All Episodes

September 17, 2024 • 17 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
All right, welcome to the program. Everybody, good to have
you here. Jimmy is my name, and it's news Top
six hundred K cool. Don't forget anytime you miss me.
If I'm not on the radio, you can find me
at the iHeartRadio app. It's amazing how that works. The
iHeart Radio app is there for your love and affection.

(00:22):
You can just type in my name Jimmy Lakey, and
you'll see two podcasts with my name. What is the
Laky Effect podcast, And that's the hour by hour, interview
by interview breakdown of this radio show, so you can
listen to it again and again, and goodness knows you
probably don't want to, but you could again just type
in my name. The other podcast you'll see is one
called The Critical Mission and Today. As soon as this

(00:46):
show is done, I'll be heading to my podcasting studio
and recording some new Critical Mission podcast that is on
the docket for the Leaky Schedule today. And the Critical
Mission podcast is not about politics. It's my purpose based
on the premise of the two most important days of
a person's life, the day you're born the day you
figure out why, and we try our best. I try

(01:07):
my best to tell the story of people's why why
they're sucking oxygen on the planet, living for a greater
cause than themselves. I hope doing something good. Whether it's
small or big, it doesn't matter. Do something good. So anyway,
that's the Critical Mission podcast, based on the fact that
all of us are here on a critical mission. We
just got to figure out what it is. So just
type in my name on the iHeartRadio app and those

(01:29):
are the two podcasts we've taken a couple of with
my golf event golf tournament that's legendary and all this
stuff there, we did not want to get kind of
lost in the shuffle of the Critical Mission podcast, so
we have not released one and a couple of We're
one week off and we'll get back on schedule now
that the golf event is all done and we're going
to record some today as well. So anyway, that's just

(01:51):
go to the iHeartRadio app any where you listen to podcasts.
It still works, Type in my name Jimmy Lakey and
you will see it there. All right. I want to
bring into the conversation a veteran, a CIA lawyer, and
it's he's written a book called Dangerous injustice. How did

(02:12):
the DOJ's about the weaponization of the Justice Department? And
Joseph Sweeney is on the hotline, Joseph walking to the program.
Thanks for joining us here in the great state of Colorado.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
Appreciate you, thank you, thank you for having me.

Speaker 1 (02:27):
Well, let's dive into this topic of dangerous injustice. I'm
sitting here, let me kind of let me set it
up and I'll let you go from there. I'm sitting
here watching the departments that are under this administration. And
you have Secret Service, obviously with a lot of problems
for excuse me, two assassination attempts in sixty days, haven't

(02:48):
had one before this in forty three years. And ultimately
that's under the Department of Homeland Security. The cabinet level
officer there is Alejandro Mayhorcas, and it seems like there's
auld be accountability. Then you have our Justice Department under
Mary Garland, and I think if you do look at
the surveys, even most people say that probably the Department

(03:08):
of Justice, Lady Justice, has taken the blindfold off, to
say the least. And that brings us to You've written
a book about it, that the Department of Justice is
one of those departments. SET probably has lost a lot
of people's respect, and Lady Justice has lost the blindfold.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
Yes, that is exactly true. And what I did in
my book was I compared how doj and then FBI
handled the two recent cases, one of our current president
and one of the former president, both for allegedly mishandling
classified information. And what I found was that those investigations

(03:46):
were starkly different, and the charging decisions in those cases
were completely diametrically opposed to each other. And after analyzing
those two cases, I traced all the way back to
twenty sixteen Trump's Trump's first presidential campaign and how even
back then, DJ and the FBI had unlawfully targeted Trump

(04:09):
and his campaign back then with intelligence collection authorities. And
then I went forward and looked at the you know,
the persecution of Trump's confident Roger Stone. You know, when
the FBI raided Roger Stone's house, it looked like the
opening scene of Saving Private Ryan. They were, you know,
they were dressed like you know, American soldiers raiding Omaha Beach.

