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July 18, 2025 29 mins
In this episode of CrimeWire Weekly, hosts Jim Chapman and Kelly Jennings discuss a series of trending crime stories, including the arrests of (2) Police Chiefs and others as part of a sting involving inproperly issuing U-Visa's. A shooting in KY kills two people and a trooper is shot and injured and a prank involving a teddy-bear with what resembles human skin causes quite an uproar. 
These crime stories and more discussed on today's podcast!
(See topics below) 


*This is a preview, links to listen to the full podcast by following "Crime Wire Weekly" are below.

Topics (Full Podcast)
  1. Louisiana Police Chief’s Arrested in U-Visa Fraud.
  2. Kentucky Church Shooting Kills (2) and Injures Trooper.
  3. Mom Arrested For Attempting to Traffic Daughter.
  4. The Human Skin Teddy Bear Prank.
  5. Pakistan “Honor Killings”
  6. Man Sentenced After Rare Ford Mustang Leads To Murder.
  7. American Idol Killings
  8. French Convict Hides in Fellow Inmates Luggage and Escapes.
  9. North Carolina Town Curbs Youth Violence With New Law.
Links to Follow Crime Wire Weekly 
https://linktr.ee/crimewireweekly

Kelly Jennings is host of “Unspeakable: A True Crime Podcast by Kelly Jennings”  https://open.spotify.com/show/3n7BUzKRtMhAEuIuu7f031?si=c98fcf5b7e6848c8
Jim Chapman is host of “Exposed: Scandalous Files of the Elite” https://open.spotify.com/show/3ePQYSPp5oSPDeue8otH1n?si=39142df6e0ed4f77
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
All right, folks, welcome back to Crime Wire Weekly. We're
going to be talking about a ton of crime that
has taken place Louisiana police officials. They have arrested several
police chiefs and several different parishes of the state on
a fraud plot that you are absolutely not going to believe.

(00:37):
If you're like me, it will blow your mind. I
never saw this one coming, but they have been arrested.
Interesting thing was they were arrested at an actual Louisiana
Police chief convention of all things, so I'm sure that
wasn't embarrassing for them. Two women were killed in Kentucky
and a trooper was shot in a church. We're going

(01:00):
to discuss that as well and much more, so stay
tuned for that. And of course, I'm Jim Chapman.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
And I'm Kelly Jennings.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
And how was your week thus For Kelly Jennings, It's
been a.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
Wild one for me. I've been watching trials on TV.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
That's always fun. Yeah, I enjoy that. Look.

Speaker 2 (01:18):
Some people like to watch movies, some people like to
watch cartoons. This girl is watching True Crime twenty four
to seven.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
Yeah, yeah, you are a true crime officiat. Officiataficionado.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
I believe that's.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
What it is, that's what you are. I couldn't spell
that nor pronounce it. But if you're listening to this show,
you're probably a true crime fan just like us. And
I'm sure you spend your own time watching trials and
things of that. Made all right, so let's get into it.
We are going to start out in Louisiana and four
law enforcement officials, including two current police chiefs in Louisiana,

(01:52):
are accused of fabricating police reports in a scheme to
illegally obtain US visas for immigrants. This from federal prosecutors.
A Louisiana businessman is also charged in the scheme. The
US Attorney's Office in the Western District of the Louisiana
alleges it between December twenty sixth of twenty fifteen and

(02:13):
July fifteenth of twenty twenty five. That's right, ten years
businessman Chandra Khant Patel, O'Dell police chief, Chad Doyle, for
Steel police Chief, Glen Dixon, former Glenn Moore police chief,
Tibo Onishia and Michael Slainey. And I apologize if that

(02:34):
pronunciation is off. A Marshall in the fifth ward of
the Marshall's Office. All conspired to produce false reports that
were used to apply for what's done as you visas,
where victims of certain crimes are eligible. Immigrants seeking you
visus would contact Patel. Now Patel for I'll just go

(02:54):
ahead and tell you this. He owned a subway sandwich shop.
He was a business owner in the area. And basically
he was a meddalman for this whole scheme. And I'm
going to deviate from this article because I know this
kind of well. He was a meddal man for this scheme.
And he would set up to where he would go
to the police chief and he would say, hey, look,

(03:15):
I've got a guy. He's an immigrant. He's in this country,
but he didn't want to go back to wherever it
was he was from. And so we would like to
pay you five thousand dollars. And in exchange for that
five thousand dollars, we want you to say that he's
a witness in a crime, or we want you to
say that he's a victim of a crime. Now in
either one of those two cases, the you visa is

