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July 16, 2025 29 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 3 (07/16) - Alex Stone comes on the show to talk about new details regarding the couple that was murdered in Encino. Pres. Biden's idea for an all electric postal service fleet has been a huge failure. LA City and County has finally started testing Rick Caruso's Steadfast LA's AI system that would help speed up the permit process. Gov. Newsom explained what he would have done differently during COVID while on the Shawn Ryan Show podcast. 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
I am six forty.

Speaker 1 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobelt Podcast on the iHeartRadio app.
We're on every day from one until four o'clock and
then every day after four o'clock. If you miss stuff,
it's on the podcast John Cobelt's show on demand. A
lot packed into this final hour. We're going to talk
with Alex Stone from ABC News about the double murder

(00:23):
and Encino Robin Kay, who is a music producer and
American idol, and her musician husband. Apparently they came home
and they found a guy robbing the house, got into
a struggle, the burglar killed them both. Let's get the
details from Yeah, kind of worst case scenario and really scary.

(00:46):
On this we cover so many burglaries and a lot
of times they have to do with burglary rings. This
one does not seem to be that, but so many
of the cases that people run off if they're confronted
at all. But this is that one where the burglar
had a gun and the burglar used that gun and
shot the victims multiple times. And today we know John
that the LAPD has found a gun at the alleged

(01:10):
killers home that they think maybe the murder weapon, but
they're running tests on it now to know for sure
if that is the murder weapon. But this all goes
back to last Thursday where the LAPD got a call
of a possible burglary. The call and Encino was a
guy jumping over a fence at a home on White
Oak Lane. I think something like that in Encino, and

(01:33):
the neighbors say that the report was that this guy
was leaping over the fence at the home. And this
is what one of the neighbors is telling us.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
My renter called nine on Thursday because she saw somebody
homping the fence and I have no idea if that
was related or not.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
So LPD patrol units they went and they looked from
the air. They sent with the coloniirship a helicopter over
saw nothing. They looked from the ground. There is an
eight foot tall fence and spikes on the top. And
they've got to have probable cause to go into your house.
So they can't just break in and decide, well, you
know what, we got to call of a guy jumping
a big call, jumping over the fence, We're gonna now

(02:15):
break in. They did what they would do if your
burglar alarm went off and they checked the perimeter as
far as they could easily get in without breaking anything down,
and they cleared the call. And then on Monday they
got a call for a welfare check of the same
home because the residents at American Idol music producer Robin
k and her husband, also a musician, had not been
heard from since Thursday. And police got onto the property,

(02:39):
they saw blood. They then broke a backsliding glass window.
They went in and found the victims. A LAPD Valley
homicide Lieutenant Guy Golin sand.

Speaker 4 (02:47):
They then breached one of the glass windows went inside
the residence where they found both of the victims deceased,
who had suffered from multiple gunshot wounds.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
So Kay and her husband were dead. Detectives believe and
that we just to Lieutenant Golan again a little while
ago that they don't think that they knew the killer,
but they there's a potentially a little bit of help
that when the caller called in last Thursday, there was
a license plate that was given, but Lieutenant Golan saying
this was mainly off of surveillance video, that that was

(03:16):
a huge help in this, that all the cameras in
the neighborhood and on the property and on forensic evidence
that they found likely that blood that was there that
they were able to get a quick match to twenty
two year old Raymond Bouderian, who they say broke in
through an open door, maybe the burglarising home. It was
not ransacked. They don't really know what the motive was
to go in the home, but technically it was burglary

(03:39):
because he was in there. Then they came home, there
was a struggle, and then they were shot and killed.

Speaker 4 (03:44):
He was there for approximately half an hour. When the
homeowners returned back to their residence, a violent struggle ensued
between them and the suspect, who was already inside their home,
which resulted in the victims tragically losing their life.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
They don't think he had any connection to them. They
are trying to nail that down just to make sure
that there's not some reason why he was going after them.
But they think it was totally random and they're trying
to put it all together. The LAPD they did have
him in custody rather quickly, likely be charged with murder tomorrow.
We got his background today. He had previously been accused

(04:21):
of battery and threats and exhibiting a deadly weapon. Looks
like maybe mental health has previously come into play. But
he'll probably be in court tomorrow. So when the neighbors
called in saying there was a guy jumping the fans
possible break in, that may have been the same moment
that this couple was killed.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
That was the same moment.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
Yeah, and we don't know what the police showed up
after the guy had run off, and as you said,
they didn't have any legal justification for breaking into the house. Yeah,
And I mean, already they're getting a lot of people,
a lot of neighbors saying, well, they should have gone in,
they should have done something. There would be a lot
of cases where if police had that legal authority without
any sign of a crime to break into somebody's home,

(05:01):
it would go the other way, or people would be saying,
they have no authority to go in there. And you
know what if they go into a home without the
justification and they see a meth lab, then what do
they do because they're not in there?

