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October 10, 2024 • 95 mins
Willie discusses the Kentucky ballot for the 2024 election with Commonwealth attorney Rob Sanders. Jeff Crouere tries to read what the polls are saying about the race for President. Finally Tom Quell and Sheriff Thaddeus Cleveland join Willie to discuss the fentanyl crisis at the southern border.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
In the South have somehow survived.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Water is everywhere, there's all power outages everywhere, but fortunately
at Bears Paul Country Club it'll be car path only
for the next two or three days. So we all
have problems, but nonetheless a lot of pain suffering throughout
Central Florida especially. But until then, joining you and I
now is Rob Sanders, the Kent County Prosecutor. And Rob
welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And first of all,

(00:23):
I see that there's been an arrest Wyatt Testament. This
is an extremely sad story of an eighteen year old boy,
a young man who beat his grandmother to death. Can
you tell the American people and Tony Bender what's going
on with that?

Speaker 3 (00:40):
Willie? Thanks for having me back.

Speaker 4 (00:41):
On Tuesday afternoon, earl Anger police responded with a number
of neighboring agencies to a residence for a reported assault.
When they got there, they found why a testament outside.
They took him into custody quickly while they investigated what
was going on. They found, unfortunately, his grandmother, Sherry olive
her inside the residents bleeding profusely, suffering from wounds all

(01:06):
over her body but especially to her head. She was
seventy four years old. She was taken to University Hospital
where she was treated for her injuries, but unfortunately died
from bluntfort's trauma. Mister Testament was subsequently lodged in Kent
and Keunty Detention Center and charged with murder.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
Do we know anything about Sherry Oliver, the seventy four
year old grandmother killed by her grandson as to what
instigated this event? Normally grandsons have good feelings towards their grandmother.
But I guess he used a mug or something to
beat her to death. What was the cause of the dispute.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
Willie, I'm not sure.

Speaker 4 (01:41):
In fact, from what I understand from reading the arrest citation,
mister Testament was acting irrationally and attacked miss Oliver for
no apparent reason, at least no legitimate reason. My understanding
is she made the mistake of getting up out of
her chair after he told her not to. But again
from the rest citation, that the murder weapon was some

(02:01):
kind of yetti mug.

Speaker 3 (02:03):
And you know, I've handled a lot of murder cases
over the years.

Speaker 4 (02:06):
Really, I've had murder weapons beguns, be knives, be bare hands,
all sorts of different things. But this is the first
Yetti murder weapon I think I've ever dealt with. Hopefully
I never deal with another one. But I suspect that
we are going to find out that mister Testament, and
this is again speculation on my point at this time,
but based upon my experience over the years, really I

(02:28):
suspect that this will be a case where mister Testament
has consumed some sort of mind altering substance, which under
Kentucky law, is.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
Not a defense.

Speaker 4 (02:36):
You know, if you're insane, that's a defense, but if
you're only insane, or if you're only suffering from some
temporary impairment because of your voluntary consumption of narcotics, that
is not a defense under Kentucky law. So again, I
don't know if that's the case with mister Testament. We'll
find out for sure in the coming days, but right now,
just based on what I know, I would suspect that

(02:58):
that is a likely, likely, what we're dealing with, likely
scenario in this case.

Speaker 2 (03:03):
And that standard also applies in Ohio. And in the end,
you can't voluntarily get drunk and then be blameless for
doing something criminal, much less getting taking drugs and then saying, well,
I'm not responsible because I'm high on heroin. It doesn't
work that way. Now I know what a YETI is.
I think is a large ape living in the Himalayans.
But what the hell's a YETI mug?

Speaker 4 (03:24):
Yeah, it's one of those mugs that like, you can
put a drink in it hot or cold, and it'll
keep your drink hotter cold.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
For amazing amounts of time. Will you know?

Speaker 4 (03:33):
If you leave ice in your yetti and set it down,
go to bed, get up in the morning, and come back,
you'll still have ice in your yetti the next day.
They're expensive, but they're really neat contraptions.

Speaker 3 (03:43):
I have several in my house.

Speaker 4 (03:45):
My wife's fond of them, so we have all sorts
of yeties around the house.

Speaker 3 (03:49):
She uses them for coffee.

Speaker 4 (03:50):
I might use them for cocktails from time to time.
With their phenomenal devices when they're being used to drink,
but when they're being used to beat your grandmother, that
makes the such a good thing.

Speaker 1 (04:01):
Wow. All right, we'll see what happens to mister Testament.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
One other issue, we had a guest from the Secretary
of State's office about the status who won the state
of Ohio, which is saying that if you vote yes,
that means you're in favor of gerrymandering. If you vote yes,
that means you want to take away your right to vote. Normally,
Democrats care a bunch about the threats of democracy. But
in the state of Ohio and Status you won, if

(04:24):
you vote yes on Status you one, it means you
take away your right to vote in the future toward
those who draw the lines, which is kind of stupid.
You can't be in favor of a democracy then vote
to take away voters right to vote. I mean, that's
kind of stupid. And a similar, unrelated but similar in
state of Kentucky. There's two incidents up for a vote.
One is the non citizens shouldn't vote. The other one

(04:47):
is is state money being used to go to a
Catholic school for example with a voucher. Explain the first one,
which is I guess it says citizen non citizens shouldn't vote.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
I think that's basic. But is that controversial?

Speaker 3 (05:00):
Well, you wouldn't think so, Willie.

Speaker 4 (05:02):
But I think that this is planning in the future
on the part of conservative Republicans.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
In Frankfurt or state capital.

Speaker 4 (05:09):
They're looking at this issue one would put it in
our state constitution that if you are not a citizen
of the United States, not a citizen of Kentucky, that
you can't vote in Kentucky's election. And while that seems
pretty straightforward, pretty common sense, I think it's planning for
the possibility that the pendulum can always swing back in
the other direction. While Republicans dominate Frankfort right now and

(05:30):
would never let non US residents or non citizens vote
in an election, the folks down there right now are
planning for the future in the coming years if Kentucky
were to politically swing back in the other direction, and
Liberals would be back in control in Frankfort like they
were for decades and generations, that they couldn't change and

(05:53):
start allowing non citizens, illegal immigrants, or anybody else to
vote in our elections. If the pendulum and we're to
swing back in the other direction, who knows what's to
come in the future. That I do know that like
every place else you know, you and I have talked
about Springfield, Ohio, and several other places in Ohio that
are being overrun and inundated by non US residents that

(06:13):
the Biden administration is shipping into the state.

Speaker 3 (06:15):
They're doing the same thing. In Kentucky.

Speaker 4 (06:17):
We're seeing giant rises in non citizen populations, both in
Kenton County, Boone County, and Campbell County, all over the
place in northern Kentucky taking, like they say, in Springfield,
a lot of factory jobs and things like that, that
they are being drawn to this area for one purpose
or another. But nevertheless, we're seeing the influx and it's

(06:38):
putting the same tension on our infrastructure in our community,
our hospitals, our schools, our court system, our law enforcement,
all the same pressures that they're facing in Springfield and
other places. That it has nothing to do with eating
dogs and cats, but it has everything to do with
the resources available, especially when it comes to non English
speaking populations. We're dealing with that. So because we're seeing

(06:59):
that influx, who knows what's coming in the future. And
if the Liberals take back over in Frankford, maybe they're
going to pass the law that says, hey, we're going
to let all these Zilligal immigrants vote because we think
they're going to vote Democrats, So why wouldn't we do that.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
Well, now Mauritania has taken over Lochlan and Wyoming, and
I've gone by it twice. I can't believe Mauritanians. In fact,
I'm not sure where Mauritania.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
Is, much less know where it is. I think I
don't know where it is.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
I don't know where it is. But there's hundreds of Lachland,
Lachlan and Wyoming. Just drive through it and you're thinking,
what in the hell is going on? And one Mourtainia
will give birth to six to seven others. Now there's
hundreds trying to live in Lochland and Wyoming, looking for work,
wandering in the streets. And one incident, some more Tinian

(07:46):
pulled out his private part and maybe it said he
was going to number one, but he seemed to linger
quite a while in front of a girls, in front
of a girl's soccer camp, and the police arrest. There's
no social security number and speak of the English, no
names that are understandable. And may God help you if
you simply criticize that maybe Moretanian should not be running

(08:08):
around Lachland and Wyoming, or maybe Ugandans in Boone County,
maybe that's a problem. If you bring up the idea
and I wait a minute, this isn't right. They're not citizens.
How'd they get here? I dare you to mention that,
Rob Sanders, if you mentioned that you're racist, sexist, homophobe.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
Where in the hell is Mauritania?

Speaker 3 (08:26):
I don't know, Willie.

Speaker 4 (08:26):
Look, I said, I can't find it because I can't
spell it, So I don't even know where to look
on the globe, or probably wouldn't even know if I
was looking at it. But what I do know is
that when you go to the Boone County Courthouse, which
from time to time I am called on to come
out and visit my good friend Lewis Kelly out there.

Speaker 3 (08:39):
In Boone County and handle a conflict prosecution form.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
And when you're out there, you sit through this courtroom
proceeding where it's one interpreter after another after another. And
you know, in Kington County, for the most part, we
have Spanish interpreters come in quite often, but that's usually
about it.

Speaker 3 (08:54):
But in Boone County, because they have the.

Speaker 4 (08:56):
Airport, because they have Amazon, because they have a lot
more industrial employers out there than we do in Kenton County,
they have all sorts of interpreters that they have to
deal with and it's just one after another, and I
don't even recognize half the languages that are being spoken, Willy.
But it's a giant problem for the court system. I
know we did get one in Kenton County. I'm handling
a rape case that was supposed to go to trial
last week. It got continued until February because that's the

(09:19):
earliest we could find these French speaking interpreters to communicate
with the defendant in that rape case. And it's not
just French like they're from Paris, France. It's some sort
of African dialect of French that you have to have
interpreters that speak that African dialect of French so the
defendant can understand them, because if you're just Parley doing

(09:40):
whatever they speak in Paris, he's not going to be
able to understand it. So our court system, like many
other things in government, is just not set up to
handle this influx of a non English speaking, non citizen population.

Speaker 2 (09:51):
I got more Tanny. I just talked to my girlfriend Alexa.
It's a Islamic Republic of Mauritania. It's a sovereign country
north no West Africa, and the language has spoken include
among other languages spoken as Hereton by Dean how Poola Falani,
Mandy and Wolfe So and there's one guy. You know,

(10:13):
numerous crimes are being committed. The Wyoming Lachland police have
no idea what to do. They take him downtown, nobody
speaking the English. They've got a dialect and they're committing
crimes and causing the quality of life in Wyoming and
Lachlan and go right down the tubes. And there's no
interpreters available for these dialects. And then what do you
do as a prosecutor?

Speaker 3 (10:35):
No, Willie.

Speaker 4 (10:35):
And the funny thing is if you look at if
they happen to actually have a passport.

Speaker 3 (10:39):
We've had dealt with this in Kent County before.

Speaker 4 (10:41):
If they actually have a passport, if you open it
up and look at it, and guess what, there's no
stance from the US where they are legally crossing the border.
You'll see stamps where they flew into Mexico and the
Mexican government stamped their passports. But then there's no US stance,
which means they're crossing the border illegally, sneaking into the country.
We have no idea who they are, what their criminal
history is, or whether or not we want them in

(11:02):
this country.

Speaker 2 (11:02):
So when they're arrested, why not deport them immediately probable cause?
You rape the girl, you committed a burglary. Why can't
we say you've committed a crime. You're here illegally, See
you wouldn't want to be send them back to Mauritania.

Speaker 4 (11:17):
Why not, Well, William, Kenton County, You're not gonna come
rape anybody without going to prison. I don't care what
country you're from, what citizenship you have, or whether or
not you're here illegally or not. If you rape somebody
in Kenton County, you're going to prison.

Speaker 3 (11:29):
Now.

Speaker 4 (11:29):
When they get out of prison, we'll be happy to
deport you then, but you're going to spend time in
our lovely Department of Corrections facilities until you've paid your
price to the public. And some of these folks were
going to be paying for their housing and their food
and their medical care.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
For decades on our tax dollars. But that's what happens
when you commit a crime.

