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April 28, 2025 • 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Michael, the judge let that criminal sneak out through a
back door, and the court should be put in the
stocks and pelted with rotting fruit and vegetables and kept
in the socks for a good long time.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
And that's just the beginning.

Speaker 3 (00:17):
Why ripe fruit, I thought it was a rotten fruit
was the thing?

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Yeah, yeah, I didn't. I didn't get that ripe fruit.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
I mean, granted, or ripe ripe fruit is probably a
little bit more firm, but get the rotten rotten, so
it smells worse, smells worse, and and you can get
sick from rotten fruit too.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Yeah. Yeah, uh, that's interesting that you do. You know
when that was left?

Speaker 3 (00:44):
I'd have to double check here, but yeah, You've got
a lot of talkbacks from the weekend. What what is
this the weekend with Michael Brown?

Speaker 2 (00:52):
Yeah, I do this stupid little thing on the weekend.
That's I don't know you heard plus stations or whatever,
but this is one time and I don't know what
the o's over is. I have no way of knowing.
I don't think I have any way of knowing how
many people that listen to the Weekend program listen to
this program or Vice versa. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
It's easy to do on the iHeart app, the new
and improved iHeart app.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
Like I said, I have no way of really knowing,
because even if there were some wady to know in
that iHeart app, can you imagine me trying to pull
that technical information out of somebody. Yeah, either off this
floor or from that in the basement.

Speaker 3 (01:33):
Any The only thing that we could really do is
find the podcast numbers, and that that's about it.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
Yeah, I mean, and the podcast numbers are great, but
it doesn't show me.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
It doesn't show you where well, it.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
Does show you geographically like you can you can see,
which is interesting because the podcast numbers, you would think,
and the greatest number is Colorado.

Speaker 3 (01:59):
Right, But the obvious reason, I mean, were in Colorada.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
Right, And we do, you know, for twenty hours a
week here and then three all out there. But it's
talking to Brenda or the Big Boss boss one day
about it because I was I had a gripe about
the podcast, which, by the way, Premiere is thinking about it.

(02:25):
We're working on I should say, is not any already
thought about it. All I'm going to say is Premier
is working on maybe doing something with that podcast. But anyway,
she said, yeah, I assume that probably like ninety seven
ninety eight percent of your podcast downloads are from Colorado,
and I just kind of said, yeah, I think so,

(02:46):
and then I went back one time and I've looked
I've looked at this number now in several months, but
it was not really Yes, it was like in the eighties,
somewhere in the eighties, mid eighties. Because all the other
states that are now pulling in and downloading.

Speaker 3 (03:08):
Him, I just thought, we need my uncle Brown getting
a bigger ego, saying he's got reach from coast to coast.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
Yeay, yay. So I don't do this, In fact, I
don't know that i've I'm sure I've done it before,
but I know I'm doing it very specifically because I'm
using the same notes, I'm using the same articles, I'm
using the same everything, except today I'm adding into it
because since I talked about the judge on Saturday, there's

(03:35):
now been an awful lot of audio come out about
the judge. And it is utterly fascinating to me that
in a nation of certain constitutional principles, that the left,
the Democrats, the Marxists, the socialists, the communists, whatever you

(03:58):
want to call them, have gone so in on this judge. Now,
as I said before I get into the details, having
someone who has practiced law in front of every kind
of judge you can possibly a manage, imagine real.

Speaker 3 (04:18):
Quick, just for clarification, all in on this judge meaning
defending Yeah, actually, okay, just like well with defending interesting.

Speaker 2 (04:28):
Kind of defending the judge, attacking Trump for doing it
and completely ignoring what she did. They're just astounded that
a judge was arrested. Oh, dann, I guess the law.
I was going to say, I've got to see. Oh,

(04:51):
I think I think you probably find on my x timeline,
because some people are claiming this is something that's never
happened before in the entire history of the country.

Speaker 3 (05:01):
A judge breaking the law or.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
A judge being arrested. That's part that's part of the
crap that the left is pushing right now, like this
is unprecedented and so and I'll see if I can
find it on. In fact, while I'm talking, let me
pull up my ex timeline because I'm pretty sure that
I uh reposted this on my timeline. So I've got
to go see if I can find it. Real quickly,

(05:28):
do do do do do do by by the way,
but the thing we're gonna talk about today, have you
heard about the raid in Colorado Springs where nearly a
hundred illegal aliens were taken into custody. Well, we're gonna
talk about that a little bit too, because Jason Crowe
is really saying some stupid things out there.

