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November 21, 2024 33 mins

Sounds of the day

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard on
great radio stations across the country like News Talk ninety
two point one and six hundred WREC in Memphis, Tennessee,
or thirteen hundred The Patriot in Tulsa, our Talk six
fifty KSTE in Sacramento, California. We invite you to listen
live while you're getting ready in the morning, and to
take us along for the drive to work. But as
we always say, better late than never. Thanks for joining

(00:21):
us for the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Two three, starting your morning off right.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together. This is your morning Show
with Michael gel Charn. Thank you, Mike mccannon. Seven minutes
after the hour, Oh my gosh, this is our two already. Yeah,
how did we get you?

Speaker 3 (00:44):
See?

Speaker 1 (00:44):
I got an email from somebody that wants to know
what my dream was. It's better than any series on Netflix. Now,
if I do the dream, I can't do Sounds of
the Day. Then if I don't rush into Sounds the Day,
then we got you know, Decker and ud Camp Padonia today.
I mean, the dream was amazing, so basically in the dream,
my entire life never really happened. It was an illusion.

(01:09):
So like my dad was never really a radio host,
and even though we were moving town to town, he
had unlimited funds.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
He was like an.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
Operative Okay, But the best part about it was the
way I was discovering it in the place I was at.
So if I wanted to see my dad, or if
I wanted to see somebody that since died, and nobody
was as they appeared. So my dad's best friend Sam
didn't really sell boxes. In fact, we didn't really meet
Sam through Little League. Dad and Sam were all a
part of this all along. I think it's because I

(01:38):
fell asleep watching the Oliver Stone JFK thing. So but
if I wanted to, you know, find them, as I
was getting clues, I would just say their name, kind
of like a little ode to Billy Beetlejuice. I guess,
and I goes Sam, Sam, Sam Boom. Sam would appear
and he'd have to answer me, answer the questions. It

(01:59):
was really fascinating. And then we got trapped in a
home where somebody got killed. Then we had some demons
in there was a little bit of everything.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
Sounds like another episode of Stranger than Stranger Things.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
Listen. I fall asleep watching Netflix and my dreams are better.
So REHDD tried to find him. You know, Red, I
think the bottom line is the the university, Penn State
University Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Sam Richards. It may
be him, I can't tell because of the picture you sent,

(02:30):
or for all I know, he did it in his
auditorium class at Penn State. And then I saw a
different person do it in a viral video and it's
a video that could probably be abused and used for
wokeness and social justice, I'm sure. But he's trying to
teach the class the essence of justice, and so you know,
right before he starts, he just singles out one girl

(02:53):
in the class randomly, you could tell it's randomly, and
he's looking around like, you know, any meenie mineymore, you
right there with the blue sweater, get out of my classroom.
And she's looking at him like, in fact, I don't
want to ever see you in one of my lectures again.
Get out, get your stuff, and get out. It's very awkward.
Nobody says a word. She leaves. Then he starts talking

(03:16):
about what justice is and why justice is important, and
people are giving different answers. He picks one and settles
in on it, and then he reminds him of how
that girl was treated, and he reminds them of how
they were all silent while he was doing it. When
we talk about Lincoln Riley and we talk about a courtroom,
that's justice for Lankln Riley the victim, It's justice for

(03:39):
her family that must live without her, But there's a
societal justice mixed into that. So I woke up this
morning still torn. Apart from watching all the friends and
family members give their testimony before the sentencing. It was
one of the most heart wrenching things I ever put

(03:59):
myself through. It completely ruined my day. And so here
I am this morning, and I'm like, do I play
this for you and ruin your day? And then I'm
thinking of that viral video of a classroom discussing justice,
and I'm saying, you know what, you almost must why
because it was her? Why do we say those things?

(04:23):
Because it could be your daughter next and you should
view it the same, but never more than in this
particular case. So I was bragging on the daily signal,
You're not gonna get a lot of stories every day.
But when you do, you're gonna get a real education.

(04:44):
They're not there to frighten antitilate you. That I'd educate you.
If you want to go beyond information to understanding, you're
gonna love this site. So the headline is linkoln riley
murder case highlights systemic failures in the justice system. It's
part of the pain that you were hearing yesterday. It
shouldn't have happened. He shouldn't have been in this country.

