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July 22, 2025 • 32 mins
ICE in NYC?
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Ah, good morning to you. Beautiful day to be driving
into work in the Big Three today. Look, New York
City is about to get a lot of visitors, a
whole lot of Ice officers because borders are Tom Homan
was in town yesterday and man is he mad, And

(00:22):
he said, We're just gonna flood New York City with
ice officers because he blames the city policies for one
of the Border Patrol agents being in the hospital right
now with a gunshot wounded the face. Two criminals with
long rap sheets who never should have been in the
country are now in custody for the shooting of a

(00:44):
Customs and Border Patrol agent. And the borders are blasted
the New York City Council.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
You see the polls. Everybody agrees we should be a
resting public safety threat illegal aliens where you've got a
city council here, The locktain is on the Wreckers Island?
Are you kidding me? We allen in Ruker's Island. We
can't talk to we don't have access to. That makes
the city unsafe.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
Like I said, he's going to send as he said,
He's going to flood the zone and send in a
whole lot of ice officers. The man accused of killing
Aton Pates, the six year old Manhattan child whose disappearance
spawned a national missing child's movement, may now get a
new trial or just get released because a court is

(01:30):
now saying a confession that he made never should have
been considered. Oh, the jury determines that it's an involuntary confession,
that they can't consider it. The law has to be
equal for everyone. The Manhattan DA's office is making the
decision right now whether there is going to be a
new trial for Bodego worker Pedro Hernandez, who was convicted

(01:53):
of the nineteen seventy nine killing of Aton Pates. In
twenty seventeen, that's how long it took together him. It
now must be decided whether he stands a new trial
or is just released. We have Aaron Katirsky coming up
to talk about this. He's been covering the case. At
nine oh five, the disappearance of a nine year old
girl at Lake George and Upstate New York is now

(02:15):
considered a murder, and the father who reported the nine
year old girl missing has been arrested.

Speaker 3 (02:21):
The investigation has determined some time after Molina's phone call
with her mother, and before Monsieur Frattoln's NIH one call,
he allegedly murdered Molina and left her body in a
remote area where she's later discovered by law enforcement.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
Well you want some good news, how about this. The
Trump administration is just six months old and has already
accomplished its two core promises, bringing down inflation and securing
the border.

Speaker 4 (02:47):
People who did not want to accept.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
Sorry about that anyway, take my word for it. It
was a secure border in Lake a weekend and it
was down to two percent inflame nationally, two point one percent.
And that was the Director of National Intelligence, Tolsey Gabbard,
And she has asked the Justice Department to investigate several
members of the Obama administration for treasonous conspiracy for manufacturing

(03:16):
the Russian collusion hoax to try and cripple Donald Trump's
first term in office back in twenty sixteen.

Speaker 4 (03:24):
People who did not want to accept the will of
the American people in electing Donald Trump in twenty sixteen
and therefore cooked up this treasonous conspiracy to again try
to effectively, and they did effectively launch a year's long
coup against the sitting president of the United States.

Speaker 1 (03:42):
And an ethics complaint has been filed against New York
Congressman and Minardi leader Hakim Jeffries for attempting to get
a federal judge to remove New Jersey US Attorney Alina
Haba from office. The so called US Attorney from New
Jersey is woefully unqualified and is a political pack. The

(04:04):
people of New Jersey deserve better. If I said it,
I meant it. Well, he's not backing down. Hob As
the interim US Attorney must be confirmed by the Senate
by the end of July if she's going to keep
that job. And finally, it is so sad. Malcolm Jamal Warner,
who played the lovable Theo Huxtable and the number one

(04:25):
rated Cosby Show, has died.

Speaker 5 (04:27):
I've had such an awesome life, you know, I mean,
like I'm literally you know, I've got my ups and
downs and all of that. But like, if I die tomorrow,
I I know I would go with the smile on
my face.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
One or drowned on a family vacation in Costa Rica.
He was fifty four years old, far far too young.
That guy always had a smile on his face. He
was just he just seemed to be so much fun
to be around. You can go to the iHeartRadio app
right now now and we just covered a lot of
stuff right there, and leave us a talkback. You could

(05:03):
win a limited edition MENTI in the Morning t shirt
which will be awarded every day to our favorite talkback
of the morning. And while you're on the free iHeartRadio app,
just go ahead and pre set it for seven to ten.
WOOR makes it a lot easier to find it the
next time you want to go on. Let's talk about
the Aton Pates It is just a complete stunner, a stunner.

