Shocking Jack Smith Doc Dump as Scandal Grows, CBS News Shakeup, Missing Monkeys: AM Update 10/30

18m
Thousands of newly released congressional documents reveal the Biden FBI targeted hundreds of Republicans under “Arctic Frost,” which later turned into the Jack Smith investigation, which GOP lawmakers now call a scandal bigger than Watergate. CEO of the Federalist, Sean Davis, breaks it down. Paramount begins mass layoffs after its Skydance merger, cutting about 2,000 jobs, including roughly 100 at CBS News, as new Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss starts her overhaul of the network. The Fed cuts rates by a quarter point to a three-year low, but President Trump says Jerome “Too Late” Powell still might need to go. Authorities in Mississippi are searching for several research monkeys that escaped after a truck overturned on the highway.

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Transcript

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Speaker 1 Good morning, everyone. I'm Megan Kelly.
It's Thursday, October 30th, 2025, and this is your AM update.

Speaker 2 It is bigger than Watergate in the same way that the Pacific Ocean is bigger than your bathtub.

Speaker 1 Thousands of pages released this week by the House and Senate Judiciary Committees exposing what Republicans are calling the biggest scandal in Washington history.

Speaker 1 The CBS news shake-ups begin as parent company company Paramount begins post-merger layoffs. The Federal Reserve moves on interest rates, President Trump not yet satisfied.

Speaker 3 What does he say, monkeys?

Speaker 1 And research monkeys on the loose in Mississippi. All that and more coming up in just a moment on your AM update.

Speaker 1 As President Trump is settling into his new administration, one of the top Democrats in Congress aiming to undermine the Trump agenda is Democrat Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois.

Speaker 1 And according to our sponsor, the Electronic Payments Coalition, Senator Durbin has a new plan: a government takeover of your credit card.

Speaker 1 Today, Americans have thousands of choices in credit cards, but they say Senator Durbin's plan will result in less competition and less security, which means more risk for your credit and your identity.

Speaker 1 You can learn more for yourself at guardyourcard.com, and you could consider telling your senators to stop Dick Durbin's government takeover of your credit card before it's too late.

Speaker 1 The House and Senate Judiciary Committees releasing two separate troves of documents this week, each revealing a Biden administration FBI determined to investigate not just President Trump, but the vast majority of the conservative movement.

Speaker 1 The House Judiciary Committee releasing documents provided by FBI Director Cash Patel showing dozens of Republican figures wrapped up in what was known as the Arctic Frost Investigation, which began as an examination of the alternate slates of electors Team Trump pushed in the 2020 election and developed into Special Counsel Jack Smith's wider probe into interference around the 2020 election, a dragnet that surveilled U.S.

Speaker 1 senators, financial institutions, basically GOP heavyweights having anything to do with Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 The Senate Judiciary Committee releasing whistleblower documents containing the actual subpoenas issued by special counsel Jack Smith, targeting at least 430 Republican individuals and entities, including media companies like Fox and Newsmax, as well as Turning Point USA, Make America Great Again PAC, eight GOP senators, and private individuals scrutinized in what Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley describes as an FBI phishing expedition to, quote, improperly investigate the entire Republican political political apparatus.

Speaker 1 That probe zeroing in on the GOP's so-called false electors scheme, a plan in which pro-Trump electors in several battleground states submitted alternate election certificates claiming Mr.

Speaker 1 Trump had won those states in hopes that they would be counted during the January 6th vote certification.

Speaker 1 The Trump camp describing these as contingent electors to preserve President Trump's legal rights amid ongoing legal challenges to the 2020 election.

Speaker 1 On Wednesday, GOP senators arguing these latest revelations unveil a scandal as big as any in modern political history.

Speaker 4 What is revealed in those 1,700 pages of documents, in those 197 subpoenas, is nothing short of a Biden administration enemies list.

Speaker 4 People need to understand how politicized the Biden administration turned all these agencies.

Speaker 5 Arctic Frost is Joe Biden's Watergate. Merrick Garland was a fundamentally corrupt attorney general.
Jack Smith was a fundamentally corrupt prosecutor.

Speaker 5 This was a political enemies list from the beginning.

