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May 6, 2025 60 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Check it.
It's the 10 reparationcommandments.
A lot of these fake blackleaders won't understand it.
They just gonna tell you tovote and get nothing.
So I'm about to put you on gamehow to get something.
First step is something calledSAR.
You gotta understand this oryou won't get that far.
It stands for self-administerreparations.
This is a key fact to land yourfoundation.

(00:22):
Number two open up a tax-freebusiness.
If you're a black American, yougot a right to get this.
Here's an example of mine, sodon't stress.
And then you'll get a masterfile with the IRS.
Number three open up agarnish-free account.
You don't need these folkstaking all the money you're
amount.
See, the system attacks yourmoney from all angles.
So I'm going to show you how tobe tax free and stable.

(00:49):
Number four you never heardthis before, but if you own your
shack, no more property tax, nomore.
Number five learn about humanrights, not civil rights.
Civil rights is just permission.
Human rights is good for life.
Number six gotta learn yourgenealogy.
Not the DNA test, but therecords that they keep.
Number seven understandnationality.
As a 14th amendment slave youwill not be free.
You won't free.
Person applies to whiteposterity.
When they made you a citizen.

(01:10):
They took out the word free.
Number eight gotta learn realhistory.
Most of us didn't come offboats originally.
Number nine your reparations isfor genocide, not for slavery.
Uh-huh, and here's the reasonwhy our genocide still happen
until today and they don't needto study like what they try and
say.
Number 10 the GeneralAssembly's important Guidelines

(01:32):
for reparation and enforcementTo violate your rights.
You get restitution too.
They give you fake history soyou don't have a clue.
They brainwash your mind.
History erased, then use Asianimmigrants so you could be
replaced.
That's why I'm tax exempt.
Here's my receipts and facts,because the Constitution says
Indians not taxed.
With your real identity, yougot human rights, the right to

(01:54):
self-govern and control your ownlife, but you gotta be part of
a body politic Common free.
I'll show you the process tothis.
Let's go.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Peace, peace, peace and welcome back, Welcome back
Freedman's Affairs, radioFreedman's Network.
I'm your host, your gracioushost, vaughn Black, aaron Vaughn
Black, that is, and right outthe gate we gonna say thank you

(02:37):
for tapping back in with us onthis great and glorious sunrise,
may 6, 2025.
On this great and glorioussunrise, may 6th 2025.
It's a little overcast, so it'snot bright and sunny.
It's some overcast here in NewYork City where I'm at.
But, yes, in the math for today,we're dealing with equality.

(03:03):
Equality is the math for todayFamily, and that's a compounded
word.
It's a compounded word thatuses equal and quality.
Let us remember that Right.
And it deals with what isequality?
It deals with fairness, balance, cooperation, harmony and rest.

(03:30):
How does the word go?
Reciprocity?
That's the word I'm looking for, reciprocity, and we understand
, like in balance, the numeralthree.
It equals knowledge, because wealways say knowledge, wisdom,
understanding, right, and thatthree represents knowledge.

(03:55):
Now we have, on either side ofthe scale, right, the three
bringing us to equality, right,and that's what we're going to
be dealing with.
A lot of things that's going tolead us into fair handedness,

(04:19):
as we have a little shortdiscussion this morning on this
podcast.
Little short discussion thismorning on this podcast and
we're going to take a when wecome.
We're going to take a to hearfrom some of the sponsors.
We're going to take a quicklittle pause, station pause here
, and we're going to hear fromsome of the sponsors and we'll

(04:40):
be right back and we're going tokick the show off and y'all
hang with it, hang with it, hangwith it because we can.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
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Speaker 1 (06:36):
You got it.
You got it.
You got it, you got it.
I know you got soul.
Hey, if you didn't, youwouldn't be in here.
I know you got soul.
Hey, if you didn't, youwouldn't be in here.
I know you got soul.
If you didn't, you wouldn't bein here.

Speaker 8 (06:57):
I know you got soul.
If you didn't, you wouldn'tshake that thing.
Hit me with the beat, hey,because it makes me sing.
I know you got it going, hey.
If you didn't, you wouldn't bein here.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
I know you got the feeling the way you move over
there.
All right, we're back, we'reback in, we're back in family
and once again, thank you, thankyou for hitting that button and

(07:41):
tapping back in with us againthis morning.
Let me get a little better inhere, because it sounds a little
.
It's still a little echoey inhere.
We're trying to get the studiotreated and get it up to par,
and so this is why I'm likewhich, I like talking over music
anyway.
But yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,yeah, family, before we get

(08:03):
started, it's a couple ofacknowledgements that I'd like
to make a mention of up herebefore we get started this
morning, and that is I want tosend a special, special birthday
congratulations of theanniversary of her birth, and

(08:28):
that is mother jackson, misskatherine jackson, the mother of
michael, janet, latoya,jermaine, tito, randy and I'm.
I forget if I'm leaving out anyof the kids, I know it's a
couple I'm leaving out, but yes,miss Catherine Jackson's
birthday was May 4th.
She was born May 4th 1930, andshe is 95 years old.

(08:51):
Family, she don't look it thatwoman, look like she's in her
60s and she looks great Ninetyfive years old.
So salute to you, motherJackson, 95 years old.
So salute to you, motherJackson, thank you, thank you
for giving us the great seedsfrom you and Mr Jill Jackson,

(09:14):
michael, all of them, every oneof them, thank you for blessing
us with the grace of thosechildren of yours.
And thank you, miss Jackson,thank you and happy birthday and
I wish you many more.
And thank you, ms Jackson,thank you and happy birthday and
I wish you many more, and Imean that, I'm not just saying
that as a cliche.
I wish you stick around foranother 20, 30 years.

