Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vordiez a guy in the studio who spent some
time in jail. Not completely abnormal for the guests or
staff of this radio program, but these circumstances surrounding it
are very interesting and they've come up quite a bit
here in this election cycle. It goes back to January sixth,
twenty twenty one. But before that he was serving as
(00:24):
a county commissioner in New Mexico, South New Mexico along
the border with Texas in Otero County, and then we
founded the group Cowboys for Trump. Went to the Capitol
on January sixth, didn't even go into the Capitol building.
Your life has been ruined before and sense all of
(00:44):
this because of Donald J. Trump. You're known now as
the J Sixer. Your name is Coy Griffin, and I
appreciate you coming in here on news Radio eleven ten
kfab Coy, good morning.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
Good morning to Scott, and it's just want to tell
you it's an honor to be able to be here.
I appreciate the opportunity to tell my story. Big fan
in New Mexico. I've got family there, beautiful state. I
want to talk to you about some of the issues
in Otero County specifically border issues. You border Texas, but
it's a pretty thin border there between New Mexico, Texas
(01:16):
and Mexico. But you've gotten this designation of being a
J sixer, and there are a lot of people who
say that with their mouths just dripping with disdain for
you and everything you stand for. You've been called an insurrectionist. Legally,
how does that term apply, you know? Legally? Recently they
(01:38):
applied the term insurrectionists through a civil courtroom in New Mexico.
Kind of stepping you back a little bit. After January sixth,
whenever I returned back to New Mexico, where I held
an elected position, there was a great effort to recall
me from that position by my adversaries. The recall petition
(01:58):
failed miserably, Scott. They could get twenty six percent of
the people to sign it. So since they couldn't remove
me from office through a recall campaign, they used a
civil lawsuit in a civil courtroom on grounds of insurrection.
I was taken before a liberal Democrat judge on a
bench trial in New Mexico, and at the end of
this civil trial they deemed me as guilty of insurrection
(02:21):
and removed me from my commission seat. And I'm the
first elected officials since reconstruction that's been removed from office
on grounds of Section three of the fourteenth Amendment, which
is insurrection.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
As a lot of people who aren't even close to
legal experts have figured out over the years, the burden
of proof on a civil trial is whatever the judge
decides it is. It's not the same burden of proof
for a criminal trial. Sure, this has come up a
lot here in Donald Trump has been found guilty of
assaulting a woman. No, that's not true. He was found
(02:52):
civilly liable, because that's what that judge determined the burden
of proof to be. I don't like him. I feel
like he did it. He did it. He's he's got
to pay money here. They're fighting that in court. On
what grounds? Did they say that you committed an insurrection
on January sixth, twenty twenty one. You didn't even go
(03:13):
into the building. No, Now, just typical smoking mirrors, you know.
I mean, they had.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
They had a role that they needed somebody to fit,
and they fit me into that role. You know. Unfortunately,
that's what happens a lot in politics, and so you
know it was a bogus sham trial. Uh, some of
the biggest hitters, legal hitters in America, including the ACLU
Lawrence tribe, Dan Abrams, a lot of the big hitters
(03:42):
entered in and uh, yeah, just it's a total scam.
You know. Right now I'm barred from ever holding political
office again in New Mexico through a court order. So
right now I can never run for office again. And
and it steps back not only to January sixth, but
also before that in my position on election certification on
(04:04):
the local level, because as you and many of your
listeners know, our elections are first certified on the local
county level by county commissioners. So when the twenty twenty
two election came before us, as I said, as a
county commissioner, I voted no on the certification of the election.
And through a huge wrench in the system, they said, no,
(04:25):
you can't vote no, you must vote yes. You have
to certify. And mind you, this is a yes noo
board decision on the county level, on the local level,
and so I still said no, I'm not going to certify,
and I voted once again no on the certification. Well,
at that point, Scott, the Secretary of State through the
new Mexico Supreme Court threatened me with the fourth degree
(04:48):
felony and to remove me from office unless I voted
yes on a yes snow board vote, which makes you
sit back and wonder, well, if you have to vote yes,
why why don't they just take the county commissioners out
of the process. And I'll tell you the reason why.
