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January 8, 2025 • 44 mins
Wednesday 01/08/25 Hour 2. With Mike Imbasciani, Attorney Scott Weinberg and J6 Defendant Robert Morss.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's Wednesday, Gary, and now someone making her New Year's resolutions.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
New Year's resolutions. Stop spending time following the real housewives.
They aren't that real and most of them aren't even wives.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
Fake.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Laugh at all my bosses inappropriate jokes, like when he
said it's better to be laid on than laid off.
Stop listening to podcasts that are so outdated by the
time I listened to them. The Guests movie already bombed.
Listen to more radio. It's live and they get to

(00:37):
things faster. And finally, stop scrolling TikTok. I'm rooting for
the band. I could get so much more done.

Speaker 4 (00:45):
In a day.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
And that was someone making her New Year's resolutions.

Speaker 5 (00:49):
Guess what today?

Speaker 6 (00:50):
It is National bubble bath Day, National bubble bath Day.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
Hot bubble bath.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Join me in a nice hot bubble bath.

Speaker 7 (01:00):
Ain't nown bubba bn like a baby bumble BLA.

Speaker 4 (01:04):
Bubble bath was a little too bubbly.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Some would he enjoy a bubble ball.

Speaker 5 (01:09):
It's showtime in this present crisis.

Speaker 8 (01:14):
Government is not the solution to our problem.

Speaker 2 (01:18):
Government is the problem.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
This is Charlotte County Speaks. Your chance to let your
voice be heard on local state in national issues and
now broadcasting live from a dumpy little warehouse behind a
taco bell, the host of Charlotte County Speak.

Speaker 9 (01:37):
This is do Ken love Joy. Heg you Johnny News
Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM, WCCF Radio
dot Com. Charlotte County Speaks. Our number two ten just
about ten o nine.

Speaker 4 (01:49):
Is a time.

Speaker 9 (01:51):
And in studio we have Mike Bassiani my good morning,
Good morning. We have attorney Scott Weinberg, good friend of
the show, Scott.

Speaker 10 (01:58):
Good morning everybody.

Speaker 9 (01:59):
And on the horn via Skype, we have Robert Morse,
a J six defendant. Robert, are you there over morning?

Speaker 5 (02:07):
What's going on? Gentlemen?

Speaker 9 (02:08):
Wow? Great signal.

Speaker 4 (02:09):
I know that I like that, right.

Speaker 9 (02:11):
So, Robert, now you're a JAY six defendant. What I
would like you to do, if you could please, is
tell us who Robert Morse is, where you came from,
what you did with your life, and then what happened
on January sixth.

Speaker 5 (02:28):
Well, thank you very much for having me.

Speaker 11 (02:29):
That's a lot to try to pack in, but what
I can do is try to summarize it very briefly
for you. I was born and raised in Reno, Nevada.
I left at seventeen to join the Army. I didn't
intend to, but I became an airborne ranger, went to
AFGHANISTANO three combat deployments, serve my country honorably. But on

(02:51):
the first deployment, as I was walking through an area
called Sharana and seeing how massacred the people were and
devastated the geography was there, I realized that my own
country could become what I was witnessing if the next
generation doesn't know how to keep this republic. So on
that first deployment, I recognized that I needed to dedicate

(03:13):
my entire adult life to becoming a high school history teacher,
because at that point in time, I figured, well, I
think I can make more of an impact as a
teacher in the classroom than I can, you know, with
my M four.

Speaker 5 (03:26):
So that's what I did.

Speaker 11 (03:27):
After my initial contract with the Army was honorably concluded,
I went to Penn State got my degree in secondary
education on December nineteenth, twenty twenty, and then two weeks
later I found myself at the Capitol. So things happened fast,
you know, and I wasn't arrested. In history, I was

(03:50):
teaching in the classroom for six months, and then that's
when the FBI decided to show up on none other
than the last day of school. And a year and
a half in the min my incarceration, I finally get
my discovery, my evidence, if you will, which is one
hundred percent unconstitutional, and in the discovery, the FEDS admit that,

(04:10):
oh we should, we should arrest Robert Morse on the
last day of school. It's gonna hurt him more. And
so that's kind of what this whole situation has been like.
It's been overcoming insult to injury every step of the
way and really challenging me to adhere to my principles
and my God. But it's always worth it to do so,
especially when the odds are against you, because then I

(04:33):
get to talk to an incredible gentlemen like you.

Speaker 9 (04:35):
Well here here we appreciate again, you know again your
service to the country and what did you do? What uh,
what did you what happened to take us through January
sixth and one? Why you went and to what what happened?

Speaker 5 (04:53):
Sure? Well, like I said, again, it's a lot to
try to unpack.

Speaker 11 (04:56):
But what I can say is that though you know,
I'm proud to say that Donald Trump was my president,
and I believe that he won all three elections he's
ever ran in for president. I showed up a lot
less for him than a culmination of reasons. So obviously,
the coronavirus plandemic, as I coined the term in the

(05:17):
book that just released on Amazon not too long ago,
called One Question Remains.

Speaker 5 (05:21):
Really pissed me off. And it did that for a
lot of Americans.

