Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And good morning. I am Larry Menti in the Big Three.
One of the oh No, the nation's largest healthcare insurance
companies CEO United Healthcare that would be is gunned down
in New York City. A manhunt is on now for
the assassin who fled the scene on a city bike
(00:21):
and disappeared into Central Park. Also, no verdict in the
Daniel Penny trial yet, as the jury asks for evidence
and testimony to review. Jury deliberations continue today. We could
have a verdict today, or we could have a verdict tomorrow.
It is expected this week, and the countdown is on
(00:44):
until borders are Tom Holman comes to town with his
large posse of ICE agents to get those who are
here illegally and have criminal records off the streets and
send them back to whence they came. And we found
out this week earlier this week that that number is
(01:06):
higher than I think anyone thought. Fifty eight thousand illegal
criminals or people that are here illegally with either arrest
or criminal records. The man who released that information is
on the phone now. Kenneth Janalo is the New York
(01:26):
City Ice Director. Thank you so much, mister Janalo for
joining us. I really appreciate your time.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
Hey, good morning, Larry. I appreciate you reaching out. I'm
glad to be on Now.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
Those numbers I gave and the people that we're talking about,
was I correct in saying it's fifty eight thousand and
that they all either have been arrested or have criminal records.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
That's correct. The numbers that were received through our databases
delineate fifty eight thousand plus criminal non citizens in the
New York City aoar. And remember, my area of responsibility
covers the City of New York, the two counties in
(02:15):
Long Island, and the seven lower counties of the Hudson
Valley region, so it would encompass all of that area
where these individuals are located.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
Have you been in communication with the incoming borders? Are
Tom Homan?
Speaker 2 (02:30):
Unfortunately, until the transition team is in place and the
MoU is signed, we don't have any communication with the
new administration. So we're waiting for that and anticipate that
to happen soon. So you know, like I said, I'm
just waiting on that to happen.
Speaker 1 (02:50):
Have you talked with him in the past, do you
know him?
Speaker 2 (02:53):
I've worked for mister Holman in the past when he
was the prior Ice director. He's a great leader, he's
a genuine man, and he knows how to get the
work done.
Speaker 1 (03:05):
So you expect that he's going to be a man
of his word. He keeps saying whether you want us
there or not, we're coming, and that don't try to
stop us, or don't cross a certain line because you're
going to be arrested for a felony for harboring an
illegal immigrant that we're supposed to be arresting and taking
back home. You take him at his word when he
(03:26):
says that he's.
Speaker 2 (03:28):
A transparent person. No smoke and mirrors with mister Holman,
So you know when he says that he's talking about
sanctuary policies, and obviously the sanctuary policies in New York
City that have been enacted a while ago and then
strengthen under the former administration with the may of the
Blasio where it took it further and basically we had
(03:51):
a unit that was located at Rikers Island and when
the individuals were done with their local time or if
they were being released on bail or we were able
to vet and determine if they were amenable to removal
proceedings and take them into custody right from Rikers Island.
So you know, during that heyday about ten years ago,
(04:12):
we were taking into custody close to one hundred individuals
a month. So if we're no longer located at Rikers Island,
obviously those individuals are just being released right back into
the community. And you know, the recidivism rate is extremely
high with these individuals. And on top of it, the
majority of the victims that they take advantage of are
(04:34):
actually the migrant community and migrant females and migrant children.
So when you hear these politicians state that it keeps
their community safe, the sanctuary policies, I don't know how
their constituents can believe that when they are releasing these
heinous individuals right back into the community instead of turning
(04:55):
them over to my staff to place them in removal
proceedings in a detained setting.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
Do you have statistics and or do you have numbers
or information on the number of for instance, trend de
Arragua or cartels or other gangs that are in the
New York City area.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
No, we don't have any concrete statistics, but obviously there
has been an increase in gang activity not only in
New York City but across the country. And you know,
the recent influx of the trend the Aragua gang has
caught the attention of all law enforcement.
Speaker 3 (05:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
I know that the NYPD is not supposed to be
even talking about immigration status or even getting that information.
