All Episodes

December 18, 2025 35 mins

The hour opens with more from Petros Papadakis, including laughs over favorite guilty-pleasure restaurants and Petros’ unfiltered take on Nick Reiner. The conversation blends sports, pop culture, and classic Conway-style banter. 

The show then shifts to major national news as Fox News reports the suspected shooter connected to the Brown University case was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound inside a storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire. Additional details later emerge during a news conference confirming the same outcome. 

Dean Sharp, the House Whisperer, joins the program to discuss the state beginning repair work on an abandoned oil well in Newport Beach that has left a nearby home red-tagged indefinitely. Dean explains why issues like this are far more common in California than many people realize and also weighs in on the upcoming 2025 Holiday Gift Guide with smart home-focused ideas. 

The hour wraps with local and pop culture highlights, including congratulations to Beckman High School football head coach Marcello Giuliano on being named Coach of the Year, recognition for Makhi Czaykowski earning Second Team All-County honors, discussion about the Oscars moving toward YouTube, and a celebration of A Charlie Brown Christmas marking its 60th anniversary. 

 

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's if I am six forty and you're listening to
the Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Well,
Petros Papadakis joins us from the Petros and Money Show.
Petro's when you take your family to dinner? Are there
any restaurants that are chain restaurants that you're embarrassed to
say that you really love?

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Mine? Is Olive Garden, you've been.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
I've never even been to an Olive Garden.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
Olive Garden has these new sort of lighter dishes, you know,
it's like half portion and I get to chicken parmesan
with about four or five breadsticks.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
Is this a commercial?

Speaker 4 (00:34):
No?

Speaker 2 (00:34):
No, no no, But I love that place.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
And this isn't like a live read.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
Not yet.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
It might be eventually, but not not yet. But you
go to places like that, or you just go to
high end places with your wife and kids.

Speaker 3 (00:48):
Well, we don't go anywhere because my kids are very difficult.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
Oh they are.

Speaker 3 (00:51):
I just despise being with them. They'll just start fighting
with each other and then it's just.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
Like shut up. Do they hate each other?

Speaker 3 (00:59):
Yeah, they don't get along.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
That's the that risk you run when you have kids.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
But we yeah, they're gonna hate each other, they're gonna
hate you. There's a lot of risk, right, But we
live near in the Redondo area.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
That's beautiful.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
I don't I don't live in Redondo, but I live
by the Redondo Riviera and they have a lot of
restaurants down there, so we go over there. But I
guess every once in a while, Fletcher and my wife,
my son and my wife will go over to the Shaky's.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
Oh love Shaky.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
There's a Shaky's. Yeah. Well, you're from the valley, so
chain restaurants to you are sort of like just like.
But I grew up in a one off, you know,
so we avoided My father tried to avoid chain restaurants.
But we you know, we spent a lot of time
at the Bjays.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
Did you ever go to a Greek restaurant that wasn't
your dad's in Greece? Oh, but not in La.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
No, every other Greek restaurant in La will we consider
to be terrible and bad and stealing and stealing our ideas?

Speaker 2 (02:01):
Oh that's classic. That's great, man.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
I think Tony's and Malibu are you thinking about most
that was the biggest culprit?

Speaker 1 (02:09):
What's the lemon drop soup. That the chicken lemon drop soup.
I always like, what is that?

Speaker 3 (02:13):
It's called av glemono souples just ofvglemono ass comes from
soup glemono soup and then it's made with chicken broth, rice,
lemons and eggs.

Speaker 2 (02:26):
Oh, it's beautiful.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
It's a great soup.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
It's great.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
I could use some because I've had a running nose
the last few days.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Oh my god, everybody's sick.

Speaker 3 (02:34):
Everybody's sick, and everybody's blaming each other.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
Yeah, all right, let's talk about the Rob Reiner. Did
you ever meet him?

Speaker 3 (02:41):
No? I never met Rob Reiner. But when I saw
the story, I thought immediately of my children killing me.

Speaker 2 (02:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:46):
I know it's sad, but I don't know if a
lot of us did that.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
But I've bet a lot of people did that.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
My son is totally going to do this.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
A lot of people are thinking like that. But this
is it was such an I.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
Think it seemed like they had some serious problems for
quite so time.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
Yeah, but you know, wealthy people can hide them behind
walls and bushes and you know, and big trees where
you can never really see into the home. Like like
if Nick Reiner. Like, let's say Rob Reiner was a
deadbeat and didn't make any money and lived in an
apartment on Sherman Wayne, Kester. Okay, so and and and
pretty specific. Yeah, well I always used that intersection as

(03:24):
like the worst place to grow up.

