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September 24, 2025 43 mins

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On today’s MKD, we talk about a Tesla driver and multiple kids burned alive in their car, a waxer wearing Meta glasses during an appointment, a foster dad busted with child porn on a cruise, an airline lawsuit after a man had a stroke, apparent human remains found in airport luggage, and a bracelet stolen from a mummy. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Mother Knows Dad starring Nicole and Jemmy and Maria qk Hi.
Everyone welcome The Mother Knows Death. On today's episode, we're
going to talk about yet another situation where a Tesla
caught on fire and the doors could not open. We

(00:30):
will get into reasons why meadowglasses are a terrible idea.
A foster dad with a pregnant wife and eight kids
busted with child porn on his phone while on a cruise,
an airline lawsuit after a man had a stroke while flying,
human remains found in luggage at the airport, and stolen

(00:50):
jewelry from a three thousand year old dead person. All
that and more on today's episode. Teslas are starting to
a little bit of a problem. It seems well, they're
certainly not having good press the last couple of weeks,
but this might just be like, you know how, like
I've always personally been a Boeing truther, but like they
were having a particularly bad year last year with bad

(01:14):
negative press. All right.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
So in this case, a forty three year old man
was driving a Tesla with three kids when suddenly they
crashed into a tree and with the exception of one
child who was able to get out. The guy and
two of the other children burned alive in the car
because first responders could not get the electronic doors open.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
So I don't know if it was actually first responders
or it was like to me, it seemed like it
was a guy that owned a business and it just
so happened to have like the accident happened right across
the street from where he was, and his immediate thought
was like, I have a fire extinguisher right here, let
me run out to help these people. And he was

(01:56):
there when it happened, and if the doors opened, he
would have been able to pull them out right away.
And he said that the car was so hot and
he was not able to open the doors, you know,
because their handles are like you.

Speaker 2 (02:10):
Have to like press them in to pull them out.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Yeah, So I feel like they're I don't know if
it's possible if they just have some kind of safety
feature when the car crashes that they just automatically pop out,
just because like I've never opened the Tesla before, so
I don't even know how I would. I would look
at the handle and be like, what do I do here?
Is it like very easy to figure out?

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Or like listen I'm a little dumb and everything, but
like Dedie has one, right, so anytime she drives me,
I'm like, how the fuck do you open your car to?

Speaker 1 (02:40):
Like I can't like, that's what I'm saying, Like, I
just feel like it. I just feel like it's a problem.
But more importantly, I guess I don't know what the
problem is. But obviously when those cars catch on fire,
they burn it much higher temperatures than a regular car
would because it's because of the battery. But I don't
know if it's like a certain temperature or whatever. But

(03:04):
so that is something to take into consideration. That the
doors are just too hot to even touch. I don't know,
I'd have to escape if like a regular I mean,
like a regular car gets out hot too, I suppose.
But they have like they have gear, they have like
gloves and stuff. I don't, I don't know, but.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
They have special protocols for these weird cars.

Speaker 1 (03:22):
They're they're supposed to like, I mean, because they just
have to be handled a little bit differently, you know.
But in this case, the the doors, the electricity of
the car shut off and the doors wouldn't open. And

(03:44):
think about this from this guy's perspective that he was
trying to be a bystanderd hero and like go up
to a car that was on fire and try to
save people, and think about being on the other side
and watching that happen and just being out of your
control totally. I mean, by the time fire department would
get there, it would almost just be that couple minutes.

(04:06):
Is the difference between life and death, you know?

Speaker 2 (04:09):
Yeah? And I don't really know what was going on
in this situation because it didn't say all the kids
were the man's and they were all nine years old,
so unless he had triplets, I would assume one or
two of the kids with his and the friend maybe.
But this is absolutely horrific. I can't possibly imagine that. I,
like you're saying, I can't imagine what the bystander was

(04:30):
going through, literally watching people burn alive in the car
and not being able to do anything about it.

Speaker 1 (04:35):
It has to be a specific set of circumstances, because
I've heard about it maybe like four times this year,
and I feel like every time it happens, we're gonna
hear about it. But in the grand scheme of like
how many Tuesslers there are on the road and how
many of them catch on fire. It's like it's not
happening all the time, so it has to be a

(04:56):
combination of something that's causing the electricity to cut out.
But I mean it's technology, so that's gonna happen, right.
I complained about it with my car, like every once
in a while it's just like, oh, I'm not turning
the screen on here, and then like I can't even
control my heat and stuff. It drives me nuts.