Speaker 3 (05:48):
Are We also going to get to the deporched deportation
of what was it a four year old? Uh huh?

Speaker 2 (05:55):
Yes? In fact, in fact, I've got that sound bite
for today too.

Speaker 3 (05:59):
That sounds pretty interesting, Yeah, because.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
I can't believe that. It's astonishing to me.

Speaker 3 (06:04):
A four year old citizen was deported deported?

Speaker 2 (06:07):
Right? I think he was?

Speaker 3 (06:08):
For she?

Speaker 2 (06:09):
They them? Well, and and let's be today. We'll have
to be fair as we usually are, fairly particular about
our language, because was the four year old boy or girl?
What I say?

Speaker 3 (06:24):
I don't care, I don't know, I just I just
heard something along that Line's contrast, an American citizen child
was deported, Yes.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
And the the word that we need to focus on
is deported because can you really be I don't want
to get too far into this yet, but can you
really be deported if you just go with your mom
and dad.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
Are you telling me that's not the full story? Is
this kid was just put in handcuffs and then put
on a jet and told to leave.

Speaker 2 (06:54):
That's exactly how the story sounds, doesn't it. I as
four year old kid, and in fact sounds like Donald
try up. He came back from the pope's funeral. He
went somewhere and gave a speech, and then he took
Marine one and hovered over some house, you know, And
and then he repelled out of the out of out
of Marine.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
One, kicking in the door.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
In the door, grabbed the kid trim cuffs and you know,
strapped the kid to himself. They pulled him back up
into in the Marine one, and then they flew off,
and they flew it somewhere into you know, Tijuana somewhere,
and they just dropped the kid off and came back
and Trump, you know, sat back again and smoked a
big cigar and and and thought to himself, you know,
I wish Trump drank because I need I need Trump

(07:35):
to drink, you know, to take a big you know,
slug a tequila, because he took the kid to Mexico.
And and then you know, put his feed up on
the resolute desk and smoke a cigar and say, another day,
another kid deported as accomplix. That's right, mission accomplish that
that bush had no idea. He didn't know what mission
accomplished means. I know exactly what it means. So yeah,

(07:57):
we're gonna talk that. We're gonna talk about all of
that stuff today. So anyway, well, let's let's get started
with the judge because that that that's a good place
to start. But a little background I think is necessary
about about the judicial system, because, as I was saying before,

(08:19):
I was so rudely interrupted by my producer who wanted
to point out what a gigantic ego I have.

Speaker 3 (08:25):
Not sorry at all. That's right, yo, what I'm not
sorry about that at all.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
I know you're not. I know you're not at all.
As I said, I've practiced in front of every you know,
municipal judges. I've never practiced from I've never done immigration law,
so I've never practiced in front of an immigration judge.
I have advised some immigrants on some things, giving them

(08:53):
advice about where to go, but I've never really represented
aliens legal or otherwise administrative of law judge, municipal judges,
district court judges, Supreme Court judges, federal district court judges,
appellate court judges. So I've been in front of all

(09:15):
of them. I've got my ass stewed out a couple
of times. My federal judges. I remember one judge in particular,
I was in had a client in which talk Kansas,
of all places, I don't remember. I think I was
representing a defendant and not in a criminal case, in

(09:36):
the civil case, and there was a misunderstanding between me
and opposing counsel about some agreements on some dates for discovery,
and turns out I was wrong. I was absolutely wrong.
I got that I had taken the notes down wrong

(09:56):
and I fully owned up to it. But the judge
was pissed off off because we weren't. We were behind
schedule and discovery, so he called us. All you know
I had I had to fly over to which it
tall and uh, you know, got there the night before,
spent the night, was there that early that morning to

(10:18):
go upear before the judge and walked in and he
reamed my butt out royally. In fact, I was for
I wasn't really afraid of being held in contempt of court,
but he was just and he was obviously in a
bad mood that morning. Either breakfast wasn't right, he didn't
get any from the wife or the boyfriend or whatever

(10:39):
the night before. I mean, I don't know, but he
was in a really crabby mood and I got my
rear end chewed out, and all I can think of
was simultaneously feeling like, you know how you feel like
you know you're just two inches tall because you're just like,
you know you're totally wrong, and you know it's your fault,
but you know you've been blustering about you know, blah

(10:59):
blah blah. And I felt that way at the same
time that I felt like he has the absolute right
to do this and I was wrong. And you know,
I respect you, Judge, and I know you're you're obviously
mad about this, but you're really mad about something else
that's not has nothing to do with this courtroom right now,
But I still respect you. It is for me, the

(11:20):
courtroom was always a sacred space because it represents something
that's different than anything else in most of the world.
And that is as much as we and this is
now questionable but I used to believe that, and I
don't want to paint a negative picture about the judiciary.

