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June 30, 2025 30 mins
George Brauchler, 23rd district attorney, joins Ryan after returning from a conference in Florida to announce a 4-year prison sentence for a degenerate man who distributed over 200,000 images of explicit child pornography. 
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
One driver in particular, explain that truth driving to him
is more than just a job, but rather.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
A way of life he's always enjoyed.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
But he now understands the urgent need for him to
learn English if he is to continue in this.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Line of work.

Speaker 3 (00:17):
No, there's a long time, nogos is uh I needed
to speak in English, but all and today is more necessary.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
It is more necessary. And I have deep compassion for
those who come to this country with only a dream,
but they do it the right way, and they want
to become American citizens. And that is such a tremendous journey.
And you hear Arnold Schwarzenegger talk about it with such pride.
If these are some of the most proud Americans you'll

(00:50):
ever meet, especially those that move here from communist dictatorship
hell holes like Zoran Mamdani wants to turn New York
City into but those that from the Eastern Bloc countries.
There's a reason why President Trump and before him, President
Reagan are so popular in places like Poland and Romania.

(01:12):
It's because they know the scourge, the curse of communism,
of leftism, of pure unbridled off to the races, leftism
that punishes wealth and success and rewards laziness and failure.
That's not to say there aren't people out there, heck
myself included. Sometimes you get a raw deal. Again, that's life.

(01:36):
The tough ones pull themselves back up and they find
a way. You in this audience, I bet there's been
a circumstance in your life at some point where you've
really been up against it. You endure a struggle of
some sort in your life, but nobody else could come
to your aid, nor did you expect that from anybody

(01:57):
else but yourself. You had to pull yourself up by
your own bootstraps. And the Democrats mocked that statement. But
look at all the great success stories in American history,
many of them from immigrants, from minorities. Nobody gave them
a damn thing. Listen to Ray Charles saying America the beautiful.

(02:23):
Do you know how Ray Charles was brought up, how
he was raised, where he was born, where he came from.
He came from less than nothing. He had a debilitating
eye disease. His mom was part of a sharecropper venture
down in the South, rags to riches. Why did Ray

(02:46):
Charles succeed? Why did he become an American icon in
music because he had talent and he had drive. He
needed determination, I need opportunity, and he made the most
of the opportunity despite losing his eyesight. Ray Charles is
one of the greatest Americans ever. And you listen to
him sing that song and perhaps Zach can bring us

(03:10):
back from break on the other side of this. And
we talked to George Brockler, and there's so much feeling
in it, so much pride that he has in this country.
He means it when he sings it. And there's no
other version of that song that I would rather hear
than Ray Charles. My point is this, if Ray Charles
can make it, you can. If Ray Charles can make it,

(03:32):
anybody can. Nothing is holding you back other than excuses
and blaming somebody else for your problems and your failures. Yeah, no,
man's keeping me down or I can't get an opportunity,
And that's all bunk. Excuses are for losers. Winners find
a way. Winners are self reliant. That doesn't mean that
they're on an island. You need other people to form relationships. Alliances.

(03:57):
Build a good working rapport with somebody who runs a
business that hires you and you prove yourself to them.
My grandfather, I've talked about many times on this program,
served in the Chetnik Army. That army lost out to
the Communist Partisans in Yugoslavia. He was a wanted man.
He got the hell out of Dodge. He came here

(04:18):
with a dream and about two Nichols rub together and
his brother Albert sponsoring him, and he bought up farmland
in southern Illinois and he built a life for himself
and he was beloved down there. And he wanted to
learn English and become an American and he did that.
And when he didn't know a word, he had a
dictionary with him, English dictionary. He'd get frustrated. He and

(04:41):
I are a lot alike, I've been told. And he
died unfortunately when I was six, so I barely got
to know him. But it bothered him that he wouldn't
know a word. So we'd go back home and he'd
highlighted underline the word and he'd teach himself that word.
That was like every day, every day he encountered an
English word that he didn't know. You know what, I'm
going to learn that, and you know what, I'm not

(05:01):
vonn anymore. I'm John, call me John. I'm gonna be
an American. I'm gonna speak English, I'm gonna work hard.
I'm gonna build life for myself. And he left behind again.
Guy comes here nothing nothing. He left behind enough money
for myself, my brother, and my sister, the three of
us to all go to college. He made that happen.

