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July 9, 2025 • 94 mins
Willie gets the details of what happened at the Red, White, and Blue Ash event with Blue Ash Mayor Jill Cole. Also Hamilton County Sheriff Charmaine McGuffy explains how she wants to curb the violence in Cincinnati and how to help a local cop fighting cancer. Finally Rob Sanders explains who Kentucky handles youth violence.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Billy coming in the Great American and welcome this Wednesday
afternoon in the Tri State Reds baseball kicks off about
six oh five tonight, because I thought that maybe Trevino
should start the game because he seems to have more
results in the starting pitching crew. Looking at the last
two games at my ballpark, the Great American, the Reds
on Monday night lost five to one. They lost last
night twelve to two. That means collectively they're seventeen and three.

(00:31):
This isn't a football score, a baseball score. Seventeen and
three against Miami, not exactly the seventy six Reds, but nonetheless,
they try again tonight. We'll see what happens tonight with
Avan on the mound, and then they have one more
game tomorrow with Miami than three with the Rocks in
town and getting ready for the All Star break and
the trade deadline. Maybe one of the other good teams
won Trevino to pitch for them, because he seems to

(00:53):
be the best pitcher the Reds have. But until then,
there's all hell breaking loose throughout the Try State in
many different quarters. I have a guest on tomorrow to
talk about what happens in Clifton in front of the
fire station, the skyline chill. On a regular basis, we've
had on guests from Covington about the what's happening on
the riverfront there and also in Cincinnati. But Red White
and Blue Ash is a signature event in Hambleton County.

(01:16):
It's been going on for about thirty years, and until
a few days ago there was no difficulties whatsoever. Then
all hell broke loose. Joining you and I now is
Mayor Jill Cole, and Mayor Cole is in charge of
the city of Blue Ash, the little tree that grew.
And Mayor Cole welcome, i think for the first time
to the Bill Cunningham Show. So first of all, can

(01:36):
you tell me tell the American people the event itself,
the planning for the event before the events took place
later on in the evening that were terrible. Now just
talk in general about what Red White and Blue Ash
seeks to do for the past thirty years.

Speaker 2 (01:51):
Thanks for having me on, Billy. Yes, it's my first
time talking with you, and I'm really grateful to be here.
You know, Blue Ash is an amazing city. We have
a long history of being said Efe and welcoming and
we're in the we have the ability to do a
lot of amazing things, including our annual Fourth of July celebration.
As you said, we've been putting these on for over
thirty years, and I've always been so proud that despite

(02:12):
the thousands and thousands of people that attend, there have
rarely been any problems. However, last Friday night, a small
group of individuals made poor choices and they frightened the
people around them. I know I had one of my
family members that was right in the middle of it,
and it was very scary. Fortunately, our police officers were
nearby and they were able to quickly respond to the situation. Fortunately, Yes,

(02:36):
very serious.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
Injury, and there's other serious injury or deaths or nothing
at some of these events. As far as the entry
to the facility, I was last there about ten to
twelve years ago and it was easy to get into,
easy to go. Is there an entry point where people
were more or less checked a little bit or not
ors simply catches catch Can just come in for any
any quarter that you desire.

Speaker 2 (02:58):
It is just to catches catch Can. It's a hundred
over one hundred acre park and we do want to
keep it very opening and welcoming, and so we don't
have a checkpoint. And you know, obviously we're going to
look at this and see what safety measures we might
need to implement for next year. I think that one
would be a difficult one to do because of the
size of the park and also again we just want

(03:20):
to keep the welcoming, family friendly environment of it.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
As far as what occurred that night, I know you've
been working on this with the city manager and the
police chief. Tell the American people what happened Friday night
that caused the injury to the police officer, and just
give us the facts of what happened that turned out
not so well for that particular event.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
Sure, you know, I just want to reiterate though, that
we're still doing research on this.

Speaker 3 (03:45):
They were still.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
Analyzing you But what we know is that again, there
was a small group of individuals that were throwing fireworks
at each other under the canopy area, which if you've
been to the park, you're familiar with that. And then
unfortunately they ran through the crowd that gunshots had been fired,
so they added confusion and upset to the area. Again,
the people that witnessed it were very upset rightfully, so

(04:07):
fortunately it was fairly well contained and again the police
responded quickly.

Speaker 1 (04:14):
As far as injuries, what was the injury to the
police officer, He had a burn on.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
His legs from a firecracker that hit him. He was
treated at the hospital and released. In fact, he was
back on duty last night.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
And as far as I read somewhere in the media
that juvenile court, which in my editorial opinion, often does
a terrible job relative to holding juveniles accountable for serious misbehavior,
is it true that juvenile court dismissed most of the
charges against the individual that injured the police officer.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
That is true, and unfortunately we can do our part,
but we can't control what.

Speaker 4 (04:50):
Happens after that, which is really unfortunate.

Speaker 1 (04:53):
Did that happen with your permission? With you're okay?

Speaker 2 (04:58):
Wow, I wasn't there. I would have to talk with
the people that were there. But I don't know that
we have a choice in that. That's the magistrate's decision.

Speaker 1 (05:06):
And the police officer. I would assume it was. I
just understand it's without prejudice, which means that it could
be brought again. And the magistrate in the media said
that they can't identify the person who did this because
it's a juvenile. But nonetheless it was over the objections
of the police officer and according to media accounts, the

(05:27):
city of Bluish was not involved in agreeing to the dismissal.
The magistrate did it on her own. Is that your.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
Understanding, that's my understanding.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
As far as going forward, one of the council members
has come forward about monitoring social media, almost like a
CIA function in which you're going to have large numbers
of people monitoring social media of individuals who may come
to the party, may not come to the party. As
far as entry points and searches of bags, have you
begun the planning yet to do? What number one, is

(05:57):
the event going to continue next year? And if so,
how will it different?

Speaker 2 (06:02):
Well, you know the event will continue next year. At
this point, you know, we're just beginning to look at
this and we have a whole year and so we
work closely with our law enforcement, our parks and w
rec people and we'll carefully look at what happened and
see what we can do if we need to make
adjustments or change. Is to ensure that it's a states
and welcoming event. Unfortunately, you know, we do as a

(06:24):
policy in our council appoint the mayor and the city
administration as official spokespeople. But unfortunately we had a council
member that's gone out on his own and has made
statements that are not reflective of the views or the
values of the city, describing the individuals as you know,

(06:45):
just confusing language that stigmatizes and dehumanizes these people, which
were just young kids. They made stupid mistakes, but that
was no reason, you know, we shouldn't be out ahead
of this event without understanding all of what happened and
criticizing the young people that were there.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
Well, that council member was almost Cosloane. A couple of
days ago. He talked about the punks, about individuals that
don't deserve to come to events like that. He was
very accusatory of those being charged. And so you're saying
that does not reflect the viewpoint of city council in
blue Ash nor the mayor.

Speaker 2 (07:20):
What I'm saying is that we shouldn't be talking about
individuals like that. First of all, we need to leave
the communication, particularly to the administration. So what was released
is clear and factual and doesn't conflict with other people
are said, and I just personally think, and I know
that my council members share my view that his statements
were inflammatory and were not necessary or helpful and just

(07:43):
made the situation worse.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Some of the charges were kept inside the City of
Bluish and Mayor's Court. As you know as the mayor
that there are misdemeanor charges that could be brought and
kept in Mayor's Court and if it's a juvenile it
must be sent down to Hamlin County Juvenile Court, which
has a history of dismissing charges against those charges with crimes.
And I will and Nelly basis are you going to

(08:06):
is there a sense of pursuing the charges in the
City of blue Ash Mayor's Court to it through their
logical conclusion and not to dismiss them.

Speaker 2 (08:16):
You know, I don't have any information about what the
plan is. As you know, we have a magister. You
may know that we have an outside person run our
mayor's court now a lawyer, so that it's handled completely appropriately,
of course, and so I have not been engaged in
any conversations talking about what what will be This is
the decision about these charges.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
So as far as the planning for the future. The
idea of having a place where people are checked is
almost impossible to do because I've been there many times
and you can come into that park from three sixty
You can come in from almost any angle. Secondly, to
have a weight line for people to come in starting
in the afternoon until ten thirty pm at night, take

(09:00):
forever to get through the line, that would be a problem.
And so there's been comments made by some about parents
that aren't possibly being the kind of parents they should
be relative to their children. There were comments made by
state officials, and I know police officer and chiefs of
police and other cities have said where are the parents?

(09:21):
How come parents on supervising their own children? As far
as the age of those involved in these activities, is
the number about ninety because the police chief said it
was about ninety people, What can you tell us about that?

Speaker 3 (09:34):
How many people?

Speaker 2 (09:35):
I've heard media reports that there were four hundred people
that I haven't heard anything official from our folks that
determined that that was the number of this group. But again,
it was a very small number of young people that
made these poor choices and use these actions that scared people.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
Now no question, and I think ninety might be a
small number. At one point it was four hundred and
as far as the tenants is ninety thousand people, I've
heard some say there's ninety to one hundred thousand people attending.
Is that accurate?

Speaker 3 (10:04):
You know?

Speaker 2 (10:04):
I've heard varying numbers from fifty to sixty to seventy
in the park to the numbers that you're talking about
when you consider the people that watch the fireworks from
around the park and then surrounding commercial buildings. So it
is a big event, you know, and in a Blue
Ash we only have about thirteen or fourteen thousand residents.
So we put on this event for the whole community,
the whole region, and we're happy to do it and

(10:27):
just will work really hard for next year to make
sure that we can do anything possible to minimize any
events like that's happening to disrupt what's otherwise an amazing
event and.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
A mayoric cole. It's fair to say the great majority
of those attending this event are not from the city
of Blue Ash. Is that fair to say?

Speaker 2 (10:43):
Can't be thember The numbers speak for themselves.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
Yes, what does everybody park? I mean, I look at
numbers of fifty to sixty thousand people. That's like a
that's almost up to the level of pay course stadium.
Where do people park? How do you get there?

Speaker 2 (10:58):
We have well, we have a lot of commercials, a
commercial areas around Summit Park, and so the office building.
Some of the office buildings, not everyone, but many of
them allow us to have visitors park there. We put
up portlets and so forth, you know, to accommodate the
needs of the people. But you know, we have good
relationships with our surrounding businesses. We try to take really

(11:19):
good care of our businesses and they help us out
from time to time with situations like this.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
Well, going forward, how does this hurt you as the
mayor of this city, which I think Blue Ash is
fabulous that it's a motto is the little tree that
grew it's now a fabulous community. How does this hurt
your heart when there's something like this happens.