It's about liability, because they leave that vote a yes
no vote on the local county level. They make you
(05:11):
vote yes because that way, when you do now the
county commissioners in the counties assume the liability of the election.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
I got to do my quick preamble in setting up
this question for you on the issue of the twenty
twenty election. Here are the things I know. I know
that I'm probably never going to know for sure what
happened with all of this. I'm just as interested in
seeing Densh Desuza's new movie vindicating Trump as anyone else.
But I also know that facts presented to people in
(05:43):
this day and age are only facts if they comport
with what you already believe. You can tell someone, hey,
Trump says today's Friday. If they hate Trump, it's not
it's Saturday Eve. You know that you've got to fight
about everything. Facts don't matter anymore. And I also know
for certain that if Biden had lost the twenty twenty election,
with the same questions that you and other people have
(06:04):
had regarding rules changed on that day and other shenanigans
going on, sure he and the media and everyone else
would still be leading this drum beat as we have
to know what happened in the twenty twenty election. Those
are the only things I know for sure. So setting
that up for you, Coy Griffin, you were serving in
the Otero County New Mexico County Commission, and what is
(06:25):
it about what happened on election Day twenty twenty in
your county that caused you to think, I don't know
that we can certify these results yet?
Speaker 2 (06:34):
You know, probably more my position came whenever I voted
not to certify, was more from the message I was
getting from President Trump, and not only President Trump, but
Senator Ted Cruz, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, they were all.
They all had the message that our elections were compromised,
that China specifically had stolen our elections. So whenever I
(06:57):
heard that message coming out of DC on my smaller
political level as a county commissioner, then I respected that
and I took it to heart, and that was more
probably of what directed my vote on no on the
certification was more of what I was hearing from them.
But then again Scott, at the same time, we did
our own audits inside of our county. We had Professor
(07:21):
David Clements and his wife Aaron came in. We audited
our county, We audited the vote, we canvas, we door knock,
so we found a lot of discrepancies through the audit
as well. That led to my decision of not certifying.
You know, I mean, I feel like we have to
We're gonna have to get our feet on the ground.
(07:42):
I feel like the county level is the only place
we can and if we're ever to demand any type
of voter reforms, we have to do it that way.
We have to say on the county level, we're not
going to certify unless we have paper ballots, unless we
have same day voting, unless we get rid of the tabulators,
unless this and this happens, We're not going to certify
(08:04):
the vote. And if we can have more of a
push in that realm, then maybe we can have some
movement and we can fix some things, change some things,
and bring reform.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
You and Trump and everyone else in the wake of
the twenty twenty election results were just called sore losers
like you guys lost, Get over it and move on.
Everything you're saying right now about this being a rigged
election is all lies and you guys know it. To
that to those people who feel that way, you'd say what.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
You know that it's easy to say you don't like
the result just because your horse didn't come in, And
to those people, I feel like it's very unfair for
you to say that because this isn't about who wins
the election. This is about the election process itself. We
(08:52):
have to separate the two. And I feel like county
commissioners would be much better suited right now to agree
not to certify before the election takes place, because that's
what that's always what happens. If you say I'm not
going to certify the election and after the election takes place,
(09:18):
then it's always used against you that you just don't
like the outcome. That's why you're doing it, you know.
And we have to we just have to get ahead
of them on it and say, no, the reason why
we're not doing is because we don't trust the system
right now. If we could trust and have full confidence
in the system, then it wouldn't be a concern.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
I know that. They say that. The fact that we'd
have people like you that don't have confidence in the
system is just absolutely a travesting this country. Meanwhile, a
lot of these same voices didn't and still don't believe
what happened in twenty sixteen. What I'm very interested in
about looking forward here to twenty twenty four in terms
of elections, we've swerved down this path. We'll get back
on a day. For one, in a moment, is a
(10:01):
lot of the people of your mindset that say I
have really serious questions about what happened in twenty twenty
They didn't just pound their fist or post on social
media about it. They got elected as whether it's the
local election commissioners, secretaries of state in some instances, and
you got a lot more people looking at things in
a very different position here for twenty twenty four. I'm
(10:24):
just as curious as everyone else as what's going to
happen in twenty twenty four. We're inside forty days here.
