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January 30, 2026 33 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 2 (01/30) - Alex Stone joins the show with the latest on the legal repercussions tied to Don Lemon’s actions, and Karen Bass’s latest hissy fit over the controversy. A Palisades family blocked from rebuilding due to a required fire hydrant purchase. Trump halts a low-income housing project from being built in the Palisades. LA County’s plan to remove homeless encampments near Olympic venues.

 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty. You're listening to the John
Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio app. We're on every day
from one till four o'clock and after four o'clock it's
the podcast. Listen to it today, tonight, this weekend, and
it's just you catch up whatever you missed on the
radio show in the first hour if you're just joining us.
We talked a lot about who's behind these protests. You know,

(00:23):
there's a large fake one going on in downtown LA
there's plenty of them going on in Minneapolis, and according
to Fox News and reporting from the New York Times,
a lot of this is financed by a wealthy tech
businessman who now lives in communist China and has does

(00:48):
a lot of work with the Communist Chinese Party in
spreading the message and an undermining American piece here. And
his name is Neville Roy Singha. He sold his company
for seven hundred and eighty five million dollars and he
finances these protest groups both in Minneapolis and here in
Los Angeles and other places to do. What it is

(01:10):
you're seeing on television if you watch any of the
cable news shows, what you'll be seeing tonight on your
local news. What we've been covering here, this is likely
financed again by wealthy guys. They hire protesters, whip them
up into a frenzy over on social media and online,
and then we're told that America is turning against Ice. Well,

(01:33):
this is a lot of crap. The LA riot in
June was financed by this guy. The Minneapolis riots are
financed by this guy. And there's other guys as well.
There's a lot of these wealthy tech guys, and this
is what they do with their money. Some wealthy guys
by hookers. Some wealthy guys run for office. Other wealthy

(01:56):
guys pay subversive groups to create mayhem in the street.
Let's talk with Alex Stone from ABC News about the
Don Lemon situation. Welcome Alex, Sorry right there, John, Yeah,
and we expect some news to be coming out momentarily
from a court that he should be called for an
appearance in front of a judge here in LA and

(02:18):
likely that judge is just going to say, well, this
case is out of Minnesota, good to see you. You're
going to Minnesota, and then transfer him to Minnesota, either
on his own or in custody, and then everything else
will go on there. But this all went down and
around midnight, the FBI and Homeland Security Investigation agents they
showed up at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. They had an

(02:38):
arrest warrant in hand out of Minnesota, and two judges won.
A lower court magistrate judge in Minnesota and then an
appellate court judge denied attempts by prosecutors to get into
rest warrant and to charge Lemon, saying that they did
not have grounds for it and that it was not appropriate.
But our sources say A. G. Pambondi was livid about that,
that she wanted to charge and have a Lemon charge,

(03:00):
and that yesterday they brought it to a grand jury
which indicted Lemon, and that allowed them to move in
and make the arrest today with that indictment. But he
wasn't the only person. There were three others I believe
who were arrested today in other cities as well, who
were part of that protest to the church. But an
attorney for Don Lemon, he is saying that there is
an unprecedented attack on the First Amendment, saying Lemon was

(03:21):
there as a journalist documenting the protest and not a protester.
Lemon kept saying that during his live broadcast, saying, I'm
just cr chnically, I'm not with the group. But the
DOJ is arguing that when the law comes interfering with
the right to practice religion, that there is no carve
out for journalists. Whether he was a journalist or he
was an activist in this and a protester, that they

(03:42):
say that doesn't matter. Now. The judges, the federal judges
who denied moving forward with this case, they did think
it mattered, but the DOJ says it doesn't. Now both
sides John, they are claiming First Amendment violations in this.
The DOJ is saying Don Lemon infringed on the church
attendee's First Amendment rights. Lemon's attorney is saying the DOJ

(04:03):
is infringing on First Amendment rights that those of Don
Lemon by coming after him and his freedom of speech
and freedom of the press and whatnot. Pam Bondi today
said she personally ordered the arrest today and for agents
to move forward and make the arrest. We'll see where
it goes, as it will be heading back to Minnesota.
We'll see first La what the judge here says, and

(04:23):
then it will move back to Minnesota. I saw a
report that the group that invaded the church that Lemon
was either chronicling or connected to pick the church because
they thought the pastor was somehow involved with ICE activities.
Have you seen that, reporter or is there any other
reason given? Yeah, they do claim that, and I think

