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December 5, 2025 96 mins

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Start with the strongest claim: if the facts are airtight, the timeline should be too. We take you inside a charged breakdown of the newly announced arrest tied to the January 6 pipe bomb case and sort what’s known from what’s assumed. From early media framing to neighbor accounts and OSINT breadcrumbs, we wrestle with receipts that seem suggestive but not conclusive, the absence of verified planting footage, and the oddities surrounding timers that supposedly remained “viable” long past their limits.

That leads to bigger questions about process and trust. We examine the prosecutors’ track records in prior January 6 cases, the ethics concerns raised around discovery and attorney-client communications, and why a “lone wolf” narrative can feel convenient when evidence gaps persist. You’ll hear a grounded discussion of jury selection mechanics, false confession risks among neurodivergent defendants, and how narratives harden before facts are fully tested. It’s not cynicism—it’s a call for transparent, timestamped, verifiable proof.

We also zoom out. National controversies don’t cancel local agency. If skepticism about institutions is rising, that’s exactly when city councils, school boards, and county committees matter more. One person in the room often counts for thousands who stayed home. We share practical ways to channel frustration into presence, scrutiny, and better questions: request the data, ask for the chain of custody, push for the footage, and keep attention on process over spin.

If this arrest is solid, show the public the connective tissue—clear timelines, corroborating video, validated cell data, and a careful gait analysis. If there were other actors, lay out the links. Until then, we stay disciplined: engaged, skeptical, and focused on evidence rather than headlines. Subscribe, share with a friend who follows January 6 coverage closely, and tell us—what single piece of proof would change your mind?

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_18 (00:41):
Peasants, man.
We're just peasants.
Every one of us.
You watch those old movies, yousee the peasants in the
background with the kings andkings walking around.
We're those people.
We're those people.
Good morning, peasants.
Welcome to another episode ofThe Peasants Perspective.
Is the sound better if I get itreally close to my face?

(01:02):
Yeah.
Less echoey.
Yeah.
Reverb.
Alright, well, try.
I can only do what I can do.
Alright.
So yesterday was like a crappyday.
Kinda.
I was not impressed by the newsconference that they did for the
J6 pipe bomber.
Not impressed by that at all.

(01:22):
That was a big fat.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
We found them.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We all work together.
We're such a great team.
Don't ever take any of our poweraway.
We're great.
We all we finally redirected allthis great power you've given
us.

SPEAKER_20 (01:34):
Thank you for the summary, Taylor.
I missed it.
It was horrible.

SPEAKER_18 (01:38):
It was like now they just arrested the guy.
He gets a rain today.
So today's when they like readout the charges.
We do know the charges, butthey'll like read them and kind
of just you know, they'll readthrough the the complaint form.
Um I'm not impressed, man.
So we'll we'll talk about it aswe get into the show.
Um I'm not saying that he's notinvolved in the pipe bomb.

(02:00):
I'm not saying he's not the pipebomber.
I'm just saying really likereally.
I mean, it's barely convincing.
What do we have going on over inthe chats?
Get people rolling in.

SPEAKER_20 (02:14):
Oh.

SPEAKER_18 (02:15):
There we go.
Good morning, Jonathan,Ferrazier.
Nice day in Boy C.
Tony Boy, good morning, Carlitz.
Hey, good morning, y'all.
Welcome, everybody.
Okay, so let's uh go over acouple things here.
Uh I think it was Tuesday.
Donald Trump had a cabinetmeeting.
Yeah, it's either Tuesday orWednesday.
Yeah, big cabinet meeting.
Anyways, he said this at the endof the cabinet meeting as he was

(02:37):
being asked about Ilon Omar andthe Somalis, and you know, he
got a little bit of a uh asclose to a standing ovation as
you can get in the White House.

SPEAKER_15 (02:44):
And they contribute nothing.
The welfare's like 88%.
Sir Sings! Welcome, Sarah.
They contribute nothing.
I don't want them in ourcountry, I'll be honest with
you.
Okay.
Somebody would say, oh, that'snot politically correct.
I don't care.
I don't want them in ourcountry.
Their country's no good for areason.
Their country stinks.

(03:05):
And we don't want them in ourcountry.
I could say that about othercountries too.
I can say it about othercountries too.
We don't want them to hell.
We gotta we have to rebuild ourcountry.
You know, our country's at atipping point.
We could go bad.
We're at a tipping point.
People mind me saying that, butI'm saying it.
Uh we could go one way or theother.

(03:27):
And we're gonna go the wrong wayif we keep taking in garbage
into our country.
Elon Omar is garbage.
She's garbage.
Her friends are garbage.
These aren't people that work,these aren't people that say,
let's go, come on, let's makethis place great.
These are people that do nothingbut complain.
They complain.
And from where they came from,they got nothing.

(03:50):
You know, they came fromparadise and they said this
isn't paradise.
But when they come from hell andthey complain and do nothing but
bitch, we don't want them in ourcountry.
Let them go back to where theycame from and fix it.

SPEAKER_25 (04:09):
Thank you.

SPEAKER_18 (04:17):
He's like, let's get them out of here.
I I there I mean, you'd have togo back to like pre-Civil War to
hear a president talk like that.
I mean, they're garbage.
Biden called Trump supportersgarbage.
Trump calls Somalians garbage.
It's pretty interesting.
They man, I'll tell you what, ifyou're not involved politically,

(04:39):
if you're not dedicated to votein the midterms, you need to get
your head straight because ifTrump gets impeached or
whatever, life is gonna getreally hard for a lot of
Americans.

SPEAKER_20 (04:49):
It'll be East Berlin.
It's the whole country.
It's gonna be bad.

SPEAKER_18 (04:53):
It's gonna be bad.
Um, yesterday they brought inoh, so before I get to this,
this is really funny.
So uh Frey, do you know whoMayor Frey is?
Jacob Frey in Minnesota.
So he's the mayor ofMinneapolis, and uh he's one of
these guys during 2020.
You know, he totally just bentthe knee big time.
So obviously, you know, Trump'sgot this little campaign against

(05:15):
the Somalies.
And so yesterday, this is avideo of him going to a Somalian
restaurant eating food.
Look at his face.
This is like a Gavin Newsompiece.
This guy's holding on for dearlife.
This food is not good.
Look at him.

SPEAKER_19 (05:28):
Oh, yeah, I love it.

SPEAKER_17 (05:30):
That's really good.

SPEAKER_11 (05:32):
Oh, the mall beans, garbage beans, man.

SPEAKER_18 (05:37):
And look, they're at like some nice restaurants where
the cool guys all happy.
They're eating in paper bowls.

SPEAKER_31 (05:44):
Yeah, I don't need paper.

SPEAKER_18 (05:45):
Uh don't worry, it's $29.99 a plate right there.
That Somali restaurant.

SPEAKER_17 (05:49):
Anyways, Jacob Fry holding on for dear life.
Yeah.
So no more.
No, I don't, no, I don't want totake any from your family.

SPEAKER_18 (06:00):
Like, I don't want any more food.
We used to do that in Brazil,right?
Like if the food wasn't good.
Yeah.
In Brazil, when you what so Iwent there on a mission, right?
For people that don't know.
And you eat in people's houses.
And they tell you, you know,these people are really poor.
So, like, you know, if theyoffer you food, decide if you
really should accept it.
And if you do, don't overeat.
Because a lot of times that'syou know, they're gonna eat

(06:22):
what's left over.
And I did see that many, manytimes we would come in to eat,
and the family would literallysit there and watch us two
missionaries eat, and we'd belike, Oh, they're gonna eat when
we leave what's left.
Like, they're gonna let us eatas much as we want and just eat
what's left over.
So, you know, you take a realsmall portion and the whole
thing.

SPEAKER_20 (06:38):
We figured it out pretty quick.

SPEAKER_18 (06:39):
That's what that reminded me, you know.
And the excuse was, oh no, wewant to leave some for you guys.
That's why I was laughing.
I did I knew the joke.
This liver's not very good, youknow.
Yeah, we want to leave all ofthis for your kids, you know.
Grand jury declines to indictNew York General Letitia Jarn uh
Letitia James less than twoweeks after the first case was
dismissed.
So, as you guys know, LetitiaJames and James Comey were both

(07:01):
indicted, and then the case wasdismissed on essentially a
technicality based on LindsayHalligan's appointment.
So they brought in a prosecutorfrom Missouri, put him in front
of a grand jury, and he failedto get an indictment for Letitia
James.
So they're going to try again.
They've got kind of like a thirdchance, third bite at the apple
on this thing, so they willproceed.
But when I saw this, I was like,are you freaking kidding me?

(07:24):
Like this is prima fossamortgage fraud.
It to me, it doesn't seem likeit would be that hard, which
does call into question, youknow, how uh how rigged are
these grand juries?
I mean, juries can be rigged.
They use something called thewheel.
A lot of people don't know aboutthis, but the wheel is It sounds
like it was developed in the1700s.
No, the the wheel is basically,you know, I don't know how it

(07:47):
started, but the idea is that'sthis is how you get your jury
pool, right?
You've got a rotating uh, youknow, pool of people and you
just draw these random names.
Well, this program that wascreated, and I'm not sure if
it's tied in with Palantir ornot, but it was basically it's
an electronic jury selectionpool.
So it's this is what sends outthe letters, but allegedly it
already has you know perusedyour social media and kind of

(08:10):
has your profile, your your youknow, your profile using AI.
And so it knows like, oh, weneed 12 liberal jurors, so let's
put a pool of 48 in the jurypool, and then they can pick 12,
doesn't matter which 12 we get,right?
Right, because you've got you'vebasically put selected.
I will say this now the Districtof Columbia is very liberal,
it's like votes 90% plusdemocratic, but you know, there

(08:30):
wasn't a single juror out of the48 or so that were interviewed
that I sat in front of thatwatched Fox News, you know, the
largest cable news network inthe world.
Nobody watched it, nobody hadany idea.
You know, it was like it waskind of interesting.
Um, I did get picked up inNewsweek yesterday.
So, you know, they mentioned mein this article.

(08:51):
Capital rioters react to BrianCole arrest on the January 6th
pipe bomb.
So this article just goesthrough, and the only
significant part about thisarticle is it quoted me and a
couple of my friends.
It quoted my friend Dominic Boxfrom Savannah, Georgia, who was
convicted for participating inthe riot, wrote that the subject
subject was, quote, justarrested using old evidence
gathered under the Biden admin.
He questioned whether Cole is asupporter of President Trump,

(09:13):
though more details about Cole'smotives have not been made
public.
Stating that Brian Cold wasarrested in connection with the
J6 pipe bomber investigation isnot the same as saying he is the
pipe bomber, he wrote.
Words matter, and this wholestory is about to get more
interesting.
Then it goes on to quote me, andit says, another January 6th
defendant, John Strand, wrote,oh, quoted him first, X breaking
the FBI has arrested a malesubject in the J6 pipe bomber.

(09:35):
Is the Feds direction finallyunraveling?
And Taylor John Attakis, aWashington state man who was
sentenced later and pardoned forthe riot, wrote on X, It is all
way too suspicious.
I have a hard time believinganything about J6.
The truth might be too much toreveal.
Right out of Newsmax.
So that's probably the fifth orsixth time I've been featured in
Newsmax.
So apparently they are trackingmy Twitter.

(09:57):
And this morning when I got in,my computer froze up and told me
that my IP address had been usedto visit websites and I had to
reset my computer.
I assume it was just a virustrying to get me to buy
antivirus software.
I took a video of it because Iwas like, man, I hate it when
things in my life get weird.
So Me too.
Um if people remember back to2022, 2021, 2022, this is uh

(10:22):
Madi Hassan, and he's on hisMSNBC at the time show.
Now it's MS Now, um, and he istalking about the pipe bomber.
Why hasn't the pipe bomber beenfound?
And they just make a broadassumption about the pipe
bomber's identity.

SPEAKER_07 (10:37):
Jelani, you're a black man.
I'm a Muslim.
When you consider how blackcriminals and Muslim terrorists
are treated, both by the legalsystem and by the media.
And yet the January 6th pipebomber who laid explosives in
front of the RNC and DNCheadquarters still walks free.
We just learned today that thenVice President Alect Harris was
inside the DNC when the bomb wasfound there.

(10:59):
We still don't take domesticterrorism of the far-right white
variety seriously in thiscountry, do we?

SPEAKER_23 (11:06):
No, we don't.
We've seen this since the Obamaadministration, uh, where they
pointed out that there was thisrise of white nationalist
terror, and that and and thatwas uh promptly squashed uh and
and jumped upon by theRepublicans in Congress.
And so uh great cries of outragein response to that.
And this has been what we'veseen since then.

(11:27):
Uh nowhere near the level ofalarm that we've had uh around
the uh what was the phrase theyused, Islamic terror that they
weren't trying to make uh BarackObama say all the time.

