Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Very Show is on the air, and now a
totally random weekend review from the past.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Take a guess when this.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
Was all so one of them is known as Big Balls.
The beauty of this is that then you had all
of these liberal news agencies having to say the name
on air on evening news broadcast. In order for people
to be as upset as they're supposed to be about
(00:42):
these kids who are do gooders saving the federal government
and saving the republic, they had to say the name.
Speaker 4 (00:52):
A licensed Houston Obama is wanted after an investigators.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
Say she cut off a man's private part before cremating him.
Speaker 5 (00:59):
She cut off his private part put it in his mouth.
Records show mortuary staff had just learned the victim was
a registered sex offender.
Speaker 2 (01:05):
Ethics is everything in this line of work.
Speaker 5 (01:08):
Jason Altieri runs Southeast Texas crematory. He says families should
feel comfortable to ask questions that y'all.
Speaker 3 (01:14):
Aren't one of those places, you know, I mean, cut
his winner off and stuff in his mouth.
Speaker 6 (01:20):
The Baytown managed charged with murder months after his fiances
mysterious death, but perhaps most disturbing of all what police say.
He allegedly searched for on the Internet before the murder.
Speaker 7 (01:29):
One of his Google searches quote, can I kill an
illegal human?
Speaker 3 (01:34):
He googled if it was legal to kill an illegal
People's lack of basic knowledge astounds me.
Speaker 8 (01:41):
A plumbing problem At forty thousand feet, the toilets were clogged,
enforcing the flight crew to turn around back to Chicago.
Speaker 7 (01:47):
Out of twelve, eleven of the lavoratories got plugged.
Speaker 9 (01:51):
Only one lavoratories in the business glasses US a boat
on the flight.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
One toilet for three hundred passengers. I drink a lot
of water, and I peel a lot. I gotta tell you,
and you got to go, and there is somebody in
the toilet, and you wonder what are.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
You doing in there? How long do you need it?
Speaker 3 (02:12):
You've landed on the Michael Berry Show. You hopefully intended
that to be the case. But there are always new
we call them samplers. Maybe you're traveling through a community
and flipping around stations and found us, or maybe you
left the station on, Maybe you left the dial setting
on where you watched the ball game last night, and
(02:34):
this is the first time you've checked in, or maybe
someone else borrowed your vehicle and they're a listener to
our show. Whatever the case is a quick programming note.
On Fridays, we call it the Friday Drive Home Show.
We will start the show, typically in the first segment,
with a week in review, which will be some clips
(02:55):
from the week that occurred. We do that because it
gives us a chance to give life to audio from
the week. Since we're in audio medium, we don't have
a visual aspect. But we also do that because it's
always interesting for the rest of us. Chad Knockinishi, our
executive producer, puts it together. It's always interesting for us
(03:15):
to realize by Friday that whatever was the hottest, biggest
topic on Monday, it was the biggest topic in the
history of mankind. By Friday, we have forgotten that it
even existed. And that happens in the course of a week.
Imagine a few months. Who remembers the cracker barrel issue
that wasn't so long ago? That was the biggest story
(03:38):
out there? Boyl boy, was that ever big? Today is
filing Day in the state of Texas, And depending on
where you're hearing our show and at what time, six
PM Central is the end of the filing deadline for
offices in the party primaries Democrat and Republican, and we
(04:03):
have some interesting races in the state of Texas. Let
me tell you, a lot of folks around the country
will tune into our show because we do offer some
Texas perspectives in addition to what's going on in the country,
and we're pretty well plugged into what's going on. There
were fireworks in the state of Texas today, perhaps the
(04:27):
biggest being that Jasmine Crockett, the Sheila Jackson Lee want
to be. We call her Sheila Jasmine Crockett, congressman who
has really overtaken AOC as the most loudmouthed, obnoxious member
of Congress. She's even displaced ilhan Omar. Ilhan Omar allegedly
(04:54):
a target of the Mogadishu, Minnesota fraud investigation that allegedly
includes Keith Ellison, Tim Walltz.