Speaker 2 (03:26):
So let's say that happened.

Speaker 1 (03:31):
I get emails from people live in that area going,
can you please stop doing that?

Speaker 2 (03:35):
It's irritating us.

Speaker 3 (03:36):
Let's say he had no hope in life. Let's say
things were just dead and he lived on Sherman Wayne.
You know right where people are just they're desolate, they
have nothing below this is come.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
Of the earth right right, and they've they've not seen
where they are in life.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
They haven't pulled themselves up.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
So let's say that they right there, Kester, Right, So
let's say that Rob Reiner and his wife and the kid,
the thirty two year old Nick lived in an apartment.

Speaker 2 (04:02):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
That means that every time they're in the laundromat or
the elevator or the parking lot or the pool or
the lobby they're going to and they're gonna hear at
night the fights that they have, and everyone's gonna know
that that kid's a weirdo. That that kid Nick is
off his rocker. But in a wealthy house in Brentwood.
It's a sixteen million dollars thirteen million dollar house. You
can hide all that in the house. And I think

(04:23):
that's what happened here.

Speaker 3 (04:25):
Well, I mean I grew up in a pretty big house.
It wasn't worth that much, and it wasn't in Brentwood, right,
But we used to fight a lot, and the cops
would come to the house all the time, Is that right? Yeah.
My older brother pushed a dining room table off a
second floor with me on top of it, and I
jumped off at the last second like an action movie.

(04:47):
It went through a window.

Speaker 2 (04:48):
That's great.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
We had a lot of stuff. My mom threw a
comb at my dad like a Chinese star and it
stuck into his chest and he roared with laughter, like oh.
And people would call the cops all the time. I
don't want to say all the time, but at least
three or four times. I mean, my older brother was
all juiced up and weigh two hundred and fifty pounds
with a flat top and a Mustang and a letterman

(05:12):
jacket like it was. It was game on. There was
a lot of physicality at that house. Great, and so
the cops would come. And that was a big house,
you know, it was like a five thousand square foot house. Wow,
you know, and why it was big. So what I'm
saying is, I mean, we're no Rob Reiner or anything
like that night, but we you know, and and and

(05:33):
we are very violent. And I don't want to say
we're off our rocker.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
Right, but that was old. That was when kids had testosterone.

Speaker 1 (05:39):
They have people called the cops though, right, but they
but these kids nowadays don't have any tea.

Speaker 2 (05:44):
There's no ta in these kids. Low te low t chi,
low tea.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
And so they're you know, they're they're not out there,
you know, pushing uh, you know, dining room tables off
of second floors because they don't have the physical ability
to do that.

Speaker 3 (05:57):
No, he certainly, I mean he leg pressed twelve hundred
pound when he was sixteen, so he certainly had the
power to rip us all into shreds. And he tried.
He once picked me up by the back of my
pants and swung me around like a cartoon into a
into a wall, and I broke my arm and we
never even fixed it.

Speaker 2 (06:13):
Yeah, we thought a lot when we were kids.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
I remember holding my brother by the neck outside of
a second story window and threatening to let him go.

Speaker 3 (06:20):
Oh that's good, that's get some good mafia tactics.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
Oh yeah, right there.

Speaker 3 (06:23):
But in this situation, I read somewhere that this kid
was in eighteen different rehabs. Yeah, something like that, like
eighteen rehabs. That's unbelievable. And I think if you lived
on where was Sherman Way and Kester, that you're not
paying for maybe a rehab and half.

Speaker 1 (06:41):
You know, he walked by the he walked out of
the house after the murders, allegedly, and he walked by
that that that gas station, what is it Dino's gas
station or Dino's gas station?

Speaker 3 (06:53):
What is all the Sinclair?

Speaker 1 (06:54):
Sinclair walked by the Sinclair and he probably noticed, Hey,
the dinosaur's back, you know, the dinosaurs brought back. Who's
stolen his brought back? But there's a lot of video
of him afterwards. He goes to the you know, the
hotel afterwards, showers, sleeps there, covers the window, there's blood
all over the you know, the bedroom or the hotel room.
I think this kid is looking at the death penalty

(07:17):
or at least, you know, prison for the rest of
his life without perole.