(03:38):
a visa specifically developed to keep that person in this country.
If they are witness or a victim to a crime.
Not only that, but if you're a family member of
someone that is a witness or victim of a crime
that is an immigrant, you also get to stay in
the country. So, to really put it into layman's terms,

(04:00):
they were totally fabricating police reports to say that someone
was either the victim of a crime or they were
a witness to a crime, so that that person could say,
in this country, this subway sandwich owner, sandwich shopowner would
pay five thousand dollars each for this. And get this,

(04:20):
there were hundreds of immigrants that took advantage of this.
If you will, this scheme, and it is all coming
to roost, I guess you could say for these folks,
and they have dropped the hammer. So they actually went
into the Louisiana Police chief convention where these two chiefs

(04:41):
were and basically said, you know you're under arrest, you
have the right to remain silent. It is wild A.
Marshall also involved in this, And as I said, the
sandwich shop owner was the middleman, mister Patel. Now the
only one currently still being held in jail is Patel.
The others may bond and they have been released. Of course,

(05:02):
everyone's innocent until proven guilty, but I can tell you
if the Feds have done all of these years, they've
got some pretty good evidence.

Speaker 2 (05:10):
Ten year span.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
Yeah. Wow, never even would have considered. You know what,
this has made national news. It's breaking everywhere into me uh,
the fact that these are look, folks, these are smaller towns.
These are not big towns, and in the state of Louisiana.
And what a lot of these national organizations are really

(05:32):
saying is it's amazing this scheme was was being able
to be pulled off for this long in towns that
are this small. I mean one of these towns has
like one police chief and three you know, other officers,
and he's putting in over one hundred of these.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
Right, and weren't they all armed robberies or something like?
It was like a bizarre when you look at when
you look at crime data. Okay, and I don't want
to be dry right now, but seriously, you know, when
you look at crime data, you have projections of amounts
of crime I'm in a certain area, and demographics and
all that are looked at that in population, and then
there's this disproportionate amount of armed robberies, and then you

(06:08):
have to wonder, okay, well, obviously those aren't going to
trial because they didn't happen. Yeah, so what's that about.
And I'm thinking that might have been what cleued in
the FEDS, maybe a tip, but also you know, maybe
that might have been what clued them in, because it
just doesn't jive with the traditional I.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
Agree over time. I mean, this has been ten years,
so nobody was clued in for quite a while, which
is the shocking part. And you're absolutely right, I think
a lot of it played into it. But you know,
this stuff is elaborate. It's not as easy as saying, okay,
here's the proof of a police report of this guy

(06:47):
being involved. He was a witness to an armed robbery,
let's say, and here's the police report. So we need
him to stay in town because he could be a witness.
We don't need him to be deported at this point
or made to leave the country. Well, the issue is
there's a lot of paperwork behind that. People check that
or supposed to be that's what it's verified. There's a

(07:08):
lot of things going on there, and so the shocking
thing is you could see in New Orleans something like
this kind of sliding through because there's so many people
in New Orleans, there's so much opportunity. But literally, like
one of these towns is like a thousand people total,
and you've got one hundred immigrants involved in bank robberies.

(07:29):
How they didn't catch at this soon. I'm not blaming anybody.
I know. This is a big country and you got
you know, you have a lack of people to check
things like this, and it wasn't a lot shit.

Speaker 2 (07:40):
Right yeah. And before people start going, oh, well, maybe
this was like a do good thing, which I'm not
saying it was, but you know, these poor immigrants, they
didn't want to no, no, no, no, no. They were profiting by
this scheme. They were being paid the five thousand dollars
yes each, yes, And so now we've got this corruption
that's disgusting. You know these people people always say they

(08:02):
should be held to a higher standard. No, how about
hold them to the damn standard. Let's just hold them
to the standard. Yeah, and they have they have. This
is sick, it's wrong. And then it makes you wonder,
as with so many other cases where cops gone bad,
you know, what other things have they done that are corrupt?
Are there people behind bars right now that took the
fall for something they didn't do. It does make you wonder,
It makes your brain start to wonder if you can

(08:24):
be paid off that easily. Wow.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
Yeah, And in the in the biggest picture issue for
me is, look, no one hates this more than good cops.
No one hates this more than good police chiefs, good
shaff So you know why, because now they're gonna get
scrutinized harder because of stupidity of these two police chiefs.

