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August 20, 2025 • 29 mins

In today's episode, we dive deep into the alarming crime statistics in Washington D.C., where illegal immigrants with criminal backgrounds are being arrested while politicians like Robert Garcia would rather shut down the government than let President Trump tackle the crime wave. We expose the shocking cover-ups by D.C. officials, who are allegedly manipulating crime data to make the city appear safer than it is. Join us as we hear from crime victim Anna Ghiratelli, who reveals her harrowing experience and how the D.C. police failed to report her assault. It's time to hold accountable those who prioritize politics over public safety!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Coming up next our final News Roundup and Information Overload Hour.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
All Right, News Roundup and Information Overload Hour. Here's our
toll free telephone number if you want to be a
part of the program. By the way, Cash Pattel, FBI Director,
saying twenty five illegal immigrants with criminal backgrounds were arrested
Tuesday night in our nation's capital, and he said today
that his agency will continue to pour resources into combating

(00:27):
crime in Washington, d C. Until every community is safe.
He posted on x five hundred and fifty people have
been arrested in DC since Donald Trump moved to federalize
the Metropolitan Police Department. Of those arrests, sixty six were
on Tuesday. Pattel also said the FBI was involved in
forty one of the arrest on Tuesday night, with eight

(00:49):
drug seizures, six illegal firearms that were recovered, and he
said the men and women in the FBI, working side
by side with local law enforcement partners, have taken hundreds
of dangerous criminals off the same streets of DC. And
proof of what happens when good cops are empowered to
do their jobs right away, so they're not going to stop.
And the fact that Democrats want that to happen is

(01:11):
inexplicable to me. I played this earlier, I'll play it again.
It's appropriate. Robert Garcia, congressman from California, shocker, you know,
would rather shut down the government than let Donald Trump
fix Washington d C. Now, keep in mind as you
listen to this that if you look at the homicide
rate for capital for capital cities around the world, by far,

(01:34):
America's capital city, Washington, d C. Is number one in
terms of the homicide rate, and that is forty one
per one hundred thousand people. Crime, homelessness, lifestyle issues, quality
of life issues are out of control. And since President
Trump has gotten involved. I gave you the statistics yesterday.

(01:56):
I won't repeat them. Every crime category is down because
of you know, getting away from this idiotic defund dismantle
NOBIL law and immigration I'm sorry, and sanctuary city status
mentality of the left. But listen to this, congressman, but
do you think.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
That your colleagues in the Senate Senate Democrats should refuse
to fund the government? That deadline is coming up at
the end of September. Should they refuse to vote on
these spending bills using that leverage until they see President
Trump reverse deploying troops in the seats in the streets
of DC.

Speaker 4 (02:36):
Yes, I mean, first, that should be on the table,
and I don't think we should be ruling that out.
I think I think that Democrats and the Senate, the House,
mean every all of us should be united and using
everything that we can do in all of our power
to stop what Trump is doing right now, not just
in deceib but across the country. So absolutely that should
be on the table now.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
DC officials, thanks to our friends at the Washington Free Beacon,
law enforcement officials in d C's Democratic controls city government
are now facing allegations that they actually covered up multiple
murders in a bid to make their city staggering crime
numbers look better. Now, remember we have the distinction every
country in the world. We have the number one homicide

(03:17):
rate of any capital city around the world. By the way,
even Bagdad isn't as bad and Mexico City isn't as bad.
I can go through all the different countries and you know,
forty one per one hundred thousand, and that's with doctored numbers.
And you know this massive, you know, manipulation of numbers. Anyway,

(03:39):
what We're discovering is a lawsuit filed by a veteran
d C cop is citing four examples of obvious homicides
that were classified as accidental will cause undetermined. Now, I
want to read to you, and we'll be joined at
a minute by Anna Heretatelly, and she's the Washington Examiner
homeland security reporter. She does a great job. I want
to read article that she wrote. I'm going to read

(04:01):
part of it. Five years ago, I was violently attacked
and sexually assaulted in broad daylight in Washington, d C.
By a homeless man. He served time in federal prison
for what he did to me. But if you look
at if you look for evidence of the attack that
happened in the city's crime statistics, you will not find it.

