Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning Kooner country. Okay, holy Shamoli, That's all I
have to say. So here is exactly now what has
taken place, forget the last twenty four hours, in the
last twelve hours. Apparently now they have identified the mass
(00:25):
shooter who opened fire at Brown University on Saturday, killing
two students and wounding nine. According now to law enforcement authorities,
Boston Police in particular and the FBI, they now believe
that this man, and I'm going to give his name
(00:45):
in a second, is also directly responsible and linked to
the murder of the MIT physicist, the fusion scientist who
taught at MIT. Remember that physicist was forty seven years old.
He was from Portugal. It appears that the suspect in
(01:09):
both the Brown and the MIT shootings is Claudio Nevez Valenti.
He is forty eight or was forty eight years old.
He is from Portugal. Originally, he came to the United
(01:30):
States in twenty seventeen on a diversity visa lottery program.
He then eventually got a green card permanent legal resident.
He is actually not a resident of either Rhode Island
or Massachusetts or New Hampshire. In fact, he apparently has
(01:51):
no connection to New England whatsoever. He is a resident
of Miami, Florida now according to law enforcement, this is
now the timeline. He arrived in Boston and rented a
car with Florida license plates. He then, for about a
(02:14):
twelve day period, drove down to Providence where he was
scoping and casing the campus and the university. He had
attended the university for a brief period from two thousand
to two thousand and one. In other words, basically twenty
(02:36):
four years ago. He attended the graduate physics program, so
he I guess he was a wanna be aspiring physicist.
They claimed that the reason why he targeted the engineering building,
they suspect is because he took his physics classes in
(02:58):
that engineering building. They don't believe that he targeted those
students specifically, whether it's Ella Cook, the young Republican who
was murdered, or the other victim who is from whose
parents are from Uzbekistan. They believe he just randomly chose
the classroom from the building that he had attended twenty
(03:21):
four years ago when he took several classes in the
graduate program of physics, the physics graduate program. Apparently he
withdrew from the program they don't know why, but he
took a few classes and then he withdrew and they
never heard from him again. As he scoped and cased
(03:42):
the university. He then made his move where he launched
the massacre. He then drove back to his hotel where
he then changed the license plates. He also, when he
first arrived in Boston, rented a storage unit at an
(04:05):
extra space storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire. When he
returned back from Providence after the massacre at Brown, he
then went to the home of the nuclear physicists, the
professor at MIT who apparently they knew each other. Now
(04:25):
I don't know how well they knew each other, but
they went to the same academic program from nineteen ninety
five to two thousand. In fact, they both graduate in Portugal.
They both Portuguese. They graduated from the same academic program
in Portugal. In fact, they both graduated in two thousand
(04:47):
from the very same institution. He then went to Brookline.
We have a big audience outside of Massachusetts. Brookline is
very close to Boston and by the way, a swanky area,
a very upper middle class anyway, So he went in
targeted the professor, shot the professor multiple times, eventually killing him.
(05:13):
He then went on the lamb. He then drove up
to a storage facility and apparently hid there until he
eventually ate his own gun. Now, that's that's what the law,
that's what the police told us yesterday. Police what broke
the case wide open? And this is incredible. It's not
(05:36):
all the cameras that apparently now don't work at Brown University,
and I'm gonna get to that, they in some ways
deliberately don't work, and I'll get to that. It's a
homeless person who and you know, they're very territorial. Homeless
people are very very territorial. They live in a place.
(05:57):
This person happens to live at Brown permanently on campus.
This homeless guy, and he noticed something very suspicious about
Claudio Neves Valenti, and so he began to follow him,
and he followed him back to his vehicle, and by
(06:18):
following him back to the vehicle, this homeless person was
able to make the make and model of the car
and even provide them with the license plate. So really
it was a homeless guy that gave the case that
broke the case wide open. So what we have is
(06:39):
a forty eight year old man, an immigrant from Portugal
who is not a US citizen, who apparently, and they're
not giving us a motive, shot up Brown University and
then shot and killed the MIT professor and then fled
(07:01):
to Salem, New Hampshire, to his storage facility. The police,
in a manhunt, were closing in on him, the FBI,
Boston PD, the Providence Police, and apparently he killed himself
before they got on the scene. When they opened up
the storage facility, his storage unit. Forgive me, they opened
up his storage unit, they found him dead. So this
(07:25):
is I'm giving you the facts of the entire case.
