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May 7, 2024 31 mins

Todd Bensman comes on the show to talk about why the Biden administration's idea to bring refugees to the US from Gaza is a bad idea. More on the Trump "Hush Money" trial. Newsom wants state employees in the office at least twice a week. 

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

Speaker 2 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 1 (00:06):
Welcome. We're in a different studio today.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
I'm sitting with Eric because somebody decided we need five
televisions in the main studio. I don't know why we
had to. Now we're going to have five so I
could look at five TV screens.

Speaker 1 (00:21):
I don't even know how to do that. Just think
about all the baseball games you can watch. I just
think how distracted you're going to be.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
Well, that's what's going to happen, is I'm gonna say
I'm not I'm going to stop paying attention.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
And I already have that issue. I'll have to yell
in your ear. We're back from break. We're back from break.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
Yeah, it's like hold on, it's the bottom of the eighth. Okay,
we've got we got one thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
We're given away.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
A moistline is eight seven seven moist eighty six, eight
seven seven moist eighty six.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
Every day it's.

Speaker 2 (00:47):
Another crazier and crazier news story regarding the border, and
now Joe Biden's administration is seriously considered, seriously considering bringing
war refugees in from Gaza war refugees. Seriously, because we
don't have enough angry displaced people from Palestine here, not

(01:11):
enough people hating Jews, not enough people marching and tying
up the colleges. Let's bring people who have been living
out in the desert without basic necessities for the last
seven months, and that we've been because of a war
that we've been financing.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
Bring him here.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
I'm sure they'll be happy, no grudges. Well, we're going
to talk out of Todd Bensman. Todd is with Well.
He's an author and a journalist, files a lot of
stories from the border, Senior National security fellow at the
Center for Immigration Studies. He's got a piece today in
the New York Post going through what a crazy idea

(01:54):
and what's fascinating is he explains.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
How well Hamas has their.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
Indoctrination system, their propaganda message starts practically when these kids
are still embryos, and how it pervades their entire life
and turns them into terraces.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Let's get Todd on here. How are you, Todd, I'm
doing great.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
Thanks for having me. I appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (02:17):
Fascinating piece that you wrote today in the post why
don't you explain the indoctrination program that starts very very
early in childhood with children in Gaza?

Speaker 3 (02:32):
Sure well. The title of the post pieces why Biden's
Gaza refugee plan is a hard hell no. And the
reason that's such a strong headline is because there are
very few places in the world where you have an
insular community like this that has been subjected to for

(02:52):
decades straight, hardcore bleiological Jihattist indoctrination at every level of society,
at every civil civic institution, the schools, the emoms, the colleges,

(03:14):
the health and human services network, every aspect of that
society has been bombarded NonStop for decades straight with the
messaging of hate, murder, genocide, dehumanizing the other against Christians,

(03:38):
hate for of course Israel, and it's a great Satan
benefactor America. And they start from, like you said, the embryo.
I like that. I might steal that from you, but
they do start from a very young age. Kindergarten is
when all the starts that got their hand on all

(03:59):
the curriculm them all the textbooks, and they place all
the teachers and uh, it is very heavy on creating
value for jihad, for suicide, bombing, for killing. The highest
order of valor that you can attain in goss In

(04:21):
society is that you kill your you kill yourself while
you're killing your enemies.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (04:27):
And that goes from the beginning all the way to
the to the end of life. Now, I'm sure that
there are some Gosins that are not impacted by this.
It's but it is not such a large population that
you know, there's two million people live there in tight
close quarters and are not allowed to travel anywhere. So

(04:48):
it's a very unique situation. So when you talk about
bringing refugees in from that place, there's a very high
probability that you are going to bring people in who
want to kill you or somebody in this country and
might hide the fact on the front end until they
can get in. All the polling shows that Dozins overwhelmingly

(05:12):
hate America. It's in their polling, and it's credible polling
showing how they feel. So that's why it's a hard No.
I'm not saying don't help the Gosins by all means,
send the Mercy Hospitalship over there and help facilitate you know,
the injured getting treatment in neighboring countries. But there's no

(05:34):
reason why the United States needs to take the risk
of bringing that particular population.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
In Well, can you talk in this about the school
textbooks and the curriculum and it infuses the next generation
with militant ideology. In fact, you quoted that from the
New York Times.

