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July 22, 2024 39 mins

Why does Kamala laugh so much? Stuck on the tarmac during an emergency. How quickly things moved after the bullet missed Trump. No radio comms from the USSS from July 13th. Kim Cheetle passing the buck on the Trump rally security lapse. Medal of Honor: John “Bud” Hawk.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Monday. It's so good to be back. Now. I
should do this before we get to Medal of Honor Monday,
which I'm gonna get to, and we're gonna get to
all this secret Service testimony and stuff like that, the
stuff from today. I do need to give you a

(00:32):
couple little notes here, and you're gonna be mad about
all of them. It's not my fault. Well, for the
most part, it's not my fault, all right. You know
I was gone last Fridays. I was traveling. I I
just want you to know, July, as far as my show,
as far as doing shows goes, it's a nightmare. So

(00:53):
here it is. I'm just laying it out for you. You
can yell and scream. There's very little I can do
about it. I won't be here Friday. Why won't I
be here Friday? This one's my fault. This one's my fault.
I am having a twenty year reunion with my Marine
Corps brothers. We are renting a house on a lake

(01:14):
here in Texas. We're just gonna go grill up some burgers,
catch up on some old times. We're having a Marine
Corps re union. So I won't be here on Friday.
That's on me, obviously, I can't blame that on anyone else.
Next week, I will not be here Monday through Wednesday.
I'll be back on Thursday, all right, I'll be back
on Thursday. Monday through Wednesday, I'll be gone. I'll be gone.

(01:37):
And it's not my fault. I have been called out
of town by the suits to do suit things that
these are all good things. You should know. No, I'm
not in any trouble. These are these are very very
good things. Yeah, I'm not in trouble, Chris, I'm really not.
These are very very good things that mean good things
for the future of the show. So you're sacrificing three

(01:59):
days at the show for a longer, better future of
the show. I'll just put it to you that way.
So look after this, it should be okay. After this
until Christmas time, I don't foresee really anything else coming up.
July is just a bad month, all right, all right,
now time for Medal of Honor. Monday. Every single Monday
at this time, we do the exact same thing. We

(02:20):
take a Medal of Honor citation, and we read it.
I said this before to you, but I'm gonna say
it again. All these are available online, and I got
a bunch of emails last time saying where do we go?
Where do we go? Where do we go? Just put
it in an Internet search. The Congressional Medal of Honor Society.
I know that they have a website, but there are
many many websites where you can find all these online

(02:44):
for free. I don't have some special radio ac chafts
just because I'm an oracle. I don't have any of that.
You can do this with your family. Just print them
off and read them. I guess I don't have to
date myself. You don't have to print them off. I
guess you can read them right off of your phone
or iPad or computer whatever you're doing it on. But
anyone can do these. And we take email suggestions if

(03:07):
you have ones you like or ones that have some
relation to you. This one is well. We got this
email went back in December Jesse in honor of my grandfather,
Milton Pence, who was a bar operator serving in the
Corps and shot multiple times during the Battle of Falat's
Pocket and taken prisoner. German command gave the order to

(03:28):
execute the prisoners. Prior to the German retreat from the pocket.
A German doctor saved my grandfather's life by hiding him
in a wagon under a pile of straw. He was
later discovered by advancing Gis. Milton was awarded a bronze
star in a purple heart for his actions in honor
of all the men who served during the Battle of

(03:50):
the Falaise Pocket. I request that you read the Medal
of Honor citation for John Drew's bud Hawk and for
my grandfather. Please let the bar eat. His name is
cot Bar for you civilian types. Is a Browning automatic rifle,
a heavy machine gun that was used widely used in

(04:13):
World War Two. So, without further ado, US Army, let's
dig into it.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
Right hey, honoring those who went above and beyond. Its
Medal of Honor Monday.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
John Drew's bud Hawk. He manned a light machine gun
on the twentieth of August nineteen forty four near Shambeau, France,
a key point in the encirclement which created the Fallet's Pocket.
I know I'm saying that wrong, by the way, during
an enemy counter attack. His position was menaced by a
strong force of tanks and infantry. His fire forced the
infantry to withdraw, but an artillery shell knocked out his gun,

(04:59):
wounded and wound him in the right thigh. Securing a bazuka,
he and another man stalked the tanks and forced them
to retire to a wooded section. In the lull which followed,
Sergeant Hawk reorganized two machine gun squads and, in the
face of intense enemy fire, directed the assembly of one
workable weapon from two damaged guns. When another enemy assault developed,

