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September 5, 2025 33 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 2 (09/05) - SoCal Edison is being sued for starting the Eaton Fire in Altadena in January. More on 24/7 LAPD security for former Vice Pres. Kamala Harris. LA is the second dirtiest city in the entire United States. There are 56 angry nudists. 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the show. How are you?

Speaker 2 (00:01):
We're on every day between one and four o'clock and
then after four o'clock John Cobelt Show on demand on
the iHeart app. So whatever you missed today you can
hear tonight or anytime on the weekend.

Speaker 1 (00:12):
You can hear any of the shows over the weekend.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
I do want to say you should listen to the
first hour and we may return to this topic again
because we're going to be riding hard on Karen Bass
over this one. Two years and nine months is mayor
and she's allowed the Suppulvita Basin, which is a beautiful,
very large park in the San Fernando Valley, to be

(00:36):
overrun by three hundred homeless. Every day the fire department
gets called over another fire set by the mental patients
and the just the not only the mental patients and
the drug addicts. They said they set hundreds and hundreds

(00:58):
of fire, thousands of firesout the city, but at the
Samovada Basin alone, three hundred fires in the last year
and a half. And we talked with a member from
the Encino Neighborhood Council about it, and.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
We actually got.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
From Bass's press office an email directed to Ray and
to me, you know some other facts we'd like to
know about the good work bass is doing about homelessness
and what she's going to be doing in the supulvida basis.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
This is just a load of horse manure.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
So you know, since she has contacted us, you know
what I'd like to know if she came on the air,
because I have invited her to come on the air
and spend a week here.

Speaker 1 (01:42):
First thing I'd ask is.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
Why did you hire fifteen lawyers so that you would
not have to answer questions in court about the two
billion dollars missing in homeless funds? There's two bill young missing,
and you hired fifteen lawyers so you would not be

(02:06):
questioned in court about it. So just to let you know,
if you agree to come in here, you're not going
to get what you get from all the uh uniqu
reporters here in Los Angeles. I mean, if it was
up to me, that would be the required first question
every time any reporter went up to the mayor. Why

(02:27):
why you spend Why they're spent They're spending six million
dollars of our tax money on fifteen lawyers. So she
doesn't have to testify about the missing two billion, and
nobody bugs her about that. What a bizarre media culture?
We have absolutely bizarre. Here's what's else? What else that

(02:51):
is bizarre? And the media in California is atrocious. I've
never seen this. I grew up on the East Coast.
They never media like this. The media was a pick
bulls and they just kept chasing you and chewing on
you and forcing you into a corner until you're surrendered.

(03:11):
And that's what the media here ought to do. Because
when you don't do that, what do you get? Well,
you get the Altadena fire, and you get nineteen people
burned to death, nine thousand homes burned to the ground.
You know, this was the other fire on January seventh.
Palisades gets a lot of attention. This was started by

(03:33):
so cal Edison now so col Edison and PG and
E in northern California. They have started numerous fires. You
can't count all the fires that they have set. Oh,
just in the last ten to fifteen years, millions of
acres have burned, thousands and thousands, tens of thousands of homes,

(04:00):
billions and tens of billions of dollars, hundreds of billions
of dollars total in damage because PG and E and
so cal Edison spends almost nothing on maintenance, as you'll
see in this Altadena fire story.

Speaker 1 (04:18):
And they get away with it.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
And when they have to make court payouts, Gavin Newsom
is their best buddy. They have him bent over and
they get him to taxes. They take our tax money
and then they reroot it to PG and E and
so cal Edison to cover all the lawsuits. Now follow this,

(04:43):
Pgene and so cal Edison burn our homes down, we sue.
Gavin Newsom cuts a deal so that the tax money
that Newson takes from us is used as a settlement
money to pay us back through PG and E and
so cal Edison.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
You follow that.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
It's a big money launch drinks so so cal Edison
never suffers. The executives never suffer. Executives never have to
go to prison. They should get murder and arson charges
all the executives PG and E and so cal Edison.
It's incredible how many people they've killed. It's incredible how
many homes they've burned down, all because they never wanted