(05:08):
He shouldn't have been in Atlanta. He was allowed into
this country. He was released after committing crimes. He was
put up in a nice hotel in Manhattan. Unlike you,
he didn't have to pay for it. You were paying
for it. And then when he wanted to go to Georgia,
he went and got an airline ticket. He didn't pay
for it. Your tax dollars paid for it. They start

(05:36):
the peace with and they walk among us to put
a chill down my spine. I have two daughters, roughly
Lincoln Riley's age on a college campus. Right now, I'm
not even gonna I'm gonna try not to play that
portion of the clip. I'm doing as good as red today.

(06:08):
The rawness of the father, because I can feel it,
knowing what his daughter went through, how frightened she was
when it was happening, when she was dying, and when
he gets to the point of it and I wasn't
there to protect you, I about came out of my skin.

(06:34):
I go back to the daily signal, and they walk
among us? Why because he's a member of a gang,
A gang Trump talked about throughout the campaign, formed in prisons,
emptied through our poorest border, and now at large in
sixteen of our states. You better learn their name. They

(07:00):
walked among Lincoln Riley and killed her. They walk among
our daughters even today. Listen.

Speaker 4 (07:08):
The Venezuelan gang trend de Aragua, notorious for beheading or burying
its enemies alive, has established a footprint in sixteen US states,
according to a Homeland Security memo cited by The New
York Post. The Tennessee Bureau Investigation is warning that the
gang is active in all of the state's major cities.

Speaker 1 (07:29):
They shot an individual, a cartel member, thirty one times
broad daylight on video and posted it to social media.

Speaker 4 (07:36):
Texas Governor Greg Abbott says they've arrested hundreds of members
of trend A Aragua.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
I declared trend de Arragua as a foreign terrorist organization
so that we would be able to muster every single
law enforcement tool in the state of.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
Texas to go after them and arrest them.

Speaker 4 (07:52):
The gang formed a decade ago in a lawless prison
in the Venezuelan state of Arragua. They began by extorting
money from businesses and trafficking women and children. As thousands
of Venezuelan migrants have flooded into Columbia, Peru, and Chile,
gang members embedded with them, expanding operations from retail theft

(08:14):
into the violent drug trade. After a security video showed
heavily armed suspected gang members enter an apartment complex in Aurora, Colorado,
this summer, concerns grew. It's similar violence in the US
would happen in a matter of time. The new administration
is vowing President elect Trump will take a quick action.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
Finding the criminal gang's rapist, drug dealers and monsters that
have murdered our citizens and sending them home. I mean,
this shouldn't be the kind of thing that Fox will cover,
CNN will bury, or defend or attack. This should be

(08:56):
something that everybody in America is aware of and on
the same side of the Biden administration allowed so many
unvetted illegals into this country, flooding by the millions, and
they've made America less safe. Now Red made a joke
off the air, I actually almost have to rebuke it.

(09:17):
He brought up a John F. Kennedy quote and he said,
my gosh, the Biden administration even managed to make a
domestic mistake that killed people. John F. Kennedy's famous quote was,
you get domestic policy wrong, it costs you a lot
of money. You get foreign policy wrong, it costs you
a lot of lives. But I've always viewed the border
as foreign policy. It's an issue of national financial security,

(09:41):
but it's also an issue of national security. Was for
lancln Riley, just how many illegal immigrants like Antonio Obara
are in this country right now, staying in hotels paid
for by you, being flown around the country paid for
by you. How many of these monsters are being pushed

(10:03):
through the system. They go in the front door committing
a felony, and they're right out the back door to
commit more heinous crimes. So all the things that we
talk about every day in talk radio come tragically to

(10:25):
life in this story, and who knows how many others
coming first and foremost the open borders they flood in
lancln Riley's murderer never should have been allowed in this country.
Borders need to be secured, those who enter have to
be vetted. Shouldn't have been released by authorities after he

(10:48):
committed crimes before lancl murders A how would you to
be this father? This guy shouldn't even be in the
country if the president did his job. Shouldn't even have
been out of jail even after the President did his job,
didn't do his job. If the das would have done
their job, that's bail reform for who the Queen's DA

(11:15):
who did nothing and made sure it wouldn't be the
death sentence. She's since gone Bye bye. The George Sorows
finance progressive prosecutor voted out of officing and independent won that election.