Now let me just say this, okay, a couple of points,
and then I want to throw it open to you,
the great audience of Kooner Country six one seven two
six six sixty eight sixty eight. Here's my initial reaction
from the heart. How convenient, honestly, how convenient. So you
(07:56):
mean to tell me you have a guy come into
a classroom, according to multiple witnesses, shout a la hu akbar.
But it turns out he's Portuguese and this is a
(08:16):
non terrorist attack. It's some guy with some grievance twenty
four years ago. He left Brown and was disillusioned or
disenchanted with their physics program, and then went up and
killed the MIT professor, which is what fifty miles away
(08:38):
Brookline is about fifty miles away from Providence, and then
very conveniently kills himself, so we don't get to interrogate him,
we don't get to get more information out of him.
It's did he have help? Did he do it by himself?
What a motive? It's all just swept under the rug.
(09:03):
Now something. I'm sorry, it doesn't pass the smell test. Now,
to be fair, if you know anything about Portugal, like
any European country, especially Western European, Portugal has a lot
of Muslims, they just do. So maybe this man was
a Portuguese Muslim. Okay, maybe I'm not saying he is,
(09:26):
but it's a distinct possibility. Now let me make another
obvious point. This is not from some fringe website. I'm talking.
These are wire services, the Reuters Associated Press, Yahoo News obviously,
the New York Times, USA Today, all the papers in Israel, Okay,
(09:47):
the Washington Post. The Israeli government was invest on American
soil with the FBI was investigating the murder of that
MIT professor because he was such a prominent nuclear physicist
overseeing such a sensitive program, and that the Israelis were
(10:09):
becoming convinced that this was a hit, an Iranian hit squad,
but led by the you know, overseen by the Republic
of Iran to decimate it to retaliate for what happened
at four Doah and the destruction of Iran's nuclear program.
I'm honestly, I'm rarely speechless. I don't know what else
(10:31):
to tell you, but so look, I'm very suspicious. Let's
just put it this way. This is all so convenient,
now so convenient. Let me just make a few other points,
and then I really want to go to the phone
lines and take the pulse and get the reaction from
the best audience in the business. Six one, seven, two
(10:51):
sixty six, sixty eight, sixty eight is the number, okay,
according now, and I'm going to play you the cuts
I promised, but I'm just gonna lay it out for
the President of Brown is now under withering pressure. I
don't know how this woman still has a job. This
is d ei higher all the way, all the way.
(11:17):
This woman screams in competence. They held this press conference yesterday.
I don't know if you saw it. What a bunch
of losers. Oh my god, they were taking a victory
lap the Brown University professor, the police chief who I
(11:39):
can't understand, who often talks in Spanish. I could go on,
the crazy attorney general, the crazy mayor, the governor. Oh
my god. So there they are in Providence and they're
all congratulating themselves. I'm not kidding. They're all patting each
(12:00):
other on the back. You're great, Nanah, you're great, Nana.
Oh did we do this? Did we break this wide open?
Speaker 2 (12:10):
Wait? Got it?
Speaker 1 (12:13):
Ah? Ah? Fire all of them, Fire all of them.
This is frightening. I'm serious. These people actually have power.
She now, Christina Packson is her name. She's now being
asked repeatedly. You have over a thousand cameras on campus.
(12:37):
How come it took a homeless guy who followed the shooter,
Claudio Neves Valenti, apparently to his car and get the
make and model of the car and the license plate.