(05:24):
to spend money on maintenance.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
I'll give you this example here.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
First of all, the reason this is big news is
the US Attorney bill As Sale, one of the few
saying people in government, has filed a civil lawsuit against
so Cal Edison for starting the Altadena Fire, also known
as the Eaton Fire. Nineteen people killed, nine thousand homes burned.
Now there's investigations still going on all over the place,

(05:53):
La County Fire Department, California Department of Forestry, blah blah
blah blah. But you know what A Sale says, there's
no reason to way. Edison's own statements indicate there's no
other apparent cause for the fire. We believe the evidence
is clear that Edison is in fault. The reason not
to waste is because fire season is coming up again
and we want Edison to change the way it does business.

(06:14):
It does not maintain its infrastructure in a way to
prevent fires.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
We don't want another fire igniting.

Speaker 2 (06:21):
Now to the first point that Edison is already admitted
it's their fault. Pedro Pizarro is the chief executive of
Edison International, which is the parent company, and he has
said that the leading theory of fire investigators, their own
fire investigators, is that there was a century old transmission line,

(06:44):
a one hundred year old transmission line that was last
used during the Vietnam War. Somehow this became re energized
and sparked the fire. Since I know they don't teach
history in school anymore, the Vietnam War lasted from nineteen
sixty four to nineteen seventy three, and that was the

(07:07):
last time this transmission line was used. So for about
fifty years it supposedly was shut off, and then magically
last January seventh, during the windstorm, it re energized and
burned down nine thousand homes in Altadena. Because in those
fifty years, the company did not spend a dime to

(07:32):
get rid of it, to keep it maintained. I don't
know where to put it underground? How about disconnect it
and put it in the trash.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
Once you go fifty years, I think that's a good rule,
even in your house, Right, devin't used something in fifty years,
maybe you ought to toss it. The government's lawsuit said
Edison has admitted an illegal filing that it was not
aware of evidence pointing to any other possible source of ignition.

(08:05):
All right, so everybody's an agreement. Edison started this fire
they had one hundred year old line that they never
took care of that they didn't lose use in fifty years.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
So what's going to happen. Well, losses from.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
This Altadena fire could be, according to UCLA, anywhere from
twenty five to forty five billion dollars. Now, there's a
twenty one billion dollar fund that California has to protect
utilities from the cost, so obviously that would be wiped out.
And that doesn't even count the Pacific Palisades Fire, the

(08:41):
Bass fire, you know, that's what the official name for
the Palisade fire is now, the Bass Fire. Yeah, and
it's going to be up to forty five billion dollars.
Edison doesn't have that money either. I think the executives
should be forced to liquidate their homes and their cars

(09:03):
and all their possessions on their way to be sent
to be sent to prison. How else will you get
these companies to stop it? Get them to stop paying
off Gaven Newsom and Gaven Neusom's wife, you know, Jennifer Newsom,
she lives off PG and E money. That's how she
gets to be a documentary filmmaker because they sponsor her

(09:24):
documentary films on feminism and how masculinity is bad. And
you know, they force school kids around the state to
watch this crap. We talked about this the other day.
It's all funded by PGNE and so PGE gets special
protection whenever there's a big fire they started and they
don't want to go bankrupt. Well, so cal Edison also

(09:45):
shovels a lot of money at Gavenusom and the other
Democrats in the corrupt legislature. This is what it's like
living in a corrupt state. You may say, well, I
don't really care politicians get a little money on the side. Well,
except they get some money on the side, and then
they get blanket protection to two companies who then go
and burn down everything in sight. So you lose an

(10:06):
entire town like the Palisads, you lose a huge chunk
of Altadena, you lose an entire town in northern California
like Paradise. And eighty five people were killed up there,
and nineteen were killed in Altadena, and there was another
twelve or so killed in the Palisads. So that's what
you get for having a little corruption on the side.

(10:27):
When you have Gavid and Jennifer Newsom doing the collecting
and then you have the PG.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
And E and the in.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
Southern California Edison not updating or maintaining their transmission lines
for one hundred years, and then he lectures us that
it's all climate change. See how it works? More coming up.