(04:43):
it turned out that it was like an assistant pastor
or somebody who is an ICE official, that they did
have some correct information that that was a church that
was connected to an ICE official. Nonetheless, the DOJ is
saying that doesn't matter that that you don't have the
right to go in and and disrupt a church service,
whether whatever the pastor or assistant pastor what they do

(05:06):
to to lead the congregation. But yeah, that is why
they targeted that church. That they had intel that that
there was an ICE leader who ran the church or
had a leadership role in the church, and that's why
they went there. So he spent a night in jail
here in La well kind of midnight on so the
time that he was booked into the Federal Detention Center
downtown and then now he'll be or is right now

(05:29):
appearing at the roy Ball Building. You know, all one
big building right there downtown, so the early morning hours
until today and then we'll see he may go right
back to Minneapolis, or he may remain here through the weekend.
But eventually did get assented to Minneapolis. Yeah, he's not
going to stay here, So the judge likely is going

(05:49):
to send them right back to Minnesota. The judge in
LA is not going to have a lot of ability
to do much because there was a federal arrest warrant
from the indictment out of Minnesota. It's not California's case.
The charges weren't brought here. He just was here. His
attorneys said to cover the Grammys and that he just
happened to be in LA's jurisdiction, and so they took

(06:10):
him into custody. But they have no say over the case.
They have nothing to do with it. The judge here
has to see him that he is legally before him
and say you've been arrested, and he gets his first appearance.
Then he goes to Minnesota and has to do it
all over again. All right, thank you, Alex, Yeah you
got it. Thanks Alex Stone. Now we know that Karen

(06:30):
Bass is not interested in all the palisades fire victims,
that's for sure. But she is very interested and upset
with Don Lemon getting arrested. Listen to this again, did
you ever hear this passion about the suffering that the Palisades'

(06:51):
residents have gone through? She says, the arrest of Lemon
is quote an egregious assault on his constitutional rights. The
statement from Bass says Don Lemon, an internationally known and
renowned journalist and friend, was arrested last night by federal

(07:13):
agents and now's in custody in Los Angeles simply for
doing his job and following a protest into a church
in Minneapolis while reporting the story. The arrest of journalists
for going into a church and the course of reporting
is shocking enough. But what's even more alarming that it's
no secret that Don Lemon is a Trump critic. Well,
they got they got the charges approved by a grand

(07:36):
jury and then a judge signed off. And if you
listen to Lemon's clip, he well, I read a transcript
of it. He talks about we we have an operation
going on here. Like I said before, he's trying to
play both sides of this. So I hate probably Craft

(08:00):
did this that he would he's in sympathy with the movement.
He wanted to do his part for the movement and
do some live streaming or what the hell he does.
And then you know, if he gets Acosta, it's like, hey, hey,
you know, I'm just a journalist here. I'm just exercising
the First Amendment. Well, he's classic with the First Amendment
rights of those who went to church that day and

(08:21):
wanted to take in the church service. So we'll see
whose rights end up being more important than the other rights.
It's just the word of nonsense. But she did notice
Karen Bass right Karen Bass right away as a statement.
She's full of fire and anger over the way Don
Lemon is getting treated and how much sympathy, how much

(08:42):
empathy has the Palisades fire victims got from Bass when
they gave her seven days a warning about the fire
danger and the wind danger. She got on a plane
to Africa. And I'm going to remind the world of
that just about every day of my life until she's
out of office. She ought to be in cuffs what
she's done.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (09:08):
You got two rounds of the Moistline coming up next
hour if you want to get on for next week
eight seven seven mois Steady six as always eight seven
seven Moist staighty six or usually talkback feature on the
iHeartRadio app. We continue to keep an eye on and
on the phony, baloney, waste of time protests down in
downtown Los Angeles. They'd only be interesting if they start

(09:33):
acting like toddlers and causing damage and setting fires or
whatever these losers do to amuse themselves. That's coming up later.
All right, Now, just I just mentioned how Karen bass
is having another hissy fit again. It's she wasn't mad
at anybody during the palis Ades fire. Wasn't mad at

(09:55):
you know, if I say, Genie Kinez for leaving the
reservoir empty, right, But she's mad at the Trump administration
because Don Lemon is getting prosecutor why would she give
a crap about Don Lemon. Well, he got arrested in
Beverly Hills and for storming into a church with a
group of protesters in Minneapolis. Now he claims he was

