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March 25, 2024 • 65 mins
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(00:00):
And raised songer on news radio eleventen kfab which is also the Feast of
the Annunciation. I have no ideawhat that is all about, but waffles
are eaten generally on this day.The shift from the religious celebration to waffle
Day occurred because Swedish vro frutigen soundssimilar to what waffle Day is waffeldaggin.

(00:33):
So overtime, Swedes just began callingit waffle Day and celebrated by eating waffles.
So the Feast of the Annunciation isthe commemorating the visit of the archangel
Archangel Gabriel to the Virgin Mary,So that's what that is. He informed
her that she was indeed pregnant,so this is like the start of Christmas.
And then he had some waffles apparently. Well yeah, that's the thing.

(00:55):
It's like, as time went onin recent years, all of a
sudden, they just started calling itwaffle Day. If they weren't religious,
I'll celebrate waffles. I don't care. I remember when we made a big
deal about pancake Day. Yeah,well now it's waffle Day. Now it's
waffle Day, no waffling about it. And I'm getting some waffles. So
boom. All right, anyway,there you go. Oh yeah. And

(01:17):
on top of that, you knowwhat else today is It's the Monday after
the first weekend of the NCAA tournament. How's the bracket holding up. I
believe I'm in forty fourth place.Last checked, forty fourth place or forty
four percent, because forty four percentisn't very good. I think I'm in

(01:38):
I think I'm in forty fourth.I'll have to look into that. I
think I'm in forty fourth place.Okay, we'll talk about that later.
All right. So it's two onine. There are some things that are
going on in the news that weneed to talk about, and for good
reason. The uh biggest of thesestories. New York was the site of

(02:00):
another hearing for Donald J. Trump, the former president of the United States,
and a New York appeals court gavehim ten more days to post that
four hundred fifty four million dollar bond, right and every it's like Latitia James,
who is the Attorney general over therein New York, She's just like,
well, Sonny, you are goingto pay that four hundred and fifty

(02:22):
four million dollars or my namemate,Latitia James or something like that. And
if you doubt I'm gonna start seasonyour property. Trump Tower, that's mine.
WrestleMania five, which was also inTrump Tower, that's mine too,
I get. I get WrestleMania five, That's what I get or something like

(02:46):
that. Is that a good LatitiaJames, I don't care what you want.
I'm gonna do what I want todo. You should make me president.
I'm gonna take your towers or somethinglike that. I'm paraphrasing, of
course, I don't know how youseize assets. If I was gonna seize

(03:08):
an asset of yours, Matt,what would happen? Is? Uh?
Would I? Uh? I walkinto your office and just take that giant
cardboard thing that says uh Spaghetti workson it that we got from mister Monopoly
last week and I just walk outof there with it? Is that how
you see something? That's one wayto do it. I don't know if

(03:28):
I can legally do that. Youcan probably asume me for that he signed,
He signed that for you. Thatcould be worth money, all right,
rich uncle pennybags. You could justtake it, though I don't think
I have any like legal grounds tolike take it back. But it's your
property. I could just steal fromyou. Yeah, if I was the

(03:50):
court, could I just could youjust do that? Like? What process?
There's got to be a procedure.Well, anyway, it doesn't matter
because guess what, and appeals stayedthat payment and said you have ten days
to post one hundred and seventy fivemillion dollars instead of the four hundred and
fifty four. A huge victory forTrump for a multitude of reasons. And

(04:15):
of course all this is about electioninterference and Donald Trump saying that this is
all being done to try to preventhim from becoming the president of the United
States a second time. So basicallythe idea here is we'll see what happens
in ten days. But if hehands over the you know, one hundred
and seventy five million dollars, thenwhat happens after that? I mean Leatitia's

(04:40):
egg on her face now. Aspokesperson for Letitia James said in a statement,
Trump is still facing accountability for hisstaggering fraud. Staggering that's the that's
the adjective there. The six hundredor the four hundred and sixty four million

(05:00):
dollar judgment plus interest against Donald Trumpand the other defendants still stands. Yeah,
So what did Trump say about this? Well, he jumped on old
truth social and he says, Judgeanger On, who was the appeals judge,
has refused to obey the decision ofthe Appellate Division. Relative to the
statute of limitations. This is aconfrontation between a judge and those that rule

(05:23):
above him. A very bad situationto which to place New York State in
the rule of law. Okay,and we're talking about the other thing that
he's in New York for. That'sthe wrong thing. Sorry about that.
Post to truth socially, he said, we will abide by the decision of
the Appellate Division and post either abond equivalent securities or cash. This also

(05:47):
shows how ridiculous and outrageous the originaldecision was at four hundred and fifty million
dollars. And that was the quotefrom Donald Trump. So he said,
I'll obey. Thank you Appellate Courtor sorry, thank you appeal Court,
and no, thanks to you.Letitia James, if you got thoughts on
this, is this going to hurtTrump? Help Trump? This obviously helps

(06:12):
him. I mean there's not eventhe debate here. But I think the
idea of Okay, are other court'sgoing to step in and say you are
exercising something that is against the law. You are interfering with an election based
on stuff that is being prosecuted againsta guy who otherwise wouldn't be prosecuted for
the same reasons, especially considering thefact that this the evaluations for these properties,

(06:34):
you know, when they were happeninglike over a long, long period,
and it just now has become anissue worth prosecuting him. For give
me a break, get out ofmy face. You can always email me
though Emory at kfab dot com.Emory at kfab dot com. You can
always call in four two five fiveeight to eleven ten. Four l two

(06:55):
five five eight to eleven ten.We'll talk all day long, and I
hope you join us on news radioeleven ten KFI Amory so on news radio.
Ok sab. Never been to courtfor any reason, I've I've been

(07:23):
on a basketball court before, okay, okay. Never been to objection,
Yeah, okay, well I didonce, so I lied. You know
what I did. I got pulledover for having tinted windows. Oh yeah,
I just bought a car, andthe car the car's previous owner had

(07:44):
really dark tinted windows, which lookedreally cool. I didn't think anything of
it. I didn't put him there. And like three days later after I
was driving this car around and Iwas living in a small town. These
cops had nothing else better to do, guys, and he pulls me over,
and I'm like, what did Ido? Like, like you know,
in your head when you're getting pulledover, like what did Like you're

(08:07):
trying to think, like what didI do? I didn't do anything wrong,
Like I wasn't speeding, I usedmy turn signalated and to run a
red light. Like why is thisguy pulling me over? And the first
thing I think about is like atmy registration, Like I just bought this
car. There's no way that that'sexpired right now. The guy comes and
he's just like, hey, thosethose windows are pretty tinted. Can I