Speaker 3 (10:49):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (10:56):
On from one until four o'clock after four o'clock John
Cobelt Show on Demand and moist Lye twice in the
three o'clock hour. I hope you had a good day
at work today. And how does it feel maybe you're
coming home now?

Speaker 1 (11:12):
How does it.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
Feel that you made a little more money to make
Kamala Harris safe. Doesn't it feel good that Kamalas Harris
is safe?

Speaker 1 (11:22):
You may not be safe.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
I mean, as we told you last hour, the people
in Encino are terrified because there's three hundred crazed homeless people,
three hundred mental patients and drug addicts running around starting
fires in the Supulvidabasin Recreational area. We'll do more on
that later, but they're starting three hundred fires. Everybody scared

(11:46):
its fire season and hasn't rain since last I don't
know March so I got six months of dry weather,
and there's crazy people starting just in the last year
and a half, seven hundred fires, and Carabas has done
nothing about that. But when Trump had died, Kamala Harris's
Secret Service protection suddenly Karen Bass had the money and

(12:10):
the personnel fourteen LAPD officers to quote protect her. Now,
Karen Bass, even though you'll not hear this very often
because everybody lies in the media, has no legal right
to any more Secret Service protection. That right ends on

(12:30):
the day that her term concludes, which would be January twentieth.
There had been a tradition to give a six month
grace period beyond that, but even that six months is gone.
Biden had extended it, Trump reversed it. Mike Pence only

(12:51):
got six months. And really, they don't deserve a day.
No Republican, no Democrat, deserves a day of extra protection.
You feel you're endangered, you pay for it. The Associated
Press has reported that according to a recent threat intelligence
assessment by the Secret Service, they concluded that there is

(13:15):
no credible evidence of a threat to Kamala Harris, none,
no red flags, nothing, So right now they don't think
she's in any more danger than you or I, except
you and I are in more danger, especially if you're
living in Encino because of the three hundred crazy people
starting fires every day, not to mention all the people

(13:36):
breaking into homes and murdering the residents in Encino. But
Kamala Harris, she's got fourteen cops working to protect her
twenty four to seven, and we're paying for that, and
they've been working since Monday. And I love this. The

(13:59):
La Times said, sources not authorized to discuss the details,
but then they discuss.

Speaker 1 (14:05):
The details, but they will at the Times print their names. Said.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
The city is funding the security, so city taxpayers, we're
paying for Kamala Harris. They will not pay to get
rid of the mental patients in the park. That's all
on Karen Bass. That's her decision, her priority. She gets
up in the morning. I've got some money here for safety.
Should I spend it on getting rid of the homeless
people starting fires next to en seeo neighborhoods. No, Kamala Harris, Yes,

(14:33):
Kamala Harris. Fourteen cops so public of Mason zero.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
There you go. That's what your lives are worth it. Encino.

Speaker 2 (14:41):
According to Karen Bass, the board of directors for the
Los Angeles Police Protective League, that's the union of the
rank and file officers. This is a great quote in
their statement. Pulling police officers from protecting every day Angelino's

(15:01):
to protect a failed presidential candidate who also happens to
be a multi millionaire with multiple homes and who can
easily afford to pay for our own security is nuts.
And Karen Bass ought to tell Governor new said that
if he wants to curry favor with Harris at her

(15:23):
donor base, then he should open up his own wallet,
because LA taxpayers should not be footing the bill for
this ridiculousness. Well said, yes, we have a multi billionaire
getting protection from another multi billionaire. Newsom said he was
going to use the CHP and state tax money. Somehow
it got farmed out to Karen Bass and city tax money.

(15:48):
And remember what they said about how wealthy Kamala Harris is.
Let me give you this juicy little tidbit. The Daily Beast,
which is a left wing online site, they have a
section called The Swamp.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
It covers Washington stuff.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
And according to the Daily Beast, spies tell the Swamp
that Barack and Michelle Obama and Kamala Harris and husband
Doug m Hoff were all dining at the Exquisite State
Road restaurant in Martha's Vineyard last Thursday night. Martha's Vineyard.