(11:37):
These are issues and debates we're not even fighting about anymore,
and the election results are in. But for lankln Riley
or a twelve year old girl in Massachusetts or in Texas,
come on too late. These have to go beyond being

(12:00):
news stories or petty partisan arguments to the life and
death they were to the Riley family, or there is
no justice.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
I can.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
Riley's stepfather chose to read her last journal entry in court.

Speaker 5 (12:20):
Listen to my future husband. I want you to know
that I'm thinking about you. I'm working every day to
become the best wife I can be. I've been working
through my current relationships, so thats prepare me for hours
and our kids. One day, I'm focusing on God and

(12:44):
what he defines. They're faithful Christian life and so that
I can best embody those characteristics. I pray that you
know that is with my full faith and trust in God,
that I know this relationship has been hand crafted by Him.
I pray that we continue to glorify the Lord, prioritize
Him in every aspect of our lives, and raise our family,

(13:08):
our future family to be God fearing Christians as well.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
And sounds the day You're going to hear a lot
of very emotional testimony. Why do I love that one?
When I was a big fan of the Wayne Watson
song Somewhere in the World Today, and it's about a
father praying for whoever his son's wife is going to
be while his son's still an infant, and his future wife,

(13:32):
most likely as an infant or not born, already praying
for his son's wife. But the main reason I want
you to hear that quote is for all the people
that spoke. Her roommate who couldn't even someone else had
to read it, to her mother, to her father, to

(13:54):
her stepfather, to her friends, the other victim, the husband
who never gets to find that wife who wrote that
journal entry for a woke policy. I don't think it

(14:17):
ever came up in the trial, but I hope it
comes up in the courtroom of public opinion today. Lincoln Riley,
her father, her stepfather, her mother, her roommate, her friends.
They were failed by their president, They were failed by
their das, they were failed by their prosecutors. They were
failed by wokeness. And it is heart wrenching because it

(14:46):
was her and it was them, and because it might
be our daughter's next be haunted throughout the day by
the first line of that daily Signal story, and they
still walk among us Inauguration Dayan justice can't get here

(15:09):
soon enough. This is your Morning Show with Michael del Trono. Red.

Speaker 6 (15:15):
Do you want to turn your microphone on to handle
this one um. Josh writes Michael, why was the death
penalty off the table? This guy absolutely won by going
to jail for life.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
Well, we can thank a George Sorows financed progressive prosecutor
Democrat placed and she was more concerned about how future
illegal immigrant felons might be treated if she gave a
death sentence to this piece of scum. There. I couldn't help,
but I handled it myself. Michael, Please try to pronounce
the name Lincoln Riley. Lincoln Riley was a football. Did

(15:52):
I slip say Lincoln? I don't know that I did. Hey, look,
I was watching. I was making sure no f's came
out of my mouth. That's how angry im right now.
But we'll have more on that and our sounds of
the day. I want you to hear some of I'm
not here from her father and her roommate and some
of her friends.

Speaker 7 (16:12):
Hey, I'm Olympic gold medalist Scott Hamilton, and my morning
show is your morning show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
Hi, I'm Michael, and your morning show is heard on
great radio stations across the country like one oh five,
nine twelve, fifty, w HNZ and Tampa Florida, News Radio
five seventy WKBN and Youngstown, Ohio and News Radio one
thousand KTOK in Oklahoma City, love to have you listen
to us live in the morning, and of course we're
so grateful you came for the podcast. Enjoy in California,

(16:46):
Los Angeles. To be exact, they're making plans to thwart
Donald Trump's plans to deport undocumented immigrants. You know, maybe
we ought to do like the governor Abbot in Texas
and just start rounding up all of these gang members,
just send them to Cali National correspond to Jason Campadonia
is in Los Angeles and he's here to explain what
the city is doing to prepare for the Trump administration's

(17:08):
deportation plans. Good morning, Jason, Good morning.

