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November 7, 2024 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, luck and load. The Michael
Varry Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
So many things that excite me about the Trump presidents.
I've used the sports analogy. When the Astros won the
World Series in twenty seventeen, it was the first time
Astros fans, Houston baseball fans had had a championship. When
the Rockets won in the mid nineties, was the first
time Houston had won a national championship. But the next day,

(00:53):
nothing changes. You just get a good feeling. When you
win the White House, you can reach out to Putin
and say, let's negotiate an end to the war forthwith
I believe Putin wants an exit strategy the ground and
pound long term game. Eventually Russia just exhausts you. But

(01:16):
I think Putin wants a way out, and I think
he wants back in the international community, and I think
Trump gives him the opportunity to end that, which means,
among other things, we don't have to send your billions
of dollars there. We don't have to send your boys
in mind to get killed as cannon fodder on the

(01:36):
planes of the Ukraine. Hamas is already called for an
end to everything they could, they can end this. They're
going to have to hand some people over. There's going
to be some retribution. Israel's not walking away that easily,
not after what they've suffered. You can calm that zone down,
your two biggest hotspots in the world. You know what
else happened yesterday They dropped the Jackson Smith prosecution of

(02:01):
Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
So that happened.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
So we can stop that nonsense, and we'll get to
Letitia James the ag of New York in a moment.
You know what else has to happen. Every person on
site on January sixth will be pardoned. That has to happen. Absolutely.
I find it interesting that people are calling for a

(02:26):
pardon for Hunter Biden more than they are a pardon
for people who did nothing more then walk over to
the Capitol. They weren't armed, they never struck anyone or anything,
they never caused any violence, and yet the doors were

(02:47):
kicked down and they were sent to prison. That's an
awful place to be. Lendon Mitchell is just one of
those people landed there. So I understand that you were
a pest control guy working in the Arlington, Virginia, Washington,
DC area. Your mom was an Army lieutenant colonel stationed

(03:08):
at the Pentagon and Capitol Hill, and you had been
living there because of her. How old were you on
January sixth, twenty twenty one? About thirty three thirty one?

Speaker 1 (03:20):
I guess yes, I was about oh, January sixth thirty.

Speaker 2 (03:24):
Okay, So all right, and give me about a forty
five second wrap up of your life. What was going on?
Did you have a girl? Obviously you're working in pest control.
What was going on in your life?

Speaker 1 (03:36):
Well, you know, I was just I was just busy.
I was busy every day. I had made it a
point to make myself as valuable as possible to the job. Yeah,
I had a girlfriend. It was just a casual thing. Yeah,
it wasn't nothing serious. But up until that point, yeah,

(03:56):
I was just exploring the city, just trying to make
my life.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
And so you wrote the reason you were there at
January sixth that you wanted to see your president and
protest the steel So you were there at President Trump's
speech before walking over to the Capitol right, tell me
about that day for you?

Speaker 1 (04:19):
Oh? Man, it was it was. It was an incredible experience,
all of it, the good, the bad. The speech was fantastic.
He had more. It was more than just him that
was up there. But I came specifically to see Trump,
and I could see him on the ellipse and got
to hear everything that he said. After that, we were

(04:43):
walking over to the Capitol building and everything was, man,
everything was just there was there was so much unity there.
You know, everybody was laughing, you know, singing. Uh, it
was It is a great day, man, It was just
a great day to everything else happened.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
All right, let's take that in slow motion. So at
that moment that President Trump is speaking, you're not expecting
to walk over to the Capitol. You just kind of
notice people start went over to the Capitol, right, yes, sir. Which,
by the way, I've walked over to I worked in DC.
I've walked over to the capital one hundred times, walking
over to the capitals on a criminal act. Very natural.

(05:25):
It's the house of our governments, the people's house. So
are you with anyone else?

Speaker 1 (05:30):
Uh? You mean like any organization?

Speaker 2 (05:32):
No? No, are you with any You got a friend
with you?