(05:24):
Nobody else. He made that happen. All this to say,
truck drivers that are here, if you don't speak the
language of the land that you're in, then you best
get to learn that. Michael Savage has talked about this
for decades now, and I used to think he was
kind of fringy far right, you know, extreme, But it

(05:46):
sure makes a whole heck of a lot of sense now. Borders, language, culture,
We need to preserve all three of those things in
this country or in any country, for it to exist,
for it to be a nation, for to have some
kind of foundation and principles. What are American principles? What
is our foundations? We come up on independence stay July fourth.

(06:07):
What does it mean to be an American? How do
you define that? How do you define that? I know
how I define it, and I talk about it a
lot on this show, almost every day, about how much
pride I have. You know, I am lucky. People who
become Americans, who are immigrants, they know they're lucky. My
mom was lucky. She was two when she came here.

(06:28):
She was born in Claudenford, Austria. My grandparents on that
side came to America became Americans. My grandmother worked on
the assembly line at Detroit Diesel General Motors in Michigan.
She's very proud of that, to earn a wage, to
go to work. And I don't recall either one of them.
My grandmother lived till I was well into my thirties.

(06:52):
I don't recall her ever making an excuse for failure
or a reason why she didn't succeed more in the
United States that it was somebody else's fault. Never did
I ever hear that from her. And she's one of
the hardest working women or people I've ever known or met.
For a time there, she was a single mom. My

(07:12):
grandparents they were separated. It's a long story, but it
didn't work out between the two of them coming over here.
So if truck drivers are upset that they now have
to learn English due to Trump's executive order, Well, there's
a new sheriff in town, and we're just not going
to let you slide by if you can't read road
signs that are guess what they're in English. I mean,

(07:34):
you think about the massive tragedy, an avoidable one, I
might add, that happened on I seventy here just a
few years back, with an out of control driver who
was an illegal alien who was hired it seems, under
the table, who did not know the English language well
enough to realize there was an off ramp on these

(07:56):
the highway coming down out of the mountains. There's these
off ramps for when trucks blow up their brakes, burn
out their brakes, because how do they don't have brakes?
How did they slow down? Well, then you go on
this ramp and you correct the error. He either ignored
those signs, could not read those signs, panicked, was not
qualified enough to drive the truck obviously, as he was
riding his brakes in a semi going downhill from the

(08:18):
mountains of Colorado, and then he plows into stopped traffic
on I seventy on the flatlands and kills five people.
And of course Governor Polos reduced his sentence because Kim
Kardashian got a little friendly with the governor and asked
her for a favor, and well he delivered. Let's go
to some more texts. Eric Manning on Eric Adams, my apologies,

(08:42):
my brother, and I was like, no, I you know,
I had to look that up too, Eric, I didn't
believe it when I first I go, wait and wait
a minute, Eric Adams, this is a guy that when
he first took office, there was video of him now
playing the race card and talking to NYPD officers and
it was off putting. And it's again it's like, you know,

(09:03):
just stop with the crap. But yeah, Eric, at one
time he was a Republican and he might be coming home.
They give him a chance. I don't know, maybe not,
I don't know. He's sure again, Zoraan Mundani looks like
the only alternative, and I'll take Eric Adams gladly over that.
Frandy asks, do you think Mundani should have his citizenship revoked?

(09:26):
I really lean against that. What would be the basis
of that if he's an American citizen and he came
here the right way. I know he espouses some pretty
rotten rhetoric that you and I don't agree with. But
I'm real cautious as to revoking the citizenship of any
individual unless he, you know, was like a call to

(09:46):
arms against the United States, inciting a rebellion on behalf
of Hamas, or a pro Palestinian extremist organization. I mean,
based on his past postings, that might not be that
far out of character. But to my knowledge, maybe he
hasn't quite gone that far. Jim says, I guess I
have a missed up perspective. I work for a gentleman

(10:08):
in this town who owns a multi million dollar business,
and guess what, My paychecks never bounce. I have health insurance,
and those same paychecks have paid for my house, car
and put food on my table. Glad he has his money.
See Jim, that's the right way to think. These are
job creators, and you can look up to them and
admire them for the wealth that they've built and accumulated.

(10:31):
But my response is an ah, he ranch I should
get some of that. Why don't I get my money
from him?

Speaker 1 (10:38):
No?

