Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
The Michael Very Show is on the air. It could
be we're going to run against crazy Bernie. That could
be he's a crazy man. But that's okay. We like
crazy people. I love running against Crooked Hillary.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
I love that crooke Hillary Clinton, Crooked Hillaries, he is
a crooked one.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
Gavin Newscomb, he's the governor of California.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
He's signed Newscomb. Michael, they're going to cover Pocahontas.
Speaker 5 (00:39):
I've named him deranged Jack Smith.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
But we'll work together with Shifty Shifts, who are going
to defeat crazy Kamala. But we have a representative in
Congress who they say was here.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
A long time ago. They call her a Pocahontas. But
you know what I like. You know sometimes you won
was there a long time? That always patch acase.
Speaker 6 (01:08):
You want to be where you can see you.
Speaker 5 (01:12):
Say you want to be.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
Everybody in holes your name. We'll talk about funny or sad.
I think it's more sad than funny. He has won
ability I don't have. He sleeps. He can sleep, sleepy
Joe Biden, sleepy.
Speaker 3 (01:29):
Joe crying, Chuck, do you want to keep it going
for another five years.
Speaker 7 (01:35):
Yeah, yeah, you you were.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
Say PoCA hunters.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
Yes, be glad that one.
Speaker 5 (01:42):
Knows your name.
Speaker 2 (01:46):
Always Bataca.
Speaker 5 (01:50):
You want to go.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Home, say you.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
Want to go ahead, everybody noles your name.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
I'm a rocket man.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
We will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea.
Rocketman is on a suicide mission for Himself'll tell you.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
What cash Hotel showing out.
Speaker 8 (02:17):
I'm not so sure about our Attorney general, but I
am very happy with cash Fortel. He appeared before the
Appropriations Committee and during his opening statement, he gave an
update on the fantastic work his agency has been doing
in a very short period of time.
Speaker 9 (02:34):
Highlight just a few things the FBI has undertaken a
few short months that I've been at the Helm, we
have apprehended three of the FBI's most top ten wanted
fugitives in the world, three in less than three months.
We've joined our partners at DHS and conducted target operations
to round up fugitives around the country. For instance, in
(02:56):
Massachusetts alone, we have prehended three hundred and seventy violent
fugitives we sees along with our partners at DHS and
the Department of Defense. In one operation down off the
coast of Florida. Forty four thousand pounds of illicit narcotics,
that's half a billion dollars of pure narcotics that would
have hit the streets are now off the streets permanently,
(03:17):
and as part of Operation Allied Corridor, we've targeted approximately
three thousand legal aliens with ties to criminal organizations or
eligible for deportation and removal children Today, as we talked
about with the Attorney General and Operation Restore Justice, prioritizing
crimes against children is a priority of mind and will
continue to be of the FBI. Just this morning, we
(03:40):
announced that we execute over four hundred and fifty search
warrants and have rounded up in the last month alone,
over four hundred individuals who choose to enact the acts
of violence against our children, two hundred and five in
the last week alone, to include individuals and positions of
trust such as teachers and law enforcement off They are
(04:01):
committing some of the most heinous crimes against the most
instant of our society.
Speaker 5 (04:05):
And we will not tolerate it. It will remain a
priority for us as we double down on criminal threats.
Speaker 9 (04:12):
We're never going to stop pursuing the mission of defending
the homeland. Foreign spies are trying to steal our technology,
are trying to steal our agricultural products and seeds. Cyber
actors are looking to infiltrate our networks on a daily
basis from all parts of the world, and foreign and
domestic terrors continue their plotting both here and overseas. It's
(04:35):
hard not to overstate the operational tempo that the FBI
must act and will continue to act since I've been
at the helmet in these last three months. The mission
is a no fail mission because if we fail, then
American lives will be endangered or lost. Every operation we
run comes with one end state in mind, to disrupt
or stop criminal activity or threats to the homeland.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
That's just so darn Refrain wishing to hear, isn't it?
Bravo bravo?
Speaker 8 (05:05):
As Rush would say, right on, right on, and then
he gives credit where it's due. It's the everyday men
and women of the FBI who protect this country. These
guys wanted to be the good guys, and now they
get to be.
Speaker 5 (05:19):
It's not I that do the work of the FBI.
