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October 25, 2024 29 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly Nash, It's tomorrow show today. In this case,
tomorrow will be Monday, and we start a brand new
series of giveaways for what you're talking about.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Yeah, Kip Moore's coming to the Senate and we have
your tickets and you'll be eligible if you win the
tickets for the Do we call it a meet and greet?
Is that still the phrase that we use?

Speaker 1 (00:23):
Is he going to agree it? Doule? Meet and greet?

Speaker 2 (00:27):
The text message was a little ambiguous. It said an
experience with an experience. I don't know what that means.
I'm assuming it's a meet and greet. It might be
you guys, I don't know, share a beer.

Speaker 1 (00:38):
I don't know what.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
I don't know what the experience will you're doing something
backstage or sides. I don't know if it's even backday.
He might come out to the bar in high five you.
You've had your experience and you're going to get a leave.
It'll be something worthy of a selfie for your social media.
And I will give you a clue, although I'm going
to give you the answer. You know, one of Kip
Moore's biggest songs as Beer Money, which leads us to

(01:02):
what you're talking about word of the day Monday morning
at six thirty.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
Crapulous, crapulus, craps the rap, Yes, crap you LUs not fabulous,
but not crapulous, No, crapulous, crap but the opposite of fabulous.
I'll go with that. This is obviously a new word.

Speaker 2 (01:18):
No, this is a word that came out in the
eighteen hundreds. It's from showing the effects or caused by
the effects of alcohol. Example, given I was a little
too crapulous this evening to register what I wanted. Yeah, yep,
that's an actual word.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
That's great from the eighteen hundred.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Yep, crapulus. So now you know that's a big word
you can put into your vocabulary. And if you remember
it from Monday morning at six thirty and or the
right caller, well, I guess Jonathan will decide what number
you'll be. Uh you went to your a pair of
tickets to go see Kip Thursday, November seventh at the Senate.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
Oh you gonna do is know the answer? We give
it the answer, so you really don't have to know
anything other than how to read it.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
Can you read? That would be the name of our contest.

Speaker 1 (02:02):
All right?

Speaker 2 (02:02):
We could we've also got you know, it's the height
of political season and they've got big problems up in Saskatchewan.
Now I'm not really that familiar with Canada. So Saskatchewan,
I guess, is a province which is kind of like
a state, though they're much larger it would seem. And

(02:22):
then inside the province, who have towns. Yeah, so in
Saskatchewan there's a town named Kyle, which is a very
small town, four hundred and thirty seven residents. The current
mayor is retiring, is his name Kyle No. And the
town council two people, four people are stepping aside, three

(02:49):
people are staying. They so they need two more.

Speaker 1 (02:53):
Okay, because you're gonna have five on town council.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
You gotta have seven. So you've got you've got two
that are staying, three that are coming on board, or
two that are coming on board. You need two more
or something like that. So anyway, they have no candidates.
Nobody is running for town council other than the two
that have already been. Once you threw your name in
the hat, you won, so if and nobody's running for

(03:16):
mayor and.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
So somebody but while we have a quorum, somebody been
to rewrite the laws.

Speaker 2 (03:24):
So I'm you know, I'm guessing I looked it up.
I didn't find it. I'm assuming that this is a
volunteer position, being the mayor of Kyle uh Saskatuan, and
you know, and there's a lot of small towns that
where that's the case, or it's a very minimal thing.
My wife was telling me, I want to say, Camden

(03:47):
has it like the youngest mayor in America.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
I didn't know.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
Let me look that up before before I get too
far into it, because she's selling a house in Camden
and she met that guy Camden.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
He was what on his recess from school.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
Well you got to be what twenty two I think
or something like that to run for office. They're making
it Camden, New Jersey. I want Camden, South Carolina mayor.
Stop showing me the Camden, New Jersey mayor about it.

