Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott vorgiez, as you just heard in the Fox News update,
people now with the Federal Emergency Management Agency have lost
their jobs. The Department of Homeland Security tells Fox News
that we just heard a moment ago that four employees
are being fired today for circumventing the leadership and unilaterally
(00:20):
making the egregious payment for hotels four migrants in New
York City. If you're just joining us saying, wait, who
did what? DOEGE, the Department of Government Efficiency, led by
Elon Musk, and a bunch of teenagers who had some
hilarious names on social media in their previous youth Doege
(00:43):
found that there were about fifty nine million dollars in
payments made to New York City hotels out of the
FEMA budget, not during the last days or months of
the Biden administration. Last week. Last week, someone decided to
direct fifty nine million dollars set aside for emergency management hurricanes, flooding, wildfires,
(01:12):
maybe some problems we have with snow here in the Midwest.
This is emergency management money. And last week someone at
FEMA approved fifty nine million dollars to go to some
luxury New York hotels so we could put up migrants
in that community. That's not what that money is there for.
It's also certainly worth noting that when the people in
(01:37):
among other places, Ashville, North Carolina, were underwater, buried in
water and then mud and trying to dig out, and
FEMA was nowhere to be found, and one of the
FEMA directors said, well, you know, we you know, pretty
tight budget. We don't have a lot of money. And
then someone said, you guys certainly spent a lot of
your FEMA budget on housing illegal immigrants. And then the
(01:59):
Biden administration and everyone said, no, no, no, that's all
a lie. We're not doing any of that. But they
were doing it. We knew they were doing it. The
American people knew they were doing it. That's why they're out.
And DOZE is taking a look to see what's going
on with your tax dollars, and someone within FEMA, because
the swamp has not been drained, decided last week, Hey,
(02:20):
they're not going to get to us. They're not going
to see this. They're not going to see the approval
of fifty nine million dollars in that big, bloated government.
How are they going to notice? Well, someone noticed. I
don't know if it was Elon Musk himself or one
of his teenage Doze employees who either figured out some
(02:43):
Greek scrolls at the bottom of a volcano like that
Nebraska kid did, or the one who went on social
media by the handle big Balls for a while when
he was fourteen. I don't know, but someone found it
because they're watching now. You can't the paltry sum of
fifty nine million dollars anymore, not from this team. So
(03:06):
Elon Musky yesterday said, the Doge team just discovered that
FEMA sent fifty nine million dollars last week to luxury
hotels in New York City to house illegal migrants. Sending
this money violated the law and is in gross insubordination
to the President's executive order. That money is meant for
(03:27):
American disaster relief and instead is being spent on high
end hotels for illegals. A clawback demand will be made
today to recoup those funds. Now, they didn't get any
pushback from FEMA. They've got an intram FEMA director put
there by Trump now taking a look, and he said,
(03:49):
we appreciate that this has been brought to our attention.
And that we would look into it and we would
not be surprised to see that people would be fired.
That's what the interim director of FEMA, Cameron Hamilton said yesterday.
He said the payments have been suspended and the employees
(04:11):
who authorized them would probably be disciplined. And now we
got the update from Fox that there are four employees
who have been fired. Now, this is not a Republican
or Democrat issue, because there are so many Democrats, including
people who are in this country as immigrants, who say,
(04:34):
no one's given me anything, no one's spending American tax
dollars to put me up in a fancy hotel. I mean,
there are people in New York living in squalor, whether
they're legal immigrants, whether you got some people who are
illegal immigrants. Not everyone gets to stay at the really
fancy hotels. You got people born and raised here, You
(04:57):
got a melting pot of people in New York City
going away. Why did some people get that golden ticket
to stay in that fancy New York luxury hotel on
the taxpayer's dime. This is not how it's supposed to work.
So this isn't a Republican or Democrat issue of course,
(05:18):
there are certainly those who will make it that everything's
got to be a Republican or Democrat issue. I don't
see it that way, and I think that as another
update we just got from Fox a moment ago, there
are a number of churches and religious institutions across the
country who are pushing back on the Trump administration when
it was said like, well, yeah, places of worship are
(05:42):
not immune from immigrations and Customs Enforcement doing a raid
there now. They want you to think that means that
ICE is going to come running in during Mass on
Sunday or a church services on Sunday and start pulling
out anyone who's got so much as a decent tan
come with us, hector, I'm not in the country illegally. Ah, well,
(06:07):
tell it to the judge. It would just send you
to Guantanamo and figure it out later. That's what they
want people to think is happening. That's not happening. There
are some so called religious institutions in this country operating
as basically fronts for criminal enterprise, including the housing of terrorists,
dangerous illegal immigrants, and FEMA always had not FEMA, but
(06:33):
ICE always had the opportunity to go into a sanctuary
and get dangerous people out of our community. No matter
immigration status. None of this has changed, but of course
they want to make it seem like Trump is sending
the Gestapo church church to harass Brown people. This is asinine.