Speaker 3 (07:20):
I saw something on TV where there were legal experts
talking and they said something like, pleating insanity California might
be this way or that way, and a lot of
people's opinion, but pleating insanity in California ain't easy. You
got a lot to prove. And if you're walking around
and noticing the dinosaur, you know, maybe you're not crazy.

(07:40):
They snatched him up right by USC, right on Exposition
and Vermont.

Speaker 2 (07:45):
And why was he there?

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Because the only reason you go to that area is
you're going to or coming out of a football game,
or you're visiting somebody on campus, or you're going to
a museum.

Speaker 2 (07:54):
Okay, museums were closed.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
He doesn't know anybody on campus, and there's no football game,
so he's there to buy drugs.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
You think he was an Exposition park to buy drugs.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
You don't think that there's daily sales in Exposition Park
of drugs.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
I mean I do. But does he need to go there?
I mean can't? I mean, the guy's a Brentwood rich guy.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
He's got no money. His parents shut him down. Oh okay, yeah,
he's got no, dubt.

Speaker 3 (08:19):
I mean I would. I guess if you told me,
if you gave me some money and let me loose
in the Los Angeles area, more on the east side,
which I would consider that, you know, downtown or mid
city area, And if you gave me money and you said, Petros,
go buy us some drugs. I'm not exactly sure what
kind of drugs, but just said, go buy us some drugs.

(08:39):
I would go to Expo Park before I hit MacArthur Park.
That's right, because I think it'd be harder to get
anybody's attention at MacArthur Park. People are so tweaked out
at MacArthur Park. I think it would be hard to.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
Like just no, I think you're right.

Speaker 3 (08:53):
I think people go to Cold Turkey, go in there
and buy drugs.

Speaker 1 (08:55):
They go to Exposition Park to take to buy the drugs,
then they go to these other parks to take.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
Them and stand there with the fetanyl.

Speaker 2 (09:03):
Lean, yes, the old fetanyl leen.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
So yeah, he could have been there to buy drugs.
That's a pretty good that's a good sermonsation. I didn't
know where where why he was in that area. Yeah,
that not to visit the floor tower at USC.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Yeah, he's not going to see if you know, if
the space shuttles erecked yet, that's not his vibe.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
I think they covered it up, right, They covered it
up with a.

Speaker 1 (09:27):
Building, yes, yeah, but they're but they're they're erecting it
so when you go to see it, it'll look like
it's about to launch. And I guess I don't know
people enjoy that, but you know, but wouldn't you be
more interested in going to see the Space shuttle if
you could actually go inside and see the buttons and
see the payload.

Speaker 3 (09:44):
Yeah, I've always wanted to see one of those German U.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
Boats, yes, and the inside.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
Yeah, And they're very hard. There's only like one, and
I think it's on because they the Germans would blow
them up so we couldn't get our hands on them
because of the because of the technology, right, And there's
only one German U boat and you can walk all
through it and everything. I think we we have it
in our possession at the California or the Chicago Museum.

Speaker 1 (10:08):
And don't the North Koreans still have a ship that
they stole from us? They like wiped out the crew
and stole one of our ships.

Speaker 3 (10:15):
Yeah, they probably do I don't know if it's on
display in a museum.

Speaker 2 (10:17):
Yeah, it probably isn't Petro's.

Speaker 1 (10:19):
Can you come on every Thursday at five thirty?

Speaker 3 (10:23):
Well, I don't know if it could be every Thursday
because sometimes we are on at the same time. Okay, Well,
but when I check the schedule every week and I
find a time where there's Clipper games or Dodger actions
or some kind of football game, I can come on
and knock.

Speaker 1 (10:38):
Out an hour, okay, and we should be very happy
to do so. We should get it sponsored so you
make some money doing it. I'd incentive incentive.

Speaker 3 (10:46):
I'd like that. I think it would be a great.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
Thing and put that away and buy gold and silver.

Speaker 3 (10:52):
Is that a commercial? Or are we going back to
the olive card? All right?

Speaker 2 (10:57):
Pee, Thanks buddy, you're the king.

Speaker 3 (11:00):
Of these new like plates. That Conway calling a little
concerned about your makeup in studio.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
I know it does sound odd, but I think I
would have been helpful. I think I could have say,
if you're a week's worth of you know, crap.

Speaker 3 (11:17):
You look like a clown.

