Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Very show is on the area replace where we went,
the carry and the sense of joy.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
I know it's incredibly disappointing now and look candidly, it's
a bit scary because there's a very different vision that's
being good out there.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
And today we're getting some new details about that Trump
Trudeau dinner from two people who were at the table.
We are told that when Trudeau told President elect Trump
that new tariffs would kill the Canadian economy, Trump joked
to him that if Canada.
Speaker 4 (00:44):
Canada Democratic County commissioner who resigned after being arrested for
stealing more than thirty thousand dollars from an elderly man
is now an international wanted fugitive.
Speaker 5 (00:58):
Well, Oregon Democrat County commit.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
To wanted fugitive on the land, having left our country overnight.
Oregon Department of Justice believes she fled the country with
her nine year old son. Oh my, this is quite dramatic.
The story from KGWTV in Portland.
Speaker 6 (01:20):
The search is on for former Gloackamus County Commissioner Melissa Fireside.
The Orgon Department of Justice believes she fled the country
with her young son ahead of a December trial where
she faces several felony charges related to theft. Well tonight,
we're getting a look at a court document that helps
explain how all of this came about. This is the
(01:40):
affidavit filed by state lawyers asking for Fireside's release agreement
to be revoked now. That agreement requires her to notify
the court if she changes her address, and also to
stay in Oregon unless she has permission to leave. The
document says that last week, Fireside's ex partner and father
of their nine year olds called the Clockamus County District
(02:02):
Attorney's office and said Fireside took their child out of
school and apparently fled the country. He says he found
out after the school notified him. Fireside has full custody
of the child, but she and her ex do have
a legal agreement when it comes to parenting. According to
that document, the special Agent with the State Department of
Justice says he looked into Fireside's travel records and it
(02:24):
showed she had not crossed any international borders since twenty
twenty two, but DSA data showed Fireside had a flight
from Mexico to Amsterdam last Tuesday. According to TSA and
state law enforcement, she may have used a fake ID
across into Mexico and then used an Austrian passport to
fly to Amsterdam. State officials believed she took her nine
(02:47):
year old with her, and they do not believe he
is in danger now. If Fireside is confirmed to be
outside the US, investigators say bringing her back to face
justice maybe challenging, depending on the country that she's in.
Speaker 4 (03:01):
And this is your reminder, not all Democrats are criminals,
but all criminals are Democrats, and a lot of Democrats
are criminals. Tucker Carlson once said, And Tucker's been around,
he was a journalist long before he was doing what
he does now. The Gavin Newsom was the most skilled
liar he's ever seen.
Speaker 7 (03:21):
Oh, Gavin Newsom. And you know, I think a lot
about Gavin Newsom. Many different things about Gavin Newsom, but
one thing I know for a fact about Gavin Newsom
is he has the capacity to be the.
Speaker 5 (03:32):
Light of textra test.
Speaker 7 (03:33):
Gavin Newsom will say anything he needs to say, not
like Bidens, not like this. Actually, whatever Biden's fault, He's
not like this like Biden. Would you know he has
like guilt if he's lying to you, he gets twitchyt
Gavin Newsom's.
Speaker 5 (03:47):
Palm stone sweat.
Speaker 7 (03:49):
His respiration doesn't increase, his body temperature doesn't change. Nothing
changes in Gavin Newsom when he lies to your face.
And there are not that many people like that. Actually,
that's a rare quality, Like to lock down the state,
to keep people's kids from getting an education, and to
arrest people for surfing and then go have dinner at
the French laundry.
Speaker 5 (04:10):
Like most people couldn't do that. They just be like
her saying he's a sociopath.
Speaker 7 (04:13):
You lie and not to I'm not a psychiatrist, but
so I don't know that. I don't really know the category,
and I'm not going to diagnose him.
Speaker 5 (04:20):
But I'll just say, in fifty years.
Speaker 7 (04:22):
Of being around a lot of people, I've met very
few who can behave that way, very very few. It's
very unusual quality, and of course it's probably useful in politics.
Speaker 5 (04:31):
Is he electable? Is he electable? Exactly? Are there American
people going to see that the way that you see it?
Or well, as you.
Speaker 7 (04:37):
Know, the assystant in California does not include elections. I mean,
it has nothing to do with what the people think
it's a machine state. It's the most corrupt out of fifty.
Kamala Harris was like despised by most Californians, and she
was a sitting US Senator, Diane Poured, Diane Einstein, my
neighbor in Washington.