(05:24):
he was forced to pull back from the pressure of
spearheading armor. Two of our tanks were brought up. Their
shots were ineffective because of the terrain, until Sergeant Hawk,
despite his wound, boldly climbed to an exposed position on
a knoll, where, unmoved by the fuselades of enemy, he
became a human aiming stake for destroyers. Realizing that his

(05:48):
shouted fire directions could not be heard above the noise
of battle, he ran back to the destroyers through a
concentration of bullets and shrapnel to correct the range. He
returned to his expos's position, repeating this performance until two
of the tanks were knocked out in a third driven off,
Still at great risk, he continued to direct the destroyer's

(06:11):
fire into the Germans wooded position until the enemy came
out and surrendered. Sergeant Hawk's fearless initiative and heroic conduct,
even while suffering from a painful wound, was in large
measure responsible for crushing two desperate attempts of the enemy
to escape from the fallet's pocket, and for taking more
than five hundred prisoners. How about that an aiming steak

(06:37):
may be confusing for some. Just know that we have
these in mortars. You know, I was a mortarman. I
was in the infantry, and they made me a mortarman
when you join the infantry. At least back when I joined.
I don't know if it's still this way. You didn't
get to pick what your specific mos, what your specific
job was in the infantry. You just joined in the

(06:59):
infantry and they put you wherever they wanted you were.
They made me a mortarman. We used aiming stakes, and no,
I'm not going to bore you with all the nerdy
details on it. Just know that there's steaks you put
out in front of the mortar O. So just a
white steak, think four or five feet tall, a white
steak stuck in the ground, putting out in front of

(07:20):
the mortar. And what happens is the mortar itself it
has a sight on it. I had a sixty millimeter mortar.
It has a sight on it. What are you looking at?
Because most of the time, not all the time, but
most of the time with mortar fire, it's indirect fire,
meaning I can't see who the enemy is. He's over
a hill, where he's somewhere there. So fire is called in.

(07:42):
Someone who can see calls in the fire, and then
adjustments are made. And what you aim at, what you
go off is the stakes that are out in front
of you. You make the adjustments. I adjust the weapon
looking at the stake in front of me, and I
understand that's what an aiming steak is. To be a

(08:04):
human aiming steak would be a very very very dangerous
bit of business, a very dangerous bit of business. And
that is a very brave man right there. All right,
now we need to get to the secret service talk.
You should know though, just one final word on dome,
probably not the final word, but another word on dome

(08:25):
another way you can tell that she's the chosen one
for the system. She just shattered a record in twenty
four hours of fundraising dollars, over eighty million dollars raised
in twenty four hours. How does that happen? Well, obviously
it's not Dome's winning personality. It's not like she was

(08:46):
burning up the phones calling all these people. Did she
call some? Of course she did. How did that happen? Well,
it happened because all that money was ready to go,
prepped and ready to go as soon as Joe left.
And that was part of the conversation as well. That's
how you know she's been chosen. Don't listen to anybody

(09:08):
who says it's up in the air. And look, I
understand there are people who are at least saying this,
and it's not a stupid thought, it's just incorrect. There
are people saying she's she's on a trial run herself.
She has to get the poll numbers better or what. Listen,
we are three months from the election. You realize that

(09:30):
three months for three months in change. I realize that.
But August, September, October, then there's the election. There are
four people in the United States of America by my
count who have a presidential campaign set up to run
Michelle Obama courtesy of or courtesy of Brock. She's not

(09:51):
running Hillary Clinton because she's done it many times before.
Gavin Newsom because he was preparing for this, and Kamala Harris.
Newsome has already come out and backed Kamala Harris. Hillary's
not running. Michelle has announced she's not running unless she
changes their mind, which, as we've talked about, they do,

(10:12):
it's going to be Kamala Harris because there's no longer
time to switch. Again. She's the one that's it. That's
what she's got, That's what they've got, and what they
have is a real problem on their hands. I'll just
one more word on that, and then we'll dig into
all this secret service stuff and then I'll get to

(10:33):
emails and other things. But first let's get to this.
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(10:54):
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my boys insist on them. Now at this point in time,
it's just I don't know what that fill is they
put in there. It is, It changes you, and it

