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July 16, 2025 36 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 2 (07/16) - Royal Oakes comes on the show to talk about a new multi-state lawsuit against FEMA for cutting disaster funds unlawfully. Vice Mayor of Cudahy Cynthia Gonzalez finally addressed her viral video where she called for gang members to take action against ICE. An Arcadia couple is being investigated by the FBI because they had 21 kids but the kids were born through surrogacy. News conference from Gov. Newsom regarding the ICE raids in the LA area and some of the National Guard troops leaving LA.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobelt podcast on the iHeartRadio
app ron every day from one.

Speaker 1 (00:07):
Until four o'clock. After four o'clock, John.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Cobelt's show on demand and you can listen to whatever
you missed. And in the last hour we talked extensively
about how they are busy passing legislation in Sacramento so
that the City of Los Angeles can buy up Palisades
lots and turn them into low income housing. This is

(00:33):
separate from Gavin Newsom offering one hundred million dollars in
tax money to build low income housing in the Palisades.
That's separate from Scott Wiener's bill that wants to allow
low income housing. These are apartment towers in any residential neighborhood,
Palisades or otherwise. We'll talk more about this later. It
is a real full on effort. Now let's go as

(00:55):
something completely different. Royal Oaks. ABC News legal analyst is
on here because FEMA is the target now of a
nineteen state lawsuit saying that the Trump administration broke the
law canceling hundreds of millions of dollars in disaster preparedness

(01:16):
and also the lawsuit says that the Trump administration broke
the law in hiring new administrators to run FEMA. And
let's see if Royal Oaks can sort this out and
explain if there's any merit to these cases.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Royal you there, I I'm here. Yeah. This falls John
under the heading of a bad look. There isn't any
evidence actually to say that the FEMA program that Trump
dumped back in April, the absence of it, contributed to
the problems in Texas, but that's being alleged by the lawsuit.

(01:54):
We'll see if the Democrat Attorney's General nineteen of them
can come up with the goods. But at this point,
after everybody is so focused on the tragedy in Texas,
it is not a good look for the Democrat ags
to be able to drag Trump into court and say, aha,
he canceled millions of dollars in emergency aid, including some

(02:15):
flood prevention systems and emergency power supply programs. So that's
just a political victory, whether or not they get a
legal victory.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
It's the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program, right, A.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
Brick is the acronym, So what's happened here is that
the Attorney's General very very smart. They filed the lawsuit
in Massachusetts, and if you count up the numbers, there
are twelve federal judges in the Massachusetts District Court. Eleven
were appointed by Democrat presidents won by a Republican president,
so very likely they're going to get good news. Now,

(02:51):
this isn't some plot by the Democrats. It's a function
of the fact that for over a century there's this
blue slip program where when the president wants to appoint
it judge, the senators in the home state where he's
appointing them actually have a right to veto them. Now,
the presidents don't always go along, but they usually do. Plus,
judges wait until they get a president in office before

(03:13):
they resign. And that's why you got this, you know,
crazy eleven to one count in Massachusetts.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
Yeah, it's all big stupid game, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (03:22):
But let me ask you, doesn't doesn't did the Trump
administration like any administration, they could decide, they could decide
what programs they want to fund and which ones they
want to end.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
Yeah, they do, And that goes to the heart of
the issue in the lawsuit. One of the things. The
lawsuit says is, well, Congress passed the law creating this
sort of sub unit within FEMA for the flood stuff
and so on. But generally, the executive branch has a
right in implementing the congressional law to decide, well, this
is where we're going to spend the money. And Trump
has pointed out that these these programs that were passed

(03:55):
basically are green energy vanity projects, and they were designed
to help Democrats states and cities, and that was the
basis of his decision.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
A lot of these lawsuits, the main argument is, hey,
the executive branch of the government cannot affect programs that
the executive branch runs. I mean, I don't know how
many times we've had this conversation. The Trump administration's in charge,
they get to control the federal programs.