Speaker 5 (04:54):
I don't think she was a horrible person, just for
the record, but she.
Speaker 7 (04:57):
Was noncompass menace and like she could have lived well
beyond her death as a US Senator.
Speaker 5 (05:02):
So it's like, it's not.
Speaker 7 (05:03):
A democratic state, small de democratic state. It's not run
on the basis of what the population wants. It's a
fixed game in California. And so it does make me
very uncomfortable that someone from that political culture, which is
an utterly corrupt political culture, an authoritarian political culture, could
like enter a presidential race because like, clearly, what.
Speaker 5 (05:25):
Are you running on? If you're Gavin Newsom.
Speaker 7 (05:27):
As a native Californian, you know, I know what the
state was like in nineteen eighty five because I live
there and it's completely degraded that from that time, and
like how did that happen? Well, part of the big reason,
the big reason is the political leadership in the state.
You've got nothing to run on.
Speaker 5 (05:43):
What are you running? Have you driven through LA recently?
Like seriously?
Speaker 7 (05:47):
So? The fact that he would get in the race suggests,
you know, they think that they can win without the consent.
Speaker 5 (05:55):
Of voters, and that freaks me out.
Speaker 4 (05:57):
This sounds like a backhanded compliment. It is, but I've
thought about this a lot since then. We want to
welcome you, folks. What a night we have, ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 5 (06:08):
How bad can you be?
Speaker 4 (06:09):
It's so Michael Berry show severely tone Jeff, heyk.
Speaker 8 (06:16):
Step it's gloves off, singing loud on, hold back now
hand on, miss We'll take a Bob lil Berry shows
name Honkey carry okus. The game laps in two's saying
who's got flap food?
Speaker 5 (06:37):
Jo contestants that are more tone Jeff than Helen Keller.
Welcome to the stage, Stephen, who's singing a.
Speaker 4 (06:49):
Terrible rendition of friends in loath face Well, log out
rams and low lad whiskey.
Speaker 5 (07:01):
By your m.
Speaker 9 (07:07):
And I'll be.
Speaker 5 (07:09):
Folks. That's his tone deaf as it gets right? Where
am I room? Please welcome?
Speaker 10 (07:17):
Sendy from side fair never mind.
Speaker 5 (07:35):
What a tough break.
Speaker 4 (07:37):
Every window from Tomball to a Tesca Sita is shattered.
Speaker 10 (07:42):
Finally our last contestant California.
Speaker 5 (07:47):
He's the worst of all nothing.
Speaker 9 (07:50):
I just like more than the politician that it sits
there and liestyear and we all.
Speaker 5 (07:56):
Just sit there, rolling our eyes, going to keep me
a break.
Speaker 10 (07:58):
Congratulation to Gavin Newsome.
Speaker 4 (08:02):
The most despicable tone deaf person in America.
Speaker 5 (08:11):
They are jobs con use. That tone to me not
a joke. That's sarcastic, contemptuous tone that means you know
everything because you're a man, and I know nothing because
I'm a woman. That is not a joke. That is
a natural fact. The Michael Show.
Speaker 4 (08:29):
Over Tennessee state troopers here say d UI quota has
led to arrest of sober drivers. Yeah, sure you were sober,
you weren't drunk, then why'd you get a DUI? Well,
the state troopers themselves are now saying that in Tennessee quote,
(08:50):
this is corruption. We're ruining people's lives. We're being forced
to ruin people's lives. They say they were required to
make one hundred d UI arrests each year, even if
the people weren't drunk. I am a very big supporter
of law enforcement, law and order, but when you find
(09:14):
cases like this of a bad cop because we give
so much deference and a presumption of professionalism to cops.
When you find whoever is doing this right here, the
people carrying out the orders who did not speak out
against it, and the people who gave the orders especially,
(09:36):
you have to pin them to the wall. You have
to destroy their career because this can never be allowed
to have The story is from WSMV TV in Nashville.
Speaker 11 (09:48):
We told you about Thomas Manus's arrest and Stephanie Fairs
and Candae Slates and all the other people arrested for
DUI by state troopers when they were completely sober. But
we've never heard from any of the troopers who've arrested
sober people for DY until now.
Speaker 5 (10:07):
This is corruption. We're ruining people's lives. We're being forced
to ruin people's lives.
Speaker 11 (10:13):
Do you know if you've ever arrested a sober driver
for DUI?