(08:47):
All the police chiefs are gonna be scrutinized harder. It's
gonna be harder for legitimate immigrants that this U VISA
program was made for. If they do witness a crime,
it's gonna be hard for a police chief to even
want to process that in that because I don't want
people to think that I've I'm doing what this jackass

(09:09):
in forest Wood, Louisiana did. I don't want my people
thinking this. It creates issues throughout the entire law enforcement community.

Speaker 2 (09:18):
The job's hard enough as it is, and everyone's screaming
all these times, they're saying that the police have done
something wrong when they haven't. And then this happens. They're
like see see, and they just use it to add
fuel to the fire. Let's go to Kentucky. Two women
were shot and killed at a Kentucky church after a
suspect who shot and wounded a state trooper fled there
this past Sunday. The two people were killed and were
identified by officials as Beverly gom seventy two and Christina

(09:42):
Comb's thirty four, and they were a mother and daughter.
The suspect was also killed. The suspect was later identified
by the coroner as forty seven year old Guy House,
who died from a gunshot wound at the church. Two others,
both men, were wounded by the gunman, Weather said. Police
said Monday that both men were in critical condition and

(10:02):
the state trooper was in stable condition. Family members of
the victims said that House showed up at the church
looking for one of GM's daughters, who was the mother
of his three children. When they said that she wasn't there,
he responded, quote, I guess someone's going to have to diet.
The family members, who are Gum's daughters, said House shot
and killed their mother and also shot their father, James,

(10:23):
who is the pastor of the Richmond Road Baptist Church.
The other victims, they said, were another one of their
sisters who was killed and her husband who was wounded.
The family said that house allegedly suffered from severe mental
health issues, had an ongoing drug problem with methamphetamines, and
was under the influence when he shot their relatives. The
police chiefs said the shooting began after the trooper pulled

(10:44):
him over near the Bluegrass Airport in Lexington. After shooting
the trooper before noon on Sunday, the suspect carjacked another
vehicle and ended up at the Richmond Road Baptist Church
in southwest Lexington. No injuries were reported during the carjacking.
The shootings ended when Lexington police shot and killed the suspect.

Speaker 1 (11:03):
Horrible shoot at and injure severely injure a state trooper.
Where it occurred at a church, horrific. Most of the
people going there, I would say, all the people probably
going to that church. Nobody wanted to see that that day.
It doesn't really say there had to be some kind
of issue.

Speaker 2 (11:18):
There with well, it says too he obviously went there
to kill somebody, because he said somebody.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
He doesn't specify where they estranged and you know, everybody
could see this coming. It doesn't really specify if this
was just a totally out of character thing, but with
them accusing him of being mentally ill and obvious, thank you,
Captain Obvious for that. You got to be pretty crazy
to do what he just pulled off.

Speaker 2 (11:43):
He wasn't too crazy to get the gun, load the bullets,
shoot the cop, make it to the church, and try
to kill everybody.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
So yeah, and so, just a horrible situation unfolding in
Kentucky and hopefully some information come in as to what
spurred this.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
Yeah, I'm sure there'll be some background in from But
for that family, I would like to say, you know,
absolute prayers and thoughts, and I hope that the survivors
that are hanging in there make a full recovery and
they can get some sort of answers.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
Okay, let's go to Indiana and a communication through Snapchat
has triggered an FBI investigation into an Indianapolis mother of
seven for an alleged sex trafficking attempt of her seven
month old daughter that ultimately led to her arrest. Now,
when first confronted by agents, this was in November eleventh

(12:33):
of twenty twenty four, Morgan Stapp, who was thirty two,
told them that her Snapchat have recently been hacked and
she no longer had access to it. She also said
she was upset at the loss of the photos of
her seven children. So these agents confront her about obvious
allegations and she says, Oh, my account's been hacked. The

(12:55):
woman then told them she received an email from the
social media platform that told her her account had been
permanently banned for suspected online commercial sex transactions. Huh, I
wonder why. Later in the month, she allegedly admitted to
the Indiana Department of Child Services that she had lied
to federal agents about losing her Snapchat account because quote

(13:18):
I wanted the FBI to leave After that unproductive initial
interview with staffed. The FBI them reshout to the Indianapolis
Metropolitan Police Department for assistance in this case, and the
detective was able to acquire a search warrant to investigate
STAPs Snapchat account. Subsequently, guess what selfies were found of

(13:41):
her that had been saved to the account after her
FBI interview that suggested she still had access to that
Snapchat account, so she was lying. Further digging found that
the account had sent over seven thousand messages over a
three day span. How do you do that? Even in November,

(14:02):
shortly before Snapchat reached out to the FBI, the government
agency launched its investigation. Now one message was repeated eighty
one times in that barrage get this quote? Would you
be interested in buying my needs so I can get
my babies diapers. Stap's account was also reportedly added four

(14:23):
hundred other accounts during that same three day span. The
investigation showed that all of the messages had been sent
from an area near stabs home, and all of them
had been sent after she claimed she lost access to
that Snapchat account. The specific message that triggered Snapchat to
alert the FEDS reportedly included three photos of Stap's infant daughter.