(04:22):
The truth of what happened to me and the DC
government's role in it as much as a public scandal
as it is a personal trauma. DC police covered up
this unspeakable wrong that this stranger did to me, even
though a judge sentenced my attacker to hard time in prison.
D C police leadership would rather deceive the public and

(04:43):
appear less dangerous than list mining countless other sexual assaults
on their website, and here a Telly joins us. Now,
first of all, I'm very sorry about what you have
gone through. You do a great job at The Examiner,
and we appreciate your time.

Speaker 5 (05:00):
Sean, thank you so much for amplifying my story.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
You know, I don't know it's interesting because the New
York Post today, I couldn't believe my eyes when I
read this story about this guy, William Hathaway, took a
woman to to a soho house in New York City,
in the West Village, where he was convicted of rape.
According to him Manhattan jeury. They found him guilty of rape,
but even though the prosecution asked for four years in prison,

(05:26):
the judge led him off with probation and quote sex
offender treatment. I mean, but those people that have never
been a victim of this kind of violent crime, I mean,
I imagine it's the type of trauma that will stay
with you for the rest of your life. I can't
imagine the horror that you live through.

Speaker 5 (05:45):
It is it is, and and you know, it's taken
years of recovery. It's been five years since it happened,
and that's why it's taken time to speak out. Now
and you know, I am a crime reporter. I've been
to the border over sixty times. I work with the
federal law enforcement every day, and I had no idea
how covered up crime is in DC until I became

(06:07):
a victim and said I have to speak out because
no one's doing anything until now. And you're right, it's
an incredibly personal thing, and I don't hold it against
other victims for not speaking out. But I think if
the Trump administration really wants to fix this problem, they
need to know how deep it is. And we don't

(06:27):
even have accurate crime staff at this point to know
how bad it is.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
Let's go into your case, I mean to the extent
you're comfortable. I don't want you to have to revisit
the entire trauma, but just to paint the picture for
this audience, what did you go through, what happened, what
time of day was it, and then the impact it
had on your life, and then the fact that DC,
you know, police and prosecutors whoever's involved in this, are

(06:56):
covering up the fact that your crime even ever took place.

Speaker 5 (06:59):
Yeah, it was a Saturday in April twenty twenty, Saturday morning,
nine point thirty. I lived right outside Union Station, a
few blocks from the US Capital, and I had a
package I was going to mail the post office on
the other side of Union Station, and I was walking
down the street. Other people were out and a stranger,
a large man, came at me and lunched at me,

(07:21):
and in the process of trying to take me down,
he's actually assaulted me. I was screaming for help. He
was screaming on top of me. It was very you know,
you don't know what's going on, very chaotic, and someone
did come initially run over, and others came and helped me.
He got away that day, but police got DNA for

(07:42):
my clothing and two months later told me there's been
a match. He has a criminal history, he's homeless. He
lives close to your apartment building on Second Street Northeast,
and they arrested him a month later. The judge ordered
him released the following day, and in the nearly two
years it took us to go to trial, he was

(08:02):
arrested five more times, including for having a machete in public,
and was released from jail all five times the following
day after his arrest.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
And so, I mean, you're describing madness. I've got to
imagine that has got to be infuriating for you.

Speaker 5 (08:20):
It was infuriating, and and you know, after that type
of crime, you're not in your right mind. And it
was COVID in DC. Was was nuts because we were
all locked in. I lived by myself on this floor
of a building. I saw no one every day and
trying to overcome that and then understand at the same
time that you know your city is gaslighting you. It's

(08:41):
not a big deal. We're gonna we're gonna try him
by the SAIDs you know it's a big deal, but
it felt of not a big deal, and at the
end of the day saying I can't, I can't, you know,
rely on the city to have my back. I was.
I felt physically I'm safe, but I felt so led
down by the city I loved. My career is in DC,
I mean politics and media. There's no other place to

(09:03):
do that, and so I left with nowhere to go
because I didn't feel like I had a choice.

