Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Man, I haven't seen him anywhere.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
You guys seen him.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
I don't know what he's doing. He was over here
a minute.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Oh wait a minute, bro, what do you do when?
Speaker 3 (00:10):
Oh dude, I'm trying this new body butter out from
Sugar Creek Goods.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Man, you got to.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Try it out.
Speaker 4 (00:16):
Is a good moods.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
Your skin makes you all night and smooth after a.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Hard day of work on the farm.
Speaker 5 (00:23):
Bro, get some of that, Get you some yeah, get
some of you.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Yeah. Oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
He even smells beautiful.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Yeah yeah, yeah, better than that. Uh, better than that
last celly you had. H that's perfect.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
Well, come on, let's get out of here.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
Oh yeah, I got to show it.
Speaker 6 (01:16):
And and in.
Speaker 7 (01:53):
And hey, everybody, welcome to a very special edition of
Cowboy Logic. We're at the front of the farm right now.
You can see at the entrance of our driveway is
the yellow ribbons.
Speaker 8 (02:13):
These were put.
Speaker 7 (02:13):
Up well a couple of years ago by Angel Harrelson,
Kenny's wife, when she was coming here to come pick
him up as he was being released from the Atlanta Yeah,
and so we've kept him up until all the Jan
sixers are free now. Unfortunately, there are a few that
are still incarcerated, but for the most part, they're all out.
So we've got a very special show as far as
(02:36):
our presentation is concerned. And at the end of the show,
we're gonna have some jan sixers coming.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
We're gonna have a ribbon a ribbon down specially well, we've.
Speaker 9 (02:47):
Got a special presentation that's a documentary by David Somemrol
and Trenas Evans of Stop Hate dot com and Condemned
USA dot com. It's a documentary called Pardon Us and
it's a whole different look book at January sixth because
they really get into what's been going on with the
district courts and the judges. So we're going to throw
(03:08):
it to our boys in studio, Kelly and Kenny, and
they're going to take over the show for tonight. We'll
see you guys next week, but let's see pardon Us.
Speaker 5 (03:22):
Thanks Don and Donna, we really appreciate you having us
on and let us take over the show for a
little bit today. We just want to take a little
bit of time and go over not only the video
that's going to be shown for the rest of the show,
but we also just want to take a minute and
spend a little bit of time and just tell you
our gratitude not only to Donn and Donna, but also
to all the viewers out there who have supported us
(03:44):
over the last four years. It has been an extremely
difficult road. It's been very difficult for us all to
get through. Our families have suffered, and if it wasn't
for your support, I know personally I wouldn't have a
house to go back to right now, but I do,
and I just wanted to take a second and thank
(04:04):
you all for that and take a minute here and
just really thank Don and Donna for everything they've done
before we get to the movie.
Speaker 3 (04:13):
So, Kenny, yeah, I'm you know, just a big shout
out to everyone. You know, without your guys' support, our
families wouldn't have been able to stick in to the
fight as long as they did and support us and
give us what we needed to see this through to
the end. So a big thank you guys to everybody.
Speaker 5 (04:35):
So, and one of the things that we've been working
on is kind of behind the scenes. Don and Donna
don't know we've been doing this, but I worked with
Ron Phillips. They're great producer, and we put together a
quick video that we'd like to share with everyone.
Speaker 10 (04:57):
Hey Don, Hey Donna, Thank you guys. Thank you so
much for everything you've done for us. You always told
our stories and answered my phone call every single Wednesday.
You guys played the patriot him at the end of
every single show to remind people that we were still there.
I'm incredibly grateful for everything you've done, for spreading the truth,
(05:19):
for allowing us to speak. You gave us a voice
when so few did. I'm incredibly grateful to all you've
done for us all these years. There's not enough words
to describe how thankful I am. I love you both.
Speaker 4 (05:32):
Hi, Donna and Donna. It's part.
Speaker 11 (05:34):
I just want to say thank you for everything you've
done for us. It's extraordinary, amazing.
Speaker 4 (05:40):
And it's done out of love, and we love you back.
Speaker 11 (05:43):
You're part of our family and always well be and
we are in your debt and we just love you
so much. So know that you're in our thoughts and
our prayers.
Speaker 12 (05:54):
Hi Donna and Donna, and hello Gawboy Logic family.
Speaker 13 (05:58):
I just want to come out here and say thank you.
Speaker 14 (06:00):
Thank you for standing up while others stood still.
Speaker 15 (06:03):
Thank you for everything that you've done for us, for me,
my family in the j six community.
Speaker 16 (06:08):
God bless you, and God bless America.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
Hey and Donna, how you doing.
Speaker 4 (06:14):
It's Tom Webster here.
Speaker 17 (06:15):
I wanted to send you a quick thank you for
everything that you've done and supporting us Jay six ers
and our families and really just keeping your foot on
the gas and speaking the truth with you and your audience.
Thank you so much. You are true patriots. God bless
you and have a.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Good day dazzling Donna and Donna will Don, thank you
for giving us a voice, an outlet, and a future.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
Because of your effort.
Speaker 10 (06:43):
Natalie has the truth set us free, but.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
The rest of the world understands the truth about January sixth.
Speaker 18 (06:50):
Thank you for your loyalty and your love.
Speaker 19 (06:53):
Don and Donna.
Speaker 14 (06:53):
You know you guys have always been such a blessing
in all of our lives, especially mine. I just want
to say thank you so much for all that you do,
for picking up our fight and fighting alongside the January
six Ers when it was not a compolitically.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
Expedient or a pretty topic.
Speaker 14 (07:09):
So just thank you for your faithfulness, for your loyalty,
and for your love.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
We appreciate you so much. God bless y'all.
Speaker 18 (07:16):
Hey, Don and Donna to my bond despage, best friends.
I just want to thank you for everything you've done
over the last four years. You picked up my husband's
from prison, you fixed my wedding ring, You've always been
there for us always. I love you, guys, and we're
going to be friends forever and ever. And God bless
you Bold for everything you've done for the January six ers.
Will I'll be grateful to you forever and ever.
Speaker 5 (07:41):
So that video was put together by a lot of
people are that I'm really close with and that Kenny's
really close with, and we wanted to bring in Dan
and Jeff mckallop as well, just to give them a
moment to just express their feelings to Don and Donna. Dan,
go ahead, guys, I.
Speaker 20 (08:00):
Just want you to say to say that you know,
without you guys and your platform and you open it
up as supporters, friends and just selflessness that you guys
have demonstrated all of us your your support based the
Cowboy logic fingers out there.
Speaker 21 (08:18):
We love you.
Speaker 20 (08:19):
But Donna, Donna, when I say tell my family I
love them, I can include you guys in that your family.
I love you. God bless you. It would not be
where we are without you. It's just thank you, Thank
you very much.
Speaker 22 (08:32):
I love you.
Speaker 5 (08:34):
Thanks Dan, Jeff jump in there, buddy.
Speaker 23 (08:39):
I want to thank you very much from the bottom
of my heart.
Speaker 24 (08:42):
Don and Donna.
Speaker 4 (08:43):
You know.
Speaker 23 (08:47):
You know what you mean to me, and you've taken
care of my childon when they were when they were
out of my reach. He who dwells in the shelter
of the Most High rest in the shadow of the Almighty.
All you have to say is his name. He will
be your buckler, your fortress, and your ramparts. And you
say of the Lord. He is my God and whom
I trust. I love you with all my heart. You
(09:10):
are my family. You are my father and my mother
and my brother and my sister. Thank you very much.
Speaker 5 (09:18):
Just don, Don and Donna would like to bring you
guys on right now. Please you guys can come on.
This is something that all the j sixtors want to
give you, guys, for everything you've done for us.
Speaker 25 (09:34):
I think I can see right now.
Speaker 4 (09:37):
And we can't hear anything, and we don't know what's
going on here.
Speaker 5 (09:43):
Two minutes I heard a lot and Connie rapid, so
it's not going to be easy to open.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
You gotta help.
Speaker 5 (10:01):
You're gonna have to help with the taste because kind
of uses a lot of takes.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
No, I don't think we have any knives.
Speaker 26 (10:07):
One knife.
Speaker 27 (10:08):
I've got to calculate.
Speaker 28 (10:10):
There we go, there it is.
Speaker 9 (10:11):
We gotta tell them about the documentary that's coming right.
Speaker 5 (10:14):
Listen, guys, while they're opening this up, the one thing
that you're gonna want to do is you're gonna want
to watch this Pardon Us documentary. Me and Kenny would
particularly have interested in parting in us since we didn't
get a pardon right we're both commuted right now, but
we're in appeal, so we're working on that. But this
is a special gift we all put together. This documentary
is going to cover a lot of the things you
haven't seen about Jay six. It's going to be a
(10:36):
lot of things about Jay six I have to do
with the judges, et cetera. This is actually one of
the flags. This is my personal flag that Garrett Miller
drew this flag by hand in the gulag and if
you turn it around on the back, every person that
just spoke to you right now has signed this flag,
as well as many other men who serve their time
(10:57):
in the DC gulog and we love you and we
thank you for everything you have done for us. You
guys will always be on family.
Speaker 20 (11:05):
You guys very much.
Speaker 5 (11:12):
And thank you guys.
Speaker 3 (11:12):
This is for you two here.
Speaker 5 (11:15):
So this is really a moment we have all looked
forward to for four years. These guys have been there
strong the whole way and and we're all going to
be friends forever. Everybody to tell on these videos. Thank
everybody that's on this screen, and these guys they're part
of our family, will be forever.
Speaker 8 (11:31):
Star flags are done enough, guys actually talk bs walk man, Thank.
Speaker 5 (11:37):
You, and I all right, we'll be right back for
more cowboy logic. We're going to bring up to pardon
us here.
Speaker 14 (11:44):
It is.