And I was a little bit surprised when they came
out a couple of months ago and said that seventy
five percent of the crimes in Midtown are caused by
those who are here illegally. And I was trying to
(05:54):
figure out how they even know that information, but it did.
It did show that the NYP is fed up with
this as well. Do you get that feeling?
Speaker 2 (06:05):
Well, look, I don't understand how anyone would want to
have an individual that's a violent or heinous individual released
back into their community to live side by side with
them when they can be you know, taken into custody
in a secure setting by my agency, placed and removal
(06:25):
proceedings and you know, have their airing in front of
a judge. Everyone has the right to do process, has
the right to obtain counsel. You know, the notion of
us grabbing people and just driving the JFK and putting
them on a plane is absolutely far from the truth.
And you know, the other notion that we do these
sweeps and we do these raids is another false narrative
(06:46):
that's been pushed. We do targeted enforcement, which basically means
an officer will investigate a certain individual, we will get
legal sufficiency from our legal department on that individual, and
then a supervisor will sign off on the case. Then
we go out and we seek to arrest that one individual.
(07:06):
We do not do sweeps. We don't go into schools,
we don't go into churches, we don't go into hospitals.
So the fear monitoring that you hear that's out there,
it's unfortunate, but it's a narrative that's trying to be pushed.
Speaker 1 (07:20):
And there is something else that I've heard other interviews
with you, and there's something else you said that I
thought was really important for our listeners to hear. It
is the root of sanctuary cities. The argument for it
early on was that ICE would would not be able
to get information, the NYPD wouldn't be able to get
(07:42):
information about crimes from those who were here illegally and
living their lives and not committing crimes because there was
fear that they would be sent back, and you set
that straight. Please say what you said about that.
Speaker 2 (07:56):
Sure, ICE ero uses a victim senate approach when it's targeting,
it's the individuals for arrest. So those that are victims
of crimes are those that are witnesses to crimes. We
do not seek to arrest. We work with our law
enforcement partners, We work with the District Attorney's office to
(08:18):
ensure that those people are not arrested or targeted for arrest. So, yes,
that was the original reason why sanctuary police policies had
been established way back during the Koch administration. But like
I said, our agency does not go after victims or
we don't go after those that are are witnesses to crimes.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
We're talking to Kenneth Ganalo, who is the ICE director
in New York City, So are you. There have been
reports that in the ICE Department and with ICE officers
across the country and with the Border Patrol, that morale
has been down over the last few years and that
(09:01):
people are actually coming back out of retirement or putting
off their retirement because Tom Holman is taking over his borders.
Are is there a renewed excitement in ICE because he's
now taking over.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
I mean, I can't speak for all of these other people,
and you know, I don't want to speculate what's going
to occur in the new administration. But what I do anticipate,
since I've worked for mister Holman before, is that I
know that he will fight for additional funding that's sorely
needed for the agency because during the Less administration, our
(09:40):
budget has been cut by Congress. So when we out
going out and we are arresting all these individuals, not
only here in New York City but nationwide, we need
additional bedspace. So in order to have additional bedspace to
detain these individuals, we need additional funding. And on top
of that, my my staff during this current administration was
(10:03):
operating down thirty percent in my Officer Corps because of
budget cuts. So basically I have a staff that we
had to address the large reporting from the Southwest border
at our office, so I had to move staff to
address that. But in the interim, I ensure that my
staff is out every day making these arrests. And you know,
(10:24):
you hear people saying, well, why haven't the arrest been occurring? Before,
and they have. The thing is the media doesn't report it.
And basically, last fiscal year, my staff, even though we've
been operating shorthanded, arrested close to one thousand individuals in
this aor here that all had committed some serious crimes.
(10:45):
And if you look at the mat that I explained about,
we're no longer at rikers or there's no cooperation and
they're releasing individuals back into the community. If we were
doing one hundred a month, obviously it's about one thousand
to twelve hundred a year if we're arresting at dollsand
you see the dent that we're making is not that
large in the amount of criminal non citizens that are
(11:08):
located in our communities right now.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
And sir, with that, we do have to leave. I
would love to talk to you again you obviously, I
think you could tell from the questioning you have our
support and I wish you luck. Sir Kenneth Genalo, New
York City Ice Director, Thanks.
