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May 12, 2025 32 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 2 (05/12) - Alex Stone comes on the show with an update on the Menendez Brothers' resentencing trial. More bad news coming out of Newark Airport. LAPD is going to be impacted by budget cuts from LA City. An Amazon driver was caught peeing and pooping on people's lawns after delivering packages. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty. You're listening to the John
Cobelt podcast on the iHeartRadio app or on every day
from one in till four and then after four o'clock,
whatever you missed is on the podcast John Cobelt's show
on demand, and if you missed the first hour, well
that's something you ought to listen to as soon as
you can later today. Because Governor Newsom is suddenly pretending

(00:23):
to be fed up with homelessness and he wants all
the encampments in the state removed, and he even came
up with a model local ordinance that he thinks all
the towns and cities should pass. He can't force them
to pass it or enforce it, but he's got a
strong suggestion here. So it's his hypocrisy and his phoniness

(00:49):
is just he's like the Michael Jordan of phoniness and hypocrisy.
He's unbelievable. I don't know how he does it. He
gets up every day and he will do a one
to eighty on any issue. Six and a half years
he was governor, and he was scalding everybody for years
about having compassion, and suddenly now it's like, oh my god,

(01:12):
they all got to go already, they gotta go. Oh,
come on, this is too much because he's running for
president and this doesn't play in any other state, not
even Democrat states. Is no other Democrat state has what
we have. We will talk more about that later and
you can also listen to the podcast and hear the
one o'clock hour. Alex Stone is back with us from

(01:34):
maybe C News. Good lord, the Menendez brother's case thirty
five years already. Yeah, it feels like it's since October
when we began this whole new push for them to
get out, and the Netflix had the documentary and the
scripted series and everything. But well they got a hearing
tomorrow to get resentenced, and resentencing could mean that they

(01:54):
get set free. So the states are really high. Garags
is involved, talk about what we should see tomorrow. Yeah,
so they could go free by Wednesday afternoon. The order
could come down or whatever the judge decides to do.
So this is finally what they've been waiting for since
everything got going with George Gascone and the documentaries and

(02:15):
all of that, and then Hawkman came in and he's
opposing their release. But the court is keeping Gascon's argument
for their release. Hawkman tried to get that tossed out
again during a pretty heated hearing on Friday, And I
was sitting in there, as you know. Hawkman was going
over all of what they learned from the parole board
that did an analysis of the Menendez brothers finding that

(02:37):
they are a moderate risk if they were to be
released into the community. And we'll talk about that in
just a moment. But he is saying, your honor, pay
attention to now what we want where we're saying, do
not release them. And the judge said, look, under the
State of California, I gotta go with what you're fought
with your office filed initially, unless you can tell me
that they're a gang leader in it now or that

(02:58):
they murdered somebody in prison, and that he's got to
go with the original filing. So they're going to show
up tomorrow. And guyansk, you something here and not that
you know the answer to this, But George Gascone, given
his political proclivities, if he intentionally misled the judge by
downplaying some negative evidence or if he's exaggerating some positive evidence,

(03:22):
Hawkman can't revise that. I mean, I thought the whole
point of the process is to eventually get at the truth.
And if Hakman says, well, wait, I've got you know,
a different story here for you that Gascone withheld or distorted,
isn't it isn't the judge required to look at that? Well,
the judge is saying, mister Hackman, which by the way,
it was unique for the DA of La County to
be in court on Friday and arguing in a case,

(03:45):
you know, typically it's a Deputy DA who gets out
there and the DA holds a news conference and then
the deputy DA is going and do the work. He
did this on his own, and the judge saying, during
these hearings you can argue it, but the official filing
is going to be what Gascone entered months ago. That
it's going to remain that because there is not some
violent other change that they have seen of these brothers,

(04:08):
even though the parle Board it is new evidence that
the pro board did this risk analysis and the risk
analysis found that they had illegal cell phones in prison
and that yeah, there were a drug violation years ago
and some other illegal stuff, tax fraud helping another inmate
with tax fraud years ago, but a lot of it
was quite a while ago, and seeing another inmate with

(04:30):
tax fraud. Yeah, about fifteen years ago, but it was
it was a cell phone. So that really Hawkman because
that was new for I believe it was Eric in
January of this year was found again to have an
illegal cell phone. Now the judge said, look, I'm talking
about like gang leader or murder. He goes, every inmate
has an illegal cell phone in prison, that that is

