A homeless man sits in Chelsea.
Photograph by Dean Moses
The remarks Kilmeade himself would later name “extremely callous” got here on Wednesday on an episode of “Fox and Friends” as he and his co-hosts mentioned homelessness and the current slaying of 23-year-old Ukrainian immigrant Iryna Zarutska, in North Carolina. The suspect within the killing was homeless on the time and has a historical past of psychological well being points.
Co-host Lawrence Jones said that these residing on the streets with psychological well being problems ought to both settle for assist or be jailed when Kilmeade jumped in.
“Involuntary lethal injection or something,” Kilmeade mentioned bluntly. “Just kill ’em.”
Kilmeade apologizes for ‘extremely callous’ comment
On Sunday morning, Kilmeade apologized for the remarks that went viral over the weekend on social media.
Fox Information host Brian KilmeadeWikimedia Commons/public area
The try and stroll the feedback again didn’t sit properly with those that have devoted their lives to serving to these in want and those that reside on the streets.
New York Metropolis is coping with one of many worst homeless crises in its historical past at a time when hire ranges have reached historic highs. Greater than 100,000 individuals are residing in shelters throughout town, in keeping with the latest experiences.
Town has additionally been struggling to cope with homeless people residing on the streets with extreme psychological sickness. The Adams Administration has labored to involuntarily hospitalize people deemed a risk to themselves and the general public, and join them with care and providers.
Christine Quinn, president and CEO of Win, the biggest supplier of shelter and supportive providers for homeless households with kids in New York Metropolis, rebuked Kilmeade’s remarks from final week and mentioned he ought to volunteer in certainly one of her group’s shelters as penance.
“Rhetoric like this – completely devoid of all humanity – only serves to divide and inflame,” Quinn mentioned. “There is no denying that we are facing surging homelessness and mental health crises in this country that require our full-throttled attention. Instead of settling for reductive and inhumane quips, we should be focused on investing in supportive services to get these individuals the help they need and back on their feet before tragedy strikes. While I’m glad to see Mr. Kilmeade’s apology, I invite him to go a step further and engage in meaningful dialogue with those of us working day-in and day-out to move the needle on these critical issues. Better yet, come volunteer in one of our shelters and see the face of homelessness for yourself – we could always use the help.”
CEO of WIN Christine Quinn stood alongside fellow service suppliers and homeless and immigrant rights advocates on the steps of Metropolis Corridor in January 2025 and denounced President-elect Trump’s promise of mass deportations and cuts to social providers allegedly part of what has change into extensively referred to as Challenge 2025.Photograph by Dean Moses
Shams DaBaron, a former homeless New Yorker turned homeless advocate, instructed New York News that he was disturbed by what Kilmeade mentioned on reside tv. He himself went from sleeping on a bench in Harlem to working with Mayor Eric Adams to deal with road homelessness. Like Quinn, DaBaron invited Kilmeade to stroll the streets with him.
“I was exactly the type of person Kilmeade says should be killed — homeless and struggling with mental health challenges. But I transformed from someone people wanted to erase into someone working to eliminate homelessness itself,” DaBaron mentioned.
The advocate mentioned Kilmeade’s apology doesn’t undo the injury his unique phrases have brought about.
“We must reject this rhetoric and embrace real solutions: permanent supportive housing, mental health services, and treating homelessness as the public health crisis it is,” DaBaron mentioned. “If Kilmeade and his co-hosts truly care, I invite them to walk these streets with me and learn from those with lived experience. The ‘solution’ they discussed would have erased me before I could improve my circumstances and become part of the answer. That’s not just callous — it’s anti-American.”
DaBaron additionally criticized Kilmeade’s co-hosts for staying silent about what he says is a suggestion tantamount to the “final solution.”
Others took to social media to name for Kilmeade’s firing. Former federal prosecutor Elizabeth de la Vega wrote on X: ”I nonetheless assume he must be fired. TV hosts who casually speaking about killing folks on television shouldn’t be TV hosts.”