SPEAKER_18 (11:36):
Are you kidding me?
There's not as much outragearound Islamic terror as there
was J6.
Um, we didn't arrest 1500 islike I'm sorry, no, no, that's
not what happened.
They came after us hard.
And the idea that, oh, the onlyreason they haven't found the
pipe bomber is because he'sblack.
Well, I got news for you.
But before I get there, DickleRick Dickle Rick 005, on my way

(12:01):
to school, Washington State.
Figured I'll drop in for thedrive.
Good morning, y'all.
Welcome.
I'm so glad you joined us.
Nickel Rick.
005.
All right, Jake Tapper.
After news broke yesterday thatthey had the suspect of the pipe
bombs in custody.
And here we have the firstpicture that we got of the pipe
bomber right here.
This is what he had to say.

SPEAKER_06 (12:20):
Capital attack.
Brian Cole Jr., a 30-year-oldwhite man from the DC suburbs,
is charged with transporting anexcuse me.

SPEAKER_18 (12:31):
Excuse me.
What?
Excuse me.
Okay, a big hint as to why wenever found out who this person
was and he wasn't arrested mightbe because he didn't fit the
script.
They probably wrote this scriptin 2021.

SPEAKER_06 (12:44):
A white man found Nope, turns out it's a black
guy.
Explosive device in interstatecommerce and with malicious
destruction by means ofexplosions.
CNN observed local and federallaw enforcement outside his home
in Woodbridge, Virginia thismorning.

SPEAKER_18 (12:57):
And you didn't notice that he was black, and
that all of his family wasblack?

SPEAKER_20 (13:03):
I can't see color, Taylor.
I can't see the color.

SPEAKER_18 (13:07):
All right.
So then we go on here.
So this is on CNN, and ofcourse, they're just having a
fit.
They're like, well, Donald Trumpwould have pardoned this person
anyways.
Why are they wasting resources?

SPEAKER_22 (13:15):
I do wonder if he had been actually caught around
the time of January 6th andprosecuted.
Would he have been included within Trump's pardons?

SPEAKER_24 (13:23):
I mean, okay, this is absolutely beyond the pale to
me, to be honest, to claim thatwe don't know any sort of
inkling of a motive of thisindividual when just a few
months prior there was a lawsuitruled in the Trump
administration's favor againstthis particular individual.

SPEAKER_18 (13:37):
Oh, yeah, there's that too.
He sued the Trump administrationjust prior and lost.

SPEAKER_24 (13:43):
His company seeking to let illegal immigrants out of
prison on bail bodies.
He purchased the supplies injust a lot of people.

SPEAKER_22 (13:50):
Just to clarify, very clearly what we're saying
is that on that podium there,you're suggesting that he's tied
to January 6th insurrectionisttheoretically because we are
saying that Cash Patel and PamBondi did not provide a motive.
And so you can speculate all youwant, but the authorities who

(14:12):
are charging this guy haven'tlaid out.
I have news for you.

SPEAKER_18 (14:15):
Motive doesn't matter when you drop off a pipe
bomb.

SPEAKER_20 (14:19):
Pretty much.

SPEAKER_18 (14:19):
Some crimes, motives matter.
Did you know it was a crime?
You know, some crimes, those areprocess crimes.
When you drop off a pipe bomb,it's just assumed if you
graduated from third grade, youknow better.
Okay?
It's just assumed.
Motive actually doesn't matterhere.

SPEAKER_22 (14:34):
It's did you do it or not?
No, I'm not suggesting that hewas tied to stop the steal, but
I'm not sure why you're notgoing to be able to do that.

SPEAKER_24 (14:43):
Had he been discovered right after January
6th, would they have beenincluded in the individuals who
persecuted the city?

SPEAKER_22 (14:49):
So it's called the hypothetical.
Had he been prosecuted alongsideall of those other people who
were involved in violent acts onJanuary 6th, would Donald Trump
have pardoned him?

SPEAKER_24 (14:58):
No, because individuals who were in the
Capitol building on January 6thwere not planting pipe bombs.
What about the DNC and the otherthing?
But again, it's rich to me thatnow police are saying we have no
idea.

SPEAKER_18 (15:12):
Well, they used the American flag to beat police
officers because they hadunderstaffed themselves by
responding to a bogus pipe bomb,and they kind of let the crowd
get out of control.
And by the way, yes, there wereprovocateurs in the crowd.
So the there was a little deepdive into the identity of the
pipe bomber by Travis Hawley.
So this is a Twitter thread.

(15:32):
And uh we're just gonna scrollthrough it real quick.
The FBI has arrested Brian Coleof Woodbridge, Virginia, for the
pipe bomb incident that tookplace on the eve of January 6,
2021.
So allegedly he posted it on2020.
So all of this stuff is OSINT.
So here's some pictures of theman.
The suspect arrested on January6th.
Pipe bomber is Brian Cole Jr.
of Woodbridge.
He would have been 25 or 26 atthe time, 25 at the time of

(15:55):
January 6th.
Now he's 30 years old.
So here's some more pictures ofhim.
Hi, Deborah.
Kids are grown and working.
Britney's 28, Brian is 24, blah,blah, blah.
Uh, me and my grandsons.
So nice little family.
Very, I mean, I know, I knowthey look white, but I don't
think they are.
CNN.
I you might want to check uhreal quick.
So he goes through, he'sidentified some different email

(16:17):
addresses that he's used, um,different locations, which by
the way, uh, protect your stuff.
These are all his dad'spasswords or all his passwords.
Patriism for USA, Brawny OneDelta, Patrios for USA,
Forgotten One Delta, Delton OneForgotten, Brawny Delta,
America, America one.
So I think these are his dad'spasswords, possibly.

(16:38):
Um, but Brian, Brian himself hadthis I am I am hot for cock,
appears to be his usernameassociated to his email, and uh
Cole Brian, blah blah blah atGmail, involved in the 2016
hacking of the adultfriendfinder website and sex
swingers hookup site.
So here's his here's his uhhookup.
Uh looks like he was playingvideo games kind of in this

(17:01):
little furry Gaia onlineaccount.
So, you know, he's another bigtime gamer.
And uh apparently his IB uh Iwas able to acquire five older
IP addresses associated with histwo email addresses, which
included locations inWashington, D.C., Glenmont,
Maryland, and China and Canada.
I don't know about that.
Um Brian Cole was looking forpen pals before 2015, so you

(17:24):
know, a loner, as they weregonna find out, they've said
avid gamer.
Um more games, more games.
Uh his mom is a you know, soundslike a pretty reckless person.
DUIs, drug possession, drivingunsuspended, no driver's
license, kind of just a longhistory of known by the locals.
Uh huh.
Known by the locals.
Known by the locals, yes.

(17:44):
Now, dad, who's a Bell Bondsman,felon, uh possession of
controlled substance, possessionof manufacture and distribute
schedule one and two,manufacturing controlled stuff
substance, prisoner possessionof unlawful uh chemicals, which
means when he was in prison, hegot caught with drugs in there
as well, and felony marijuanadistribution, um, disorderly
conduct, and then some trafficviolations.

(18:05):
And here's uh Brian Cole.
So this is his brother, MarcusCole.
Excuse me, that's his brotherwith the felony charges.
His father, um, basically somedriving violations and you know,
tinted windows.
You know, we call these blackcrimes.
It's pretty normal.
So I guess that he just couldn'thelp it because he was
surrounded by badness.
I don't know.
Now, his dad has registered allthese bell bonds addresses and

(18:28):
more stuff here.
Um, but you know, sometimes thisstuff seems kind of boring, but
you do get a little bit ofrevelatory stuff.
Basically, it goes to supportwhat the New York Post posted
about, and Brian Cole Jr.
of Virginia identified as DCpipe suspect sources.
Now, now's where we're gonna getinto it being really
interesting.
Okay.

(18:50):
I don't feel good about thisparticular indictment.
I didn't feel any sense ofrelief yesterday or like we were
one inch closer to solving thisbig mystery.
Okay, didn't feel good about itat all.
Here's what uh New York Post asthey went out and reached out to
family and neighbors had to say.
The man accused of planting thepipe bombs outside the
Republican and Democraticnational committees before

(19:11):
January 6th riot is aChihuahua-obsessed,
crocs-loving, autistic-like30-year-old who lives with his
parents' families and neighborstold the Post.
Brian Cole was known as arecluse in his Virginia
neighborhood, about 20 milesoutside Virginia Washington,
where he was regularly seenwalking his pocket-sized pup
from the to and from the local7-Eleven.
He would wear shorts all winterlong, no matter how cold it was,

(19:33):
and he would be outside inshorts walking.
He would wear red Crocs, onelongtime neighbor recalled.
Uh, he would always comment,like, How is he in shorts?
It's 20 degrees out in his redCrocs, walking his dog all
winter long, the local added.
We knew all we all knew him asthe guy that walked the
Chihuahua.
Cole was arrested by the FBI.
The viable explosive deviceswere discovered the next day as

(19:55):
an unruly crowd of Trumpsupporters, uh, footage from the
Pride Bomb, blah, blah, blah.
Then he goes, some sources,unknown sources, told the post
that investigators were lookinginto his possible connection
with some form of anarchistwritings.
Read anarchist is probablyAntifa.
Leanings, though specifics werenot immediately known, but the
family and some neighbors areconvinced the FBI has the wrong

(20:15):
man.
I don't believe this at all,said Cole's distraught grandma,
Loretta.
He's not a terrorist.
Man, it's funny.
My wife said the same thing.
And my mom, too.
He's almost autistic likebecause he doesn't understand a
lot of stuff.
I hope he's not talking, sheadded.
She said that he works at theirfamily Bell Bonds company, Brian

(20:36):
Cole Bell Bonds, which wasraided by the FBI.
Cole's mother is also a lovingreal estate agent, and he has a
brother and a sister.
He's very naive.
He would not hurt a fly.
He's just not that kind ofperson, Loretta insisted.
Neighbors on his WoodbridgeStreet agree with numerous
speculating that Cole was on thespectrum and recounting that he
always kept himself when he wasdoing the rounds with his
beloved Chihuahua.

(20:57):
He doesn't talk.
He doesn't talk to anybody, oneneighbor said.
He's very antisocial.
He keeps to himself, they added.
Very introverted, very, veryintroverted.
Almost like a lone wolf.
Several neighbors also felt thatthe stature of Cole, this is
where it gets reallyinteresting, and the suspects
seen planting the bombs didn'tline up at all.
The guy that I know that walksthe dog is pretty short and has

(21:19):
real short legs, like uncommonlyshort legs, a neighbor said.
Get ready to laugh, Ron.
I would think that a gateanalysis would be pretty easy to
either rule him out or confirmit because his legs are, I would
say, uncommonly short.
If I was Brian Cole's defenseattorney this morning, I'd be on

(21:40):
the phone with Blaze Media beinglike, get me the gate analysis.
Okay.
Because what they got this guyon is literally driving to seven
Home Depots and buying variousparts that could be put together
to be a pipe bomb.
That's what they have.

SPEAKER_20 (21:54):
Okay.

SPEAKER_18 (21:55):
They have receipts that this guy bought end caps
for pipes and wires and clipsand uh egg timer over the course
of like seven months.
That's why it was so hard totrack him down because you know,
they didn't just have one HomeDepot that had all the supplies
bought at one time.
It was bought over time.
This must have been planned out.

SPEAKER_20 (22:13):
Yeah, super planner.

SPEAKER_18 (22:15):
I would think that again, uh, someone said that if
he is the man, they they areglad to see he's no longer
living next door if he wasbuilding bombs.
Cole's grandma matter, however,is adamant that her grandson is
innocent.
He's just a gentle person, shesaid, explaining that he leaves
the house for a little more thangroceries and has no idea why he
would be in DC on January 5th.
I don't know.
He was doing DoorDash for awhile, she said.
He doesn't have any ties to DC.

(22:36):
I don't even know how theyincluded him in this.
This guy evaded capture for fiveyears.
Now, as a Bell Bondsman, I thinkit's his dad.
There's a little confusion herebecause he and his dad have the
same name.
But on the LinkedIn, this issome of his skills: skip
tracing, fraud, privateinvestigation, security
management, physical security,surveillance, surety bonds,
criminal law, background checks,investigation.