(16:27):
They charged thirty dollars for a burger. So Kamala Harris
is eating at a Martha Vineyards restaurant where a burger
goes for thirty but she can't afford to pay for
her protection from non existing threats.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
I hope you worked really hard today.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
By the way, you may think, wow, did the four
of them have dinner Barack and Michelle and Kamala and
Doug m Hoff. No, they ate in separate rooms. There
is bad blood between the two couples. It says that
one couple stopped by to say hi to the other,
but other than that, they spent no time together. Apparently

(17:17):
Obama was not a fan of Kamala running for president.
He was trying to derail that train behind the scenes.
He didn't he didn't see, he didn't think she was
up to it, and he was right. By the way,
you don't she's going on this book tour, and remember
that she will refuses to pay for her own security.

(17:37):
She's she's stiffing you with the bill. Okay, she will
not pay for her own security. She and her husband
are worth eight million dollars. And listen to what it
costs to hear her speak on the book tour October ninth.
If you go to Washington, DC's Warner Theater, you can
go online and buy an orchestra your seat at the

(18:00):
theater to watch Kamala Harris speak about her book. It
will cost you as much as three thousand and five
hundred and ten dollars.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Does it come with any anster solid dressing? Thirty five
hundred dollars to hear her speak? That's how hot the
ticket is.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
Uh. However, that does not include a meet and greet,
and that does not include a signed.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
Copy of the book. You had to get in early
for that, and that was extra. Uh.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
Do you know how much money Kamala Harris's campaign raised
three billion dollars? Three billion all down the toilet. You
imagine if you had a product, If you run a
business and you had a product and he had three

(19:01):
billion dollars to sell it and you didn't, bye bye,
three billion dollars, there goes swirling.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
Done.

Speaker 2 (19:16):
So she got three billion dollars from donors donors are
giving her no money to protect herself from non existent
threats out there, but Karen Bass thinks we should spend
our tax money on that.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
What a fascinating time we live in. More coming up.

Speaker 3 (19:35):
You're listening to John Cobel's on Demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (19:40):
We're on every day from one until four o'clock. After
four o'clock John Cobelt Show on Demand on the podcast.
You can follow us on social media at John Cobelt
Radio at John coblt Radio. And we've been telling you
how Karen Bass refuses to spend any mondy to get
rid of three hundred homeless people in the sub it
pays suppulvit of Basin Recreation Area in Encino. It's been

(20:05):
the it's been years, and every day a new fire
is set, seven hundred fires in a year and a half.
And she won't spend any money on that. Another thing
she won't spend money on. Oh, she does spend money
on Kamala Harris's protection, but she won't spend money on
keeping the city clean. If you've noticed the city of

(20:27):
Los Angeles is quite disgusting, and you could I just
use my eyeballs.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (20:34):
I don't need surveys or statistics anymore. I don't need
you know, phony press releases. It's it's it's a foul
city to just drive around the amount of garbage around.
Somewhere along the line, Karen Bath decided her sanitation department
is no longer operational.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
I don't know. Maybe they were cut, maybe they were
put out of business. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
I don't think we have a sanitation department. It's a
big garbage up off the street. And well, here's a
study if you need a study. There's a national lawn
care company called lawn Starter, and they did a study
and the analyzed cleanliness, pollution, living conditions. You know, we

(21:21):
look at the squalor that people are living in, the
waste infrastructure. You know, do we have a way of
getting rid of our garbage efficiently? And how unhappy residents
are because of all the garbage and filth. And we
ended up being the second dirtiest city in the United

(21:41):
States of America.

Speaker 1 (21:44):
We're number two.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
Out of all the cities they surveyed in the United States.
We're the second filthiest. Thank you, Karen. Make sure those
cops can yet the right overtime for Kamala's protection. Okay,
we wouldn't want to spend some of that money on
cleaning up the garbage. Now you're saying we're number two.

(22:11):
Who beat us out? Who's number one? Well, you don't
have to drive far. The dirtiest city in America, according
to lawn Starter, San Bernardino. Congratulations, those of you in
San Bernardino, you're living in the filthiest squalor in America.

