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March 28, 2025 • 144 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Five, o five.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
And fIF you've got k r C the talk station.
Yay Friday, a vacation there, ye go, very happy Friday

(00:32):
in spite of the Reds lost yesterday. What a what
a disappointment as a tradition. Thanks for looking really good
up till we got about the eighth inning? Okay, pitching,
How you feeling about that one, Joe? It's one game.
Got a lot more to play. But obviously with opening

(00:54):
Day and all the festivities and apparently everybody had a
great time at the parade, and it's always a wonderful thing.
We have that wonderful tradition here in the Cincinnati area.
But sadly, Joe is right, it is kind of tradition
for us to not do so well playing the game.
But that doesn't mean people didn't have a really good
time anyhow. What's coming up on the fifty five Carressey
Morning Show, of course Tech Friday with Dave Hatter. Got

(01:17):
several topics talk about with him, which is as is tradition. First,
FBI warning cell phone users that they want your records,
they want access to your records, and I think this
has to do with encryption, and FBI has a bit
of a problem with encryption because they can't well read
what you've typed in and what you've stored if it's encrypted.

(01:40):
So I always love hearing from Day of Hatter again
a nationally recognized segment here on the fifty five Carcy
Morning Show Tech Friday. Let us see here topic number
two twenty three and means now bankrupt, So what happens
to the data? There were widespread warnings and circulations and
admonishment or recommendations of people, delete your data. Now. When

(02:04):
I heard about that, I'd never done twenty three and
mes I never really felt comfortable with the idea that
someone would have my personal genetic makeup and some database
and some far off place. Well, and this is what happens.
You know, they go bankrupt, their assets have to be
sold to satisfy the creditors, and I have to imagine

(02:28):
that the database of information has some value to it
to be sold. More broadly, I don't know what the
legalities are behind that. I don't know if there was
some promises made or some contractual obligations on the part
of twenty three meters to not share that data with anybody.
But them going bankrupt, you know, you've got they have
some assets. And when you look with data company, which

(02:49):
I presume they're going to do as opposed to reorganize,
that stuff has to be sold to satisfy creditors usually
get like a penny or two on the dollar if
you're a creditor, if that in some cases, but if
you haven't deleted your data, and ask yourself this question.
You know, if you tell them to delete it and
they're a bankrupt company, are there going to be people

(03:10):
there that can effectuate the deletion? Can they actually accomplish
deleting the data? Is it still over there in some
cloud form or some device. Well maybe David will be
able to answer those questions. But kind of frightening stuff.
I mean, that's you, that is everything about you boil
down to some slice of DNA. And finally, Sweden no
longer cash lists. I talked about that the other day,

(03:32):
Sweden recommending actually people have cash on hand, and the
world's going to be a really dangerous place if we
go to the these cryptocurrencies, national cryptocurrency, They're gonna know
everything that you do, every purchase you make, where you
are when you buy it, then where you move to.
HM big brother is here, it's alive, it's well and

(03:53):
something far beyond whatever George Orwell could have ever conceived.
And I always go back to the Chinese Communist Party,
big critic I am of the Chinese Communist Party. Had
a conversation about that yesterday. Some say that's racist. No,
it's not. If nothing against Chinese people, it's their system

(04:15):
of government. They have something that is the ultimate or
well in reality going on this this sort of credit
score this, Do you abide by the Chinese Communist Party principles?
Do you swear a note to the Chinese Communist Party?
Are you fully indoctrinated or are you some kind of
rebel radical that you know? A tenement square person, right, Joe,

(04:42):
why don't you ask the kids a tenement square if
fashions the reason why they were there. No, they're looking
for freedom and is the farthest thing from a free
society in China. I mean, they can deny you anything.
They can prevent you from buying, they can prevent you
from renting own a home. It's just God, it's so

(05:04):
dystopian when you think about it. But we're running headlong
into that. And if you take away cash and you
must engage in electronic transmissions. That is one more step
closer to what exactly is in place in China, and
why anyone would want to embrace that is beyond me.
So Sweden's going backwards from that. And I think it

(05:25):
was like ninety percent of all transactions were done with
some form of electronic payment system in Sweden. So backpedaling
they are, which is a good thing. And I have
a feeling Dave's going to agree with my position on that.
Ohioan's for child protection. We're supposed to have Rebeca Cerndorf
on the other day she was out of the country.
The connection was bad. She's going to be on today

(05:46):
talking about this pedophile music teacher slash priest who raped
repeatedly on nine and then ten year old over a
long period of time, as well as committed other further
other acts of child a use and disgusting behavior with children.
Is looking for some leniency. He doesn't want to have

(06:07):
to register on the high level a sex offender, which
he agreed to in his plea agreement. So I think
he's personally, I think he's got a snowball's chance in
hell where there is a special reserve spot for him
when he finally dies of getting his requests for relief.
But the d that someone who raped the child admitted it,

(06:30):
confessed to it, and got a plea agreement, spent some
time in prison, has the audacity to ask for some
measure of leniency is just beyond my comprehension. When she
crawled back into a hole and just hide from Society
Heart for Seniors, wonderful organization. Patty Scott returns to talk
about that they're just looking for better care for seniors

(06:52):
and senior care facilities, and it really is. It's kind
of a nightmare scenario. If very few people caring for
a large number of seniors, which means a lot of
them are basically wallowing in their own fill for a
long period of time, which obviously creates massive health problems.
They've got a cure for it. I mean, they've got
a simple solution that should literally be in every single

(07:15):
one of these institutions. And I've got personal connection with that,
given my dad was in a dementia facility and you're
struggling with the dementia, you don't know how to take
care of yourself. It's one of the sad realities or
one of the sad ist realities of dementia, and that's
why folks end up in these senior care facilities because

(07:37):
they're supposed to be caring for them. Well, Patty Scott's
got some great solutions for them. To hear from herd
again today, get an update on how things are going there.
Ken Williamson returns Vietnam Veterans Ceremonies taking place on Saturday.
You know me, I love the American veteran. Ken Williamson
out loves them more than me. He's such a great guy.
So we'll get the details on that at eight oh five.

(07:58):
And then another wonderful event, Cheryl Pop returns Honor Flight
schedule for twenty twenty five. Cheryl Pop with Honor Flight
tri State gonna come in me be talking at eight
thirty on the this year's schedule and a fantastic opportunity.
And you've got plenty of time to get your organization together.
You get the kids together, rent the bus, get the

(08:18):
school group together, and show up for the return welcome
ceremony for any one of the Honor flights. It's this
true dose of much needed patriotism in these trying times
when we find ourselves so feel patriotic. It's a good thing.
Love hearing from you, especially on a Friday, especially since
I've got a bunch. I got a whole bunch of
articles laying around me, not a single one. None of

(08:42):
them interest me. I have editorial discretion here on the
morning show. I guess you know, I set the topic
if no one calls in and wants to talk about
something specifically. But what do you do when nothing interests you?
It's an interesting thing I could Usually I come in.
I'm really enthusiastic about talking about something in particular, but

(09:03):
today it's just not in me. Fortunately, I've got a
vacation coming up. I think it's much needed. The week
of the fourteenth of April. I'll just be taking the
week off, So I'm just gonna exhale, relax, and try
to stay away from the news, sort of a mental
health week off. Got to use your vacation for something,
So that's what I'm choosing to use it for. Maybe
I'll be refreshed when I come back. But anyway, why

(09:24):
not this because Trump's tariffs are coming at looming fast
on the automobile tariffs, and so there's been some reports
and I know he did have a conversation with the
auto manufacturers, saying, don't raise the price of automobiles. We
want to check it out. Josh dalzy Over at the
Wall Street Journal wrote an article about that Trump warned
the US automakers not to raise prices and response to tariffs.

(09:47):
Apparently told executives that the White House would look unfavorably
if they raised prices on automobiles. And I don't know
if he directly threatened him with punishment, because you know,
the powers that be in Washington do have a lot
of regulatory authority over business and industry out of this world.

(10:08):
We've learned that a lot over the years. I regret
that that's the case, but they do. He suggested they
should be grateful for his elimination of what former President
Joe Biden had electric vehicle mandate. You got to appreciate
that you can still manufacture the internal combustion engine. And
he suggested they would actually benefit from the tariffs, calling

(10:29):
them great. But Wednesday he announce would be a twenty
five percent tarifunnel imported vehicles and parts. Notice the emphasis
of my voice on that and parts, which is going
to be a problem because most American manufactured automobiles, I
don't care if it came from Detroit or Kentucky or
wherever it's made, are filled with imported parts. And as

(10:53):
a CNN report, I understand the bias at CNN, but
they did consult with some outside experts on it, suggesting
that the produce that vehicles produced domestically could jump between
thirty five hundred dollars and twelve thousand dollars after the
tariffs kick in on April third. That's because one of
two cars sold in the US that are manufactured here

(11:14):
import a significant amount of components, primarily from Canada Mexico.
According to the Trump administration fact sheet that was published
on Wednesday we announced the tariffs quote, the average domestic
content is conservatively estimated at only fifty percent and is
likely closer to forty percent. The balance of the car

(11:37):
from imported parts, which will be subject to a twenty
five percent increase in price. They say, by some estimates,
forty thousand dollars a forty thousand dollars American car could
be hit with a five thousand dollars levee. That's facts
from well claims from Anderson Economic Group, which is a
think tank in Michigan. They estimate the car costs all
rise between thirty five, one hundred and twelve thousand dollars.

(11:59):
Peter Nagel, who's an automotive economists with S and P
Global Mobility, there's a probability probably not a vehicle on
the market today that wouldn't be affected in some form
or fashion by tariffs. I would think prices would start
to change in the one to two weeks after the
tariffs go into effect. Ivan Drury, Edmunds dot com director

(12:21):
of insights quote, it's going to be expensive, too soon
to tell how much, but it'll be a couple of
thousand dollars if not more. Industry experts in the automotive.
Automotive industry do not expect automakers will necessarily pass all
of their higher costs onto the sticker price, but the
incentives the car shoppers are seeing, automakers can simply remove

(12:42):
some of the incentives that are quite lucrative. According to
mister Drury, like car makers may drop at one point
nine percent subsidized the car loan, raising the cost of
purchasing the vehicle by six to seven thousand dollars. They
say you may not be able to negotiate more favorable
terms anymore. No haggling over this, because there's it's just

(13:04):
the fact that the industry's going to have to deal with.
They liken this kind of what happened to the COVID
pandemic pandemic, Remember the shortage of computer chips in various
parts because of supply chain breakdowns. People weren't going to work,
there were lockdowns in place and all that. In twenty
twenty one, new cars jump seventeen percent price use cars
serge thirty two percent in price corner. Jonathan Stoke, chief

(13:29):
economists over Cox Automotive, that the tariffs go through by
mid April, we expect disruptions to virtually all North American
vehicle production, accounting to twenty thousand fewer vehicles produced per day,
which is about a thirty percent hit to production bottom line.
Lower production, tighter supply, higher prices are around the corner
reminiscent of twenty twenty one. So guard your loins for

(13:51):
that one. Get out and buy your car today, I guess,
And it does seem inevitable. I've said up before, I'll
say it again. No huge fan of tariffs. I guess
we have to weigh and see when the dust settles. Now,
Donald Trump of course hopes this is going to bring
back automobile manufacturing in the United States. We're going to
need to bring back part manufacturing so a larger percentage
of the automobile is made in America. Now that may happen,

(14:17):
you know it's going to take a while. Five nineteen
fifty five krcy detoxication. Feel free to call five on
three seven fournine fifty five eight hundred and eighty two
to three. Tacould be right back.

Speaker 3 (14:27):
Fifty five KRC touching enrolls you want to reoccurring any tech.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
I approve of him approving this message. Also approve of
Lemon waking me up in the morning. Indeed, more must
derangement syndrome. Someone's like getting into the stack is stupid early.

(14:57):
We got to Now we have a loss In Vegas.
Man charged in a molotov cocktail attack that lit multiple
Tesla's on fire. Paul Young Kim. He's thirty six. He
got arrested Wednesday by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department
after at least five cars were set on fire at

(15:19):
a local Tesla collision center. Charged with multiple crimes ranging
from destruction of property, Artison possessing a fire device also
now facing federal charges. They're cracking down on this. Spencer Evans,
the FBI agent charge of the euro's Las Vegas office, said, yeah,
there is nothing courageous. I love this statement. There's nothing

(15:40):
courageous or noble about fire bombing private property and terrorizing
your local community. The self righteous mob that's cheering you
on today to commit acts of violence on their behalf
will leave you high and dry and forget about you tomorrow.
At the end of the day, you and you alone
will be held responsible and face the prospect of a

(16:01):
lengthy prison sentence. There's a brilliant commentary. You know, social
media is egging people on to key destroy light on fire.
Otherwise go after these Tesla automobiles. They're just egging you on.
Kind of wonder whether they're doing anything or just egging
you on. Hmm. There's always someone whispering people's ears, telling

(16:22):
them to do things that are the wrong thing to do.
And yes, of course you're the one that will ultimately
be held responsible for you. Remember, going back to Orwellian
society we live in, there are cameras literally everywhere. You
will be captured on video. They will bring a hold
you to account. Apparently, the word resist was spray painted
on a Tesla in the center's front doors until the

(16:42):
Molotov cocktail was found on one of the cars that
this guy had. What does resist mean? What are you resisting?
I'm asking for a friend. They used to go after
SUVs because they were killing the planet. At least you
could say, well, I'm going against SUVs because you know,
they used burn up a lot of gas and they're

(17:03):
polluting the environment. And BBB, Well, tesla is the answer
to that, wasn't it? Which isn't itself a lie? Given
all the you know, the the destruction of the planet
and the Chinese communist parties coal fired factories creating all
the component parts that go into them. But now we
won't pay attention to that. Now, Tesla's are evil. What

(17:25):
are you resisting? What does that word mean? And what
context does it mean? Authorities I said. Kim's social media
activity showed potential links to oh communist groups and Palestinian causes,
and his DNA match DNA samples collected at the scene
of the attack. According to authorities, there you go. They

(17:48):
found multiple firearms, including his rifles, a shotgun, a handgun,
and gun parts, as well as ammunition when they searched
his two vehicles. Even commies known firearms. Five twenty six
five k see the talk station. Local story is coming up.
I hope you can stick around or alternately give me
a call. Either way you slice it, I'll be back
in a couple fifty five the talk app today here.

(18:19):
It is your Channel nine first warning weather forecast. Got
some partly cloudy skyes today going all the way up
to seventy six breezy conditions lends up to twenty miles
per hours. Overnight just partly cloudie, mild sixty degrees, mostly
cloudy to morrow. Spotty rain chances show up late in
the afternoon seventy four degrees for the high. Got overcast
guys overnight with likely rain in the lowest fifty eight

(18:41):
shower Sunday morning and afternoon and evening thunderstorms along with
some severe storms at least the possibility of them. Sunday's
high seventy two fifty two degrees. Right now fifty five
KRCD Talk station. It's five thirty and Happy Friday to you.