(05:28):
I came to New York when I worked at WABC
Eyewitness News back in nineteen eighty four. Aton Pates went
missing in nineteen seventy nine. It was still an enormous
story in this city. And I already knew about Aton
Pates because it became a national story. The search for
his killer was a national story. The reason there is

(05:53):
a big push to find missing children all across the
country is because of Aton Pates. The reason that there
were pictures on the back of milk cartons of missing
children was because of Aton Pates. There is now a
government organization to find missing children. That's because of Aton Pates.

(06:14):
That's how big this story is. If you're at a
certain age, you remember all of this. There are some
people that probably don't remember any of it. But when
I was here at eyewitness News through the eighties, they
never found them, but it was a story every single year.
The search was that intense, and they didn't really find

(06:38):
somebody till two thoy seventeen. Think about that, almost twenty
years later. They got this pedro Hernandez right, and he
worked at a bordego. He's mentally challenged. And after talking

(06:59):
to him for set than hours and pressuring him, been pressuring,
and these police officers were pressuring him, finally he said, yes,
he lured a Tom Pates away from a bus stop,
took him into the basement of the badego where he
killed him. He said it was not sexual at all.

(07:19):
We still don't really know what the motive could have been.
And then he put him in a trash bag and
threw him in the trash That's what he says happened.
And then so he after he gives that confession, they say, okay,
we got to get this on tape, and they read
him as Miranda and they start the confession. Well, at

(07:43):
the time of the of the legal proceeding, when the
jury went into the room to deliberate, they sent a
note to the judge saying, wait a second, this confession
came without a miranda. Can we even consider this? And
the judge sent back a note and said, yes, consider it.

(08:07):
And at the time the attorneys for A. Tom Paid said,
I have a feeling we're coming back here. I got
a feeling this is going to happen again. And here
we are, here, we are this many years later, and
that has come back to haunt the investigators.

Speaker 6 (08:23):
And you wonder, why so many years after twenty seventeen,
why are we bringing this up. Why didn't they bring
this up in twenty seventeen.

Speaker 1 (08:31):
I'm sure they did. I'm sure they did. I'm sure
it went through a pellet process, and a pellet process
and a pellet process. This was the second US Court
of Appeals that overturned the conviction. And now what they're
saying is either you have to let him go or
you have to retry him. But he can't stay in prison.

Speaker 6 (08:50):
Just bringing up this story started me thinking, you know,
I grew up in Staten Island. I was relatively young,
around his age when this happened, I wasn't in my
conscious I wasn't watching the news, but I remember as
a child hearing feeling the fear of kidnapping. And now

(09:11):
I as an adult, I'm looking back and I'm like,
that was happening in my backyard. This was probably what
my parents were fearing at the time, and I just.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Didn't know right all these missing children. That the reason
it's become such a huge story across the country, and
it should be. I think, you know, in a strange way,
he was a martyr. I mean, I mean, he's the
one that made us care about missing children all across
the country to a national extent. It was. It was

(09:42):
that big of a story. And look at I feel
for everybody involved in this story. Whether he gave a
confession that was forced, I feel bad for him. I
feel bad for you know, the family of Aton Pates,
who were just they were horrified, and they went through
hell trying to trying to find out what happened. And

(10:03):
here we go again. The whole thing is going to
resurface again for New York. But I just wanted to
tell people, in case you weren't old enough, how big
of a story. This was and will be if we
get another trial.

Speaker 3 (10:17):
Well.

Speaker 1 (10:17):
On Sunday, Carnegie Hall featured the youngest piano player ever
to perform at Carnegie Hall. We'll tell you who he
is and how he did it next. Just a reminder,
every time you said this a talkback, you were in
the running to win a coveted, highly coveted. Be careful
where you wear it because you know you might be attacked.
Somebody wants to get it. The limited edition Menti in

(10:39):
the Morning t shirt. It's awarded daily for our favorite
message of the day and don't forget the best talk
back of the week takes home a sea crane radio
for the listener who demands better Sea crane radio with
legendary reception. You know what, the funny thing about genius
is that people that are geniuses seem to just be

(11:03):
born with it. And it's not something you're gonna learn,
you know, it just it happens. All of a sudden,
you are considered a genius, usually at a very young age.
They they're able to spot somebody that's a genius as
young as five, just like Alec Cajudurian Alec Conja Durian

(11:25):
is five years old, five years old, and he played
Carnegie Hall on Sunday night. He is a musical prodigy,
and I wish I could play a lot for you,
but we're limited to what we could play, and so
this is it. That's it, that's all we're allowed to play.