Speaker 4 (11:47):
We don't say, oh, you're not a citizen, so we're
just gonna shift it back to wherever you came from
and forget about the crime. We're still putting them in prison,
but then they're not they're going to get deported when
they get out of prison.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
Despite an abundance of natural resources and incluting iron ore
and petroleum, Mauritania remains poor. It's economies based upon livestock
raising and fishing. Generally seen is a poor country for
human rights and girls who treat it like chattel and
sold between plans for sexual purposes. There's at least ninety
thousand sex slaves and Mauritania.

Speaker 4 (12:19):
That's a scary thing, Willy. In a lot of these
countries that these immigrants are coming in from, they treat
women horribly. They treat them like animals. Like to say
they were second class citizens. I'm sure a lot of
them would love to be treated like second class citizens
because they get treated far worse. But then they sneak
into our country and they think that we treat women

(12:39):
the same way here and they can just do whatever
they want and have sex with little girls no matter
how young they are, and it just defends our senses.
But that's common in their countries, and they can't understand
why we're arresting them and putting them in prison because
they just don't get it, because women just don't have
rights in a lot of the Third world countries. These
folks are coming from.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
It's awful and it's not going to change.

Speaker 2 (13:00):
Of course, Kamala Harris promises to continue these policies. We
need more in the country and they're going to be
on steroids because if she's elected, she's going to think,
you know what, American people want this. They want more Atanians,
they want Ugondans, they want Venezuelans all over to Hell's
f Acre. And if she gets elected, it's going to continue. Well,

(13:20):
we got to run Rob Sanders. We haven't talked touched
on the state of Kentucky providing vouchers to go to
We have about a minute remaining. Let's say you're in
some lousy, lousy public school and your kid's not getting
educated for whatever the reason might be, and you want
to take the kid and go to cubcath or go
to Covington Latin.

Speaker 1 (13:39):
Can you do that in state of Kentucky.

Speaker 3 (13:41):
No, you can't.

Speaker 4 (13:42):
You've paid all your tax dollars to the state government
willing to fund your children's schooling. But if you don't
have the money to pay for that public schooling and
pay for private schooling, then you can't send your kids
to private school issue too, would remove what the courts
have interpreted as a prohibition on tax dollars going to
private schooling, so that you could let tax dollars follow

(14:03):
the children to any school that they wanted to go to,
and so poor kids would have the same opportunity to
go to private schools as rich kids do.

Speaker 3 (14:11):
That's that's issue too. You know, I have great affection
for our.

Speaker 4 (14:16):
Public schools and our public school teachers, but you know,
some of the things that we're seeing in our public schools,
it's just not working.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
It's you know, we're.

Speaker 4 (14:22):
Getting failing test scores, kids that can't read, kids that
aren't prepared to go out into the world, much less
go to college or anything like any kind of higher education.
You know, I have great affinity for the public schools,
but part of it is we got to try something new,
something different.

Speaker 3 (14:38):
And maybe this is it, because there's.

Speaker 4 (14:40):
Been way too much of an increase and six figure
salaries to administrators. That money doesn't trickle down to the teachers,
and it certainly doesn't trickle down to the students.

Speaker 3 (14:48):
So in my mind, we got to try.

Speaker 4 (14:50):
Something new to see if we can improve schooling for kids,
and if maybe if we let the tax dollars follow
the students whatever school to choose, maybe that'll work.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Of course, Democrats in Ohio don't want people to vote
anymore on Issue one. You don't vote, you don't get
to vote anymore. And in Kentucky, Democrats want to make
sure that their constituency stay in failing public schools don't
want to educate the product of Democrats, and public schools
keep them dumb down, so they're easily controlled. And so

(15:21):
we Republicans want to have more black babies born. We're
kind of in favor of right to life. We want
to get more black babies born. They don't. We want
better quality education for children, they don't. And we want
to vote in elections. They don't want you to vote.
And so it's all about playing the game. Rob Sanders,
you got me all fired up now about Mauritania, which
I didn't know exist until I looked at Alexa. But

(15:43):
once again, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show,
and Rob, you and your family have a great weekend.

Speaker 4 (15:48):
Thank you, Willie, thank you for having me. It's always
great to be on your show. Look forward to the
next time.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
Take care and God bless Mauritania. Let's continue. Wow, all right,
your comments are next. Dasshear won in Ohio. If you
vote yes, that means no more voting. When it comes
to deciding who draws the lines, the bureaucrats will decide
for you. And that's called democracy. Bill Cunningham News Radio,
seven hundreds WLW, I.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
Love one spent.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
Let's continue, Billy Cunningham, the great American Jonah you and
I now is Mayor Dan Allers, who controls Fort Myers Beach,
one of the areas hit by the hurricane, and dan
Uh Dan Alers, the mayor, thank you again for coming
on the Bill Cunningham Show. We have many residents who
are in the tri State but also have homes and
Fort Myers Beach. Can you tell the American people? First

(16:37):
of all, how did Fort Myers Beach do? Just in
a general sense, definitely.

Speaker 5 (16:43):
Speaking, I think we did.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (16:45):
We had more water than what we had with with
hallen See, not as much as we had with Ian.
The water filled up the stair Boulevard, the main thoroughfare
here if you're familiar with it, with a lot of
with a lot of sand and there, and it wasn't
safe for people to pass. So we've been down here
since about three this morning with our staff and contractors

(17:06):
getting the road as passable as we can to allow
residents on. And we got water restored about an hour ago,
and we just now started letting about fifteen minutes ago,
started letting the residents on the island. Hopefully we'll be
able to get some power here in the next day
or so so that get back to as close.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
To normal as we can and mayor ollers.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
At the height of the storm, how much of the
ocean how many feet was Fort Mars Beach underwater?

Speaker 5 (17:34):
We were The best we can tell so far is
about six to ten feet, depending on where you're at
on the island. Some places got more, someplaces got less. Helene,
it was about five five and a half feet, pretty
universal across the island. So this one had a bigger search,
had a bigger wind. It came at night, which was
a little more difficult. I'm sorry, we got some guys
going by with buggies, but yeah, So this morning we

(17:56):
had we had a lot of things staged and ready
to go to be able to get the road as
clear as we can. We were still I got stuck
three or four times, and in a four wheel drive truck,
so we wanted to make sure people weren't going to
get stuff trying to get their houses cleaned up and
ready to go. But the reason we were able to
do it so fast is is people really heeded the warning.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
We were really quick to get out to evacuate.

Speaker 5 (18:18):
Which sometimes can backfire on you if nothing happens, but
in this case, everybody listened and because of that, the
fire chief had zero calls in the queue for search
and rescue this morning, So because he didn't have to
bring out search and rescue teams or to go look
for bodies or go look for people, because everybody heeded
the warning and left, allowed us to start the clean
up and the recovery almost instantaneously this morning. So it

(18:41):
pays when people listen. Not only were we going to
have everybody coming back, but supposed to be coming back
and living here and enjoying paradise. We didn't lose anybody,
and we're able to get ahead of the game by
cleaning up.

Speaker 2 (18:53):
As we said here about twelve forty two pm on
Thursday afternoon, is the ocean fully receded, and is Fort
Myers Beach currently a beach again.

Speaker 5 (19:04):
Well, it's it has receded.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
It's still the beach.

Speaker 5 (19:07):
It's gonna need some cleaning obviously. We're concentrating on the
main roads in the side streets so people can get
to their homes. And once we finished that, the next
thing is we'll attack the beach to get that cleaned up.
Because after a long, hard day of sweating and trying
to clean out your house for the fourth or fifth
time since two years ago, it's always nice to be
able to walk to the beach and enjoy a sunset.

(19:28):
And if we can get people of their houses and
get them to enjoy the sunset, that's that's a good start.

Speaker 1 (19:33):
To recovery now, mayor all.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
As you said yesterday, that's your own home, which was
somewhat elevated, and you kind of said you might have
said goodbye to it for the last time. That's what
you said yesterday afternoon. Can you say hello to your
house today? Is still there?

Speaker 5 (19:49):
I was able to Yeah, it's still there. You know,
a little bit of clean up like every you know,
a lot of clean up, I guess you say, But
we took everything out of the house and pretty much
left in bearer Bo like many people did, and packed
up as much as we could and took it off island.
So we'll have some work cleaning up and putting things
back together, but it's better than the alternative having houses gone.

(20:10):
From what we can tell so far initial things, there
has been really a lot of major structural damage. We
did have one resident who's home that was about fifty
percent complete since Ian did come off the pilings and collapsed,
But so far that's my major thing we've seen. We
have seen some small, small issues, but nothing catastrophic like

(20:31):
we did with the end.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
Well, when I talked to some of your residents who
live here, like Tim and Jill Dickie, they tell me
that Fort Myers Beach was recovering the last two years,
And you pointed out yesterday. Then in the last two
years since Ian, there's been there's been three other events
of a minor character. This would be the fifth over
a two year period, but the Fort Myers Beach was recovering.

(20:55):
Do you have a sense now you're looking many many
months or years until there's a recovery.

Speaker 5 (21:02):
Well, I think we'll to get back to where we were,
you know, for Ian, we shouldn't take that home. To
get back to where we were on verse twenty seven
two before the day before Ian hit. That's going to
probably take a few years, but I will say in
the last year, to see him on the new homes
that have gone off and people getting back in their
new residences which have survived this storm because they're built

(21:24):
to current building codes, is encouraging. You know, this will
definitely be a little bit of a hiccup, but we
don't expect it to be a major one. As I've
said before with you, I believed many times the as
long as the sunset and a nice beach where people
can go and relax and unwine and forget about their day,
you'll always have a place where people want to come live, visit,

(21:44):
make it their home.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
Do you have a fatigue? As the mayor, you're the
leader of Fort Myers Beach. I guess you can't have fatigue.
You can't say this is beating me down. But many
residents do they have a fatigue after all these storms?

Speaker 1 (22:00):
I think I think they have.

Speaker 5 (22:01):
You know, mental, physical, and financial fatigue. There's no way
anybody could honestly say that they don't have that. After
going through five storms in two years. You know, it
takes its toll on your pocket book, your body, and
your mentality. But you know, as we were just at
that point, I think after end where people were feeling
good again, they could see us coming back. I think

(22:21):
the fact that when they get back, they're going to
be able to see that we were able to get
this cleaned very quickly with the help of them leaving
and allowing us to get to work right away. I
think that'll inspire some hoping people. It'll inspire some energy.
I can tell you I'm watching a steady flow of
traffic as I talk to you come on to the
island that they are all residents when coming back to
open up their homes and get their lives back in order.

(22:42):
So I think it'll it's inspirational. I think if you
see that, you forget about your wounds when you get
home at night and you relax a little bit, maybe
you think about them, but then the next morning, you know,
like all min investerners do, you get up and you
put your boots on, you go to work.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
Yeah, you're from Minnesota. For those who may not know,
you came down from Minnesota to far Mari speech about
twenty years ago, and you decided to accept the mantle
of leadership during a consequential time and I other than
the last two years. For those who say this happens
all the time, isn't it true that in the last
twenty or thirty years you went through about fifteen or
twenty years with no hurricanes at all. Just the last

(23:18):
two years, it's it's been, it's been challenging. Is that
fair to say this is not normal?

Speaker 5 (23:24):
No, it is not normal. I've talked to people that
have been here for forty fifty years, and you know,
they aren't shocked by this. They're shocked at the severity
of two of the five storms, but they're not shocked
in it. They feel it's it's kind of like bell
bottoms and mullets every twenty it seems like things recycle,
disco things like that, and these storms. From what they
tell me, it's back in two thousand and four ish,

(23:46):
two thousand and three, two thousand and four there was
a cycle storms that came through Charlie being one. So
to them, it's not shocking that it happens, and then
it goes twenty years or so without anything happening, and
then it seems like just when you've forgotten on mother Nature,
it could really show you bosses things like this happened.

Speaker 6 (24:02):
But you know, technology comes a long way. You learn
a lot from every storm. You know, when you're walking
away from something that just happened last night and what
happened two weeks ago, and people.