Speaker 2 (17:12):
That is correct. Los Angeles City has voted to become
a sanctuary city, meaning that they will not use any
city services or city funds to help federal authorities with
any deportations of any kind. That means LAPD cannot be involved,
jails cannot house anything like that. If federal authorities come

(17:34):
in and there there is some sort of massive deportation effort,
the Los Angeles City Council has instructed everybody who works
under Los Angeles City to not help. One of our
local Assembly members State Assembly members took to x and said,
everybody who is for sanctuary cities and states needs to

(17:57):
watch this video. And it's the video that the of
the parents of Lincoln Riley showing up to identify her body.
And it is brutal to watch the pain and suffering
from these people. So there's there is a fight against it.
But the Los Angeles City Council continues to move forward

(18:19):
with the vote on the sanctuary city, even though the
voters in Los Angeles voted out their district attorney who
was soft on crime and voted in a new district
attorney who's tough on crime. The angel I can.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
Push out by the way, I can take you to
this particular case with Lincoln Riley, and the very George
Sorows funded leftist prosecutor who chose not to go for
the death penalty for woke reasons, also got voted out
in the most recent election and removed from the case.
So there's a scene in Red Dawn where they're listening

(18:56):
to the little radio and you know they're behind enemy lines.
Noybody's talking about the chairs against the wall. The chairs
against the wall. That's how I feel like what I'm
talking to you, Jason. So I can't relate to California.
I don't live there. I don't know. I guess that's
why a lot of people are bearing this trial and
not wanting people to see it, or especially the family
testimony that I'm going to play during sounds of the day.

(19:19):
But yeah, there's got to be more than just this
counselor that's concerned. A lot of these illegal immigrants have
been committing burglary crimes in very high end neighborhoods in California.
I mean, there's got to be a good portion of
California that's concerned about law and order.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
Right, that's absolutely correct, and we've seen that. We actually
voted a new state proposition that is tougher on retail
threat theft after seeing tons of viral videos of mobs
of you know, teenagers basically going into department stores or
big box stores and just ripping off, you know, hundreds

(19:55):
of dollars worth of stuff as much as they can carry.
And in California, if you if you see items that
are less than nine hundred and fifty dollars. You're not prosecuted.
They just say, hey, don't do it again, and then
ye're off. But the new proposition, if you're caught doing that,
you will be prosecuted. So the voters here in California

(20:17):
may not be as blue as politicians thought, but they
continued to govern on ideology, not what the constituents want.

Speaker 1 (20:24):
Well, the American people spoke in this election, and I
think if you know, certain states want to play the
sanctuary city card, they can play it, but they might
be playing it at their peril because this is a
clear and present danger. You know, we used the JFK
quote earlier. You get domestic policy wrong, usually it costs
you a lot of money. This kind of blatant malpractice

(20:47):
of our leadership has actually found a way to create death,
even in domestic policy. But then again, I always thought
the border was an issue of national security. So we
have this particular gang alone in sixteen states. We don't
know how many other criminals are among us, and here
comes Donald Trump into office. I suspect he's going to
make priority number one this gang because he talks so

(21:10):
much about them emptying their prisons. So we suspect that
the deportation is going to start with criminals. I guess
they're prepared to stand against even that, right, It just.

Speaker 2 (21:20):
Means that they're not willing to cooperate with any mass
deportation effort. So if somebody is caught and they find
out and the officers find out or detectives find out
that they are in the country illegally, they will have
to eventually hand them over to a federal authority of
some kind. But you know, it's going to be interesting

(21:41):
to see how that happens. We do have what's called
crime tourism here in southern California, where members of games
from other countries across the border illegally and then go
rob some celebrities house. We've had sports stars homes broken into,
actors actresses homes been broken into by mainly people from Venezuela.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Well, no wonder, my home value is tripled, and no
wonder so many people from California are moving to Tennessee.
Jason Cappadoni, he's gonna be back in the third hour,
good reporting talking about the testimony yesterday, and I'm gonna
spare us all these sounds of the day. Sounder, This
is too heart wrenching to do that. I played earlier