And that's In other words, you had no cameras functioning
at Brown University. Apparently they disabled many of the cameras
(13:04):
on purpose. Why did they disabled you may say, Jeff, Jeff, Jeff.
What apparently they disabled many of the cameras on campus
because they got letters from far left wing groups, pro
(13:26):
Palestinian groups, anti ICE groups. We don't want the protesters's
faces and identities to be picked up by cameras because
this could send them to jail. So please, to protect
(13:47):
the identities of these left wing protesters, could you disable
the cameras? And the idiot said, yes, you can't make
this up. You cannot make this up. You cannot make
this up. There's woke and then there's crazy woke. I
(14:08):
mean really dangerously, recklessly crazy woke. This is it, this
is it? So apparently so that these pro Palestinian protesters,
you know, these raging anti semites, Well, they were getting
arrested at Columbia, they were getting arrested at Havid Okay,
(14:28):
at Harvard, they were getting arrested at MIT. Why well,
because they were caught on camera you could see their faces.
So what they do with brown click disabled? There were
illegal aliens at some of these anti ICE protests on campus.
So you know what genius said, let's click disable the cameras.
(14:53):
Why this way illegal aliens won't be arrested because you
don't have the facial recognition technology just won't work. Click,
just turn the camera off. Two students are dead, nine
(15:15):
students are wounded. An MIT professor is dead, which begs
the question, had the cameras been activated, would they have
prevented the shooting and at a bare minimum identified him
(15:37):
so much quicker on the spot that that MIT professor
wouldn't be dead today. You want to talk about massive lawsuits.
If the victims, the families of the victims are going
to sue Brown, and I hope they do four billions
(15:57):
of dollars, the element of theirs is going to be
gone by the time these lawsuits are done. Now here's
the other big bombshell. Okay, listen out of this. That's
why they were covering all this up. This has been
one big, massive cover up. They're covering up for her,
this crazy president. They're covering up for Brown. They're covering
(16:18):
up for the Brown police and the local Providence police.
Here now is what's been exposed after Nevez Valenti went in,
remember door unlocked, camera's now deactivated, and shot that classroom up.
(16:39):
The students were bleeding, yelling, screaming, lying on the ground.
Providence and campus police came to the building. Okay, so
you have this lunatic president of Brown, okay, president Christina Packson,
(17:00):
who is admitting that they were disabling cameras to protect
the identities of left wing activists and protesters on campus
and apparently now including even illegal aliens at these anti
ice rallies or protests. So Brown now has blood on
(17:20):
their hands. There's no question they have blood on their hands.
So they disabled and deactivated many cameras which could have
easily identified this guy, now Claudio Nevez Valenti, and instead
he got away. This allowed him to escape because the
cameras weren't functioning on campus, and then he went on
(17:44):
and went into his car, drove up the Brookline, and
then killed that MIT professor. Okay, but it gets worse.
So according now this is what's coming out Campus police
and Providence police, and these are really the Keystone cops.
(18:05):
They were at the engineering building. There's a shooting. People
are calling nine to one one so you could hear
it on the radio transmissions. They come up and they're
outside the building, and like in Uvaldi, if you remember Uvaldi, Texas,
(18:26):
the police refuse to go in. You've got students bleeding.
You've got students screaming, You've got students on the ground,
shot begging for help, and you can hear they're going,
where do we park? I'm not kidding. The police are saying,
(18:49):
do we park there? Do we park here? Are we
in the right building? I don't think we're in the
right building? Is this the right building? I'm not sure
we're in the right building. And they were fuse to
rush in. I don't even want to ask this question,
but my god, it needs to be asked. Did any
(19:13):
of the two students that died? Did any of them?