Speaker 5 (24:13):
Are like, oh, we'll gladly take that, that tells you
how severe it was with Ian. And when people have
a mentality like that, well, this wasn't that bad. It's bad,
don't get me wrong, but compared to what we saw
two years ago, it's not bad. That's it's nice to
hear people look at it that way and not think, oh,
poor me. Not again. I mean, you do have some

(24:34):
of that, but for the most part, it's people are Okay,
let's let's get this back going again, and so let's
get it back open to tell me the sun is out.
I mean, there's no clouds in the sky today, the
sun's out. There's a little bit of a breeze that
it has passed by us pretty quickly, so it's helping
us get things dried out. And it's not too hot
to be working. If you open your windows, so you know,
things could be much worse. We know the people did

(24:55):
in the north of us on the Barrier Islands, took it
on the Chimer's time, and certainly understand what they're going true,
and our thoughts and prayers are with them, and anything
we can do once we dig ourselves out, will be
there to help them, and any guidance we can give them,
please reach out. I'll be more happy to help you
any way I can. But just know that you can
get through it. It's it's it's challenging, and it's it's
it's hard, but you keep your mind right, you'll be

(25:17):
able to get through anything.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
Lastly, when will the UH our only residents allowed on
Fort Myers Beach, No dawkers, no other people, just residents.

Speaker 5 (25:27):
Yeah, right now, it's residents only with their hurricane entry
pass and get onto the island. Once we can get
a sterile boulevard safe to pass there, that will come
to contractors back on so they can get back to work.
And so far, you know, we've had some grumblings, but
people understand, you know, the fact that they're getting on
you know, three hours four hours after daylight. Bro I

(25:49):
would say that's a win for the town and it's
residents and are a couple of rumby people at first,
but they're getting back to open up their houses to
air it out, to protect their stuff and the tractors.
I'm hopefully at the end of the day.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
And I would take every facility is effect that they
have six seven eight serge water is in every facility
on Fort Myers Beach.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Is that fair to say?

Speaker 5 (26:14):
It's pretty fair to say. Yeah. I mean, if you
have an elevated home, you still had water down in
your garage and your breakaway walls. Is that but none
We didn't see any breakaway walls come undone, which is good.
It didn't look like any of the water got to
any electrical panels, which is very important. When the water
gets above your electrical panels, that shuts the entire island
down because now everyone has to replace their panel, their

(26:36):
breakers and it creates a big shortage. And if I
could give any recommendation to those to the north of
us that are going through this, if you have access
to electrical panels anywhere in the country, try to get
your hand in one now, because it was a big
setback for us after Ian just trying to find the
product to be able to exult it. Plenty of people
to do the work, you just couldn't find the product.

(26:57):
So that's going to be their initial challenges, the goods
to do the work well.

Speaker 2 (27:02):
I have friends like Johnny Kraft to craft of Electric
and Craftsmen Electric here. So you're saying that you need panels.

Speaker 5 (27:10):
We do not the ones that got hit to the
north of us. When they start building back, it's not
going to be immediate, but when they start building back there,
it's going to be an outcry for electrical panels will
be the first thing you'll start to see. I haven't
see after cleaning rake, shovels, brooms, things like that. You're
going to see an outcry of people needing electrical panels.
After Ian, every single structure on our island needed a

(27:32):
new electrical panel. Commercial, residential condos everyone needed to replace
their electrical panel, and a lot we're trying to do
it at the same time, which created a heck of
a shortage across the country.

Speaker 2 (27:43):
Mayor Allers, I'm glad that people of Fort Mars Beach
has a character like you in charge. I often say
things are interesting at times I wish they weren't so interesting.
At times I wish things were normal. There's no better sunset.
I've been on the island three or four times. Maybe
as things calm down, I'll have a glass of hotty
Toddy with you. But there's no more beautiful place an

(28:05):
American than to be on the be on the beach
of Fort Myers Beach to watch the sunset. There's nothing better,
and uh I know it. Ultimately, Americans and Florida Flertian
so will certainly overcome this and go on with life.
But Dan Alller's, the mayor of Fort Myers Beach, thank
you this afternoon for taking the time to report to
the American people. And may God bless you and God

(28:25):
bless America. Dan, thank you very much.

Speaker 5 (28:28):
Thanks Bill, have a good day.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
God bless you. Let's continue with more there it is.
I had some doubt whether you and I could connect
with him. I tried twice this morning without success, and
he got to in an area where there was better
cell service. So for those who have property down there,
you heard what he had to say. And every structure
when you have six to eight feet of seawater come

(28:50):
over the top of your home, over the top of
your island. For a period of several hours. It's a problem,
but more than any other state, Florida is able to
handle these difficulties because they do it so often, they
get pretty good at it. Governor Bush, Jeff Bush eight years,
is really good at it. Now De Santus has learned

(29:10):
from him, and he's leaving office in about two years.
And I would anticipate the next governor of Florida, without
the involvement of a great vice president, will be able
to do their duty as God gives them the light
to see that duty without too much difficulty. So let's
continue with more after one o'clock today is Jeff Crueir
wrote to call him in town hall. Really good stuff

(29:33):
about lett him eat cake. How the elitist in Washington
and here really want you to know your role and
shut your mouth and actually either don't vote it, don't
get involved. Something in that character which is really unbelievable.
In fact, State Issue won is something we talked about
the last day or two. I voted in and already
I would encourage you to vote early and often on

(29:55):
statusue won and vote no. But those who put this
together are essentially saying they want to eliminate your right
to vote. The language says, briefly, quote a majority yes
vote for this amendment to pass. The proposed amendment would
repeal constitutional protections against gerry mandering approved by nearly three

(30:18):
quarters of Ohio voters and two state wide elections, and
also eliminate the ability of Ohio citizens to hold the
representatives accountable for establishing a fair state legislative and congressional district.
That means, if you pass State Issue one, voting is done.
When it comes to electing the people who draw the lines.

(30:39):
See the Democrats, having lost elections, want to change the rules.
So I thought, the party that cares about democracy wants
to eliminate democratic votes. And if you vote yes on
State Issue one, you will encourage jerry mandering. And secondly,
you would take away your right taing vote. In the

(31:00):
future for the persons who draw the lines, it'll be
done by a panel of experts. Is that what you want?
Are you that stupid they think you are? And if
you believe television ads inform you independently and objectively on
an issue, then you're more stupid than the Democrats think.

(31:21):
Don't be stupid. Vote no insteadus you won. Let's keep
the right to vote. Does that make sense to anyone?

Speaker 7 (31:27):
How about the right to vote for the people who
issue rulings in governance that controls your life.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
Do you want to be able to vote for that.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
Person or you want a bunch of college professors telling
you where the lines are and you can't vote for
You can't vote them out. Once they're in, they're in
and the power to vote is gone. How does the
party that care so much about democracy want to take
away your vote? I call that hypocrisy. Twelve fifty five
Home of your Reds and Bengals. There's Radio seven hundred WLW.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
Bill cunning in the Great American.

Speaker 2 (32:08):
Of course, I continue to follow all the polls, especially
relative to the presidential race.

Speaker 1 (32:13):
What's happening, what is not happening.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
I happen to check in on Tuesday as the hurricanes
are basically striking Florida and elsewhere, and I happen to
watch MSNBC so you don't have to. And I found
out from MSNBC that Kamala Harris is on the rise,
that she's connecting with the American people, that they're going
to use to her personality, and that she's likely to
win the presidency. But then I deal with reality, and

(32:39):
I see crises confusion everywhere. I see Kamala Harris trying
to horn in on the FEMA responses in the Great
State of Florida to Uncle Milty Milton. I see her
conducting press conferences in a blitz involving a sex podcast
in which she's discussing three ways and I'm not talking
about chili. With Howard Stern. She talks about the kind

(33:02):
of breakfast cereals she enjoys. Then she's on Colbert one
night drinking a beer as people are dying in Florida
and North Carolina.

Speaker 1 (33:10):
I'm thinking, you know.

Speaker 2 (33:10):
What, maybe that's not the case. Maybe that is not
the case, and so I want to deal with reality.
Jeff Krueir, who's a radio talk show host and an
author headquartered in New Orleans, has written a column a
few days ago, October the seventh, that deals with America's
last Let Them Eat Cake, Let Them Eat Cake, Jeff
crewe Air, Welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show and

(33:32):
number one. Are you shocked to find out that Kamala
Harris is rising the polls, She's showing great leadership at
these FEMA get togethers, that she's doing the media tour
with all the friendlies and getting great answers to all
those stupid questions. Are you shocked that Kamala Harris has
seized control of this race?

Speaker 8 (33:53):
Bill, It's great to be with you.

Speaker 9 (33:55):
I will say that is an indication that she's doing
all these softball interviews that things.

Speaker 8 (33:59):
Are not going well.

Speaker 9 (34:01):
She had to do all these interviews because her polls
are not looking good. Reports that I'm getting show that
her internal poll numbers are not good, that she is worried,
that they are freaking out. They see things going in
the opposite direction for what MSNBC was saying. So, yeah,
she's in trouble. She's in big trouble.

Speaker 8 (34:20):
She'd love to.

Speaker 9 (34:21):
Have another debate with Donald Trump. I hope he doesn't
do it. He doesn't need it. He's doing well. He
needs to keep doing what he's doing. She's the one
that's having a hard time. You know, when you're drinking
beer on late night TV, when you're having to go
on Howard Stern's show and talk about cereal, you know
things are not good.

Speaker 8 (34:39):
Bill, not good.

Speaker 2 (34:40):
And then you got the view. Of course, the ladies
in the View made news without knowing it. They wanted
her to answer the question better, but I think it
was sunny. Houston said to her, what would you have
done differently in the past four years as the vice president?
Her eyes rolled back on her head like a great
white shark eating a tuna, and she said.

Speaker 1 (34:57):
Well, really nothing.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
Her whole campaign was based upon a new way forward,
a new we're going forward, and according to politico dot Com,
when she came off set, one of her advisors said,
what in the hell are you doing. It's a new
pass forward, We're going a new direction. You can't say
I did nothing different. And then she goes on call
her daddy, call her daddy, a woman named I guess

(35:21):
it's a woman named Alex Cooper, and they're reminiscing about
unprotected sex and threesims in three ways and should you
give your husband a Hall pass?

Speaker 1 (35:31):
And I'm thinking, man, that's what I'm thinking.

Speaker 2 (35:33):
Maybe I'm thinking about that, but nonetheless, the average American
is probably not thinking about a three way.

Speaker 8 (35:41):
Just think about it, Bill. She's going on all.

Speaker 9 (35:44):
These frivolous programs while Americans are getting, you know, impacted
by these hurricanes, while people are suffering, while they're not
getting FEMA assistance, while she's trying to horn in on
Governor DeSantis handling a hurricane there in Florida and insert
herself into the conversation somehow. I mean, she's handled everything

(36:05):
involving these hurricanes in the wrong way. Even Biden looked
good in comparison by saying Desanders is doing a great job.
Biden sabotaging her more than anybody else.

Speaker 8 (36:16):
Bill, He's saying, yeah, there's no difference between me and Kamala.

Speaker 9 (36:20):
Oh and by the way, Ron de Santras is doing
a great job, and I'm in constant contact with him.
But of course he won't take Kamala Harris's call.

Speaker 8 (36:28):
Why should he?

Speaker 10 (36:30):
She doesn't.

Speaker 8 (36:31):
What does she bring to the table. Nothing.

Speaker 1 (36:33):
I'm watching.

Speaker 2 (36:34):
I'm watching on one of the morning talk shows, and
Ron DeSantis is up there. He's up to his waist
and alligators. He's got the army behind him, he's got
thirty thousand trucks running around Florida. He's got eighteen thousand
meals being delivered to Hillsboro County. And then the stupid,
idiotic reporter of female probably from Columbia School of Broadcasting, said,

(36:55):
and mister Deatanna is mister Datanna is the mister, have
you returned the call of Kamala Harris? Have you returned
her call? And he looked at her and said, who No,
I said, I deal with the president.

Speaker 1 (37:07):
I deal with family.

Speaker 7 (37:08):
She's try I don't have time for Kamala. Well, why
didn't you talk to Kamala Harris. I don't want to
talk to Kamala Harris. I'm up to my as an alligators.
I got problems there on the media wants her to
talk to Kamala Harris. You got to talk to her?
Or is it Kamala Kamala? I'm not sure I wanted
to talk to her. I'm losing my mind, Jeff, I'm
losing my mind.