Speaker 2 (11:41):
Well, again, I said, it just hurts my heart because
I've been so proud of the fact that, you know,
as you were talking about earlier, crazy things are happening
all over that we've always been able to host this
event that has been pretty much trouble free, and it
is discouraging that this wasn't the case this year. But
I really have a lot of confidence in our team,
and I know that we will carefully look at every

(12:03):
angle of it and will develop a very effective, safe
plan going future, you know, going forward. So we'll also
still keep it welcoming and family oriented events.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
So the event will go on no matter what. The
planning will continue. You can't let these few individuals, which
might be half of one percent or less of those
who attend, can't let them ruin it for the other
ninety nine point eight percent of the people that attend.
I often reference this, then it's not exactly the same.
But when something happens terrible in Israel and some terrorist
blows up a pizza parlor, the next day, the pizza

(12:34):
parlor is filled with customers because you can't let the
myscreiants determine your activities. As an American, we have to
stand up to this stuff, and we can't back down
and say, Okay, we're not going to do this anymore
because someone may get hurt. Someone may get hurt just
walking across the street, for God's sakes. And so when
these things happen, whether it's on the banks, whether it's
Washington Park, whether it's in Covington, whether it's in Middletown,

(12:57):
whether it's in Blue Ash. When these events take place,
we must stand up together and say not on my watch,
and we're going to continue to have this event. We're
going to police it maybe a little bit a little
bit better. But I don't know how you could have
anticipated this from occurring. It hadn't happened in thirty years.
And nonetheless your head over one hundred police officers present,
and at this point the planning must go on. Is

(13:17):
it your attitude that as long as you're the mayor
of Blue Ash, this event will transpire.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
Well, that is my sincere hope. And I've heard no
one on staff mention at all the idea that this
would not go forward. And this is a very important
community event we're very proud to put on celebrating our countries.
So I have no information at all that discontinuing it
is being considered, all.

Speaker 1 (13:42):
Right, Mayor Joe Cole, thanks for coming on. And Friday
night was a good night until at the last thirty
or forty minutes, and then a few individuals acted up,
made fools of themselves, committed crimes and next year it
will be more prepared. But Mayor Joe Cole, once again,
thanks for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show, and thank
you Mayor thinks. So let's continue with more. And there

(14:03):
you have it. And fortunately no one was seriously injured.
No one was hurt seriously, no one was killed, fortunately,
but nonetheless had the potential with some serious injuries from
individuals that don't know how to act in public. Let's
continue with more. Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred WLW
HI Billy Cunningham and I've been trying to get on
Mayor Joe Cole last couple of days. I'm glad she

(14:26):
decided to come on as a responsible leader. You want
to wait maybe a couple of days for things to
wash out a little bit to get more of the facts.
Here are some of the facts of what happened on
the evening of July fourth, which an event that I
have attended repeatedly and it's a great event. Six people,
including four kids, children juveniles, were arrested after fireworks were

(14:46):
set off in the crowd at the event. A thirteen
year old think about a seventh grader, initially charged with
soulting a police officer now has charges reduced to simply
inducing panic, which is a misdemeanor. And I can't get
clear information from the mayor or from the Chief of
Place as to why it occurred. But it is a

(15:07):
regular event in our Hamley County juvenile court system, and
I have Rob Sanders coming up later to address this.
And it's not a seriousness. In juvenile it's called kiddy court.
And if it's the first offense, many times the court system,
under the leadership of Judge Kerry Bloom simply dismissed the charges.
Maybe you have to write a book report, literally write

(15:28):
a book report. And many of the proceedings are shall
we say secret because of the youth of the child involved,
so the media is not notified. It's not open court.
You don't have many times a record being taken. And
the thirteen year old is not something in juvenile court
system is fashioned to address. It's too young. But in

(15:50):
today's world, when you look at the fighting happening at
the Red, White and Blue Ash disturbance, most of the
kids were there, shall I say, they weren't living in
Blue Ash. And secondly they were acting up unless if
it was some Jerry Springer show. So when you charge
with a soul and the police officer, at a minimum,
the court system ought to be in contact with the

(16:11):
police officer that was injured and to discuss it with
him or her, to talk to the law director in
the city of Blue Aesh, maybe talk to the mayor
Jill Cole and say, hey, what's up with this? But
to dismiss it willy nilly the first time of initial
appearance is kind of stupid, but nonetheless that's the way
juvenile court works today. Body camera footage shows police arresting

(16:35):
a thirteen year old girl and responding to a fight
involving pepper spray. Numerous fights broken out, and so the
fact matter is this isn't just happening in Blue Ash.
This is happening all over the county, in all over America.
Today you have in large cities of this great country

(16:58):
of ours, they're in rebellion against the federal government. It's
the new Confederacy.

Speaker 5 (17:03):
You know.

Speaker 1 (17:03):
The Democrats in the South, which turned about eighteen twenty
eight when Jackson Andrew Jackson formed the Democratic Party through today,
they've been around now for almost two hundred years. For
the first part of their existence, the Democrats were in
rebellion against the federal government. The government wanted to have
black citizens treated the same as white citizens, and the

(17:25):
South would not do it. They would not educate black kids.
They had visions vicious ferior in discrimination. And so we
went to a civil war eighteen sixty one to eighteen
sixty five, killing about six hundred thousand of my fellow citizens.
To tell the South, tell the Democrats that you're part
of the Union and you don't having your own federal law.

(17:48):
We wi't enforce federal law. You don't. So after deals
were struck in eighteen seventy six with the selection of
rutherfert B. Hayes to be the president. To get the
Democrats in the South to go along with Hayes's presidency,
Hayes had to agree to withdraw all the federal troops
out of the South, which he did in eighteen seventy

(18:10):
seven to eighteen ninety. The federal troops were required to
leave the South. The commander in chief the president said
get out, which is what the Democrats wanted. That they
imposed Jim Crow on the South. If you were a black,
a person of color, often Catholics, certainly, homosexuals, and others
were treated as second, third, and fourth class citizens, and
they were lynched, beaten, marginalized. And it took that way

(18:34):
for eighty years for Dwight D. Eisenhower to say in
the nineteen fifties, you can't do that anymore. This a
federal law. You've got to follow federal law, the Supremacy
Clause in the US Constitution. You must follow federal law
whether you like it or not. So the Democrats said
at that point, no, we're not We're not going to
follow federal law. What happened well Orville Fabas, the governor

(18:54):
of Arkansas, or George Wallace, Democratic governor in Alabama stood
in the doors of the of the school and would
not let black kids go in to be educated, and
that white businesses would not hire black employees. So that
caused the mass exodus, the mass migration out of the
South by African Americans to go into areas of our

(19:14):
country controlled by the Republican Party. And so that's why Detroit, Ohio, Kentucky,
and Pennsylvania have so many African Americans because they couldn't
stand living under Democrats anymore. So here we are a
few decades later, what are we learning now? The Democrats
who run the cities will not enforce federal law again

(19:35):
and again and again. In fact, they're calling for rebellion
against ICE, the FBI, the CIA, the law enforcement officials,
US Marshall Service. There's efforts by some to literally shoot
and kill ICE agents whoever they might be located. I
saw the story this morning in which there were approximately

(19:57):
fourteen left wing activists. We spent their time planning the
murder the execution of ICE agents at their offices, and
right now they've been indicted and the Democrats in the
big cities were not enforced federal law again and again
and again. Sadly, according to this one report out of Texas,

(20:23):
a militant left wing group allied with the Democratic Party
launched what officials called was coordinated violent attack on ICE
detention facilities on the fourth of July. It started at
about ten thirty pm when a group of twelve ANTIFA
radicals dressed in all black began shooting fireworks toward the building,
lowering the ICE officials out of the building. On July fourth,

(20:46):
in the evening, some began ventializing government cars. When unarmed
ICE workers called nine to one one the police department
showed up as the officer got out of his car.
The first thing that happened he got shot in the
neck by one of these left wing radical Democrats shot
him in the neck. Then another officer arrived. He was

(21:08):
taking fire. In total, the assailants, the Democrats, shot approximately
thirty rounds out of AR fifteen style rifles at correctional officers.
Police later found two AR fifteen style rifles and spent
casings in nearby woods. They've been arrested. They were found
in possession of military style clothing. Some had body armor,

(21:30):
some were covered in mud, some were armed, and some
had radios for communication purposes. The fourteen of all been arrested.
The officer has survived the shot and the gunshot to
his neck. It's in the hospital. And that is being
incentivized by the activities of mayors in Chicago, Los Angeles
and ma'em. Donnie the next mayor in New York says

(21:51):
the same thing attacked law enforcement. In fact, there's this
one report and I watched this morning on CNN. I
watched this, so you don't have to that twenty four
members of Congress or A Democrats say that their constituents want
to see blood running in the streets. They want Republicans
and Mega killed. That's what the supporters of the twenty

(22:14):
four elected Democrats are saying. And you think it can't
get worse. Blue Ash compared to these events was somewhat minimal,
But why you dismissed charges against assault on a police
officer is really beyond me. Tip of the iceberg. You
may know that Elias Rodriguez is accused of murdering two

(22:39):
Israeli embassy staffers in Washington, d C. On May the
twenty first. Luigi Mangioni, the accused killer of CEO Brian
Thompson December fourth of last year, shot him in the back,
and the Democratic Party has raised him a million dollars
in legal fees to keep that things going. You might
recall the Jews were set on fire in Colorado by

(23:01):
someone named Mohammed Solomon. And I'm watching this and this
is similar to what occurred in eighteen sixty one. And
now our beloved mayor and the completely overwhelmed city manager
of Cincinnati, herl Long, it's going to hold a news
conference in forty five minutes to address the violence. I
spent some time. I'm gonna have a guest on tomorrow

(23:23):
to talk about this and things occur and Ludlow on
Ludlow Avenue in Clifton that largely go completely shall we say,
uncovered by the media because of when it happens and
the police frankly don't know what to do. And this
is happening in one of the best sections of Cincinnati,

(23:44):
which is Ludlow and the story CPO has a Channel
nine a late night street takeover on Ludlow Avenue in
Clifton has residents and business owners demanding the city take action.
Up to eighty to one hundred persons crowding the streets,
blocking traffic, dancing on the cars, drinking, smoking pot, etc.
About three to four am on Sunday morning, which is

(24:06):
after Saturday night, pushing the crowd Backfire departments having trouble
getting out of the firehouse there were so many people
in the street. A fire truck reporter could not get
out of the firehouse on Ludlow Avenue and Channel nine
has obtained surveillance videos. The video shows officers chasing at
least one person catching up to them over the scanners
who hear cops saying they need help, please roll on this.