Speaker 3 (05:54):
Yeah, this isn't me saying it. I mean, there's this
has been studied heavily by think tanks, and it's been
reported on by the Washington Post, the New York Times.
This isn't fringe stuff at all here. It's well known
I mean within certain circles.

Speaker 2 (06:10):
So the average kid is exposed to thousands of examples
of violent incitement against Israel and the Jewish people. That
I mean, that's their childhood. Thousands of times it's reinforced
to hate and commit violence against Jews.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
And that's just in kindergarten through fifth sixth grade. Remember
also in the same piece, I talk about the Hamas
summer camps where tens of thousands of children go during
the summer, and they have actual militant brigade fighters run

(06:50):
these camps as camp counselors indoctrinating them proselytizing them into
the the ideology of of death. It's like a death cult.
They train them with weapons, they teach them how to
stab and kill, you know, supposed Jewish people and enemies,

(07:10):
and you know, get them ready to be conscripted into
the Hamas armed forces. Get them kind of soften the beaches.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
So they're hearing and seeing the messages of hatred every
day of their lives. And it comes from their teachers,
from their parents, and no wonder they can be whipped
up into a frenzy to commit the atrocities when Hamas
finally invaded.

Speaker 3 (07:33):
Well, that's right. And you know, I point out at
the top of the piece that you know, there were
some good hearted Israelis that sponsored a lot of gossens,
thousands of gozens to pay them to work in their
farms and are in and around their homes in towns
not far from the Strip, and they could go home
their day labors and very very rare privilege. And there

(07:57):
was good reporting that some of those people provided tactical
intelligence to the Homas attackers for October seven. They knew
where everybody was, They knew which families lived in which
houses in which towns, and so you know, that's what
you get for being a little bit too naive and

(08:19):
trusting and hopeful with people that have been indoctrinated that way.
And one last thing is, you know they all underwent
security vetting. You can't get a permit like that if
you're not the Israelis, you know, aren't checking you out fully.
And they do that with the United Nations agency that

(08:41):
provides all the humanitarian resources for Gosans unru It's called.
And it turns out that at least a dozen of
them were directly involved in the October seven attacks from
that and they were all vetted by the Israelis. So
if somebody thinks that our refugee bureaucrafts are going to

(09:02):
be able to really vet these people might be as
better than the Israelis can, I'd be pretty surprised. I've
got a swamp to sell you in Florida.

Speaker 1 (09:11):
Yeah, can you stand on another segment?

Speaker 3 (09:14):
Sure? Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:15):
I want to ask you about the cartoon character that
all the children in Gaza we're watching for so many years,
And I want to ask about what you think is
going on in the minds of these Biden officials that
they would even think of this let alone had this
publicly leak out. We got Todd Benzman on. Todd Bensman

(09:37):
is the journalist, the writer stationed often at the border,
senior national security fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies,
got a piece in the New York Post, And yeah,
the title is why Biden's Gaza refugee plan is a
hard hell no more to come.

Speaker 4 (09:52):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
We continue with Todd Bensman, the journalist, the author, often
stationed at the Mexican border, and he writes for a
number of publications, and he's a fellow at the Center
for Immigration Studies. And this is something else Joe Biden's
administration wants to let in Gaza war refugees. And what

(10:19):
Todd did is wrote a peace today describing how the
children in Gaza are indoctrinated practically from birth to hate
the US, hate Israel, to want to kill Jews, destroy Israel.
In fact, he notes the reports of jubilant children, women