Speaker 2 (09:08):
All right, quick break, we'll come right back more with
Anna Garatelli. She is the Washington Examiner Homeland security reporter,
a victim of a sexual assault herself, and of course
they're not keeping track of it, and DC is now
being faced with allegations that they're covering up major, major
crimes to lower their crime statistics. We'll continue with Anna

(09:31):
on the other side, and then we'll get to your
calls eight hundred and ninety four one, Shawn. As we continue,
we continue, Washington Examiner Homeland Security reporter Anna Garatelly is
with us. Let's talk about when you discovered that DC
and the government there that they are purposely not reporting

(09:53):
sexual assaults like yours on their website and they're doctoring
the numbers because this now is coming to the forefront.

Speaker 5 (10:02):
Yeah, and that article you mentioned, I mean, that's just
the tip of the iceberg for how deep it is
and what I uncovered in twenty twenty after the attack,
I was writing a story on violent crime, I you know,
trying to get back to work myself despite what I've
been through, and I noticed on the crime map at
the time, they used to put tins on the map

(10:22):
for exactly where a crime had occurred. And I noticed
there was no pen on the map where my what
was a sex abuse crime had occurred. And when I
spoke with the police, they said, we're only posting first
degree felons on our public space and crime maps. And
my charge is not a first degree spect crime. It
was a lower degree. And so for the next five

(10:44):
years that, I mean, that's set the tone for you
don't matter. You know what you went through. It was
incredibly invalidating to me. And then last week I reached
back out to the police to double check and see
where cans stand. Now, what are they putting on that
crime mapp. They're no longer using tens to being less
specific and color coding regions and neighborhoods in certain colors

(11:08):
and not giving a detailed breakdown. And they said to me,
for sex of these crimes, we're only placing first degree
and some second degree crimes on the map. And so
first degree is rape, second degree some of those are
are attempted rape crimes. In this case, I wasn't one
of those charges. I was a different charge or different degree.

(11:29):
And so they said, no, your charge is not on here,
and I said, he went to federal prison. Don't you
think he should be listed? And they didn't respond. So
that's what we stand today.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
This guy is a repeat defender, and you have the
typical you know, defund dismantle nobail law mentality in DC,
like New York, like places in California, for example, How
long did this guy go to jail for the crime
against you?

Speaker 5 (11:55):
Well, I found out it's sentencing that he had attempted
to hurt, not killed, an off duty female police officer
in the same a Very Area neighborhood just a few
weeks earlier, and so that sentence was combined with mine,
and with the five other arrests that were pled down

(12:16):
to misdemeanors, and he did around two years in prison
for everything combined. And he's been released since then.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
And I hope he's not living five blocks from your
house like you've found out months after the assault took place.

Speaker 5 (12:31):
Now, you know, I chose to leave DC and I
haven't returned, just I don't feel safe, and you know,
it's a really painful experience to know what could happen.
And you know, I hope everyone there, no one should
be a victim of crime, regardless of party belief. I
think you and I both agree with that, and you know, I.

Speaker 2 (12:51):
Hope anybody with a brain agrees with that, anybody exact
you know, I mean, look at this story. I mean
it's the front page of the New York Post today.
I don't know if you get a hard copy wherever
you're living. I won't even ask you because I don't
want you to disclose it. But here's a thirty three
year old guy took a woman to Soho house, then

(13:11):
to his West Village home, was found guilty according to
a Manhattan jury of rape, and even the prosecution in
New York asking for four years in prison, the judge
lets him off with probation and quote sex offender treatment.
I mean, I don't know. I don't know the mindset

(13:33):
or the mentality that would ever let somebody convict it
of this crime out on the street and not throw
the book at them. Well, I don't know if this
is the right decision or not. The judge said, in
this case, the right decision was to prevent future potential
crimes here and other victims from this guy. That's the purpose.

(13:53):
And to punish people for their crime.

Speaker 5 (13:55):
Yeah, I can't imagine how the victim feels. It's doubly
as painful to be physically sexually hurt and then to
have have this happen. To see the people who uphold
the law feel like they're not offending you feel like
they're doing more for the criminal. And you know, I
hope the Trumps administration looks into not only the judges

(14:17):
deciding cases in DC, but also looks at you know,
how bad is the crime situation. You know, this is
my story, but how many other sex off these victims
and victims of other lesser degree felonies are out there
who don't even know they're not counted in the crime
staffs for DC Police.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
Well, Annager, Telly, I'm so sorry that you had to
go through this, live through this, you still live with
it today. Everyone can completely understand that. I applaud you
for speaking out and giving this the proper attention that
it deserves. Hopefully that will wake people up and we'll
start punishing people for the crimes that they come in,
especially violent sexual crimes like you had to experience yourself.