Speaker 1 (05:35):
You? Oh, yes, sir, yes, sir, I I had a
buddy with of mine with me.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
Okay, So you all start walking over to the Capitol
and take it from there.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
So we start walking over to the capital. You know,
we got our flags and everything, and it's a it's
a healthy walk from the Ellipse to the Capital. Once
we get over there, I'm standing across the street from
uh I guess it's the uh the backside of the
West End is I think is what they called it.
And we're just standing there chilling out. You know, we're

(06:08):
talking to one of my buddies little bosses and everything,
and we're probably standing there for about forty forty five
minutes before everything kind of starts going the way that
it did. Looking back on it, you know, it was
there are probably some red flags that I should have seen.

(06:29):
This dude comes walking up and he's got a bike
comet on with a pham mohawk on it, shoulder pads
and cargo shorts. So he walks up to me and
Luke and he goes, are you guys patriots? Are you
guys patriots? So of course the obvious answers say, yeah,
of course we are. So he's like, well, follow me.
So we're like, all right, where we're going? So we
start walking. The next thing I know, there's just this

(06:51):
big old crowd walking behind us, and that's when he
starts throwing up I guess signals, and then he's like,
we're going in, We're going in, and then everyone's like yeah, yeah,
so we just start rushing forward. You know.

Speaker 2 (07:09):
So for people who don't know that was going to
be clear what you what you're saying. And for people
that don't know Ray Epps was one of the people
who did this. The idea was it's entrapment. There's several
there's several terms for what they did, but what you
are alleging is that these individuals were FEDS who were
there for the purpose of getting someone to do something violent,

(07:34):
riling people up, instigating us, and trapping them so that
they would then have a January sixth they could refer
to this day as this day, which will live in infamy,
and then they could prevent Trump from ever running again
because they knew they had just stolen the election and
this would be it's all a plan, and we sound
crazy laying it out, but it's diabolical. It's brilliant that

(07:59):
they pulled it all off the way they did, involving
so many people pulled with me for just a moment
Landon Mitchell just got out of the prison. He's been
in prison all this time. He just got out, and
he's moved to Beaumont, and he's Beaumont, Texas, and he's actuast.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
At least chairs keep rolling around.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
Damn it all right, this is Mark Chestnut Enjoy Bizaar.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
Of Talk Radio.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
I had some friends that had chartered a plane to
see President Trump speak on January sixth. Go to the event.
Business owners well to do, certainly not insurrectionists, one of
whom was a doctor, one of whom has a booming
business of millions of dollars a year and probably one
hundred employees. These are fat cats. They don't want to

(08:52):
risk anything. The last thing they're going to do. And
they said, come with us, go on plane. We'll pay
for everything. And I I have gotten to a point
and I don't like to be around crowds. I don't
like any of it. I'd rather just be at home
on my back porch, maybe have a friend over, my wife, kids,
my cigar, my booze, my food, my cheese plate. So

(09:13):
I said, respectfully, thank you, but no thanks. But it's Trump.
No thanks. I could have just as easily and ten
years ago I would have gone because you're there. It's
a moment. This is a moment in history, and I
loved to be there. I don't anymore, but I did it.
I could have been there. I would have been there,
and I would have walked from the speech over to
the Capitol, which I've done. I worked in DC. I

(09:36):
would go to the Capitol and just walk around. I'm
a student of American history. These are the halls of
America's a governing palace, and I would have on that
day felt very moved. You know that there's a scene
that there's a part in the documentary about Martha Stewart
where she talks about it's the eve of Easter and
she's in Florence for the first time. Is first time

(09:57):
she's ever left the country. It's the eve of Easter,
and she walks over to the Duomo and if you've
ever seen that beautiful, beautiful house of worship, it is incredible.
And she was talking about how moved she was just
the eve of Easter and she's there. I get that
way when I'm in DC. I just finished a Jefferson biopic,

(10:23):
and I get moved by thinking that's where that happened.
This is very powerful. I would have walked over. There
could have been by myself, and I would have walked over.
It wouldn't matter. I could have been with the crowd
walking through the capitol thinking about the history of all
anybody could and the people who were were pushed to
try to get them to do more, which they didn't do,

(10:44):
and then they were harassed and imprisoned and broken. Landon
Mitchell is our game. So for twenty three minutes you
were inside the capitol. What happened Landon while you were
inside the Capitol?