Speaker 2 (05:10):
You know?

Speaker 1 (05:11):
Yeah, I know, but it's I mean they I mean,
they probably would have would have died anyway.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
But the idea, it does seem that way.

Speaker 1 (05:18):
The two of them would have been bleeding out while
the police were outside going on what to do. I
mean that just that doesn't seem right either. Yeah, but yeah,
they tell us that they saw no because he went
in through an unlocked door, and they had a lot
of security. It's been described as being fortified by police.
They had a lot of security, but there was apparently
an unlocked door.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
They had high walls, and they had spikes on the walls.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
Right, Yeah, because of we understand because of the burglaries
that have been going on in the Encino area that
they wanted to fortify the home. But seventy years old,
both of them, seventy that you know, like a lot
of seventy year olds who live in a quiet area.
They apparently left the door unlocked and he was able
to walk right in. But that also once the airship
got meant that they didn't see any broken windows. They

(06:02):
couldn't see anything inside the home from the air or
from out on the street, and so there was nothing
there to know that something had gone. So it was
an unlocked door in the home itself. Was there anything
unlocked or open that allowed him on the property, because.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
No, that was him jumping the defence.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
Now, it seems like maybe the witness saw him leaving
jumping the fence rather than coming in. But no, it
looks like he jumped the fence to get on the property.
All right, Alex, thanks very much. You got to thank
John Alex Stone from KFI News. The guy's name is
ABC News Raymond Abu Darian. He's only twenty two years old,

(06:40):
but the neighbors, according to The New York Post, knew
him well. They said he was a neighborhood junkie who
terrified the neighbors with junkie antics. Darien lived thirteen minutes
away from Robin Kay and her husband, and according to

(07:02):
an eighty year old neighbor named Madeline Amrani, we had
a lot of problems with him because he's taking drugs.
Every now and then, he would be outside high. The
neighbors complained and they would come and arrest him. But
Darian would also bring other junkies around and get high
with them in the back. I'm afraid, I'm frightened of them. Yeah,

(07:22):
how many times I've heard about these stories where in
a really good neighborhood there is one mental patient, drug addict, junkie,
violent guy who terrorizes everybody, and the police are called
over and over and over again, and sometimes police don't
bother to look for him or arrest him, or when
they do, he's released right away. And he never seems

(07:45):
to be He never seems to be jailed and put
away and gotten out of the neighborhood. This is the
progressive mentality in this stupid city and stupid state. This
is Newsome and Bass and the idiots on the city council.
I've never understood, like why some people get prosecuted and
get put away and others don't, although not many gets prosecuted.

(08:11):
He got a photograph of Boudarian. Oh what do you know?
He doesn't have a shirt on, and he's got his
hands behind his back and a large group of police
around him. It's all in the New York Post. Now
the Post says he's got arrest for at least three
cases of criminal battery and the police use the fingerprints

(08:31):
on file and security footage to connect him to the murders.
Three cases of criminal battery. Again, did he go to
prison at all? Has he ever been jailed? He breaks
into similar reports what Alex said, heavily four to five
four and a half million dollar mansion and then shot
the couple to death when they came home and walked

(08:52):
in on them. Another neighbor said Boudarian would often wander
around the street stoned and that she saw his arrest
on Tuesday. When you have a nice neighborhood and there's
a guy like him who's stumbling around stone troublemaker. Everybody
knows who he is, the police should get him arrested

(09:15):
and he should be put in jail, put away period,
You put them away. That's what used to go on.
That's what goes on in civilized countries. You know, you
don't get to come back and come back and come
back with your buddies and terrorized nice neighborhoods. People are
living in a four and a half million dollar neighborhood.
They spend a fortune on a high wall security system,

(09:38):
a spike fence. Somebody forgets to lock a door, and
now they get shot in the head over it. And
that is absolutely because of Newsom, the California Legislature, Bass,
the city Council. They have completely destroyed the justice system.
So when these guys get arrested, even if they get convicted,
there's little or no jail time. Or they're let out shortly.

(09:59):
They're after and they don't care about the dead bodies.
Newsom and Bass don't care about the dead bodies. They're
busy redirecting billions of dollars of homeless money into their
friend's pockets. That's their day at work. More coming up.