Speaker 2 (10:38):
It's say, okay, wait a minute, what's the roadmap here?
What did this person do or this woman do to
accumulate that wealth and create an enterprise. I think those
stories are fascinating. And if you've got the gumption and
get a little bit of luck, you need luck, get
some investors, you got some people on your side. You
have a creative idea for a company that provides it's

(11:00):
a unque service or product. Well, you're cooking with gas,
and go right ahead and do it. The law to
have have to read English to drive a truck is
actually from nineteen thirty seven. I did not know that, Texter,
but I appreciate you sending it.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
Ryan.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
I hate hearing about the driver losing his breaks. Truckers
aren't supposed to use breaks, use one gear up or down,
no braking. Oh you're right, you're right on that. But
this could have been a very inexperienced driver. And I
think was revealed later that he had no business earn
earning and quotes the certification to be driving a semi
and I believe the company was sued for damages. I

(11:39):
don't know. Did Dan Camplis have that case? Well, I don't,
I don't. My memory fails me on that one. He
takes cases like that one righteous cases on a percentage
fee basis five, seven, seven, three nine. This was fascinating
to me. RFK Junior just sat down for an interview
with Tucker Carlson. You know, Tucker's who lost it a

(12:01):
little bit, but RFK Junior hasn't. And he talks about
his perception of President Trump and how it's changed from
the caricature that we're all sold, you know, on a
daily basis by the mainstream media. But that's all you watch,
you're going to think the guy is an orange tyrant
and a simpleton and a warmonger. He's not. He's a
piece nick for the most part, that this guy is

(12:23):
a complete narcissist, doesn't care about anybody else but himself.
And you know, all the narratives that are out there,
very fine people on both sides, stupid stuff. But RFK Junior, well,
he's gotten to know Donald Trump very well and he
describes the evolution of his thought on the president here
with Tucker Carlson.

Speaker 4 (12:42):
A lot of things have surprised me about the President
because I you know, brought into this fact that he.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Was this.

Speaker 4 (12:49):
One dimensional character, that he was kind of a bombastic
narcissist and all this, and you know, and part of
it is hearing it all the time on TV. But
also you know, with a way that he conducts himself
sometimes validates those If you have that narrative, you can
find things what he does to validate that. But what

(13:11):
I've been surprised in getting to know him is what
a kind of the deep, multi dimensional and thoughtful character
he is.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
I hear this a lot from people that are in
Trump's inner circle, and they all kind of report back
with the same take, and that they they didn't realize
what a deep thinker Donald Trump is. What a deep feeler,
a feeling empathetic person that Donald Trump is if you
watch him. There were some special Olympians in the Oval

(13:40):
office just the other day, and this young woman had
won a gold medal and she was really proud of it,
and she was talking about how her dad had hair
like Donald Trump. Oh he must be a really handsome man,
you know, stuff like this humor. Well, the way that
the down syndrome affected athlete kind of revealed it was awkward,

(14:02):
but you know, consider the circumstances. She revealed that her
parents actually had both died, and without missing a beat,
Donald Trump in that moment, he pivoted and was able
to handle it and said, well, they're looking down on
you right now and they can see that gold all
the way from up there, and I'm sure they're very
proud of you. I mean, this is really sweet stuff.

(14:22):
He's a sweet guy. I know people don't want to
hear that. It doesn't fit with a narrative, but ask
any gold star mother or father out there how he
has treated them with the ultimate respect, unlike his predecessor,
successor whatever. He's both. I guess Joe Biden. They feel loved,
they feel embraced, they feel respected, they feel validated, they

(14:46):
feel heard, and they feel seen by President Trump. That's
not an accident, that's not an act. And then you
listen to this like the nuance of Donald Trump and
his interests. RFK Junior talks about that right here.

Speaker 4 (15:00):
I also thought, Oh, he doesn't read, and you know
he's not interested in anything. He's immensely curious, inquisitive, and
immensely knowledge Boy, he's encyclopedic in certain areas that you
can't expect, like music. And you know he gets very
emotional about music. Yes, and he is, and he knows
the whole story behind every Avaratti and James Brien, Yeah,

(15:23):
he cries when he hears Fonarati. He said to me
one night when we were at Martin Lago with an Amberis.
He said, he's an Emeralis. You understand this because she
loves music too, And he said, but most of the
people I don't understand it. They don't get it.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
You know, I've watched documentaries about Donald Trump, and he
is the He's the same guy we've always known he's been.
This is where I'm different maybe and maybe you are too,
Like I've known who this guy was going back to
the eighties and the nineties, and he's basically the same guy.
He's a swashbuckling, blue collar billionaire. And I say that
because his dad instilled that in him. Fred Trump these