(10:19):
a journalist covering the protest. But there are people who
were trying to enjoy the religious service, and they had
all these hooligans coming in there. The assistant pastor had
some connection to Ice, they said, and so that means
protest the religious followers can't enjoy their service in peace,

(10:42):
which actually potentially could violate several federal laws. And that's
why Lemon got arrested. And it went before a grand
jury and a judge signed off on it. And so
that's Don Lemon's problem. Karen bast though, is all upset.
She's very upset that Don Lemon got arrested. How dare they? Well,
here's once again to reinforce my point how she doesn't

(11:04):
care about the Palisades fire victims. Here's a report from
ABC seven Josh Haskell. When I saw this, I couldn't
believe it. They want to make the fire victims pay
for a new fire hydrant before rebuilding, like cut five.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
As if losing your home of thirty four years wasn't
bad enough. The rebuilding process for Pacific Palisades residents Chris
and Jeff Spitz has been anything but smooth.

Speaker 4 (11:31):
Fire department came back and said, well, before we approve
this permit, we need a new hydrant to be put
in because you guys are more than twice the legal
limit from the closest fire hydrant and please contact LADWP
to get a cost estimate for what you'll have to
pay to build this and install this new fire hydrant.

Speaker 5 (11:53):
It was so shocking that I would that was nauseated
by it, because our insurance certainly wouldn't have covered that.

Speaker 3 (11:59):
The spits Is felt they were being punished for wanting
to rebuild. Adding to the confusion, this hydrant issue didn't
come up for their neighbors who built new homes within
the last ten years before the fire.

Speaker 5 (12:11):
We didn't just tear this down willy nilly and say, oh,
we want to build a brand new house. This is
just trying to come back.

Speaker 6 (12:17):
The closest fire hydrant to the Spitz's home is roughly
one thousand feet away, and as you can see, all
of the homes in their neighborhood, especially the homes closer
to the fire hydrant, burned in the Palisades fire. There's
currently two fire hydrants near the Spitzes home, one at
Lombard Avenue and Via de Los Olas and one at
Lombard Avenue and Friendstreet.

Speaker 7 (12:38):
My level of outrage is through the roof. I really
can't imagine much more insulting something to someone that has
lost their home with this kind of devastation that they
need to pay to put in new fire hydrants.

Speaker 3 (12:54):
Los Angeles City council Woman Tracy Park represents Pacific Palisades
and arranged a meeting with the laf D in LEDWP
last month to resolve this issue. After being stalled in
the rebuilding process for eleven weeks, the Spitzes were told
by their councilwoman the issue had been resolved. LEDWP tells
Ewen's News they will cover the cost of installing a

(13:15):
new fire hydrant at the price tag of thirty five
thousand dollars. During the Palisades fire, DWP says demand for
water in the Palisades reached four times normal use, resulting
in water pressure issues that prevented water from coming out
of some hydrants.

Speaker 5 (13:31):
They're aware that fires happen here all the time, and
in all that time, no one did anything about the
fire hydrants.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
LEDWP also tells Eyewinness News placement of hydrants is determined
by the LAFD and that a future water mainline upgrade
in the Spitzes neighborhood will increase the hydrant's flow rate.
Based on discussions with the LAFD. DWP doesn't anticipate that
additional fire hydrants will be needed in the Palisades, but
if they are, who pays for it will be determined

(13:59):
on a case spike case basis.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
Josh Haskell ABC seven, No, this is something that the
city and the DWP should always pay for. We pay
taxes so you can install fire hydrants. What a bunch
of bozos? Did you hear all the details in this
These poor people lost their home they'd been in thirty

(14:23):
four years. When it's time to rebuild it got bollocked
up for eleven weeks because Jennie Kennez is LEDWP wanted
to charge them thirty five thousand dollars to build a
new hydrant or install a new hydrant. What the hell
are they insane? All the tax money they get, all

(14:44):
the water money they get, and all the money they
get for are the electric bills. We've got double the
electric costs in this state compared to the rest of
the country. We have high water rates and high taxes,

(15:05):
property taxes, sales taxes, income taxes. The hydrants were all busted.
Remember there was over a thousand of them that didn't work. Again,
where's Karen vass with this, Karen Bass was never upset
that the the fire hydrants didn't work, never upset about
the lousy water pressure, because they never built the infrastructure