Speaker 1 (04:17):
Give the damn who the mayor of Camden, New Jersey is.
We just want to find out about America's oldest excuse me,
South Carolina's oldest inlet city. Who is the mayor of Camden,
South Carolina.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
I'm not finding it, but it's one of those types
of towns where We have a young mayor, and I
think that he might make like one hundred dollars a
week or something for being the mayor. So you don't
run for office. This is the way America was initially
set up. You don't run for office, even for the power,

(04:50):
because there really isn't supposed to be a whole lot
of power in government. It's more about you doing public service.
That's why they called the word servant is used to
the people. You volunteer yourself for a limited period of
time to for maybe up to eight years, where you're
going to kind of detour your life, not for your good,

(05:12):
but for the community's good and kind of handle the
business for them.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
We seemingly have fewer and fewer public servants and statesmen
or stateswomen.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
Do you think that it's because of how ugly politics
has gotten.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
Oh, I'm sure that has something to do with it.
Or it could be just don't want people. Now you've
got a mobile phone, you don't want people dming you
or texting you all the time. Back in the day
we had the public meetings that I showed up respectfully
and made their appeals right suggestions.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
I think it has something more to do with just
the idea of people attacking you.

Speaker 1 (05:54):
You don't want to go through the vetting process, and
some people will never run for office just because they
don't want to family to go through it.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
Absolutely. I mean you see what some of these candidates,
even at very small local town council races, go through.
By the way, I think it might be Bishopville. Okay,
I'm looking up the city of Bishopville, South Carolina to
try to find the mayor. Did you know what it's

(06:22):
called the garden spot of the Carolinas Bishopville is.

Speaker 3 (06:25):
Did they call the mayor of the bishop they should?
I don't Knowsplle, I don't know why they wouldn't. Luke
Giddings is the mayor. Okay, let's look up Luke and
see how old Luke.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
Good job, Luke.

Speaker 2 (06:39):
Let's see how old he is. He is twenty one
years old.

Speaker 1 (06:42):
Maybe he was recruited in Maybe he's like Kyle Saskatchewan.
Maybe they had to recruit somebody in at Bishopville.

Speaker 2 (06:51):
Okay, Giddings beat the incumbent.

Speaker 1 (06:54):
Oh, look at this, Luke goes to.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
He's an online community college student. Okay, at least when
he won CCTC. I don't know what that is. CCT
Central Carolina Technical College alumnus. Win's the Bishopville Historic mayoral race.
So congratulations to him. Here you got three hundred and
fifty one votes. It looks like to two ninety seven. Okay,

(07:22):
that's about so it's a little bit bigger than the
town that we're talking about.

Speaker 1 (07:26):
A little bit twice the size. Probably.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
He is the youngest elected official. Oh, he's the fourth
youngest mayor in America.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
The youngest in South Carolina.

Speaker 2 (07:37):
The youngest elected official in Lee County, the youngest mayor
in the state, and the fourth youngest mayor in the country.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
Here you go, so and obviously called a public servant
early in life, servant ship, and he's going to serve.

Speaker 2 (07:52):
But this idea of where they go back and they
find stuff on you and they drag it out and
they're like, did you not post this in two thousand
and three on your very first comment on YouTube? You
said something that can be interpreted as racist, so that
you're ineligible now and you should be canceled. And people

(08:13):
are like, wow, man, what did I post in two
thousand and six or whatever? I don't I just don't
need somebody to drag in all my pasta right.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
We found in one of your domesticated pets, June's veterinary record,
that she went in for a tooth cleaning in October
of twenty twenty four and they had to remove three teeth. Now,
certainly you would have recognized that feeding her hard food

(08:41):
was inhumane, but you did this apparently for a lengthy
amount of time.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
It's not only inhumane, it's in animal lane.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
Yes, So I don't even know how we could trust
a South Carolina's or Forest acer citizens when you can't
even properly take care of pat.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Jonathan Rush tried to torture a cat to death? Do
you want him in office?