(22:56):
Let's see, asset protection,evidence, forensic analysis,
access control, investigativereporting, uh, litigation
support, personal protection,risk management.
Sounds like this guy actuallymight know a little bit.
If you know how to findsomebody, you can kind of
reverse engineer how not to befound, right?
So there's a possibility beingin the bail bonds business, this
family is, you know, kind ofaware of how to disappear,

(23:20):
evade.
Hey, if you're gonna build apipe bomb, don't buy everything
in one spot.
It's like, hmm, yep, that'strue.
You probably if you thought itthrough, you'd probably think
that.
Um, could could express intent.
It could also just be dude wasbuying plumbing supplies.
I don't know.
I've bought all the materials tomake pipe bombs 10 times over.
But of course, I was in theseptic business.
So, you know, buying a couplepipes here and there wasn't a

(23:42):
big deal for me.
Uh, maybe the uh uh thealligator clamps for the the
whatever, you know, my eggtimer.
Yes, Taylor shouldn't be buyingegg timers.
Um, it was disc it wasestimated.
This comes from Kyle Serifin,who just kind of posted this as
a hilarious thing.
False confessions of people withautism.
It was estimated in 2012 by theU.S.

(24:03):
Department of Justice that 30%of prisoners has a form of
cognitive disability.
I absolutely agree with that.
100% agree that a mass masspercentage of our prison
population has a mental errorthat does not allow them to see
cause and effect.
I believe that wholeheartedly.
I saw it in person.
Some people literally cannot seethe second domino falling when

(24:24):
they push the first one over.
It's like, dude, you startedthis.
You know what I mean?
Like, no, I didn't.
It's like, no, you started it.
You walked in my room yelling,and now you're reacting as to
why there's a you know, allright.
It has been so it goes on here.
Autism was included within thelist of cognitive disabilities.

(24:44):
However, there were no data thatspecifically indicated how many
people within the autismspectrum are in prison system.
It has been proven that peoplewith autism are known to give
false confessions, and that iflaw enforcement agencies should
be trained on how to question aperson with autism spectrum
disorder.
Interesting.
So it kind of leads to uh okay,so let's look at this.

(25:06):
So here's a picture of him, youknow, some high school picture,
whatever.
Look at the legs.
Whoa.
Look at the legs.
Okay, so this does haveabnormally short legs, but I'm
just not feeling it.
You know what I mean?
I'm just not feeling like itjust don't feel good to me.
You know what I'm saying?
Like when I see, you know,little Tyrannosaurus Rex here
with the short legs, I'm justnot feeling I just doesn't I

(25:29):
don't know, man.
Like you said, you look at thisand immediately said, Oh, it's a
woman.

SPEAKER_20 (25:32):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_18 (25:33):
Also, those shoes look a little big, you know.
Crocs, man.
I guess we'll find out.
Uh again.
Having been through thisprocess, I don't trust the
prosecution.
I'm sorry.
I don't care if Cash Patel andPam Pondi are behind it.
This is a struggle that themoment your name shows up in the
media, the moment you see thecriminal complaint against you,

(25:54):
and you see it's like even if Ifeel like I'm pretty decent and
looking in the mirror and going,am I responsible for something?
Like, what's what what do I haveto change before I can
self-reflection?
I think I'm like that.
I hope that I'm like that.
The people in my life may or maynot think that.
I hope that's my uh attitudehere.
So when I'm looking at theindictment, I'm like, I didn't

(26:16):
do some of these things.
I mean, some of these things,yeah, I went to DC, yes, I did,
you know, but this, no, this,no, this no.
Where how did you contrive that?
Right?
And then and then I also knowthey didn't interview the people
I flew with, they didn'tinterview the people I traveled
with, arranged travel with, theydidn't interview any character
witness, they didn't care.
So I'm looking at this and I'mlike, hmm, this is interesting.

(26:40):
Anarchist feelings, okay?
Uh a loner, uh, doesn't talk toanybody, uh personal motivation,
sued the Trump administration.
Are we going with a lone wolfscenario here?
Is this another one of our hugeevents that happen in our
history that it's just somerandom dude that just decides to
shoot JFK?

(27:00):
Some random guy decides to shootMartin Luther King, some random
guy decides to shoot DonaldTrump, right?
And then here we go, it's like,so you've had this information
for five years.
Christopher Ray says, Oh, it'stoo we can't find him.
Dude, you identified people withlike earlobes and stuff.
You've got cell phone, like youknew where this guy was.
You are telling us that he washolding his cell phone.

SPEAKER_20 (27:21):
I think they found that Manioni guy by his eyebrows
at McDonald's.

SPEAKER_18 (27:25):
Right.
Okay.
So uh Daniel and Legacy Mediaequals Make America United
again.
I don't know.
He says, we arrest a Patsy justlong enough for Shawnee to sue
Steve.
Shawnee Kirkoff is the CapitolHill police officer that has a
gate match to sue to this youngblack man with short legs, has a
gate match, uh, to sue Steve.
Then we let the lawsuit becomebigger than the story.

(27:47):
Then nobody ever invoked CapitolPolice again.
Then it's forgotten, and thePatsy is quietly exonerated.
We closed churches and keptstrip clubs open.
This is easy.
That's how it feels.
This feels so much like that.
You know what was anothersituation that was like that?
The 2020 stolen election.
Right out of the gate.
Venezuela, dominion votingmachines, mailing ballots.

(28:08):
Now you're crazy.
Look, here's Ruby Freemanshoving ballots into machines in
the middle of the night in afrom a suitcase.
She sues Giuliani.
We lose, you know, Giuliani getsfired or uh Giuliani gets sued,
Sidney Powell gets indicted.
Uh uh Lou Dobbs.

SPEAKER_20 (28:22):
Instead of throwing Tina Peters in jail, maybe you
should listen to her for aminute.

SPEAKER_18 (28:25):
Yeah, Lou Dobbs gets taken off the air because he
mentions Dominion Smartmatic inViz Venezuela, and poof, he
disappears, right?
It's like, um, okay, uh, thisfeels like, and then the lawsuit
with Ruby Freeman againstGiuliani becomes bigger news
than the actual stolen electionand the raw accusation
allegations that he made thatthey wouldn't even let him prove
in court that they did or didn'thappen.

(28:47):
Rudy Giuliani was all hot totrot to court because he's like,
I'll prove the case.
And then they're like, you can'tprove the case.
You can't present any of thatevidence.
Now, the big concern over thisis I'm concerned about
narrative.
And I'm not concerned aboutnarrative because I want one
particular narrative overanother.
I ultimately want the truth.
If this ended up being a MAGAsupporting guy and it was dead

(29:07):
to rights, and they planted thepipe bombs, well, shame on you.

SPEAKER_20 (29:10):
Well, yeah, I don't care if it's a black guy, a
white guy, uh, the white chick,or whoever, just come on.

SPEAKER_18 (29:18):
This destroyed my life, yeah.
Right?
And I don't say that like mylife is destroyed because I'll
make of it what I want to makeof it.
But at the same time, it's like,dude, no pipe bomb.
I sit on the grass outsideCapitol, you know, outside the
reflecting pool, deciding ifwe're gonna hit the Lincoln
Memorial in the afternoon,right?
Instead, pipe bomb, Congress isevacuated, electoral process

(29:39):
stops, the crowd gets pissedoff, then they start shooting
tear gas at us, right?
So Christopher Ray, back when hewas still the director, was
asked about the pipe bomber.
Why haven't you found him?
Okay.

SPEAKER_13 (29:51):
So you were able to arrest hundreds of individuals
who are allowed into theCapitol, walked around, took
selfies, but we can't find theindividual who committed the
most dangerous crime andattempted to cause m multiple
mass casualty events at theCapitol or around the Capitol.

SPEAKER_27 (30:07):
Congressman, we have an entire dedicated team focused
specifically on thisinvestigation.
We've done thousands ofinterviews, visited again, just
in the pipe bomb investigation.
Thousands of interviews, visitedthousands of residents and
businesses, reviewed millions ofpieces of data.
There's something like 39,000video files.
Uh, we've assessed like 500 orsomething tips.

(30:28):
We've done extensive uh publicpublicity, we've increased the
reward money.
We've got our lab working on it,we've got our WMD directorate
working on it, we've got ourOffice of Technology division,
our cellular analysis team.
Uh so the folks that we haveworking on this investigation uh
are working very aggressively onit.
Uh, and I, as much as anybody,would like to see uh it solved.

SPEAKER_20 (30:54):
Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_18 (30:54):
Yeah.
Okay.

SPEAKER_20 (30:56):
We believe you.

SPEAKER_18 (30:57):
The people who follow this story since the
beginning are Revolver.news,Julie Kelly, Steve Baker got
involved, and uh Dan Bongino.
Julie Kelly, Revolver.news, andDan Bongino have all raised a
primary concern that this personwalking around on January 6th in
the hoodie, there's actually novideo camera angle of him

(31:19):
planting the pipe bombs.
We have no video footage that heplanted the pipe bombs.
So there's an outsidepossibility this person was
randomly walking around in themiddle of the night.
Okay.
Okay.
Totally possibility.
They believe that the pipe bombwas planted earlier in the
morning on January 6th, not inthe evening of January 5th.

(31:41):
And they believe that the theuncovery of the pipe bomb is
highly suspicious.
For example, the officerswalking and looking straight in
the bushes where the gray hoodedman stopped, person stopped.
Um, that there, you know, justthe the uncovering of it was
highly suspicious.
On top of that, these bombs thatare allegedly viable that were

(32:02):
set 14 hours prior, allegedly,had egg timers that had one hour
timers on it, and there's 20minutes left.
So either somebody was goingover and you know, adding to the
time every hour, or they weren'treally viable, or maybe they
were viable with gunpowder orwhatever was inside, but they
weren't really triggerable.
I don't know.

(32:23):
Right?
Doesn't add up, just doesn't addup.
So this guy's been charged forbasically building the bombs and
bringing them to DC.
I don't know that he's beencharged with well, I know he
hasn't been charged with quoteunquote planting the bombs.
So the narrative is open thatthere might be something else
going on on January 6th, right?
And Julie Kelly kind ofemphasized that in some of her

(32:44):
interviews yesterday.
Um, I don't know that that's thecase.
Like it it feels to me a littlebit like, and this is how I felt
when Julie Kelly was defendingher journalism to uh Steve Baker
and Kyle Seraphim and Viva Fryover the Blaze reporting about
the Capitol Hill police officerbeing the alleged pipe bomber.
Is her whole thing was, well, itcan't be him because it was done

(33:06):
in the morning.
That was it was that simple.
So ignore all the evidencebecause I have reported that you
know it might have been in themorning because of various
things.
So are we trying to validate ajournalist or a series of
journalism, including Bon Gino,who's in charge of this
investigation?
Are they trying to validatetheir reporting?

(33:26):
I don't think they would dothat.
Um, but then at the same time,you know, you got this guy, and
they made a huge thing in thepress briefing.
We tracked him down with onlythe information we already had,
no new tips, essentially sayingthe pipe, you know, the Blaze
reporting had nothing to do withthis.
I unfortunately have to live ina world where I have to consider
it could have still been CapitolHill police involvement, and

(33:49):
that this guy might have beensimply a Patsy to create the
pipe bomb, right?
This thought that the person whoplanted the pipe bomb has to
have been the person who boughtthe materials and plant, you
know, these these are notmutually exclusive.
You could have had the pipe bombbrought by a patsy that was
always designed to take thefall.
Now you'd think they would havehad maybe like a redneck that
flies a Confederate flag builtthe pipe bomb.

SPEAKER_20 (34:13):
Huh?
And maybe a timer that went tothe body.

SPEAKER_18 (34:22):
So nothing about it feels right.
You know, it just whatever.
Uh after the press conferenceyesterday, Cash Patel, Janine
Shapiro, and Dan Bangino madethe media rounds.
This is one of Cash Patel's hitson uh Fox News talking about
what we're gonna find out todaywhen they actually read out the
criminal complaint in court.

SPEAKER_10 (34:40):
Uh, Trace, you're gonna learn a lot more about him
coming up in the next 24 hoursbecause what's gonna happen is
he's gonna make his first courtappearance, he's gonna have to
be arraigned, and he's gonnahave to be subjected to the
formal charging process.
And once that happens, we'll beable to speak more clearly to
the public about what we found.
But what I'll remind this, theaudience, is this suspect was

(35:02):
just 25 years old at the time ofthe alleged pipe bomb incident.
Not an old person at all, notsomeone with extensive history
necessarily in the criminaljustice system.
But I think what we'll find inthe coming days, maybe even just
by tomorrow, is the amount ofresources that you have to put
into this.
Generally speaking, and notstyling stylizing the evidence

(35:24):
in this case, you gotta go outand buy pipes, you gotta go out
and buy MCAPs, you gotta go outand buy sulfur, you gotta go out
and buy wires.
Then you gotta figure out how toput that all together
successfully.
And remember, thankfully, thesedevices didn't go off, but they
could have gone off.
They were ready to go off.
And so that was a disaster thatwas averted, thankfully, saving

(35:45):
the lives of you know hundredsof people around the United
States Capitol.