(09:35):
Well, we all got to go and sheis 95 years old, but we hope she
sticks around for a long timemore.
But yeah, back to it, back toit.
Back to a fan also, also also agreat supporter of this, of the
program here, the podcast, myman, my main man, smitty joint,

(09:57):
matthew smith, thank you, bro,thank you, thank you know and
bless to you and your family andthose grandchildren of yours,
that grand baby of yours, man,just blessings to you, brother,
and salute and stay with us.
Stay with us, man, because wegrowing, we growing and yeah,

(10:19):
man, thank you so much.
Thank all of you who listen andcome up here weekly.
But that brother isextraordinary and I told you, I
got you this morning, I got you,I got you up here.
Anyway, family getting into this, we're going to start getting
into a little bit of this show.
Well, not just yet.

(10:40):
We got a few moreacknowledgements, a couple more
acknowledgements to make justyet.
We got a few moreacknowledgments, a couple more
acknowledgments to make, andthat is from what I understand.
Yesterday they started juryselection with Sean Combs in the
Sean Combs case Puffy brother,love P Diddy, whatever.

(11:00):
But, um, he started, uh, juryselection yesterday, on the 5th
may 5th.
Yeah, he started selecting thejury and they're going to be
interviewing potential jurors.
And I gotta say this, I gottasay this family, I gotta say
this I was looking at thecharges and what the case in

(11:24):
court is going to be about and Ithink he stands a pretty good
chance of getting around thisthing.
Now, I'm not saying I'm rootingfor him.
I don't have a dog in the raceeither way.
But Wright is right.
I mean he, from what I'm, fromhow I'm looking at things, he

(11:48):
has a good chase of beating thisthing.
I'm not saying I want that tohappen.
I'm not saying I want him to beconvicted.
It doesn't.
It's no skin off me either way,because, just like with
anything in life, there's alwayslessons in something.
So either way we can drawsomething from all of this, but

(12:09):
they're not going to.
There's certain things they'renot going to be talking about,
and the, the child, thesoliciting of the children,
that's not going to be talkedabout.
In the China is something else.
I can't think of what it isright now, cause I don't have
the have the, I don't have thepaper in front of me.
I need the papers, the courtpapers in front of me, but, as I

(12:31):
remember I know that was one ofthe main ones, it was two
things and they're not going tobe talking about them now.
What's going to damage him tosome degree is is the video of
of him, um, with the incident inthe hotel with the uh, cassie
ventura lady, that's that ifthey play that, that's going to

(12:54):
hurt him.
Um, I'm I'm projecting thatthat the, that the prosecutor,
will come out the gate verystrong and it will seem like
he's in doom.
You know, in the first phasesof the trial it's going to seem
like, like they think he'sfinished or whatever.
But if those lawyers are goodand they on their job.

(13:17):
They can turn that thing aroundand and he he could stand a 50
50 chance of getting getting outof it.
But the images of him with thegirl, with the incident and the
violence that he perpetratedagainst that young lady, that's
going to be hard to get that outof the juror's mind.
So let's keep those things inmind and we'll watch as the case

(13:39):
progresses.
We will watch it.
Okay, now there was anotherstory.
Hold on.
Now there was another story,hold on.
There was another story up inum cincinnati, I believe it was,
and um it's a case involving,uh, rodney hinton jr.
Let's see can we get that.

(13:59):
Let's see can we get to that.
Hold on, let's see can we getto that.
Hold on, let's see Can we getto that.
Let's see Can we get to that.
Hold on.
All right, give me a secondhere and we'll be right to it.

Speaker 6 (14:23):
Give me a second here and we'll be right to it.
This separate session of theHamilton County Municipal Court
is now in session.
Judge Tyrone Yates is presidingthis morning.
We ask that you turn off allcell phones.
You may be seated.
Please remain quiet during allproceedings, good morning
everyone.
Good morning, Good morning your.

Speaker 10 (14:48):
Honor, good morning.
Good morning, good morning,your Honor all proceedings.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
You know what?
We'll go to another clip, holdon.
We'll go to another clipbecause they're bringing them
out into the courtroom.
Well, wait a minute, hold onjust a second Good morning, mr
Henson.

Speaker 6 (15:38):
Good morning, he said good morning.
He's very soft spoken.
Okay, all right, thank you Allright, thank you All right.

Speaker 10 (15:49):
Anything as to probable cause?
Yeah, we'll weigh probablecause.
This morning I submitteddesignations for John Kennedy
and Timothy Bicknell.
They will be the attorneys ofrecord handling this case.
I'll be handling thearraignment this morning.
All right, thank you, mrProsecutor.
Anything as to Bond?
As to Bond, your Honor.

(16:10):
Thank you, your Honor.
We understand.
This is a very, very serious,very terrible charge that Mr
Hinton is facing.
He has a recidivism but he doesnot have a history judge.
He has no felonies in hisrecord.
His arrest is sentenced to overone.

(16:32):
He has no juvenile record.
He works at EDF.
He's married, he's a father,he's a graduate of Purcell
Marion Sorry, purcell Marion, Iunderstand that this is an
emotional.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
We'll cut to a news clip about it.
Let's again bring some news into the reporting, because this
is a court hearing.
I think this is his arraignment.
This is what would be thearraignment.
Hold on.