(11:15):
doesn't matter what kind of a sleeper you are. On
your back, on your stomach, on your side. They have
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(11:36):
on the radio listener special square used to promo code
Jesse MyPillow dot com promo code Jesse. Or you can
call eight hundred eighty four five zero five four four.
We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (11:51):
Miss does catch up.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Jesse kellyshow dot com. It is the Jesse on a Monday. Oh,
it's so good to be back. You can email me
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. I don't care what
it is. Send me an email, don't forget. If you
miss any part of the show, you can podcast it.
It's easy, it's free. iHeart Spotify iTunes. One more word

(12:17):
on Dome, because then it's time to talk about this
secret service stuff. And in fact, I should probably tell
you the plain bathroom story too. I don't want to,
I know, Chris, I don't want to. I probably shouldn't,
but I'm gonna one more word on Dome. Have you
ever heard of imposter syndrome? I could say right now
that it's a real thing. But what's a real thing.

(12:40):
It's something a bunch of shrinks have decided is a
real thing. So it is what it is, But impostor syndrome.
You know that montage of Dome laughing that we played
from time to tell me. Oh gosh, okay, I can't

(13:00):
take it anymore. You know what that is, right, that's
nervous laughter. Here's a story for you. This is not
my scoop. This is a different someone else came up
with this, but it's true stories. You know this. Kamala Harris,
she was scheduled to have a big, fancy fundraising dinner

(13:21):
and she was so nervous because Joe Biden wasn't gonna
be there. She was so nervous about heading up this
dinner that her staffers set up a rehearsal dinner with
staffers sitting there pretending to be the big shots so
she could talk to them. Kamala Harris has impostors syndrome

(13:45):
in the worst possible way. She's never been vetted. She
sailed through California politics. She got her start because of
Willie Brown and you know the background on that story.
And from there, she sailed through California politics really without
ever being vetted or torn up or anything like that,

(14:06):
because she was the I don't know what she is.
She used to claim to be an Indian American, now
she claims black, and it doesn't matter. But she was
a minority Democrat woman and that's basically royalty in California,
and so they just kind of gave her everything without
destroying her. And being a minority Democrat woman, that's what

(14:29):
got her VP. But she's not ready for prime time.
And you know who knows that better than anyone else her,
She's not ready for prime time. You ever been given
a job you don't know how to do it? I
have many many times in my life. One because my
dad thought that was hilarious, but I have many many

(14:49):
times in my life, and that's a bad feeling, isn't it.
You ever had to do something and you don't know
what you're doing, you don't know how to do it.
That's where she's at. She has imposter syndrome. Back all
right now, I'm gonna tell you. I just want to
get this airplane bathroom story out of the way first.

(15:10):
And I know it's not a story I should tell,
but I feel like I owe you honesty, and I
feel like my suffering generally brings you joy, which doesn't
speak highly of you, but it generally brings you joy.
So here it is. You know how I had to
fly to Milwaukee last week. There we had a stomach

(15:32):
bug going around our house. It was a twenty four
hour stomach bug. Maybe you've had it. From what I understand,
it's been going around the country big time. Wife got it,
kids got it, eventually I got it, and it took
a different form with whoever got it. But just understand
it was a twenty four hour bug, really really bad.

(15:53):
But after twenty four hours, you're gonna suffer. Yeah. I
don't know which end it's gonna come out of, but
you're gonna suffer for twenty four hours and then you'll
come out of it. Okay, not a big deal. Okay,
wife gets at kids gets it. I never got it.
I'm happy about this. I flew to Milwaukee on Monday
of last week. Oh, Chris, it gets better. Just stay
with me. I am on my way to the airport.

(16:16):
I don't pack bags, all right. I don't pack backs.
I don't check luggage. You should know, unless it's something
like a two week vacation, I do not check luggage.
So I've got two carry ons. I've got a backpack
of carry on. I'm totally fine, completely healthy, and I'm
sailing through the airport. I'm almost to the gate, and

(16:37):
my stomach doesn't feel good. It really, really really does
not feel good. And I don't mean a little bit
of discomfort, like a stabbing kind of pain in my
lower lower, lower stomach. Okay, Well, you know, everyone who's
listening to this show for any length of time understands
full well that I do not do public restrooms if