Speaker 1 (10:55):
Oh? Well, I guess I should start back from how
we all end up getting in. Like I said, I
was on the west end and there's this I don't know,
I guess it's some sort of a really thin corridor
to a door, and you know, everybody was up inside
that little corridor and everything. Then the door starts opening up,

(11:17):
you know, then everyone starts rushing in, and everyone's like, oh,
we got in, we got in. So we go start
walking in and I just want to make a point
to anybody who thinks that this was a this was
planned on our part, you know, like there's no possible
way that all of these disparate characters got together and
all decided to do this on this day. It was

(11:39):
all planned in everything way. Other people are trying to
tell it when we got in. You should have seen it, man,
everyone got in there. It's like the wind was let
out of everybody's sales. We just get in. It's like,
what do we do now? So we just started wandering
around aimlessly taking pictures. You know. Uh, Metro Police was
in there, you know, guiding us to certain areas. And

(12:02):
then we get to that one room. I can't remember
what it was, but it was one of those rooms
where like you can stand in one spot on the
other side you can hear a whisper from somebody else.
Then I find my way into the center chamber floor
and I get in there and I'm like, well, this
is a tiny room compared to everything else. It looks

(12:23):
a lot bigger on TV for some reason. But there's
a Qann shaman guy that's you know, standing up there,
and you know, we're all looking around and everything. And
then do start praying. And then as soon as he
starts playing, like, oh stop whatever I'm doing looking around
by my head, start praying. After that goes on, Metro

(12:43):
Police comes back in and it's telling us that we
need to leave. So everyone kind of just looks around
and goes all right, So we start walking out, and
that's that's really it, you know, after everything that's going on.
When I in court, when I heard that we were
only in there for twenty three minutes, I was like,
what really? I mean, they got the evidence, the video
evidence and everything, but just seems like a lot longer. Well,

(13:07):
I was in there, but that's I guess that's a
relative thing.

Speaker 2 (13:09):
Had you ever been in the Capitol before?

Speaker 1 (13:11):
Oh? Yes, I had been in the Capitol building before.
As you said, my mom was a military liaison working
at the Pentagon for Congress and everything. So I had
been there when they were doing this ceremony for the
female fighter pilots of World War Two, the ones that
had never gotten the medal, and they were just now

(13:33):
starting to get their medals. So I went there for
that occasion and that was a pretty moving.

Speaker 2 (13:38):
So you leave, you A gun is never drawn by
you or an officer, there's no blows thrown, there's no
putting you in cuffs. You exit the building, right, Yeah,
now that.

Speaker 1 (13:55):
I yeah, I exited the building. Everything's copa SETTI you know,
there was one lady that was inside trying to break
a window from the inside. So I go up and
I'm like, what are you doing? What are you doing?
Get away, get out of here, don't get and she
goes on and gets. But other than that, you know,
I saw the HBO documentary on it, and the old

(14:18):
lady that I was with at the time was like,
this is what happened. Huh, this is exactly how it
went down. I was like, the first ten minutes of
the documentary, land, I ain't nothing how I went down.
I ain't how I went down at all. And okay.
And then.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
Ten months later, do you hear from anyone before October
of twenty twenty one when.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
They show up? No?

Speaker 2 (14:43):
So, yeah, anything is wrong in your life, no, sir?
All right, So then tell me what happened in October
of twenty twenty one. Ten months later when the FBI
showed up.