Could they have been saved if these clowns had gone
in earlier enough, enough, enough, enough enough enough. That president
(19:35):
needs to be fired immediately, immediately. That joke of a
police chief, first, the campus police chief. By the way,
the campus police chief is a DEEI hire. I'm talking
Brown said, he's a DEI higher. This is a guy
who had two, not one, two votes of non confidence
(19:56):
against him by his own team, by his own officers
underneath this command, who said who hired this clown? Then
you've got the Providence police chief, the one I can't
understand half, who comes out of his mouth, the guy
they brought in from Columbia. No, I don't mean Columbia
(20:16):
is a Columbia University. I mean the country Columbia. This
and then that mayor who just are just staring off
into space. Ooh, oh my god, oh my god. Okay
to me, there's gonna be lawsuits. There needs to be lawsuits.
(20:41):
The police need to be held accountable. Everybody involved who
refused to rush into that building, fire their ass, every
single one of them. Brown University must be held accountable
for what happened. The mayor has got to go. That
(21:01):
state attorney general, the yeller. All he does is scream
and try to brate reporters. He's got to go. And
that police chief. Where they found that police chief? I
don't know. Now. The larger point is this, let's just
accept the narrative at face value for now, just for
the sake of argument. Why was the shooter? Why was
(21:29):
Nevez Valenti allowed to enter the United States of America? Why?
Seriously why? Now? Trump, in the wake of what happened,
has suspended Christinoman announced this last night the diversity visa
lottery program. Don't just suspend it, abolish it. But the
(21:52):
question is here, you have another non American coming in,
a non citizen who clearly was not properly vetted. And
because of this, you've got two dead students, a dead
MIT professor, nine wounded, and this guy apparently dead from
(22:15):
self inflicted gunshot wounds or one is shot wound at
a storage facility in Salem. How much more of this
are we going to take. We don't owe the world
of visa. We don't owe the world to let all
of their nutjobs come into our country. It's time to
(22:41):
reassert control over our borders, over our sovereignty, over our
immigration system. I've never heard of this a lottery. I
mean I've heard of it. I know we've had it
for many decades, but you know, a quote unquote lottery.
No allow immigrants to come in that you need for
(23:03):
certain specific skills and jobs, and you make sure they're
not criminals, they're not terrorists, they're not insane, they're not
going to shoot up your schools. I don't know, they're
not drug dealers. As I told Sandy while we were
off air in the last break, this is becoming like
(23:24):
a movie. This is like a Hollywood movie, but you know,
like the Keystone Cops and but real life and in
real life, people die. So let me ask all of you. Okay,
let me put my cards on the table and ask
all of you this. What do you make of what
(23:47):
happened last night? The fact that they have found him.
They found him dead in a storage facility, apparently according
to the police. If you want to play, you the cut,
but I'll just you know, say it. They they say
that after he murdered Neves Valenti murdered the MIT professor,
that's when he drove up. He changed license plate, he
(24:11):
put on a main license plate. That's when he drove
up to that storage facility and that unit that he rented,
and apparently shot himself later that day. So apparently he's
been dead in that storage unit for a few days now.
So anyway, let me ask you, what do you do
(24:32):
you believe the official story? Do you believe valent Nevez
Valenti was the actual shooter. Do you believe the two
murders or the two shootings? Forgive me, the two shootings
were linked and tied both what happened at Brown and
at MIT. What do you think the motive is? Did
(24:56):
he act alone? Or do you believe we're being lied to?
Does this reek and smell of another cover up to
you six one seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight,
and the larger question why was he allowed to come
(25:18):
into our country? And maybe even the larger question to
that Brown University? Does Brown have blood on their hands?
I say yes, what say you? Six one seven two
six six sixty eight sixty eight. John in Malden, You're
(25:40):
gonna kick us off? John, thanks for holding and welcome.
Speaker 3 (25:47):
Hey, Jeff, I'm good.
Speaker 2 (25:49):
How are you?
Speaker 1 (25:49):
John?
Speaker 3 (25:50):
Kids? Good?
Speaker 2 (25:51):
Not bad?
Speaker 4 (25:52):
Have you know you too?
Speaker 1 (25:53):
And marry Christmas in your family?
Speaker 3 (25:56):
John?
Speaker 1 (25:57):
John, what do you make of everything that happened last
night with me?