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Exactly? That kind of made tell me somebody has never
dug into the veterinary records of someone running for office,
And I'll tell you you're a liar.

Speaker 2 (09:12):
I have a friend who's currently running for I won't
say which school district, but it's a Midlands school district
and it's not I'll tell you this, it's not in
the one that my wife serves in one too, it's
not that one. So he's running for office. And he
told me a lady came up after a I guess

(09:33):
they had a forum or something. Okay, and spoke to
him for an hour. He couldn't get away from her
for an hour, and the hour was spent. He said,
she knew more about my life than I do. She
had researched everything about me, oh my and and one
of the bones of contention was he had filmed a

(09:56):
commercial for my wife my wife when she was for
Richland two several years ago. She assumes that that means
Angela knows this individual. And because Angela knows this individual,
he is also intimately involved with anybody who endorsed Angela

(10:17):
and one of the groups who endorsed Angela or one
of the people I was. I don't even know that
he knew what she was talking about. That group or
individual was fined or ended up in some sort of trouble.
And because and so, she's like, well, what about your
intimate involvement with the so and so group? And he's like,
I don't know the so and so people. Yeah, well,

(10:39):
did you not do a commercial for one Angela Nash
in twenty twenty two or twenty twenty one? And he's like, yes, Well,
then she received the endorsement of them in twenty twenty
two and then pled guilty to something. So now I
would say, now you're ineligible, aren't you?

Speaker 1 (10:56):
Like the sixth degrees of Kevin Bacon here?

Speaker 2 (10:59):
And He's like, I don't know any of those people.
And even if they had endorsed me personally, I still
don't think I'm ineligible because somebody said that I'm a
good guy and then it turned out maybe they weren't
good guys. I don't know, but no, I don't feel
But that's the level.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
Of guilt by association knows no bounds.

Speaker 2 (11:18):
Of dirt digging. She knows every client he's ever.

Speaker 1 (11:21):
We will keep digging into and we'll go to your
veterinary records if need be.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
Yeah, my wife has had clients contacted by groups and
said you can't buy a house with her. We want
to end her business in Columbia because she stands on
this this way, on this issue. It's it's really insane
the level of So with all that being said, if

(11:46):
you were guaranteed the election, in other words, there is
no dirt digging, okay, because there's nobody else running, all right,
that's right. The town just wants you to step up.

Speaker 1 (11:58):
Just signs of papers for the quorum.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
If Casey said, we have no candidates for the mayor
of Casey or Forest Acres or name a small town Blythewood, whatever.
Would you take the job? Would you even take it?
It doesn't pay anything, or it pays very little, but
you got to go stand in front of these people.
It's more than a weekly job. I'm sure you.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
Inspire a Morning Russia regulars to this calling. Or is
there anything we can do to inspire? Is it? What
if we come up with some dirt and day we're
going to release it.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
If you don't run, now you're on to something.

Speaker 1 (12:36):
Answer.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
Jonathan Rush has out clevered all of y'all.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
That's good. We talk about that Monday as well.

Speaker 2 (12:44):
Do you want to talk about the Menendez brothers on Monday?

Speaker 1 (12:46):
Man? Everybody's talking about them. They're apparently going to be
home for Thanksgiving, And I wonder when I saw the
headline this morning, where would Thanksgiving be? I mean, didn't
they have to move out of their home? And I'd
forgotten that one of them. Now I learned both of
them had gotten married, and one of them has even
got married and gotten divorced because he apparently was cheating
on his wife while in prison. Yes, you heard me

(13:07):
right with somebody I don't know who. Apparently they were
in two separate prisons because the other brother was lamenting
the fact that he had to lead a married life
without sex, and this other one over here has already
got a relationship. Maybe it was an emotional relationship, maybe
it was a physical I don't know. But he's already
gone through a divorce. The other one has a wife
waiting on him. So I don't know if if they'll

(13:27):
be what are they Lyle and Eric? I don't know
if they be going to her house. I don't know
what's going on, but apparently the attorney's very excited to
say they'll be home for Thanksgiving.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
I didn't realize Kim Kardashian is one of the people
who's been working on the case. I did not know that,
And so she wrote an op ed piece. I guess
that came out in this morning's La Times.