(19:01):
If I won three seven, four, nine fifty five two
to three Talk found five fifty on eight and t
phone Look It's lent Fish Friday. Friday list is on
the fifty five care see website fifty five carc dot
com for that Crime Stoppers, bad Guy of the Week
and Jay Ratlift discussion aviation issues. Yesterday. Corey Bowman for
Mayor talked to him yesterday and an hour with Todd
z Enzer. What an enlightening conversation that is Todd z

(19:23):
ends or former Inspector General, really paying attention to the
issues that are going on in the city of Cincinnati,
including the Shenanigans declaration on mayor have tab pervol and
some well work that was done in his campaign that
he never paid for the campaign contributions, So whether or

(19:43):
not anything comes to that, he seemed a little bit
skeptical that anything might happen as a consequence of that,
But we'll see. Keep your popcorn out over the local
stories got one person arrested and a warrant was issued.
Authorities investigating what they say are suspected prop institution operations
at two different businesses and one residence and of all places,

(20:05):
Claremont County. A report from Pierce Township Police say deputies
with the Claremont County Sheriff's Office, representatives of the Prosecutor's Office,
and Dea executed search warrants at Natura foot Spa Dave
Chappelle would approve, right, Joe, There's no flag for us,

(20:27):
and the Yaleen Comfort Zone Massage, both located at Highpike.
After receiving several complaints late last year, officers say law
enforcement arrested the Queen Dang fifty four following a search
of the nature of foot Spa, facing now two counts
of solicitation, one kind of permitting prostitution. Law enforcement issue

(20:48):
a warrant for yaling Wang. It's a parking lot. Some
people get that statement. Cattie Shack, one owner of the
yell End Comfort Zone Massage, please say she's facing charges
of two counts of promoting prostitution, one kind of solicitation,
one kind of sexual imposition, and one kind of practicing

(21:11):
without a license. Law enforcement has not provided it from
additional information regarding the residents involved in the investigation. Pro
by the High Inspector General found that a temporary Ohio
Department of Job and Family Services employee fraudulently released more

(21:33):
than half a million dollars in pandemic related unemployment assistance funds.
Oh Look Fraud the System. ODJFS was in charge of
distributing billions of dollars of federally funded pandemic unemployment assistance funds.
Eligibility requirements loosened, of course that allowed for fraud, waste,
and abuse work are ODJFS distributed and estimated seven point

(21:55):
six billion dollars in fiscal year twenty twenty one. ODJFS
later found that millions of dollars were fraudulently distributed, many
links to intermittent and temporary employees who the department had
to hire to process spikes and claims. Joint Investigated and
Investigative team consisting of the Ohio Office of Labor, Inspector General, House,
State Highway Patrol, US Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General,

(22:17):
and ODJFS was formed to investigate. Most recent inspection found
that a former intermittent customer service representative, Renita car improperly
released just under five hundred and sixty six thousand dollars
to twenty eight PUA claims that were outside of her
training and authority. Five of those involved friends, relatives, or

(22:39):
acquaintance of Car. According to the investigation, I was shocking.
Investigation found cars searched for specific claimants, voided eligibility and
fraud concerns, and removed fact finding information short for the organization.
Between May twenty seventh and twenty one and August six,
twenty one, before direct employment by the department, Car was

(23:02):
a subcontractor of ODJFS as a customer service representative for
Insight Global. Insight Global an organization, and when she answered
calls about applications and claims while they're spokesperson for ODJFS,
Tom Beatty, we are disappointed that the intermittent employee in

(23:26):
question allegedly betrayed the public's trust and abused their position
to improperly approve claims. High Inspector Jen referred Car's case.
The Franklin County Prosecutor, Ohio Auditor accorded the news release,
so there will be hopefully some accountability for that. But
again going back to COVID, and they just threw heap
loads of money out into the world, increasing inflation and

(23:48):
causing a lot of fraud, waste, and abuse. There is
no oversight, there's no effective oversight. Most notably when they
relax restrictions, restrictions which are supposed to prevent this kind
of thing from happening. Oh no, no, no, we got
to get the money out to the world. Remember, it's
all your money we're talking about here, folks. Five thirty
five at five K city Talk station Stack, Oh stupid. Hey, welcome,

(24:10):
Stack is stupid here on a Friday. Hope you can
stick around or feel free to call either way. Be
back in a couple fifty five KRC dot com Are
you a business owner?

Speaker 1 (24:19):
CEO?

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Facebook? And some message in anticipation that John the Fisherman
every Friday. Good morning, Jeffrey, it's five forty. We got

(24:50):
that out of the way. Five one three seven fifty
two three talk Stack, Oh stupid. We go to Evansville, Indiana.
Apparently owners of a restaurant say a plumber returned to
reclog their pipes because of a disputed bill.

Speaker 4 (25:07):
Do what the hell?

Speaker 2 (25:09):
Tybeeestern Bar operations manager Jesse Sanders said that when the
kitchen's grease trap started to overflow, they called Heraven Plumbing
company to fix the block. Several days later, when it happened,
Sanders said, the restaurant called the plumber back. This time,
saying it was an emergency. After Heaven Plumbing returned for
the second job, Sanders said they received a bill for

(25:30):
nearly double what they had already paid for the first visit,
since the plumber returned on overtime hours. Sanders said the
exact same work was done twice, but the second time
he was charged nearly double, saying I was shocked. I
couldn't believe it, Like, okay, is this really happening? What
first bill two hundred and thirty five bucks, the second
three hundred and ninety bucks. Sanders said he refused to

(25:51):
pay the second one, claiming it's not about the money,
it's about him just standing behind his work. After refusing
to pay the second bill, restaurant surveillance cameras see they're
there everywhere showed the plumber returning the next morning to
reclog the pipes, corded Sanders. The following day, we received
the text message say that he's on our property. He

(26:13):
put a balloon into our grease trap and he's not
going to remove it until we pay. Text exchange between
the parties showed the restaurant owners were given about an
hour to pay the bill before the plumber would leave
for the weekend. Sanders said, if we were to leave
the balloon in there, it would overflow the restaurant with water,
dirty water from the grease trap. Basically, we would have

(26:33):
had to shut down. So they called the police officers
on the scene and bill in hand. Harvid Plumbing removed
the balloon. The restaurant said the bill they handed over
was ultimately marked as paid under protest Plumbing company over
Joel Harvin, speaking with local news over the phone, the
restaurant has a history of being slow to make payments

(26:55):
to his business in the past. Evansville Police Department information
officer Anthony Alseicker speak with News of this type of
matters are normally settled in small claims court. True, bud
Hereven said he didn't want to go that route and
instead took matters into his own hands, saying, frankly, it
was not worth it pursuing it in court. It's not
worth my time. Just wasn't worth it. And you know,

(27:18):
he's got a point on that. Going through small claims court,
you know, and when they call your plumbing company next time,
if you had a problem with them paying bills in
the past, just say no, I don't want to do
the work, call somebody else that a more effective way
of handling the situation, and you will pay more for
after hours plumbing. I think that's just kind of the norm. Milwaukee,

(27:43):
Wisconsin man arrested for secretly putting super glue into a
coworkers into coworkers plural beverages after being caught by What's
Coming a secret camera?

Speaker 4 (27:56):
What what the hell?

Speaker 2 (27:58):
Woman identified a problem cause Affidavid as a quote JH
clothes quote began to suspect that someone was putting something
into the drinks she left out on her desk, and
we learned this lesson last Friday. Don't leave drinks out
on your desk. Last Week's a lot worse than the superglue,
if I remember correctly right, Joe Jage told the officer

(28:20):
of the approximately two two to three weeks ago. Jay
suspected that her beverages on her desk had been contaminated
by a chemical substance. This, according to the affidavit, Jah made
aware of the contamination due to strong chemical smell and taste.
Stated that upon consumption of the beverages, she became ill. Moreover,
she did not consent to anyone placing anything into her
drink really suspicious the culprit was doing it at some

(28:43):
time during the workday. She reportedly set up a hidden
security camera in the office and caught thirty four year
old Joseph R. Ross in the act. According to the
Affidavid approximately nine fifty two a m. Why is the
word approximately in there? When you got it nailed down
to the minute, JH camera captured Jh's coworker, whom Jah
shares an office with Joseph R. Ross. Here and after

(29:05):
the defendant put a foreign substance into the soft drink.
Jah shared the video footage with officers Toty State. The
video showed Ross wearing latex gloves and sweet squeezing contents
of a brown orange tube into the cann of Coca cola.
One question. He allegedly admitted to putting a supplement into
the beverages. Please said when they STARTLESA said that when

(29:30):
they searched for Ross belonging as they found the gloves
wrapped around a tune of Gorilla brand super glue, locally
owned and operated that matched the objects seen in the video.
Ross arrested charged with felony kind of placing foreign objects
in edibles, carrying a maximum sentence of three and a
half years in prison and a fine of up to
ten thousand dollars. Five point forty five ft five kars

(29:52):
detalk station. That's two weeks in a row. Learn a lesson.
Don't leave drinks out, don't leave drinks unattended. You got
people in the building overnight, You got people you work with.
It may not like you for whatever reason. And there
are stupid, evil, evil, stupid people.

Speaker 5 (30:06):
In the world.

Speaker 2 (30:08):
You have to take that precaution. You can't trust people
around you. But another lesson learned. I'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (30:14):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 5 (30:17):
Texting en rules you.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Five point fifty Happy Friday. Back to stack of duke
stupid Saskatoons. Sasketcha on man who was caught recording a
nine year old child while he was changing claim he

(30:41):
only did it because, in his words, he was worried
he may be a pedophile and effectively wanted to see
if he was. Yeah, I think it's pretty clear the
idea of setting up a camera to record a child
changing you're a pedophile. Thirty one year old Scott Riley

(31:01):
father and husband pled guilty the creation of child porn
after an incident which to the nine year old child
who Riley knew found the man's phone recording him in
a changing room that he had set up for him.
Since we were in Saskatchewan, It's crowned Prosecutor Andrew Clements
said the child was in a changing room, Riley told
him to go into his cabin when he spotted the

(31:22):
phone sitting next to a plant. Boy picked up the
phone and noticed it was recording, deleted the video and
told his dad what he found. Father asked Riley's wife
as she would check the phone to see if there
were any other illicit material, at which point she reportedly
found three deleted videos that showed Riley setting up the
phone and testing the angles. He recorded himself setting up

(31:43):
the hidden phone. Officers later searched the phone. They said
they found two nude photos of girls between ten and
thirteen years old. Court of the Court documents. Riley told
the court his brain was his words well FCC compliant
f up, and Clements said he claimed the reason he

(32:03):
took the video was he was worried he maybe a
pedophile and effectively wanted to see if he was. His
defense attorney said this comes out of the left field
from anybody in his life. It was very different from
his normal behavior. Not much of a defense. Victim's father
tests fight against Riley's saying, this is a permanent scar
you left to my kids. Scott, your actions have not
only stole my children's peace, but shattered their sense of safety, trust,

(32:26):
and childhood innocence. Sentenced to one year in prison the
mandatory minimum I know, I know, mandatory minimum sentence for
the offense, followed by a three year long probation order
during which he cannot contact the victims family, Must enroll
and participate in the sex offender treatment and must permit
the authorities to search his electronic belongings at any time.

(32:48):
Also be on the sex offender registry for twenty years.
What do you think is happening right now in prison, Joe?
What do you think is happening in an hour from now,
and then four hours from now, every hour every day

(33:09):
of his president prison sentence? Amen, brother, I heard me.
The aviation expert Jay Ratlife didn't have this on a shortlist. Yesterday,
a completely naked woman caused the chaotic scene at Dallas
Fort Worth International Airport. I saw the video of this
crazy man the woman spotted on March fourteen. She was
heard proclaiming quote, I speak all languages, along with other

(33:34):
bizarre phrases. But video shows are spraying water all over
a terminal and then spot trying to smash a monitor,
captured in a two minute clip that's been widely circulated,
including on the Facebook page of one Andrew pappas former
Anderson Township trustee, which is where I saw it.

Speaker 6 (33:49):
As a tradition.

Speaker 2 (33:50):
Police learned the woman suffered a manic episodes what they
describe it as a corner of the police report once
she was subdued. She claims she quote wanted to be
with the flower and thought she was in a forest.
Beginning of the video, she shown yelling unintelligibly at airport
staff and tossing and drink up in the air man

(34:11):
can be heard pleading go away, stop as the woman
seeses what seems to be a water bottle, pops open
the cap and hurls its contents all over the floor.
Heated exchange between the man and a woman and the staff.
She and the staff before she yells again, I speak
all languages and the compound word, which I believe is
on George Carlin seven Dirty word list MF security guard

(34:36):
communicating on his walkie talking while the woman observes before
is observed before breaking into bizarre shuffle dance. Female staff
members seem to offer the woman a coat before the
naked lady screams while attempting to snatch it and dashes off.
This point, she somehow has what looks like a phone
in her hand and heads toward the gate shouting F

(34:56):
you and f you. The last one was for emphasis.
Ook Kay got two naked stories, Let's go with the
shorter one. In the Interesting Time Bucket, Atlanta woman broke

(35:17):
up woke up to find a naked guy in her apartment.
She said she kicked in. He kicked in the patiodor
of her ground floor apartment. Ca John A. Levy told
the police she was sleeping in her Buckhead apartment Monday night,
got up after a bang in her bedroom door. I
opened the door and this guy standing right there, so
immediately I'm like boom punching him. Said. She punched the

(35:39):
man about a dozen times and she was ready to
hurt him further, but he took off. If she grabbed
a kitchen knife. Wow, bold, He's like the police the police.
I'm like, you're saying, police, I'm getting ready to call
the police. Lanta police showed up eleven twenty pm search
for the man. They couldn't find him. She was shaken,

(36:00):
but thankful she didn't get hurt because I was getting
ready to kill him. He just ran off before I
could get the knife. I spared him this time, but
there will not be a next time. She feels the
man may have not meant to harm her, only to
be seeking help. After some time to reflect on what happened, really,
she said, this is why I don't feel like he

(36:21):
was here to harm me. He may have been needing help.
Then when I said I'm going to call the police's
reaction was like, oh, let me run because you're going
to call the police. If anything, I was like, yes,
call the police. Or if it was like yes call
the police said or patio door wasn't completely locked and
officer said they might have maite it easier to kick
it in. They helped her secure it. Five point fifty

(36:41):
six fifty five care see de talk station. You know
in a castle doctor in state. He might have fared
so it might not have fared so well, Uh, don't
go away we got an Tech Friday coming up at
six thirty, a worthy endeavor to stick around for that.
When we learn a lot from Dave Hatter and Tech Friday,
you can feel free to steer the air between now
and then. I got other stories to talk about. I'll

(37:02):
be right back after the news.

Speaker 1 (37:04):
US happens fast, stay up to date at the top
of the hour, not going to be complicated, and it's
going to go very fast. Fifty five KRC the Talk
Station Spring cleaning, don't forget your windows check se also.

Speaker 2 (37:17):
Sex if you give about Parisee the Talk Station TGIF
Frian Thomas very happy, It's Friday, looking forward to the
conversation's gonna be having. We're gonna get the bottom of
the hour with guests Tech Friday with Dave had Or
FBI warning cell phone uses that they want lawful access
to your records. Twenty three meters bankrupt. What does that

(37:37):
mean to you and what happens to the data? Finally,
Sweden is no longer a cashless society, which is the
direction they were pushing. They've done a one to eighty
on that. We'll talk with Dave at the bottom of
the hour. Rebecca Rebecca Cerndor from Ohioan's for Child Protection
talking about that pedophile priest music teacher that molested a
nine and then ten year old over a long period
of time, raped them, admitted to doing it in the

(37:58):
plea deal, got a lighter sentence than probably otherwise would
have gotten. I think Judje Gas said she would have
locked him up for life if she was able, but
in the plea agreement he agreed that he would register
as a sex offender Tier one sex offender. And now
he's trying to say no, no, no, no, you need
to lighten up on me and lower the level. No,
we're not going to do that. And Rebecca Sernder for
Ohighlands for Chod Protection, we'll be bringing that to our attention.

(38:20):
Coming up in an hour are Heart for Seniors, wonderful
organization Patty Scott Rafferns to talk about, along with some
other guests, the progress they have made in helping seniors
in senior care facilities including dementia facilities. Plus Ken Williamson,
thank you for your service for our country. Ken. Ken's
going to be talking about the Vietnam Veterans ceremony taking
place this Saturday and continuing a theme Cheryl pop from

(38:43):
Honor Flight tri State will be giving us the rundown
of the Honor Flight schedule for twenty twenty five. You
definitely want to be there for the welcome home ceremonies.
And thanks to everybody who signed up to attend the
Honor Flight and accompany veterans to their memorials in Washington,
d C. I had the honor and privilege of doing
it twice. It is an absolutely a wonderful experience, one

(39:08):
that I'll never forget anyway. Uh Absent calls running the
government more like a private business. This is what's going
on now, and it's got the left pulling their hair
out and like, oh my god, we're all gonna die.
No we're not and taking a cue. I guess from

(39:29):
the likes of Elon Musk and his efforts of faradot
fraudways and abuse. Moving over to Health Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy Junior, and he is making the Department of Health
and Human Services run more efficiently by firing a bunch
of people. Unnecessary, redundant work is what we're getting rid of,
so you, the American taxpayer, don't have to pay for
a bloated government bureaucracy. He announced changes at HSS, including

(39:54):
merging some of the divisions become more efficient. He said,
We're going to go streamline HSS to make our agency
more efficient, more effective, improving the quality of service, he said.
In addition to consolidating divisions, mass layoffs are going to
reduce the full time HHS workforce by about twenty five
percent from its current eighty two thousand workers. Reorganization they

(40:18):
say it is going to take twenty eight divisions down
to fifteen, expected to save all of US one point
eight billion dollars a year. Most affected the Food and
Drug Administration, with about thirty five hundred workers being let go.
Centers for Disease Control Preventions workforce down about twenty four
hundred employees, about twelve hundred to the National Institutes of

(40:39):
Health Center for Medicare. Medicaid Services will move forward with
about three hundred fewer workers. Health and Human secret Services
said in the statement that many of the divisions contain
redundant units. Officials are going to consolidate the units into
fifteen divisions. One new division will be called the Administration
for Healthy America and feature five former divisions, including Healthy

(41:03):
Resources and Services administration. They say it will not affect
key services such as Medicare Medicaid, So don't start screaming,
oh my god, they're gonna take my Medicare and Medicaid away.