(04:31):
And then I looked at the persecution of General Flynn,
President Trump's national security advisor, All unlawful persecutions. And then
I went forward to look at the rate of mar
A Lago that was eight of August twenty twenty two,
and by that point, you know, where there was this
kind of mission creep with DOJ and the FBI, where

(04:52):
they just kept getting more and more aggressive, where you know,
culminating in the rate of mar A Lago, which was
basically you know, by that point they weren't even trying
to hide the fact that they were acting as an
enforcement arm of the Democratic Party. And then after the raid,
of course, we have now two indictments against Trump. And

(05:14):
so in doing all that, in my book, I go
into great detail. I used to work on these types
of cases for the government, and so I brought a
level of analysis that most people could not, and I
was able to see things that most people could not.
There were only four cases in US history where senior
government officials were investigated or prosecuted for mishandling classified information.

(05:37):
I worked on three of those four cases. I'm very
familiar with the subject matter, and I dug deep on
the cases, and my book proves the weaponization of DOJ
and the FBI.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
The Voice of Joseph Sweeney he's written a book called
Dangerous Injustice. We'll talk more about where you can get
that book and how to get it again. Joseph Sweeney
as a background as a veteran CIA lawyer, Joseph, let'st
have had that the decisions by these councils that decided
to charge or not charge. This is the special counsel
for Joe Biden said, well, there's probably something to charge

(06:09):
him with, but he would come across as a old
guy that could remember anything. That's the one where should
have raised some red. Flying said there's some mental decline
for Joe Biden because the prosecutor actually, or the one
that could have advised for prosecution, said yeah, there's probably
something to charge here, but he's not fit for trial.
Is we're talking the same thing right?

Speaker 2 (06:31):
That is exactly it. And it's even worse than most
people realize because when the special prosecutor gave that excuse
basically that Biden was too senile to prosecute, he was
talking about a very specific piece of evidence, and that
was when Biden was working with a ghost writer. This
was right after he left the vice presidency February of

(06:53):
twenty seventeen. The ghost writer was recording conversations with Biden
for the book and what to take. One of the tapes,
the audio tapes, Biden is clearly heard saying to the ghostwriter,
I just found all the classified stuff downstairs. Now, that's
in Biden's private home at the time, and he was

(07:13):
a private citizen. Absolutely should not have had classified information.
That is, you know, that's what a prosecutor would call
a taped confession in any other type of case. But
the prosecutor was bending over backwards not to prosecute Biden.
And so what he said was, even though he had
this taped confession of Biden, I just found all the
classified stuff downstairs. He said, Well, his memory was so

(07:38):
poor that he probably, you know, he could have forgotten
right after he found this stuff. He could have forgotten
that he found it. Now, I would highlight that's February
of twenty seventeen. That's three years before Biden even became president.
Even then, the Special Council determined that Biden's memory was

(07:59):
so poor that he would have forgotten that he found
all the classified right after he found it.

Speaker 1 (08:04):
The name of the book is dangerous in Justice. You're
talking about the Department of Justice. We also, though have
under the Department of Justice, you have the FBI. Do
you talk about the FBI and how that seemingly has
oftentimes especially against the former president, been weaponized as well.
Christopher Ray has in my estimation, not done a lot

(08:28):
to earn public confidence of again, just blinded justice happening.
Do you talk about the FBI in your book?

Speaker 2 (08:36):
I talk about it in great detail because eventually the
FBI Affidavid that was supporting the rate of mar A
Lago was put on the public record. It was highly
redacted on the probable cause portion, but much of that
Affidavid was not redacted, and I used to write those affidavits.
I've written hundreds of affidavids explaining classified information that that

(08:59):
issue in certain cases the federal judges, and so I
was anxious to get my hands on it. When I
looked at the FBI Fi David, it was deplorable. They
misstated the law, they misconstrued facts, and this was all
obviously purposeful. So I do a deep dive on not
only the FBI's rate of mar A Lago but then
on all their subsequent actions to target Trump. You know

(09:22):
about the classified documents that ended up at mar A lago,
which Trump didn't even pack those boxes, you know, his
staffers did. Then there was no evidence that he ever
even looked in them. So yes, I do a deep
dive on the FBI and all of their bias.

