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Iryna’s Law branded ‘political agenda’ as sheriff warns of jail overcrowding
Just days after another stabbing on Charlotte's light rail, and only days after Iryna's Law went into effect, Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry McFadden warned that it would lead to dangerous overcrowding.
North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein signed Iryna’s Law in October, which was named after 23-year-old Iryna Zarutska, who was stabbed to death on the Charlotte light rail in August. Decarlos Brown Jr., a repeat offender, has been charged in her murder. The legislation imposes stricter pretrial release rules for repeat and violent offenders.
Speaking at a Monday news conference, the sheriff said the law adds numerous new requirements for his office and added that politicians used Zarutska's stabbing as a "political agenda."
"And we believe that the only reason that this caught national attention is because it was caught on video and it was displayed across the United States, and our local politicians at that time saw it was a political agenda, or they could highlight her as a refugee and not an immigrant," McFadden said. "This is why they created Iryna's Law."
CHARLOTTE RESIDENTS SAY THEY FEEL LESS SAFE AS CITY FACES SECOND TRANSIT STABBING
McFadden insisted that the new legislation will lead to overcrowding in Mecklenburg County Jail.
"This law will cause our detention centers' numbers to rise. We will have more people staying inside a detention center at a longer stay than normally. Because it attacks the new bond referendum and it attacks also the discretion that the magistrates and the judge has on releasing people," he said.
The sheriff said that following Zarutska's violent attack in August, local judges "were attacked violently on social media."
"And we took additional measures to protect them because of the violent nature of social media, and parts of other media, and also just the violence that they received just personally," he said. "And so, they live in fear now, and I have to say that, because for an entire day, we had to talk to the magistrates on how to live safely, how to travel safely, and in the middle of all of that, they were concerned after the shooting of Charlie Kirk, because they said to me, 'Well, what if they shoot me because of this?' And so, they're going to be more cautious and reluctant to allow people to be released."
He argued that county staff will now be responsible for managing "a much more difficult population," particularly individuals with heightened mental-health needs who must remain in custody longer under the new rules.
"On top of the other population, of the people who are arrested for robbery, rape and murder. All these people are still gonna be housed here at the detention center. So when people say, 'Well, is that gonna cause a problem for your staff?' Of course, it is. Why? Because my staff is not gonna be subject to having to deal with people with much more mental health problems than we had in the past. Or we're gonna be dealing with families who will not understand why their loved ones are not being released."
WATCH: North Carolina lawmakers pass tough-on-crime bill in honor of Iryna Zarutska
The sheriff said that none of the new requirements were accompanied by state funding.
"House Bill 307 did not bring us any resources, and it did not bring any funding," he said, adding that lawmakers should not impose such sweeping mandates without input from the agencies that must carry them out.
He asked legislators in Raleigh to include sheriffs in future conversations about criminal-justice policy, saying they "need a seat at the table and a voice" when new laws directly affect local detention operations.
Josh Shapiro defends claim that Kamala Harris trying to ‘cover her a—’ with critical book excerpt
Gov. Josh Shapiro, D-Penn., stood by his claim in an interview with MS NOW that former Vice President Kamala Harris is trying "to cover her a—" regarding critical comments she made about him in her book.
During an interview on Monday, Shapiro was confronted about his interview with The Atlantic in which he slammed Harris for publishing an unflattering anecdote about him in her new book "107 Days." Shapiro said he stands by his words.
"Look, I stand by what I said," he told host Symone Sanders-Townsend. "I think the way in which the author described my emotion, frankly, was not accurate, but the words are mine, and I stand by them."
In The Atlantic interview, Shapiro was asked to comment on an excerpt from Harris’ book in which she described some of the tension between them while she was vetting him to be her running mate in the 2024 presidential election.
Harris alleged in her book that Shapiro had asked her staff lots of questions, including "how he might arrange to get Pennsylvania artists’ work on loan from the Smithsonian." She also accused him of wanting to be involved in every decision and said she reminded him, "a vice president is not a co-president."
When asked about it by The Atlantic’s Tim Alberta, Shapiro said, ""She wrote that in her book? That’s complete and utter bull----. I can tell you that her accounts are just blatant lies."
