Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
First of all, Hello, welcome to Laura Kane after Dark.
Thank you so much for joining us, Thank you for
listening or watching. We have a show too nice. So
we have a woman. Her name is Anne Green. She's
a model in Los Angeles, and boy does she have
(00:38):
a story to tell. It's a story about survival. It's
a story about corruption, it's a story about intimidation and
privilege and uh and also PTSD and like I said,
survival and and justice. Like, this woman's story has celebrity
(00:58):
connections and and I think all of you guys who
are watching on Instagram Live should pop on over to
YouTube live. Yes, because that way you guys will be
able to hear her voice because she's coming in through
the phone. Because she lives in LA she couldn't make
it down for Monday night. But so when we start
the interview, we will hopefully you guys will pop on over, Hi, Julie, Hi,
(01:24):
to YouTube our YouTube channel which is Laura Kane after Dark.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
Okay, So Anne has a very it's a it's a
hard story to hear some of it.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
But it's quite the tale. I mean, is there anything
you want to say about it? Before we I mean
we don't want to well give all the.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
Details I'm I'm all about like true crime and stuff
like that.
Speaker 4 (01:49):
I watch all the Netflix stuff on true crime.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
And I was going on a deep dive on TikTok
one night and I see this TikTok series called Don't
Say Shortzenegger, and I was like, what is this? So
I listened to it and I was absolutely pulled in
because she's so articulate and she just didn't give up,
(02:15):
and I was just amazed at kind of her resilience.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
Yeah, this incident that she's going to talk about happened
in twenty fifteen.
Speaker 3 (02:21):
Yeah, April of twenty fifteen in La and I reached
out to her because I became very concerned, and she
was lovely she responded back. And then as the series went,
I think I started when it was only twelve episodes
in and there's now I think fifty six or fifty
(02:43):
eight episodes.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
Oh my gosh, And how how long are these episodes?
And she's just giving chunks of the story.
Speaker 3 (02:50):
Ten to fifteen minutes each, Okay, but it is a
really unbelievable story.
Speaker 2 (02:59):
Okay, have her on.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
I just wanted to apologize for not being on last week.
Oh my gosh, I was so sick. I was flat
on my back. Well, no, I was more like in
the fetal position, to be honest, and all I did.
Speaker 4 (03:15):
You probably want to explain that you weren't flat on your.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
Flat on my backs bread eagle or anything like that.
My god, legs a kimbo, A kimbo. I love that word,
a kimbo. I really love that word. It's a cool
word should.
Speaker 4 (03:29):
Say to you.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
Your legs are a kimbo. Oh.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
So we're gonna have her on for the entire podcast.
So again, you guys are just joining us on Instagram Live.
I think you guys should pop on over to our
YouTube channel, which is Laura Kane after Dark and we're
live on YouTube too, so you could hear the interview.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
You don't want to miss this.
Speaker 4 (03:49):
It's you.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
Anyway.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
We have producer Brian over here. Hey Brian, what's going on?
Missed you last week?
Speaker 4 (03:59):
Yeah, we got we missed you because you were almost dead?
Speaker 2 (04:02):
I know, I know. Well, why's in the camera on you?
Did you not like fix the camera?
Speaker 4 (04:06):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (04:06):
There we go.
Speaker 1 (04:08):
You don't want to be seen, you want to be mysterious.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
I know.
Speaker 5 (04:16):
God.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
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Speaker 2 (05:36):
Okay, ready, all right, okay, so let's get on with
the interview. Let's talk to Ann Green.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
All right, A N N E g r E E
N E on TikTok, It's.
Speaker 4 (05:51):
Here we go. Hello, Hi, Anne, Hi.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
Hi Anne. I'm Laura. Nice to meet you, Laura. And
and you know what, my middle name is Anne, A
N N E.
Speaker 5 (06:06):
Oh, so many people tell me that.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Really I love the E at the end of Anne.
That makes it.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
That was my grandma's name too. Anyway, and thank you
so much for being on our show. And we really
appreciate you sharing your story. I know it must be
really hard to relive over and over and over again
like you've had to. But in order for you to,
you know, reach your conclusion to this whole thing, you
need to get the word out. So we are happy
(06:37):
to have you on and tell your side of the
story and and what you've been through and what it
is that you are looking for. And let's start at
the Let's start at the at the beginning, like you're
a model in Los Angeles.
Speaker 5 (06:54):
I just wanted to say thank you so much too
for having me on, because the whole, this whole process
of having to talk about it, as hard as it is,
the more people that hear the story, the closer we
can get to justice and the more safety I had.
So it means absolutely the world to me. But you
guys are having me on, so thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
Of course, absolutely, yes, so, and you're a model in
Los Angeles, it's twenty fifteen, you're at a ritzy exclusive club.
Speaker 2 (07:24):
Then, yes, what happened?
Speaker 5 (07:28):
Well, so this is nine, just over nine years ago.
I had just I lived around the corner from the
Nice Guy, which is what it's called, and I went
with three people. One was my older brother and then
the other two were his co workers because he owned
a bar in the on the Sunset Stript at the time,
and so the three of us went there and we
(07:50):
weren't even there that long. I think. We went and
we ordered a round of drinks. I got a Skella
for some reason. I remember. We're detailed, but at a
certain point I was like, hey, I'm going to step
out into the smoke outdoor smoking section have a cig
and they were like, oh, we'll come with you. So
the four of us go out there and it's this small,
enclosed area with a six foot wooden fence around it.
(08:11):
And within twenty seconds, all of a sudden, we heard
a really crazy commotion out in the street. So we
just peeked over the fence and there was a guy
just curled up in a ball and maybe about a
dozen or so guys stomping, kicking, punching him, and another
maybe ten or so people just standing there like just
(08:32):
a few feet away, watching and so it was. It
was pretty intense. And the thing is is, you know,
back in the day, like fifteen twenty years ago, long
time ago, I used to see a bottle service waitress
in La And when you live, when you work in
that world, you see a lot of stuff Like I
saw a lot of fights. I saw people cracking bottles
over each other's head. I thought, you know, like you
(08:53):
just see that when you work in Hollywood. You know,
I set a little hot spot like in the clubs especially,
so I'd seen stuff like that and it's always like
oh God, and security handles it and they moved, moved
the staff out of the way, and it's never you know,
I never felt the need to intervene ever and any
of those instances. But this was different because it was
a guy that was he was curled up in a ball,
(09:15):
just just trying to protect his skull, and you could
tell that the men that were beating him were getting
more savage the less he could defend himself. And so
I remember in that moment, I was like, it was
just so much. So many thoughts ran through my head
in a split second, and I was like, Oh, my god,
he's going to die or he's going to be a
paraplegic after this is over, and tomorrow when everyone in
(09:36):
La finds out about it, they're going to be like, oh,
you were there, and what am I going to say? Yeah,
I stood there holding a beer and I watched it happen.
I didn't do anything, and so like, it was that brutal,
so I just and also two one thing I clocked
in those few seconds was they were all wearing like
sports coats and like dressed very nice, so you could
tell that they had just come from dinner from inside
(09:58):
the nice Guy. And the nice Guy is a place
where you can't just walk in you have to either
you have to be on a list or you have
to be you know, your name has to be on
a list, period, whether you know, celebs, whatever. But you
just can't walk in randomly. Ever, So I'm also thinking, Okay,
they're well dressed. They came from the nice guy like
(10:18):
they wouldn't, you know. If I just tell them to stop,
they're gonna be like, okay, yeah, what are we doing? Like,
it's not like we can get away with this. They
know our names, you know. So I hopped the fence
like just like whoop cop Mike went over it, and
I ran out there and I was just screaming, you know,
he can't he's not fighting back. It's over. It's over.
And I pulled this one guy off of his body
(10:39):
and he, you know, he just shrugged me off, and
so I tried to pull him off by the shoulder
again and he turned around and I happened to turn
around because I could hear like the other men behind me.
So I turned my back and that gentleman that I
pulled off, he hit me so hard in the back
of the skull that I immediately lost consciousness before I
hit the ground. And so, you know, I wake up.
(11:02):
Maybe I don't even know. Thirty minutes or something later
and when I woke up, I'm sitting on the curb
and I'm just in shock. I have a traumatic brain injury.
I have. I'm just like, my face is crazy. And
I was confused, obviously because I didn't remember being hit
because the first hit was in the back of the head.
But I woke up and I have bruises and kind
(11:23):
like my whole face is like rearranged, and there's an
ambulance in front of me and a paramedic is shining
lights in my eyes, and I was just so confused.
I'm like, no, I remember them like They're like, you
need to get in the ambulance, and I was like, no, no, no,
I'm fine, I'm fine. No cops, no cops, And they
were like ann And then I went and touched my
forehead and it was like five six inches out.