Speaker 2 (11:23):
Again, I appreciate it. I have a great day you too.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
Maybe they'll write a song about it. A rock band
gets robbed at gunpoint outside Starbucks. We'll tell you what
the band did and what The details are also your talkbacks.
Next Good morning, I'm Larry Manti. Love your talkbacks. It's
easy to do. Just go to the iHeart app, look
for seven to ten WR, click the microphone and record
(11:50):
your message and we'll play it on the air.
Speaker 4 (11:52):
Now.
Speaker 1 (11:52):
Earlier of several times, we've been talking about the Daniel
Penny so called choke hold trial. He put a choke
hold on Jordan Neely, who was acting up on a subway,
to subdue him because people on the subway thought they
were in harm's way, and he held him there until
he got to the next stop. But at the same
(12:14):
time he was holding him, Jordan Neely died and now
he's on trial. The jury has the case. They're expected
to come back in a verdict. But you're our eyes
and ears out there. This gentleman has encountered Jordan Neely before.
Speaker 5 (12:30):
Yes, I've encountered that Neely character a number of times
on a subway. He was abnormally aggressive. Most of your panhandlers,
homeless panothers, are pretty benign and harmless. This guy was
very aggressive. He used to stand up on the chains
in between the cars and threaten to jump if he
didn't give him money. And he was there was really
something wrong with this guy.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
Yeah, I think that was established at the trial, but
I had not heard that story before. Then we got
another talk back because because I was stunned today to
find out that baby carrots weren't grown as baby carrots,
or maybe they were taken before they grew up to
be adult carrots. But I didn't know that they just
(13:13):
took a regular carrot and carved it down. And several
of you have called about that.
Speaker 4 (13:18):
Larry, don't let them, Larry, don't let them make fun
of you.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
Fifty two years old. I didn't know that about baby carrots.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
I thought they were specific kind of carrot that was
made for it.
Speaker 3 (13:30):
I buy them all the time for my kids.
Speaker 4 (13:32):
I am blown away that they're just shaved down big carrots.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
Thank you, thank you. You see all of you looked
at me like I was from another planet. But I mean,
I think this is stunning news to a lot of people.
He's fifty two years old. He just learned out that
baby carrots are not really baby carrots. They're just made
to look like baby carrots. Why would they do that
to us?
Speaker 6 (13:58):
I don't know.
Speaker 7 (13:58):
It's a marketing thing. I think there are some types
of small carrots, because I've actually gotten carrots that are
tiny that have the tops on them, but they're more
like decorative. They're kind of fancy looking. But those ones
in the bag that look like little nubs.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
But they don't call them baby carrots, do they.
Speaker 3 (14:16):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
That's a little bit of false at.
Speaker 7 (14:18):
I'm going to dig into this because I I feel
bad that.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
We've Yeah, there's a lot of people that are stunned
out there, I know.
Speaker 7 (14:25):
Maybe, yeah, we're going to dive into this very important story.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
Good thank you speaking of not important stories. Although this
is the way this ends is really very thoughtful and
and I thought was a I guess it was a
criticism of America and through a foreigner's eyes. So I
(14:51):
don't think if you've ever heard, I'm gonna guess you have.
And I haven't heard of them before. The indie British
band called the pop band called Sports Nation, and apparently
they have a following big enough so that they're touring
America right now. And they were out in the a
Host which is out in the Los Angeles area, and
(15:11):
they stopped at a Starbucks and while they were there,
they saw a guy breaking into their van and taking
all the band equipment. Yeah, get down, ring, get down, Bring.
Speaker 8 (15:26):
The police, Ring the police.
Speaker 9 (15:27):
Guy, somebody ring the police.
Speaker 1 (15:29):
So they went out and that's what happened. The guy
pulled a gun on them. The guy pulled a gun
on them and told them to back off or he
was going to shoot. And then you heard what was
happening there.
Speaker 9 (15:40):
He pulled out a gun and pointed it at Lauren,
a tool manager, and was sort of like waving it
around us, like to get back. So we then retreated
and like stuck for cover.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
That's a in Greenwood. He is the team's drummer. I
could listen to him talk all day long. I love that.