Speaker 5 (10:16):
Yes, sir, I'm sure I have.
Speaker 11 (10:18):
Former troopers Ashley Smith and Adam Potts say there's a
reason so many innocent people have been arrested for DUI
in Tennessee by state troopers. A reason, they say, revealed
in these internal maps and recorded audio from a troopers
meeting in Chattanooga, risk.
Speaker 12 (10:36):
Every DUI that you can get your hands on.
Speaker 11 (10:40):
We've always thought this was a great thing because you
want to get drunk drivers off the road.
Speaker 5 (10:45):
Do you feel like that this push to.
Speaker 11 (10:47):
Get duy's is eventually having a negative outcome?
Speaker 5 (10:51):
Absolutely, there's pressure to arrest the.
Speaker 11 (10:54):
Us POT says, it's not just pressure, it's a quota.
Speaker 5 (10:58):
I have to ask you.
Speaker 11 (11:00):
Did you ever feel pressured just to pull someone over
and arrest them for DUI?
Speaker 5 (11:04):
Just to make a quote.
Speaker 11 (11:06):
Absolutely, it's something directly addressed in recorded audio from a
meeting with Captain Patrick Turner out of Chattanooga, obtained by
WSMB four investigates, I'm passing.
Speaker 12 (11:18):
On the message to support the command staff walks, but does
hard work look like, well, a good look like arrest
in one hundred plus the UIs a year.
Speaker 11 (11:28):
In that meeting, it's stipulated to troopers on the midnight shift,
one hundred uy rs will be required each year per trooper.
Speaker 4 (11:38):
If they're the UI, I want you to load the
jail fullham.
Speaker 11 (11:41):
Turner also talks about consequences when it comes to how
many uy rs are made, as well as contacts meaning
drivers pulled over each shift attorney.
Speaker 12 (11:53):
In thirty three d us per year and one point
seven contacts, you're gonna get spanked.
Speaker 11 (11:59):
But in find what you just heard. This is what
the THCHP email does. Quote the Tennessee Highway Patrol does
not have or use quotas for traffic stops, citations, or arrests.
And there's more in emails obtained through the Open Records Act.
Captain Bruce McCarley sent out maps this year subject line
(12:19):
DUI map. It shows every county and district date and
every trooper with a number next to it. These former
troopers say, those are the numbers of duy orrs made
by each trooper.
Speaker 5 (12:32):
What is the message to you all? Why send this
out to troopers?
Speaker 13 (12:36):
You're not doing good enough because somebody else is beating
you with the EUIs.
Speaker 4 (12:39):
You need to do better.
Speaker 11 (12:40):
So, these former troopers say, there are incentives for troopers
to make duy ors.
Speaker 14 (12:47):
The advantage of arresting somebody, whether they're really drunk or not,
is I continue to get that premium overtime.
Speaker 11 (12:54):
So does that translate to troopers feeling like if I'm
working this shift, I've got to find some to arrest,
absolutely for full transparency. Both Potts and Smith were fired
by the THHP. Potts pleaded guilty to leaving the scene
of a single car accident involving his personal vehicle.
Speaker 5 (13:14):
I had a crash off duty, and.
Speaker 11 (13:17):
The THHP is seeking to decertify Smith, accusing her of
helping a family member to get out of a duy.
She's fighting that claim before the state. The THHP may
simply say that you're just a disgruntled employee and that's
why you're coming forward.
Speaker 6 (13:34):
I would have said something before if it wouldn't have
been career suicide for me.
Speaker 11 (13:38):
As for what the THHP says about their claims and
everything else we've obtained, we don't know.
Speaker 4 (13:44):
Colonel.
Speaker 5 (13:45):
This is Jeremy Finley with Channel four.
Speaker 11 (13:47):
After we tried to speak with the head of the
THHP in August and he drove away in a car.
We once again sent our findings to them, asking for
an interview. Instead, they send a statement reading in parts,
troopers are highly trained and expected to use their judgments
and make necessary traffic stops based on observed violations and
(14:07):
public safety needs.
Speaker 14 (14:09):
I think they really don't care about the citizens. I
think they care about the way it looks the perception.
Speaker 4 (14:14):
Oh my, Ramone thinks that's what you don Okay, Ramone
thinks that's what happened to Paul Pelosi when he was
arrested for DUI a couple of years ago. It's a
good thing we have the bodycam footage. This is a
Michael Berry Show exclusive thanks to our contacts in law enforcement.