Speaker 2 (05:09):
Ilhan Omar and Moore.
Speaker 3 (05:12):
We know that there are upwards of one hundred arrests
of people who had some major role in this fraud,
and a number of them are pleading.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
Out and taking their time.
Speaker 3 (05:24):
It was an out and out din of iniquity, full
of fraud and corruption in Minnesota.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
We do know that, We know that for a fact.
Speaker 3 (05:35):
But back to it, Jasmine Crockett announcing that she would
be getting into the Senate race. Stacy Abrams, Yeah, that
one was always sweaty faced. She helped clear the deck
out of Georgia, she helped clear the deck in Texas
to get Colin all read out. Former congressman said he
(05:56):
did not want to go through a bruising Democrat primary.
To be a former professional athlete, and you're gonna get
bruised by Jasmine Crockett.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
Okay, anyway, he's gonna run for Congress.
Speaker 3 (06:09):
Lots lots to talk about, lots happening, but first, Jasmine
Crockett is running for the United States Senate.
Speaker 2 (06:16):
And since the girl, I am playing from the great
traditions of Queen's like Nefertt and Latifa, as the time
has come for the next moment of black power, jazz
mean Crockett.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
Growing up in a boogie white neighborhood, she studied the enemy.
She knows their way. She's been inside that belly of
the beast, and she's ready to bring hood to the hills.
Wiggs to Washington, Crass to the Capitol and saz to
what once had class.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
She's jazz Mein Crockett, and she can rocket.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
She descends from a long line of distinguished ladies who
bravely and boldly done serve before her.
Speaker 5 (06:56):
I will go and take Trump out to night boys
and evidence literally killing people at the border.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
Let me just say this, it is very well documented
that words nowadays can actually break your bones.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
Well, I'm glad I was standing with these children right
here here.
Speaker 5 (07:16):
I am to be able to celebrate the eclipse.
Speaker 10 (07:20):
They will not be seen for another forty for.
Speaker 2 (07:23):
Another time until twenty forty four.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
Jazz Mean Crockett, because it's time we ruined its country.
Speaker 2 (07:30):
As the snowflood.
Speaker 11 (07:36):
On a cold and grayish Chicago on and a poor
little baby child is born given.
Speaker 2 (07:43):
This is Michael Ferry Show.
Speaker 10 (07:46):
Enjoy it.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
Waded into the international soccer world.
Speaker 2 (07:56):
It's quite interested in it.
Speaker 12 (07:57):
You know.
Speaker 3 (07:57):
President Trump goes back into the world of entertainment. He
loves these sorts of things, Miss America, the usfl television.
Speaker 2 (08:08):
He loves the entertainment side. He's good at it. He's
a promotions guy. He gets it. He also gets the
business end of it. Well.
Speaker 3 (08:17):
The world Cup in twenty twenty six will be coming
to the United States and city of Houston is a host.
Seattle is a host. Well before the teams were even chosen,
Seattle's organizing committee for that city declared that the June
(08:39):
twenty sixth game there would be a Pride match. Then
last week the draws were announced, and hilariously, the Pride
match will feature Egypt versus Iran or Iran pick your poison,
(09:02):
two countries that openly vociferously criminalize gatum. In Iran, capital
punishment is still the maximum penalty under law. They can
and will kill you. And the way they like to
do it, because it's the cheapest way, is just push
(09:23):
you off the top of a building. Then everybody else
sees it, and I guess the idea is you see
some guy plunging to his death and you go, I
guess I'm not gonna be gay after all.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
I don't want that.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
Seattle's World Cup organizing committee is also holding a June
teenth themed match on June nineteenth, with the United States
taking on Australia. But we'll leave that aside for a moment.