Speaker 9 (05:22):
It's the agents, the intel analysts, the sos, and the
supports staff throughout our field offices that take it to
the streets every single day.
Speaker 5 (05:28):
It's our linguist who translate and.
Speaker 9 (05:30):
Transcribe from dialects that most people on Earth don't even
know about in offices on a twenty four to seven basis,
so that our search warrants can be signed out, so
that our rest warrants can be signed and approved by judges.
Speaker 5 (05:43):
It's the everyday women of the FBI across the country.
Speaker 9 (05:46):
Many of them had gotten to meet in my short time,
and prior to that, in my time as a terrorism prosecutor,
worked hand in glove with them both here in American overseas.
Our Joint Terrorism Task Force is a heartbeat of what
defends this country from domestic and international threats of terrorism.
Every one of our fifty five field offices has a
Joint Terrorism Task Force situated in almost every single state
(06:08):
in this country, covering every single state in this country.
Speaker 5 (06:11):
We've stopped many plots.
Speaker 9 (06:13):
Including against targeting energy facilities in Baltimore and of course
the tragic New Orleans Day plot terrorist attack. One of
our initiatives, of course, is to continue to fight against
illicit fentanyl trafficking and narcotics trafficking into the country.
Speaker 5 (06:33):
Every seven minutes in this country.
Speaker 9 (06:35):
As of last year, an individual, an American citizen, is
killed from a drug overdose. To that end, we have
enacted along with our partners across the inner Agency in
the Southwest Border Intelligence Center, the Countercrtel Coordination Center is
what we call it the FBI the C four.
Speaker 5 (06:50):
We have.
Speaker 9 (06:53):
Flexed assets over to that area and are using it
as a regional hub to countermand the narcotics coming across
the southern border. It's important efforts like these that not
just stop the narcotics traffickers and narco terrors from entering
our country, but from pouring drugs in. We rust work
with the interagency to accomplish this goal. We will work
(07:14):
with the interagency to accomplish this goal. It's not an
FBI mission alone. We will partner with anyone and everyone
willing to achieve this mission set and one of my
first actions as director, I gave my agents and intel
analysts an opportunity to go out and serve in the field,
and many of those individuals took that opportunity.
Speaker 8 (07:35):
I'm going to head it off for we had paced
to hear all of that, but it's a three minute club.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
It's probably too long without the visuals.
Speaker 8 (07:43):
You know, Programming is a tough decision because if someone
watched it already, they may say, I don't want to
hear that again. But the numbers reflect that most people
don't watch it. And I think it's important to understand
when you elected Donald Trump, you didn't just elect that
one guy. You elect the team they're.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
Going to bring in.
Speaker 8 (08:03):
You know, when when when your owner hires a GM
of the of the team, it's not just that he's
a good GM, it's what coach is he going to
bring in? What quarterback is he going to bring in?
Speaker 2 (08:14):
What D line? When is he going to bring in?
Speaker 8 (08:16):
And when you see good people like cash doing this
and this is gonna get contentious here just when I'm
hanging this.
Speaker 10 (08:21):
This is the.
Speaker 5 (08:21):
Michael Berry Show, locked and loaded loaded.
Speaker 11 (08:31):
You know.
Speaker 8 (08:31):
One of the things that I've learned from having been
an elected official and then trying to keep elected officials
honest is elected officials are always looking for more money,
and the departments of government are always looking for more money,
(08:52):
and there's always this fear mongering.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
Right, we have to have more.
Speaker 8 (08:54):
Money for the school ball and or the schools are
going to collapse, or gotta have more money for the school,
or this is going to happen.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
Everyone's going to die.
Speaker 8 (09:01):
Okay, because taxpayers are taxed out right, but I'm wondering
about cash. Betel says that the infrastructure at the FBI
is outdated and that not every field office has the
equipment necessary to.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
Do their job.
Speaker 8 (09:18):
I'm going to take him at face value. That has
been pretty honest, and if that is true, think about
all the money that's been given to illegal aliens while
the organization that is supposed to be helping to protect
our nation doesn't have the equipment they knew they need.
Process that for a moment.
Speaker 5 (09:37):
We're also, under.
