Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
The only way to bag a classy lady is to
give her two tickets to the gun show.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
This Monday Gun Day with the gun.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Swatch up with the guns. They'll get down.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Guy, stop calling your arms gun show.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
Yeah, this is perfect. My name is Nigel Guy. Ralford
is filling in for Jason Hammer. He's a licensed firearms
instructor and to a attorney. How are you doing?
Speaker 2 (00:26):
I am great and thanks us always to our sponsor
for Monday Gun Day. That's Premier Arms in Brownsburg with
the largest selection of new, used and historic firearms in
the Midwest and PA Jewelers located in the farmhouse right
out front. Check them out at thirty seven and fifty
four South Green Street in Brownsburg or Premier Arms dot com.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
So there was a press conference earlier today with Mary
and County Prosecutor Ryan Meres along with IMPD Chief Bailey,
and all having to do with former NFL quarterback Mark
Sanchez who was in town to call the Colts game
for Fox. Now, all of a sudden facing felony charges
for Saturday's stabbing incident in downtown on Indy. Uh. If
you haven't heard about this, it's being covered extensively on
(01:04):
this show on this website w IBC dot com. But
you and were telling me about something that Russ McQuaid
from Fox fifty nine asked. Yeah, a question, he asked
the prosecutor. Yeah, apparently it's like so eye roll worthy. Well, like,
I just can you can you maybe explain what? He asked?
Speaker 2 (01:27):
Oh yeah, And apparently Jason, even on his day off,
is watching news conferences. But yeah, the Chief Bailey and
Ryan Meers, Marion Kenny, prosecutor, gave a press conference. They
were asking some answering some.
Speaker 1 (01:41):
Questions rated Sanchez's charges to level five felony.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
Based on the fact that the victim now incurred. They
say serious bodily injury and battery with a serious bodily
injury is a level five felony. So they announced that
and they were answering other questions, and uh, Russ McQuaid,
he wants.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
To sarcastically called you a to a scholar.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
A scholar? That was it? That was it a hearing? Well,
he was referencing a hearing where I testified in favor
of a pro two A bill in the legislature. But
he and I have kind of been going at it
since then. But I should have known, and and by
the way, he covered the constitutional carry legislation extensively when
we were trying to get that passed. And that's the
context where he sarcastically called me a scholar, which, by
(02:27):
the way, a member of the Democrat on the committee
had actually called me that sincerely and asked me a
legitimate question. Anyway, Russ, he used to be good. I
don't know what happened. I just think he's a good reporter.
I think he's a good investigative reporter. But but on
this thing that that he does on his well out
in the open of these press conferences, and the stuff
(02:48):
that he puts on Facebook. Yeah, I mean, I'll go
back and.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
Imagine letting my my, my unbiased reporters put the stuff
that he does on Facebook.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
Well, yeah, and he's he's but he's just so biased
against the Second Amendment. I mean, he called the hero
of the Greenwood Park mall shooting, my client Eli Dickon,
called him the second shooter at the mall shooting. But
in that context, by the way, I think he's still
mad that constitutional carry passed when it did in twenty
twenty two, because here's what he asked, Ryan Mears and
(03:21):
Chief Bailey, considering Indiana is a constitutional carry state, how
lucky are we that somebody's not dead of a gunshot wound.
Now this is in the context of a stabbing that
was allegedly self defense.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
Can you hear me rolling my eyes through the radio.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
But there was no shooting, There was no shooting, gun
wasn't involved, much less constitutional carry. Well, aren't we just
lucky that given this horrific law we have in this state.
And to Ryan Meher's credit, when he answers the question,
he says, you know what, as we've looked at the
numbers over the years, the number of cases that we've screened,
we look at that through the lens of self defense,
(04:02):
and that number has gone up because there are more
people armed and protecting themselves. Said that. Meer said that, uh,
And he said, which is a right that they have?
So there you go. Dear said that. Well, I'm just
reading the transcript, but yeah, he's saying they're saying that
they're they're there, they have to be screened by the prospect.
You know, I shouldn't attribute that because I actually don't
(04:24):
know that could have been that could have been Chief
Bailey to your point. But uh, but but.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
How either way a dumb question?
Speaker 2 (04:32):
How lucky are we that no one shot given constitutional carry? Oh? Please?
And I and I said, is that a dumb question? Yeah?
But I said when it was when it was passed.
When we passed constitutional carrying in twenty twenty two, I said,
get ready because for the foreseeable future, constitutional carry is
going to get blamed for everything. I mean, from somebody
spitting on the sidewalk to you know, who knows what,
(04:52):
and here you go, You've got a stabbing downtown and
us Rush McQuaid still wants to blame it on constitutional carrier.
Speaker 1 (04:58):
Well, Democrats are always I can only assume Rus McQuaid
is a Democrat, and by what he posts on his
personal Facebook page is yeah, is pretty evident. And he
hates the two. He hates the Second Amendment, he hates
the gun laws, he hates constitutional character carry. But it
just seems like in general, Democrats are always saying the
(05:19):
American public wants stricter gun laws. They want it the
American public. The Democrats seem to have the pulse of
the American public when it comes to guns. However, Reuter's
poll says.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
Otherwise, right, we just had a Reuter's poll, and I
think correct me if you disagree. Notige, but I think
Ruters is seen as pretty, you know, straight down the
middle of the fairway. I don't know that they have
a leaning left or right.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
I would probably think they'd lean more left, but that
we can have another discussion about that.
Speaker 2 (05:49):
But they ran a poll and turns out the majority
of Americans, by by a margin of four percent, actually
the majority like our gun laws today and are not
in favor of strict or control. And then it went
on to say that they prefer, by a significant majority,
(06:11):
they preferred Republicans approach to gun laws over Democrats in
terms of political platforms. So you know, we always hear
Democrats to your point, saying, oh, you know, we're on
the side of the American public on this. We need
to ban this type of weapon, or we need this
restriction or pass this other law. And turns out a
national poll done by Reuters just came out and refuted
(06:33):
that directly.