(08:28):
test him? And you got thething he's got like a thing that can
test, like the tent of thewindow, and he tested him. He's
like, Yep, these are toodark. I'm gonna cite you for this,
but you can appeal this if youget them removed. So my court
date for the appeal I had togo to the courthouse, tell them I
was going to appeal or show upon the date of the thing. Excuse

(08:50):
me. And I went back tothe dealer and it's like, you sold
me this car with illegal tanged windowsand I got pulled over and cited for
that, and they're like, oh, well you should have known. They
are pretty dark. And it's like, why didn't you like help me remove
them? Why didn't you say somethingto me? I didn't know. I'm

(09:11):
like twenty four years old. Inever had a car like this. Anyway,
they helped me take it off andI went back on my court date
and I sat there with a bunchof people that were contesting like marijuana or
possession of methamphetamine and all this stuff, and I'm looking around and I'm just

(09:31):
because you know, they do thesethings like very quickly. Everybody shows up
in the morning and it takes acouple hours. And I was like,
can I please be at the frontof the line. I just I have
my situation figured out. Can wejust take take care of mine? Please?
And they're like, we'll get youin as fast as we can.
But I sat there and watched thesepeople try to give their side of the

(09:54):
story, real quickly if they werechallenging or going to challenge to further pursue
litigation for paraphernalia or whatever. Itell you what, Matt case, not
my crowd, what do you mean? These were? These were some.

(10:15):
These were some colorful characters that werein the courtroom that day waiting their turn
to be heard. And finally,sheepishly, I'm the only one that's kind
of dressed up like decently, Andthe judge called my name and said,
uh, it looked like you hadsome like a vehicular violation. I said
yes, And then I said theofficer an officer name told me that if

(10:39):
I got it removed, I couldappeal and the fine would be waived.
And then she sent an assistant ofsome kind out to double check my vehicle,
to double check that the tent hadbeen taken off. And then they
stamped on the paper that my finehad been voided, but I stilled to
pay sixty dollars in court fees.Matt, I was in I was in

(11:00):
court for five minutes and they chargedme sixty dollars in court fees. Now,
now chew on that for a second. That's the court system in our
country. Well, they got tomake money somehow it's stupid, stupid anyway,
sixty dollars later, I should havejust like the fine was only like
another sixty bucks. Might have wellhave just paid it and had my car

(11:24):
look cool. You know what Imean? Oh, well you got you
would have gotten pulled over again.Yeah, and then I would have said
screw you. I you know,like you're you're hurting my wallet because you
don't like to let me live.This is America and I should be able
to have whatever ten of my windowsI want. I would have got.
I would have got all out.I would have started putting colored tent on

(11:46):
my windows just to prove a point. What is the like, why is
that illegal? I okay, Sothis is what they told me because I
asked the same thing. I wasjust like, I don't understand. When
I went to the court initially toconfirm that I was going to get the
uh, I was going to challengethis. So I get my fine waved
and I asked the clerk, like, why is this an issue? And

(12:09):
she said, well, this particularofficer pulls a lot of people over for
this, and it's for police officersafety. They want to know and be
able to see what you're doing inyour car. Oh as if I'm like
just pointing weapons behind the wheel orsomething like, what could possibly be going

(12:30):
on in my car? Yeah?Is that what it is? What could
possibly be going on in my carthat I'm like, And I'm not trying
to say the police officers don't needto feel safe, but come on,
man, I'm sure there are statesout there, some some jurisdictions they don't
give a rets petuit about what coloredthe tent is in your windows. They're

(12:52):
like, hey, man, nicecar looks pretty slick, and what is
gained or not gained by that?You know what I mean? Help me
out with that. Ladies and gentlemen. If you've been pulled over for window
tent, or you have window tentand you've not been pulled over, tell

(13:13):
me your secrets. I don't knowhow I got onto this four h two
five five eight eleven ten four htwo five five eight to eleven ten,
or you can email Emrie at kfabdot com. Oh yeah, it's because
court. I was talking about theprocedure of court. If this car is
a rocking, don't you be aknocking. That's not how that works,
although that could I mean, realistically, I've had I have one of those

(13:33):
stories too. Do you want tohear it? Oh? Really? Yeah,
all right, we got time.I uh so, my wife mars
a drum corps. Okay, shewasn't my wife at this point, but
I saw her. You know,I was still we were still college aged,
and she's touring around the country.But she stopped in Omaha. At
that point. I was living insmall town, Iowa, about three hours

(13:54):
away, but I knew I coulddrive that distance and see her perform and
maybe talk to her for a littlewhile. It was the one time over
like a two and a half monthspan that I was actually gonna get a
chance to see her, right mhm. So as sad as I was
that I was, you know,only going to see her for a little
bit. I drove there, andyou know, I brought her back to

(14:15):
the vehicle that I had, andnothing insane happened, but I was like
hugging on her and smooching her inthe seat of the vehicle because she was
about to leave, and I hadthe person that parked next me that was
looking in my vehicle and saw thatI was hugging this person, and they
apparently didn't know what was going on, knocked on my window really loud.

(14:41):
What yeah, you want to talkabout embarrassed? What did they do on
that for? They just wanted toI don't know, they wanted what I
don't know. I wanted to joinin what's going on here. It's just
like, did they have a smallchild and they didn't want them to see
like a couple, like a coupleof young people hugging and kissing each other,
So they just knocked on the windowto like tell you, hey,

(15:01):
don't do that. Well, theydidn't do anything. Like by the time
like I heard it, and youknow, you just kind of freeze.
And by the time I looked,they were in their vehicle and driving away,
very rude. Yeah, and tintedwindows in hand. Yeah, there
you go, they wouldn't have seena thing. Tell me how that's wrong,

(15:22):
Tell me how tinted windows don't helpall of us in that situation.
That's a platform right there. Tintedwindows legalize everybody else is trying to get,
you know, marijuana legalized recreationally andall this stuff and sports gambling and
guess what I'm going in on tintedwindows. So I hope you enjoy that
you got to get your platform readyfor where is it? Oh, yeah,

(15:46):
we're going. Uh, we're goingto America Samoa. That's right.
If we can figure out how muchit cost to get on the ballot there.
But that that's that's our our growthprogram for this show. We're going
to get on all the major newsnetworks by winning the American Samoa. The
American Samoa. What is it asa primary? It's a primary. I

(16:07):
think it was a caucus objectively,a brilliant idea. Yeah, we're doing
it. So if you got somethoughts on whether or not you've been to
court, the court procedures that youdealt with now, obviously Donald Trump's doing
all sorts of them. He wasin a hearing today trying to push back
one court case. It didn't work, and the trial and date, the