Let's talk about Iran and Egypt, and rather than get
(10:01):
our perspective on it. We thought we'd check in on
Timmy Waltz of Mogadishu, Minnesota, Minnesota.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
I'll tell you what.
Speaker 3 (10:19):
I'll just suffice it to say, Timmy Waltz is conflicted
on who to root for. He can't say anything bad
about Muslims, but he loves gay men. So here are
his thoughts on the Pride Match.
Speaker 6 (10:33):
Timmy, Timmy Walton, It's the Timmy wal Podcast.
Speaker 10 (10:39):
Shot.
Speaker 6 (10:40):
Hello and heidihod All our listeners. This is your boy,
Timmy Walls. And we just added an affiliate in.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Fu Cle, Minnesota. As we continue to grow and grow
and grow.
Speaker 6 (10:54):
So today I thought I'd get my mind off of
things in the news and hast a special sports edition
of the podcast. Chance for your good old ball coach
to put on my rawlings, coaches shorts and talk sports
with my boys like I love to do. What a
wild year in sports. It's been first you remember the
Gay World Series. Who Now we have another day to celebrate,
(11:16):
and it's in the soccer world.
Speaker 2 (11:18):
The World Cup is.
Speaker 6 (11:19):
Coming next year and the committee has announced a Pride match.
Walls applause, Walls applause. Let's see who are these two
teams playing? Who Egypt versus Iran in the Pride match? Well, uh,
what a go in getting under my leadership Here in
the great state of Minnesota, we're like Iran. In Egypt,
(11:40):
we have a tremendous Muslim population. Now, who the heck
am I gonna pull for here? This is a tough
one since here Iran has something called a rainbow island
that has to be a great place to just spread
out and stay awhile. But then again, the Bengals smash
hit walk like an Egyptian is always on top of
the jazzer scythe playlist.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
I'm torn. You know what, Let's take a poll.
Speaker 6 (12:04):
I love poles, Pride Match Egypt or Iran will reveal.
Speaker 2 (12:08):
My pole next to walls out.
Speaker 3 (12:11):
The identity of the January sixth pipe bomber was revealed,
and despite the fact that Jake Tapper kept saying that
it was a white domestic terrorist, the guy's black.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
You know, whether it's.
Speaker 3 (12:26):
Calling the Narco terrorists fishermen when in fact they're trafficking
in drugs, or calling a black man white, which keeps
happening again and again and again. In fact, when you
see the prison population numbers, you can take the number
(12:47):
of inmates listed as being white, and you can cut
that in half or probably more than that, because what
they love to do is call Hispanics or Muslims, and
in some cases blacks white. Now I know what you're saying, Michael.
There are only really three races. His Fanics are technically.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
White.
Speaker 3 (13:13):
That's why we have a subclassification. So if a white
person can't qualify on a loan or for admission or
for a job for a minority position, but another white
person can who calls himself Hispanic, then we do recognize
there is some sort of difference, now, don't we? And
(13:36):
in that case, it's worth noting that this is a mistake,
one of many that keeps happening again and again and again,
and the reason is they want to blur the lines.
Facts are a troubling thing for folks who want to
make it seem that everyone is kind of carrying on
(13:58):
about the same in this country. The data shows President
pointing this out the other day, that Somalis who come
to the United States are I think the number, well,
you know what, I don't have the number in front
of me multiples more likely to receive federal governmental aid
(14:20):
for being autistic than native born Americans. So either they're
autistic or they're scamming the system. But what we do
know is I think it's one hundred and thirty three
times from three million to one hundred ninety nine million
(14:41):
for sorry, three hundred ninety nine million. We do know
that Somalis started opening these centers that would qualify for
federal funds, and we know that those individuals had connections
with government, and the federal money would flow from DC
to Mogili, Issue, Minnesota, and then into their bank accounts.
(15:04):
In some of these cases, they're like a drop site.