Speaker 5 (11:20):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am sixty.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
Before we get to Dean SHARPI got breaking news here.
Fox News is reporting that the Brown University suspected shooter
has been found dead from a self inflicted gunshot wound
inside a storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire. He's also
the suspect in the killing of the MIT professor. So

(11:47):
we'll have more on that as it comes in. Looks
like they finally got their guy, and there's a lot
of pressure on that police chief and that police department
to find who did that. And it looks like they
the guy. The guy was cornered and killed himself. On
that happy note, Dean Sharp is what its Dean Sharp
is on every Saturday morning from six to eight am

(12:10):
and then Sunday from nine am until noon.

Speaker 2 (12:13):
Dean, Welcome to the program. How you bub present and
accounted for? Look at you?

Speaker 3 (12:18):
Hey?

Speaker 1 (12:18):
Are you listening? A are you paying attention to that story?
And know there's a lot in the news, the story
where the oil is coming up in Newport Beach into
some homes. Uh, yeah, A little bit, A little bit
that it is crazy, huh, it is it?

Speaker 6 (12:32):
You know what what.

Speaker 7 (12:34):
A bummer that is? I mean, because we're talking about
something that's going on eight hundred feet below your house. Wow,
and it's an old it's an abandoned well oil.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
Well, aren't those very difficult to cap?

Speaker 3 (12:48):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (12:48):
There, Well they have been capped. That's the problem is
that it's been capped, it's been abandoned, it's gone. But
difficult in the sense that recap. We've left a we've
left a hole, you know, in the ground down there
we left you know, there's a vacuum essentially, and now
there's all this methane gas that's collecting where the oil

(13:09):
used to be, and the methane gas is finding its
way out under pressure right next to these homes.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
Do you remember what happened on Third Street where there
used to be a kmart there and a lot of
methane same thing right near the adjacent to the tar pits,
a lot of oil, a lot of methink methane gas,
and then the whole block blew up.

Speaker 3 (13:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (13:29):
They had a real opportunity there to make a nice
outdoor fire pit, yeah, a little patio, but they ignored
it and then the block blew up.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
That has to destroy the property value for good. When
oil is coming out through your property, how can you
ever resell that again?

Speaker 2 (13:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (13:42):
I mean even even if you can prove that it's resolved,
who's gonna believe it?

Speaker 4 (13:47):
Now?

Speaker 2 (13:48):
Who's going to believe it?

Speaker 7 (13:49):
And it's like, oh, by the way, the last structure
that was here blew up.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
I have a perfect solution for it. For it, and
tell me what you think. Put an oil. Start putting
oil down there, and pull the oil out of the
of the earth so it is not a problem in
the future. Go back to exploring, grabbing the oil, turning
into gas and selling it.

Speaker 2 (14:13):
Okay, yeah, this is my solution.

Speaker 3 (14:15):
All right?

Speaker 7 (14:16):
Just put you just want an oil rig back in
my backyard? Is that what you're saying?

Speaker 1 (14:19):
Wherever it is, if you have oil in your backyard,
you know, black gold is what it's called.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
Texas tea, Yeah, Texas tea.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
All right, let's talk about a holiday gift guide for
twenty twenty five.

Speaker 2 (14:33):
What is on it that you think is interesting this year?

Speaker 7 (14:36):
Everything since I wrote it, everything is interesting. But this
is the gift guy. We went over this with our
listeners a couple three weeks ago. But you know, I thought,
you know what we're getting down to. What we're a
week out now one week out, and so there's gonna
be a little bit of last minute gift panic out there.

(14:57):
So I'm just telling you here's the thing. This may
not look romantic, but man, if you have got a
handy person in your life that you're looking for a
great gift for, step up and buy them the right
extension cord, that's great. That's okay, awesome. So I've got
a and what is the right extension cord? Pray tell Dean. Well,

(15:19):
I'll tell you. It has like three important features to it.
Number one, it's about fifty feet long. Fifty feet one
hundred foot extension cord. Unless you're a pro, that gets
a little unwieldy. Twenty five it's not quite reaching everything
that you want right fifty around the typical house. That's
the magic number. Then twelve gauge. Twelve gauge okay, and

(15:41):
people are like, I don't even know what that is.
It's the size of the wire inside. Twelve gauge means
you can run anything, multiple things on it. You're not
going to burn it up. And here's the key. On
the plug side. There's a little LED light inside, so
when you plug it in, the LED lights up, and
so you know there's power running in it. Okay, So
you don't have to worry about there's a break or

(16:02):
prom or this or is it the cord or is
it the tool? And on the receptacle side, locking plug,
locking prong outlet. In other words, there's a little collar.