(24:30):
When the first few officers arrived, they were scared the officers.
The police were scared. They called for backup, and back
up would very slow to arrive at four am on
Sunday morning, and the video shows that businesses are being looted.
There are numerous crimes being committed on Ludlow Avenue and

(24:53):
many are begging the city to look at the police
staffing levels. And that night they arrested eight people, including
one for assault on the police officer. And they see
people selling alcohol out of their cars, fighting in the streets,
dancing literally on top of the cars, intimidating people with
guns in their waistband, brandishing guns. We've reached out the

(25:13):
businesses for comment. They don't want to comment on it whatsoever.
Many say, we love our city, but this can't continue.
What this isn't Dodge City and gun smoke in the
eighteen seventies. These are democratically controlled cities, and Cincinnati is
better off than many of the other ones. In the

(25:34):
city of Chicago, which is six times our size, they
had over one hundred people shot and in the city
of Chicago over the weekend, and the mayor, Brandon Johnson,
who's a complete idiot, said it happened because it was
a long weekend. Many people, he said, took off on
Thursday before the fourth Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, there was
a hangover until Monday. So the reason so many people

(25:56):
were wounded and about fourteen were murdered because it was
a long four day weekend instead of a three day weekend.
The what are we talking about? And Los Angeles, the
mayor Karen Bass will organize outside ice detention facilities, hundreds
of people and block access to the public streets of

(26:17):
ice vehicles organized by the mayor of Los Angeles who
refuses to follow federal law. And if this Mondani character
gets elected as the mayor of New York City is
going to get worse, worse, and even more worse. And
Cincinnati is in better shape than most of the major
cities in this country. Right, We're better shape. We have

(26:40):
a mayor who looks great. We have a city manager
who's completely in over her head with no qualifications for
the job. Who's the only job before this one was
running North College Hill, which is a terrible community but
set by all kinds of problems, who filed personal bankruptcy
as leans against her, and she's the city manager in
charge of six thousand employees and a seven hundred million

(27:03):
dollar budget, and the mayor is freeze dried off the
pages of GQ. So they're going to have another powwow
in about half an hour or so to talk about
what they can do to stop it. About a month ago,
their proposals, among others, was to address gun violence, poverty,
crazy gun laws, and accessibility to social media Act for Cincinnati,

(27:28):
they spend three million dollars on things like hip hop
dance lessons, opening up swimming pools keeping them open at night.
Forty one organizations received about a million dollars, including for
that hip hop dance stuff. Also to understand vital social
services for at risk residents, twenty five thousand dollars for

(27:51):
mentoring youthful minds. One program would pay at risk youth
teens each month when they're not arrested for a crime,
ipens not to commit crime. Also, food and security is
a problem eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars to feed individuals.
I read their proposals. I'm anxious to hear what they
have to say in about thirty five minutes because obviously

(28:15):
everything they proposed at this point doesn't work. And when
I speak to men and women in blue, and I
speak to men and women of the fire department, none
of them, to a person, respects the mayor or the
city manager at all, zero, zilch, nada. Whatever they say
is completely irrelevant. As the fire chief of Cincinnati was
fired by the city manager about two years ago. The

(28:37):
current guy went on leave for like six months, and
she just fired another assistant chief for god knows the reason.
And the cops have no respect for city council or
the mayor or the city manager. They don't pay attention
to what they say at all. What is required is
grossly more police officers immediately, or call in the National Guard.

(28:58):
Get the National Guard here. Obviously life and limbs are
at risk. So we'll see what happens, but little or nothing.
And when we have a completely dysfunctional juvenile court system
that doesn't lock up criminals who happen to be thirteen, fourteen,
and fifteen years old, maybe write a book report that's
what passes for punishment in our juvenile court. Things are

(29:21):
completely out of whack. The cops won't a rest and
the judges will not convict when cops can't when cops
go through what they have to go through for an arrest,
and then the magistrates and juvenile court dismissed the case
immediately upon filing. It sends the idea to the copper's, look,

(29:42):
why waste your time with all this paperwork? Why charge
anybody anyway? And you know what's happening at the banks.
They have special let in let out occasions with security
guards at the banks because of all the violence committed
at the banks, and now it's spread out to Clifton
and Ludlow Avenue, which is along with Hyde Park, the

(30:02):
two best communities in the city are at Clifton and
Hyde Park, and the Hyde Park's in total turmoil because
of what city council was doing with the Hyde Park Square,
complete turmoil. How does it end? God only knows. We
can't be a great nation with all of our large
cities in total collapse New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Washington,

(30:25):
d C. Cincinnati is only like the thirty fifth largest city.
You can't send your kid to school. You pay property
taxes for schools largely, and you can't send your kid
to the public schools. They're so dysfunctional and so bad.
Given a choice. No parent would send their kid to
use high school, right, not one. But you got to
pay confiscatory taxes so others can go there. It's nothing

(30:47):
more than daycare services. No education is being conducted. And
the police departments had their legs cut out from under
them by an incompetent city council and competent city manager
and a pretty boy mayor that can find is cheeky
butt with both hands. So we're about to hear from
them again about maybe midnight basketball, keep the pools open,
and more hip hop dance lessons. That'll solve the problem, right.

(31:10):
What solves the problem is law enforcement and prosecutors and judges.
A small percentage of the total are doing these things,
and they need to be held accountable for their criminal acts.
Three things. Graduate from high school work, don't commit crime.
That's all it takes. It doesn't take hip hop dance lessons.

(31:32):
Graduate from high school work, don't commit crime. Boda doom
bademing batabang. Do those three things and you'll be successful.
And if you don't do those things, lock them up
and hang them high twelve fifty five, Home of your
Reds by the way, coming up after one o'clock today,
we'll be Sheriff Charmaine McGuffey about her deputies and what's

(31:54):
happening in law enforcement in the city and more. Bill
Cunningham News Radio seven hundred Wow by Billy Cunningham, the
Great American.

Speaker 3 (32:08):
Of course.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
A few days ago, I'm watching Fox nineteen. Did this
story really a sad story? Hopefully with a great ending?
Himny County Deputy Sheriff Justin Shaeffer, who's a corporal. I
understand from the sheriff herself. He's been in office about
twelve years and living his life, wife, got kids. I
saw this picture of him with a little baby, newborn baby,

(32:29):
living his life quite well, and all of a sudden
in May of this year, at work, he kind of
lost a little bit of consciousness. He was kind of
zoned out. He couldn't talk, didn't respond and went on
for a minute or two, and then he snapped back
and he felt fine. But then he had things checked
out and the results weren't very good. And Sheriff Charmade McGuffey,

(32:49):
welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. So, Sheriff, can
you tell us about Deputy Sheriff Justin Shaeffer, what he's
doing for you right now. And what happened to him
at work?

Speaker 4 (33:00):
Yeah, and thanks Bill for having me on. Justin is
a wow. He's just been an excellent employee. He's a
road patrol deputy, started out in the jail some twelve
years ago, you know, very quickly gravitated to road patrol
and has been working that, was promoted to corporal And yeah,
just as you said, you know, May twenty fifth, he's

(33:21):
just sitting there talking to a couple of his colleagues
there and you know, kind of zoned out, and people
were concerned. Our deputies are trained, they're trained to recognize
when someone's having medical emergencies, and so they urged him
to go to the hospital and he did, and unfortunately,
he found out he has a brain tumor, stage two cancer.

(33:45):
And you know, they did surgery, like I mean right away,
like June second, that's how serious it is. And they
were able to get as I understand, a good amount
of the tumor out and so forth, and hisgnosis is hopeful.
But I mean, he has stage two cancer, brain cancer.

Speaker 1 (34:04):
And there were no indicators ahead of time. Maybe my
grand headaches, maybe losing consciousness, maybe your extremities feel a
little bit unusual. This just came out of nowhere.

Speaker 4 (34:15):
Yeah, it absolutely did. I mean he actually, you know
how you are, how we all are. We tend to
not seek medical attention because we think, oh that was
just I don't know, I was overheated or something. But yeah,
he had nothing until he had that episode. And you know, again,
fortunately our deputies were very vigilant urged him to get

(34:38):
that attention. But he's a perfectly healthy young man.

Speaker 1 (34:41):
Yes, how is the prognosis stage two? I guess is
a serious stage four? Of course? Is there a sense
has he returned to duty at all the last month?

Speaker 4 (34:53):
No, No, he cannot. I mean he underwent surgery, a
very serious surgery, and as I said, it went well,
but there is still many hoops to jump through. He's
going to further consult his surgeon, as I understand, and
there may be another surgery here in his future. So yeah,
he has been off work, using his you know, he's

(35:16):
saved up sick time. He's been a good employee, comes
to work every day, so he is using his time.
We are, of course, you know, monitoring, you know, when
our deputies can help out to donate time and things
like that. But he is off work and by the way,
so is his wife. I mean they have a brand
new newborn and now she of course is taking care

(35:40):
of the newborn and has this situation that she has
to work with.

Speaker 1 (35:44):
I understand. There's a go fund Me page set up
and there's about twenty one thousand dollars so far in donations,
and well, it's powerful to see, I feel because this
shows the shows to him you're not alone. You've got
a lot of people behind you, not only law enforcement,
family and friends, also the public. There's an event on
July the thirteenth, between one and five pm at Deadlow

(36:06):
Brewery on Kellogg Avenue. And the day of the week,
I think that's uh is that a I think that's
a Sunday. I think it's this coming Sunday. If I
have that correct, one to five is coming Sunday and
hopefully enough money can be raised. There's another fund I
know when when Deputy Larry Henderson went down, there's a

(36:27):
fund set up for officers that assist the family sometimes
in need. Does he qualify for what some of those
moneys are not? Because I understand that goes to those
who have been injured or killed in the line of duty.
Just something like this apply or.

Speaker 4 (36:39):
Not, it doesn't. Bill, that's a very restrictive fund that's
outlined for those for those other tragic incidences. And this
is I mean, this is beyond tragic as well. It's
it's but it's not something that is funded for We
do you know, we do rely on the public to

(36:59):
you know, you want to support your police officer. And
and honestly, this is a young man who really you know, Bill,
I kind of consider him related to all of us, Right,
he grew up on the West Side, Uh, gravitated to
law enforcement. He's a young man that we know. Right,
he's married, married at a young age. Uh. Has you

(37:19):
know this beautiful little six month old baby boy, cathyon
and he's got a little, uh, a little four year
old girl. Is he such a cute man? And uh,
you know, I mean he's just well, he's every one
of us. He's really every one of us. He's everyone's
you know, son, grandson, et cetera. And uh, certainly we

(37:41):
want to support his recovery. Uh. This young man does
have a chance. He has lots of chances, and we
want to we want to accelerate that. And uh, you know,
keep his young family going while he works through this.
And he's very strong and determined.

Speaker 1 (37:57):
We'll see what happens. And I know I spoke to
Mary Carol Melton on your Top Assistance about this, and
I'm going to contact her and I'm going to make
a personal donation of one thousand dollars to assist this Temporday.

Speaker 4 (38:09):
Thank you well.

Speaker 1 (38:10):
When I saw him on those Fox nineteen stories, I
thought unbelievable to have this strike him. How's the agency
doing after Larry Henderson's murder?