Speaker 1 (13:46):
Uh huh.

Speaker 2 (13:47):
And as she says, thank you, George, is it Gascon?
Who is gascone for revisiting to Bernando's brother's case and
writing these significant wrongs. Your commitment to truth and fairmness
is commendable to the brothers, family, friends, and millions who
have been vocal supporters. Your voicers have been heard. I'm

(14:08):
very honored to have been a part of this. She adds,
society's understanding of child abuse has evolved, and social media
now empowers us to question the systems in place. The
case highlights the importance of challenging the decisions and seeking
truth even when guilt is not in question.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
So so child abuse is now, this is now. The
new argument is is the child abuse has described if true,
and probably is, but certainly by many people in the
documentaries that Sally is watching. She's all wrapped up into this.
Does child abuse within itself then justify a murder?

Speaker 2 (14:46):
Yes, that's what That's what Kim Gardashians say. That's what
she's says, and apparently that's what the district attorney is
saying in Los Angeles.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
I thought there's going to give them time spent and
then let them off for the murder charge with the
early release. That was going to be my guess as
the highway they're going to come down with this, But
I don't know, because I guess we don't know yet. Yeah,
but Sally is watching, and Netflix has got a documentary.
I mean, I think every streaming platform has got a
documentary on the Benindoz brothers. They're all over the.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
News, and she's added, the District Attorney's office needs to
right the wrong that they did to these boys many
years ago.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
Listen, now you got to pay them.

Speaker 2 (15:25):
It doesn't mean that they shouldn't have gone to prison.
It means that they deserved a second chance at life.
They've done more than enough time.

Speaker 1 (15:35):
And then you got the other argument about some of
the information that was withheld in one or two or
both of the trials or whatever.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
So Gascon says he's going to recommend a sentence of
fifty years, which means they're immediately eligible for parole. And
like their people said, they would be home for Thanksgiving.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
Can you believe that's been thirty five years ago?

Speaker 2 (15:54):
Is that what it was? Let's see, they've been in
prison for nearly thirty five years, it says Gesc, and
I believe they've already paid their debt to society. They
were both under twenty six at the time of the murders.
So I don't know, you know that on that one
that might be a little too heavy. To be a
little heavy, but the idea of everybody's.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
Watching the documentaries they were all into it. Well, I
don't know about everybody.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
But I'm saying, like, you know, there's a lot of
subject matters that we don't cover on a morning show
because we're supposed to be the lighthearted alternative to the
serious world. Well I can tell you that, but the
podcast doesn't mean we can't touch it.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
Sixty six percent of my actually seventy five percent of
my household watches it, glued to it because when Sally
watches it, both June and Lolli are keyed in. Sure,
I'm the guy over there scrolling through Facebook.

Speaker 2 (16:49):
Sure I don't care, but when she turns on the comedy,
she doesn't want the hard hitting, serious, depressing news of
child abuse gone wrong with a double murder as well.
So we're supposed to be more of the lighthearted fun show,
but in the podcast we can be anything we want
to be. So I'm fascinated with the idea that your

(17:10):
two men men, they're not children. One was like twenty
three and one was twenty five. That's right, So they're men,
and they had suffered enough, according to them, and rather
than turning to the authorities and letting them handle it,
they decided to murder their parents, And according to the testimony,