Speaker 1 (14:56):
So it's early morning, it's probably about five o'clock. I
walk out of the building that I'm living in and
I look to my right and there's this FBI guy
all dressed in you know, battle fatigues at FBI across
his chests and everything, and as soon as he looks
right at me, he ducks behind the corner, right, So

(15:16):
I'm looking at him and doing that, and I'm like, man,
somebody's about to have a bad day. And I started
walking across the street to my car. Next thing I know,
I'm getting grabbed from behind. You're under a rest, just
throwing me up against the wall and everything. And then
like all of these cops just start popping out of
not the cars, but like behind him and everything. I
had no idea they were there. They were like ninjas.
And so I'm being thrown up against the wall and

(15:39):
I'm like, whoa, what am I being arrested for? What's
going on? Because I'll be honest that by this point,
I've kind of put the events of January sixth in
the back of my mind. You know, I was just
working just That's pretty much it. I dedicated my a
lot of my time to my job, and I just

(16:00):
lost track of how things are going on. And then
the FBI dude whitchers up into my ear. Do you
remember January sixth? And I was like, oh boy. At first,
I was kind of struggling a little bit, like what's
going on. I didn't do nothing, and so he says that, and.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
I was like, oop, holding just a moment. This man's
been in the prison off this time. Can you imagine
We've got people being set free that have committed murder.
This man's been in prison.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
If you can't say something nice, you can always say it.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
On The Michael Arry Show.

Speaker 2 (16:31):
January sixth of twenty twenty one, then thirty year old
land and Mitchell And as a pest control applicator, he's
a license to apply pest control.

Speaker 1 (16:42):
That's what he's doing.

Speaker 2 (16:43):
He is living in the DC area with his mom,
who's an lieutenant colonel in the Army, working at the
Pentagon and Capitol Hill. And he goes over to here
President Trump speak and then with the group of patriots,
singing patriotic songs, carrying flash wearing red, white blue, they
walk over to the Capitol. He's there for twenty three minutes,

(17:04):
walks around, leaves. Ten months later, the FBI shows up.
They jump in about sixteen sixteen people like he's Osama
bin Laden. They sent fewer men for that, you said,
They interrogated you for hours asking your political opinions.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
Tell me about that. That is really the whole gist
of the way that my interrogation went, how do you
feel about this, how do you feel about you know,
Nancy Pelosi saying this, or how do you feel about this?
And a lot of it, I guess was because they
were like looking at you know, Facebook posts and stuff
that I posted just you know, just following the election

(17:47):
and following you know, Trump's administration and everything. So they
really were just trying to pick apart my political view
was on everything, you know, and that's really about all
it amounted to. They started showing me pictures of other

(18:08):
people that were there, and then they showed me a
picture of of uh of Luke, And at that point
I was like, look, man, I'm not here to talk
about anybody else and take reself belief for nobody else
but myself. Is your buddy who you were with? Uh yeah,
he's my co defending Okay, all right, go ahead. And
uh after that, they take me to they take me

(18:32):
to a d C d C jail and I'm I'm
sitting in the bullpen for about an hour and that's
the area that they keep you in while you're waiting
on uh waiting on court, and I get arrained. I
don't I don't even see a judge or anything like that.
I got. I'm on a phone call for some reason
in the in the back office, and you know, the

(18:54):
judges talking to me about you know, my charges, what
I'm going to be charged with and everything. And since
my job had me working in d C, I was like,
because what they ended up doing is they ended up
a banning me from from d C, I can now
I'm not allowed to go back into d C at all.
And I was like, but I work in DC. My
work takes me in there. Like all right, well you

(19:16):
can go to d C with the exception of work
and court appearances. And I was like, that's fine by me.
I don't even really go in there anyway. Other than that.
Then they released me, which I was not expecting at all.
I was like, man, I'm going to be sitting here
in d C jail, and after all the things that
I had heard about DC jail, I was not looking

(19:38):
forward to it. But uh so, as they released me,
they put an ankle monitor on me the next day,
and it was because I was getting paranoid or anything,
but I swear I could see like helicopters just doing
their little turns around me all the times, like I

(19:58):
just started noticing how many hell were traveling above me
while I was working in DC, and I guess it's because,
you know, I was on their watch list or something
like that, and they must have really thought that I
was part of some bigger group or something, because they
spent a lot of money, you know, keeping tabs on me.
That's what it felt like at least.

Speaker 2 (20:17):
And so you come back to Texas just for two years.
You're wearing an ankle monitor for two years, and you're
a waiting trial and sentencing. They rescheduled the trial three times.