Speaker 11 (05:25):
And just so, our constitutional rights were shredded before our
very eyes. In the whole year of twenty twenty, the
riots were burning down cities across America, and yet small
business owners were told that they had to close up
shop because mom and pop stores that had been, you know,
a generational producer of revenue for a family, I guess,

(05:46):
was now a super spreader, you know.

Speaker 5 (05:47):
So the hypocrisy was unbound.

Speaker 11 (05:50):
I did not like that Congress was sending our taxpayer
dollars to other countries like Nicaragua, while our own cities
were being burned down or they were in decay already
because of the Obama administration's legacy. So I was furious
for a myriad of reasons. But I also showed up
to testify that I watched the election get stolen. I

(06:12):
was up at three o'clock in the morning. I saw
those numbers flip. Trump had the lead, and then out
of nowhere, you're telling me that Biden has the exact
same numbers that Trump had two seconds into the dead
of night. That doesn't happen, man, you know. And so
I think that if anything was learned through the twenty
twenty four election, that they did steal the twenty twenty election,
because after all the illegal immigration we've seen in this country,

(06:34):
you're telling me that twenty million people decided not to
vote for the Democrat Party this time around.

Speaker 5 (06:38):
That doesn't add up, you know. So I was there
for a.

Speaker 11 (06:41):
Bunch of reasons. And I also wore my uniform that
I deployed Afghanistan in three times to show and to
be symbolically representative of that I've already invested sweat and
blood equity into this nation and the future of this
country is something that I I'm already bound to. And so

(07:02):
you know, if this ship is sinking, I'm going to
do what I can to prevent that, regardless of how
isolated or alone or afraid I might be. It's our
responsibility if we want to keep this republic to do
it ourselves, and so that's what I wanted.

Speaker 5 (07:15):
To do that day.

Speaker 11 (07:16):
I had absolutely no intention of going anywhere near the Capitol.
I had a job interview the very next day, guys
like I was supposed to be at any time, fitness guys,
you know, try to become a professional trainer, a personal trainer.
And so you know, overthrowing the government was not on

(07:37):
my schedule, Okay, my planner.

Speaker 9 (07:40):
Yeah wow, so I and then they so did you
go in or were you just there?

Speaker 11 (07:49):
I did enter the capitol, Yes, And I've I've tried
so hard to explain just how chaotic today was. And
if you will, try to imagine the biggest bar fight
in your life. Watching the police that you had advocated
for all year long of twenty twenty now turn on
innocent civilians and shoot them with rubber bullets or flash

(08:09):
bangs or shield bash old ladies in the face. You're
completely confused. You have no idea what's going on. On
top of the fact that you know, there's also drummer
boys marching back and forth behind you, there's people playing
the bagpipes, there's people blowing into show fars, and then
there's also people on the megaphone saying, this is it, patriots,
It's now or never. If you don't do something today,

(08:31):
you're going to lose your country forever. So this was
thereat storm, right, yeah, right, exactly.

Speaker 5 (08:38):
So, and reps had a lot of help that day.

Speaker 11 (08:40):
And so, you know, and that's what I try to
go to lengths to describe for your audience in the
book One Question Ormain, so you can kind of get
an idea of how it felt that day. It was
a perfect storm. It was a mailstrom of emotion and
righteous indignation. You know, so many people were having a

(09:01):
good time at January sixth. It was a peaceful protest.
It was like a political woodstock, it really was. And
then things went sideways at the Capitol steps halfway through
Trump's speech because of the now confirmed paid instigators, ANTIFA
members and FBI agents that were in the crowd that day.

Speaker 10 (09:23):
So if I could ask a question, what were you
eventually charged with?

Speaker 11 (09:29):
Oh, my goodness, I was charged with like forty five
different charges. I kept getting superseded. The indictments would not stop.
But what I was found of when I went to
trial was three charges. It was a simple assault which
if you were to flick somebody in the elbow that
would qualify it was for robbery, which if you read

(09:49):
the charge, only qualities if it takes place over maritime waters,
which I definitely wasn't. And then the obstruction of an
official preceding charge, which, if you recall, was struck down
last year by the Supreme Court. So you're telling me that,
with no criminal history record whatsoever, an honorable service to
the country and the Special Operations Unit, I had three

(10:11):
and a half years of my life destroyed. And not
just that, but half of my family doesn't talk to me.
My friends don't speak to me. My brother has disowned me.
You know, I have no wealth any longer, and half
the country hates me now because all I wanted to
do was protest a stolen election and utilize my First
Amendment rights.

Speaker 5 (10:30):
They say that the process is the.

Speaker 11 (10:32):
Punishment, and it definitely was, but it's been a very
painful experience. However, I stand before you here today, gentlemen,
acknowledging the fact that it was necessary not just for
America to find its courage again, but for me to
become a better man. And my relationship with Christ has
never been stronger.

Speaker 10 (10:50):
So you went to a jury trial in Washington, DC?
Or did you have a bench trial?

Speaker 11 (10:56):
I'll uh, oh see always votes a Democrat, I would say,
like they're ninety eight percentile of the voter.

Speaker 5 (11:05):
Base in you broke up their first Democrat?

Speaker 4 (11:08):
Which did you have?

Speaker 11 (11:10):
So I had a what's known as a bench trial,
So no jury, just in front of the judge.

Speaker 10 (11:16):
Who is your judge, McFadden? And who is your lawyer?
Just curious?