(15:28):
in the Palisades and elsewhere in the city to handle
modern day Los Angeles. Billions and billions had been diverted
to homeless people. Nothing to build a underground mainline for
the water, nothing to make just to check on the
fire hydrants and make sure they work, and a thousand

(15:49):
of them didn't. Not to mention the empty reservoir one
hundred and seventeen million gallon reservoir. Bass never talks about
any of this. She's never upset. But Don Lemon gets
arrested at a Beverly Hills hotel. That's worthy of an
outraged statement. She's insane, absol If you were mayor and

(16:11):
want to a family, your residents, your constituents, your tax
beyers house burned down, trying to rebuild the house, they're told, no,
you've got to You've got to pay for the fire hydrant.
Would you charge the family for the fire hydrant? Would
you do that? What is the tax money for? What

(16:33):
is the water and electricity money for?

Speaker 6 (16:35):
That?

Speaker 1 (16:35):
We pay it in our bills every two months. What
is that for? It doesn't buy a hydrant. So Tracy
Park is the only functioning part of the Los Angeles
government seems to be Tracy Park. So she arranges a
meeting with the fire department and the Los Angeles Department
of Water and Power, a meeting. Where was the fire

(16:58):
department on this? It took eleven weeks? This is so
so crazy. Does everybody in the city government have brain damage? Seriously?
Does this Bass and Kenonias have brain damage? You charge
a family thirty five thousand dollars after you let their
home burn. You Bass, let the Palisades burn, Keinonias, let

(17:23):
the Palisades burn, Kristin Crowley, let the Palisades burn. Now
it's burned, there's nothing left but ashes and rubble. Oh,
you want a fire hydrant and that's thirty five thousand dollars. Oh,
this is what people ought to be protesting about, not
the stupid anti ice rallies to bed. We can't get
the Chinese Communist Party interested in what's happened to the
Palisades homeowners. Maybe they would fund some of the uh

(17:46):
some anti Bass protests instead of this anti ice garbage.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
We're on every day from one until four o'clock and
then after four o'clock John Cobel Show on demand on
the iHeart app. You want to listen to our one
o'clock hour on the podcast if you've missed it, because
there we went extensively into the details. Is reported by
Fox News and The New York Times over several year
period about one's a specific guy, and he's not the

(18:19):
only one, but this is a great example. A guy
named Neville Roy Singham. He is worth close to eight
hundred million dollars and he is an American citizen who
moved to China after he sold his IT business, and
he now finances many of the left wing crazy groups
that are screaming in the streets against ice. His money

(18:43):
fueled the Los Angeles riot we had in June. His
money is fueling the rioting that's going on in Minneapolis.
We've got new protests today in Minneapolis, in LA and
other cities because it's some sort of day to do nothing.
I don't understand this. I tell all these unemployed losers,

(19:03):
they come up with these ridiculous titles. First, it was
no Kings that had zero effect on the Trump administration. Now,
this is a do nothing day. You're not supposed to
work or go to school or a shop. So on
a Friday afternoon, hardly anybody works. And I don't I

(19:26):
don't understand. You don't you don't shop? And what is that?
And that's supposed to stop ice in its tracks, that's
supposed to get Donald Trump to reverse his deportation orders.
These people are really childish, silly little toddlers with bad
temper tantrums. They're losers. Go get jobs. You should go
and have families and get jobs and have a purpose

(19:49):
and a point to your life instead of standing in
the street waving your stupid sign and banging your idiotic drum.
It's really exhausting. Now here's another thing. Trump said that. Well,
you remember he issued an executive order to try to
streamline the permitting process that Karen Bass and Gavin nufsm

(20:12):
have all bollocked up. And he also says he wants
to stop a low income housing project from being developed
in the Palisades. He said this during a cabinet meeting,
and he says they want to build a low income
housing project right in the middle of everything in the Palisades.
I'm not going to allow it to happen. I'm not
going to let these people destroy the value of their houses.