But a lot of these people who did all this
got elected. These positions have not been labeled insurrectionists, such
as yourself. I want to talk to you about what
happened on that day, January sixth, twenty twenty one, and
some of what has followed, including accusations that you threatened
to show up in DC with a gun to meet
(10:46):
President Biden. We'll address all this next. Coe Griffin is
our guest here on news Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
Scott voices news Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 1 (10:57):
Coy Griffin is in the studio. Coy was a member
of the Otero County New Mexico County Commission and then
was labeled civilly an insurrectionist because you were in Washington,
d C. January sixth, twenty twenty one, as the President
was holding a rally out there before the certification of
(11:18):
the twenty twenty election. First of all, Koy, why did
you go to Washington that day and what were you
expecting for that day?
Speaker 2 (11:26):
You know, I can honestly say that what drove me
to Washington again with just the integrity of the election
and as a county commissioner, as someone who had voted
against the certification of the twenty twenty election. I wanted
to carry that same conviction to Washington, d C. To
stand peacefully and patriotically is what I did, Scott. As
you mentioned, you know, I didn't go into the Capitol.
(11:49):
I didn't do anything on that day that I felt
like I couldn't legally and rightfully do as an American,
you know. I mean, I stood shoulder to shoulder with
other Americans who were suspect of our elections and wanted
a closer look given to it. Didn't fight with anybody,
didn't break anything leading up to it. People say that,
(12:11):
and by the way, go ahead and pull that microphone
and get it. You know, pointed a little more directly
at you here. So someone on this this show better
have a good voice in pristine sound.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
It might as well be you. I don't, but people
say that. You know, Trump colluded with the Proud Boys
and a bunch of guys, and everyone knew. Everyone knew
when they went to that Trump rally in DC that
day that stuff was going down, and you guys were
all ready to go. So what did you expect that day?
Speaker 2 (12:39):
I my expectations on January six, I was I don't
know if I really expected it, but I was hoping
that for new information, like we always are from day
to day, where we we sit on our edge of
our seat waiting to hear something new, maybe a new
plan of attack, maybe a new uh, you know, a
new play where we can stand or position. I was
(13:02):
hoping that there would be something new that I would hear,
and unfortunately there was nothing. It was just the same speech.
It was the same China stole your elections and you
know that. And so I didn't hear anything new at
the Ellipse. I wasn't even planning on going down to
the Capitol on that day, but through a set of
circumstances and some encouragement, I went down. I stood outside
(13:26):
of the Capitol again and did nothing that I have
any conviction over. But yet I was arrested on January
the seventeenth.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
On But but you know, Trump gave that speech and
the line we keep hearing about is Trump told you
and the rest of your followers his followers, go to
the Capitol and fight like him.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
Yeah, I didn't hear that on January sixth, I didn't.
You know, I've seen I've seen clips gaslight eclips here
and there of the speech, but I didn't hear that
on January sixth. That isn't what drove me to the
Capitol on January This sent someone.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
Got whipped into a frenzy through one way or another
and went to the Capitol and things got out of hand.
When did you where were you? What was your vantish point?
When did you realize like, oh this is this is
getting a little crazy here.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
You know, I was on the west side Scott up
on the terrace, so I was fairly closed. I could
see throughout the day at different points. I saw a
little skirmishes here and their breakout, but nothing that made me, uh,
nothing that was like, you know, made me scared or
worried or oh no, look at that, you know. I mean,
(14:34):
anytime you have a crowd, a massive crowd, you're going
to have little events take place. I don't care if
it's at your county fair or at a political event
or where if you have large numbers of people. And
so that's what I saw on that day. I didn't
see anything that again that I just thought, you know,
(14:55):
was was an insurrection or a mob or.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
People going into the building fighting with police officers. You know,
picking up whatever they could get their hands on, clashing
with security and everything else, and a lot of people
got into the Capitol and mostly just kind of wandered
around there. Did you think, well, I got to get
into that capitol and see what's going on.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Never, I never crossed I never. It wasn't my intention.