Speaker 11 (16:57):
Let's get the story hold on Our local law
enforcement officers aregrieving this evening after a
Hamilton County deputy diedafter he was hit by a car.
The man accused of hitting himmade his first court appearance
today.
The sheriff's office is notreleasing the deputy's name yet,
but Cincinnati police say hewas directing traffic ahead of
University of Cincinnati'sgraduation ceremony when a car

(17:19):
struck him and a pole.
The deputy and the driver ofthe car were taken to UC Medical
Center where the deputy died.
Police have since identifiedthe driver as Rodney Hinton Jr,
the father of a man shot andkilled by Cincinnati police on
Thursday.
Now police reported he was incritical condition on Friday

(17:40):
afternoon but he appeared incourt this morning for an
arraignment on an aggravatedmurder charge.
Court documents claim Hinton Jrintentionally struck the deputy
with his car.
He's being held without bonduntil his next court appearance
on Tuesday.
The judge ordered he be held atthe Claremont County Jail for
his own safety.

(18:01):
Cincinnati police say that caseis connected to an officer
involved shooting on Thursday.
Police say they approached astolen car in East Price Hill
when four men got out and ran.
Cincinnati police say HintonJr's son, 18-year-old Ryan
Hinton, ran from officers,although it's hard to see in
this body camera footage.
Police say the young man had agun and pointed it towards the

(18:25):
officer.
Chief Teresa Fiji says theofficer told investigators he
felt threatened so he shotHinton.
Hinton did die at that scene.
Police arrested two of thesuspects the same day.
They are 19-year-old DeAnthonyBullocks and 18-year-old Jarrell
Austin.
They are charged withobstruction and receiving stolen
property.
After a days long search,cincinnati police say they have

(18:48):
now also arrested the finalsuspect in that case, 18 year
old Sincere Grigsby.
He's charged with receivingstolen property and felony
obstruction of official business.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
Yeah, so there you have it, there you have it.
That's the latest as of.
I started picking up on thisstory like yesterday.
And it's crazy, man, it's oneof them.
Stories like it's unbelievable.
You know, if you wasn't lookingat the news and getting the

(19:20):
reports firsthand, you would saythat's unreal.
But this is real, it's a realthing, it's a real thing.
And I played some of thearraignment at the top of the
report.
I played some of thearraignment that they had just
brought him out into thecourtroom man, you know,

(19:41):
hundreds of police in thecourtroom and outside the
courtroom.
It was just a media frenzy andwe got to pay attention to that
because this is a veryinteresting case, very
interesting just as well.
Uh, you know we watch thesethings up here.
So, yeah, family, but, um,there was also another story.

(20:03):
There was also another story Iwanted to present, before I get
into the broadcast for today,the rest of the broadcast.
Hold on, I'm getting some bleedthrough, okay, okay, that was
my headphones, yeah, so let mesee, can I find the story?
Hold on, yeah, there was this,I'm not sure where.

(20:25):
Oh, this is in minnesota.
This is in minnesota.
There was this white woman thatit was an incident in the
playground with.
This woman ended up calling afive-year-old special needs
child uh the n-word and um, itwas caught.
Some, someone recorded it.
Let's, can we get the story.

(20:45):
Let's see Can we bring it inreal quick.

Speaker 8 (20:48):
Did you call the child a n***a word?
It is my own business.
You call him a n***a, okay.
Why don't you have the boss tosay it right now?
Again, f*** you n***a, okay,all right, that's what you say.
You're digging for people.
Nobody digging.
That's what you say.
You're not digging for people.
Nobody dig into your shit.
A little fucking kid, justdigged your dog.

(21:09):
A little kid.
You call him a shit.
A little child.
Are you about to hit him?
You chase him here.
He took my son's stuff.
So that gives you the right tocall the child five-year-old a
nigger, the n-word, if that'swhat he's going to act like.
That's what you're gonna callhim.
That's what he's gonna act like.
You know that's a hate speechand you can be the c*** of that.
I don't give a c***.
Huh, f*** off.

(21:30):
Okay, we'll see about that.
What the internet has to sayabout you.
You call him a n***a the c***.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
Yeah, now, family, this woman, this is up in
Minnesota.
They had a fundraiser for her,a crowdfunding for her, and this
woman raised from last I heardI think it was like six hundred
thousand dollars.
Yeah, now, according to theincident, I couldn't get there.
Let me see.
Oh, here it is right, here,let's let's talk about it.

Speaker 12 (21:58):
Hold on Context context and then what happened
today well, the context here isit started last week with a
video that was posted on socialmedia and went viral of a
confrontation at a playground ina park here in rochester uh,
the soldier field that parkeddown there and um, there was a
woman here that in this videoI'm told was taken by a witness

(22:23):
somebody else but that sheapparently got upset because
accused a five year old oftrying to steal something from
her child's diaper bag.
That in the video she'saccosted by this witness saying
did you call that little boy theN-word?
And it kind of escalates fromthere.

(22:44):
I just saw the video here a fewminutes ago and this interplay
then it really raised a lot ofemotions, obviously around here,
and so that led to this rallyhere that you saw earlier today.
It started at noon, it went fora while and then there was a
short, just kind of march aroundthe government center here Now

(23:05):
it's wrapped up in which youknow there's a number of things
at play here in the video.
At the center of this thenstarted a fundraising campaign
on uh, give, send, go and raisedsix hundred thousand dollars

(23:27):
there, in which she said that'sfor her own legal defense,
that's also for her own safety,that she's been getting threats
that she may have to move,protect her family.
Well then, people are upset thatthey view her as maybe trying
to profit off of what occurred.
It's unclear exactly what thesituation is.
I talked to the mayor here tooand she said yeah, it's unclear.

(23:50):
The police have been doingtheir work all the weekend
trying to talk to witnesses,figure this out this morning,
forwarded it to the cityattorney's office here for
potential charging decision thatthey will work with the county
attorney's office here too,because a lot of people at this
protest that was the other partof it is they want this woman to
be charged with some sort ofhate crime because they see

(24:12):
again online the donations thatshe's getting, come with a lot
of then incendiary comments tothe NAACP, then had their own
fundraising campaign just toreally kind of counter that,
which has now been ended, metits goal and ended, and so
there's going to be some moreevents here.
But the big thing is thatthey're concerned that the folks

(24:36):
that have come together herewould like to see some sort of
criminal charges against thewoman at the center of this
conflict, and so we'll see wherethat plays out.
There's no real timeline onwhen that decision could come.