Speaker 7 (15:59):
I was about to say they are also so polite
instead of saying call the police, Ring the police, Yes,
ring the police.
Speaker 1 (16:07):
Very British of them. But you know, I'm glad you
brought that up because then they said something in the
interview that was really telling, and I guess as a
commentary on America versus other countries, because they said they
had never experienced anything like that before, even come close
(16:28):
to experiencing anything like that before, because they grew up
in London. Now that's a big city. That's a big city,
and I'm sure they have crime there, but they don't
have guns. And so this was really listen to what
he has to say. I thought this was profound and it.
Speaker 9 (16:45):
Just felt like it was really normalized for the whole
community there, the people in star Wars, the police who
we spoke to. I think that's kind of what is
almost more shocking and shaken us more than the incident itself.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
So they were freaked out. They hadn't seen anybody pull
a gun. They never thought that would happen, but they
said that everybody else there, all the Americans, the people
in the Starbucks, even the police when they got there,
thought okay, this happens all the time. Just give us
your name and your number. Thank god you didn't get shot.
(17:17):
And I'm sure they never even went after the guy
because it was no harm, no foul. We got bigger
crimes to go after. And it really is a commentary,
a sad commentary on America. It is got me. Maybe
it got me more than the baby carrots. I'll tell
(17:37):
you that it got me. It really did move me
to think because all I know is what I know.
You know what I mean, All you know is your
own town, and you know to be careful and you
know to watch out, and you're not stunned all the
time by what happens. Which is why, by the way,
we can wrap this whole thing together, which is why
(17:58):
Jordan Neely was so special, because most people would have
looked the other way. Most people just say, oh, that's
what happens on the subway. He took action. He's a hero,
just like our talkback saw him all the time. That's right,
Jordan Neely saw him all the time, and I guess
many many times he was threatening. Well, the book is
(18:18):
called The White House Privilege. We're going to be getting
to that in just about a moment. But first we're
going to get the news with Jacqueline Carl Jacqueline, Good Morning.
Speaker 10 (18:28):
President Elect Trump's embattled pick for Defense Secretary is vowing
to hang in there, meeting with lawmakers on Capitol Hill
once again on Wednesday, this despite reports that Pete Hegseth
could be replaced by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. The former
Fox News personality is embroiled in multiple misconduct allegations, and
the Rockfeller Center Christmas Tree is now shining bright after
(18:49):
last night's tree lighting ceremony. It will be lived daily
from five am to midnight and on Christmas Eve for
twenty four hours.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
It's beginning to look a lot like small.
Speaker 11 (19:02):
This year's tree and Norwegian spruce from Massachusetts weighs eleven tons,
is seventy four feet tall and forty three feet wide.
Speaker 4 (19:10):
It looks faller but smaller.
Speaker 1 (19:11):
We've been taking the kids up here to see Radio
City and to see the tree, and they look forward
to it every year.
Speaker 11 (19:16):
The tree lighting never fails to excite with its fifty
thousand multicolored led lights and dazzling Swarovsky crystal is the crown.
The tree will remain on display through early January. Sarah
Lee Kissler wor News.
Speaker 10 (19:30):
And you know those splash pads that have been everybody
sees around now like to cool off in the summer,
where you just kind of like dive into them.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
They're not like this deep like.
Speaker 10 (19:39):
Pools, you know these, so we're getting some disturbities about them.
Researchers with the CDC have waded through twenty five years
worth of splash pad research and found that they are
wonderlands for bacteria that causes things like gastro intestinal illnesses
between nineteen ninety seven and twenty two twenty two, at
(20:00):
least sixty cases of fecal related illnesses, one of which
caused over two thousand people to get sick, and all
the linked outbreaks were over ten thousand illnesses, one hundred
and fifty two hospitalizations, and ninety nine emergency room visits.
It sounds like I'm talking about the Christmas like I'm
singing that Christmas song three French has you know, I've
(20:23):
never heard that.
Speaker 7 (20:24):
Oh that's surprising, because I could have saved the CDC
a million dollars. Just ask any mother who brings their
kid to a water park and they come up with
some bad illness after.
