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August 18, 2025 29 mins
(August 18,2025)
Amy King & Neil Saavedra join Bill for Handel on the News. Trump tells Zelenskyy Ukraine cannot reclaim Crimea, be a NATO member. Gaza: Leaked recording reveals ex-Israeli military intelligence chief calling 50,000 deaths ‘necessary.’ San Bernardino County Sheriff’s investigators ‘cannot rule out foul play’ after mom reported baby boy ‘kidnapped’ in Yucaipa. Storm strengthens to category 4 near Bahamas.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Bill Handle on demand from kf I
am six forty.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
I think we all agree on this show that older,
decrepit things that don't work anymore should be the commissioned.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Oh that's a good point. Oh you're talking about me. No, what, bastard?

Speaker 4 (00:26):
What?

Speaker 1 (00:27):
And now Handle on the news, ladies and gentlemen, here's
Bill Handle.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
Good morning, everybody, Handle and the morning crew.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
At the.

Speaker 3 (00:44):
Oh, let's say here you go. I do my TVs
in the morning, but I have to turn them on.
I hate that. But we don't have anybody who turns
the mind for me.

Speaker 5 (00:51):
Oh, please do it during the show.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
Pardon someone has someone has to mute. Okay, there's about that.
Uh yeah, all right, there we go.

Speaker 5 (01:05):
I might interrupt the show, the quality of the.

Speaker 3 (01:07):
Programs trugged show. Yeah, uh oh, non, you.

Speaker 4 (01:14):
Know, I'll do it during the commercial ohtle choice.

Speaker 3 (01:18):
Oh yeah, you know.

Speaker 4 (01:19):
I just the problem is I have to go through
a whole bunch of different clicks. Drives me crazy. Okay,
let me say hello to the group as we start
the morning. Amy, good morning, Hi Bill, Oh, Yellow and Black.

Speaker 6 (01:34):
Are we Uh I'm a little bumblebe today.

Speaker 3 (01:36):
You are a little bumblebee.

Speaker 4 (01:37):
Yeah, an accurate africanized bumblebee. You know, I boy, could
I do forty minutes on that one?

Speaker 3 (01:44):
Okay?

Speaker 4 (01:45):
Uh cono, good morning, good morning Bill, and there is
a lovely Neil.

Speaker 5 (01:51):
Good morning Willie Wolf and uh there.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
Is uh ann hi hi all. You worked all weekend
football games, just one on Saturday.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
Oh okay, Oh she's not a happy camper, Bill, look
at that put.

Speaker 6 (02:08):
Well, her padres got beat soundly by the Dodgers this weekend.

Speaker 5 (02:12):
Her beat by the Dodgers.

Speaker 6 (02:15):
Yeah, they Well, I was just trying to she pretends
to be nice.

Speaker 4 (02:20):
Yeah, I watched I watched a bunch of Hitler shows,
which I always do, you know, documentary on the Hitler
Sanpeaking of Amy.

Speaker 3 (02:26):
Watched a bunch of Hitler stuff.

Speaker 4 (02:27):
Wow, Okay, it's true. They call it the History Channel,
but we really know what it is. It's the Hitler Channel.
It's it's that simple, all right. You could look up
Hitler on any of the various platforms and you'll see
forty fifty eighty different documentaries.

Speaker 5 (02:47):
Will possibly be learning about him at this point.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
Well, you know, little bits and pieces.

Speaker 4 (02:52):
I mean, something comes up and you know, oh yeah,
I didn't know that real quickly. Oh God, was I
gonna say, Oh, there's a documentary about Billy Joel that
just came out and I think it's on Hulu. Phenomenal,
I mean just phenomenal. Amy, You're nodding, have.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
You seen it?

Speaker 6 (03:14):
And I have, yes, and so it goes, Oh.

Speaker 4 (03:17):
It's just yeah, it is really great, really good documentary.
The documentaries are well TV in general. I mean, this
is the golden age of TV by a long shot.
The original golden age of TV was in the fifties
when TV was early on and they were live shows,
they didn't do recording, and they were many.

Speaker 3 (03:39):
There were many plays, is what.

Speaker 4 (03:41):
There were an hour of plays that were written specifically
for television and never came back.

Speaker 3 (03:48):
And if you look at early days.