(16:58):
it can be avoided. I don't want to sound like
a big weenie germophobe. I really don't. But I've used
these restrooms, fellas. I see how gross you are. Not
washing your hands. People treat public restrooms terribly. They pee
all over the I'm just grossed out by the very
concept of public restrooms. You've heard this, if you've listened

(17:20):
to the show before. I don't like it. I'll do
it if I absolutely have to, but I'll bend over
backwards to avoid using a public restroom for dear, but
for number two purposes, obviously, I'll go use a urinal whenever.
I'm a dude, right, But I'm just I don't want
to go sit down on a public toilet. Okay. So

(17:40):
that's the lead up to this. Now we're getting ready
to get on a plane in Houston and fly to Milwaukee.
The plane itself, I'm sitting in first class. Not to brag,
but it's just one of those tiny little planes. Don't worry,
it's not fancy. Where in first class, on one side

(18:00):
of the aisle there's only one seat. On the other
side of the aisle there's two seats. That's how tiny
this plane is. So this is a really, really really
tiny plane. My feeling in my stomach goes away at
the gate, so I think I'm probably good to go.
Then we board the plane. I will finish my story

(18:22):
in just a moment before we do that we're about
to talk about emergencies. But there are emergencies and then
there are emergencies. You see, having a rough bathroom incident
is an emergency. Having no food, well, that's a whole
different ballgame, isn't it. Listen, you see the times we

(18:42):
live in, You know the evil people who run the
various systems on this planet. Do I need to play
this for you? This is Bill Gates. Listen to this.

Speaker 3 (18:50):
I'm here in Dubai. This is COP twenty eight, very
very important meeting the issue of health and climate. We'll
be discussed at length. That's never gotten the attention it deserves.
These are food systems and how with climate change a
lot of farmers aren't able to grow their crops, which

(19:12):
is a tragedy.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
Go to prepare with Jesse Kelly dot com right now
and get an emergency food kit. That's my Patriots supply.
They're selling three month emergency food kits two hundred dollars off.
Go now, don't try to wait until you need it.
Buy one, stash it, forget about it, and pray you
never need it. Prepare with Jesse Kelly dot com. We'll

(19:37):
be back.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
Miss something.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
There's a podcast.

Speaker 2 (19:40):
Get it on demand wherever podcasts are found. The Jesse
Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
It is that Jesse Kelly Show on a Monday. It's
so good to be back. I'm going to get to
the secret service stuff in a moment. In case you're
just now joining us, I'm relaying something absolutely horrible, devastating
that happen to me last week. Quick recap for you.
Stomach flu was going through our house, a stomach bug
of some kind. I ended up being fine, wife, kids

(20:08):
were bad. But then I got off scott Free. I'm
getting on a plane, a very very tiny plane, A tiny,
tiny plane was united from Houston to Milwaukee last week,
and the pain hits me as I'm about to get
on the plane. Now. You know, I'm not going to
use the airport bathroom if I can be avoided, So
I tough it out. I sit down. It's a couple

(20:30):
hours from Houston to Milwaukee, and I'm fine for most
of the flight. I do have a couple times the stabbing,
searing pain comes back to me, but I'm sitting there,
I'm sweating, and I know, look, airplane bathrooms are tiny anyway,
this plane, I'm not sure if I can even fit
in it. Remember I'm six ' eight. I am six

(20:52):
foot eight, and I've watched people try to squeeze themselves
in and out of this bathroom the whole time. So
it's bad, but I'm making it. I'm making it through.
And then we begin our descent. You know how they
tell you your descends twenty thirty minutes. We start our
descent and the pain comes back. Only this pain, it

(21:16):
wasn't just visiting. This pain stayed and it started to
hurt really, really, really bad. And now even if I
wanted to get up and use the restroom, which I'm
not joking, I'm praying at this point in time. Not
that I'm against praying or something like that. I try

(21:36):
to pray as much as possible. But I am sitting
in my seat praying to myself, Please Lord, let this
go away. God, Please, I'm asking please let this go away.
This is what I'm doing in my airplane seat. This
is how much I'm dreading it. Seat belt sign is on,
so I'm not even allowed to get up, and we
are slowly, slowly descending into Milwaukee. We finally land in

(21:59):
Milwaukee and I am starting to sweat. That's how much
pain I am in physical agony in my lower stomach. Okay,
that's fine, it's fine, it's fine. We're gonna get there,
and I'm just gonna have to use the airport bathroom.
Just just's fine. We're already landed. I'm gonna make it.
I'm gonna make it. I'm gonna make it. I'm gonna

(22:19):
make it. We start driving up to the gate we're
on the plane. Plane stops. Okay, why are we stopped?
It's another five minutes while another plane is getting ready
to leave. Then we pull up to where the jetway
is and they begin to pull the jetway out towards

(22:41):
the plane. And I'm watching this like a hawk because
I need this jetway on the plane, and I need
it on the plane right now, because I am about
to have a problem here on this plane. That is
the kind of desperation that I'm in right now. The
jetway gets three feet from the plane and stops moving.