(11:44):
But and it's been a long time since I've practiced law,
so I know things are changing. I've been in a
courtroom in agents, and I don't want to go into
a courtroom because if I go into a courtroom now,
it's probably because either I'm in trouble or I'm going
after somebody for something. But the courtroom all we always
represented to me that place that made us distinctly unique

(12:09):
as Americans, where everyone was treated equally, where you could
go and have a dispute, a legal dispute, whether it
be a you know, a criminal matter or it's a
contractual matter, you can go there and you can believe
that either a jury of your peers or a judge

(12:33):
will look objectively at the evidence presented and they will
make a decision. And even if I disagreed with it,
I would feel like we got our so called you
know trite phrase, we got our day in court. When

(12:53):
a judge, when a lawyer, or anybody for that matter,
ascends the bent, they do so to to arbitrate those disputes.
I'm talking about the government versus the people the United
States of American versus Dragon red Beard because Dragon red
Beard committed a crime of some sort, or Michael Brown

(13:15):
versus Dragon red Beard because Dragon red Beard soiled, you know,
soiled my reputation on air, and so I'm suing him
for bibel and slander. Of course, I don't know. I'm
not gonna get anything. I have to Missus red Beard
because he doesn't have squat, so I'd have to sue
Missus Redbeard.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
True, she is the money bags, She's the money bag.

Speaker 2 (13:33):
So you know, you gotta get you gotta go the
deep pockets. And Dragon wears shorts that have deep pockets,
but they main nothing in it except lint. There's just
a bunch of lint in those pockets. So it it
when the judge takes walks in all rise and then

(13:53):
the judge announces everyone be seated, uh you know, and
the bailiff announces that the court is and such he
or she does as I said, to arbitrate disputes, but
embodies the very principle of the rule of law, not whim,

(14:16):
not personal you know, piccadillios, but of the rule of law,
and in a society of free people, that's come together
with a social compact. That the idea of that judge
is that I'm going to embody the rule of law,

(14:37):
and I'm going to you know, recognize that Congress passed
these laws. I'm going to interpret these laws. I'm going
to apply these to the facts. Blah blah blah blah blah.
But but you know what, you know what our show
rule is about the butt in recent years, particularly in

(14:59):
these matters about immigration enforcement, they're breaking the very bonds
of trust between American citizens and themselves and what they represent.
And that case in Wisconsin, where Judge Hannah Dugan facilitated
the escape of an illegal alien during an active trial,

(15:24):
provides a horribly grim and urgent illustration of how they
are failing us. I know that's a broad generalization. Not
every judge is doing this, but judges, they are humans,
so they are fallible, and judges do make mistakes, and
sometimes judges cross the line. But here's the most fascinating

(15:48):
part of all of this. What are the Democrats doing.
The Democrats are trying to frame these acts, and in
particular Judge Dugan as somehow she was defending due process,
and that she was defending due process against an overreaching

(16:09):
federal authority. Now stop and think about this. First of all,
she had no jurisdiction whatsoever she was. She's a state
court judge. She has nothing to do with federal immigration law.
So for the Democrats to talk about how she is

(16:30):
defending due process, there was no one in her court.
Because think about this, For you to be in the
courtroom means that you are subject to the jurisdiction of
that judge for that particular matter, not for anything else.
You might be involved in four different court rooms. I mean,

(16:54):
when I was the undersecretary being sued in my official
capacity as the Undersecretary of Homeland Security, my name might
be on the pleadings on dozens and dozens of cases
all across the country. Well, so that judge might have
jurisdiction over me in that matter having to do with

(17:17):
FEMA or the Department of Homeland Security. But that judge
would have no jurisdiction over let's say that let's go
back to me and Dragon. Dragon and I have a
contractual dispute. The judge that those judges dealing with some
homeland security issue have no jurisdiction over that contract dispute