Speaker 4 (03:49):
Of TV, you will see some extraordinary actors, so many
of them started back then, who were of course big
names subsequent today that doesn't exist. All right, let's do it.
We've got a lot going on today. Of course is
a miserable, magnificent mortician like Monday, and so we're waiting
for the big one, the big the post summit summit.

(04:16):
Matter of fact, let's start handling the news with Amy
Neil and me lead story.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
And it has to do with the summit. And this
one is.

Speaker 4 (04:27):
Another one of Donald Trump reversing himself, but in a big,
big way. This time he goes to the summit in
Alaska with Putin. Now keep in mind, Putin has become
a pariah leader of the world, of the world community,
and Donald Trump gives him, I mean extraordinary coverage, treated

(04:49):
him as if nothing is wrong, and as a matter
of fact, said, and this is now he's really pushed
it that the war in Ukraine can end, will end,
and only if Ukraine gives up the twenty percent of
its land, everything that Putin wants and actually more land
than Russia is occupying, and then there will be peace.

(05:12):
You give him everything, and there will be peace.

Speaker 5 (05:16):
They'd also throw in no NATO membership.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
Oh that's a given.

Speaker 4 (05:20):
And American security, which no one knows what that is.
We'll talk more about that obviously at seven o'clock. And
Putin is I think he's already in Washington, d C.
He is meeting with the President in the Oval Office.
Hopefully there's no screaming this time with Oh, no Zolensky,
I misspoke. Zelensky is meeting with the President as well

(05:43):
as Western world leaders that are coming in. So it's
going to be a big deal today. And again more
about that at seven o'clock.

Speaker 6 (05:54):
Sorry, I had to cough. How many is too many?
In leaked the former head of Israel's military intelligence can
be heard saying that the deaths of tens of thousands
of Palestinians are necessary and required for future generations. He said,
for everything that happened October seventh, for every one person

(06:15):
on October seventh, fifty Palestinians must die. Major General Aron
Haaliva said in the recordings release that it doesn't matter
now if they are children.

Speaker 4 (06:29):
Intersperse instead of his name, for example, Joseph Goebel's name
with the same quote, and maybe the number is different.
This is exactly the language that came out of Nazi Germany,
regarding the Jews and the Serbs and homosexuals and the Roma,

(06:50):
the Gypsies, exactly the same language. It is horrific, I mean,
it is I just this is one of those in
one of those areas where I've never ever been ashamed
to be Jewish. This time I am because of this.

(07:11):
Can you imagine fifty thousand people? Eh, small potatoes for
every one of ours. Fifty people, not that Hamas is
not a terrorist organization has to be put down. But
he didn't say fifty Hamas fighters. He said fifty Palestinians.

(07:35):
And the word Palestinian you look at includes women and men,
civilians and children. So this came out, and of course
they're backing immediately, backtracking.

Speaker 3 (07:46):
Oh, I really didn't mean it that way.

Speaker 4 (07:49):
You're not publishing this in context. I'm sorry that I
said that. Please don't misunderstand that I'm contact. I have
no idea. I have absolutely no idea. The only context
would be I have heard that this is being said
by certain members and it is horrible. That's the only context,

(08:12):
and you quote it. That's it, all right?

Speaker 3 (08:15):
Moving on.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
You heard Amy talking about this earlier. The search is
continuing for the missing missing seven month old boy out
in U Kaipa.

Speaker 5 (08:29):
This is a weird story.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
So the mother says she was watching a sport event
with her other kids, took her seven month old boy
with her to go to like a Big five or
something like that, to get a mouthguard. Baby needed to
be changed, She should put the baby on the back,
went to change the diaper, and then she said, she

(08:51):
wiped it out.

Speaker 5 (08:52):
Someone hit her. She whited it out.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
When she came to the boy was gone. Law enforcement's been,
you know, of course, doing their due diligence. Sheriff's department
is talking to Rebecca Harrow, the mother, and asking all
these questions. Then all of a sudden they start pointing
out inconsistencies, and she stops and declines to be interviewed anymore.

(09:15):
So they're not ruling out foul play in this whole thing. Amy,
I had heard something I don't know if you have,
that the father had maybe been had a felony child
abuse something around there.

Speaker 6 (09:32):
Yeah, he was convicted of child cruelty in twenty twenty three.