Speaker 3 (04:25):
That's right. If you don't have a statue that explicitly says, okay,
we the Congress are passing a law saying X dollars
will be spent in the following X y Z ways,
then the executive the presumption is he or she does
have that power. Again, though, this falls into the bad
look category because not only is this lawsuit coming when
everybody is so horrified by Texas and the Democrat ags

(04:48):
were able to say, look what Trump did. He cut
flood control. Also, they're arguing that Trump has appointed some
guys running FEMA illegally and one of them doesn't give
how many practical experience in terms of emergency management. Again,
whether it's true or not, it's a pretty smart move politically,
even if they don't prevail legally.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
Yeah, that was the next thing he was going to
ask you about. Specifically. It's about this man named Cameron Hamilton.
He was the acting FEMA administrator up until May, and
lawsuit says that he was unlawfully put in that position
and he lacked the authority to terminate the funding. Again,

(05:27):
doesn't the presidential administration get to choose who they want
to run these agencies because they're in charge and the
other administration was voted out of office.

Speaker 3 (05:37):
Yeah, and so Trump probably has the better of that argument.
The Democrats are saying, is sky Hamilton. He's served as
acting FEMA administrator for several months and he illegally held
a position under a federal law called the Federal Vacancy's
Reform Act. But Trump is responding and saying look, he
was legally appointed, the presidential memorandum deemed and qualified in

(05:59):
the national interest. Again, it's inside baseball. Who knows who
will win. But it's kind of a political victory for
the Democrats to be able to say, you know, in
a headline, Hey, you know, the Trump appointed somebody who
didn't have any career.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
That's all they want is the headline. The whole story
is much more complicated than that, but nobody cares. You
just you get a cheap headline from a very compliant media.
Royal looks very good. Thank you for coming on.

Speaker 3 (06:23):
Do you have thanks?

Speaker 1 (06:23):
All right?

Speaker 2 (06:24):
Royal Oaks from ABC News, the legal Analyst. We are
waiting to see if a newsom is going to be
speaking to LA Fire survivors.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
While he has three three.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
Prongs that are going to bring low forced, low income
housing into Pacific Palisades, he's tried to distract here, I
think by claiming he's got a program where the good
people of Palisades and Altadena can be able to offer
their voice to help help shape the rebuilding of these community.

(07:01):
It's a total misdirection play. We'll talk about that coming up. Also,
I'll talk about the cutahey, vice mayor. She issued sort
of an apology for asking gang members to come to
town and kill ice agents. We'll talk more about that
and play her new public statement.

Speaker 4 (07:19):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI am
six forty.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
Well, here's some good news. It looks like our pressure
has worked. We had Rick Caruso on was it last week,
within the last two weeks, and he was saying, how
Karen Bass and the County of La we're not using
the AI tool that he acquired with Steadfast LA. Steadfast

(07:50):
LA is his nonprofit that he's put together to try
to help people rebuild in Altadena and Palisades more quickly.
And they had an AI permitting tool that shortened the
time of the permit process from a few months to
a few hours. And Bass and the La County supervisors
wouldn't take them on the offer. They wouldn't take them

(08:12):
up on the offer. Didn't understand why. Well, we kept
hammering about it and hammering about it, and I'm sure
Tracy Park came on and confirmed just a couple of
days ago that, yeah, Karen Bass was not approving of
the AI software that would dramatically increase the rate of

(08:36):
permits being granted. So we had two sources on that,
Caruso who acquired the software, and Tracy Park and that's
her district. Well, a little more hammering went on, and
now we've got this press release from steadfast La. LA
City and County begin testing the AI permitting tool provided

(08:57):
by Steadfast LA for faster rebuilding.

Speaker 1 (08:59):
Just got this at twelve forty nine.

Speaker 2 (09:03):
Both La County and La City announced today that the
AI plan check and permitting tool that Steadfast LA was
able to provide it no cost, is now available for use.
This was what was infuriating. It wasn't going to cost
Cairen Bass anything to use it. It would simply speed
up the process dramatically. This technology, read now from the website,

(09:25):
will dramatically expedite the plan check and permitting process for
families who want to rebuild following January's wildfires. Now the
city and county must deploy it correctly and eliminate any
surrounding red tape. It's called Arches Star and Cruso's group
says it's a leading technology company with a track record

(09:46):
in this space, and Stetfast LA provided funding for them
to develop the tool brought it to the city and
the county in partnership with La Rises and Governor Gavin
Newsom's office, and they are they also have links if
you are interested in connecting to the arches Star software

(10:09):
program and gets your permit plan check much more quickly
for people in Altadena and the Palisades from those two fires,
so that there's no reason that it should have been
delayed as long as it had been delayed many many weeks.
I don't know why, but I think there's got to
be more and more public pressure on all this nonsense.