(11:49):
That was the five year old playing, and afterwards he
talked about how excited he was. I was a first performer.

Speaker 4 (11:55):
I've played two pieces, and I was so excited.

Speaker 7 (11:58):
Oh my god, could you imagine.

Speaker 8 (12:09):
You know, at five years old, it was like boom boom.

Speaker 1 (12:13):
Won't buy the piano and smack on it every once
in a while exactly, but this kid like pick it,
picked it up right away. And the nice thing that
I heard from the dad, which which is wonderful, is
he still just a regular kid.

Speaker 3 (12:25):
He's still very much just a goofy five year old
and loves to play all day. But once he gets
on the piano, it's a whole different story.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
Yeah. Apparently he learned notes immediately, you know, and he
was asking questions about once he learned that what he
was playing the notes had a name, he wanted to
know more. He just constantly wanted to know what what
the notes were. Yeah, and so at five years old,
five years old at Carnegie Hall. You know, it's funny

(12:56):
how many parents that I know that just are I
get lessons for their kids and and and push. You know,
you're gonna be a sports star, you're gonna be a
music star, you're gonna be and and sometimes it's just
not there.

Speaker 6 (13:10):
That's so funny that you said that. So, uh, my
brother was a pretty talented musician. You know, he played
multiple instruments and all that stuff. So my older brother,
So my mom thought, yeah, you should take music lessons too,
So I did. I took piano. I did the clarinet.

(13:30):
The piano teacher at one point came to my mom
and said, you maybe should think of just stopping this.

Speaker 1 (13:39):
She felt guilty taking the money. That's that's something you
were pretty bad.

Speaker 6 (13:47):
I was, And I had no desire, you know that.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
That's all. That's really what it is. But for the
for the teacher to actually say, you know what, don't
give me any more money. I just can't put up
with this anymore.

Speaker 8 (14:00):
I want to go to heaven. I don't want to
go to hell. I'm taking this money.

Speaker 1 (14:04):
It is, but I look at I did it with
my kids you know, you let what I always feel like,
you should let them try everything to see because if
they don't like it, they're never going to be good
at it. So, you know, we had we gave piano lessons,
I give drum lessons. We every sport there were lessons
for and uh, you know, you wait to see if

(14:25):
something clicks and they love something and never Apparently what
they really loved that I found out was video games.
They really were good at video games.

Speaker 8 (14:36):
And they look it's a profession now. Honestly, what we
should do in this country is give our kids language
lessons because they're not doing it in school, and may
video games in like Spanish and Italian they'll learn.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
That's a good point. Well, they learn a little bit
because they play internationally. I'm shocked at who my kids
talk to online. And I know I'm supposed to watch
out for that, but they're older now, Yeah, because of
who they're talking to online, but yeah, no, they talk
to people from other countries. They talk to people from
other states.

Speaker 2 (15:07):
You know.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
As a matter of fact, my son wants to come
up to New York because he found somebody from Canada.
I guess he wants to go a little bit more upstate.
Somebody from Canada is coming down that he wants to
go meet. So now I have to drive up because
I don't trust somebody he meets on the internet, so
have I said, yeah, you can meet him, but unfortunately
I'm driving up with you. Let's get the news at

(15:30):
six thirty with Jacqueline Carl Jacqueline.

Speaker 8 (15:33):
Good Morning.

Speaker 9 (15:33):
President Trump's Big Beautiful bill could add trillion to the
national debt. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office published a new
analysis Monday that found the spending bill will increase the
national debt by three point four trillion dollars over the
next ten years. The CBO also said the number of
people without health insurance will increase by ten million by
twenty thirty four because of the law. And Coldplay isn't

(15:56):
forgetting about that viral kiss cam incident that took place
at their show last week.

Speaker 10 (16:01):
Red paint, apparently intended to symbolize blood, was discovered splattered
all over the front of AOC's campaign office on Herschel
Street and Westchester Square overnight Monday. A sign was also
tied to the metal gate reading AOC funds genocide and Gaza.
The incident led to AOC canceling an event and Jackson
Heights campaign manager Oliver Hidalgo our priorities.