My intention was just to stand peacefully and patriotically with
other Americans and just protest the election, but not do
it non violently and do it, you know, with with
dignity and so. But you know, there was there was
(15:39):
a lot of different things going on on January sixth.
There was a lot of different forces at work. I
believe it's been proven, and we all know that the
government was very heavily involved, including the FBI in those
at the very top. Whenever you have those like Representative
Clay Higgins as Director Ray. If there was Trump men
(16:02):
and women dressed up as Trump supporters inside the Capitol
before the doors were breached and Director Ray couldn't answer
that question, I think that says a lot right there.
I mean, the FBI was heavily infiltrated on a lot
of the stuff going on on January sixth, And you
know where they're instigators where they're agitators. Absolutely, there were,
(16:25):
you know, And but I'm always I always hang on
the balance Scott that each person, individual person is responsible
for your own actions. And just because I was in
the same crowd with somebody who acted like an idiot
doesn't mean that I'm an idiot too, you know. So
we need to quit just labeling everybody that went to Washington,
(16:49):
d C. On January sixth as an insurrectionist. That's a
load of garbage. It's not right talking here with Koy Griffin.
Remember still at this time in twenty twenty one of
the Otaka County New Mexico County Commission, you're there on
the capitol grounds January sixth. You go back home to
New Mexico, that's right, And in a County commission meeting
(17:10):
you're accused of saying that you're going to go back
to d C in this time and this time you're
bringing a gun. That's right.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
And you went to d C and you were arrested.
You say, you said, January seventeenth, twenty twenty one, that's correct.
What happened there? You know, I went back.
Speaker 2 (17:25):
To Washington, d C. To witness the the the inauguration.
I wanted to see it with my own eyes because
I've never felt in my gut that Joe Biden as
a legally lawful president of the United States. I just
always felt like there was something was going to keep
this from happening. So I went back to watch inauguration.
(17:47):
In the County Commission meeting, before I addressed the fact
that I was going to have my firearms with me,
I addressed all of the death threats that I had
been getting, very very very dangerous death threats. I mean, yeah,
stuff that was very vile and very vulgar. And I
said that in a public meeting that I would embrace
(18:08):
my Second Amendment only to send message out to those
that were making those threats that I wasn't going to
be a victim. And so I never said that I
was taking my guns to Washington, d C. In order
to go for an uprising or whatever. The reason why
I said I was going to have my firearms was
because of the death threats that I was personally getting.
(18:31):
And I said it in a public meeting. It's all
out and open, you know. I mean, I wasn't not
like I was packing my gun my car with if
I would have had a nefarious intent with firearms, I
wouldn't have been saying it in a public meeting, you know.
I mean, I had no nefarious intent with any firearms
(18:52):
in while.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
I mean that was you were arrested in d C, Y. Yeah, firearms.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
Well I didn't. I didn't take my guns in Washington,
d C.
Speaker 1 (18:59):
No, you were arrested and spent how long in jail?
Speaker 2 (19:02):
Three weeks. I was arrested on a misdemeanor trespass charge,
and I spent three weeks in solitary confinement. The first
night trespassing how because they said that there was an
area around the capital that was restricted, that the bike
racks had already been taken down, the snow fencing had
already been taken down. There was no indicators, no markers
(19:24):
where you could tell there was a restricted area. If
I would have known that it was restricted, I would
not have walked in there. I'm a respector of the law.
I didn't go there to try to break in anything,
you know. I mean, I went there lawfully, so I
didn't know it was a restricted area. But yet I
was arrested on trespass.