Speaker 4 (38:21):
Well, and thank you very much for asking for the public.
We are, you know, we still are feeling the pain
quite honestly. I mean, we had an unveiling. We had
a young man, Tony Lips, who used to work for
us as a deputy and is now a very accomplished artist,
and he painted a portrait of Larry that we dedicated

(38:43):
over there at the district in Anderson Township where Larry
worked and so forth. And you know, his wife, Laurie
was there and one of his he has. Larry has
five adult children and they are frequently at these events,
supporting and so forth. And they're young people too. But yes,

(39:04):
we are, We're still feeling. We're still feeling the edge
of it, and we're going to feel it a long time.
It's going to live with us.

Speaker 1 (39:11):
Sheriff McGuffey, you've been at this for more than thirty years.
You've held every position to be held in the Hamlet
County Sheriff's Department, from top to bottom, from walking to
range and the old workhouse to being the sheriff of
Hamblet County. You've seen it all, You've done it all.
Is there something happening in Hamlety County, in the city
of Cincinnati the last five to ten years that is

(39:32):
historically unprecedented with the number of shootings we have? There
was another eleven year old girl was shot this morning
about one am and Avondale. Is there something different happening
now than say, fifteen to twenty years ago.

Speaker 4 (39:46):
Oh, it's quite different. It's very, very different. And you know,
you can point it different factors certainly, that and socioeconomic
factors and so forth, and people living in poverty. But
I also have to tell you, and I've said this
many times and I'll continue to say it, this arena
of everybody gets to have a gun is ridiculous. You know,

(40:09):
we had a concealed carry license here. That's what we built.

Speaker 3 (40:13):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (40:14):
Men and women came down and they paid a nominal fee,
they got training, they they were able to carry a
gun very responsibly. And now we have legislation that has
occurred within this last decade that literally just it takes
away all that they don't. You don't have to have
concealed carry. You're encouraged to, you know, carry a gun

(40:36):
on you everywhere you go. And that's just ridiculous. And
you know, Bill, I'm a plain talker.

Speaker 3 (40:42):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (40:43):
That may work in these rural communities where you have,
you know, a very small population and everybody knows everybody.
But look, you know Cincinnati is a small, big town.
But when you tell everybody, hey, we're not we don't care,
we don't care about gun regulations. I mean, this is
it's incredibly out of hand. And we do need to

(41:06):
talk to parents certainly that I think parents are doing
everything they can, the parents that are keeping an eye
on their kids, because my god, you've got to get
your kids, you know, away from these guns and try
to keep them away as you can. And look, if
you think it doesn't affect you, it affects every one
of us, and it's going to continue to do that.

(41:27):
I know Cincinnati Police is working very very hard to
get a handle on this. I work very hard on
the juvenile justice as far as gun prevention, violence and
so forth as well. You know, as a community, we've
got to get behind this. But our lawmakers, let's put
some restrictions on who can have a gun. For God's sake.

Speaker 1 (41:48):
Well, we're going to do what we can here to
assist Larry Henderson the way he You know, it's one
thing to be killed in the line of duty, it's
one that he was. But it's one thing to be
on a swat team. It's another thing to be running
radar or something as you pull somebody over. He was
simply standing there doing his job and somebody targeted him
for murder because he perceived he wanted to kill. It

(42:10):
could have been you, it could have been Fiji, it
could have been any cop, Green Township City, anybody. That
guy wanted to murder a cop. And it's just I
look at that and I'm going this is this hasn't
happened before where someone has targeted specifically because of the
uniform that they're wearing. And it's extremely said but once again,
for those listening, I'm gonna get a hold of one

(42:31):
of your top assistants there and make a thousand dollars
personal donation. I'm gonna encourage all my listeners to make
whether it's five dollars, twenty to fifty dollars, go fund me,
Go fund me and send the name of Justin jus
T I. N. Schaefer s C H A E F
E R. And he's he's at home recovering. His wife

(42:53):
is off work. They have a couple of kids. He's
got brain cancer. He wants to come back to work.
And the least we can do is help among us
that are working on our behalf to maintain law and order.
But once again, Sheriff McGuffey of Hamilton County, thanks for
coming on the Bill Cunningham Show, taking time this afternoon,
and we'll do it again. Thank you, Sheriff, and thank
you so much.

Speaker 4 (43:13):
Bill, Thank you for your donation. Thank you from the
bottom of our hearts. The Shaeffer family, thank you so much.

Speaker 1 (43:19):
God bless you. Let's continue with more and it's available
if you're in town. Whatever it's coming Sunday, July thirteenth,
from one to five at Deadlow Brewery on Kellogg Avenue
or go online go fund me. So far there's about
twenty thousand dollars raised and the family needs a lot
more than that to get through these difficult days. Deputy's

(43:40):
name again is Justin Schaeffer, Bill Cunningham on news radio
seven hundred WLW. It's the music Dave Keaton after two
o'clock today. We need different perspectives on similar issues. Prosecutor
Rob Sanders will be here after two o'clock today from
Kenton County to talk about what's happening there in their

(44:01):
juvenile court system, which is fundamentally different than our juvenile
court system, in which book reports are a big item.
For a punishment of some thirteen year old commits a
vicious crime, a book report might be ordered by Judge
carry Bloom, book reports apologizing and moving on and once again,
the meaning's going to be held beginning now. But what

(44:21):
it takes is to hire quickly one to two hundred
more police officers and number two have I know this
has been powwow suggested between some of the more senior
judges in Amwiny County to get with juvenile court judges,
especially Judge Carry Bloom and tell her you can't keep
doing what you're doing, because ultimately it's up to the
voters to decide who's in office and who's not in office.

(44:44):
I have a guest on tomorrow is going to talk
about this, that he's thinking about running for city council
as a Charter Right and I said, well, you can't
run as a Republican in the city of Cincinnati because
you can't win, and I don't think you can win.
I doubt you can win as a Republican. I don't
know the last time of Republican mayor. I think it
was nineteen seventy one with Willis Gradison. It's in more

(45:05):
than a half a century. You might recall that Ken
Blackwell was a Charter Right Maybe for those who take
a different approach, to run as a charter right may
make some inroads. Talk to Attorney Flynn and see what
he thinks about a charter right party to give a
different perspective. What happened in Blue Ash is also happening
in larger numbers, of course, in the city of Cincinnati,

(45:27):
with a lot more violence, at least in Blue Ash.
I have the press release issued by Rachel Murray and
others about what they did in preparation for the event
that up to now has had no difficulties. There were
one hundred and ten officers on duty from the Sheriff's Department,
Blue Ash Police, Highway Patrol, Swat, the drone team and

(45:48):
numerous other agencies throughout the region. And I'm trying to
find out why the magistrate in juvenile Court quickly dismissed
the assault on a police officer charge before the thing
got off the ground. The case has been dismissed now
he's been dismissed without prejudice, which means it can't be
brought again. But I am sure that the three to

(46:10):
four hundred so called youths called by one member of
Blue Ash Councils Riff Raft are laughing, snickering and having
a good time getting ready for the next Red, White
and Blue Ash event. That hundreds of young kids with
nothing to do in their own minds aren't going to
go away. They're going to come back next year. So

(46:31):
I know the Mayor Joe Cole is going to do
her damnedest to provide more security. But things are not
good in Blue Ash. But nobody was shot and nobody
was seriously injured. And I understand the officer himself was
back to work today having taken about four days off,
so his leg's okay. You get hit with some Roman
candle and the eye and the head and the face,

(46:52):
you can have serious disfiguring injuries or died from those things,
so it's not funny. But without parental involvement, without consequences, criminally,
this actions are likely to continue. We'll see what happens.
All we do is continue. We never stop. One thirty
Homier Reds. The last two games they've lost by a
collective score of seventeen to three. That's two baseball scores.

(47:15):
Hopefully tonight with ABB, it will be better. Bill Cunningham,
News Radio seven hundred ww CNN has scum, and so
is MSDNC.

Speaker 6 (47:24):
They're all and frankly the networks aren't much better.

Speaker 7 (47:32):
Hello buietus, I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 1 (47:39):
Seg right now. The city leaders are meeting about the
mean streets of Cincinnati running red with blood and more talking,
more talking, that's what we need. We have hip hop
dance classes coming midnight, basketball, keeping the city pools open longer.
And he guess the mayor with his new haircuts down
there and the city manager, whoever that is, and then

(48:01):
other city officials gonna solve the crime problem. In chief,
guy er chief, I get a hold of Batman. Put
a sign up there on the clouds. Get Batman, Superman.
They had him at the Whole of Justice at the
Union termto last night. We're Superman when you need him.
If you had a superpower, what would it be? Mine

(48:21):
would be flying. I love to fly like an eagle.
You know what I'm saying. How about X ray eyes?
Not bad? Sometimes you don't want to see things though.

Speaker 7 (48:31):
That's true.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
So I don't know, And I'm glad you brought that up.
About Joe Burrow. I'm watching Netflix now, we've had it
for two years. Penny showed me how last night I
watched Netflix and I'm watching Joe Burrow. I love Joe
Burrow's mother. Can I say that? I love that woman
the way she cares for her son. And his dad's

(48:53):
not bad either, Jimmy, But I love Anyone that doesn't
love a mother like that, doesn't have love in their heart.
I love Joe Burrow's mother. Like to meet her, see
get him in here, Get Jimmy and mom in there.

Speaker 3 (49:04):
Mine.

Speaker 1 (49:05):
Nothing better, nothing better than a good mother. Would you agree? Correct,
I can see why Joe's as good as he is,
but he likes to look at dinosaur bones. And also,
I'm watching again how last year they lost at home
against New England that was like impossible. Then I watched
how they lost the game to the Ravens and ot
because Moneymack issued a bad check, couldn't make a field goal.

(49:27):
And then I looked at the Washington loss. They should
have been four and one instead of one and four.
And then they have to wait for Denver to lose
it home to Kansas City when the game didn't matter
in Casey rested all their starters. Now I love that
kind of behind the We should have a behind the
scenes in here, would you agree? Let's get somebody do
behind hard knocks at the big one, see what really

(49:49):
happens behind closed doors.

Speaker 7 (49:50):
Let people really know what's going on.

Speaker 1 (49:52):
Let them I'm not afraid of that, are you afraid? No,
I'm not afraid. Put the stooge on TV, put it
up right there. Let's get it off. Yeah, I think
it'd be great. Would you could we get some subscription services,
possibly only fan account that Rocky Boyman has schooled me
on getting an only fan account for the students report,
I would say, so only fans. Yeah, and you and

(50:14):
I get paid hopefully. Yeah, you could you some more money.
You're rich anyway. If sun getting to you or something,
it has gotten to me. Yeah, all I know is
that brighter day. The last two games segment, Austin Elmo
said about a week ago, the ten games, the next

(50:34):
ten games, seven at home, the last three over the
week in Philly. The Reds are going to go seven
and three in these ten in these ten games and
three in Philly, seven at home. Roustin said seven and three.
At this point, they're one and four.

Speaker 7 (50:49):
Wrong again.