Speaker 1 (09:37):
Let's thot those documents and we're told and maybe you
can speak to this that when it was told that
the National Archives had said, hey, you have some documents,
we may want some of those back. Your staff packed
them or whatever. I mean, Donald Iman, Lanya, are any
president's not there packing up the U haul himself there?
That's all that's all happening. Literally while they were the inauguration,
A lot of that stuff's going on. I mean, they

(09:58):
keep it normal until they walk out for the last time.
But the Archives said, hey, but could you keep They
sent people in to look at him, and then they said, hey,
could you add an extra lock? And they did. They
put them behind the locked doors at the request. And
then suddenly there came a raid. So there was already
some conversation going on with the Trump team and the

(10:19):
National Archives about what should be sent back and what
was going to go where and what went to the library,
et cetera. And so this raid kind of came out
of nowhere. Am I missing something?

Speaker 2 (10:29):
No. In fact, Trump had sent to the Archives, had
returned to the Archives fifteen boxes of documents, and so
his attorneys and his staff were cooperating with the Archives.
But you know the Archives, and I go into great
detail on this in my book, the Archives was also
weaponized against Trump. You know, the FBI and DOJ and

(10:53):
in Department of Homeland Security. I think we all recognize
how politicized they are, but that politicization and that weaponization
it also extends to the Archives. And I lay this
out in great detail in my book, all the steps
the Archives was taking to stick it to Trump. At
every possible turn, they deviated from their regulations, they took

(11:17):
actions that they never took with any other president, all
to help the Biden Harris administration get Trump.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
The name of the book is called Dangerous Injustice, and
Joseph Sweeney is the author. Yes the background as a
lawyer with the CIA the Office of General Counsel for
twenty five years and supported all sorts of intelligence operations
around the world, and now he's writing a book about
the Department of Justice and the dangerous Injustice that is there.

(11:46):
Let me ask you, as we head towards an election.
I really wish Lady Justice could get the blindfold back
on holding those beautiful scales of justice. Lady Justice supposed
to be blindfold because they're not supposed to matter whether
you're team red, team blue, Republican Democrat. I think we've
lost that. But it's maybe not as easy as just

(12:07):
replacing an attorney general. I mean you're talking about even
the National Archives have been weaponized. I mean, what steps
have to be taken so that injustice does not break
out and it's cleaned up in all of these agencies
that have been weaponized. When the national librarians and the
archives have been weaponized, we've got a real problem.

Speaker 2 (12:26):
Yeah, I agree, and I'm glad you raised that, because
you know, I didn't want to write a book that
just complained. I wanted to actually propose some practical solutions
to fix these problems, and I do that in the
last chapter of my book. I propose a number of
practical reforms that, if implemented, could prevent any political party
in the future from weaponizing the executive branch to retain

(12:49):
power and persecute their political opponents. I'll just throw a
few of them out there for you one, the Attorney
General doesn't need to pick a special council, right, that
could be picked by a bipartisan process. That would go
a long way towards, you know, helping political bias to
be removed from the decision of who's going to be
a special counsel. Also, the FBI after nine to eleven

(13:11):
was given domestic intelligence authorities, which are very powerful in
addition to their domestic law enforcement. Those two authorities should
be bifurcated, and we should create a special agency for
domestic intelligence that is completely separate from the FBI, you know.
And beyond that, the most important thing of all is

(13:31):
that presidents appoint to political appointees who are people of
moral courage and moral strength. That's the most important thing
because that kind of morality will it will infect an organization.
And if you have the opposite right political bias or morals,
those things will also affect an agency. Just look at