(10:42):
and men cheering, spitting at and beating alive and dead
Israeli hostages that were being graded through Gaza after they
were captured. Yeah, everybody forgets this stuff. How do you
get children to beat a corpse.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
Well, you have the parents bring them in, and first
you watch your parents do it, and then your parents
tell you to do it. And that's the Norman Gaza.
How the administration plans to vet for that sort of
thing is a big mystery. I'd love to be able
to question them about that about it. The White House

(11:19):
spokesman framed this yesterday at a press conference where he
was asked. They were asked about this, something about like,
you know, what, what's your plan here, and the way
they framed it was, well, we're going to be bringing
you know, sick children in to get cancer treatment, and
you know, these very kind of sympathetic sounding sorts of things,

(11:41):
but you have to understand that when you bring the
kid in, who's probably been very indoctrinated, depending on their age,
you're also bringing all their relatives in and their their
older siblings and their parents and and everybody else. They
say that they're going to folks on gosins who already

(12:03):
have relatives in the United States and kind of do
a family reunification, like it's this wonderful thing, but you know,
we're seeing in the protest across America of people like
that at college campuses don't even belong.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
Yeah, there'll be a Columbia tell us about this TV
character named far four, right.

Speaker 3 (12:28):
I mean, I laugh, it's not funny, but I mean
it's it's.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
Just really outrageous.

Speaker 3 (12:33):
This thing that's Yeah, Hamas has a television station. It's
a propaganda station, very popular state run TV there called
al Aksa, and it is a US designated terrorist organization,
I might add by the US Treasury Department. But it
kind of got a little bit of international infamy about

(12:53):
ten years ago when they had this like kind of
Mickey Mouse type character on a regular daily children's show
that would just preach suicide bombing and martyrdom and killing
and how to kill and to urge kids to take
up Ak forty seven's and murder. And so when this

(13:14):
got out around the world, it was such a problem
that the ox of TV people decided they should kill
off Falfour. And the way they did it was they
brought in an actor posing as an Israeli, a disgusting
character who beat Falfour to death on TV, and then

(13:36):
just created a new character in the form of a big, fuzzy,
cute b called Narhoul who just went on preaching death
and violence. And that's the sort of thing that people
don't understand.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
A Mickey Mouse type character preaching violence, hatred to Jews,
take up Ak forty seven rifles and then they have
an Israeli kill their beloved, a character, their little friend
that they saw every day after school, and Israeli kills them.
And how angry and upset the kids were. I think
that that that that alone would incite these children into

(14:13):
violence against Jews for the rest of their lives.

Speaker 3 (14:17):
Right. The point being here is that you know, in
lots of societies that regard themselves as at war with
the out outlanders, with the people who are you know,
not them all around them. You know, it's not that
unusual like in Vietnam. You know, children would be used

(14:39):
to conceal bombs and to blow up American troops. It's
not outside uh you know human experience that women blow
themselves up, mothers blow themselves up.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
It's it's just a national security issue and risk that
is unnecessary. Don't have to do this. We have enough problem.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
What do you think they're doing this?

Speaker 2 (15:05):
I mean, Biden's got a lot of problems obviously he's
not in a good place for the election. Immigration is
the number one issue has been for three straight months,
which has never happened before.

Speaker 3 (15:15):
Well, I don't really, I can't say that. I know,
but I do. I can't speculate, I think with some
amount of accuracy. So you know, right now, the administration,
the campaign, the Biden campaign, is very worried about alienating
it's far left progressive wing in the election. They need

(15:40):
that progressive wing. If that progressive wing sits out this election,
Trump's probably going to win. So they have to do
whatever they can to get them back in the fold.
And I think maybe this is a sop to that.
Maybe they're trying to just say, hey, you know, we're
so concerned on the humanitarian end that while we're supporting Israil,