Speaker 4 (11:43):
Oh my god.
Speaker 5 (11:45):
Okay. I was like, you know what, why why don't
we go to the hospital so, you know, so they
threw me. You know, obviously, like a brain injury, these
you just don't really know what's going on, but you know,
and then of course, like down the road throughout the
criminal receedings and all of that stuff that happened for years,
I was buying all the transcripts to kind of fill
(12:06):
in the blank, and that's when I, you know, I
got a hold of the police reports. I got a
hold of every single deposition, every single hearing, every single
every single statement, and I pieced it all together and
realized what had happened. And then I realized that certain
people were changing their story dramatically after the first couple
of months, and that's when I kind of realized the
(12:27):
corruption was happening. And then it just became you know,
years of a deep dive and keeping a paper trail,
and so what.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
Was the story, Like, well, who was the guy and
who were the guys beating the guy?
Speaker 5 (12:39):
Well, so see, at the time, we've never met any
of these people. They were just strangers. But we found
out that night at the hospital. I think it was
because the police came to the hospital to try to
get statements from us, and you know, I had a
concussion all that stuff, so like a lot of it
was in and out, but I did write most of
the stuff down and apparently and this is from testimonies
(13:02):
that I got in the police reports, but so it
was this large group of guys like maybe like twenty
and girls, like twenty people or so that were there
for a birthday dinner and they were friends with the
owners and so they had a big table and bottle
service all that stuff, and they were wasted. And when
they came out, like rolled out of the bar around
one forty five, like last call. They come outside like
(13:25):
so I swear, yeah, okay because they were ship faced,
and they admit to it and everything in the under oath.
But they come outside and they start giving you know,
five to ten valet tickets to the valet and they're like,
get all our cars. And it's like one or two
guys at the valet. One of them was an older
gentleman and he said, you know, sir, like the main
(13:47):
one of the main criminals in the case. He was like, sir,
your your car is parked four feet away. It's the
very first car parked here. Can you just take your
keys and and I'll tend to all your friends who
you're so it's faster. And the guy goes, you know,
I don't give a fuck, like blah blah blah, like
just you pull my car right up to my feet
I don't give any swearing and berating. And there happened
(14:07):
to be two TMZ paparazzi standing there because they were
waiting for celebs to come out, like Michael B. Jordan
was inside apparently according to them, and so they were
standing there and they were like, no, like, lay off
the valet guy, like, are you seriously getting in a
valet's space when he's just trying to like expedite all
of your you know, tickets. So the guy, the criminal guys,
(14:30):
they didn't like that, and so they start getting in
the face of the first TMZ guy and backing him up,
backing him up, and then finally one of the defendants
just stucker punches the TMZ paparazzi. He hits the ground,
and then after that first punch, the whole group, this
is according to the TMD guy, the whole group jumps
in starts stomping him and just like oh, it's geanging
(14:52):
up on him mentality exactly, and he like lost consciousness temporarily.
And the second TMZ guy was obviously trying to help
and be like, you know, trying to you know, de
escalate and stuff against you know, ten guys or so
ten to fifteen whatever it was. So the second TMZ guy,
they beat him up as well, and then they drag
(15:15):
him out into the street. And that's what we saw.
We didn't even know about the first TMZ guy, but
that's what we saw. And this was all of that.
Everything I just said is from the police reports. It
was from initial depositions, but mainly police reports. And I
like to I like to call that the time when
everybody was telling the truth before famous criminal defense attorneys
(15:37):
entered the chat, and suddenly, oh boymz's story, the paparazzis
and I have the documents, their stories changed dramatically, literally
like a year later. It was oh no, that TMZ guy,
he wasn't even there. He pulled up later, he never
even got hit. He's not suing, it's fine. And I'm like,
that's funny because then the police report he says he
(15:59):
was beaten savagely and lost consciousness. Both of them did.
But suddenly he wasn't there, And then the second one
was saying it wasn't that bad. I had like a scratch.
I only left work for it like a minute, like Jurassically,
it was very helling.
Speaker 2 (16:12):
Okay, so who are these men there.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
They have a fame, they're somewhat well, they're they're of
they're notable, right.
Speaker 5 (16:20):
I mean, yeah, notable, and they are like really entwined
with a list celebrities all sorts. So the main most
of the defendants, there's three of them that are actually
all related. There's like the worst of the defendants who
were convicted and everything, and they're the Drizz family. Two
of them, the older ones. They were actually there was
(16:42):
celebrating their birthday. It was their fiftieth birthday there. So
the identical twins, Alberto and Maurice Drizz, it's them. And
then one of those twins, sons, Chandris, was also convicted.
He was there. He's they're all extremely violent and everything.
And the Drizz have been what the what effort is
(17:02):
the word? Like not angel investors, but they were the
very first owners of the Blaze Pizza franchise when they
first opened, I believe in twenty thirteen, and it's now
worth about a billion dollars god so. And they owned
at the time like eleven or twelve locations throughout southern California.
I think maybe one in Vegas, but they owned a
ton of them and those locations have been making so
(17:26):
much money if you just google, like literally, they've been expanding, expanding, expanding.
It's crazy. But they owned all that. And on top
of it, the other main initial investors of Blaze Pizza
were Maria Shriver and her son Patrick Schwarzenegger, and the
Shreiver Schwarzenegger family not only were business partners with the Drizzes,
(17:48):
but we found out because like you know, La is
a very small world. When you're dealing with like that
kind of world, you know, like the celeb world all
that stuff, It's a very small world. Everybody knows everyone,
And within two weeks after the assault, we found out
through maybe fifteen like friends and acquaintances that heard about
(18:09):
what happened and like wanted to get any information they could,
we found out that one Christina Schwarzenegger, the youngest daughter
of Arnold and Maria, had been in a long term
relationship with one of the defendants, Chandrews, the younger of
the three Drizzes. And at that point I remember thinking, Okay,
(18:29):
well that's actually disappointing. I was like, but that's a
good thing. I'm like my little naives. I was like, well,
if Maria Shreiver, you know, a renowned feminist journalist like
she she is going to step in and be like, well,
this is not happening. You're not going to be dating
my daughter, even though Christina is a full grown adult
with you know, full body of bodily autonomy or whatever.
(18:52):
But I just figured, and also, it's not a good
image for a family like that, right, And I just figured.
I figured they'd step in and you know, cut those
ties and be like, yeah, we're not having our daughter
data guy who was involved with crushing a girl's skull, Like,
we're not. And I kind of like sat back, and
you know, the police and DA everybody was like, you
(19:13):
don't have to like do anything. You don't have to
post about it on social media, you don't have to
investigate it. Like, trust me, we have video evidence, we
have witness statements, we have medical injuries. It's just you
guys have too much evidence just to let justice and
the law handle it. And I was like, Okay, I
totally have faith you're right. But then once we got
(19:34):
to the criminal preliminary hearing like a year later or
whatever it was, that's when all of a sudden, the
little the weird things started happening. I started noticing things,
and that's when I started my little Okay, I guess
I'm going to have to not take anyone's word for it,
and I'm going to buy every single transcript.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Were they ever arrested? I mean, did the police are?
Where did they go? When they did they take off?
Speaker 2 (19:57):
After? Yeah, before the police got there.
Speaker 5 (19:59):
Stuff They off because they knew, like they knew somebody
had called the police, and so they all hopped in
there like sent leaves and maseratis, and they fled the scene.
And from there they went back to Sean Drizz's apartment,
which was like in West Hollywood or Beverly Hills, somewhere
close to the scene, and they all went there. And
we found out, you know, through I found out through
my all the documentation that they went there and all
(20:22):
talked about what happened. And one of the twin, the
older Drizzes, he was bragging about knocking me out.
Speaker 7 (20:29):
He said, yeah, I think his word he said he
said something like them, yeah I got her good bang,
and so oh that was yeah, And then.
Speaker 5 (20:42):
It was I think they were arrested. I want to say,
I don't know, like maybe like seven to ten days later,
and during that week we had to go down to
the police station multiple times and give statements and you know,
they pull up photos and you have to point it
out and go, that's him, that's not him. And we
happened to be at the state and the lieutenant and
everything was you know, the sergeant and stuff. They were
(21:03):
really really helpful, and they were pissed, like they were
like we we, you know, work harder when it's like
something to do with children or when it's something to
do with women being hurt. They're like, we're going to
get these guys. And they were on it. And while
we were being interviewed the I saw a police officer
walk over to the sergeant that was talking to us,
(21:23):
and he had this like his eyes were the size
of dinner plates. He kind of looked stunned, and he
like so I kind of I like looked down, pretended
I was doing something, but I was totally listening and eavesdropping,
and he whispers in the sergeant's ear. He goes, Robert
hero is here. He was like starstruck, but it was
(21:44):
like starstruck, and so the sargeant was like, oh really,
He's like yeah, and he's got all the defendants with him,
they're turning themselves in. So here's the thing. They turned
themselves in because a week in the department, somebody had
reached out and said, h that it was either a
leak or We're not really sure, but there was definitely
they got a heads up that they were going to
(22:05):
be arrested, and they didn't want it to be happening
at their homes in front of their you know, wealthy
neighbors and stuff. And so Shapiro, who's been a long
time friend, as he said in the trial, he's been
a long time friend of twenty five years with the Drizzes,
and he was like he was smart. He was like, yeah, no, no, no,
we're going to walk you down there immediately. We're going
to and they were in and out in forty five minutes.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
They weren't even behind bars.