(17:38):
or Let's say that I've been charged in a criminal
court with you know, some misdemeanor somewhere. Those judges dealing
with those other issues have no jurisdiction over me regarding
that misdemeanor criminal action that might be occurring back here
in Colorado. Or maybe I'm in a contract dispute with somebody,
you know again, maybe I've got a contract dispute with

(18:01):
a tenant or something. Well, that's between me and the
tenant and the and the judge in Denver or Douglas
County or wherever it might be the tandling that and
not a judge is dealing with some female homeland security
matter down in Florida somewhere. So when the Democrats rush
can try to frame this as she was defending due

(18:22):
process against an overreaching federal authority, the exact opposite is.

Speaker 4 (18:27):
True, Morning, Brownie and Dragon. I wonder how many people
are listening to you who are Colorado expats like myself.
I grew up in Denver but left Denver in nineteen
sixty nine, but Colorado is still my I guess you'd
call it. He's in my heart, regardless of the fact

(18:48):
that it's been comed fied.

Speaker 3 (18:50):
Have a great Mindy, how many times are we going
to talk about getting an actual map so that we
can start placing dots on it to where all the
all our listeners are and actually do it? And we've
talked about it for almost years plural.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
We could have hung the map up where we put
the face up you want. My real reticence about doing
it is that one will have to I don't whether
it for to have any effect. I want to put
it outside the studio.

Speaker 3 (19:23):
Right where everybody can see it. We can see it,
we can show off, so we.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
Can show off exactly because I mean, your egos as
big as you used to be, and we want to
just kind of be in everybody else's faces.

Speaker 3 (19:39):
Yeah, but then.

Speaker 2 (19:44):
Other people will want to use our.

Speaker 3 (19:45):
Map, right, they'll start putting their own dots of their own. No no, no, no, no, no,
it's not yours.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
But I would be okay, like if we used red
pins had a dark gray background. I'm thinking of the
map that I have in my office. Okay, dark bright,
dark gray background, and then we could use red pins
so they stand out the most, or white well red
or white pins, and then everybody else have to use

(20:13):
every time we see a pin go up, it's not ours.
We make sure it was like a.

Speaker 3 (20:18):
We take it down and put up you know, green
or no. Put if it's a black background, put up
a black pin.

Speaker 2 (20:24):
Yeah, a gray black pine. It would be difficult to.

Speaker 3 (20:26):
It's hard to see him.

Speaker 2 (20:30):
That's plus just the idea of hmm, hanging something on
one of these walls, which is hilect. I can't believe
I'm worried about hanging something in one of these walls
when we have like outlets for clocks, for electronics, for
electrical we have ceiling tiles that are just straight up missing,

(20:54):
straight up missing, and we just have Ethernet cords and
other chords just dangling from the wall, like we've got
one in here. There's some cord over here by one
of these Steve monitors that's just hanging out, just dangling there.

Speaker 3 (21:08):
Do we want to start taking bets as to how
long until those new TVs that were hung actually get
turned on. I think you were telling guys who are
not working the plastics still on, so.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
They they they Oh, by the way, so I learned.
I learned over the weekend too that the Premiere Studios
in Sherman Oaks that apparently some big wigs are going
to visit there. So they had a walk through, and
the walkthrough was things that needed to be cleaned up,

(21:38):
straightened out, repaired, or replaced because somebody, I don't know
whether it's Pittman or you know who, somebody's coming in.
And so now Michael was laughing about Michael. My Michael
in La was laughing about we're finally going to get
a few things fixed, and there was even talk about

(21:59):
some air might actually get remodeled.

Speaker 3 (22:01):
How sad is that the big wig CEO needs to
come down and come to town in order for something
to get fit fixed, right, And so.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
My response to him was about the TVs. I said, well,
the news room. Our newsroom has a couple of tiny
like you might the cheapest monitors you could buy at Walmart,
sitting on what looked to be TV trays out here
connected by extension cards going around because the closest place
to put a out go around the corner somewhere, and

(22:33):
people are always fearful about tripping over it or touching
the TVs and them falling over, and they've been like
that for at least a year.

Speaker 3 (22:40):
But don't worry, it's right next to the station of
the ear Award, right.