(14:48):
Along with them was the message you can and I'm
not going to say the word, but it's the F word.
Her for four hundred dollars half now the rest later,
I'll send my address. I do live alone and her
dad is not in the picture. That was arrested now

(15:10):
facing a Level two felony charge of attempted sex trafficking
booked into the Marion County Jail and being held on
a two hundred thousand dollars bond.

Speaker 2 (15:17):
kJ go to say what she said. First, you know
y'all know you know by now that I have a
I wish I could have her, give me that child,
and I will protect her with everything in me. And
I've never seen her, I don't know her. And this
woman gave birth to that child. And then to say
her daddy is out of the picture, which is all

(15:39):
she's saying is she's defenseless. She's defenseless, she's defensive.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
Hey, you ain't got to worry about him coming back.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Nobody here that will stand up to you, and you
can have free reign with my baby. I hope all
seven of her children are removed from her custody, and
I hope that she never ever.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
Ever gets the back it's discussed.

Speaker 2 (16:02):
And I hope that those other children, who I'm assuming
have to be older, just by process of elimination here,
are vetted very carefully for what maybe they they have
been through.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
My a, mys you are you don't deserve to be
walking around with oxygen in your lungs.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
No, and don't ever call her mother. She's not a mother.
There's nothing motherly about that, you know. I just I
remember one time Jim kind of off the on topic.
But I pulled up at a bank one time and
had a very small load of the ground car. And
I'll make it short, but I looked up and I
saw these little fingers come over the top of my
hood while I was in the drive through, and I

(16:37):
ended up finding a baby in a diaper in front
of my.

Speaker 1 (16:41):
Vehicle, just by themselves.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
Yes, yes, And so I got out of my car.
Everybody was stunned what was going on. I picked him up.
He was in a little diaper, and I'm looking around.
There's no parent around, and so the bank teller was like,
bring him inside, bring him inside, and everything maternal in
me said no, I'm not going to do that. And
I held that baby, called the police and I would

(17:04):
not even let him go to anybody because the maternal
instinct was so strong to protect him because I felt
like he had nobody and he didn't. And I know
it's very bizarre, but the mother ended up being in Walmart,
which was next door to that bank.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
Well how did the baby get away from?

Speaker 2 (17:19):
Month? Great question? That baby had enough time to walk
out of that Walmart and tittle over. The people of
that area ought to pay attention and follow through with
this one.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Yeah, that would be in that rage, that would be
in this situation. And it's one of the worst, honestly,
one of the worst messages I've ever seen. I've done
this a little while, I've never seen something that bad
when it comes to child exploitation. Yeah, disgusting.

Speaker 2 (17:46):
Oh it makes me mad, me too, it makes me mad.
And I know, I'm gonna just say I hope that
baby's in custody with someone who's loving and karen for her,
and that you know, she'll be taken care of, you know, And.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
Just to put a put a period on this story.
There are other options out there for people that can't
handle kids, or don't want kids, or any of those
sorts of things. Now they have these these you can
drop the baby off and it's like a I don't
know if you call, I know, yeah, they have those.

(18:23):
They have those in Hammond, even Louisiana. I don't know
if they have one in Livingston Parish. But you don't
even have to like explain explain nothing. You put the
baby in there, you push through, and it's it's almost
like a bank deposit deal. On the other side, the
baby comes and there's someone there, and it is to

(18:46):
avoid people just dropping their babies off in the middle
of nowhere that they can't take care of.

Speaker 2 (18:51):
So yeah, this was this that's wonderful too, But this
wasn't that.

Speaker 1 (18:55):
No, that wasn't now. I was more responding to your
bank situation. And it's way I thought, maybe she just
liked the baby.