Speaker 3 (16:23):
Just to make sure that our team is safe, the
congressman safe, and of course the folks our neighborhood.

Speaker 10 (16:27):
Are residents are surprised that AOC would be targeted over
the war in Gaza.

Speaker 11 (16:32):
She's on the.

Speaker 8 (16:32):
Left and she's as pro palastating as you can be.

Speaker 10 (16:36):
Kristen Marks wr News all Right.

Speaker 9 (16:38):
A company has made an AI van with a face
it says it could empathize with its driver.

Speaker 8 (16:45):
Do drivers need emotional backup?

Speaker 9 (16:47):
According to the Autotopian, a company called Faraday Future has
revealed its new van called the FX super One. It's
a rebadged Chinese minivan with a digital face on the
front that could show emotions and even quote unquote feel empathy.
The event in La that you know showcase this featured influencers, mocktails,

(17:10):
and budswords like AI e v era. The van's face
is supposed to interact with people, but details like price,
delivery data where it's built we're missing from the presentation.

Speaker 8 (17:21):
I think that would be distracting.

Speaker 9 (17:23):
I'd rather have a TV, right If I'm gonna go
I'm gonna wrap myself around a pole. I don't want
to be looking at a at a face of my
car showing that it's like, you know, sad disappointed.

Speaker 6 (17:36):
In me for not you know, I'm thinking of like
the car behind me winking at me. Oh well, do
you ever see the people who have like the big
eyelashes on their their cars?

Speaker 8 (17:47):
Oh yeah, isn't that like with like bugs? The Volkswagens
do that a lot.

Speaker 1 (17:52):
I know, it's like, please, can we stop teaching AI emotions?

Speaker 8 (17:57):
We need to stop.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
You have to stop giving it all these human qualities. Yes,
because eventually it's going to turn on us.

Speaker 8 (18:04):
So many of my stories are now about this stuff.

Speaker 9 (18:06):
I know, stop you're scaring me, but I have to
warn the masses.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Thanks so much, Jacquelyn Carl the Borders are says he's
going to flood the city now with ice officers after
the shooting of an off duty Border patrol agent. We
have reaction coming up next. We all remember that one
teacher right who made a difference, who believed in us,
challenged us just you know, just made learning fun. Well,

(18:34):
now is your chance to say thank you to them
in a big way. With iHeartRadio's Thank a Teacher powered
by Donor's Choice. You can nominate an outstanding public school
teacher who has gone above and beyond for their students
for a chance to win five thousand dollars to stock
their classroom with whatever they need. Teachers give their time,

(18:57):
they give their money, they give their hearts to help
students succeed. Help us say thank you to the educators
shaping our future. Nominate your favorite teacher now at iHeartRadio
dot com slash teachers. But we still don't know the
name of the officer, the Customs and Border Patrol officer

(19:18):
who was shot in the face, just trying to enjoy
an evening Saturday night. And I think we're never going
to know the name, you know, because ICE officers are bad,
the Democrats. Ice officers are bad, and so you have
to be careful because they'll go after their families. If
you think I'm kidding, it's happened. It's the reason that
they wear masks. And of course the Democrats have a

(19:39):
bill to make sure they don't wear a mask because
they they're anti Ice. They're anti this guy that got
shot in the face. They are pro immigrant, even the
criminals that's why they have sanctuary cities. They should they
should never win another election until they straighten themselves out,
because this is not only terrifying, it's maddening. Just gets

(20:05):
you upset. And so yesterday at the Harlem hospital, many
other Border Patrol agents showed up just to show their
respects and to check in on their friend. It's very scary,
and I would like to say to everyone listening that prayers,
a lot of prayers need to go in with our

(20:26):
brother today. That's one of the officers who would stop
and speak because so many of them are afraid to
put their face out there. So many of them are afraid.
Imagine that. Imagine somebody who is trying to clean up
the streets of the cities to undo the wrong of
the last four years, that are proud of what they're doing.

(20:46):
Crime rates are going down all across the country. They're
proud of what they're doing, taking criminals off the streets.
And of course the Democrats say they're evil, and then
they inspire all these riots, and they inspire all these protests,
and these agents get docs, their identities get put online,

(21:09):
their homes get put online, their children's names get put online.
For what what to win another seat in the midterms.
Why why would you do this? Why do you want
to put people's lives in jeopardy, not just the ice officers,
but citizens that you are now making prey to, all

(21:32):
of these criminals that got into the country. It just
doesn't make any sense. Christy nom the Homeland Security Secretary,
was here yesterday. Tom Homan was here yesterday to say,
just to say, this has got to stop.