(22:28):
Lincoln Riley's stepfather reading her last journal entry, which was
really beautiful. It's her writing to her future husband, who
she's never met, about what she's doing. These are things
I tell my kids all the time, and so to
hear that journal entry tells me a lot about the
character of the life that was taken. You can't control

(22:53):
where your husband or your wife is. You can control
what you're doing right now and how you're living and
what you're learning to be the person you need to
be when you meet them. That's exactly what she wrote
in this journal. It's absolutely beautiful. Here's a friend of

(23:14):
Lincoln Riley making her statement before sentencing.

Speaker 3 (23:18):
Family get togethers, fun events, and the absence of her
presence is so Deafenie.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
I mean, sure, we still laugh and we're still living.

Speaker 3 (23:30):
We're still here, so we have to keep living, and
we're going to honor her with everything that we have,
and we're just going to keep trusting in the Lord
to help our dear friends and.

Speaker 4 (23:46):
Sweet Lauren.

Speaker 3 (23:50):
With all of the things that they're now not going
to experience with their daughter. No parent should have to
say goodbye to their daughter.

Speaker 1 (24:00):
In this manner.

Speaker 3 (24:02):
The loss of a child is devastating, no matter what
the circumstances are. But it's something like this, where evil
intentionally goes out to harm somebody.

Speaker 1 (24:13):
There's no words for it.

Speaker 3 (24:16):
And so today I stand before you with her friends
and family, and we ask you your honor, to bring
earthly justice for our precious Lacoln and for all of
us who love her so very much.

Speaker 1 (24:33):
This next one would have been her roommate and best friend.
I'm sparing about sixty seconds of weeping, and finally somebody
else grabs a statement and reads it for her.

Speaker 3 (24:48):
Lacoln was intelligent, patient, loyal, driven and kind. Her pureeness
and love for the Lord were evident and shined through
her in a way unlike anyone I have ever met before.
She is in a better place. But it is not
fair that the rest of us still here on earth
have to suffer because of this individual's actions. Because of

(25:11):
this individual, some of my happiest days, such as the
day I get married and have kids, will be forever
accompanied by a feeling of grief, a sadness that Lacoan
will not be there with me to experience them.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
Because of this individual.

Speaker 3 (25:25):
I have so many fun memories, but no one here
to share them with because of this individual. I will
be searching for the rest of my life for a
friendship like the one I shared with Lincoln, but I
know I will never find one because ours was simply unreplicable.

Speaker 1 (25:41):
You know, the scripture says we mourn, but not like
those without hope. Through all the different testimonies, you could
sense her faith and where her family shares that faith.
But they still miss, and they still hurt, and they
still mourn, and they still live on with absence. By
the way the social paths come back, it's just sitting

(26:02):
over there smirking. When the father was speaking, all I
can think of is more, You're a better You're a
more godly man than me. I'd have brought in a
fountain pen something, and I'd have been all over him.

Speaker 8 (26:20):
I think about how my sister saw exactly what was
coming and had.

Speaker 1 (26:23):
No way of preventing it.

Speaker 8 (26:26):
I think about how scared she must have been, and
how that man is the only one to truly witness
that scene. I'm not sure why he did this to
my Lincoln, and I know I will never understand. I've
waited for him to have a reason, But as the
details of this case have unfolded, I realize I'll never
get any piece or closure. What Josea Bara did to

(26:47):
my sister is almost unbearable to listen to. I am
completely disgusted having to even look and be in the
same room as him. Inhumane and is the epitome of evil.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
When this evil is in sixteen states. It was some
of the most emotional sentencing impact statements I have ever
heard in my life. And the judge granted the ultimate
penalty of life in prison, couldn't do the death sentence
because of a George Sorrow's placed woke prosecutor who is

(27:27):
no longer in office. But the lesson of the day is,
and we still have a trial of a twelve year
old in Massachusetts child in Texas. We have sixteen states
where they're still among us. The true essence of justice

(27:48):
is not just for Lincoln Riley, It's for all of us.
Because you're not hurting like them, is irrelevant. It could
be you next. It might be you next. They were
failed by their president, they were failed by their vice president,

(28:11):
they were failed by their Homeland Security director, they were
failed by district attorneys and prosecutors. I mean, that's the
pain of it. Yes, evil exists, but this evil shouldn't
have been in this country unvetted. This evil should not
have been released from a jail twice after felonies never
brought up. And they're better than me and bigger than me.