Speaker 9 (09:39):
My leadership looking to cut waste for an abuse. We
have found duplicative line item contracts already within the FBI,
and we don't want to waste taxpayer dollars at the bureau.
We don't want to pay twice for something when we
have been only needed to pay once. Modernizing and prioritizing
the FBI is a critical component.
Speaker 5 (10:01):
Of what we need to do.
Speaker 9 (10:03):
Our capabilities and our infrastructure the FBI are outdated.
Speaker 5 (10:07):
They have been.
Speaker 9 (10:10):
The opposite of streamlined. An agent in our field office
in al Paso does not have the same toolkit as
an agent in our field office is covering the Dakotas
as our agent in New York City.
Speaker 5 (10:21):
That's unacceptable to me. We will fix that.
Speaker 9 (10:24):
But building this new infrastructure is going to take not
just a public effort, is going to take a public
private partnership engagement, which we.
Speaker 5 (10:30):
Have already executed on.
Speaker 9 (10:33):
The members of this committee are important critical partners to
the fight against crime in this country into defending our homeland,
and you know better than anyone that our own fail
mission continues and can't continue without your investment and your support.
I rely on your expertise. I rely on our conversations
that I have with you here and offline to tell
me where the problem sets are in this country, because
(10:54):
I don't know where they all are, and then we
can deploy assets to attack the growing problem sets. Enemies
are getting more and more creative by the day, and
we need to keep up not just with the intelligence,
but with you, who represent the men and women in
the in the United States across this country. You have
the ground level knowledge that we need to help fight
this message. Without the funds to get ahead of our adversaries.
(11:16):
I agree we risk making trade offs that will jeopardize
the safety of Americans. So it's my commitment to you
to work with you during this appropriations process to address
budgetary needs shortfalls and also think innovatively to make sure
we fund the FBI for future.
Speaker 2 (11:31):
Well it's a kind of a sobering thought, isn't it.
Speaker 8 (11:37):
So then Cash had a heated exchange with Pennsylvania Democrat
Madeline Dean was she's a mean one when she asked
if she should be worried about being a target of
the FBI, and I wish he had answered by saying, yes,
you're going to get what the JA sixers got. You See,
our side will point out all the awful things they
(11:57):
did to us, but our side never punishes them back.
And I want them punished back. I want a J
six implemented on them. I want them sent to prison.
I want them dragged a court because they don't fear
doing horrible things to us, because there are never any consequences.
Speaker 2 (12:22):
It should be as you.
Speaker 12 (12:24):
And the President continue to weaponize and investigate is perceived enemies,
as you follow this blueprint, When can I a former
impeachment manager expect the FBI at my.
Speaker 5 (12:35):
Door, ma'am.
Speaker 9 (12:37):
You want to know who was targeted by a weaponized FBI.
Speaker 5 (12:40):
Me, you want to know how and why? You want
to know what I'm going to fix it?
Speaker 6 (12:45):
Let me move on.
Speaker 9 (12:46):
Well, you should read the book, because there's no enemies
list on that book.
Speaker 5 (12:49):
So there are people that violated their.
Speaker 9 (12:51):
Constitutional obligations and their duties to the American people, and
they were rightly called out. And you should give that
book to every one of your constituents that they can
read about it.
Speaker 7 (12:59):
I won't be doing that.
Speaker 5 (13:00):
That's their loss.
Speaker 12 (13:02):
During your Senate confirmation hearings, you repeatedly denied having any
involvement as a private citizen in the firing of FBI
officials who engaged in the prosecution against January sixth insurrectionists,
the violent rioters who beat and killed Capital police officers,
and whom you referred to as political prisoners.
Speaker 7 (13:22):
Since then, multiple.
Speaker 12 (13:23):
Whistleblowers have come forward, and we know that you likely
committed perjury. At the same hearing, you claimed you were
not familiar with Stu Peters, an anti Semitic Holocaust denier,
despite the fact that you appeared on mister Peters's podcast
eight separate times, eight times, and you claimed not to
recall mister Patel.
Speaker 5 (13:44):
My second question is should.
Speaker 12 (13:45):
We worry more about your memory or your veracity?
Speaker 9 (13:48):
We should worry more about your lack of candor you're
concusing me of committing perjury.
Speaker 13 (13:53):
American petrol broke were to after I think Bessont went
after her Treasury secretary.