Speaker 5 (11:23):
Sure?

Speaker 11 (11:24):
So my initial lawyer was a man named Kiyo Naga
who decided not to defend me whatsoever when it came
to evidence surfacing of me being pushed into the tunnel
by a man who wore multiple different costumes that day
and could slip back and forth behind enemy lines or
enemy lines that might have been a fliding slip behind

(11:44):
police lines. That we get it, you know, yeah right, yeah, Hey,
there's a lot to unpack. And then I had Nick
Smiths my sentencing lawyer. So I feel like I who
was more or less kind of let down the entire process. However,
it was also brought up in Alan Derschowitz's book Get

(12:06):
Trump that there is an agenda out there to coerce
and intimidate lawyers from the hot reference thinking Trump or
January six ers.

Speaker 9 (12:15):
Yeah, effectively, Yes, that's been happening all over.

Speaker 10 (12:20):
Well, I could attest to that I have taken some
heat for representing the oath keepers in Doctor Harris on
January sixth. Now, if you were in the tunnel, from
what I recall of watching all the videos after the
government finally gave us a copy of the videos, the
tunnel is pretty much the hottest part of what I
would describe with January sixth. There was a tre a flagpole.
There was a bunch of police officers coming at you.

Speaker 9 (12:42):
Yeah, okay, that's a teaser.

Speaker 4 (12:44):
Yes, it's a teaser.

Speaker 9 (12:45):
That because we have to go to break But before
we go to break.

Speaker 4 (12:51):
Breaking news, what's the breaking news?

Speaker 9 (12:52):
From the Associated Press? The Justice Department says it will
release Special Counsel Jacksmith's findings on Trump's effort to undo
the results of the twenty twenty presidential election, but we'll
keep the rest of the report under wraps. What So,
we're gonna leak out the crap that we don't like
about truck, but everything else, we're gonna all the stuff

(13:13):
that makes us look guilty. We're just we're not gonna
we're not gonna keep that out there.

Speaker 11 (13:17):
So, hey, we've heard this before. It was called the
Russian collusion.

Speaker 9 (13:21):
Oh, Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia.

Speaker 5 (13:24):
We'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
Hey, welcome to the sales team. Here. You can have
this cup.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
M that's good.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
Oh you like it?

Speaker 11 (13:34):
What is it?

Speaker 1 (13:34):
It's radio station coffee.

Speaker 4 (13:36):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
The morning show always seems to make a pot right
before they leave. Then it just sits here all day.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
I kind of like it.

Speaker 1 (13:42):
The pot itself hasn't been cleaned since about twenty sixteen.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
Is that a hair in it?

Speaker 1 (13:47):
Probably? So. They use an old microphone windscreen as a
coffee filter.

Speaker 2 (13:52):
The more you tell me, the more I seem to
like it.

Speaker 4 (13:55):
I know.

Speaker 1 (13:56):
And here's the best part. It's free. Company pays for it.
Why nobody complains. You can't beat free coffee? Hey, what
do you say we take these and go watch the
DJs through the windows. They're like monkeys in a cage.
Radio station coffee made by an intern with bad hygiene.

Speaker 7 (14:17):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks on News
Radio fifteen eighty WCCF.

Speaker 9 (14:26):
Big News from Meta.

Speaker 6 (14:29):
Yeah, the Facebook meta is uh, well.

Speaker 9 (14:34):
They tapped out, They tapped out. Meta is going to replace.

Speaker 6 (14:38):
Its third party fact checking program, which again that's not
using well not proper use of the words. You want
to call it a fact checking program. No, it's damn
censorship program. Who are we trying a kid here? They're
going to replace their censorship program with the community notes

(15:03):
system that is used by Elon Musk at X. Again
they're trying to gin up some more interest on their
platform where many, many, many people have left.

Speaker 1 (15:16):
Again.

Speaker 6 (15:18):
Man, they keep trying to take down Elon Musk, but
he just keeps on winning Watchdog on Wall Street dot Com.

Speaker 8 (15:36):
Dude, brush, some toothpaste, a flannel for my face, pajamas, hambrush,
new shoes, and a case.

Speaker 9 (15:45):
Did they give you that in prison? Robert?

Speaker 7 (15:48):
You know?

Speaker 9 (15:49):
New shoes, a case, the pajamas, jammas.

Speaker 5 (15:53):
Maybe maybe a rundown version every once in a while.

Speaker 10 (15:57):
Now, were you stuck in the DC gulag or did
they send you to a federal prison?

Speaker 5 (16:02):
So I did both.

Speaker 11 (16:03):
Initially I was in the Alleghany County Jail here in Pittsburgh,
and then I went to the d C GOO Lag
where I met oath keeper Kelly Meigs, who I would
eventually end up writing a book with a year later.

Speaker 5 (16:16):
Then I went to Northern Neck.

Speaker 11 (16:17):
Then I went to Lewisbourg, which is in Pennsylvania, and
then went back to the DC GOO Lag where I
met you know, the I guess the next wave of
January sixth political prisoners. And then after that that's where
Kelly Meigs and I Oathkeeper out of Florida, went to
Philadelphia for two months and we cranked out the book.