Speaker 6 In this instance, I can't think of a bigger political scandal in the last hundred years. So if you want to compare it to Watergate, this is 100 times worse than Watergate.

Speaker 1 We spoke with CEO of the Federalist, Sean Davis, about the significance of these documents.

Speaker 2 So Arctic Frost was a wide-ranging, massive investigation, basically against the entire National Republican Party infrastructure launched under the Joe Biden administration, namely under the authority of special counsel Jack Smith.

Speaker 2 And it purported to be investigating January 6 and election interference and stuff like that. But that was all really a pretext

Speaker 2 to create legal reasons to destroy the Biden administration's entire political opposition in the country.

Speaker 2 They wanted to destroy their opponents and they kind of cooked up a whole bunch of reasons, whether it's January 6th or Trump calling shenanigans on the election or what have you.

Speaker 2 They wanted to use that as a basis to effectively legally terrorize their opposition.

Speaker 1 The House Judiciary Committee documents contained the FBI information used to justify the investigation.

Speaker 1 That tranche was difficult to parse, says Davis, but the Senate drop provided by whistleblowers contained 197 subpoenas and hundreds of pages of underlying documentation.

Speaker 2 So it was a massive, massive release that is starting to make clear the full breadth and insanity of this phishing expedition by Jack Smith and the Biden DOJ. It wouldn't surprise me if there's more.

Speaker 2 They were subpoenaing Trump's campaign, the RNC itself, Trump-affiliated PACs, conservative organizations, legal organizations, individuals.

Speaker 2 They were trying to find and target and burrow into and learn every single possible thing about what every major figure in the, in Republican politics was doing in the country.

Speaker 2 They wanted to know who they were talking to, what they were talking about, who they were emailing, who they were doing business with, what their bank records looked like.

Speaker 2 And this even included United States senators who clearly had nothing to do, even if this thing is cooked up, they clearly had nothing to do with any of it.

Speaker 1 Davis says these revelations are worse than the scandal that forced President Nixon to resign from office in 1974.

Speaker 2 When we had Watergate, what we had was a scandal over a break-in by a handful of people of the Democrat Party headquarters. And they alleged that Nixon knew about it and tried to cover it up.

Speaker 2 But it was a one-time... break-in of a party headquarters on one evening by a handful of people.

Speaker 2 What we had here was a multi-year fishing expedition using the most powerful tools and weapons in the entire federal government against hundreds, if not thousands of people, including the former and future president of the United States, all his aides, his campaign funders, the organizations that supported him and the people who worked there.

Speaker 2 It is bigger than Watergate in the same way that the Pacific Ocean is bigger than your bathtub.

Speaker 1 Smith's investigation into the elector scheme was ultimately rendered moot by the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling recognizing presidential immunity for most official acts in office.

Speaker 1 And not a moment too soon, says Davis.

Speaker 2 They were demanding financial records, basically any name they could get on from anyone

Speaker 2 with any real major influence within the national Republican and Conservative Party infrastructure. So they used it to go after alternate electors in places like Arizona or Georgia.

Speaker 2 They used it to go after lawyers. They went after Sidney Powell.
They went after Jeff Clark and John Eastman. They used it to go after Donald Trump himself, a bunch of his campaign people.

Speaker 2 They used it to go after conservative organizations like the Conservative Partnership Institute or American First Policy Institute. They even used it to go after a pillow company called My Pillow.

Speaker 2 You had the executive branch under a tyrannical DOJ going and just hoovering up legislative records from their opponents in Congress. And I mean, who knows what they were getting from that?

Speaker 2 Were they figuring out how to defeat Republican legislative strategy? I mean, that's an abomination if that's what happened.

Speaker 1 What should come of the revelations? We asked Sean Davis that, too.

Speaker 2 You cannot have this type of behavior go unpunished.

Speaker 2 So I very much hope that Pam Bondi, the Attorney General, understands that the risk that not punishing these people poses to the future of the country, because you cannot have a country where one party is allowed to do this over and over and over again and nothing ever happens to them.

Speaker 1 Coming up, hundreds of cuts at CBS News and some big names rumored to be on the chopping block. And multiple aggressive medical research monkeys on the loose in Mississippi.
What you need to know.