(10:31):
All right, speaking of nonsense, remember our friend the Katahey mayors,
Cynthia Gonzalez. Cynthia Gonzalez in the midst of the riots,
she is the vice mayor Vice mayor, I should correct myself.
And she is an educator, she has a doctorate, she's
doctor Cynthia Gonzales, and she's worked as a teacher.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
And administrator of principal.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
And I don't know if she got loaded one night,
because when she is speaking in public normally she has
a very cultured, quete, educated delivery, and instead she was
caught up in all the hysteria regarding the riots, and
we got the street version of Cynthia Gonzales. Here is

(11:19):
audio from the social media video that she put out
calling for the Eighteenth Street and Florencia gangs to take
on Ice. Not for nothing, but.

Speaker 5 (11:31):
I want to know where all the trollers are at
in Los Angeles, Eighteenth Street, Florentia. Where's the leadership at,
Because you guys are all.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
About territory and this is Eighteenth Street and this is
sore Anthea.

Speaker 5 (11:42):
They tag everything up flaiming hood.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
And now that your hood's being invaded by the biggest
gang there is, there ain't a peep out of you.

Speaker 1 (11:50):
It's everyone else who's not about the gang.

Speaker 5 (11:52):
Life that's out there protesting and speaking up.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
We're out there life fighting.

Speaker 5 (11:58):
Ar tour, protecting our turtecting our people.

Speaker 6 (12:01):
And like where you are, Dinka ya vito, Dinka ya vitoso, and.

Speaker 1 (12:08):
They're running amuck all up in your on your streets,
on your.

Speaker 7 (12:12):
Streets and in your city and peepe when the big
gang guns come in.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
Nothing but like why we're out here, the regular.

Speaker 5 (12:19):
Ones that have never been jumped in out here calling things.

Speaker 2 (12:22):
Down, trying to organize people, trying to do the thing.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
So don't be trying to claim no block no, nothing.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
If you're not showing up right now trying to like
help out and organize, I don't want to hear a
peep out of you once they're gone, trying to claim
that this is my block. This was not your block.

Speaker 1 (12:38):
You are even here helping out.

Speaker 5 (12:40):
So whoever's the leadership over there, just can get your.

Speaker 1 (12:43):
Members in order.

Speaker 2 (12:44):
Yeah, completely incoherent. That's neither English nor Spanish. I don't
know what that is, but that's your doctor. Cynthia Gonzales. Well,
last night she was at the Cutahey City Council where
she's still vice mayor, and she tried to explain her
calling on I mean, this is not in dispute. She

(13:07):
was asking gang members to come back to town and
defend their territory and take on ICE. These are armed
gang members. Presumably she expected them to kill the ICE
agents if necessary. I don't know, So let's play her statement.

Speaker 5 (13:21):
I'm going to read off of this, and usually I
speak just from what is in my heart, but for
legal purposes, I'm going to read this because they took
time to write it and draft it. I just want
to take some time to address the short satirical TikTok
video I made recently that drew national headlines and public criticism.
To be clear, I created this video in my personal

(13:44):
time and on my personal page.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
Can you stop stop a second? That satire like what
Saturday Night Live does satire? Usually there are laughs in satire.
Maybe I missed it. I mean we've played that clip,
I don't know, probably about twelve times. I keep missing
the laugh. What's what's the punchline? When you're asking gang
members to come and take on ice?

Speaker 1 (14:08):
By the way, you know.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Your delivery is a little bit different, a little more restrained,
a little more articulate. English is clear here, not doing
that sing song street rap routine play some more.

Speaker 5 (14:20):
To be clear, I created this video in my personal
time and on my personal page. The message was not
about violence. It was about regular people. Us Martin had
joined me in one of these claiming ownership of our
streets in a time of great distress and asking others
who I mentioned in my video, in organizing and protesting

(14:41):
against the harm and violence being inflicted on our community.
Those that inserted a narrative of violence into my video
weaponized it in a way that is totally.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
Inconsistent in my life.

Speaker 2 (14:53):
Stop we weaponized it she's calling on the Eighteenth Street
Gang and the Florencia thirteen gang, and we weaponized the situation.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
Wow, all right, play more.