Speaker 3 (26:02):
I think it was a setup. I think, uh the
way it sounds, this was uh set up for a
hit for that in my teeth professor for some reason
another And to me, what did he what else did
he find? Storage? Then in that storage area, you know
(26:23):
they find anything else and the other guns or anything
else of any other clues. I don't know it. To me,
it's just a something thinks still it really does another
think too, Jeff. So it's funny because when they were
announcing and everything and they're patting themselves on the back,
it was like watching a movie. You know, it's like, oh,
(26:45):
you know, it just cracks me up about.
Speaker 1 (26:48):
It, you know.
Speaker 4 (26:49):
But to me, I think this was a hit and
the way everything went down for you know, finding this guy,
if he if he is, if it is true it
was him, which you know.
Speaker 1 (27:02):
Well that's the thing. So much of this just doesn't
add up. Okay, it's all coming out now, and this
is going to be incredibly damaging to Brown. My prediction,
they are going to lose a ton of money. You're
going to see some massive, massive, massive lawsuits. So just
(27:22):
so that you know, because many of you are emailing me,
texting me, Jeff, could you give us just a little
more information about these police officers that apparently were staged
outside the building. They were there, but they didn't move in,
they didn't Russian well apparently on radio transmissions. Now it
was caught. There were officers. The shooting takes place, people
(27:45):
are calling nine to one one, there's pandemonium, and the officers,
both Providence police and campus Brown University police showed up
and it was like a bad improv skit. You can't
make it up. Some of them are saying, we can't
find parking. Where do we park now? Remember, you've got
(28:08):
people like I don't know, dead or dying, bleeding, screaming, yelling.
They're on the floor, there's blood everywhere. Shots just rang out.
One literally one cop says, I need a day off.
I'm just I'm feeling burnt out. I just I don't
need this. I need a day off. Are we in
(28:31):
the I'm not kidding. Are we in the right building?
Was it at a different building? Is it? Are you
sure it is the building? I don't think it's the building.
And nobody, nobody had the courage or the professionalism to
actually rush in, which begs the question, and it's obvious.
(28:51):
Had they rushed in, could they have caught the shooter?
Could they have seen the shooter? Could they have tracked
the shooter? Could they have maybe followed the shooter? Their
utter incompetence and failure, they're cowardice, their inability and refusal
(29:12):
to act, let the shooter escape. And we know what happened.
After he escaped. He drove fifty miles to Brookline outside
of Boston and murdered Cole in cold blood, allegedly an
MIT professor. A they've got blood on their hands. Number one.
(29:40):
Number two, If I'm a parent sending my children to
that school, my kids to that school. I'm my kids out.
Sure you're never going to Brown again. And this president
is joke of a president of Brown. Christina Pakson, she's
taking Victory Lab last night, and the Providence Police chief
(30:05):
is high fiving everybody like, I don't know what like
they just pulled off the greatest police sting operation in history.
I yi ya ya ya. I don't know what to
tell you. Honestly, I don't know what to tell you
all kidding aside, this is like having Bill in Sudbury
(30:29):
be the head of police. This is like Bill and
Sudbury giving him the keys to Brown, you know, like
here you're going to be the president of the university.
Go Bill disabled the cameras. But we all want protesters
to get arrested. Oh oh, if I'm Ella Cook's parents,
(30:59):
if I'm the parents of that poor Uzbek American more
cod off I believe? Is how you pronounce his last name?
If I'm mangling it? Forgive me. By the way, Apparently
he was a brilliant student. He was the first student
in his entire family to go to college, never mind
go to a prestigious Ivy League school. And he was
going to be a neurosurgeon. They said he his IQ
(31:22):
was off the charts, and that he was so determined
for him his family to really make something of himself
that they said, this poor kid, all he did was
eat and study, eat and study, eat and study, literally
eat sleep, study, eat, sleep, study, and he ends up dead.