(23:02):
They have mechanical problems. Now they've they've at least turned
off the fastened seatbelt sign because we're stopped. We're not
gonna move. Everyone has stood up. I have both of
my carry on bags with me, and I'm sitting there
thinking to myself. I'm gonna make it. I'm gonna make it.
I'm gonna make it. But the gentway it's stopped and
it's not freaking moving, and I'm looking and I'm trying

(23:22):
not to be desperate, because you can't be honest in
that moment with everybody. It's not like you can start
sharing your troubles with everyone around you. You're suffering in silence.
It's not like you can yo. If the stewardess, Hey, Stuardess,
it's about to be a mess back here. If they
don't hurry up, you're stuck and it stays stuck, and
it stays stuck, and it stays stuck. And I know

(23:45):
I should point out I know that people recognize me
on this flight. Of course it's a Houston flight. We're
going to the Republican Convention in Milwaukee. How many people
are on that plane who recognized me, so of course
I'm known. At this point, finally stewardess comes on the
air and just in the most pleasant way possible, she says, hey, sorry, folks,

(24:07):
looks like they're having a little technical problem with the jetway.
They're working on it right now. They said it's not
going to be more than ten or fifteen minutes. I
don't have ten or fifteen minutes. I just don't have it.
Did I clarify that the aisle is full of people,

(24:28):
We've all stood up, we've all gotten our bags, and
the bathroom is at the front of the plane. Obviously
that's where the line begins. And so I as casually
sounding as humanly possible. Oh yeah, sweating, Chris sweating, And
it was visibly sweating to the point where I would
touch my forehead and you could see the shine on

(24:50):
my fingers from the sweat. And I still had to
try to play it, cause I set my bags down
on the chair and I say, well, I mean, as
long as we're stuck here, I'm gonna use the restroom
real quick. I have to tell two people to move
so I can get by them. Go into the air

(25:11):
plane bathroom. I sit down, my knees are touching the door.
I'm facing the door when I sit down on my
knees or touching the door, and with people five inches away,
there's a one inch store between me and the people
people five inches away. I get sick on an airplane

(25:36):
bathroom that's so tiny, and that people have been using
for two hours. I don't know that I've ever been
this humiliated. And to make it even worse, I'm just
sharing my pain with you. To make it even worse,
I don't feel like I don't feel like I can
finish and then leave the bathroom and face the people

(26:01):
who are right outside the door, because it's gonna be
very obvious. Hey, where did that tall guy go? Didn't
he disappear into the bathroom ten minutes ago? So I
had to sit there with my knees buried into the
airplane bathroom door. It felt like ninety minutes. I'm sure
it was ten minutes. I had to sit there and

(26:23):
listen until everyone had deplaned so I could get up
and wash my hands and leave the bathroom with somehow
slightly less embarrassment than I had otherwise. It was a
living hell. What Chris? What Chris? Who knows what they thought?

Speaker 4 (26:41):
Right?

Speaker 1 (26:41):
They might have thought I was doing drugs, you know what?
I hope they did think I was doing drugs. It
would be better than if they knew the actual truth
of what was happening. I've never been more embarrassed. I'm
mortified in my life. I'm mortified beyond belief, And the
only thing that made this at all worth it was
I did get to tell the wife because she was

(27:02):
so horrified and embarrassed. It actually made it at least
slightly funny. That's what I was going through for you
traveling to the convention last week. Now, let's talk about
the Secret Service. Let's talk about this hearing today, because
you know, I thought I had earlier. You know how

(27:22):
slow government moves, how slow politics moves, How slowly big
things happen. They generally don't happen all at once. Isn't
it wild? How quickly things began to move as soon
as that bullet missed Donald Trump. As soon as the

(27:47):
bullet missed Donald Trump, then a bunch of things got
put into motion. That is funny, isn't it? And one
of the many things Kim Cheatle, head of the Secret Service,
said today, one of the many things she dropped was
does the Secret Service routinely record communications between and amongst detail.