Speaker 5 (15:07):
Those that inserted a narrative of violence into my video
weaponized it in the way that is totally inconsistent with
my life's work. I spent over twenty two years in education,
advocating for young people and working tw interrupt cycles of harm.
As a high school principal in south central Los Angeles,
Los Angeles, I led with the belief that every young person,

(15:28):
including those involved or impacted by gangs, poverty, or incarceration,
deserve dignity, respect, and opportunity.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
Well hold, play it again, who gets dignity, respect and opportunity?

Speaker 5 (15:40):
Including those involved or impacted by gangs, poverty, or incarceration,
deserve dignity, respect, and opportunity.

Speaker 2 (15:48):
Stop Stop this is easy. Got a Wikipedia type in
Eighteenth Street Gang. The most licrative activity of the Eighteenth
Street Gang is street level distribution of cocaine and marijuana and,
to a lesser extent, heroin and metha anthetamy. The gang
is also involved in auto theft, carjacking, drive by shootings, extortion, identification, fraud, robbery, assault,

(16:13):
and homicide. Special Agent George Rodriguez of the US Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives describe the Eighteenth Street
Gang as quote one of the most violent street gangs
and one of the most prolific in the United States.
Several Eighteenth Street Gang members have reached a higher level
of sophistication and organization than other great gangs. They have

(16:35):
been linked to murders, assaults, arson, copyright infringement, extortion, human trafficking,
illegal immigration, kidnapping, prostitution, robbery, and weapons trafficking. Okay, play
that last line again, just so we have a context here.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
Including those involved or impacted by gangs, poverty or incarceration,
deserve dignity, respect, and opportunity.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
Okay, wait, stop that down, dignity, respect, an opportunity.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
Okay, so let's review.

Speaker 2 (17:10):
According to Special Agent George Rodriguez of ATF, in addition
to street level distribution of drugs their main source of income,
these gang members who deserve dignity, respect, and opportunity, have
been linked to murders, assaults, arson, copyright infringement, extortion, human trafficking,

(17:31):
the legal immigration, kidnapping, prostitution, robbery, and weapons trafficking, got it,
and they deserve dignity, respect and opportunity, according to doctor
and Vice Mayor Cynthia Gonzales and Kude. And that was
when she was calling them to come and fight Ice.

Speaker 1 (17:54):
That was just satire, just a gag. I really feel
like I'm going.

Speaker 4 (18:00):
And see you're listening to John Cobels on demand from
KFI A six forty.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
We're on every day from one until four o'clock and
after four o'clock John Cobelt Show on demand on the
iHeart app.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
We're going to have.

Speaker 2 (18:16):
Alex Stone on at three o'clock to talk about this
double homicide in Encino, the former music supervisor with American
Idol and her husband, also a musician. There is a
lot of weird stuff swirling around. The New York Post

(18:36):
has a story that this guy had quite the arrest
record in recent years, and well, we'll see what Alex knows,
and then we'll follow up some of the other stories
out there, because it looks like this this guy was
repeatedly being being spinning through the justice system and somebody
effed up by not putting him in prison for a

(18:57):
long time.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
But you know it's expected.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
You just take a bad guy, spin him through the
system over and over again, no matter how many times
he's charged, and eventually he's gonna kill people because he's insane.
And in Karen Basses Los Angeles, the insane get to
roll things because there's a lot of people in the
Bass's administration and in LASA who are making a lot
of money as long as the crazy violent drug addicts

(19:24):
are running amok in the city. They're making thousands of dollars.
Got to talk about this other bizarre story, and this
is in Arcadia. There is a couple. The man is
sixty five, the woman is thirty eight. The man is

(19:45):
named Gourjean Juan, woman Sylvia Jane Xuan is that pronounced Jean.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
Sure William and the wrong people exactly?

Speaker 5 (20:01):
You're my check bot, Yeah, I know you know what
put it in AI and see what AI has to say.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
You're my AI. You haven't been reading the guy's name.

Speaker 2 (20:11):
No, I have not, Goodness, I've not said it one time.

Speaker 1 (20:14):
I've done the story a million times. X u A
n yeah one.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
Think one sure one and Jang. They were arrested originally
for felony child endangerment in May. They have a four
million dollar home in Arcadia.