Speaker 29 (12:26):
December seventh, nineteen forty one, September eleventh, two thousand and one,
and January sixth, twenty twenty one.
Speaker 30 (12:38):
No one can tell me that it had been a
group of Black Lives Matter protesting yesterday. It wouldn't have been.
They wouldn't have been treated very, very differently than the
mob of thugs that stormed the Capitol.
Speaker 31 (12:52):
The entire summer of twenty twenty. Folks in the Democrat
Party said rioters and looters were peaceful protesters.
Speaker 32 (12:59):
This is a mostly a protest.
Speaker 22 (13:03):
It is not generally speaking unruly.
Speaker 4 (13:05):
But fires have been started.
Speaker 29 (13:08):
The lawlessness, the violence, the chaos.
Speaker 28 (13:14):
I don't know.
Speaker 33 (13:14):
We could have the summer of love.
Speaker 34 (13:16):
I just don't even know why there aren't uprisings all
of the country.
Speaker 6 (13:19):
Maybe there will be.
Speaker 30 (13:23):
Show me where it says that protesters are supposed to
be polite and peaceful.
Speaker 35 (13:27):
People need to start taking through the streets.
Speaker 36 (13:29):
This is a dictator.
Speaker 26 (13:30):
I have thought an awful lot about blowing up the
White House.
Speaker 19 (13:35):
Our nation has been gripped by professional anarchists, violent mobs,
arsenal saluters, criminals, writers, Antifa, and others.
Speaker 37 (13:46):
Everyone should take note of that on both levels.
Speaker 29 (13:49):
That is, they're not going to let up, and they
should not and we should not.
Speaker 30 (13:53):
Don't dare call the protester they were a riotous mob, insurrection.
Speaker 38 (14:01):
With e and let's go in a quietly and colley
sit down in this room, call me quietly.
Speaker 19 (14:10):
These are not acts of peaceful protests.
Speaker 30 (14:13):
These are acts of domestic terror domestic terrorists. It's that basic,
it's that simple.
Speaker 10 (14:20):
We are also confronting a domestic threat.
Speaker 34 (14:23):
The domestic enemies to our voting system and are honoring
our constitution are right at sixteen hundred Pennsylvania Avenue with
their allies in the Congress of the United States.
Speaker 29 (14:35):
The strength of democracy is the principle that everyone should
be treated equally.
Speaker 27 (14:41):
The law enforcement response to the writers at the Capitol
yesterday is being criticized as a.
Speaker 35 (14:46):
Double standards, a double standard.
Speaker 2 (14:48):
There's definitely a double standard.
Speaker 39 (14:50):
It's not even up for debate.
Speaker 30 (14:52):
More than anything, we need to restore the honor, the integrity,
independence in the Department of Justice in this nation so
badly damns American people saw a plane view. I hope
it sensitize them and what we.
Speaker 4 (15:09):
Have to do.
Speaker 1 (15:20):
My name's David somemrall.
Speaker 40 (15:22):
I started Stop Hate Awareness program back in nineteen ninety
two during the LA riots.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
Saw what the media did with a partial.
Speaker 40 (15:29):
Video and how they divided the country on racial lines.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
And stop Hate.
Speaker 40 (15:35):
As an acronym stands for start turning off prejudice, heal
attitudes through education, and it's just our attempt to try
to bring people together and communicate. Sometimes have those more
difficult conversations, but they're necessary for us to understand each other.
We tried to find a way that we could help
(15:55):
the people from California that were going through the riot.
But from Texas, what you really do You can't throw
money at it, you can't put the fire out, and
you can't break up the fight. So we decided a
prevention campaign was probably the best route to try to
prevent the next occurrence.
Speaker 1 (16:10):
So we stood against groups like the KKK.
Speaker 40 (16:13):
We even stood against the Nation of Islam with some
of their hateful rhetoric in the nineties.
Speaker 41 (16:18):
Allah I wants to kill the white man.
Speaker 40 (16:21):
And then I got so many death threats, and my
family was young.
Speaker 1 (16:24):
They certainly didn't sign up for that. All right, welcome
back to the war room.
Speaker 17 (16:27):
I'm now joined in studio by David Sumral, and you.
Speaker 36 (16:31):
Started the website stop Haete dot com.
Speaker 4 (16:34):
Yes, stophete dot com.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
That is a million dollar idea.
Speaker 4 (16:39):
Who's that?
Speaker 1 (16:40):
And you're like they were like David Sumrol, the gollu met.
I was like, oh my gosh, we gotta get him
the studio.
Speaker 40 (16:45):
So I just did what I could in my own community,
never tried to really make it a big organization or group.
So we started make America Stop Hate a different brand.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
During the Trump administration.
Speaker 16 (17:00):
This is a friend of Ally's who gave me this, Sime.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
I don't quite understand. It was make America Stop Hate.
Speaker 40 (17:06):
Well, my friends were going to the Stop to Steal rallies.
I showed up in Austin for another rally and a
friend said, Hey, would you like to be involved with this?
And I said, yeah, it's a good cause. Election integrity
is very important, of course, so I stayed in Austin,
ended up running most of the events down there for
Stop to Steal in the months leading up to January sixth,
(17:30):
and then of course on January sixth.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
I did not want to go to d C.
Speaker 40 (17:34):
I was tired, I was spent, I was broke, you know,
going to Austin back and forth from Dallas every weekend.
So I decided to stay home on January sixth, and
everyone prodded me, encouraged me, asked me to go, and
my wife said, I really think he need to go.
It's been you know, almost thirty years of doing the
(17:54):
Stop Hate campaign, and you know, my friends were saying,
you know how to recognize different things. You've dealt with Antifa,
you've dealt with BLM, You've done events all around the country,
so you kind of need to go.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
So I decided to.
Speaker 40 (18:06):
Put a film crew together and go to DC to
January sixth and film for history what actually happened, because
I know the media will never tell the truth.
Speaker 8 (18:20):
Oh violence.
Speaker 28 (18:21):
Remember we are the party of law and order.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
Respect the law and our great men and women in Blum.
Speaker 26 (18:27):
Thank you, Please support our capitol please and law enforce.
Speaker 8 (18:32):
My name is Trena Sevens and I went to January
sixth not to be an insurrectionist, but because I felt
called to be there. It was a duty that I had.
I had to respond to the stolen elections. They had
to hear our voices and know that something like that
couldn't take place without the American people having something to
(18:52):
say about it. January sixth was cold, and it was
(19:13):
cold for so many reasons, but there was a warmth
of community.
Speaker 4 (19:17):
There was a spiritual warmth within us.
Speaker 8 (19:21):
We had hope, we had a belief that something good
was coming. And that's where the real misconception comes in,
that we were all dark hearted and there for something
other than the true purpose of demonstration.
Speaker 2 (19:33):
States want to revote.
Speaker 25 (19:36):
The states got defrauded, they were given false information, they
voted on it now they want to recertify, they want
it back.
Speaker 8 (19:45):
The reason I wanted to be a January sixth is
I wanted to demonstrate my support for the people that
were doing the right thing, the people that were going
to give the States an opportunity to review the information
from the selection and the legislators really have a chance
to make a determination as to what the correct action
(20:06):
was the correct will of the people per their vote.
Speaker 35 (20:11):
This is video of a man called Daniel Goodwin walking
through the Capitol through an open door on January sixth,
twenty twenty one, at exactly three point thirty two pm,
that is long after the doors were breached. The legal
team has also provided this video and in it you
can clearly see the Goodwin was inside for less than
a minute and when he was asked to leave.
Speaker 4 (20:31):
He left. So there's no dispute about any of that.
It's all on tape.
Speaker 35 (20:36):
But the DOJ is still trying to send Daniel Goodwin
to prison, and in the meantime they have completely wrecked
his life.
Speaker 10 (20:43):
You know.
Speaker 35 (20:43):
Goodwin joins us now along with his lawyer Eryl Stewart.
Thanks to both of you for coming on.
Speaker 24 (20:49):
First.
Speaker 16 (20:50):
To you, Danie, my name is Daniel Goodwin.
Speaker 12 (20:53):
I went to the Capitol on January sixth, twenty twenty one,
because Donald Trump tweeted about it. We were going there
to steal. I went there also, you know, to do
some investigative journalism type stuff, and people said, you know,
Antifa might show up.
Speaker 16 (21:13):
So I was thinking, all right, well, I'll try and
see if I see anything.
Speaker 12 (21:20):
So when I got to the Capitol, I basically meandered
into an open door with police standing around, not saying
any king.
Speaker 16 (21:30):
When I was inside, they asked me to leave. I
was in there for between thirty and forty seconds and
then I left.
Speaker 12 (21:38):
They raided my house that same month, FBI Counter Terrorism
Task Force swat pre dawn raid roger Stone style. They
had a medieval style battering ram. They were pointing laser
guns at my whole family, traumatizing everyone there.
Speaker 16 (21:55):
They had us all come.
Speaker 12 (21:56):
Out, yelling at us, put everybody in shackles except for
my mom, was the last one out.
Speaker 36 (22:01):
I didn't want to talk to them.
Speaker 16 (22:02):
So I would just say, you can talk to my
lord no matter what they said.
Speaker 4 (22:07):
They were really worried and.
Speaker 12 (22:08):
Scared about COVID nineteen, so they after they had me
in handcuffs were trying to put a mask on me.
I didn't want the mask, so I kind of moved
my jaw around like this and got the masks off.
In the FBI report, they put in he chewed through
five masks, which is not how I would characterize the situation.
(22:31):
But anyways, they took me to the fan in County
jail locked me away, and they said because of COVID
quarantine lockdown that I had.
Speaker 16 (22:40):
To be in solitary confinement for three weeks there.