Speaker 9 (37:29):
You know that exposes two things. One the great job
that Rond de Santis is doing and secondly, how biased
this horrible media is.

Speaker 8 (37:39):
That's exactly what she did.

Speaker 9 (37:40):
She was trying to get some kind of a political
point here against Rond de Santras.

Speaker 8 (37:46):
And help out Kamala Harris.

Speaker 9 (37:48):
It did the opposite, made her look ridiculous and bolstered
Rondasantis's image. And she's really flailing around right now. I
think she's having a real hard time. My sense, Bill
is that her numbers are going down. Trump is in
a strong position in all seven of these battleground states.

(38:08):
I think he could theoretically win all seven. So right
now I think the edge goes to Trump.

Speaker 8 (38:13):
He is doing well.

Speaker 9 (38:14):
We don't know what kind of way they're going to
try to steal this thing. But even Carville I saw
the other day.

Speaker 8 (38:19):
Carville's worried. So when he's worried, I'm happy.

Speaker 9 (38:23):
Bill.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
Well, that's one of your guys from Louisiana. That guy
looks like an old cobra snake. I mean, that guy,
James Carvill doesn't look right. Something's wrong with it. Could
be an alien at sometime for nont look.

Speaker 9 (38:34):
At Yeah, I think he is.

Speaker 5 (38:37):
I like his wife.

Speaker 8 (38:38):
She's a friend of mine. She's a nice lady.

Speaker 9 (38:40):
But I don't know what the heck she was thinking
marrying that guy.

Speaker 10 (38:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (38:43):
Well, love will always find a way, especially if you're
watching like like have Pleasure with your Daddy, if you
have that podcast, love will find a way. I'm reading
the story out of townhall dot com or your columns
often appear. Former MSNBC political analyst Mark Alpern dropped a
significant bomb on the Harris campaign indicating that she's likely

(39:06):
lose six of the seven battleground states and maybe get swept.
He says, the latest surveys of Kamal hairs at risk
of losing six swing states. Helper and note it. And
this was trumpeted also by Frank Luntz that underneath the
polling there's significant problems because the American people want change,
and so I would ask you before I get to
your column. I'll get to that at some point. It

(39:27):
appears that seventy percent of us think the country's headed
in the wrong direction, and about eighty five percent of
Republicans and sixty percent of Democrats.

Speaker 1 (39:37):
Say, whether it's the cost of food.

Speaker 7 (39:39):
Housing, mortgages, whatever it might be, illegals entering the country,
wars overseas, we're heading in the wrong direction.

Speaker 2 (39:46):
And so a columnists pointed out that maybe the wrong messages.
Let's keep things going, maybe the wrong messages. I wouldn't
change anything, but the new path forward just crashed and burned.
Now let's talk about your column, because you a great
sentence in here, and it says the following. The open
border also allowed undocumented migrants from around the world to

(40:07):
stream into our country. Among these quote newcomers, as Biden
likes to call the newcomers, were terrorists, drug dealers, murderers,
and rapists. We have a little part of Greater Cincinnati
called Lachlan and Wyoming, little communities about five or eight
thousand people each, and there's hundreds of Mareitanians that have
showed up in Wyoming and Lachlan who wander the streets

(40:29):
not speaking the English and they're looking for work or
waiting for their permit, and they've had a couple of little.

Speaker 1 (40:34):
Town meetings and whatever.

Speaker 2 (40:36):
A town resident in the back of the room raised
their hand and saying, mister mayor, mister mayor, why don't
we have more Tanians whoever that is running around Lochland
And you're you're kind of told you're a rasist, know
your roll and shut your mouth. You're from New Orleans.
How much of a problem is Louisiana? Are the resettlement
of these quote newcomers from the Biden Harris administration.

Speaker 9 (40:57):
Yeah, we have a big problem because in our ran
in Parish Jefferson, we've had a number of folks in
recent weeks murdered by illegal aliens.

Speaker 8 (41:05):
That are here.

Speaker 9 (41:07):
So we're affected. We're right next door to Texas. So
we have an onslaught coming here. You know, Ohio is
a way nowhere near the border, and.

Speaker 8 (41:17):
You've got Haitians.

Speaker 9 (41:18):
You've got people from all over the world being settled there.

Speaker 8 (41:21):
And all over the country.

Speaker 9 (41:22):
So every state bill is a border state now due
to this disaster known as a Biden Harris administration. And
you're right, people want change. They want to secure border,
they want a good economy, they want us out of
these forever wars. They want to put America first. And
there's nothing racist about that bill. That's what Americans want
to want. Our government working for us, not working for

(41:43):
these warmongers, not working to bring people in here from
all over the world. How about helping the tax paying
Americans bill, how about helping us. That's what really Ill
was trying to write about, that we need to put
America first.

Speaker 8 (41:56):
I mean, this is ridiculous.

Speaker 9 (41:57):
We're sending money to Lebanon, Ukraine, everywhere all over the world.

Speaker 8 (42:01):
We got people that are in serious need after these hurricanes.
That's where our focus needs to be built.

Speaker 2 (42:08):
You have a column that says the following. To make
matters Worset, FEMA has been preventing Good Samaritans from helping
Hurricane Heleen victims in North Carolina. Elon Musk, owing to
a SpaceX, revealed that one of his engineers helping on
the ground, reported that FEMA is actively blocking shipments and
seizing goods and services. I had a call the other

(42:29):
day from a North Carolinian who was a restaurant owner
that took grills and personnel to feed hungry people in
the hills of North Carolina. And he was told by
FEMA and the local sheriff to stop. You can't do that.
That's not FEMA approved. And he's saying, you want these
people to go hungry, And he kept doing it and said,
I dare you to arrest me, and the police officer

(42:49):
did not arrest him. Explain why the government does not
like Good Samaritans, They don't like the Graham Foundation, they
don't like Elon Musk, they don't like anyone other than
FEMA assistance.

Speaker 9 (43:02):
Right because I guess they want to take all the
credit for the recovery. But here's the problem. FEMA is
always late. We know it from New Orleans for Katrina.
They were very late to arrive. They always give limited assistance.
Seven hundred and fifty dollars Are you kidding me? People
have lost everything and they're offering what seven hundred and

(43:22):
fifty dollars And I'm talking to people, Bill, who get
denied when they try to apply for the seven hundred
and fifty dollars. So the best way to help people
is to help these good groups. We've got a Louisiana
group that does excellent work. It's called the Cajun Navy.
They go all around to these hurricane ravaged areas and
offer assistance, do a great job rescuing people. Samaritan's Purse.

(43:44):
They're all kind of great groups that are really effective,
unlike FEMA, and they get the job done, and they
rescue people, and they put all the money toward helping victims.
You know, with FEMA, we've got bureaucracy, we've got an action,
we've got waste, We've got a billion plus going to
reset migrants all over the country. I mean, come on, Bill,

(44:04):
that should be disaster relief, not migrant resettlement.

Speaker 2 (44:08):
It's pitiful and also part of your colum to Biden.
Harris Administration's ambassador to the US Agency for Development, Samantha Power,
boasted in a video recently that American aid is allowed
a half a million Ukrainians to have electricity for lighting
and heat. Also, I imagine we're paying the civil service,

(44:29):
the American taxpayers paying Ukrainian civil service, and also their
retirement account. We are refilling the accounts of those who
work in Ukraine and increasing the money we give them
for their four toh one k account in Ukraine and
getting the lights on in Ukraine. Now, one might ask
the question, possibly, maybe you should focus on Americans first.

(44:53):
By by raising the issue, you're not an internationalist anymore.
I dare you, Jeff Carreer, to prioritize over Ukrainians.

Speaker 1 (45:01):
I dare you to do that.

Speaker 9 (45:04):
And by the way, they're three million right now with
that power in Florida. So let's get their lights on
first before worrying about Ukraine.

Speaker 8 (45:10):
You know, Bill, if we put this to a vote to.

Speaker 9 (45:12):
The American people, they would say, end this craziness where
we're dumping two hundred billion dollars into a war halfway
around the world when we've been invaded. We got problems,
We've got homeless vets, we got hurricane victims, we have
all kinds of needs. We wasted six trillion in the
wars in Afghanistan and I rock two hundred billion and

(45:33):
more in Ukraine.

Speaker 8 (45:35):
It's time to put America first.

Speaker 3 (45:36):
Bill.

Speaker 9 (45:36):
That's why Donald Trump is going to win. It's going
to make America great again. This has got to happen.
This nonsense has got to end.

Speaker 3 (45:43):
Bill.

Speaker 2 (45:43):
Can you imagine it's about a month from now, Kamala
Harris win's the presidency with the marshmallow Man. They have
a big rally, and you know what, Basically the American
people want what we're doing right now.

Speaker 1 (45:56):
We need more of this on steroids.

Speaker 2 (45:59):
We need another seventy five thousand killed by synthetic operoi opioys.
We need to bring in more African South American Central Americans.
I wish they were all white Presbyterians from Scotland so
we didn't have a racial argument. And she says, let's
keep it going. The new way forward is the old way,
and we go like that for the next eight years.
Imagine the country then we won't.

Speaker 9 (46:21):
Have a country Bill if that happens. And by the way,
if she's elected, God forbid, she's going to go back
to the Kamala Harris at twenty nineteen. She's going to
go back to the radical socialist that she was when
she ran for president. Now she's trying to pretend she's
a moderate. This is all to get elected. If she
gets in, she's back to the real Kamala. And of course,
this guy waltz Oh a socialist. He's a crazed lunatic,

(46:44):
and that's why she picked him. I mean, they're just
perfectly aligned politically.

Speaker 2 (46:50):
Bill Well, I'd say this when you say, if this
was on the ballot, we know, well it is on
the ballot. All these issues are on the ballot. And Trump,
god knows it, is not a great candidate by the
viewpoints of many, but damn it, his policies work and
the peccadillos are one thing. Personally, he's wonderful. The public

(47:12):
persona of Donald Trump, loud and brash, is not the
private persona of Donald Trump, and his policies work is
going to be chaos. The chaos will reigned. Supreme Senator
Bernie Sanders said it best about two months ago. Well,
after all, he was asked whether or not this metamorphosis
of a conservative Kamala Harris is actually true, and Senator

(47:33):
Harris is Senator Bernie Senders, of course not. Once she
gets elected, we know what she's going to do and
I'm thinking right, well, Bernie, thank you for telling us that.

Speaker 9 (47:44):
And by the way, she was ranked as more liberal
in the Senate than Bernie Sanders, So that gives you
an idea of really how radical.

Speaker 8 (47:52):
This individual is.

Speaker 9 (47:54):
Far far part of the left. She's the most left
wing candidate we've ever had for president. They're the most
left wing ticket we've ever had. You know, we cannot
we cannot elect them. It would be the destruction of America. So, Bill,
I mean, so much is on the line in this election.
I mean everything is really on the line. Everything is
on the line.

Speaker 2 (48:12):
The column is Americans last. Let them meet Cake. Jeff
crue Air from New Orleans. Good luck to you and
good luck with us. Silly mayor you have. And maybe
she'll be the Secretary of State and get that one
mayor out of South south of Chicago. She can be
in charge of the Department of Commerce. She'd be great
at that. But all right, once again, Jeff Crueir on
townhall dot Com. You're a great American. Quit laughing, and

(48:34):
thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show.

Speaker 11 (48:36):
Thank you, Jeff, Yes, indeed, thank you, Bill, thank you.

Speaker 2 (48:39):
All right, let him meet Cake. We're turning on the
lights in Ukraine, but not Florida. Let's continue with more.
Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundreds WLW.

Speaker 12 (48:50):
Was democracy best served by President Biden stepping down and
basically handing you a nomination. He didn't have to go
through a primary process, you didn't have to fight off
other contenders. That's not really the way our system was
intended to work.

Speaker 10 (49:09):
President Biden made a decision that I think history is
going to show is rare among leaders, which was to
put country before self. And I am proud to have
earned the support of the vast majority of delegates and

(49:31):
to have been elected the Democratic nominee. I am proud
to have received the endorsement of leaders around this country
from every background and walk of life to fight in
this election over the next month for our democracy.