Speaker 2 (05:14):
Yeah, all right. This TikTok has been going viral over
the last couple of weeks for this woman is explaining
that she's been a customer of European wax Center for
almost a decade and when she was at her last appointment,
she realized in the middle of it that her waxer
was wearing the Meta AI glasses. You know, I didn't
We have a story a couple of weeks ago that

(05:36):
we ended up cutting for whatever reason about someone so
someone had these METAAI glasses on, or maybe it was
just like a video I sent you on Instagram or something.
Did I send you a video on Instagram that was
showing you the view of the meta glasses and showing
how you can go up so you could go up

(05:56):
to a person and take their picture, and then you
could Google image search or picture, and then you could
find their social media and then you could get their name,
and you could go up to them and be like, Hi, Sophia.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
How are you Do you remember me?

Speaker 2 (06:10):
Like, I don't remember seeing this, and that bothers me.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
Maybe I sent it to Gabe. It's just like I'll
look for it because it was within the past couple
of weeks, and I was just like, why the fuck
did they make this technology? Like why like why.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
It's points It's pointless to me. The only positive example
I've seen is when where where was there just really
bad flooding? There was there was a flood really bad
somewhere in the last couple of months, and somebody used
their Meda glasses to like record the damage in their home.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Right, yeah, that you could also use your phone.

Speaker 2 (06:48):
That's exactly sit exactly. But it's the only example. I
was like, Okay, this seems practical in this case, but
also not necessary. But in this case, this girl's concern
is that she's midwax appointment. And even though she called
the girl out and she said they were off and
the battery was dead and whatever. She doesn't know if
that's true. And what if this person is taking footage

(07:08):
during these wax appointments and uploading them on a porn
site or making money off of them somehow?

Speaker 1 (07:14):
Is there a way that you can, like, are these
very identifiable if someone's wearing them, because they're just aren't
they like straight up like wayfair like ray band glasses.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
They look like regular ray bands. But maybe there's something
on this arm of it suggesting what they are. And
I don't know, I've never really seen it, And now
that we've looked at this article, maybe i'd be more
hip to the model they are. But they look pretty
much like normal glasses. But maybe on the side it
says meta or something.

Speaker 1 (07:45):
There has to be a way that you could tell,
because in this article they said that there was this
exotic dancer who said that people were coming in and
trying to wear these glasses, and like the bouncers are like,
you're not coming in here with those glasses on.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
You must be able to tell in some capacity.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
But just like, I just like, this is one of
those things that I'm just like, I really cannot I
can't understand how the good would outweigh the bad on this.
This is just for every creepster boy or weirdo, like
I mean, obviously like Zuckerberg made them so like there
you go, I guess, but really like it's just it's

(08:25):
just so bad and it's scary because let's say someone
like momm was going to a procedure or something like
a going to college disappointment and someone was wearing them
like they like some people don't even know those things exist. Well,
like exactly how how often is this being used for
bad things?

Speaker 2 (08:44):
I would say it's only being used for bad things.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
I'm not a total idiot.

Speaker 2 (08:49):
I know that most places you go outside you're under
like twenty four seven surveillance. But is it necessary to
be in people's glasses where like you can't even have
an inner at Starbucks or something without somebody being able
to pull up all your information and possibly where you
live just by looking at you.

Speaker 1 (09:08):
I just I just don't like that even a little bit.
Like God, I'm just thinking about like how terrible that
that that that could just be, like people could start
like OnlyFans pages and stuff. Well that's what I'm saying,
like see, and then that makes me think about only
fans like they have to have some kind of monitoring

(09:29):
on only fans, right, Like let's say, for example, this
waxing person was videotape in their clients getting waxed, and
then it's like there's that whole fetish of like, oh,
these people don't know they're being filmed. That's like a thing, right,
and then like you're you're like hurting them like near

(09:49):
their vagina and stuff like that. If those videos started
going on someone's only fan page which are clearly like
not taken with consent, like is there a way for
them to monitor that? Because there has to be people
doing We actually have a story that we're going to
talk about on the YouTube Live in the Gross Room

(10:11):
this week about this very thing about just like weird
shit people are doing on OnlyFans, but like there has
to be people that are like pushing it beyond like
oh totally, you know what I mean, Like, yeah, do
they have some sophisticated AI that could pick up certain
things like that?

Speaker 2 (10:30):
Or I don't know how they're like, like how.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
Do they get like child sexual abuse? How do they
know how old these people?