(04:51):
not something that would be shocking new evidence to throw
out Gascones argument and replace it with a new one
from the office. So you know, at this point the
judge is saying, you can argue it in prison, but
the filing is going to remain the same, And yeah,
that's ridiculous. Hawkman is going to make the argument, assuming

(05:12):
he continues to argue tomorrow and Wednesday or his deputy
that the brothers that they have not come clean. He
keeps saying, it's not not never, it's just not right now,
because he argues that they continue to lie, that the
whole self defense thing is a lie because it wasn't
in the moment they killed their parents while they were

(05:33):
watching TV. They weren't a life threatening situation. He says
that there is no evidence has been authenticated that they
were being sexually abused, that the brothers just won't come clean,
and Hawkman keeps saying this.

Speaker 2 (05:46):
In order to be truly rehabilitated, you have to acknowledge
the full breadth of your criminal conduct, your cover up,
and your lives.

Speaker 1 (05:54):
Now, Mark Garrigo says, no, they don't, that they have
come clean and that this is about under the state
to California resentencing laws that they are are due to
a crack ad them and Garago has made a bunch
of claims against Hakmen in court on Friday, arguing that
something isn't right with Hawkman because he's too invested in
keeping the brothers locked up. They tried to argue this

(06:14):
conflict of interest, saying that he had a history that
was against that, and the judge said stopped that it
like all this unethical stuff that they were alleging against Hakmen,
and the judge made them stop that. But yeah, garag
against Tomen, Yeah, and then Hawkman was coming back. So
Geragos dropped on Friday an attempt that he was trying

(06:36):
to get Hawkman kicked off the case because it wasn't
going anywhere. The Attorney General of California said no, that
this has no merit and and so wasn't going anywhere,
and Garages dropped that. So that's discussed. But the big
part of this really came down on Friday to the
parole board review of the brothers and that moderate risk
that they found, where the judge said he will take

(06:56):
it into account. We don't know if it's going to
play a big role over these next two days and
whether he releases them or not. Moderate risk of what
well say, a threat to the community. And here this
is talkman.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
We have this additional new information coming in from the
border parole senior psychologists that have assessed that risk as
a moderate risk, not a high risk, not a low risk,
but a moderate risk.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
Now, again, a lot of this goes back to cell
phones in prison and the argument being if they didn't
follow the rules in prison, especially at a time when
they're trying to get released right now, that they won't
follow rules outside of prison. The judge again was kind
of like, we're talking cell phones here, We're not talking
about murder in prison, so he's not putting a ton
of they're still psychotic reliance on a yeah, and the

(07:41):
psychologist to get fixed in prison. Yeah, the doctors found
the narcissism and other things. But the other issue is
that they can't question the doctors who did the report.
And there's a lot of things. It wasn't made for
the court. It was made for Governor Newsom for possible clemency.
So the judge that I'll look at it, but it's
not everything. So Mark goes judge, Yeah, Mark Garrigos. His
argument here is that unless there is a major strike

(08:04):
against them, that they've done something majorly violent in prison
that they deserve to get out, is there a likelihood
of a super strike? That is the law a super
strike as he called it. So the judge is gonna
have to decide over these next two days. Do they
get out immediately, do they stay in prison for the
rest of their lives no parole as the jury and

(08:25):
judge decided so many years ago, or do they get
a chance at parole, which then they would go to
the parole board. And we know the parole board found
them to have a moderate risk. They may not get
out immediately with them and they could try again in
three years, So that could go on for months or
even years. So this could go any number ways. Lyle
could get one thing, Eric could get the other. We'll
find out as early as probably Wednesday, maybe after that.

(08:47):
Garagos has seven family members to call, two experts. They
expected to go Tuesday and Wednesday, and then the judge
will rule. All right, I guess we'll talk with you
Tomar about it. You got it? Sounds good, Alex Stone,
ABC News on the never ending Menendez story. We come back,
We're gonna have another quiz for you, and don't look
it up during the newscast. There is more bad news

(09:09):
coming out of Newark Airport. This is this is stuff
that's impossible to believe. There's a three hour period it's
gonna happen tonight between six thirty and nine thirty Eastern time,
which starts three thirty our time, And at three hour
period at Newark Airport, there's gonna be one hundred and
eighty takeoffs and landings, one hundred and eighty them. How

(09:29):
many air traffic controllers do you think will be working
in the air Traffic Control booth to oversee one hundred
and eighty of these takeoffs and landings. You'll get the
answer and the explanation coming up next.