Speaker 1 (20:39):
And that's so it's not just the splash pads. Yeah,
it's it's it's you know, not enough chlorine. Yep. Well,
thanks for that uplifting story at the end of see.
Speaker 10 (20:50):
I told it in the winter time. Now let's head
over to Wall Street for the opening bell. Dow opened
down eighteen points, but the S and p uh up
and down forty like almost a point, and the Nasdaq
opened up twenty nine points.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
Thank you, Jacqueline. A very funny man coming up next.
His book is called White Privilege Album. It is said
to be a guide to the disaster of the woke culture.
All I know is the book and the author are
very funny. AJ Rice is up next. Welcome back. I'm
Larry Manti. As some of you may know or may
(21:28):
not know, my wife is also a talk show host,
and she's on in Philadelphia, very popular talk show host
a similar show to this, although she's a little bit
better than I am. And I'm driving home because I
have to listen to her driving home. Then I'm listening
to her in the radio because she quizzes me afterwards.
(21:48):
And so I listened to this guy who was on,
and he was great. He was very funny, very knowledgeable.
And as soon as I got home, I said, we
have to get this guy on the air. What's his name?
And she gave me the information. I thought, Natalie Hahn,
And now here he is. Aj Rice is the president
and CEO of Publius p R. Editor in chief of
(22:12):
the publiest National Post, and author of the new number
one political humor bestseller, The White Privilege Album, Bringing racial
harmony to very fine people on both sides. Aj thanks
so much for coming on. I appreciate it. Larry.
Speaker 8 (22:31):
They tricked me. They told me this was another interview
with Dawn, your wife, your better had see.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
No, that happens all the time. I'm really sorry to
disappoint you.
Speaker 8 (22:40):
No, it's you know, it's about It's about time w
O R put the goat of public relations on this show.
I thought the Giants and Jets fans were keeping me
off this show.
Speaker 1 (22:48):
So hey, listen, tell us about the book.
Speaker 8 (22:53):
Well, look, it's a defensive Western civilization with put a
little smile on your face. It's defense of the middle class,
defense of the nuclear family. Because when you hear the
left talking about white privilege, that's really what they're talking about.
They're talking about the vestiges that make us special. They
make us special, and they don't really have a skin color.
So when it's coming from the you know, the Madrasas
(23:15):
of the humanities departments across you know, the liberal arts
degrees Department of America, I mean, that's really what they're after.
So they can they can try to hide behind social science,
they can try to hide behind you know, the guilt
of Western civilization or the original sin of America. But
they want to reset us and lo and behold with
(23:37):
this last election, Larry. It's interesting both wokeism and globalism
got a great reset, but it wasn't the reset they
were looking for. Trump just reset them both.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
Yeah, No, absolutely, And it was I think the surprising
issue in the election. I know Dave McCormick in Pennsylvania,
near the end of his campaign, all he kept running
were ads about stopping biological men from playing women's sports.
(24:08):
Going into the election, people weren't really talking about that,
but seemed like the election was a referendum on wokeness
and people rejected it.
Speaker 3 (24:19):
That's right.
Speaker 8 (24:19):
And look, I was, you know, i was midwife in
the talk radio world. I'm Lauren from former executive producer
Monica Crowley, who just got a big job Yesterday's former
executive producer, and I share a birthday with Rush Limbaugh.
And Rush used to say, look, you know, his job
was to use a reverent humor to illustrate truth. Andrew
Breitbart used to say something similar. So that's what I
(24:42):
try to do with both my books. The Woking Dead
was the first one. The White Privilege Album the new one,
and look, We're gonna have a White Privileged album Christmas
because the subtitle of the book is bringing racial harmony
to very fine people on both sides. And if you
look at what Trump just did making the republic Party
more working class, more multi ethnic. I mean, he's got
(25:04):
the Muslims in Michigan voting the same way as Jewish
voters in Pennsylvania and New York. So if anybody's bringing
racial harmony, it's not the race hustlers that are mostly white,
by the way, with liberal white coastal elites looking down
their nose at working class people. Trump just brought that. Okay,
there was two blue walls that went down, Larry too
(25:26):
on one, yeah, in the russ Belt in the Great
Lake States. But the second blue wall runs from Brownsville
to El Paso, and it's not exactly filled with Scandinavians.