(16:00):
construction sites, he didn't want to meet with and consort
with and have drinks with. Donald Trump doesn't drink, remember,
hasn't drunk it ever in a long time, at least
since his brother died for a junior. But he doesn't
want to associate with these muckety MUCKs and these you know,
titans of industry. They bore him, they don't interest him.
Watch him when he talks to a construction worker or

(16:23):
one of these builders of his buildings, and how much
respect and awe he has for the job that they're doing,
how much support he gives them. And imagine what that
does for morale. You know, group of construction workers building
a Trump tower or a Trump enterprise of some kind
of the big guy comes down, the Orange Man's like,
how you guys doing? Can I buy you lunch? What's
going on? You know, how do you do that? I

(16:44):
don't know how you do that? And he's genuinely curious.
That's exactly what RFK Junior is saying right there.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
Dam In terms of sports, he is he just he's encyclopedia.
He knows everything. And then you know, on Wall Street
he knows how everybody made their money and the stories
and he is, you know, an incredible raconteur about telling
all these stories. And then and then also the most

(17:17):
surprising thing is because I adam begged as a narciss
when narses are incapable of empathy. Again, he's one of
the most empathetic people that I've met. You notice, when ever,
he talks about the Ukraine War, Yes, he always talks
about the casualts on both sides. Every time he talks
about I've noticed that.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
Fact check true. Hark Junior on with Tucker Carlson. When
we come back, George Brockler DA in the twenty third
Big Child Porn Bus. He's going to tell us more
about it when we come back from Douglas County. Here
on Ryan Schuling Live has no equal and he Ray

(17:57):
Charles a great American. So is our next guest here
on Ryan Shuling Live, a colonel in the Colorado National Guard,
the district attorney in the twenty third George Brockler joins us.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
George, welcome back, Hey, thanks for having me with that intro.
By the way, there was a moment where I'm like, oh,
who's going to be on before me? It was like
that was great.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Well, unfortunately Ray Charles no longer with us, but that
song for me, George, you just evokes, oh geez, such
thoughts of pride about the country. And of course this
week with Independence Day and you having served in the
Colorado National Guard as a colonel. Just what it means
to you, George, to be an American?

Speaker 1 (18:38):
You know, I think it's easy to say. Look, I
just feel blessed to be in a place where you
can exercise the freedoms that you can. I think the
part that a lot of us forget about it, and
I'm not preaching here, is just what a debt we owe,
not just for those who came before us, but what
we need to do for those to come after us.

(19:01):
And I got to tell you, Man, for a guy
who's running out a runway right now on his military career,
just by function of years of service, not anything else,
I look back and I think, you know, this country
could have asked so much more of me, and it didn't,
And I feel guilty about that, you know, Like I
fully expected I would go to Iraq and Afghanistan and

(19:21):
I ended up only going to a rack. And when
I say only, I'm not trying to diminish my service,
I just I just thought they would ask more of me, Man.
So I carry around a little bit of guilt about
not having done more, and I'm running out of opportunities
to do it.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
So for me, Man, I just I love the Fourth.

Speaker 1 (19:40):
The Memorial Day of the Fourth in Veteran's Day are
the three big ones for me. They're just so uniquely
American and they speak to our sense of service and independence.
And I don't know, I mean I appreciate you asked
me that. Man, I hadn't really plan on giving an answer,
but ye of guilt.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
Oh, I appreciate that insight, and you know, thank you
for your service. Obviously. I know all of our listeners
and those who you serve in the twenty third field
that way as well, George. But I got to tell
you Florida in June a conference. One who schedules such madness?
And two what kind of guy goes to Florida by
choice in June.

Speaker 1 (20:16):
Yeah, it was a great honor. And it's going to
sound weird because it was a District Attorney's association that
asked me to go be the keynote speaker at their
annual conference. But it one in the Florida one, and
I'd done that one in the past. It was Louisiana.
Every single year, Louisiana has their national conference in destin, Florida.
I'd never been. It's on the Gulf of America side,

(20:37):
which I'd loved, saying, I'm like, oh, it's so nice
to be out here here the Gulf of America. I
mean it was just fun. Yeah, but it was hot,
no doubt about it. But the water's great. The people
were sure nice. It was definitely crowded, but it was
a great event and a great honor to have these
folks ask me to come out. It was nice.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
Well, we talked about service to the country, George, and
I can't think of a a single issue. Maybe also
tied to human trafficking being fentanyl in this state, but
human trafficking in the form of minors being brought across
the border, being trafficked across the country, and the fact
that you are able to deliver this prison sentence for

(21:18):
I hesitate to call him a man, but distributing over
two hundred thousand images of explicit child pornography. Take us
through the details of this case, George and its resolution.