Speaker 5 (22:30):
No, So here's what this was. The first thing that
like the first crazy This is right after Shakira got involved,
when things started getting weird, and so they have an
initial arraignment when something like this happens. And we found
out way down the road when I was reading like
the DA's statements in court, because the DA was amazing,
like one of the few unethical people in this entire process.
(22:53):
But I remember him saying in the transcript, he was like,
first of all, he's like, you're on a He's like,
this is crazy. He's like, because I I was supposed
to be like, this is how it goes. This is
just protocol. He's like, I was never notified about their
arraignment after they were arrested. He goes, they were somehow
allowed to have a private secret arraignment and set up.
(23:14):
They set it up like it wasn't even like the people.
He goes, they set it up. Shapiro set it up
and everything. And by the way, this is like standard
in California law that if you were if if you're
in trouble for either murder or attempted murder or I
think attempted murder, if you're in trouble for that, the
minimum your bail will be will be a million dollars
(23:38):
or no bail at all. That's the standard. Their bail
and their secret hearing without a DA presence was I
think it was about twenty five to thirty five thousands,
which means they only had they only had to pay
like ten percent. You know, that's like the way it works.
Oh yeah, so they had no prison, they had they
were allowed to have a secret thing, pay a few
thousand dollars and and they're out. So that was the
(24:00):
beginning of crazy stuff happening where they were just like, oh,
we'd actually we're not going to have this da We
don't we don't want him. Oh we're not going to
have this judge. We're going to remove that judge because
the judge made it clear that these guys are a
danger to the to public. So that's happened like multiple times,
like a pattern, not like one here one. It's it's
wild even you know, I haven't gotten I haven't finished
(24:22):
my series yet, but there's three different times in this
whole you know, at this I guess seven years process
between the assaults and the end of the civil trial
in twenty twenty one, three different instances where court transcripts
were blatantly altered, blatantly altered, with proof backing it up
that they were altered. Oh my, that's the nice question.
(24:45):
I don't can't. I can't say because I wasn't there
for whoever pulled those strings. But it is really, really,
really like I have had by the way, since I
spread my series. I have had so many court reporters
like not just like like other states Cali. I have
had so many court reporters reach out to me and
validate it and confirm it, and they're like yeah, They're like,
(25:06):
first of all, you can always get the audio if
you know, if you think this happened, And I'm like, yeah, actually,
I have reached out to all the court reporters for
the specific one, and both court reporters said there. The
first one said the audio was stolen. It was the
only She was like, it's the first time in my
career it's ever been stolen. And the second court reporter
just flat out said no, so do and I can
(25:30):
do a whole like I can report to the Court
Reporters Board. I can, but I could sue because also
I had to pay for all like one, just the
civil trial transcript alone I had to I bought and
it was eight thousand dollars, Okay, I was I was
just going to ask you that why would they provide
for five feet high of documents that I've had to
(25:50):
pay for all these years, which turned out to have
evidence proving federal crimes, Felling it like of people working
in the system. So there's somebody huge that with a
lot of power, political power, and fulllessness that has been
able to do that like having judges removed, having transcripts
(26:10):
completely changed so as to make the charges and accounts
go down, and remove witness statements. And you know, one
thing I'll say is the reason why I decided to
name my theories don't say Schwartzenegger, is because and I
haven't covered my civil trial yet in the series that's
coming up soon, but during right before the civil trial began,
(26:34):
there's a hearing that like they'll always have with a
judge and the attorneys and stuff, like the day before
the trial starts, and they kind of go over like
specific rules that they're going to make for that specific trial.
For example, like you can't bring up you know, this
girl's you know pass if she was like a stripper,
or you can't bring up this and this, you know,
because we have to stick to the you know, stick
(26:54):
to the story. And like sometimes they have to tell
attorneys to make these motions just so nobody, you know,
tries to sway a jury with stuff that isn't pertinent.
So one of the things one of the rules that
the defense tried to add to that. I think it's
called motions and LEA mean, I forget. But the defense
asked the judge the day before the trial to make
sure that nobody could say Schwarzeneger and she was like no, because,
(27:20):
like you guys like they had been bringing up Schwarzeneger
and the judges have been bringing up Schwarzenegger all throughout
the years, whether it be in depositions and whatever. We
had never mentioned them they did. So when the trial came,
they were like, can we make sure that no one's
allowed to say Schwartzeneger or Christina or Arnold. The judge
was like yeah, no, and so I was like, okay,
so I'm going to name my series. I mean, at
(27:42):
one point when I found that out, I was I
was honestly thinking about because I was afraid that the
judge would allow that rule. And I was like, Okay,
then I'll just temporarily change my name to Arnold Schwarzenegger
is involved have to like address me as that in court?
Speaker 1 (28:00):
But is that what you were thinking at the time. Okay,
so we're at the criminal trial now, right, No, can
you hear him?
Speaker 2 (28:07):
Can you hear?
Speaker 5 (28:08):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (28:08):
Yeah, I'm here?
Speaker 2 (28:09):
Hello?
Speaker 4 (28:11):
Can you hear me.
Speaker 5 (28:11):
Hello, Hello, can you hear you? We can he hear me?
What happened?
Speaker 4 (28:19):
Can you hear us?
Speaker 2 (28:21):
Yello?
Speaker 4 (28:22):
Yes, can you hear us?
Speaker 7 (28:24):
Ship Hold on, I'll call.
Speaker 4 (28:27):
You right back.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
Oh my god, just when it was getting like, you know,
your damn you know what? It's your freaking phone. My
phone is your damn phone. I hate your phone.
Speaker 5 (28:38):
Your call has been forwarded to an automated voice message.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
No matter what, whenever I whenever I'm talking to Eric,
it always like high out, cuts in, cuts out.
Speaker 5 (28:49):
Hi.
Speaker 4 (28:52):
Can you hear me?
Speaker 5 (28:53):
I can hear you?
Speaker 4 (28:53):
Now that was weird.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
No, I think it's Eric's phone. I think his phone is.
Speaker 4 (28:57):
I can't blame for everything you.
Speaker 6 (29:01):
Men.
Speaker 4 (29:02):
I know.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
So we are at the criminal trial now, and I know.
And let's go back to when you were saying you
were kind of happy to know that the Schwarzeneggers were
somewhat connected because of Maria would come to your hopefully
somewhat of a defense for you. Yeah, and so what
(29:25):
ended up happening did was she just crickets.
Speaker 5 (29:28):
Or well nothing, Well she didn't do nothing. She opened
her arms warmly for Sean Driz to be a part
of the family. On their luxury vacation luxury dinner. Because
I went and told I did, I've been like my
own little private investigator for years in the amount and
(29:48):
first of all, Sean like the leaded his social media
or made it private. But immediately once I started kind
of talking about this publicly, like a year year and
a half after it happened, two six feenish. But that
wasn't good enough because I figured out who all his
friends are, and I would go and you know, deep
dive into their instagrams and stuff and find, oh, look
at him, he's you know, in Turks and Caicos, at
(30:11):
you know, he's at the Risk Carlton, He's Oh, there's
him and Christina having dinner. There's In fact, Maria Shreiver
posted just a few months ago and I put it.
I put it on my Instagram and TikTok series.
Speaker 4 (30:22):
Oh yes, she.
Speaker 5 (30:23):
Posted like a little real and it was like the
caption was like, you know, taking the moment to really
appreciate loved ones, friends and family and the people closest
to us. And it's her and they're like on a
fancy sailboat, like somewhere I forget and it's you know,
the entire al, the Schwarzenegger kids and the shrive like
(30:44):
ted Schreiverer. I don't even know the names all the
other shreiver like men. And what do I see? There
is a cozy picture on the sailboat with Sean and
Christina covied up, you know, just like with the sun
setting behind him. That's a picture that Maria took. And
so that's been something like and that like that was
after the civil trials, and they've been together ever since.
(31:04):
In fact, they moved in together. She moved him into
her home at Christina Schortzmaker's home. She moved him in
in twenty seventeen. So they have not only stayed together,
but they've fully like I've and I can't prove this,
but I've heard, you know, rumors over the last years
that they got engaged.