Speaker 7 (41:15):
Now.

Speaker 2 (41:17):
They need serious work over there. As I pointed out
just the other day in the Morning Show, Medicaid making
redundant payments, payments going out to individuals into the fact
they think are living in two different states, a lot
of money in duplicate payments. So there's an area you
can go after, and that will not remove Medicaid from you,

(41:38):
but it will save you money, and it of course
ensure that Medicaid doesn't collapse under its own weight of
inefficiency and fraud, waste and abuse. Don't believe those people
who are telling you they're taking it away. That is
an outright lie.

Speaker 5 (41:55):
Now.

Speaker 2 (41:55):
Of course, the Democrats are upset about this, It's reported
Representative Gerald Connolly from Virginia Democrat and the US House
Representatives Oversight Committee. He claimed on social media that the
cuts are a grave mistake. I have serious concerns about
how this will impact Americans well being and now and
long into the future. You know when I paused when

(42:16):
I read that, and I was trying to think to myself,
you know, really, what is Health and Human Service has
done for us as America's health gotten better over the
past several decades. No, not a bit. HHS already fired

(42:37):
about thirty two hundred probationary workers. According to court filings,
HHS among the agencies that there were recently ordered to
reinstate the workers workers that are clearly unnecessary. Some took
a buyout. About ten thousand additional employees will be terminated
under this reorganization, according to HHS. Once complete, it will

(42:58):
leave HHS with work for still of sixty two thousand people. Now.
Note their budget increased between twenty twenty one and this year,
increased by thirty eight percent. What have you gotten in
return for that? Staffing one up seventeen percent during that time,

(43:24):
he said, But all that money has failed to improve
the health of Americans. Kennedy sided the growth of the
rate and chronic disease and cancer, as well as lower
life expectancy for Americans when compared to Europeans. He said
that he's found HHS is mainly operating in silos, with
some divisions working at cross purposes with each other. One quote,
he said, a few isolated divisions are neglecting public health

(43:47):
altogether and seem only accountable to the industries that they're
supposed to be regulating, he said. In one instance, defiant
bureaucrats impeded the Secretary's office from accessing closely guarded databases
that might reveal the dangers of certain drugs and medical interventions. Now,
this has been a widespread cling for a long time

(44:07):
that the government is working hand in hand with the
pharmaceutical companies. And of course the pharmaceutical companies cannot be all,
you know, criticized across the board. They do provide life
saving medications, but quite often they get the skids greased
to get medications approved that may be dangerous. You like
the COVID nineteen vaccine. Maybe, But why wouldn't the department

(44:29):
cooperate with requests for information for databases that they have
a direct responsibility for. Why would they keep that information
under wraps? You would think that they would just describe
to be transparent. Oh no, you can't fire us. Here's
all the reasons why, and here's all the databases that
we've been putting together and all the good that we've
done for the American people. No, we're not going to

(44:50):
show it to you. Nothing to see here. Therein lies
a challenge. Well, I'll wait to be proven wrong. But
I've said it all along. When when they decided to
tap our FK Junior for this job, I thought he
was an ideal person to do it. He's a critic

(45:11):
of the you know, the big pharma companies, and there's
a lot of reasons to be critical of them. And
I'm not a complete anti vaxxer, but you know, I'd
like information, and that's what he's all about, Like, you know,
the information on these databases. Would it be interesting to know?
Don't you think government officials who are actually like like
inspectors general that are looking to make sure there's accountability,

(45:35):
make sure that there isn't nefarious activity going on, making
sure that there aren't favors being handed in curry between
you know, outside interest and the government dollars that are
being spent and allocated all in the interest of your health.
Give us the information, let us make informed decisions. Don't
take things off the market necessarily unless they're actually going
to kill us. But it would be important. I think

(45:59):
it's valuable to have all this information. The more we have.
The more educated we are and the more informed our
decisions are, give us the choice. Let's see what Jay's
got this morning. Jay, thanks for calling the morning showing
a very happy Friday to you.

Speaker 8 (46:11):
Hey, Happy Friday, Brian.

Speaker 9 (46:13):
He wanted to build on your comment of running government
like a business and putting Ohio onto the microscope. Here
we are with our medicaid spend being the same as
Pennsylvania's state budget at forty five billion dollars a year.
Now the governor and seems like a lot of the

(46:33):
Republicans are thinking that what we need to do is
take six hundred million dollars of tax payer money and
give it to the Cleveland Browns for a new stadium,
at which point we know the Bengals will start crying
and they'll get their six hundred million or a billion dollars. Meanwhile,
if they seem oblivious.

Speaker 8 (46:52):
To the fact that these tariffs.

Speaker 9 (46:53):
Every day there's a headline, and one of them caught
my attention, headlines of we've got ensuring of steel, manufacturing aluminum,
high tech automobile plants, and most recently I saw Rolls
Royce Rolls Royce aircraft engine plant. Now I would think
that the focus would be on a Rolls Royce engine plant.

(47:14):
And if Cincinnati could become the home of two major
aircraft engine manufacturers and Rolls roy oh yeah, wouldn't Wouldn't
that be what we want instead of a stadium that
sits empty except for five home games.

Speaker 8 (47:29):
And this is a very old and tired idea.

Speaker 9 (47:32):
And I love how the wine says, don't worry about
this money because it's free money, because it's going to
be coming from online sports betting. As if that money
is free and couldn't be put.

Speaker 2 (47:43):
Towards literally, we would. I could probably sit down and
he put an hour's work into and come up with
a list of one thousand things that that money would
be better served with. Yes, there's online gambling. Yes they're
a taxes associated with it. That's a pile of money.
How do we spend it? It's not free money. I mean,

(48:04):
if they're going to decide to tax something, those taxpayer
dollars go to projects that government is supposed to do,
not pet projects like stadiums. I hate paying for public
money paying for stadiums. Jay hate it, hate it, hate it,
most notably football stadiums where they don't use it for anything.
Other than a handful of games. As you pointed out,
it gets worse.

Speaker 8 (48:24):
It gets worse.

Speaker 5 (48:24):
Brin.

Speaker 8 (48:25):
There's also this entity called Jobs Ohio.

Speaker 9 (48:28):
Which was created solely to drive economic development. When within
the state of Ohio, where does its funding come from.
Don't worry, it's funded free from the proceeds from the
profit because we gave them.

Speaker 8 (48:41):
They bought all the.

Speaker 9 (48:42):
Liquor license from the liquor sales in the state of Ohio.

Speaker 8 (48:46):
That's how they're funded. So instead of liquor.

Speaker 9 (48:49):
Tax is going to pay down debt in Ohio and
maybe you know the forty five billion in Medicaid, if
we get that cleaned up, could.

Speaker 8 (48:56):
Free up some cash.

Speaker 9 (48:57):
But this whole entity exists, and you just got what
a fifteen year extension and instead of going to Jobs
Ohio and telling them to go figure out this Browns
and Bengals, No, we're reaching back into the public pills
and now there's Jobs Ohio. Don't worry, it's free because
it's just tax on liquor. And now we're going to
go outside of that. We're going to go, say, take

(49:18):
the tax revenue from online sports.

Speaker 8 (49:20):
You can tell people. Don't worry, it's free.

Speaker 9 (49:23):
So all this free money is damned expensive if you
ask me, And it seems like the politicians ought to
get their head out of their ass and start focusing
on there are real job creating. For instance, Rolls Rice
annual revenue six billion dollars a year, Cleveland Browns six
hundred million dollars a year. It's the equivalent of the
revenue of ten Cleaveland Browns. And how many jobs. Ge

(49:47):
Aircraft Engine has fifty thousand jobs. Cleaveland brown has about
two hundred jobs.

Speaker 1 (49:53):
Well, Jake, so good question is better for our kids?

Speaker 2 (49:55):
Well, you obviously have made the point. It's very obvious,
and I appreciate you emphasizing that. But see this. Have
they approved or have they already said that they will
be passing legislation otherwise funding that stadium or is it
still just a concept and a gleam in someone's eye.

Speaker 9 (50:12):
It From what I saw, it looks like it is
rapidly heading towards that they're going to get that money.
I thought I heard that it was approved or on
the break.

Speaker 8 (50:19):
Of getting approved. Well, there should be, and I'm sure
it won't take along.

Speaker 9 (50:24):
You guys have a down in Cincinnati.

Speaker 8 (50:27):
There's what's her name?

Speaker 9 (50:28):
Alicia Reef, who's constantly trying to put put you know,
get money for the Cincinnati Bengals. Now, if you take
a look at the total number of seats in Cleveland
Brown Stadium and divide that by the population of Ohio
to say, if that sucker was full every Sunday, And
it's not, but if it was, what percentage of Ohioans
would attend to Cleveland Brown game?

Speaker 8 (50:48):
Is point zero zero one percent of the population.

Speaker 9 (50:54):
How many people could benefit from a Rolls Royce plant,
a steel making plant, high tech plant, all this insourcing
and here we are, we're gonna we're gonna blow whatever
remaining money we have on sports again.

Speaker 2 (51:04):
Well and looping back we're left behind and looping back
to the tax dollars. I would imagine the engineers and
employees that are Rolls Royce engine manufacturing plan probably make
a lot more money than some employee at a stadium,
and there'll be a lot more of them. Ergo, the
tax dollars that they pay into the system are going
to benefit you know, the total till to a much

(51:26):
more substantial degree than than the collective employment from the stadium.
I mean, it's just mathematically, that's just the reality of it.
It's Jay, thank you brother. I appreciate you shedding some
light on that one. And there should be more public
outrage about that, quite honestly. Six twenty right now fifty
five KR's de talk stations stick around me, right.

Speaker 1 (51:44):
Back, fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 4 (51:48):
You don't think about it, you don't top.

Speaker 2 (51:52):
Six twenty four atfig five KR see de talk station.
Happy Friday? Yeah, Jay got me thinking, David, you're happy? Yeah,
David tappy it's Friday. Usually get that out of him.
As he mentioned liquor taxes. Yeah, there's an extra tax

(52:13):
on liquor. And currently manufacturers imports wholesales distributed to a
beer wine side of mixed beverages of up to twenty
one percent alcohol by volume, they have to pay an
additional there's additional tax on it. Fourteen cents per ounce
of containers twelve ounce or less five dollars and fifty
eight cents per barrel. I'd be thirty one gallons. That's

(52:33):
for beer wine, and of course liquor liquors three dolls
and thirty eight cents per gallon extra tax, and that's
beyond what you pay in a sales tax. Why that's
the only question. One is why we pick and choose
things to add additional taxes on. And most notably, it's
usually just a new product comes on the market and
they decide, well, we're gonna love an extra tax on it.

(52:55):
It's this massive cash grab at every turn, every instance.
It's they can justinfa all, well, it's a sin tax.
Well you know what, who defines sin? It's a cash
grab and it's a I mean it's everywhere you turn.

(53:15):
I mean, at least with gasoline tax you can say, well,
it's supposed to serve the infrastructure. The cars use the roads,
and if you're using the road, you gotta bea able
a gas tax so the roads can be taken care of.
I can understand that conceptually, But just because it's liquor,
there is a separate and piled on tax. You're online gaming.
Why are they taxing that in a higher rate? Why?

(53:39):
Because I'm sorry, I just can't abide on that. At
least I got that out of my system. Tech rid
of a Dave Hatter coming up next. I hope you can.

Speaker 4 (53:48):
Stick around fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (53:52):
Now here's the morning you think about KRC detalk station interest.
It dot com your business. I know you've got computers,
get best practices, get out of problems, get them solved
by interest. It the best in the business corner of
the business career. You get the assistance of Tech Friday's
Dave Hatter and his team. Dave, Welcome back to the program,
the award winning podcast that we're gonna we were doing

(54:16):
right now. This segment it hit the map number thirty
nine on the list of one hundred from the million
podcast folks. So again, congratulations on that and again a
scary stack of topics this morning.

Speaker 10 (54:28):
Well you know, Brian again, couldn't do it without you
and job. So thanks and I enjoy chatting with you
every week and I hope we're helping people avoid the
increasingly large, gigantically deep pitfalls that are out there.

Speaker 2 (54:40):
Amen. Brother, if they choose to listen and heed your advice,
you are definitely doing the world of service. And I
know you've impacted people's lives for the better because they
have taken your advice over the years. I know I have.
So I'm not sure what kind of here, what kind
of dossier they have on me, but it's a lot
smaller than it would have been had I not heeded
your advice. I guess the FBI is added again they

(55:02):
want to get access to our encrypted data. To them,
I've got two words and they ain't. Happy birthday.

Speaker 10 (55:08):
Yeah, so this is an interesting story. You know, I
can remember talking with you late last year. SIZA, the
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which is a Department of
Homeland Security primarily focused on critical infrastructure local governments. I mean,
their focus is physical and cybersecurity, and they came out

(55:29):
late last year and said everyone.

Speaker 5 (55:31):
Should be using encrypted messaging apps.

Speaker 10 (55:33):
Now, this is also interesting in the light of the
signal thing that happened. Yeah, all of this, you know,
news that's been swirling around that. But the bottom line is,
you know, you have two different government agencies that have
taken sort of a different perspective on this. You know,
the FBI, I'm sure understands the value of into encryption.
And let's say, for example, you're on an Apple phone.

(55:54):
I'm on an Apple phone, if you're using the Apple
I message app. When you send me a text, it's
into end encrypted from my phone to your phone, and
even Apple can't read that the contents of the text
because it's been encrypted and sent through their system within
the end encryption. That's the long that's the basics, most
simple definition. If you're not on an Apple phone, you know,

(56:16):
if I'm sending a text to an Android phone, there's
a way to do it. Ideally, in the near future
this will all just naturally work. But Signal has been
around for a while. In my opinion, it's probably the best,
most respected, most well known of the other messaging apps
that are not ender specific right, Signal will work on
just about any device. It's designed within the end encryption. Again,

(56:39):
it's thoroughly vetted. You've got others out there, like What's
happened from Meta, You've got Telegram.

Speaker 5 (56:44):
There's some concerns around that.

Speaker 2 (56:47):
You know.

Speaker 10 (56:47):
Bottom line is Signal was recommended by many many people.
You've got says that telling you you should use into
encryption because of all the tax and the theft of data
and so forth. And then you've got the FBI say
and well, yeah, we like endid encryption, and end encryption
is good, but we want to have quote responsible unquote
into end encryption, which means there'd be a backdoor in

(57:09):
there so law enforcement could crack it. Because you know,
if you and I are texting each other, Brian. Again,
let's say Apple Phone Signal or whatever. And if they can't,
you know, unlock our devices and access those apps. As
of today, unless there's something I don't know about out there,
the level of encryption that's used by an app like
Signal or even the Apple I message is not currently crackable.

Speaker 2 (57:30):
Right, Well, they shouldn't be accessing it anyway because they
don't have warrant and probable cause to access to data.
It's private communications. They have no right to look at it.

Speaker 5 (57:40):
I agree with you wholeheartedly.

Speaker 10 (57:42):
I think the distinction they would make, though I know
not reading their mind, but I think what they would say,
and the idea of this back door quote responsible and
unquote encryption is, Okay, you and I are criminals, we're
messaging each other. If either one or both of us
really in this case, it would have to be both
of us, don't give up the keys. If we won't

(58:02):
unlock the phone, we won't tell them the password. They
can't unlock the device, they can't read the messages even
with a warrant, right, so they can compel me and you.
They can put us in jail.

Speaker 5 (58:11):
But if we.

Speaker 10 (58:11):
Still won't comply, they won't be able to read those messages,
which is where the back door comes in. With the
back door, they'd be able to, you know, essentially have
a back way into the defeat the encryption, access the data.
And my problem with all of this because I agree
with you wholehearted, you should get a warrant.

Speaker 2 (58:30):
Period.