Speaker 5 (20:31):
Yeah, did you it looks really nice from the outside.

Speaker 1 (20:34):
For four million in Arcadia, I better look nice.

Speaker 3 (20:37):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
And there was a report that a two month old
had a traumatic injury. So the cops get inside. They
find fifteen children between the ages of two months and
age thirteen. There was another six children had been moved
to other homes. Twenty one kids. Now, there's no enough

(21:00):
time for a woman to give birth to twenty one
kids in thirteen years. Seventeen were under the age of three.
That would be a real busy mother.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
That'd be a nightmare. I don't think you could.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
Run seventeen pregnancies through your body three years. Turns out
all of this they were all surrogate born children. And
I guess they had paid off at least seventeen other
women as many as seventeen other women in the last

(21:38):
three years. And they're thinking that maybe this was they
were trafficking in babies. They were having babies created and
then selling the babies, since they found six in other homes.
I don't know, just speculation there, but there must have
been nobody's doing this for fun. Nobody wants to have
seventeen kids under the age of three running around the house,

(22:00):
and of course they hired some nanny and they think
the nanny was beating up the kids.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Oh God, so awful.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
The nanny is fifty six year old Chun May Lee,
and the cops say they're security cameras that showed Lee
was verbally and physically abusing the kids. Now, technically, having
dozens of children through surrogates is not illegal, but a
lot of the activity inside the home obviously was, and

(22:30):
the executive director of the Center for Bioethics and Culture,
Callie Fell, told Channel seven that the situation smells of trafficking.
So they were creating kids. This was like, this is
like horse breeders, right, they breed horses.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
And then they sell them. This is so bad. This
I'd never heard of before.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
Breeding children through surrogates and then selling them.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
I can't imagine there's any other sean. We're going to
break in now and go to governor new Some She
knew her.

Speaker 6 (23:03):
Rights, she exercised her rights. I think it's important to
highlight that.

Speaker 7 (23:09):
One thing to know your rights, another important and imperative thing.

Speaker 6 (23:13):
To do is to exercise them. And she did that.

Speaker 7 (23:16):
She videotaped what occurred and it's an example of what's
occurring all over here in southern California. What's occurred at
a level we've not seen in modern times. I just
had an opportunity to visit with business leaders, small business.
When I say mom and pop, I mean mom, dad, kids, grandkids,

(23:37):
generational businesses. In bell I met one business owner. They've
been twenty years in business. They said, we missed COVID.
They said it was much easier. They have lost eighty
percent of their business.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Oh, this is an illegal animal said they've.

Speaker 7 (23:57):
Lost something more precious, which really put it in perspective.
They said they've lost a sense of community. They said
they missed their customers, not the business.

Speaker 6 (24:07):
They missed the tables being filled.

Speaker 1 (24:10):
All right, let's talk about business. A major emotional manipulation.

Speaker 6 (24:13):
Making ends meet. They're trying some catering work. They have
a fifteen year employee. He won't even show up to work.

Speaker 7 (24:22):
He's here with documentation, but he's scared to death. He
hasn't shown up in weeks. Well, he won't even show
up because he's scared to death of being pulled over
for simple reason because the way he looks.

Speaker 1 (24:38):
Oh, they're not doing it. Profiled do you have documentation.
You're not being kicked out of the country. Daughter, That's
that's false.

Speaker 6 (24:47):
She just got off.

Speaker 7 (24:48):
She was walking in an ice cream store and her
mom came to me. She says, I'm here legally, but
I'm carrying my passport. If you need any proof, I said,
you don't need to impress me.

Speaker 6 (25:02):
That's right, because you're legally caring past. Mister coming back
from Bible school.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Oh, from Bible school. Nice.

Speaker 7 (25:11):
That's Trump's America twenty twenty five, Downey in bell, California, La.

Speaker 1 (25:20):
Listen to the dramatic cadence.

Speaker 7 (25:22):
The most diverse, most populous county, the most diverse and
most populous state. Diversitys diverse, most diverse democracy. The United
States is diversity twenty five.

Speaker 6 (25:34):
It's a disgrace.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
Twenty five.

Speaker 7 (25:37):
The President of the United States decided to advance.

Speaker 6 (25:43):
His rote cruelty.

Speaker 7 (25:45):
By utilizing the brave men and women of the National
Guard as ponds in an effort.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
To the riots. You were allowing.