KAMALA HARRIS COMPLAINS ABOUT 'IMPOSSIBLE' LACK OF SUPPORT FROM BIDEN'S COMMS TEAM, INNER CIRCLE
Elsewhere, Shapiro told the outlet that Harris was "trying to sell books and cover her a--." He amended his response, adding, "I shouldn’t say ‘cover her a--.’ I think that’s not appropriate."
"She’s trying to sell books. Period."
The governor repeated to MS NOW that what Harris’ book was getting at was untrue.
"I think what was relayed to me by that author that the vice president had written about me just simply wasn't true. And you know, I think the vice president and I had very and continue to have very candid conversations. And I think the way in which it was articulated to me what was said was certainly not accurate," he said.
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Sanders-Townsend followed up, asking Shapiro if he was correcting the record for the sake of an upcoming presidential run. The governor denied that notion.
"No, Simone, I was asked for my reaction to a statement that he said the vice president said that simply wasn't true, and I was pointing that out," he said.
"Look, here's the thing: I've got respect for the former vice president and I think we do everyone a disservice when we focus on looking backwards instead of looking forwards in terms of what we're dealing with every day with the Trump administration making people's lives more difficult," he added.
Shapiro is widely seen as a possible 2028 Democratic presidential candidate given his status as the governor of a major swing state.
Fox News Digital reached out to Harris' team for comment.
Fox News Digital's Hanna Panreck contributed to this report.
Magic's Desmond Bane hit with hefty fine for launching ball at Knicks' OG Anunoby in wild moment
Orlando Magic guard Desmond Bane has been hit with a hefty fine for launching the ball at New York Knicks forward OG Anunoby during the team’s 106-100 loss to the Knicks on Sunday at Madison Square Garden.
Bane, in addition to being assessed a technical foul in the moment, was fined $35,000, the NBA announced in a press release.
The 27-year-old was fined for "throwing the ball with force at an opponent in an unsportsmanlike manner."
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The incident occurred in the fourth quarter, when Anunoby was going up for a fast break layup while surrounded by three Magic defenders. The ball was swatted out of his hands as he went to gather for the layup and humbled over.
Bane, who was trailing the play, picked up the loose ball and in one swift motion launched it at Anunoby, who was still on the ground. The Knicks forward took exception to being drilled with the ball, and got up and pushed Bane.
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After the Knicks’ victory, Bane and Anunoby appeared to hash things out on the floor and hugged.
It is the second incident this season in which Bane has thrown a ball at an opponent. In the beginning of November, the forward had another incident on a fast break.
Bane was alone while trying to defend a fast break by Onyeka Okongwu with the Atlanta Hawks up 79-65 in the third quarter.
Okongwu went up for a layup, but Bane refused to give up the easy bucket, so he fouled him and pulled him to the ground. As Okongwu fell to the floor, the ball floated in the air and Bane swatted it down off Okongwu’s head like a volleyball player executing a spike.
After a replay review, Bane was ejected from the game after being assessed both a technical foul and a flagrant foul for his transgression.
The Magic’s next game is against the Miami Heat at 6 p.m. ET on Tuesday.
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Barefoot father and son airlifted from Everglades mudhole after ATV runs out of gas: ‘Alligators are hungry’
A father and son stranded barefoot and soaking wet in a mudhole in the Florida Everglades were rescued Thursday night, when deputies spotted the fire they had lit to stay warm.
The men got stuck in the mud in the Big Cypress National Preserve when their ATV ran out of gas, the Collier County Sheriff’s Office said. With night approaching, the men called 911 for help.
"My four-wheeler ran out of gas," the father told the 911 dispatcher. "We got stuck in a mudhole, and now we’re just here stranded. Pretty far and almost out of water with my son."
The preserve is a vast swamp that stretches 729,000 acres across multiple counties.
ELDERLY WOMEN RESCUED FROM HOT TUB AT REMOTE KENTUCKY CABIN
The father said he and his son both lost their shoes in the mud and were barefoot. He was also concerned about approaching wildlife as night began to fall.