Speaker 1 (20:30):
And I got to d C twice out of those
three times, and it's the day the next day or
the day of my schedule of court appearance. And one
time they told me that my judge had COVID, so
we have to reschedule everything. And I'm like, just spent
like six hundred bucks just getting here, all right. I

(20:52):
spent money just for hotels and everything, and now you're
gonna tell you that my judge is COVID. I got
a plane flight tomorrow, and you want me to wait
here for a week. They pulled that move on me twice.

Speaker 2 (21:03):
Yeah, they're wearing you down, trying to get you, Tobe. Yeah,
because they have all the money and all the time
in the world. And well absolutely, and this is designed
to uh to grind you down. This this this is
our government at its finest.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
Wow wind. Another another thing that I felt was incredibly
suspicious was when I got my UH. I got a
quarter pointed attorney the first time. And a quarter pointed
attorney is different from a public defender. Quarter pointed is
has their own or is from an actual like law firm,

(21:37):
as opposed to being paid for by the by the
state or the district of his cape. And her name
was Danny jan She was the the lawyer that tried
or that was. She's a lawyer that represented the Pizzagate shooter.
You remember him goes into a DC and with an

(22:01):
AR fifteen and revolver and shoots up the place and
she gets him off with like eighteen months because everyone
thought he was crazy.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
Spoiler alert that guy shot the place up and did
less time than you did.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
Okay, go ahead, yeah, yeah, So I am super excited.
I got a really bomb lawyer who is on my side, ready,
ready to ready to fight this with me. Tooth and dale,
and like halfway into all my court proceedings and everything.

(22:35):
I get a call from her office saying that she
had gotten an offer for partnership in a law firm
and that I was going to be reassigned to a
new lawyer. And halfway into all of this, you know,
all of our arguments and everything are getting ready to go.

(22:56):
I wasn't going to plead guilty to this at all.
I was. I was ready to fight him to the
very end. And then you settled me with the public defender.
And she did a good job too. I suppose she
wasn't nearly as on fire for this whole thing as
my previous lord boy man. A whole bunch of stuff

(23:19):
that happened to I fold. The whole entire experience was
ship like.

Speaker 2 (23:22):
Landon Mitchell served more time in prison than the Pizzagate
shooter while marriage. I think that there might.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
Be, because I got nothing going on down there.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
Probably Landon Mitchell was like anybody else in this country,
thirty year old young man working for a pest control
company and showed up to hear President Trump speak our
president on January sixth, twenty twenty one, and then walked

(23:49):
over to the Capitol, did nothing wrong, and his life
was destroyed by our government. They won't tell you this,
but you shoot the president. You have hearings which you
bring in the head of ABC to stage them to

(24:09):
make a TV show out of it. Liz Cheney lost
her seat over a lot of things that they did
that cost them this election. Don't underestimate how many people
will never trust our government again for what they've done.
But it's not just about who was at fault and
what they did. How do you get your life back.

(24:32):
You've been a prison inmate, You've been in prison with
murderers and rapists and pedophiles. You don't just get that back.
This Martha Stewart documentary on Netflix, she went to prison
for five months, doesn't sound like a lot. We went

(24:55):
to prison for five months? Or they admitted she didn't
commit a crime. They said she lied to the FBI.
It's it's and it's guess who did it, Jim Comey.
It's it's sickening what they did to this woman. Landon
Mitchell is our guest. Landon, let's I got this is
our last segment, So I want.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
To get through this.

Speaker 2 (25:16):
Uh, you show up to prison. You're not a guy
that goes to prison.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
How did that go, and so I was given the
the the dubious, dubious honor of going to self surrender, right, And.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Basically what that means is when it's time for me
to go to prison, they will send me a letter
in the mail giving me the date, and I drive
myself to UH to incarceration. And so I had some
time to figure out where I was going, do some
research into the whole thing. And they told me that

(26:05):
I was going to Beaumont, Beaumont FCI Medium, and I
didn't really have any idea that it was going to
be like a whole entire campus complex thing where you've
got the penitentiary, the Beaumont Penitentiary, the Beaumont Medium, and
the Beaumont camp right right, all in their little group.