Speaker 1 (19:44):
And it seems like the kind of you know, trespassing
a jaywalking charge where they cite you and say, all right,
come back here to a courtroom for your hearing. You
spent three weeks in shill on this. You hadn't been
you hadn't been convicted of anything.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
No, it was pre trial, pre trial detention. In the
first nine days. They didn't let me take a shower
for nine days. They didn't let me use the telephone
for nine days. It was twenty four hour lockdown where
I was just I was arrested and thrown in a
sail and totally blindsided too. You know. It's like typically
(20:19):
probably whenever you get arrested or interrogated by the cops,
you kind of have an idea of what you might
have done wrong. But like in this situation, I was
totally blindsided. I was like, what do you guys? What
do you trespass?
Speaker 1 (20:33):
I know you're talking about being held against your will
for a long amount of time. Can you hang out
for one more second with me right now? I'll let
you take a shower before we come back here. Okay,
all right, boy, because I want to ask you, because
a lot of these guys who have been through various
degrees of what you've been through, have gone back in court,
and they have they Some people accuse them of turning
(20:54):
on Donald Trump, like, hey, I didn't want to do anything,
but you know start he started it that kind of thing.
I want to address that here. It's just a moment.
Coy Griffin is with us. He bears the title of
insurrectionist and he's with us here on eleven ten kfab.
Scott in the studio. We've got someone who was serving
as a county commissioner in Otera County, New Mexico, and
(21:16):
I want to talk to you more about all of
that in a second. But then he found himself at
the Capitol on January sixth, went back home and said,
I'm getting death threats. I'm going to be carrying my firearm,
but I am going back to Washington, d C. I
want to see the inauguration of the president. People took
that as a threat. You were arrested. You spent three
weeks in jail. You said, nine days, no phone calls,
(21:38):
no shower, no nothing. Coy Griffin is with us here
on news radio eleven ten kfab. There are still we
hear people who haven't been able to take a shower
and make a phone call in three years. Is that true?
Speaker 2 (21:52):
Oh, I tell you what, it just it makes me
tremble Scott to think of it, you know, because I
spent three weeks in the and I honestly tell I
tell people, I don't know how I could have spent
one more day. It was so bad, Okay, I mean
the conditions you hear of the Washington d C. Goolog
from the black mold to the brown water coming out
(22:13):
of the sinks, to the racist treatment it's been. It
was hell on earth to spend that time in there.
And then to think of guys like Jake Lange, who
has been spent over eight hundred and fifty days in
solitary confinement, over three and a half years in prison,
(22:34):
been to fifteen different prisons that they've had him in.
And this is a man that still hasn't been a
trial yet. It's all on pre trial detainment. He's no
criminal history, no criminal record, you know. But the pre
trial detainment in the way that j six defendants are
being treated is probably one of the biggest disgraces we've
(22:56):
ever had in our country, in my opinion.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
I've got an email here in the zone Conker's custom
woods inbox Adam email Scott at kfab dot com and says,
this is shocking testimony from your guest. When your freedom
depends on which side of the political aisle you're on,
then you're not free. I've heard these stories, but to
hear at first hand is sobering. A lot of people
make the distinction between those who are out rampaging in
(23:19):
the streets across the country in the wake of what
happened with George Floyd, the Black Lives Matter movement, and
they say people never were even so much arrested in
many instances, certainly not dealt with the same things that
some of these guys on January sixth went through.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
But it goes back to the branding of it, you know.
I mean something that jumps out at me as we
talk about this, Scott, was that during my trial, my
attorney made made the presented the fact that during the
Kavanaugh confirmation that BLM and n TIFA broke into the Capitol,
disrupted DC and had many of the same actions that
(23:57):
those on January sixth did. And he told that to
the judge, and immediately the prosecutor responded and said, oh, yes,
your honor, but that was a peaceful protest, and we're
talking about a violent insurrection. So that's what that's how
they do it to us. It's the inception, this branding
of this armed mob, this violent insurrection, these you know,
(24:20):
and they get away with it because of that, you know.