(16:39):
One question remains, which I'm sure you'll appreciate. Having defended
oath keepers. We exposed the absolute travesty of their trials.
We referenced how Cowboy Logic had the gumption to expose
that the judge completely overlooked exonerating evidence of these men
that are absolutely patriots. They're not terrorists, they're not insurrectionists.

(17:03):
And by the way, you have a constitutional amendment and
responsibility to be a part of a militia. So that's
not a dirty word and it's something to be proud of.
But even if you were gonna, you know, make the
claim that the Oathkeepers are a militia, the one thing
that remains is that, well, the way that they were
treated is Unamerican, completely and so that's when Kelly Meggs

(17:26):
and I really became good friends.

Speaker 5 (17:28):
I'm proud to I'm glad, I'm.

Speaker 10 (17:32):
Glad you mentioned Kelly Meggs. In fact, Kelly Meggs's attorney
is now Trump's lead council in Washington, d C. In
the White House. So I was a part of Kelly
Megs's uh. I was part of oath Keepers too, So
I got to know Stanley Woodward very well, who represented
Kelly Meggs. And you know, Kelly Meggs was kind of
the fall guy for the oath keepers on the ground
that day because you know, technically he was in front

(17:54):
of the stack, the quote unquote stack, and you know,
we've talked about that another podcast, about the you know,
older to crepit people that were following him into the Capitol.
And I believe Kelly Meggs's goal going inside of the
Capitol was because they had heard that there was a
mass casualty event inside and all the oathkeepers were trained
in first aid and had first eight kits. So the
fact that Kelly Meggs's attorney, Stanley Woodward, who was a

(18:17):
wonderful attorney, very ethical, He's the one who helped Trump's
co defended out of Florida in the Florida box cases
that got that case dismissed. He is now going to
be Trump's chief legal counsel in Washington, d C. So
I think that's a good sign.

Speaker 4 (18:33):
And I think that shows that Trump does get it, Yes.

Speaker 5 (18:37):
Without a doubt.

Speaker 11 (18:38):
Well, you know, and not to you know, kick a
dead horse here, but you know, when it comes to
the lawfair in this country, how it's been abused, we
need brave men like Winward who's going to be able
to take the fight to the enemy, use their own
language against them, but stand on principle. And you know,
you talk about the motivation that Kelly Mags had. He

(18:58):
describes that for you in detail in that book. One
question remains, So I know you for a fact would
love it having known people that have defended oathkeepers and
defended oathkeepers yourself, especially the fall guy like Kelly Megs.
He and I wrote this thing together side by side
in prison. It was smuggled out of prison. It's now
available on Amazon, and you and everybody listening to this

(19:22):
show is going to have like a window into the
life of what it was like to be there that day.
And what it was like to suffer through the incarceration,
but also with a game plan forward of how to
actually make America great again. But they're also going to
be confronted with many things that you've never heard of
about January sixth.

Speaker 5 (19:40):
For example, I don't want to spoil too.

Speaker 11 (19:42):
Much for you, but we also annotate in the book
that there is a former CIA guy in Washington who's
got his own radio network, Sputnik Radio, who is in
possession of hotel receipts and airline tickets confirming that members
of the Special Ops Ukrainian Asov Brigade were present in

(20:04):
the crowd on January sixth, disguised Why on earth were
they there? And the book is loaded with things like that, So,
I mean, it's the list of things that don't add
up about that day and the inconsistency, if you will,
of the mainstream media's narrative of how this was an
insurrection and yet nobody had any firearms and nobody got

(20:24):
shot except our own people doesn't add up. And that's
what's provoking so many people to want to look into
this stuff.

Speaker 4 (20:31):
Well, and talking about the tunnel and like, as Scott
mentioned too, that was one of the hottest areas, and
you were there, what were you seeing leading up to
that and going into that tunnel?

Speaker 5 (20:42):
Leading up to that, I saw the police.

Speaker 11 (20:46):
Not de escalate tensions as they're all supposed to do
the first responsibility of any officer arriving on call is
to de escalate. They escalated things. They made sure to
escalate tensions, and so it was almost as if, and
you know what, if you look at these videos, you'll
watch the tempo of the agitation die down. Someone from

(21:07):
the patriot crowd always tries to raise their hands and say,
we don't do this, everybody please calm down, and everything
does die down, and then moments later it rises up again,
as if somebody is continuing to provoke the violence. And
so as I approached the tunnel, as you reference, that's
what I saw, I saw that agitation continue to be

(21:28):
stoked like a flame in a smithy, and it was
just so bizarre. I was so confused, and so that's
probably why somebody pushed me into the tunnel, because I
might not have entered on my own accord. It was
very strange, very bizarre, but it was a lobster trap.
The whole day's events were a lobster trap to ensnare
individuals like myself who had absolutely no intention of going

(21:50):
anywhere near the Capitol that day, so that the people
that have been destroying Donald Trump's character as much as
they could in the media had something to point to
and say, see, we told you so, he is Hitler
and these are Nazis.

Speaker 5 (22:04):
What do you think now?