Speaker 4 (31:24):
And I see the.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
Worst of the defense of the attackers. Do you think
or in your tun or do you know?
Speaker 5 (31:32):
I think it's it's kind of different because I know
every detail of every punch and kicks that was thrown
and whatever and stuff. But he had the most charges
against him, they all had, all of them had GBI
felony charges along with multiple other ones and GBI felony
is great bodily injury and that's the highest charge you
can get below murder. And so they all had those charges.
(31:56):
But to be honest, like in my opinion, you know,
I know it was Alberto Driz, one of the older twins,
that knocked me out initially from behind, but the one
according to like this is awful. You know, ninety nine
percent of my injuries, all over my body and my skull,
happened after I was hit in the back of the head,
(32:17):
so that means my body was there. They could have
like people thought I was dead, and the Drizz is
like you know, they they were beating the shit out
of me while I was unconscious and and a witness,
a stranger had come out of the bar to de
escalate and his oh man, this is a crazy part.
So it was the manager of the nice guy. He
(32:39):
ran out because like you know, one of the staff
was like, oh my god, there's a fight, come outside.
And when he ran out, and this is what he
testified to and court, both criminal and sibil. He said,
I came outside and there was a woman on the
ground unconscious and there was a man sitting on top
of her like his sitting on her chest with his
(32:59):
knees on each side of her head, and his arms,
his fists were just swinging out out like left right, left, pounding, pounding,
pounding on my skull.
Speaker 4 (33:08):
Oh my god.
Speaker 5 (33:09):
And so he immediately tries to pull him off, and
then he was assaulted by Chandras for doing so, for
trying to save my life, which he probably did because
if he hadn't pulled him off, who knows what one
of those punches while I'm unpunched, you know. And so
here's the crazy one of the craziest parts of this
entire thing and my series was that was my star
(33:30):
witness to my attempted murder. He testified to that in
the twenty sixteen Manager The Manager. He testified to it
in detail, like what I just told you, but even
more detail. And he also said on the stand, you know,
he's like, I don't know these people. He's like, but
I wanted to drive all the way out here and be,
(33:50):
you know, available to testify, because it's kind of different
when you He's like, when you see, you know, a
woman being beaten by a man, especially a woman who's
I'm conscious, possibly dead, and they're still beating the shit
out of her. Right, so he was like, so he
was like, so I needed to do this because it
was that fucking like brutal. So here's the thing. When
(34:12):
the end of the criminal trial ended, suddenly the charges
that were no brainer attempted murder like if you, if you,
it's attempted murder, just like it's not even objectively attented murder.
They didn't get attempted murder charges. They actually got GBI
felony charges, which is so serious, but it's not attempted murder.
(34:34):
And we were devastated. We were like, how is that possible?
Like we had all the evidence and we caught them
lying like every it was hazy. So whatever, we'll take it.
Blah blah blah. At two fud like twenty twenty, right
right when COVID began, like February is in twenty twenty,
(34:54):
and at that point I had been investigating, I had
been doing my due diligence. I'm very aware of that eruption.
I'm very aware of the big high powered names involved.
And I got a DM from on like Instagram or
something from the manager and again never met him or anything.
And he messages me and he's like, hey, I just
saw that you're like kind of posting here and there
(35:16):
about what happened. And he's like, I small, let you
know I was there that night. I testified in your
criminal a couple of years ago. I hope I don't
trigger you, but I just wanted to see how you're
doing and if you have any questions, like, I'm more
than happy to answer them. And I was like, whoa, okay,
and I'm you know, I'm worried I'm being catfished because
I already asked some weird, weird stuff. So I was like,
you know what, yeah, and I messaged him back. I said,
(35:39):
I do want to talk to you, but not on
the phone. I want to see you in person. Like
I was kind of like, like, I mean, I want
to see you in person. I want to look in
your eyes because I'll know within ten seconds if you're
lying to me and if you're like if you've been
bought off or something. So I am like, yeah, let's
meet to Lynch. I'll come down to where you are.
And so I had I had a private investigator, security
(36:00):
guards sweep the place first before the lunch and wait,
wait several tables over and figure out what car he
was driving, Like, I wanted to be sure I was safe,
and I wanted to make sure there was no other
people that were going to be in there watching, and
I just had to be safe, so because really scary
stuff had been happening to me that at that point already.
(36:20):
So I was like, okay, like, go and meet the
manager for lunch. And within the first minute, it's immediately
a parent that he's a good guy. It's a parent
that he's telling the truth and this is not a setup.
We ended up sitting there for an hour. We didn't
even talk about the case. It was like it almost
seemed inappropriate because we both realized we were involved in
(36:40):
something pretty traumatic, and we were just literally just asking
each other about our lives, like oh, I was like, oh,
you have a wife and kids. That's great, and like
how is blah blah blah blah. The lunch ends and
we get the check and we're standing up when I'm
just like, okay, I'm going to get the balls to
say it, and I just said, okay, you know what,
I've already read your ID. I've read your testimony from
(37:02):
the preliminary trial, like I've read it three times. I
know it by heart, but could you just tell me
in your own words what you experienced that night. Here's
the thing. What I just told you about what he
witnessed is not what was in the transcript. In the transcript,
it said, according the transcript, said, I came out of
the bar and there was a person at the disadvantage
(37:25):
on the ground, and I saw a guy on top
of the person at the disadvantage and I pulled him off,
and then the person at the disadvantage was still there,
and then I got hit and then he finally ent
In the transcript, it ends with him saying, yeah, so
the guy on the ground was there, and that's what
I saw, and that's it. Well, here's the thing. At
the end of the lunch, I say, what happened? What
(37:45):
did you see? Because in my mind, he's not a
star witness, He just he saw some one of the
other guys getting beat up. He proceeds to tell me
what I initially told you guys a little while ago,
that he came out and there was a woman unconscious
of the ground and a guy was cracking her skull open.
And he was so upset by what he saw that
(38:05):
he felt the need to testify because it was so brutal,
and he's like, and I realized, you know, like I
realized it's down the road, Like now, he goes, I
realized that woman was you, and it was just I'm
glad I was able to help in any way. And
I kind of just went into shock because I wasn't.
I didn't even know how to take that information. Like,
wait a second. So I get in my car, I'm
(38:27):
driving up the four or five and all of a sudden,
I start to like almost hyperventilate, and I have to
pull over to the side of the highway and I'm like,
what did I just hear? Because he's saying that he
testified that he pulled a man off of a woman's
body who was who was swinging left right, left right
on her skull, but the transcript says it was a man.
(38:48):
Wait a second. So I immediately text him, I go
what fuck? And I tell him like, this isn't right.
That's not what the transcript says, and he's like, what
are you talking about. He's like, I even testified too.
That's part of the reason I was there was because
when a man beats a woman, it's worse than a
man beating a man, and I was like, that's not
in the transcript. So I speed home, pull out his testimony,
(39:09):
screenshot it send it to him and he immediately was like, yeah,
that's not what I said. And also he goes, also,
there's like weird adjectives here that I would never use
to describe, like I wouldn't say the person that the disadvance,
Like whoever altered the transcripts made sure all the shees
and the hers and the ann and the woman anything
anytime he said that all fifty six times he mentioned me,
(39:33):
they changed every single pronoun to to someone person, them
or they, and at the very end they change to
the last pronouns to see. So what that does is
that removes the star witness from my attempted murder off
off the page. So he yeah, so we figured that out,
and that was just one of the biggest like okay,
(39:55):
who has the power. And that's when I reached out
to the snographer and I said, yeah, somebody changed, somebody
changed the transcript, like I'm gonna need I'm going to
need the audio. And she was worried about my safety.
I'll just say that, like she wasn't the one that
was rupped. She reached out and was like, I need
you to be safe, but I also need you to know,
(40:15):
in my thirty years plus, for whatever years of doing this,
it's never been stolen or like removed. She's like, we
don't have audio. I don't know how that happened.
Speaker 2 (40:23):
Oh god, So how well did I lose you guys?
Speaker 5 (40:27):
Again?
Speaker 2 (40:28):
No you did not? Hello, No, no, no, no, Okay, it's.
Speaker 4 (40:34):
Not my phone. I swear it's been sitting here. I
haven't touched it.
Speaker 2 (40:37):
It just died. I saw it just die. There you go.
Speaker 4 (40:41):
I don't know what I think it's. I think it's Laura.
Speaker 2 (40:46):
Eric has a stupid His phone sucks.
Speaker 1 (40:50):
I'm talking to him on the phone.
Speaker 2 (40:53):
You have a lemon? You have a lemon? I do
not anyway.