Speaker 10 (58:30):
Now I'm not saying they wouldn't get a warrant and
then attempt to use the back door. My issue with
the whole thing is if there's a back door, you
can guarantee it's guarantee.

Speaker 2 (58:40):
It's going to be exploited.

Speaker 10 (58:41):
Yeah, whether it's you know, abuse through a government agency,
it's exploitation by criminals or other nation state actors, you
can guarantee it's going to be exploited. So I'm against
it on its face simply because there's no way it
will be kept safe and then we're all at risk,
including them, if they're using these technologies. That's right, So

(59:05):
I understand their perspective. I understand why it would be
extremely helpful for them when you're dealing with hardcore criminals
who don't want to cooperate. It just puts us as
we rely more and more in this technology and as
encryption becomes more and more important to protect our assets,
our conversations, our businesses, our governments, etc. At least until

(59:29):
quantum computing really becomes a thing. But that's a whole
new topic. It's just crazy, crazy to think that that
wouldn't get to be used.

Speaker 5 (59:37):
We don't want it.

Speaker 10 (59:38):
You should tell your legislators, no, we don't want any
kind of backdoors.

Speaker 2 (59:42):
I agree, and I guess fundamentally it comes down to
is it really is it better just to have some
criminal getaway with not being forced or being able to
get in touch with those communications. Maybe they have other evidence,
other sources of information they can get a conviction, or
maybe in the absence of that evidence, maybe they can't
convict them. That will be a very small slice of

(01:00:03):
the population. The rest of us are at risk across
the board if they put a backdoor in, and so
you got to weigh the societal benefits against the risks,
and I think you know the risks are more significant.
Let's bring Dave back. I see it. We'll talk about
twenty three ae meters bankruptcy. Why did you give your
DNA evidence the outside company in the first place? Ask

(01:00:25):
that question? Six point thirty six. If you I have
KRC the talk station and get in touch with QC Kinetics.
Folks out there struggling with pain, you know you may
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Speaker 4 (01:01:28):
Nine fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (01:01:31):
Did you know even this time? Quick chane nine. Weather
forecasts maybe a little rain out there till ten, and
then after it just breezy and partly thotty, going up
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two Right now.

Speaker 11 (01:01:54):
Traffic time from the UC Health Traffic Center for National
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Speaker 6 (01:02:06):
Do you have a new accident?

Speaker 11 (01:02:07):
So out on I two seventy five northbound after Milford.
It's on the shoulder here, but it's the left side,
so planned force some slowdowns. Also the accident on two
seventy five eastbound after Winton Road. It's still reported on
your right shoulder. I'm Heather Pasco on fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (01:02:24):
The talk station, So forty fifty five KRCD talk station.
Get some great info as always from tech Friday's day.
Have had our interest it dot com where you find
him and his crew and over to twenty three ande meters.
I'd never give up my DNA evidence or DNA to
anybody unless I was forced to by court order or
something like that day, but people went online or actually

(01:02:47):
swabbed themselves and sent it off to twenty three and
me to figure out their ancestry, and lo and behold,
we had a hack of breach and the company's gone underwater.
They finally filed for bankruptcy. Now they're doing a reorg.
Are they liquidating? It's sounds like it's a reorg.

Speaker 5 (01:03:02):
Yeah, Well, Brian, here's.

Speaker 2 (01:03:04):
The thing, let me stay up front. The reason I
asked that is because if they liquidate, if they are
going out of business, there are creditors out there, and
this information, I imagine, is worth something out on the open market,
which means it's something that it's an asset that can
be sold to pay off creditors.

Speaker 10 (01:03:20):
And that's Gary, yeah, and that's I want to go
back to the first point that she made before we
really segued into this, which is I would have never
given my sensitive health data to a third party company
that's not regulated by something like HIPPA. Because people are like, well,
you go to the doctor, you go to your hospital,
they take blood tests, they do these kind of tests.

(01:03:42):
They do, but remember their business model is different. First off,
their healthcare providers. Second, and that's their business right. Secondarily,
theoretically they've taken the Hippocratic oath and they're there to
help you. And third and most important in this context,
they're covered by HIPPA right, So there's a regulation that
requires that they protect certain sensitive data. As you and

(01:04:05):
I have discussed many times over the years, there is
no national data privacy law. Some states have passed laws.
It's a hodgepodge quilt of different regulations, and the level
of rigor across these laws varies widely. California's is by
far the most rigorous. Ohio, unless it happened recently, has
not passed the data privacy law. You know, I like

(01:04:26):
to like to chide you guys a little that we
did it in Kentucky, but it.

Speaker 5 (01:04:29):
Doesn't kick in until next year.

Speaker 10 (01:04:32):
So bottom line is, yeah, I would have never and
I want to before we even go further this colo Guard,
I would never use colo Guard for the same reasons.

Speaker 5 (01:04:41):
Is your DNA in the samples that you're sending them?

Speaker 10 (01:04:44):
Of course it is. What are they doing with it?
I don't know. Did you read the terms of service?
Did you read their privacy policy? And even if they
do everything right according to those policies and they're in
alignment with your wishes, data can be hackets hacked all
the time. And then before we come back to this,
do you remember, Brian, It hasn't been that long, and

(01:05:05):
I'm pretty sure you and I talked about it. Radio
Shack was one of the first retail companies to want
to collect your data, right you go up to the
cash register.

Speaker 5 (01:05:13):
You know, I'm in Neard.

Speaker 10 (01:05:14):
I used to go to Radio Shack all the time
and they'd want to, you know, give me a zip code,
give me your phone number, and they swore they would
never sell that data. And then they went out of business,
and there was actually several lawsuits over that data because
they sold the data as a way to offset you know,
the money they had lost and needed to pay off
their bills.

Speaker 2 (01:05:32):
Right, That's the point I've made about the DNA data.
It's got to be Listen. The Wuhan Institute Virology might
want all the information from Americans DNA so they can
make a DNA make some kind of deadly tsin that
attacks only people. That's certain DNA structures. I mean, that's
a real thing.

Speaker 10 (01:05:50):
As far fast as that sound, I mean, I'm not
a scientist or a doctor, but from all the all
the research I've seen and heard other experts talk about it,
that is a real thing. So you've got roughly fifty
million Americans genetic data. And as I like to tell
people about biometrics, now, I'm not saying bioomemetrics are bad,
but unless I really really trust the platform, I'm going

(01:06:11):
to give some biometrics to You can't get a new fingerprint,
you can't get a new retina, you can't at least
not yet anyway, and you can't get new DNA. It's
the most sensitive information there is about you. If they
go fully bankrupt and your assets, their assets are sold,
which includes your data, and there's been enormous concern the
State Attorney General of California has urged people to go

(01:06:33):
delete their data, which would be my advice.

Speaker 5 (01:06:34):
I'll get to that in a second.

Speaker 10 (01:06:36):
But even if it's not going to a Chinese company
where the PRC is going to build bioweapons, could their
data be sold to a company that claims to have
an algorithm that can analyze this data and determine what
you'd be good for insurance because you're going to come
down with some exotic disease next year, do we want
to hire you cantor yes?

Speaker 5 (01:06:59):
Yes?

Speaker 10 (01:07:00):
So I mean those are a little less far fetched
than the idea of some sort of bio weapon. But
I mean these are all real possibilities. And if and
when this data gets sold, will they abide by whatever
the previous policies Where you're the attorney here, if company
acts has a policy that says that this thing and
then they sell to someone else, is that new company
going to be required by law to adhere to those

(01:07:22):
same terms. I don't know, I know, And again in
many states there's almost no rules around this sort of stuff.
So yeah, it's a real concern in my mind. I
would encourage any of your listeners who have used twenty
three and meters to sometime today walk into their account
and use the permanently delete my data option.

Speaker 2 (01:07:42):
Now will they permanently delete your data? I don't know,
but then not if there's no one working there.

Speaker 5 (01:07:50):
Yes, But then.

Speaker 10 (01:07:51):
Now, as I understand it, they were still in business
as of late last week and people could still be
sending their data in. So first thing, do not send
your data in twenty three and meters. Secondarily, I encourage
you to use the primarly delete your data option and
hope they do it.

Speaker 5 (01:08:08):
And then third I would.

Speaker 10 (01:08:09):
Encourage everyone listening to this and less than until there
are laws that cover this at the same level as HIPPA,
I would not use any of these services. I mean,
I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with the service itself,
but you're giving up information that if and when it
gets leaked for whatever reason, by whatever mechanism, you cannot
get that back and you can't get new DNA. So again,

(01:08:33):
a lot of this stuff, I'm not just inherently against it.
We're so immature in our practices around this stuff, and
this stuff is such a wild West.

Speaker 5 (01:08:43):
The risk in my mind is just too high.

Speaker 10 (01:08:45):
So I would not use any service that requires you
to send something like DNA to it and as far
as twenty three meters goes go in today delete your
data and let's hope this doesn't become a problem for.

Speaker 2 (01:08:55):
Me and wait for your class action lawsuit. Notice. Let's
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Speaker 4 (01:09:47):
Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:09:50):
There's a lot on the line in a divorce, your home, savings,
maybe even your kids. So when you find yourself facing
to six fifty.

Speaker 2 (01:09:59):
Five care ced talk station, cash is king. I love
being able to pay for pay with things in cash.
You don't use a credit card, don't wrack up a
credit card bill, and you don't have all your transactions track. Well,
that's not the case in Sweden, where the vast majority
is electronic payment, either mobile payment systems or credit cards,

(01:10:20):
and they're deciding they don't want to go that way. Dave.

Speaker 10 (01:10:24):
Yeah, I'm glad you wanted to talk about this today
because this is a super important topic and something I've
been worried about literally since the nineties. But real quick, Brian,
so we don't run out of time. I just want
to throw out there. The Ohio Secretary of State is
doing a seminar on the fourth of April at the
Shift Center at Xavier. It's designed for small businesses. It's free.
I'm going to be one of the speakers there. I

(01:10:46):
know they've already got about three hundred people signed up
for this, but it's really a half day long event.

Speaker 5 (01:10:51):
It's free, and we're.

Speaker 10 (01:10:52):
Going to be myself and many other excellent folks are
going to be talking directly to small businesses about the
kind of things they need to be concerned about and
the things they need to be looking out for you.
If you follow me on social media, you can get
the details there. You can get the details from the
Secretary of State's website or their social media.

Speaker 5 (01:11:09):
Hope to see you there now.

Speaker 10 (01:11:10):
Cash this society, I'm really, really, really against this idea, hope.
Not only yeah, not only because of what this article
from the Finance or from the Guardian points out, which
I'll get to. I mean, the idea of control. Think
of the social credit system in China. I know, the
idea of the insane violation of your privacy, some of
which we've seen just from credit cards, right, you know.

(01:11:33):
But the point these European governments are making, and I'm
so happy to see governments waking up to these realizations.
You know, all the way back in twenty fourteen twenty
fifteen timeframe, Russia and Ukraine were doing cyber attacks on
one another. Russia knocked out the ATMs, they shut down
some banking, they did all kinds of stuff. And you know,

(01:11:54):
as we get more and more reliant on technology, as
more things become digital payment based.

Speaker 5 (01:12:00):
You know, I don't use VENMO, I don't use any
of that stuff.

Speaker 10 (01:12:03):
And I would encourage other people to think long and hard.
I get the convenience. I understand why business is like cashless,
right less likelihood of loss because people are stealing the money.
You get the money in the bank faster if depending
on the payment method, avoid the credit card fees that
come with that form of digital payment.

Speaker 5 (01:12:23):
But to say we're not going to accept cash just
creates a huge problem.

Speaker 10 (01:12:27):
I personally will try to avoid going anywhere that will
not take cash, just out of principle.

Speaker 2 (01:12:32):
Me too.

Speaker 10 (01:12:34):
And so you you know, Sweden and Norway both they're
both tagged in this story, you know, have gone almost
entirely cash less over time, but they're starting to wise up.
So they basically say here as it pertains to Sweden,
such as the perceived severity of the situation that authorities
are trying to encourage this is to keep cash and

(01:12:54):
use cash in the name of Civil Defense. In November,
the Defense Ministry sent home a brochure or sent to
every home rather, a brochure entitled if crisis of war comes,
advising people to use cash regularly and keep a minimum
of a week's supply in various denominations to quote strengthen
preparedness unquote. So you know they're concerned about, you know,

(01:13:14):
obviously what's going on with Russia and Ukraine and the
idea of other types of war hackers being able to
shut down the system. I mean, even if they didn't
knock out the system. Imagine Brian, if everything was entirely
digital and somehow you could just corrupt the system.

Speaker 2 (01:13:29):
Oh now, you didn't know the hell out of me,
like your four oh one k. I mean you think
there's a pile of money someplace. No, it's all ones
and zeros that exist out in that ether somewhere.

Speaker 10 (01:13:40):
That's exactly right. But Norway has apparently gone even further.
And I can assure you I will be reaching out
to my legislators in Kentucky and encouraging them to do
the same thing. You know, maybe we could do this
at the federal level.

Speaker 5 (01:13:54):
Who knows.

Speaker 10 (01:13:56):
But Norway has actually passed the law last year that
requires businessinesses to accept cash. That's good, it doesn't work.
It doesn't require them to accept cash exclusively. But you
can't be a business that will not accept cash. And
you know, unfortunately, I think eventually we will be in
a place where this will be unavoidable. But again, our

(01:14:16):
digital world is so fragile and so immature and so
not ready for everything to be digital and cash less.
I have huge concerns about this. I've had concerns about
it since like the days of the first gas pumps
that took credit cards. You I could see the trend
right now. I don't have to use cash. Super convenient
for me, super convenient for the business. But we're just

(01:14:37):
not ready for that. Kudos to Norway, kudos to Sweden.
We need more of this kind of thinking here. We
need people to be reaching out to their legislators, We
need people to be talking about this. You know, I'll
post this article, I encourage people to read it, I
encourage people to share it. We are nowhere close to
being ready for a fully cash to society. And yeah,
I'm we're on the right track with these folks.

Speaker 2 (01:15:00):
And yeah, well, if the lights go out power goes out.
You know, I can still take one hundred dollars and
buy some food from you if you're willing to exchange it.
We'll need electricity for that transaction. Dave Hatter, thanks for
what you do. Appreciate in trust it sponsoring the segment. Awesome, folks,
you are interest I dot Com. Dave. We'll talk again
next Friday. Hope you have a wonderful weekend, my friend.

Speaker 10 (01:15:19):
Thank you Brian, and thanks to Joe and all your listeners,
and I'll look forward to chatting.

Speaker 2 (01:15:22):
We get in after the top of the hour. News
Rebecca Soar into our Ohioans for Child Protection has this
outrageous story she wants to bring to our attention. I
hope you can stick around for that news.

Speaker 1 (01:15:33):
It happens fast, stay up to date. At the top
of the hour. We're moving very quickly. Fifty five KRC
the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:15:57):
Seven six. Happy Friday to you by the Thomas Please
welcome to the fifty five Kersey Morning Show for an
outstanding organization, Ohiolands for Child Protection. Rebecca, sirandor Rebecca, welcome
to the program. It's a real pleasure to have you
on today.

Speaker 6 (01:16:11):
Oh thanks for.

Speaker 8 (01:16:11):
Having me back on.

Speaker 12 (01:16:12):
We really appreciate how you've been staying on this story.

Speaker 2 (01:16:15):
Well, I was outraged, just simply outrage that this pervert,
disgusting piece of human excrement had the nerve to request
a lower sex offender status after what he did and
his plea agreement. Well, I saw that he was in
front of Judge Gizon. There has been a development. She said,

(01:16:35):
how about no boiled down in her order here that
was just released the other day. Let me first off,
before we start into the details about this horrific guy,
let me listeners know about O Highlands for Child Protection.
I'm curious to know how you got involved with it,
if I can ask that.

Speaker 8 (01:16:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:16:51):
So back in twenty nineteen, my four kids were students
at Saint Ignatius on the west side of Cincinnati, and
father Jeff Drew had been assigned by in twenty eighteen
to the parish. And this wasn't my first encounter and
Withdrew in my life. He'd actually been my grade school
music teacher and music minister when I was a student
at Saint Jude.

Speaker 2 (01:17:11):
Oh wow.

Speaker 4 (01:17:12):
And I had no.