There weren't literally there was nobody inside working, There was
nobody even employed. They were just getting government money. You
don't do that without some higher ups knowing what was
going on to be involved and probably making some cash
off of them.
Speaker 11 (15:22):
Everyone listens to Michael Verie show.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
Well, here is the pipe bomber is black revelation. Let's
go back to Frank Phillyudsei, former FBI Assistant director, who
was on MSNBC talking about the conspiracy theories. He didn't
want to be distracted with conspiracy theories. Just so we're clear,
(15:48):
words are important or well taught us that you have
to control the language, because that's what they want to do.
Speaker 2 (15:56):
That's what news speak is all about.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
If you read nineteen eighty four, which some of you
are gonna have some time at Christmas, I encourage you.
Nineteen eighty four is the best primer to get you
up to speed on understanding what's going on today and
to give you the vocabulary to enter this conversation. Because
a lot of people tell me they have trouble keeping up.
Nothing wrong with that. You throw me on a job
(16:20):
site and tell me to pull wires with the electricians.
I don't know what all the terminology is. You put
me into a plumbing project. I don't know the terminology.
You put me in an eighteen wheeler. Tell me I'm gonna
pull up to the scales and they're gonna I'm gonna
have to answer the questions.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
I don't know the terminology.
Speaker 3 (16:39):
This is what I do. It's what I've always done.
There's nothing wrong with not knowing that. But unfortunately I
can avoid electrical and plumbing and mechanical and all that.
I can hire someone else to do it. But in
a self governing democratic republic, you have to be involved.
And I know you want to be involved. So go
ahead and buy it nineteen eighty four, Georgia. Well and
(17:01):
read it. And I know what you're thinking, man. I
hadn't read a book, Michael, since I was in high school,
and truth be told, I just read The cliff Nose
back then.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
That's okay. I didn't go to college. Don't need to.
I never was.
Speaker 3 (17:15):
Don't need to. You're going to be surprised. There was
a reason those things were prescribed to you, assigned to
you in school, and at the time it seemed like
it was to torture you. But you're going to understand
there was a real good reason behind that. It was
part of building a foundation for you to understand self
governance and the tyranny of others and the temptation toward
(17:42):
authoritarianism and the willingness of people to succumb to it.
Speaker 2 (17:48):
And then there is the who is John Gault?
Speaker 3 (17:50):
I ran reference where you understand that if you, if
you grasp when I'm putting down every day that in
a sense, you're John Gault, You're the one cursed. And
I've called it a curse. It would be easier if
you were like the other people driving on the road
right now and just turning into the music and listening
(18:11):
to the Hot to the Top forty and wondering if
Travis Kelsey's going to marry that goofy woman. It'd be easier,
wouldn't have any to worry about, because once you understand
what's going on, it becomes a real burden. So this
was former FBI assistant director who did not in May
of last year, sorry May of this year, who didn't
(18:34):
want to be distracted by a January sixth pipe bomber conspiracies.
Speaker 13 (18:39):
FBI deputy director says the bureau will pour resources into
cases including Supreme Court leak and cocaine at the White House.
Frank Finfluozy, the fact that this is their priority, what
does that tell you?
Speaker 10 (18:52):
And what is.
Speaker 13 (18:52):
The cost of the FBI asking to be spend its
resources on cocaine at the White House, on the Supreme
Court league? What is going to be lost in that redirection?
Speaker 9 (19:06):
So at face value, of course, people catching this quickly
in the evening news, with their lives going on around them,
they may say, what's wrong with that?
Speaker 2 (19:15):
We all want to solve.
Speaker 9 (19:16):
Let's get to it, Let's figure out who's cocaine.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
It was at the White House?
Speaker 9 (19:18):
Let's solve the pipe bombs placed on the night of
January fifth.
Speaker 10 (19:22):
Let's figure out who leaked to the.
Speaker 9 (19:24):
Dobbs draft from the Supreme Court. Sure, but you've got
to understand, as you said, first, what's not getting done
in the FBI's national security priorities, public corruption, organized crime,
violent gangs number one?