Speaker 1 (50:50):
He also said in the month of June they were
going to win total of six games. Correct, They won fourteen, right,
So tonight he says they're going to lose. You know,
life say they're gonna win. Would you agree?

Speaker 7 (51:03):
Will he? The Stute Reports a proud service of your
local Tamestar heating and air conditioning dealers. Tamestar quality you
could feel in beautiful Milford, the home of one main
gallery called Baker Heating at five one three, eight, three,
one fifty one twenty four spots. Thank you Roxy those
Marlins extended their franchise record road winning streak. Will you

(51:25):
do eleven in a row? That's not possible, as they
routed the Reds last night twelve to two. That's four
in a row, and the l column for the Red
Lags are now four and a half back in the
wild Card instead of two and a half or one
and a half. Monday and Tuesday they've lost those games
seventeen to three. The money Man mark Nick Martinez rocked
for a career high ten runs last night. He retired

(51:47):
six in a row then, and you're thinking, all right, now,
it's doing pretty good. Then the Marlin said, uh ah,
three times through the lineup, we're gonna get you, and
they got him for seven runs.

Speaker 1 (51:59):
Sech If you take Candelaria forty five mil, Yeah, Martinez
twenty one mil. My simple Deer Park Chris Euster Matt says,
that's about sixty six million dollars. What's the return on investment?
What's the r I.

Speaker 7 (52:16):
Game?

Speaker 8 (52:16):
Three?

Speaker 7 (52:16):
Tonight, Sandy al Contra up against Nationale Gallstar Andrew Abbott,
seven hundred wlw's covered six ten Sports Talk RNL carriers
inside Pitch and then caught Kelsey Chevrolet extra inning show
after the game, and then again then Andrew Abbott found
out during the game last night that he was an

(52:37):
All Star seven and one mark going into the night
at two fifteen ERA. He's replacing a Dodgers pitcher who
is is going to start on Sunday. So Trevor Bauer, No, No,
it's a Japanese guy. What's Trevor Bauer doing? Nothing? How
about I think he's still pitching over in Japan. Pretty

(52:59):
good a phone call. Let's see a little league baseball, Willie.
We say congrats to the West Side all Stars eight
down Loveland last night, fourteen to nothing, and the West
Side goes to their fortieth straight district title tomorrow night.

Speaker 1 (53:15):
How many years forty have they ever won won at all?

Speaker 7 (53:20):
I think they have been a few years ago. I
can't remember. I'll ask wild Man, he'll know. Let's see
Red's community fund. The telethon last night really raised a
record three hundred and forty four thousand, three hundred and
five dollars.

Speaker 1 (53:33):
How about that?

Speaker 7 (53:34):
How about that? And PNC contributed one hundred thousand dollars
matching donation the home of Scott Dixon.

Speaker 1 (53:42):
How about that? How about that? Pretty good? Stuff that
is a wonderful that was outreached to the community. Had
Charlie Frank and Michael Anderson in the other day. They
came in, talked in there and went, well, three hundred
and forty four thousand, you know, they're thinking about doing
a park in Deer Park and name it after me,
Chamberlain Park. Wouldn't that be something?

Speaker 7 (54:03):
You mean renaming it?

Speaker 3 (54:04):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (54:05):
Because Will Chamberlain never was that big of a character,
was he?

Speaker 7 (54:09):
I think? In some ways? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (54:11):
Yeah, but I want to call it Cunningham Park. Now,
wouldn't that be who's it named after? Now? Will Chamberlain's
Chamberlain Park?

Speaker 7 (54:17):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (54:18):
Somehow he came through in the nineteen fifties. Yeah, and
the powers of being Deer Park thought, we'll we named
the park after Will Chamberlain.

Speaker 7 (54:25):
Doesn't make any sense. Seventy years ago Bengals update. Let's
see at National Football League execs, coaches, scouts and ranking
the NFL's top ten edge rushers for twenty twenty five.

Speaker 1 (54:39):
Oh oh, Miles.

Speaker 7 (54:41):
Garrett, new Merrow, Uno Browns, t J. Watt two Steelers,
Micah Parsons Dallas three, Max Crosby Raiders four, Nick Bosa,
San Diego, San Francisco five. Trey Hendrickson is number six?

Speaker 1 (55:04):
What is he signed?

Speaker 3 (55:05):
No?

Speaker 1 (55:06):
How about Stewart?

Speaker 7 (55:07):
Negative? Do they have an edge off any edge they got?
Let's see what it is? Twenty Yeah, they got about
two weeks ago. It's what the twenty They open up
on the the open camp on the twenty third.

Speaker 1 (55:20):
But at some point it gets real. Maybe Henderson doesn't
need camp, Shamar Stewart needs camp. Correct, he needs to
get in there. Yeah, but the Bengals are still holding
out right. Yes, they will not give market value to
either correct with the right language. The language is important.

Speaker 7 (55:38):
And I don't think the other guy is the number
two pick hasn't signed? Has he No? So how about
the pot? He's keeping his mouth shut.

Speaker 1 (55:46):
Pittsburgh is talking about trading Paul Skeins. According to ESPN, what.

Speaker 7 (55:57):
I mean able to keep players, not get rid of them.
They're going to be in the duldrums for the rest
of their life. What would happen if the Red Well,
they think they're gotta get Aaron Judge and half of
the Yankees for Paul Skeins.

Speaker 1 (56:09):
I'd keep him, would you agree?

Speaker 7 (56:11):
I would build around him?

Speaker 1 (56:13):
Me too. How about the Reds keeping Dela Cruz.

Speaker 7 (56:16):
They always get it, They always get one of I mean,
the baseball draft is Sunday. I think that. I think
Pittsburgh's I think they may be number two or three
on the list, thank you all.

Speaker 1 (56:27):
They're after his bags of cash? Is that Joe Dieters
Whatever happened him?

Speaker 7 (56:32):
I don't know. Went to Columbus, dude doing some kind
of job.

Speaker 1 (56:35):
Not sure need him back his prosecutor. Some say, what
do you say?

Speaker 7 (56:39):
I hear he may end up on a pro golf
tour after he can put hitting that putt at on
eighteen and clover and if you give you that glorious
victory of what ten dollars?

Speaker 1 (56:49):
Twelve twelve, twelve dollars? Wow, you guys, Joe can pay money.
Birdie on eighteen, a natural birdie with a stroke.

Speaker 7 (56:56):
Don't they don't they don't. They call him justice Joe
this so.

Speaker 1 (57:00):
He comes in anyway, I haven't seen this. He plays
golf wearing a black robe and that was hot, really, yes,
it was hot.

Speaker 7 (57:08):
That doesn't that impede his swing or not?

Speaker 1 (57:10):
His swing?

Speaker 7 (57:11):
He's got one like Scottie Scheffler classic, but he can fade, fade,
draw hook slice slow, high low straw left hip. Yeah,
he does it all. Maybe i'll have him in one day.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
He wants to play frank Zy Bell.

Speaker 7 (57:30):
You want to plame for a pool? What for the
Supreme Court justices?

Speaker 1 (57:36):
Sharon Kennedy in his backyard, he's a hot tub on
the twelve floor of the Justice Building in Columbus.

Speaker 7 (57:41):
A hot tub. And you see when you're gonna have
the governor on again? You know?

Speaker 1 (57:45):
I uh yeah, I know. I'll give him a call
and see what he's doing. But I mean that he
signed the budget and done. Everyone's mad at him too.
At some point the foolishness has got to stop. Who
aren't people mad? Can you see him on Only Fans?
Mike Dwine on Only Fans? Is that a possibility? No,

(58:06):
he has no, No, I don't think he has any
idea that. What about Phil Belichick? Jordan Hudson on how
much money we're talking about? There? All the money?

Speaker 7 (58:16):
Oh, he wouldn't have to coach ever again, there'll be
no money left in the war on air and have
her dance around or something.

Speaker 1 (58:21):
Dance around doing the hook a dance. Have you seen
the Hukka dance?

Speaker 7 (58:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (58:25):
You like that? She'd be doing the twist and the
boogoloo and the alligator. Yeah, should be doing it all
the freak bet you. Yeah. I can't. I can't stand,
I say, good man. We have coming up next is
Rob Sanders, who's taking an umbrage about what's happening in
Cincinnati from Covington. Umbrage. What is umbrage? If you take umbrage,

(58:46):
you got some umbrage off. It's correct.

Speaker 7 (58:49):
And he also had because all that could spill over
into it does, thank you, it does. That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (58:55):
He wants to build a wall. Build that wall, is
what Covington is saying, keeps Cincinnatians out. Covingtons, build that wall, okay,
And how safe is Middletown right now?

Speaker 7 (59:07):
So far, so good?

Speaker 1 (59:08):
No rioting, no, no marauding youths.

Speaker 7 (59:12):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (59:12):
Four hundred strong making a fool of themselves.

Speaker 7 (59:15):
I know that. I told the video of that the
other night. It was not it was terrifying, not good.
And there were people fighting. The girl girls were fighting.

Speaker 1 (59:23):
Springer show stuff, pulling hair, rolling around cops.

Speaker 7 (59:27):
And somebody starts throwing firecrackers and every and that, and
that's really what happened.

Speaker 1 (59:31):
Shots fired, shots fired. People are laughing, snickering, Blue Ash chaos.
And the juvenile court they're dismissed the charges against the
cop assault for reasons unclear at this point, and they
won't announce why they do them because the juvenile court
and the person was a thirteen year old seventh grader
assault on a cop made to write a book report.

(59:55):
Just say work, say give me out of the stud's report.

Speaker 7 (59:57):
Please, willye and I have a nice day. You're in
the rice dad, and how about it, rids? Maybe win
a couple in a row here?

Speaker 1 (01:00:04):
Last two collective score seventeen to three. This isn't football.

Speaker 7 (01:00:09):
This is a baseball score at home at my ballpark.
We leave you with the immortal words of the stud report.

Speaker 5 (01:00:17):
Teeny psychiatric help.

Speaker 4 (01:00:19):
That's a good truth of the matter.

Speaker 1 (01:00:21):
That's justice show calling in Wow you see referring to
you or me? I think I assume you Rocky or
Rocky Oh no, head on the mayor of Blue Ash,
Mayor Joel Cole col E Cole oh boy, who said,
we have about ten thousand residents in Blue Ash and
win eighty thousand people there shall we say the great majority?

(01:00:44):
We're not Blue Ash residents. Would you agree, I would
say so yes, And you get there by uber by
hook and.

Speaker 7 (01:00:49):
Crooked well, and then another thing is too is well
he you know, if it gets too out of control,
they'll cancel it, which is a shape I beg.

Speaker 1 (01:00:55):
I hope gues.

Speaker 7 (01:00:56):
It's for families and everything else to do that. But
I hope you.