Speaker 12 (49:51):
But I think this truncated process is why people think
or saying they don't really know who you are.

Speaker 10 (49:58):
Look, I've been in this for seventy days.

Speaker 2 (50:05):
Hello, quiet skulls, I'm broadcasting menaging those kind of responses
for forty eight years from now.

Speaker 1 (50:17):
Seg Man, unbelievable. Andy mcleast.

Speaker 2 (50:19):
Bill Whittaker of sixty Minutes asked a few questions. I'm like,
know your daddy? Who's your daddy? Podcast? In what she
talked about sex, sex and more sex with a woman
named Alex. Yeah, but they're taking the sixty minutes taking
some heat and one of her questions was like a
dumb answer and then they kind of, uh, they kind
of redid it or did something in AI and I

(50:40):
don't know it was well, they didn't sixty minutes. Wanted
to clean up her answered by giving a different one. Yeah,
that's okay. They do the same thing for Trump, wouldn't
They will heave the stood reporters approach service of your
local Tame Star Heating in their conditioning dealers. Tame Star
quality you could feel in Cincinnati Braun and Braun Heating

(51:01):
at five one, three, three eight, five seventy seven sixty
five Sports and also Willy, we want to thank Ron's
Roost Restaurant and Bar, the world's greatest fried chicken.

Speaker 1 (51:14):
It's clucking good.

Speaker 2 (51:15):
Sixty four years in business, Young Pam bringing down our
lunch today thirty eight to fifty three Race Road on
the good Old West Side at five seven.

Speaker 1 (51:24):
Four two two two.

Speaker 2 (51:28):
I like Pam Bengals Update Wille brought to you by
Good Spirits, Wine and Tobacco and Party Town and thirteen
locations in Northern Kentucky. It's of course at Bengals and
New York Football Giants Sunday night at what is it
MetLife Stadium or something?

Speaker 3 (51:43):
I guess.

Speaker 2 (51:44):
Preview the game tonight on the Cincinnati Tax Resolution powered
by Toe Sheldon Roundtable Show, Lance and Rocky Live from
Longnecks and Richwood six oh five here on seven hundred
WLW and segment I Understand from Lance Mcallistroy monitor his
show at nine last night, he said that the Reds
have more interest now than the Bengals. And it's October,

(52:08):
and I don't mean the October surprise. But do you
think the Bengals are completely irrelevant and immaterial or just
irrelevant or just immateial? Neither the irrelevant. They start winning, everybody,
You'll be alright, calm down. Does any team in the
NFL have a worse record than the Bengals Jacksonville?

Speaker 1 (52:26):
No, they don't. It's the same. Well, so what the
question is this? Does any team have a worse record
than the Bank?

Speaker 3 (52:34):
What are you on?

Speaker 1 (52:34):
Sixty minutes or something?

Speaker 2 (52:35):
He's asking the questions you don't give me the answers
like Kamala Harrison Thursday night, NFL San Francisco at Seattle
seven thirty, Fox Sports thirteen sixty.

Speaker 1 (52:45):
Can you see it tonight? It was one of these things.

Speaker 2 (52:47):
I don't know. We don't care, do we don't promote television?
You think they promote US Baseball? The Mets or in
the National League Championship Series down in those Phillies.

Speaker 1 (52:59):
Wow, I want neither team to win.

Speaker 2 (53:02):
So the Mets are now await either the Dodgers and
Padres winner go home tomorrow night in Los Angeles in
Game five.

Speaker 7 (53:10):
That'll be a crisis. You're talking about a riot. The
boys in New York would like New York versus LA.
Do you agree, Bingo? They do not want anything. They
don't want San Diego. They want the Dodgers and the Metropolitans.
Is that correct?

Speaker 1 (53:25):
Or could it end up Subway series.

Speaker 2 (53:30):
And you see the Mets and the Yankees playing there,
I'm not so sure they If the Royals take out
the Yanks, I want the Royals to win. So an
end of the day, you didn't answer the question, what
do the Reds have more dominance in October now than
the Bengals. Oh, they obviously got a big shot. The
other day when Terry Francona was officially announced he's gonna

(53:54):
be here.

Speaker 1 (53:55):
You didn't answer the question.

Speaker 2 (53:57):
Detroit and Cleveland today tonight at six the and Motown
the Tigers up to one. New York up to one
as they play again the night in Kansas City a
little after eight o'clock.

Speaker 1 (54:09):
We'll see about that.

Speaker 2 (54:11):
Let's see Rafa Rafa Rafa Nadell announcing his retirement Raa
from the sport at the end of the season.

Speaker 1 (54:17):
What a heart.

Speaker 2 (54:18):
Thirty eight year old has won twenty two Grand Slams,
including fourteen French Open titles. He is the king of clay,
no question.

Speaker 3 (54:26):
Well done, Rapha.

Speaker 13 (54:27):
Can you say that among your twenty two major titles,
the last two in Australia and Roland Garos are probably
the most unexpected given everything that was going on.

Speaker 1 (54:37):
Yeah, well, but it's not the day.

Speaker 14 (54:38):
Not much about the twenty two and nice a day
about talking about Rodan Arras because here we are and
for me have this trophy next to me again means everything. No,
so yeah, I've been a emotional victories without a doubt
I expected in some way.

Speaker 3 (55:01):
Yeah, happy.

Speaker 7 (55:02):
No, I mean, uh, you know Sagan tennis. If you
got Rafa the Joker confederer and then Serena gone, those
are four.

Speaker 2 (55:14):
Maybe the jokers still had al Karez coming up. He
got a joker still playing. He's on his way out.
I'm just saying. Nadal is a past champion of the
Cincinnata Open. He was there, presented by John Barrett in
twenty thirteen, about a year ago. And when you had,
you had golf and you had Joker, right, you had

(55:36):
something pretty good. Now who won the men's title and
the woman's title this year?

Speaker 1 (55:40):
Segment? What a at tennis? Tennis? Jonnick Center? And he
also won the next one.

Speaker 2 (55:47):
He won the US Open, Right, what about the ladies
Arena Sabolenka.

Speaker 1 (55:53):
You can't say that?

Speaker 11 (55:54):
Why not?

Speaker 1 (55:54):
And you said their name? Can you say Sabolinka? You
just did? And you say Trent to Felu, He's the
king of Republicans. Go ahead.

Speaker 2 (56:02):
The NHL to I Columbus Blue Jackets open their season
tonight on the road versus the Minnesota Wild. Take a
look to you right there. Segment, there's Tampa not looking good.
I talked to Mugs, Mugs and Tony. Are they Okay,
they're hairy as men and they're okay, Well, that's good.
I talked to the mugs there on CNN.

Speaker 1 (56:21):
Is that him?

Speaker 2 (56:22):
He's not that attractive. The mugs doesn't have any hair.
But I talked to the mayor of Fort Myers Beach,
Dan Allers. Yes, and six to eight feet every square
inch of Fort Myers Beach was under the ocean. But
now the recovery begins, segment recovery begins. Have you been
to Fort Myers Beach? I've been to Fort Myers Wooey,

(56:45):
because that's where the I didn't ask you that that's
where the miracle play. They played there, and I didn't
ask you that. No, I didn't been to the beach.
I've been to Fort Myers. Like to see your spring training? Now,
what about Matt McClain. Is he's still hitting with with
the Hound Dogs of the Dogs. Well, the Assault River
beat the Glendale Desert Dogs yesterday four to two. But

(57:06):
but pitching prospect of the Reds, Connor Phillips had a
good outing four innings, two hits, no runs, no walks,
seven K'SO you pitch against what team, Salt River? That's
not exactly the Cubs of the He's, well, you've got
major leaguers on these teams. They just break up the
major league teams and put them on these other teams

(57:27):
in the Arizona Fall League. Why does he keep playing?

Speaker 1 (57:30):
All right?

Speaker 2 (57:31):
You don't want them to sit around and get fat
like me, do you? What about Matt McClain one hundred
and sixty eight days till opening day? And Tito Francona
going one to zero the the San Francisco Giants.

Speaker 1 (57:44):
What about Cees?

Speaker 2 (57:47):
Don't know what he did yesterday? Marte, I don't think
he's in Arizona. How about Friedel? Friedle's in the Freedles,
at home somewhere. What about Hunter Green? Hunter Green's at
home with his dog. What about Lodolo, He's probably in
Florida someplace. What about Abbott? Probably the same place? Well
what about Ascraft?

Speaker 1 (58:09):
Don't know?

Speaker 2 (58:10):
And I'm gonna be off the DL by any hopes,
so they better be also? Will he one big thing
on Sunday Night? The New York Football Giants lead the
league in quarterback sacks so far with twenty two. The
Bengals have six six and watch out for Dexter Lawrence,

(58:33):
one of their big defensive guys, he's got six sacks already.

Speaker 1 (58:37):
Segment.

Speaker 2 (58:37):
I'm getting a report here from the Hamlety County Board
of Elections. Long lines, traffic backups everywhere. Jeff Beckham, the
brother of David Beckham, says he's trying to vote and
he can't.

Speaker 1 (58:51):
The long was the Democrats closer down the doors.

Speaker 2 (58:55):
And stanton shoe one. If you want to end democracy? Aw,
what's the deal on? Because I tell you stupid it
is state issue, these stupid state issues.

Speaker 1 (59:05):
If you want to vote no, you vote yes. That's wrong.
If you want to vote yes, you vote no. That's wrong.
So what how do you vote on me?

Speaker 2 (59:13):
I'll tell you this is stupid. You vote no, but
let me tell you why. Okay, Twice Americans living in
Ohio put restraints on so called jerrymandering. In twenty fourteen
and twenty sixteen, we voted you can't do this, can't
do that. So the Democrats, who keep losing elections want
to change the rules. So now a state issue, one

(59:34):
would say, among other things, the main thing is there'll
be a board of experts put together to draw lines
in you. Segment, A slept voter will have no more
voting on that topic, there'll be no issue. So you
participate in democracy by not voting.

Speaker 1 (59:51):
Who are the experts? They're going to be picked by other.

Speaker 2 (59:54):
Experts, Well, who are their experts. They're going to be
picked by experts, not you, but others. And so if
you want to quit voting, vote yes on issue one.
If you think, wait a minute, I want to control
the people, the human beings to make decisions. I can
vote yea or nay for that person. Vote no on
state issue one. So it's vote no on one absolutely. Okay,

(01:00:17):
you've got to be stupid to vote yes, because if
you want to quit voting and democracy, then vote yes.

Speaker 4 (01:00:22):
Here.

Speaker 1 (01:00:22):
It is segment even you might be able to understand this.
Uh huh.

Speaker 2 (01:00:26):
A majority yes vote means it would repeal protections against
jerry mandering approved by three quarters of the Ohio electors
in twenty fifteen twenty eighteen, and eliminate the ability of
Ohio citizens to hold their representatives accountable for establishing fair
state legislative lines. In other words, Democrats say, vote for this,

(01:00:49):
There'll be no more voting. Does that make sense to you?

Speaker 9 (01:00:52):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:00:52):
Then vote no.

Speaker 7 (01:00:54):
It can't be that stupid, Okay, or are you no?

Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
I'm telling to vote no. I will vote no. Do
you agree yes? Vote no? Yes? There you go again.
He's got to vote no. Okay.

Speaker 2 (01:01:11):
Coming up next is a Moller father, a Maler high
school dad, and a sheriff. And the Maller dad lost
his son to fentanyl, and the sheriff's here from Texas
to talk about what's happening with fentanyl in northern Kentucky,
Indiana and Ohio segment.

Speaker 7 (01:01:26):
Vote no, don't say yes, Say no. Are you voting no?
We That means yes, you're supposed to vote no. I'm
voting no. Good, don't say that again.

Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Okay. Get me out of the sutureport.

Speaker 2 (01:01:39):
Will you, and out of a beautiful day here in
the Tri State and vote no on one.

Speaker 7 (01:01:43):
If you're a clown, vote yes. If you're not a clown,
vote no.

Speaker 2 (01:01:48):
We leave you with the immortal words of the Stude Report.

Speaker 12 (01:01:52):
But it seems that Prime Minister Netanyah who is not
listening well build.