Speaker 11 (22:05):
And it was all political theater on the most grandoises
scales you've ever imagined. But then again, the book One
Question Remains references another work called The Confessions of an
Economic hit Man, where you learn how the CIA has
been doing these types of operations in South America for
a long time to coerce political leaders to be I

(22:29):
guess subservient to the United States by intimidating them into
compliance with measures up to and including stolen elections, political
warfare and violence and or assassination. And so it all
adds up in Europe too, yes, yes, and so like
I said it all, it all makes sense if you're

(22:49):
willing to, you know, connect the dots and look at
how each of these key players are involved. So, for example,
the director of the FBI office that oversaw the abduction
of the Gretchen Whitmer plot ended up being promoted and
put in the exact same responsibility for January.

Speaker 5 (23:08):
Sixth of the Washington DC off. I remember that, and
we annotate that in the book, you know.

Speaker 11 (23:12):
So it's like, come on, man, like, how stupid do
you think the American people are here?

Speaker 5 (23:16):
You know?

Speaker 9 (23:17):
That's it. They think we're so stupid that they've done
a very poor job of trying to pull this off.

Speaker 5 (23:25):
That's how stupid.

Speaker 9 (23:26):
They think we are. But at the same time, Matt
Vespa's got a piece out yesterday CNN. They have their
data guru and elections analyst decided to dive into January sixth, and,
to the shock of no one, the Democrats overreached. Most
don't even blame President Trump for sparking that day's chaotic events.

(23:51):
It wasn't worse than nine to eleven Pearl Harbor the
American Civil War. It was a little riot. Most Americans
did after that. Only five percent of Americans have this
event as the number one memory of the first Trump administration.

Speaker 4 (24:07):
That's not what the Bald Lady on MSNBC says.

Speaker 9 (24:10):
Was Trump responsible for January sixth? Only thirty seven percent
think so. And this was a CNN poll compared to
forty eight percent in twenty twenty one. So the more
the information comes out, everybody's realizing this whole thing was
a setup from the get well.

Speaker 4 (24:26):
And speaking of CNN, I just want to read the
headline they had for you, Robert at the time from
July twenty twenty one, ex Army Ranger weaponized military training
to aid Capital rioters.

Speaker 11 (24:39):
Judge said, right, yeah, yeah, And I'll tell you this,
And nowhere in any kind of ranger handbook does it
instruct you how to build a shield wall and bust
through the capital doors. It's not in my training whatsoever, okay.
Nor does it describe how to overthrow the United States

(24:59):
government with a plastic children's toy, as they alleged that
I did, you guys know about how I got the
name Lego Man?

Speaker 9 (25:04):
Right? No, wait, that's what we want to hear. We
want to hear story, how did you get Lego Man?

Speaker 11 (25:09):
It's ridiculous, and I'll try to simplify it as much
as I can.

Speaker 5 (25:12):
Long story short.

Speaker 11 (25:13):
As I'm being hauled away from my life on June eleventh,
twenty twenty one, the Feds go through my apartment and
they're passing extremely dangerous objects like the United States Constitution
and the King James Bible.

Speaker 5 (25:24):
Oh my gosh, yeah, oh my god.

Speaker 4 (25:30):
You were a history teacher.

Speaker 11 (25:31):
That's dangerous enough dangerous, So they get to my uh,
you know, dangerous stockpile of legos. Now, no shame in legos.
I think they're incredible. I think they activate the engineer
in all of us. And I also think that they're
really cool to bring into the classrooms so that the
kids that struggle with ADHD could have something to chill
out with in their hands while they're listening to my lessons.

Speaker 5 (25:52):
So I'm cool with that.

Speaker 11 (25:53):
But the Feds behave as if they find the holy
Grail of January sixth, which just so happened to be
within my you know, piled legos, a lego kit of
the United States capitals.

Speaker 4 (26:10):
Now I remember that. Yeah, this is the model they
used to plan what what rooms they had to enter, like,
it's not to scale.

Speaker 11 (26:20):
Come on, and you know what, so this is the
craziest part. Okay, So they're pushing this, They've got the photos.
They're literally saying that I'm the architect of the insurrection. Okay,
and all of this is happening without my knowledge, by
the way, because I'm in, you know, the belly of
the beast that the dc GOO lags and I haven't
even met the J six crew yet.

Speaker 5 (26:39):
But by the time that I do, I enter.

Speaker 11 (26:42):
The room where all the January six ers are to
a hero's welcome and they're like, oh, it's the lego man.

Speaker 5 (26:47):
Like, I'm looking over my shoulder going like, who's that?
It's you man, don't you know? They introduced me.

Speaker 11 (26:54):
To Miranda Divine's work where she calls the people at
the FBI the blockheads of the FBI. According to what
she says, and what the Internet has recited at nauseum,
is that when the FBI brings this evidence before the judge,
they say, your honor, we got him. This is the
guy that planned January sixth. Him and Trump sat around
planning this insurrection with the lego set.

Speaker 5 (27:15):
The judge looks at.

Speaker 11 (27:16):
This evidence and says, wait a second here, fellas, how
is this possible if the legos are still in the box.

Speaker 5 (27:22):
It was an unopened box of legos.

Speaker 1 (27:24):
Man.

Speaker 9 (27:30):
Well, they didn't need to he didn't need to build
it because they had the picture on the front, right.

Speaker 5 (27:34):
Yeah, And that's enough.

