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March 3, 2026 12 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Mojoe in the morning show. Oh, I got a quick question.
What do I do in this case? So I was
taking the dogs out, and it was last night, and
so I'm like taking them out to go to the bathroom.
I normally do my routine like at nine thirty ish
or something like that, and I go to bed and
there were a fire truck and an ambulance driving down

(00:22):
our street. Not sirens blasting, but definitely the lights of shining,
and stopped right in front of two of my neighbor's
houses that I could see literally right there. So of
course I do what every good citizen does. I say, dogs,
let's get a little closer.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
I want to know what's going.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
On, right, you want to heat it as we I'm
like figuring out exactly what's going on. Yeah, I'm neighborhood watch.
I just want to make sure, Yeah, I just want
to make sure that everything is okay. So I couldn't
hear exactly what the guys were saying. I could hear
the radios going off, you know, I heard the like
the dispatch talking, you know, back and forth, but I

(01:04):
couldn't I couldn't see if they were talking to them
or what was going on, and I wanted to see
if I knew any of the firefighters, because you know,
I got my friends that you know, are some West
Blomfield fire guys, and I didn't recognize so I kind
of just sat there for a second, and then it
was so cold, I'm like, I got to go back inside.
So I ended up going back inside, and I was
having a conversation with my friend Tommy, and when we

(01:26):
were having a conversation with each other, he said, well,
you should call over there, and I'm like, I just
don't know whose house. It was like, I couldn't tell
if it was on which side of the street that
these guys were were tending to somebody, And I had
no idea.

Speaker 2 (01:39):
So it wasn't smoke like nothing like that. No, I
think it must have been.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
To me, it seemed like it, because why would they
send the ambulance right like they're bringing the ambulance.

Speaker 2 (01:48):
Fighters were just first response all the time.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
They always go with. So I didn't, you know, do anything,
and I don't know if I should. And I of
course then reached out to Brittany, who is also neighborhood Watch.
She's the other Dozy neighbor. She went to some app
and she looked on some app and she says it
wasn't updated yet. I guess there's an app where you
can look and you.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
Can see it more like a police app. No, it was.
It was this app that she showed me.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
You show me.

Speaker 4 (02:17):
And it does all of the police reports come through it. Yeah,
it's actually really cool.

Speaker 2 (02:25):
Crime radar. Oh, you don't understand. When there's something happening
in my neighborhood. I immediately get on our Facebook page.

Speaker 5 (02:31):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (02:33):
A noise, a police car, anything.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
So I couldn't see anything on there, and then I'm
talking to Tommy and Tommy says to me, he goes,
you know, I have a situation where one of my neighbors,
nice guy. We hadn't seen him for like five days,
and I thought, okay, maybe he went out of town.
But then his car was parked in the driveway. Normally
he would pull it in the garage. So Tommy didn't
do anything for like, you know, a day or so,

(02:57):
and then went over knocked on the door and no answer.
Finally he called the police. After about five or six,
you know days, the police came. The guy was dead.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
On his floor. Y wait for five days maybe yeah,
maybe fives. Yeah, so I don't know.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
Like I look at this and I go, God, I
hope everybody's okay, you know, and I make sure. Yeah,
it's a gene Hagman thing. I'd love to know. And
I'm like Shannon, I'm a good neighbor or a nosy neighbors.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
We like to call it, like I use the word responsible. Yeah,
is that what's we're supposed to be.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
Yeah, we like, you need to know everything that's going
on so you can keep everybody else informed.

Speaker 6 (03:38):
Yeah, this happened in my life. Yeah, literally, I think
it was twenty twenty. My grandmama was found on the floor.
Holy and my grandma and my great aunt, her sister,
my aunt Penny. We also have my party whatever the case.
So I'm Penny and her have a great relationship. And
long story short, my grandmother's my pass away when she

(04:00):
was super young. My grandma's the oldest sister, so she
stepped into that matriarch role and she basically raised on Penny.
So they have a rule that we connect every single
day on the phone.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
Wanta.

Speaker 6 (04:09):
Penny didn't hear from Grandmama for a couple of days.
She like, I need to go over there. She went
over there, walked in the house, and Grandmama was like
laying on the floor like scrolls empty water bottles like
she had met me. But she's healthy now and back.
But like, you got to check your people. Yeah, you
got him.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
But I would like to I'd like to know, like
what nosy neighbor stuff did you find out by being
the nosy neighbor?