Speaker 12 (22:43):
Then when I finally got out, I was in house
arrest for thirteen months, and then after that I was
still restricted in Texas. And then while I was in jail,
I had four misdemeanors. They added a fifth charge, which
was the fifteen felony obstruction charge that carries twenty years.
Speaker 36 (23:04):
I took a plea deal and they dropped the fifteen
to twelve charge, and so I ended up with just
a misdemeanor. And that's how I got a two months
prison sentence. And after the two months prison, I had
a year of supervision. And in the supervision there was
a computer monitoring restructure.
Speaker 8 (23:21):
The first time I ever heard that I was being
charged with the fifteen to twelve obstruction of Congress was
when I saw the magistrate, I received my paperwork. I
had already been arrested, hauled to the FBI building, finger
printed pictured, taken to the federal detention center hours away.
We skipped the one near my home by the way
and went hours away to one further south. I was
(24:20):
in this maximum security facility, federal detention center, with the
worst people that you can imagine, people that were guilty
of hundreds of pounds of cocaine and methamphetamine, and drug
runners and cartel members that had been rounded up, human traffickers.
I go in to see the magistrate, and just before
you do, the handle of your paperwork. I was blown away.
(24:42):
It said felony fifteen to twelve obstruction of Congress and
has a penalty out there? What to charge ways in
at it twenty years. I was like, it's got to
be a mistake, Like, what the hell could be happening here?
Speaker 4 (24:55):
This can't be I didn't obstruct Congress.
Speaker 8 (24:59):
It was so early on, and you know, I was
arrest number two twenty five, and I couldn't believe what
I was seeing.
Speaker 41 (25:12):
Yep, right, yeah, all right, you can't step out with us.
Speaker 42 (25:16):
For sure.
Speaker 8 (25:17):
I'll never forget the morning that they showed up with
the battering ram, armed to the teeth and putting my
thirteen year old son in gunpoint, dragged my wife outside
in her nightgown. They waited until we were in a
hard time as a family and we were going to
a funeral my father in law.
Speaker 4 (25:35):
So my wife and I are.
Speaker 8 (25:36):
Headed to the funeral with our children that weekend, going
to the viewing of the body, and they show up
to make their arrests laid on the Thursday pre dawn
rate so that they can keep you in jail over
the weekend.
Speaker 4 (25:47):
You're not going to see the magistrate on Friday.
Speaker 8 (25:49):
I want to hold you till Monday, the same consistent effort.
That way they can hope they can get you to
talk or crack, something can happen ahead of time that
they won, or to just blister you with punishment.
Speaker 41 (26:05):
You love that all right?
Speaker 38 (26:28):
Hand, Amen, another record, let's teeth welcome that red hat backwards.
Speaker 12 (26:54):
Classes do it is the red hat backwards, get the
hand teeth, red hat backwards, red hat backwards.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
I saw it doing.
Speaker 8 (27:04):
Make it make sense for me, America, Help me understand
how the most armed populace on the face of the
planet chose to show up at the seat of government,
and they came to overthrow the United States government, the
largest military industrial superpower.
Speaker 4 (27:21):
On the planet.
Speaker 8 (27:23):
And they came with plastic flagpoles and megaphones, and not
only that, but military veterans, police officers, good men and
women who had taken oaths chose to do that and
run under the cover of children and grandparents and pregnant women.
I don't think that you can make that make sense
anywhere in history. The narrative of insurrection based on that
(27:46):
statement alone is as dead as the minds of the
people that believe it.
Speaker 43 (27:51):
It's almost like the stage was made for us.
Speaker 13 (27:56):
Probably get us up on it.
Speaker 26 (27:58):
That they see you, why trouble these guys don't cause
any trouble.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
Bore those guys.
Speaker 44 (28:13):
They kind of set us up.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
What they're trying to do, what they've.
Speaker 4 (28:26):
Had this set up to this they did.
Speaker 2 (28:31):
There's no way they did.
Speaker 4 (28:34):
They set this up to us.
Speaker 45 (28:37):
You know, well, the Select Committee had actually they had
an impression on not only the Washington DC jury pool,
(28:59):
but the entire country. But there's a reason for that.
They partnered with the legacy media and the biggest media
corporations in the country and produced Hollywood style committee hearings
in order to make sure that everyone was was brainwashed
(29:20):
to believe that January sixth was an insurrection when it
was not.
Speaker 22 (29:23):
To bring in a guy like this who would think
outside the box really did prove to be fruitful. And
it was Goldston who really began to envision this as
in a way, a kind of mini series that there
would be, you know, sort of nine episodes, and that
these episodes would tackle particular themes.
Speaker 46 (29:38):
We were either going to you know, make people realize
that this is important, you know, or once once you've
lost them, you've lost them for good.
Speaker 47 (29:49):
The Select Committee to Investigate the January sixth attack on
a United States Capital will be in order without objects.
Speaker 48 (29:58):
We wanted to make sure that this was a presentation
that would grab the audience and hold on to them.
Speaker 4 (30:04):
Chairman Thompson loved to say, it's got to pop.
Speaker 45 (30:07):
What they did is they sold the lie day in
and day out.
Speaker 30 (30:10):
We have seen growing evidence that the dangers to our
country can come not only across borders, but from violence
that gathers within.
Speaker 49 (30:20):
We always have to be aware of and protect against
external threats. But what really is tearing our country apart
and threatening our democracy is what we saw on January sixth.
Speaker 8 (30:34):
So the people of January six have been labeled as insurrectionists, editionists,
the worst people on the planet. We've consistently heard this
message that it was like nine to eleven. We've consistently
heard the message that it was the worst attack on
our nation since Pearl Harbor.
Speaker 43 (30:51):
Nine to eleven is nothing compared to January sixth. And
the fact that the FBI and the rest of the government,
if they are not on the same sort of warfooting
that we were all on in the weeks and months
and years after nine leve shame on everyone.
Speaker 42 (31:05):
We've been very clear from the beginning that what we
saw on.
Speaker 45 (31:08):
January sixth was the worst attack on our democracy since
the Civil War.
Speaker 8 (31:13):
These are absolutely untrue, and as we've said for a
long time that it certainly represents something more like Kent
State or Tianneman Square from a perspective of what people
experienced that day and how the government responded or.
Speaker 4 (31:28):
Treated the citizen.
Speaker 8 (31:31):
A key historical point that we need to recognize would
be what happened with the Wisconsin State House in twenty eleven.
So please remember that during that time there was a
historic union vote going on for the state. The people
that appeared for that assaulted people on the ground, assaulted officers,
broke their way, and forced their way past police into
(31:53):
the building. They held the Wisconsin State House for some
near two weeks. Dozens of people bragged about being arrested
as many as twelve and fifteen times.
Speaker 50 (32:05):
Yesterday, six PM meeting was announced at exactly four to
ten pm, and protesters who rushed the building in connection
with that boat reportedly smashing windows, forcing their way through windows,
through doors, and into the Capitol.
Speaker 8 (32:54):
And Nancy Pelosi was among the first of the politicians
to weigh in on the matter, and she called that
democracy and action.
Speaker 51 (33:01):
As we gather here in Wisconsin right now, we are
watching an extraordinary shell of democracy and action. Wisconsin's workers, teachers,
and public servants must have a seat at the table
to fight for good worriages in a safe workplace. I
stand in solidarity with the Wisconsin workers fighting for their rights.
Speaker 40 (33:20):
So after January sixth I knew this was going to
be an attack on the people in the most vile way.
When we got back to the hotel that night, the
reports wereety of the insurrection narrative, and you had people
in the government immediately from Joe Biden colonists insurrection to
Michael Sherwin saying that this was a shock in all campaign.
Speaker 24 (33:38):
I wanted to ensure and our office wants to ensure
that there was shock in all that we could charge
as many people as possible.
Speaker 40 (33:45):
And soon to follow, you know, Benny Thompson and others. Judge,
how I believe was you know, putting stricter punishments or
travel restrictions.
Speaker 39 (33:55):
We are here today because the folks, the people, the
insurrectionists who breached the US capital fall under the definition
of threats to the homeland and should be immediately added
to the TSA no fly list.
Speaker 12 (34:11):
A lot of people from January sixth, and even their
family members are put on this thing called the Quiet
Sky's List or the Quad S list. The reason it's
called Quad S is because you get your boarding pass
and there's four US is on there. It's so ridiculous
that they even have people on this who are j
six ers.
Speaker 16 (34:29):
Maybe they're a family member, and I'll give you a
great example.
Speaker 12 (34:33):
AJ Fisher's baby is out that list. So what is
that he's got like a terrorist baby. It's ridiculous.
Speaker 40 (34:40):
One of the most atrocious things in this January sixth
experience has been the total deprivation of constitutional rights.
Speaker 1 (34:48):
People do not understand that when these j.
Speaker 40 (34:50):
Sixers who went to DC to protest, to I guess,
make their voices heard, use their free speech, or to
gather in a group, or to ray either religious freedom
or even media.
Speaker 1 (35:04):
You know, they were all thrown into one basket of.
Speaker 40 (35:07):
You're a terrorists here to overthrow the government, and they
were not allowed to use the First Amendment in their
legal defense. So imagine you not being able to say
why you went to DC in the first place to protest,
to make my voice heard for religion, for God and
country anything you can't use the First Amendment in your defense.
I think that taints the whole story, in the whole
(35:29):
court situation for so many people that didn't know going
into that that they weren't going to be able to
use their God given rights in their own defense. And
that's the deprivation from this government in trying to force
this control in such an unconstitutional way.
Speaker 45 (36:21):
Yes, I believe the judges that presided over these cases
against January sixth defendants. I believe they were extremely politically biased.
These judges abuse their benches and they weaponize the power
of their decisions politically against people that protested an election.