(16:32):
date of this trial is going tobe April fifteenth. And this is the
Stormy Daniels hush money thing. Atthe same time, there was another thing
going on where he was supposed topay his four hundred and sixty four million
dollars of the other thing that happenedin New York where Letitia James said that
he and other defendants were miscalculator ormisrepresenting how much their properties were valued or

(16:59):
were and said that they had topay four hundred and sixty four million dollars
that was slashed in one hundred andseventy five million dollars by an appeals court
and they gave him a stay often days to be able to pay that.
So there you go. Things tokeep in mind. But I want
to hear your court stories as well. If you have a funny court story
or a court story that you thinkneeds to be told, much like my

(17:21):
tinted window situation, I want youto call me now at four h two
five five eight eleven ten. Fourh two five five eight eleven ten,
news radio eleven ten kfab relax EmerySonger will be right back. As seen
as I finished talking on news radioeleven ten, kaybe. At the same
time, he had a like abail or a bond or whatever like cut

(17:45):
by an appeals court that an attorneygeneral and a judge there inger On put
in place. And this all precipitateswithin like a couple of hours. And
I was just thinking to myself,what what kind of court stories do people
have? Because the procedures are realinteresting. And now I only was in

(18:06):
court the one time. It wasfor five minutes while I, you know,
appealed a me getting pulled over forhaving window tent that I didn't know
I had and got it removed,came back and they approved that and I
was on my way and I soldto pay sixty dollars for that court fee,
but I at least I didn't havea fine for having the illegal window

(18:29):
tent. Well, I want toknow your court story, so you call
us at four oh two, five, five, eight to eleven ten.
Four oh two, five five eighteleven ten. Mark's on our line.
Mark, thank you for calling andbeing a part of the show today.
What do you think about this?I just bide by default plead not guilty.
And in Nebraska, then they reschedulethat for a date when they just

(18:52):
pick a date right then, andthen the police officer has to appear on
that date or they dismissed the case. In percent of the time, they
dismissed the case because the officer doesnot cannot appear, maybe if he's on
vacation or she's on vacation, orwhatever the case may be. But if

(19:14):
they can't appear by law, youever right to face your accuser, and
your accuser is the police officer.So if they don't show up, then
they dismiss it. You pay nofines, no fees, no nothing,
no court fees or anything, Nocourt fees, no nothing. They dismiss
it because they your accuser's not there. And I've had where I plead not

(19:36):
guilty and then a week later I'llget a letter from the Douglas County attorney
says, we dismissed your case basedon your good driving record. Well,
son of a gone, all right, Well it's uh that it'll probably never
happen again. Now that they listen, they're like, oh, we fix
that situation. Also, also onthe window deal, I do have windows

(19:57):
that are ill legal, but Ido roll them down when the police sauficer
comes up to the window. Notthat I get pulled over that much,
but I do roll them down sothey can see in the car. And
again most of the time they arepretty appreciative that. I've had one time
where the guys like, why'd youroll your windows down? You've been drinking
and I don't drink at all,and you know, they thought it was

(20:21):
weird that I rolled them down.But otherwise I roll them down that way.
They don't want. I wouldn't wantto walk up to some dark tinted
window, you know, and sittingon the side of the highway either,
right, Well, but I Ididn't do anything. That was the thing,
Mark. I got pulled over literallybecause of the window tin. It
wasn't like I was speeding or anything. In Nebraska, they can't do that.

(20:41):
Okay. Tinted windows are a secondaryoffense. So basically they can get
me for the tinted windows if Ilike had a late registration or I ran
a stop sign or something like that. Yep, okay, well go put
your tin back on. I gottago find that car wherever I ad ended
up. No idea where that thingis these days. All right, Hey,

(21:02):
Mark, appreciate the call. Keepa great day. Let's go to
Smitty Smitty here with Emery on newsRadio eleven. Hey, every it looked
like there's a there's a trend here. I got pulled over for an illegal
lane change. I saw. Isaw a cop pulled over in the left
lane coming from a single lane toa double lane at the light. I

(21:23):
said, well, I'm in theleft lane. He's then a left lane
with a car, so I puton my blinker. He didn't have time
to blink much, but I changedlanes. Another cop pulled up right beside
me, and we went down andI watched my speed, not speeding.
Poto got just about there and thelights come on. Pulls behind me and
light me up. I'm like,okay. We pull over and he says,

(21:45):
you changed lanes. You know youchanged lanes, didn't you usually blink?
I said it probably didn't have timeto blink, so I just held
it up and changed and he well, they pulled me over and then he
said, well, what you've beendoing? Well? I had red eyes
from doing on working on a roofthat day. I was kind of tired
and and and the you know,of course, I asked that I've been
drinking and I was like no,and uh, well the lane change itself

(22:10):
was at the light and uh andso well he gave me a ticket and
I said, we're fighting this.So I get to court. We go
we you know you're right, yougo through this process and I'm ready to
fight. I got my little notesand everything. I found out they had
a little click at Chicken campaign goingon, Like okay, y'all just pulling
everybody over. Well, the guydidn't show, the just says, well,

(22:30):
you want to just pay fees?And uh and and be done with
a no and uh. So Iwasn't I want to pay fees. I
don't say nothing. So they said, well, we can reschedule this for
another time. I said, fine, just let me know and uh and
then so I guess I just drovearound for the rest of the year with
with that hanging over my head thatthey could call me back. But they

(22:52):
never did and I never got released. What what in carnation? First of
all, Smitty, you sound likea real upstanding individual. I cannot imagine
under any circumstance whatsoever, why anybodywould be pulling you over, let alone,
then dragging this thing out over yourhead for no reason. Yeah,
a lane change, illegal lane changefight? Something else better to do?

(23:14):
Pal, Like, aren't there peopleRobin Banks? Or isn't somebody like breaking
into a convenience store or something?Why don't you go get those guys well
in the breasth get lost. Iguess that's weird roles man. Oh yeah,
well I wouldn't know yet, buthopefully I don't have to find out
smittee. That's a great story.Thanks for sharing with us. Man,
Yeah, Jubidor, let's go toa Doug Dougie, Doug, thanks for

(23:37):
being a part of our show today. What do you got in your mind?
Well, in nineteen sixty nine,I was a seventeen year old with
a nineteen sixty two Chevy with athree twenty seven four speed. I saw
the judge one day. I hadto go back and see the judge next
day. And the judge said,what are you doing here this time?
And he asked the police officer whatdid he do this time? He said,

(24:00):
welly, he spun his tires inthe first three years for unnecessary noise,
and he would have done the fourth, but he saw me, so
he got me for unnecessary noise andspeeding. And the good thing is I
now have a sixty two Chevy witha four or nine and two four barrels