Speaker 12 (01:17:13):
Idea when he was assigned to our parish the very
well documented past that he had mostly because many of
the events took place in my childhood, and a lot
of weird things can be misfiled in a child's brain.
So while I saw some of the graving activities such
as him massaging boy's shoulders and then sticking his hands

(01:17:34):
under their shirt down through their collar along their back,
I saw it so frequently and there was no one
reacting to it around me that those kinds of events
are very easily miss filed to a child.

Speaker 2 (01:17:48):
Of course, they don't. Children don't have life experience, they
don't understand what's appropriate and inappropriate, and they certainly don't
have a grasp of the law.

Speaker 12 (01:17:56):
So fast forward to my four children in the school.
He's essentially the superintendent of because he has higher and
fire authority over the principal and the teachers. He would
be the final voice in deciding if the child is
being suspended or expelled. So that really is a position
of authority to be a pastor at one of our

(01:18:17):
Catholic schools. So basically, my classmate Paul bravely stepped forward
in the summer twenty nineteen and came forward about the
abusity suffered from father Jeff Drail And that's when we
saw the nine charges happened in the arrasted and me
and some other moms like Teresa den Whinnie Herman, We've

(01:18:38):
decided that there must have been a larger failure in
place that a man like this was running our school.
And that's when we did our first public record request
and realized that there was much more to this story
and that he had a well documented past spanning three decades,
three counties from out protective service calls about him, countless

(01:19:01):
parents reaching out to the archdiocese, three criminal investigations in
Butler County, and through all of this he was never
placed on leave. There was no investigation within the church
as to how this all came to pass. That he
was running the largest elementary Catholic school in the state
of Ohio, and we thought, you know what, the state

(01:19:22):
of Ohio.

Speaker 4 (01:19:22):
Also allowed this to happen.

Speaker 12 (01:19:24):
We need to go look at our lawmakers in Columbus
and started dressing Ohio's child sex abuse laws.

Speaker 4 (01:19:32):
Because it turns out that.

Speaker 12 (01:19:34):
While we speak frequently about abuse in the Catholic Church,
the big story is is that one in four h
one of four girls and one in thirteen to one
and twenty boys. It depends which study you look at
are being sexually abused before they turn eighteen, and to
look at Ohio more specifically, we just saw this status.
The Girl's Report come out last year and their climate

(01:19:56):
survey found that were above the national average for girl abuse.
For twenty percent of Ohio girls reported some form of
sexual violence in the prior twelve months. And to put
that into perspective, can you imagine if one in five
cars have been.

Speaker 4 (01:20:11):
Stolen in Ohio.

Speaker 12 (01:20:13):
So we decided that more needs to be done. So
for five years we've been advocating up at the state House,
just a group of parents, mostly moms, asking allmakers to
truly treat this public safety issue at the level it
needs to be. And so we saw the governor signed
the grioming.

Speaker 4 (01:20:31):
Bill earlier this year.

Speaker 12 (01:20:34):
But we're still advocating for things like statute limitations for reform.

Speaker 2 (01:20:40):
There's so many questions I've got about this. I know
it's okay, first off, on a fundamental basis as far
as legislation is concerned. Why did you been advocating for
this for such a long time. This seems to be
something that should have been on the books now for decades.
Why in what resistance did you get why did it
take so long to actually get pen on paper and

(01:21:00):
make this a criminal violation? And how come they have
the statute limitations haven't been changed. I mean we're talking
about children here. I mean they need to be protected
more than any person on the planet. Adult police can
can rationalize, have an understanding, take acts and steps to
protect themselves. I mean, these are the most innocent of all.
Why was there any resistance at all to get in

(01:21:22):
this moving forward or more quickly? So?

Speaker 12 (01:21:25):
I do think with the grooming bill, a lot of
it is because this was This is amongst fun the
early efforts in the United States to criminalize grooming. This
is actually already illegal in places like Australia and England
for the last twenty years, but in the United States,
we were at the forefront here of Ohio to asked
for dreaming to be criminalized and to be well done.

(01:21:47):
We didn't want something that has been a drag innocent
people into court.

Speaker 4 (01:21:50):
So part of that is because we were first in grooming.

Speaker 12 (01:21:54):
For the most part, statute limitations reform. There's some powerful
ones in our state that had been pushing against that.
We did a partial reform back in two thousand and six,
and if it wasn't for the efforts of the victims
from two thousand and four to two thousand and six
on statue limitations reform, my classmate Paul would have had

(01:22:15):
the court doors shut on him. The lesser known part
of this story, though, is that there had been an
effort to expand statue limitations more fully, because the average
age disclosed abuse is age fifty two when you've been
on child victim. Well, there's a second known victim in
the Jeff Terra case, and there has been indicators that

(01:22:35):
there are more victims. But the second victim that came
forward with similar evidence abused in the same school building
over the same time period.

Speaker 8 (01:22:44):
He was just arbitrarily that little bit older. So the
court doors were shut.

Speaker 1 (01:22:49):
If both victims.

Speaker 12 (01:22:50):
Would have had their day in court, would we even
be talking about Jeff Drey being released next year?

Speaker 2 (01:22:56):
I imagine not. And so my listeners have a full
accounting of what happened to nyer this so and so
Jeff Drew pleaded guilty in twenty twenty one to repeatedly
raping Paul when Paul was nine and ten years old,
and it happened in the late nineteen eighties and nineties
when Nira was a student in Altar Boy at Saint June, Bridgetown,
where Drew happened to be the music teacher. I and that,

(01:23:19):
you know that what brought that? You brought this to
my attention and having on the programs, because this guy
had the audacity to seek a lower level sex offender
status in spite of the fact that his plea agreement
which locked him up for seven years. He said he
would register as a what is a Tier one sex offender,
so he has to register regularly and everybody gets in
the neighborhood gets a notification from the police lett him

(01:23:40):
know who he is, where he is, and what he
looks like for the protection of the children that are
in the neighborhood. That he had the nerve to do that,
I just I want to throttle the guy that's thinking about.

Speaker 12 (01:23:51):
It, and I wonder, like, how is he affording all this?

Speaker 2 (01:23:55):
Legalists, Oh there's another good question, and you know, another
looming question of the background of this concerned or maybe
you've been able to get to the bottom of this.
You said that they the church had known about his antics,
if I can call them that for a long long
time before he was finally finally got busted. Aren't Isn't
that criminal in and of itself? If you're you're facilitating

(01:24:16):
or otherwise covering up the molestation of children, you are
in as far as I'm concerned, as guilty as the
guy committing the acts.

Speaker 8 (01:24:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:24:25):
I think enablers are key allowing offenders access our children,
and that is another area of the law that I
would like to see our lawmakers. Well, they first when
it's repeated within an institution and he has people that
truly have the power to stop it.

Speaker 2 (01:24:42):
They facilitated, They put him in contact, close contact, in
a position of authority about around a bunch of young children. Mean, yes,
it's like you're asking for this to happen again. Lives
to be ruling.

Speaker 12 (01:24:57):
Fixated offenders average one hundred than fifty victims in their lifetime,
and they ascend into their geriatric years. So it's vitally
important that we take a look at this problem and
we try to approach it from every level that we can,
from COMMA, informing those that work with youth, having stronger laws,

(01:25:18):
having our statue limitations reform, and one survivor rightfully pointed
out to me that since Ohio is one of the
handful of states left that provides the statute limitations to
protect child defenders. He likened us to being a sanctuary
state for child sex abuse because we're one of the
few states left in the whole country that we're running
a clock that you get off scott.

Speaker 2 (01:25:38):
Free, especially when you're being helped by the folks that
are enabling you to have presence around children in a
position of authority. Let's pause, We'll bring Rebecca Sore into
our fact from Ohiolands for Child Ohiolands for Child Protection.
You can find them on Facebook, of course, Ohioans for
Child Protection. Let's pause from them. We'll bring you right back.
I want to mention but Herbert Motors. They're going to
treat you great for lawn equipment. Just think but Herbert Motors.

(01:26:00):
I know you got the box store around the corner
where they sell inferior products, and they are sold by
people who have no interest in your happiness with the
lawn equipment you buy, and they know little about the
equipment they're selling. When you're working with Bud Herbert Motors,
you are working with one of the fifth generation family members.
You will be working with a Herbert family member. The
name is on the building. They protect their family's good

(01:26:22):
name and reputation because they sell only the world class brands.
They service what they sell. They'll deliver it to you
and they'll treat you a service with a smile. They
know everything there is to know about what they sell.
John Deere, x Mark Steele, Hando Power Equipment. I had
a wonderful, wonderful experience, and I always like to give
thanks to west Side Jim Keefer because after my terrible
box store experience, he's the one that brought them to

(01:26:43):
my attention. So I feel blessed to be able to
do it here on the fifty five KRSY Morning Show.
Thank you Bud Herbert for sponsoring the program, but also
for letting me recommend you too. Are you folks to
my listeners? So Bud Herbertmotors dot com is a place
to go. Give them a call and tell the Herbert family.
Brian said, how when you do the treat you great,
you'd be glad you took me up on my advice.
The number is five one three, five four one thirty

(01:27:04):
two ninety one five one three, five four one thirty two.

Speaker 4 (01:27:07):
Ninety one fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (01:27:10):
Are you the breadwinner in your house? Life insurance covers
the cost of living in case you're not there to provide.
Are you a stay at home parent?

Speaker 5 (01:27:18):
Jentle and I and.

Speaker 2 (01:27:18):
Weather forecast is some rain out there going on, but
after ten o'clock you'll just be partly clouding all the while,
all way up to seventy six and breezy as well.
Partly cloudie overnight sixty for the low seventy four Tomorrow
SI with clouds and a chance of spotty rain in
the afternoon, and then you get rain likely overnight with
a low of fifty eight. And then I kind of
really rainy Sunday with showers in the morning and then

(01:27:39):
afternoon evening thunderstorms which may be severe at times. Seventy
two for the high on Sunday. Right now it's fifty two.
In time for a traffic update.

Speaker 6 (01:27:47):
From the u See Health Traffic Center.

Speaker 11 (01:27:49):
For National Doctor's Day, we honor the u See Health
physicians who are leading breakthroughs for better Tomorrow's learn more.

Speaker 6 (01:27:55):
At u sehealth dot com.

Speaker 11 (01:27:57):
And accident on I two to seventy five northbound before
Ward's Corner road locks your left shoulder and intermittently the
left lane. Traffic is stopping go from State Round twenty eight.
I'm also seeing heavy and slow traffic on I seventy
five southbound. You're the Reagan Highway and seventy five northbound
between Buttermilk Pike and Fort Washington Way.

Speaker 6 (01:28:17):
I'm Heather Pasco in fifty five krc.

Speaker 2 (01:28:19):
The talk station seven twenty fifty five KERRCB talk station
hard for seniors in studio after the bottom of the
hour at the bottom of the hour, looking forward to
having them and doing great work for seniors that are
in senior facilities. In the meantime, Ohioan's for Child Protection
Rebecca Sorendorf on online talking about this Jeff Drew guy,

(01:28:40):
this pervert priest and music teacher who was busted for
and pleaded guilty to repeatedly raping a gentleman named Paul Nyer.
He is still in lock up according to the reporting
from who Is in Gift credit to WCPO, he's in
the Noble Correctional Institute, which is described as a medium
security prison for men in Caldwell, Noble County, and expected

(01:29:01):
release date August seventeenth, twenty twenty sixth I imagine Judge
gizz probably as offended as I was the idea that
he had the audacity to seek a lower level sex
offender status when he got out. But no, she said,
you gotta register with the sheriff's department. I guess every

(01:29:22):
I said, every ninety days for the rest of his life.
He guess the register's addressed with the Sheriff's department, and
then they have to send out photographs to the community
letting everyone know where this guy lives and what he
looks like. Also, is that correct, Yes, that's part of
the agreement. Good.

Speaker 12 (01:29:43):
But I want parents and grandparents out there to realize
too that for child sex abuse, in part because of
our stature, limitations and the delay and reporting that we
have a really low conviction rate around these crimes. So
for every person you see on an offender registry in

(01:30:03):
your community, just know that there's probably another, you know,
fifteen to twenty five offenders in your area that go
completely unnamed.

Speaker 2 (01:30:13):
Yeah, and you know, with with online communication and the
kids gaming all the time, it just creates more and
more opportunities for these groomers to have access to children,
and parents are oblivious to what's going on when their
kids are in the basement playing games and that I
know that's one vehicle because I've read so many articles
about it. That's how they gain access and gain confidence.

Speaker 12 (01:30:33):
Great, and we actually saw research at a university in
New Hampshire that shows that about one in six kids
are being exploited online and about sixty percent of that
exploitation is someone who already knows that child are in
their offline life, so they're presenting many times as another
kids really a love interest. It happens a lot to

(01:30:54):
our team boys and they think they're communicating with a
girl of their age and they start exchanging images with them,
and it quickly turns into that they're being blackmailed with
their money or further images, which Ohio just made sextortion
illegal last year. And this is why we need to

(01:31:15):
be fast tracking this kind of legislation, still being thoughtful
about it, bringing the right people to the table, but
each bill shouldn't be taking five to twenty years to pass.
So we connect it with Senator Blessing and Representative Rachel
Baker and we've asked them to start a Sexual Violence Caucus.
We're still working out exactly what the name is going

(01:31:36):
to be, but we need a place where our lawmakers
are going to come together with those on the front
lines in our state, from law enforcement to the good
people at our schools and those working at places like Marison,
and get these people to the table and start mapping
out where's our system falling short for our kids and
what can we do up in Columbus to make sure

(01:31:59):
that it is a state place to raise the family
in Ohio and that our children aren't being exploited at
this rate.

Speaker 2 (01:32:05):
Amen to that. Is there any pending legislation or proposed
legislations floating around behind the scenes in committee or anything
right now that my listeners can get in touch with
their elected officials and pressure them to move it forward.

Speaker 12 (01:32:16):
Not at this moment because we just started a new
General Assembly, so they're all busy with the budget at
this moment, okay, but we are working on getting these
things started. I think one of the biggest thing that
you can do is call your lawmaker and tell them
that we should have statue limitations reformed, and that you
ask for this sexual violence pocket, that they join it,

(01:32:38):
that they support its work because it's such a multi
tier issue at this moment. For example, many many states
already require in their screening of educators that you check
if there's child.

Speaker 8 (01:32:54):
Protective service calls on the individual.

Speaker 12 (01:32:56):
In the father j just through case, we can see
that he had trial protective service calls in Montgomery County,
Butler County, in Hamilton County, yet he had superintendent like
authority at SA Magnacious School. While that's a religious institution,
Ohio does not have that kind of protection in any
of its schools, whether religious or public, at this moment.

(01:33:20):
But also we see that there's carve outs for things
like Aaronwall, which is body safety training for children. We
got that in all of Ohio's public schools, but there's
an exemption for all the private and religious schools in
our state, and we would like to equally protect every child.
Parents have an expectation, whether they're sending their children to

(01:33:43):
religious school they're choosing or a public school, that there
should be equal protection from child sex abuse.

Speaker 2 (01:33:49):
And if you're a private school, why wouldn't you implement
your own policies to keep these children in out of
harm's way. I mean, that's a question worth asking. You
don't need some legislator to tell you what to do.
You're a private ended, you put the put these protections
in place, geez Louise. And if you're a known if
there's a known pedophile working for you, why don't you
turn them into the cops and fire them and get

(01:34:10):
them out of the presence of children. Oh this just
gets my eye up. I am sorry for getting on
a rant here, Rebecca, but I don't understand any resistance
to this type of reform. I just don't get it
Anyhow do you.

Speaker 12 (01:34:23):
Think it's going to take every day people stepping up
to make it priority because it's too quickly the attention
days elsewhere and Columbus and us everyday people, we need
to keep speaking up, following our Facebook page when there's
a specific bill, we always.

Speaker 9 (01:34:40):
Share good what needs to be fact.

Speaker 12 (01:34:42):
But just let your lawnmaker now show up at a
community event with them, or start visiting your local clubs.
We actually are a bipartisan group.

Speaker 8 (01:34:51):
We show up.

Speaker 2 (01:34:51):
Of course you are the Republican.

Speaker 12 (01:34:53):
Clubs and every day people deeply care about this, but
it isn't a front burner issue at the State House
on a day to day base post.

Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
Well it should be. And Rebecca Sorender, if you have
a place open spot here on the fifty five Cascy
Morning Show. If legislation comes up you need support for it,
you come on my program. You talk to my listeners
about what's proposed and what we need to do to
a call of action, we'll call it here, So you're
welcome on my program. I certainly appreciate the behalf of
every child out there, the work that you're doing on

(01:35:21):
their behalf, and I wish you all the best of
luck and bring in some reform here to the state
of Ohio.