Speaker 1 (01:00:59):
Can't do it. You can't let them win the criminal element.
Hope not to not win. They must lose. They must
go to jail, they must be punished. Maybe next year,
have more security, whatever it might be. Hell, they had
one hundred and ten cops anyway all over the place.
Now what do you do? Never had problem for thirty
five years, no problem. Now, all of a sudden, all
Hell's breaking loose. The virus of criminality in Cincinnati is

(01:01:22):
leaching into the suburbs, including the Butler County. I might
add Butler County. Well, you know who will take care
of that? I think jonesy kick ass like mister ass.

Speaker 7 (01:01:34):
Mister Jones will take care of that.

Speaker 1 (01:01:36):
Me and mister Jones, we had a thing going on.
Why don't you and I visit mcgimmon the Justice Center.
You want to go up to the Yeah, have you
been there before?

Speaker 7 (01:01:44):
Not recently. I've been in there sometimes. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:01:48):
I don't not overnight in a drunk tank or anything. No, No,
that's not you. No, No, I may go. Jonesy invites
me back up to do our show A from a
cell block. You want to do the show from Levenon correction. Yes,
guy's name is William C. Dolman was the was the
war and he wanted me to go up there and
do my show. Now, Jones, he wants me to set

(01:02:08):
up shop inside cell block C and do my show. Boy,
wouldn't that be something captive audience segment, Thank you, sir,
Let's continue with more. Coming up next will be the
prosecutor of Covington saying that maybe what's happening in Covington
should also occur in Cincinnati. You know what I'm saying.

(01:02:30):
On seven hundred WW, Billy Cunningham, the Great American Reds
Baseball kicks off about six zero pop tonight. We'll see
what happens big game tonight and of course over the
weekend of three with the collar out of Rockies can't
win those games, you got a problem. I think it's

(01:02:52):
critical this week for the redsgo at least four and three,
maybe five and two, which means they possibly will be
buyers instead of sellers. At the break July thirty, first
the trade deadline, will see what happens. But until then,
Rob Sanders, Kent County Prosecutor, welcome again to the Bill
Cunningham Show. And Rob, you sent me some materials about
this one character who belongs under the jail. His name

(01:03:13):
is Gage A. Wayaley talk about him in a moment.
But one of the issues in Cincinnati is that we're
going to have blood running in the streets of Cincinnati,
especially OTR all summer long, if not longer, every day,
every morning, every night, there's more balloon releases of moms
that are very unhappy with the deaths of their son
fourteen fifteen, sixteen years old. I don't hear the same frequency. Now,

(01:03:36):
Covington's a much smaller city. In Cincinnati, the city thereof
we have about three hundred thousand residents. I think Covington
is about less than a third of that. But nonetheless,
have you sinsed? As the Kent County Prosecutor for the
last have been out of for about twenty years, that
crime in Covington alone, is accelerating, decelerating, or staying about

(01:03:56):
the same.

Speaker 3 (01:03:58):
Will you do this to me all time?

Speaker 5 (01:04:00):
You know, we do a great job over here, partnering
with our local police and law enforcement and making sure
Northern Kentucky's the safest place to live.

Speaker 3 (01:04:07):
Work and raise a family.

Speaker 5 (01:04:08):
But every time we start talking about the fact that
we have no crime, you jinx me into having some
kind of major crime. So no, we fortunately we have
not suffered the same types of violent criminal activity that
we have seen on the north side of the river,
and God willing will keep it that way. We think that,
you know, has a direct impact on our local community.

(01:04:31):
When we implement policies like felons with guns go to prison,
drug traffickers go to prison, burglars go to prison. You know,
we're taking the people off the streets that are committing
the serious offenses, and we hope and pray that those
are the people that would otherwise be out there doing
stupid things like shooting up Red, White, and Blue festivals

(01:04:51):
or whatever they had going on over there, Like the
violence we've seen just right across the bridge. You know,
we can see the banks from the south bank of
the Ohio River, but we certainly don't want all the
trouble they've had over there in Small Park and the banks,
with shootings and juveniles running crazy over there. We and
when I say we, I'm not just talking about Kenton County,
but likewise, my counterparts in Boone and Campbell County, we

(01:05:14):
like to keep it quiet over here, and we've enjoyed
a much more peaceful place to live. And I think
it reflects when the community supports their prosecutors, supports their
law enforcement, backs the blue, the quality of life just
goes up. And you know that's why we are still
over here shopping for homes for you and the People's
judge you can come enjoy the safety and security that

(01:05:36):
is northern Kentucky.

Speaker 1 (01:05:37):
Well, I'm looking at some of the spending by your
friends in City Hall eight oh one, plumb, straight and
aftab pure of all, et cetera. They've budgeted this year
at least three million dollars, which is selling Cincinnati's holistic
approach to violent crime. So three million dollars is like money.
And some of the problems here are crazy gun laws,

(01:05:57):
the accessibility to guns, the use of social media, and
the mayor pointing out that there's to be greater parental engagement.
I certainly agree with that. He also says they're going
to spend money eight hundred and thirty thousand dollars reaching
out to the community to forty one external organizations, which
involve ten thousand dollars for hip hop dance lessons hip hop.

(01:06:21):
How about twenty five thousand dollars to address loneliness. How
about five hundred thousand dollars to have a safe and
clean fund. The goal is crime prevention through environmental design.
We then have something called the Human Services Violence Prevention Fund,
which spends one hundred and twenty seven thousand dollars to
identify socially at risk children which provide them a mentor

(01:06:45):
Big Brothers, Big sisters. To me is a great idea
that may make some sense. They also have spent a
one point five million dollars the Blueprint for Reducing Violence,
which involves, among other things, paying individuals who are at risk
monthly stipend who do not commit crime. Also food insecurity programs.
If you're hungry, we're gonna get that for you. We

(01:07:07):
also have programs of outreach of the community and which
elders in the community stand around waiting for something to happen.
Then they go and try to diffuse the situation. Would
any of these programs now being employed in Covington, Well.

Speaker 5 (01:07:21):
No, Willie, because you know, I don't think the Covington
budget could withstand the amount of money it would cost
to teach me to hip hop dance. And we know,
obviously I don't live in Cincinnati, or that number would
be a lot higher. But I don't think that hip
hop dance lessons are the answer to solving the crime
problems that they're suffering through over there. Now, there is

(01:07:43):
a lot to be said for getting parents to be
involved in their children's lives because, as you I'm sure
are well aware, and no full will without parents keeping
an eye on the children. And when we have teenagers
running amok at two, three, four o'clock in the morning
with no aren't going hey, where is my kid? Why
aren't they in bed? That's when bad things happen. That's

(01:08:05):
when teenagers get into all kinds of trouble. It's when
teenagers do things that land themselves in prison. Unfortunately, it's
when a lot of teenagers end up getting shot and killed.
How many times have you seen a case on the
news where they announced the shooting death of a teenager,
and not to blame a victim in any shooting death,
but half the time you find out the person that

(01:08:26):
shot them was also a teenager. And the obvious question
there is where are the parents and how are these
kids out running around to be shooting people or even
getting shot at two, three, four o'clock in the morning
when those teenagers, if they were being properly supervised and parented,
would have been fast asleep. So we are implementing as
much of the law enforcement as we can over here,

(01:08:50):
but supporting the blue let them policing. Being proactive to
get at the criminals before they actually commit the violent offenses,
I think is the biggest key that any community can implement.
It gets tough when you start talking about juvenile crime,
because that's one problem that we do share with everybody
in Ohio is that our juvenile crime laws are way

(01:09:11):
too lax, too many slaps on the wrist, not enough
kids being treated seriously. I guess, for lack of a
better term, by the juvenile justice system, too much hug
a thug mentality out there, where we should just give
the kids a hug and a paddle on the back.
And maybe a dance lesson and ask some church elders

(01:09:32):
to stand down on the street corner. And that's going
to fix it. That's just not it. We have to
let kids know that breaking the law, especially violent crime,
is only going to land them in adult prison if
they keep up that behavior.

Speaker 1 (01:09:43):
Well, the case out of Blue Ash, a Birdie Wishman
in my ear yesterday that the case is against the
juvenile who used a Roman candle's one of those devices
where you fire m eighties in the air or at people,
has been dismissed as the mayor of Blue Ash would
like the chargers to go away and pretend like it

(01:10:04):
didn't happen. Do you have two to three or four
hundred youths wilding around gatherings? Maybe on the riverfront in Covington.
By the way, the view from Covington to Cincinnati has
a great view. It's better from Cincinnati to Covington. When
I'm in Covington, I look across at night, it's pretty nice.
And you're thinking, you have hundreds of use running around
Covington at night with guns and with Roman candles shooting

(01:10:26):
at people and cars. Do you have that going on?

Speaker 3 (01:10:29):
No, we don't Willie.

Speaker 5 (01:10:30):
And you know, that's a very I guess point and
issue that the city's going to have to address, because
it's not like you can just ask the neighbors, the
adults in the neighborhood to stand down on the street
corner at the banks, because nobody lives at the Banks. Now,
that's all business district, entertainment district. It's not someplace where
you're just going to have to tell or that you're
able to tell the community to just go police yourselves.

(01:10:53):
They need to up the security over there, they need
to unhandcuff the Cincinnati Police Department. Let them do their jobs,
like I know they know how, but there's just no
reason to have dozens or hundreds of teenagers running crazy.

Speaker 6 (01:11:06):
Now.

Speaker 5 (01:11:06):
We have seen on occasion problems with that at Newport
on the levee, but I think Newport Police Department cracks
down on that whenever they have a problem with it,
and it takes care of the problem until we let
it happen again. But we don't let it happen nearly
with the frequency as we see it going on on
the north side of the.

Speaker 1 (01:11:23):
River, and they're released. For example, David Fornshell, the Warren
county prosecutor will tell you they've had problems at King's
Island because two or three hundred youths come out there
and they get in. They have enough money to get in,
that's about it. And they they're not there as patriots.
They don't make fools of themselves. And when there's car
break ins at King's Island, the Mason Police find out

(01:11:44):
who did it, they arrest them, and guess what, they're
not released. They're kept there. They're kept in jail until
the hearing, and then at that point they're either sent
to Youth commission prison or they're sent to the county
jail if they're eighteen years old. And guess what, you
don't hear the millions of people that go to King's
Island with all those open air parking spaces. But it

(01:12:06):
does happen. But when it happens, all hell breaks lose.
And I would imagine if Covington Convention Center had some
event and there were twenty to thirty car break ins,
that'd be a big deal. At you see University of
Cincinnati campus, car break ins are part of the deal.
And we talked previously about what happened with the shooting

(01:12:27):
and the killing of Ryan Hinton, him and his band
of Merriman. They're Darrell Austin and Anthony Bullocks and sincere
grigsby got their car in northern Kentucky to steal, they
broke into another car. They stole a car. They've broke
in another car and got a gun. And you're looking
at charges at this point, by the way, with Ryan Hinton,
of course he's dead. The other three are you yet

(01:12:48):
pursuing the charges against the other three in northern Kentucky
for breaking into.