(14:59):
And I'm so sory sorry that happened to you, and
our prayers are with you.

Speaker 5 (15:03):
Thank you so much, Sean.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
Eight hundred Shawn. If you want to be a part
of the program, all right, quick break right back. We'll
get to your calls. Eight hundred nine one, Shawn. As
we continue.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
Today, information download Sean Hannity and the Breaking news you
might have missed today. It's Sean's insider information.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
Hannity is on right now. All right, let's get to
our busy phones. Jeff is in Virginia. Jeff, how are
you glad you called? Sir?

Speaker 6 (15:38):
Hey, Sean, thanks, thanks for having me on.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
What's going on?

Speaker 6 (15:43):
So you're going to talk about some of the topics
you were you were speaking about earlier with Ukraine and Russia.
First off, on the previous caller, Dan, I was talking
about the languages. Neither one of them is going to
have any any problem. What's however, discussing things in English

(16:05):
or in Russian although they are you are correct, Russian
Ukrainian are different languages. Thanks to Katie, she did a
great job, you know, all this call screening stuff. And
then last on the you know, on the prelude here, uh,
next time you're in Alaska, you.

Speaker 2 (16:21):
Gotta try moose moose moose moose steaks. I thought, I
thought I did a good job trying reindeer's. That was
a big step for me. And I had reindeer sausage
and a guy gave it to me at a local
breakfast place, and I'm like, tastes like regular sausage. It
tastes like, you know, a pork sausage to me, Yeah
it is. It is really good.

Speaker 6 (16:42):
Moose is like the best uh uh had no no fat.

Speaker 2 (16:48):
I think I'm going to get more brave in my
as long as it's cooked. I don't really care. Well,
why shouldn't I try everything? What's the big deal?

Speaker 7 (16:56):
Okay?

Speaker 6 (16:56):
I don't want to down to the topic. You know,
they're rush of Ukraine. I mean from my perspective again,
I'm retired marine. I was an international relations guy, foreign
area officer, studied that part of the world a bit.
Putin wants he wants it all, but what he really
wants is a better warm and deep water sports. He

(17:19):
got those ten plus years ago with the Crimea. But
he also is quite interested in all the resources that
that's a super resource rich environment there on the eastern
side of Ukraine, Lots of coal and gas and salt
and minerals and all that kind of stuff.

Speaker 2 (17:35):
But yeah, I think it's coming down to the Danasku
region if in fact they both want a deal. At
the end of the day, there's only so much Donald
Trump can do. It's gonna be decided by Putin and Zolensky.
Europe will play some part in the decision, but really
it's good. It's gonna be putin, It's gonna be Zolenski.
Either one of them can blow up the deal at
any time that they want, and if they do, I mean,

(17:58):
that's on them. At that point. They're given an opportunity
here to stop the killing and stop the madness, and
if they choose not to do it, there's nothing anybody
can do at that point to stop them.

Speaker 6 (18:09):
Right, I agree from Zolenski's point of view, I mean,
you know, his dream state would be the borders, you know,
reset that you know twelve fourteen years ago, and give
me security guarantees.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
I'm just being realistic. I'm not saying what I want.
It is. If you go back to when Clinton convinced
the Ukrainians to give up their nuclear weapons, that was
the biggest mistake Ukraine ever made. All of these countries
gave security guarantees to Ukraine. So this so what happened
in Crimea in twenty fourteen would never happen. What happened

(18:45):
under Biden would never happen. And guess what it all happened?
And the big the lesson to be learned here is
if you have nukes, don't give them up. And if
you're a country like Iran and the number one state
sponsored terror for the rest of the free world, don't
let them have them. That's my advice.

Speaker 7 (19:04):
Man.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
I think that's the biggest lesson here. Anyway, my friend,
I appreciate it, Jeff, God bless your man. Back to
our phones. Don is in the great state of Iowa. Don,
How are you glad you called, Sir.