Speaker 1 When customers are walking through the aisles of their local Walmart, they're not just picking up groceries or supplies. They are supporting American businesses and their communities.

Speaker 1 The real story is what's behind the label.

Speaker 1 With over two-thirds of the products Walmart buys made, grown, or assembled right here in the U.S., buying local is not just stocking shelves, it's about strengthening communities.

Speaker 1 Because of that commitment, Walmart invested $350 billion in U.S.

Speaker 1 manufacturing, helping American companies like Fisher and Weezer Specialty Foods, a local Texas business, expand their operations in Fredericksburg, Texas, hire more people as well, and bring their Texas-grown peach jam to a national market.

Speaker 1 Their story is just one example of how Walmart's U.S. manufacturing investment is supporting over 750,000 American jobs.

Speaker 1 Businesses across the country are empowered to sell more, hire more, and help their communities grow. From farms to factories to final shopping carts, learn how Walmart is fueling the future of U.S.

Speaker 1 manufacturing at walmart.com/slash America at work.

Speaker 1 Paramount laying off about 2,000 workers beginning yesterday following its merger with Skydance Media earlier this year.

Speaker 1 CEO David Ellison, writing in a memo to employees, quote, in some areas we are addressing redundancies that have emerged across the organization.

Speaker 1 In others, we are phasing out roles that are no longer aligned with our evolving priorities and the new structure designed to strengthen our focus on growth.

Speaker 1 The CBS News Division seeing about 100 employees cut, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Speaker 1 Part of a broader restructuring underway at CBS under Ellison, beginning with purchasing independent media outlet, the Free Press, and installing its founder, Barry Weiss, as editor-in-chief of CBS News.

Speaker 1 The layoffs were reportedly planned before Weiss was hired. Early steps in the overhaul eliminating streaming shows, CBS Mornings Plus and CBS Evening News Plus, and closing the South Africa Bureau.

Speaker 1 The LA Times reporting the Race and Culture Unit formed in the 2020 aftermath of George Floyd's death was closed down as well. Two weeks after NBC closed its same department.

Speaker 1 It was BS window dressing all along. Some of those employees will reportedly be moved to other divisions.

Speaker 1 The New York Post reporting earlier this week, next on the chopping block could be some of the longest tenured 60 Minutes anchors, as Weiss aims to revive the Marquis Show, once known as the Lion's Den due to its gold standard hard-nosed journalism.

Speaker 1 Bill Whitaker, a possible target, he has been criticized for throwing softball questions, according to the Post, like in his interview with Vice President Kamala Harris just weeks before the 2024 election.

Speaker 1 I've been covering the border for years, and so I know this is not a problem that started with your administration. Correct, correct.

Speaker 1 You have accused Donald Trump of using racist tropes.

Speaker 7 I'm glad you are pointing these comments out that he has made that have resulted in a response by most reasonable people to say it's just wrong.

Speaker 1 Not exactly Mike Wallace, is he? Earlier this year, parent company Paramount agreeing to settle with President Trump over allegations that interview was edited to unfairly help the Democratic nominee.

Speaker 1 Scott Pelley, also rumored to be on Weiss's potential list.

Speaker 1 In March 2024, Pelley humiliated himself in an interview with the Moms for Liberty co-founders, raising concerns about graphic sexual content in books commonly found in school libraries.

Speaker 1 A very real problem Pelley openly scoffed at and downplayed.

Speaker 1 Parents send their children to school to be educated, not indoctrinated into ideology.

Speaker 8 What ideology are they being indoctrinated into?

Speaker 1 Let's just say, children in America cannot read.

Speaker 8 They often dodged questions with talking points. You're being evasive.
21% of Islamic students are reading. You're being evasive.
What ideology are the children being indoctrinated into?

Speaker 8 What is your fear?

Speaker 1 I think parents' fears are realized. They're looking at these books where sexual discussions are happening with their children at younger and younger ages.

Speaker 8 Tiffany Justice read from sexually explicit books written for older teens, but found in a few lower schools. Most people wouldn't want them in a lower school.

Speaker 8 But in a tactic of outrage politics, Moms for Liberty takes a kernel of truth and concludes these examples are not rare mistakes, but a plot to sexualize children.