Speaker 5 (40:56):
Okay, So okay, your trial.
Speaker 1 (40:58):
Okay, So the preliminary trial happened, and then the criminal
trial happened, and then what happened?
Speaker 2 (41:03):
Were they convicted and what were the charges?
Speaker 1 (41:06):
And because something major like this is a like a
historical thing happened.
Speaker 5 (41:12):
Well, so criminal happened. That that was the prelim I
mean it was it was like a week or two
long in the preliminary hearing. Whatever criminals. Yes, they were
all convicted of GBI felonies, and I think all of
them had between four and six counts each. The Drizzes
had the most. Christina Schwartzenegger's boyfriend had the most out
of anyone because he was just brutal. But yeah, so
(41:32):
they had all the charges and so when they when
they all got convicted, we were relieved. And you know,
the judge that we had had for the whole criminal thing,
he was fantastic and at one point, on his last
day that he was there, after the whole trial happened,
he actually made a statement and this is right before sentencing,
and he said, well, it's very apparent to me that
(41:53):
these defendants are an extraordinary danger to society. So we're
going to deal with that at sentence. Well the sentencing, well,
I'm going to put my phone on do not disturb, okay.
At sentencing, which happens like a month or two later,
that judge was removed and replaced with a new judge.
And the new judge was supposed to give him about
(42:14):
like everybody from the DA to whatever they were like, Yeah,
so how this works is when you have these many,
you know, serious charges, you're probably gonna get, you know,
up to seven years in prison. And so we were
like it's not enough, but okay, prison, Okay, they're going
to go from mansions to prison. That should have hurt. Okay, good. Yeah,
and the new judge, remember the first judge is like,
(42:36):
these guys are an extraordinary threat to society, Like he
was clearly going to throw them in prison for years.
And the new judge came in and said, okay, so
we're going to give everybody forty five days non consecutive.
And what that means is you can spread out your
forty five days over the course of the year, so
you can just do weekends if you want, so that
(42:57):
it doesn't age with the social life.
Speaker 2 (43:00):
Yeah, I've never heard of such a thing.
Speaker 5 (43:02):
Yes, So and on top of the forty five non
consecutive days they were allowed to, they were supposed to
go to prison to do it and instead and La
County Jail was a rough place and they didn't want
to go there, you know, so the judge allowed them.
It was their idea and she was like, yeah, that's
a great idea. They said. They were like, our our
(43:24):
clients are willing to go to a jail of their choice.
And they found a really nice private jail in Steel Beach, California,
and they are willing to do it there. And the
judge was like, great idea. Love it that Steel Beach Jail.
I looked it up. Never have they They're not allowed
if you're private jail, you're not allowed to have violent
(43:46):
criminals do like you pay pay to stay there whatever.
It's like eighty bucks a night to go there. That jail.
Private jail is supposed to be for people to have money,
but they're like, you know, like white collar crimes and
stuff like that, like didn't packs or something like. That's
that's what it is. Never it's like, I think it's
against the law. They're not allowed to have violent criminals. However,
(44:07):
No Beach Jail made an exception for you guys, and
in this jail, it's one of the nicest private jails
in the country. And they have full like flat screens
inside each cell and full size refrigerators and you can
get all your meals like brought in every day, so
you can have like matsuhisa, if you want mister Chow
you can have. So they five non consecutive and it
(44:31):
didn't interfere with their life work with their social lives,
and they had all of that, like they're like babied
and coddled. And I think in the first week or
two that they like of time that they had spent there.
They were doing weekends, except they all got kicked out
for showing up drunk. And by the way, they're on
so any probation, you can't be drinking or around alcohol
(44:51):
like you or you'll go to prison. Not for them.
They showed up wasted and were trying and aggressive, trying
to fight the staff, like the police where you that
worked there. So they kicked them out. We had to
have a hearing to address a probation violation, and we
all show up. We're excited. We're like, okay, of course
they would violate probation in the first two weeks, like
(45:12):
this is amazing. They got breath alized, like they had
alcohol and their systems. They're going to prison. We show
up to the hearings and the new judge the same.
Like the new judge she says, well, I'm not going
to add any time or anything, totally going to allow
it because nobody specifically told them, hey, don't drink when
you show up to your jail on the weekend.
Speaker 1 (45:35):
By the way, we were like, is Robert Shapiro still
representing all these guys?
Speaker 2 (45:40):
Okay?
Speaker 5 (45:41):
Yes, And at one point he took his name off
saying he didn't represent them anymore. However, throughout the years
up until like even the last year or so, another
attorney at his firm named Maria Hall took over. I
think they just wanted to take his name off it. Yeah,
so they're all still very very interconnected because they're buddies. Yeah. Oh,
(46:04):
and another little side note, which is why the first
amazing judge in my opinion, was removed, because first of all,
he was like, I'm going to throw the book at them.
But part of the reason he was going to throw
the book at them wasn't just because of the evidence
presented and the testimonies. We didn't know for oh god,
maybe two years something like that. Once I started buying
(46:27):
all the transcripts, when I started realizing everybody was lying,
I bought the transcripts and I was like, reading what
happened during the preliminary criminal thing, because when that happens,
all the victims and people testifying, nobody's allowed to be
in the courtroom when other people were testifying so that,
you know, so you don't like sway somebody else's testimony
or whatever, like you're not allowed to be in there
(46:48):
or talk about it outside of the court. So we
didn't know what had happened when we were all sitting
in the hallway, what was happening inside the courtroom. So
here's the thing. I'm reading the transcripts and realize that
all of a sudden, during one of the main like
main testimonies of the victims, the bailiff suddenly goes, uh,
your honor and he whispers something to it whatever, and
(47:12):
then the judge was like, all right, hold on, get
the witness out of here, put him in the back room.
We got to talk about something. Something just happened. So
they removed the witness, but the sonographer's still going comes
back in and the judge says, okay, so what's going on,
and the bailiff goes, yeah, so I just noticed that
the identical twins Alberto and Maurice. He's like, I just
(47:33):
noticed that they've been switching seats and switching clothes in
between witness testimonies, like one light and the crazy part was,
you know, and so he said it, and the judge
was like, wait a second, that's not cool, and Robert
Shapiro goes, oh, my goodness, like, that's so surprising. I went,
they're identical. I didn't even know that they were identical. Like,
(47:55):
he's crazy. So the judge goes, well, that's very interesting
that you should say that, Robert, because you actually asked
specifically before this began, that the Driz Twins be in
specific chairs for the entirety of the trials. And now
they're switching clothes. Like one would come in with with
like bright like electric fluorescent green reading glasses and the
(48:17):
other one would have no glasses, one would be and
they were switching them. And the crazy part was is
during the freelims, for some reason, I noticed that, you know,
I've been modeling for years, and one thing you can
spot a mile away when you've been modeling for years
is you can tell when a wardrobe styl is that Eric,
you get this, okay, So you can tell when a wardrobe,
(48:38):
when someone has been style. You can tell when a
professional has like done their outfits. And I remember the
very first day of the prelim, I'm sitting in the
hallway and the Driz Twins walk past us and I
was like, that's so weird. Like one day they would
be wearing identical outfits, like same de cut cashmere gray
(48:58):
sweater with a sport coat and the same exact blue pants,
and you know, like maybe one would be they'd be
wearing like the same brand, the same everything, but like
one would be a light gray sweater and the other
one would be a dark grape like everything was identical.
Then the next day one would be wearing you know,
a button down that's like white, and the other one
would be wearing a vest with glasses. So they'd be
(49:19):
you could tell they were being dressed to look identical
one day and then dressed to be very different, and
I was noticing it. So I started writing down their
outfits and the details every day I was there, and
I didn't know why. I felt I was like being stupid,
But it came in hand me a couple of years later,
and that's when I realized they were being styled so
that they could easily switch a jacket or the glasses
(49:40):
like whatever in between testimonies, so that you know, we'd
go in and start the day and the judge would
be like, that's Maurice, that's Alberto, and then we'd all
go outside and they go, okay, call in the first witness,
and they'd switch they'd switch peaks, and they'd switch glasses,
and it was to confuse all the witnesses. People would
be yeah, yeah, it was insanity. So it was just
(50:03):
so that happened, and the judge was like, I caught you,
and then I think to maybe one or two more
times during the prelim they had to stop it again,
and the bailiffs would be like, yeah, sorry, judge, they're
switching clothes again.
Speaker 2 (50:14):
Oh my god.
Speaker 5 (50:16):
Yeah, yeah, you like suckery from beginning to end, and
that's not even that was just the very beginning, like
the the beginning of all of the corruption, blatant everything.
Speaker 2 (50:28):
Yeah, so okay, what what was the verdict? What how
I mean, like what what?
Speaker 4 (50:33):
What? What did you?