Speaker 3 (09:43):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (09:50):
All right, we've had a lot of terrifying news, airline
news coming out of Newark. And you know, there was
another outage on Friday, and that was the backup system
that apparently failed. On Friday, they had an outage and
then the backup system didn't work. They just installed the backup. Now,

(10:10):
get this, this is an exclusive from the New York Post.
From six thirty to nine thirty tonight, the normal traffic
planes landing and taking off at Newark Airport, about one
hundred and eighty jets, one hundred and eighty and so, Debra,
I ask you, how many air traffic controllers do you

(10:33):
think are working between six thirty and nine thirty tonight
at the Newark Air Traffic Control Center which is not Newark,
it's in Philadelphia, which is ninety miles away. How many
you think are working for that three hour period? Three
three seven. One You've got to be kidding. One. I'm

(10:55):
never flying into Newark again. They're supposed to be fifteen there,
and how can that.

Speaker 4 (11:01):
Be with everything that's going on. I don't understand.

Speaker 1 (11:03):
There's one guy left. He is going to have a
trainee with him, a trainee, So really it's like one
and a half. It's a it's a guy standing next
to him shouting they're gonna crash. That's that's the whole staff.

Speaker 4 (11:20):
Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
An air traffic controller in New York speaking anonymously, described
the situation as pure insanity, and he says, if you
look at the schedule, they're going to operate at a
bare bone staff while between one hundred and sixty eight
and one hundred and eighty planes or either taking off
or landing. It comes after Oh, look at this. The

(11:47):
airport was facing a doomsday scenario Monday afternoon today. Yeah,
they were facing a zero air traffic controller event. Is
what they call it, a zero ATC event. Nobody was
supposed to be Well, this is the place where five

(12:07):
guys left because of trauma when their screens blacked out
for a minute and a half. Yeah, they all went
home to cry. And now there's nobody left. So for
a short time on the schedule there was nobody supposed
to show up. It's like, hey, everybody's on their own.

Speaker 4 (12:23):
Well, there's no way, I mean, you have to shut
things down.

Speaker 1 (12:28):
One of this I can't believe this is real. They've
got they get like seven trillion dollars worth of taxes.
Newark is one of the busiest airports in the country.
It's United's main hub, and according to this anonymous controller,

(12:49):
one of the controllers is canceling his day off and
coming into work. That's the one guy. It's like, all right,
you really have nobody.

Speaker 4 (12:58):
Why can't they get somebody from Kennedy or LaGuardia.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
I come in, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (13:04):
I can't be There's no way you have to shut
You have to shut down the opera. You can't fly
in and out.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
No, who's coming in tonight? Schedules blank, everybody's on Tramallie,
oh god. An FAA spokesman said, there's gonna be no
point at which we'll have zero air traffic controllers. Yeah,
because you got the one guy to come in.

Speaker 4 (13:28):
On his day off, on his day off.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
And then she said, well, there's supposed to be at
least three controllers for each hour. No, there's supposed to
be fifteen. The Yeah, the control room has five radar
scopes which cover different sectors, with one controller monitoring each one.

(13:54):
So if you only have one guy he's got to
look at five screens all at the same time and
they all manage different directions.

Speaker 4 (14:01):
No, that's impossible.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
You know, you got the planes coming in from the
east to north, the west, and apparently Sunday for the
night shift, there's only two controllers. Fifteen is the target
for Newark. Anything less than half is rough.

Speaker 4 (14:16):
It's rough.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
It's rough. Well, what's one? What? Zero?

Speaker 4 (14:21):
What is this a third world country airport?

Speaker 1 (14:24):
Yeah, if you get down to seven, safety is compromised.

Speaker 4 (14:29):
Okay, so one safety death, imminent, crash imminent, crash is imminent.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
This is not funny, it's.

Speaker 4 (14:40):
Not this is sad.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
Wow. And and they're in Philadelphia to begin with. Well,
that's pretty scary because you know people in Newark. It's
not like somebody can run up the stairs and go
into the air traffic control center. Right, It's like you
got to drive ninety miles that takes about that takes
about two to three hours in traffic. Uh wow uh.

(15:04):
And Sean Duffy, the Trump's Transportation secretary, says, I think
it's clear the blame belongs with the last administration.

Speaker 4 (15:10):
Okay, you know what, we don't even need to play
the blame game.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
Right now.

Speaker 4 (15:14):
Let's just fix this farming guy is there.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
I read they were allowed to retire at fifty six.
Looking at they want to extend the retirement age sixty one.
It's like fifty six.