Speaker 4 (04:32):
You know?

Speaker 1 (04:32):
I I I'd like to know everybody's okay. And I'm
hoping and praying that everybody's okay in my neighborhood. But
I asked, also, did I swear? I almost said it.
I thought I said yeah. But I also want to to,
you know, know, if there's something crazy that happened, like
did something get stuck somewhere?

Speaker 2 (04:53):
You know what I mean? Hey, what's going on? Andy?
How you doing nothing much? Man?

Speaker 1 (04:59):
I'm just hanging out. I'm a little, you know, worried
about one of my neighbors. I saw the fire truck
in the ambulance. You heard my story.

Speaker 2 (05:04):
What's that?

Speaker 7 (05:06):
I was going to say. There's two apps out there.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
One's called Alertison a L E R T Citizen at
the end, and you can put area codes and circles
around your your friend's family, everything, and then whatever alerts
in that area, it can tell you. And then there's
another one called wait what is that first one called
point alert?

Speaker 7 (05:26):
Yeah, you pay for that, it's like twenty four dollars
a year.

Speaker 6 (05:28):
Oh yeah, no, never mind.

Speaker 7 (05:32):
You can do your family, your friends, your your school,
you can do all your workplace and then any anything
that gets alerted will get picked up.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
There.

Speaker 7 (05:42):
Can you tell points the other one?

Speaker 1 (05:44):
Can you tell me what you found out? Anything interesting
that you found out that happened?

Speaker 7 (05:49):
Every day?

Speaker 3 (05:49):
Every single day, something pops up, I mean anything and
everything you can you can take up.

Speaker 7 (05:53):
It pops up.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
And what what what did? What did you find out
about a neighbor disorder?

Speaker 7 (05:58):
The conducts?

Speaker 3 (05:59):
I mean you can find out like literally anything do
you wise?

Speaker 7 (06:02):
You know fires? And then like I said, plus points more.

Speaker 3 (06:05):
Than medical one where it literally the moment like a
call hits. They put it on as like a a
thing you can see mine.

Speaker 4 (06:13):
Even alerts like when there's somebody with a some sort
of charge against them near me, like it will say
May May and middle aged with like a some sort
of crime reported near you, Like if you had like
I mean that's really a kid crime or something.

Speaker 2 (06:31):
Yeah, I guess I would want to know that.

Speaker 6 (06:33):
Yeah, I like thought we were so about to even
you say it, write down what it was and the
menuting he said it was twenty.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
Yeah, at that point, I don't care if my neighbors
a pediphire, Right, Terry, what's up?

Speaker 2 (06:51):
It's Mojo in the morning.

Speaker 5 (06:52):
Hi, a morning. How is everybody?

Speaker 2 (06:55):
We're doing? Okay, I'm a little concerned, but what's going on?

Speaker 8 (06:59):
So a couple of years.

Speaker 5 (07:00):
Ago, when I lived in my nice little neighborhood in Roseville,
we had a nice, nice, I would say, nice neighborhood.
You know, nice neighbors looked out for each other. Well,
across the street, we had a family with some issues.
And one morning I wake up, I hear the three
daughters are about teenagers screaming and yelling, and they come
over to get me, and I'm like, what is going on?

(07:23):
I thought they were having some sort of a big
family fight, and they're like, you gotta go check it
our mom. I walked in the house, water was everywhere,
and her blue feet were sticking out of the bathroom
and she had died of a drug overdose. Sad it was.
It was, it was, it was bad. And then I thought,

(07:45):
this is what I get for being the neighborhood.

Speaker 9 (07:47):
I know it all.

Speaker 5 (07:49):
I would just say I was very well informed of
what was happening in my neighborhood.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
Oh my god, can I tell you I've never happened
upon I've seen something. My dad died in front of me,
but I hospice. Yeah, but I I watched his last breath.
But I've never like walked in on somebody dead. And
I've often thought to myself, would I be like the
TV cop shows where.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
I'd put my two fingers up to their in front
of you? Like better?