SPEAKER_18 (35:48):
And so that's what we were able to hone in on as it
just I'm sorry, I'm watching thevideo, the walking footage in
the background here.
Right.
This percentage between the legsthis doesn't go like
disperfortable.

SPEAKER_10 (35:59):
And so that was a disaster that was averted.
It's a leg saving the lives ofyou know hundreds of people
around the United StatesCapitol.
And so that's what we were ableto hone in on as investigators
and FBI agents in the field letout on that and said, let's go
figure out who's buying thisstuff and how they're using it
and how they're learning how todo it.
And I think you're gonna get alot more information as to the

(36:19):
how, the why.

SPEAKER_18 (36:20):
One of the most uncomfortable things that you
come to the realization of isthis idea of planted evidence.
You know, in prison, you talk tosome guys, and you know, if
prison's a funny place becauseon one hand, everybody could
possibly be lying to, but on theother hand, nobody has a reason
to lie to you.
So it's one of the mostauthentic places you're ever
gonna be, like, genuinely.
Like for the most part, peopleare what you see is what you

(36:42):
get.
And I remember there's this oneguy, he'd kind of been in and
out of prison, you know, smallsentences, 18 months, 12 months
for all drug possession-relatedcharges, kind of throughout his
whole life, right?
He's kind of one of those guys,and he was wrapping up a
five-year sentence and on alittle bit bigger charges.
But he was he was telling usabout this one time in St.
Louis.
Uh, you know, he was he would gointo St.

(37:03):
Louis with crack and he'd godriving around looking for crack
hores and you know, horrible,degenerate life.
But he did get sober at onepoint in his life, like totally
sober, had gone to like afacility and really tried to
restart his life.
And he's out driving around andhe gets pulled over by a cop in
St.
Louis, and the cop's like, Oh, Iknow you, you're a crackhead,
blah, blah, blah.
And he's like, No, I'm reformed,and pulls him out of the car,

(37:25):
puts him in cuffs.
And as he's sitting back therein the, you know, watching this
officer, this officer takes abag out of his pocket, tosses it
in his backseat, and goes, Oh,look, I just found you in
possession of crack.
Right.
And he's like, he's like, he'stelling us, he's like, Listen,
you could have pulled me over onany other year since I turned
17.
I would have had crack in thecar.
He's like, that's the only timein my life I didn't have crack

(37:47):
in the car.
He's like, I'm trying to turnover, leave, and I ended up in
prison.
And guess what?
I relapsed in prison, you know?
It's like, oh, geez.
So the idea that, like, oh,well, did they find the
sneakers?
Well, dude, you took everyoneout of the house, and then you
guys bring the vans.
Listen, you might not havebrought the sneakers out of the
house.
You might have just found themin the house.
Look at what they did inMar-Lago.
They literally brought stuffinto Mar-Lago, spread papers out

(38:10):
on the floor, put the coversheets that they brought in,
took pictures of it, and toldyou that that was what Trump had
kept, all these top secretfiles.
They brought in the top secretfiles, they've spread them out
on the floor.
How do we trust any of thisstuff, especially here?
Okay, you remember the Epsteincase?
Who prosecuted Epstein's secondcase?

(38:31):
Maureen Comey, James Comey'sdaughter, right?
Who prosecuted Ghlaine Maxwell?
Maureen Comey, James Comey'sdaughter.
Who prosecuted Sean Diddy Combs?
Marine Comey, James Comey'sdaughter, which by the way, Sean
Diddy Combs is sharing a cellwith the former intelligence
head of Venezuela.
They're sharing a cell rightnow.
It's kind of, you know, smallworld, right?

(38:53):
Okay, so knowing that, I wasdoing my own research yesterday
and I came across this.
I found this, I looked this up,right?
So I sent out a post and Itagged Enrique Tarnario, leader
of the Proud Boys, and said, atNoble One, any thoughts?
Your Proud Boys, any thoughtsyour or the Proud Boys have on
the J6 Pipe?
I always throw in a spellingerror.
Anytime I get something thatgets like 8,000 views, there's

(39:16):
always a spelling error.
Any thoughts you or the ProudBoys have on the J6 Pipe
Bomber's prosecutor, JocelynBallantyne?
Is she a good witch or a badwitch?
Because it turns out theprosecutor in this case is
assistant U.S.
attorney Jocelyn Ballantine,noted for handling high-profile
January 6th cases like the ProudBoy Seditious Conspiracy.
So now you've got this DOJprosecutor who absolutely

(39:42):
maliciously prosecuted the ProudBoys, violated any semblance of
an ethical obligation that alawyer has, doing things like
actually recording and usingattorney client privileged phone
calls out of the jail in theirAnd when it was brought up by
the defense, the judge just goesoverruled.

(40:04):
Okay.
Absolute sleazebag, dirtbagprosecutor.
Just based on that alone.
You prosecuted seditious cases,one of which for Enrique Antario
wasn't even there.
Oh, she's in charge of the pipebomb case.
Oh, great.
Yeah, because they've gotscruples.

(40:25):
So Cash Patel explains to JohnSolomon also a little bit more
about where what we expect tofind.

SPEAKER_10 (40:31):
As about the the defendant, because now he's in
the court process and he hasconstitutional rights, and we're
going to honor those.
But we are going to deliver aswe do a mess transfer.
That's cute.
I'm glad I'm glad he getsconstitutional rights.

SPEAKER_18 (40:41):
That's fun.
I like that.
That's real cute.
Real cute.
Go read my transcripts.
Go decide about how thoseconstitutional rights really
work out, Cash.
It's possible.

SPEAKER_10 (40:51):
And the affidavit does say that he bought pipes
and caps and bomb makingconstitutional rights.
I hope you don't listen to hisattorney client phone calls.
Key material and wires.
And so that's a pretty goodpiece of information to have.
The other things you need todevelop are: is there a cell
phone ping in the area that putshim with the phone in the

(41:12):
location?
What else can we do?
Can we turn out and talk topeople in the community and
family?
All those things are ongoing.
And by tomorrow, I think, by theend of the day tomorrow, you're
going to have a pretty powerfulpresentation in court by the
United States attorney.
Look, this process is just notpossible without DOJ and the
great partners, and AttorneyGeneral Bondi and Todd Blanche,
and U.S.
Attorney Janine Piero and herprosecutors were so aggressive

(41:35):
on this case, and rightfully so,because the public demanded
accountability for someone whotried to blow up Americans.

SPEAKER_18 (41:42):
And we all suspect the FBI was involved, so it'd be
really great if you could getsomebody else that's not you
guys.
It feels that way.
I did not feel a sense of reliefyesterday, and I'm not in a
position to be like, well, thisisn't the guy, or he didn't
build pipe bombs, or he'stotally I'm not that I'm not
saying that.
I'm just saying it doesn't feelright.

(42:02):
This doesn't feel right.
It feels like all those greatprosecutors are making sure they
close up, close stitch up thecover up.

SPEAKER_01 (42:12):
When your agents were building a profile on who
the PERP likely was, does he fitthe mold?
Does he fit the profile?

SPEAKER_18 (42:17):
You know, we haven't perfect.
We always find patsies that area little bit on the autistic
spectrum, typically loners, nofriends, nobody to really vouch
for him except for Mima, right?
And a couple neighbors thatwatch you watching a chihuahua.
No, it's perfect.
No, absolutely we assess thisguy.

SPEAKER_10 (42:31):
Entire behavioral analysis unit at the FBI that
gets to work on these types ofthings.
And what we want to ensure is isthere a bigger network?
Is there a confession we can getout of him?
Are there other targets?
Were there other targets?
Are there other unsolved crimes?
Now that we have the suspect incustody, those folks can go to
work on that.

SPEAKER_18 (42:49):
That stuff just It's got long legs, it's got
proportional legs.
I just want to like do aproportion match and be like,
where's the waistline?

SPEAKER_10 (42:56):
This takes time to develop out.
The first thing we want to do istake the guy off the street and
make sure he doesn't do thisagain, and more importantly,
also hold people him accountableto the innocent Americans he was
threatening.
So you'll hear information abouthis behavior, about his
background.
Remember, the guy was only 25years old at the time five years
ago.
That's not an old person.

(43:16):
That's someone who's prettyyoung.
And America has a right to askquestions as to how he got there
and why he got to this state.
And we're looking to get thoseanswers to the public, but we
can't get ahead of DOJ whenthey're presenting.
He's still got to go for hisarraignment or presentment
tomorrow.
Yeah.
Um, if he hasn't already doneso.

SPEAKER_18 (43:32):
All right.
I still don't know what to thinkabout Thomas Massey.
I really, I like he drives meabsolutely bonkers.
But at the same time, he's kindof the guy that's a voice of
reason in this.
And he looked at that Blazereporting and he had other
whistleblower reports, and hewas like, all in.
Right.
And then he got threatened byBon Gino's staff.

(43:53):
Remember this.
He got threatened by Bon Gino'sstaff where they said, if you
keep looking into this, we'regoing to investigate one of your
staff.
It's so he said, Listen, I haveto say this on camera.
This happened.
I called Bon Gino, told himabout it, and they said, get
with the program.
You better get with the program,or we're going to invest.
It was the direct threat.
Wow.
Articulated threat from a DOJperson.

(44:15):
Okay.
And Bonji, and he told Bon Ginoand Bungie was like, Oh, yeah,
I'll stop that.
So they have a program.
They have an agenda.
Get with the program.
Get with the agenda.
We need to offload liabilityfrom us, the government at
large, possibly to includeCapitol Hill Police, and put it
onto something and someone else.

(44:35):
That's what it feels like.
Knowing what they did to him,knowing how they didn't respond
to this Blaze reporting.
And then all of a sudden, a fewweeks later, we finally get a
crack in the case.
Which is like all of a sudden,because the spotlight went on
someone and said that's it.
And nobody can really refute it,except for people like Julie
Kelly that were really out inthe weeds based on her unsourced

(44:58):
reporting that said that thepipe bomb was planted on January
6th and not January 5th.
That was why she discredited thegate analysis.
She wouldn't even look at itbecause she had a theory.
Well now her theory isn't provenbecause even this current arrest
is still the alleged nighttimepipe bomber.
But now she's okay because youknow Cash and Dan said it.

(45:20):
So this is Thomas Massey beingasked about this.

SPEAKER_21 (45:55):
Chad, have you seen any press release from the FBI?
They're gonna have a pressconference with that.
Okay, great.
That's when it would beappropriate to comment.
That's right, but you don'tknow, but what you've heard so
far, you don't know if thatsyncs up with what they're gonna
say with that.
What I know comes from twodifferent whistleblowers.
It sounds like you're a littlesuspect of what they might

(46:16):
present.
I am a suspect if it doesn't uhincorporate other facts that I
know about this.
So we'll see.
If it's if it's like a singleperson acting singly without
coordination among other people,I am very suspect.

SPEAKER_25 (46:33):
Yeah, it's uh while the Department of Justice on a
schedule for the release of thefiles after the bill passed.

SPEAKER_21 (46:45):
Well, they have until December 19th, which is
now 15 days away.
And it's a it's a Herculan task.
They have to put that stuffonline, they have to redact it,
they have to redact any uh childsexual abuse material, they have
to so he's going on and talkingabout the Epstein files.

SPEAKER_18 (47:00):
But I I second him.
If this ends up being a lonewolf scenario, guy was just
disenfranchised and he thoughthe'd bombed the DNC and the RNC,
opportunistic, didn't want thegovernment to change hands or
did want it to change.
What's your motive?
Like, what's the agenda?
What's the purpose of this pipebomb?
Was it to hurt Kamala Harris,who by the way also mysteriously

(47:21):
left the Senate and went down tothe DNC and was on the other
side of the wall as this pipebomb was sitting there and
discovered, and oh my god,right?
Is that what what is this just acomedy of coincidence?
Like you know what I mean?
Like, is it just just oh yeah,this guy brought this pipe bomb
into DC, and then you know, Mr.
Short Legs grew some long legsfor the night and went and

(47:41):
walked around and dropped thebomb, and then the pipe bomb
squad that was sent to deployjust randomly looked in the only
two spots that there was a pipebomb, right?
Which were separate from eachother.
They literally oh and the bushwith the guy bent down, then
they got real curious about thebush.
Like, is something under here?
Nothing feels right, but we doknow one thing for sure that the

(48:04):
FBI of yonder years, the RayFBI, it's got some questions to
answer.

SPEAKER_02 (48:09):
And let me just say this there's really a main
headline on top of the mainheadline, and the main head, the
real main headline here is thatChristopher Ray needs to be
under oath in front of somebodybecause there is no way, after
what we heard today, that youcan say anything other than they
sat on this, they didn't wantthis to come out.
There's no way they didn't knowwho this was.

(48:31):
But, anyways, let's do theheadline still, God.
I'll take it away.