(36:41):
It's so unconstitutional, it's so wrong. The American people own
the elections. They own every election in this country because
they're the people, they're votes, they own their votes. The
American people pay for the elections through their taxes, so
they own their elections, and they can protest an election
if they want to. That's that's the first Amendment, right,
(37:02):
And these judges totally went with the entire lie in
the narrative that the Democrats set up and punish people
punitively in horrific ways with their sense.
Speaker 41 (37:18):
Actually on the bar. Right.
Speaker 2 (37:59):
Now, look.
Speaker 52 (38:02):
All right, everybody, this must be peaceful. Reason, this has
to be peaceful.
Speaker 53 (38:18):
We have the right to peacefully assembles up.
Speaker 41 (38:21):
Here easily grains from the police officer.
Speaker 6 (38:24):
And I shot in the.
Speaker 41 (38:25):
Face, and this last game night, I can't.
Speaker 1 (38:27):
Hear it in my left you're not second to three
runs on my face my.
Speaker 47 (38:30):
L I can barely see out of this.
Speaker 40 (38:38):
So today we've had about sixteen hundred people that have
been charged and dieted I guess with crimes surrounding January sixth,
it's a revolving door.
Speaker 1 (38:47):
They come in, they come out.
Speaker 40 (38:48):
We still have a couple of the original guys that
signed away on their due process rights that have not
had their trials yet. Of course they've been charged, but
they're sitting in prison waiting for their trials four years later.
It seems like it's a little bit intentional by the
government to stretch this out so long and those due
process violations, like we talked about, Listen, nobody got a
fair trial. If you can't use your evidence, if you
(39:10):
don't get due process, if you can't get a change
of venue and a jury of your peers, if they
have all these Brady violations that you can't even really
tell the story of why you were there, nobody got
a fair trial.
Speaker 44 (39:21):
We remember, we talked about the story that's being written
about Danny. Right Danny gets to choose if he writes
a story today with us. But right now, the story
that's being told is by DC, It's by Antifa, BLM
and the Huffington Post, and it's going to be told
by the people that we're talking to today that choose
(39:42):
to talk to us and they may tell a story
about the Danny Rodriguez.
Speaker 4 (39:46):
So if you're if you're.
Speaker 44 (39:47):
Making things up or you're leaving things out, that puts
us in a bad spot because we can't go to
the prosecutor and say no, no.
Speaker 4 (39:54):
On Dan, Danny's stand.
Speaker 54 (39:55):
Up guy, why made anything up?
Speaker 1 (40:00):
Okay?
Speaker 40 (40:00):
Well, and then when you frame that in the media
to say, oh, we got eight hundred of these people
to take a plea deal, but you don't say that
you intimidated them and threatened them with a twenty year
charge that three years later turned out to be illegal
for you to use against them because it was not applicable.
Speaker 1 (40:18):
But nobody goes back and tells it story.
Speaker 40 (40:20):
I think it's reminiscent to the officer Brian Sicknick story
where he died of a stroke the next night. They
blamed his death on J sixers and said that we
beat his head in with a fire extinguisher. Total fabrication.
The paramedics that got to his body said that he
didn't have any damage to his head.
Speaker 13 (40:38):
We were sent to the Capitol grounds. We heard the
radio traffic from Capitol Police that they had an officer
in cardiac arrest on the UH in the North Quarter
in the stairwell.
Speaker 47 (40:52):
We have a medical local inside the Capitol CPR on
the Capitol Police offerer.
Speaker 15 (41:00):
Me and the rest of the crew got escorted down
into the Capitol where we found a down officer.
Speaker 13 (41:09):
The patient was laying on the ground on his side,
had other officers around him.
Speaker 1 (41:15):
I asked.
Speaker 13 (41:17):
What exactly had happened, and the other aucer said they
didn't know that he had just Collapsed's.
Speaker 15 (41:23):
Going to be a priority war non conquer perche. The
other officers were trying to be cpon and but he
was actually not in cardiac arrest, so we kind of
pulled everybody back, and then the Capital physicians got there
and we started coordinating his care while we were waiting
on Engine too, Medic two and EMS four who were
(41:44):
initially dispatched on the run to get down there.
Speaker 40 (41:46):
There's so much set up with the medium, with the information.
This is an information war, and like we titled our
first movie writing History, the Journalistic Battle of January.
Speaker 1 (41:56):
Sixth, that's truly what it is.
Speaker 40 (41:58):
The journalists have tried to control the narrative, the story,
and decide what the public does and doesn't learn, and
it's up to us to spread the truth, so people
know what actually happened on January sixth and can treat
it accordingly. It was Patriot Date to so many people
that experienced it because of what the people did, the
heroes that stood against the police that didn't overreact. There
(42:21):
were enough people there to wip the police out, but
they did not.
Speaker 1 (42:24):
There's reasons for that.
Speaker 40 (42:25):
The crowd controlled itself, and it's amazing to think that
they were blamed for deaths when they didn't cause any.
The police caused four, and it's never mentioned that's intentional.
Speaker 8 (42:37):
Hundreds of January sixth defendants may like to have gone
to tri out, to have had that day in court
of something that we've always understood to be our opportunity.
Yet if you didn't take the plea deal, if you
didn't assign yourself to some level of guilt, you were
going to be charged with all every crime. You were
to be convicted of every crime in DC and your appeal.
(42:59):
You aren't going to go until your appeal, So you're
gonna do your years in prison. And not only that,
but those that refused plea deals were hit with superseding indictments,
and the government regularly threatened superseding indictments. If your person
doesn't plead guilty to this, We're gonna hit him with
a felony.
Speaker 46 (43:18):
I wanted the judge to know that the Feds are
threatening me with a felony. And I'm glad that I
said it. So either way, you know, I'm glad that
I was able to expose the truth in the court.
Speaker 1 (43:28):
He not only did.
Speaker 46 (43:29):
He not know that, know that, but the federal prosecutor
like denied that on the record under oath, which is
a literal lie. Because that was literally threatened to my attorney.
I couldn't just accept a guilty plea and like not
tell the judge like where I'm coming from, because I
think it's very important to be like, well, I want
(43:50):
to go to trial, but you know, if the Feds
are gonna threaten me with felonies, then I think I
gotta take the deal. And like the judge was shocked,
like whoa what And then you know, the prosecutors like
we would never say that, you know, it's like you
literally yeah said it.
Speaker 8 (44:05):
So they extorted play deals from many Americans. They used
this malicious prosecution and extortion tactics. That's what terrorism is
when people with guns to threaten you force you into
doing something. So the real terrorists in this equation are
the FBI, the DOJ, and the judges who allowed this.
Speaker 12 (44:31):
It's clear that all the judges in the DC District
Court are completely biased, and it's kind of crazy that
they're the one who gets to decide in terms of
the change of venue.
Speaker 4 (44:41):
So people are.
Speaker 12 (44:41):
Saying, Okay, I don't think I can get a fair
trial in this area because everyone's left wing, and then
the judge is.
Speaker 16 (44:48):
Like, I don't feel like you won't get a fair trial.
Speaker 12 (44:51):
Yeah, well, you're the one who's left wing, so maybe
you shouldn't be the one decided.
Speaker 8 (44:55):
We were able to bring in more experts than had
ever been assembled, and these were government experts, including doctor
Sigmund Freud's daughter who came in on the psychology side
of this, doctor.
Speaker 4 (45:06):
RuvA, who was the change of venue.
Speaker 8 (45:08):
Expert for Tassov, and that was the Boston bomber. We
had put together an assembled the greatest team of experts
to support not only the data, but the science and
the psychology of change of venue. We presented this in
our motion, which was the largest change of venue that
had ever been entered into the record, and not only that,
(45:30):
the government, in their effort to respond, asked for extensions
two different times and were granted.
Speaker 4 (45:36):
Two two week extensions.
Speaker 8 (45:38):
So in their month long effort of extension, they never
were able to find an expert witness to come back.
They were never able to actually refute this, and they
went on to file the same nonsensical effort that they
filed in case after case, as if.
Speaker 4 (45:53):
We never filed anything new.
Speaker 8 (45:56):
The judge, pinned in by this and knowing that he
was going to lose on a piece, decided to answer
this with no opinion denying or change of venue effort.
Speaker 4 (46:05):
In the AJ Fisher.
Speaker 40 (46:07):
Case, the Brady violations is probably the biggest thing because
that's the evidence that would set these people free and
show that they didn't do what the government said. I mean,
case in point, one of the guys was holding his
hand up fists bumping the cops basically in the air,
and they used a still picture of that, and if
they had rolled the video they would have seen.
Speaker 1 (46:28):
That he was saying yay, we like the cops.
Speaker 40 (46:30):
But they took a freeze frame and said, oh, look
he was being mean to the cops and had his
fist in the air and they put him in jail for.
Speaker 1 (46:36):
Three years, I believe.
Speaker 40 (46:37):
So these are the kind of situations that people, when
they see it in the media, they think, well, they
must have been guilty of something because they went through
the process and they're in jail now, so they must
be guilty. But that is not the way this system works,
and it's being exposed more day by day.
Speaker 21 (47:17):
Shown stuff in here with Nemo Arms. Just recently finished
up twenty nine years in the Navy, with the last
twenty seven being in the Seal Teams. Twenty two of
those were spent out our Tier one unit in Virginia,
where I've spent numerous deployments overseas doing real world combat operations,
and when we weren't deploying, we were home training. I
had a good opportunity when I showed up in Idaho
(47:37):
and I was introduced to a Nemo rifle where I
intally fell in love with it craftsmanship, treem, accuracy, and
also the lack of recoil was also I came on
board with Nemo Arms as a full time position, looking
to introduce our weapons to military and law enforcement units
in the United States and overseas. I'm extremely excited to
be with the Nemo family.
Speaker 8 (48:21):
There was a time when I actually, I think I
wanted to believe that these judges needed to see the
truth that they had been lied to and maybe had
taken this information in kind of bought this story Kline
and Sinker, maybe, But there became a point of no
return when we passed the idea that they didn't know.