I mean whenever I know that, I know the people
I stood by on that day. They were veterans, they
were police officers, they were soccer moms, they were just
average old, run of the meal Americans that wanted to
finally one day put stand up and and and let
(24:42):
and be a part of a protests. Oughts, all we
see is protests. So we thought, well, let's us protest
the elections because we're concerned. And then when we do that,
then all of a sudden, we're labeled insurrectionists and thrown
in jail, and everybody just turns a blind eye to us.
And it's very sad.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
Some people asking, since you've been labeled an insurrectionist in
a civil court, what can you do legally about that, because,
as we mentioned earlier, the burden to prove in civil
court is nothing that's correct.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
And you know, and in the legal world there's always avenues.
You know, I had a petition filed before the United
States Supreme Court that made it all the way to
the very end, and then the Supreme Court kicked it.
So the precedence is still standing in New Mexico. But
I'm a fighter and we're going to continue to fight
in the courts and one day we'll get it rectified.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
You guys have been labeled insurrectionists, domestic terrorists, maga extremists, racist, homophobes, bigots.
Let me know if I'm leaving anything out here than
you a threat to democracy and all the rest of it.
So here we are in another election cycle. Yes, what
are your thoughts? First on this country, where we are,
(25:52):
where we're heading. Ever thought that I have is a
thought of concern. I'm concerned on every front right now.
If we had a legitimate election process and we had
the right way to count votes, legal votes, then I
wouldn't be near as concerned, but as rigged as everything
is right now, and I just you know, I'm I'm
(26:17):
very concerned.
Speaker 2 (26:18):
I don't know what's going to happen. I pray for
the best, you know, but I think that our republic,
I think there's only one way out. To be honest
with you, I shouldn't say I don't know what. The
one way out I believe scott is a local level.
I think if our local county sheriffs, our county commissioners
(26:38):
will stand up and honor their oath. Their oath is
to God, not to man. You're not You didn't swear
an oath to serve the government. You swore an oath
before God and and and through that to serve the people.
And I think if our county sheriffs will step into
a place where they actually have a backbone instead of
just saying they have one, if they'll actually get their
(27:00):
boots on the ground and do their job, and if
they suspect fraud and cheating in our elections to do
the right investigations. I think if our county commissioners will
vote no on the certification unless security parameters are put
in place to secure the vote. If we can do
that on the local county level, then our republic is
going to be breathed back to life. And I believe
(27:23):
that we will once again have representation to the least
of the people. But until our local officials honor their
oath and get on their feet, we're going to have
this thing called democracy that's going to continue to oppress us.
The democracy, in my opinion, is just another name for
the regime that they have in place in Washington, d C.
(27:43):
I'm sorry. I mean we're yes, we're a democracy, but
first we're a republic. We're a republic that structured through
the democrat process. But at the end of the day,
we're not a democracy or republic. We have to come
back to the place where our republic lives, inside of
our local offices. And I think that's where we get
(28:04):
through it. If we keep looking at Washington, DC and
thinking that our help is going to come from a
senator or congressman or the President of the United States,
I think all those efforts are going to be feudal
and in vain. Our real hope is in the office
of the county sheriff. And if there's any defendants out
or any January six people out there that we're in
DC on January sixth that are concerned about the federal
(28:26):
government coming after you, I would tell you to contact
your county sheriff right now and dial them in because
the county there's not any warrants that are issued inside
of your county unless they go through the county sheriff's department.
Get a hold of your county sheriff and find protection
in your local sheriff.
Speaker 1 (28:43):
One of the big issues in this election is border security.
Here there Intero County, New Mexico. That's a south central
southeast New Mexico. You border Texas, but it's that sliver
of Texas that New Mexico really should just annex. Texas
has no business lighting under New Mexico like that. That's
right thin border between them at you guys and Mexico.
(29:06):
At that point, what does border security look like in
your home area of Otero County, New Mexico.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
As the border goes, so do our communities go. You know,
as I said, as a county commission and I watched
the reports of sheriffs would bring on narcotic seizures and
crimes and property crimes and stuff. As the border escalates,
all of those areas escalate as well. So where I
sit in New Mexico, as you mentioned, I'm seventy five
(29:32):
miles as the crow flies, so I'm right on the
border pretty much. And you know, the fentanyl is out
of control right now.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
You know.