SPEAKER_26 (48:34):
All right.
Well, you said it, Damon.
The biggest headline of the day,the accused DC pipe bomber, uh,
now has been named.
His name is Brian Cole Jr., isnabbed after the Trump
administration resurrected thecase that was collecting dust
under Joe Biden's administrationand the aforementioned Chris
Ray.
That evidence, according to uhDirector Cash Mattel and Deputy

(48:54):
Director Dan Bongino, as well asuh Attorney General Pam Bondi,
that evidence has been sittingthere collecting dust.
This wasn't a new tip.
This was some this wasn't somenew evidence.
This was the hard work of thepresident, uh, President Trump's
administration.

SPEAKER_18 (49:11):
And let me say if they'd have taken those 5,000
agents that were tracking downGrandma Mima and walked in the
Capitol and they put them onthis case, you know, because
they had to go through so manylines of code.
Yeah, and you tell me you didn'thave AI help you with it.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.

(49:31):
You know his you know his sexbook site password, right?
Like it just goes to show yourlife is out there, like you have
no idea the digital exhaustyou've left laying around.
You got some guy OSINT, opensource intelligence going into
the dark web and pulling upstuff from 10 years ago.
I mean, like, look, he visited achannel a website looking for uh

(49:52):
looking for pin pals.
He was a lonely guy.
Oh my gosh, it happens to be oneof those pin pals was uh Kerry
Kirchhoff from this.
If I had to guess, if I had tothrow out something that is
probably the case, this washighly coordinated, highly
orchestrated.
I believe, by the way, KerryKirkoff, to her attorney's

(50:12):
credit, has now fully denied forthe first time yesterday, fully
denied that she's the pipebomber.
So after they arrested someone,then she's like, Yeah, it wasn't
me.
Good job.
I believe if this person isinvolved, he's the pipe bomb
builder.
And then he dropped it off.
That's what puts him down there,and then somebody else picked it
off and went moving.

(50:33):
Because remember, he's on thephone, he's talking to people.
Who's he talking to?
Oh, the cell phone data iscorrupted.
That had to be done at a highlevel.
And then ATT is like, well,actually, we can recover the
data.
You know what I mean?
So the whole narrative aroundthis, what Julie Kelly suggested
yesterday was that the FBI foundthe guy under Christopher Ray
and then went, oh shit, he'sblack.

(50:53):
And an anarchist, Antifa.
Oh, no, that's a bad narrative.
Okay, throw it away.
Tell CNN to report it's a whiteguy.
You know what I mean?
Like, that's what they're tryingto push.
Like, oh, look at this.
You know, the former FBIChristopher Ray, he should be
indicted because he's a liar,and that's the story.
Rather than, hey, yourgovernment was overthrown by

(51:14):
inside actors from left, right,and Sunday.
You know what I mean?
And a handful of patrioticAmericans showed up to protest a
stolen election, and things gota little hot.
That's the real story.
Oh man, we'll find out.
I guess we'll find out.
Now, this right here is uh we'llfinish with this as far as this
topic.
This is Cash Patel continuing totalk about what we're also going

(51:36):
to be finding out in the comingweeks with regards to Arctic
Frost and the Russia Gateinvestigations.
To the FBI's credit, there isprogress happening.
Okay.
As far as accountability, as faras racking up some names on the
boards, getting some arrests,it's happening.
So, at a bare minimum, we've atleast crossed off J6 pipe bomb
investigation.
Right?

(51:56):
Okay.
Whether we're happy with theresults or not, which listen,
this could be the guy.
I I absolutely want to make surethat Kerry Kirchhoff doesn't sue
me.
Right.
I don't know that it was you.
I'm just reporting on publicstuff.
Looks awfully suspicious, but II feel yeah, I also got said
that I did things that I didn'tdo.
I get it.
I'm sorry, I was in the newstoday as well.

(52:19):
I I get it.
You don't, you know, you didn'tmean to live this life.
However, this other guy here, hemight not have meant to live
this life either.
But if you did those things, ifyou actually did build a pipe
bomb, if you actually did takeit to J6, well, welcome to the
party, bro.
I actually went as well.
Right?
I wasn't just there in spirit,like so many have said.
Yep, I actually showed up andwent.

(52:40):
So hats off to you for takingaction, Brian Cole.
But now we're gonna find outwhat really happened.
And unfortunately, I'm in theposition where I just don't
believe anybody.
I don't believe anybody on thatside of the tracks, so to speak.
I've lost my ability to takethem at face value.
The government forevermore isguilty until they prove

(53:02):
themselves innocent.
There's FOIA requests, you mustshow your homework.
Now, private individuals areinnocent until proven guilty.
I gotta take them at face value.
But the government, you have notyet proven yourself trustworthy
in a 250-year history.

(53:23):
Hasn't happened.
Hasn't happened.
So we have to just sit back andwait.
But I am giving credit wherecredit's due.
They are advancing some of theseaccountability things.

SPEAKER_05 (53:34):
Where do you think the Arctic story ends up when
you're all done with yourinvestigation?
Are there people inside the FBIwho end up either arrested or
charged or punished in some way?

SPEAKER_10 (53:45):
Well, accountability comes in multiple forms.
Transparency through Congress.
You guys are tremendous atreporting on that.
We've issued 40,000 pages toCongress this year alone.
Comey did 3,000 in three years,Ray did 13,000 in seven years.
So we are committed totransparency.
But what's unique about this FBIis we are running investigations
while providing what we can.
So on the Arctic Frost front, wediscovered it at this FBI that

(54:08):
they were unlawfully surveillingsenators and guys like me and
weaponizing governments.
So this pipe bomb investigationshould show the American public
that we, while providinginformation on the pipe bomb
over the last eight years andprotecting the integrity of our
investigation, gets us to theend point we want accountability
and transparency.
It takes a little time to breakdown the disease temple that

(54:29):
they built here in Washingtonfor decades.
But I harp on the fact that thisinvestigation should show the
world how we are going tooperate in every single
investigation, Arctic Frostspecifically.
We have a huge investigationgoing.
That is public, I can say that.
And it's going to take a littlemore time to peel it back.
But no, I'm not going to letpeople get um off the hook or

(54:50):
get a hall pass.
I don't care what position youheld in the FBI, you're going to
be held accountable.
And this DOJ is assuredlybacking us.

SPEAKER_18 (54:58):
Okay, so I fully support Cash and Bon Gino and
everybody in their pursuit oftruth.
Fully support it.
Doesn't mean I'm not going toquestion it, right?
Doesn't mean we're not going tolook at it because they have to
prove themselves.
And, you know, just because younailed a conviction to me
doesn't mean anything.
Because I've been down that roadmyself.
So I want to I want to be ableto say, yep, I support the
conviction.
I don't want to see Brian Colerot in prison for 20 years as a

(55:20):
patsy for all this.
Do I believe there are patsies?
Yeah.
Do you know how depraved ourAmerican government is despite
what you think?
Right?
You know how depraved they are.
Did you know there's a weeklykill list or hit men real?

SPEAKER_16 (55:34):
Yes.
At the National SecurityCouncil, there is a committee
that meets every Tuesday morningat nine o'clock to drop
something called the kill list.
They sit around a table and theymake a list of all the people
that they want to kill thatweek.
And then they take it back tothe CIA, which has a dedicated
unit.
I won't tell you the name, butit has a dedicated unit that

(55:56):
takes receipt of the list.
They say, okay, number one.
They drive to the airport, theyget on the plane, they go out to
that country, they kill theperson, they come back, and then
they go to number two on thelist.
That happens every single week.
Now we can have a conversationabout whether that's right or
whether it's wrong.

(56:16):
It's certainly immoral.
It's illegal, but it's beentasked by the president.
Uh at the same time, they willtell you there hasn't been
another 9-11, has there?
Maybe it's because we're outthere killing people.

SPEAKER_28 (56:31):
What kind of people would be on that list?

SPEAKER_16 (56:33):
Oh, the the most dangerous terrorists in the
world.
Or at least people that the CIAdeems to be the most dangerous
terrorists in the world.

SPEAKER_18 (56:40):
And that's the key.
And the CIA has a kill list, andso does the FBI, by the way.
Their kill list looks like thischaracter assassination, Patsy
setups, lone wolf actors doingthe How convenient Thomas Crooks
showed up at this rally.
Half of the country, theDemocrats, were like, we love
that man.
Who hired him?

(57:01):
Nobody, he acted on his own.
How convenient.
You know what I mean?
Yes, your government's thatdepraved.
So when they say, oh, trust us,I don't know about that.
I don't know about that.
I don't know if I can trustthat.
You you get involved withpolitics just a little bit and

(57:21):
you realize it is pretty dirtybehind the curtain.
Right?
When you get to, I hate to saythe level that I'm at, but when
you understand concepts likeequity like I do, you realize,
oh, we're just all pirates.
And there just happens to besome stronger pirates than
others.
My gang is bigger than yourgang.
I belong to the gang of theUnited States of America.
Right?
But the moment that flag goesdown, you're on your own, bro.

(57:43):
Okay.
So we do live in this kind ofartificial world where yes, the
CIA knocks people off who are anenemy to our gang because that's
what this is at its fundamentalcore.
Everything that you and I grewup with, the Boy Scouts, the we,
you know, we're supposed to be,you know, all these altruistic
ethical values believing inAmerican exceptionalism.

(58:03):
That is the indoctrination thatwe got.
That's not how the world is.
It's so hard to wake up to that.

SPEAKER_19 (58:11):
I know.

SPEAKER_18 (58:12):
That's not how the world operates.
The world operates on consent,which means if I can get away
with it, I will.
If I tell you it's against thelaw for the government to strip
anybody of their civil rightsand convince you enough to
believe it, when I strip peopleof their civil rights, you won't
believe that I'm capable ofdoing that because I've told you
your whole life that I wouldnever do that.
Did you say the Pledge ofAllegiance to the flag this

(58:32):
morning?
No.
Exactly.
But when you're young, you do.
Oh yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
And in a little bit of time andwisdom, you're kind of like, uh,
you know, you only have to getscammed by the, you know,
financial planner a couple timeswhere you start going, you know,
maybe I'll take my financialmatters into my own hands.
You know what I mean?
Like, so, and the thing is, isthat the threats to our

(58:54):
democracy, our republic, ourlegion.
Here's this right here.
And this came out a this didn'tcome out a while ago.
This was added to yesterday.
Mar uh Mario Naufal wrote this.
He said, accused Chinese spybragged that Hokel was much more
obedient than Cuomo, and textBeijing officials.
This is what foreigninfiltration looks like.
Bombshell evidence from theLinda Sun corruption trial

(59:16):
reveals the accused Chineseagent texted Beijing consular
officials that the quote,Lieutenant Governor Kathy
Holchel was much more obedientthan Governor Cuomo.
So here is the spy that KathyHokel hired as her personal
assistant.
There's your governor of NewYork right now.
Okay, and here's the textmessage exchange.
Blank, you know, have her dothis.
Let me know if you can openthis.

(59:36):
Wow, that's perfect.
Got it.
I'll send you the last finalversion of all the videos in
early February when they'rebroadcasted.
She had Kathy Holkel get on andgo, China's amazing, and you're
a sister city, and blah, blah,blah, blah, blah.
Did this whole like Chinapropaganda piece.
Quote, she is much more obedientthan the governor.
And please let me know where itwill be broadcasted.
Okay.
This is what Chineseinfiltration looks like.

(59:56):
What was Sun delivering?
She convinced Hulk to finish.
A lunar new year video for theChinese consulate, then offered
to coach her on her talkingpoints of Beijing's choosing.
The video is still on theChinese consul's YouTube
webpage, with Hulk will callingit a privilege to work with
Ping.
Sun also promised Chineseofficials she would stop Cuomo
from mentioning Uyghuratrocities.
I will definitely not thegovernor bring not let the

(01:00:18):
governor bring it up.
What did Sun allegedly get inreturn?
Millions funneled to herhusband's seafood company, a
Ferrari Roma, a$4 million LongIsland mansion, a$2 million
Hawaii home, and luxury saltedducks from the Consul General's
private chef.
Chef.
I want to eat salted ducks, shetexted Ping.
He sent six.
A Hokal Sportsman dismissed thetext as words from someone

(01:00:40):
accused of lying repeatedly.

But the question remains (01:00:42):
how did an alleged Chinese agent get
close enough to call the futuregovernor obedient?
Yep.
New York, New York.
We're being run bynarco-terrorists.
It's a hell of a Chinese AIDS.
For for what?
Some salted duck?

(01:01:03):
You selling out our country forsalted duck?

SPEAKER_20 (01:01:06):
Well, and the four million dollar thing and a I
know.
I know, right?