Speaker 10 (01:02:00):
The work that we have done has resulted in a
number of movements in that region by Israel that were
very much prompted by or a result of many things,
including our advocacy for what needs to happen in the region.

Speaker 12 (01:02:19):
But it seems that Prime Minister Netanyah who is not listening.

Speaker 10 (01:02:23):
We're not going to stop pursuing what is necessary for
the United States to be clear about where we stand
on the need for this war to end.

Speaker 2 (01:02:31):
The first one was her real answer. The second one
was sixty minutes cleaning up her real answer to make
her sound even less stupid.

Speaker 1 (01:02:39):
You know what I'm saying. Yeah, are you stupid? No?
That's right. Vote no, Let's continue.

Speaker 2 (01:02:46):
Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred WLW by Billy Cunningham,
The Great America Get out it again on Sunday night.
The Bengals in New York should be an easy victory.
Of course, the last four games should have been easy
victory for the Bengals. That's a different matter. Joining you
and I now is Tom Quell, and also Sheriff Thoutius
Cleveland on the Southern border. First of all, Tom Quell,

(01:03:09):
welcome to the Bill Cunningham Show.

Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (01:03:11):
Bill.

Speaker 2 (01:03:11):
Twenty four year old son Jack Mueller high school grad
I'm sure a great kid, and explained his story and
how he died.

Speaker 1 (01:03:18):
So Jack, You're right. He went to Muller High School.

Speaker 15 (01:03:21):
He graduated in twenty sixteen, he was top ten academically
in his class. He gave one of the graduation speeches
at the graduation. In twenty sixteen, got a great scholarship
to the University of South Carolina, studied abroad, went to
three different countries over three semesters, and we never worried
about him, you know, he was just a self sufficient.

Speaker 1 (01:03:43):
Great kid.

Speaker 15 (01:03:45):
In twenty twenty he graduated from South Carolina and it
was a height of COVID. So he got a job
at the Hex Corporation in Baltimore, but lived with us
for a year and worked remote because of COVID, which
is everybody hated COVID. But it was probably the best
year we had because we had Jack at home. We
knew he was worldly, We knew that he would go somewhere.
He wanted to start his own company, be an entrepreneur.

(01:04:08):
And when August of twenty one it was time COVID
had dissipated, he had moved to Baltimore, we went up
Labor Day weekend to visit him and it was the
last time we saw him alive.

Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
So as a parent, you wanted to give your son
roots correct wings exactly, and sometimes the wings take over
the roots. But the year you spent with him on
home as an adult was special.

Speaker 15 (01:04:30):
It was very special and I will always touch that.

Speaker 1 (01:04:34):
No, he did.

Speaker 15 (01:04:35):
He had a great time with us, but it was
time for him to spread his wings. As you said,
after Labor Day. Two weeks later, my wife Stephanie got
the call that from a friend of his that Jack
had a heartbeat. His other friend, Chris, who he knew
from South Carolina, was already dead. So we drove like

(01:04:55):
maniacs up to Baltimore. We got there at midnight on Sunday.
Immediately met the doctor. He said Jack has less than
one percent of survival. And Jack was always a kid
that fell on his feet. We're like, hey, he can
get this. And they worked on him, and you know,
the Maryland University of Maryland and Medical Center, they were
so nice to us and they took good care of

(01:05:16):
us and they knew, you know, our passion that were
about to lose the sun. They worked hard for five
hours and they couldn't do anything. And it was so
bad because fentyl had invaded his body that we could
not even donate his organs.

Speaker 1 (01:05:29):
Did you know how it happened? How he ingested fentanyl.

Speaker 11 (01:05:32):
I do.

Speaker 15 (01:05:32):
He was out with a friend, actually, he texted me
that night. He went to the South Carolina Georgian football
game and they had come back. And the one thing
we talked about during our presentations is you know, kids
think they're invincible, and his friend had bought some cocaine.
They went back and tried it and they both died
because it was lace with fentanyl.

Speaker 1 (01:05:52):
And as far as the dealer that did that, do
you know anything about those or do you care even
about that? I do care. But it was also.

Speaker 15 (01:06:02):
Baltimore News had posted that it was the highest rate
of overdoses they ever had that weekend. So I don't
think the police force could even find out who did
it because there was so much dispersed throughout Baltimore.

Speaker 2 (01:06:16):
And cocaine was ingested with the fentanyl. And that's right, correct, Yes, yeah,
Mom and dad? How'd you feel awful? You know, first
of all, you know, if.

Speaker 15 (01:06:29):
You're up all day, you know, you're praying with your son,
and then we're in shock. So we went back to
his apartment. We collected everything we thought that was important
to him and important to us. And mind you, we've
been up since Sunday morning. It's now Monday morning, and
we drove back from Baltimore, which is about an eight
hour drive, so we got home about Monday at six.

(01:06:50):
I was still in shock, and that whole week up
to his funeral was just a blur because you have
people coming over all the time that are comforting you,
and it's still not setting in. And what really happened
was after the funeral, it really sat in and we
were recluses for a couple of weeks. My wife finally said,
she jumped out of bed, Stephanie, and said, we need

(01:07:10):
to do something. We need to alert our nation's youth
and their parents and the dangers of fentanyl so that
no one else loses their Jack.

Speaker 2 (01:07:18):
Sheriff Thutius Cleveland is from the border between Texago and
Texas and Mexico. And I've seen you on News Nation
and Fox News, and you're a real sheriff, like a
Richard K. Jones, but you're down there on the border
and most of it, ninety percent or more comes from
the border. And you're a border sheriff elected and you're
in charge of the border. What is happening on the

(01:07:40):
border Sheriff, what's happening on the border is solvable. I'll
tell you that first and foremost, and there's only one
option we have right now to get this border back
to be in the most safe, secure border, and that's
obviously with the upcoming election. But what're seeing over the
last three and a half years along the border, just
over three and a half years, is unlike we've ever

(01:08:01):
seen before. And I'm not just going to use political
talking points state talking points from our governor. I'm talking
from a life long experience. I grew up along the border,
spent some time in the military, and they had a
twenty six year with the United States Border Patrol, and
I'd still be an agent, but as I told you,
our share passed away and it was time for me
to take care of my community.

Speaker 11 (01:08:20):
I grew up in along the border.

Speaker 16 (01:08:21):
But the prior what I wanted to make the distinguished
is is the prior Ford administrations, both Democrat and Republicans.
I started my career with President Clinton, worked at President Bush,
President Obama, President Trump, and a year and some change
of this administration. Those first Ford administrations all added to
border secuity. They all built some sort of barrier, they

(01:08:42):
all hired border patrol agents, they all picked technology on
the border. What President Trump obviously did in addition to
those things, with the policies he put in place for
those that were coming to our country to seek asylum
and other things, he had to remain in Mexico. The
MPP Microprotection Protocol, which made those who are being allowed
in now who wouldn't be otherwise allowed in the United States,

(01:09:04):
they had to remain in Mexico before they were allowed
to come to have their.

Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Which means many didn't come at all because they weren't
going to go because they're not going to get in
illegally anyway.

Speaker 11 (01:09:12):
And it also served as a deterrent. But that's what
it takes.

Speaker 16 (01:09:14):
It takes a strong deer in the White House letting
the rest of the world know that you're not going
to come to the United States and intern illegally, or
we're still going to have people try to come. We are,
but it's going to lessen that burden on the US
border patrol and as well as the state locals that
assist in that fight there.

Speaker 2 (01:09:28):
You know, I've been on there long enough to play
the speeches of Senator Barack Hussein Obama, the speeches of
Hillary Clinton. They were no different than the speeches of
Donald Trump, the same speech. I can recall Chuck Schumer
given the same speech that Donald Trump gives today. What happened,
what happened between Clinton and Bush and then Bush and

(01:09:49):
then Obama and then and then Trumpster. What happened the
last four or five years?

Speaker 16 (01:09:54):
What occurred completely dismantled the border, a complete dismantling of it. Again,
those prior policies that worked under President Trump, this administration
came in and completely removed them and revoked them.

Speaker 11 (01:10:07):
And that even prior to that.

Speaker 16 (01:10:09):
You know, if you go back to the presidential debates
between President Biden president Trump, President Biden was asked about
giving people political asylum and he said he would welcome them.
That sent the initial message. That's why we started seeing
that people come to the border. And then when they
arrived at the border, they were allowed in. And that's
not on the backs of the US or Patrol Agency
or Immigration Customs Enforcement. That again, those policies come from

(01:10:31):
the President through the Department Homeland Security down to those
on the ground.

Speaker 11 (01:10:35):
That's what they have to do. They have to allow the.

Speaker 16 (01:10:38):
People in, give them the notice to appears. But the
other part with that is when this president came in
into office. He also reduced the funding and the amount
of bed space that was available where we could detain people.
So it's either those that are come to our country
legally that are seeking to sell them wait outside the
country until they had their case, or you incarcerate them.

Speaker 11 (01:10:59):
And we're not doing neither of that.

Speaker 2 (01:11:00):
Soh Kamala Harris was appointed. That borders are and you
thought to yourself, as a sheriff man, we're in good
shape now, aren't we Not exactly?

Speaker 11 (01:11:07):
No, never thought that, No, not at all.

Speaker 1 (01:11:09):
Here we go.

Speaker 2 (01:11:10):
So let's say y'll say tomorrow, let's say you go
back home. You're on the border, Your men and women
are out there, and you're a sheriff. You're not border patrol.
You know how they work because you spent a quarter
of a century, sir. And let's say here comes a
group generally they're unattached males and they have backpacks on.
Do you even apprehend them or do you say border
patrol come and get these.

Speaker 16 (01:11:29):
No, we apprehend almost every day. Then what happens we
turn them over to the border patrol. With the differences where
I live and work, what you've seen on the TV
the last three and a half years over an Eagle
Pass del Reo il Passo San dieguoar Arizona. Isn't what
happens in my county. What happens in my county is
we have people that still want to enter the border undetected.
They want to sneak across. When we encounter them in

(01:11:50):
the desert, they run, or if I encounter them on
the highway, they lead us in those high speed pursuits.
Over the last two and a half years, we've taken
over one hundred and eighty smugglers off the highway in
their vehicles. We've made a huge impact. What are they
smuggling humans so I'm sorry, yes, or humans for sex
trafficking or labor trafficking one.

Speaker 11 (01:12:09):
Type, definitely, both, without a doubt.

Speaker 2 (01:12:11):
Now, how is your situation relatable to to mister Coyle?
How is that relatable? Because the funtandel doesn't arrive in
Baltimore or Cincinnati just out of the sky. How are
the two issues related. It's all coming from the southern border.
It's all coming from the southern border.

Speaker 16 (01:12:26):
But with that being said, the right's going to tell
you it's coming in between the ports ventry, meaning it's
being interdicted by the US bordatral agents. The left's going
to tell you that, no, it just comes from the
ports of entry and it's being smuggled in by America's
the point I like to make it is they're both right,
but they're The point is is that our borders are
still poorous and we, as United States of America, the

(01:12:47):
greatest country in the world, still we can completely eradicate
that flow of drugs. People will say, now, we can't,
but we can. I've worked at our headquarters in Washington,
d C. On two different occasions. If we work together
and we have the political willingness to do that, we
can get it done.

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
And you did not want Dad, Jack's death to be
in vain. I mean, young people make stupid mistakes. I
would assume he ingested the cocaine willingly, not knowingly of
what was in it, but as those things that young
people sometimes do. And you did not want Jack to
die at the age of twenty four in vain.

Speaker 9 (01:13:22):
No.

Speaker 15 (01:13:23):
And you know, I'm not naive enough to think that
that was the first time he tried cocaine. As a
matter of fact, after Jack died, we had friends from
all the high schools in Cincinnati that he knew went
to different colleges, and we didn't realize how prevalent, how
glamorous cocaine was back then, and it was everywhere, and
it's still everywhere. It's big in colleges, it's big for

(01:13:47):
young professionals at parties, bachelor.

Speaker 2 (01:13:49):
Parties, ecstasy, things like prescriptive pills that look like an
upper but really it's fentanyl.