Speaker 3 (24:50):
And Rob, if you could , for those who haven't seen the
video or choose not to watch it, could you kind of walk us
through?
You know just kind of slowlywhat transpires and so we don't
catch any initial.
The person who's recording saysyou said this.
We don't have that initialinteraction, but we do have him

(25:12):
confronting her.
Is that right?
And she does say several times.
Can you walk us through that?

Speaker 12 (25:18):
Yeah, I mean, what I've seen here is that the uh,
the bystander, the witness whotook the video, walks up to this
woman and, and you know, startsby saying, hey, did you just
call this boy?
This, you know?
And uh, and the one I saw had alot of things beeped out.
So you don't get all thelanguage there, you just know

(25:39):
that it's inflammatory and so ithad to be beeped out and really
just confronting her about whywould you say that to a
five-year-old.
And she said, well, he wastrying to steal something out of
my child's diaper bag.
And then it kind of escalatedfrom there and really again, the
version I saw that was editedfor language really was just

(26:01):
strongly edited for language,and so it's hard to hear in the
version again that I saw exactlywhat the full interplay was,
except that it was certainly,you know, it kind of escalated
back and forth where you knowhe's challenging her about what
she said, and so it reallystruck a lot of nerves here that

(26:23):
this happened.
And the mayor said there's beena couple of other incidents in
the last year or so in town thathas really kind of put people
on edge about it.

Speaker 3 (26:35):
It's just something like this and after the rally,
Rob, did you have a chance to goand kind of chat with anybody
in particular or, you know, getany insight from people who were
?

Speaker 12 (26:46):
there I spoke to the mayor and the head of the NAACP
and then several of the peoplethat attended here too, where
they just said, you know, theywant to come out to say that you
know this should not happen,these things should not be okay,
and what they're maybe evenmore concerned about was then
the comments that they readonline, where they say is filled

(27:09):
with a lot more, you know, hatespeech or racially charged
speech in support of this woman,and that really kind of
escalated.
You know.
Know, the emotional responsehere was seeing then the other
reaction online and and sothat's really kind of just
continuing to add more kind offuel to the fire okay, sounds

(27:30):
good.

Speaker 3 (27:30):
Yeah, I think you might have said this on the top.
It sounds like rochester pdfinished their investigation,
handed it over to the cityattorney.
Um, so I guess we'll kind ofwait and see.
Uh, now, if there are anycharges.

Speaker 12 (27:42):
Right, and that's the question here is you know,
people you know really want somekind of legal reaction to this.
But of course the question iswhat laws may have been broken
here.
You know there's legalstandards.
Where you know is which crimeor which legal standard you know
might fit here in terms ofwhether you know there's some

(28:04):
hate speech laws on the books,but some of that stuff is an
enhancement to other laws youknow or other crimes.
So it's really they've got tofigure out here was this just,
was this just an unfortunate andinflammatory incident, or was
there something here thatactually warrants a criminal
charge?
Was there a law broken?

Speaker 3 (28:25):
Yeah, so many layers to this one and yeah, that's why
I look at a lot of people, evenacross the country, washington
Post, I mean, there's a lot ofnational media covering this
story as well.
So, all right, rob, thank you,Appreciate your time.
We'll look for you a little bitlater tonight.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
Um, fox nine at five, six o'clock, okay, okay, family
, you got.
You got the the gist of that,got the gist.
Now, the reason why I playedthis and brought this up and I'm
gonna go into another story andthen we're gonna try to slide
up out of here real easy like.
But here it is.
You have people in ourcommunity, black folks, who

(29:06):
constantly tell us and this iswhy I'm up here doing what I do
you have people and me andDivine spoke about this from our
community that tell us we'rebeggars, we wait for a handout,
we're all this reparations talk.
We're beggars, we wait for ahandout with all this
reparations talk.
We're perpetual victims.
They just don't see no racismand we look for excuses, look

(29:30):
for everything.
You know.
You had that blockhead, negroOfficer Tatum the other week
talking about oh, there'sanother movie talking about
racism, talking about theSinners movie.
Right, how many more movies arewe going to have talking about
racism?
And the movie wasn't aboutracism, it was about vampires.

(29:52):
It was about a time in theSouth Jim Crow South in the
1930s.
Right, this is what the moviewas about.
The movie was based in reality,except for the vampire
situation.
That was the only fictionalthing that was in there.

(30:12):
But you know him, jason Whitlock, and a bunch of other ones.
You know a bunch of Christianchurches.
They protesting against themovie.
I haven't heard any protestsyet, but they're advocating that
people don't go see the movie.
But I don't want to get offinto that.
But what I'm saying is thisthis is why we need hate crime

(30:34):
bills to protect us, becausethat woman should be charged.
Because, do that to let me tellhad I had.
Do that to let me tell yousomething.
Do that to an asian.
Say something derogatorytowards an asian person.
Just say something derogatoryand you'll be charged with a
hate crime.
The man, the reporter, said it.

(30:55):
We have to see what kind oflegalities that are in front of
it, because what laws may havebeen broken if there's any hate
crime situations legalese wisethat may have been violated.
There is none, so she probablywon't even get charged.
Maybe if there's enoughpressure from you know, you got

(31:18):
the NAACP, they said is up there.
You know how I feel about them,but they're up there and the
community, the black communityup there, is probably putting
pressure on on city hall orwhatever the case might be, and
they, they probably may caveunder pressure and come up with
some kind of bogus little slapon the wrist thing to give her

(31:40):
or whatever Like.
Right when Jordan Neely waschoked out by Daniel Penny that
Alvin Bragg didn't even want tocharge him, they had to pull
teeth.
The community had to pull teethin order for Alvin Bragg to
even charge Daniel Penny withthat man's murder.

