Ahead of her appearance on the live broadcast, guest Rebekah Koffler posted that she was “refilling my #champagne glass”
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(749x0:751x2):format(webp)/Rebekah-Koffler-061525-2-6fe778fd46e14c95ab6178a4c58b7e0e.jpg)
NEED TO KNOW
Rebekah Koffler joined Fox News’ special military parade broadcast on June 14 while seemingly inebriated, and the co-hosts abruptly cut her interview off after a minute and a half
Koffler, a former defense intelligence agency officer, later claimed there were audio issues during the broadcast, which a Fox News source denies
Ahead of the interview, Koffler posted about drinking champagne, which she later said was a “joke, intended to boost viewership”
A Fox News segment is garnering attention online for its abrupt and awkward end after a guest appeared visibly inebriated during the live interview.
On Saturday, June 14, President Donald Trump held his pricey birthday military parade in Washington, D.C., and during Fox News’ live coverage, co-hosts Lawrence Jones and Emily Compagno invited Rebekah Koffler, a former Defense Intelligence Agency officer, to give her reaction.
When Koffler joined the special broadcast just after 9:30 p.m. local time, Compagno asked her to comment on the “symbolism” and “messaging” of the parade, which also celebrated the 250th birthday of the U.S. Army. Koffler began by appearing to incorrectly identify host Jones as another member of Fox News’ staff.
“I’m so excited, Emily and Lucas Tomlinson,” she began, her speech slurred. “Everybody, like, this is incredible! Finally, the United States is back! I want to really thank all of our army, navy and air force officers who have been sacrificing their lives, literally.”
Koffler, still slurring her speech, continued: “Their families have been contributing to the mission, most of the time for the past quarter of a century because of the mismanagement of the, uh, the administrative state, they’ve been fighting these foreign wars, but with our new Commander in Chief, Donald J. Trump, they are prioritizing America first.”
“And I want to thank these officers for all of these sacrifices and all of the hardships that their families have endured,” she went on.
Both Jones and Compagno then made separate attempts to interject, seemingly trying to cut Koffler off.
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(749x0:751x2):format(webp)/Rebekah-Koffler-061525-1-aa7993c8682746a7ad6f49d6ccca36a8.jpg)
Rebekah Koffler in 2022.Jason Davis/Getty Images
Instead, Koffler continued, this time correctly identifying Jones to tell him, “Lawrence Jones, you are doing … you’re rocking man!”
She then attempted to say a few more words, but the co-hosts cut her off entirely. The duo both thanked Koffler for her time before concluding the interview, which ended up being around a minute and a half long.
Neither Compagno nor Jones acknowledged the abrupt end or the guest’s behavior.
The day after the incident, the former defense intelligence agency officer addressed the appearance, and online reactions tied to it after the segment went viral, in an X post.
Claiming that “allegations against me related to my @FoxNews appearance #TrumpParade are FALSE,” Koffler said the “TRUTH” is that “audio, video during #MilitaryParade were corrupted due to intermittent, slow internet connection.”
A Fox News source, however, denied this, telling PEOPLE there “was no connection or audio issues with her hit.”
In the same June 15 statement, Koffler also addressed a since-deleted X post she made before the broadcast — a photo of a bottle of wine, alongside which she included the caption, “Refilling my #champagne glass.”
“Yes, I did post #champagne photo — this was a joke, intended to boost viewership,” she wrote.
Koffler is a freelance editorial writer, author and a strategic military intelligence analyst who formerly worked for the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, according to her Fox News bio.
News
THE FIRST QUESTION: Officers in Bennington, Vermont, said they initially approached Janette MacAusland to check on her health — but one of the first questions she asked them is now part of the investigative chain of events
On the evening of Friday, April 24, 2026, officers from the Bennington Police Department in Vermont responded to what appeared to be a routine welfare check at a family residence. The call came in around 9:15 p.m. after a woman…
THE LAST 24 HOURS: Investigators are reprocessing the final 24 hours before the children were found any conscious at their Wellesley home — including a brief interaction this evening that may now be more significant than initially thought
THE LAST 24 HOURS: Investigators Reconstruct the Final Day Before Tragedy Struck the MacAusland Home in Wellesley As the investigation into the deaths of 7-year-old Kai MacAusland and his 6-year-old sister Ella intensifies, authorities are meticulously reprocessing every detail from…
A CALL: Call logs related to Janette MacAusland show a 39-second outgoing call late Friday night — and the identity of the person who answered has yet to be released is complicating the case
A CALL: The 39-Second Outgoing Call Late Friday Night That Investigators Are Scrutinizing in the MacAusland Case As law enforcement pieces together the final hours of April 24, 2026, in the tragic deaths of 7-year-old Kai MacAusland and his 6-year-old…
TIMESTAMPS FROM NEIGHBORS: A neighbor near MacAusland’s home in Wellesley, Massachusetts, said they noticed unusual activity around 9:14 p.m. Friday — a timestamp now being compared by investigators with phone and vehicle data — but what they heard was even more horrifying
In the quiet, tree-lined streets of Wellesley, Massachusetts — an affluent Boston suburb known for its top-rated schools and family-friendly atmosphere — one neighbor’s casual observation on Friday, April 24, 2026, has become a critical piece in reconstructing the final…
RELATIVE’S CALL: A relative in Bennington, Vermont was the one who called police after seeing Janette MacAusland arrive late that night — but the first thing she reportedly said inside the house is now drawing attention
On the evening of Friday, April 24, 2026, a quiet residential street on Northside Drive in Bennington, Vermont, became the unlikely starting point for one of the most disturbing cases to cross state lines in recent memory. Janette MacAusland, a…
LAST MESSAGE DETAIL:Janette MacAusland’s ex-husband Samuel MacAusland has now spoken publicly about the custody fight — but investigators say a 7-word text she sent late Friday night is now being reviewed as one of the final messages before everything unfolded
In the affluent Boston suburb of Wellesley, Massachusetts, a bitter divorce and custody dispute ended in unimaginable tragedy on Friday night, April 24, 2026. Janette MacAusland, a 49-year-old acupuncturist, stands accused of strangling her two young children — 7-year-old Kai…
End of content
No more pages to load