Speaker 11 (27:35):
Right, So that's that's where I got the name, and
I'm not dropping it because it's a little bit of
in a really rough patch in my life. But it
also goes to show how shameless and ridiculous these people
will go, what lengths they will go to in order
to confirm a narrative that is totally based off of uh.

Speaker 9 (27:54):
Garbage, soulless tyrants. We have to take another quick break
and we'll be right back with more on news radio
fifteen eighty.

Speaker 7 (28:03):
Are you listening to me?

Speaker 3 (28:05):
Hey, guys, I just push buttons all day.

Speaker 1 (28:07):
They have no chemistry at all.

Speaker 10 (28:08):
The cycle of jerks has to end.

Speaker 9 (28:10):
You seriously should run with this.

Speaker 11 (28:12):
Is this saying anything, Let's go ahead, Terras station, Let's
go to the bit they haven't picked.

Speaker 10 (28:15):
I don't understand or as you just said.

Speaker 7 (28:17):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks on news
radio fifteen eighty WCCs.

Speaker 8 (28:24):
There are certain things everyone in our country has in common.
Here is one. Working out is a waste of time.

Speaker 3 (28:36):
It is.

Speaker 8 (28:37):
It's a stupid waste of time. A friend of mine
runs marathons. He's always talking about this, runners high, but
he has to go twenty six miles for it. That's
why I smoke and drink. I get the same feeling
from a flight of stairs, saving time everywhere it is.

(29:02):
It's just why do we waste time like that? Here's
a little message to every good athlete in the audience
here tonight. Every hour you're in the gym working out,
I'm in a bar talking to your girlfriend. I may
not be strong, but I'm there.

Speaker 4 (29:21):
Lift that.

Speaker 9 (29:40):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM, WCCF
Radio dot Com ten forty five here on a hopday
Wednesday at Charlotte County speaks our guests via Skype. Robert
Morris J six defended. We've got Mikeae Bassiani and Attorney
Scott Weinberg in here too, Robert, So, so, tell us

(30:01):
what's it like since you've been out? How long of
a parole situation or you stuck in?

Speaker 5 (30:08):
Sure?

Speaker 11 (30:08):
So? I am currently at the Halfway House, actually at
work doing this interview. There are patriots in Pittsburgh that
were willing to hire me, and as the condition of
my release from the Halfway House to leave it, I
have to be at work. And these individuals here in
Pittsburgh were willing to hire me the moment they had

(30:29):
found out that I was incarcerated three years ago. So
I'm in the halfway house now. If I don't get
pardoned on the twentieth, which I'm confident that I will,
I will transition to house arrest in late February. But
the only reason why I am still not in prison
to this day is because of Donald Trump signing the

(30:50):
First Step Act into law when he was president. Now,
a lot of people say that, you know, this was
written and drafted while Obama was president. That's correct bill
when Obama was around, but he didn't sign it into law.
Donald Trump did. And so that's why I think a
very large percentage of the African American community within America

(31:10):
was willing to vote for Donald Trump this time around
because so many of their brothers and sisters and fathers
and sons were able to come home because Donald Trump
was willing to let them go. And so it all
comes down to this man not worried about color, He
worries about work ethic and I'm able to get to
work because of Donald Trump's decisions back when he signed

(31:32):
it into law.

Speaker 5 (31:32):
How crazy is that? Good?

Speaker 4 (31:35):
Indeed, so.

Speaker 9 (31:37):
How you know what about your family and you know,
your parents and stuff. Is that is that ever going
to be healed? Do they do they understand that you
didn't really do anything wrong at all.

Speaker 5 (31:50):
For my mother, her and I are rock solid.

Speaker 11 (31:53):
I am so grateful for the efforts that my mother
has endured on my behalf. She's met President Trump several
times in mar Lago. Because of her work ethic she
moved from Reno, Nevada and got a place up here
in Pennsylvania, knowing nobody, never even visiting the area where
she moved to, just so she could rescue her son.

Speaker 5 (32:14):
She has worked tirelessly.

Speaker 11 (32:16):
She has spoken to so many individuals about my story,
and she has tried to raise an army of patriots
on my behalf. Can't say the same about my father.
And even though he was the one that was willing
to talk like a patriot and helped me fall in
love with the Founding Fathers and things of that nature,
you know, he's the one that sat me down to
watch Mel Gibson's Brave Heart and The Patriot, you know,

(32:37):
And so I take this stuff seriously.

Speaker 5 (32:39):
Those are my favorite.

Speaker 11 (32:40):
Movie, yeah, and everybody's favorite movies as far as I'm concerned.

Speaker 5 (32:43):
That loved this country, but when push came to show,
he was nowhere to be found.

Speaker 11 (32:47):
And you know, it reminds me of Thomas Paine's American
Crisis that annotates you know, the difference between a sunshine
patriot and you know the times of trimn souls and
we few that got in car rated are the ones
that showed up, regardless of whether or not.

Speaker 5 (33:04):
You know, the odds were against us. Were the winter soldiers,
and we paid a price for it beyond just time
served behind bars. My brother disowned me.

Speaker 11 (33:16):
And and that was my best buddy, you know, since
I was three years old, and he knows me better
than anyone because he's spent the most time around me,
you know. And but he was willing to buy into
the mainstream media's lies, I guess, and take the advice
of a stranger as opposed to listen to the man himself.

Speaker 5 (33:32):
And he cut the cord about two months ago.