(24:22):
in those tires, Doug, notas much unless my grandkids are with me.
Ah right, you got it?Okay? So and and is that's
a he said, he said,thing right, because they have no evidence
that you did that evidence that Iwas speeding, But he he said,
he squealed his tires in the firstthree years, and the bat bar was

(24:48):
my mom had to be there thesecond day. Oh yeah, so much
for having the cool car. WellI got to keep it. Yeah.
Well, well, Doug, youknow, like they you could have ended
worse for you. Let's just saythat it could have ended worse. I
square. That's how I ended upwith my wife. How because you impressed
her with your car. Well,that's some of the things. But that's

(25:11):
what I dated ran. Oh allright, they're back from junior in high
school to we were in our twenties, we got married and yeah, still
going strong. Huh. That's whatI got it. That's awesome. I
love I dell you. I appreciateit. Man, Thanks for the call.
It's a funny story. Thank you. All right. If you got
some court experiences or some information,or you just want to talk about what

(25:36):
happened to Donald Trump and all thedifferent procedures he dealt with today, we
can do all that. You cancall it us A four oh two five
five eight eleven ten four oh twofive five eight eleven ten, News Radio
eleven ten Kfab Emory's songer on newsradio eleven ten Kfab. Hey, thanks
for taking my call. Yeah,so, uh, I actually have unique

(25:56):
experience in this and the fact thatI it's okay, we'll call it a
non criminal issue, a civil issue, all the way to the Supreme Court
Nebraska, and one unanimously. AndI think I can explain something that ties
it together with the Trump situation thatmakes it easy for people to understand,
like a high level view from alow level explanation, which is basically that

(26:19):
you take where he's getting convicted,and all you need in that state is
the right jury and judge which youcan control, and then you know,
like in New York, I believeit's the appeals court is their high court.
Where it's like in Nebraska it's theSupreme Court. There's you know,
it varies by state, but soessentially, you can politically hit somebody through

(26:45):
the court systems all the way upto the Supreme Court, which you can
only argue in in a federal caselike not it wouldn't be speeding related,
you know. And so in theright circumstances, the way that they've done
this to Trump, effectively, theyjust are tying his hands, just like

(27:07):
they would have done in Colorado whenthey tried to remove them from the ballot.
Mm okay, So yeah, thisis the interesting thing here at all.
And Justin, I think we needmore people like, hey, whenever
we're talking court, can you justbe listening and just know like it's a
bad signal, so you can callin and explain like how this like how

(27:29):
you're seeing this from the cherseas,please, because I always love to hear
people give that kind of perspective becausethat stuff just like goes over my head
pretty easy. So but that makessense when you explain it. So Justin,
this is my unofficial virtual through theradio handshake to make sure that whenever
I talk about court stuff, you'lljust call in, how's that? That

(27:51):
sounds good? And I'll tell youwhat after realizing what a nightmare going through
that process is without representation, whichagain I would never suggest somebody do it.
If it's like they're you know,being accused of a crime or something,
you know, give an attorney atthat point. But I actually set
up a website self legal aid dotcom just too so people could like see

(28:14):
civil ways of handling courtroom procedure,because procedure is a big part of it.
As you mentioned earlier, the procedureonly gets you so far. The
system is stacked in the in thebeauty of like in Nebraska, the Supreme
Court, these are all televised,so at that point, no longer can
the system hide the behavior that you'refighting. It's in fact you're correct.

(28:38):
Mm hmmmm. Gotta love that.That's some transparency there for the public.
That's what we need, I thinkplat forms of government. One h justin
this is good. Thanks for callingin and giving us some of these tidbits
of information that we didn't have.Appreciate you calling for sure. Take care.
Let's hit up Brian. Brian's onour phone line of four h two
five five eight eleven ten. You'rewith Amory on these radio eleven ten kfab

(29:03):
right, Well, I think ofelection in Appearence Moura's committing crimes like impersonating
officials, forging documents, taking intovoting machines, rather than trying to prosecute
crimes like lying about the value ofyour assets on social forms. Okay,
and speaking of lying about the valueof his assets, that's something that was

(29:29):
said today which I don't think peopleare noticing from saying that he owes very
little debt on his properties. AndI think in the next couple of months,
it will become apparent that no,he's deeply in debt on his properties.
They're leveraged. And Bryan, Ijust to follow up, I would
this be happening to him at allif he's not running for office? Yes,

(29:55):
yes, see he committed times.And when when did all this happen?
Because this was not happening in thelast four years. This stuff is
he's accused of from a long timeago that is being brought to light.
Now why now, Brian, whythis exact year computer wasn't bringing it and
so that's why this prosecutor or attorneygeneral whichever ran on it. Yeah.

(30:19):
Yeah, Latita James, she's madeit very clear that she really enjoys the
spotlight here. There's no reason thatthis is brought up in New York court
except for the fact that he oh, yeah, he did something wrong and
he should be punished for that.But the timing has nothing to do with
that at all. Right, Well, it's not a judgment call. I
mean there's time saying his apartment waspretty thousand square feet when it's only ten

(30:45):
thousand square feet okay in mar Alago. The reason it's valued so low as
it's zone for commercial property and there'sno way to have it as residential property,
so it's limited in how much moneyyou can bring in. Yeah,
well, but Brian again, he'sbeing prosecuted for this at at a tune
of four hundred and sixty four milliondollars. That's an insane amount of money.

(31:08):
And it's happening in the middle ofa campaign that he's trying to run
for higher office. This is notsomething that was brand new information. This
was stuff that they knew and theywaited until now to prosecute, using Letitia
James and people in the DOJ wholean left to be a part of this,
you know. And I'll hear theI'll hear arguments from people like Brian

(31:30):
who are just like, well,yeah, he deserves every bit of this.
Okay, we can talk about why, but you can't tell me this
stuff would be happening if this wasany other year, or if he was
not running for public office, ifhe was leaving well enough alone and went
away, they'd leave him alone too. But because he's running for public office,
all this stuff is being slung atit. That's just a fact.

(31:51):
You have to be blind not tosee that. We'll continue to talk about
this, and I want to keephearing your stories. When you went to
quarter got pulled over. We'll talkabout that more so call it's four h
two five, five, eight toeleven ten Emory Songer on news radio eleven
ton kfab Well, don't you knowit, Emory Songer is going to take
a quick break, but folks,he'll be back. In fact, I

(32:14):
think he's back now. Let's listenin. He's got ten days to figure
out where to get that money,and he said he'll he'll comply with that,
and he thought thanked them for understandinghis situation. Also, he was
in court with his attorneys today tryingto push back and dismiss the charges in
the hush money case involving Stormy Daniels. That did not happen, and they

(32:36):
set the date for that trial tostart on April to fifteenth. So that's
the kind of thing that's going onfor him. But I'm just thinking,
man, there's all sorts of stuffgoing on there. Let's share some court
stories. I went to court onceit was for tinted windows. I got
my tent removed after I realized thatI had it. It wasn't intentional.
I had like a clerk come downand double checked that my tent was gone

(32:59):
off my window. They stamped thething and then the judge said, yep,
you're good. All you have todo is pay court fees. And
it was like sixty dollars in courtfees, which was annoying, but that
was my only real taste of courtmyself. We're sharing court stories with some
other people. Plus we can talkabout the Trump situation as well. You
can call us at four oh two, five five, eight to eleven ten.