Speaker 2 (22:43):
Next to the station of the ear Award. And so
then Dragon I last week were laughing because they put
up to television monitors. They put up three, which I
assume is for the three local stations, which could really right.
I know they'll use k ev R will be one, right,
so will the other two be four and seven or

(23:04):
seven and four or seven and nine. I think they'll
put here's my bet, they'll put the Fox affiliate. They'll
put Channel nine because that's the really really liberal station
in Colorado, and then they'll flip between I don't know
whether they'll do seven or CBS.

Speaker 3 (23:20):
I'd have to dig a little bit deeper, but I
would have to bet as to what stations they can use.

Speaker 2 (23:28):
I only say KDVR because they have that one on
on one.

Speaker 3 (23:30):
Of the two that we've always seen that one up
over there.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
Yeah. So anyway, last week Dragon and I noticed that
there were three boxes with three large not large forty
two yeah, forty monitors, and we laughed because there's like,
how long is are it going to take them to
put them up? But it took them a week to
put them up, and now it's been at least a
week since they've been up, and they're I've tried to

(23:53):
turn them on, they won't come on. So they haven't
powered them up yet. And the plastic and all the
you know, the energy saving label, everything's still on it.
There's there's still and so now the bed is how
long will it be before they actually used them?

Speaker 3 (24:08):
Wouldn't it be absolutely fantastic because there were outlets on
the wall. Would it be absolutely fantastic if those outlets
are not powered?

Speaker 2 (24:17):
Oh, that would be great.

Speaker 3 (24:18):
So then they got to take the TVs down, take
the wall down, power the outlets, and then put everything
all back of That would just be that, And that'd
be exactly what happened with the red room, the the
front lobby area. They had to repaint the damn thing
four times.

Speaker 2 (24:33):
I was guessing four times.

Speaker 3 (24:34):
Yeah, so I wouldn't wouldn't that be power for the
course here around at iHeart if they tried to plug
them in and those outlets aren't powered properly?

Speaker 2 (24:46):
But yeah, I didn't. Well, I think I would have
noted if they'd been on, I would have noticed what
I walked by this morning.

Speaker 3 (24:52):
No, they're plastic still on them, They're not they're not on.
And the other thing that bugs I think that both
of us, one of them is a level with the
other two. It's not by much, it's not by much,
but noticeable. Half an inch half an inch, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
Even if it was a quarter inch, it's enough to
be noticeable. And now that we pointed out to a
few people in the newsroom, now it's starting to piss
the newspeople off. It's like, really, you couldn't have. In fact,
Pat Pat explained to us that the people who were
putting them up had a level with them, a level

(25:33):
and a measuring date, yes, and they still couldn't get
it aligned correctly.

Speaker 3 (25:42):
God, I love it well.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
I love about the fact. I just love the fact
that we can bitch about because you know that there's
somebody out there listening right now. This got something in
their office or in their school or wherever they're working
that is not working, and they've been trying to get
maintenance or the building manager or somebody to fix something
for weeks on the end, and all they can do

(26:05):
is just mumble and gripe about it, because if they
say anything about it, they'll get in trouble. Whereas you
and I can just bitch about it, and we just
don't give a red task.

Speaker 3 (26:12):
I mean, it's absolutely hilarious because you've got the two
TVs in your studio and they look fairly level with
each other, but they're also a foot and a half
two feet apart. So if one was a quarter inch
to a half an inch lower or higher than the other,
you might not notice it so much. But those three
TVs that are out there, they're butt up right next

(26:33):
to each other. They're back to back to back as
you would, you know, dual monitor system at your desk
right there.

Speaker 2 (26:40):
Yeah, confession time. Yeah, they are not level and s
bug me forever because what I haven't I haven't gotten
up and measured. But the one to my left is
the CNN is lower and Fox is a little higher,
or or the ceiling is crooked. I don't know. Now

(27:03):
you gotta come in and check. He has to come
in and check. But from my perspective here, uh, the
one to my left is lower than the one on
the right, and the other thing that the other thing dragon,
they're not equally spaced between the clock. Oh yeah, you
see it, see it. So it's they're not they're not
equally spaced they're not square in in the well. They

(27:27):
actually all kind of square in the window, it looks like,
but they're not square around the clock. And they're ye ye,
that's bugged me for it as long as he's been
in here. Plus you see all the cables, and then
and then you see there's the lack of the paint.
You still see the dry wall. There's holes in the drywall.