(26:28):
So when I looked at Beaumont on the internet, I
saw a whole bunch of articles for bloody Beaumont this,
and bloody Beaumont that, this many inmates got into a riot,
this many people stabbed each other, you know, just all
of these different articles. That was I was like, man,
I'm going I'm going to the slaughterhouse, is what I

(26:49):
thought is the way I felt. And so I get
in there and one of the first things that I
ended up doing is just, yeah, I need to find
a way to protect myself, you know, So get myself
a little piece of metal and start sharpening that thing

(27:10):
up and start you know, making myself a shank and everything.
And then the next thing I know, we're getting locked
down twenty four to seven for two weeks. After seventy
two hours, you're eligible for a shower, right eligible for
a shower, It doesn't mean they're going to give one
to you. Then you're let out yourself for ten minutes.

(27:33):
And a lot of the times that we were put
on lockdown was just because the the the CEO just
decided that they weren't going to show up. And it
happens a lot your CEO doesn't show up. Everybody's locked
down for like the whole week, twenty four hours, seven
days a week. My first two months there, I spent

(27:54):
more time locked in my cell with another dude, you know.
Then I probably spent about maybe, you know, maybe two
weeks the first two months actually out in the day
room area. And that's how the beginning of my experience

(28:17):
in Beaumont started. Eventually things started calming down, they started
letting people out The thing about life in prison is
very rarely does anybody ever travel what they call solo

(28:37):
solo dolo where they or not affiliated with any group
within the within the prison. And they call these groups
cars because you've got people who drive it kind of
direct where everybody else in your in your car goes.

(28:57):
And I was part of the Native American car. I
didn't understand that when they when I came in there,
they just asked me who I was? What am I
this kind of thing, and I was like, I'm uh,
my name was Lande. I'm Native American. They're like, oh,
so you're part of the Native car. I was like,
uh oh, not really. Well, I don't know what that means.
I don't worry about it. Don't worry about it. You're

(29:19):
you're independent. So I was like, okay, thanks for that.
And uh Man Beaumont is it's a there's a lot
of things that happened down in there. I don't know

(29:40):
whether or not you're a It's all right for me
to talk about it on the radio, but I guess
you'll stop me saying something that I can't really well.

Speaker 2 (29:52):
I see what take thirty seconds and talk about I'll
stop you if I have to because then I want
to finish up with where you are now and if
you've heard neat thing about a potential pardon or anything
like that.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
All right, so going in there, you know, uh, I
is this gonna be at rape? No, well, if anything
like that, but there's going to be a lot of violence. Okay.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
I want to have that conversation another day because we're
overdue for a prison inmate story from normal people being
sent to prison. I'm going to keep you on my
list for that and we'll have time to really go
in depth into what you do in that situation.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
I've got a.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
Minute, I got a little over a minute. I want
to know what you will do now, Uh, what you're
doing now? And have they talked about a pardon and
how you go forward?

Speaker 1 (30:49):
Well, as far as I understand, Trump has the pardon's
already written. Well, I got to wait for him to
actually get certified and put an office before anything happens.
That doesn't mean that everything is going to be stricken
from the record, I've already got my sony overturned. I'm
working on two more misdemeanors. I'm still appealing the entire thing.

(31:11):
But all that pardons. Going to really do is take
away my probation and take away any restitution.

Speaker 2 (31:21):
Yeah, it was three years of probation.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
Landing like two thousand bucks.

Speaker 2 (31:27):
You are a strong, strong man. You've been put through
hell by a government that works for me and everybody else,
and for that, because those people did this to you,
we all owe you an apology. This is wrong, this
is awful. Thank you for sharing your story. I want

(31:49):
more people to come forward and share their stories. This
is why we are civil libertarians. This is why Ron
Paul was popular. This is why you don't give powers
to a government and treat them like your friend. They
work for us, we don't work for them. Thank you
for sharing your story, Landed Mitchell.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Wow.
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