Speaker 7 (19:15):
Hi Shan, Thank you for taking my call. I'm actually
driving through Texas right now, coming up on Katie's neck
of the woods.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
Why is everybody sucking up to Katie today? Everyone's sucking
up to Katie anyway, God bless you for being a
truck driver. I say this every time, and I mean
it sincerely. The part that you play in America's food
chain and every store we go to, every item that's
in there, is because of a trucker like you. Thank

(19:44):
you for your hard work every day. It's not an
easy job. It's a tough job.

Speaker 7 (19:48):
Thank you, Sean. I appreciate that I called because of
what's going on with Newsome, in particular, he s he's
really being a nuisance and the crime in and Trump
trying to put an end to all the crime, either
via illegal alien or legal US citizens. He's trying to

(20:10):
put a stop to as much of it as he can.
And that goes for in Ukraine and Russia right now.
I mean, the man is amazing and it's just.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
The guys trying everything you can do. I mean, he's
had great success worldwide. I think this is going to
be the toughest piece deal to pull off because of
the people that we're involved with and dealing with and
attentions are that high. But with that said, I'll take
any progress. I don't think any other world leader who

(20:41):
could have gotten Plutina sit down. I don't think any
other world leader would motivate Europe a day later to
mobilize and come to the White House and Zelenski to
go to the White House. And he's working really hard
on it, but at the end of the day, there's
only so much of this heavy lifting that he can do.
At the end of the day, it's gonna be on
them to decide, So we'll see what they do. I'm

(21:04):
hoping for peace. I mean, I'd like to see an
end to the killing. You know, both sides are, you know,
kind of dug in And I hope both sides see
it's in their best interest to come to a negotiated settlement.
And there's not going to be a perfect negotiated settlement.
That just isn't and I don't I can tell you
ahead of time. Whatever it is, I'm not gonna like it.

(21:26):
But I would like to see an end to the killing.
I mean, you had an apartment going to a complex
attack with multiple drone strikes last night by Putin in Ukraine,
and you know it's sad. There's a lot of dying
going on. Anyway, Lorenzo, how are you? I did notice
you're in Boston, Lorenzo. I did notice that your mayor

(21:49):
had a very bizarre press conference yesterday. I think we've
got the tape of this and I'm gonna play it
for everybody. This is uh, this is your mayor and
her press conference. Every lost.

Speaker 8 (22:13):
La is KiB and smentesredentes, kibes, amos recohuendo lorestos, the
tu fracassos and any complemiento this would promise us. This
has always been a city of revolution, of innovation, of
standing up for the public good and never bowing down

(22:35):
to Tyranny.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
That is your mayor. Michelle Wu hosting a Marachi band
speaking Spanish as she refuses to back down from Boston's
sanctuary status. I'm sure you're very proud, Lorenzo.

Speaker 9 (22:51):
I don't even want to comment on that. Sean unbelievable.
It's unbelievable. But what I would like to say is
you're right on the way you handles some of the callers.
And yesterday you had a caller that I was like saying, oh,
Russia and Ukraine fight. I'm a junior confident, just like
you were, Shun. You were a ninety four guy, right.

(23:11):
I was a sixty seven guy before we had the merger.
But I worked with Russian guys, Ukrainian guys. You know,
some of the guys are even married. Well one particular guys,
a Ukrainian guy married to a Russian Russian girl, that
whole area, and well, all they tell us is they
want the fighting stop. That both the Russian guys and

(23:34):
Ukrainian guys. They want the fighting stot. So what Trump
has done Friday, what he's done Monday is unbelievable. And
I get mad when you know these people in the
media try to attack them, and you struck up from
he has your back. Trump has your back like none,
and I'm glad you used the platform to fight for him.
Sean Well, I.