(20:33):
And I've heard this repeatedly reported that all the politicians
were kind of confused. They didn't know of a major
low income housing project. Karen Bass says, there's no plan
to bring low income housing to the Palisades. It's not true.
There couldn't possibly be a project that neither the council
member nor the mayor would have any knowledge of. And

(20:55):
then Newsom has this weirdo is he Arden, who's his spokeshole.
The President of the United States is a bumbling idiot
and has no idea what he's talking about. The narrative
that Gavin Newsom is trying to build a high density,
low income housing in the Palisades is absurd. But there's
something bugging me in the back of my head. So

(21:17):
I looked up to this online and this is dated
July eighth of last year. It's in a local publication
called The Center Square, written by Kenneth Shrump, and the
headline is Newsom unveils one hundred and one million dollars
to build Palisades low income housing. Six months after the

(21:42):
devastating Palisades and Eating fires, Newsome unveiled one hundred and
one million dollars in funding for quote multifamily low income
housing development that will contribute to a more equitable and
resilient Los Angeles. The priority is for geographic proximity to
the fire perimeters of the Eaton Hughes and Palisades fire.

(22:08):
Earlier this year, the Center Square broke news that a
local la ordnance required fire destroyed rent protected housing to
be replaced with low income housing that included all apartments
in the Palisades built before October of nineteen seventy eight.

(22:32):
Newsom said in a statement at the time, thousands of
families from the Palisades to Altadena to Malibu are still displaced,
and we owe it to them to help. The funding
we're announcing today will accelerate the development of affordable, multi
family rental housing so that those rebuilding their lives after
this tragedy have access to a safe, affordable place to
come home to. And then there's details on how the

(22:53):
whole financing situation works. Yet you have Karen Bass and
Knewsom as weirdo spokeshole claiming there's no such thing. Also,
there is a woman named Mariam Tzar Palisades resident says

(23:18):
many in the Palisades fear a project on the side
of the Shell gas station that a developer named Justin
Kohanoff said he wanted to build into an eight story,
one hundred unit low income building. Klonov's father, Sayid Kolanov,
declined to comment other than saying the family has no
immediate plans to develop the property. So there's our plans

(23:45):
all over the place. Maybe they're not operational at the moment,
but it's not like they don't exist. It's not like
there hasn't been money funded. It's not like this developer
hasn't obviously spoke publicly what he'd like to do with
the s gas station, a lot in fact, one hundred

(24:08):
and one million dollars that Newsom committed to. According to
La Times, the program allows affordable housing developers to apply
for financing and prioritize prioritizes projects that are near wildfire
burn areas. The program required the developments to remain affordable
for more than a half century, and the weird spokeshole

(24:35):
for Newsom, Easy Guardone, said the state is providing resources
for developers to rebuild below market rate housing. I don't
think Trump was a bubbling gidion. I don't think he
was crazy. I don't think he was talking about something
that doesn't exist. There may not be a plan that

(24:57):
has been approved and is actively being worked on, but
obvious and I remember one of the state senators, I
think it was Ben Allen, had some kind of state
law that he was proposing that had something to do
with developing affordable housing in the Palisades, and there was
so much screaming about that that he pulled the bill
and admitted that it needed to be reworked. So there's

(25:22):
been plenty of affordable housing stories in the air. What
is best talking about? Could she and knew some weirdo
spoke soul? Can you people possibly just fake telling the
truth for even five minutes? More coming up?

Speaker 2 (25:39):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI Am
six forty.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
We are on from one until four o'clock. After four
o'clock John Cobelt Show on demand on the iHeart app
and you can listen to what you missed. This is infuriating.
I've been infuriating all day haven't I. This is one
thing after another. This is from public radio Las dot com.

(26:10):
La County is considering plans to remove thousands of homeless
people from the areas around the sports venues ahead of
the Olympic Games in twenty twenty eight. Do you hear this?
Twenty twenty eight, the Olympic Games. Suddenly thousands of homeless

(26:31):
people will be removed. We've been putting up with them
in La County for over ten years now, maybe twelve
years that I can remember it being a real problem
and noticeable. We have seventy thousand homeless people in the county,

(26:54):
seventy thousand, and now after twelve years, they say, well,
in the next two years, because foreigners are coming for
the Olympic Games, we are going to move the vagrants,
the mental patients, and the drug addicts. County officials issued

(27:16):
a strategy report last week, advising local governments on how
to clear people from encampments. You mean they didn't have
a strategy report back in Oh, I don't know. Twenty fourteen,
twenty fifteen, twenty sixteen, twenty seventeen, twenty eighteen, twenty nineteen,
twenty twenty. Shall I go on a strategy to how

(27:39):
to clear people from encampments near major events and move
them into temporary housing. Why can't you Why haven't you
done that for the last twelve years. There are concerns
that there won't be enough beds to get the beds.
There's no new funding for such an effort. Go find

(28:01):
the money. You blew billions. You can't track the billions.
Stop spending it on all the criminal nonprofits. How about
you get the money back from those two characters that
got indicted, the Brentwood guy, the the uh that that scandal.