SPEAKER_18 (01:01:13):
So in Washington State, apparently uh they're
gonna start taxing the rich.
I mean, like I said, the buseswill be free and they will be
paid for.
It's a question of how and bywho, right?
So in Washington State, they'rethey're pretty you got the
supermajority.

SPEAKER_30 (01:01:26):
Uh we got some bad news.
So he does about a 55-minutepress conference yesterday
saying that we're gonna be weneed to raise taxes on the rich.
We gotta go get the rich, wegotta get the rich.
We did all these bigcorporations, they're not paying
their fair share, and the richpeople, we need to take the
money from the rich people.

SPEAKER_12 (01:01:41):
We have a situation with many major corporations, in
particular Amazon and Microsoft,which I think one of which you
had mentioned, uh, have alreadybeen shedding jobs.
They didn't need tax policy tobe an impetus to invest in um
artificial intelligence, and thegoal of that uh technology is to
divest from human labor.

SPEAKER_30 (01:01:59):
Yeah.
Right exactly.
This is the same way theydivested from human labor when
it came to building cars.
And what they end up doing isthey um actually grow the
economy because what you do isyou reduce the cost of
production, reduce the cost toproduce something, and then it
brings prices down.
The government doesn't bringprices down, innovation brings

(01:02:20):
prices down.

SPEAKER_18 (01:02:23):
And the big thing was with that, with this whole
tax the rich scenario here wasthey consider the uber wealthy
in Washington, the rich, youknow, when they're like, We got
to tax Microsoft and Amazon, wegot to go after these guys.
Do you know what their thresholdlevel is?
125 grand.
Now, for a few of our listenerssitting out in the Midwest, 125
grand is a lot of money.

(01:02:43):
Around here, that you can't evenbuy a house with that salary.
No, like four times that salaryisn't even the starter home
price in this particular county.
Okay, there's a lot of peoplethat combine two incomes to get
somewhere north of that numberaround here.
Okay.
Now, occasionally you do someonethat makes more than that, but
that's a surprisingly low, Ishouldn't say you do have lots

(01:03:04):
of people who make more thanthat.
But our cost of living is sohigh, right?
That that number's not reallyrich.

SPEAKER_20 (01:03:10):
No.

SPEAKER_18 (01:03:11):
That's like me going out to Iowa and being like,
anybody who makes over 65 grand,you're one percent.

SPEAKER_20 (01:03:17):
It's like nearly median income and a lot of.

SPEAKER_18 (01:03:21):
And also, if you're married filing jointly, there
you go.
Uh, that's who they're gonnacome after.
Basically, they're coming afterthe middle class.
Clearly.
Clearly, they're coming afterthe middle class.
Um, CNN has continued theirreporting on this, you know,
Pete Hexeth ordering the doubletap on the narco-terrorist.
And it's fascinating to see thedifferent politicians line up

(01:03:44):
around this story.
You have some Republicans, RandPaul, it shouldn't be uh
shooting unarmed people.
Drugs are drugs.
You know, unless they'reshooting bombs at us.
It's like it doesn't matter,right?
It's like, well, you can't shootenemies.
No, we're at war with thesepeople.
They've killed a million peoplein the last decade.
That was one of the things thatwas articulated by Stephen
Miller.
He's like, by any metric, ifanother foreign nation sent over

(01:04:07):
mustard gas that killed 10million people, or maybe that
hot air balloon, if it wasdropping, you know, radiation
poisoning and killing 100,000people a year, it's an open act
of war.
Well, guess what?
These drugs wasn't open act ofwar, but it was subversive.
Why?
Because you have a lot ofpoliticians snorting cocaine in
the back room, back room thatdon't want to actually go after
their drug dealers.
You know what I'm saying?

(01:04:27):
Like that's the truth of thematter.
Go listen to Madison Cawthorntalk about drug use in Congress.
It's stunning.
We are being run, we are beinglegislated for, and our lives
are being managed by genuinelyhorrible people in many
occasions.
There are some good ones, but ona whole, a lot of these people,
at a bare minimum, they've losttheir mortals and their

(01:04:48):
scruples.
And many of them, I think, havecompromised their souls.
This is CNN now.
So CBS broke the story about thedouble tap.
Pentagon did an IGinvestigation, came out and said
not only did Hegseth not orderthe double tap, it was an
admiral that did, and we had JAGattorneys advising him, and they
made a radio call, which weintercepted asking for more

(01:05:08):
help, which meant they're stillin the fight and the drugs were
still afloat.
Pop, pop, pop.
We're done.
Okay.
So CBS broke the reporting that,hey, this is a nothing burger.
But then CNN jumped on becausenow CNN's like, well, uh, we
have to continue the story.
This is exactly, exactly likethe Rush, the Ukraine gate

(01:05:28):
scenario.
There was a long-running coupagainst Trump called Russia
Gate.
Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia.
Eventually, Trump didn't backdown.
He didn't bend, he didn't break.
He forced the molarinvestigation to its full
conclusion.
Bill Barr said, write a report.
They got a report, and guesswhat?
No evidence of collusion.
A couple evidences of attemptedobstruction of the investigation

(01:05:51):
into the non-issue ofnon-collusion, right?
They were saying, well, you keptus from getting the evidence of
your collusion that we neverfound or even thought existed.
Right?
Massive fishing expedition.
As soon as Mueller testified,and also we found out that he
already had dementia andcouldn't answer questions,
probably had never read his ownreport.
I don't know if anybodyremembers that.
It was a tragedy.

(01:06:13):
A tragedy.
You've got a guy that can'thardly remember his name, that's
in charge of the biggestinvestigation in United States
history.
It's a tragedy.
Okay.
So he gets up and that goes justit's over.
Russia's not a prime.
Trump's come out the doubledoors in the White House, the
sun's behind him, it looks likehe's God's gift to earth.
We beat him, right?

(01:06:34):
And he's like, okay, let's geton to governing.
And a week later, oh my gosh, hehad a call with Ukraine and he
asked for quid pro quo.
And we've got to impeach him.
And they unpaneled the jury, theimpeachment judiciary, you know,
the in the in the house.
And Schiff gets up there andsays, Oh, look, he reads a
transcript where Trump asked forquid pro quo, and he's seven

(01:06:56):
times.
And as he's doing this, Trumpreleases the actual phone call,
which Vinman and his acolytestried to take so that Trump
couldn't release it, but theygrabbed it first, released it,
and that phone call was nothinglike what Adam Schiff was
quoting up on the up on thestand up on the diocese.

SPEAKER_20 (01:07:12):
The script.
Okay.

SPEAKER_18 (01:07:13):
So fortunately, enough Republicans decided they
didn't want to put their name onthe fraud that Trump wasn't
impeached.
But it was a fake story.
It was debunked, but they keptrunning with it.
Well, here we have a fake story.
They tried it with Signalgate.
Signal gate went flop.
They tried it, and now they'retrying it with this, and it went
flop, but that doesn't matter.

(01:07:34):
I promise you, right now,they're trying to impeach Heg
Seth and many other of Trump'scabinet members, and then
they're gonna get Trump.
They're gonna keep running withthe story.
How do I know this?
Because CNN now has moresources.

SPEAKER_28 (01:07:46):
Craig Brass was taking questions behind closed
doors from lawmakers, but CNNhas exclusive reporting tonight
from sources with directknowledge of those briefings
that the Admiral told them thatthe two survivors in the water
did not appear to have radio orother communications devices.
That matters because defenseofficials that we've been
hearing from have been quietlyarguing that the survivors were

(01:08:08):
legitimate targets because theyappeared to be radioing for help
or backup reinforcements thatcould theoretically allow them
to have continued to traffic thedrugs that were on board that
boat.
However, despite that, andaccording to our new reporting
here at CNN tonight from mycolleagues, Admiral Bradley
today acknowledged that thosetwo survivors were in no
position to make a distresscall.

SPEAKER_18 (01:08:31):
Oh, okay.
So you've got sources reportingthat contradict the IG report.
So hey, Ron, we're in goodcompany.
CNN and us don't both don'ttrust the government.

SPEAKER_19 (01:08:41):
Okay.

SPEAKER_18 (01:08:43):
Hey, can we have our K community?
They're trying to continue thenarrative.
Oh, some anonymous sources.
So now they're gonna drag up theIG and he's gonna say his thing.
We'll drag up some general thathates Trump, and he's gonna be
like, oh, I mean, I don't knowif they really had a radio
interception.
Then they'll drag up some signalofficer and he'll be like, no,
we did intercept a radiocommunication.
You know, it's just gonna be abig old cluster.

(01:09:04):
It's gonna be rough.
So they're running with thatstory.
To me, it seems like a nothingburger.
Kill the drug dealers.
I don't, I don't, I don't seethe problem.
You got a hit list.
Why don't you just quietly putthem on the hit list?
Why'd you have to tell us aboutit at all?
Just go about your business.
I mean, you've been doing thislong enough.
Like, why do we have to beinvolved?
What do you think about it all,Ron?

SPEAKER_20 (01:09:24):
Man, I don't think you want to know what I think
about it all.
I'm so tired.
So tired of living in thisstate, living in this country,
under what just feels like Ican't.
I can't right now.

SPEAKER_18 (01:09:40):
I look at this like I like I personally like to see
it with clear eyes.
I want to know what it is.

SPEAKER_20 (01:09:47):
I know, but we keep getting obscuscated from the
truth.
And you know, when Cash Patelwith his bug eyes gets up there
and starts telling half-truths,I start to lose faith.
And I'm just not feeling it withPim, Bon Gino, and I I'm still

(01:10:10):
feeling it with Trump.
Yeah.
For some reason.

SPEAKER_18 (01:10:13):
I think Trump's got the Kavorka.
I mean, he's got the he's gotthe thing.
But everybody around him is justlike, what the hell are you
talking about?
Yeah, Peter Ticklin was on withuh uh uh Altman yesterday.
I listened to his wholeinterview, and he's basically
like Trump knows everything.
He knows everything withDominion, he knows about
corruption inside of thegovernment, but he's the

(01:10:33):
smartest man he's ever met.
He's makes very strategicdecisions, and Ticklin's like, I
trust him.

SPEAKER_20 (01:10:39):
Right, and the moves that uh keep being made are you
know making me feel like, oh,this is you know, things are
happening the way that theyshould be.
And then when these guys get upand start talking, it's like,
what the heck, man?
Yeah, and obstructing.
And it and it looks like and itfe makes me feel like, okay,
great.
Is are we just um in the nextphase of the in and we're just

(01:11:03):
the the new dummies in Americathat are lapping it up?

SPEAKER_18 (01:11:07):
It's been such a long this is government.
When I was in college, I feltlike I was blackpilled.
I felt like, oh my gosh, youknow, everything's a war for
oil, it's all about the money.
And I just was like, I can't dothis.
I gotta go make my own way.
Best thing I ever did.
Because I didn't becomeentangled with the government

(01:11:28):
any more than a normal peasantdoes just with normal
regulations and business stuff,right?
But I got to see it, and I waslike, I don't want to
participate in that.
And that's that's all I'm sayinghere.
Listen, we have to live here,right?
So I want policies and thingslike that that make life good
for me, but I don't thinkanybody owes me anything.
And that's what I want to seefrom from my government.
And when I see them doing otherthings, I'm like, okay, well, I

(01:11:48):
have to then enforce mybirthright as an American and
choose not to participate.
And that's where we get hung up.
I want our listeners and I wantpeople to understand listen, you
have a vested interest here inthe country, not the nation.
The country is the land and herpeople, it is literally your
neighborhood.
And it extends from you outward.

(01:12:10):
We have a beautiful country.
There are beautiful people thatlive here.
And the best thing about thiscountry is you're born free.
But then you're quickly enslavedafter a series of obligations
and agreements that get made onyour behalf with the political
association called the nation.
Those are voluntary agreements.
It's written in the law thatway.
But when we get caught up and wedon't recognize our own

(01:12:33):
authority in this, we start toneglect things.
We don't attend our city councilmeetings.
We don't attend our differentstuff that's going on.
You know, we're here in KittsapCounty, and I'm dealing with the
local GOP, and there's a handfulof very strategic commissioner
meetings that are coming up inthe next few days.
They're really important, likemajor decisions that are going

(01:12:53):
to affect your land use andstuff like that.
They hold these meetings in themiddle of the day.
So most people are at work.
Now, the local countycommissioners, we know this
because we know we have one ofthem on the board, says, Well,
we all talk amongst ourselvesthat one person who shows up is
equivalent to 10,000 people inour county.
So if one person shows up tomake a complaint, they equate
that to 10,000 people.
The left figured this out a longago and they started sending

(01:13:15):
their Karen's into the schoolboards and all this other stuff.
You know what I mean?
But yet we don't, because we'rejust like, well, somebody else
will take care of it, right?
I mean, if I was in a positionof authority, I would.
But yet we never run.
We never participate, we neverengage in how the sausage is
made, and then we bitch thatit's flavored the way we don't
like it.
That's why coming back fromprison, I've dedicated myself to
get involved.
Because if you're not in thearena, you don't get to play.