(32:01):
But this is what we're talkingabout.
This is what we're talkingabout.
But see, now we beggars whenwe're talking about we want
substantial hate crime bills andfederal protections against
this kind of thing.
This is a five-year-old kid.
Now she's saying that the kidwent in her son's bag.
Her son is like 18 months old.

(32:21):
Kids do things and this is aspecial needs kid.
He might be, have autism orwhatever the case might be, but
he's a special needs.
So he's doing.
He's five years old.
How much harm?
Okay, you take the bag away outof his reach.
You know it's not nice, don'tdo that.
You know, be not.
You know, whatever the casemight be, but to, to, to come

(32:44):
out and and with epithets andand and uh, racial slurs towards
a, towards a child, that could,I mean.
Isn't there any childendangerment or anything like?
Come on, come on man.
But back to these goofies all,all the bootlicks, the boot, the
boot, the boot, the bootlicksthat love to tell you ain't no

(33:06):
racism.
Everything is wrong with blackculture, it's black folks.
And see, I'm one of the onesnow.
We have problems in ourcommunity, just like anyone else
.
Let me get a bed back in here.
We have problems in thecommunity, just like anybody
else.
But I'm not going to sit uphere on this microphone or any
other platform and constantly,constantly poke fingers at and

(33:31):
shake my finger in the face ofmy people.
I'm not going to do that and Iprobably can make a lot of money
doing that because these peopleare getting money and I
probably can make a lot of moneydoing that because these people
are getting money.
The Jesse Lee Petersons and theJason Whitlocks, april Chapman
April Chapman, that other tightsuit wearing fool.

(33:52):
Vince Ellison, yelling all thetime.
You know today.
You know, you know him with hisfoolishness, but everything is
wrong with black culture.
There's some things in blackculture that we can do without.
Believe me, I know, and I willbe the first one to say it
there's.
There's plenty that we can dowithout plenty of goofiness, but

(34:14):
I'm not gonna get up here onthis microphone every single
time and put my people down likethat.
No solutions now.
No solutions, just constant putdown.
No help.
You ain't coming with no help.

(34:34):
You know you just talk abouthow bad the coach is.
You know, you just talk abouthow bad the coach is so, so, uh,
there's, there's money in that.
There's money in that you get.
You get your YouTube channeland you talk about, and you get
your black and you talk abouthow bad black coaches and it's
how much garbage it is.

(34:55):
You'll be, you'll blow up, justlike Candace Owens and the rest
of them.
You'll blow right up.
And you know how come?
I know Because I was looking ata little TikTok that they had
up there of Jesse Lee Petersonand he was talking there.
You know, white folks are sogood and the blacks they sick of
the blacks and all you know himright, go to family type in

(35:18):
Jesse Lee Peterson.
This dude is a straight bozo.
But when you look at thecomments, jesse, we love you.
Oh, you're a man of truth.
This and that I mean just goingdown the list and it's white
folks.
It's white folks and they'llsend him cash apps, they'll send
him PayPal's and they'll senddonations in because they want
to hear that.

(35:39):
They want to hear a blackperson talk bad about other
black people.
There's a huge audience forthat and you can make money
doing that.
But see, I could do that.
I could do that because there'splenty to talk about that's
undesirable in our community.
But my soul would not be ableto rest knowing that I do that

(36:04):
for some money and for notoriety.
And then every time you getaround, some white folks invite
you to a podcast or some kind ofnews outlet or something like
that and you just grinning fromear to ear, cheesing and
grinning from ear to ear.
I seen the chick, april Chapman, do that.

(36:24):
She was on one of them littlelocal channels.
I think she's from Atlanta orsomething like that.
One of them little localchannels had her or something
and she was man you should haveseen this sister man and the
disrespect was so hard becausethey was cutting her off.
They would ask her a questionand cut her right off and she's
standing there grinning becauseshe was so glad to be on that TV

(36:46):
, on that network, you know.
But back to it, family, back toit.
There's a, you know, and it'sthese bootlicks.
This is what I want to addresswhen they tell us we shouldn't
be asking for nothing, weshouldn't be demanding no

(37:07):
demands, we should do everythingourselves.
Look, I'm getting ready tobring you to another story.
Hold on just a second and thisfamily is going to raise your
eyebrows so crazy.
Hold on, this family is goingto raise your eyebrows so crazy.
Oh Lord, oh Lord, check thisout, family.

(37:30):
Let me bring this music down.

Speaker 6 (37:34):
The investigators that worked this case.
There's no doubt in my mindthey have stopped a mass
shooting that was going tohappen.
This guy was ready to go, hadall the equipment, had the
propensity to do it.
It's just a matter of what daywas going to set him off to go
do it.

Speaker 9 (37:53):
A Florida sheriff is not holding back when talking
about the arrest of this man.
Pictures show that deputiesfound 18 guns, thousands of
rounds of ammunition, policeuniforms and, allegedly, plans
to carry out mass shootings atseven locations.
Allegedly he gloated onlineabout his loadout being set for
quote war.

(38:14):
Then, on social media, heallegedly made it look like he
was a member of law enforcementas he flaunted the guns
allegedly in his possession.
But then, on top of all of that, another shocking twist in this
story Deputies say he wasallegedly in touch with a
Wisconsin teenager for monthsbefore she died carrying out a
school shooting last year.

(38:35):
We're on the case presented byLaw and Crime.
I'm Chris Stewart.
Case presented by Law and Crime.
I'm Chris.