(17:33):
the thing that I will never get over is that
they reloaded on mom. That mom had been shot and
was wheezing and crying, and they had to walk down
the hall out the house or something, reload the shotgun,
walk all the way back in, and then look at
their mom and blow their face off. That to me is.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
They had reloaded a couple of times, because I think
she got shot fifteen times.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
So to me, that's life in prison. That's minimum life
in prison, possible electric chair type of thing, doesn't matter
what happened to you. That's like mom and dad are
raping you on the hour. Got it. You had an
opportunity to get out of that, you didn't.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
That's the thing that fascinates me. You're twenty three. You
thought when you turned twenty two and you get out
of college, you'll be escaping the house. But no, you
found out that's not true. Now you got to live
there forever. Brother, you've been driving to tennis practice for
five years. Just take out ninety five and don't come back. Yeah,
you could flee.

Speaker 2 (18:38):
And I don't want to come off as cold to
the idea that I understand that, especially the relationship between
a parent and a child. If that parent or parents
become predatory, those kids grow up with an outlook on
life that's different than we'll say normal. Sure, and so

(19:02):
they weren't making good judgment calls, all of but all
of that, it does this whole stuff. Whatever happened to
you as a kid, I understand that affects the rest
of your life. But you have to override that. That's
the way I look at it. When you're twenty one,
when you're eighteen, you've got to override it, and when
you're twenty one, you certainly have to override it. We

(19:24):
can't allow twenty five year olds to lash out at
their parents because of whatever happened, and I do mean
whatever happened where they just get to go ahead and
slowly murder you, torture you, and then there's that's okay,
all right, we understand as a society that's me.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
Maybe other way you'll go for lunch. That was gonna
want to talk about it again, particularly with the headlines
popping up.

Speaker 2 (19:48):
And I mean, I don't know if it's a more
lighthearted thing, but you're saying one is married and the
other is not.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Yes, if I remember the article I read correctly. When's
one's divorced? Now?

Speaker 2 (20:02):
Is he single or is he married to another woman?

Speaker 1 (20:06):
You know, I don't go back and look because.

Speaker 2 (20:08):
One was considered like the looker, right, I think the
older one was the looker. And I think he's the
one who went bald, didn't he? Yes, I can't. I
get him confused. It's Eric and Lyle. But if if
you had an opportunity, if you met a Menendez brother
here we go, would you date him?

Speaker 1 (20:25):
You don't have to meet him if you could DM
him because we have women constantly. We've talked about this before.
We had talked about it in a while. They find
prisoner's fascinating.

Speaker 2 (20:35):
Well, I'm not looking for you. I'm looking for the
average woman. You're hanging out in five points or you're
at the gotcha and and somebody introduced this my friend Eric. Hey,
Eric was going and conversation begins. Everything's great. You and
Eric have a natural attraction to one another. And then
so if I want to get a hold of you, Yeah,
I want to get a hold of you. You send

(20:56):
it to Eric Menendez free at last dot com.

Speaker 4 (21:01):
Eric Menendez and I just read another and speaking of
which I just read another headline this morning. I don't
even know where to do is like I think, I
think I was all on WISTV because they have so
many national stories over there. Guy admits to a date
he's wanted for murder in another state.

Speaker 2 (21:19):
Really, he told the girl on a date told it
I wanted from DoD He think that was going to
be a turner.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
Now, I'm gonna be honest with you. I didn't click
on that story. I know you're saying, what all that
information is available with your index finger and you didn't
go for more? No, I didn't. I did not click
on It didn't click. But you know, we've talked about
that before too, and it's not like it's just women
throwing themselves at guys. Look at the guys that have

(21:46):
been talking to Susan Smith. We read those transcripts on
the paper last week. One of the guys says, I
can tell you're so loving and caring for other people.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
Brother, not all other people.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
Brother. Did you read any of the new stories caring
for other people? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (22:02):
Well, some other people.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
Well that described Susan Smith. Hey, and I don't even
know where our parole hearing's coming up, but I know
her then husband, David is he shows up every time
she comes up, well, every time she couldn't have come
up for parole. Many times he already plants, he's already
nounced he's going to be there at a petition against it.