Speaker 2 (19:02):
Cause I saw a thing too. Just to that point,
knowledge is power. But I wondered, like in cold states
that have those boxes where you can turn over your baby,
like what happens if nobody's there. But I researched tickets
on a dork and it said that they have alerts
on them, and so an alert goes off, it tells
somebody in whoever is if there's nobody actually in the

(19:23):
building at that time, it gives an alert and they
have so many minutes to get there and recover the baby.
But I think it had a warmer in it too,
so like it the baby wouldn't be freezing if it
was snowing or something, it wouldn't be freezing. And because
a woman had dropped off her child and she had twins,
actually she dropped off twin babies and she had packed
the diaper bag everything that the kids would need, and
she put the diaper bag in there, and it caused

(19:44):
this fiasco because the babies were too old. They were
past what the standard time frame was.

Speaker 1 (19:50):
They were like sixteen.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
No, yeah, yeah, they had a lot of here you
go to take them.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
These things brown there at sixteen.

Speaker 2 (20:00):
These things don't listen, So let's go to California. A
human skin teddy bear that was discovered outside a convenience
store in California over the weekend was likely placed there
as a prank, despite police launching an investigation. On Sunday,
July thirteenth, the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department responded to
reports of possible human remains outside an AMPM store at

(20:22):
a gas station. A coroner investigator took possession of the object.
Authorities had cordoned off the parking lot while the coroner
investigator looked at the bear, which had been left just
outside the store's entrance. Despite the ongoing investigation, the bear
is actually made out of latex and is currently being
sold online described as a human skin teddy bear for
one hundred and sixty five dollars. Kind of weird to

(20:43):
me that you would throw away a one hundred and
sixty five dollars teddy bear unless you were trying to
stir something up. That's kind of an expensive bear. South
Carolina artist Robert Kelly of Dark Seed Creations is now
taking credit for the work, confirming that he had shipped
one of the bears to a customer there week. Kelly
said he'd started getting tons of messages and calls from
people telling us about the incident after the reports made headlines.

(21:07):
Our work is pretty easily recognizable, and people were sending
the articles left and right. I looked, and sure enough,
it was the bear I sent out last week. Kelly
continued that every artist wants credit for their work, so
I said I made that, and I haven't been able
to catch up with messages since. Kelly added, I guess
i'd probably be lying if I said I wasn't enjoying
it a little bit. I'm an independent artist, so a

(21:27):
little attention is sometimes good, regardless of not being able
to condone or whatever. I don't know if the guy
broke any laws or if it was just a prank,
but it looks like he definitely got some people riled up.
The artist, who specializes in horror, special effects and haunted
attractions set The artist posted a video of the Bears
in question on Facebook on Sunday, writing that his work

(21:49):
has been quote used in a prank. No, I do
not have any knowledge of the buyer's intentions, nor was
I involved in a prank on the other side of
the nation from me, the artist wrote, adding that anybody
can still order one of the bears online. One of
the things that we're known for is that we make
a lot of these props that are fake human skin,
Kelly said, So those are all made out of latex,

(22:11):
they are created from a mold, and our stuff is
pretty recognizable in the industry. So once this happened a
few hours ago, my phone started blowing up and my
Facebook started blowing up. You must be pretty good at
what you do if people are buying it and then
it's used in the industry and well recognized, and I.

Speaker 1 (22:27):
Have seen pictures of it. You can google and see pictures.
We'll put some on the Facebook page. Actually, but it
was funny, y'all because Kelly originally messaged me when we
didn't know it was fake, right, yeah. So she messaged
me and she's like, with the link to an article
referencing this before it came out that it was fake.

(22:51):
And she was like, oh my gosh, we got to
talk about this, and it was like the next day
it had went viral and the next day come to
find out it was fake. But it sure looked real. Yeah,
and so we'll put some pictures on the page. But
I don't think this guy did anything wrong. I mean,
he sold it on eBay, someone bought it and decided
to pull up joke. It was a prank. Look. We

(23:14):
covered a story a few years back where it was
a like a mannequin that somebody had put in the
woods and it looked like a dead body. And I
know that's not funny, but I mean they did it
intentionally as a prank to prank people driving down from
the interstate, and it looked just like a dead body,

(23:35):
so much so that the police were called and they
show up and they're like guns drawing and everything, thinking
there's a dead person back here. And you know, then
they're like, wait a minute, that's a mannequin. Yeah, so
it happens. It's where I get aggravated. Is you waste
police time when you do something like the second example.
This first example is is just on.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
I just know this. I spent one hundred and sixty
five dollars on a damn Teddy Bear, not end up
outside a convenience store.