"But the sun’s going down and the alligators are hungry, buddy," he told the dispatcher, per WMGT-TV.
Deputies said the men were soaking wet and started a fire to keep warm.
The sheriff’s Aviation Bureau launched a helicopter and tracked the men’s coordinates. They spotted the fire the men had started and saw the duo waving at the helicopter.
Video released by the sheriff’s office shows the father and son being hoisted to safety. The sheriff’s office added that the men extinguished the fire upon their rescue.
No injuries were reported.
"This is another example of CCSO’s great training put into practice and the success that comes from seamless partnerships," the sheriff’s office said.
John Cena reflects on biggest piece of criticism he received in his WWE career and how it changed his approach
John Cena’s in-ring career with WWE is coming to an end.
He’s considered to be one of the greatest pro wrestlers to embark on a career with the company and the dynasty that he helped create has seen him win 17 WWE titles, including the one he won at WrestleMania 41. Cena’s final match will take place on Saturday at Saturday Night’s Main Event against Gunther, who earned the right to take on the legendary superstar.
Cena reflected on his career in an interview with Tom Rinaldi, which aired Monday night. He was asked about a piece of criticism that stuck with him through his career.
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The Massachusetts native said it was a three-word chant from the audience in the middle of his career – "You can’t wrestle."
"The ‘You can’t wrestle’ chants because I would do the same five moves every night and win all the time," Cena said. "And what I hear from the audience is I’m seeing other performers do these fantastic things and then at the end of the night, I see you do five moves and win because I’m, in the throughline of the story, setting up a dynasty and if it ain’t your guy, dynasties are tough. So, I’ve learned that."
Cena said he didn’t bristle at the chants. Instead, it drove him to be better and to expand his move set.
"In hearing that line, I’d just be into doing more stuff. And it looked janky and ‘unorthodox’ but I listened and I went back to wrestling school halfway through my career," he said. "I went to newer performers and asked what you think I’ll be good at? Can you teach me some stuff? And newer performers like Sami Zayn, like Kevin Owens, like when A.J. Styles first came, CM Punk. Teach me some stuff. How can I do better? Make you look good, that’s always my lead, and what can you teach me? And that’s from the audience, chanting at the top of their lungs, ‘You can’t wrestle.’
MYSTERY ATTACKER INTERRUPTS MEN'S WARGAMES MATCH AS LIV MORGAN RETURNS TO HELP DOMINIK MYSTERIO
"Our audience will continue to lean in until they get you and it didn’t get me. … I’ll try to be better and not make it be a hard reset. I’ll try to be better and be my authentic self."
Cena’s career spanned 25 years with several championships under his belt. His retirement tour this year started at the Royal Rumble where he finished as the runner-up in the match.
He won the Elimination Chamber match to go up against Cody Rhodes for the Undisputed WWE Championship. He stunned fans with a heel turn that could only draw comparisons to Hulk Hogan. The heel persona only lasted a few months as he was back to the babyface fans grew to love and adore by the summer.
He and Rhodes battled one more time for the title at SummerSlam. He also had matches with Punk, Styles, Logan Paul, Brock Lesnar and Dominik Mysterio during the year.
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Kate Winslet slams Hollywood’s ‘terrifying’ obsession with Botox and weight-loss drugs
Kate Winslet is sounding the alarm over Hollywood's "terrifying" obsession with cosmetic treatments and weight-loss drugs.
Winslet opened up about the intensifying plastic surgery trend and what she perceives as a "disregard" for health while calling out the growing use of Botox, fillers and GLP-1s.
"It is devastating," the "Titanic" star told The Times. "If a person’s self-esteem is so bound up in how they look, it’s frightening. And it’s puzzling because I have moments when I think it’s better, when I look at actresses at events dressed how they want, whichever shape – but then so many people are on weight-loss drugs. It’s so varied."
"Some are making choices to be themselves, others do everything they can to not be themselves," Winslet continued. "And do they know what they are putting in? The disregard for one’s health is terrifying. It bothers me now more than ever. It is f---ing chaos out there."
Winslet admitted she's not even that upset with "all the f---ing actresses" participating in the cosmetic treatment craze, but with the rest of the world: "People who save up for Botox or the s--- they put in their lips."