Speaker 11 (33:35):
So I guess I don't have a brother anymore because
of my involvement in January sixth.

Speaker 4 (33:40):
Well, and you know, one of the things that people
keep asking in the mainstream media keep asking Trump, is
you know, are you going to pardon everybody including those
that you know beat up on the cops. And it's
like regardless at this point, I'm time served. And I mean.

Speaker 10 (33:55):
Even the person that allegedly did the worst thing on
January sixth from the protesters side of the ball, they've
done enough time. I mean Enriquetario, head of the Proud Boys,
got a twenty two year prison sentence for not even
being there on January sixth. Stuart Roads, the head of
the Oathkeepers, and you know we've discussed Stuart Road's faults
in the past. He didn't have anything to do with

(34:16):
January sixth either. He was walking around lost. They gave
him eighteen years in prison, so I didn't even enter
the building well because he was lost, right, Yeah.

Speaker 4 (34:27):
He was walking around circles. But Scott, how's speaking of
a parole time and everything, How's David doing well?

Speaker 10 (34:33):
The good news is, you know, David is doing great.
You know, like we talked about, he was The government
wanted him to do ten years, that was the recommendation.
The judge, Judge Metal went below guidelines and gave him three.
He ended up doing nine months on the three years.
He's currently in a halfway house. He's doing well. He
gets to stay with his family every weekend. He's working.
He's really trying to get his life back on track,

(34:55):
and we're hoping that this pardon will allow him to
use his degree. He was a porro physiologist, and when
you get convicted of a felony, you lose all of
your professional licenses. So we're excited about that. You know,
I've kept in contact with David and his family. You know,
I consider them close friends. You know, when you go
to trial and you're basically in a war for you know,

(35:16):
two months is over. You know, a few to each
other span in my life. Yeah, yeah, And you know,
I'm proud to know David. I think he's a great man.
He stood tall against the government. He didn't take a
plea or testify against his other January six ers. You know,
I think myself and the this gentleman have a little
disagreement about January sixth itself. I don't think, you know,

(35:40):
people should not have gone into the Capitol. I don't
care how many FBI agents were there or how many
agent provocateurs were there. I think what happened to the
January six ers was oppressive. I think what's happened with
the dj has been terrible, what they've done to their family,
to their lives. The best way that this situation could
resolve is you hit everybody with the misdemeanor charge and

(36:02):
you move on. And I think the Democrats showed that
they overplayed their hand on this case, but are still
I'm not going to sit here and say that. You know,
going into the Capitol on January sixth was a heroic
thing to do. It was a silly thing to do,
and people shouldn't have done it. I think after January sixth,
a lot of those people did show their heroism by

(36:24):
fighting against the government and the oppression of the January
sixth prosecutions.

Speaker 9 (36:30):
But you and both know if they'd have been wearing
pink pussy hats, they would not have been accosted at all.
We wouldn't even be discussing.

Speaker 10 (36:37):
And that is a wonderful example, because if they were
wearing the pink pussy hats, they wanted to have been arrested.
But guys like you, me and Mike would say, well,
where's the sixty caliber machine gun for the shooting all
the people breaking into the capitol. So you know, it's
always always injury when here I am sir time for

(37:01):
a simple assault.

Speaker 11 (37:02):
And yet somebody who was a pro hamask guy punches
an African American woman Capitol police officer in the face
and only gets forty eight hours of community service. So
the disparity there of the two tier justicism is blatant.

Speaker 9 (37:17):
Can you speak to the treatment of some of these prisoners,
because I mean, we're stories are getting out about torture
and get moving around a lot too.

Speaker 11 (37:27):
Yeah, without a doubt. Yeah, So there is a thing
called diesel therapy where you are just transported around the
country so that you never really kind of get to,
you know, feather your nest if you will. Psychologically, humans
need that. We're creatures of habit and the BOP knows that,
and so they will charge the American people money so

(37:50):
that they can just mess with the minds of their prisoners.
That happens a lot, And I was in I think
like what seven different institutions by the time I was done.
For what purpose do you tell me? I have no idea,
But that just goes to show what these people have done.
To say that there's a Department of Corrections is a
bad joke. They don't correct behavior. They actually entice people
to become monsters, and it's a good way to make

(38:12):
sure that they keep getting money because the more that
you can warp people's minds and becoming animals while we've
got them in their possession. It includes horrendous things like
assault and things like that, but you guarantee the fact
that these people will come back and January six ers
going through the DC Gulak going to all these horrific
institutions around the country exposed with the BOP and private

(38:35):
jails have been doing for decades to a larger audience
of America. And hopefully one of the things that can
be accomplished because of this is the BOP being completely
reformed into something that actually makes better citizens as it
was supposed to.

Speaker 10 (38:49):
I think that's an excellent point. In fact, the judge
in David Morshall's case wanted him sentenced to a work camp,
and there was an order from all of the prisons
that nobody involved in January Ruary six is going to
be allowed to go to any type of work camp,
which is basically the minimum minimum security. So every January
six er goes to at least a minimum to medium

(39:09):
security prison. So this was an example of desperate treatment
to people in a different situation. Well, usually when a
federal judge says send a guide to a work camp,
they do it. But only in the January six ers
cases did they not do it?