(48:42):
So much evidence had been presented that it's untenable to
think that these people, these judges, didn't have the proper
knowledge to understand this event as a whole.
Speaker 4 (48:56):
And what did they do.
Speaker 8 (48:57):
They doubled down, continued the assault on constitutional rights, judge
after judge after judge, be it Timothy Kelly or Judge
Royce Lambert or Dabney Friedrich or Beryl Howe or Colleen
Color Katelly, judge of mient Meta. They used terminology like insurrectionist.
(49:20):
They used terminology of insurrection in reference to me, and
they allowed assistant United States attorneys, these prosecutors to incorrectly
label me in their courts, and they took part in
that it might be a situation, it might be concerning,
I should say, if they said mister Evans is a
(49:43):
bad person, or mister Evans is a big dummy, whatever
it is.
Speaker 4 (49:48):
They might want to say.
Speaker 8 (49:50):
But when you falsely label me with something that is
a crime, a criminal statute, as the term insurrectionists, when
the actual crime that I committed was trespassing at best,
that's problematic. You don't call Jay Walker's murderers and get
away with it in a court of law.
Speaker 40 (50:14):
In comparison from what happened on January sixth, as to say,
for instance, the Summer of Love, all the bl in
activity and the burning of cities and destruction of property
and broken glasses.
Speaker 45 (50:26):
The George Floyd protests are unique in scope.
Speaker 55 (50:29):
It's not one city, it's more than twenty states that
is a large chunk of the country reporting losses. And
these protests have now gone international, and that's why the
insurance industry is predicting these protests will become the costliest
case of civil unrest in US history.
Speaker 40 (50:45):
I don't recall any bl embers being hunted down for
four years for any of the things that they did,
even the policemen that were killed or the innocent people
that were killed or injured in all those riots, actual riots.
And then you see the position that they've taken against
these Grandmas and people that were there praying.
Speaker 45 (51:05):
When things got out of hand on January sixth, all
of a sudden they became the Party of law and order.
But they weren't the party of law and order. See,
they were the Communists the entire time.
Speaker 40 (51:16):
The BLM would be considered offense and JA six would
be purely considered defense.
Speaker 56 (51:22):
All right, look at this, some disturbing images here this man,
he was at a peaceful rally up in San Francisco.
Speaker 1 (51:30):
To look at that. Oh he was.
Speaker 56 (51:33):
Their names Philip Anderson. He was there to go rally
in front of Twitter to call attention to how Twitter
is banning conservative voices and the Hunter Biden scandal story.
While he was trying to leave the area, look at
these Antifa thugs. They punch him repeatedly in the mouth,
knocking his teeth out. He now has thousands of dental bills,
(51:54):
I'm sure some trauma and PTSD after being attacked there.
Speaker 57 (51:57):
He is well.
Speaker 45 (51:58):
The left wrote the playbook on political violence. We can
look back to President Trump's inauguration in twenty seventeen where
they nearly burned down the very city that we're sitting in, Washington, DC.
Speaker 58 (52:09):
Uh.
Speaker 45 (52:09):
Then they proceeded to create ground troops that fought every
single angle of whatever political effort President Trump was trying
to take and his supporters.
Speaker 54 (52:21):
If you see anybody from that cabinet in a restaurant,
in a department, stuff at a gasoline station, you get
out and you create a cloud, and you go back
on them and you tell them.
Speaker 52 (52:36):
Now got Michelle Wood says that you know when they
go low, we go.
Speaker 4 (52:44):
When they go low. That's what just new Democratic parties.
Speaker 45 (52:50):
About what they have done is they have funded not
only the political violence against us for years, they have
funded the ripping the fabric of America to shreds. And
then when they took power, they took the power that
they were handed or actually they stole it, that's the truth.
They stole that power with the twenty twenty election, and
(53:12):
then they turned it into a weapon and directed it
at their perceived political enemies. And the reason, part of
the reason why they prosecuted people so harshly is they
had to create the lie that to back up that
President Trump is this, He's a Nazi, he's hitler, he's
(53:33):
abusing power, he'll be a dictator, he'll never leave office.
And this is his army. This is his army that's
going to come in and help him take over. And
it was just a lile the whole time.
Speaker 12 (53:47):
There was an actual insurrection, if you want to call
it that, in say Seattle or wherever where these people
literally have these autonomous zones and they take over the
area and then they don't let in police, they don't
let in an ambulance or fireman. People get shot, people
die in those places, Like I'm pretty sure that treason
(54:08):
is are something like you can just take over I mean,
it's not their land. They're like, that's that's an actual insurrection.
But what happens to them?
Speaker 4 (54:17):
I mean, I don't know.
Speaker 12 (54:17):
Have you guys seen a website on the Justice Department
Justice dot gup that has a list of all the
people from chop or Chazz.
Speaker 16 (54:26):
I haven't, but.
Speaker 12 (54:27):
There's definitely a list of J sixers on the Justice website.
So there's definitely not the same treatment. Did they have
a manhunt after them? Did they give press conferences every
time one of them got arrested? Did they all have
these crazy raids that they go after them and arrest
them and convict them and sentence them to.
Speaker 16 (54:47):
Really long sentences, like up to twenty two years. I
don't think so.
Speaker 8 (54:52):
In the nineteen eighty four Sentencing Reform Act, it was
made clear that the cases should be adjudicated in like manners,
the same or with great similarity. Yet the judges of
the district chose to operate with a new jurisprudence that
they created and concocted solely for January sixth defendants.
Speaker 4 (55:15):
In other words, they.
Speaker 8 (55:16):
Wanted stronger beatings and lashings for these individuals. Rather it
was Grandma that walked in and said a prayer, or
an individual that simply walked through carrying a flag. They said,
they desecrated democracy, that they tore at the fabric of
democracy and made all of these unhinged rants.
Speaker 40 (55:36):
They literally hunted down protesters that may have been guilty
of misdemeanors, which the FBI doesn't usually deal with in
the first place. But then they put these same people
in federal prisons where there was nothing but felons in
those prisons, and they could hardly believe that misdemeanor defendants
(55:57):
were put in the prison in the first place. So
the treatment in that respect, the segregation of.
Speaker 1 (56:03):
The prisoners when they're in prison, the shoe as.
Speaker 40 (56:07):
They call it, the isolation tank. Basically that they put
people in for extended period of times is beyond torture.
Speaker 1 (56:15):
Geneva Convention, if we were at war, would not allow what.
Speaker 40 (56:18):
These people have done to Jay six Ers, And I
think that's the reality that people have missed out on.
You've got a grandma that's supposed to be sentenced for
a misdemeanor. She's supposed to go to a minimum care facility,
basically a halfway house, and at the last minute, someone
in the DOJ or a judge somewhere says, no, you're
going to one of the worst women's prisons in the country,
(56:40):
which has now been since shut down.
Speaker 37 (56:43):
Fcidublin has become so notorious for sexual assaults behind it
swalls that some have nicknamed it the rape club. But
now the world is finally learning about what's been going
on inside. Women who experience the abuse are speaking publicly
for the first time.
Speaker 8 (56:57):
The defendant was bludgeon with an extreme amount of evidence
against them, but it wasn't actually evidence against them.
Speaker 4 (57:06):
It's just events and video of the entire day. But
somehow defense counsel was.
Speaker 8 (57:11):
Supposed to go through all of this when those videos
to have gone through them, and what might be relative
to your case would have taken over a year to
watch individually, maybe two, depending on if you wanted to
just look at the area where the individual was, but.
Speaker 4 (57:28):
Entrapment or any of those things.
Speaker 8 (57:30):
How would you know when the government never gave us
all of the information and still today we do not
have all the information. But in the middle of trial,
you might be two days in a weekend, they would
dump terabytes of new information on the defense council, who
maybe at the time had a responsibility to turn over
emotion by midnight to the judge for something there the
(57:52):
defense council is asking for. Yet they're somehow supposed to
find time to go through video evidence and information that
would take multiple people working together months, if not another year.
Speaker 52 (58:09):
You know my.
Speaker 12 (58:10):
Count Listen, it's clear that the January sixth Committee and
(58:37):
the prosecution, and the judges and the mainstream legacy media
all colluded together in order to have a narrative of insurrection,
and no one was even charged with insurrection. But okay,
you want to say, maybe, oh, the seditious conspiracy, it's
completely bogus.
Speaker 16 (58:52):
For example, the biggest evidence.
Speaker 12 (58:54):
They have of seditious conspiracy is a document called seventeen
seventy six Returns that was on Enrique Tario's fault.
Speaker 16 (59:03):
The problem is he didn't write it.
Speaker 36 (59:05):
There's no proof he even read it, and there's no proof.
Speaker 16 (59:08):
It was even sent to anyone, much less that they
acted on it.
Speaker 12 (59:13):
But even beyond that, if you read the document itself,
it doesn't even match an insurrection or seditious conspiracy, much
less even match what they actually did.
Speaker 16 (59:25):
So it's the weakest argument you can imagine.
Speaker 36 (59:28):
But in these DC courts, you're gonna end up with a.
Speaker 12 (59:31):
Jury who's like ninety nine percent Democrat and then one
percent just a never Trumper type of a rhino, and
they feel like they are going to get revenge on
Trump by convicting these January six ers who.
Speaker 16 (59:47):
Trump doesn't even know, which is ridiculous.
Speaker 26 (59:49):
It's just bogus.
Speaker 40 (01:00:22):
You know, We've got Proud Boys that were horribly mistreated
in their trials, all kinds of Brady violations, exculpatory evidence,
witness intimidation, everything you can imagine. There were over twenty
different reasons that the Proud Boys should have been a mistrial,
probably the same with the Oathkeepers trials. And yet there
they sit in prison, guilty by association. Enrique Tarrio wasn't
(01:00:43):
even in DC, and yet you got bigs and Rufio,
guys that didn't do anything wrong, but they're capable of
doing something wrong, so.