Speaker 5 (09:36):
Yes, which doesn't make for a better situation, but.

Speaker 3 (09:39):
No, it doesn't.

Speaker 4 (09:40):
However, however, you know, when you have a mom in
all kinds of inconsistencies, and then when the inconsistencies are
pointed out to her and she goes, I'm not talking anymore.
I basically want a lawyer at this point or whatever.
She says, foul play cannot be ruled out. At what
point is foul play rule in under these circumstances.

Speaker 6 (10:02):
Well, they know it's foul play because somebody the baby's gone.

Speaker 2 (10:06):
Yeah, but at this point it does it's sketchy that
she says, now I want to an attorney.

Speaker 4 (10:14):
And the time, and the child cruelty charge does not
necessarily mean that he would murder.

Speaker 3 (10:21):
His own child.

Speaker 4 (10:22):
I mean, it's it looks like there may be some connection.
But I would argue that I'm looking at her if
I was an investigator as more likely because of the
crazy stuff. And it's always I was there and someone
attacked me and took my baby.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
You know, it's always that kind of story.

Speaker 5 (10:43):
You know, what does the child? Is the child special needs?

Speaker 3 (10:49):
Does it say?

Speaker 2 (10:51):
I haven't said anything, but I know that's horrible to say.
But one of the pictures I saw looked like maybe
the child had some issues of some kind.

Speaker 5 (11:02):
Which like down sydrum.

Speaker 2 (11:04):
I don't know if it would be that, but it
just to me something that you know, I don't know,
may may add a layer of well, she's got other.

Speaker 4 (11:15):
Children, and yeah, she has five kids. Yeah, so this
is one of five.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
I don't take, just just just a thought.

Speaker 6 (11:24):
The hurricane's powering across the Atlantic. Her name is Aaron,
and she's re intensified, expected to strengthen further as the
hurricane threatens the Bahamas and Hispaniola. What's Hispaniola?

Speaker 3 (11:39):
Hispanola. That's actually where I don't know where that is.

Speaker 4 (11:43):
It's an island and in the Caribbean, and that is
where probably Columbus landed. Oh we don't know exactly, but
probably where he landed and discovered the New World.

Speaker 6 (11:53):
Okay, well, it's about to get pounded by this hurricane.
It's been barreling through the Atlantic Ocean. It's not expected
to make landfall in the US. They're still projecting that
it's gonna make a turn. There's a cold front headed
that's going to push it out, and hopefully that it's
they're gonna get rain and stuff, but hopefully it's not gonna.

Speaker 3 (12:11):
Make it's going to be it's gonna be bad.

Speaker 1 (12:13):
It is.

Speaker 4 (12:15):
And notice that a hurricane Aaron E R I N.
And when you said she, it used to be all
male names until a few years ago when they allowed
female names. And you know, it all went to hell
when they allowed women to vote nineteen twenty.

Speaker 3 (12:31):
It just literally went to hell in a handbasket.

Speaker 4 (12:33):
And now they're doctors and lawyers and god forbid, they're
pilots on airlines. What I get on a ply, I
get on an airline and hi, and then you have
then you have some female pilot's name and probably not
trans And well what's a woman flying an airplane about anyway?
So yeah, okay, moving.

Speaker 5 (12:55):
On, what's next? Talk show hosts, Well.

Speaker 3 (13:01):
That's now.

Speaker 5 (13:05):
All right.

Speaker 2 (13:05):
At the behest to the Trump administration, a lot of
arms going up in the Republican governor category of hey,
use some of our guys, so West Virginia, South Carolina, Ohio,
they are Republican governors have announced just this weekend that
they are they're going to send National Guard troops to Washington,
d C.

Speaker 4 (13:26):
To explain to me, right, why is this happening? Well,
because crime in Washington, c DC is out of control.
The criminal elements have taken over the city even though
crime has gone down, and not in federal troops that
are put into place by the president isn't enough.

Speaker 3 (13:45):
It has to be all the states.

Speaker 4 (13:47):
Around it that are also bringing in federal bringing in
troops that are going to become federalized.

Speaker 5 (13:55):
You haven't seen the pattern President Trump. He loves the
theatrics of all.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
Of course, of course, this is all option and this
is what when he does the show of force. The
hope is that people it will automatically slow down.

Speaker 5 (14:15):
The crime and actually think it.