Speaker 5 (14:34):
Mister Pelosi, do you know why I pulled you over?
Because of my life? Wanted to defund it, defunnel.
Speaker 15 (14:42):
No, that's not that defund you, No, sir, you were
speeding and driving erradically. Bet your partner, officer, how many
two years old?
Speaker 5 (14:52):
And I haven't been a ratic in many years. Please
step out of the car. Okay, sir. How much have
you had to drink tonight? I'm married to a Dorgan
Gray painting. How much do you think I've had to
(15:13):
drink him? Young man? I've got a pee, sir. Let's
have a seat in the back of my cruiser. There
you go, watch your head.
Speaker 15 (15:22):
No, you watch your head might tell you what to do.
Speaker 5 (15:26):
You're not tell me. Min tell you. I've got a pee. Okay, sir,
We're gonna have to take you down to the precinct.
You'll have to catchway first, Copper. You're already in my car, sir.
I'm getting way too old for this londer.
Speaker 16 (15:44):
Then we're gonna be changing the name of the Gulf
of Mexico to.
Speaker 5 (15:56):
The Gulf of Mitch and Michael Berry, which has a
beautiful room.
Speaker 4 (16:01):
The fact that Come in and Done gets elected promising
to give away free stuff, free childcare, free buses, frozen
rent you want to pay, you just keep paying nineteen
fifties rates.
Speaker 5 (16:14):
We don't care.
Speaker 4 (16:16):
But now that he's won the election, he's asking the
people who voted for him to send him donations.
Speaker 5 (16:24):
Good morning, New York City, thank you.
Speaker 17 (16:27):
Last night we made history, and today we begin the
work of making a new administration.
Speaker 5 (16:32):
Welcome to the transition.
Speaker 17 (16:34):
This is a period over the next few months rebuild
a city Hall that delivers on the promises of our campaigns,
to make New York City affordable and to make government
accountable to the people it serves. As we've prepare to govern,
we'll start announcing the leaders who will help implement our ejective,
people like deputy mayors who oversee entire areas of government,
and the commissioners who carry out the critical.
Speaker 5 (16:52):
Work of city agencies.
Speaker 17 (16:53):
These apployments will be driven by excellence, integrity, and hunger
to solve old problems with new solutions. Talking to organ
on the front lines of the fight to improve our
city government, veterans with proven track records, policy experts from
around the country and the world, and working people you
know better than anyone what our neighborhoods deserve. And this
will be a period like the campaign we ran, and
(17:13):
the city Hall to comp defined by transparency because New
Yorkers deserve a government they can trust. On January first,
I will be your mayor. New Year's Day and a
new era for this city. Oh and one more techniques.
Remember how I told you a few months ago to
stop sending us money, you.
Speaker 5 (17:30):
Can start again.
Speaker 17 (17:31):
This transition requires staff, research, and an infrastructure that can
meet this moment, and it will be made possible by
the people who built and believe in this movement. So
I hope we'll make a donation at Transition twenty twenty
five dot com.
Speaker 5 (17:42):
Now let's get to work.
Speaker 4 (17:44):
You know, I watched a show called American Greed. I
study the fall of scam artists and Ponzi schemers and frauds,
and it always happens like this. They're high on the hog,
making the big promises, talking big, and then they got
to start begging.
Speaker 5 (18:03):
For money, asking for donations.
Speaker 4 (18:06):
It's not the only iron he's got in the fire
to raise money for his transition team.
Speaker 5 (18:13):
Did you know that he has a brand new musical
on Broadway. Oh, welcome to New York, the city that
never sleeps.
Speaker 4 (18:21):
We're bagels and filos are full, piled deep.
Speaker 8 (18:26):
We've got dreams delis and decreased in mine and.
Speaker 5 (18:30):
Now the city that never rests.
Speaker 13 (18:32):
Musc from the store to the Bronx. Here my grand degree.
We'll have hells on Ebry Streets.
Speaker 5 (18:48):
Five times a day. We'll stop the subways and.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
Broadway will face East.
Speaker 5 (19:01):
We're Justice, meet the jazz has. We're panning, brunching boy.
Speaker 18 (19:08):
Just it's time.
Speaker 5 (19:13):
What a show.
Speaker 4 (19:27):
Anna Navarro who for years made herself famous by being
a Hispanic woman who claimed to be a Republican, and
that was kind of her.