Speaker 1 (01:00:50):
They're gonna put them in prison. This is not the
America that I grew up in the rest of our.
Speaker 59 (01:00:54):
Fellow America that, Oh, the hearts of those turned hard
towards you.
Speaker 10 (01:01:01):
Pray for both those and.
Speaker 3 (01:01:04):
And our government turns partially away from you.
Speaker 59 (01:01:07):
As well as realized understand can't understand the family, the
(01:01:31):
institution you put on the sir, that's sport.
Speaker 4 (01:01:35):
Are we going inside?
Speaker 1 (01:01:36):
I want to go inside?
Speaker 51 (01:01:38):
Well without a Bundy, No, we did.
Speaker 1 (01:01:46):
We went in Boise.
Speaker 2 (01:01:48):
I know you get up from you?
Speaker 28 (01:01:49):
Are you the oh?
Speaker 4 (01:01:51):
I wanted to help you guys and give.
Speaker 9 (01:01:53):
You a room.
Speaker 47 (01:01:54):
Find out about what events are happening tonight around the
time when the sun starts to go down, because we
know that's when Antifa to go out and start attacking
people as they leave, as we saw last night in
some areas. So we want to try to go on
ahead and do as much risk mitigation as we can
find the areas that we need to get located at
and try to you know, these people.
Speaker 24 (01:02:15):
The ten percent of the cases i'll call the more
complex conspiracy cases where we do have evidence it's in
the public record, where individual militia groups from different facets, Oathkeepers,
three percenters, prow Boys did have a plan. We don't
know what the full plan is to come to DC,
organize and reach the Capitol in some manner.
Speaker 1 (01:02:38):
A majority of the.
Speaker 42 (01:02:42):
Domestic terrorism cases that we've investigated are motivated by some
version of what you might call white supremacists.
Speaker 26 (01:02:53):
Violence.
Speaker 60 (01:02:53):
Democracy is a threat to white supremacy and vice versa,
and we're about to learn a lot more about the
role such movements and groups had on the coordinated bid
to agitate crowds into storming the capital on January sixth.
Speaker 46 (01:03:06):
In my opinion, the Youthkeepers are a very dangerous organization.
Speaker 40 (01:03:09):
They may not like to call themselves a militia, but
they are.
Speaker 1 (01:03:13):
They're a violent militia.
Speaker 41 (01:03:15):
Help me.
Speaker 1 (01:03:18):
They want there to leave?
Speaker 46 (01:03:19):
Do you want to move to leave?
Speaker 4 (01:03:20):
No, they can stay there.
Speaker 1 (01:03:21):
I need to get the.
Speaker 60 (01:03:28):
Like Donald Trump himself, these far right extremist groups are
united and racism, sexism, in a thirst for violence.
Speaker 61 (01:03:34):
So we have to stop demonizing people and realize the
biggest terror threat in this country is white men, most
of them radicalized right to the right.
Speaker 7 (01:03:45):
Did the problems have a plan to go into the
into the capital?
Speaker 24 (01:03:48):
Absolutely not talking about no specific uh communication about reaching
the capital, but talking about going there, taking back the house,
talking about stopping the steal, talking about how they need
a show of force in DC, and to use.
Speaker 25 (01:04:05):
A favorite term that all of you people really came
up with, we will stop the steal.
Speaker 8 (01:04:13):
The Class BEE misdemeanor parting and picketing is typically resolved
with a ticket fifty dollars and you see the magistrate
and it's over. Except for these Class B misdemeanors. We
actually sent swat teams out and kicked down doors, use
flash bangrenades.
Speaker 4 (01:04:29):
That's how the Class BE misdemeanors. For January sixth, defendants
will resolved.
Speaker 8 (01:04:34):
James Little took his case to the appellate Court and
said that he was sentenced improperly outside of the nineteen
eighty four sentencing guideline structure, where a petty misdemeanor must
be resolved with a maximum of six months in jail
or a maximum of six months probation. And there is
no combination effort of those two to be used. So,
(01:04:55):
after serving months in a prison and then being on
probation for well over a year, his case finally hits
the appelades ordered to be re sentenced.
Speaker 4 (01:05:04):
And what does the judge do.
Speaker 8 (01:05:06):
The judge stomps the jack boot of tyranny right back
on James Little's neck and sends a message to the
rest of the January sixth defendants who had their cases
resolved with a class bing misdemeanor, don't show up here
to be resentenced, because whether they do, they sent mister
Little back to prison. So he had already served a
prison term, he had already served a probation term to
(01:05:26):
be well beyond the six months the pre trial monitoring.
He that mister Little had to go through like everyone
else when on pretrial and being.
Speaker 4 (01:05:35):
Monitored by the government for quite some time before a
year or two years before. So then you experienced that.
Speaker 8 (01:05:41):
But this is how the judge chose to resolve his case.
Speaker 4 (01:05:45):
It was a.
Speaker 8 (01:05:45):
Message sent, just like they do with everything else.
Speaker 45 (01:05:48):
Mister Evans, you just you've already served time for January sixth,
Is that correct?
Speaker 62 (01:05:55):
Yes, the government was kind enough to provide me in
federal prison state for demonstrations.
Speaker 45 (01:06:00):
Did and you did you? Did you burn down the
capitol on January sixth?
Speaker 62 (01:06:07):
No, I actually would have been better off if I
were an Antifa protester that would have burned thirty four
thousand dollars worth of federal property that was sentenced on
the same day as me, who assaulted an officer and
while on pre trial release, assaulted another officer and a civilian,
and who got just rotation in a small fine and
went home.
Speaker 45 (01:06:26):
You would have had a ninety five percent chance of
having your charges dropped.
Speaker 4 (01:06:29):
Correct, that's correct.
Speaker 1 (01:06:31):
Did you?
Speaker 45 (01:06:33):
Did you assault anyone on January sixth?
Speaker 62 (01:06:37):
Only the fabric of democracy?
Speaker 1 (01:06:39):
I hear?
Speaker 45 (01:06:41):
Thank you, God, bless you for your humor.
Speaker 35 (01:06:47):
So you may have concluded correctly that virtually everything you
have heard screamed at you for three years about January
sixth is a lie. Joining us now was David Sumral.
He's one of the producers of this documentary and we're
very glad to have him join us.
Speaker 4 (01:07:00):
David, thanks so much for coming on.
Speaker 35 (01:07:03):
So you've been involved in trying to figure out what
happened that day for the last three years, and you
did this amazing public.
Speaker 4 (01:07:12):
Service for the rest of us by putting together this documentary.
Speaker 35 (01:07:14):
Tell us some of the things that you learned from this.
Speaker 48 (01:07:18):
Well, I think it's the things we didn't learn from
anybody else. The Select Committee had every opportunity, with all
the evidence, to put a documentary out that.
Speaker 1 (01:07:25):
Showed what happened that day.
Speaker 48 (01:07:27):
But the discovery in this video I think the public
really needs to see, and that's why they've kept it
hidden and dangled.
Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
It like a carry it over the public for so long.
For three years.
Speaker 40 (01:07:36):
There is so much video around that West Tunnel taken
by individual citizens, and you'll notice around some of those
areas it's not the government footage that was important this
whole time. It was the people's footage that they took
from their cameras. And you can see Colt mccabee trying
to help the police, pulling them off the ground, talking
to him. They're thanking him, thank you for helping.
Speaker 41 (01:08:27):
Overwhere I.
Speaker 16 (01:08:37):
Speaker McCarthy promised that he would release all the footage
from January sixth.
Speaker 12 (01:08:43):
All the JA sixers want the footage released, so when
the footage is released, we have exculpatory evidence. When the
footage is not released, what do we have, Well, all
the bad parts are already out there, because anything they
find that makes you look bad, they put it out there.
So the only evidence out there that we don't see
is the stuff that's going to help.
Speaker 1 (01:09:00):
The whole reason we got rid.
Speaker 16 (01:09:02):
Of Speaker McCarthy was to get someone who would do this.
We get in Speaker Johnson, and he slow rolls in.
To this day, they haven't even released it all.
Speaker 8 (01:09:13):
The empty promise of Mike Johnson was to release all
the footage, but somehow, after an intelligence briefing, he determined
that couldn't be done. I'm tired of empty promises. I'm
tired of politicians telling me one thing. You got the position.
We the people rallied behind you. We wanted McCarthy gone
because they wouldn't release the footage. When in history have
(01:09:35):
you ever heard of the criminals demanding more footage of
their crime. Why isn't the collective voice of the January
sixth community is to release.
Speaker 63 (01:09:44):
All the footage.
Speaker 8 (01:10:02):
I contend because I've seen it all and all that's
important that if the footage is ever actually released to
the American people, the only danger to national security is
probably to the members of Congress who've hidden it from
the American people this amount of time.
Speaker 41 (01:10:18):
Glory haven't love.
Speaker 28 (01:10:23):
Gloria?
Speaker 1 (01:10:42):
All right, yeah, pray you have mel I'm fine, man,
I'm great.
Speaker 29 (01:10:48):
I'm great.
Speaker 26 (01:10:48):
I'm great, great.
Speaker 28 (01:10:49):
Yeah right, hey, God, it's like, thank God, that's over.
Thank you for I don't know to stand up there.
I'll tell you what we believe that guide us, so
you may go to a room.
Speaker 1 (01:11:04):
I'd wait for that.
Speaker 57 (01:11:05):
I've the brothers that stand beside the us.
Speaker 28 (01:11:08):
They meant.
Speaker 32 (01:11:19):
We know what it means to be a cowboy. If
we take a lot of pride and saying made in
the USA, our values and traditions don't have a price.