(16:00):
we're going to be doing all this for the gossoms.
But you know, I have that's speculation. I can only
guess at that.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
That's crazy. That's just great, Todd, excellent reporting. Thank you
very much for spending time with us.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
Again, thanks for having me. I appreciate it, all.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
Right, Todd, Bensman and uh go to the New York Post.
Why Biden's gays a refugee plan is a hard hell no,
and it'll it'll your blood's going to come out of
your eyes after you read this thing. All right, we've
got Oh. I was waiting. It's very hard to get

(16:36):
details in good context for the Trump trial and Stormy
Daniels because it was happening, you know, while I was
driving in, while you were working. And but now some
reporters have sorted out the story and we'll tell you
how Stormy Daniels described her night of sex with Donald
Trump on the standon.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
I was waiting for you to get I.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
Oh, you've been dying to be talking about those details
all day. Oh oh yeah, And let me tell you
the idea of Trump and Stormy Daniels going at it.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
This is the hot story you'll ever hear. Hope, you're
not having dinner.

Speaker 4 (17:14):
You're listening to John Cobel's on demand from KFI Am six.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
Forty on from one until four, after four o'clock. You
missed stuff.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
Oh you should have listened to Todd Benjamin the last
half hour talking about the Biden administration wanting to bring
us Gaza refugees. If you missed that, you listen to
the podcast after four o'clock on the iHeart app Conway.
Coming up at four o'clock is here on KFI. Okay,
we opened the show. We got a report from Dave
Packer at ABC News trying to track the Trump Stormy

(17:47):
Daniels story today. See, the thing is, there is no
audio and there is no video allowed in this courtroom,
which is just a tragedy, just a shame. So you're
relying on porters who are typing probably text messages and
sending them to the producers at the cable channels, who

(18:07):
are then passing them on to the anchors and the analysts,
and then you hear them, and it's on a delay,
and sometimes it's at a sequence.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
It's disjointed.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
You really can't get a feel for this right because
you're not hearing from actual reporters who are witnessing it live.
They're stuck in the courtroom, and the reporters are writing
fragments down. So but you give it a few hours
and some writers have put it together and I've got
the tabloids tell the Truth New York Posts, some of

(18:36):
the British tabloids. So just a little bit of background,
Stormy and Trump met at a celebrity golf tournament in
Lake Tahoe. She was twenty seven years old in two
thousand and six, and he was probably fifty nine sixty,

(18:56):
and he invited her, bantering back and forth, and he
invited her to dinner, and her publisher said, yeah, in fact,
skip a work event. Now, what's a work event for
Stormy Daniels. She's at Lake Tahoe. She's an adult porn actress.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
Promoting the next porn movie.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
Because the publisher said, look, it would make a great
story if you met Trump instead. So then Stormy met
Trump's security guard earlier in the day. She went to
Trump's hotel suite and Trump was in silk or satin pajamas,
like Hugh Hefner tell me when this gets too creepy.

Speaker 1 (19:45):
At least it wasn't a robe, no, no, but it
was close.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
It was a kimono like garment over a tight black shirt.
And they I guess they got it to a bit
of an argument right away. She told Trump she had
had enough of his arrogance. He pulled out the Time
magazine with his face on the cover, and she said,

(20:13):
somebody should spank you with that. Let's get into the
detail here. So after coming out in silk pajamas. He
pulls out the magazine with his face on the cover,
and she said, I wanted to eat dinner. You promised dinner.
Didn't want to She didn't want to sit at the
hotel and listen to him. And Stormy asked Trump if

(20:34):
he was always this rude?