Speaker 2 (23:55):
Think he's doing the right thing. He's had great success
around the world. He is showing what America's strength looks like.
Only he and a strong president could pull this off.
To this point. He can't force people to do things.
But in the end, if let's say Vladimir Putin decides

(24:16):
he wants the war to continue and the death to continue,
I do believe President Trump. When Donald Trump says that
consequences will be dire, and he puts in place a
deal where a trillion dollars in energy that would normally
be used to purchase Russian oil will now be used
to purchase American oil. And when Donald Trump steps in

(24:37):
and he puts a fifty percent tariff on India, if
they keep importing Russian oil that is the heart and
soul of Russia's economy, he will bleed them dry. That's
why you have this article out today about the reformers
in Iran begging the uranium Mullahs to stop pursuing nuclear weapons.

(24:59):
To get this actions drops so that they can, you know,
once again bring financial stability to their country, otherwise they
ultimately will be overthrown. And Donald Trump had two consecutive terms,
the Iranian Mullows would have already been overthrown because they
would have been bankrupt and people would have been rising
up against them, including their own revolutionary guard and cuts forces.

(25:21):
That's my opinion.

Speaker 9 (25:23):
I agree, Sean.

Speaker 7 (25:24):
Here's the other thing too.

Speaker 9 (25:26):
You know the president he always talking about, you know,
the election, and how you can't have the mail in
boat ballots and all this stuff. And I remember when
the election, you know, you said you had it, you know,
you said we had to do what they had it.
You had to do the ballot harveston. I know you
don't want that, Sean. I know you want just like
Shame Day, voting in person.

Speaker 2 (25:47):
And I hope that, you know, be paper ballots.

Speaker 9 (25:51):
I hope you drive that home with draw platform. And
I got one more thing. I'm gonna listen to Sean sometime.
I'm going to tell you a story how how good
Trump is and how smoty is to do with the
construction and you know, comping his union and everything like that,
how he was going to buy a company and he
decided to walk away because there was so much corrupts

(26:13):
and in politicians being Someday, I'll tell you that story
next time we talk.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
And you could read the Art of the Deal. Trump
says in that book that if you're doing any deal,
you've got to be willing to walk away up to
the last second. And I use that as I use
that as a business model myself. I'm willing to walk
away from any deal you have to, Otherwise you're willing
to sign onto a bad deal anyway. God bless God,

(26:38):
bless your hard work. And all my best to my
fellow construction workers. The work you do every day is vital.
By the way, I love that that our article I
keep referring to the next generation of millionaires is going
to be tradespeople. You can't replace them with artificial intelligence.
Although you are seeing robotics that are able to do roofing,

(26:59):
and are seeing robotics now developing that they're able to
do some framing. However, you're still going to need craftsmen.
I don't see i AI replacing all of that by
any stretch. Joe and Arkansas next Sean Hannity Show, What's
Up Joe, how are you.

Speaker 10 (27:15):
I'm doing good.

Speaker 2 (27:16):
What's going on?

Speaker 7 (27:17):
I'm doing good, Sean, I'm I feel like that.

Speaker 10 (27:22):
A worker at at the Pilot school, I thought it
odd that all the Middle Eastern students skip landing day
and didn't wasn't able to tell anybody what was going on.

Speaker 2 (27:39):
I remember that. I remember that came out after the fact. Yeah,
he's talking about the nine to eleven hijackers.

Speaker 10 (27:45):
I'm talking about I'm a I'm a trucker and I
drive all over the United States and Canada on a
regular basis. Things have changed in the last few years
that are that are very scary.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
Well, I mean, we learned that, for example, this guy
involved in the killing of these three people in Florida
making an illegal U turn. We got an update today
that he didn't have the ability to read English street signs.
That's number one. Number two, we know that he came
in through the sanctuary state of California, where he got

(28:21):
his commercial driver's license, and he was denied a work
permit in Trump's first term, and it was Joe Biden
that gave it to him. And you know, look at
the disaster, there's untold numbers of people that have died.
You know what pisses me off too. I'm gonna tell
you one other thing. A sanctuary state like California, we
have tried to find them. They don't exist. They don't

(28:43):
keep crime statistics for illegal immigrants. They don't do it
on purpose, and we don't know how many people may
have been murdered and raped and victims of violent crime
because they don't want us to know. With that said,
were sometimes they able to piece together a list of names,
and trust me, I'm very prepared when this, you know,

(29:07):
for the next presidential election. If Gavin new some things
he can run away from his record, good luck on that.
I don't think he's going to be able to do it.

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