Speaker 3 (10:18):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (10:25):
You know, during the Biden administration, they spent hundreds of
billions of dollars on all sorts of fake, phony green
energy projects. Right, It's like they announced billions of dollars
to build electric charging stations around the country, a whole network.
It doesn't seem like that is complicated, but if you remember,

(10:46):
after three years, they had only built eight stations. Seriously,
got another one of these stories. Another Biden administration green
energy plan to create a green fleet of postal vehicles
electric mail trucks multi billion dollars ten billion dollars ten

(11:11):
billion dollars to build thirty five thousand battery powered postal trucks.
It was supposed to be completed by September of twenty
twenty eight. The first funding was three billion from the
twenty twenty two Inflation Reduction Act. All right, it's now
twenty twenty five. It's been three years. We have paid

(11:35):
one point seven billion dollars in three years. You know
how many trucks have been built? Two hundred and fifty,
two hundred and fifty trucks, one point seven billion dollars,
only thirty four thousand, seven hundred and fifty trucks to
go three years of work. They were supposed to do

(11:56):
thirty five thousand trucks in six years.

Speaker 2 (11:59):
We got two hundred and fifty and three years.

Speaker 1 (12:02):
And they blew about almost twenty percent of the money.
They blew twenty percent of the money on less than
one percent of the trucks.

Speaker 2 (12:13):
This is your green energy nonsense.

Speaker 1 (12:17):
They don't even execute because people steal the money. Even
these are the most expensive battery. Those mail trucks are small.
How do you spend almost how do you spend a
billion seven on two hundred and fifty of them? So

(12:39):
US Senator Republican Jhonny Ernst of Iowa says, I am
working to cancel the order and return the money to
the sender, the American people. I think this is part
of a set of bills that they are going to
or try to pass in the Senate to reverse the spending.

(13:01):
The Postmaster General quit earlier this year. Lewis to Joy
and there's a new guy running. The company that was
supposed to build these electric vehicles is named Oshkosh. It's
a defense contractor. And they were going to get two
and a half billion to provide the thirty six thirty

(13:22):
five thousand vehicles, but only ninety three were ready by November.
Supposed to be three thousand. Was supposed to be three thousand.
They got ninety three h so they they got about
what is that three percent of the order in no,

(13:47):
not even Oshcock's. Oshkosh's mail truck production has struggled engineering hurdles,
issues with airbag calibration, and then they did leak testing
and water would be pouring out as if the windows
had been left open in a storm.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Water pouring out of what.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
A senior executive at Oshkosh tried to tell the Postal
Service about the production problems way back at the beginning
of twenty twenty two, but their bosses blocked him. One
person at the company said, this is the bottom line.
We don't know how to make a damn truck. They

(14:36):
made a contract. Oh, what kind of corruption was this?
What political donor whose brother in law was involved in
this contract for Oshkosh to make thousands of electric trucks
for the post Office. We don't know how to make
a damn truck because they don't make trucks, do they.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
They're a defense contractor.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
The Postmaster General later said, I'm in the parcel delivery business,
not the vehicle manufacturing business. They had a factory that
could produce just one mail truck a day. We're supposed
to do eighty a day.

Speaker 2 (15:22):
One a day. The truck was supposed to cost seventy
seven million.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
Never mind, Well it was a complete bust. That's the
bottom line, a complete and total bust. Waste, money, corruption, stupidity.
Having electric, green trucks delivering your mail has no effect
on the climate. It's why all this stuff needs to
be dismantled and flushed and busted up and buried.

Speaker 3 (15:54):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (16:00):
We're on the air from one until four o'clock and
after four o'clock John Cobert Show on demand on the
iHeart app. Joined the millions who downloaded to all year
long oh, you can follow us at John Cobelt Radio
on social media and we need less than six hundred followers,
now less than six hundred to hit thirty thousand. So

(16:22):
let's get to it. I'm gonna tell you more now.
Early on the show, we discussed this briefly, but we're
going to do more on this tomorrow as well. Everybody
ought to know about this. This is so devious and
so wrong. We just found out today that the city

(16:43):
and county have finally agreed to start using the artificial
intelligence software that Rick Caruso procured through his nonprofit Steadfast La.
So maybe all the public pressure, all the yelling and
screaming we've been doing in here, uh, we finally cracked
Bass and the idiots who run the La County Supervisors

(17:06):
Board because for weeks and weeks and weeks they were
doing nothing to speed up the permit process. And this
AI system will do in hours what used to take months.
Why this wasn't immediately implemented, I don't know. And they're
going to start testing it. So I'm not fully convinced
until I hear from a Rick or from Tracy Park