(28:21):
Remember the Brentwood guy. He got millions of dollars and
then he flipped the property in Chevy At Hills for
like twenty yeah, yeah, thirteen million I think he bought
it with and then he flipped it got twenty seven million.
And then two other guys were involved in the second
company who were on leave. Now those characters, Oh wait,
wait anid How about that Alexander sufer in Westwood who

(28:44):
stole twenty three million dollars and he's got a seven
million dollar house in the range Rover and the wife
is on the payroll and they're vacationing in Hawaii and
he's wearing twelve hundred dollars shoes. How about that? Used that?
Use that for the funding. Sarah Maheine is La County's

(29:06):
director of Homeless Services and Housing. Oh, we better write
her name down. This seems to be a new character. Yeah,
they pulled that Alasa because Loasa was so criminal and corrupt,
because Karen Bass has been squawking about that. How they
lak well because Bass's friend she Uh presided over all
the corruption there. So Sarah Maheen submitted the report. Port

(29:31):
of Supervisors asked. They also sent it to the cities
along Los Angeles Long Beach in Englewood. Sheila Myers with
the Legal Aid Foundation of LA said the strategy is
aimed at eliminating visible signs of homelessness rather than addressing
the root causes. That's a good one, Sheila. The root causes.

(29:55):
The root causes are drug addiction and mental illness, and
they all ought to be locked up in mental health
wards and drug addiction wards. There's your root causes, root causes.
You're not actually getting people off the streets. Well, yes,
you will be. In fact, once you build the buildings

(30:19):
and you get the beds, lock them inside so they
can't get out. They don't want them to scare all
the tourists and the travelers for the Olympics. How about
not scaring us. Rachel Cassenbrock, spokeshole for La County's Homeless
Services and Housing, said the county does not intend to
displace anyone without connecting them with adequate housing resources and sport.

(30:41):
So why haven't you been doing this for the last
fourteen years. Efforts to remove unhoused people will focus on
the security perimeters of the Olympic venues. Oh nowhere else?
Are they just going to move them outside the perimeters.
Some new neighborhoods will have to suffer with the feces
and the needle.

Speaker 3 (31:05):
That's just.

Speaker 1 (31:08):
The largest security perimeter will likely be for the opening
ceremonies at Sofi Stadium and the LA Memorial Coliseum. Is
all this is also galling twelve years of nothing. The
Olympics are coming to town, and then what happens the

(31:30):
day after the Olympics are over. Everybody comes back. They
bring back all their feces and needles and insanity and
drug addiction. I don't know why you put up at
this stuff. Absolutely, this is so fascinating to me. How

(31:51):
a metropolitan area of millions of people can put up
with all the dangers and the indignities and the theft
of your tax money. And these people make their pronouncements like,
oh yeah, twenty twenty eight, Yeah, we're gonna be cleaning
up those encampments. Finally, Yeah, we don't have any place
to put him, and we don't have the money to
put him anywhere. But because you know, again, all the

(32:15):
money's been stolen, but Bill Sale is gonna have to
keep prosecuting to maybe we can cost some of that
money back that Alexander super guy. Can we get them
I mean, can they sell his house and we can
get that money back and his car. We're coming up.

(32:39):
Let's see, it's gonna be three o'clock. We're gonna have
Royal Oaks on. Wow, Luigi Mangione, the death penalty counts
have been to You should know that you have an
Italian wife. Where did you turn Italian? Huh? I'm Italian? Well,
and I know why and not for the good reason

(32:59):
if I if I didn't know better, m Yeah, Luisjimnioni.
A district judge Margaret Garnett ruled that stalking is not well,
I'm gonna have orolooks explain all this. Uh, we got
Deborah Mark, who's not Italian? What then, what ethnicity is
to Uh you have a little Polish in me? Oh,

(33:24):
I see, yes, I know that side of the family.
Debor Mark is live in the CAFI twenty for our newsroom. Hey,
you've been listening to The John Cobalt Show podcast. You
can always hear the show live on kf I 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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