Speaker 4 (14:18):
Works and it's slowing down anyway. You know, cyclical crime
goes up, crime goes down.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
That's garbage there. See, you know how numbers work. You
get it goes down. Let's say it goes, it triples,
and then it goes down by two percent, and they
say it's going down.

Speaker 3 (14:36):
It doesn't triple.

Speaker 4 (14:37):
You know, you don't see three times the number of
burglaries and murders. All I'm saying is that this is
one of these incidentss that are done for optics, and
that's it. Do you really need federal troops in Washington,
d C? Not only Washington d C. National Guard, but
from three states? Why not five states?

Speaker 2 (15:01):
You know what they do here in La they get
decommissioned black and whites, uh, and they park them in
front of you know, Hollywood and Highland and all these
things as a show that there's law enforcement there.

Speaker 4 (15:15):
That isn't even I understand there's a deterrent care. But
look what they're doing. They're guarding federal buildings. When was
the last time, during the course recently with administrations where
federal buildings were somehow at rists. January sixth, just that one.
But are you actually telling But wait a second, but

(15:36):
January sixth was not an attack. January sixth was a
patriotic move. It was just Americans that were demonstrating.

Speaker 5 (15:44):
That's it. I will never swallow that pill, and anybody
that does to me.

Speaker 4 (15:49):
Okay, we're on the same page. We're just obviously taking
different views of that. I'm right, you're wrong.

Speaker 3 (15:55):
Moving on.

Speaker 6 (15:57):
They must not have been making enough money. Amazon is
shuttering it's Amazon App Store on the Android operating system.
If you got it, times running out because it ends
on Wednesday, August twentieth. That's this Wednesday. That means the
mega corporation's competitor to the Google Goal Play Store, Google

(16:17):
play Store, Google Play Store, it is no longer going
to be available. The companies shut down the app Store
on Windows back in twenty twenty four. They say, we
have decided to discontinue the Amazon App Store on Android
to focus efforts on the app store experience on our
own devices.

Speaker 4 (16:35):
Yeah, how many people have iPhones go to How many
people have Android phones go to the Amazon App Store?

Speaker 3 (16:43):
I would think not many.

Speaker 2 (16:45):
Well, the only problem, right, amy, is that if you
did did download an app from that, it will it.

Speaker 6 (16:53):
Could it might not be there after Wednesday. Yeah, yeah,
that could be problematic because like with Apple, you go
to Apple's whatever it is, it's app store, and then
they also have the Android Google Play Store. So why
wouldn't you just go to that? Why go to a

(17:14):
third party?

Speaker 5 (17:15):
Well, that may be the issue.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
All right, this is a story that needs some suss
and out. San Bernardino Police responded to a call dealing
with an officer involved shooting. In this case, it was
a federal immigration officer in the shooting. Apparently they pulled
someone over. The Department of Homeland Security said that agents
were conducting this targeted enforcement operation in sand Burdo there

(17:41):
and said that the Customs and Border Protection officer was
injured during a vehicle stop. It seems that the vehicle
was the weapon in this particular case, so says they
and the subject just flat out refused to exit the
vehicle and tried to run them down.

Speaker 5 (18:01):
That's their story.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
And on the flip side, the individual said that he
would not get outside. He said that they broke his
window and started shooting at him.

Speaker 3 (18:14):
Well, you could see the window being broken.

Speaker 4 (18:16):
The video shows the window being broken, and you hear
the shots. Now the argument, and they.

Speaker 5 (18:22):
Broke the window because he wouldn't get out.

Speaker 4 (18:24):
Right, he broke the window, I guess to drag him
out because you see a hand going through the window clearly.
And as soon as that happens, the driver steps on
the gas and the police are saying that they were hit.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
And that's easy, that's easy to ascertain. Were police hit?
Were their injuries? Okay, where's the argument there?

Speaker 4 (18:45):
And so I'd love to see what the politics of
this one is going to be. And according to the
driver and witnesses, the car was unmarked.

Speaker 3 (18:57):
These were federal agents.

Speaker 4 (18:58):
The car was unmarked, and they were it was part
of an investigation that Ice was having or Border Patrol
was having. But they were.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
Wearing jackets that said police or something, because that's on
the video, yes.