(27:47):
I mean, it's like we're in the ghetto. It's the
ghetto studio because we're at the ghetto station. You're listening
to the if you want to, you can tune over it.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
You can go listen.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
You can go listen to Kawa because that that's the
legacy blow towards station. That's the station that's got all
of the modern stuff. So you can go listen to
them give their liberal slant on the news if you
want to let it go, do that.

Speaker 3 (28:10):
What are our good friend Leland used to call this
one were the double wide.

Speaker 2 (28:14):
Yeah, we're the I always called this the orphan station.

Speaker 3 (28:17):
Red headed stepchild.

Speaker 2 (28:18):
Yeah we are. We are the orphan but you know what,
we have fun and we don't care. Back to the judge,
So the Democrats are trying to frame the judge taking
or helping this illegal alien abscond as she was defending
due process. Now, when a judge contrives and actively participates

(28:44):
in helping an illegal alien evade a lawful arrest, she
hurts not just the judicial system, but she hurts the
victims that were in that courtroom, and particular in this case,
because the victim that was in the courtroom was a

(29:05):
victim of domestic violence. So the illegal alien, in addition
to being illegal alien, is a dirt bag illegal alien
because he's a abuser. But it hurts everyone because now
the entire country is talking about it. And raise your
hand if this makes you question the objective the fairness

(29:31):
of our judiciary, raise your hand. Now, if you don't
think it does, and you're driving, raise both hands. She's
not guarding justice, she's not ensuring justice. She's taking the
statue of justice and tip the scales. Now. I want

(29:55):
you can think about most people ignore the facts of
this incident in Wisconsin, and I think you need to
understand the facts. So the illegal alien was on trial
for three counts of domestic violence related battery, BAM beating
up somebody. Eduardo Flores Ri is a Mexican national federal

(30:20):
authorities were executing. And here's the other thing that when
we get to the sound bites, you'll hear this in
a second, but the Democrats are claiming that, oh, but
there wasn't a valid warrant. Well, what they don't understand
is the agents that were there to arrest him had
a valid expedited removal order that had been issued more

(30:44):
than a decade prior, and they were after him. They
had an administrative warrant attached to the expedited removal order.
Now why is that important Because in some of the
sounds you'll hear people talking about, oh, but they didn't
have an arrest warrant. They didn't need an arrest warrant.

(31:07):
He had already received his due process. He had been
subject to. Remember when we talked about we went through
the different types of removals he had been subject. He
was subject to an expedited removal. Now why he wasn't
removed on the day that that order was issued, I
don't know, but he should have been. So he should

(31:28):
not have even been in this courtroom. He should never
have had the opportunity to batter this woman. But he did,
and they had the removal order. They had an administrative warrant,
which meant that they could You know, there's a there's
a somewhat fine distinction to make here between arrest warrants.

(31:49):
An administrative warrant basically allows the federal agents in this
case ice to arrest you anywhere they find you in public. Now,
if they know, for example, that you are in and
obviously the court room's a public place, but if they
knew that this illegal alien was in a private home,

(32:09):
then they would need a search warrant and arrest warrant
signed by a judge, by an administrative law judge or
a federal judge. But they didn't need it. They had
the expertite to removal order. They had an administrative warrant,
so any place they found him in public, they could
arrest him. And that's what they were there to do
because they had traced him down to this courtroom.

Speaker 4 (32:33):
That Wisconsin judge, she's so ugly, she ain't gonna get
any dude process in prison.

Speaker 2 (32:41):
Did you see the Have you seen the the booking
photo the huh uh oh where she's crying.

Speaker 3 (32:53):
Oh, I'm sorry you got caught doing something wrong.

Speaker 2 (32:56):
First of all, when you're gonna get your mugshot taken,
don't cry and compare and contrasts that, like to Donald
Trump's mug shot from while what's out in Georgia somewhere,
I mean, good grief. The judge is literally bawling her
eyes out in one of the shots. Now I've seen
two mugshots side by side, So I don't know whether

(33:20):
the jail or because the or the whoever was doing
it in some federal courthouse somewhere, whether they gave her
an opportunity to do another one just out of respect
to the judge. I don't know. But there's one shot
where she's in like you know, the new Orange is black,
and where she's just bawling her eyes out. So when

(33:40):
we get back, I want to walk through the betrayal itself.
How bad this is. It's an example of how this
country is. At the same time that Trump and you
and I and conservatives constitution whilst are trying to save

(34:01):
the republic, there's this degradation of the republic going on simultaneously.
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