(22:35):
You imagine, I get you realize that none of them
care because I don't know. I imagine if you or
I were the mayor, we wake up and I'm seeing
I'm the dirtiest city in America, I'd sting.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
A little huh, what do you do? I'm a mayor
of the mayor. You're the mayor.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
What I'm the mayor of the dirtiest city in America?
Why don't you clean it? I don't want to. I uh,
you know, I need I give away the money to
uh Kamala Harris's security team. San Bernardino has the worst
pollution rating the highest number of dissatisfied residents.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
Los Angeles was number two. Do you know.

Speaker 2 (23:17):
Four of the top ten dirtiest cities are here in
southern California. Number five is Ontario and number ten is Corona.
So congratulations to those cities. You know, a little mini
La Wannabes. Huh, you're only top ten, Las number two, Okay,

(23:38):
San Bernino number one.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Those are the big guys.

Speaker 2 (23:42):
You guys are only number five and ten, and we're
up there with other great cities that you're probably very
familiar with over the years. Detroit, Michigan is third. Yeah,
that's where we are. Newark, New Jersey. I didn't grow
up far from Newark, and that place has been disgusting
for fifty years. Jersey City, New Jersey. Las Vegas is

(24:04):
number nine. Jersey City is number eighth. Now the cleanest
cities now, it seems to me because these people like
to go on all kinds of junkets, right like Karen
Bass was in Ghana when the big fire broke out.
I remember Garcetti was always on junkets and the usually

(24:25):
to go. I remember a whole group of politicians years
ago went to Paris to look at high speed rail
or something like that. Well, all right, you think when
you're the dirtiest city in the country or the second
dirtiest city, you get on a judget and go to
the cleanest cities. The cleanest city in America is South Bend, Indiana.

(24:48):
Who used to be the mayor of South Bend. Remember
he'd go to Jedge and he's a very clean looking guy,
and he wasn't going to have a dirty city, right,
that's right. Pete Bootages is former city South Bend. Wilmington,
North Carolina. I've been there, Beautiful beach Town, Des Moines, Iowa.

(25:12):
Now these are places that Karen Bass would not be
caught dead in. Whoever the hell the mayor of San
Bernardino is I don't even know, but they should go.
If they're going to go on a junket, go to
Indiana or they'd never seen She would never be seen
dead in Indiana or Iowa. Now, why do they have
their cities clean? Why do they pick up their garbage there?

(25:33):
What's the good reason for that? I'm serious, what's the
good They're able to pick up their garbage and we don't.
It's not hard to keep And you don't say money.
Because I grew up in a lower middle class, blue
collar neighborhood. Every property in the neighborhood we had small

(25:55):
with small tracked housing. I don't think my home was
more than a thousand square feet. All the homes look
the same, perfectly clean, everybody in the neighborhood.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
So it wasn't money.

Speaker 2 (26:08):
It was everybody got up in the morning and said,
I'm not going to have a filthy property.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
I'm not going to have guard. It's guarage, trash. It's
just you know, paper cups and paper bags and oh
yeh needles, crack pipes. Yeah, that do all right.

Speaker 3 (26:29):
More coming up you're listening to John Cobels on demand
from KFI Am sixty.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
Coming up at the three o'clock hour.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
Two runs two rounds of the Moistline at three twenty
and three fifty, and we'll also give you details on
something we've been referring to constantly, and that's Karen Bass's
refusal to get the three hundred insane homeless people out
of a great beautiful park in the San Fernando Valley,
the Suppulvida Basin Recreation area. Three hundred crazed homeless people

(27:02):
who start fires every day, seven hundred fires since last year.
There was a big community meeting with a fire department
chief and all the Encino residents were yelling at them,
and nothing's been done. They have two useless, brain dead
council people that represent that recreation area and absolutely nobody

(27:24):
wants to get the three hundred arsonists out of the park.

Speaker 1 (27:28):
And hey, it's September, it hasn't ranged in six months.
What could happen?