(17:28):
who said the same thing a couple of days ago, Uh,
we don't want testing to go on for months and months.
It's we got we gotta get go in here. And
I told you they're they're they're dragging their feet on permits.
At the same time, Newsom's offering one hundred million dollars
for low income housing developers in the Palisades, and Scott Wiener,

(17:54):
that insufferable little jerk, is trying to get past a
bill that would allow apartment towers filled with low income
people in every single well, in every single family neighborhood
in the state, all single family neighborhoods. You would have

(18:17):
it right in the middle one or several or many
low income apartment complexes. Anytime a neighbor sells out to
a contractor and they're gonna get they're going to get
some donations and financing from the state. It's like Nwiseom
here thrown in one hundred million dollars. So you've got
Newsom thrown in cash. You got Weener writing a new

(18:41):
law that allows this sort of thing. You have Karen
Bass dragging the permits because, believe me, she doesn't want
wealthy people enjoying the Palisades. Again, she's a cashtro girl.
As I explained yesterday. By the way, you're looking for
a podcast just like for a half an hour one
thirty to two o'clock from yesterday, I explained Karen Bass
is extensive obsession with Castro in Cuba. She spent a

(19:05):
lot of time there. She is a devout believer in
the socialist, communist type of style of government that Castro perfected. Okay, absolutely,
and it explains what's going on here. It explains why
she's dragging her feet on the permits. I don't think
they have a whole lot of wealthy people in Cuba.
I think what you see a real character. Now when

(19:28):
she went crazy carrying on about ice agents in MacArthur Park, well,
here's the latest one. California lawmakers were supposed to be
today on a new law that would allow the City
of Los Angeles Karen Bass to buy lots destroyed by

(19:52):
wildfires and then built low income housing. This is the
third low income housing store in a week. New some
shoveling one hundred million dollars, Scott Wiener changing the zoning
laws to allow them to be built in single family neighborhoods.
And now here you go, we got the triple Crown

(20:12):
Karen bass is going to be able to direct the
city to buy burned out lots in Los Angeles, in
the Palisades and then build low income housing. They want
the Palisades to be low income housing paradise. When they said, oh,
we want the Palisades to rebuilt in exactly the way

(20:33):
it was, No, they don't, They're lying. Stop believing these people.
They have come up with a concept called Resilient Rebuilding Authorities.
These will be city run agencies that will buy the
ruined land and obtain loans to rebuild, and forty percent

(20:54):
of their funding would be earmarked for multi unit low
income housing, that is, apartment complexes for poor people in Palisades, Malibu,
Alta Dina where single family homes once stood. So even
if you don't sell to a developer to build a

(21:16):
single a low income apartment building, everybody else on the
block mit and you only need one to ruin the neighborhood.
That's the beauty of this. You only need one to
ruin the neighborhood, and then everybody sells out, and then
they could build ten twenty fifty of these. Newsom says

(21:39):
the state can help accelerate the development of affordable multi
family rental housing so that those rebuilding their lives have
access to a safe, affordable place to come home to.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
You got it.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
You get burned out of your home because in part
a large part because of government and competence. And they say, oh,
you don't have a home. Well, maybe we'll give you
a place and our low income housing apartment so you
have a safe place to come home to, because that's
how you Well, just forty percent of the units will

(22:15):
be for affordable housing, but you could have some of
the some of the nicer units on your old block.
Somebody named Tu meek wea moss secretary of some agency, said,
these money, these moneys will accelerate household stability, climate and

(22:37):
health outcomes.

Speaker 2 (22:38):
Climates.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
This is a perfect climate. It's cool there, it's breezy.
You got a view of the ocean. Air is clean
and fresh.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
So this is what they're doing. If nobody stops them.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
And I realize this is exhausting and overwhelming, but it's
by design. It is designed to frustrate you, to overwhelm you,
to exhaust you. So you throw up your hands and
you give up, and then Bass can institute her. Cuban
communist philosophy, and Newsom can institute her his socialist progressive philosophy,

(23:19):
and they can start remaking palisades into low income apartment
paradise so that low income people can enjoy the fresh air,
the cool breezes, and the temperate climate and the water
views too, because in Newsom in Los Angeles' America, people

(23:40):
cannot succeed and enjoy the fruits of their labor. You're
not allowed to. You have too much. You enjoyed life
too long. Things have to be equalized. So time to
give poor people their turn in the palisades.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
Oh gee, did.