(06:58):
Add to the layer of as nineness. What Trump said
yesterday about Hamas and some of the reaction to this,
we'll get to that in two minutes.
Speaker 2 (07:08):
Scott Voice News Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
Trump said yesterday that Hamas needs to release all those
hostages by noon Saturday. I'm sure that someone right now
at HAMAS is like win noon noon, Gaza time, noon,
Washington time. Wait noon, win what time? But I think
(07:33):
the message is loud and clear. Release the hostages. Otherwise
all hell will break loose in Gaza.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
Now.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
I don't know if President Trump had noticed, but all
hell has already broken loose in Gaza. It's bombed out, rubble.
All hell has broken loose in the Middle East for
the better part of our entire lives. So you know,
say like, hey, you gotta do this by Saturday, otherwise
(08:04):
all hell's gonna break loose. Like oh yeah, around here,
we just call that Saturday. Now. What Trump means is
release the hostages. Otherwise the ceasefire agreement is off. Now
It's interesting that technically President Trump really can't decide that
(08:30):
is he speaking knee jerk? Is this off the cuff?
Is this something supported by Israel? What is Israel gonna
do now? Trump immediately said it's going to be up
to Israel as to how they do this. But I
think Trump is he's putting himself in the shoes of
family and friends waiting for a loved one to come
(08:55):
home after they were taken hostage October seventh, twenty twenty three,
about a year and a half ago, almost a year
and a half ago. Since then, they've been all these
months without their loved one. In some instances, they're not
sure if this person's alive or dead. If they're alive,
we need to get them home. And this whole like, oh,
(09:15):
we're gonna have a little ceasefire. You guys go reload
over there, we'll reload over here. Meanwhile, you're wondering about
a family member. You want that person back. Why are
we pacifying the other side? Do we know where they are?
Can we go get them? Why did other hostages get
released in mine? Didn't you know?
Speaker 2 (09:35):
So?
Speaker 1 (09:35):
Trump is putting himself in those very real humanitarian shoes, saying,
I'm tired of people, you know, who are waiting for
hostages to be released, and we're just past we're just
pacifying terrorists over there. So maybe Trump got a little
(09:56):
knee jerk when he said those hostages need to be
released by noon on Saturday. Now, who would be against that?
Terrorists who are holding hostages? What other group collectively would
be against that? And you know why they're against it
(10:19):
because they say, well, if we let the hostages go,
then Israel is going to come in here and they're
going to kill us. They're not going to have anything
right now. Really, the only thing stopping them from coming
in here and killing us is we might kill the
hostages as they come in, or they might accidentally kill
these hostages. So we have to keep the hostages once
we release them. There's nothing stopping them from killing us. Yes,
(10:41):
and maybe you should have thought about that before you
started killing innocent people and taking hostages. Who's against this
from Trump? Interesting meeting coming up here in the White
House today. We've got the King of Jordan, King Abdullah
(11:04):
the Second aka the Deuce, will be at the White
House today he is the leader of Jordan, and Jordan
is one of those nations that Trump said, We're going
to have a beautiful strip the Gaza strips can be beautiful. Frankly,
the riviera of the Middle East being credible. And then
people said, well, what about the Palestinians who lived there. Oh,
(11:26):
they're going to go to Jordan and Egypt. They're going
to take them. And Jordan and Egypt said, hell, we
are We're not taking these guys. So now we've got
the leader of Jordan under this umbrella, coming to the
White House today to talk to the President, and the
idea here is that it's going to be a tense meeting,
with King Abdullah expected to inform Donald Trump that he's
(11:51):
against the Palestinian resettlement plan because it could spur radicalism,
spread chaos in the region, jeopardized p with Israel, and
threatened Jordan's very survival. Do you hear this, all of
you guys who have stopped traffic and chased Israeli students
off of college campuses. Even Jordan, a Muslim majority nation,
(12:14):
doesn't want Hamas in their nation because these guys are crazy.