(13:54):
what happened with the FBI under Director Comy. My god,
you know, a whole level of senior leader ship of
the FBI was fired for unlawful and unethical conduct up
to an including Comy himself. So those are just a
few of the practical reforms I talk about in my book.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
The name of the book is Dangerous Injustice, written by
Joseph Sweeney. He's a CIA A served of the CIA
as an attorney there in the Office of General Counsel
for twenty five years, and now he's written a book
called Dangerous Injustice. How Democrats weapon the DOJ to protect Biden,
persecuted Trump. But it really just goes beyond the overall

(14:30):
scope of the weaponization of our government. It's called Dangerous
Injustice Joseph Sweeney. If somebody wants to follow you and
or buy the book, where do they go?

Speaker 2 (14:40):
So I have a website SWEENEYJB dot com and there
is a link on that website that will take you
directly to the book on Amazon. You can also just
find the book on.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
Amazon SWEENEYJB dot com or look up Joseph Sweeney Dangerous
Injustice on the Amazon and get a copy of it.
Just appreciate your time, Thanks for hopping on the program. Again.
The name of the book is Dangerous Injustice by Joseph Sweeney.
All Right, we got to take a break here in
a few minutes, but before we do, I want to
talk it out there and have a very direct and

(15:11):
honest conversation with you as a man. Ladies, hold on,
don't get nervous here, but we're gonna have a man
demand conversation. Any man out there that has ever had
a moment that failure to perform talking about the moments
of intimacy and thus things didn't work out. And any
man who's been there, done that doesn't want a T

(15:31):
shirt to brag about it. It's a moment where men go,
I don't know what's going on, what's happening? Why is
this happening now? I don't understand. A lot of causes
for ED. It's called direct how dysfunction. A lot of
causes for it. It could be something well, there's just
a lot of causes for it. And because there's a
lot of causes, there can be a lot of treatments,
and some treatments work better for some guys than some don't.

(15:51):
Maybe you've tried some of those herbal things I've seen
on television. Maybe you've tried the pills before and maybe
they work a little bit. Maybe they didn't work as
good as you want to, Maybe they gave some side
effects like headaches and other things. Listen, Rocky Mountain Men's Clinic.
The bottom line is have helped thousands of guys get
back into the moments of intimacy and most a lot
of guys, thousands of men say they're performing like they

(16:12):
haven't performed in years, and they're like, Wow, this is amazing. Listen, guys,
you know that that anxiety can build up if you
have this d going on a regular basis, and you'll
start pushing back and rejecting intimacy. That harms your relationship.
Don't do that. Rocky Mountain Men's Clinic wants you back
in the game once you fully engaged in those moments

(16:33):
of intimacy with your partner. Rockymountainmen's Clinic dot com. There's
five locations you're gonna have medical consultation, blood work, PSA
T tests, even to medically vice testos. Testos doesn't work
in the office. Your visit is free. Rocky Mountain Men's
Clinic dot com. Fort Collins, North Denver, Central Denvercastle, Rock Colin,
out of Springs, Rockymountain Men's Clinic dot com. You tell
them now that Jimmy Lakey told you to be in touch.

(16:54):
Rockymountain Men's Clinic dot com. Everybody stand by Laky is
on the radio. It's a Tuesday morning, better than a
Monday morning, but not quite a Friday morning. Everybody stand
by a six hundred KCl
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Boysober

Boysober

Have you ever wondered what life might be like if you stopped worrying about being wanted, and focused on understanding what you actually want? That was the question Hope Woodard asked herself after a string of situationships inspired her to take a break from sex and dating. She went "boysober," a personal concept that sparked a global movement among women looking to prioritize themselves over men. Now, Hope is looking to expand the ways we explore our relationship to relationships. Taking a bold, unfiltered look into modern love, romance, and self-discovery, Boysober will dive into messy stories about dating, sex, love, friendship, and breaking generational patterns—all with humor, vulnerability, and a fresh perspective.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.