Speaker 2 (50:34):
What were you look? What were you looking for?
Speaker 5 (50:40):
Criminal?
Speaker 2 (50:42):
Criminal?
Speaker 5 (50:43):
Well criminal, we wanted prison, you know, prison for seven
the full seven years, but instead they got forty five
non consecutive days in a private and a private like
Airbnb of their choice pretty much, so you know, we
didn't get that butt Over the next couple of years,
we had to have maybe god, maybe close to like
(51:06):
two dozen hearings to address all the probation violations, like
like just maybe like let's see when it was twenty seventeen,
so within a year after they were convicted and had
to start beginning their quote unquote jail time. So they
sorry less than a year after they got caught drinking
(51:28):
and being drunk at jail and trying to fight the cops.
There was a surprise probation search at the luxury Beverly
Hills condo that the three Drizzes were living together. That
was their probationary address for you know, for probation reasons,
and there happened to be a surprise search. And when
this surprise search happened, one of the drizz To only
(51:51):
one of the twins was home the owner of the condo.
The other two were out, and six Beverly Hills Police
Departments cops show up along with High Risk GPS unit,
which is like, that's like the they're not like in
They're not like, you know, on our case. They do
all the seleny probation searches around the city of la
and so they just popped in and during that search
(52:13):
they found cocaine, a stolen loaded chambered gun, paraphernalia like
paraphernalia and a defel bag of weed all in each
of their rooms. And first of all, if you're a
Sellen and you're on Selly probation and you have stolen
(52:33):
property like like a gun or even if it was
your own gun, you're not allowed to have a gun,
or if you have they had all of it, all
of it. They were caught with all of that, and
they were given no probation, no no jail time for
that at the hearings. The New Drugs who stayed on
(52:54):
the case for the next few years always let them
off for all of their probation, like breaking contact, Like
I have a video of my own deposition of Chandrizz
showed up to it Christina's boyfriend and he's on video,
it's in the transcript and he's and he's not allowed
to talk to me because of restrain restraining order, and
he says on video he was like, hey, I want
to talk to her, and we were like, no, you're
not allowed to do that, and he just goes, I
(53:15):
want to know if you're afraid of me, plain and simple,
and it's just like, okay, he violated cool, We got
it on camera. It's in the transcript. The sonographer got it.
I have a copy of it. No, no probation, no,
nothing allowed to do it. So this was and by
the way back to the gun cocaine bus at their house,
Chandrizz wasn't even arrested. In fact, we found out from
(53:39):
the hearing we went to like a week a q later.
We talked to the arresting officer and we said, why
the fuck would Chandraz not be arrested? Like, these are dangerous,
dangerous people they have It's not a good combination for
a violent fella to have a gun and cocaine in
their possession. This is not bode well for anybody, and.
Speaker 2 (53:58):
Right for a person who drinks in jail.
Speaker 5 (54:01):
Yeah, and the cop, the officer said, and she was
like pissed, and she goes in front of me and
all of our friends that were there at court. She said, look,
I don't know who this Sean guy knows, but he
clearly knows somebody very very powerful in the system, because
we were going to since he wasn't home. Doesn't matter
if their home or not doing something like this. If
(54:22):
that's your address and there's that stuff caught, you're getting
arrested period. That's the law. She said that she goes,
we went to go back there that night or something
to wait for him to arrest him, and instead, instead
of arresting him, her superior, she didn't name who her
superior was, so her superior told her to stand down,
(54:44):
do not arrest. You are never going to arrest that kid,
and if you do, you're going to have to do
it at his new address that he moved into the
very next day from that Beverly host condo. He goes,
his new address is in Brentwood with his girlfriend, and
you're not going to arrest him. It's not going going
to happen. Well, guess what I have it documented. He
(55:04):
said in a deposition six months later that he moved
in with his girlfriend, Christina Schwarzenegger the day after the
bus and was somehow allowed to not be arrested, and
that the connections just keep getting deeper and deeper and deeper,
and then even like during these during the probation violation
hearing for said gun and cocaine, here's the thing about this,
(55:28):
we were told about one of the twins hearings to
deal with this, like the DA emailed us was like Hey,
it's downtown where we do all the everything we've done downtown,
so you know, here are the dates we'll see events.
And it was weird because we're like, well, wait, wait,
First of all, we're already pissed that Sean wasn't even arrested,
but we're like, what about the other twins state only
(55:49):
one twin when we all live there, what's going on?
But it was like no answers. Then somebody, and I
will never say their name publicly for their own safety,
somebody that works in the system got a burner phone
and called us and said, hey, these are locations and
dates of hearings that are going to be happening over
(56:09):
the next month. You need to show up to them
and bring eyes, bring people with you. Here are the
dates and times and the department room numbers. And if
you ever tell anybody I told you this, I will
deny it because this is a burner phone. And they
hung up. So we're sitting there going, We're going, what's
the what are wait a second, why is this location
at the Airport Courthouse, which is like an hour away
(56:30):
from downtown, Like that has nothing to do with like
our district or whatever you call it. Like jurisdiction. So
we're confused. We have no idea, but we show up
to these weird court days, and when we do, we
see like Blair Burke, who at the time was representing
Harvey Weinstein for his billion rates, and we're like, what
(56:52):
is going on, Blair Burke? And when we walked into
the back of the courtroom, again not knowing why we're there,
we walk in and the other male attorney that was
standing there for the other twin, he turned around and
I said, where to God? He said, and we could
hear it from seventy feet away. He said, what the
fuck are they doing here? And we were like, quick's
(57:13):
he yelling? Why don't ref whining? What is happening? So
we just sit in the way back and we realize
we are at the secret hearing of the other twin
whose condo it was, who was arrested on the spot
and then released from jail immediately after, like a couple days.
They expedited his release, and we realized it's a new judge,
a new set of attorneys, and there's no there's no
(57:35):
DA and it has a new case number. So had
we not found out about this, we never would They
literally just said, yeah, you're the new judge. This judge
placed in in a different jurisdiction. Literally just said, yeah,
so you know you're guilty. You got caught, not going
to add any any jail time. And also and also
(57:55):
he says to Blair Bird, he says, let's have him
released from county because he's been there a couple days.
I will expedite it for you. And if you have
any issues, call my cell phone after court. That's illegal.
You're not allowed to speak the judge isn't allowed to
speak to attorneys without the other attorney's present. That's just
how it works. I have it in the transcript. He
literally was like he was like, ill expedetic, call my
cell phone if you have any issues after court. And
(58:18):
this judge in these secret illegal hearing with a new
case number and two hearings for it, like he had
to have multiple dates to deal with just Alberto for
the gun and these secret hearings, and we showed up
to every single one, but in two of those court dates.
This was very telling. This is one of the biggest
(58:39):
like bombs, like wow. As he's looking at Alberto, the
judge says, so, Alberto, can you just promise me, after
I expedite your release, can you just promise me, you
or somebody your family to just go back to your
home and get rid of any bullets or anything else
that might be there, and just get rid of it.
And then he says, he goes, he goes, you ever
(59:00):
heard the quote I'll be back? And he goes, I sure,
And he goes, you know who said it? And he's like,
I think so. And the judge goes, Arnold Schwarzenegger, the terminator,
the former governor, is the one that said that famous
quote I'll be back. And he goes, so, remember that, okay,
because probation will be back. He said that in two
(59:21):
different hearings while releasing him instead of sending him to
prison for like twenty years.
Speaker 2 (59:27):
Okay.
Speaker 5 (59:28):
It was his way of saying to him, like, wink, wink, nudge, nudge,
you better be really appreciative. What's going on?
Speaker 2 (59:36):
Oh my gosh?
Speaker 1 (59:37):
Yeah, well okay in the meantime, what's going on with you?
And what did what did were your medical bills paid for?
Speaker 2 (59:46):
At least did you get any compensation? Like what's happening?
Speaker 5 (59:52):
I still have so much like I have so many
doctors that I've seen so many I still need to
see like I have. You know, I have weird little
memory like apps and stuff, like weird stuff that happened.
So I knew from the get go nine years ago,
like something was wrong with my brain. So I made
a point to write. I write down everything, everything, and
(01:00:13):
my memory gaps are very specific. I don't want to
go into that detail because I don't want them to
know how I how it works and how I fix it.
But I just keep very detailed notes and stuff. But
you know, when twenty twenty one came around, we had
our civil trial and it was a jury the three
weeks long, and the jury unanimously awarded us the largest
(01:00:36):
PTSD settlement of all times. It was somewhere around like
eighty million dollars and they haven't paid a cent of it.
That was three years ago, and they are still. I
have the photo evidence. They are still just like flying
first class. They love posting pictures of them flying first class,
staying at the most expensive like expensive like like super
(01:00:58):
yachts where there's like stat like you know, eight bedrooms
just for stats. They're saying at the most expensive mansions
you can rent in the most beautiful like getaway vacations.