Speaker 4 (15:28):
That's young.

Speaker 1 (15:28):
That's in the middle of your life. What do you
mean you're retired and they're getting a fat pension and
they're going home. Well, no, wonder, they've got a shortage.
They haven't been hiring in recent years. And I'm sure
they had all that DEI nonsense going on.

Speaker 4 (15:43):
Oh god, we need to pay air traffic controllers a
lot of money to stay on past fifty six.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
Fifty six, and then these guys go home and they
spend the next forty years sitting at home. What I'm
building model airplanes? What are they doing? And they're on
trauma leave. Oh man, this is not the greatest generation.
This is not the generation that saved us from the Germans.
More coming up.

Speaker 3 (16:10):
You're listening to John Cobel's on demand from KFI A
six forty.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
Listen to us every day one to four, then after
four o'clock. Whatever you missed, you can listen to it
on the podcast John Cobelts Show on demand on the
ihrt app and you can follow us on social media
at John Cobelt Radio at John Cobelt Radio. You know,
I was thinking, there's something wrong if there's four people
that produce this show every day and there's only one

(16:38):
guy at Newark Airport. We've got four times the staff
than they have at Newark Airport handling one hundred and
eighty planes taken off and landing. I don't know, it's
not like we don't pay seven trillion dollars a year
in federal taxes. That's seven trillion they don't have. They

(17:02):
don't have a few bucks for two more controllers, not
to mention they need twelve more. Meantime, here in Los Angeles,
same issue affecting the Los Angeles Police Department. We should
have ten thousand officers at minimum, that's what we had

(17:25):
a few years ago, and to handle the upcoming World
Cup and the Olympics, we should have twelve thousand. Well,
right now we're at eighty seven hundred and it's probably
going to drop to eighty four hundred soon because this
year we'll bring more retirements, more resignations, and it looks

(17:50):
like based on the bad budgeting by the bad mayor,
Karen Bass. By twenty thirty, which is only five years away,
we're gonna be down to sixty six hundred officers. We
should have twelve thousand. We're gonna have about half that.
You know the way, we have only half the firefighters

(18:10):
that we that we ought to have be employing. We're
gonna have half the police. Gee, what do you think
is going to be happening in the next few years?
She is so bad. She really should resign, you know what.
You know what she did. She did this stupid thing.
And I could think of two other idiot politicians who've

(18:32):
been settled with over the last twenty five years. There
was Grey Davis back around two thousand, that dunce. Remember
do you remember the uh the dot com boom when
the stock market exploded because there were all these fake
companies with fake internet businesses and they were overvalued. All

(18:56):
their stock prices were hundreds and hundreds of dollars and
they had no they had no revenue some of them,
some of them didn't have a business model. But they
went public and their stock was selling for outrageous amounts
and people were buying and selling stock, buying and selling stock.
This is nineteen ninety nine two thousand and the state

(19:16):
was taking a share of all the profits. Well, they
the revenue the state was getting was so bloated that
Grey Davis gave away huge pay raises and even Huger
that's a word, Huger pension raises. And then the stock

(19:37):
market crash happened in two thousand and the revenues in
California went whoo right off the cliff. And now he
was such a stupid man, and so we were stuck
with huge raises and huge pensions for government workers, of
all things, government workers. And then eight years later you

(20:01):
know who else did that, Tony Valar. Tony Valar. Yeah,
he gave away huge raises to government workers in the city.
And then what happened, Oh, we had the mortgage meltdown,
We had a huge economic crash, stock market cratered all
over again, second one in eight years. And here comes

(20:23):
Karen Bass and she does the same stupid thing. She
gave huge raises the city leaders, the city workers rather
and now it's a billion dollars of deficit, a billion,
and she doesn't know what to do because he just

(20:44):
the fire department was exposed and the palisades was destroyed,
and now they're looking to cut LAPD officers, but they're
gonna cut them through a back door. They're just gonna
stop re routing officers and stop hiring new officers. We

(21:07):
had ten thousand cops five years ago. By next June,
we'll be down to eighty four hundred. In five years,
we'll be down to sixty six hundred because they plan
on cutting police hiring for the next five years. They're

(21:32):
going to cut the number of recruits by seventy five
percent eventually. And you know who's driving this. One of
the socialists, one of the defund the police socialists Unices
Hernandez unic Is. Hernandez runs the most disgusting district in
Los Angeles. It's the MacArthur Park area. If you haven't