(01:13:38):
I mean, how dare I just show upon January 6th at the Federal
Capitol when I never showed upat my commissioner meeting?
How dare I do that?

SPEAKER_20 (01:13:44):
Solid point.

SPEAKER_18 (01:13:45):
You know what I mean?
And so that's how I feel likepeople've got to get involved.
You've got to get involved.
You know, there's a county inTexas that's decided they're
doing paper ballots.
That's awesome.
Because without the paperballots, we're probably gonna
lose this whole thing.
Remember, Sydney Powell, whomany people have discredited,
and all she went out on a limb.
No, she didn't.

SPEAKER_00 (01:14:03):
I can hardly wait to put forth all the evidence we
have collected on Dominion,starting with the fact it was
created to produce alteredvoting results in Venezuela for
Hugo Chavez and then shippedinternationally to manipulate
votes for purchase in othercountries, including this one.

(01:14:25):
It was funded by money fromVenezuela and Cuba, and China
has a role in it also.
We have staggering statisticalevidence.
We have staggering testimonyfrom witnesses, including one
who was personally in briefingswhen all of this was discussed
and planned, beginning with HugoChavez and how it was designed
there, and then saw it happeningin this country.

(01:14:46):
As soon as the state shut downon election night and stopped
counting, those are the stateswhere the most egregious
problems occurred.
We also need to look at, andwe're beginning to collect
evidence on the financialinterests of some of the
governors and secretaries ofstate who actually bought into
the Dominion systems to linetheir own pockets by getting a

(01:15:08):
voting machine in that wouldeither make sure their election
was successful or they got moneyfor their family from it.
Well, for fraud this serious, Ithink even if the states are
stupid enough to go ahead andcertify the votes where we know
the machines were operating andproducing altered election
results, then they will be setaside by the fraud also.

(01:15:31):
I mean, we are talking abouthundreds of thousands of votes.
President Trump won thiselection in a landslide.

SPEAKER_18 (01:15:38):
They have private polling that shows the support
for President Trump is somewherein the 70 to 80 percent range.
But the apathy in our votingsystems is 60 to 70 percent.
It's huge.
It's huge.
People don't trust the votingsystems, they haven't trusted
them for years.
But now it's not just a generaldistrust.

(01:16:00):
It's like, no, there's fraud.
Plain as day.
That was four years, five yearsago.
Five years ago, Sydney Powellwas saying that.
What's changed?
Did Venezuela uninvolvethemselves and elections?
You know, did the whistleblowersdisappear?
No, in fact, we have an evenbetter testimony from one of
them that's now been publishedand and you know circulated.
It was published in a Dallasnewspaper, by the way, is where,

(01:16:21):
you know, so that's the officialjust came from that guy.
They did their source checking.

SPEAKER_20 (01:16:25):
Um and this is this topic is exactly why Tina Peters
is still in jail.

SPEAKER_18 (01:16:30):
This is why she's still in jail.
Exactly.
There was a huge steal in 2020,and they won.
They got power.
They sent guys like me toprison, they persecuted people
like her, they took Lou Dobbsoff TV.
I'm sure there's people we willfind out in the future that were
on that kill list and we're nothearing their voices today.
Right?
They tried to lace people upwith lawfare.

(01:16:52):
It's almost better to smear aperson and destroy their
reputation than it is to killthem.
If Sidney Powell had died afterthis interview, she'd be a
martyr.
But instead, she became, oh,well, didn't she get, uh, you
know, didn't she plead to amisdemeanor?
Didn't she do that?
Yeah, she pled to a misdemeanorin her apology letter, which she
was required by the judgment towrite to the state of Georgia,
said, I'm sorry for exposingyour elections are stolen.
Sincerely, Sydney Powell.

(01:17:14):
That was her apology letter tothe state of Georgia, right?
We have to be diligent, we haveto be involved, we have to do
our peasant thing and raise ourpitchforks politely and kindly.
All right, it's time for us tojump over to the private.
Thank you guys for stickingaround.
And uh, I know this episodetoday, it may have been heavy
for some of you.
It doesn't really matter.

(01:17:34):
Life is gonna go on.
Sun's gonna rise, sun's gonnaset.
Today it's a nice wet day in thePacific Northwest.
Live your life, right?
But don't entangle yourself withthese people.
It's not worth it.
It's a zero sum game.
Okay.
See you guys tomorrow.
The rest of you will see inprivate.

(01:17:54):
Okay, so I thought this was kindof interesting along this whole
narco-terrorism route.
So this is president of ElSalvador Bukele, who people like
quite a bit.
And he was talking.
This is a longer interview.
We're not gonna listen to all ofit.
I just wanted to find one piece.
And they are satanic also.
So he's talking about MS-13.

(01:18:15):
That was such a okay.
So he's talking about MS-13 whenthe women actually, you know,
got into their strongholds andstuff like that.
They found things that were verydisturbing that had been
rumored, but nobody ever had anyconfirmation of.

SPEAKER_09 (01:18:35):
MS-13 is one of the major gangs.
And they are satanic also.
That was my question.
So very little No, no, no, but II would hope you will explain it
because very little has beenwritten in the West about this.
They're satanic, yes.
But but actually, literally.

SPEAKER_31 (01:18:49):
Can you explain?
Well, uh, they didn't start as asatanic organization.
They they MS-13 started in in inLos Angeles in the US because uh
Salvadorans weren't allowed tosell drugs by the Mexican gangs.
So they created a gang that wascalled um 18th Street Gang,

(01:19:14):
because they basically wanted tosell drugs in in the street in
18th Street over there.
But then uh divisions started toto um create to they started
dividing themselves and startedinfighting, so they created
MS-13.
And uh and then MS-13 starstarted out outgrowing the other

(01:19:37):
gangs and they started you knowexporting the organization to
other parts of the US.
And when uh Bill Clinton decidedto uh deport those guys, he
didn't tell our government atthe time, I'm deporting these
criminals, they just you knowsent them here.
And they came, they were a few,but unchecked.

(01:20:00):
At the same time, some some lawswere passed to protect minors
from imprisonment.
And of course the gangs use thatto recruit 15-year-olds,
16-year-olds, 17-year-olds.
So at the beginning it was, youknow, uh some youth causing
harm, assaulting, you know,trying to control their

(01:20:21):
territory, selling drugs.
Things that are bad, but youknow, probably not not critical.
But they grew, they grew, theygrew, and they started
controlling territories.
A few years a few years later,they were actually a huge
criminal a huge internationalcriminal organization that they
have bases in Italy, uh,Guatemala, Honduras, El

(01:20:43):
Salvador, the US.
Basically a lot of major citiesin the US would have strongholds
of the city.
Right outside Washington, D.C.
Yes, of course.
And they would have in in LongIsland and LA.
It's it's it's it's a it's ahuge criminal international
organization.
So um so so they grew and theystarted, you know, uh killing

(01:21:08):
more people to just to getterritory or to fight against
rival gangs or to you knowcollect debts or you know money
or whatever.
But as the organization grew,they became satanic.
They started doing satanicrituals.
I don't know exactly when thatstarted, but it's it was well
documented.
Yes.
And we in our arrested, we'veeven found authors and things

(01:21:28):
like that.
Yes, I've seen them.
And um, and so it's they becamea uh a satanic organization.
And even when when you uhsometimes when you interview uh
gang members that are in prison,they would say, I'm out of the
gang.
Of course they're in prison, butthey would say I'm I'm not an a
member of the gang anymore.
And when they asked them why, Iremember one I don't I remember

(01:21:49):
the news outlet that made itthis this but it's a you know a
very well-known news outlet thatmade this interview with a gang
member in person, we allowedthem to go into prisons and and
do the interviews.
And the guy that they they askedhim how many people have you
killed?
And he said, I don't remember.
He didn't remember how many.
Probably 10, 20.

(01:22:09):
He didn't remember.
And then they asked him, and uh,are you in uh what is your
position in the gang?
He explained how he went up inpositions, but um I left the
gang.
I said how why do you left thegang?
And he said, Well, because uh Iwas I mean I was you I was used
to kill uh I was used to to killpeople.
Um but I killed for territory, Ikilled for to collect uh money,

(01:22:36):
I killed for extortion.
But I came to the you know, tothis house and they were they
were about to kill a baby.
And he, a killer that had killedtens of people, said, Oh wait
wait, what are we doing?
Why why why are we gonna killthat baby?
And they told him because thebeast asked for a baby.

(01:22:57):
So we have to give him a baby.
So we said that he couldn'tresist that.
So he left the gang.
He's in prison because you knowhe's a killer, but he left the
gang because he couldn't uhtolerate what he was seeing.

SPEAKER_09 (01:23:10):
So human sacrifice was a part.

SPEAKER_31 (01:23:12):
Well, in the in the United States a couple of weeks
ago, or a couple of days ago, Idon't remember exactly, I saw
the news that they were theywere gonna kill a young girl, or
they killed a young girl, anddon't exactly remember because
it was a it was a satanicritual.
Well, it happened in the US acouple of weeks ago.

SPEAKER_18 (01:23:27):
So this is what's so scary about this, right?
This gang starts outorganically, it's just a gang.
They just want to sell a drug on18th Street and it eventually
morphs into MS-13, right?
But it becomes international.
Again, supply, demand,opportunity, power.
All the seven deadly sins arepresent in every one of these
organizations, whether it's thegovernment or the MS-13.
My gang's bigger than your gang.

(01:23:48):
That's all it is.
Gang organization.
But they're at some pointinfiltrated, at some point they
become satanic, probably becausethey're in the business
merchants of death.
And uh uh they're doing thatstuff.
And here's the thing it shows upeverywhere.
Uh shows up everywhere.
You know, there's that old clipof the banker, the guy that used
to work for World Bank.
That's like when they wanted meto kill a kid, that's when I got

(01:24:09):
out.
Bankers, like IMF, World Bankstuff.
Here's Nick Fuentes talkingabout when he used to hang out
with Yee.

SPEAKER_08 (01:24:15):
I remember that monologue well because I saw a
lot of this satanic occultstuff.
I'm talking about like Pizzagatestuff.
Like, we have to acknowledgethere are a lot of people in the
elite that are straight up devilworshippers.
I firmly believe in this likeeyes wide shut kind of thing
that it does happen.
I don't think it's necessarily agrand conspiracy, but no,

(01:24:36):
there's spiritual warfare forsure.

SPEAKER_20 (01:24:38):
Uh for sure.

SPEAKER_08 (01:24:39):
Yeah.
And I think there's a lot ofthose types of people out there,
especially in like Hollywood.
I saw it up close and personalwhen I was with Ye, and I I just
hate that stuff so much.
Wait a second.

SPEAKER_29 (01:24:49):
And I want to give you the answer, but what do you
mean you saw it up close?
Were you at an eyes wide shutparty with Ye?

SPEAKER_08 (01:24:54):
No, I wasn't at a party, but you know, being with
him, you you see, you know, likewith Balenciaga.
They did that at Balenciaga.
All right.
They had that like SNM teddybear in it.
And there's things like that.
It's like a wink and a nod to tobasically just evil, just
straight up evil.
And so so no, I, you know, thatthey always do this.
I do a show every night, as youknow, and you sometimes get

(01:25:15):
whipped up and you say somethinglike that.
Um, so I don't know that I'm Ihave a policy of like when I get
in charge, I'm gonna giveeveryone the death penalty.
But but suffice to say, thepeople that are involved in that
kind of stuff, they they can'tbe negotiated with.
It's not gonna be a powersharing agreement with people
that worship Moloch and Ball andthe Epsteins and and um, you

(01:25:35):
know, who is it, the Podestas.
Like those people are gonna haveto be like imprisoned or
something like that, becausethat stuff just makes me sick to
my stomach.

SPEAKER_18 (01:25:44):
I remember in that monologue when there was a
whistleblower that came out toRon Johnson and Ron Johnson ran
to the phone, to the micro tothe uh uh mics in the hallway,
and he was holding thewhistleblower report and says, I
have evidence of off-site uhmeetings with FBI agents that
are satanic uh ritual uh things.

(01:26:04):
I have evidence, I havewhistleblowers, and he's waving
his paper around.
I know I never heard about itagain.
What's the connecting stringbetween these cartels that
traffic and death thesecountries that traffic in death
and have hit lists, thesepoliticians that are crooked as
a day is long?

(01:26:26):
Could it be?
Could it be?
I don't know.
Here's Patrick Byrne, last clipfor private.
Thank you guys for stickingaround.
And he's talking about uhessentially all you people that
are in that, that are in eitherthe satanic stuff connected with
the Venezuela cartels, etc.
etc.
Roll now, roll now because it'scoming.