Speaker 5 (19:35):
Look at me, I'm different. I'm a Hispanic. When he
was a Republican.
Speaker 4 (19:40):
Now she hangs out with the hags on the View
and they say, you know you're a Republican, but you
don't like Trump. No, I don't and we don't like Trump.
You're not a Republican and you're not very smart. They
are beside themselves happy over the recent election results.
Speaker 5 (20:00):
Navarro said that Virginia.
Speaker 4 (20:02):
Ran a bad Democrat candidate for attorney general and still won,
and in her mind, that's the rejection of Trump.
Speaker 5 (20:08):
It's not, but that's what she says.
Speaker 19 (20:09):
Not every Democratic candidate on the ballot was a great candidate.
In Virginia, they had a guy, Jay Jones running for
attorney general who just a few weeks ago it was revealed,
you know, these texts that he had sent fantasizing about
killing a political opponent had resurfaced.
Speaker 5 (20:27):
I mean, this guy was.
Speaker 19 (20:27):
A bad candidate. And even that bad Democratic candidate won.
Speaker 5 (20:32):
By six points.
Speaker 19 (20:34):
So that tells me that this was a resounding rejection
of Donald Trump's and the Republican partner.
Speaker 5 (20:42):
And there were the grand Trump.
Speaker 19 (20:45):
Trump was out there well they I mean Trump was
out there last night in the middle of the night,
talked tweeting about how you know the election results were
what they were because Trump wasn't on the ballot.
Speaker 5 (20:55):
I actually think Trump was.
Speaker 19 (20:57):
Everything was pretty much on the ballot all York. We
inserted himself into this race. That was the kiss of
death for Andrew Cuomo when Elon Musk and Stephen Miller
endorsed Cuomo.
Speaker 5 (21:12):
Poor Andrew. That was it? Tell you something?
Speaker 4 (21:15):
Yeah, headline from Fox eleven in Los Angeles, LA. Father
separated from toddler by federal agents outside home depot. Oh wow,
that's awful. The separated a father from a toddler. What
kind of federal agents would do that? This is terrible.
Speaker 5 (21:32):
This is horrible. How did this happen in America?
Speaker 4 (21:35):
Here's an excerpt from the Fox eleven that's the local
Fox affiliate article. The organization Los Angeles Rapid Response Network
said a man and a toddler were both in the
process of an unsettling arrest on Tuesday, November fourth. Federal
authorities later confirmed it was a thirty two year old
man and his son. The organization said the arrest happened
(21:57):
as federal agents were staging inside the Dodger Stadium parking lot,
which is a short distance from the Cypress Park location
of home depot where the detainment took place. Federal agents
drove off from the scene with the baby inside the vehicle.
The family of the child later told the local Fox
affiliate that the toddler has since been reunited with its
(22:18):
mother with their mother because they can't say if it's
a boy or a girl. Remember, we have to all
be consistent with each other's rules. Can't say the sex
of someone. They then issued the following statement in the
wake of the arrest, as comes from the leftist organization
the la r N, strongly denounces the presence of armed
federal agents at various locations throughout Los Angeles on a
(22:39):
day when Angelinos are exercising their civic duty to vote.
Speaker 5 (22:44):
Well, don't worry.
Speaker 4 (22:45):
Illegal aliens don't vote, so remember so if they're not voting,
they're not at risk of being arrested. Back to their story,
the presence of massed federal agents is meant to cause chaos,
threatn our entire community in oately suppress our right to vote.
The abduction of a man that he's been abducted by
(23:07):
ice now and an infant, No, the infant was given
to the mother at a cypresscart a park home depot
parking lot, demonstrates the crass and cruel nature of the
racially motivated random snatchings taking place in our neighborhood. Oh
you mean the enforcement of law against criminals. It sounds horrible, right.
A man and his child abducted by federal authorities? Oh,
(23:30):
my goodness, Area fifty one, What are we going to do?
Maybe we should watch the video to learn more.
Speaker 9 (23:37):
New attend Federal agents arrest a man with a toddler
ery and enforcement operation at home depot in Cypress Park.
The thirty two year old man is reportedly a US citizen.
FED say he was not arrested for being undocumented. According
to the La Times, Department of Homeland Security officials said
the man allegedly got out of his car carrying a
hammer through rocks a federal agents. They also told The
(24:01):
Times that the man was arrested for assault without a
pistol in his car, which had been reported stolen out
of New York. Suspect also had an active arrest warrant
for into. The Times that toddler has been reunited with
her family.