Speaker 5 (01:12:52):
We have a warrant out for mister Bullock's arrest. He
is the one that we believe is responsible for the
theft of the car out of Kentucky, and he is
facing charges in Kenton County. Now I don't believe that
he has actually been picked up on those charges, or
at least if he has, he's not been extra died
across the river. But he's looking at a prison sentence

(01:13:13):
for felony auto theft in that case. But that is
certainly something that we don't take lightly. That stealing cars
is still a big deal on this side of the river.
It'll still get you set to prison, will he Do
you imagine in some jurisdiction over here, it's still a
big deal.

Speaker 1 (01:13:29):
It's a big deal if you steal a car and Covington,
that's a big deal. You steal a car and since
I break in is no big deal, you'll be released.
Let's talk about this other case a couple of days ago.
Fox nineteen, Covington man pled guilty on Monday one hundred
and ninety counts of child porn belonging under the prison
not in it as Gauge Whaley. What did he do?

Speaker 5 (01:13:50):
It's his name was Thomas Gage Whaley Willie Gage's middle name.
But the Covington Police Department got a notification from the
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, who monitors or
is the clearing house for complaints from online Internet service
providers when they find that one of their users is collecting, uploading, sending,

(01:14:13):
or otherwise distributing child pornography on their platform, they send
those notices to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children,
otherwise known as nick Mick. Nick Mick determines what jurisdiction
had occurred in and they notify the police department. When
this case it was the Covington Police Department. They determined
through that tip that a Google Drive account belonging to

(01:14:35):
Thomas Whaley had been uploading child pornography to that cloud
account using a cellular phone. Covington police went and executed
a search one on mister Whaley's house, where they were
unable to recover the actual phone. The police suspect that
he destroyed that phone or got rid of that phone
knowing that police were outside about to execute a search one. However,

(01:14:58):
they were able to utilize a search warrant to get
the contents of that Google drive, and in that Google
Drive they found not only was mister Whaley in possession
of ninety five different images and videos, some of which
were over ten minutes long of children, some of which
were as young as toddlers being sexually abused and molested
by adults, but he had hundreds or thousands of other

(01:15:22):
images and videos as well that he had collected in
that same Google drive. Mister Whaley was arrested. He was
indicted on one hundred and ninety counts of possession and
distribution of chob pornography. He entered an open plea means
he didn't get any plea deals. Emily Aren't and the
prosecutor on the case refuses to make any plea deals.

(01:15:42):
In chob pornography cases, Willie is her normal habit, and
she just tells him. You can pleade guilty if you
want to. You can go to trial if you want to,
but either way, we're going to seek the maximum possible punishment.
In this case, mister Whaley was caught prior to a
change in Kentucky law. The benefit of our old cap
on child pornography charges, which was twenty years in prison

(01:16:04):
as the most you can get under the old law.
We have since Fortunately, Willie, the legislators saw the problem
with that, and, like you said, the child pornography should
be buried under the prison, not let out in twenty years.
So they raised that cap to seventy years, which isn't perfect.
It's not under the prison, but it's hell a lot
better than twenty years. So had he done this a
few months later, Willie, he would have been facing up

(01:16:26):
to seventy years in prison. But as it is now,
prosecutors are seeking a twenty year prison sentence, the maximum
available under the law. Mister Whaley pled guilty knowing the
prosecutors in our office we're seeking that maximum sentence. Yet
he didn't want to face a jury and have to
own up, or he didn't want us to.

Speaker 3 (01:16:43):
Prove what he did to us to a group of twelves.

Speaker 5 (01:16:46):
And sitting on that jury. So he decided he'd take
a chance with Kent and stir could Judge Patricius Summy,
who is not the judge I would want to be
taking a chance in front of if I was facing
child pornography charges. Law and order judge always had great
results in her courtroom. Final sentencing for him will be
coming up in August, and I fully anticipate he will

(01:17:08):
be serving twenty years in prison. He'll have to serve
eighty five percent of that twenty years before he's even
eligible for parole. And of course he will register for
life as a sexual offender, which he should.

Speaker 1 (01:17:19):
He's twenty two years old. Is going to get out
maybe when he's forty, if he's lucky, and then he'll
go back to a life of crime. You don't have
a judge like Harry Bloom in Kenton County that believes
everyone gets three four and five and six breaks. Let
the juve and I also commit serious crime out on bond.
That's not Judge Summy. Is that fair?

Speaker 3 (01:17:36):
To say no, that is not Judge Summy. You know,
she is a very reasonable judge.

Speaker 5 (01:17:40):
If it's somebody that's in her courtroom with like a
substance use disorder, something along those lines, some other nonviolent crime,
maybe she'll give you a second chance, she might give
you some probations, she'll give you drug treatment. But no,
when it comes to people to collect and distribute job pornography,
she is a very tough on crime judge. She's a
very check great judge, fair judge, but a very great

(01:18:02):
judge to try a case in front of. But she
takes child pornography very seriously, as it should, and you
know that, Willy. This is worth pointing out about this case.
These guys that upload this stuff to Google drives or
drop boxes or any of these cloud sharing services, it
makes it so much easier for them to distribute their
child pornography to other pedophiles out there, because all they

(01:18:24):
have to do is send somebody their link, their hyperlink.
If you have the hyperlink, you can access his cloud account.
You can download all of that sick child pornography that
he's collected, and it's virtually undetectable of where else it
goes until somebody starts saving it or uploading it again.
But it makes it so much easier for chob pornographers
to distribute this filth if it is uploaded to a

(01:18:46):
cloud account. So that's why anybody like mister Whaley that
is foolish enough to collect child pornography in their cloud
account in Kenton County should know that it's only a
matter of time.

Speaker 3 (01:18:55):
We're coming for you.

Speaker 5 (01:18:57):
And unlike mister Whaley, you're not getting twenty years to
end up with seventy years because our laws changed and
the maximum possible punishment is now more than triple good.

Speaker 1 (01:19:06):
Well, in the city of Cincinnati this year, there's going
to be about four to five hundred people will be wounded,
about one hundred will be murdered. In addition to that,
there's going to be twenty thousand bullets flying around Cincinnati,
and I can't imagine more of a meltdown. More hip
hop classes might be warranted if these numbers continue. But
Rob Sanders, thanks for coming on this Wednesday afternoon. We'll

(01:19:27):
see what happens. And this guy gets out in about
twenty years or so, I won't be around, you'll be around.
We'll see what happens. But once again, thanks for coming
on the Bill Cunningham Show. Good luck and stay safe.

Speaker 5 (01:19:40):
Willie, thanks for having me. I would say, go Reds
that you know, we're down to this part of the
year where chances of making the playoffs have been reduced
to just hoping that they don't sell off the team
in a fire sale at the trade deadline.

Speaker 3 (01:19:52):
So I don't know, go Reds.

Speaker 5 (01:19:54):
Won't be too much longer, I'll be saying who day.
But again, let's hope for something, Willie. Maybe someday will
make a playoff.

Speaker 1 (01:20:00):
In both all we have is hope. Rob, All we
have is hope. Don't have a rests. All we have
is hope. And Rob Sanders, you're the best. Thank you
for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. Thank you, Rob.

Speaker 3 (01:20:11):
Thanks Willie, take care.

Speaker 1 (01:20:12):
Let's continue with more news next that Drome, the Reds
marching for glory and for some the judgment seat of God.
A news radio seven hundred WLW.

Speaker 9 (01:20:20):
And there is an Iranian an Iranian official that says
you President Trump have done something that he can no longer.
Sunbathe in mar A Lago. As you lie there with
your stomach to the sun, a small drone might hit
you in the navel. It's very simple. Do you think
that's a real threat? And when it's the last time

(01:20:42):
he went sunbathing anyway.

Speaker 6 (01:20:43):
I've been a long time. It's been a long time.
Maybe I was around seven or so. I'm not too
big into it. Yeah, I guess it's a threat. I'm
not sure it's a threat. Actually, buddy, perhaps it is.

Speaker 1 (01:21:03):
Hello, quiet skulls, I'm broadcasting that's an iraigning official targeting
the president's belly button for a drone attack. Peter Doucey
of Fox News. Can you imagine Trump laying on the

(01:21:24):
beaches of mar A Lago with an exposed belly, a
large button, and a drone attack from teyron taking out
the president? Would that be a bit of a shock, Yeah,
you'd you'd be surprised.

Speaker 7 (01:21:36):
But probably in this day and age, will he who
knows anymore? I mean, drones could be microscopic, medium sized, small, medium, large,
extra large.

Speaker 1 (01:21:46):
And fat. I'm glad you brought that up. I'm looking
at Miami Marlins. Yeah, their record this year is forty
two and forty eight. In other words, they're not very good,
and the Reds are forty six and forty they're not
very good. And at this point the Marlins the last
two games have beaten the Reds by a combined score

(01:22:07):
of seventeen to three, and that that's a baseball not
a football score. Current Marlins aren't very good. But tonight
we have Hope segment get me into the Stude Report.

Speaker 7 (01:22:17):
Will he the Studge Reporter's approach service every local Tamestar
heating and air conditioning dealers Tamestar quality you can feel
in beautiful Western hills called Durbin Heating and Cooling at
five one, three, five nine, eight, eighty eighty four forty
nine R go to Durbin Heating and Cooling dot com.
But and those Marlins extended their franchise record road winning

(01:22:42):
streak will you to eleven unbelievable and at twelve to
two rout of the Reds. Last night, Nick Martinez rock
for a career high ten runs. He got the first
six then and then the Marlins erupted for seven and
the third and it was ov R.

Speaker 1 (01:22:57):
That's called in golf segment at TC a total collapse.

Speaker 7 (01:23:01):
Game three tonight, Sandy al Contra up against National League
All Star Andrew Abbott Any good coverage begins at six'.

Speaker 3 (01:23:09):
Ten you?

Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
Believe do you? Believe no carriers inside? Pitch do you have?

Speaker 7 (01:23:13):
Hope Kelsey Chevrolet Extra inning show after the?

Speaker 1 (01:23:17):
Game do you have? Hope?

Speaker 7 (01:23:18):
Yes always.

Speaker 1 (01:23:19):
So the object in any sport is to get better
as the season goes. ALONG i don't care if you're
Playing tiddley. Wins you got to figure out a way
to get a little bit better as the season moves.

Speaker 7 (01:23:30):
Along are The rights getting? Better not right? Now, no
they were getting, better and then they. Weren't then they,
were than they, Weren't then they, were then they, weren't
then they, were then they.

Speaker 1 (01:23:42):
WEREN'T i don't say that. Again let's See Andrew.

Speaker 7 (01:23:46):
Abbott But willie was informed last night in the dugout
that he's An All. Star he's headed To atlanta Next.
Tuesday well. Deserved he rolls into the night with a
seven and one mark and the fourth best ra in
the national.