(33:19):
Four oh two, five five eighteleven ten. You have Sean on
the line. Sean, thanks forbeing a part of our show today.
What are you thinking about? Ijust want to say, like I've heard
many, many different opinions, extremeon both sides with all these decisions with
Trump, and I understand that it'spolitics, but if you're going to have

(33:40):
an opinion either pro or ton,at least read the decision, at least
do minimal research. And I've foundnearly everyone that I've talked to, especially
about this broad decision, hasn't readthe decision, hasn't even read the summary
of the decision, And just youknow, a little bit of a taste

(34:02):
of another thing that I think fallsin this is the people who say,
oh, it's Supreme Court justice iswe just count up the conservative ones and
the liberal ones and we know exactlyhow they're going to decide every time.
Well, if that's your opinion,there's a thing called fantasy scotus and you

(34:22):
get fifty thousand dollars if you makethe best predictions. And I will guarantee
to you that you will do poorlywith that kind of framework. Well,
we'll actually have to read the briefsand the keys background. Okay, So
what okay, So you're saying toread in all this, and I don't

(34:44):
disagree. I think that's a reallygood point to be made here. I
also think that there can be argumentsmade by people who just know that this
is being a targeted is targeted specificallytoward one man who's trying to run for
president. So Sean, just quicklyfor the people out there that are saying,
Okay, what are we missing here? What are you seeing in this

(35:05):
decision that makes you feel like weneed to look further into it before having
our own opinions. Well, forinstance, what you just talked about just
there, do we have a selectiveprosecution defense made by Donald trumpon decision.
The answer is, we don't.Now we can speculate about why that defense

(35:27):
was never made, but ultimately hedecided not to bring that defense. So
I guess I'm just wondering, whydoes that keep coming up? If he
as a party didn't even bring thatup, Well, why is he okay?
So, but he's saying what he'ssaying. Obviously, we're talking about
what a guy who likes to saya bunch of things says, and we

(35:50):
know how he reacts to things quiteviscerally on social media as well. But
he's saying all this witch hunt.He's saying that this stuff was inaccurately brought
upon him based solely on the factthat he's running for president this year.
And it's hard to argue with thatconsidering when the valuations of this stuff occurred.
Well, he never brought that incourt though, and presumably he has

(36:14):
attorneys that know how to bring thatdefense. So my question would be,
if it's such a great defense,why didn't his great attorneys bring it.
I don't know, maybe, uh, that's a really good question, but
why did the Appella court then slashthis by almost sixty five percent of to
what he needs to pay and gavehim ten extra days to pay it.

(36:37):
Well, now, that I thinkis a different issue. So and I'm
not saying that the judge was freedfrom error. That very well could be
an error that the judge made.But let me just raise something that's related
to this that people bring up allthe time. My dad. I had
a conversation with him and he's like, this judge just brought the dam mug

(37:00):
is out of a hat and we'vealready talked about how the bond changed and
all that. Well, if he'dactually read the decision, he'd know exactly
how the damages were figured. Andanother thing that's raised all the time is,
oh, well who was damaged?What? The banks weren't damaged at
all? Okay, the statues thatthis was prosecuted under require that answer.

(37:24):
No, it doesn't, and inthe decision it brings that up numerous times.
So again I would just say,like, in order to even know
the basics of what you're talking about, especially if you're not a lawyer,
then yes, you can criticize.I'm not saying that you can't, but

(37:45):
it has to be based on somethinginformational. And I think my criticism of
the Supreme Court Justice thing is isstronger and maybe drives the point further.
But the insurrection ballot cases, Iknew almost instantaneously, just from the briefs
that that was going to be unanimous. And even after the decision was made

(38:10):
by the Supreme Court, friends ofmine that were Williams were like, how
can this be? If you readanything that was submitted by that Whether you're
conservative or liberal, I challenge youto come to the conclusion that those insurrection
cases were good. Same thing withpresidential immunity coming up. Anyone who believes

(38:35):
that Donald Trump is going to getcart launch immunity for every day that he
was in office without qualification, I'msorry. You don't know the law.
You've never even attempted to try andlearn the law if you think that's the
case. And I would just say, it's a heck of a lot more
interesting and entertaining to approach it inthat way. And it's real too.

(39:01):
You don't have to come away withthis. Judge just crazingly wanted to write
No, Sean, Sean, I'mhearing you, and I appreciate you for
giving me so much information. Iappreciate your passion for this scenario. And
all I'm gonna say is I understandwhere you're coming from, But the weeds

(39:23):
in which there are a lot ofpeople that are going to digest the way
that various news outlets are going toreport on this, that is a level
of conversation that can occur. AndI think that still lends if you get
those spark notes or cliff notes versionof whatever is happening with Donald Trump,

(39:46):
Joe Biden, or anyone else Januarysixth, the insurrection is saw this stuff,
then I think you still have theability to fact check those spark notes
or cliff notes against some other fromdifferent sources, which I always say is
a good idea without spending one hundredlike spending all your time reading one hundred

(40:07):
page decision that's going to be mostlylegal jargon. And you don't I don't
think it's fair for us to sithere and just say, well, we
can't have any any opinions because we'renot lawyers. Well, I have opinions
on football, and I haven't coachedfootball one day of my life. Okay,

(40:29):
I got opinions on movies, butI haven't directed anything. Is it
illegal for me to like see whatis going on in Oppenheimer and be like,
yeah, I wasn't sure about thethird hour of Oppenheimer. It seemed
like it went on a little longfor me. But I'm disqualified from having
that because I don't know how towrite a movie. We know that this

(40:51):
is a version of election interference,and I think that's been pretty plainly thrown
out there, especially with the demonstrativeeffort Letitia J. James herself has made.
So I'm just sitting here. I'mI'm digesting it the best way that
I can, and I have myopinions and you can have yours. And
if you want to spend time readingone hundred pages of the decision, I'll

(41:13):
let you do that, and youcan come back to me and say,
no, your opinion is wrong becausethe news is an't reporting the whole story.
I'd be surprised by that, becauseI read a bunch of different opinions
on these things. You can factcheck or cross check the facts that are
being reported. Generally, you're goingto come to a conclusion of what actually
is the truth. That's my takeon it. We got plenty more calls
coming in about the Trump thing.We can do that but I really want

(41:36):
to talk about your court stories.I want to talk about what happened when
you got pulled over and you wentand you fought it, and your experience
with the judge or a lawyer.You can call us right now with that
four h two five five eight eleventen. Four h two five five eight
to eleven ten More with you nexton news Radio eleven ten kfab Emery Songa

(41:57):
on news Radio eleven ten, Fab, Hey, real quick, I'll try
to tie all three of these intogether. Between your court stories, Donald
Trump and the media you're sitting thereasking questions on people have gotten pulled over.