Speaker 4 (19:13):
And you don't know if that could be seen from
the driver and he said, all I saw was a
bunch of guys in helmets and the car was unmarked.
You're right, it's two different views of this completely, and
we have to the police have to set out all right.

Speaker 6 (19:31):
Well, the first lady had a little something to say
from far far away. First Lady Milania Trump sent a
letter with President Trump too Russian President Vladimir Putin, so
when they met in Alaska, he got the letter. She said,
it is time to protect children and future generations around
the globe. She said, we must strive to paint a

(19:54):
dignity filled world froll for all. She said, A simple
yet profound concept, mister Putin, I am sure you agree,
is that each generation's descendants begins their lives with a
purity and innocence which stands above geography, government and ideology.

Speaker 4 (20:13):
And he immediately declared, You're absolutely right. I'm stopping the
war today. Okay, a letter to pootin world. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
Air Canada, Hey, they are going back and forth with
their strike. He had more than ten thousand Air Canada
flight attendants that went on strike, and then you had
the Canadian government jump in their Canadian jobs. Minister jumped
in intervened. It intervened using Section one oh seven of

(20:51):
the Canadian Labor Code. This was back on Saturday, saying
that hey, you know, you got to get back to work.
This operations and duties is important to the secure industrial
peace and protect the interests of Canada.

Speaker 5 (21:06):
And they went.

Speaker 3 (21:08):
That's right, they said, go pound ice.

Speaker 5 (21:11):
Yeah, exactly, yeah, and.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
So they proceeded in the process of still being.

Speaker 5 (21:23):
On strike.

Speaker 4 (21:26):
I wonder what happens because here there is, for example,
there will be an order, usually a federal order, for
the strikers to return to work, and usually that does it.
But this is when this is ignored under the law.
The Canadian government can do this, and the striker is saying,

(21:46):
we don't care about the law.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
That is, that's anarchy.

Speaker 4 (21:51):
Effectively, we're not interested in what the law allows or
doesn't allow us to do.

Speaker 3 (21:56):
So I've got a problem with that.

Speaker 6 (22:00):
Feeling a little tired, Well that's okay, because it's really
trendy to look tired these days. It's the latest gen
Z makeup trend. Even as a name, it's called tired Girls.
Celebrates the look of not having been to bed. Of course, historically,
looking sleepy and worn down has been associated with poor health, aging,
and unattractiveness, but tired girl beauty celebrates the opposite, about

(22:23):
embracing the imperfections we've tried to conceal in the past.
And of course the poster child for it is Wednesday Atoms.

Speaker 4 (22:31):
He explain this to me, and I'm asking Amy and
Anne you are of the female ilk well.

Speaker 3 (22:39):
I'm now cool?

Speaker 4 (22:42):
Yeah day yeah, so does and so I guess you
two are the wrong people to ask ask sorry about that.

Speaker 3 (22:52):
But do you try to hide it with makeup? No?

Speaker 4 (22:57):
No, exactly. But I don't understand the other way. Why
it's so cool to look tired?

Speaker 6 (23:02):
Yeah, okay, I definitely it's not out with me.

Speaker 3 (23:06):
Yeah, it's not for you to understand, Bill, you.

Speaker 4 (23:08):
Know, I mean the audience, I can understand you do
you doing makeups? Looks like you have opened shankers on
your face that I can understand, But this one I can't.

Speaker 3 (23:19):
Okay, No, but yeah, Amy and I are very hip, okay,
even with makeup. That's the word i'd use. All right.

Speaker 5 (23:29):
So Capital One is in hot water.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
They were between September and twenty nineteen or twenty yeah,
twenty nineteen and June of twenty twenty five. Apparently they
did not change the rate. They froze their rate at
a low level for several years, even though you know,
nationally the rate was rising. So that cheated customers out

(23:53):
of more than two billion dollars in lost interest payments.
So they have agreed to a four hundred and twenty
five million dollars settlement to resolve all this, and that's
going out to people. You may get a chunk of that.

Speaker 3 (24:11):
Hey, you a question about two questions?

Speaker 4 (24:13):
Number one, two billion dollars in lost interest that did
not pay and they're paying four hundred and twenty five
million dollars, which is a twenty five percent hit. How
many companies out there would be fine with twenty five
percent a seventy five percent profit?

Speaker 3 (24:30):
You know I would?