(28:36):
Was not how evil got to their sister and killed
her and destroyed their life, but how their government failed them.
And even though it hasn't happened to you yet, they're
failing you and your daughters even as I speak. And
God protect them, including my own, until the president begins.

(28:56):
And already you have these Blues states still trying to
make politics of this, and make no mistake about it.
It's why they're burying this trial and this testimony from you. See.
And this is exactly where Donald Trump will start.

Speaker 7 (29:11):
It's your Morning show with Michael del Chno, mikeh after
here and that I don't know whether to scream and
angers or crying sadness.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
Man.

Speaker 7 (29:22):
I got tears welling up in my eyes right now.

Speaker 9 (29:24):
From it.

Speaker 7 (29:25):
Mahart goes out their family and friends and frankly to
the American people who have to sit by for this strategy.
And the guy only gets to like say hopefully you know,
and I don't want to. I'm not gonna says out there.

Speaker 1 (29:42):
I know exactly what it was going to say. I've
had all those same emotions. I've struggled with this this
morning because I'm sure there's somebody that's probably turned the radio.
Nobody wants to wake up to a donner like this.
I watched all the family member's statements. It was one
of the more heart wrenching ones I've ever listened to
in my life. She was that special of a person,

(30:03):
and all along knowing that she was failed by her president,
failed by her vice president, failed by her Homeland Security director,
failed by das, failed by prosecutors, failed by media, narrative,
and that's really the lesson. You know, Policies have consequences.
Narratives eventually meet reality. But as uncomfortable as it is

(30:27):
and a downer as it is to do, it must
be done because if we sweep it under the rug
and ignore it, well then we miss justice. The sentence
was justice for Lincoln Riley and her family, but for
true justice, we've all got to be aware. I'm looking
at my your morning show cities, Dallas, Memphis, Nashville, Tampa,

(30:52):
this violent gang that he was a part of. That
our text, pay your dollars, put him up in a hotel,
then paid for his ticket to go there to commit
the crime. Never should have been in this country, should
have been vetted, never should have been released on two
felony charges to commit this murder because it was her
and because it could be our daughters. Next, we have

(31:14):
to allow our eyes to see it and stop it
because the same narrative games and the same petty partisan
fighting that was going on that allowed this to happen
could interrupt preventing it from happening again, because here comes
deportation beginning with this type of criminal element, and here
comes resistance, all in the name of narratives. Now, we

(31:37):
also have the Trump Cabinet, and they met yesterday. The
decision was not to release the Matt Gates files of
the investigation. John Decker's joining US White House correspondent, All right,
where does this leave Matt Gates And what's Matt doing
to try to get himself.

Speaker 9 (31:55):
In Yeah, good luck to Matt Gates. He's insulted members
of the Republican Senate, including John Soon, including Mark Wayne Mullins,
including Lisa Murkowski Stusan Collins, good luck getting their votes.
This is I think the writings on the wall. This
is not going to happen, and the allegations against him

(32:16):
are pretty serious for the person who would like to
be the chief law enforcement officer of the United States,
Sexual misconduct, sexual relations with a minor, using campaign funds
for personal use, illicit drug use, all of that is problematic.
And you know, to me, if there was information contained

(32:36):
in that report that exonerated Matt Gates, they would have
released that report.

Speaker 1 (32:41):
No charges were ever filed. You know, I'm not a
fan of this guy at all. In fact, I've smelled
the rat. We're down to ten seconds. Gosh, I don't
like when our time is short. I've always felt like
this pick was designed to get everybody to focus on
so the others could get through. But since the last
time I talked to you, less odds of this going through, right, Yeah,
I don't see it happening. We're all in this together.

(33:04):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Jorno.
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