For the actress-turned-director, aging is one of life's joys.
"My favorite thing is when your hands get old," Winslet said. "That’s life, in your hands. Some of the most beautiful women I know are over 70 and what upsets me is that young women have no concept of what being beautiful actually is."
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The "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" star recalled seeing a woman who "looked like a cartoon" in a BBC article about a car crash.
"You do not actually know what that person looks like – from the eyebrows to mouth to lashes to hair, that young woman is scared to be herself," Winslet said. "What idea of perfection are people aspiring to? I blame social media and its effect on mental health."
Winslet's role in Peter Jackson’s 1994 film "Heavenly Creatures" landed her on Hollywood's radar. She continued to give stunning performances in films such as "Sense and Sensibility," "Jude" and "Hamlet."
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She gained global stardom after starring in James Cameron's "Titanic" in 1997. The success of the film gave Winslet fame she and her family weren't sure how to handle.
"… They were worried because the media was vile, singling me out for relentless bullying," she told The Times. "I wasn’t ready to be a famous actress. I was so young, but I felt so invaded. Nothing was nice."
"People climbed into my garden," she recalled. "I couldn’t go to a shop. I was followed when I had a baby in the back of the car on my way to the pediatrician. It is abnormal and, to my dad, I was still that little girl he helped clean out the rabbit hutch every Saturday afternoon."
Leavitt defends Trump’s drug boat strikes, says Democrats attacking U.S. military 'stooped so low'
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt is defending the Trump administration’s handling of recent strikes on suspected drug-trafficking boats, accusing Democrats of trying to undermine efforts to combat the cartels.
"It speaks to the depravity of the Democrat Party that they have stooped so low, they are attacking our military leadership," Leavitt said Tuesday on "Fox & Friends."
"They are attacking the brave men and women who have conducted these strikes well within the law, following the orders from their commander-in-chief," she added.
WASHINGTON POST STANDS BY HEGSETH 'KILL THEM ALL' REPORT ON BOAT STRIKE DESPITE TESTIMONY DENIAL
Her comments come as Secretary of War Pete Hegseth prepares to brief a small group of Republican and Democratic lawmakers on the situation with Venezuela. Democratic leaders have been openly critical of the White House’s strikes on alleged narco-terrorists, with several calling them "war crimes."
But Leavitt argues the Trump administration ran on taking tough action against drug smugglers and was elected by the American people.
"In 2024, the GOP platform at the Republican Party Convention, written by President Trump and his team, stated that we are going to quote, ‘Demolish foreign drug cartels.’ President Trump campaigned on this. He is delivering on it," she said.
There have been at least 22 strikes on suspected drug boats that have resulted in the deaths of dozens of people. A September strike drew intense pushback after the military launched a second strike that targeted survivors of the first.
COMMANDER OF SEPTEMBER ATTACK BELIEVED SURVIVORS WERE CONTINUING DRUG RUN, REPORT SAYS
"We need to know what information Hegseth had before ordering the execution of everyone on that boat and if those onboard were properly identified. But the bigger question remains: Does it make Americans any safer to kill people without due process? I don’t believe it does," Sen. Mark Kelly wrote on X.
Hegseth is expected to brief the Gang of Eight Tuesday, along with other top Cabinet officials.
"Every time President Trump and Secretary Hegseth and the White House are criticized for blowing up drug boats, we are thinking about Americans like Anne Fundner, who lost her 15-year-old son Weston to a drug overdose," Leavitt said.
"I think it’s great President Trump is finally paying attention to it and taking strong action."
Trump pressures Zelenskyy for new elections, warns Ukraine of 'a point where it’s not a democracy anymore'
President Donald Trump appeared to take a swipe at Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy by reiterating his call for elections, despite Ukraine's wartime prohibition against them.
The remarks come as Washington works to secure a deal to end the Russia-Ukraine war.
"They haven’t had an election in a long time," Trump told Politico. "You know, they talk about a democracy, but it gets to a point where it’s not a democracy anymore."
It's not the first time that Trump has called for Ukraine to hold elections. In February, Trump sparked controversy when he referred to Zelenskyy as a "dictator without elections" in a Truth Social post.