These guys got all kinds of nuts going on. We
don't want them a Jordan. These guys are dangerous, violent, radicalized,
and crazy. You know, these are the people you were
(12:35):
standing up for, by the way, when you were chasing
Israeli students out of college campuses and chasing Jerry Seinfeld
through the streets because he's a youw and we got
to go after them. Right now, this is who you're
standing up for. Other Arabs and Muslims don't want them
(12:56):
in their nation. Are you going to take them in?
Fox kfab News updates next. You know that if you've
listened to this radio station for more than approximately an
eighth of a pike a second. Over the last few years,
there's been a debate in Nebraska about who should be
in what bathroom, locker room, sports team related to transgender stuff.
(13:17):
Also when should what be allowed with children, some of
whom have yet to even go through adolescents what should
be allowed there? It is a reasonable debate, it has
not always been held between reasonable people, which has been
frankly incredibly entertaining. How quickly can I was just thinking
(13:40):
about the Mikayla Cavanaugh outburst at the legislature. When she
starts yelling and screaming, going I love trans people, we
need trans people. And she was kind of yelling and
screaming on stuff like that. Yeah, that was from an
(14:00):
alleged adult State senator in Omaha. There's a bit of
a cabal of very left leaning state senators from Omaha
and Lincoln, mostly women. I'd probably throw John Cavanaugh in
there as well. And the two who really seemed to
(14:26):
court controversy would be MICHAELA. Kavanaugh. But she's the one
that's often, you know, crying and yelling and screaming. Megan Hunt,
she's more like a dagger. She more like a stiletto.
She just knifes you and then sits back and then
just watches, just watches the aftermath. I happen to think
(14:50):
Megan Hunt is funny and entertaining. Would we agree on
pretty much anything politically? I don't think so. Oh, but
she's funny on social media. She's funny. She's a great
follow on social media, and when she has a chance
to remark on things, usually she's pretty funny. Watching her
(15:14):
and State Senator Julie Slama, when State Senator Slama was
in the unicamer go back and forth at each other
was hilarious because they're both super funny and sarcastic, and
they hated each other and it was sorry, I'm entertained
by it.
Speaker 4 (15:32):
So now you wouldn't You wouldn't break up a girl
fight in a bar, would you? I?
Speaker 1 (15:38):
I don't. I tend not to get involved. I don't know.
I don't know. So now Slama's gone, and so now
like Megan Hunt is like, oh, who am I going
to play with now? Well, thankfully Omaha State Senator, very
conservative Kathleen Kuth is there. And it's Kathleen Kuth who
has put forth, She's put her name on a lot
(15:59):
of these bills about stop doing transgender surgery and hormone
blockers and all the rest of this stuff for kids.
We need to keep boys off of girls sports teams
for a variety of reasons, and we need to keep
boys out of girls' bathrooms and locker rooms for a
variety of reasons. Well, somehow this whole thing has gotten
(16:21):
incredibly political, which led to yesterday's exchange at the Nebraska Unicameral.
This would be liberal state Senator Megan Hunt of Omaha
asking conservative state Senator Kathleen Couth of Omaha a very
pointed question, like you've been in.
Speaker 4 (16:41):
The bathroom at the same time as me.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
Right, so you can hear this right as you go,
Senator cout you've been in the bathroom at the same
time as me. Right. Kathleen's like, yeah, we've been in
the bathroom together before, do you How do you know
I don't have a penis?
Speaker 3 (16:57):
I do.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
You've been in the bathroom the same time as me.
Uh huh? How do you know I don't have a penis?
Please don't take that cut and clip it and use
it for anything.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
I would do.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
How do you know I don't have a praarner? And
Kathleen couches goes, I don't now see, boy, I got
a variety of thoughts on this. The first that comes
to mind is if I'm a woman and another woman
just said, yeah, I don't know that you don't have
male genitalia, seems like I might be something I'd be
(17:39):
offended by. Apparently you're not allowed to be offended by that.