Speaker 8 (14:05):
He had a rather interesting exchange with New York Democrat
Gregory Meeks. And Meeks is one of these loud mouthed,
bombastic guys that a lot of white people will just
sit quiet when he starts screaming because they don't want.
Speaker 2 (14:21):
To be yelled at.
Speaker 8 (14:22):
But he asked who was the president in the last year,
and Besson's answer suggests that Biden wasn't really the president.
And that's more than Gregory Meeks can handle. He's not
very smart, but his head is big, and his head
almost exploded.
Speaker 10 (14:36):
Four decades we've had trade deficits in the United States
of America and nobody said it was an emergency. Democratic
and Republican presidents.
Speaker 2 (14:50):
Ye know what that says to me?
Speaker 10 (14:52):
That is not an emergency because it hasn't been.
Speaker 2 (14:55):
For four decades.
Speaker 7 (14:58):
It says to me that.
Speaker 6 (14:59):
We should bring tariffs.
Speaker 10 (15:01):
Back to the United States Congress so that we can
make that determination as the Constitution has said, and not
tried to go around Congress. It's just unbelievable to me.
Let me ask this question. Maybe I'm they missed it.
(15:24):
Who was the president? Who has been the president since
January twentieth, twenty twenty five?
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Donald J.
Speaker 5 (15:33):
Trump?
Speaker 2 (15:34):
Okay?
Speaker 10 (15:35):
And who was the president in twenty twenty four?
Speaker 2 (15:42):
The one believes President Biden? One believes.
Speaker 10 (15:47):
Are you one of those non believers that the election
the American people didn't vote?
Speaker 2 (15:53):
I I am not.
Speaker 10 (15:56):
You're not, you said, one believe. Do you believe in
the Constitution of the United States.
Speaker 11 (16:04):
I believe in the Constitution of the United States.
Speaker 10 (16:06):
So you believe in it without any second thought. You
don't have to think about it. You believe in it,
and you would abide by it.
Speaker 2 (16:16):
Is that correct? I haven't I do, sir? Okay.
Speaker 10 (16:19):
But do you know that a president has said he
may or may not?
Speaker 6 (16:23):
You don't know.
Speaker 8 (16:26):
Gregory Meeks is one of those guys in a proud
ful of people going preach.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
Yeah, I'm right, Yeah, you tell him. He gets the
mistaken belief that he's smart he's not. He's an idiot,
will fart hard for the freedom to vote the Michael
Barry Show.
Speaker 8 (16:43):
Part in your gender direction, I'm thinking of not very
smart people, Maxine Waters. You know the thing about it
is Maxine Waters and Gregory Meeks in Jasmine Crockett are
bordering on retarded. They are so stupid, I mean really
(17:06):
really dumb, Like, don't ask them to make change. If
your bill is a dollar fifty and you hand them
two dollars, don't expect them to be able to handle
making change. They're really, really dumb. They were elected in
black districts because they're black, and that's their one trick.
Speaker 2 (17:25):
Ponies.
Speaker 8 (17:25):
They just screened racism, racism, racism, and it's embarrassing.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
It's embarrassing for black people.
Speaker 8 (17:31):
It's terrible for black people, and it's a bad look
and it leaves people with the impression that this is
what black people are when it's not. But the power
structure and a lot of white liberals like to keep
these kinds of people around because they like to trace
(17:54):
them around as look at we got some black.
Speaker 2 (17:56):
People in here.
Speaker 8 (17:57):
The you went out and got the dumbest, loudest black
person to represent black people. Which and this is the
part that's hard to get people to understand. It's not
until you understand that white liberals want the dumbest black
person to represent black people because that's how they view
(18:20):
black people as pets. They view black people as pets,
pets that they care for and look after. But never forget.
You're the pet, You're the toy. You're what I parade around,
You're my little prize. Look what I do for you,
(18:43):
poor dumb black people. That's what white liberals feel. Malcolm
X used to say that I didn't come up with it.
There's been a lot of blacks in between, but Malcolm
X used to say that in no uncertain terms. He
used to tell blacks, the white liberal is not your friend.
Speaker 2 (19:01):
Anyway.
Speaker 8 (19:01):
Here's Maxine Waters, a real, real mental giant, questioning Scott Besson.