You know what I'm saying, Larry, No, Right, So so
he flipped all of those all all of those counties.
So you know, every six years, Ted Cruz is gonna lose.
Ted Cruz is not gonna lose. It turns out remember
(25:48):
when George W. Bush used to say family values don't
stop at the Rio Grande, Well, it turns out maga
values don't stop at the Rio grand either.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
Yeah, And I think people that were supporting Donald Try
in both all three elections, actually don't want to admit
to posters that they're voting for him. I think that
they've become embarrassed because the media has embarrassed them and
the woke culture has embarrassed them that they're Republican. But
there's a rejection of that. Do you think that they'll
(26:19):
all be more proud now that they can actually come
out and say, I'm a Trump supporter and I rejected.
Speaker 8 (26:25):
Absolutely absolutely man from the NFL to the UFC. You
see it. And you know, most Americans don't wake up
in the morning and order their entire universe by how
much melanin they have in their skin, or you know,
whether their grandparents came from South Korea or the Philippines,
wherever it is. Most of us get up when we
want the same thing, and the Democrats try to divide
(26:48):
us into this Creola sixty four box of collars and
try to be a different America to each of us.
Speaker 1 (26:54):
You know.
Speaker 8 (26:54):
So it wasn't really a red wave. It wasn't really
a red wave or blue wave. This was a red,
white and blue wave that happened here where the American people.
Whether it's on you know, the trans mafia coming after people,
or just the fact that we're sort of exhausted by wokeism,
exhausted by the advertisers, whether it's Jaguar or Budweiser. Just
(27:16):
leave us alone, get out of our way, and make
this easier for us to sort of rise into the
middle class and beyond in this country. And the Democrats
have not made that their focus, and that's why they
lost big time.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
No, they embraced it. They were led by the far
left of their party. And what's amazing is, look, Donald
Trump is a couple of months away from being sworn in,
or a month and a half away from being sworn in,
and there's already changes. Did you see how many companies
have already rejected the DEI policies? Walmart for JP, Morgan Lowe's,
(27:51):
they didn't wait.
Speaker 8 (27:52):
Absolutely No, this was a woke waterloo moment for them.
And there's been others, right Kid Rock with as they
are fifteen, Ricky Gervais at the Golden Glowe and as
long and look, quite frankly, Elon Musk buying Twitter. I
mean that was the greatest digital jail break in history.
Elon Musk just turning content loose, you know, content that
the left was trying to suppress. I mean, there's a
(28:13):
reason Mark Zuckerberg, you know, oh, I guess was the
last person in America to find out the DJ might
be lying to you. Okay, he stood down in this election,
and he just flew to mar A Lago before Thanksgiving
to you know, kiss the ring. So you know, everyone
wants to be a part of the great American renewal.
American's birthdays coming up, we have the Olympics coming to California,
(28:39):
and if you're a woke, wacko corporation, I'm thinking the
Trump administration might not let you advertise.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
Oh wow, that's that'll be interesting. I'll find out. We'll
find out altogether if you were correct about that. But
thank you, aj Rice. It was a pleasure. Thank you
for your time.
Speaker 8 (28:56):
Larry God Bless Merry Christmas after New Year, brother.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
Same to Yourice, President and CEO of Poopliut pr, editor
in chief of the Poopliest National Post, and author of
the number one political humor bestseller, The White Privilege Album,
Bringing racial harmony to very fine people on both sides.
We're going to talk more about those drones over New
(29:19):
Jersey got new information. That's next. There are still reports
about the drones over New Jersey and northern New Jersey
around Morris County. People are calling the police constantly asking
what's going on. They're reporting on social media, they're being
interviewed about them. Now, these drones aren't like the little
(29:41):
hobby drones you see that are flying down the shore.
They say they're as big as cars, and they're flying
all around Morris Kelly's as big as cars. So it's
not as big as some of the regular airplane. But
a car is a good length. But a car somebody
can be inside of it. That's this is it is.