Speaker 2 (27:32):
Well, and Sino's worried that it's going to burn down
and be the next one on Karen Bass's hit list.
La Town's destroyed by negligence and fire. So we'll give
you more of the details on that coming up. There
are let me see.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
There are.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
Eighty how many newtists are there? Fifty six angry nudists?
You mentioned that, fifty six angry nudists and they have
filed a lawsuit in San Bernardino County Superior Court. They
are members of the Olive Dell nudist Colony. Now, this

(28:16):
nudist colony popped up in the news not long ago
because two of the nudists were murdered I believe by
another nudist. Right, it was an angry male nudist who
killed a husband and wife. And apparently the upheaval continues.

(28:38):
The owners of the nudist colony want everybody out there's
new owners and they purchased the Olive Dell ranch for
over two and a half million dollars in twenty nineteen.
Imagine paying two and a half million dollars and you
end up with fifty six naked people. Well, that's what's

(28:59):
going going on. So it had drive out the Olive
Dell nudists. The owners are being accused of cutting their
electricity in community spaces such as the clubhouse, the bathrooms,
and the walkways. Now trash is piling up. Oh, maybe
this is why San Bernardino is number one in filth. Hmm,

(29:24):
could be this newdest colony alone. The tenants are so
fed up they moved out some of them and they've
been replaced by rats, insects.

Speaker 1 (29:35):
And weeds.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
Finally, the owners of the Olive Dell ranch told the
remaining residents put on your clothes or leave. No more nudity,
and the leftover residents sold. No way are we getting dressed.
We're going to court. I am not making any of
this up. The nudists are claiming that their civil rights

(30:02):
have been violated. They're filing the lawsuit under the Civil
Rights Act. They're claiming financial elder abuse, dependent adult abuse,
labor code violation, unfair business practice as a whole list
of things. And the nudists want five million dollars in damages.
What are they going to do with it. I'm not

(30:25):
going to buy any clothes. By the way, it sounds
like just an unpleasant place. The people live there, live
in mobile homes or RVs, and they pay for their spot,
and they pay membership fees. Oh, here are the amenities. Okay,
managine fifty six nudists. Well, the membership fees give you
access to a hot tub, oh god asana and a

(30:52):
steam room. Wow. Do you go on a hot tub
that's been used by fifty six nudists? But this is
so cross and shockingly many of these residents are lower income.

(31:13):
I guess people who don't wear clothes have trouble getting
a steady work. The rents range from five point fifty
to eight to fifty a month, and they're very proud
of the community that they live in. The ranch was
renamed Olive Dell RV Park and resort.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
Boy.

Speaker 2 (31:37):
That is really stretching the limit of the word resort there,
that's really testing that definition. It turns out that almost
a year ago the owners of the resort said that
the Olive Dell nudist ranch would become a textile park,
which meant that clothing would be mandatory. See you wear textiles,

(32:00):
That's what clothes are made of. A textile park. Does
everything have to have a euphemism.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
A textile park? Now, going back to the murder.

Speaker 2 (32:15):
One resident, Michael Royce Sparks was charged with brutally killing
two neighbors, Daniel and Stephanie Minard. And if Sparks's home
was pretty much destroyed. Police used a battering ram to
get to his property, and the people there say, we're
still dealing with the with the trauma of the killing

(32:39):
of the couple and the Sparks home being destroyed, and
people are coming gauk at the place. Really disgusting. All right,
we come back, Karen Bass. We're gonna play a couple
of news reports to give you an overview of this.
Karen Bass has finally been called out by the good

(33:00):
people in Encino who, when they're not dodging a large
number of home invasion robberies, when they're not dealing with
people who come in in murder residents in their own homes,
they have to deal with three hundred crazed mental patients
in the Supulvidam Recreational area. It's a big park, and
these three hundred crazed mental patients start fires constantly, seven

(33:24):
hundred fires since last year, about one a day, and
Karen Bass refuses to do anything about it, and so
do the two council members. We'll give you the whole
story coming up. It is a doozy Two rounds of
the Moistline. Debora Mark is off. We've got Michael Krozer
live in the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Hey, you've
been listening to the John Cobalt Show podcast. You can

(33:47):
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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