Speaker 3 (16:14):
You know that.

Speaker 7 (16:15):
When you look at any tool or appliance that's got
a chord to it, you know it's got the three prongs.
But you ever notice the holes at the end of
the two big prongs, right those holes, yeah, right in
the end. Well, this, this kind of extension cord takes
advantage of those holes to get a little ball bearing
under pressure. So when you plug it in, little bearings

(16:35):
snap into those holes, lock it in place. Oh that's
a great idea. So when you're up on a ladder
or you're moving from room to room and you tug
on the cord, you know the tool doesn't coming unpluged.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
Well, I do it old school where I just tie
the chords off to each other.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
Yeah, me too.

Speaker 7 (16:50):
You just tie the knot the overhand knot, and you
don't worry about it. But this is a slick way
to go.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
It really time to Also, you don't wear out the
cord at the you tie it too many times.

Speaker 2 (17:01):
It becomes flimsy at the end. Yeah, you never want it,
you know.

Speaker 7 (17:04):
I mean, I'm an old av guy, right stage crew
kind of guy, and you're like, don't twist those cables
and wearing out the wires.

Speaker 1 (17:11):
But I've noticed that, and again Dean charts with us
the house whisper, I've noticed that if I work with
a one hundred when I when I had an electric
leaf flower, I had one hundred foot cord and it
was a sixteen gauge. I noticed that there was less
power in my leaf blower than if I had a
you know, a twelve gauge or a ten gage.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (17:32):
Well, the size of the you know, size of the
wire limits the amount of electricity that can run through it.
And so when a tool like that is really drawing
on it, it's not going to draw as much. It's
going to be more resistance. It's not going to get
all through there. It's like water flowing through the size
of a pike. That's how you you know, you kind
of imagine the gauge of an electrical case. And the

(17:54):
worst part is if you kept using that thing and
and put something even more powerful into it, it's pulling
so much that the cord's going to heat up and
it will probably melt.

Speaker 8 (18:03):
At some point.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
Oh okay, not good? Yeah, all right, stay with us.
Dean Sharp is with us.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
The House Whisper every Saturday six am to eight am
on on KFI, and every Sunday from nine am until
noon also on Cogo in San Diego. We'll talk more
about the House Whisper twenty twenty five Holiday Gift Guide
when we come back.

Speaker 5 (18:23):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
am six forty.

Speaker 9 (18:29):
Quick here and take the press Combs Providence, Rhode Island,
regarding the shooter the suspected shooter room at Brown University
earlier this week.

Speaker 10 (18:36):
Tonight, our Providence neighbors can finally breathe a little easier.
In a minute, Colonel Perez will share the latest details
on the investigation. But I want to thank the people
of Providence for stepping up and coming together during an
extraordinarily difficult time.

Speaker 8 (18:56):
I know this has been hard on all of us.

Speaker 10 (18:59):
Over the past five days, minutes have felt like ours,
but the people have Providence have done what we're best at.

Speaker 8 (19:08):
We've leaned on one another.

Speaker 10 (19:10):
Come together and supported one another and showed the nation
what a tight knit community looks like. It was because
of the information provided to us by neighbors, and the
tireless work of our Providence Police Department, the rrounded State Police,
the FBI, the ATF, and many other federal partners. The

(19:37):
incredible prescatorial advice and guidance that we received from the
Attorney General's Office.

Speaker 8 (19:43):
We all worked.

Speaker 10 (19:43):
Well together to be able to identify this suspect.

Speaker 8 (19:48):
I know we will have a lot of.

Speaker 10 (19:49):
Questions still, and we will continue to work to get
those answers. But it is a great honor for me
to turn this over to our Chief of Police, Colonel
Oscar Press, and I will say on behalf of the
people of Providence, we owe him and every member of
the Providence Police Department the deepest debt of gratitude, Colonel.

Speaker 9 (20:14):
That's Matt Brett Smiley from Providence, Rhode Island.

Speaker 8 (20:16):
Thank you very much, Maia. Well.