Speaker 15 (01:13:55):
Yes, and actually, so we started to do it for
Jack Foundation, Jack Quell Foundation, and we speak to high schools, communities.
We've done a couple of corporate onboarding for young professionals.
And the pills scare us the most now because when
we first started talking, six out of ten pills were
lace with fentanyl, counterfeit pills that looked the same as
real pills. Now it's seven out of ten. So the

(01:14:17):
problem's growing.

Speaker 2 (01:14:18):
And what happened at Ohio State University about two years ago.
Two college co eds were going out to party some
night and they wanted to take a pill which suppose
quelude or something make you feel great, and it was
laced with fentanyl. Unbeknownst to them, they took it. Within
a half an hour, one's dead, the others in the.

Speaker 15 (01:14:35):
Er correct, and I think one of them actually was
taken an adderall for studying. She thought was an adderall
and it killed her. And actually, Mark, who's with us,
he's on our board. His daughter, Lizzie died from a
fig xanax that was lace with fentanyl.

Speaker 1 (01:14:50):
Mark, tell the American people about that.

Speaker 11 (01:14:52):
If you can.

Speaker 1 (01:14:53):
I can barely see you, please go ahead.

Speaker 13 (01:14:56):
I'm from Westchester here and my daughter died in the
Tri state area. She thought she was taking a x
anna accident. Turned out that it was almost pure fentanyl.
So we've been working with Tom and the jack Well
Foundation just to bring awareness because we real I've been
to the border twice once with Sheriff Jones. We realized that,
you know, we're no Rambos. So the only thing we

(01:15:17):
can do is just make our communities aware of what's
out there and what could potentially ruin your family like
it like it kind of ruined ours. So how old
it was Susie when she a Lizzie was she was
twenty one and graduate of Laquota West High School, twenty
one years old, and she thought she was taking something. Yeah,
the DEEA came to my house in Westchester and he

(01:15:39):
showed me the pills and he goes, here, they are
right here. He showed me the exact pills that were
left there, and uh, yeah, yeah, she died from.

Speaker 1 (01:15:46):
What did it looked like it's a young girl taking something.

Speaker 13 (01:15:50):
It just looked I'm kind of like Tom I was.
Everything was kind of in a blur because we're in shock.
We lost our child. But he just said, this is
what I don't even know what Zanna looks like, but
it's I don't know if it's paying, but has it
has the markings on it that it was it was
pressed here somewhere, and that that's what did it. It
just there's there's no second chances with this drug. It's

(01:16:10):
it's it's worse than Roulette one time and you're done.

Speaker 2 (01:16:14):
Where did it originate? Sheriff any idea where these things
are originated?

Speaker 16 (01:16:17):
So the precursor chemicals come from China and their shipped
to Mexico and then they're made and stamped about the
lab made it made out and who knows what they
made it, meaning it could it's not like a laboratory
here in the United States where we made you know,
it's stuff that it's watched over.

Speaker 11 (01:16:35):
It's just made in a barn.

Speaker 16 (01:16:36):
But one point I just wanted to make is, of course,
you know Mark and Tom, they're kiddos, look just like
my kiddos.

Speaker 11 (01:16:44):
They look just like I look.

Speaker 16 (01:16:45):
And I've gone around the country to speak at other
Fittnhall events in Washington, d C. Little Rock, Arkansas, they're
in Texas and everything that I see when I look
at these banners that they put up of their children, again,
they look like my kids. And the parents that I
meet look like all of us in this room. So
you know, it's not that what we think of in
the past of someone, you know, passing from from a drug.

Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
So we have Lakota West and we have molor high
school kids. I bet right now, within the sound of
our voices are thousands of other kids doing exactly the
same thing, taking stamped pills that look like an up
or down er, a x anx elude, something that character
and they're laced with a little too much ventanyl and
the sheriff the goal of a drug dealer is to
put enough fentanyl in each item to give it a high,

(01:17:31):
but not enough to kill the user, because otherwise you
lose money. But these are not These are Chinese precursors.
Who knows what?

Speaker 3 (01:17:38):
You know?

Speaker 2 (01:17:38):
The goal of the Chinese government is to destroy this
country and there some say they're well away and doing it.
But the idea is it's done in a certain way
to hook the kid, but not to kill them. But
there's not much measurement going on exactly that's exactly right.

Speaker 16 (01:17:51):
And I heard one person put it best, April is
that you know, of course China is killing Americans without
firing a single bullet.

Speaker 2 (01:18:00):
Lastly, Tom, what's the website? How can Americans listen and
get involved?

Speaker 1 (01:18:04):
So it's do it for Jack dot Org.

Speaker 15 (01:18:06):
We my wife and I and Stephanie is actually the
heart and soul of our foundation. She is the one
who started at the foundation. Mark's on the board. We
have five or six other board members. We're a nonprofit.
We speak to high schools in this area and communities.
We've talked to pretty much every private high school and
they've been open to us. And the story is great

(01:18:29):
because it's heartfelt. It's about our son that we lost,
or Mark when he talks about Lizzie losing Lizzie, so
we really reach out. It's great when we have kids
and parents together because the parents are like I was
three years ago, not understanding how much ventyl is there.
And if I can say real quick, the DEA seeds

(01:18:49):
enough ventanyl to kill every American in twenty twenty three,
they say, conservative estimates, this comes from the DEA. Three
to four times that amount is still getting through. So
think about that, three to four times the amount of
fenol is in the United States to day to kill
every American and sheriff.

Speaker 2 (01:19:05):
It begins with stopping at the border and then dally internally.
But until we stop it at the border, this thing's
not going to end. It's going to accelerate.

Speaker 16 (01:19:12):
Definitely, I would agree with that, but I'd also say
expanding our borders further south than Mexico. And look, under
President Trump, we had programs where CBP personnel, Department Defense
personnel going to Mexico and train the Mexican Marines to
do counter operation against the cartels. So you know, we
don't necessarily have to send Americans down in or to
do that. We already had programs where we train them.

Speaker 1 (01:19:31):
And you did that under Trump.

Speaker 16 (01:19:33):
You did that, We did our agencies did that, and
that stopped it didn't stop it, but it helped, and
it would take more of that, but there's not that
coordination going on today.

Speaker 2 (01:19:41):
It's over correct. Imagine continuing these policies the next four
to eight years, that's what it will take.

Speaker 16 (01:19:46):
Well, imagine that unless we get President Trump to reinitiate
those programs to help stop the flow, will stop them
before they get to the border, and then that that
does make it through, stop it at the border.

Speaker 2 (01:19:57):
All right, Mark, thank you and Sheriff thank you you.
Sheriff Thoutius Cleveland. You're like a Richard K. Jones acolyte.
I mean, you guys get along.

Speaker 16 (01:20:05):
Yes, sir, We've done some panel interviews before on Newsmax,
so I bet.

Speaker 15 (01:20:10):
And one last thing if I could say it, and
I mentioned private high schools. We are actually starting to
get into public high schools. They were really tough to
get into. We will speak to any school. Our presentation
is roughly an hour long, it's heartfelt and it really
goes a long way.

Speaker 1 (01:20:24):
Do it for Jack dot Org.

Speaker 2 (01:20:26):
That's how you got yes, gentlemen, thank you very much,
and my condolences to both of you and the loss
of your thank you Bill. There's nothing more horrible in
thean losing a child, especially in this character when it's preventable.

Speaker 1 (01:20:37):
Correct sheriff.

Speaker 11 (01:20:38):
Thank you, thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:20:39):
Let's continue with more Bill cunning into Great American Lave.
It's oom of the REGs and the Bengals. News Radio
seven hundred WLW.

Speaker 12 (01:20:45):
But it seems that Prime Minister Netanyah who is not listening.

Speaker 10 (01:20:50):
Well, Bill, the work that we have done has resulted
in a number of movements in that region by Israel
that were very much prompted by or a result of
many things, including our advocacy for what needs to happen

(01:21:11):
in the region.

Speaker 12 (01:21:11):
But it seems that Prime Minister Netanyah who is not listening.

Speaker 10 (01:21:16):
We're not going to stop pursuing what is necessary for
the United States to be clear about where we stand
on the need for this war to end.

Speaker 7 (01:21:27):
Hello, quiet, and I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 1 (01:21:35):
Ty Rock. You got that.

Speaker 7 (01:21:36):
I understand that no one's paying to make it a
little more clear on what that was Clarire's mud and
she's explaining what the problem is. But sixty minutes had
two answers, and they clipped off the first part, which
made her look even more silly. Then they played the
second part to make her look better. What they have
done that for Donald Trump? Absolutely not.

Speaker 1 (01:21:55):
But I mean, but we're I mean.

Speaker 7 (01:21:57):
The contrast where she's coming out and saying Ron just
saying us won't take my call, and he's no good
this and that, and then Biden himself said he's doing
a great job. He wants her to lose. I'm telling
you right now, he wants her to lose. Very protective
of her.

Speaker 1 (01:22:19):
Rump. I'm telling you that.

Speaker 2 (01:22:20):
What are we doing? And then another issue came up
you I'm glad you brought that up. If I listened
to everything simultaneously at once and ten is everywhere. Lance
mcgallisher said last night that the Bengals really don't matter anymore,
that it's all about the Reds, that the Reds have
overtaken the Bengals. If somebody had told you the first
week in October that Lance mcgallister would be applauding the

(01:22:43):
Reds moves or Frank with Francona, and all of a sudden,
no one in football has a worse record than the Bengals.
The only other is a bunch of one in four teams,
and the Bengals are one of them. Would you believe that?

Speaker 3 (01:22:55):
Now?

Speaker 7 (01:22:55):
I'm not sure that's what Lance said, but it we'll
talk more about this. You might have twisted it at
you might have a little bit. I don't think he's
giving up on the Bengals. But here's the reality. If
they would somehow lose the next two out of three games,
here's what we're talking about.

Speaker 1 (01:23:08):
We're talking about.

Speaker 7 (01:23:08):
The dissolution of the Bengals super Bowl team, one that
went to the Super Bowl.

Speaker 1 (01:23:14):
Remember that a couple of years ago. I don't remember that.

Speaker 7 (01:23:15):
Okay, well what happened a couple of years ago? But
it's you know t Higgins. You got to put him
up for a trade. You know, Jamar Chase, he isn't sign.
Does he want to stay here?

Speaker 1 (01:23:25):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:23:25):
Can you get something for him? Joe Burrow's here. I
think Chase is here.

Speaker 7 (01:23:30):
You're you're looking around at your roster, at some of
your good players and saying, we got to get.

Speaker 1 (01:23:35):
Is that possible? Rock?

Speaker 7 (01:23:36):
We were talking a few weeks ago about you know, Okay,
they lost to New England, but we got Kansas City.
Those failures in the draft, I think are the biggest
thing that they were hoping that some of these defensive players. Okay,
you pay Joe Burrow, you pay you know some you
know offense, you pay the offensive line. So Joe Burrow
is great, Let's pay the people to protect Joe Burrow.

(01:23:57):
But then you need the draft. You need those guys
not just in the first round, but on down the
line there to come in and be good players. You know,
I talked about the Super Bowl team that I was
on with the Colts. Yes, he had Dwight Freeney, who
was a number one, you know pick, I mean a
top ten pick who was fantastic, Bob Sanders first round
top but then that defense was filled out with Robert

(01:24:19):
Mathis was the other defensive end. He was an undrafted
free agent that they pegged and he turned out to
be a superstar, probably go in the Hall of Fame.
Gary Brockett, a linebacker, was an undrafted guy. Antoine Bethea,
our safety, was a seventh round pick.

Speaker 5 (01:24:34):
You know.

Speaker 7 (01:24:34):
So you got to nail some of those picks in
the draft, and the Bengals have not been able to
do that, and I think that, in my opinion, that's
the biggest reason we're sitting.

Speaker 1 (01:24:42):
Where we are right now.

Speaker 2 (01:24:43):
Hey, benchmark against the Chiefs, and in that game, Burrow
outplayed the greatest quarterback certainly in the National Football League
today outplayed him and they lost because the Chiefs defense
got the job done. Now against New Orleans, I'm watching
that game. Okay, he got New Orleans, pretty good team
playing in Kansas City, and the Chiefs defense dominated the

(01:25:05):
Saints offense before Car got hurt.