Speaker 10 (19:36):
Number two?
Speaker 9 (19:37):
What's really behind all of this posturing by the Deputy
director of the FBI. He's got to make good on
the promises that Cash Bettel, the director, and himself made
in their podcast, their books, their public appearances where they said,
I believe in the following conspiracies.
Speaker 10 (19:56):
I believe the FBI is hiding who the.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
Pipe bomber is.
Speaker 9 (19:59):
I believe that some liberal Democrat leaked the Dobbs draft
out of the Supreme Court, etc.
Speaker 10 (20:05):
Etc.
Speaker 9 (20:06):
And now last week Kendelanian of NBC News reported on
the pressure coming from MAGA on the FBI. Hey, you
said you'd deliver on this show us the goods show
us expose all of these conspiracy theories you spoused.
Speaker 10 (20:20):
Well, they can't do it.
Speaker 9 (20:22):
And so now we're seeing all these resources are going
to go into doing something. By the way, the Supreme
Court leak was never truly investigated. So look, I'm for
a real honest investigation. You recall the Chief Justice decided
he do that in house with the Marshal of the
Supreme Court.
Speaker 10 (20:38):
That's not an investigation. They didn't.
Speaker 9 (20:40):
I've wrote about this, I've spoken about it. They never
went outside the court to interview former cleric spouses, never
did a real, live grand jury.
Speaker 10 (20:49):
To get to the bottom of this. So yeah, let's
do it.
Speaker 9 (20:52):
But are they prepared be careful what's asked for? Because
if the FBI finds that Geett it wasn't some left
wing liberal who leaked to the Dodds this, are we
going to get that truth?
Speaker 10 (21:02):
That's what's important.
Speaker 3 (21:05):
So what he's saying as he talks in circles is
you're taking a lot of our resources or something that
shouldn't matter anymore.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
But okay, we'll do it if you make us.
Speaker 3 (21:19):
But we're going to warn you, crazy maga middle American
breeders in the heartland. We're going to warn you. It's
not going to be liberals, it's going to be you
to be one of your own. Well, the real reason was,
as cash Patel said earlier today, he said, listen, they
(21:44):
sat on this evidence.
Speaker 2 (21:46):
It's very important.
Speaker 3 (21:47):
Dan Bongino said this the other day in his interview
in his pressor, and he made it very clear, and
there's a reason for it.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
He said, we didn't get any new tips.
Speaker 3 (22:01):
We went back over the evidence in a cold case
sort of sense. What he's telegraphing to you at that
moment is it was all right there. They didn't find
it because they didn't want to find it, and he
wants you to understand, we didn't break this because all
(22:23):
of a sudden someone came in and said, Hey, it's
Brian Coley, Libs lives out in a Virginia suburb. The
evidence was all right there, and he wants you to understand. Clearly,
the FBI didn't want to find it, and they were
probably being ordered not to find it.
Speaker 2 (22:42):
It's not a coincidence. This is catch and kill. This
is do the.
Speaker 3 (22:49):
Investigation, find out what's out there, and then tuck it
away where no one will ever see it. What they
never counted on was that you would show up and vote,
that Trump would win all seven of the swing states,
that Trump would have the fortitude to come back, and
that you would have the fortitude to support him and
(23:10):
put him there. Here's cash Battel explaining what the Biden
administration did with that evidence.
Speaker 4 (23:17):
The prior administration sat on the evidence for four years.
There wasn't any production of new evidence from five years ago.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
Here's what we did.
Speaker 4 (23:24):
We went out to the country, brought in our experts
and Deputy Director Bongino led the charge and said, we're
going to look at every single piece of evidence again trace.
We looked at three million lines of evidence. We went
back and looked at the cell phone towered data dumps.