Speaker 4 (20:18):
First and for most, I want to offer my deepest
condolences to the families the victims. It was for them
that his work was put together to make sure that
they get the justice that they deserve and to ensure
that this person was held a klonable. Second thing, I'll
tell you that I'm extremely proud of this department, actually
the officers, the detectives, the Real time Crime Center, the

(20:39):
Community Response Team, the Intelligence Division, then Narcotics Division, the
task Force.

Speaker 8 (20:46):
This passed outed as you'll know.

Speaker 4 (20:47):
December thirteen, Province Police Department in Brown University Police Department
responded to this horrific tragedy at Brown and University one
p eighty four Hope.

Speaker 8 (20:58):
Our officers were there within minutes. That same day.

Speaker 4 (21:01):
Providence Police detectives immediately went to work, immediately went to
work looking for video footage to see who this individual
was and who was responsible. A person of interest was
identified from that video footage. The person of interest was
observed down Hope Street turning onto water min Street, and

(21:21):
that was one of the first videos that we released.

Speaker 8 (21:25):
At the same time, every federal agency.

Speaker 4 (21:28):
You can think of was reaching out to the Province
Police Department and responded to the Capital City.

Speaker 8 (21:34):
Images were shared with media within hours. Persons of interest.

Speaker 4 (21:40):
It was the same individual that has been the focus
of this investigation since the beginning.

Speaker 8 (21:47):
All the new images that we received of this person.

Speaker 4 (21:49):
Of interests were shared with the media continuously over the
past six days. This critical evidence was collected with the
use of public assistance. As the mayor stated, I'm proud
to be the chief of police of the city.

Speaker 8 (22:04):
I'm proud of to be a product of the city.

Speaker 4 (22:08):
For the reasons that the mayor stated, the community stepped up.
It was all about groundwork, public assistance, interviews of individuals,
and good.

Speaker 8 (22:20):
Old fashioned police.

Speaker 4 (22:22):
That is the type of police work that every police
officer in this nation reminds themselves of and that many
do not understand. And that's critical and critically important and
often succeeds where technology alone cannot. We looked at financial records,
we looked at video footages.

Speaker 8 (22:44):
And in a specific incident, it was.

Speaker 4 (22:47):
Actually a video that provided us with a description of
a vehicle that was corroborated to a tip that was
received to the tip center. That room was packed with
detectives agents receiving calls on a daily basis. We started

(23:07):
early and left late. Then Flock and the LPR was able.

Speaker 8 (23:14):
To provide us with this description of this vehicle.

Speaker 4 (23:18):
A vehicle was picked up by Flock, which led us
to a car rental place in Massachusetts. Through that the
agents and their work as well were able to get
us footage of this individual as well as a copy
of the agreement which provided his real name. The video

(23:39):
of that subject matched the description of that person of
interest that this police department.

Speaker 8 (23:47):
Was desperate to put handcuffs on.

Speaker 4 (23:51):
An individual was identified as Claudio Nevis Valentin, date of
birth and he was a forty eight year old.

Speaker 8 (24:01):
He was a Brown student.

Speaker 4 (24:03):
He was a Portuguese national and his last name, non
address was in Miami, Florida.

Speaker 8 (24:09):
And I will tell you that he took his own
life tonight.

Speaker 4 (24:12):
We have members of the Province Police Department up in Salem, Massa,
New Hampshire, and we also have the BCI unit obviously,
the FBI and the Evidence Recovery Unit is up there.

Speaker 8 (24:23):
So the process is being conducted as we speak.

Speaker 4 (24:27):
And he goes without saying that I would like to
personally thank the efforts again of the Province Police Department,
the Rhad Island State Police, the Ror Island Attorney General,
the FBI, the atf HSI, the US Marshals, I, r
s DEA Secret Service and n CIS. There is no

(24:51):
way that we could have done this by ourselves and
this nation. When horrific incidents like this happen, enforcement steps up.

Speaker 8 (25:01):
Thank you very much.

Speaker 3 (25:03):
Thank you, Colonel General Ron, thank you, thank you Mayor.

Speaker 11 (25:07):
You know, I would describe the emotions on the investigative team,
including our prosecutors and the agent's detectives. For most State
Police Providence is mixed. You know, there is a sense
of completeness in terms of the investigation and investigation that's,

(25:32):
if not the hardest, among the handful of hardest investigations
that I've ever been involved with.

Speaker 8 (25:40):
And the sense that we owed.