Speaker 12 (21:47):
Absolutely zero reason that someone who has scum of the
earth like this should be running loose on the streets
of New York City.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
Well there's two now. So they got the other suspect,
the guy that was driving the moped, he's the one
that drove up. They spotted the couple. They didn't know
he was a border agent. They didn't know he was
Customs and Border. He was just there with a girlfriend
and they were sitting on the rocks, trying to enjoy
the night in Fort Washington Park. And so they got

(22:16):
immediately because the officer was able to get off a shot,
and they got Miguel Francisco Mora Nunez who had to
go to the hospital. And they figured it out right
away that that was their guy. And then he has
a long rap sheet not only in New York, but
violent crimes not only in New York, but in Boston.
Both their sanctuary cities both have bail reform. So even

(22:36):
though he got arrested over and over again and had
orders against him and warrens against him, he was allowed
to be out in the street. And the other suspect
that was picked up is Christian A bar Barroa. Both
same thing came into the country illegally, came in through Arizona.
I guess they knew each other from wherever they came from,

(22:58):
maybe some gang that they in because he has just
as long of a rap sheet. Both of them never
should have been on the streets, never, But because of
these policies here, they are protected by a sanctuary city
who can't even help ice officers clean up the streets.

Speaker 12 (23:18):
I'm calling on every single mayor and sanctuary city and
sanctuary governor to change their policies and to change their
tactics right now. Their job is to take an oath
to protect the public.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
I'll tell you what. Tom Holman went to the news
conference yesterday with Christy Nome right from the hospital, and
you can tell he was emotional. He said right away.
He said, it just pains me so much to see
this young man lying in bad He had bandages over
his face because he was shot in the face. Thank
God he's alive. You know, you know, he's the bad guy, remember,

(23:54):
And Tom Holman turned his sorrow slowly into anger, and
he made this promise to New York. He's upset with
the city council, especially extremely upset with the city council
for not allowing ICE officers into jails, not allowing them
into Rikers. Can you anybody, any rational person, I'd love

(24:17):
to sit down with somebody that defends that policy, any
rational person. I would love to sit down and hear
what they have to say, because there is absolutely no
reason why somebody who has been convicted of a crime
and is at Rikers Island and is a criminal from
another country here illegally, why ICE can't pick them up there,

(24:42):
which has always been the case until it became political,
until the Democrats decided this was their big issue. Can
anybody explain that to me? It helps everybody. It not
only helps ICE, it helps the NYPD, It helps the
community because now ICE has to go into the community
where they could kill the suspect. They could be shot themselves,

(25:04):
They could hurt somebody just there in the community because
gunfire starts. But get used to those Ice officers. Because
Tom Holman is upset with New York City and he
said he's gonna flood the city with ice officers.

Speaker 2 (25:20):
The sanctuary cities are now our priority.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
We're gonna flood his own.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
You don't want to let us in the jail to
arrest a bad guy in the safety and security of
a jail. You want to release them into the street.
Where makes it unsafe for the community, makes it unsafe
for the officer, makes it unsafe for the anling. Can
anything happen on the street arrest? That's what we're going
to do when I'm more agents in New York City
to look for.

Speaker 1 (25:45):
That bad guy.

Speaker 4 (25:47):
Right.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
John Chill, by the way, agrees with them. I love
when the NYPD speaks up. I love it because you
know they're furious. They are furious at these policies and
they want somebody to come in and help them. They'd
love to help the Ice officers. And John Chell was
at the news conference yesterday and said this has got
to stop. He is the chief of department.

Speaker 11 (26:10):
The point that we're making here is this should.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
Never have occurred.

Speaker 11 (26:15):
We need thoughtful change to our sanctuary city laws in
his city that protects our New Yorkers. This person, Miguel Moore,
is to post a child for what is wrong with
sanctuary city status in New York City.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
The worst kind of idiocy stems from arrogance to not
be able to admit when you're wrong, and city council
it's obvious they're wrong, but they can't admit to it.
And so this shooting, all the deaths because of the
legal criminals that are here and protected, it's on them.
It's on city council. It is that easy. And that's

(26:52):
what you should remember when you go out to vote,
because city councils, and it's not just the mayor's race.
City council is going to be up to if you
want to put them back in and that's on you. Two. Well,
they call him teflon Don for a reason. The Epstein
file controversy doesn't seem to be hurting Donald Trump's approval
ratings at all. We'll have the numbers coming up next.