We went back and looked at the providers and what
information they provided pursuits to search warrants at the time,
(23:44):
and asked questions such as why weren't all the phone
numbers scrubbed, and why weren't they connected, and why wasn't
there any geolocational data done.
Speaker 2 (23:50):
Now that is either.
Speaker 4 (23:51):
Sheer incompetence or complete intentional negligence, and neither of which
is acceptable for this FBI. So we changed that in
the prior eight months, not on just this case, but everyone,
and what that did was allow us to narrow the
search down.
Speaker 2 (24:03):
I mean, I have to remind the audience.
Speaker 4 (24:04):
In the world, this guy, this suspect planted bombs.
Speaker 2 (24:08):
With his finger on the pulse.
Speaker 11 (24:11):
The King of Ding continues on The Michael Perry Show,
It's very.
Speaker 3 (24:17):
Easy to just forget about January sixth, fight bomb and
the dobs leak at the Supreme Court. My wife always
says that Americans have a superpower, that we're not burdened
by the past. You know the song pave Paradise, put
up a parking lot. My wife is in awe of
(24:39):
the fact coming from India as she does that Americans.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
Wait.
Speaker 3 (24:43):
You first have to understand that India is very burdened
by its past. There is so much of an almost
worship of the past. It's why they treat their elders
with such respect, and we don't. Our point is that
Americans are always pushing forward. And part of that is
(25:05):
that from our very earliest days, the pilgrims who arrived,
they gave up so much to come here. You look
at Winthrop, You look at what's Rogers's last name, Williams,
Roger Williams. You look at the founders to this country
and the waves of immigrants who came after they gave
(25:27):
up everything, in many cases after the English, they came
here and learned a new language, the Germans, the Czechs.
Texas has a lot of Germans and Czechs, the French
who came down to Louisiana by way of Acadia in Canada,
(25:48):
the Norwegians, sorry, the Swedes who ended up in Minneapolis
and made that such a great place. You know, Minnesota
was such a warm and welcoming place. It has become
a crap hole, just like Somalia. It turns out, well, you.
Speaker 2 (26:07):
Do the math.
Speaker 3 (26:09):
So what we cannot do is forget. We cannot do
what we do so often, and that is chase the
bright new penny and forget the crimes that were committed,
the lies that were told. Because George Santaiana famously told us,
those who do not learn the lessons of history are
(26:29):
doomed to repeat them. Those who do not learn the
lessons of history are doomed to repeat them. So Cash
betel On with Donald Trump Jr. Triggered with Donald Trump Junior.
It's called talking about whether there would be a review
(26:52):
of how it is. As Dan Bongino noted that the
FBI could not find the January sixth pipe bomber for
four years, and now all of a sudden, in a
matter of a few months the Trump FBI could It's
almost as if they wanted to.
Speaker 11 (27:12):
Will there be a review process on how this was
conducted Differently, how you guys could do this, you know,
four years later and then you know, eight or nine months,
you know, actually come up with a suspect versus the
prior administration having four years a more immediate timeline, you know,
being able to go right into it, having the immediacy
of that, or you know, even the fact that they
just didn't care. Doesn't that say so much about the
(27:35):
weaponization of justice in America today?
Speaker 4 (27:38):
Absolutely, And I think you're going to see it on
parallel tracks. What you're going to see is as this
case presents itself in court, you're going to see where
we were able to collect the evidence and make the
case against this suspect. And then common sense journalism and
investigator are going to be able to look at it
and say, why did these people do X, Y and
Z four or five years ago? That's going to make
itself self apparent. But what we're doing at this FBI
(27:58):
is also we have replaced this entire leadership cadre. We
have pushed out a thousand agents into the field. There
is a reason this FBI has twenty five thousand violent
offenders arrested this year alone. That's twice as many as
last year. There's a reason that this FBI is going
to deliver President Trump the lowest murder rate in modern
history by double digits. There is a reason this FBI
is out there crushing fence and all destroying ARCO traffickers
(28:20):
and making sure the homeland is safe and preventing spies
from infiltrating our homeland in our way of life. That's
what happens when you change leadership from the prior administration
FBI who wanted to weaponize and politicize law enforcement, to
US President Trump and the Attorney General who want to
just deliver law enforcement on every single front.