Speaker 4 (24:16):
Wait, you mean the man got out of his car
with a hammer, a deadly weapon and threw rocks at officers.
He had a stolen gun and warrants for his arrest. Oh,
a father abducted with his toddler fully might technically be
(24:38):
a biological father, but he's also trying to kill her.
Speaker 5 (24:41):
Camer of the famous Growing Pains. If it worked for
Growing Pains, I wouldn't be on the Michael Berry Show.
You have a Roll. It was a comedian.
Speaker 4 (24:53):
I forget who it was who made the point that
the shirts there were never shirts cops. The guy's always
had their shirts off, and if they had their shirt on,
the shirt was coming off. That was just part of
that part of the deal. The shirt's got to come off.
That's always kind of funny, like the shirt is holding
them back.
Speaker 5 (25:14):
Anyway.
Speaker 4 (25:15):
There's a story out of Houston, actually Webster, which is
south of Houston. A guy ran from the cops and
he was emboldened to do this because he was in
other police chases ZA plural with the Webster Police Department
that were ultimately called off, most recently about two weeks ago.
(25:40):
So this is a guy who keeps running from the cops,
and there's a crowd of people who say, don't chase
them because other people will get hurt. Yeah, but if
you don't chase them, they're going to keep doing these things.
A career criminal led to Popo on a chase from
Galveston which about an hour south of Houston all the
way up to the South Loop just about ten minutes
(26:02):
south of Houston and Stella Link, So going out west
about another ten minutes or so and the chase ended.
Speaker 5 (26:10):
Are you ready for this?
Speaker 4 (26:13):
He ran out of gas? How perfect? ABC thirteen in
Houston with.
Speaker 20 (26:18):
The story the driver of that vehicle is thirty eight
year old Jazzmre Washington.
Speaker 5 (26:24):
On My Poor Record Show.
Speaker 20 (26:26):
Washington has Dwyite the lengthy criminal history from surrounding counties home.
Speaker 5 (26:30):
And hearing what's his name? Jazz Mire?
Speaker 4 (26:33):
We didn't have any jazz Mires at our high school?
Did you have any jazz Meres at year high school?
Speaker 5 (26:37):
Start that over.
Speaker 4 (26:38):
I want to make sure I got his name. I'm
not really sure, jazz Mire. I'm not really sure what
kind of name that is.
Speaker 20 (26:45):
The driver of that bhgle is thirty eight year old
Jazzmere Washington On My More Record Show, Washington has Gwyke
the Lincoln.
Speaker 5 (26:53):
He got an apostrophe in his middle name.
Speaker 20 (26:54):
Counties and here in Harris County, will Youse say. The
reason that he was the target of law enforcement today
is due to parole violations and active warrants connected to several.
Speaker 5 (27:03):
Webster Police cases.
Speaker 20 (27:05):
I was able to pull a court records showing he
has a warrant for not showing up to a court
hearing over a June death case in which it's alleged
she stole a pair of seekers from a person that
costs less than one hundred dollars. He also has a
warrant from just a week and a half ago for
another police chase. Court documents saying on September twenty fourth,
a Webster police officer spotted him in the same red
(27:25):
in the Tubishi he was driving today, ran his information
and found out that he had a warrant in Harris
County and Brazoria County, and he tried to pull him over.
Court records say the chase lasted about eight miles. It
contained much of the same dangerous driving we saw today.
That chase was eventually terminated by that Webster officer.
Speaker 5 (27:45):
Today's chase was a.
Speaker 20 (27:46):
Much more intense scene, with officers telling me that it
was unbelievable. Nobody was hit, injured, or killed during this.
This chase lasted about fifty miles. Webster Police saying their department,
alongside Texas City Policing Galveston Police, we're looking for Washington
as he was a wanted man. Police saying that they
found him, tried to pull him over in Galveston You're
(28:07):
seventy third Street.
Speaker 5 (28:09):
But he refused to stop.
Speaker 20 (28:10):
We watched that chase reached speeds of over one hundred
miles an hour and included incredibly dangerous driving. Law enforcements
say on scene that it only ended because he ran
out of gas once he pulled over on the side
of the South Loop. We watched from sky as he
got out, put his hands up and turned himself in
with no problems, and we were able to see him
(28:33):
interact with police and law enforcement once he was in
custody after this chase, he seemed very cooperative with law enforcement.