(27:12):
Everybody remembers the Trump Russian collusion probe. It really stymied
the first year of Donald Trump's twenty sixteen term in office.
It came right from the beginning. I mean Hillary Clinton
started it saying there was Russian collusion, Russian collusion and
that they're helping Donald Trump. And you know, there was

(27:35):
never really any evidence of it. I mean, James Colemy
found that out after a year and a half long
investigation and forty million dollars and talking to hundreds of witnesses,
going after everything using the FBI, sources, using national intelligence.
It never went anywhere. They didn't find any evidence, as

(27:55):
he said, of collusion. And yet the country had to
go through all of that for over a year. And
now we're finding out from recently unclassified documents that well
Tolsey Gabbert at least says there is overwhelming evidence that
then President Obama and his national security team laid the

(28:16):
groundwork for what would be the Trump Russia collusion probe
of that we had to all suffer through at the time.
And so this is the way the story goes. So
they had an assessment that they got from the FBI

(28:36):
and from the CIA, they got an assessment, and the
assessment said, look, Russia just doesn't have this capability they
haven't found any evidence of it. They don't have that capability.
And Obama allegedly called a meeting, and there's some records
of this, called a meeting and brought in Clapper and
call me and Brenner, Brennan, and they all sat there,

(28:58):
you know, from the CIA and from the FBI National Security,
and he said, well, look, we're going to table that assessment.
We're going to hold on to it, we're going to
push that to the side, but we're going to go
with this assessment. And the assessment was exactly the opposite.
And so it was Tulsey Gabbard that found all of this,

(29:21):
and thank god she did.

Speaker 4 (29:23):
People who did not want to accept the will of
the American people and electing Donald Trump in twenty sixteen
and therefore cooked up this treasonous conspiracy to again try
to effectively and they did effectively launch a year's long
coup against the sitting president of the United States.

Speaker 1 (29:41):
And President Obama was the ringleader of this.

Speaker 4 (29:45):
There's no question in my mind that this intelligence community
assessment that President Obama ordered be published was manufactured intelligence
that sought to achieve President Obama and his team's objects,
which was undermining President Trump's presidency, and next week we
will be releasing more detailed information about how exactly this

(30:08):
took place.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
But in the meantime, she has referred for criminal charges
against several members of the Obama administration to the Justice
Department that include treason and conspiracy. And have you heard
a lot about this? No, no, no, no, it's Epstein, Epstein, Epstein,
Epstein because they think it'll hurt Donald Trump all over
the place. This is a huge story, an enormous story

(30:33):
that a president of the United States and those working
under him in the intelligence community all got together for
a conspiracy to bring down a sitting president anything. Nope,
but there's gonna be hearings. And by the way, whistleblowers
have now come forward, so you're gonna have hearings, you
might have criminal charges, all of that, but it doesn't

(30:55):
get covered that much because they want to hurt Donald Trump.
So how is that going? By the way, how are
they doing in hurting Donald Trump? I mean Epstein, Epstein, Epstein, Right,
that's going to kill him, That's gonna hurt him. Well,
according to CNN and their digital reporter, their data reporter,
Harry Entin, they were as just as shocked as anybody

(31:17):
that it's not doing anything to him.

Speaker 13 (31:19):
Republicans who approve of the job that Donald Trump is doing,
get this and our CNN SSRs poll. It was eighty
six percent prior to this whole Epstein saga. Now it's
eighty eight percent. In fact, the percentage of Republicans who
approve of the job that Donald Trump is doing has
actually anything climbed a little bit of Corey to our
CNN pauling have about quinnipiec eighty seven percent before this

(31:39):
whole Epstein saga started approved of the job that Donald
Trump was doing among Republicans. Now it's ninety percent.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
Yep, his approvals going up among Republicans. Nice. Try now
deal with the Russian conspiracy probe. Another day another world
leader comes to the White House, and that means Jeffrey
Epstein is sure to come up as well. We'll talk
about it with w R. White House correspond to John Decker.
That's coming up after the seven o'clock news. Oh a

(32:08):
lot of money. Louis was in deep trouble. We're gonna
take your house, put a lean on your bank account.
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