Speaker 2 (38:39):
Stewart.
Now I want to say this family,this here, this boy, this Damien
Allen.
They thought it his plan tocarry out mass shootings, I
believe.
Where is this?
In Florida.
Yes, palm Beach County, florida,this is where this went down at

(39:04):
.
And let me tell you somethingfamily, this dude had police
paraphernalia.
I'm talking about officialpolice uniforms, riot gear.
He had a Crown Victoria withthe police kit on it, right, you

(39:31):
know, that's what they drive inthe MLR vehicles Usually in the
South and stuff like that.
They drive those CrownVictorias.
He had a Crown Victoria, had ittricked out with the police kit
.
He had a police computer in hisvehicle, official police
computer in his vehicle.

(39:54):
Uniform cuffs, the whole gamut,the whole gamut.
No stuff from Army and Navy.
You know how you go to Army andNavy and you get little things
boots and maybe a nightstick orsome kind of survival knife and
different little gear and stufflike that.
This wasn't that.
This was official policeregalia, right?

(40:20):
Family, this dude had 18 gunsin his home and he lived with
his parents.
18 guns and 300 pounds ofammunition.
You heard what I said 300pounds of ammunition.
Let's get back to the story.

(40:42):
Give me a second.
Let me cue it back in, bring itback in the cue, hold on.

Speaker 9 (40:46):
The sheriff in Palm Beach County, Florida, says his
deputies have stopped a massshooting before it happened
because they were able to arresta man they believe had stalked
several locations and had theweapons to do it.
Damian Allen is now underarrest.
Deputies say they first learnedof the 22-year-old through a
tip that came into the FBI.
Deputies raided his home inLoxahatchee, Florida, and they

(41:08):
say they found 18 guns and12,000 rounds of ammunition.
This is one of the pictures thesheriff showed at a news
conference.
On top of the weapons, deputiessay Allen allegedly had
multiple Palm Beach CountySheriff's Office uniforms, a
badge, a PVSO laptop, even thebelt and holster that deputies
use.
They say it's unclear how Allengot his hands on all of that.

(41:31):
We found Allen's Instagram pageand he has allegedly posted
multiple videos of him dressedup as a deputy, and deputies say
those videos are far more thanjust some 22 year old playing
dress up and pretend police.

Speaker 13 (41:45):
Some of the information we have on this is
that there are onlinecommunications with other
individuals who discuss carryingout mass violence, not just
here in Florida and Palm BeachCounty, but in the nation.
Allen expressed support ofradically and absolutely
motivated violent extremism andthreats of mass violence, to
include identifying severalplaces I believe it was seven
that he would like to strike.

(42:06):
This included a policedepartment and other
conversations.
People who were online were todiscuss churches, the use of
guerrilla warfare and tacticsand ambushing to carry out the
mass violence attacks.

Speaker 9 (42:18):
We went through court records for Allen and in the
probable cause affidavit we seeAllen talking on TikTok about
his alleged extremist views andviolent attacks In May of last
year.
Deputies say Allen wasallegedly talking to a user on
TikTok who they say wanted to doa quote black church, that was
near me.
But you know, allen laterreplies quote.

(42:38):
But you know, allen laterreplies quote I got a AR-500,
steel plates at level fourhelmet, ifak kits, my loadout is
set up for war.
Deputies say that user whoAllen was communicating with was
Natalie Rupnow.
That name might sound familiarto you.
She was a 15-year-old girl whokilled a teacher and student at
the Ab life christian school inmadison, wisconsin, in december

(43:02):
of last year.
She also injured six otherpeople.
Court records show that afterrupno took her life, police in
wisconsin got her phone from herpocket then traced the
conversation that she was havingwith alan in florida.

Speaker 2 (43:14):
Here's another video, allegedly of alan let's stop it
right there let's stop it rightthere and just just talk about
that.
You heard what he just said,that she did this.
This young girl, 15 years old,killed this teacher and another
student and wounded six otherpeople.
They got her phone, wentthrough her phone record, found

(43:35):
out she was conversating withthis damien, this Damien kid,
right, damien Allen Then.
But prior to that, you heardthe.
You heard the reporter say thatthe FBI got a tip.
This happened last year wherethis girl killed the teacher and

(43:57):
the other student and woundedthe six other people.
That happened last year, in2024.
Right, you knew the text wasexchanged between them.
They were talking aboutplanning attacks.
Why didn't the FBI move on that?

(44:18):
What are you talking about?
You got a tip.
You were supposed to move onthat long before.
When that incident happened inWisconsin, you were supposed to
move on him in Floridaimmediately.
This dude had 18 guns and 12,000rounds of ammunition, living

(44:44):
with his parents.
Now, the first thing I wanty'all to understand is that,
first of all, you got all ofthat police equipment.
Where did you get it from?
We know from the data that FBIhas for the Justice Department,
not the FBI.
The Justice Department has putout the information that law
enforcement throughout theUnited States has been co-opted

(45:08):
by white supremacist groups.
We know this.
This is a fact Right.
We know this.
You is a fact Right, we knowthis.
You have white supremacistgroups that are in law
enforcement throughout theUnited States, in different
police departments, in differentagencies in law enforcement.

(45:28):
You mean to tell me this kid Ithink he's 20, 21 years old he
did all of this stuff, broughtall these guns, got all this
police equipment with no help.
How do you think he got thatpolice equipment?
They recruit these boneheadsearly.

(45:48):
They recruit them, especiallythe high energy ones.
He seemed like a high energy.
They recruit them and get themturned out and tell them.
You're part of us.
Because he wanted.
He hated cops, according to thereport, he hated cops but he
dressed like a cop.
He rode in a car that lookedlike law enforcement.
He had the full uniforms, notone or two.