And you know this is this is why people don't
want to serve, because you don't want to have to
deal with this kind of trash.
Speaker 7 (19:16):
Do you know the level, type, or nature of the
clearances and security training required for individuals to access the
information held in the computers of Treasury I rs A CFTB.
Speaker 11 (19:32):
Yes, I do, and I think we would have a
disagreement over the definition of the word unfettered.
Speaker 7 (19:38):
Missus Secretary, did all the individuals work of a DOGE
who were given access to Treasury and CFPB's computer databases
receive all of the required clearances and security training before
they were granted access.
Speaker 11 (19:54):
Again, they were granted read only access at Treasury.
Speaker 7 (19:59):
There were t So let me just say, those employees,
you can't fillibus to hear. This is not the phillibus
to playground. And so what you did was you let
these strangers into our treasury with access to all of
the data, all of the personnel information, and you just
opened the door. Why did you do that?
Speaker 11 (20:18):
No, ma'am, they were treasury employees.
Speaker 7 (20:22):
Oh are you saying today in front of this committee
that all of them were treasure employees? That the twenty
five year old who's being identified, who worked for Elon
Musk was not allowed was allowed into the treasure? Was
that person there that he.
Speaker 11 (20:39):
Was a Treasury employee, as was Tom Krause, the senior
person on the DOGE team.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
There were only two people.
Speaker 7 (20:46):
There were dogs and employees.
Speaker 2 (20:48):
Also, Sorry, do you know were you aware that.
Speaker 7 (20:52):
There were DOGE employees coming into our treasure getting all
of our personal information.
Speaker 11 (20:58):
Man, there is no such thing as a dojan. There
were treasury employees.
Speaker 7 (21:02):
I tend to disagree with you based on the information
I had.
Speaker 2 (21:07):
I tend to disagree with you.
Speaker 8 (21:11):
When you run the department, and you know I tend
to disagree with you based on the information I have. Well,
where'd you get your information.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
From?
Speaker 8 (21:22):
Two dudes throwing bones in the yard at the Section
eight housing complex. Where did you get your information? Because
obviously it's bad. I tend to disagree with you, Ramo,
what is eight plus eight?
Speaker 2 (21:38):
Oh? You say at sixteen? I tend to disagree with you.
What the number he is? Tell me? What the number?
I tell you? Who can tell me it ain't sixteen?
So you ron, good lord.
Speaker 8 (21:50):
Next we moved to the brother lover il han Omar,
who is both black and Muslim.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
This is very important. She was on al Jazeira, because
why wouldn't she be.
Speaker 8 (22:01):
She said, our country should be more fearful of white men. Yes,
we played this the other day. In case you're wondering, Michael,
you already played that. I know that there's an update,
So let's get her statement on the record first.
Speaker 9 (22:13):
A lot of conservatives in particular, would say that the
rise in Islamophobia is a result.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
Lot of hate, but of fear, A legitimate fear.
Speaker 14 (22:20):
They say, of quote unquote Jadis terrorism, whether it's Fort
Hood or.
Speaker 6 (22:24):
San Bernardino or the recent truck attack in New York.
Speaker 5 (22:28):
What do you say to them?
Speaker 14 (22:30):
I would say, our country should be more fearful of
white man across our country because they are actually crossing
most of the deaths within this country. And so if
fear was the driving force of policies to keep America safe,
(22:52):
Americans safe inside of this country, we should be profiling, monitoring,
and and creating policies to fight the rdicalization of wait men.
Speaker 8 (23:05):
So nothing could be further from the truth. I could
review the crime stats with you, but I suspect you know.
And we need to stop importing Somali Muslim terror, supporting
people like her and many of the people who have
supported her, and we need to stand up to this nonsense.
(23:26):
We need to stand up for our country. We have
enemies abroad and we have enemies within, and we need
to get comfortable admitting this and dealing with it. So
James Carville, who was responsible for Bill Clinton being president,
the rage and Cajun he is the last white guy
left in the Democrat Party. He needs to turn out
(23:50):
the lights on his way out because he doesn't realize
it ain't his party anymore.
Speaker 2 (23:55):
So he's just this.