If you look like a woman and identify as a
woman and other people think, I bet there's a a
weien in there. Apparently that's not something to be offended by. Guys,
try that it's Valentine's Week. There might be some guys
(18:02):
going I'm tired of being lonely. I'm gonna go out
there and find me some female companionship. Apparently it is
very flattering if you sidle up next to a woman
and go, hello, there, little lady, you might have a penis,
and that's fine. See how that goes. Maybe it'll go fine,
maybe it'll go very well. I don't know. I don't
(18:24):
know what everyone's I don't know what anyone's doing anymore,
and I don't care. So the point here from Megan
Hunt is her point is there are some people who
you look at them and you don't know is this
a male? Is this a female? And what are you
gonna do? Kathleen Kuth? Are you going to go from
(18:46):
stall to stall and just pull people out of there
and check? All right, let me see what's going on
in here. We're going to go in there and check
all this stuff. How do you know? How do you
enforce this idea about boys shouldn't play on girls' sports teams,
They shouldn't take positions from girls in sports, they shouldn't
(19:06):
take scholarships and records from female athletes, and they should
certainly shouldn't be showering next to them in the locker room,
or using bathrooms with these women. And Megan Hunt's point is,
how are you gonna know? It's a valid point. I
certainly don't want anyone going from bathroom stall to bathroom
(19:29):
stall to make sure that the people in there have
genitalia that corresponds with the gender that we assume is
going on based on whether it says male or female
before you go into that bathroom. Now, some of you
might volunteer for the job. Again, I don't know what
everyone's into, and it's not my business to find out,
So please don't tell me. If you're like, I'll volunteer
(19:52):
for that that you know what, call Kathleen Cauth and
Meghan Hunts see if they'll take you up on it.
But to Hunt's point, she's right, we're not going bathroom
stall to bathroom stall, going all right, show me. But
(20:13):
we also don't go from vehicle to vehicle. We don't
just start pulling over cars around town saying all right,
anyone committing crimes in here, You've got to have reasonable
and probable cause to pull over a vehicle. Now, wait
a second, hold on, before you start yelling at me,
(20:36):
what do you mean. I mean, if someone is a
girl who looks like a boy, that means you can
just pull her pants down. That's not the reasonable or
probable cause that I am talking about. I am saying,
when we know that a this is only for purely
for the analogy of why police would pull over a vehicle.
(21:00):
All right, So when we when we pulled over a
vehicle and we know that there are things going on here,
then then they deal with it accordingly. Many of these
individuals who especially at these like middle school and high
school level and all that, and some in college. You know,
(21:21):
we're not talking about people who've gone through full surgeries
and all the rest of this stuff. We're just talking
about people who've just decided, like I'm gonna go play
on the girls' sports team, and I'm gonna go into
the girl's bathroom and I'm gonna go into the girl's
locker room. There's no attempt to conceal or anything. It's
more like, what are you going to do about it?
And how are we not standing up for women and
(21:42):
young girls who have been put in that situation? How
am I not supposed to If I'm out someplace with
my daughter and she goes into the bathroom and some
guy follows her into the bathroom. How do I not
turn into Liam Neeson right there and say I've got
a particular set of skill you deal with that situation.
(22:03):
By the way, I don't have a particular set of skills.
You know, if you if you kidnap my daughter's I
have a particular set of skills. I will I'll find
out who you are. I will mock you on the radio.
You will be a part of long winded radio diatribes.
It's not that scary, but my wife, my wife had
(22:24):
probably uh, she would come down on you with a
full force and vengeance of hell, you know how and
how are you not supposed to do that? Look, George Carlin,
I think said it pretty well, responding to people that say, well,
you never know, and he goes no, sometimes, you know,
(22:48):
he wasn't talking about this issue, but I think the
application is there. There are males who are not trying
to conceal anything. They're just taking advantage of this incredibly
ridiculous policy that just allows guys to go play on
the women's sports teams. So going to bathrooms and locker rooms,
(23:09):
now here's the interesting thing to me because we got
the NC double A responding to the President's executive action
on protecting women and girls in sports and in sports facilities,
that's locker rooms. The nc double A changed its participation
pology the other day, participation policy the other day for
(23:32):
transgender athletes, limiting competition in women's sports to athletes who've
been assigned female at birth, otherwise known as athletes who
are female. The phrase assigned female at birth is asinine.