Speaker 9 (39:23):
Wow? Is there any recourse for these people?

Speaker 10 (39:29):
Well, I know that a lot of January six ers
have talked about following lawsuits and suing people and suing
the government, which frankly is an extremely difficult task. Having
been a defense attorney for many years and won a
lot of big cases and lost a lot of big cases. Unfortunately,
at the end of the day, I think everybody needs
to get their part in and move on with their life.

(39:49):
You never become successful chasing revenge or in this business.
My old partner Chris Brown used to say, don't spike
the football. If we get the part in, we walk away,
We walk to the sunset, and we move on with
our lives and try to live a good life. Obviously,
there's going to be studies about January sixth and the
impact and all this other kind of stuff. But to me,

(40:09):
my suggestion to my clients would be, let's take the
part in, we put it on the wall, we shake hands,
and we move on with our lives.

Speaker 4 (40:16):
That would be well uncle, And the victory was getting
the public outrage enough from January sixth that we got
Trump reelected and we'll get that pardon. That's the big
victory too, because going after a government entity. Now that
Trump's in, let his DOJ handle that.

Speaker 10 (40:34):
That's exactly right. All of these things that we've talked
about and people will, you know, quote unquote say it's conspiracy.
Now we have the opportunity to actually investigate these things.
So the DOJ, hopefully under Trump, will investigate the over
prosecution of the January six ers. We'll be able to
investigate the twenty twenty election, and we'll finally get real
answers to real questions.

Speaker 9 (40:55):
BONDI got the chops, I think so.

Speaker 10 (40:58):
I think so. I think what you need is somebody
that can delegate, that can hire. You know, in most
state attorney's office, there's always the head person and there's
you know, two deputies, which I call are the goons
and the ones that get the job done. And I
think while you know, people can say what they want
about Pam BONDI I think she knows who to hire
and who to be her hired guns. And I think,

(41:21):
you know, make America. Florida is really the work of
this country is going to turn around.

Speaker 9 (41:25):
Yeah, what do you think about the Gulf of America.
I love the way Trump controls I think. I love
the way Trump trolls the media and the left and
the Mexican president who isn't doing us any favors right now.

Speaker 5 (41:40):
I love it, not at all.

Speaker 9 (41:41):
I love it.

Speaker 11 (41:43):
So I will say that expanding our territory I don't
think it's going to be a solution to our problems.
I like the Roman m for Hadrian, who didn't expand
any of the Roman campaigns at all, but he actually
reformed Rome as much as he could. He tried to
balance the debt that room had, and his impact is
the Hadrian's Wall that's still up in Great Britain today,
as you know. And so I kind of confer Trump

(42:05):
as being like the Roman Emperor Hadrian with his first term.
I you know, obviously, I think he's kind of you know, uh,
joking around about all these territorism.

Speaker 9 (42:14):
But at the same time he sends a message to
the on Russia to stay the hell out of Greenland.

Speaker 5 (42:21):
Yeah, which I'm a fan of.

Speaker 9 (42:24):
Hey, so, how can people find out more about the
Lego Man, Robert.

Speaker 5 (42:27):
Morse Absolutely so.

Speaker 11 (42:30):
There is a website that your listeners can access.

Speaker 5 (42:33):
It's called www.

Speaker 11 (42:35):
Dot AKA the Legoman dot com with two g's.

Speaker 5 (42:40):
On the website, you'll find my life.

Speaker 11 (42:42):
Story, the literature that I've produced while I was incarcerated.
You'll find the book being advertised so that you guys
can you know, freshen up on things that you did
know and didn't know about January sixth and uh. We're
also selling what we're calling freedom blocks so that you
can actually get your own customizable little lego brick.

Speaker 5 (43:03):
Yeah, and contribute to the.

Speaker 11 (43:05):
Movement of making America great again and putting on your
desk and thinking, you know what, if these guys can
go through hell and back to save America, maybe we
can too. And so it's a it's a it's a
nice little symbolic way of trying to get everybody involved
to rescue this sinking ship of America again.

Speaker 5 (43:21):
The website is www.

Speaker 11 (43:23):
Dot a k A The Lego Man dot com with
two g's, and the book is called One Question Remains Excellent.

Speaker 9 (43:29):
Robert Morris, appreciate your time, man, So sorry for what
you've had to go through and how it's affected you.
But hopefully with that pardon you can get things turned
around and uh get your life back on track. And
I hope the book is very successful for you as well,
and sell a lot of Legos all by. I'm gonna
go buy a Lego.

Speaker 5 (43:49):
Thank you, gentlemen. I appreciate that.

Speaker 11 (43:50):
It was an honor being on your show. God bless
you guys, and let's make America great again.

Speaker 9 (43:55):
All right, Scott Weinberg, thank you, my friend.

Speaker 5 (43:57):
Thank you.

Speaker 9 (43:57):
Always great to have Mike. We'll talk to you tomorrow. Yeah, sir,
have a great day, folks.

Speaker 5 (44:04):
Anybody got any more jokes anything funny?

Speaker 4 (44:07):
Nope, nope, all right, see you folks.

Speaker 7 (44:10):
We're in news radio fifteen eighty AM w CCF Punda
Gorda and FM one hundred point nine W two sixty
five EA punder Gorda
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