Speaker 2 (29:45):
Property crimes are out of control, you know, and we're
not getting the cream of the crop across the border.
I'm sorry to say it. You know, we're getting a
lot of the gutter trash, a lot of the criminals,
a lot of the rapists and murders and insane asylums
and all those things that Trump has been telling us
over and over repeatedly. There's a reason why you're saying that.
It's because that's what's coming across our border right now.
(30:07):
And you know, just because it comes in my backyard
doesn't mean that it's not going to be in your backyard.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
So it's been noted every town's of border times now.
Anyone eating your cats and dogs down there, not you know,
not that I've seen when you're better off than some communities.
Last question for you years we're talking just another couple
of minutes with Coy, Griffin Coy. A lot of this
all centers around a guy named Donald J. Trump. And
there are several like yourselves who were labeled insurrectionists in
(30:36):
some cases through courts. Sure getting this designation after what
happened on January sixth, twenty twenty one, who stood there
in court crying and said, I didn't want to do anything,
but Trump made me. He's a cult of personality. I
was wrong to follow him. What are your thoughts on
Donald Trump?
Speaker 2 (30:54):
I think Donald Trump is the greatest president we've ever
had in our country. I believe that he's here just
like us all. Could he have made mistakes and possibly
made some mistakes, of course we all do. You know,
we got to give each other grace. But the beauty
of Donald Trumps he wants to put the American people
and American children first. And that's where my loyalty and
(31:16):
allegiance comes to him, is putting our country first. Those
that try to say, oh, Trump made me there, you
know again, there's many people that had nefarious intent on
January sixth, and everybody from January sixth it was wearing
a Trump hat. Wasn't necessarily a Trump supporter. People need
(31:36):
to get that through their heads. A lot of Antifa,
a lot of the left were dressed up in Trump
gear on January sixth, and so those same people that
now have their tail caught in the door if you will,
of course they're going to roll and say Trump is
the bad guy. Trump's the one that made me do it.
But all Trump did was what he's always done, and
(31:58):
that's encouraged Americans just on their own two feet, stand
up for their rights. Believe in your country, Believe in
your fellow man, believe in the history of your country,
and fight, fight, fight till we get through this to
the end. Because this is a battle. We can't lose.
We can't if we lose. If we lose in the
(32:22):
coming future, we're going to lose our country, and our
country is going to come turn into a blue cesspool
that nobody's going to want to live in.
Speaker 1 (32:30):
On this radio program or just in my job responsibilities,
I've talked to everyone from President Trump to President Obama
to weird Al Yankovic. Sure, this is the first time
I've ever interviewed an insurrectionist.
Speaker 2 (32:43):
Well, I'm the only one in the country apparently, so yeah, yeah,
there are several who beg to differ and they've got
blue dots signs.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
Maybe you saw those as you drove through Omaha. I'll
let you continue on to New Mexico. Thanks for stopping in,
Quot appreciate you, Scott, Thank you for the opportunity. Coy
Griffin here on news Radio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 3 (33:05):
Scott Vories NewsRadio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
We just talked with someone who was named in court
an insurrectionist civil court for his role in January sixth,
where he didn't even go into the Capitol building. Interesting
conversation with Coy Griffin from New Mexico over this past
hour of the program, and the response has been everything
from let's see here. Corley says that man is a hero,
(33:32):
Paul says, great interview. Everyone needs to hear this because
the mainstream media won't talk about it. And then I
got an email from a guy who emails me a lot,
never signs the email and says that I and this
radio station are irresponsible for giving this man a platform.
If you heard some of it, if you missed all
of it, and you want to hear it, if you dare,
(33:52):
it'll be posted later this morning on the Vintage Vorheas
podcast link Scott Vorheas page at kfab dot com.
Speaker 3 (34:01):
Scott Boys Mornings nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven
ten Kfab