PUTIN CALLS TRUMP’S PEACE PLAN A ‘STARTING POINT’ AS HE WARNS UKRAINE TO PULL BACK OR FACE 'FORCE'
"He refuses to have elections, is very low in Ukrainian polls and the only thing he was good at was playing Biden 'like a fiddle.' A dictator without elections, Zelenskyy better move fast or he is not going to have a country left," Trump wrote.
A few days after the post, Zelenskyy visited the White House, where he had an infamous clash with Trump and Vice President JD Vance. The three men sparred over the war as Zelenskyy attempted to paint it as a possible threat to the U.S., something Trump and Vance rejected.
UKRAINIAN OFFICIAL YERMAK RESIGNS AS CORRUPTION PROBE ENCIRCLES ZELENSKYY
On Tuesday, Zelenskyy said that after speaking with European leaders, he was ready to present a peace proposal to the U.S.
"We are working very actively on all components of potential steps toward ending the war. The Ukrainian and European components are now more developed, and we are ready to present them to our partners in the U.S. Together with the American side, we expect to swiftly make the potential steps as doable as possible," Zelenskyy wrote on X. "We are committed to a real peace and remain in constant contact with the United States."
Zelenskyy said the end of the war depended on Russia's willingness to "take effective steps to stop the bloodshed."
The peace deal is not the only issue on Zelenskyy's plate. He's also facing turbulence on the home front after a recent political scandal. Andriy Yermak, the head of the office of the president of Ukraine, resigned late last month after his home was raided by anti-corruption investigators. Upon Yermak's resignation, Zelenskyy thanked him for "always presenting the Ukrainian position in the negotiation track exactly as it should be."
Fox News Digital reached out to Zelenskyy's office and the White House for comment.
Fox News Digital's Alex Nitzberg and Fox News' Simon Owen contributed to this report.
Texas A&M student Brianna Aguilera’s fall death sparks police response to family’s explosive claims: report
Texas police said the investigation into the death of Texas A&M student Brianna Aguilera remains open as they defended their handling of the case, which her family’s lawyer demanded be turned over to the Texas Department of Public Safety.
Aguilera, 19, died when she fell from an Austin high-rise apartment following a Texas A&M vs. University of Texas football tailgate at around 1 a.m. on Nov. 29, according to police.
Last week, the Austin Police Department held a news conference to announce that their investigation determined Aguilera died by suicide, despite her family’s claims that she was killed.
"It is not common for a police department to speak publicly about a death by suicide," Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis said during a news conference Thursday. "But inaccurate information has circulated and been reported. And that has led to additional harm of innocent people, bullying included, and their families."
TEXAS A&M STUDENT BRIANNA AGUILERA HAD DELETED SUICIDE NOTE ON PHONE, POLICE SAY
Speaking to reporters on Thursday, police previously revealed they had uncovered a deleted suicide note from earlier in the week on Aguilera’s phone, along with suicidal texts sent the evening of her death to friends. The investigation also found that Aguilera had made comments to friends indicating she may be suicidal, police said.
However, at a news conference on Friday, Aguilera's family attorney, Tony Buzbee, condemned the investigation’s findings, while pointing to the autopsy and toxicology reports not being completed, according to The Daily Mail.
Buzbee also looked to cast doubt on the validity of the suicide note found on Aguilera’s phone by investigators.
"Then [Det. Robert Marshall] gets into her phone and he sees an essay that she wrote and he calls it a suicide note," Buzbee said, according to The Mail. "She took creative writing the semester before. The suggestion is that she left ‘a suicide note’ – total malarkey."
Buzbee reportedly pointed to a TikTok video posted by a resident of the same apartment complex claiming to have heard two women arguing minutes before Aguilera’s fatal fall.
"A young man posted on TikTok that he could hear up above, at around the 17th floor in that general area, fighting [and ] screaming – somebody saying, ‘Get off of me,’ and then a muffled sound," Buzbee said.
APD previously revealed that Aguilera was fighting on the phone with her boyfriend just two minutes before the first 911 call reporting an unconscious person was placed.