Speaker 5 (28:11):
Radio communications?

Speaker 1 (28:12):
Any communications?

Speaker 5 (28:15):
Email communications are captured as well as text messages, and then,
depending on the detail, radio communications are recorded.

Speaker 3 (28:25):
Does the Secret Service have recorded communications from the July
thirteenth event.

Speaker 5 (28:29):
We do not have radio communications from that day.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
I'm sorry, what did what did you just say? They
don't have radio communications. From this day, we have multiple congressmen,
congressmen elected people now saying they believe there was at
least one other person involved. Congressman Burchette today of Tennessee
told me this twenty year old has three overseas accounts.

(28:59):
Three overseas account Now, I did not get clarification that
they were bank accounts. I guess I should have asked that,
but overseas accounts of some kind. The radio communication was lost. Hmm.
Let's have a chat about that, and we'll talk a
little bit more about the Secret Service in a moment.
Before we do that, let's chat about your chatting. I'm

(29:21):
talking about your talk on the phone, your text messaging.
Who's your cell phone company? You see, we are choosing,
we're making choices on behalf of our culture when we
spend our money. Now that businesses have decided to get involved,
now we have to get involved back. You should have

(29:44):
pure Talk. That should be your cell phone provider. More specifically,
you should not have hoverzon or At and T your
freaking T Mobile. Gosh, T Mobile might be the worst.
And that's the look I'm not pointing fingers. That's the
one I had before I switched. When you switch to Puretalk,
you support a company that shares your values. You're not

(30:04):
going to sacrifice a thing. They're on the same five
G network. You keep your freaking phone, You keep your
phone number. This is a company that loves you, that
loves this country. Their CEO thought for it. And it
takes ten minutes on the phone to switch, and you'll
save a pile of money. Dial pound two five zero
and say Jesse Kelly Pound two five zero, say Jesse Kelly,

(30:27):
switch to Pure Talk. You're listening to the Oracle. You
love this one.

Speaker 2 (30:32):
It's a scream baby, the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (30:36):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Monday. And
I am really excited to dig into this. And I
am getting really really creeped out the more I learn
about this Trump assassination attempt. And this is not something
This is not something we can allow them to gloss over.

(30:56):
We can't allow them to move on. The system really
really really wants us to move on from the fact
that Donald Trump was two inches away from having his
brains blown all over the stage in Pennsylvania. That is
not something we're going to move on from And I'm sorry,
you'd have to be Stevie Wonder not to see how

(31:17):
quickly things moved the second that bullet missed. The bullet missed,
and what do you know, five seconds later, Joe's got
covided up. Joe's out looks like Kamala Harris is a
candidate eighty million dollars. Everything's lined up behind her. Sorry,
it's looking very neat. And no, I don't know anything,
but no, I haven't ruled out a single thing, especially

(31:38):
when when I hear a lot of this testimony today,
this is Andy Biggs questioning Kim Cheer.

Speaker 6 (31:45):
Agency has a no fail mission, and on Saturday, July
thirteenth year, agency spectacularly failed. It is unfathomable that a
twenty year old on the radar of Secret Service and
local law enforcement before President Trump went on stage, was
able to climb onto the roof of a building with
a rifle and fire off multiple rounds before he was neutralized.
Was mister Crook's acting alone?

Speaker 5 (32:07):
Again, I would have to refer you to the FBI's investigation.

Speaker 6 (32:12):
Was he just a loan gun man?

Speaker 5 (32:14):
I would have to refer you to the FBI's investigation
from motive.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
Excuse me, okay, there's that. Of course, she did this
thing all day long today.

Speaker 5 (32:27):
The Secret Services solemn mission is to protect our nation's leaders.
On July thirteenth, we failed. As a director of the
United States Secret Service. I take full responsibility for any
security lapse of our agency.

Speaker 1 (32:43):
I take full responsibility. But then says this.

Speaker 4 (32:46):
Do you think you are the best person in the
country to head the Secret Service?

Speaker 5 (32:52):
I think that I am the best person to lead
the Secret Service at this time.