Speaker 1 (01:23:59):
Lead do it tonight at two point one? Five how
badly tonight's? Game do we need to win that? Game very?
Well in, fact this, year despite The marlins have won
eleven in a, row their record are away at this
point in The marlins is twenty two and twenty, one
so before they won this eleven game winning streak.

Speaker 7 (01:24:19):
On the, road they're, terrible. Correct can you name any
of the? Players, oh Al contra is. One let's, See
Eerie perez is. Another related To. TONY i don't think.
So it's all young players will either rebuilding that team
back up again and beating the right like they have
been in the past. Years they win The World, championship

(01:24:40):
they get rid of, everybody then they rebuild it, back they,
win they do. It it's like a cycle down there
In South.

Speaker 1 (01:24:47):
FLORIDA i, say hurry. UP i Have Steve rawley waiting
on hold about the. Events oh CAN i get to.

Speaker 7 (01:24:52):
That let's, See. Willy we got a couple Of citizens
of The.

Speaker 3 (01:24:56):
Day.

Speaker 7 (01:24:56):
Good we say happy birthday to one of your biggest,
Fans Suzanne edwards out Of. Franklin Suzanne, Edwards happy birthday to.
Her And happy anniversary to a very special, Couple anita
And Jeff. HOPSON i didn't know. THAT i Like Jeff,
Hoppy Happy. ANNIVERSARY i like that.

Speaker 1 (01:25:16):
Guy to the doll And butch, segment get me out
of the students, report we Have Steve rawley hanging On.

Speaker 7 (01:25:23):
Willie And hotter of a beautiful day here in The Tri,
state maybe with some, rain and let's Go, reds let's
get with.

Speaker 1 (01:25:29):
It seventeen to three is.

Speaker 7 (01:25:30):
Embarrassing we leave you with the immortal words of The
Stoo report that.

Speaker 1 (01:25:36):
Seemed some things this YEAR i don't want EVEN i
don't want to remember. Goodness couldn't agree, more that's for.
Sure they got to beat the fish before the rocks.
Arrive then The All star break then is are we
buyers or sellers better start? Winning on seven HUNDRED Wlw

(01:26:01):
Bill cunning in The Great, america of. Course tonight On
channel nine is the big telethon in honor Of Maddie,
raleigh who passed away several years. Ago she had difficulties
with drugs and alcohol and other psychiatric conditions decided to
take her own, life which is devastated To raleigh. Family,
john you AND i now Is Steve riley And Julie

(01:26:21):
Lee's Raley and first of, All steve talk about what's
going to happen to night On channel.

Speaker 8 (01:26:24):
Nine, well we've got a telethon to Help Mattie's. House
Mattie's house is a hangout for young adults who recovering
now recovering in a way that they can community.

Speaker 3 (01:26:37):
Together it's not a residential.

Speaker 8 (01:26:39):
House but five years, ago the year after we lost
our Daughter, bill we started a wonderful, place eight thousand
square foot home on a lake and it was all
Because Boss Soaker Mercy health donated this. Home we're now
seeing about fourteen hundred young adults a. Month that's how
much it's grown in and so quite, frankly we have

(01:27:03):
already outgrown in five years the building we're. In we're
very near building The SIMON. L Lease fitness And Wellness.
Center we're very close now because it's going to give
us not just more, space but an entire, gymnasium so
we can start building a healthy kind of fitness and

(01:27:23):
basketball and volleyball regimen, leagues that kind of, thing all
for our. Members so that's why to four four o'clock
to eight o'clock we are going to have a telethon
On channel nine.

Speaker 1 (01:27:34):
And Julie Lee's. Raleigh there's no worse thing can happen
to a parent than the death of a. Child AND
i think maybe sons are closer to their, fathers maybe
daughters are closer to their. Mothers my mother told me
that a son's son until he takes a. Wife but
a daughter will be your daughter all the days of her.
Life and you were particularly close To, maddie and explain

(01:27:54):
how this thing has grown in five. Years and you
could not have imagined five years, Ago, julie teen hundred
kids a month would come through. There that's almost, impossible isn't?

Speaker 2 (01:28:03):
It?

Speaker 5 (01:28:04):
Oh it.

Speaker 10 (01:28:06):
IS i can't bring my daughter, back and it. Is
there is a forever hole in my. Heart there's so
many other families that have that whole. Too Because, BILL
i want to talk to you about suicide rate for
young children teenagers is up times three, PERCENT i mean times.
Three Hamilton county saw a. Surge a couple of weeks.

(01:28:27):
Ago we had nine young teenagers in The morgue that
had taken their own life within a couple of. WEEKS
i think you might remember the story a couple months
ago In Boone county they had nine young.

Speaker 2 (01:28:40):
Teenagers that took their.

Speaker 10 (01:28:41):
Life what is going? On and we have got to
do more awareness. Campaigns we have got to get out.
There we've got to get give these kids some tools for.
That we're actually doing our first Pilot spark program for
high schoolers next.

Speaker 3 (01:28:56):
Week it's all.

Speaker 10 (01:28:57):
Week it's a summer. Camp it's a wellness camp these,
kids and we are going to take this program and
launch it off and next year during school we are
going to open for, teenagers middle school and high schoolers
for programming.

Speaker 4 (01:29:12):
Because it is so so so needed in our.

Speaker 10 (01:29:15):
Community that's the other reason we need the. Gym we
need more. Space we need, to you, know increase our.
Programming so we need this gym and all the money
tomorrow we raise will go to building the. Gym we
have one point four million dollars in a fund for
the gym that we've raised in honor of my, father
and we're gon we're going to try and put it
over the top to martw see if we can break

(01:29:36):
ground this.

Speaker 1 (01:29:36):
Fall And, jolie you, KNOW i can look back on.
Life there were moments in my life as a teenage.
BOY i felt, OSTRACIZED i felt, ALONE i felt like
my life's going to be. Worthless and for some, reason
something is happening in social, media especially maybe it's a
TikTok or whatever that causes kids today to act upon
those feelings of. Depression my mother used to, say sometimes

(01:29:59):
you at the, blues AND i got that so one
AND i simply got about life's. Work but what is
different today for in twenty twenty Five july twenty twenty, Five,
julie what is different today than maybe twenty years ago
that the kids see suicide is the way?

Speaker 10 (01:30:14):
Out, well, NOW i Don't, bill you, know you're my.
AGE i mean my. PARENTS i would get on my
bike and i would. Ride i'd be gone at eight
in the, morning And i'd come home for dinner at six,
o'clock you, know and it was a safe unity to do.
It we can't do that with our kids. Today these
kids have so much more pressure the social, media what

(01:30:36):
they're seeing and some of it's not even true what
they're seeing on social. Media AND i, MEAN i can't
imagine being a kid growing up today and all the
extra pressure that they have when just growing, up your body,
changing who are? You what are you turning? Into what
do you want to be when you grew?

Speaker 2 (01:30:53):
UP i mean that's pressure.

Speaker 10 (01:30:54):
Enough and then to add all those other, extraneous you,
know pressures onto these young kids too.

Speaker 3 (01:31:00):
Much it's too.

Speaker 1 (01:31:01):
Much, see you cannot have imagined five years or this
thing to develop as it. Has why is it developed
into a fourteen hundred month attendance of these, kids and
you can't keep overnight because you don't have fourteen hundred hotel.
Rooms but, nonetheless what is the Reason maddie's house is.

Speaker 8 (01:31:17):
Succeeding i'll tell you why it's, Succeeding, Bill it's very.

Speaker 3 (01:31:22):
Simple.

Speaker 8 (01:31:22):
Community that's the one common denominator for all of these
young adults who may have some, issues whether it's a
mental health or recovery. Issue because when you can talk
to somebody who can talk to talk and walk the
walk with, you all of a, sudden those, doors those
closed feelings are. Gone so as a, result you have

(01:31:45):
a chance to meet somebody who totally gets you and
you know as. Much and our daughter said it to
us a, Lot, Mom, DAD i know you love, me
but you don't understand What i'm going. THROUGH i know
you want to help, me but you can't to be
around other. People and that was one of the problems
we face is we couldn't find anywhere to bring her

(01:32:06):
as a young adult so she could have that, community that.
Interaction it is imperative to be able to talk to
other folks who are going through what you're going.

Speaker 3 (01:32:16):
Through and we believe.

Speaker 8 (01:32:17):
That's Why Maddie's house has been so successful and frankly,
exponentially and that's why we've got To we've got to
expand we we can help a greater part of the.

Speaker 1 (01:32:27):
Community AND i Think julie please please comment on.

Speaker 3 (01:32:31):
That. Please, oh everything we do to too is.

Speaker 10 (01:32:35):
Free we don't charge. Anybody that's why our donations are
so important in the. Community and our donors we don't
charge them for. Anything if they are part of our book,
club we pay for their book every every.

Speaker 3 (01:32:46):
Month we buy their.

Speaker 10 (01:32:47):
Books most of our members don't have a lot of,
money definitely not extra. Money we take them on field.
Trips we were taking them to Can dial this them
they're going to a red game because they don't have
the money to do those extra things that other other
people in the community to. Do so that THAT i
think is really important To everything we do is, free
and these young adults don't have that money to continue

(01:33:10):
treatments and all the extras that they need to live a,
healthy happy.

Speaker 1 (01:33:15):
Life Steve, rawley it's four to a, tonight but that's
going to start in a couple hours or. So but
is that what is the? Website for those who want
to be, involved you can either donate, time donate. Money
what is the, website.

Speaker 8 (01:33:27):
Sure mhsincy with a y dot. Org so it's m
h since with a y dot org and you can go.
There you can, donate find out more About Maddie's, house
or you can. Volunteer perhaps because we always need. Volunteers you,
know our organization wouldn't run if we didn't have. Volunteers so,

(01:33:49):
yes any one of the. Three if money might not
be your, thing maybe volunteering, is so that might.

Speaker 3 (01:33:56):
Be another way to. Go so mhsinc dot.

Speaker 1 (01:33:59):
Org luck to both of you tonight four to, Eight
channel NINE Wcpo mhsinsey with ay dot. Org and to
both of, you you're doing The lord's. Work and once,
Again steve And, julie thanks for coming on The Bill Cunningham,
show and good luck on all your future. Ventures good.

Speaker 8 (01:34:14):
Luck thank, You, bill and we can't thank you. Enough
you've been such a great supporter Of Maddie's house and
so IS.

Speaker 3 (01:34:20):
Wlw thank you so.

Speaker 10 (01:34:22):
Much, god thank you from the bottom of our.

Speaker 1 (01:34:24):
Heart god Bless. America thank you. Both Verymull let's continue
with more news next that's Your home of The. Reds
hopefully tonight they can win a game the last, two
as you know, that lost by a total of seventeen
to three. Runs if you can't beat, this isn't a football.
Score The reds lost seventeen to three the last two
NIGHTS abb but tonight could be. Different On News radio
seven HUNDREDS wlw
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