Doctors really don't get this wrong. But whatever, Trump signed
(23:55):
the executive order banning males from girls and women's sports,
and so the NCUBA policy change is effective immediately and
applies to all athletes, regardless of previous eligibility reviews. So
we're talking about five hundred thousand athletes at one thousand,
one hundred member schools, and that's just the NC double A,
(24:17):
it's public colleges and institutions. The president of the NC
DOUBLEA says, we strongly believe that clear, consistent, and uniform
eligibility standards would best serve today's student athletes instead of
a patchwork of conflicting state laws and court decisions. To
that end, President Trump's order provides a clear national standard unquote,
(24:39):
so they're following it. Here's the interesting thing that I'm
waiting to see, because I think that there are a
lot of liberal Democrat people who say, yeah, I mean,
I don't want anyone harassed or anything like that. Certainly
we're not looking for that discriminated against. We don't want,
(25:03):
but we're not gonna let guys take spots on women's
sports teams, or compete against girls injure girls in sporting competitions,
take scholarships and records away from girls. That's not why
we fought so hard for title nine back in the day.
We didn't fight for all these years. My mom didn't
fight for title nine just so I could stand by
(25:26):
and go, oh, you know, it's fine from a transgender
female to do this. Like it's gotten a little out
of control. And so what I'm wandering here is here,
whether it's Congress at the midterm or somewhere down the
line when another Democrat is in office in the White House,
(25:49):
if there will be executive actions to change it back,
or if they just say, you know, it's the laws,
the law, and you know, we're always looking, and then
they kind of put people off, go we're always looking
and conversing about we will put together a committee to
study the effects of and you know, they're just gonna
hym in hall and push this down the line and
(26:10):
just hope it ends up being someone else's problem, because
I think a lot of these people are very glad
that Trump did this. That way, if someone goes, I
can't believe Trump did this, they can go, yeah, I know,
what are you gonna do? Right, it's Trump. And then
at some point Trump's not gonna be there, and all
these people come back to these guys in power and
(26:30):
say Trump's gone, Are you gonna reverse that the horrible policy?
And they're gonna be like, that's not that easy, you know,
so we gotta do this, and they're rid of habeas corpus,
and it just there's so much that goes into it.
I think they they're super happy that Trump did this.
It no longer puts them in a position where suddenly
(26:51):
they're bad Democrats. If they stand up for the rights
of women and girls, Will they change back after Trump?
Will see what happens after Trump? They asked the president,
is your vice president going to be the next president
of the United States? Did you hear what he said
about that? You will next.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
Scott Bories News Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
Brett Baar talked to President Trump in that Fox News
interview before the Super Bowl on Sunday, and here's one
of the surprising exchanges. The music put here by Sky
News Australia. In this clip posted online. Do you view
Vice President JD.
Speaker 3 (27:32):
Vance as your successor the Republican nominee in twenty twenty eight. No,
but he's very capable.
Speaker 2 (27:38):
I mean, I don't think.
Speaker 3 (27:39):
That it, you know, I think you have a lot
of very capable people. So far, I think he's doing
a fantastic job. It's too early. We're just starting. But
by the time you get to the midterms, he's going
to be looking for an endorsement. A lot of people
have said that this has been the greatest opening almost
three weeks in the history of the president.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
That's only been the fastest and the most stuff.
Speaker 3 (27:58):
I've done so much, so fast, And we really had
to because they have really what they've done to our
country is so sad.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
It's sorry. So that's President Trump talking to Brett Behar.
Brett Behar says, do you consider J. D Vance, your
vice president, to be the front runner for the Republican
nomination for the presidency in twenty twenty eight, and Trump
just said no, and some people are like, way to
throw your vice president under the bus. Talked about this
a little bit with Jim Rose earlier this morning on
(28:27):
kfab's Morning News. I said, I think one of the
reasons Trump might say that is there's some people that say,
you know, he could be president for another term. They're trying.
I don't think that's a serious thing. I think that
Trump likes to say that and dance in that light
because it just really tweaks those who truly have Trump
(28:49):
derangement syndrome. I don't think he's serious. I don't know,
but that's not going to happen. Remind me, I said
that here in four years, but that's not going to happen.
I said. I think it's probably has more to do
with the fact that Trump wants whoever the next nominee
for the party. I think he wants him to earn
it and not have anything handed to them. I think
(29:10):
that's probably a pretty easy answer to understand. You know, yeah,
jd Vance could certainly be the guy, but he's got
to earn it. Also, you look at the problems that
Trump had with his last vice president in the final
days of that administration. So he's not going to immediately
sign off on Vance because if he said the same
thing about Pens, people would be like, hey, do you
(29:32):
still think Pens? So I think it's all that. I
like Jim Rose's response to all this. He said, what
about Trump's ego playing into all this? As soon as
Trump says yeah, JD. Vance is the next guy, then
we spend the next four years talking about JD. Vance.