Speaker 6 (25:59):
The federalized the National Guard.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
Yes, because officers.

Speaker 7 (26:03):
Were playing roughly five thousand bottles, not overseas.

Speaker 6 (26:08):
In fact, his entire first.

Speaker 7 (26:09):
Term rocks bottles to cement the military cars on fire
seas his entire first term, first six months of his administration,
he cites to send them to the United States of America.
Five thousand military only riots and federalized with the National
Guard close to one thousand US Marines. He sent them
to a United States city.

Speaker 6 (26:31):
The utilization.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
Were not governing anymore.

Speaker 6 (26:36):
You spent hundreds of millions of dollars.

Speaker 7 (26:40):
Good wasted hundreds of millions of dollars on this five percent.
By the way, the folks that were taken uh and
brought into armories waiting for a mission assignment, our summer
school teachers, our paramedics, are firefighters, are police officers themselves.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
I guess we're skipping over the flons in the criminal land.

Speaker 7 (27:07):
Because of the absurdity of this and the complete incapacity
of the Pentagon to reconcile, the fact they weren't doing
a damn thing. They manipulated this twenty six percent number.
It's about five percent. They even realized the absurdity of this,
And they're talking about a demobilization of roughly two thousand

(27:30):
of the seventy.

Speaker 2 (27:31):
Nine because all the violent animals have That process.

Speaker 7 (27:33):
Will take a couple of weeks. They'll go through medical
reviews and exams. They'll be in the process of filling
out their pay stubbs, getting reimbursements for travel, trying to
get their lives back on track. We still have thousands
of National Guard, the forty ninth MPs. You know them
well here in southern California. Those are the forty ninth
MPs that spent forty five days up to sixty days, right.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
Yea, yeah, yeah, yeah, stop stop. He is so full
and nobody's challenging him. I bet you none of the
reporters challenge him for all that BS people are going
to Sunday school or a Sunday school teacher was that
the reference? Good lord, he is a steaming pile of BS.

(28:24):
He is a steaming pile of it. Everything is emotional
manipulation and misdirection. Here's something this confirms one of my suspicions.
Metro's ridership numbers fell to its lowest levels of the
year after the immigration raids, down thirteen and a half percent,

(28:48):
the lowest June on record since twenty twenty two. Because
much of our public transit system is meant for homeless people,
illegal aliens, and criminals, That's why they and that's who's
on the many of the buses and trains all day
and night.

Speaker 4 (29:05):
You're listening to John Cobbels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (29:11):
We're gonna have Alex Stone on after Devers three o'clock
news to talk about that double murder and Encino involving
the former American Idol music supervisor and her husband. Let's
go back to the news and press conference. He's taking questions.
This was this whole emotional manipulation routine he's doing over

(29:32):
illegal immigrants.

Speaker 7 (29:34):
Let's see safety of individuals, be it their state employees,
local employees, or federal employees. They have responsibility as relates
to public safety. So I'm deeply mindful of that. There's
a balancing act there. But when it comes to the
safety of officers, I wish them no harm.

Speaker 6 (29:52):
Mostly these folks have been conscripted. I mean the National
Guard memoirs.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
This is about masking a lot.

Speaker 6 (29:58):
Of you were out there taking selfies with them.

Speaker 7 (30:00):
The biggest issue to add in place like Santa Monic,
because so many, you know, jugs of water came, so
much food came. We were really proud of them that
the same people they're just under now a Jersey. They came.

Speaker 8 (30:11):
He helped protect lad and to protect employees people of
the government buildings who are under assault, and from your
rioters about public illegal alien rioters.

Speaker 7 (30:23):
That safety includes federal employees as well.

Speaker 9 (30:26):
Maybe if they say problem with you, anticipate the possibility
refer to draw down of the National Guard and worship
of the Marines back to the base. Give them the
rules the washings once as far as the elite of
ICE officers to arrest anybody who attacks federal.

Speaker 7 (30:42):
Officers, why not, said they love and said.

Speaker 9 (30:44):
That maybe it will be forced rocks wheneveryone assaults for
the watchers, they're free enough ICE to actually contain and
the rest of those people from assault. If those rules
were gave colt, are you anticipating in further draw down
because there's no need your soldiers or anyone else to
provide any kind of a buffer around.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
I lost.