(31:44):
And these idiots are high fiving themselves and patting themselves
on the back. What I saw last night, it was grotesque,
It was disgusting, It was stomach turning. Agree this, Agree, now,
just very quick, I promise, I'm going to go to
the phones. In contrast, in contrast, there was the Boston
(32:09):
press conference. And by the way, law enforcement is now
admitting this in a way, and please, I don't want
this to come out the wrong way. I am so sorry.
I feel so bad for that MIT professor. As I said,
I believe Brown has blood on their hands. But had
it not been for the murder of the MIT professor,
(32:31):
I don't think they would have caught this guy. Because
once the MIT professor was murdered, then the Boston police
got involved, and once the Boston and Brookline police got involved.
In other words, real professionals, unlike these clowns and Providence
(32:51):
that kicked the investigation into high gear. And they were
the ones who began to crack some leads and break
open some evidence and aggressively pushed the case. And things
started to break at a much quicker pace. So once
Boston got involved, to be frank in other words, a
professional police force, things started to move and move quickly.
(33:17):
And just the press conference alone is a tale of
two cities. Even yesterday, the Providence police, i mean the
media was laughing at these clowns in Providence, even the
local Providence media. I'm going to play a clip later
one reporter actually starts to shout at the president of
(33:38):
Brown saying, what is wrong with you? This is not
a joke. People are dead. What do you guys high
fiving each other for. While the Boston press conference it
was professional, it was detailed. They had real evidence, real information.
(33:59):
They were singer in other words, you know, welcome to
the NFL. This is a professional law enforcement agency and
we conduct professional press conferences. So listen now, this is
US attorney Lisa Foley. This is on the Boston side.
And thank the Lord, Thank the Lord, because a I
(34:22):
don't think they would have caught this guy and b
At least we have some basic information that we never
would have gotten out of Providence. Roll cut one, Mike.
Speaker 5 (34:36):
This is what we learned during this multi jurisdictional investigation.
Nis Valente studied at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island,
on an F one visa around two thousand to twenty
twenty one. He eventually obtained legal permanent residence status. Previously,
he attended the same academic program as the MIT professor
(35:00):
or Nuno Louriero in Portugal between nineteen ninety five and
two thousand.
Speaker 1 (35:06):
So it looks like they knew each other or had
known each other, or we're at this. We're in the
same program back in the old country in Portugal over
twenty five years ago. Now listen, they give you details
now on how the crime happened and how we planned it.
Roll cut one, a Mike.
Speaker 5 (35:29):
Although Nives Valente appeared to reside in Florida between November
twenty six and November thirty of this year, he rented
a hotel room in Boston. On December first, he rented
a great Nissan CenTra with Florida plates from a car
rental agency in Boston. That same day, he drove to
the vicinity of Brown University, where his car was observed
(35:53):
intermittently between December one and December twelfth.
Speaker 1 (35:58):
Then, and this is the key, that's when he then
led up to December thirteenth Saturday, and then went on
to go to Massachusetts and murder the MIT professor in
Brookline roll Cut one B Mike.
Speaker 5 (36:20):
On December thirteenth, Neves Valente entered an auditorium on Brown
University's campus during his study session and began shooting at students,
killing Ella Cook and Mahammet aziz Umerzokoff and injuring nine others.
Between December thirteenth and December fourteenth. Nis Valente returned to Massachusetts.
(36:43):
On December fifteenth, he murdered MIT Professor Nuno Lourieriro at
Lariro's home in Brookline, Massachusetts.
Speaker 1 (36:53):
He then changes plates again, this time to Maine license
plates and anyway, and he tries to make a run
for it by going to the storage facility roll Cut
one Sea Mike.
Speaker 5 (37:11):
At some point while he was in Massachusetts, he switched
the plates on the Nissan CenTra to an unregistered plate
out of Maine. Immediately following Professor Lariro's murder nives. Valente
drove to a storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire, where
he had rented a storage unit in November of this year.