Speaker 12 (01:35:26):
Thank you so much for staying on this and for
Pulup Christian over at Channel nine. She has just been
on this case for years now and the item's been
on it.

Speaker 2 (01:35:35):
That's great. I'm glad to know that as well. Rebecca.
You take care of a wonderful weekend, and again, just
give Joe a call if there's anything on the front
burner and we'll help you out. It's seven twenty eight
to fifty five cars dot dot com. Heart for Seniors
up next. Wonderful organization they are. We're going to hear
from the good people from Hard for Seniors. After I
mentioned and remind you that imaging can be affordable as
long as you don't go to the hospital. Imaging department

(01:35:56):
where you're going to have to shell out thousands and
thousands of dollars to get an echo cardigram, an MRI,
a CT scan, an ultrasound, lung screening, cardiac scoring. They're
all just outrageously priced. Echo cardiograms at a hospital thirty
five hundred bucks, pay extra for the radiologist report. Go
to Affordable Imaging Services, where I can tell you you
should not expect much overhead, but inside the building the

(01:36:19):
same equipment that hospitals use, run by medical professionals who've
been at this for decades, and where you will pay
and only five hundred dollars for an echo cardiogram and
they can get you right in. That's without an enhancement.
If you need an enhancement, it's eight hundred bucks. MRI
thirty five hundred dollars four thousand at a hospital, only
four hundred and ninety five bucks at Affordable Imaging Service,

(01:36:39):
the same thing across the board, massive savings. Everything works
out great. I've had a couple of CT scans there.
I'm getting another one coming up here real fast in April,
and it's always been fine with my doctor. They have
no complain about the quality of the image. Of the
radiologist report and I save the heapload of money and
you will too. You have a choice. Exercise at five
one three, seven five three eight thousand. That's seven five

(01:37:00):
three eight thousand Online Affordable Medimaging dot.

Speaker 4 (01:37:03):
Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:37:06):
What's up.

Speaker 2 (01:37:10):
Tier the channel? I wether four ks. It could be
raining where you are. They see the rain will head
be out by ten. Then we're left with a cloudy day,
but a breezy day dust up to twenty miles for
our high at seventy six. Overn night low is sixty
with some clouds. Seventy four to the high tomorrow with
clouds and maybe some spotty rain in the afternoon. Then
the rain comes in overnight, likely they say, fifty eight
below Sunday. Count on some rain. We'll get morning showers

(01:37:31):
after in evening storms and maybe some severe storms. Seventy
two will be to the high on Sunday. It's fifty
one Right now.

Speaker 11 (01:37:37):
It is time for traffic from the u see Health
Traffic Center. For National Doctor's Day, we honor the UCE
Health physicians who are leading breakthroughs for better Tomorrow's learn
more at u seehealth dot com. An accident on I
two seventy five northbound before Ward's corner. Road is on
the left shoulder, so planned for traffic to be stopping
to go. Approaching traffic is heavy and slow, even bumper

(01:37:59):
to bumper on seventy five northbound between Buttermilk Pike and
Fort Washington Wade. And on two seventy five he's found
up for corn Raine Avenue. There's a stall in the
left lane. I'm Heather Passo in fifty five KRC, the
talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:38:14):
Seven thirty three, fifty five KRCD talk station, late starting
a segment that's aokay because we got some folks in
studio that you're gonna love here and from Welcome back
to the fifty five KRC Morning Show from Heart number
four Seniors, Patty Scott, along with some beautiful young ladies
who are gonna put a real smile on your face.
They are Macy and Marie Cunningham. And we're gonna pause.

(01:38:34):
We'll talk to Macy and Marie in a minute, but
let's let's hear from Patty, who's gonna remind my listeners
how awesome you all are and how much you have
done for seniors that are in senior facilities, improving the
conditions and their health. Patty remind my listeners about Heart
for Seniors.

Speaker 13 (01:38:50):
We love your listeners, Brian, and we love you. If
you remember, the first show that Roger and I came
on was in December, and at that time we were
talking about really the epidemic and the crisis of one
hundred and twenty six million people turning sixty five and
all over in long term care facilities and just not
really having the resources and the technology.

Speaker 2 (01:39:12):
Right because there's way too many in the facilities for
the helpers, the healthcare workers or personnel to adequately check
on them on a regular basis, because many, many, many
people in this situation struggle with incontinence and they have diapers,
and they'd sit and wallow in their own fills sometimes
for hours and hours and hours.

Speaker 4 (01:39:32):
Averages fifteen to eighteen hours.

Speaker 13 (01:39:35):
Oh So, in December, if you remember, we came on
because Hertford Seniors is a nonprofit and we started that
to support to buy the technology so we could expand
even just into fifty facilities in the state of Ohio,
so that everybody had it from up north to down.
When we came in December, there were four facilities that
we were in and I am happy to tell you

(01:39:57):
were in eight. We're about to exp into a couple more.
We are well on our way to fifty. So we
have four up north in the Cleveland area, and we
have four down here in the Cincinnati area. Now we
only had two and we now have four all the
way just down here in Cincinnati. So we are so
grateful and we are so excited, and we cannot thank

(01:40:17):
you enough because it's your listeners. Your listeners have gotten
us too. They've asked us to come to rotary meetings,
they've asked us to come to chamber meetings and speak,
and it's all because of you.

Speaker 2 (01:40:28):
Well, no, it's because of you. I'm just the voice
that I have a vehicle to let my listeners know,
and you guys are doing this. It's so mind boggling
how simple the technology is and how much how much
better the living conditions are for so many people just
with the small investment and the technology boiled down. Because
we're going to go into break here real quick. Is
a monitor in effect, and it provides the healthcare providers

(01:40:51):
with an immediate signal that yes, there has been an issue,
so they know exactly who to go to and don't
just walk around some regular routine schedule, walk out of
a room. No, they're dry, and then two seconds later
they may have an accident and they won't be back
for hours and hours after that. It's just a it's
miracle technology. So that's boiled down what it is. Heart
number four Seniors dot org is where you can find

(01:41:13):
them and make a contribution. You will literally save a
life for multiple lives. So we'll bring them back and
you get to This is gonna be awesome, folks. You're
gonna hear from Macy and Marie who have a special
incentive for you making a donation. You just your mind's
gonna be blown, and I have a feeling I may
suffer from an allergy attack. First though, I want to

(01:41:33):
talk about chimneycare, fireplace and stuff. Two things you can
do now, if you don't have a wood burning stove,
you still have a chimney, because you've got a gas fireplace,
call for a free exterior evaluation because you could have
water damage and the flashing comes away, the calking or whatever.
They'll do a thorough inspection of it and make sure
that well you're not gonna struggle with water damage or
anything else for that matter. They may say you need
some tuck pointing out there, but it's a free inspection

(01:41:54):
from the Chimneycare Fireplace and still locally own an operated
since nineteen eighty eight. Now for you wood burners out there,
they'll do that when they come over to do the
wood burning sweep and evaluation and the spring special. That's
a low low price of one sixty nine ninety nine
plus tax one sixty nine ninety nine thorough inspection sweep.
Make sure you're safe. That's what it's all about. And
it's a great time to do it because of course

(01:42:14):
it's a little warm out there. You're probably not using
the fireplace. Tell on Brian's side and when Brian said,
how when you give them a call a plus with
a better business berd they are five one three two
four eight ninety six hundred two four eight ninety six hundred.
You can book the appointment online and learn more about
the company. It's Chimneycareco.

Speaker 3 (01:42:27):
Dot com, fifty five car the talk station best are.

Speaker 2 (01:42:35):
As far as the weather guy those Channel nine says,
after the rain leaves this morning, which should happen by ten,
if you're getting any it's going to be a partly
cloudy day going all the way up to seventy six,
but a little bit breezy out there overnight just clouds
and low sixty Tomorrow, mostly cloudy day, spotty rain in
the afternoon seventy four for the High. More rain over
night fifty eight than a rainy Sunday with morning showers

(01:42:55):
and afternoon meeting thunderstorms which may be severe at times.
It's seventy two for High on Sunday and right now
fifty degrees at fifty five kr. See Let's get a
trap update from.

Speaker 11 (01:43:06):
The UC Health Traffic Center. For National Doctor's Day, we
honor the UC Health physicians who are leading breakthroughs for
better Tomorrow's learn more at you seehealth dot com. The
accidents I two seventy five northbound before Ward's Corner Road
still blocks the left shoulder and we'll have you slow
from State Round twenty eight. On I two seventy five
eastbound if for Coleraine Avenue there is a stall blocking

(01:43:28):
your left lane and adding two delays.

Speaker 6 (01:43:30):
I'm Heather Pasco on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:43:36):
Seven fifty five KRCD Talk Station. I always say I
got the best listeners in radio. I'm a blessed man
and you guys have proven it with the help you've
provided a Heart for Seniors dot or Heart Number four
Seniors dot org. Small contributions can go a long way,
and if you want to make a big contribution, you're
going to be helping a lot of people seniors and
senior facilities making sure they get the proper care at

(01:43:57):
the right time. With these very it's just this minimalist
kind of thing. It's a device that notifies the healthcare
workers when they have had any incontinence issue, so they
get quickly chained, they don't wallow and their run filth
and there's a lot of health issues that spring from that.
You explain that to me the last time you're on
the pro the program, Patty, just give a quick rundown

(01:44:18):
of what.

Speaker 13 (01:44:19):
Your skin breakdown UTIs. I mean low pull socks. We
actually have technology now since your listeners that we've put
into the facility that tell the healthcare worker when the
call light has gone on calllights are defective. They're sitting
above the window or above the door. Yeah, and it's

(01:44:39):
just in sight, out of mind. So now the bioling
technology takes the call light. We have little mechanism that's
on there and it alerts the phone directly to the
stn A and they know that the call it's going off,
and then when they go in we can tell we've
got little questions where they can ask what are they
there for? And let me tell you, the majority of
the falls come from call lights not being answered.

Speaker 2 (01:45:00):
Oh wow.

Speaker 13 (01:45:01):
Yeah, So if you can get there and they know
about it right.

Speaker 2 (01:45:04):
Then we have less false That is just amazing. Well,
also in studio, and you're gonna love these young ladies
Macy and Marie Cunningham. Now apparently they are so popular.
Apparently John Legend and Kelly Clarkson both fought over getting
them hooked up together because they are the young ladies
that have terrific talent singing wise, Macy, Marie, it's great

(01:45:28):
to have you in. And you know what, it's so
cool that you've volunteered your time and your skills to
help out this great organization. I got to applaud you
for that. How did you come how did you come
into contact with this organization?

Speaker 14 (01:45:39):
Well, we've been very great good friends with Patty for
a really long time. She's been in our lives for
a long time. She's been friends with our mom for
a long time, so you know, Patty's just been around.
She's just our girl love. So to be able to
just like we heard about what she was doing and
to be able to just like jump on the opportunity
to be a part of it and to support and

(01:45:59):
to read the light that we have and that we
want to spread is just like an honor, honestly.

Speaker 15 (01:46:05):
Yeah, and I to you know, bounce off of that.
The reason we went on the Voice was to get
exposure and to get our message across to the world,
which is light love and to bring more love and
warmth and family to the world that it's missing and lacking.
It is a lot and this, this opportunity is just
giving us more opportunity to help those in need.

Speaker 2 (01:46:25):
It's an extension of your mission.

Speaker 14 (01:46:26):
Yeah, it's what we do.

Speaker 2 (01:46:28):
Gee, Heaven forbid. We we don't smile as much. And jeez,
we're so divided as as a society and that's little
stupid things and social media really exacerbates that to no end.
All Right after the next break, we'll bring back because

(01:46:48):
they're going to demonstrate for you. They're awesome talent. They
sing and here's the little in center for you to
make a donation Hard for Seniors. Because if you do
make a donation to Hard for Seniors and there's a
couple of and Patty can explain that they will go
and sing for a senior in a nursing home or
sing for a healthcare worker, and you know you can

(01:47:09):
designate one. Let them know who you want them to
sing for. And they'll even come to someone's house and sing,
like if you got a senior you're taking care of,
put a smile on their face. You get Marcy and
and Macy and Marie to come over there, they're gonna
rock the house. We've got to take a break. Remember
it's Heart number four Seniors dot org. And if you
want to send an email message Macy and A C

(01:47:30):
I E and the word and Marie m A R
I E at heartfor Seniors dot org. You can reach
out to them directly that way. I'll repeat this information
when we come back, and we're gonna get a little
entertainment from these beautiful young ladies. Right after I mentioned
my dear friend Peter Shabris shab Ree Group of Color,
Williams seven Hills Best real Estate Agent and team you'll
ever run into the finest in the business and the
greater Cincinnati area, purely providing value and bringing home the bacon.

(01:47:53):
To ask Brandon. They got Brandon multiple offers on his
house the first day was on the market, netting him
fifteen grand over the asking price. Plus on top of that,
the buyer was happy to waive the inspection contingency and
gave Brandon post occupancy right after closing rent free. See
this is the kind of terms of conditions you get
when you're working with this gree group of Kelowiams seven Hills,

(01:48:14):
offering all kinds of plans and services that nobody else
is doing and truly giving you that five star experience.
To reach them, it's five one three seven zero eight
three thousand five one three seven zero eight three thousand
directly to the web. Just go to seven zero eight
three thousand dot com. If you can't remember that, remember
how to spell Chabri cha b r I S and
type in Schabri group in your search engine. You'll find

(01:48:35):
them right there. Tell them.

Speaker 1 (01:48:36):
Brian said, Hi, fifty five KRC dot com. Have you
taken yourt com.

Speaker 2 (01:48:43):
Uh quick weather here when the rain moves out, This
morning around ten o'clock is to give you a breezy
day with Parkley cloudy sky seventy six for the high
sixty overnight with pop cloudy with a late afternoon chance
of rain. Tomorrow seventy four for the high over nine
fifty eight with rain and then a lot of rain
on Sunday morning showers eating storms, maybe a severe time
seventy two to high on Sunday. It's fifty right now.
Let's get a quick.

Speaker 6 (01:49:03):
Traffic update from the UC Health Traffic Center.

Speaker 11 (01:49:06):
For National Doctors Day, we honor you see health physicians
who are leading breakthroughs for better Tomorrow's learn Moore at
u seehealth dot com. An accident on two seventy five
northbound before Ward's Corner Road crash here is on the
left shoulder and still working to clear and causing stop
and go delays. Two seventy five eastbound and for Cold
Raine Avenue. Your left lane is blocked by a stall.

(01:49:28):
On I two seventy five westbound at Turkey Foot Roads.
The right shoulder is also blocked. I'm Heather Pasco in
fifty five KRCD Talk.

Speaker 2 (01:49:36):
Station seven forty nine. I fIF about KRCD Talk station.
You know I'll always love my Friday, but wow, extra
special Friday. It has been this morning with Macy and
Marie Cunningham working doing some charital work for Hartford Seniors
dot org, where you can make a contribution and they
will go out and entertain a senior and a nursing home,

(01:49:56):
a healthcare worker or even maybe a senior in your
in your world at your home, and we're gonna hear
from them. They are known as the Cunningham Sisters. That's
what they were called when they were on the voice.
They may rebrand themselves at some point, but we'll find
out down the road. But if reach out the heart
for seniors, then you can schedule their appointment to come
out and entertain you, and without further ado, we're gonna

(01:50:16):
get a little taste of what they're able to do. Mason, Brie,
have at it.

Speaker 15 (01:50:22):
Cause you're too close, kpe basking what I want the most.

Speaker 4 (01:50:30):
I'm scared.

Speaker 14 (01:50:30):
I don't ever let you go. That's what Iever wanna
get this close.

Speaker 2 (01:50:39):
Ohai, your two close.

Speaker 14 (01:50:44):
I hate it when you give me home.

Speaker 4 (01:50:48):
We both know how this story goes.

Speaker 14 (01:50:51):
That's what Iever wanna get this close.

Speaker 4 (01:50:57):
This close.

Speaker 2 (01:51:00):
Absolutely food, thank you. I told you I have an
allergy out right.

Speaker 14 (01:51:07):
Thank you, thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:51:08):
Oh my god, you guys are wonderful.

Speaker 12 (01:51:10):
Thank you so much.