And Trump would prefer that you spend the next four
years talking about him. And I'm reading this really long
(29:53):
headline from the Babylon b Democrats uncovered devious billionaire plot
to spend billions buying social media company to get President
Trump elected in order to access the Treasury database and
steal grandma's six hundred and ninety five dollars social Security check.
(30:15):
Like I said the other day, people are like, oh,
Elon Musk and the Dose team have access to the
Treasury informationist, so they're gonna have your social Security number.
This guy sends satellites in space. He's got a kid
on his team from Nebraska who found some burned out
scrolls in the bottom of a volcano and figured out
(30:38):
what the scrolls said. Admittedly, it'd be hard to argue
with him, but still, these guys are among the brightest
of the bright, even though some of them, being recent teenagers,
used the handle big Balls on social media, proving that yes,
(30:59):
they were just a few years ago. Fourteen year old
boys and even forty eight year old boys find that funny. Anyway.
I think if they wanted your social Security number, they
could probably track that down. They could probably get that. Yeah,
Democrats uncovered devious billionaire plot to spend billions buying social
(31:21):
media company to get Trump elected in order to access
the Treasury database to steal grandma's six hundred and ninety
five dollars social Security check. All right, a few more
things related to what happened in New Orleans over the
weekend and in the week leading up to it. This
(31:42):
one not so much about the football game. There was
a reporter from Kansas City's Telemundo, the Hispanic Latino TV network.
They sent a reporter who lived in Kansas City to
the Super Bowl, and this young guy named Adan Manzano
(32:04):
is dead. We don't know why he's dead. What we
do know is we have hotel security footage that shows
a woman going into his hotel room and then later
coming out of his hotel room. The woman is known
to authorities. She's known as the Bourbon Street hustler. Anyone
(32:27):
else ever been on Bourbon Street? Talk to anybody? You know,
there's not just one Bourbon Street hustler. I'm sure she's
known as the Bourbon Street hustler. There's probably at least
a hundred others down there going Hey, that's my line.
It is a place of ill repute, which can be
(32:48):
if you keep your wits about you, just delightful, just
really fun. I will tell you about the time I
spent some time on Bourbon Street and Orleans hanging out
with the pimp Lucy ever tell you that story?
Speaker 4 (33:03):
Yeah? I think I missed that one.
Speaker 1 (33:05):
Spending some time hanging out with the pimp. And did
he know it that he was hanging out with me?
Are you suggesting I'm ruining his reputation? Wait a second,
you're not one of those radio blowhards, are you? Yeah?
I am. I gotta get out of here. I can't
be seen with you.
Speaker 3 (33:21):
No.
Speaker 1 (33:22):
I I was talking to this guy and we quickly
established that he is a pimp engaged in active pimpery.
Now he saw me, and I was twenty years old,
like Scott, what were you doing twenty years old on
Bourbon Street? Trust me anything I wanted. Bourbon Street didn't
care that I was twenty years old, thus underage to
(33:42):
get into the bars and drink thirty two ounces Hurricanes
at four dollars a pop. Turns out, Burmon Street didn't
care about any of that stuff. Hey, you you look
like you're about twelve. Come on into this strip club,
this bar, this jazz club, this we're playing Zydaco in here.
What's that? I don't know? Come in here and said
you want to drink? This one's on the house. Bourbon
Street didn't care, thankfully though, since I have only very
(34:10):
rarely drank to excess, I had my wits about me
to where. Now here's a guy, a working gentleman, who
sidled up next to me and wanted to know if
I wanted to have some real fun in New Orleans
that night. I said, of course I do. He goes, well,
here's what we're talking about, and here's what it'll cost.
(34:30):
He I said, oh no, then not that, And so
he's now trying to sell me. Good dude, nice guy.
I got the sense that he was fairly new in
the pimp and game. So we just walked up and
down Bourbon Street. He kept trying to get me to
go off down side roads. I said, no, no, no,
We're just gonna stay here on Bourbon Street. And I'm
(34:52):
just very curious about your life, about your job. And
I just interviewed this guy for probably a half an hour,
and I kept telling up.
Speaker 4 (35:01):
With this random guy. Yeah, and you know what he
does for a living, sure, quote unquote.
Speaker 1 (35:05):
Oh yeah. I'd never talked to a pimp before. I
loved talking to people about their lives, especially if it's
a circumstance and situation that is completely foreign to me.