(42:20):
I own slash frequent a local barwhere there's eight or nine local people
that come in and talk about allof them are divorced and how terrible their
ex wives were and they were themost horrible person in the world. And
it's just amazing to mean the lawaverages. How I could get all nine
of those guys to talk about howhorrible each one of their wives were.

(42:43):
It's the same thing about speeding orthe tickets when they go to court.
How many people you ever heard say, Hey, you know what I was
speeding? You're right, I deservea ticket. It's a thankful, thankless
job. And it's the narrative thatyou guys set up. You're wanting somebody
that calls your station, that believesin your beliefs, want to fan the

(43:05):
fire, so to speak, andget people talking about something that ninety percent
of the people that get pulled overare in the wrong, but maybe five
percent admit that they're in the wrongand they were doing whatever. Same with
people that get divorced, it's alwayssomebody else's fault, it's never their fault.
Yeah. So when you talk aboutTrump and you want to do this,

(43:25):
I understand your your concept on that, but ninety eight percent of the
people don't have time to read bothsides. They look to the media.
Yeah they're truth no, not fortheir narrative. Right, So Steve just
to reply to that part of it, right, because I don't want to.
I don't want to make it soundlike I'm flipping about facts because I

(43:47):
don't. I don't want to be. Now, the facts that we know
here are that he was given afour hundred and sixty four million dollars you
know number to pay based on thefindings and the ruling by this judge espron
and you had the Letitia James factorthat she was prosecuting him basically for the

(44:12):
overvaluation of this stuff and citing abunch of different time with interest that he
needed to pay all of this stuff. And that's how they get to this
gigantic and insane number. And mybiggest question, just like most I think
Republican voters or anybody who cares aboutyou know, the procedures of this country,
are why now? Why are youdoing this now? Why are you

(44:37):
coming to the findings of this eightmonths before a critical election that he's going
to be a presidential nominee for.And the only answer that any of us
have, at least to my knowledge, is well, if you're an opponent
of Trump, he did it,well, he just did it. He
needs to go to jail, butyou can't. Those people also don't say

(44:58):
that they disagree with the fact thatif he was not running for office,
that this wouldn't be happening anyway.And I think that's where we need to
start the conversation. None of thisstuff came up until he announced he was
going to run for president again,and then the last April all these indictments
started popping up. That's not anaccident to me, and I think that
you're right. The media has aresponsibility to explain what is happening with as

(45:21):
many facts as possible. But myjob isn't to make you feel a certain
way. My job is to tellyou what I'm interpreting. And if you
have an opportunity to interpret in adifferent way, or you got a source
that says something a little bit differentor has a different spin on this,
and you tend to agree with thata little bit more, I'd love to
hear it. But between the timing, the number, the way, and

(45:43):
how demonstrative Latitia James was in doingthis with the same time the Georgia thing
happened, this all happens three yearsafter the fact because he's running for president
again, and you can't tell methere's anything else that's going on there.
And that's kind of where I'm sittingon it. Steve, It's well,
well, it takes it takes ayear or two to put their information together,

(46:05):
whether it be a murder trial orwhether it be any type of time.
I mean, they spent two yearstrying to put this guy in jail
with the Russia collusion thing before andone of the same people that were trying
to investigate him for that is involvedin one of these other things with Stormy
Daniels that he's trying to push backinto. I mean, look at this
reduction, you guys, look atthis reduction as oh, we'll see obviously
somebody else thought that was just somany times, whether it be child support

(46:29):
or whether it be pay your fineon time, they come back in the
court and they say, hey,have you got your fine pay? No?
I don't. Why haven't you gotit paid? Well? I run
onto some hard times, right,yeah, no, And we know people
like that, Steve, You're right, ninety percent of people in this world
they don't do any wrong, youknow they We live in a finger pointing
world that nobody wants to take responsibilityfor their own actions. And I don't

(46:51):
disagree with that at all. Atthe same time, that doesn't mean everybody's
as guilty as they're being made outto be for a variety of reasons.
And yeah, did Donald Trump probablymissed back you some of this stuff.
I think that might be legitimately true. Did Donald Trump do some other things
like the hush money thing that he'sgoing to be found of. We're going
to find a lot more facts outas that trial happens next month. But
you know what, there's no waythis stuff is popping up if he's not

(47:14):
running for president in twenty twenty four. That's what I have the biggest problem
with. That's all I have.That's all I'm saying on it. You
know what I mean. I appreciatethe call, Steve. Let's go to
Rick Rick's on a phone line offour h two five to five, eight
eleven ten. Rick, thanks forbeing a part of our show today.
You're with Emory on news radio elevent in kfaby So. About a little

(47:35):
over three decades ago. I'm aphysician and I was in my residency training
in northeast Ohio. It was aroundthe holidays. That's heading to the hospital.
I came around a curve and therewas shadows of some trees right at
the apex of the curve, andit had a thick frost on the road.
Car sturted, fish tailing in thefrost, split out, hit a

(48:00):
boulder. A lady had put upthe protect her mailbox because apparently other cars
slid up there in the past.Car ended up driver's side down. Pretty
Some people are pounding on the cargoing okay, and I opened the passenger
door towards the sky climbed out.Lady came running out, telling me I
was going to have to pay forher mailbox. Highway patrolman showed up and

(48:22):
he gave me a ticket for failureto have control, and I ended up.
I went into court and do youthink a soccer referee thinks for themselves?
It's a DemoGod. Nobody rolls likea judge. This judge just started
toying with He goes, where areyou going? I said, I was
heading to the hospital. He goes, oh, I was wrong. I

(48:43):
said, well, I'm a resident. His eyes lit up and he goes,
oh a doctor And I said,oh, I just a poor because
of the training, sir, Andhe goes, I was just at a
party over the Christmas break and thesedoctors were haranguing me all about lawyers on
me and stuff. And he justhad so much fun toying with me,
and I ended up. I triedto tell him, look, there was

(49:06):
frost on the road. By timehow a patrol mm came, the sun
was higher, you know, hadmelted that off, and he didn't see
that, and no good I gotthe I had to pay the ticket anyway.
Geez, brutal stuff. Rick,Well, were you okay? Like,
did you have any injuries coming outof that? They had called the