Speaker 2 (10:37):
Like, Well, they have to have a monitoring in some
capacity because of stuff with like children but like you're
saying there's fetish murders and stuff, so I don't know.
Like a lot of people in this video and the
comments were saying you should call the police. And while
I think in some cases that could be dramatic, Like
I would be really upset if this happened to me,

(10:59):
because even the person saying they're dead and it might
have just been a truly innocent mistake that they like
wore those glasses that they or they weren't thinking about it.
I would not be comfortable with the potential of like
I'm going in to get my vag wexed and now
my vagina might be splait all over the internet. Yeah,
I think that's policeworthy because they need to investigate. If

(11:19):
you had a camera on.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
The wall, you would absolutely be like they're filming me,
Like yeah, exactly. It's even worse because like you could
get all up in there with the glasses, and the
place is saying they looked into it and confirmed they
were dead, Like how did they know that. I don't
care if they're dead. I don't even want them on
your face.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
Yeah exactly, Like they shouldn't be allowed to be in there.

Speaker 1 (11:40):
You shouldn't be allowed to really wear them at any job, like,
and I understand that their prescription glasses. I saw like
I didn't actually like look at what they looked like,
but I saw that when I walked by Lens craft Ors.
They sell them there. So I'll go in there next
time just to see what they look like. But I'm like,
people are getting them as regular glasses. So I'm gonna

(12:02):
post I'm gonna try to find this video and then
I'll post it in the groceryroom about the point of
view from the glasses, like to see what they look
like for people and what they're capable of of people.
It's so disturbing.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
Yeah, I'm really I'm really enough for this, and I don't,
you know, I just don't see the purpose in having them.
It's they just seemed kind of dumb, all right. A
foster dad was on a cruise with his pregnant wife
and eight of their kids, seven of whom were foster
kids that they adopted, and all together they fostered twenty kids.
So these kids were ages five through twelve, and at

(12:35):
the end of the cruise, this guy gets busted for
having child porn on his phone.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
So I have this is like really crazy because I
didn't even know this and I had this written down
that the guy so he was in Miami coming off
of the cruise or was he going on to the cruise.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
No, he was coming off the cruise, right, So he's.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
Coming off the cruise in Miami and he got picked
to be a random secondary screening that wasn't random. It
said that it was.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
It said it was random, but then it was like
he gave them the password to his phone and they
went in Google Photos and found a folder marked six
year old Rare and there was forty five photos of
child pornography. Like why don't search the contents of inside
of your phone during a security search?

Speaker 1 (13:27):
All right, that's what I'm trying to check because they
said in the article that they he was randomly picked, aside,
I don't, and he willingly gave his password, and I
was just like, WHOA, is that something that they like
can do because I guess they're checking to see because
they did that with us right when we came from Bermuda.
They were just checking to see, like.

Speaker 2 (13:48):
They don't look inside your phone. You pull up a
art code that's like your ticket and like, oh yeah,
but didn't they check to see.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
If we like like we were like what the stuff
we were bringing in? Yeah, you go through security like
tsn okay, so that so they did a secondary thing
and he willingly like because they did that with like
when we went on when you know, when we got
to the ship, they did that and then I had
to go through a separate security thing, remember, because I

(14:16):
tried to smuggle in my electric blanket and they thought
I was a risk. But they weren't like here, oh,
let me look in your phone.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
Unless there's a magic device that scans your phone and
is able to pull up things like this. They knew
exactly what they're looking for, and they use it as
an excuse to catch him, because why are they going
on his phone in general and then into his Google
photos and then into this folder like they knew it
was there. Yeah, that's what was like freak, Like listen,

(14:45):
the whole story is like surprise, like the foster system
screwed up. But like I was more shocked about Oh,
they're just like allowed to go through your phone like that,
for example. This is why I don't believe it. In December,
we were in Lake Placid. We were very close to Canada,
and we were like, instead of staying one more night

(15:07):
at the hotel in Lake Placid, why don't we go
to Montreal for night? I brought my incorrect passport. I
brought my old one. We did not realize it until
we were almost in Canada because I have an active passport.
They were gonna let us go through, but they had
to search the car, and let me tell you, they
searched the entire car. We both got interrogated about what

(15:27):
we were doing there, what hotel are you staying at,
what time is the check in? What hockey game are
you going to? Who's playing that team? What time does
that game start? Like full blown interrogation forty five minutes.
They searched every crevice of the car. At no point
did they look in my phone?

Speaker 1 (15:45):
But what but like, wouldn't they have to have like
a search warrant to do that.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
Yes, this is what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
But the thing is in the article though they said
that he willingly gave them his phone, like was he
just like like seriously, like is it possible? They pulled
him over for this secondary screening and he was just like,
here you go, look in look in my phone.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
I swear I have nothing to hide, and then you
go through all the apps like Google, Like why I
even looking Google?

Speaker 1 (16:14):
Because I feel like none of that stuff would be
able to be held up in court if it wasn't
with like the proper paperwork associated with it.