Speaker 1 (21:29):
Yeah, you know, this is one of those ones that
I think people should appreciate as the dark sort of
risks that take place in an open and free society
that we have. Right like everyone's in favor of the
First Amendment, even saying things that just defend others. This
is the criminal extreme end of the kind of freedom

(21:52):
that we tolerate in this country, and we try to
keep from tolerating through criminal laws in this one. But
it has got to be some kind of record for US.
This guy's name is Geryl Joe Henry. This guy had
over two hundred thousand images of child porn. And when
I talk about child porn, some of these images, man,
are infant rape. I mean, so these are not your

(22:16):
typical like, oh, it's a fifteen year old dressed up
to look provocative. Even that would be potentially criminal. This
was much much worse than that. And in talking to
the great prosecutors that handled this case, Abby Haggerty is
one of us, he's a senior deputy DA for US,
and Daniel Harmio, who's our chief deputy. They told me
that the two hundred thousand let me tell you how

(22:38):
limited this is. That's not all he had. That's all
we could get. We reached out to the place where
he stored all of his criminal child rape pictures and
they said, yes, we'll grant you access to download everything,
but we're only going to give you one week's worth
of access. And so the detectives worked around the clock

(22:59):
to download as much as they could, and at the
end of a week they were able to get two
hundred thousand images, but they couldn't get more. I can't
tell you how many more images that this guy had
and was trafficking in, but he had two hundred thousand images.
I sat down and did the math on this, and
I put this in our release. If this guy looked
at each image of child sexual exploitation pictures one second

(23:25):
on each picture, two hundred thousand would take him fifty
five straight hours of looking at nothing but these horrible pictures.

Speaker 2 (23:34):
This is horrible stuff.

Speaker 1 (23:35):
And it's not just you know, it's not to say
he created them, but in trafficking in them, you create
a market that generates this kind of stuff. It's just horrible.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
George Brockler, a guest district attorney. In the twenty third
I recall a scene from a television show from a
while back in which Whatdy Harrelson is playing a detect
and they show him his reaction to watching a child exploitation.

(24:07):
We assume it's a rape, and you see that visceral reaction. True, detective,
And what I was talking about with my fiance Kelsey
over the weekend, George, is your law enforcement and what
you do in the prosecutor's off It's time about downloading
all this, I mean, think about it, and you're having
to sift through this filth this absolute, horrible, evil imagery.

(24:31):
How do you wrap your head around that? Can you
get that out of your mind?

Speaker 1 (24:36):
Well, one though, you can't ever unsee it. It just
gets filed away there somewhere in that gray matter where
you hope to not be revisited by it, involuntarily, maybe
while you're sleeping or something else. But the real people,
I mean, I see a fraction of what these hardcore
prosecutors do in my Special Victims Unit. They're the ones

(24:57):
that consume this by the truckloads and ordered to try
to put together the best case possible to hold these
guys accountable. And here's the crazy thing, man, they are parents.
They're mothers of daughters and sons, who are the ages
of the people that are pearing these pictures. I could
not be a Special Victims Unit prosecutor, and I've done

(25:17):
my share of the child sex assault cases and that
kind of stuff. I couldn't do it as a full
time job because Ryan I would end up finding myself
choking out someone across the room in the courtroom while
the deputies were pulling me off. I couldn't do it.
I would lose my mind. And yet these people find
a way to plow through these horrible things, and it's

(25:38):
not just the pictures but the facts and the videos
and the descriptions from the victims. Somehow they get through
these things every single day and they don't go crazy,
And I don't know how they do it.

