Chapter 1: What is the president's stance on Greenland and its security?
The president stands his ground. Elisa Brady, Fox News, continuing the push to take over Greenland for security as he heads later today to an economic forum in Switzerland.
And he's going to get in front of these world leaders who are very anxious and very concerned about his rhetoric on Greenland. He is. doubling down every single hour. It seems that he wants to take Greenland. He's making the case that there is no other country out there that can protect Greenland from China and Russia. It has to be us.
Last night, he actually told reporters on his way back from Miami, I don't think they're going to push back too much. Talking about world leaders, we have to have it. They can't protect it.
Fox's Aisha Hosni at the White House, where the president is marking one year since his second term began, holding up a thick stack of papers moments ago in the White House briefing room. These are the accomplishments of what we've produced. And then highlighting criminal arrests made by ICE in Minnesota.
Minnesota and the Twin Cities are suing the federal government, claiming an abuse of power over immigration enforcement operations. Now some police chiefs in the Minneapolis metro area are suggesting there's racial profiling with numerous complaints from U.S. citizens of color, including off-duty cops, saying agents are stopping them and demanding paperwork.
We demand more from our federal government.
Hennepin County Sheriff Dawana Witt.
More professionalism, more accountability, more humanity. We demand lawful policing that respects human dignity.
The Brooklyn Park police chief says civil rights violations have to stop, but he's also emphasizing they're only accusing a handful of federal agents and that they're not calling to abolish ICE. Homeland Security officials have previously denied allegations of profiling.
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Chapter 2: How are local leaders responding to immigration enforcement in Minnesota?
On the sidelines in Davos, Switzerland, a meeting between a Kremlin envoy and U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff with a Russian state news agency quoting him as saying the talks were very positive. This as Ukraine's president says more than a million households have no power in frigid Kiev after Russia's latest airstrikes on the capital.
Some New England Patriots fans are being blocked from buying tickets for Sunday's AFC championship game in Denver.
Patriots fans in New England and most other states will have to buy tickets secondhand if they want to see their team try to win its way back to the Super Bowl. For the AFC Championship game in Denver, Ticketmaster is only selling to people with a billing address in a state considered Broncos country. Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, Nebraska, Montana, South Dakota, and in western Kansas.
There's a pop-up message on the site saying it's due to limited availability. Washington Capitals hockey team was the first to widely restrict sales based on address in 2001. Other teams in most major sports leagues have done the same from time to time, especially during the playoffs. Chris Foster, Fox News.
A deepening sell-off on Wall Street. Right now, the Dow's down 829 points. I'm Lisa Brady, Fox News.
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