Speaker 2 (16:22):
This story is either way misreported or.

Speaker 1 (16:26):
Well regardless this guy, Like I the thing is is
with foster care, I do believe that there's genuinely people
that just have a broken heart for like a soft
spot for these kids that need a home. But I
also think that they need to be you know how,
like it's really hard to adopt a kid because they

(16:48):
want to make sure. They need to be like that
with foster parents too, because some of them are using
the situation just to make money a month. Others like
I'm sorry, Like there's gonna be so actual predators and
the fact that this guy's had twenty foster children, Like
who are those six years olds that are on his phone?
Are they ones that he fostered? Are they? Like? Is

(17:11):
that what he's doing? And like it's also very weird
because I just saw that we just had one in
Camden County another one for dudes busted this week for
child porn.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
Somebody went to high school. It's just got busted for it.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
And it's like you think about when you meet people
and stuff, you're just like, oh, I'm in the garden.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
Oh yeah, let's meet at the garden center and go
to this class whatever.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
Like how does it come up in conversation that you
like to jerk off looking at pictures and naked little kids?
How how do you make a friend and talk about
that out loud that you share files with these people?

Speaker 2 (17:46):
Well, I think they're meeting in like these weird chat
rooms and stuff and then meeting it, Like how does it?
Like it's just I don't understand how it goes down,
but like it's happening.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
A lot, just because it's like not because it's not
just like like I understand, like like I've dated people before.
I understand how you go from like a stranger to
like talking about having sex with somebody or whatever. But
like that's like like pedophilia is so frowned upon. It's
like the worst thing that if you're not into it,

(18:21):
it's either like you're into it and it's the best
thing ever, or you're like the most disgusting person ever. Right, So,
how do how do you feel.

Speaker 2 (18:28):
Comfortable people in the middle that are pretty lax about it, honestly.

Speaker 1 (18:32):
Yeah, well those people just need to go away. But regardless,
like how like how does that? How do you feel
comfortable enough with a stranger to like bring that up
that you're into that and you both decide, like you
both get into the fact that you're into that.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
It's so weird to me, it's disgusting. It's like it's like.

Speaker 1 (18:52):
Meeting a stranger and just being like, you know, I
really want to I really want to kill someone, you
want to kill like something like so perverse and weird.
It's just like and you're like, no, I'm serious, Like
let's do that. Like it's just weird. I just can't
wrap my head around it. And it happens like a lot. Yeah,
So this guy's sharing these files with someone on Google.

(19:15):
Google doesn't have a way to check this shit out either,
by the way, unless he specifically wanted to be caught
and was like, take a look at this. There is
something not adding up in this story. So he's so
the wife's pregnant and they have eight kids with them
on this cruise, Like you also the questionister, if you

(19:41):
you also have to question like and let's be honest,
Like if you have eight kids and one on the way, Like,
why do you want to be a foster parent? Like
their kids are annoying, especially if you have eight kids,
they're really seven.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
Of the kids are their foster kids.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
But why would they even talk more like I don't
and they let them adopt seven children? Yeah, that's that's
like I don't know. It's just kind of like.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
Is it better? Obviously this person's a pedophile, so like
let's remove this. But I'm saying, think of a normal
couple that's gonna adopt all those children. Is it better
for the kid to be living in the system his
whole life or just have living in a more stable
environment with more children?

Speaker 1 (20:24):
Like think about that. I don't know, because I start
because then I start to question, like what person in
their right mind would want to have that many children?
Like you can't even pay attention to that many children, right,
So it's like like I would start thinking, like what
are they doing with these children? I don't know, I
think it's necessary.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
I don't think anybody like wakes up and they're like,
well some people do. Some people are gonna wake up
and be like I want ten children. But I think
a lot of people that have a lot of children
like this taking away this case is people that are
like extremely religious, don't believe in birth control things like that,
and then they just like go with it and.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
That's that's fine, but like when you're gone, I don't know,
just the adoption they like I said, like they should
just be like a little bit more. And obviously like
maybe they were, they did do a lot, but how
they gonna know, Like somebody has this on their phone
and then like you are this woman, you're married to
this guy. This isn't like you're looking at seventeen year

(21:22):
olds that are barely underage. It's like you're looking at
six Like you're like, seriously, such a disgusting person.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
Like it's just it's repulsive.

Speaker 1 (21:30):
I just I don't even like then I would never
let my kids go see him again. Like it's and
now she's a single, she's going to be a single
mom of twenty kids or whatever, like.