Speaker 14 (01:51:11):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:51:12):
See that's a little taste of what you can do
for some person in your world. That healthcare worker out there.
They'll put a smile on their face, and I'm telling you,
they put off the most positive vibe. They're all about
smiles and happiness and Sharon love. It's inspirational and obviously
they have a charitable connection with this wonderful organization. She

(01:51:33):
get my eyes cared so Hertfordseniors dot Org is how
you can schedule that. And you know, I understand. You
have a Georgia, a neighbor of yours who's ninety four.
I don't know if she's listening right now, but a
shout out to her. Yeah, but she doesn't have anybody
left in her world. She survived everybody that that was

(01:51:54):
loved ones, relatives, And so you go over to her
house and you hang out with her.

Speaker 9 (01:51:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:51:58):
Yes, she has outlived her husband and her three children,
but she lives and she still lives in the same
house that they all, you know, lived in together. So
we go and we take care of her and we
you know, feed her washer, bathe, get her what she needs,
and we just assist, you know, to her needs and
she any other time during the day she is by herself,

(01:52:19):
and to just like sit there alone, and to just
be able to be a part of her life, even
if it's a small piece of her life, like just
to be a part of it, even though she's like,
you know, all alone, to just bring that joy to her,
like to give her a little smile or a little
laugh or a little joke or just something to brighten
her day. Like just to be able to do that,

(01:52:39):
that's wonderful.

Speaker 15 (01:52:40):
Yes, And since we know we're able to do that
with Georgia, we know we can do it with many others.
Because so I was just thinking yesterday, like there's a
lot of seniors out there that have probably done so much,
like in their life or like uncontributed to a whole
bunch of things maybe in their community, and now they're
just alone and dealing with things and sitting and filth,
and it's just not fair. And I feel like we
shouldn't just forget about them and give up. And I

(01:53:02):
think that now, at this point in their life, we
should give them the support and love that they need
the most.

Speaker 2 (01:53:07):
What a beautiful, beautiful thought. And at such a young
age nineteen and seventeen, if I got that right, yes, geez,
and so mature and so uplifting and god and inspirational.
You know there's someone out there right now that is
smiling and going you know, gosh, darn it. I shouldn't
be such a jerk during the day and I could
find a raison to be happier and I and share
the love that everybody has inside them.

Speaker 10 (01:53:29):
Light.

Speaker 14 (01:53:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:53:30):
Wow, Well, we're gonna have to take a break and
catch ourselves at crime stop er bag Ey of the week.
But Joe's going to hook the information up on my website.
It's Heart. Just go direct, go right now, get your
credit card now, get your credit card out Heart number
four seniors dot org. You'll be saving seniors' lives. And
of course with them singing for some senior out there
is some healthcare worker putting a smile and sharing the

(01:53:50):
love out in the community. What more can you ask for?
Your dollars are going to go a long long way,
And to Patty and everybody else with hert for seniors,
can't thank you enough for what you're doing.

Speaker 13 (01:54:01):
Brian, we can't thank you enough. It's your listeners, It
is your listeners on how and why we've doubled. And
they're small donations, they're not large. We'd love the large ones.
Yeah I know, but we love the large ones. But
it doesn't matter. Every single one adds up and we're
just going to keep expanding.

Speaker 2 (01:54:18):
And it's going directly to help people have better lives.

Speaker 13 (01:54:20):
And the average alert time now in those facilities for
biolink is less than an hour. Response time that's great,
less than an hour.

Speaker 2 (01:54:28):
So you go from fifteen hours a wallowing your own
golth to getting pretty much immediate care. Yeses, this is
a great ROI return on investment, so please and you
know what, Brian Thom was here thanking every one of
my listeners, those who have made contributions in the past.
You have certainly certainly done a lot for folks in need.
So God bless each and every one of you. Let's
turn over to the phones. Get Officer Lisa Baker from

(01:54:50):
the Sinsint Police Department. Lisa, I hope you were entertained
a little bit there. Let's catch ourselves a crime stop
or bad guy the week and a happy Friday to you.

Speaker 15 (01:54:57):
Happy Friday.

Speaker 14 (01:54:58):
I was getting my credit card.

Speaker 2 (01:55:01):
You're the best go ahead who were looking for were Oh,
Canada crashing the economy.

Speaker 1 (01:55:10):
We're session looming. What happens next? Watch what happens will
happen right here on fifty five KRS the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:55:20):
Ato six fifty five kr SE the talk station. Hope
everything's having a happy Friday. We've got some great plans
calling on this weekend too. If you don't, I've got
something for you to do. Welcome back to d fifty
five KRC Morning Show from the Vietnam Veterans of America,
Clairemont County, Chapter six forty nine the President, Ken Williamson.
Ken's always great hearing from you today and good hearing
from you today as well.

Speaker 7 (01:55:42):
Good morning, Brian, so good show this morning.

Speaker 2 (01:55:45):
Oh thanks very much. I was just so inspired by
those young ladies that just left the studio, just absolutely terrific,
beautiful voices, and it's just a positive message and attitude
and a terrific organization that hart for seniors doing so
much good out in the world. Fresh thing to talk
about something positive on the morning show, Ken, And speaking
of that, speaking of that something positive, you joined the

(01:56:08):
program to talk about. You got a Vietnam War fiftieth
commemoration ceremony coming up this.

Speaker 7 (01:56:14):
Weekend, that's correct. It's going to be tomorrow, Saturday, the
twenty ninth, at one pm, and it'll be over in
Claremont County the Lieutenant Andrew Haglich Vietnam Veterans Memorial. This
is a memorial with the helicopter that our chapter actually

(01:56:37):
installed there thirty years ago. It's hard to believe it's
been that long.

Speaker 5 (01:56:42):
But.

Speaker 7 (01:56:44):
The commemoration for the Vietnam War actually started in twenty
twelve and we became our chapter became a commemorative partner
with the Partner of Defense, and we pledged to do
this ceremony every year through twenty twenty five. So this

(01:57:08):
is the final year, and it recognizes, of course, the
withdrawal of our troops on March the twenty ninth and
seventy three, and we'll be we'll be honoring all Vietnam
veterans and actually all veterans who show up, but we'll

(01:57:30):
be reading the names of all veterans, including Vietnam veterans
and their branch of service and thanking them.

Speaker 2 (01:57:37):
For that service. And Steve Balzo is going to be
the keynote speaker. He's been in the studio a bunch
of times. He's the director at the Clairemont County Veteran
Service Commission, which does great work for the American.

Speaker 7 (01:57:47):
Veteran absolutely, So we're going to start the ceremony at
one and our Master of Ceremonies is going to Cliff Riley,
who's one of our past presidents, and he was instrumental
with another one of our members, George Cannard, and getting

(01:58:08):
this whole thing set up in twenty twelve, and so
we've done this ceremony every year. It's pretty much the
same where we honor and read the names of all
the veterans who attend. Mark Brandon, one of our members,
meats and greets every veteran who shows up, puts their
name down their branch of service, and then we publicly

(01:58:34):
read their names and honor them for their service. And
we also do a memorial, a reading of the names
of the forty some Kia from Claremont County from Vietnam,
and we read those We read those names aloud and
ring a bell for each one of them. So it's
it's quite a beautiful ceremony, and we've had all these

(01:58:59):
years to practice, so we're getting.

Speaker 2 (01:59:01):
Better at it. Yeah, with practice comes perfection, Ken, And
I think it's important that you that you do this,
and I'm really so happy that you have been doing
this because you know, probably more than anybody else, how
poorly the American veteran was treated when they returned from Vietnam.

Speaker 7 (01:59:20):
Absolutely, and that's that's really why this whole ceremony was
was initiated to begin with. It started during Bush's presidency
and then carried over to Barack Obama who actually initiated it,

(01:59:42):
and then of course President Trump.

Speaker 2 (01:59:46):
Dido that.

Speaker 7 (01:59:49):
In his last last time of being president. So it's
been going on a long time, and we really enjoy
people thinking us for our service because we did not
get that when we came back.

Speaker 8 (02:00:03):
Yeah, it was it was.

Speaker 2 (02:00:05):
Not a fun time, as most people know.

Speaker 5 (02:00:08):
No.

Speaker 2 (02:00:08):
And I guess independent of the treatment that you got
and the name calling and the abuse you receive verbal
and otherwise from the American citizen, I guess there's also
the idea that we pulled out of Vietnam in March
twenty ninth to seventy three. Can I ask you what
your reaction was to our withdraw did I mean, did

(02:00:30):
having spent time there and you know, you see combat,
or you know, you lost buddies and lives and you
fought so hard for so long, it had to be
a little bit demoralizing, I would imagine. I don't know,
I've never been in that position. Ken, I just want
to gauge your reaction on what it was like when
the final troops finally got out.

Speaker 7 (02:00:47):
Well, it was in one way it was a relief,
but in another way, it was very sad because you know,
we went there to help to help that country, at
least that was why we said we and I thought
we'd just abandoned them. You know, it's we left all
those people behind. And when you know, when when all

(02:01:10):
of us served, I've talked to so many veterans about this,
When when all of us served, we had buddies that
we either lost or we left behind or we never
heard from again.

Speaker 2 (02:01:21):
In our entire life.

Speaker 7 (02:01:24):
We were in one of the closest relationships you can have,
and so that in itself was was demoralizing.

Speaker 2 (02:01:35):
I felt, yeah, that's kind of what I pread.

Speaker 8 (02:01:37):
The worst, you know, I was going to say the worst.

Speaker 7 (02:01:41):
The worst part for me was in April of seventy
five when we all watched the fall of Saigone. Yeah,
and even though our combat troops had been out since
seventy three, we still had people at the embassy.

Speaker 2 (02:01:56):
We still had had.

Speaker 7 (02:01:58):
Americans working there, and to see that happen and a
lot of those people struggling to save their lives by
you know, climbing on helicopters, hanging on.

Speaker 2 (02:02:11):
To the skids and.

Speaker 7 (02:02:14):
Falling off and whatever, but and trying to escape in boats.

Speaker 5 (02:02:20):
It was.

Speaker 7 (02:02:21):
It was just quite quite upsetting for most veterans who
had served there.

Speaker 2 (02:02:28):
Yeah, and I was around ten years old at the
time of the helicopters. I remember seeing that part on television.
In my mind, unless I'm annually reminded of it was
seventy three when the combat forces left. I always think
of seventy five as the end because that's when you know,
the lucky few were able to get out in helicopters
and it was chaos. Yes, it was.

Speaker 7 (02:02:50):
It was, and it's never a pretty sight when that happens.
But we're thankful now that we had this comemoration for
the last how many every year's it's been since twenty
twelve because we've been able to thank our veterans over
and over and over again. Yeah, and not only the

(02:03:13):
veterans who served in Vietnam.

Speaker 2 (02:03:15):
But but all veterans.

Speaker 7 (02:03:16):
And once we're serving now, I think it's very important
for us to recognize any veteran we see on the.

Speaker 2 (02:03:24):
Street and thank them. Every time I see someone with
that indicates their a veteran, I do take a moment
to thank them for their service. I don't know. I'd
like to think that it gives them a little boost
of happiness, or that I put a smile on their face,
or I just feel obligated to let them know. And
I think we have more and more people should do that,
as you say, because if you're telling me that it
is truly appreciated by those veterans, it makes it even

(02:03:46):
more worthwhile to do it. So go out of your way,
thank the veterans whenever you run into them, and of
course show up at the commemorations ceremony. Fifty I keep
reading fiftieth year. You know, all these little markers in time?
Can it? This makes me feel really old, you know
what I'm saying, Because it's been that long.

Speaker 7 (02:04:07):
It's been that long, I you know, I can't believe
it myself.

Speaker 2 (02:04:11):
I imagine you served, you were there, and God bless you,
and thank you for your service, and thank you for
the ceremony you're doing and you have been doing each
and every year. As you indicate, the veterans truly appreciated.
We own a debt of gratitude. Even if you don't
believe in the mission that was there. They served the mission,
they served honorably, and you know they answered to the call.

(02:04:32):
And that's what makes me so impressed by the American veteran.
That's exactly what they do. Ken Williamson, President of the
Vietnam Veterans of America, Claremont County Chapter six forty nine.
Joe Streckers put the information about this anniversary on my
web page. So folks, if they can't remember the Wares
and the Wens and the Wise, it's all right there
corner of Cloak Pike and Glenn ast Whamsville Road. I

(02:04:53):
hope a lot of people show up for it and
salute the American veteran, pat him on the black for
their service. Ken, God bless you, Sara. I'll look forward
to talking with you again real soon, and keep up
the great work. With the Vietnam Veterans of Association.

Speaker 7 (02:05:04):
Thank you very much, Brian.

Speaker 2 (02:05:05):
Always a pleasure for my friend. It's a fifteen right now.
I fifty five KRCY talk station, joking up with the
phone lines. Wait a few minutes to talk before we
continue to honor the American veteran Cheryl Pop from Honor flight.
Try state it's going to run down the honor flight
schedule for twenty twenty five so you can put it
down in your calendar and be there at the welcome
home ceremony. That is absolutely inspiring, So stick around, be.

Speaker 3 (02:05:26):
Right back fifty five KRC the talk station. Get ready
as I do, John and I first.

Speaker 2 (02:05:35):
One on the forecast. We have some rain out there,
they say until like ten o'clock this morning. Then the
rest of the day is going to be partly cloudye
and breezy with gus up to twenty miles per hour.
Hi have seventy six good warm up there. Overnight lowis
sixty with just clouds. Seventy four to high tomorrow with
afternoon spotty rain they say, otherwise just mostly clouds. Overnight
rain is likely with a lower fifty eight and then

(02:05:56):
a really rainy Sunday. Showers in the morning and afternoon
evening storm. They say some could be severe seventy two
to the high on Sunday, it's fifty one. Right now,
it's time for a traffic update.

Speaker 11 (02:06:06):
From the UC Health Traffic Center. For National Doctor's Day,
we honor the UC Health physicians who are leading breakthroughs
for better Tomorrow's learn more at ucehealth dot com. An
accident on I two seventy five northbound before Ward's Corner
roadblocks the left shoulder.

Speaker 6 (02:06:21):
You're slow from State around twenty eight.

Speaker 11 (02:06:24):
There's also a stall on I two to seventy five
westbound at Turkey Foot Road. The right shoulder is blocked here,
and we do have some happy pockets of traffic throughout
the region.

Speaker 6 (02:06:33):
I'm Heather Pasco and fifty five KRCV talk.

Speaker 2 (02:06:36):
Station A twenty here, fifty five KRCB talk station Happy
Friday five one, three, seven, four, nine, fifty five hundred
two to three talk time by fifty on AT and
T phones. Hard for Seniors dot org. Make a donation.
It is a great organization. Not sure restrection I wanted
to go, but we did make some progress yesterday following

(02:06:59):
through and the promise to crack down a gang members.
White House Press Secretary Carolyn Levitt came out yesterday telling
you people about the arrest of the top MS thirteen leader, saying,
this is what happens when you have competent federal leadership
at the top. We're going to continue with this mass
deportation campaign that President Donald Trump promised the American people
he was thirty miles outside of Washington, DC. Could consider

(02:07:23):
be a top MS thirteen gang leader like the King
or something like that. Justice Department, FBI, atf Virginia State Police. Ah,
how about that they joined in the fund not a
sanctuary state, Virginia. I guess. She described the suspect as
a national ring leader of this brutal MS thirteen gang,

(02:07:43):
and now the residents of Washington area are safer. She goes,
this took place thirty miles outside of Washington, DC, where
you have politicians and mainstream media journalists who live in
this city and who have rallied against the president and
has cracked down on illegal immigration and violent crime. They
should be grateful that monsters like this are no longer
got to be living in their communities. Amen to that.