Speaker 1 (20:36):
She said.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
She snapped at him, are you always this arrogant and pompous?
You don't even know to how to have a conversation
and says someone should spank you with that. And Trump
rolled up the magazine and gave me a look as
kind of a dare. So I took it from him,
and I said, turn around, and I swatted him right
on the butt.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
And after that he was much more polite.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
Some guys like.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
That a woman in charge, Yeah, Well, a guy like
that is always in charge, right, yeah, and he needs
to be subservient. So I had enough of his arrogance
and cutting me off and still not getting my dinner.
So let me see here. The door was slightly open,

(21:28):
and she went in, and she instructed Trump to change
his clothes, and so he went back in and put
on a dress shirt, dress shirt and dress pants. Wow,
he really was into this she was teasing him about
what he wore, and they talked business and Trump asked

(21:51):
her a lot about the business aspect of porn. What
she thought was rare as men usually want to hear
the sexy, dirty stuff. And she told Trump that she
had to get tested every thirty days, and they spoke
briefly about Milania. She complimented Milania, saying she was very beautiful,

(22:13):
and he responded by saying, we don't sleep in the
same room. Your wife is very beautiful, We don't sleep
in the same room. Then Trump told Stormy that she
reminded him of his daughter a vodka.

Speaker 5 (22:27):
Oh no ah, ah, come on, because that's what you
want to hear, and convinced Daniels that she could appear
on The Apprentice and help her career.

Speaker 2 (22:47):
And all the time she kept comparing her to the daughter.
You remind me of my daughter. She's smart and beautiful,
and people underestimate her as well.

Speaker 1 (22:58):
Well.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
Stormy is telling this story, Trump is closing his eyes
and shook his heads, shook his head and was talking
to his lawyers, and Daniels continued to describe their sex encounter,
and he was scowling and kept nudging his lawyer to object.
Daniels needed to use the bathroom. She'd never gotten to dinner,

(23:20):
so they sat on the couch talking and drinking water,
and then she was startled to find Trump sitting on
his bed only in his boxer shorts. It was like
a jump scare. I wasn't expecting someone to be there,
mind us a lot of clothing. The intention was pretty clear.
Somebody stripped down to their underwear and is posing for you.
Stormy said she didn't feel like he was threatening her,

(23:43):
but she noticed the power imbalance and the height difference.
He was bigger and blocking the way, but I was
not threatened verbally or physically. He stood up between me
and the door, not in a threatening matter. He didn't
come at me. He didn't rush me. See I imagine him.
He was like snorting and sweating like a bull, like
pawing the ground like Weinstein, Yeah, like Weinstein, just making

(24:03):
it like jerking his head back, put these loud snorts.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
When I exited, he was just up on the bed
like this. And she left.

Speaker 2 (24:15):
She lifted her leg up to show the court his
his POWs, and that's when the judge stepped in and
said the degree of detail we're going into here is
just unnecessary. We need to move this more quickly. She's
giving too much detail in her answers, and he warned
to keep her answers tight. Well, I had my clothes
and shoes off, I removed my bra we were in

(24:35):
the missionary position. Daniel said she doesn't remember taking off
her clothes, but she did. Next thing I know, I
was on the bed. And she added a few more details.
Trump kept nudging his oil lawyer. His lawyer was objecting
the judge substate substate the objection. Daniels made it clear

(24:58):
she was trying to leave when the happened. She told
the court she was staring up at the ceiling and
didn't know how I got there. Prosecutor asked, was he
wearing a condom? She replied no, and the prosecutor asked

(25:19):
was it brief? Stormy responded yes, And now, eighteen years later.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
WOWSA Is that enough for? Should I look for words
to tail? Well, I'm going to be leaving, Sue, so
you're on your own.

Speaker 2 (25:46):
I don't know somehow that that didn't move me in
any particular way. It just was not the most erotic.

Speaker 1 (25:52):
I was waiting for some more illicit details, John, So
maybe I'll rush into my car so that I can
hear you talk about that while I'm driving home.

Speaker 4 (26:02):
You're listening to John Cobbels on demand from KFI A
six forty.

Speaker 2 (26:08):
Moistline eight seven seven moist eighty six. You get home tonight, Oh,
you can call right from the car. You call right
from your office now and let it out. All right,
we gave you enough material eight seven seven moist eighty six.
We were mentioning before how some people seem to think
they work harder and longer when they're home. I don't
think so, and either just Gavin Newsom. Newsom now wants

(26:31):
all the state employees in the office. Oh, he's cracking
down at least twice a week. May shock you to
know that most government workers, or as as the newspapers
like to describe them as civil servants, they have their
own euphemism to make themselves sound more important and and

(26:55):
dispensable civil servants. So they want to work every day
from home, and the civil servant unions are fighting.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
Now.