Speaker 2 (21:42):
Well they have they will have nine children when she
gives birth. But he is facing thirty years in prison,
and I think he should just be set on fire.
This episode is brought to you by The Gross Room.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
Well, speaking of setting people on fire, there's a lot
of cases of that in the gross room. It sounds like,
you know, we were just talking about that Tesla case
and it just sounds like a horrific death. Honestly, like
up there with something you never want to happen with you.
We have our YouTube live this Friday. We're going to
talk about that OnlyFans case, which is super interesting, along

(22:26):
guys other things.

Speaker 2 (22:27):
And we had the best YouTube live of all last week.
There is lots of laughs everybody.

Speaker 1 (22:32):
I was like crying, like my mass Gara got messed
up because I was crying laughing so hard.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Yeah, we were having a real good time. What's his
name made an appearance, no something, it'll be a recurring.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
Character, some really some really insane looking person. I'll just
give you a little hint. We were talking about certain
certain people that are that kill people that are very
good looking versus ones that are not. And you can
everybody will know well what that we were talking about
Luigi for sure. But now we're not going to talk

(23:09):
about who the other people were.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
But the good thing about YouTube live is you can
go back and watch it after we'd.

Speaker 1 (23:14):
Doing yeah and yeah, and it's live, So there you go.
We can't even we can't even restrain ourselves. Plus that
was just after a really crazy day of just running
around and it was fun though. So yeah, so check
that out in the Grosser Room. And we also have
Forensic Friday this week. Last week we did brain contusions

(23:36):
or bruises that you would see if a person got
beat with a baseball bat in a real case of
a person that got to death with a baseball bat.
And this week, I don't know what I'll do, kind
of just like go with the flow and see what
I feel like writing about. So it'll be good.

Speaker 2 (23:52):
Check it over to the grocerroom dot com now to
sign up. All right, So American Airlines has to pay
eleven million dollars to a passenger after he had a
stroke on a flight and it was determined they didn't
follow proper protocols.

Speaker 1 (24:06):
Yeah, so got eleven million dollars. Just so much so
then I was like, Okay, something definitely happened, but I'm
just like, how's it their fault that this guy had
a stroke. But then when I read the story, I'm like, Okay,
this is really bad. So apparently they were getting ready
to take off and they were still taxied outside and
the wife noticed that her husband couldn't use his hands

(24:29):
to use his phone, and he couldn't speak, and she
was so freaked out by it. She went to the
stewardess and talked to the pilot and was just like,
I think my husband's having a stroke. And they kind
of blew her off. They didn't call any medical professionals.
You know, normally they'll be like, is there a doctor

(24:49):
on the plane? Nothing, And they took off. And then
during the flight, while they were over the ocean on
their way to Spain, he did stroke out and they
weren't able to go to the hospital until they landed
in Spain. Go to the hospital, and you know, with
we'll talk about this in a little bit of why

(25:10):
it's so important that a stroke gets recognized immediately. But
so much time went by that now he's permanently disabled,
and she, the wife, is now like his caregiver. And
if they would have went to the hospital within fifteen
or twenty minutes of him presenting with those symptoms, he

(25:31):
would likely be like walking and talking and fine. And
now he could no longer speak, he can't write, he
has he needs daily care. And I think it's one
hundred percent, Like this is a lawsuit worthy thing, I think,
because I mean think about when you're on an airplane,

(25:51):
you're trapped on the airplane, and if they had an
opportunity to get her off, because they didn't even take
off yet, it's it's just like completely irresponsible.

Speaker 2 (26:02):
Even if they just took off five minutes before and
she expressed this concern, they should have turned around because
like I'm sorry, but like people just don't stop speaking
and can't use their hands all of a sudden unless
they're having an episode.

Speaker 1 (26:15):
Yeah, and n like, listen, this would have been a
totally different situation if they were mid air over the
ocean and that's when he first presented with symptoms, then
like it is what it is. It's gonna take you
four or five hours to get where you're going, and
like all they could do is still call a doctor
on the plane and see if there's anything that they
can do, but you just kind of got to wait
to get to the hospital. So when you have a stroke,

(26:40):
there's certain there's an acronym that everybody should know, really
everybody that's a human should know. But really definitely important
if you're in a situation where you work at like
at anywhere, a school, an airport, a bus, anything that
you are in charge of people right, ems, fire, police,

(27:05):
anything like that, any single time. So the acronym is
called B fast, and the reason that it's that is
because the faster you get to the hospital, the more
likely you will not have long term effects or die
from this. So it's likely that this guy had in
a schemex stroke because that's the most common kind of stroke,