Speaker 5 (24:32):
And then happens all the time too. Of course it
was point, are they being punished?

Speaker 3 (24:37):
Well?

Speaker 4 (24:38):
Yeah, I mean at this point writing a check now
for four to twenty five where over years you writ
people off. And then the other question is aren't you
utterly shocked about a major financial institution being caught doing
something untoward in terms of its customers? Completely shocked. I
would never expect this to happen.

Speaker 2 (24:58):
Right, It wouldn't happen at the Bailey Bank and Loan
or whatever.

Speaker 5 (25:06):
Tell you that much.

Speaker 3 (25:08):
Oh here's another one.

Speaker 6 (25:10):
Data breach may pay off for some AT and T customers.
Millions can file claims and get up to seventy five
hundred dollars back as part of a one hundred and
seventy seven million dollars settlement related to data breaches from
last year. The settlement was announced that the okay, the
data breaches sorry, happened in March and July. They included

(25:36):
getting social security numbers on the dark web, phone numbers,
lots of information. It affected seventy three million former and
current customer customers. So if you were involved in this,
apparently you'll be getting an email if you're eligible for
a claim, and again you can get up to seventy
five hundred bucks back, but you have to show documentation

(25:58):
that you know that you were compromised, Because.

Speaker 3 (26:01):
How do you show documentation that you were compromised.

Speaker 6 (26:05):
That's a very good question.

Speaker 4 (26:06):
No, I don't know how to do it all So
considering well, yeah, so that means all right, no one's
going to be able to do it the other Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 3 (26:14):
So let's say you were.

Speaker 4 (26:15):
Compromised and you are blaming AT and T. How about
the other companies that also were compromised over the last
few years. If you add all of those companies together
in terms of the number of people where data was released,
you have about the population of the world three times
over seventy million people here, forty million there when you.

Speaker 3 (26:40):
Start listing the companies.

Speaker 4 (26:43):
So even if you were compromised, how do you prove
it was AT and T that did the compromising, that
the bad guys got your information from that organization.

Speaker 3 (26:52):
So I don't get this.

Speaker 6 (26:53):
Well, here's my question.

Speaker 3 (26:54):
Bill.

Speaker 6 (26:55):
Being a lawyer, maybe you will know this.

Speaker 3 (26:57):
Start laughing.

Speaker 6 (26:58):
If like, everybody doesn't get the money back because they
either don't qualify for it or it's too much of
a pain to get it, who keeps all that money
they do? AT and T gets to keep it, or
the lawyers get it.

Speaker 4 (27:14):
Well, the lawyers get a huge chunk anyway, Yeah, whenever
there's a settlement, figure thirty percent of the lawyers.

Speaker 3 (27:19):
But I think the companies keep it. They don't have
to pay it.

Speaker 4 (27:25):
They will pay four hundred and twenty five million dollars.

Speaker 3 (27:28):
But to whom.

Speaker 4 (27:30):
There aren't enough people to make up four hundred and
twenty five million dollars. And I don't believe a loss, say,
is that the government gets it. There may be some statutes.
There are federal statutes, but I'm not aware of them.
But then again, I'm not aware of many many laws
as in all of them. And so that's why I
would never ask me for advice Saturday morning.

Speaker 2 (27:52):
Moving on there, So, who would a guess at a
place called Alligator Alcatraz would come under the eyes and
the curiosity of a judge who is now weighing the
detainees' legal rights there. So a federal judge will hear
arguments today over whether these detainees at that temporary immigration

(28:17):
detention center there in the Florida Everglades have been denied
their legal rights.

Speaker 4 (28:22):
Now, this is a technicality, it's one of those. The
whole issue is which county has jurisdiction here, and that's
the fight that's going on. I love this stuff, this
question of standing. What a lot of people think is
that a case is decided on its merits, and that is,

(28:45):
for example, our rights being violated. Well, what they're arguing is,
since they're bouncing around, who has jurisdiction that argument and
that decision has to be made before the decision is made,
And that's the case here.

Speaker 3 (29:01):
All right, I think we're done, guys. That's it.

Speaker 4 (29:04):
All right, This is kf I am five.

Speaker 3 (29:09):
You've been listening to the Bill Handle show.

Speaker 4 (29:11):
Catch my show Monday through Friday six am to nine am,
and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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