Speaker 11 (25:44):
Those two dead Brown students and the nine injured Brown students,
and the students who were in that auditorium that weren't injured,
and the Brown community and the Providence community results and
the teams worked really hard. I think I mentioned that

(26:07):
to you almost every night that we met with you.
I wish they were all up here with us, that
we wouldn't fit here. But it's just was remarkable to
see the cooperation between the FBI agents, the ATF agents,
the HSI agents, the Providence Police detectives. The State Police

(26:30):
detectives are prosecutors, and.

Speaker 8 (26:32):
I will say that everybody.

Speaker 11 (26:33):
Brought a certain expertise to the table. But it is
nevertheless a sad moment when you think about those young
people who were hurt.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
All right, so they're going to continue on. The press
conference continues. The shooter is dead in the Brown University
and again they think that's the same suspect that killed
a professor.

Speaker 2 (26:59):
At M I T.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
And so if there's any more information, we'll have that.
But those press conferences the first, you know, Crozier, I
don't remember, you know, when I was younger, even ten
years ago, where these press conferences are the first ten
minutes of everyone complimenting each other.

Speaker 9 (27:14):
I don't know that we got Do we get any
information there other than self aggrandizing none.

Speaker 2 (27:18):
There's no information other than the guy's dead.

Speaker 9 (27:22):
And bottom liney is a couple hours ago they found
an abandoned car and sale in New Hampshire at a
storage facility, and cops swarmed the place and they eventually
found him dead inside.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
Okay, that's more information than that guy gave right there
in the eighteen seconds or fifteen seconds that you just
gave me is more than they gave it.

Speaker 9 (27:38):
And it was earlier today that they had said that
they did believe that there was some connection between the
shooting of Brown University and the shooting death of an
MIT professor at his home earlier this week. What they
didn't say tonight at the press conference, they said they
hadn't seen a connection. Today they said they did find
a connection, seemed legitimate and enough to where they got
an a rest warrant for this suspect.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
Yeah, they've got to stop doing that. You know, people
have you know, their attention span is very limited nowadays.
And when you get on and go, oh, you know,
we're great, this guy's great, that guy's great, everyone's great,
and then people bail, that's unbelievable.

Speaker 5 (28:11):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am sixty.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
It looks like the cops got their guy at Brown
University of killed two people. May also be the same
guy that killed the professor at MIT, and he has
just killed himself according to reports. And so that case
has been wrapped up, which is great because there are
a lot of people walking around and going to school
in that area that we're very nervous, extremely nervous.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
And they finally caught their guy, so that is good.
That is over.

Speaker 1 (28:46):
On a lighter note and a local note, Sharon Bellio
is married to John I don't think the last name
is Bellio them. He is a coach on Beckman and
Beckman football team after being horrible for many, many years.

(29:06):
This coach, Marcella is Marcello Gilianas you've become coach of.

Speaker 3 (29:12):
The year coach G.

Speaker 12 (29:14):
Wow, the way he's turned that program around amazing. He's
such a good guy. So congratulations coach G.

Speaker 6 (29:21):
And of course to his staff. He has a great
staff around coaching staff around him.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
Only three years ago, Beckman's football team was coming off
multiple underwhelming seasons to produced a combined combined wins of
only seven in a three year stretch.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
Terrible, stinking horrible.

Speaker 6 (29:41):
Okay, we got we got it, we got it.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
Not even I don't know why they didn't disband this team.
It's just the worst. And then he turned it around
so quickly. I don't know how he did that. The
Patriots nearly won and nearly became state champs. They were
Southern California champs, and they almost.

Speaker 6 (29:56):
Won the other it was the regional and then yeah,
and then they lost the state. Yeah what a run.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
Yeah, man, man, that is fantastic. So congratulations to coach.
How do you pronounce the last name Juliana?

Speaker 2 (30:10):
Juliana?

Speaker 12 (30:11):
And also congratulations and I have to read this because
I always get these wrong.

Speaker 6 (30:16):
So if you could just you know, talk amongst yourself.
We find this.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Oh I see you.

Speaker 1 (30:21):
You're not ready, No, not at all? Okay, all right,
well she's looking for something.

Speaker 6 (30:26):
I found it.

Speaker 2 (30:26):
Okay.

Speaker 12 (30:28):
And also, congratulations to second team All County football Mackai Chaikowski.

Speaker 6 (30:34):
There you go, so he had an incredible season as well.

Speaker 2 (30:37):
Excellent.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
All right, this is the The Oscars are moving. It's
gonna be on ABC for a couple of years. Then
they're moving and you will not be able to see
them on free television. Where are they going?