They are living in the lap of luxury, and like
nothing has been done to collect how.
Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
Come that can't be enforced, like them paying you, I
mean something you.
Speaker 5 (01:01:19):
Would think, Yeah, you would think I have been pushing
so hard, so hard, like reaching out to like everybody,
and they pretty much the way it's worked as anybody
who was actually doing their job ethically was immediately removed
from like immediately removed. That happened to two amazing judges.
That happened to In fact, there was an amazing like
(01:01:41):
hard ass, incredible, like one of the most badass women
I've ever met in my life was the judge who
did our civil trial. She was terrifying in the best way.
And she like even during the punitive portion on the
last day, she was like, she was like, yeah, so
it looks here. I'm looking at all the documents that
the defense provided, and you guys are nine of the
(01:02:01):
documents I ordered you to bring, like your government stuff,
your tax info, your assets, all that stuff. She goes,
I'm looking at it. She's like, I'm not an idiot.
She's like, in fact, last night I looked it up
on the computer or whatever. She's like and I discovered
you put multiple homes into this trust fund that was
made after the lawsuit. So we're going to cover that
in thirty days when we have the hearing, which is
(01:02:23):
to freeze and sees. That's how it works for like
they do it thirty days after the verdict. So we
were like, oh, it's on, Like like you know, they
have like tens of millions of dollars just in Blaze Pizza.
They have tons of like mansions, condos, rolls, voices. They
were driving like rolls, Royce phantoms. And guess what happened
in those thirty days. The judge was removed and I
(01:02:46):
was told that she asked to be off the case.
So of course I popped down to court and the
Federal court House and like a month later and I
was like because I knew she didn't do that. I
knew that, and I popped down in there and I
wasn't allowed to. Technically, if you're like in those courthouses,
like you can't go in unless you have a trial.
You have to be on the list for these specific courthouses.
(01:03:09):
But when I went all with security, the security remembered us,
They remembered me. It was like it was like a
big deal or case when it happened there and they
remembered us and they let me in. I was like, okay, cool,
just gonna just to do it. I ran up to
the courtroom, waited till the judge was taking a lunch
break from her current trial whatever it was, and I
(01:03:30):
ran into the courtroom. But I made it in there
probably two seconds after. She went into a chambers. But
her clerk, her longtime clerk who was at our trial,
was there. So I went up to her and I
was like, hey, I'm Anne Green, and she goes, I
remember you. And I was like, okay, great, Well, I
just want to ask, like, why did the judge have
to be removed from the case. I have it in
an email. I was told she asked to be removed
(01:03:52):
and that there's now like a six month delay to
do the freeze and seizing court date. And she looked
at me and she goes, so, I've been working for
her for years. I handle her calendar, and I handled
we handled your trial. She goes, that never happened, she
never has to be removed. I don't know what you're
talking about. That somebody lied to you. So things like that,
(01:04:14):
Oh my gosh, she was removed and we didn't get
to have that court state that was supposed to be
thirty days later. It happened I don't even know, maybe
a year.
Speaker 2 (01:04:21):
Or two later.
Speaker 5 (01:04:23):
And weird stuff with just a lot of weird stuff
that I haven't gotten into yet in my series of
the new replacement judge being unprecedentedly lenient and being like, well,
we're not going to freeze anything. We're gonna actually the
like we're not going to order them back to court
the descendants like like they're supposed to be. We're going
to put the onus on the plaintiffs to hire out
(01:04:46):
servers and like pis to chase chase them around the
world instead of just ordering them back to court. And
so like we've literally had this new judge just sit
on our hands and go, I can't do anything, which
is unprecedented.
Speaker 4 (01:04:58):
That unbelievable, and so and through I.
Speaker 5 (01:05:02):
Lose you guys again.
Speaker 2 (01:05:03):
Oh no, I'm going to it's not my fault, it
is it is your fault.
Speaker 4 (01:05:07):
It's your phone.
Speaker 2 (01:05:08):
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (01:05:09):
I just we had to wrap this up because it's
going pretty long, but I want to ask her.
Speaker 4 (01:05:13):
I've like a two more questions Oh my god, and.
Speaker 1 (01:05:16):
I know it's a freaking Eric. I was going to
ask you before his phone acts up again. If everything
you're fighting for goes your way, what will the outcome be?
Speaker 2 (01:05:28):
What do you want to happen? What do you want?
Speaker 5 (01:05:31):
Well, well, so you know it's it's the number has
ballooned because there's a ten percent added every year. It's unpaid,
so now it's up to one hundred and six millions
and about forty five million ish is owed to me.
But what I would like to happen, and that's the
reason I'm doing this series is I I want these guys.
I want these guys' faces to be household names so
(01:05:54):
that they can't do this to any more people. Because
there's been other things that have come out that I discovered,
like the violence and the predator predator ways, as he
could probably guess, didn't end with us. One of them,
one of the defendants, not the Drizzes, but the fourth
defense defendant, William Jolson, who is one of Sean Drizz's buddies,
who was extremely violent and he had we found out,
(01:06:18):
and I found out and brought it to the civil trial,
but he had a restraining order put against him by
a girlfriend like two years after the assaults, and because
in her statement and stuff, it was like he strangled me,
he took my dog, he wouldn't allow me to leave.
Like there was three different like incidents where there was
domestic violence, and so like that happened the two Drizzes,
(01:06:39):
the twins. They were found guilty a few years later
a sexual battery of an underage girl of a Blaze
Pizza employee who is sixteen. Like this they keep, yeah,
and they have they are so powerful and have powerful
ties to somebody can't say his name, managing to keep
them out of prison, and like so I want to
(01:06:59):
make sure that they don't do this ever again, and
when I get the money, because I'm not going to
stop till I get it. And because because getting the
money from them, it's not just me getting the money,
it's making them pay it. Because people like that, that's
the only thing that's going to stop their behavior is
reputation and money. That's the only thing that matters to them.
Speaker 3 (01:07:18):
And to be held accountable for the horribly horrible things.
Speaker 1 (01:07:22):
Yeah uh, and not only that, but you've had to
pay for your own medical expenses and all these transcripts
you've had to buy and all.
Speaker 2 (01:07:30):
Yeah, this has been out of your own pocket, I'm assuming.
Speaker 5 (01:07:34):
Yeah, yeah, And I've had to stop. You know, I
was successful modeling for years and stuff, and I had
to stop working. It was like up and down, like
trying to heal and you know, up and down. Sometimes
I was working afterwards, sometimes I wasn't. In the last
year and a half, I haven't been able to work,
like I've worked like two days in the entire last
year and alf because I've had I have such bad
(01:07:55):
like PTSD and social anxiety, like sometimes like I'm like
I have to go buy eggs and it'll take me
four days against the grocery store because I'm just like
panicking and stuff like. It's been really hard, so not
working and handling all this because you know the system
won't do it, and it's been it's been really rough.
(01:08:17):
But doing the series, I can see the light at
the end of the tunnel, Like I don't know how
this is going to end, but I'm I'm being approached
by you know, production companies and people that are like,
you should write a book, you should do a documentary,
and I'm like, you know what, I'm open to that now.
Speaker 1 (01:08:33):
Like, well, I want to have written everything down, you
have all the transcripts, you have, you have it written
already pretty much.
Speaker 2 (01:08:40):
I mean yeah, wow, yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:08:41):
So where can people find your series and where are
you at in the series right now?
Speaker 5 (01:08:48):
So my series is I'm it's the main one is
on TikTok and it's where most of the detail because
I have a lot of posts in between with updates
and stuff like that. It's there. But the second one
is on my Instagram. My instagram is my name A
N N E underscore underscore green g R e e
(01:09:08):
any And my TikTok is Oh so, my my TikTok
is animal Green A N N E. I am a
L g R e e any. And the reason I
chose animal Green for TikTok is because during the civil trial,
the Drizzes referred to me as an animal. Well I
was like, I was like, okay, I'm gonna show you
(01:09:29):
an animal.
Speaker 4 (01:09:31):
Show you Oh my god, I'm sorry what pigs? Oh
my god?
Speaker 2 (01:09:36):
Have you okay?
Speaker 1 (01:09:38):
Because we need to We're going pretty long for our podcast,
which usually is an hour, but this is like, this
is a good stuff. But I just like, have you
have you received any threats like anonymous threats to your
life or because of all the what you're doing right now.
Speaker 5 (01:09:55):
Yes, I one time I was out, I caught the Drizzes.
They were in bar, like in twenty nineteen on Phelony probation,
and I happened to walk into a hotel and they
were standing at the bar like buying drinks and like
whisky or bourbon. I forget, I asked the bartender m
but I saw them and I freaked out, and I
pulled out my camera and I took a video and
(01:10:17):
ran out the front door, and they knew it was me.