Speaker 8 (23:56):
Cranky, old, raging Cajun right right right, right right, who's
now taken to calling Trump crazy when he looks crazy
and bitching about all the young gun Democrats who have
taken over the party because of the policies of people
like him.
Speaker 2 (24:14):
You see, these were the white liberals who.
Speaker 8 (24:17):
Wanted to bring in all the foreigners and ethnics and
Muslims and gays and transgenders and all this, but they
wanted the elements of those communities that were the most radical.
So they felt they could show that community. Look, we're
giving you a voice here there wasn't a good voice,
and you empowered those people. And now they make a
mockery of you. And that brings us to this.
Speaker 4 (24:42):
Illian Omar says that white men are responsible for most
of their deaths in the United States.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
So let me get this straight.
Speaker 4 (24:50):
Sixty nine percent of the people I'm stuck on a
number I don't know, but sixty nine percent of people
are going to vote a white man. About forty eight
and a half a man.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
So I don't know. My rough mass is thirty three percent.
Speaker 4 (25:04):
Let's go out and kiss off thirty three percent of
the people that vote.
Speaker 2 (25:08):
And that's a smart strategy.
Speaker 4 (25:10):
And if people had agree with her, there are people
that actually agree with her. And I think it's honestly,
I think there's people are more trouble than at Worth.
Speaker 3 (25:31):
We're gonna been changing the name of the Gulf of
Mexico to.
Speaker 5 (25:35):
The Gulf of Mits and Michael Berrys which has it beautifully.
Speaker 8 (25:40):
Mother had a man even delighted to report a man,
my good friend, Mark Chestnut.
Speaker 2 (25:48):
Is on the mend. Some of you knowed he had
a lot of heart trouble. We almost lost.
Speaker 8 (25:53):
Him, but he has pulled back from the brink and
I am delighted by that fact.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
Delighted indeed.
Speaker 8 (26:03):
CNN's Harry Inton has been almost like a plant from
the Trump campaign. He has reviewed polls that they commission
and he keeps pointing out he doesn't try to undersell it.
Speaker 2 (26:20):
Trump is very popular now. He does.
Speaker 8 (26:24):
He reveals a poll that shows that for the first
time in five years, which means going back to the
last Trump administration, the percentage of Americans worried about violent
crime has fallen under fifty percent, So less than half
of Americans are worried about violent crime. That is because
(26:48):
that's where the Alcatraz.
Speaker 2 (26:50):
Movement came from. Earlier. Remember that earlier in the.
Speaker 8 (26:54):
Week the Alcatraz announcement that we're going to open this.
We're going to give a thousand bucks to illegals in
a flight, you send them out of the country. Americans
see this and they naturally relax. They go, oh good,
Daddy's back for better for worse.
Speaker 2 (27:13):
I tell a lot of people look at it.
Speaker 8 (27:15):
Oh good, there's an adult in charge again, there's somebody
that actually cares about us and not coddling criminals. Harry Inton, CNN.
Speaker 9 (27:22):
What about just how people are, how worried people are
actually about crime?
Speaker 5 (27:27):
About this exact issue.
Speaker 2 (27:29):
Yeah, exactly right, Kate.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
So you know we think about crime when we say, okay,
it's one thing how they're viewing Trump. But are their
views of overall crime changing as Donald Trump gets into
the White House? And what do we see here, Well,
the percentage of Americans who worry a great deal about crime.
We actually have seen that percentage drop over the last year.
It was fifty three percent last year, and look at
where we are now. We're at forty seven percent. It's
the first time in about five years in which the
(27:51):
percentage of Americans who worry a great deal about crime
has actually dropped under the fifty percent mark. And more
than that, it's a rare issue that we've seen from
twenty twenty four to twenty twenty five in which the
percentage of Americans who worry a great deal about a
particular issue has actually dropped by five points or more.
In fact, it's one of only two issues in which
we saw a five point decline among both Democrats and Republicans.
(28:11):
So I think Donald Trump is going to continue on
this law and order issue because the bottom line is
working for him.
Speaker 2 (28:16):
Kate.
Speaker 8 (28:18):
I mean, he gets way too excited about Trump's success
for being at CNN.
Speaker 2 (28:25):
It's really interesting.