Right now, Galveston police say that he is in their custody.
He's going to face a new charge of felony for
evading arrest.
Speaker 5 (28:49):
Very simple. You got to throw the book at guys
like this.
Speaker 4 (28:54):
Somebody's going to run from cops for an hour at
over one hundred miles an hour, that's a bad guy.
He's not going to be reformed, he's not going to
be rehabilitated. He's going to torment and terrorize everyone around him.
Speaker 10 (29:11):
You know.
Speaker 4 (29:11):
I've seen cases where their own mother or their own
wife or baby mama will beg the cops to put
them away because they're scared. They can't get loose of
this person, and this person is tormenting them and causing
them so much trouble.
Speaker 5 (29:31):
There is a broken subculture that has to be healed.
It has to be healed.
Speaker 4 (29:37):
It is incompatible with civilized society in America.
Speaker 5 (29:43):
You see it on display all the time. The head
coach at Grambling.
Speaker 4 (29:49):
At Grambling State, Mickey Joseph, his player's gotten a brawl
at the end of halftime against the Bethune Cookman players.
I'd never heard of Bethune Cookman before. Mostly I only
heard of Grambling because Doug Williams went there and he
was a great quarterback. And does he say, does he
say that we won't tolerate our players getting into a fight. No,
(30:12):
he speaks like some very very not smart gang member.
Speaker 18 (30:16):
They disrespected us. Nobody gonna disrespect us. We meet disrespect
with disrespect. Do you realize how stupid you sound? Do
you know how many people are in prison because somebody
was walking through the bar and accidentally bumped me.
Speaker 5 (30:34):
Oh, you disrespected me?
Speaker 4 (30:37):
You know, jay Z shot a guy at a bar
because he bumped into him as he was walking through
the bar. That's not tough, that's stupid. That is stupid.
You got too much to lose to do this.
Speaker 5 (30:50):
This is the guy.
Speaker 4 (30:51):
Who's coaching these young men into adults. Well, no wonder,
they don't have a chance.
Speaker 2 (30:59):
When you play, you gotta make sure, as a coach,
supports staff anybody, that all your players come down. If
you're gonna walk down there and take your time. And
now it's three minutes, three minutes and thirty seconds on
the clock, and we're standing on the stairs and you
got four or five kids who's just walking down taking
(31:20):
their time. Listen to at the end of the day,
I'm thinking like, well, they know what they're doing. They
taking their time, So we're trying to give them the respect.
So by the time we gotta go, we can't wait
on two players. But they should never leave. They players
who leaves they players who leaves their players over there
knowing that we gotta come down. We see. That's what
I'm talking about. That's the disrespect stuff. And we're not
(31:42):
gonna tolerate disrespect here at Grammar. You won't disrespect us.
We're gonna meet disrespect with disrespect because be responsible. Get
your kids out of the locker room, make them get
to the field. They came down on the field, they
walked on a field. That's disrespecting the game first of all.
So that's my perspective. And I told them after the game,
(32:03):
I said, you can't leave your kids up there.
Speaker 5 (32:06):
You can't leave your kids up there. So we talked.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
You know, I know we're gonna have you know, I'm
here for my ID.
Speaker 5 (32:10):
I talked to my ID. He'll talk to as they did.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
And you know, I told him, I say, you know
they if they find us, then you know what, where'd
your pay?
Speaker 4 (32:21):
You know, I get the mentality kind of Oakland Raiders,
you know, smash mouth football. And I agree that the
idea that that you know, if your hit, you hit back.
I just don't think. I don't think great coaches, were
(32:43):
great programs would take that approach.
Speaker 5 (32:46):
They would say, we're gonna win the game. We're not
going to get our.
Speaker 4 (32:48):
Players penalized or ejected for this kind of nonsense. If
the other team wants to act foolish, we're going to
walk away from that and be bigger than that.
Speaker 5 (33:01):
I think that when you attempt.
Speaker 4 (33:02):
To meet disrespect with disrespect, you get down in the
mud with the pig and wallow. And the problem with
that is the pig enjoys it. You're allowing yourself to
be pulled into the morass when you should be better.
But I don't think this guy has the tools for that,
(33:23):
and that's unfortunately. I think some people never learn the
tools of You've got too much to lose. If you
think that matters so much, you have bad colleges.
Speaker 5 (33:37):
Thank you, and good night.