Speaker 2 (22:20):
I would think. Let's see, Susan Smith, convicted is up
for parole. This was two days ago they posted this,
and Usa today is up for parole thirty years after
being convicted for rolling her car into a South Carolina
lake and drowning her two sons. Susan Smith only she's
only fifty three.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
Uh huh. She was very young when that happened.

Speaker 2 (22:41):
And I guess that's probably part of the reason for
the parole hearing. I was so young, I didn't know
what I was doing. I was like the age of
the Menendez Brothers. That's right, we could have a Susan
Smith Menendez Brothers Thanksgiving.

Speaker 1 (22:58):
I gonna be honest with you, I'd like to go
to that.

Speaker 2 (23:01):
Goodness gracious, let's just sit around and look at it.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
Let me just look at you.

Speaker 2 (23:06):
The father David Smith plans to testify, says that Smith
is no remorse even after three decades. When is the trial,
though it doesn't say.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
You mean the parole hearing, Oh yeah, or whatever.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
The case happened around the oj Simpson murder trial, so
it kind of got swallowed up in that frenzy.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
They said, yeah, but all of us remember watching the
newscast and hearing the sheriff talking. We're all screaming at
the television. Sheriff, wake up, plainly. You're not buying this story,
are you.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
So she's going to get two thirds. There's a seven
person panel, and you got to get two thirds of
them to vote for you to get parole. When it
just doesn't say when it is, I'll admit November twentieth, Okay,
so it's we're a little less than a month away.

Speaker 1 (23:49):
And she was at Monis because she was on the
phone talking not only with guys who throwing themselves at
her over the phone, but and I think they talked
nerdy to each other. But she's also supposedly talking to
two at least one producer about making a movie about
her life, which is something you can't do while you're
under the custody of the prison system.

Speaker 2 (24:09):
Is she in Colombia, It says. In two thousand, Smith
was found to have engaged in sex acts with two
corrections officers at the Women's Correctional Center in Columbia, South Carolina.
She was moved to a different facility. Well, where is
she at now?

Speaker 1 (24:23):
I don't know whether they don't say where they moved
it through. I don't think.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
Because the prison guards will be following her. They want
to take a shot at.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
Susan Smith under over the fence. That's gracious, DM me.
I wrote my web address and my crotch. It's crazy.

Speaker 2 (24:41):
How do you get in touch with her? I mean,
these people are are they writing letters?

Speaker 1 (24:45):
Or does it they got recordings of the phone call there? Well?

Speaker 2 (24:48):
How do I like, do I just call the prison
and say, hey, I'd like to talk to.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
The girl and kill her?

Speaker 2 (24:52):
Two kids?

Speaker 1 (24:52):
Know where the protocol is? But you know they tell
you before you are connected that this phone call will
be recorded.

Speaker 2 (24:58):
I'm just wondering how the how I make contact with her,
like like the very first time. I'm I'm a lonely bachelor.
I'm sitting in my one bedroom in New Jersey. Uh,
and I say, when did whatever happened to Susan Smith?
And then is it like does she have an email address?
Or do I just mail a letter?

Speaker 1 (25:20):
I don't know. I'm very proud to say I don't
know how to contact a prisoner, although we did contact
one way back in the day when James Brown was
over at Park Lane D James Brown. Yes, it's called
park Something. It wasn't Park Lane something off. It's off
a fair fair road. Yeah, when it was over there,
we had a prison, a prisoner called us, it's what

(25:42):
it was. We go to the phones and it would
give you They would tell you this conversation will be recorded.
Would you like to receive a phone call from? And
you hear the inmate's name, This is the so and
so correctional facility. And then we're talking to this guy
and he's talking about being, you know, in prison with
James Brown. And we kept trying to get James Brown