Speaker 1 Just over a year later, a case about parents' rights to opt out of insane radical school curriculum went all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court, and the parents won.

Speaker 1 The High Court recognizing, contrary to what Scott Pelley told his audience, this inappropriate material is indeed appearing in grade schools in violation of parents' rights.

Speaker 1 16-year CBS veteran John Dickerson, too, announcing he will leave the network at the end of the year.

Speaker 1 In September, Dickerson facing criticism for reporting Charlie Kirk's alleged assassin's motive, quote, remains elusive.

Speaker 1 That was after plenty of evidence had emerged revealing the shooter's leftist beliefs and deep hatred of Charlie. Bye.

Speaker 1 The Federal Reserve cutting interest rates for the second time this year, lowering the benchmark rate by a quarter point to a range between 3.75 and 4%,

Speaker 1 the lowest in three years.

Speaker 1 Fed Chair Jerome Powell saying interest rate policy is not, quote, on a preset course, and another reduction at the next meeting in December, quote, is not a foregone conclusion.

Speaker 1 Markets mixed yesterday, closing with the Dow down slightly, the SP 500 flat, and the NASDAQ ticking up slightly.

Speaker 1 Powell saying President Trump's tariffs have had only a, quote, fairly modest impact on overall inflation, but Americans still feel the pain of higher prices from years past.

Speaker 9 The reason they're so unhappy about inflation is the inflation that we had in 2021, two, and three.

Speaker 9 Because, you know, you can say that prices aren't going up as much, but that doesn't mean people aren't feeling those higher prices from the inflation we had two or three years ago.

Speaker 9 They are, and that's, I think, a large part of why the public, if you sample people, inflation is still very much making people quite unhappy.

Speaker 1 President Trump, who has long argued for lowering interest rates, making it clear multiple times this week, these cuts will not serve as a lifeline for Powell's job.

Speaker 10 He's too late in lowering interest rates. I call him Jerome too late, Powell.

Speaker 3 When do you think you'll make a decision on the Fed?

Speaker 8 Last Fed, question?

Speaker 11 I'd say maybe by the end of the year.

Speaker 10 I think by the end of the year. Early next year, but by the end of the year.
We want to get too late out as soon as possible.

Speaker 10 We want to be too early with too late.

Speaker 1 Powell's term as chair is set to end in May of 2026.

Speaker 1 Audience members from Mississippi may want to pay some extra attention to this next story.

Speaker 1 Authorities are searching for three monkeys still on the loose after a truck carrying research animals overturned on Interstate 59, about 85 miles southeast of Jackson, the state's capital.

Speaker 1 The crash occurring on Tuesday afternoon, dispatch audio capturing the moment responders first learned of the emergency.

Speaker 3 We got 21 monkeys that was on this truck. We got five of them on the run.

Speaker 3 He said monkeys.

Speaker 1 An assessment later revealing six monkeys escaped in total. Some were recaptured and euthanized.
It's unclear how many were killed.

Speaker 1 Video from the crash site showing some loose monkeys crawling through the grass and the debris near the wreckage, including overturned crates marked live animals.

Speaker 1 It remains unclear what caused the crash or where the truck was headed. Officials continue urging the public not to approach any monkeys and to call 911 if one is spotted.

Speaker 1 The whole incident reminiscent of the movie Outbreak from 1995 starring Dustin Hoffman and Donald Sutherland.

Speaker 11 In a remote African jungle, a small monkey is captured. Bound for a pet store in America.
The animal carries a deadly virus. The fate of the nation, perhaps the world is in our hands.

Speaker 12 Many people are dying and are going to continue to die unless we find this monkey.

Speaker 1 And that'll do it for your AM update. I'm Megan Kelly.

Speaker 1 Join me back here for the Megan Kelly Show, live on SiriusXM Triumph Channel 111 at Noon East, on youtube.com/slash Megan Kelly, and on all podcast platforms.

Speaker 1 So, Clorox toilet wand is all I need to clean a toilet.

Speaker 1 You don't need a bottle of solution

Speaker 1 to get into this toilet revolution. Clorox clean feels good.
Use as directed. directed.