And a few hours later that night, somebody came to
my home. And at the time I lived, I was
renting a room out of a house on a private
gated street, and with only eight homes on the private
gated street, so you know who's in and out and stuff,
and you have to go through the gate. Somebody came
to my home a few hours after I took that
picture and took a crow bar to my car beat
(01:10:39):
the hell out of it. During the civil trial, also,
there's another incident too. I don't know if we have
enough time, but I was I was dating, so this
was the same weekend that I got the crow bar
to my car, I was dating a guy and a
few days after this whole like that went down, I
got the evidence. I was going to give it to
the DA, and the crowbars happened. Two days later, I
(01:11:01):
went to his home and we were being intimate inside
his home. But his home was like it had a
huge yard around it, and then around the yard was
a huge, like high wall for like privacy, you know,
like it was like a really nice place, and so
if you're on the street, you can't see like over
the wall. And we were having sex pretty much inside
(01:11:22):
his home. It was nighttime, and all of a sudden,
we stopped because we heard a sound and we look
out the window five feet from us, and there's a
drone like two feets beyond the window, and it's recording us.
It went over the wall of the yard recorded us.
So for the next few years I was like I
didn't terrified at less with my PTSD. I was afraid
they were going to release it, but like I was like, Okay,
(01:11:44):
we'll be outside. Is if they release it, you can
tell we're not making a sex tape. Because it threw
a closed window from a patio. But during the civil
trial a few years later, during the third week of
the trial, the last week, when it was clear we
were going to win, Burner Account sent me an email
saying Anne Green pretty much and it's very long, and
(01:12:05):
the email and its pretty much said like long, Like
the gist was, we have hacked your phone. We have
all of your contacts, and we have a video of
you having sex, and we're going to release it to
all of your contacts unless you make it the right
decision in the next like forty eight hours or something
like that, which the decision was drop the lawsuit, don't
show up for the rest of the trial. Oh my god,
(01:12:26):
I've gotten And that's one of one of a hundred instances.
Speaker 3 (01:12:31):
Oh yeah, Oh well, and then you she was also
you were.
Speaker 4 (01:12:36):
On your way to something and you took an uber.
Speaker 5 (01:12:40):
Yeah that was recently. That was like during my series.
Speaker 3 (01:12:43):
Yes, because she was talking about it and I called
her and I was like, are you okay?
Speaker 1 (01:12:48):
Yeah, so this is the most recent thing that's happened.
What happened in the uber?
Speaker 5 (01:12:53):
Yeah, I was like I was outside of just outside
of LA, and I called an uber to go into
LA for like to hour drive. And I just I
was in the card, wasn't paying attention. I was on
my phone, and about forty five minutes into the drive,
I looked up and I see the driver. He's motioning
like take your headphones out. So I took him out
(01:13:13):
and he says, just so you know, he's like, you
see that g wagon like car two car paces behind us.
He goes, that car pulled out the second I picked
you up, and it's been following us the entire way.
And we were even taking like weird routes and stuff
because it was rush hour. And he was like, that
car has been following us the whole way. In the
car it was like not pinted. It was blacked out,
like illegally blacked out windows. And I was like, oh
(01:13:35):
my god. No. First thing he said to me was
excuse me, man, do you have a stalker? And I
was like, ah, sort of, and he goes, yeah, we've
been followed for the last forty minutes. And I want
and he said, I wanted to tell you before I
drop you off somewhere. It's like from bringing you home.
And I was like, so when I looked and I
saw the Mercedes, the Mercedes took off suddenly like fat
(01:13:55):
and the guy. It was crazy, and I managed. I
didn't get a picture, but I did get the license plate.
I hadn't done any thing with that yet, but so
I got that. And then when I went to that
place that he dropped me off. About ten minutes later,
I went outside and a drone popped up and was
hovering and following me as I walked up the street.
And the second I started filming it, it took off.
And I posted that in my on my TikTok.
Speaker 2 (01:14:16):
Oh, oh my god.
Speaker 1 (01:14:18):
Yeah. Now I know this has nothing to do with
your case or it's nothing like it, but the fact
that Diddy has been taken down does that kind of
give you hope that other powerful people can be brought
down eventually.
Speaker 5 (01:14:33):
Be more proud of Cassie playing chess while they're playing
checkters for her. It was so smart and so oh,
I just got goosebump for her to file that lawsuit.
Her attorneys were amazing file the lawsuit with all of
those details, so that that's already out there. The public knows.
So even though you know he settled with her twenty
(01:14:54):
four hours later, the public knew, and that triggered a
federal investigation whether she took she got the settlement or whatever,
which she did. Proud of her and she deserved it
in every penny, but that was huge. What's happening now
is that's that does give me hope. Okay, I get
so excited to field. I've met that dirt bag before,
like say, like three times way in the past, and
(01:15:16):
he creeped me out, followed me around, Yeah, followed me around,
and it was just he was I didn't know he was,
you know, a sex trafficker allegedly writer, but I knew
he was a creep like he was. Yeah, very apparent.
Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
Okay, Well, and everybody, you can catch up on her
story and continue the story on TikTok on on Instagram.
Now TikTok your series is called Don't Say.
Speaker 5 (01:15:43):
Schwarzer called Don't Say Schwarzenegger.
Speaker 2 (01:15:45):
Okay.
Speaker 5 (01:15:45):
I've also got I created a YouTube page as well
for people that don't might not have a and it's
the same profile name as my TikTok and it's animal Green.
Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
Okay, we'll put a link on our website too, so
people can I appreciate that, Yeah, for sure, because you
deserve every penny of that and you've you know what,
you are a fighter, You're you're I don't know how
tall you are.
Speaker 2 (01:16:07):
You look like you're like sick. You're a diminutive, little
You're a low person.
Speaker 1 (01:16:12):
And I'm so proud of you for putting up such
a bold, brave, totally fight in the face of money
and power and privilege.
Speaker 2 (01:16:22):
And I don't think you're never going to give.
Speaker 4 (01:16:25):
You And that's why I fucking love you.
Speaker 2 (01:16:27):
That's why I were really really impressive.
Speaker 5 (01:16:32):
Yeah, And you know, also with this whole thing is
I with my series, I've gotten hundreds of not just comments,
but like usually in the DM where there's been so
many women that have sent me dms saying that seeing
me do this has helped them in their healing process
and like and they'll tell me details about domestic violence,
like molistation, like really really rough stuff and say, like
(01:16:55):
I remember one comment was like I can see you
healing throughout this process on film and stuff, and every
time I see you heel, I feel like a part
of me heels and I could just cry. Yeah, I'm
reading them and I've got about probably twenty is more
parts to go in my series, so we got more
juicy stuff coming out.
Speaker 2 (01:17:14):
Oh my gosh, well, thank you so much for being
on our show.
Speaker 5 (01:17:18):
Thank you you guys are so lovely.
Speaker 4 (01:17:20):
Mike, thank you and so much. I'll talk to you soon.
Speaker 5 (01:17:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:17:22):
For good luck with everything, and just keep fighting the
good fight. You're gonna get it. It's gonna work.
Speaker 5 (01:17:27):
I will thank you guys, right, all right, bye? Thanks,
that's okay, bye bye.
Speaker 4 (01:17:33):
Isn't she awesome? Is not crazy?
Speaker 2 (01:17:35):
It is just that makes me so angry.
Speaker 4 (01:17:38):
I know.
Speaker 2 (01:17:39):
I just the.
Speaker 1 (01:17:41):
Money, money talks. Money, money runs the world, money, money, money, money, money, money, money.
The more money you have, the more power you have
power money money.
Speaker 3 (01:17:48):
But you did bring up a really good point. I
think that this things are going to change. I think
finally society is getting sick of these people with.
Speaker 2 (01:18:00):
Needs taking all the side ideals.
Speaker 4 (01:18:04):
You believe those private court hearings. Geez, somebody, somebody is
in her corner rooting for her, because who would do that?
Speaker 1 (01:18:16):
I know, I know with the I know so and
now all you know all hopefully all of all of
you guys will be on her, you know, supporting her,
lifting her up because this is all yeah, anyway.
Speaker 4 (01:18:31):
She deserves every penny she.
Speaker 2 (01:18:32):
Shur does she sur does well.
Speaker 1 (01:18:35):
Thank you for hanging on for this super show, and
thank you Anne Green for joining us. And uh we'll
be back on Thursday with a whole new show and
we promise it will hopefully be funny. I'm going to
be left ryot okay with that.
Speaker 2 (01:18:54):
Love your podcast, Love your podcast.
Speaker 4 (01:18:56):
Thank you Bies, I love you.