(26:02):
on the phone, but he would he would never he
would never come on the phone. So we never had
the payoff for that. But the thing went off for
like two months. Really we're trying to get James on
the phone. He would he wouldn't agree to it.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
I think she's in something called the leath l e
A t H correctional institution. So that's how we started
Lee Correctional It says l E. A. Thh Correctional Susan Smith.
This is a photo of her in twenty twenty one.
Leath Correctional Institution is a South Carolina Department of Corrections

(26:37):
prison for women in Greenwood County. It opened in nineteen
ninety one. Gotcha thirty nine acres, Greenwood YEP twenty eight
or nine Airport Road, Greenwood, South Carolina. If you want
to drive by and throw your love note to road
is Susan Smith. She's waiting for you. She's actually looks
far better than I would have imagined thirty in prison

(27:00):
would have treated her. She looks healthy, clear ride, maybe
a touch of gray in the hair. Now this is
twenty twenty one. I haven't seen it. We don't haven't
smashing rocks and the little rocks anymore. I would think
it not out picking up trash. The work would be
staying alive on the You know, everybody in here is

(27:23):
a murderer. They like murdering. That's there kind of their thing.
And we got a lot of free time. Just a
stress level, that's what I'm saying. Oh my gosh, can
you hear it?

Speaker 1 (27:32):
Great? Pretty quick?

Speaker 2 (27:33):
You want to keep your head on a swivel in here.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Good, all right, we can talk about maybe some of that.
I'll see what happens with Sally. I'm sure there's gonna
be another documentary release coming up here soon. I think
I'm six hours into the Beninda story now. Oh my gosh,
I know I can't get rid of it. I can't.
I remember, but I'm remembering things now that I've forgotten
about the trial when it came. Because everybody was saying
in the beginning, they just killed them because they were
rich parents. They wanted then hear it all the money.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
Well, that was clearly I.

Speaker 1 (27:59):
Was the end. That's what the whole first draw was about.

Speaker 2 (28:02):
The reason they didn't How is it safe to say
the reason they didn't move out is because they wanted
to stay rich.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
That's what the prosecution wanted you to believe.

Speaker 2 (28:11):
Well, if I'm twenty four and I'm living at home.

Speaker 1 (28:13):
Well, the reason wouldn't want to move out is because
Daddy was, you know, doing all that and then threatening
to kill you. You had a special relationship with dad.

Speaker 2 (28:23):
I am, Yeah, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
That's what I never could figure out. What you just
get in the car and go leave.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
Because I don't want to live outside of Beverly Hills,
right with my free Mercedes and all that sort of stuff.
So I have to tolerate my dad's insanity here.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
And apparently they were both pretty good tennis players.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
Yeah, I'm looking at one of the photos here of
I guess that's the younger one. Eric. People have been
trying to figure out for a while what his T
shirt says, Four Keys to success. That's the t shirt,
four keys to success. So this was taken.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
I guess four keys to get the hell out of here.
That would have been a better T shirt. You got
four keys to open the doors, it could be the
hell out of here.

Speaker 2 (29:06):
I'm guessing he didn't follow the four keys to success.
Or perhaps he did and they were the long keys
to success.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
He was not getting you know that treatment anymore. I
know he's imprison Yeah, I just gonna say, oh, I
don't even think about all that. Well round, this is
not going anywhere, good, Kip. Let's get back to something happy.
Keep more tickets, get you some beer money. Get some
beer money, some tickets. You got to supply your own
beer money. We can't do that legal, so so we
had to stop it. After that other craziness. I can't

(29:34):
talk about it anymore, so we're getting at all that Monday. Hey,
what's going on? You reach out to us on social media?
You know how to do that. If you want to email,
you can do it A rush at ninety seven five
WCS dot.

Speaker 2 (29:45):
Com and I'm Nash at ninety seven five WS dot com.

Speaker 1 (29:48):
You call us up with to win six thirty or
call us up to talk about it Monday at eight
oh three ninety seven, eight ninet two six seven nine
seven eight w COS
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