Speaker 1 (32:56):
Mm hmm. Yeah, We've talked about that before. We'll come
back to that. I'm going to come to this here.
Listen to this.

Speaker 4 (33:03):
The shooter began shooting at six to eleven PM Eastern
on July thirteenth.

Speaker 1 (33:08):
NBC reported that.

Speaker 4 (33:09):
At five point fifty one PM, twenty minutes before the
shooting began, the State Police informed the Secret Service of
their concern. Now, the rally was not pause at that point, correct, Now,
just too many.

Speaker 1 (33:21):
I need to pause on this for a second. I'm
going to do this a couple of times because I'm
going to explain a couple of things for you when
it comes to Secret Service protective detail. Presidents all these things,
they don't ever, ever, ever, ever just kind of chance

(33:42):
it meaning, if there's if Joe Biden's going to speak,
if Donald Trump's going to speak, and they identify a
person of interest in the crowd, they will go put
their hands on that person. They will put eyes and
hands on that person. They'll usually take them away for
interrogation before anybody Biden, Trump, whoever it is, is allowed

(34:08):
out on the stage. You me, we don't always see
it as that because they don't make an announcement. But
half the time when there's a hey, where's Joe Biden?

Speaker 4 (34:18):
Is he?

Speaker 1 (34:19):
Why is he ten minutes late? Well, half the time
it's because there was a security reason they put They
put a stop on everything. Everything stops, let's figure it out,
because they cannot afford to fail. That's normal protocol on
these things. One failure and it's all over. So you

(34:40):
don't ever, ever, ever take that chance. They identified this
guy twenty minutes before, and they allowed Donald Trump to
walk out on that stage.

Speaker 4 (34:49):
Anyway, later, at five point fifty three pm, the Secret
Service notified it's snipers about the gunman. The rally wasn't
paused at that point either, correct.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
They identified the gunman, and the snipers identified the gunman,
and they still nobody went to Trump and said, hey, hey,
give us ten minutes if you don't mind. Nobody stopped
it all.

Speaker 4 (35:19):
Now, let me show you some video footage by rally goers.
If you could play the video on the screen up here,
This was taken two minutes before the shooting start, if
you could turn up the volume. And the rally wasn't

(35:44):
pause at that point either.

Speaker 1 (35:45):
Correct.

Speaker 5 (35:46):
I can tell you, as I stated earlier, sir, that
the moment that the shift surrounding the president were aware
of an actual.

Speaker 4 (35:55):
Threat, that's a threat right there. The guy's on the
roof and everybody's yelling it yes and directing the officer's
attention to him. The rally was not pause at that point.

Speaker 1 (36:05):
Correct.

Speaker 5 (36:06):
We are currently still combing through communications and when communications.

Speaker 4 (36:11):
Were passed, well, I can point you to this communication.
It's two minutes before the shots started ringing out, Director
cheitle Yes or no. Was there ever a moment where
the Secret Service actually considered pausing the rally?

Speaker 5 (36:23):
The Secret Service would have paused the rally had they
known or been so.

Speaker 4 (36:28):
The answer is no, an actual threat, The answer is no.

Speaker 1 (36:31):
Correct.

Speaker 5 (36:32):
I can i can speak to you in generalities.

Speaker 4 (36:36):
No, no, I don't want general specific communication. The answer
is no, you did not consider pausing the rally.

Speaker 1 (36:43):
Why didn't they consider pausing the rally. I just told
you how it's done. That that is standard. Honestly, here's
the truth. If there's a balloon pop, someone cooks off
a firecracker, which has been done many times at these
things because kids think it's funny, or her people think
it's hilarious to cook one of these things off. If

(37:05):
these things happen, things are stopped, things are paused, and
they're investigated. This is the former president of the United
States of America, the man who was at the time
about to become the Republican nominee. This is a man
who was threatened all day, every day with his life.

(37:28):
Nobody stopped anything. Nobody stopped anything. Even the snipers identified him,
and no one stopped Donald Trump from walking out on
that stage. I'll play you a couple other things, and
then i'll play you my thoughts on all this, because
I have a few thoughts rattling around my head. And look,

(37:51):
we're just going to talk. It's just you and me,
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(38:11):
drains your life. You're in a bad mood, you don't sleep,
and we've lied to ourselves that we have to live
with it, or that we have to give things up. Well,
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(38:32):
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(38:53):
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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