(49:27):
ambulance when they saw the car wasactually totaled. But I just had a
little bruise from the shoulder strap ofthe restraining seat belt restraining system and a
little bruise on my elbow and thatwas it. Well, lucky it didn't
get worse. And I'm sorry itdidn't work out. I got a bunch
of emails flooding in about ways peoplewere able to get out of a variety
of different charges against them, andit's pretty entertaining. I'm sad that you

(49:50):
didn't get out of yours, though, Rick, appreciate you calling in those
story. It's a great story,all right. All right, if you
got a phone call you want totalk to us about your story, Hey,
please do four oh two five fiveeight eleven ten. Four oh two
five five eight eleven ten. Loveto talk to you about your experience here
on news radio eleven ten KFA bEmery songa on news radio eleven ok F

(50:15):
ab Accident's on our phone line.Four oh two five five eight eleven ten,
Astin, thank you so much forlistening to us and being a part
of our show today. What doyou got for me? Hey, Emory
this Aston, I met you acouple I think like a month ago or

(50:36):
whether can you hear me? Yeah? Aston, for sure? Yeah,
no, I'm gonna be the opposite. I kissed, asked when I got
pulled over? Yeah, this wasthis was years ago. Uh, in
the younger days. I had aMercedes compressor. Uh in German that means
super charged. Sure, and Igot caught doing a hundred five and in

(51:00):
the sixty five and uh I gotpulled over, and uh there was nothing
I could say or no liars.Yeah, yeah, yeah, you're kind
of screwed there. I just admittedeverything. I lost a bunch of points
that cost a lot of money.My insurance went out, and uh about

(51:21):
one actually got one speeding ticket sincethen. But uh, there's no getting
out of it. Okay, Soand uh, I have to ask,
though, before you continue, howfast could this thing go? I was,
here's the thing. I was doingone hundred and thirty and so I
felt lucky because he cocked me onehundred and five. Now I was following

(51:42):
a BMW that was that I couldn'tkeep up with, and uh so I
felt I felt lucky because I didn'tget back. Then there was with whistle
uh whistle driving or I can't rememberwhat it's called. It's it's it's another
ticket you can get. Oh,okay, right, I know, yeah,

(52:05):
I can't remember the name of it. But I didn't get that and
I only lost three points. Thesystem worked in Nebraska. I think.
I think you start out with zeroand if you hit twelve you lose your
license. Dang, but you you'vebeen careful though, you've been a good
boy. It sounds like Aston.Yeah, yeah, you remember if you
remember me, I I talked likethree weeks ago. I'm named after the

(52:30):
car that Aston Martin and I talkedto you and yeah, and I apologize
because I overtalked. Listen back,you're good man. Where it is,
it's all good. No, Iwill say this as and when you're named
after a car, you just kindof have to own that. And you
know what, I can never tellyou that I've gone one hundred and thirty
miles an hour in a car before, even though I think it'd be really

(52:52):
a lot of fun. Uh So, you know something I got to put
on my bucket list. I appreciateyou calling in and sharing that story,
though, very from some of theseothers that are like, yeah, I
challenged that thing and I got outof it. Yeah, yeah, you
can go on a one. Yeah. No. Sometimes when you speed,
you just have to admit it andjust be honest because the tops have seen

(53:14):
at all. Everybody has an excusethey've heard of one hundred times. I've
actually got caught probably ten times inmy younger days, but I learned now
I'm fifty nine and I can sayit's been ten years or whatever. But
I think the younger people like tosee how fast their car's going to go.

(53:35):
But I do know anything over onehundred and thirty miles an hour,
it all looks the same. Itdoesn't matter if you're going ninety or one
hundred and eighty. Yeah, itlooks the same. Hey, it's very
very blurry out there. Asked andappreciate the call man. Have a good
day you too, buddy. Bye. Roberts on a phone line four with
two five to five, eight eleventen, Robert, you're with Emery on

(53:58):
news radio eleven ten KFA me.Hey, thanks to taking my call.
I'll try to be brief. Iwas down in Clinton, Mississippi with a
crew, and we had rented astation wagon so I could haul these guys
around. Down the road from wherewe were working was a big giant pump

(54:19):
over the railroad track, but ithad a red light in front of it,
and I swore before I left therethat we were going to catch that
light and try to get airborne.And sure enough, we hit this bump.
I'm up in the air. Butabout the time we land, I
see the lights on the police car. Pull me over. Yeah, so

(54:42):
he pulls me over and I said, what did you pull me over for?
And he goes, reckless driving andI said, okay, well that
makes sense. But but when hewrote the ticket, he wrote it w
R E c K l ess recklessdrive. And I went in front of
the judgement. I said, Ithought that was the whole point, driving

(55:07):
without a w RET and he goes, you know, just because my sheriff
is a dumb ass doesn't mean you'renot gonna pay me seventy five dollars.
Sure enough, that's what I did. But that's my little story on ticket.
Hey Robert, that's good, that'sgood. I like that one.
Hey, I'm glad that you arestill allowed to tell the tale. Appreciate

(55:29):
that, and uh, it's you. Well, you know one other real
quick thing. That guy said whateverhis age was, And I've been thinking
about it because you know, whenyou're like nine years old and three months
you go, yeah, I'm nineand a half years old, right,
You're all, yeah, you wantto get older. Yeah and a half.
Yeah. But then like when you'rethirty five or forty five or any

(55:52):
of that stuff, you kind ofhold it to yourself and say, yeah,
yeah, you know, I'm fromthe fifties or whatever. But the
closer you get, I just turnedseventy, and guess how proud I am.
I'm gonna be about seventy and ahalf here in a little bit.
Whoa, Yeah, you're you're cookingon some special sauce there, Robert Hey
and your Sharper's attack. I appreciateyou calling in, man, that's a

(56:15):
great story. You bad. Thanks, it's funny. Trucker Bob's on the
phone line. Trucker Bob, thankyou for being a part of the show.
What do you got for me,my gully? I got that other
fella beat now, I'm seventy threeand three quarters. Woo. He talks
like he's the trucker too. I'mgoing to see a lot of the extraneous

(56:36):
hot of list because man, itturns into his story. I left the
Volvo dealership up there in Omaha,headed to my home in Lincoln. Stef
the Colvin pulls me over, tellsme a lady calls nine to one one
because of a tale light out onmy truck. Oh boy, and he

(56:57):
put me out of service at theGretna interchair. I had to pay it.
It's a couple hundred dollars three hundreddollars for a tow truck to come
out of Lincoln. I knew theguys, but they have kind of a
fat rate. I got a littlebit of a discount for pan cash and
rigged a light to the back ofit that operated directly off of the tractor,