Speaker 2 (30:47):
Let's find out, ding dong with these Oscar ceremony.

Speaker 3 (30:50):
He's moving to YouTube in twenty twenty nine.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
There's a great idea. Move it on to the internet
where nobody will watch.

Speaker 13 (30:58):
Just moments ago, the Academy Motion Picture, Arts and Sciences
announced that change.

Speaker 1 (31:04):
Yeah, they must have thrown some money. Money must have
been thrown at the Oscars to move them on to YouTube.
They're on YouTube.

Speaker 13 (31:11):
ABC will continue broadcasting the event until twenty twenty eight.
This shift represents a significant move for one of television's
marquee events.

Speaker 1 (31:20):
There you go, so you got three more years of
Oscars on ABC and then good luck trying to find it.

Speaker 3 (31:27):
Charlie Brown.

Speaker 2 (31:28):
Charlie Brown Christmas is sixty years old.

Speaker 14 (31:37):
The special begins with a melancholy melody about the happiness
and sheer kids should feel this time of year.

Speaker 2 (31:45):
Just don't understand Christmas, I guess, And.

Speaker 14 (31:48):
Yet Charlie Brown is struggling with how commercial the holiday
has become, by giving Lucy a nickel for his thoughts.
If such a candidated mission was nothing new for Peanuts,
the comic strip created by the late Charles M.

Speaker 3 (32:09):
Schultz.

Speaker 14 (32:10):
Those who knew him best called him Sparky, and no
one knew him better than his wife.

Speaker 3 (32:14):
Gee.

Speaker 8 (32:15):
Everyone says that Sparky dealt with true human emotions and.

Speaker 14 (32:20):
That's why six decades later, a Charlie Brown Christmas is
still so beloved. From these ice sculptures at the Gaylord
opry Land in Nashville to this anniversary exhibition at the
Charles M. Schultz Museum in Santa Rosa, California.

Speaker 1 (32:36):
You know, when I was a kid, you young people
out there, we all had to get showered and have
our pajamas on, and it was always eight o'clock, usually
on a Tuesday, and that came on. I think it
was on ABC or CBS and Charlie Brown Christmas came on,
and you had one opportunity to see it that year,
one opportunity. It was going to be on eight o'clock

(32:57):
on a Tuesday, and you had to be in front
of the TV set to if you missed it, if
you were sick, if you were out and you missed it,
you had to wait another year to see it. There
was no DVDs, there were no vhs, there were no cables, channels,
there was no streaming nothing.

Speaker 2 (33:12):
It was a special occasion. It was see a cartoon
in the holidays at night.

Speaker 1 (33:17):
At night, it was great. Did your whole family get
together and watch on? Oh no, they were all drunk.
Oh I see, okay, well we all got together and
watch it. But I remember we all had to make
sure that we were in front of that TV because
that you get one shot every year, one shot. It
never they didn't reair it, they didn't run it three
or four times.

Speaker 2 (33:34):
One shot.

Speaker 1 (33:35):
And now you can see it whenever you want and
it's not a big deal, and it sucks. And it
was a family tradition that has gone and a lot
of those have disappeared. All right, we gotta get out
of here. But before we do, we got to tell
you that they are expecting on Christmas Eve, which is
one week from yesterday. One week from yesterday, it is

(33:58):
going to be there's going to be three to six
inches of rain in southern California. There is going to
be snow throughout the s Sierras. There's gonna be rain
throughout the entire state. So if you're planning on getting
in the car and driving to Washington or Oregon, or
northern California, maybe San Francisco, you have got to be prepared.
It is going to be an entire your entire drive

(34:20):
is going to be drenched, So be prepared for that.
We'll talk about that more tomorrow. It is going to
be a rough Christmas when it comes to weather. Now,
if you're in the mountains, it's gonna beautiful. You're gonna
have a snowy, beautiful white Christmas. But if you're down
here in the flats, it's gonna be a mess, an
absolute mess.

Speaker 2 (34:39):
All right, Roner, who's coming up with you tonight, Bob?

Speaker 7 (34:41):
A complete pro Chris Merril, Chris Merrill, I love that
guy coming up next, right, here on KFI AM six.

Speaker 1 (34:47):
Forty Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Now,
you can always hear us live on KFI AM six
forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime
on the and on the iHeartRadio app.

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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