Speaker 2 (27:06):
California agencies can force employees to come to the office
even if their contracts promised them the right to work
from home. That's the new decision from a labor arbitrator
in a dispute between the California Public Employees Retirement System
and the union that represents state attorneys. The decision came

(27:29):
down from the arbitrator. That doesn't matter what it says
in your contract, you can be forced to come in.
Newsome in January released a budget proposal he wanted to
save fifty one million dollars. Apparently you're not going to
believe this, but we were giving these these government workers

(27:50):
stipends if they stayed home. Yeah, if they were doing
telework like over zoom, they got extra money. And knew
some what you get extra money for stay. I could
see extra money if they want to pay for your

(28:11):
for your traveling expenses, right, I could see that getting
negotiated as a perk. But how did how did they
get money for not leaving their bed? Anyway, this this
case ended up going to an arbitrator, and the arbitrator says, no,
they could make you come in.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
And that's that's that it's got way here.

Speaker 6 (28:30):
Yeah, yeah, I think tong, buddy, You know, they made
you work in a very tiny, small studio that's filled
with people today. And I listened to you on the
air today and I never knew it until I came in.
That's that's really tough to do.

Speaker 1 (28:42):
You know.

Speaker 3 (28:42):
I just.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
It's so oppressive to work this way. You know, I
feel like I'm on a chain gag.

Speaker 6 (28:51):
But oh, I thought you made the smooth you know,
transition to the working and there I guess not. Sam
Ash the music store has closed or is closing. They've
been open for one hundred years. They got yeah, you
know sam Ash. They sell great guitars. They got they
also have sam Ash drum stores as well, and they're
closing down after one hundred years.

Speaker 1 (29:11):
Sam's done finally, Yeah, Sam is Ashes. It's over.

Speaker 3 (29:14):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (29:15):
And then the Metro security guard shoots and kills trespass
being stabbed and he's Hollywood no good. And you've noticed
that you saw that fight yesterday with the dash driver
of that woman fighting the other homeless woman. Did you
notice that the homeless woman was wearing what is it
called a G string? What is that that underwear called

(29:35):
where it goes right up the crack?

Speaker 1 (29:37):
Is it a G string?

Speaker 3 (29:38):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (29:39):
You know I didn't look that close. What is that? Eric?
Is that G string? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (29:43):
Eric, Eric's the expert are you listening, but I'm saying, okay, well,
welcome to the crowd. You've just seen the ratings on
my show, but the huge majority. But Mark Thompson's here,
He's on with us as well today on Tuesday. Is
that called a G string one that goes right up
the crack? Yes, Okay, she's wearing a G strake. A

(30:08):
homeless woman is wearing a G strike. The only time
you wear a G string as a woman, I think,
is to impress men. And yet she's homeless and she's
still in the game.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
Well that's it. I love that there's no dress code
when you're homeless. That's the good news. I love that
those encampments you can wear whatever you want.

Speaker 6 (30:28):
She's still walking around with the encampments as a hottie.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
Yeah, you're right, never thought of.

Speaker 3 (30:35):
It that way.

Speaker 1 (30:36):
She's great. Are we done?

Speaker 6 (30:39):
I don't know, Well we are, You're probably okay.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
We've got crozier doors. See, I'm out of swords. I
don't even have my screens in front of me, so
I don't know who's shown up here. And Conway's next.
I am six sports. Hey, you've been listening to the
John Cobalt Show podcast. You can always hear the show
live KFI Am six forty from one to four pm
every Monday through Friday, and of course anytime on demand

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John Kobylt

John Kobylt

Popular Podcasts

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

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24/7 News: The Latest

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If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

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