In light of the attorney’s allegations, APD is reportedly continuing to stand by their investigation’s findings.
DEAD TEXAS COLLEGE STUDENT'S PHONE WAS 'THROWN IN THE WOODS,' GRIEVING MOTHER SAYS
"The Austin Police stands by the information that we provided [Thursday] during our news conference regarding the tragic death of Brianna Aguilera," the department said in a statement to The Daily Mail.
The department also seemingly contradicted Buzbee’s claims that the investigation into Aguilera’s death had been closed, with officials asserting authorities are still looking into the case.
"We would like to reiterate a couple key points," APD said in a statement, according to The Daily Mail. "The Travis County Medical Examiner determines the cause and manner of death, and APD has never made a determination in this case. Our role is to conduct an investigation and follow the evidence. This investigation remains open, and at no point has APD stated otherwise."
TEACHER'S 23-STAB-WOUND DEATH RULED SUICIDE AGAIN DESPITE EXPERT CLAIMS OF HOMICIDE
In addition to alleging missteps in APD’s investigation, Buzbee reportedly called for Det. Robert Marshall to be removed as the lead authority in the case and revealed he would be asking Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to bring in the Texas Department of Public Safety to continue the investigation.
However, Austin Police Association President Michael Bullock told The Daily Mail that there is no legal precedent for a case to be reassigned due to the family not being happy with the investigation.
"It's nothing I have ever seen happen," Bullock reportedly said. "It's our jurisdiction and it's our case."
"Could the governor order it? Probably not, but the department could invite Texas DPS in. Other than that, it's all APD."
APD, Buzbee, Texas DPS and Abbott's office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
Fox News Digital's Adam Sabes contributed to this report.
Kamala Harris declares herself a 'historic' figure: 'There will be a marble bust of me'
Former Vice President Kamala Harris declared herself to be a "historic figure" on Tuesday and touted that there will be a marble bust of her constructed in Congress.
Harris made the statement during an interview with The New York Times regarding her upcoming book, "107 Days," telling the newspaper that she no longer feels "burdened" by the need to achieve a place in history.
"I understand the focus on ’28 and all that," she told the Times. "But there will be a marble bust of me in Congress. I am a historic figure like any Vice President of the United States ever was."
"Thousands of people are coming to hear my voice. Thousands and thousands," she added about her book tour. "Every place we’ve gone has been sold out."
WASHINGTON POST SLAMS KAMALA HARRIS BOOK TOUR, SAYS DEMS DON'T 'HAVE TIME TO WASTE' ON FORMER VP
Harris' comments reference a tradition in the Senate of commissioning a bust of vice presidents after they leave office. The tradition has held strong since the late 1800s.
The former vice president has used the release of her upcoming book as a chance to settle scores with figures throughout the Democratic Party, from Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro to former President Joe Biden himself.
Harris writes in her book that Shapiro had asked her staff lots of questions, including "how he might arrange to get Pennsylvania artists’ work on loan from the Smithsonian." She also accused him of wanting to be involved in every decision and said she reminded him, "a vice president is not a co-president."
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Many political observers had scratched their heads when Harris selected Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz over Shapiro to be her running mate.
"She wrote that in her book? That’s complete and utter bull----," Shapiro said in an interview with the Atlantic. "I can tell you that her accounts are just blatant lies."
"I did ask a bunch of questions," he continued. "Wouldn’t you ask questions if someone was talking to you about forming a partnership and working together?"
JON STEWART SLAMS KAMALA HARRIS OVER HER EXPLANATION OF WHY SHE SNUBBED PETE BUTTIGIEG FOR VP
"I mean, she’s trying to sell books and cover her a--," he said, before backtracking. "I shouldn’t say ‘cover her a--.’ I think that’s not appropriate."
"She’s trying to sell books. Period," he concluded.
The book also blames Biden's White House for sidelining her and failing to support her throughout their term in office and during her contest against Trump.
"Getting anything positive said about my work or any defense against untrue attacks was almost impossible," her book reads.
She also argued the White House was happy to let her "shoulder the blame" for the border crisis.
Fox News' Hannah Panreck contributed to this report.