(27:26):
and that occurs when there's some kind of a blockage
in one of the arteries in your neck or in
your brain that cause oxygen from your heart to not
be able to get to your brain. So the longer
you don't have oxygen going to that part of your brain,
the more likely it is that you're gonna have these
serious side effects from this. So, so B fast. So

(27:48):
the B stands for balance. Is the person having a
loss of balance or coordination? E? Eyes is there a
change in vision? F face drooping to one side? Is
their face drooping? Do they look like they're they're kind
of slurring with their speech? A is arms weakness in
the limb. So this guy, already we know, was having

(28:12):
the weakness in his limbs. He wasn't able to pick
up his phone. The next one is s speech difficulty
speaking to others, so we know that happened too. So
he had two of these things and then t of
the bee fast is time called nine to one one
right away right away, And then he got he's actually

(28:34):
lucky that he's not like like comatose or dead, honestly,
And then think about this, You're an American and now
you're going to Spain to get medical treatment. Not to
say that they're not totally capable of it. They are,
it's just unfamiliar. It's unfamiliar, and I would feel a
lot more comfortable if my husband was in a hospital

(28:56):
in Miami instead of Spain, just because like I don't
speak the language, I don't understand how things work over there.
Like I just would feel more comfortable being in America.
And I get that that's a risk of traveling abroad
and stuff like that, but like it just didn't have
to go down like that.

Speaker 2 (29:11):
Well, he was in critical condition in Spain for three
weeks and then he had to return to the USBA
Air Ambulance, which I'm just sure is so absolutely scary
to go through, and like what does that cost? Is flight?
Like five or six hours, yes, so okay, So he
started showing symptoms of it before they even took off,
and then it was developing over six hours. I think

(29:33):
like the fact that he was showing those symptoms because
you know, you're you're married to somebody or anybody. This
happened to one of my friends when I was when
I was rotating, when he was working at the m's office, Like,
he was at work, one of my he was older
than me, you know, and he was at work and

(29:54):
somebody was like, dude, you're something's wrong with your face.
And he went to the hospital and they were like,
you're having a stroke. And he wouldn't even.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
Have known, because like sometimes you don't know it yourself,
and that person in his office like saved his life.
Like if if something like if you see something like
that like in a person, especially like someone that's like,
you know, over fifty years old, you should just be
like like bring it to their attention, because sometimes you
have like these these little signs of it before like

(30:24):
the big event happens. And in that case, like specifically,
because they said that he didn't really stroke out until
they were over the ocean, which you know, I mean
they were in Miami, so they would have been over
the ocean pretty quickly. But if they would have went
to the hospital and gotten an ambulance within fifteen or
twenty minutes, the outcome would have been one hundred percent.

(30:45):
And I think with all the medical experts and stuff
at the trial, like they were able to prove that
and that's why they got offered eleven million dollars.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
Well, this is an interesting thing I want to ramp So, like,
obviously they got the lawsuit, happened, and then it was
brought to trial. But then it's saying the jury worded
thirteen point twenty eight million in damages, but then reduce
the amount by twenty seven and a half percent after
assigning partial responsibility to the plaintiffs, leaving the amount at
nine point six million, and then with interest it turned

(31:12):
into the eleven million.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
So the partial responsibility. So I was thinking this too,
like if if this happened with me and with Gabe
and I was one hundred percent, and like take me
being out of a medical person, like just me being
like something's wrong here, right mm hmm, Like are they
saying like she should have caused more of a scene,

(31:34):
She shouldn't have just been like, Okay.

Speaker 2 (31:36):
I guess well, I just don't like I really think.

Speaker 1 (31:41):
I think if I was that scared, i'd be like,
you know what, like have the marshals take me off
the plane in handcuffs, like get my husband to a
freaking hospital right now, you know.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
Totally, But like if you have a bunch of people
kind of telling you that you're overreacting and something's not
a big deal, listen, they gave her a lot of
more for a reason because like they were wrong, bottom line,
because there was like something about them making jokes about
it too. Yeah, airline staff, which inappropriate, all right, Speaking

(32:10):
of airlines. At Tampa's airport, a passenger had supposedly declared
ten cigars in his luggage. However, when the bag was served,
security found a slew of prohibited items, including plants, undeclared cigars,
and a foil wrapped duffel bag containing what appeared to
be human remains. And he said it was first like
a ritual or something. Yeah, you're like, that's that makes

(32:33):
you more guilty. Well, I don't know, like a part.

Speaker 1 (32:37):
So when I'm looking, so you see that these border
is it a border patrol agent? Is that what it is, like, Yeah,
border and customs.

Speaker 2 (32:45):
I think so.