(21:57):
driven there, you'll know when you're there because there are
people dying in the street. Actually, some people are dead
in the street. And go to mark Arthur Park and
there are some people laying dead. The ones who aren't
dead are laying there and they've overdosed on fentanyl or heroin,
and the ones who aren't overdosed are standing there selling

(22:19):
the fentanyl to newcomers who would like to pass out.
And die in the park. And you knows as her
Nandez is overseas the district big defund the police. She's
with the what was the name of that group, some
Socialists of America. She's not even a Democrat. He's actually

(22:39):
with a socialist political group. There's four of them on
the city council. And you may think, well, it's not
a majority, right, there's fifteen on the city you know what.
She's in charge of committees. She sits on the budget committee,
and she constantly speaks out against spending. And they're going
to cut recruits in half this year, and Hernandez says,

(23:02):
that's a good start. Democratic Socialist in America. That's a DSA.
But they're not democrats, they're socialists. They are that this
is so this is so bad, this is so incompetent.

(23:29):
She had half a fire department, Palisades burns. So they
start to h they start to cut police officers. So
we're gonna have a tiny fire department. We're gonna have
a tiny police force, giving giving raises to uh what
people who sit at desks? Uh, you know what, we're

(24:00):
duck here. The reason we don't have money for a
fire department and the reason we don't have money for
the police department is because she spends way over a
billion dollars on the vagrants, the mental patients, and the
drug addicts. That's what she does with our money. And

(24:21):
now we can't have cops and firefighters. We just have
vagrants in the streets and they start fires, and they
terrorize a lot of people and commit crimes. In fact,
I found a story about the number of homeless. There's
a big percentage of the homeless who came right out

(24:42):
of prison, right out of jail over the last oh,
I don't know, fifteen years or so. Once Jerry Brown
decided to empty out the state prisons, you know where
a lot of those people ended up were on the streets.
Those are criminals and sex offenders. There's actually a startling
numb of sex offenders in all these encampments. So we

(25:04):
have fewer police, fewer firefighters. But Karen Bass blows well
over billion dollars on sex offenders and criminals to let
them live in the street. And Newsom is strongly suggesting
to her that you know, it is time to end
the encampments. Oh no, no, no, why that would stigmatize them,

(25:26):
That would bring them further trauma. Actually read this. These
progressives think that forcing the vagrants to either you know,
go to treatment, mental health treatment or drug treatment or
jail would further traumatize them. There's a lot of people

(25:47):
I know who are traumatized by the vagrants running around.
I mean we were chased, I told you, by by
some guy with a huge stick or a pipe or something. Now,
I'm not gonna play the victim. I wasn't traumatized, but uh,
a lot of people are traumatized.

Speaker 4 (26:05):
He caught it up a bunch of times. You're sure
you're not.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
No, I am trauma resistant. I you know what. I
I'm not going to cave into any of this. I'm
stronger than all of this. Can't help it if so
many people are weak. Nowadays, people are weak. I'm curious
with the with the with the traumatized their traffic.

Speaker 4 (26:31):
Yeah, that's ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
What a sad group there, Geez, could you hire like
real guys? All right, we come back. There's something I
wanted to do. Oh the pooping Amazon driver in Woodland Hills?
Was it your house?

Speaker 4 (26:49):
It was?

Speaker 1 (26:54):
Did you see the video? Yeah? I kept watching the video.

Speaker 3 (26:58):
Over and over.

Speaker 4 (26:58):
I saw I saw a little part.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
Yeah, well they were they blurred out the key moment.
But all right, we come back and I had a
report I want to play from Channel five, What.

Speaker 4 (27:09):
Is wrong with people so gross?

Speaker 1 (27:11):
It's a young woman too, I know. God.

Speaker 3 (27:15):
You're listening to John Cobelts on demand from KFI AM sixty.

Speaker 1 (27:21):
Eight seven seven Moist eighty six of the talkback feature
on the iHeartRadio app. Next hour, we're gonna have Susan
Shelley on calumnist for the La Daily News and the
Southern California News Group. She wrote a piece that tax
hikes are coming here in California. Yes, those uh buffoons,
idiots and clowns you send to the legislature to represent

(27:42):
you maybe taxing you again. So we'll talk to her
about that, and we'll also get into the uh Governor
Newsom's plan. Well, he's he can't force these cities in
towns to draft a new ordinance, but he really wants
them to to basically ban public camping, public homeless living.

(28:09):
No more camping, no more tents, no more blankets, no
more nothing.