Speaker 1 (24:02):
On We're going a long way away from here. Where
are we going Pakistan?

Speaker 2 (24:08):
Good God?

Speaker 1 (24:09):
I told you this is global.

Speaker 2 (24:11):
We're going around the world.

Speaker 1 (24:12):
This show is global. We don't play around, and we're
gonna tell you. Look, I hear all the time that
people who don't travel outside of the United States don't
really know what it's like in other countries. Why does
give you I'm going to give you an example of that.
That's absolutely horrific. Uh. Pakistan police allege a father shot

(24:35):
and killed his sixteen year old daughter on Tuesday, July eighth,
after she refused to delete her TikTok account. According to
a police report, and this is the part that is
absolutely insane. According to a police report, investigator said the
father killed his daughter for honor, and he was arrested

(24:56):
soon after the girl's father had asked her to delete
her TikTok. On refusal, he killed her. The sixteen year
old's family initially tried to portray the murder as a suicide.
One thousand women a year are killed murdered in Pakistan
due to what is known as honor killings. So this
typically happens when a woman's behavior seems to have violated

(25:19):
traditional expectations and they face extreme punishment from their family members.
On January thirtieth, as a matter of fact, of this year,
a teenager was shot and killed by her family in
an honor killing because of their view on her online
presence on social media and so it said. Fourteen year

(25:39):
old Hira and War was living in New York City
at the time, posting videos on TikTok like all these
all these kids do. She was living in a different
world than her family. She went to visit her family
in Pakistan on a family vacation. Several days after arriving,
she was shot by her father and uncle, who said

(26:01):
they were performing in honor killing because of the inappropriate
videos that she brought shame into the family. Pakistan society
often operates under a strict code of honor. Women are
often told by their male relatives what choices they can
make around education, employment, and even who they can marry.

(26:21):
So that still goes on, y'all.

Speaker 2 (26:23):
Yeah, And so there was actually another case, I mean
from the I think the eighties or early nineties, where
there was a family of some type of Middle Eastern
descent and they were living here though in the US.
The little girl, the teenager was started dating a boy
from her high school and the dad did not approve,
nor did the mom of who she was dating. So
they killed her with their hands in the house. But

(26:46):
the FBI was investigating them as possible terrorists, and so
they caught it on audio, the whole killing, but they
tried to put that off as that the girl had
attacked them and they defended themselves. So you know, I
say that I I'm not well traveled, but I do
understand culture, and I have studied, you know, you learn
about different cultures in different areas. You know, here if

(27:07):
if if a young girl is doing something I'm assuming
this is a sexualized type. They felt like she was
being overleaved.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
Show any part of your skin, you're sexualized, right.

Speaker 2 (27:17):
And so you know here we're like put on a shirt,
don't put pictures of yourself in your swimsuit or you
know that are that, But we don't kill each other
because we love our children, and I did. There's a
complete disconnect here. I cannot understand that you would want
to off your child over your own honor, like off
of your own like what you know. And I just

(27:40):
can't understand that. And I'm glad it's not what we
do here.

Speaker 1 (27:43):
Yeah. And the shocking thing is this still occurs sounding
like something out of the Stone Age, right, this is
this people don't realize once you travel out of how
great this country is, how much freedom you actually have.
I know some people think they get no freedom here.
Anymore freedom is gone. Let me tell you something. To
go to Pakistan for a day. Go to Pakistan for

(28:04):
a day. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
I have a friend whose friend went uh there, and
she's very tall, but she did the garb, she wore
all the stuff she's supposed to wear, but a sliver
of her ankle was showing because of her height. And
a man on the street, a complete stranger on the street,
had like a stick or a walking cane, and whacked
her in the ankles as hard as he could for
her inappropriate showing of her ankle.

Speaker 1 (28:27):
Dang, you didn't beat that out, I would.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
Have died because I would have turn around, been like
bitch and start. I know you want to talk shit.
You I mean, Boosy in Pakistan would have came out.
That's insane, you know.

Speaker 1 (28:41):
Yeah, that really is. God bless you for a world.

Speaker 2 (28:45):
Hey everyone, Crime Wire Weekly has moved to its own
new channel.

Speaker 1 (28:49):
We hope you've enjoyed this preview. To continue listening, please
follow the link referenced in the description of this podcast.

Speaker 2 (28:57):
Or simply search Crime Wire Weekly wherever you're and.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Don't forget to follow the show so you can be
alerted when new episodes drop.

Speaker 2 (29:05):
Thanks for listening.
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