Speaker 1 (23:56):
We forget to show up to put out the fire?
We're sorry about that. Did we forget to clear out
the brush? Oh we're sorry. Did we forget to pay
attention to the warnings? Oh we're sorry about that too.
I don't know how this happened, but now we can
build low income apartment buildings. Would you like to move in?
We hear you're without a house. We'll do more on

(24:17):
this tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (24:19):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI Am sixty.

Speaker 1 (24:24):
Yesterday we played some clips from Governor from Gavin Newsom
on Sean Ryan's podcast on Ryan as a conservative podcast
hosts Military Guy, CIA Guy, and it was four hours long,
and you know we can't make Eric listen to all
four hours, thank you. We played some clips and then

(24:46):
Eric found another clip. Newsom is still trying to explain
how he handled the COVID nineteen lockdowns, and Ryan pressed
him on this, so let's play this.

Speaker 5 (24:59):
Guy.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
I just you have to warn though, although I guess
we bleeked it out started cursing again.

Speaker 5 (25:05):
And I know everyone's gotten genius now in hindsight, but
at the time, none of us knew what we were
up against, including the President of the United States, who
I worked very closely with. There wasn't a democratic governor
in America that were closer during the pandemic than I
did with Donald Trump. And you can go back and

(25:25):
stress test that. And I say that with a kind
of humility he deserves as well, and grace, or rather
grace that he deserves in terms of the decisions he made.
Early on, we were all up against something none of
us had any experience around, and we counted on the experts.
What are some of the things during COVID that you
think maybe we're a mistake or that you could have
done a lot. I mean we were sitting there with Purel.

(25:49):
Remember early on we had price gouging issues around getting.

Speaker 2 (25:52):
Purel dodge wiping down.

Speaker 5 (25:54):
Everything in the house. Yeah, and we were concerned it
was airborne and folks you know, were worried about people
being outside even and we realized that after the fact
of what the hell are we doing shutting down the
beaches and open areas, you know, and not understanding that
early on. And so I think that of all issues
looking back, I remember Florida there was a big issue too,

(26:16):
even there, not just in California.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
No, I mean it was in Florida.

Speaker 5 (26:19):
I remember.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
Wait, wait, wait, stop a second. He keeps bringing up Florida.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
Florida let their kids back to school in September twenty twenty.
California didn't let their kids back to school until September
of twenty twenty one because the teachers grabbed Newsom by
his parts and they wouldn't let go. He not only
screwed the kids over and really caused brain damage, was

(26:43):
child abuse. It was because of campaign donations he didn't
want to lose from the teachers' union. And one thing
about these podcasters, because a lot of them are really
not news people or broadcasters. They you know, they do
these these interviews, and I think they're odd that they
get big name guests. I'm not hearing any of these

(27:05):
podcasters press knows.

Speaker 2 (27:06):
Some maybe they.

Speaker 1 (27:08):
Don't know what really went on. They don't remember, they
didn't care. But God Almighty, I mean, he caused twenty
thousand businesses to go out of business, and he destroyed
kids education for a year and a half and they
never have never recovered from that. And everybody knew within
three months. I saw the data, I saw the articles.

(27:30):
Within three months, it was killing elderly people and those
with pre existing conditions and immunity issues. Most of us
were safe, kids, virtually untouched play some more.

Speaker 2 (27:45):
No, I mean it was in Florida.

Speaker 3 (27:47):
I remember that they had that cruise ship off the
coast of Florida that was just stuck there.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
Yeah, for first three months how long?

Speaker 5 (27:53):
And I say that because look at Florida. Keep bringing
up because I think they're sort of this sort of
triumph new narrative. It's all myth making, all storytelling. No,
it's not narrative. There's some truth to it, but about it.
You know, Florida had worse educational outcomes during COVID than California.
Kids did worse on reading and mass course fact three
out of the four is fourth grade reading and eighth

(28:15):
grade reading. In math uh three out of the four categories,
California outperform. From a health perspective, they had more per
capita deaths than California, and from a wealth perspective, their
GDP contracted more than the state of California. I mean
on three key areas. There's a lot of mythology.

Speaker 2 (28:32):
Around what they did.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
You threw tens of thousands of people at a business.
You threw millions out of work. You blew billions of
dollars tens of billions of dollars in COVID fraud sending
it to criminals all around the world. You even sent
a criminal named Scott Paterson an unemployment check. The biggest

(28:56):
bag of BS. He is the biggest bag of BS
I have ever encountered in my life. This guy is
the show. Hey Otani of BS. Okay, I know there's more.
I can't take it. I'd quitting. I'm giving up. I'm surrendering.
Conway's coming up next. Krozier Live in the CAFI twenty

(29:18):
four hour Newsroom. 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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