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January 22, 2025 5 mins

When do the large-scale deportations begin, and who is first on the list? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL has the story. 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Previously on Your Morning Show with Michael dil Choonha.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Well, if there's one thing's for sure, Donald Trump says
what he means and means what he says. He's following
through on everything he said really in the first day.
So that begs the question, when do the large scale
deportations begin and who will be first on the list?
Your Morning Show national correspondent Roy O'Neil's here with that story.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Good morning, Rory, Good morning. I think we're expecting a
bit more activity yesterday. But the frontman on this immigration
plan that the Trump administration has says that ICE agents
have been working, i'd say, behind the scenes to start
to facilitate a lot of these deportations.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
The symbolism of where to start, how much of that
is attached to states the plan to be defiant or
cities and municipalities the plan to be defiant? And is
that playing into it? Or where do we know how
this list was formed?

Speaker 3 (00:55):
Yeah, Well they're not saying first of all, but they're
suggesting that it's going to be placed his life, Chicago, Denver, Boston,
New York, LA. It's going to be the big cities,
typically with Democrat mayors who might actually secretly like this
because it's expected that because they're really targeting people who
have committed crimes, violent crimes in particular, a lot of

(01:17):
the people being deported are probably already in a jail
or a prison, and they're the ones who might be
going out first. And I'm sure that would be to
the delight of some of these governors and.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Mayors to add their jails emptied out. California probably expect resistance,
but Chicago in New York are very interesting. That's city
number three and New York City number one. The New
York mayor very interested in this, very cooperative in this.
In Chicago, the people want it, and the mayor and
the council have kind of been against it. So they'll

(01:49):
play out differently. But as you mentioned, all indications are
the answer to the question who's first on the list
are going to be those who have committed crimes after
committing the crime of coming into the country legally, right right, right.

Speaker 3 (02:01):
And it's also going to.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
You know, it's going to be nationwide.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
I don't think we're expecting this to be in the South,
the northeast or something like that. So and this really
can't ramp up to a full operation until Congress gets
involved and starts allocating some serious money for this.

Speaker 2 (02:17):
Where he was also covering the weather. We just said,
my brother measured they're at fourteen inches in New Orleans,
so that would be well over the eighteen ninety five record.
But I mean we're talking about cities that don't have
there's no salt trucks, there's no plows, there's no preparation
for this, and then you have loss of power mixed
in with it. Travel was very disrupted. How serious was

(02:42):
this storm? I think nine deaths are going to look
into it. That takes a while to investigate because sometimes
they die during the storm. Sometimes they die of hypothermia
and exposure, and that is storm related. So we don't know,
but it certainly on the ordinary.

Speaker 3 (02:55):
Yeah, then you get the heart attacks from the snow shoveling,
right right, it's also inevitable part of this, and the
traffic crashes. Sadly, Look, there are some very dangerous conditions
on the roads out there, some of these. I think
New Orleans. I looked it up. They're going to have
a high of thirty six today. So if they got
about a foot of snow.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
That's not all going away. Today.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
Some of that snow in Pensacola probably won't be there
by three o'clock this afternoon. But some of these other
places where you were getting that wintry mix of slush
that then freezes on the road, that's the real dangerous stuff,
and that's why they're saying just stay home.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
I saw dusting once when I was a teenager there.
It's very rare. Obviously, the previous record or the most
recent record, I think was nineteen sixty three and it
was like right at four inches. This was a remarkable
amount of snowfall for New Orleans. Really from Houston over
the meme of the day, hands down, was you know
you can see Houston Hobby Airport covered with snow plains
all Park says Houston. We have a problem for much

(03:54):
of this area, though there'll be a lot of melting today.
For others not so much. Maybe more like tomorrow the
day after so remarkable winter weather, that's for sure. Roy
good recording is always January. Well it is Danuary. Yeah,
but you're not used to this in Florida. It would
have been just my my twenty five years ago. I'll
give you a great example. Twenty five years ago, I

(04:15):
got married and we chose and it was a much
different place. Then we chose Disney World for our honeymoon,
mainly because we wanted to go to France, but I
couldn't afford France, so I knew that in Nepcot. France
is cheaper these days. These days, it's cheaper. But we knew,
we knew we could hit at Nepcot Center. But when
we arrived, it was eight degrees and I know, like

(04:38):
New Orleans, you'll explain to them, it's such a humid cold.
It's different. It's if it feels remarkably different. Then I
got real sick, and I had the Mickey Mouse doctor,
literally a doctor with his name, an MD with the
Mickey Mouse ears comes to the door. All right, pal
backed over, cough, but but you know when it's cold,

(04:59):
were you you are? It's really cold, and add a
little start of that.

Speaker 3 (05:02):
True, Yeah, forty five feels like twenty five exactly. Yeah,
it just feels so much different. And by the way,
that was not a doctor, just so you know, Oh great,
that's what's that now? Wonder the hands were so.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
Big, miss a little, miss a lot, miss a lot,
and we'll miss you. It's your morning. Show with Michael
del Churno,
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