Speaker 1 (32:46):
They have like this piece of like tinfoil unwrapped. There's
definitely what appears to be a human skull, and you
could see a mandible in some vertebral bones. But the
bones that are next to the skull, I'm not one
hundred percent sure that they're human, just because they're very
short and thick and like and I don't know, they

(33:09):
just look like a little I guess they could be,
like they would have to be for the length of them,
like hands or feet bones, but I don't, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (33:20):
They just look very like fat, like something looks off.

Speaker 1 (33:24):
Yeah, I mean it's just the one picture, and I like,
obviously I didn't touch him in my hand and stuff,
but like it's possible if he's really like listen, like
people could totally be doing a ritual. We had this
whole convert If you guys didn't listen to our episode
with uh doctor Paul Kunaris that we had on last week.
We actually like talk about this very subject about just

(33:45):
like the different things that people do in other countries
when people die, but more importantly, like how you can
go to like Bolivia or something and just be like
I want to get a skull for five dollars and
they would sell it to you, and and but like
how you can't take it back home because like of
what just happened right now, they put it through X
ray and they're like, this is a human skull, You're

(34:05):
not having this. So they took this from this guy
and they said they destroyed it because of health reasons
or something, which I think is a little weird because
I'm like.

Speaker 2 (34:14):
Yeah, I thought that was weird.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
Skeleton is imposing any health reasons? And on top of that,
did you just take it from him and say like, oh,
we're getting rid of this, okay bye, Like cause like
did like where did that comevestigation? I guess I guess
not like from another country. But you're just kind of like,
oh cool, so you could like kill someone in another country,

(34:38):
take their bones over American and they'll just be like, yeah,
we're trashing these their biohazard buy like on your way,
you know, Like I don't know.

Speaker 2 (34:46):
I just again just another story with not enough information.

Speaker 1 (34:50):
Yeah, and like it's it's just totally possible though that
like he just bought Who the frick knows what people do? Right?
I just think like it's it's good, Like just from
people that work in the airport in general, and customs
and stuff like the one that just happened on the
cruise too. You're just like, they probably have some really

(35:12):
good stories to tell of the shit that they say.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
You know, my dream book. When I was in Vegas,
we were on the elevator with the cleaning people and
they were talking about like something weird they found, and
I was like, you guys have to write a book
of the weird stuff you find in hotel rooms. Yeah,
that's probably really juicy too, especially in Las Vegas because
people get.

Speaker 1 (35:33):
Out gray there well. And plus when we were talking
about the Diddy trial and stuff, it's like they were
getting like pools with baby oil and shit, and you're
just like, what do people do in hotel rooms?

Speaker 2 (35:44):
Like exactly all right? Last earlier this month, a three
thousand year old bracelet that was on a mummy at
the Egyptian Museum and Cairo went missing, and it turns
out that a restoration specialist stole it and melted it
down for gold.

Speaker 1 (36:01):
Bullshit.

Speaker 2 (36:03):
Listen, it's the bullshit.

Speaker 1 (36:04):
You're a restoration specialist, you know how much that shit's worth.
You did not just take it for the gold to
get four thousand dollars worth of melted gold.

Speaker 2 (36:13):
Unless you're knacky and you have a gambling day and
you just needed any money. Ye yah.

Speaker 1 (36:18):
Which is totally which is totally possible that this restoration
specialist at this prestigious museum in Cairo is a junkie
that's on meth. That's just like trying to sell off
this to the local pawn shop, right, I don't. I
think that they're trying to trace it and they're just like, well,

(36:39):
we melted it, what are you going to do? It's
it still exists, Trust me, it still exists. It's worth
Like I can't even tell you how much that it's.
It's priceless. It's from a three thousand year old mummy.
Like I would definitely more than four thousand dollars for
that shit, Like come on, that's.

Speaker 2 (36:57):
The only reason I could see it actually go down,
as if this person's like a true degenerate and like
was like I just need quick cash, and I know
I could get a.

Speaker 1 (37:05):
Couple of thousand. It happened. Listen, if you're a person
that like restores mummies, you know how much that stuff
goes for They probably sold it to someone that's just
like an independent collector that paid like hundreds of thousands
of dollars for it, and it like paid off their
house and all this stuff. And it's like, oh, sorry,

(37:26):
I got it melted.

Speaker 2 (37:28):
Yeah, but you're still gonna go to jail. I don't know. Yeah,
but like.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
But like you got, they don't know what happened with
the money of it. I'm telling you right now, like
I just don't buy it.