Speaker 2 (28:40):
And that's what we're doing. So you're going to see
it in both lanes.
Speaker 3 (28:42):
Then we go to Andrew McCabe, who I would argue
as a criminal. I think he's a very bad guy.
He was a former FBI deputy director. He was on
CNN and he says, ah, I find it real hard
to believe that our FBI would have just ignored this information.
(29:06):
Either your FBI was completely incompetent.
Speaker 2 (29:11):
Or evil.
Speaker 3 (29:13):
That's really the only option that accounts for the fact
that the Trump FBI found this stuff in a matter
of months.
Speaker 8 (29:20):
Director mckabe, I mean, can you help us understand a
little bit more of how this might be possible because
it had felt like a pretty stunning cold case for
quite some time. Is there any truth do you think
to what the Attorney General and those were saying that
it was ignored or how do you understand the facts
at hand?
Speaker 7 (29:40):
Yeah, it's really hard for me to believe Casey that
it was ignored over the last many years. I think
Evans characterized it well. You bring in a new team
to look at the evidence you have in a different way,
to maybe see things that your investigators who've been beating
their heads on this stuff for years have seen.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
But ultimately, what you have here is.
Speaker 7 (30:03):
An incredibly detailed data collection, and I'm sure a lot
of that data was collected before this new refresh took place.
But what they've done is they've taken every single piece
of the bomb, from the endcap to the pipe, to
the battery connectors to the wires, use every little piece.
They've identified where those things are sold, and they looked
(30:25):
at the populations of people that bought each one, and
as you layer that information on top of each other,
you cross correlate all that data. A smaller and smaller
population of people begins to emerge, and some of the
people in that population will be electricians or plumbers or
people who would buy those things normally in the course
(30:45):
of their work. But eventually your bomber or a small
group of potential bombers rises to the top, and then
you can do the very localized surveillance sort of work
that's required to kind of take that next step. I'm
sure some version of that was happening for the entire
time they'd been working this case. Let's remember it took
(31:06):
the FBI eighteen years to find a unibomber.
Speaker 3 (31:13):
Not the same thing, but surely the pipe bomber who
placed these pipes the night before January sixth. And by
the way, if you were trying to make January sixth
as big as possible, and you were trying to scare
the most people and make this look like a terrorist
(31:37):
invasion an insurrection, if of course we know they wouldn't
do that, right that there wouldn't be a plan behind that.
If you were doing that, then when we do catch
the bad guy we'd want to celebrate, right, So why
is Democrat Senator Mark Warner on MS NOW complaining about
(31:59):
the fact that as a Justice Department is taking a
victory lab?
Speaker 2 (32:03):
Shouldn't they? But I got to tell you.
Speaker 12 (32:07):
It kind of makes me looking at this crowd doing
a victory lab when all the senior FBI officials across
all key divisions have.
Speaker 2 (32:16):
Been fired for political purposes.
Speaker 12 (32:18):
When in some field offices, up to forty five percent
of the FBI officers who were doing things like counter
tespionage and cyber have been assigned to do immigration cases.
It's a little rich that they're saying that America, say,
how much earlier could we have caught this guy if resources.
Speaker 2 (32:38):
Hadn't been diverted?
Speaker 12 (32:39):
And I hope it would also remind folks that on
January sixth, I was here at the capital on January sixth.
It was an ugly, awful day, and this administration and
this president basically pardoned all the perpetrators. You know.
Speaker 2 (32:53):
It's that kind of picking and choosing a.
Speaker 12 (32:58):
Fact from this crowd that makes me a little bit
creat
Speaker 10 (33:03):
M