Speaker 2 (25:48):
Final question, George, appreciate your time and your efforts and
bringing this individual to justice. But people might see for
your prison sentence for everything you describe and think that's
a little light and more. Can you walk us through that.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
Part of it? Oh, I'm so glad you asked? Once
again in surprise to no one listening to your show, Ryan,
is that Colorado's criminal laws are largely ineffective and incredibly weak.
In Colorado, you could have a jillion images of child
rape and child porn and still be probation eligible, as

(26:22):
this guy was. So even though he faced up to
twenty four years in the Department of Corrections getting prison
at all.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
Like we walked into the courtroom, we aren't sure what.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
The jude's going to do. Didn't know, So the judge
gives four years, but people should know any really four years,
dude's going to do about a third of that before
he gets turned out into community corrections and back into
our community. And that's another broken part of the system.
But it's just weak, ineffective laws by a legislature that
sees prisons and law enforcement. It's the bad.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Guys that is infuriating what you just described there, George.
I know you're fighting an uphill battle, sometimes with one
hand tied behind your back. Lot of these cases, there's
only so much you can do, but you're doing as
much as you can. And we know that for our community,
especially in the twenty third District Douglas County, We're lucky
to have you, George, and I'm lucky to have you
on this program. Thanks for your time.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
Hey, thanks for giving me the time to talk about
I appreciate it. Man.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
I'll be listening always. George Brockler, welcome on the program,
and I know you enjoy his appearances as well. Your
response five seven seven three nine. Kelly Cocherra is walking
into the studio. I think she forgot something. We'll remember
it on the other side of these on Ryan Schuling
Live sing Live. I appreciate you being along for the ride,

(27:38):
piloted by Zach Segers Patty with this tax five seven
seven three nine Trump with Theo Vaughn. Once THEO said
he had struggled with drug addiction, Trump really took time
to understand what that had meant in Theo's life. It
wasn't about the fact Trump was there to close his election.
It was about THEO, well asking you shall receive petty patty,

(27:59):
And here is this is an amazing exchange, the man
who would become the both the forty fifth and the
forty seventh president of the United States asking about cocaine,
tell me more, well.

Speaker 5 (28:09):
How to No, I would just do cocaine. That was
really well yeah, so not just.

Speaker 4 (28:13):
Yeah, and it was that's down and dirty.

Speaker 2 (28:17):
Yeah, And this is yeah, I mean it was yeah,
but you don't anymore.

Speaker 5 (28:20):
Now I'll do it anymore, man, And I'm not doing
it just too much, too much to some of the
stuff started to get a real rattle in it too.
I don't know where we were even getting it from
in this country. By yeah, it started to make me
feel like I was a mechanic or so.

Speaker 2 (28:33):
The thing you go back to then is alcohol for
the most part.

Speaker 5 (28:36):
Right, yeah, but well, what I want probably is cocaine.
But I know that if I have a drink then
it'll give me. It'll like be like, Okay, well I
had a drink, then I can do this.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
Is cocaine as stronger? Oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah cocaine.

Speaker 5 (28:50):
So you're way up with cocaine more than anything else
you can think of. Okay, I'll turn you into a
damn owl, homie. You know what I'm saying. It'll you'll
be we'll be out on your own porch. You know,
you'll you'll be your own street lamp. You're freaking And.

Speaker 2 (29:02):
Is that a good feeling? Well, it's a more miserable feeling, but.

Speaker 5 (29:05):
You do it anyway, just like the guy you're saying
with the Scotch, Like.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
What a classic exchange. Here's President Trump when it comes
to drugs and now call one of the most straight
edged guys you'll ever meet. Doesn't drink, doesn't do drugs,
don't just kiss, don't do drugs, don't drink, you shouldn't
do it, don't smoke, not around me, And he's just asking, oh,
is it a good up? It's really charming in a

(29:31):
way when you think about it. The President Trump would
have no idea what being on cocaine is, Like, what
do you think cal No, not at all.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
And the most precious thing about that whole thing is
I harken back to the eighties when Nancy Reagan was
all about just.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
Saying just say no. Yep, just say no. But Trump
is like, well, how's that like? Cocaine will turn you
into it? Damn ol homies. You be here a street lamp.
I'm still coming down from the contact hide from last night.
Oh Metallica, you were there, Matt. We're running a time here.
You were just strolling in losing stuff. But Sheriff Steve

(30:11):
Reims is coming up next, filling in his guest host.

Speaker 4 (30:13):
For Dan'd be awesome.

Speaker 2 (30:15):
It will be today tomorrow, Wednesday. What a better way
to celebrate Independence Day week than with the good sheriff
of will County. Maybe Kelly you have a chance to
talk to him about Metallica. I don't know. I don't
know what's gonna happen. You'll have to tune in to
find out. Maryan Schooling Live tomorrow sticking state of that
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