Speaker 1 (37:32):
Now, I just he then apparently on that day after
he murders the mit professor changes the plates, goes up
to that storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire. That's where
he apparently kills himself. That's where he offs himself. So
he's been lying in that storage facility apparently dead for days. Okay,
(37:53):
Now this you just heard Leo Foley. Okay, whatever you
think about it, it was coherent, concise, there was details,
it was there was information, it was serious. It's competent,
It's completely competent. Okay, this was yesterday. This is the clown,
(38:14):
Oscar Perez, the Providence, the dei Hire, Providence police chief.
Listen to this roll cut one hundred Mike.
Speaker 2 (38:30):
He was a Brown student.
Speaker 3 (38:33):
He was a Portuguese national.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
And his last name.
Speaker 6 (38:36):
Noan address was in Miami, Florida. And I will tell
you that he took his own life tonight.
Speaker 1 (38:43):
I'm sorry that you allow for you cry. No, he
took his life four days ago, not tonight, four days ago,
and that's it. And it was error after error. It
was it was mistake after mistake, basic facts omitted, basic facts.
(39:06):
He doesn't know basic facts. He's completely mist mistating, and
and they just shaking their head. Everyone's just shaking their head.
The reporters are like, where did you find this guy? Well,
people like him running your police department. Two students dead, mit,
(39:26):
professor dead. Congratulator A to Brown in Providence, congratulations, congratulator
war walk Where well, I well, look how diverse we are? Yep,
oh yeah, oh yeah, I can see you guys run
a first rate operation down there. Six one seven two
six six sixty eight sixty eight. Lisa in Walpole, Thanks
(39:52):
for holding Lisa, and welcome.
Speaker 2 (39:57):
Hi Jeff, good morning. I just want to say that
this is just a heartbreaking story. My son went to Brown.
I'm very familiar with the area. He took, you know,
five classes in that building. One of them was the
economics class that was going on at the time, And
I'm very familiar with the campus and everything about Brown,
(40:21):
including the administration. First of all, this the story is
so bizarre that I can't even believe that this guy
even got away with this. He was he was around
Brown for two weeks before anybody noticed him, apparently a
homeless ex Brown student that they lets.
Speaker 6 (40:42):
Live in the building. Okay, he's a brilliant person, but
they let him notice to this guy noticed the car,
and that's how the investigation started. So you get this
homeless Brown student recognizes the car, goes to the police
and says, parly, that was the other person of interest
(41:02):
in the pictures, and.
Speaker 2 (41:04):
He's cooperating with them. So that's bizarre right there. You're
letting a homeless person live in one of the buildings, right,
that's not safe. Second of all, the man came in
on a green cart in two thousand and one. Then
he applied for permanent residency whatever that means, twenty and seventeen,
and he did was accepted, so he was here well legally.
(41:31):
The third thing Brown police officers are a joke. However,
they are armed and the campus is tiny, so I
can run from one side of the campus to the
other if you know, anybody calls me and needs the
oak there. They were there in seconds. Why they did
not rush in the building or at least surround the
(41:52):
building so nobody could get out or start blocking off
all the streets. So you know, he can't walk away.
He louse on foot. How can you not catch this guy? Third,
Christina Paxson needs to be fired. She was answering incorrectly
several times. The provost of Brown earlier this week said
(42:15):
there are no cameras. Yes, Brown has twelve hundred cameras
or eight hundred cameras. However, that building is old. There
are two parts of the building, a new part and
an old part. The old part has no cameras. That
classroom has no cameras. She when asked last night, are
you going to do anything different, She's like, well, we
(42:35):
have a lot of cameras at Brown, and you know,
they worked, they worked, and we feel like we did
a good job. You did. Nine kids were shot, two
are dead, one is in the hospital, and another man
in Boston is dead. And you're saying that you did
the right thing. Now, I know they're all going to
get suits and they can't really say they can't get guilt.