That's why each of our hats pass through over two
hundred hard working hands in my spetailed process. When you
put on a cowboy hat, it represents respect, freedom, strength,
and courage. You're were in the most iconic American symbol
(01:11:44):
there is.
Speaker 64 (01:11:50):
In the West, We've always lived by a code where
small talk is traded for big stories, and where every
day is another chance. Lazy betrayals rangwick for the ride
of life.
Speaker 1 (01:12:23):
To make matters worse.
Speaker 40 (01:12:25):
The corner that ruled on the four deaths from January
sixth Roseanne Boyle and Ashley Babbitt, Kevin Greeson and Benjamin
Phillips is the same corner that weighed in on the
George Floyd corner's decision and changed it so that Shavin
would end up in jail. If you're familiar with the
George Floyd story, this is the same corner. This said
(01:12:45):
Roseanne Boylan died of a drug overdose when she's obviously
on video being gassed, trampled and beaten by one of
the police officers there in the tunnel. And then you've
got Kevin Greeson and Benjamin Phillips that the media said, oh,
they died of natural causes, had stroke in a heart attack,
but they don't show where they were in the crowd
(01:13:06):
and what was happening in the pressure, the struggle, the emotion,
the frustration, or the lack of support from the police.
Speaker 1 (01:13:15):
That's the negligence part.
Speaker 40 (01:13:16):
When you let someone lay there on the ground and
die and don't get them help, that's on you. You're
responsible for that, and you didn't help these good people.
Speaker 45 (01:13:26):
Yeah, I highly, highly suspect that they destroyed evidence. They
didn't hand over everything that we asked for them to
give us when they ended the one hundred and seventeenth
Congress and Republicans we took the majority at the one
hundred and eighteenth Congress, they didn't hand over everything, And yeah,
I do believe that they destroyed evidence.
Speaker 40 (01:13:50):
One thing we said after January sixth was that we
were the template the test subjects, and that it was
going to happen to more people. And I specifically said,
you know you're next. And people said, we didn't go
to we didn't act like juveniles, we didn't do stupid things.
Speaker 1 (01:14:02):
They're not coming for us.
Speaker 40 (01:14:03):
And then they went to their school board meeting and
said they didn't like CRT. And then that same FBI
was banging on their door saying, hey, what are you
saying something in public against what we want in America.
Speaker 31 (01:14:15):
We shouldn't need to say that parents speaking out about
their children's education aren't domestic terrorists, or that those raising
concerns about the radical direction the left is trying to
take this country are not domestic terrorists, or that Trump
supporters aren't domestic terrorists. But apparently we do, because the
Biden administration is bound and determined to demonize anyone and
(01:14:36):
everyone not in lockstep with their far left agenda. Last September,
the Biden White House colluded colluded with the National school
Boards Association to orchestrate a letter to President Biden that
portrayed concerned parents speaking out at school board meetings as
security threats. The letter urged the President to use the
(01:14:57):
Patriot Act to go after America's moms and dads.
Speaker 40 (01:15:01):
And the reality is most of this surveillance was happening
long before January sixth, during the.
Speaker 1 (01:15:07):
Stop to Steal rallies and before.
Speaker 40 (01:15:10):
So when you start thinking about the Patriot Act being
used on American citizens for government control and power gains,
that's a very scary situation to be in sometimes forever.
Speaker 8 (01:15:28):
Okay, you guys, I'm.
Speaker 40 (01:15:35):
The trauma from January sixth has not only been for
the j six defendants themselves, but trickles down to their
entire family. You know, it's the breadwinner. If you take
him out of the house, that's one thing. But to
drag these children and wives out in the street during
these raids and for them not to have their father
or husband or wife, you know, in their family for
years at a time.
Speaker 8 (01:15:58):
Can we go ahead and have your have you come out,
We're gonna be clear this resident.
Speaker 14 (01:16:05):
We haven't a rest more friend, but we need to
be able to step out.
Speaker 58 (01:16:09):
Daddy what money?
Speaker 51 (01:16:12):
Why are we working daddy's hands?
Speaker 40 (01:16:15):
And like one of the Jay Sixers said, it's that
there's nothing like going to prison for something you know
you're not guilty of. But for the whole family to
being able to you know, suffer through this entire experience.
Speaker 1 (01:16:25):
And we've seen divorces. You know.
Speaker 40 (01:16:27):
The Department of Justice wants to make this as expensive
as possible. The attorneys are not cheap, so people lose everything,
their retirement, their homes, their vehicles, their wives, their children.
We've seen everything that you can imagine. We've had over
ten suicides in our community just from the pressure of
the Department of Justice and the FBI in fear of
(01:16:49):
these raids, in fear of going for prison for something
you didn't do. And a lot of people can't take
that pressure. But it's very intentional, and I think that
the cost to the family has been greater than then
the public realizes yet. And hopefully President Trump will help
rectify that situation and bring some sort of compensation or
(01:17:09):
something to these families as a whole to help repair
the damage that's been done.
Speaker 4 (01:17:15):
In six days.
Speaker 65 (01:17:16):
We have opened over one hundred and sixty case files,
and that's just a tip of the iceberg. The significance
of this investigation is not lost on us. This is
a twenty four to seven full bore, extensive operation into
what happened that day.
Speaker 8 (01:17:33):
The interesting part about Stephen d'antwano, who was the FBI
chieftain of DC for the Washington Field Office, is that
he had just come from successfully carrying out the false
flag event on the Gretchen Winner situation.
Speaker 1 (01:17:49):
These people were framed by the FBI.
Speaker 40 (01:17:51):
There were more FBI agents involved than people, and yet
they created this big narrative that they were trying to
kidnap and possibly kill a governor, which was bogus, but
it was almost a precursor or a setup, the same
script basically that they used to develop for January six.
And one of the guys, Stephen deantwino, moved from that
field office to DC just before January six.
Speaker 1 (01:18:13):
Of course, he's up for retirement. Everybody's up for retirement.
Speaker 40 (01:18:16):
Matthew Graves, Christopher Ray, all the bad guys seem to
be trying to tuck tail and run before Trump gets
into office.
Speaker 19 (01:18:25):
And Cheney was behind it, and so is Benny Thompson
and everybody on that committee.
Speaker 4 (01:18:31):
We're going to for what they did. Honestly, they should
go to jail.
Speaker 37 (01:18:35):
I have never voted for a Democrat, but this year
I am proudly casting my vote for Vice President Kamala Harris.
Speaker 45 (01:18:46):
You know, Liz Cheney, she needs to be disbarred, and
I think we can look at criminal charges for her,
but it shouldn't.
Speaker 8 (01:18:51):
Stop with her.
Speaker 45 (01:18:52):
It's like, why just stop with her? Benny Thompson is
another one that needs to be investigated. All of them
need to be investigated. And just because our members of
Congress doesn't mean that they should be protected for how
they destroyed people's lives. Actually, how they built a narrative
and built an entire plot and then destroyed people's lives
(01:19:14):
with what they built.
Speaker 8 (01:19:16):
The work we've done to expose them, to expose these
unnatural and incestuous relations.
Speaker 4 (01:19:22):
To show how the prosecutors wives are.
Speaker 8 (01:19:25):
Taking part and incredible acts like Fatima Ghost Graves and
Matthew Graves. These people do not hold American ideology. They
certainly don't respect our civilization, our culture, who we are
as a country.
Speaker 4 (01:19:40):
Or anything to do with the law.
Speaker 8 (01:19:41):
They're simply there to undermine everything that we hold dear.
They're simply there to act as partisan puppets. And nobody
that would take on such an action deserves to be
on the bench. It's why the House Judiciary was formed.
The effeckless members of Congress, in their usual uncourageous manner,
(01:20:06):
would only write strongly worded letters and potentially to give
us some media highlights. But damned if they would have
the actual brass and gall to uphold their position and
bring these people in for accountability, to bring us Beryl
Howe to bring before the people, to bring before Congressional
(01:20:26):
Committee the actions of one Timothy Kelly and Judge A.
Met Meta, these partisan lunatics who support this Marxist communist ideology.
You don't have to look any further than Judge Chutkin
to see that her grandfather, Frank Hill, was actually responsible
for starting the Marxist Communist ideological party in Jamaica, where
(01:20:47):
she's from.
Speaker 4 (01:20:49):
These people did.
Speaker 8 (01:20:49):
Not matriculate from the places you came from. They didn't
grow up under their street lights. They didn't play tag
and live in our cities and adopt Western culture and
assimilate to this nation. These people came here with an idea,
they were indoctrinated, and they came here with something that
runs very afoul of the United States Constitution. And people
(01:21:13):
like the Manchurian candidate Barack Obama are largely responsible for this.
Speaker 27 (01:21:18):
Oh, you know, there's some crazy communists. You know that's
gonna take away everybody's property. And I mean, those are
interesting intellectual arguments, but I think for your generation, you
should be practical and just.
Speaker 1 (01:21:36):
Choose from what works.
Speaker 27 (01:21:39):
You don't have to worry about whether it neatly fits
into socialist theory or capitalist theory.
Speaker 1 (01:21:45):
You should just decide what works.
Speaker 30 (01:21:50):
With regard to the question regarding the family, I'm extremely
proud of my son Hunter. He has overcome an addiction.
Is he's one of the great. It is most decent
men I know, and I am satisfied that I'm not
going to do anything I said. I advide by the
jury decision.
Speaker 12 (01:22:09):
I will do that.
Speaker 31 (01:22:10):
And I will not partner him.
Speaker 66 (01:22:11):
But we do begin tonight with the backlash after President
Biden pardoned his son Hunter, issuing a quote full and
unconditional pardon to his son.