(57:20):
so it didn't have to have wiringwas completely through. The trader followed
me a few miles back to oLaw to the Volvo dealership. I paid
him the cash and he took off. The people at Volvo were on the
phone with me while the officer wasin his car. I was explaining what
happened, I said, boys,I just picked this thing up from you.
I expected it to be in conditionthat at least it was when I

(57:46):
dropped it off. This cop cameup and was really nasty, and the
boys heard that on the phone.When I got back to the dealership,
they repaired it. No charge partsor labor. That's good. I had
a contract that gave me a representationfor any kind of pastic violations, and

(58:09):
the attorney didn't cost me anything,but he had to go through the procedure.
You have to get to the prosecutingattorney and the judge in the court
and the data set and everything hasto be done by the right time.
I didn't have to pay for that, so I didn't have a ticket receipt
to prow. I fixed it.The guy who managed service up there responded

(58:30):
to the court back and forth.They got something from the dealership. He's
a regular customer. We didn't chargehim. He got it fixed. They
dismissed it, but I had topay the court costs. The only thing
I got out of with the fineI had to pay as surely as that
I got to court. I losthundreds of dollars on the load that I

(58:52):
didn't get they never should take apail light out as a nine to emergency,
and right, well, there's atrucker out there, come racing down
the highway to catch up to someonewith a pay a light out and put
me out of service. How manytimes have you seen big trucks will have
a problem when you're out in themiddle of places. They'll turn on us

(59:14):
all the plashers and drive where they'regoing to shut down for the night and
get it fixed far or catch ina n app standard oh Man, trucker
Bob Man. The speed and intensityin which the story got to you at
a certain point, I could tellyou were reliving that and you were seeing
ghosts. I tell you what bottomline was my lawyer, I pointed out
how I got host. His remarkwas, well, that's the world we

(59:36):
live in, don't isn't it Itis? It is the world we live
in because nobody does anything about him. Thank God for Donald Trump. Oh
in trucker Bob. I probably wouldhave given my my lawyer a knuckle sandwich
for saying that right to my face. So that's what I would have told.
Hey, I appreciate anybody phone.So he was safe oh, okay,
appreciate that. Trucker Bob, thanksfor the call. Thank you all

(59:59):
right. We're gonna continue your stories. Anything funny, crazy? Did you
get out of it? Did youtry to get out of it? Did
you go to court? Did youhave a procedure issue? I want to
hear it. Four oh two fivefive eight to eleven ten. Four oh
two, five five eight eleven ten, News Radio eleven ten KFAB and Ray's
songer on news Radio eleven ten KFAB. We all probably got some stories of

(01:00:21):
what happened, whether we got pulledover, or we got put in court,
or we fought a ticket or something, and I just kind of want
to share those stories with each other, and that's what we're here for.
Four oh two, five five eighteleven Ten's the number. Shawn's on the
phone line, Sean, thanks forthe call today. What do you got
for me? Well, in themid nineties, I had to take a
trip up to Montana and we suckedfor gas in fillings and I looked at

(01:00:50):
the map and I saw this littletwo lay road going up to Great Falls
where I was headed, and Idecided to take that road, and everybody
was I was doing fifty five thewhole way, and everybody was slipping me
off and flashing their lights at me, and I thought that this is horrible.
Well, once I get up there, my sister tells me that the
daytime speed limit is reasonable and prudent. So during the daytime on a state

(01:01:16):
highway in the nineties, we'll clarifyyou could drive as fast as you want,
as long as you were driving reasonableimprudence. So when I left,
I'm driving back to Omaha, andI see this nice flat stretch of road
before me, and I thought,you know, let's see how fast this
rental Dodge Grand Caravan can go.So I put the hammer down and I

(01:01:40):
got there. I pegged that thingat about one hundred and ten and I
see a car on the horizon comingtowards me, and my wife says,
I think you need to slow down. I think that looks like a cop.
I said, no, that's nota cop. That can't be a
cop. We're in the middle ofnowhere, Montana. Really. As we
get closer, I realized it isa cop. Oh, and she said

(01:02:01):
you need to slow down. He'sgoing to stop you. I said no.
My sister said, as long asI reasonable prudence I'm driving straight,
I'm not swerving. I'll be fine. As the police officer gets closer to
me, he leans up in hiswindow so I can see him, and
he gestures with his hand downward bytelling me to slow down. Okay,

(01:02:27):
yeah, We blow past each other, whom I let up off the gas
a little bit, and I watchedhim disappear in my rear view mirror behind
me, and I wait a fewminutes to see if he's going to turn
around. And he doesn't even turnaround, and I put the hammer back
down and I'm gone. I thinkI pegged that. I think I pegged
that over at over one hundred andthirty miles an hour. Oh, and

(01:02:52):
he got away with it and hedidn't even turn around. You know what,
we need to go back to thatAmerica. Where's that America? Now?
I don't know. My friend myfriends tell me you can still do
that in Montana, but I'm not. I don't know if i'd want to
trust that again. Yeah, Idon't know if I want to drive that
far just to do that either.Hey, Sean, appreciate the call man.

(01:03:12):
That's a funny story. Have agood day, but real quick,
let's go to Greg Greg, Welcometo the show What's on your Mind?
Small town, Nebraska. Supposedly someonecalled in about a hit and running movement
in me and about a block anda half from where this supposedly happened.

(01:03:35):
The vehicle lasts and two teeps thatthey go into the bar. Then a
cop shows up. That's all onvideo from a private business. Then the
cop shows up and all they dois stand behind this vehicle. And then
I'm driving somewhere out and I getpulled over for a hit and run.

(01:04:00):
And I had a mirror that wasjust the mere part was busted out,
but no damage to the outside,tasing, nothing like that. And I
supposedly hit their mirror, although theynever looked at it. Okay, So
they kicked me with this, andunfortunately I had an emergency surgery coming up.

(01:04:26):
Long story short, When the prosecutorfinally got a hold of these people,
she said that they said they noticedsent the vectoring and wanted to thank
me for my service, and therewas no dollar value pay anything on their

(01:04:46):
vehicle. Okay, Okay, No, the prosecutor went and drop it,
so I still ended up having topay two hundred bucks over. I'm saying
that on video and pieces, andthe damage according to that body shop is

(01:05:09):
no way could have happened, right, happening beer on the park to the
vehicle. Well, Greg, Ican tell you that though. You just
never know what some of these people. Yeah. Hey, that's a great
story, Greg, appreciate you callingin. Man. All Right, we're
having some fun today. I wantyou to keep having fun. Calls four
O two five, five eight,eleven, ten News Radio eleven ten kfa B
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