That's what everybody's reporting. I mean, it's being reported by
(30:04):
a lot of different people. I'm just shocked that we
get nothing official about them. And you said people your
neighbors have seen them.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (30:13):
I actually was just on my you know, town Facebook
page last night just looking around and someone's like, oh,
there's a drone over my house. There's a drone over
too eighty seven. This is up in Morris County. And
you know, they had videos. Didn't look like a car,
but you know, it was substantial size.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
It was really dark though, right, Oh.
Speaker 7 (30:31):
It was at night and you could see it had
four lights blinking, and you know, they kind of hover.
It's kind of a weird vibe when you see them. No,
I feel like they're looking at you.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
And the big concern is that they're not only near
where Trump is in Jersey when he comes up his
golf course, but also there's a military installation up there,
so picotin the arsenals and oh, there you go. My
favorite word. I don't know why, I just don't say
it because I love Picatinny, I said when I'm driving home.
(31:02):
But here you go. This is somebody in Morris County County.
This is Julie Chevalier from Morris County.
Speaker 6 (31:09):
We're all completely unnerved. I didn't sleep last night. When
I would get up and look out my window at
two am, four am, they were still hovering. I got
up at five point thirty this morning and they were
still there. As the sun was starting to rise, they
went back in the same direction they came from. And
I but they'll be back as soon as the sun
goes down tonight.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
Yeah, they will be back. And the government must know
about these things. That's the whole reason they they'd be
taking them down. They'd be following them, they'd be have
more information. No, no, no, no, there's something fishy going
on here, and let's keep doing it every day. And
by the way, you know, call in, do our talk
back and let us know what you think. Coming up next,
Mark Simone welcomes economist Steve Moore and journalist John Fund
(31:54):
here's a recap. New York City Ice Director Kenneth Gelano
hits back at false clips made about how his agency operates.
Speaker 2 (32:03):
The notion of us grabbing people and just driving to
Jfkin putting them on a plane is absolutely far from
the truth. The other notion that we do these sweeps
and if we do these raids is another false narrative.
We do targeted enforcement. An officer will investigate a certain individual,
we will get legal sufficiency, a supervisor will sign off
on the case. Then we go out and we seek
(32:25):
to arrest that one individual.
Speaker 1 (32:28):
ABC News Crime and terrorism analyst Brad Garrett told us
what the likely motive was for the killing of the
United Healthcare CEO.
Speaker 4 (32:38):
Well, another point that I think is important is that
NYPD now is saying that on the shellcasings at the
scene where the words denied defend depos now that certainly,
if you just want to look at focused only on
that and nothing else, that would certainly suggest this was
a anger revenge killing.
Speaker 1 (32:58):
WLR and White House correspondent John isn't too sure about Pete.
Hegseatt's chance of passing through the Senate approval process.
Speaker 3 (33:07):
He's clinging. He's clinging onto this nomination. I think that
as things stand right now, he's barely there. And this
is all before Larry. There's an FBI background check that's
provided to senators. That's I think going to be a
real problem for him.
Speaker 1 (33:27):
I'm not a fan of emojis in text messages or
how my wife uses them.
Speaker 10 (33:32):
With all the emails I have, and all all the
phone lines and different things ways people get, I just
want to swat them all away.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
You want to give me a thumbs up, Let me
move on with my life. You do that. What about
like when you send a text to your wife and
say hey, I love you, and then she just sends
back a thumbs up.
Speaker 2 (33:52):
It's still.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
Worse. That's upsetting. There is one classic Christmas toy that
has always stuck out to me.
Speaker 10 (34:02):
The other toys with high collectibility are My Little Pony,
and of course Barbie.
Speaker 1 (34:08):
Yeah, my little pony. I went through my little pony stages.
You did, which what was your favorite?
Speaker 3 (34:13):
Not me?
Speaker 1 (34:13):
Myself. I had so many Barbies my daughter, although you
know I was partial. In the Coming up tomorrow in
the WR Morning Show special, guest co host Laura Currn
and we'll be talking to newsmac's political commentator Rob Astarino
at seven oh five. Comedian and Fox host Jimmy Falo
(34:35):
will be with us at seven thirty five. Gonna be
a great show. Thanks for listening today, Talk to you tomorrow.