Speaker 8 (01:22:19):
The individual actions of a career criminal like Hunter Biden
and the actions that he took over there were so
heinous and so devastating to so many people, including children. Apparently,
if you watch those videos, the depravity of the one
individual does it begin to rise to the collective action
(01:22:40):
of every single January sixth defendant president that day for
anything they could.
Speaker 4 (01:22:44):
Ever do in a lifetime.
Speaker 1 (01:22:46):
Pardons are necessary. There's no way around this.
Speaker 40 (01:22:49):
You can't reset the system if the system won't reset itself,
and we've proven over and over through these courts they
will not self correct.
Speaker 1 (01:22:58):
DC is a swamp of eruption.
Speaker 40 (01:23:01):
They have proven themselves for the last four years against
these good people, and it's time for a change.
Speaker 7 (01:23:20):
So I just sort of got a glimpse of what
was in here.
Speaker 28 (01:23:24):
I am psyched.
Speaker 45 (01:23:27):
Here it is, folks, turn they're around.
Speaker 47 (01:23:30):
My food forest Bible.
Speaker 7 (01:23:33):
Yeah yeah, baby, pull it out and see if I
can get it out of the box.
Speaker 18 (01:23:40):
Hold it in between there you go.
Speaker 45 (01:23:43):
Ah, love it, love it, love it.
Speaker 7 (01:23:48):
And it's autographed. Oh my gosh, how lucky can you be.
I'm gonna have to order the one that's not a
coffee table book so I can use it every day.
Speaker 45 (01:23:58):
This one's going on the coffee table.
Speaker 56 (01:24:00):
Love it so much, Thank you, Joven.
Speaker 60 (01:24:24):
Have you ever heard of somebody getting a preemptive pardon
who was innocent of all crime, who's just an innocent person?
Have you ever heard of that, just somebody getting a
blanket pardon and they're an innocent person.
Speaker 56 (01:24:35):
But no, you know, I think that it's an effort.
Speaker 24 (01:24:38):
Not only to prospectively pardon people for things they have
not yet been charged with and may never be charged.
Speaker 64 (01:24:44):
With, but also it's the president's own family.
Speaker 1 (01:24:49):
It's people that have.
Speaker 40 (01:24:50):
Been covering up from the president in addition to his
own family.
Speaker 12 (01:24:54):
There is no reason why any president must consider preemptive pardons.
Speaker 30 (01:24:59):
The only reason I know to ask for a pardon
is because you think you've committed a crime.
Speaker 33 (01:25:05):
And so if he pardons people preemptively, he's essentially telling
the public that these people have committed crimes and we
may not be aware of what they are, but the
pardon is clear evidence that crimes have been committed.
Speaker 67 (01:25:19):
Is there an innocent explanation for someone to seek preemptive
pardons for family members? Would you do that if you
knew you were innocent and just worried about outside forces?
Speaker 24 (01:25:36):
The answer to that is going to be.
Speaker 66 (01:25:38):
No President Trump is reportedly considering a wave of preemptive pardons.
Does this concern you all these preemptive pardons, Well.
Speaker 30 (01:25:49):
It concerns me in terms of what kind of precedence
sets in how the rest of the world looks at
US as a nation of laws and justice, not going
to see an our administration that kind.
Speaker 4 (01:26:06):
Of approach to pardons.
Speaker 68 (01:26:08):
Well, on his final hours as president, Joe Biden made
a few radical moves of his own. He issued presidential
pardons to people who've never been charged with anything, that
include his own siblings and the espouses and politicians and
public figures that he believes need protection from avengeful Trump.
Speaker 8 (01:26:26):
Reggie once, there was a time where everyone clutched their
pearls and feigned astonishment over the events of January sixth,
But that didn't change because of Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (01:26:36):
It didn't change.
Speaker 8 (01:26:37):
Because of the politicians and their strongly worded letters. We
couldn't even get these people to listen.
Speaker 4 (01:26:42):
For years.
Speaker 8 (01:26:43):
All they would talk about is prison abuse. They didn't
want to talk about the fact that officers regularly perjured themselves.
The Harry Dunns, Thelilah Morrises, the Michael Fanones, the Aquino Ganells,
and how these people abused people, and how the Select
Committee covered up and hit information, and how they manipulated
and changed and altered and fraudulently concocted and narrative.
Speaker 45 (01:27:06):
It was never possible for any January sixth offendant to
get a fair trial in the district of District of Columbia.
They were convicted the minute they were arrested.
Speaker 8 (01:27:15):
So, for God's sake, pardon every January sixth defendant in
the name of justice.
Speaker 4 (01:27:26):
Sure, yes, sir.
Speaker 12 (01:27:27):
First, we have a list of pardons and commutations relating
to events that occurred on January sixth, twenty twenty one.
Speaker 69 (01:27:34):
Okay, and how many people is this?
Speaker 11 (01:27:36):
I think this order will apply to approximately fifteen hundred people.
Speaker 69 (01:27:39):
Sir, So this is January sixth. These are the hostages,
approximately fifteen hundred for a pardon, full part, full part.
We have about six commutations, and then when we're doing
(01:28:01):
further research.
Speaker 1 (01:28:03):
Nice to see you again.
Speaker 14 (01:28:12):
So this is a big one.
Speaker 69 (01:28:15):
Anything you want to explain about this. We hope they
get him.
Speaker 4 (01:28:18):
We hope they come out tonight.
Speaker 69 (01:28:20):
Frankly, they're expecting it.
Speaker 4 (01:28:36):
Thank you for joining us.
Speaker 70 (01:28:38):
Our top story at six one of the first things
President Donald Trump did when he took office was pardoned
in January sixth. Defendants those pardoned include more than a
dozen people from South Texas.
Speaker 58 (01:28:49):
Trennis Evans from Kenya. Lake is one of the people
at the Capitol on January sixth who was pardoned by
President Trump. He pled guilty to a misdemeanor in twenty
twenty two and was fine sentenced to three years probation
in twenty days of intermittent incarceration.
Speaker 35 (01:29:25):
You're going to meet with personsponders today, but you pardon
people who assaulted person's sponder.
Speaker 34 (01:29:31):
No.
Speaker 25 (01:29:31):
I pardoned people that were assaulted themselves. They were assaulted
by our government. I I pardoned J six people who
were assaulted by our government. That's who assaulted and they
were treated unfairly. There's never been a group of people
in this country, outside of maybe one instance that I
can think of, but I won't get into it, that
(01:29:53):
were treated more horribly than the people of J six.
So no, I didn't assault. They were assaulted, and what
I did was a great thing for humanity. They were
treated very, very unfairly.
Speaker 1 (01:30:06):
There's never been in said like, well, that was a
great movie.
Speaker 5 (01:30:11):
The one thing that I would basically note from that
is the fact that they've exposed some of the things
that not a whole lot of people are talking about.
It's something that we've all had to deal with since
the beginning, and that's the unfair judicial process that we
all had to go through. There was evidence that was
being held from us. They were literally, as you've seen
on this show a year or so, a year and
(01:30:34):
a half ago, right after our trial, as I was
sitting in the hole, Don and Donna aired a video
that literally was altered in my trial, but they had
the physical whole video of an interaction that we had
with Harry Dunn, and so our judge wouldn't you know,
they just let the video go through and there was
(01:30:55):
no arguing the fact that what Harry Dunn spoke about.
And even in our trial when we had an officer
that we knew led on the stand, they wouldn't let
us bring him back in once we figured out who
he was, and the fact that he was nowhere around
us at the time, if you remember.
Speaker 3 (01:31:08):
That, Yeah, they said that they couldn't get their schedules
cleared to come back to be cross examined again on
the stand. So that was their excuse for not allowing
us to prove what actually happened.
Speaker 5 (01:31:25):
Yeah, so these are all things that we're facing on
appeal right now, which just puts us back in front
of the DC courts and the DC judges. Hopefully now
with the district attorneys that we have there, with Ed
Martin and everybody, they're going to have a little bit
more favorable results. One of the things that happened today
really focuses on something that has been more painful for
us than anything else, and that's the families. And today
(01:31:47):
me and Kenny got to do something a little special
with our sons and it's something I really appreciate. With
my son Zach being with me.
Speaker 3 (01:31:56):
Kenny, my son Nathan was with us as well, and
it was kind of like a coming to the end
of a chapter and maybe the start of the next.
Speaker 5 (01:32:08):
So and here it is, man, DC was rough, bro,
there was sure.
Speaker 1 (01:32:13):
It was a long hike back here around.
Speaker 5 (01:32:15):
I know it's a long walk.
Speaker 1 (01:32:16):
Yeah, Oh, there's a boys.
Speaker 2 (01:32:17):
Huh, what's up kid?
Speaker 1 (01:32:20):
Hey, Bud, I love you.
Speaker 5 (01:32:25):
We're gonna cut these things.
Speaker 1 (01:32:26):
Down or what?
Speaker 41 (01:32:30):
Yep?
Speaker 5 (01:32:40):
Oh, all right, all right, that was awesome, awesome, you know,
(01:33:02):
it's nice to cut those down after a while. Obviously
they weren't up as long as Nicole and Mickey were
standing out on the freedom corner for us. But it
was greatly appreciated. Yep, everything you guys have all done.
We really appreciate everything you've done for us. And now
we'd like to bring out the greatest national anthem ever sung.
Obviously we were both on it. Yeah, yeah, we were
both on it. Recorded in cell nine and C two B. Gentlemen,
(01:33:26):
take your hats off, ladies and gentlemen, hands over your
hearts as you bring in the greatest national anthem ever Sunger.
Speaker 41 (01:34:08):
What line?
Speaker 19 (01:34:20):
I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of.
Speaker 57 (01:34:24):
America, who tribes and riding grow.
Speaker 53 (01:34:41):
Sweet square, And to the Republic for which it stands,
(01:35:16):
one nation under God
Speaker 19 (01:35:32):
Indivisible with liberty and justice for all.