SPEAKER_14 (01:26:46):
Obama thing, it passed unnoticed a few weeks ago
in the press.
She turns out to have gone in inthe last days of Biden and using
the autopen gave four or fivepardons.
Now, the chances are 100%someone got paid something.
Now, you might not be able tofind it in a bank account, could
be crypto, could be the way theydo things, but they got paid in

(01:27:10):
Chicago.
In addition, the Tony Rezastuff, you you're one of the few
people who knows all thesestories.
Uh, you know why Biden, you knowwhy Obama and Tony Reza were
like this?
Because Tony Reza is a SyrianChristian, and one thing Syrian
Christians know how to do iskeep their mouth shut.
That guy did a decade in prisonfor Obama keeping his mouth
shut.

(01:27:30):
Anyway, so there was that.
I think the president alsohighlighted that because I was
telling the world roll early,roll often.
There are certain key figureswho who are considering flipping
sides.
And I want them, I think thepresident clearly wanted them to
think about that.
When you're when you're part ofa mafia like this and it's

(01:27:51):
coming apart, you want to be oneof the first.
They only give deals to thefirst guys that come in with
information or can cooperate abit.
You want to be one of the.

SPEAKER_11 (01:27:59):
I know you're here with a major deal that just got
made.
So again, why would Trump wantpeople to not?
He didn't just post that thealso link to the full interview.
Why does the president wantpeople to see what you said?
Well, he said in the interview,there's things Trump can't tell
people about why we're reallydoing this.
It's really about taking theDemocrat deep state piggyback
away.

SPEAKER_14 (01:28:14):
Well, that's that's a hypothesis on your part.
I don't think, I think there's alot.
That's probably on the list ofreasons it hit Venezuela.
That's probably not in the 10top list of the top 10.
What the reason it hitVenezuela, so yeah, I think he
was also by by retreat truthingthat doubling down on this,
telling any people out therewith information now is the

(01:28:36):
time.
And I can assure any suchpeople, you've got days, maybe
hours, to go make your deal.

SPEAKER_11 (01:28:45):
The message is roll right now.

SPEAKER_14 (01:28:47):
Yeah, roll early, roll often.
And then the other thing, so nowyou tell me when you want me to
get onto this.

SPEAKER_11 (01:28:53):
No, no, but you think finish up with that,
finish up with with with andthen let's give the huge new
news.

SPEAKER_14 (01:28:58):
Yeah, okay.
I think that Trump, I think thatthey retweeted that to reinforce
my the message of roll early,roll often.
And I can tell you folks outthere thinking of rolling.
I'm I'm um they keep me on theoutside because I'm such a wild
card, but I'm close enough.
I can tell you you have a weekat the most, maybe days to roll,

(01:29:20):
and maybe less than 24 hours toroll.
Everything, and especially withhis letter that's come out from
Hugo Carnaval, a lot, there'sjust some details to be filled
in.
So roll early, and also don'ttake your eyes off the ball with
Michelle Obama.
Michelle Obama, it's beentotally forgotten, but look it
up a few weeks ago.
She turned out to have gone inthe last days and used the
autopen herself.

SPEAKER_18 (01:29:41):
So Trump retweeted this, you know, a clip of
Patrick Burn and Alex Jones.
And he's like, you need to flipover, flip over.
Because remember that letterthat came out from Carvalho said
you have agents still inhigh-level positions.
We set people to becomepoliticians from the grassroots,
right?
And funded them.
And if you show up at the localKit Sap County and you've got
money to spend and donate,you'll run that county real

(01:30:03):
quick.
Right?
I can't imagine other countiesthat aren't maybe, maybe King
County might take you a littlelonger, might need to come in
with a seven-figure bankroll.
But if you come into a smallcounty and you got a small
bankroll, you can be mayorreally quick.
Really quick.
Like, you know, the kind ofquick like happens in Utah where
someone moves in and then theyrun in the very next cycle and
win.
It's like, oh yeah, because welove electing carpet baggers as

(01:30:24):
Americans.

SPEAKER_14 (01:30:25):
Do you get why that's so crazy, Alex?

SPEAKER_11 (01:30:27):
Well, it's just absolute uh the POTUS's
linebacker at a con us for arms,and maybe one of the pants,
literally hands-on in the crime.
That's major leverage.

SPEAKER_14 (01:30:39):
Yeah, and it's all it it tells, well, he probably
he effectively was president forthe whole four years of Biden,
so it probably didn't even seemstrange to him because he was
the president of that.

SPEAKER_11 (01:30:50):
It confirmed when when Biden first got in that a
committee of the Obamas, theClintons, uh, and and and and
Hunter and Jill and a few otherswould have committee meetings
about what got signed.
That's been confirmed.
You know, they have the cheapestcaps, you know, what to Ed
Martin, six months club, but theWest Law they have it all.

SPEAKER_18 (01:31:09):
Yeah, I have it all.
I think well, I know so let'sjust look at these pardons that
they issue.
Okay, so you've got Biden familypardon, J6 Pardon for the uh
committee, Lundgren Pardon,General Miley Pardon, Dr.
Fauci pardon.

SPEAKER_11 (01:31:24):
Yeah, they have the cheapest task.

SPEAKER_18 (01:31:25):
You know what to add Martin Six Plus Club 1,499
criminals in one day.
They said these were nonviolent.
I promise you they weren't.
I met some of them.
Iranian military supporters,Biden Virgin Island vacation
pardons, uh FBI murderer, Dr.
Fauci, and 37 death row inmates.

SPEAKER_14 (01:31:44):
Well, the West Law they have it all.
Yeah, I have it all.
I think well, I know that theyhave convened the grand jury in
Florida.
That all of this is gonna becoming.
I mean, this is the mostmonstrous crime in history uh
against the USA.

SPEAKER_18 (01:32:01):
So, knowing that, this is why in the end, we have
to give Cash Patel and Pam Bondia wide berth.

SPEAKER_20 (01:32:08):
Yep.

SPEAKER_18 (01:32:09):
That's why.
Because they have to takesomething out that's much bigger
than just a J6 pipe bomber.
Am I sad that that kid couldpossibly be a passy?
Yeah.
Do I like it?
No.
Nope.
Is the juice gonna be worth asqueeze?
No.
If it's not the truth, are wegonna have to pay for it as a
nation in karma in the future?
Probably.
But uh maybe we can kill thehead of the snake and then this

(01:32:31):
stuff can dry up on the vine.
I think that's what I thinkthat's what they're looking at
now.
Rather than constantly takingout all these intent to
distribute drug dealers, it'stime to hit the source.

SPEAKER_20 (01:32:41):
But you can understand how my hopium is
getting backed into a corner.

SPEAKER_18 (01:32:46):
Yes.
Okay, backed into the corner.
We're gonna have to startsharpening our pitchforks here
back to because we're gonna haveto harvest our own way because
the grocery stores will beempty.
That's why we sharpen ourpitchforks.
All right, guys, that's it fortoday.
Thank you so much for joiningus.
Don't forget to visitpeasantsperspective.com and left
behind with and withoutleftbehind and without.org.
They are doing their Christmasdrive right now, and uh people

(01:33:08):
are making requests for presentsfor kids with incarcerated
parents.
Please, please, please help stopthe cycle of generational
incarceration and take a visitand consider making a small
donation.
All right, thanks, guys.
We'll talk to you again later.
But before we do, Tony Pony Boysays they sold all their souls
for power.
Yes, they did, and evil speaksall languages, 100%.
All right, bye, guys.

SPEAKER_04 (01:33:53):
What night lived in that castle over there?
I'm 37.
What?
I'm 37, I'm not old.
Well, I can't just call you man,you could say dentist.
I didn't know you were calledDennis.
Well, you fell to find out, didyou?
I did say sorry about the oldwoman, but from behind, you look
what I have dangerous, youautomatically treat me as an
imperial.
Well, I am king, old king andexperience.

(01:34:16):
How'd you get that?
We perpetuate the economic andsocial differences in our
society.
What do you do?
How do you do that?

(01:34:41):
We're all we're all written.
I am in his house.

(01:35:05):
Then who is your Lord?
What I told you.
When I know those things iscoming, we take the first thing
of the order of the things, allthe time, I'm ready to special
by way of meeting.

(01:35:38):
The lady of the lake.
Signify my divine prominencethat I asked was to carry
excalibur.
That is why I'm talking.
Listen, strange women are animportant distribution thought
there's no basis for a system ofgovernment.

(01:36:00):
Supreme executive power derivesfrom a mandate from the masses,
not from some disparity or likea wedding ceremony.
But you can't expect to wieldsupreme executive power.
Just because some water ispassed through a sword.
Just because some poison beatand love the same
characteristics, shut up, shutup.

(01:36:23):
Now we see the violence in hairin the system.
Shut it up.
I'm being repressed.
Oh wow, give away.
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The Burden

The Burden

The Burden is a documentary series that takes listeners into the hidden places where justice is done (and undone). It dives deep into the lives of heroes and villains. And it focuses a spotlight on those who triumph even when the odds are against them. Season 5 - The Burden: Death & Deceit in Alliance On April Fools Day 1999, 26-year-old Yvonne Layne was found murdered in her Alliance, Ohio home. David Thorne, her ex-boyfriend and father of one of her children, was instantly a suspect. Another young man admitted to the murder, and David breathed a sigh of relief, until the confessed murderer fingered David; “He paid me to do it.” David was sentenced to life without parole. Two decades later, Pulitzer winner and podcast host, Maggie Freleng (Bone Valley Season 3: Graves County, Wrongful Conviction, Suave) launched a “live” investigation into David's conviction alongside Jason Baldwin (himself wrongfully convicted as a member of the West Memphis Three). Maggie had come to believe that the entire investigation of David was botched by the tiny local police department, or worse, covered up the real killer. Was Maggie correct? Was David’s claim of innocence credible? In Death and Deceit in Alliance, Maggie recounts the case that launched her career, and ultimately, “broke” her.” The results will shock the listener and reduce Maggie to tears and self-doubt. This is not your typical wrongful conviction story. In fact, it turns the genre on its head. It asks the question: What if our champions are foolish? Season 4 - The Burden: Get the Money and Run “Trying to murder my father, this was the thing that put me on the path.” That’s Joe Loya and that path was bank robbery. Bank, bank, bank, bank, bank. In season 4 of The Burden: Get the Money and Run, we hear from Joe who was once the most prolific bank robber in Southern California, and beyond. He used disguises, body doubles, proxies. He leaped over counters, grabbed the money and ran. Even as the FBI was closing in. It was a showdown between a daring bank robber, and a patient FBI agent. Joe was no ordinary bank robber. He was bright, articulate, charismatic, and driven by a dark rage that he summoned up at will. In seven episodes, Joe tells all: the what, the how… and the why. Including why he tried to murder his father. Season 3 - The Burden: Avenger Miriam Lewin is one of Argentina’s leading journalists today. At 19 years old, she was kidnapped off the streets of Buenos Aires for her political activism and thrown into a concentration camp. Thousands of her fellow inmates were executed, tossed alive from a cargo plane into the ocean. Miriam, along with a handful of others, will survive the camp. Then as a journalist, she will wage a decades long campaign to bring her tormentors to justice. Avenger is about one woman’s triumphant battle against unbelievable odds to survive torture, claim justice for the crimes done against her and others like her, and change the future of her country. Season 2 - The Burden: Empire on Blood Empire on Blood is set in the Bronx, NY, in the early 90s, when two young drug dealers ruled an intersection known as “The Corner on Blood.” The boss, Calvin Buari, lived large. He and a protege swore they would build an empire on blood. Then the relationship frayed and the protege accused Calvin of a double homicide which he claimed he didn’t do. But did he? Award-winning journalist Steve Fishman spent seven years to answer that question. This is the story of one man’s last chance to overturn his life sentence. He may prevail, but someone’s gotta pay. The Burden: Empire on Blood is the director’s cut of the true crime classic which reached #1 on the charts when it was first released half a dozen years ago. Season 1 - The Burden In the 1990s, Detective Louis N. Scarcella was legendary. In a city overrun by violent crime, he cracked the toughest cases and put away the worst criminals. “The Hulk” was his nickname. Then the story changed. Scarcella ran into a group of convicted murderers who all say they are innocent. They turned themselves into jailhouse-lawyers and in prison founded a lway firm. When they realized Scarcella helped put many of them away, they set their sights on taking him down. And with the help of a NY Times reporter they have a chance. For years, Scarcella insisted he did nothing wrong. But that’s all he’d say. Until we tracked Scarcella to a sauna in a Russian bathhouse, where he started to talk..and talk and talk. “The guilty have gone free,” he whispered. And then agreed to take us into the belly of the beast. Welcome to The Burden.

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