(46:11):
He had quite a few differentuniforms, law enforcement
uniforms.
I mean, like I said, notnothing you get out of Army and
Navy or one of these stores.
He had the official stuff.
How did he get it?
Then, you, living with yourparents and you got all of this,
these guns and all thisammunition, smoke bombs and all

(46:33):
this other stuff, all thistactical stuff, and your parents
don't know what's going on intheir home.
Do you think maybe they had ahand in help grooming them?
You mean, you never went in hisroom.
Where did he hide all thisstuff?
Because when you I'm looking atthe picture, you're hearing the
audio, but I'm looking at thevideo and it's a stockpile of

(46:55):
weapons and ammunition.
A stockpile.
How do you get that inside of ahome without it going on, you
know, with it going undetectedlike that?
If I see you, I could tell youstories right now, but I'm not.
I don't want to veer off, butit's crazy.
Your parents know they had toknow.

(47:17):
Let's go back to the story.
Let's go back to it.
Hold on.

Speaker 9 (47:21):
On his Instagram and this time you can see he's in
military fatigues and carryingwhat looks like an AR style
rifle.
Deputies also say that Allenand Rupnow allegedly established
a conspiracy to commit massshootings In June.
Allen writes quote we go downtogether.
To which Rupno replies correctand says I love you, to which
Allen replies I love you more.

(47:42):
Another key exchange was this,one from May of last year when
both Rupno and Allen weretalking about how many guns they
allegedly had.
Allen talks about how manymagazines he has, including 10
that can hold 30 rounds each,and how he also allegedly has
smoke grenades.
Rupno replies she has two ofher father's handguns.

(48:02):
Two handguns is what police inWisconsin say that teen used
when she attacked her school.
The conversation then continueswith Allen stating quote once
you get to a point there's nogoing back.
End quote I got seven places.
I would strike the policedepartment.
Also Guerrilla warfare tactics,ambushing and blitz.

(48:23):
Deputies in South Florida sayAllen spoke with the Wisconsin
school shooter from May toSeptember of last year.
Their conversations ended lessthan two months before Rupno
attacked her school.
Ended less than two monthsbefore Rupno attacked her school
.
As far as what could be themotivation for Allen allegedly
to plan a mass shooting and eventarget from what we're seeing
in those conversations a policestation when, according to

(48:43):
social media, he loved to dressup as a PBSO deputy.
We noticed on this image thatwas provided by the Palm Beach
County Sheriff, of all theweapons they say they found at
Allen's house, you can see thatthere is a swastika, as well as
what looks like a Russian flagon the sleeve of a military
shirt.
In court documents, it doesappear that Rupno harbored
racist and anti-Semitic views,and one question it seems that

(49:06):
PBSO deputies are trying toanswer right now is how did
Allen get his hands on so muchgear that PBSO deputies use?
The uniforms, the belts, theholsters?
It seems, from looking at hissocial media, he was obsessed
with law enforcement.
This is even a picture he tookof two PBSO vehicles outside of
a Walmart, and here's a pictureof that belt and holster in his

(49:28):
closet that he posted onInstagram too.
This is what the sheriff'soffice had to say.

Speaker 13 (49:44):
He posted several videos of him wearing a full
PBSO uniform which is verysimilar to what myself.
This is what the sheriff'soffice had to say version, but
he had two or three of thoseuniforms which at that time were
still looked at how those wereobtained.
He had a gun belt, a taser, aradio and other police equipment
included a fake body cam video.
To make it more realistic, heshowed himself operating a

(50:07):
vehicle that resembled a lawenforcement car I believe it was
a Crown Vic, if I'm notmistaken and he added a police
package, a laptop stand and apolice computer in there and it
was operational and he wouldtake videos of him standing it
and sitting in it.

Speaker 9 (50:22):
There's also the question of how this 22 year old
was able to afford so much gear, so many weapons.
Deputies say they're stilllooking into that and it's
unclear if he legally owned allthe weapons they say was in his
possession.
Deputies say he was living withhis family.
The FBI is also involved inthis investigation and deputies
say there could be federalcharges.
Currently, allen is facingcharges of written or electronic

(50:45):
threat of a mass shooting orterrorist act, using a two-way
communication device tofacilitate a felony and
illegally impersonating a policeofficer.
He's currently being held inthe Palm Beach County Jail.
The longtime sheriff in PalmBeach County did not hold back
when talking about this case.
This is disturbing thatsomebody can get these type of
items off the internet.

Speaker 6 (51:10):
It baffles me, to be honest with you, but this is a
dangerous, dangerous individual.
Can you imagine the damage hewould have done with 12,000
rounds of ammunition and fullyautomatic ARs?
Unquestionably, this is one ofthe best arrests that I've seen
in a long time.

(51:31):
That has prevented people fromdying, because I guarantee you
he was going to do that.

Speaker 2 (51:37):
What he means by that family, what that officer, the
deputy in the press conference,is talking about, the reason why
is a good stop, because he wasplanning on killing some police
too.
They were planning on going toa police station to kill some
law enforcement probably theguys that's not on the team.
This kid didn't get this stuffon his own.

(52:01):
Where did he get the money tobuy all of that, that firepower
like that?
You think he's not beingbankrolled?
You think he had no assistancein this?
Damn me, let's think.
Now.
Let's think the reason why I'mdigging into this story for all
the goofies, all the bootlicksand coons out there that love to

(52:26):
tell us we harp on racism toomuch.
Ain't no more racism, Tim Scott, Byron, Donald and all you
bootlicks on the right and left,the bootlicks on the left too,
but them bootlicks on the right,Love to tell you I just don't
see racism like that.
I just don't see it.
Everybody's playing perpetualvictims.