Speaker 8 (28:29):
One of the reasons for all of this is we're
seeing big arrests and we need to see more. I
am hard on Pam BONDI because she has a big job.
I don't have anything out for her. I want her
to succeed, but because her succeeding means the country succeeds.
Speaker 2 (28:44):
Here she is announcing a.
Speaker 8 (28:45):
Large drug bust involving multiple law enforcement agencies.
Speaker 15 (28:50):
This multi agency operation, led by DEA with our local, state, tribal,
and federal partners, targeted one of the law largest and
most dangerous drug trafficking and foreign terrorist organizations in our country.
The DEA seesed eleven point five kilos of fentanyl, including
(29:17):
an astounding approximately three million fentanyl pills, the largest seizure
in our nation's history. These are the pills in the
bags right there, the main bottom right.
Speaker 2 (29:36):
The head of.
Speaker 15 (29:37):
This organization, Sinaloa organization here in the country illegally. Six
of these guys and women here in the country illegally.
His name is Alberto Salazar Amaya. He is the leader
and he was living in Salem, Oregon.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
With him.
Speaker 5 (29:55):
They got millions.
Speaker 15 (29:56):
Of dollars cash, cars, but the drug. We're in Albuquerque, Phoenix,
and Utah. That's how insulated these drug dealer cartel leaders
make themselves.
Speaker 8 (30:12):
It's really impressive, really impressive. And we've played that story
before and we're going to play it again because it's
important to understand. The kingpins in this cartel activity. They
live next door to you. They're not in Mexico or Colombia.
(30:33):
They live in Cape Cod. They live in nice maybe
not Cape God. They live in nice suburban communities in
a million dollar house, not ten million that would draw
too much attention, and not a shack they might get killed.
They live in nice neighborhoods. They keep to themselves, their
kids go to the same private schools as yours, and
(30:55):
you'd never know. You'd never know. There's still a long
way to go, and we're just getting started. It's going
to be a difficult roe to ho if people don't
stop hiding illegal aliens. We are working against our own people.
You might ask, who's hiding illegals, Well, there's a daycare
(31:15):
in Cape Cod. This was a week or two ago
that was busted for hiding an illegal alien who ran
away from Brazil. And yes, I've mentioned this multiple times,
but this is important.
Speaker 2 (31:26):
This is an example exhibit A.
Speaker 8 (31:29):
This guy had fled Brazil, came here illegally. He was
on the run after he raped a thirteen year old child.
The story from Boston twenty five News. She was hiding
his secret.
Speaker 2 (31:47):
Jedais chiagu Lucas.
Speaker 6 (31:49):
Andre Tiajio Lucas is the reported father of Nuniaz's children.
Ice says he was sentenced to nine years of prison
for the rape of a thirteen year year old girl
in his home country at Brazil.
Speaker 16 (32:03):
Nothing surprises me anymore. Do I find it wrong? One
hundred percent wrong.
Speaker 6 (32:07):
We shared our findings with Worcester County Sheriff Lou Evangelitis,
an outspoken supporter of immigration reform in Massachusetts.
Speaker 16 (32:17):
But the idea that someone has been documented that a
Brazilian national will fled the country because they were convicted
for rape of a thirteen year old and could come
to Massachusetts and not only disappear into the fabric of Massachusetts,
but actually be living in a home there was a
daycare center for young people. That's terrifying.
Speaker 6 (32:35):
Record show EC inspected the home daycare five times, but
according to the agency, they saw no evidence of Lucas
living there.
Speaker 8 (32:44):
So we've got people all around us who are working
very hard to make sure that not only illegal aliens
stay here, but the worst of the illegal aliens. Remember
the judge in New Mexico, he had an MS thirteen
member and they're playing with guns and he's he's in
(33:05):
one picture where he's got a shirt down just past
his waist, so you don't know if he's wearing underwear
or not his his bare legs are showing, and he's
he's got this very young illegal alien MS thirteen gang
banger in there who has two pictures of bodies he's
decapitated on his phone. And that guy was a judge.
How about the judge in Wisconsin who ran in, uh,
(33:30):
pulled the illegal alien out the back and said, get
out of here, go, go go, they're coming. Then again,
well I better know you probably know what I'm bucks.
Speaker 2 (33:51):
Gentleman as has left. Good thank you, and good night,