Speaker 2 (37:39):
So I can you even fathom how you would pronounce
this mummy's name. I looked that up four times and
I still can't say it. Well, I'm not gonna try
to say it, but it starts with an A. And
it was a little known but intriguing sovereign of Egypt's
twenty first Dynasty, ruling from one thousand and one to
nineteen No, just from one thousand and one to nine

(38:02):
hundred and ninety two BC. Yeah, but going backwards.

Speaker 1 (38:06):
Like a bracelet from that time period, and you're gonna
be like yeah, haw difficult, Like no.

Speaker 2 (38:13):
Unless you're a true piece of shit in need of
some quick cash.

Speaker 1 (38:17):
I don't know if there's that level a piece of
shit there they're they're like like that that like that
whole like meth head selling your stuff off at the
local bar. Like, No, that that's like specific to the
United States.

Speaker 2 (38:33):
It was really probably specific to Philadelpha.

Speaker 1 (38:35):
These people know what that Like Listen, I'm gonna go
as far as to say, is if you're Egyptian and
you live in Egypt, Like that was like a huge thing, right,
Like they would rob the graves and stuff, and a
lot of them didn't have a lot of things in
them because people were taking all of these treasures and
selling them for big bucks. Now that there's really not
that much left, Like I just I don't buy it,

(38:59):
Like I just don't buy well.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
Also, like the way it was worded at first was
like museum employee steals it. And this is not any
museum employee. It's not like a random ticket person that
somehow was able to get it. It's a person that
specializes in restoring them. So you would assume this is
a highly educated person that did that.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
Also, because like I'm thinking about the area at the
University of Pen Museum where they where they clean up
the mummies and stuff like that, and it's like behind plexiglass,
Like I doubt that anybody could just go back there.
There's probably like special clearance because they don't want people
touching it and getting their fingerprints. Like these people are
wearing gloves while they're handling these things. It's like not

(39:41):
everyone has access to that. Like that, they now trust me,
like this is this is like this is like a
well planned out way to get a bunch of money,
and there's no tracing it. Like they said, first they
they called a silver dealer, who then contacted a dealer
who then was just like, I'm gonna melt this down

(40:03):
and it's four thousand dollars worth of gold, Like there's
no way that three people would touch that thing and
be like, yeah, this is a good idea. It's that
are from Egypt that know how much that stuff is
worth exactly.

Speaker 2 (40:16):
It's it's essentially a priceless heirloom.

Speaker 1 (40:20):
Like think about how much didn't Kim Kardashian spend like
some insane amount of money on a necklace that Princess
Diana had.

Speaker 2 (40:28):
Yes, i mean her original sheep sweater, the one she
wore on her body sold at souther Be'es for a
million dollars.

Speaker 1 (40:35):
Okay, that's a sweater that's that's not even a piece
of jewelry that'll last forever, right, and it's Princess Diana.
This is this is like a pharaoh. What are you
talking about? This thing is worth millions of dollars. There's
I just whatever. I think there're they need to be Yeah,
I hope they're listening to our show because they they

(40:57):
need to like do a better stigation of this.

Speaker 2 (41:01):
They also need to make National treasure Chiros. Yes, I've
invested in how this went down. Okay, guys. We are
going to be at the Wildlife CSI late to buy
his Wildlife Park next Friday. I can't believe that's in
a week.

Speaker 1 (41:16):
I'm so excited about that.

Speaker 2 (41:18):
It's gonna be so cool. And then the following week
we're going to be sponsoring the golf carts and I
will be volunteering at the Keeping Hope Alive IVF Golf Classic,
and the following weekend we will be at Darkseide, New
Jersey and Edison. If you have reviews for us, please
head over to Apple or Spotify, subscribe to our YouTube channel,
and if you have a story for us, please to
mint to stories at Mothernosdeath dot com and we will

(41:38):
be back tomorrow with a very special episode.

Speaker 1 (41:40):
Awesome We'll say tomorrow. Thank you for listening to Mother
Nos Death. As a reminder, my training is as a
pathologists assistant. I have a master's level education and specialize
in anatomy and pathology education. I am not a doctor
and I have not diagnosed or treated anyone dead or

(42:03):
alive without the assistance of a licensed medical doctor. This show,
my website, and social media accounts are designed to educate
and inform people based on my experience working in pathology,
so they can make healthier decisions regarding their life and
well being. Always remember that science is changing every day

(42:24):
and the opinions expressed in this episode are based on
my knowledge of those subjects at the time of publication.
If you are having a medical problem, have a medical question,
or having a medical emergency, please contact your physician or
visit an urgent care center, emergency room, or hospital. Please rate, review,

(42:45):
and subscribe to Mother Knows Death on Apple, Spotify, YouTube,
or anywhere you get podcasts.

Speaker 2 (42:52):
Thanks

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