(02:08:04):
And everybody out there is saying this is terrible. Oh
my god, Trump's rounded up in the old grandma's and
family members. No, I mean it's he's focusing on the
criminal element. Do you want criminals out of your neighborhood?
Would you be happy if MS thirteen or this TDA Trade,
Degaragua Gang or whatever the hell they're called, setup shop
in your neighborhood. They deal in drugs, they deal in

(02:08:27):
human trafficking, they deal in violence. They are extremely, extremely
dangerous people. They ruin lives, They ruin neighborhoods, they ruin
they ruin our country. I mean, this is exactly the
kind of foot folks that we don't want in our
country now, she said, And she pointed out about the
Trump's assertion of the Alien Enemies Act. He said, She said,
a radical judge of the Appeals Court is and the

(02:08:48):
Appeals Court at the and the President sorry has denied
the President and our legal team in the case against
the Alien Enemies Act. But we're going to continue to
forge ahead in the courts because of course they're criminal elements.
You can arrest criminals, and then when you find out
they're in the country illegally, you got a two full
reason to want to get rid of them. I just
don't understand people's refusal to or just this outright basically

(02:09:11):
denial that this is a positive step for the stability
of our country. And these are gang members. And you
also have to worry about terrorist cells that came in
during the Biden administration. You gotta worry about the Chinese communists,
army age men that have come in during the came
in during the Bide administration, and there are tens of
thousands of them. Jack Adams sent me an email the

(02:09:33):
other day. He cut and pasted the section one of
the Alien Enemies Act and Act Respecting Alien Enemies. Now,
there's been a lot of claims, well, we're not at war.
This has only been used in after a declaration of war.
But it's kind of a two component thing to this,
and this is what Jack pointed out. Now, I don't
know if we can completely hang our hat on this
in court, but this is being an Act of the
Senate House represents the United States of America and Congress

(02:09:55):
assembled that whenever there shall be a declared war jack
between the United States and any foreign nation or government.
And here's where the operative part comes in that may
be applicable here or any invasion or predatory incursion shall
be perpetrated, attempted, or threatened against the territory of the

(02:10:16):
United States by any foreign nation or government. And then
it goes on basically, shall be able to be apprehended, restrained, secured,
and removed as alien enemies. Now you got a question.
If this was a coordinated effort by the Venezuelan government
to get these guys into our country, in other words,
ridding their country of the terror of these guys present
and represent there, then maybe you can make an argument

(02:10:39):
along those lines. I mean, at least provides a window
of opportunity. No, we're not in a declared war. We
haven't been since World War II, for God's sake. But
then there's also they've been designated as a terrorist organization,
so maybe you can fit it in there. Maybe Or

(02:11:02):
then again, maybe Congress can enact a revision to this
and say when someone's been designated a terrorist organization, they
you have the right to eject them from the country.
That'd be okay with me. A twenty five fifty five
KR see the talk station. Let's find out about the
honor flight tri state schedule. Cheryl Pops can join the
program coming up in the next break. After the next break,
I'll be right back.

Speaker 4 (02:11:22):
This is fifty five KARC an iHeartRadio station. You don't
think of it.

Speaker 2 (02:11:27):
Time for they each Channel nine weather. Got some rain
out there. They say it'll hang around till about ten
this morning. Then we just get partly cloudish. Guys. It'll
be breezy going up to twenty mile per hour gusts
and a high have seventy six. Just partly cloudy every night,
no rain, sixty for the low. Cloudy for the most
part tomorrow, although they say there could be some spotty
rain in the afternoon seventy four for the high. Rain

(02:11:47):
kicks in overnight Saturday with a low of fifty eight
and then a really rainy Sunday. Showers in the morning,
with storms in the afternoon and evening. They could be severe.
Seventy two for the high. Right now fifty two. It's
time for.

Speaker 6 (02:11:57):
Traffic from the UC Health Track Center.

Speaker 11 (02:12:00):
For National Doctor's Day, we honor the UCE Health physicians
who are leading breakthroughs for better tomorrows. Learn Moore at
u seehealth dot com. An accident on I two seventy
five northbound before Ward's Corner Road the left shoulder is blocked.
There's also a stall on I two seventy five A
westbound at Turkey Foot Road.

Speaker 6 (02:12:17):
The right shoulder is blocked.

Speaker 11 (02:12:19):
Traffic is also slow on I seventy five southbound between
Galberth Road and Paddock Road.

Speaker 6 (02:12:25):
I'm Heather Pasco on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (02:12:31):
Hey thirty I fifty five KERRCD talk station happen having
a wonderful Friday, continuing a theme here on the heels
of talking with Ken Williams from the Vietnam Veterans about
the ceremony taking place this Saturday. Welcome back to the
fifty five KRC Morning Show representing Honorflight tri State dot org.
Check it out, Get involved. Cheryl Pop great to have

(02:12:51):
you back on the program. Thank you so much for
all that you do with the Honor Flight.

Speaker 16 (02:12:55):
Good morning, Brian. We're about ready to get started on
our new season at actually our twentieth season.

Speaker 2 (02:13:01):
Oh my god, I can't believe going on that long.
I was that was the first question I was going
to ask you, because I mean, this is my nineteenth
year radio and you guys have been coming on the program,
I guess almost the entire time, and it just keeps
getting bigger and bigger and bigger and better and better
and better.

Speaker 16 (02:13:19):
Well, we've taken seventy five hundred veterans from from the
better Cincinnati area and they're already gearing up for this
new season. April eighth, a Tuesday, will be our first fight,
and then May twenty first, which is a Wednesday, will
be our second flight for the spring. And then the
fall dates are going to be coming up soon. We
just bid on them now, so we don't know exactly

(02:13:39):
the dates, but it will be September and October for
the fall. And these escorts that we have that we
call guardians, are just absolutely they're just the core of
the trip. Yeah, couldn't take care of eighty eight veterans
by ourselves, no.

Speaker 2 (02:13:53):
And yeah, I've just I you know, no pun intended.
I was honored to be able to fly on two
of those flights. It's just it, it's so I mean,
you know, you're you're gonna cry, you're gonna laugh, you're
gonna hear great stories. It's emotional, but it's patriotic, and
you get to see these wonderful memorials. They get to
go to the memorials that have been built and dedicated
in their honor. I remember the first time I saw

(02:14:16):
the Vietnam veteran and that is I don't know how
you couldn't be moved by that one. Since we just
been talking about the fiftieth anniversary of the troops withdraw
from Vietnam is is this weekend, and it's just it's
just sort of it's it's very I mean, it's somber,
but it's moving and everything.

Speaker 16 (02:14:33):
It's very somber and moving, and finally they got a
tribute the we also we go there too, of course,
but most of our veterans now are from the Vietnam era.
So some people think that Honor Flight quit after World
War Two and then the Korean veterans, but we really haven't.
We've kind of over six hundred Vietnam veterans on our lift,
and you're just anxious to take them. They just hit

(02:14:53):
to go on our website on Honor Flight tri State
dot org and sign in. So we're taking them by
age again unless they have some kind of critical health issue,
but that you know, eighty eight for each flight, and
as face as we can do it, we'll be doing it.

Speaker 2 (02:15:06):
And you do take great care of them there's always
medical staff on the plane. They have you a wheelchair
access because we have some disabled American veterans that still
manage to be able to go on the trip, and
of course guardians help them, you know, get around and
makes it makes life really easy. It's just it's a
really long day, but it just goes by so quickly
and nobody ever runs out of steam.

Speaker 16 (02:15:27):
No, the guardians do. The veterans are pushing up around
at the end of the day literally, but they're like
come on, you know. But we also have our Flightless
Honor Flight that's coming up June the eighth that if
you have a veteran that you know can't make this
long day, go on our website and take a look
at the Flightless Honor Flight and we'll be hosting that

(02:15:47):
in June and it stays in Cincinnati. It's a pseudo
flight that takes about two and a half hours and
we'll be doing it one of the retirement and homes
over on the West Side, and they do everything we
can do in two and a half hours to give
them a little mini trip, but they really enjoy it,
and it's it's you know, taking care of those that
really can't do the steps anymore, that eighteen hours is

(02:16:07):
ridiculous and all those other things. But it's been really,
really great, and one of our sponsors just gave us
a really special honor this week, the Forge Garage restaurant
in Norwood, oh Show. They have their Burgers of Fame menu.
They asked me several months ago if I'd be interested,
and I said, oh sure, never thinking of my wildest
dream that Honor Flight would make it. But the American

(02:16:30):
Standard Burger is named after me as the director of
Honor Flight tri State, so it kind of blew us away.
Oh yeah, it's right up there with Fiona and a
couple of other special people.

Speaker 2 (02:16:41):
Is Cyyl Pop Burger.

Speaker 16 (02:16:43):
It's called the Cheryl Pop American Standard Burger.

Speaker 2 (02:16:46):
Oh that's cool.

Speaker 16 (02:16:48):
Yeah, it's really cool. But it's just another way that
our sponsors are just you know, they're behind us whenever
they can get behind us. And Tom and I in
our family had dinner live last night and we found
out who nominated me, and it was the assistant manager
who took her day at last year, and she couldn't
even talk about it without tears in her eyes, saying

(02:17:09):
how much it meant to her and when they were,
you know, trying to assemble all these people for this menu.
She said, you have to look into honor flight. So
everywhere you go there's somebody that's been, knows somebody that's
been wants to go on the wedding list. And we
want our network to just grow and grow so that
we can take as many as we can.

Speaker 2 (02:17:28):
Oh yeah, and you know, you got to give shout
out and props also to the flight person. But the
folks at CDG, they say step up when they when
these honor flights come in, and they really do just
a great job welcoming them and facilitating the event and
standing there of course with the welcome home ceremony. They

(02:17:48):
just they're they're good people over at CBG.

Speaker 16 (02:17:51):
Oh they take really really good care of us. And
we literally that early morning, in that late hour of
that day, they're just everywhere helping us. And the welcome
home starts at and it's open to the public. So
if you want to come over April eighth or May
twenty first, about nine o'clock and just see red, white
and blue from wall to wall. If you're not a Patriot,
you will be when you leave that welcome home. It's

(02:18:13):
just absolutely amazing.

Speaker 2 (02:18:14):
They have us and it's huge amen to that. And
that's the part that it gets even bigger every year
because people word of mouth gets out and I try
to promote that all day long, because you know, if
you're down and out, you think the country's going down
the toilet and you need a vital dose of patriotism.
Trust me, you're going to get a fire hose blast
of it at the welcome home ceremony.

Speaker 16 (02:18:35):
And we have a couple of your patriots too, Andrew
Pattis and Submarine Mike that will be joining on us
on this flight.

Speaker 5 (02:18:42):
Oh great.

Speaker 16 (02:18:44):
Mike has been really very supportive of Honor Flight and
now he is in charge of the triangle flag and
the case that we take everywhere, and he honors his
father by being the one that takes care of it.
And it's just so emotional to see an actual veteran
that serving the other veterans. It's just terrific, it really is.

Speaker 2 (02:19:03):
Absolutely Mike's a good man, absolutely man, and apparently Jay
Ratler is a good man. I was looking at all
these the list of all these wonderful sponsors. His datary
Fun sponsors it as well. I just scrolled by while
I was looking at the menu there, so I heard me.
The aviation expert Jay Ratliffe, also supporter of Honorfly tries date.

Speaker 16 (02:19:21):
It's a very big supporter of Honor Fly. He took
his dad and his father in law a couple of
years ago with he and his wife and if they
couldn't believe it. So he's been behind the scenes pushing
on us whenever he can. And actually a reporter that
he recommended is also going on this flight from the
Epic time, so someone he works with in his industry there.

(02:19:42):
So yeah, we're looking forward to seeing what they put
out about us and Honor Fly tri State. It was
the fifth hub in the United States, so we've been
around a long time. When others have fallen away, we're
still here. So but the support and everybody, our volunteers
are just spectacular ambassadors take care of everything. And we
have teams that work on every single part of this

(02:20:02):
now because it's gotten so big and they're all working together.
So the vet's just it's a seamless day. They always
say it's seamless, but a lot a lot of people
that are patriots are helping us make it happen well.

Speaker 2 (02:20:15):
Oiled machine. It always is. So veterans, you can go
to honorflight tri state dot org. There's a link there
where you can fill out the application and how long
how long is the wait list to be a guardian?
Because that is so well worth it that being a guardian.

Speaker 16 (02:20:30):
Well there you go. Put me on a spot again.
Now the guardians that are family members, of course, will
go when their veterans go, but appointed guardians are pulled
in when they can. I think on this flight we
have twenty percent appointed guardians. A lot of people don't
live where their families live and they, you know, they
need somebody to go with them. This kind of the
way our protocol goes. And these guys and these women

(02:20:53):
are patriots. You call them up. We put out an
all call and within twenty minutes we've got everybody we need.
Because we've got a massive emails, we send it out.
If you respond first, then you're on the flight.

Speaker 2 (02:21:03):
First come, first serve.

Speaker 16 (02:21:05):
On that part with the guardian, appointed guardians sign.

Speaker 2 (02:21:10):
Up to be a guardian. There's a link right there
for that one as well, and there is of course
you do fundraisers and now beyond that with all the
work that needs to be done. And you have a
lot of volunteers as you just indicated, are you in
need of other people patriots out there who want to
just help out in some way.

Speaker 16 (02:21:27):
Well, the key and the welcome home is you know,
open to anyone. And when we have our fundraisers, the
biggest thing is come and join us. You know, if
we we're in a parade, come and you know, be
with us. A lot of the team members are people
that have specific jobs. But it doesn't mean that we
don't need more volunteers. We really do. It's just you know,
whoever's supporting a veteran will find a place for you.

(02:21:48):
We have an ambassador now that screens the veterans and
screens the the applicants to be an ambassador, and we'll
find a place for you. So some of them have
been on flights and they have the jobs that he
have to do with the flight, but there's a lot
of other things you can do. November fifteenth is our
big fundraiser coming up in the fall, and we'll need

(02:22:09):
ton to help with that. So all you have to
do is just let us know and honor flight. Trystate
dot org and we'll get you in touch with the
right people. And two, if your company who's like to
sponsor us, it's not a secret, call us up. We
have a meeting and we'll see if you can fit
into our program. We have a lot of new sponsors
that are coming in and I think it's because finally
they believe it that we're there, that we're staying here.

(02:22:31):
So that's how that wonderful line across the top of
our website goes with all of our sponsors.

Speaker 2 (02:22:37):
Oh yeah, like I said, I'm just watching a scroll
by terrific company sponsor And on our flight, we'll go
on there and check out the website, check out the
photos from the previous flight, some really good stuff there.
And is Peter Bronson and your book still out and available?

Speaker 5 (02:22:52):
It is.

Speaker 16 (02:22:53):
We've kind of closed our store for now because we've
had so much trouble with our with the mail and everything.
It's just a nightmare delivered books because I can't get
them to go in the mail. So we closed that down.
But any of our events and when we have our
sale tables, it's still available. Also, if you're somewhere close
and you just want to call me, I can drop
one off for you.

Speaker 2 (02:23:13):
I'm sure you would you're that kind of lady, Cheryl Pop,
Cheryl Pop, All American Burger is so great. You earned it,
You absolutely earned it. And shout out to Peter Bronson
for the book as well. And you is there going
to be a third one at some point? Cheryl? Do
you think you planned on doing that?

Speaker 16 (02:23:32):
Well, I don't know. Peter's been really involved with a
lot of big projects. Yeah, you know, we started out
doing this, but I think he's grown a little bit.
He's like huge and is working with empower you and
all of his lectures. I'd love to do it. The
Vietnam veterans and the ones we have now are not
as much into telling their stories. We wish they would

(02:23:52):
the where two guys wouldn't stop, and that's where we
got the idea for the book. But we're honoring them
in different ways. We're going to be in parade out
in Westchester on the Memorial Day, and there's an event
next week that I'm sure you'll be publicizing in Mason
on April fifth, and we'll have a contention up there
with the veterans. And it gave me a good idea

(02:24:13):
when the gentleman from Plamont County, I sa'll go out there.
I wonder if everybody's on our Honor Flight list. Good question,
get them good?

Speaker 2 (02:24:20):
Good question. Well, Honor Flighty're.

Speaker 16 (02:24:22):
All assembled and we might be able to see if
anybody is interested.

Speaker 2 (02:24:26):
Well, I'll tell you what if you. Joe made it
easy for everybody if they can't remember to just go
to Honorfly Choice dat dot or just go to fifty
five car Sea dot com on my uh my page
there and he'll have a link to your organization and
I'll encourage people to help out in any way they
can and get on that Guardian list. You know, sometime
down the road you get the call and you'll be
glad you were able to participate. Cheryl Pop God bless you.
Keep up the great work and thanks for everything that

(02:24:48):
you do on behalf of the American veteran.

Speaker 16 (02:24:50):
Thanks Brian, appreciate it, my pleasure.

Speaker 2 (02:24:52):
It's a forty two here, fifty five car Se Detalk station.

Speaker 4 (02:24:54):
Don't go away, Ipe you right back, fifty five KR

Brian Thomas News

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