Speaker 5 (28:14):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
And and it's like you got three days and then
you got to move on. And Newsom's trying to act tough. God,
he wants to be president so bad. It's really sad,
all right, So this I couldn't. It's kind of gross,
but I had to watch this video over and over.
This young woman is an Amazon driver and she's working

(28:36):
in Woodland Hills your home.

Speaker 4 (28:40):
I'm sure she's delivered packages.

Speaker 1 (28:43):
And she independent contractor, right they hire her. And there's
there's two ring videos. At one house she's pooping. At
one house, she's peeing outdoors. Listen to this report from
KTL A five, Carlos cesceto.

Speaker 5 (28:59):
Hey, deliver driver for Amazon, can seem to hold it
in on more than one occasion. A woman is seing
about to leave an Amazon package at this porch off
Fiano Drive in Woolen Hills around five point thirty Mother's
Day morning, but she also leaves a smelly surprise. She
relieves herself does number one and number two before pulling
up her shorts and walks away. The homeowners were expecting

(29:22):
a Mother's Day gift.

Speaker 6 (29:24):
When I woke up, my husband said he was gonna
bring me some coffee in a pastry. He went downstairs
and was greeted by a not only one package, but
a second inappropriate, disgusting package, which was essentially like human
feces and love to be urination.

Speaker 5 (29:39):
Tamra Badoi and her family could not believe their eyes
after watching the footage from their surveillance cameras.

Speaker 6 (29:45):
You can see the mess that she left. So I
was really disgusted. It was a horrible experience, and my
husband unfortunately had to pick it up on Mother's Day and.

Speaker 1 (29:53):
She was not done.

Speaker 5 (29:55):
On another delivery later that morning, the worker is seen
urinating on the front prom pretty of a different Woodland
Hills home. She pulls down her shorts, does her business
and takes off like nothing ever happened.

Speaker 6 (30:07):
I kind of like clutch my pearls a little bit
because I'm like, really a second time, It's kind of like, wow,
still still not done.

Speaker 5 (30:13):
It's unclear why the driver just couldn't wait to find
a restroom. It's the incidents happened twenty minutes apart, the
homes less than one mile from one another.

Speaker 4 (30:22):
That was disgusting, like very disgusting.

Speaker 5 (30:24):
Because this is something you guys would never do, right, No, No,
she probably had Taco Bell before. Amazon reps say the
driver was an independent contractor, adding in a statement quote
We're deeply disturbed by the unacceptable behavior of this delivery
driver and apologize to the customers involved. We immediately identify
the driver and they are no longer delivering on behalf

(30:46):
of Amazon tonight.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
The cereal pooper is without a job.

Speaker 5 (30:50):
Certainly not a Mother's Day surprise anybody wants to wake
up to.

Speaker 4 (30:56):
Did she even wipe?

Speaker 1 (30:58):
They found a dirty paper? I think thrown in a planet.

Speaker 4 (31:02):
Yeah, that's so gross.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
I like, I like the woman who's all upset. It's
even worse that it was on Mother's Day. Well, yeah,
husband sent down to get a Mother's Day pastry. Well,
they's sold out a pastry, but this was left for us. Inappropriate,
she called it.

Speaker 4 (31:25):
That's beyond inappropriate.

Speaker 1 (31:29):
What she I mean? She has the truck. She could
drive to any restaurant, any shop there and use the restaurant.

Speaker 4 (31:39):
There's plenty of places in Woodland Hills that you can.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
Stop or go to a homeless camp. But you know,
you could lay it in front of somebody's tent. Nobody's
gonna object, but they know that that's the problem. The
homeless have like normalized the idea of urinating and defrecating
in public. Se We see so much of it anywhere.
She probably thinks, well, but she went on their private property.
I know, all right, It's not like she like hid
behind a tree and.

Speaker 4 (32:02):
Fired one out and everybody has cameras people, so yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:07):
Yeah, you got it. Yeah, otherwise you get on television
that night. So what this woman is like, goes home
and she sees herself taking the squat.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
Yeah, oh well, you gotta go, you gotta go, you
gotta go.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
When we come back. Susan Shelley's coming on. She's a
columnist for La Daily News, Southern California Newsgroup. Yes, there's
actually taxes. There's taxes that they are planning in Sacramento,
all the progressives that you keep voting for. Deborah Mark
live in the KFI twenty for our newsroom. Hey, you've

(32:40):
been listening to the John Covelt 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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