Speaker 7 (01:25:07):
You just can't eat no matter as good as Patrick
Mahomes is, maybe the best ever, I don't know. You
can't expect him seventeen weeks in a row or twenty
three weeks in a row to just be unbelievable. You're
gonna have a little law here and there. And it's
just from a pressure standpoint. I mean, the Bengals are
thinking about Joe Burrow right now. He's going to this

(01:25:28):
game saying I have got to score thirty five points.
Got to Patrick Mahomes isn't saying that? So you don't
have to force anything late in the game. We don't
have to try to force the ball and get it picked.
Maybe because he has Hey, Chris Jones and company, they're
going to clean this up here.

Speaker 1 (01:25:41):
We'll be okay, we'll be okay. Let you play loose. Well,
who's responsible for that?

Speaker 2 (01:25:45):
Because your friend Jason Williams says that most teams have
five to twenty players on developmental list and who's available.
And you go to the draft and the Bengals have
five or six people that fly coach and the other
teams have lear jets flying their players around checking out
the next Rocky boyman.

Speaker 1 (01:26:03):
Well, I don't know about that, but I mean look
at the Patriots.

Speaker 7 (01:26:05):
So yes, they had Tom Brady, but you know they
filled their roster out with you know, the Julian Edelman's
of the world and some of those guys on defense
that again, you gotta hit in those draft picks. You
just absolutely have to for no other reason than than money,
because you can't pay everybody. You can't go in free
agency like the Bengals have and and just get offensive line.
You can't do that every year. Now you can do

(01:26:26):
that and load up and go for a run, but
you better get those guys into the draft picks. On defense,
that poof a guy's a fourth round pick and all
of a sudden, he's a He's a pro bowler.

Speaker 1 (01:26:37):
That's what you gotta have.

Speaker 2 (01:26:38):
And what's worse the Bengals defensive line, the Bengals linebackers
or the cornerbacks and the safeties.

Speaker 7 (01:26:45):
What is the worst part of the defense. I would
say it all starts up front. I'd say that the
lack of playmaking ability on the defensive line, their lack
of the ability to get after the passer other than
Trey Hendrickson, you know, So they can't they can't get
pressure on the quarterback if it's not Trey Henderson without blitzing,
and then he can't stop the run because there's just

(01:27:06):
no like just stalwart you know, Jeffrey Simmons type guy.

Speaker 1 (01:27:11):
Let him go? Why because they said he was too
old and he got hurt too much. He may put it.

Speaker 7 (01:27:16):
When he was in there, he made a lot of
plays and he took a lot of double teams.

Speaker 2 (01:27:20):
Is there hope? Do you have hope? All we have
is hope one and four.

Speaker 7 (01:27:25):
I have hope. I always I'm the most positive guy.
You have hope. I have hope.

Speaker 2 (01:27:28):
So there's what twelve games left? Yes, they got to
go nine and three at a minimum.

Speaker 7 (01:27:33):
Yes, And as I told you my rookie year in
two thousand and two, when I was with the tight
we won the first game against the Philadelphia Eagles and
then we lost four straight. We're sitting right now, right
here where the Bengals are right now, one and four.
We routed off ten of eleven, got the first seed
and made it all the way to the AFC Championship game.

Speaker 1 (01:27:51):
So it can happen now.

Speaker 7 (01:27:53):
Our circumstance was different because you know, we just had
We had stars on defense. Javon Curse hurt in the
in Week one, but we knew he'd get him back.
He's one of the best pass rushers in the NFL.
Samari roll A Corner was hurt, so that played into it.
We were turning the ball over too much on offense,
so I knew we had a good squad both offense
and defense, not just one or the other. And happened

(01:28:14):
to put it together and it was a magical year.

Speaker 1 (01:28:16):
Short question.

Speaker 2 (01:28:17):
What is the question? I'm giving you the question now,
A big question. The Jets fired head coach Salah after
a terrible loss.

Speaker 1 (01:28:26):
What happens on Sunday night? About midnight?

Speaker 2 (01:28:29):
Mike brown sits in the private plane up in front
and he's on the front row on the right as'll
see in walks. Zach Taylor and the Bengalleys are one
and four. They say, say, Zach, I want to talk
with you when we leave the plane and you're going
to open up a bunch of steakhouses named Shuelas.

Speaker 7 (01:28:48):
Okay, so let's go over Zach Taylor. In twenty twenty one,
if you remember, you don't remember, but they went to
the Super Bowl.

Speaker 1 (01:28:53):
Let me write that down.

Speaker 11 (01:28:53):
Okay.

Speaker 7 (01:28:54):
The next year, in twenty twenty two, they go the
AFC Title Game.

Speaker 1 (01:28:57):
How bad?

Speaker 7 (01:28:58):
Last year twenty twenty three they go nine to eight
and they play half the year without Joe Burrow?

Speaker 1 (01:29:05):
What about you forgot about twenty one? What I forget?

Speaker 7 (01:29:08):
What about twenty twenty was he like two as Burrow's
coming off the You always tried to win the game
against the Fins, which meant we wouldn't have got Joe Burrow.
Now that was stupid. You didn't answer. The year before
you said that was twenty nineteen. You sell is the
last three years I could I don't think you could
say Zach Taylor's done a poor job now, a poor
job in assembling this roster, which I was screaming from

(01:29:31):
the mountaintops this whole offseason.

Speaker 1 (01:29:33):
What about the D line? What about the you know,
stopping the run?

Speaker 7 (01:29:35):
We didn't do that last year twenty six in the league,
here we are again.

Speaker 1 (01:29:39):
You answered the question, but not the one I asked.
I wonder this? Are you ready for this? You won't
answer the question.

Speaker 7 (01:29:45):
Here's what I here's what. Here's my answer. Whether you
had a question there or not, I'm not quite sure.
You wonder if I wonder if you know right now
Zach Taylor calls the play? I think Zach Taylor does
a great job. The dude clearly knows offense. You know,
I mean, look at the offense right now.

Speaker 1 (01:30:00):
Results.

Speaker 7 (01:30:01):
But when you call the plays, you are concerned about
scoring points? Scoring points? How do we score more points?
Instead of sometimes playing complimentary football? When you're just when
you're the head coach, you're worried about the offense and
the defense, right And if you're the head coach calling
the offensive plays, are you worried too much about the offense?
And there's not enough attention in roster building and roster

(01:30:22):
dissection of the defense to wonder? Is this how our
team can win? Because he's worried about what scoring points?

Speaker 1 (01:30:29):
Will he be fired?

Speaker 5 (01:30:30):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:30:31):
After the Giants game? No, let me give you some
more facts. You're ready for five? I just gave you
three pretty good ones. I'll give you three good ones,
ready for three. Since the first game of last year
against the AFC, the Bengals are four and eleven.

Speaker 1 (01:30:44):
Four and eleven. Now the last two years, how many
of those games was there no Joe Burrow. That doesn't matter.
I'm talking about that. I'm a team kind of a guy.

Speaker 11 (01:30:52):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (01:30:53):
Now the last two seasons up in the last season
this season, they have ten wins and twelve losses.

Speaker 1 (01:31:00):
I'm talking about trends.

Speaker 2 (01:31:01):
Joe Burrow is one and nine the last two starting
games of five consecutive years, one and nine. And Lamar
Jackson is a record of nine and one the last
ten games against the Bengals. Lamar Jackson is nine and one.
Do you see a trend here? I'm asking the question,
but what what you're You're you're.

Speaker 1 (01:31:20):
Confusing the the.

Speaker 7 (01:31:22):
Team of the Bengals and then the production of one
Joe Burrow is the production of Joe Burrow when he's healthy.

Speaker 2 (01:31:27):
Been off the charts. Last four games. The first game
was terrible. That last four games is like it's Tom Brady,
like it's like Patrick Mahomes. It's wonderful, but the team
has lost three of the four against not not really good, but.

Speaker 7 (01:31:40):
You're intermixing about them. Answer Brow, I'm saying, Joe Burrow,
he's not going to be fired. Seg Man, please continue here.
I'm just saying, but you see, there's hope and that
sack sack. Schula went on to open up anytime at steakhouses,
anytime soon? Am I right or wrong?

Speaker 1 (01:31:57):
No, that's not gonna happen. What if they lose the
next two games.

Speaker 7 (01:32:02):
Nothing is happening to him this year, nor should it there.
I said it now next year if you know, they
have an awful year this year, and then next year
they don't do the things they gotta do in free
agency and the drafts and assemble a better team. Okay,
maybe you can talk about that middle of the season
next year.

Speaker 1 (01:32:18):
So he's got one more year maybe, And that's it.

Speaker 7 (01:32:21):
That's one way of saying it. I'm just finally answered
the question. I think Zach Taylor is not the issue
right now. The issue is who is assembling the ingredients.
Who did it on the team?

Speaker 2 (01:32:31):
Name that person front office, Mike Downs, folks that are
drafting in front office, Troy blackburn him right now, we're
sitting it.

Speaker 1 (01:32:39):
Okay. So it was like, all right, should we pay
Should we pay Jamar Chase? Should we not?

Speaker 4 (01:32:44):
Uh?

Speaker 7 (01:32:44):
Some fans like myself would have liked, would have liked
to see the Bengals go out in free agency and
spend some money on the defense. But we can't because
we got a page Mark Chase. Well, now we're sitting here,
we don't have any defensive top free agent talent, and
we don't have Jamar Chase sign.

Speaker 1 (01:32:58):
We got nothing.

Speaker 2 (01:33:00):
Oh for two, who's responsible for that segment or segment's
not here? He's helping, helping his son's got to care
for his mother. Well, how about temp star? He said,
he probably getting an ac All right, Rock, what's on
the big show?

Speaker 1 (01:33:15):
To say? You didn't answer?

Speaker 7 (01:33:17):
You're completely upset. No, we got Craig cop live from Tampa.
The storm wasn't as bad. That's easy for us to say.
Sitting here, I talked to mugs, give me an update.

Speaker 1 (01:33:26):
I want to hear that. Talk to mugs. Talk to
Tony from he wrote it out. Didn't absolutely he wored
and he said cart Path only today on the.

Speaker 7 (01:33:34):
Back nine shirt off in the bar, middle finger in
the air and he said it was waving.

Speaker 2 (01:33:41):
It was a lot worse than nom when he was
in a rice patty getting shot at. I said, well,
that's probably worse. Cart path only at Bear's Paul Country
Club in Naples. Car path only, mugs. Is there some
debris on the on the fairway though, he's.

Speaker 1 (01:33:55):
You don't care about that it just move, moved the
palm tree and get gold.

Speaker 9 (01:33:58):
Right.

Speaker 7 (01:33:58):
The alligators there in fest in the neighborhood suburbia, Yes,
what would you do with the little rocket an alligator?
Mono and mono? Well, today I might actually throw them
at him. I'm kind of upset with him now. The
middle one doesn't listen very well. Beat the hell out
of him. He'll be fine. He took you buy a
bottle of water right and by like the spring waters.
Actually he like took a whole case of it and

(01:34:21):
emptied it out. There's one by one because you wanted
to make a big mud puddle like, we'll use the
tap water if you want to make.

Speaker 2 (01:34:27):
I don't care if you make a mud puddle rolling
the thing. I don't have impact, rocky, Thank you very much.
Upset Now, I now get you out of the stuge
report brought to you by tempts to our quality.

Speaker 1 (01:34:37):
You can feel hit it. Dave, oh oh, well, let's
continue seven hundred.

Speaker 10 (01:34:46):
If anything, would you have done something differently than President
Biden during the.

Speaker 1 (01:34:52):
Past four years? Nail the coffin.

Speaker 10 (01:34:54):
There is done a thing that comes to mind in
terms of and I've been a part of.

Speaker 11 (01:35:00):
The decisions that have had.

Speaker 1 (01:35:01):
Impact seventy on the wrong track, she says, let's keep
it going.

Speaker 7 (01:35:06):
I think this is her Hillary Clinton Basket of Deplorables
moment where people go, what what did you say? Wait
a minute, That's going to stick in people's minds. I
think that answer right there, more of the same is
going to stick in people's minds.

Speaker 1 (01:35:19):
On seven hundred, WLW
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24/7 News: The Latest

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Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

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