I've never interviewed and either before or since, someone who
did that line of work. And I was in.
Speaker 4 (35:24):
Thrall and he was trying to get you to turn down.
Speaker 1 (35:26):
Yeah, he was, well, he's trying to make money. And
I kept saying like, look, I'm not holding you here,
I am not doing business with you. Anytime you need
to leave and go talk to someone else, have had it.
Good luck to you, that's right. But we were if
dare I say we were having a good time talking
to each other. This guy's like one of my thirteen
best friends in the world, and I only just had
(35:48):
that conversation with him that night. So when I hear
about some guy is partying on Bourbon Street and ended
up talking to people who this person's known as the
Bourbon Street hustler, Like, Yep, that's Bourbon Street. That's Bourbon Street.
On Marti Gras, that's Bourbon Street leading up to the
super Bowl being in town. That's Bourbon Street. On New
(36:10):
Year's Eve, that's Bourbon Street. Just on a random Tuesday,
that's Bourbon Street. So this poor guy ends up talking
to someone, had a drink with this woman at a bar,
and next thing you know, we see them going into
his hotel. She comes out, he stays in. He's dead.
(36:37):
She left the room, came back to the room, and
then a lot of his stuff has gone. His phone's missing,
credit card has been used for fraudulent purposes around the city.
They discovered that she was the one who had been
using them, And what they don't know is like, did
she kill this guy or did he engage in behavior
(37:00):
that led to his death. What she seems to be
charged with right now is sounds like partying with this
guy and then stealing his stuff and then spending his money,
and then he wound up dead. Now imagine being the
family of this guy and just being like, oh no, what, why? How?
(37:24):
And then you hear this story. See if this sounds familiar,
here's a guy who went through the same process, didn't die.
But this goes back to November of twenty twenty one.
Had a drink with this woman at a Bourbon Street bar,
then felt disoriented. He believes he was drugged, and he
(37:44):
accepted her offer like, Hey, looks like you've had a
little bit too much a drink. Let me help you
get back to your hotel. Okay, So they go back
to his hotel room. He wakes up the next morning
his phone's gone, wallet's gone, and his and then he
finds out that somehow she managed to get into his phone,
knew what she was doing, and cleared out eighty thousand
(38:06):
dollars he had in a crypto currency account. And then
there was thousands of dollars in charges to his credit
cards because the eighty grand and crypto wasn't enough. Let
me also start running these credit cards down. So she
steals a bunch of money from him. He thinks she
was drugged. Now. That was November of twenty twenty one.
(38:27):
She finally gets before a judge to face all these
charges last October. The attorneys for this guy who was
the victim of the crime are saying, please put this
woman in jail. The judge is like, oh, I think
she's learned her lesson. Let's do a suspended sentence and probation.
Speaker 4 (38:50):
She learned her lesson from what I don't know.
Speaker 1 (38:52):
Well, she didn't. She was not put in jail. That
was not in twenty twenty one. That was in October.
Just a couple months later. A few months later, there
she is right back there in Bourbon Street, meets another guy.
The footage shows her leading him to his hotel room,
going in out of his hotel room, all of his
(39:13):
stuff is stolen. She's the one found to be charging
stuff to his credit cards. And he's dead. If she's
been drugging people, could be that she drugged him and
this particular narcotic that was used killed him. And you're
this guy's family and you're like, wait, this guy's dead
(39:36):
because this woman's been doing this to people, and she's
not in jail, and everyone knows it is that really
what happens in New Orleans. Yep.
Speaker 4 (39:48):
I haven't been back there in a long time.
Speaker 1 (39:50):
I'd go back tomorrow. But like the food, just like
anywhere though, I don't care where you are. You've got
to have your head on a swivel New Orleans. New
Orleans is not for your amateurs.
Speaker 4 (40:02):
No, you've got to be That's all I meant.
Speaker 1 (40:04):
Professional head swiveler.
Speaker 4 (40:07):
Go to New Orleans, enjoy the whole area, the marketplace
at French Quarter. During the day, yeah, get all your
shopping done, get all your food eating.
Speaker 1 (40:16):
And then at night live music, good food, good drink,
good parties. And then make sure you go with all
the friends that you have in the world back to
your hotel room. Not a good place to be hanging
out by yourself, but couldn't you say that about just
about anywhere in the middle of the night.
Speaker 2 (40:35):
Scott Boys Mornings nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven
ten KFAB