Speaker 5 (08:15):
Yeah, the story gets better by better, I mean worse.
The day before, her husband and her had gone to
a fit fight in the front yard and punched her. Oh,
she was asked to leave them. It was yeah, he
was asked to leave the house. And then because that happened,
they had actually taken to jail for her autopsy.

Speaker 8 (08:35):
To come back to find out.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
Whether I was gonna say the guy could have been
wanted for murder after the whole thing.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Wow, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
Terry well nosey Terry joining Shannon and I being the
nosy neighbor checking everybody out.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
What's up, Brittany, how you doing.

Speaker 9 (08:50):
Good?

Speaker 8 (08:50):
Good?

Speaker 10 (08:50):
How are you guys?

Speaker 2 (08:51):
We're doing okay? What's going on?

Speaker 9 (08:55):
So when I was.

Speaker 10 (08:56):
A child, this was like fifteen years ago, we lived
in the neighborhood. We all looked out for each other,
and it ended up we had a neighbor kind of
caddywompus to us, and they had some family issues going on.
She had a boyfriend that came over and one night
he ended up splitting her throat. Well, no one knew
until the morning because her kids are running around in

(09:18):
the neighborhood.

Speaker 9 (09:19):
And I woke my parents up.

Speaker 10 (09:21):
I was like, there's like yellow crime scene tape outside,
and they shot out of bed and we all went
running over there, and yeah, sure enough, they told us like,
it's a crime scene. You guys can't come over here.
And the house was shut down for like days so
they could collect evidence.

Speaker 2 (09:36):
Oh my god, what neighborhood was this?

Speaker 7 (09:38):
Then?

Speaker 2 (09:38):
Where was this?

Speaker 9 (09:40):
This was? So?

Speaker 10 (09:41):
I actually lived near ground rapids, so it's like minutes.

Speaker 1 (09:44):
Yeah, okay, By the way, I always, uh, you caught
me off of saying caddy wampus. I always I always
wondered what did that meant mean? When people say that.

Speaker 10 (09:53):
What is that diagonal? Like kind of like off to
the side.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
Yeah, it I never when people would say that. I
never have asked anybody like what does that mean? But
first for me, that's what stick out to you about
the splitting of the throat right now, that's any day.

Speaker 2 (10:10):
What's up? How are you doing, Angela?

Speaker 6 (10:13):
Hi?

Speaker 4 (10:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (10:13):
So I have like a really fat story. So my
mom was in hospice and I got the call for
my grandmother to come home, and she was saying that
she was breathing a erratic and I was like, okay,
And so I went home and for some reason, I
went to the back of the house, which was the kitchen,
and I went down to the basement and then don't

(10:36):
know why I went to the basement, have no idea.
And then I went back to the living room and
then went up the stairs and the next thing I knew,
I was in her bedroom and she was dead. And
when I tell you, it was the worst thing in
the world. And I never really agreeed my mom. She

(10:58):
passed away in two thousand and nine, and I think
about her so much. But to see someone because he
was he was I knew it was tummy. I knew that.
I knew.

Speaker 1 (11:09):
Wow, that's yeah. Yeah, you're saying an hospice. That's sad.
I'm sorry. Yes, that's it. That's a that's a horrible situation.
But also off topic, I have no Yeah, through lady
just threw it.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
I went on there.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
But thank you for the calling. I'm so sorry for
your loss. But we're saying on topic with Ken, Ken,
what happened?

Speaker 8 (11:31):
Ken, We moved from one place to another, and it
was a nice neighborhood. And for the first three nights
we were there two o'clock in the morning, we had
police banging on the door. Yeah, and we had no
idea why. Apparently a sex offender was living there before us,
and they were looking for him. And on the third

(11:53):
night I finally had to bring out my lease and
show him. My god, this is not them.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (11:58):
I would never think about that everything, never think about
checking to see who lived there before, and guys forbid that.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
It's not a yeah, and I mean it was a
good neighborhood.

Speaker 8 (12:07):
I mean so now when I move I checked that
address before I moved there. Oh, I had my neighbors
thinking I was a sex defender.

Speaker 1 (12:13):
When I first moved in, nobody came to your house
for trick or treating.

Speaker 8 (12:17):
I bet that's actually I'm sure honestly on the candy
for the first couple of years.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
Hey, little boy,
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