(43:00):
So they're going to get sued by all those students
that were shot. They're going to get sued by the
M I. T family. And I'm going to pull my
kid out of Brown and I'm not sending them there
until they do something drastically different about their security. For example,
somebody else Fox News said their software that they could
buy a lot of these IVY IVY League schools are
(43:22):
in dense urban areas, so there's really a there's not
a defined campus. Well you can define that campus, you know,
technologically or digitally whereby their software that would have noticed
that car being there for weeks and it would have
(43:43):
tripped something in the system. But Brown's too cheap.
Speaker 1 (43:45):
To buy that.
Speaker 2 (43:46):
For example, Yale is right in the middle of New Haven,
terrible area, but it's safe. Safe. Well, I don't know,
I don't know if you want to call it safe.
But these are things that parents are now going to
be looking at. Chasina Paxson said, no, no agency here.
Everything works the way it should be. The reporters called
her on it, and she looked like a laugh She
(44:07):
was a laughing stock last night.
Speaker 1 (44:09):
Well, she she ran from the podium. I mean, Lisa,
by the way, you're on fire. You're you're really you're, you're,
you're you're really on point. But and I promise I'll
let you finish. She literally, I've never seen this before.
She she confronts a reporter, confronts her. She doesn't know
what to say. She's claiming everything was a success. The
reporters and they're all hacks. I mean, you have to understand,
(44:30):
these are hacks. And even the hacks are rebelling, and
the hacks are like, how could you say was a success?
Look at the body count? Are you normal? Lady? She
runs away from the podium. The reporter says, can you
come back on the podium and answer my question? She
gives this ridiculous answer and then she basically almost runs
(44:50):
out of the room. I've never seen anything like this.
And Lisa, just to piggyback off of one of your points,
they're trying to make the excuse it's not gonna fly
that that Engineering building, it's just so old. I mean,
it's just so old. Okay, yeah, that's why we couldn't
have cameras in certain sections of the building. But Christina
(45:13):
Pakson's building, the President's building, is even older. You can
look it up. It's older than the Engineering building. But
notice she's got cameras up the wazoo. Every nick, every
nook and every nick and every nook and crony I
mean sorry, every uh uh, every corner. Yeah, every nook
(45:36):
and cranny is Uh has got cameras and she's got
phenomenal security. And by the way, she never deactivates for
her no, no, no, her cameras are working. They're never
turned off protest or no protest. So Lisa, they're gonna
(45:57):
get sued. They deserve to get suedde I'll be brutally
honest with you. It's up to you. You're a mom.
You know it's best for your child. I'm almost feeling
out of line here saying this, but if this was
my child, I'd pull them out of Brown. I'd pull
them out of Brown. This thing could happen again. With
(46:18):
that leadership. You're putting your child's life in danger. With
the Keystone cops, with the three stooges that run that place.
You're playing Russian Roulette with the life of your child. Lisa,
final word to you, if I had.
Speaker 2 (46:37):
A child in that school, I'd pull them and my
son went there ten years ago. But if you were
there now, I'd totally pull them out. I've dealt with
that administration. And unless you are the squeaky wheels with
fightings for your children there who are not DEI under
the DEI umbrella, you are you're in trouble because they
(47:03):
will tell you, uh, like, well, we don't really care
about you. You're white and male, so sorry. But their facilities,
some of them were news. Some of them are nice,
but my sons wasn't. And it was a disgrace that
they're charging you all this money and they expect people
to live like like they like paupers with disgusting carpets.
(47:28):
I ended up telling the dean of students that you
fill in any word for well. They said to me, well,
football players, they're they're they're animals, they're they're gonna only
mess it up anyway, so why should we clean it?
I said, Okay, you fill in any minority in that
(47:49):
sentence that you just said, and you tell me if
that sounds okay. Two weeks later, there was new carpeting
in the door.
Speaker 1 (47:59):
Good for you, good for you, good for you, Uh, Lisa,
outstanding call, Thank you very much for that call. No,
this is what DEI does. It destroys. That's what this
is what you're seeing. And notice the arrogance. One hundred thousand,
whatever seventy to one hundred thousand dollars a year tuition