Speaker 6 (31:02):
Again the utilization rate, the mission tasking.

Speaker 1 (31:05):
All right, let's let's go five.

Speaker 2 (31:10):
This is like basic way to control the violent people
in our civilization. Okay, not everybody is a peaceful, church
going lascid individual. We have a lot of violent young
men just bulging with testosterone and they can't wait to

(31:32):
have a fight. They they can't.

Speaker 3 (31:34):
You know.

Speaker 2 (31:34):
These are the guys on a Friday night who go
to a bar and by the end of the night
they're smashing bottles and chairs over each other's heads. All right,
A lot of these people are paid. In fact, one
of those reporters speaking a bit getting paid. Why don't
one of those reporters ask Newsome why he pays Turla
thirty four million dollars in tax money thirty four million.

(31:56):
Turla is a nonprofit illegal rights group, and then Churla
is involved in instigating the riots. Turla helps finance and
provide supplies to the riots, and Newsom gives them money.
Any of those idiot reported what do you think about

(32:18):
the drawdown of first Why don't you ask him what
he's doing in financing these rebel organizations who provide the
information and the logistics and the materials so that the
organizational members can riot against law enforcement. That was a

(32:42):
taxpayer funded riot and it was enabled by Newsom. But
I think journalists now just I guess maybe they go
through a gender affirming surgery before they enter the uh
enter the press room and question the governor because they've
all been newtered in one way or the other. If

(33:06):
you have the local animals throwing rocks, bottles and blocks
of cement, and you'll have what do you have a
cal state professor throwing a tear gas canister at the
heads of ICE agents. What do you expect. You're going

(33:28):
to get the National Guard, You're going to get the Marines,
and you should. They've created this environment. You see this
going on in other states. No, in other states actually
help ICE because ICE is following the law. The law
that are These are the same people who's scream about democracy.

(33:49):
The way democracy works is there's a constitution, there's a
set of federal laws. We voted on the representatives, we
voted on the president and everybody in alignment.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
Here.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
Brome Court is there to make sure that laws are
in line with the constitution, that the laws are followed properly.
All that is set up. It's a big, tough infrastructure.
And the way it works is presidents in charge of
immigration policy ICE enforces it. It's all proved, it's all legal,

(34:24):
it's all required. Newsom bass try to undermine it. They
fund rioting groups, They fund the groups that incite the riots,
that enable the riots, and then when Trump one ups them,
and Trump gave him the checkmate. He brought in the

(34:46):
National Guard, and he brought in the Marines right away,
and they ran around to every judge that they could find,
and they lost, and they lost again. Because Trump's in
charge of the National Guard, Trump can deploy the Marines.
Trump is in charge of immigration policy. They are not.
Newsom doesn't work. I'm sorry. Trump doesn't work for Newsom.

(35:08):
Trump doesn't work for Bass. Neither does the guy who
runs immigration, Tom Homan. You don't run things. You're just
a mayor and a governor of a failed city in
a failed state. You had your shot and you blew it.
You created a hostile environment for law enforcement. You created

(35:30):
this fake sanctuary city concept. There's no such thing in
federal law, no such thing. And Trump is basically pulled
your pants down. Newsom, pulled your pants down on this
fake sanctuary city nonsense.

Speaker 1 (35:43):
And now you're coming out.

Speaker 10 (35:44):
And saying, well, there's a Sunday school teacher who is accosted,
but stop it.

Speaker 2 (35:50):
The only emotionally manipulated boobs who believe that are the
media members standing there, going, oh.

Speaker 10 (35:57):
Really, really a Sunday school teacher? Really, this is this
is all crap.

Speaker 1 (36:07):
It's all ridiculous crap.

Speaker 2 (36:09):
When we talked to Alex Stone after three o'clock, we'll
find out what's the latest in this double murder and Encino. Apparently,
according to some news reports, this guy had the guy
who committed the murders had quite the criminal background. We'll
see a lot of reports out there swirling around. See
what's true. Deborah Mark is live in the KFI twenty

(36:31):
four hour newsroun. Hey, you've been listening to The John
Cobalt Show podcast. You can always hear the show live
on KFI Am six forty from one to four pm
every Monday through Friday, and of course, anytime on demand
on the iHeartRadio app.

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