(52:48):
You know, when they talkinglike that, they cooning, they
bootlicking hard Body.
They bootlicking man.
They're cooning, they'rebootlicking hard Body.
They're bootlicking man.
They got brown sauce all overtheir tongue man.
They got their mouths plasteredon white behind.
Let's get back to it.
Hold on.
Social media that someone whosaw something finally said

(53:10):
something.

Speaker 9 (53:12):
On the part about the uniform, because if you go to
an Army surplus store, army-navysurplus store, you can find a
lot of different.
You know, if you want to buyfatigues from someone who was in
the Army, like that's availableto you, but when it comes to
the uniform of a member of lawenforcement, that is not
something that someone should beable to buy unless you're a
deputy.
Within this, you're watchingthe Wildest Hour News.

(53:33):
That makes you healthy.

Speaker 2 (53:36):
That backs up what I said.
We don't even need to go anyfurther.
We don't need to go any further.
Family.
That's the point.
That's why I get up here and dowhat I do.
That's why I get up here and dowhat I do.
But let's get back to it.
We're going to skip around toit because we got to get out of
here.
We've been up here long enoughnow deputy.

Speaker 5 (53:52):
He's wearing uniform, he's inside what looks like a
cop car, he's using what lookslike a cop laptop, and yet he
hates police, he hates lawenforcement.
He wants to kill as many as hecan.
This was a guy who apparentlywanted a mass shooting, and so
there are a lot of unansweredquestions.
Obviously there are mentalhealth issues, but that won't
save him.

Speaker 2 (54:11):
Here he he heard it, you heard it mental health
issues.
He, he had some problems as achild.
You know he didn't.
He didn't get hugs from his dadregularly.
You know they already startwith that soft shoe stuff.
They already start with that.
But you understand family, youunderstand.

(54:32):
And let me play something realquick from my man, my main man,
godfrey.
I like godfrey, great comedian,hold on, let me.
Let me see, can I get the cuethat up in here?

Speaker 4 (54:43):
hold on, hold on so I saw the movie sinners and I
left with a smile.
I really did, but I'll talkabout that on another video.
I just want to to counteractwhat Jason Whitlock said.
Jason Whitlock is no strangerto criticism from us.
It's okay to not like the movie.
I know some friends that saw itsaid I liked it.

(55:05):
I liked the way it was shot.
But I'm not really into horrorand stuff like that.
That's cool.
You don't have to like it,that's fine.
This is what art is about.
What Jasonason went like I feltas if he went to the movies
just to shit on it because itgot all this hype.
It's doing very well killing inthe box office.
In the original script, ryancoogler has an amazing deal that

(55:27):
I think only tarantino has, andnow he has it.
He owns a lot of property.
It's such a wonderful thing.
Him and Michael B Jordantogether are just this dynamic
force and I think he went therejust to shit on it Because he
said this was nakedly racist.
I found this movie.
Sinners to be the most nakedlyracist movie that I've ever seen

(55:54):
.
First of all, what the fuckdoes that mean Nakedly?
Is it openly racist?
How was it racist?
Though there were peoplepicking cotton in this movie,
it's the South.
Black people are living inshacks.
It's poverty right, it's stillracism.
It's Klan symbolism.

(56:14):
It's Jim Crow.
It's lynching, it's.
Where is the racist part?
This is really myopic shit, bro.
You are a pro-hater, bro.
You really are, because youliterally what the fuck were you
watching when you saw blackpeople being racist?
I don't understand.
I think they pay you.

(56:35):
Is there a coon track, not acontract?
Is there a coon track that youhave?
There's a lot of you out there.
There's a lot of you blackpeople that literally I swear
you're paid by somebody of ahigher power Sends you niggas
out there to fuck black progressup, like they did the Black

(56:58):
Panthers, like that fucking coonthat infiltrated the Black
Panthers and got Fred Hamptonkilled.
Like the people that fucked upSNCC with Stokely Carmichael all
the different groups that blackpeople try to do to progress.
Even the gangs were firststarted off as things to help
the black community.
Well, infiltrators, blackpeople that acted as gang

(57:19):
members, came in and fuckedthings up too to start fights
amongst people like with thisibrahim triore from burkina faso
, who's doing such a wonderfuljob.
There's other leaders from fromsenegal and and mali that are
kicking out the French.
You know they're trying to sendsome other kind of traitors to

(57:39):
come in like that.
What is it, the General Langleywho had the nerve to call
Triori a corruptor?
Another coon, yeah, a five-starcoon.
He ain't no general, you ageneral handkerchief, head-ass,
nigga.
To me there's got to be a combgene.
There has to be a comb gene.
Why do you hate black freedom?

(58:00):
Why do you hate black progressand positivity?
Why do you hate it?
It has to be a brain disease.

Speaker 2 (58:09):
That said, family, that said we're going to blow
out of here we're going to blow.
And as always, as always, it'sbeen a pleasure for me to get up
here on the mic and spit alittle bit and talk to you and
talk to the family.
Godfrey said it mount fort.
We got a bunch of them and thisis why the delineation is so
important, family, thedelineation is so important and

(58:35):
uh, yeah, but we ain't gonnagive up.
We're gonna keep doing what wedo here.
Right, peace, gone, gone, gone.

(58:59):
Gone, gone, Gone, gone, gone.
Baby, thank you, give it, giveit, give it, give it, give it,

(59:23):
give it, give it, give it, giveit, give it, give it, give it,
give it, give it, give it, giveit, give it, give it, give it,
give it, give it, give it, giveit.

Speaker 4 (59:33):
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it.
Give it, give it, give it.
Give got got to give it.

Speaker 8 (59:58):
But I want it like a sex machine.
Give it back.
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