Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vorge h welcome onto the program. Someone we've been
describing as an expert when it comes to military law
enforcement operations. Trevor Thrasher is here back on eleven ten
KFA being It's great to have you here.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Thanks for having me on again. It's been a while.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Former Green Beret.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
I wear a lot of hats, Green Beret, law enforcement,
counter terrorism operative. I've done a lot of work overseas. Domestically,
I've dealt with pretty much all the gangs you could
think of, from Marris, Albatrujia, MS thirteen, Crips, bloods, you
name it, al Kaeda, Taliban, isis Isol all right.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
That's all of them. That is the resume that we've
been looking for. You're hired.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
I've made a lot of friends.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
Yeah, I'm sure. First question, does Omaha have a problem
with illegal murderous gang members hiding out in our community?
Speaker 2 (00:48):
Well, like any big city in America, the answer is yes,
and it's nothing new. Even back when I was an
Omaha police officer, we dealt with MS thirteen, Latin Kings, Different,
Hispanic and another gangs and there there were plenty of
them that were here illegally, and back then it was
a little easier to deal with ice. If you had
(01:09):
one of these bad guys captured, they would sweep them
up pretty quickly. So it's always it's always been an
issue there. It's a lot easier for them to hide
in plain sight now because of the open border policies
the last couple of years. So certainly they're going to
take advantage of that, and they're going to use that
to build their networks and move their people around a
lot more easily.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
Some people have said, like, how would Omaha not know
that we've got very dangerous criminal illegal immigrants living right
under our noses here in our community.
Speaker 2 (01:38):
Well, I think I think we know. It's just a
matter of pinning them down and bringing them to justice.
So it's like I said, the expectation is always that
they have been there. I know there's some officers I
worked with that even wrote were books about cartel killings
in Omaha. So it has happened. It's nothing new here.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Tell me about MS thirteen.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
Well, I don't know a lot about the gang specifically.
I'll tell you one of my old partners was an
expert and was actually invited by the FBI to speak
about it. Back in the late nineties. L Salvador obviously
is known for having extreme gang violence and up until
very recently it was you know, extremely dangerous, high homicide rate.
(02:19):
Their prisons are some of the worst in the world,
and they're some really bad actors, so they will do
things here that are pretty imhorrant. This is the schetties
and other things like that.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
El Salvador went through a civil war forty fifty years
ago and little boys with the kids as young as
ten to eleven years old were given rifles, given machine
guns in some cases, and this is how they were raised.
And war and criminal enterprise as all some of these
guys have known, and in order to take care of
(02:52):
their turf, take care of their family, they set up
gang divisions and they generally deal with methamphetamine and other
drug trade and trafficking. And you can't just sell it
to each other in El Salvador all the time. You've
got to come to where apparently people are doing meth.
Do we have a meth problem here and along I
eighty corridor and specifically Omaha, Nebraska.
Speaker 2 (03:12):
Well, it's been interesting and my law enforcement experience, meth
has gone from kind of a local and international problem
to mostly international problem. I trained law enforcement over the
country and they are extremely surprised if they actually arrest
somebody who's manufacturing get here. So it's all, you know,
basically coming from south of the border, the myth nowadays
(03:34):
in a more powerful form of course.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
All Right, you mentioned it used to be a little
easier for ICE to work with local law enforcement to
you know, come in here and get these guys. Do
you have any reason to think that perhaps that's changed.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Well, I don't think locally we've had that much of
an issue with it, but obviously nationally the sanctuary city
issue is going to create some problems of releasing these
people back into the streets when they should be confined
and held for ICE. But locally, I know for a
fact that at least, you know, the Douglas County Sheriff
is on top of it. So I've talked to him personally,
(04:07):
and he basically said, although they generally stay out of
ICE operations, sometimes there's some crossover, so if they're really
bad actors in the community, they will work with ICE
to help remove them. And we, you know, we kind
of leveraged similar to what we did in Afghanistan. We
had groups of Special Forces teams that were working with
the DEA over there, and so they had kind of
separate intel and a separate mission. But if we detected
(04:31):
a really bad actor and we wanted to conduct operations
get that actor, we would use their assets under the
guise of drug control. I know it's ridiculous when we
thought it was ridiculous at the time too, trying to
stop the you know, the opium production in Afghanistan. But
if we could use their assets and remove the same
bad guy, we would remove the same bad guy. So
it's kind of similar to that.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Douglas County Sheriff Aaron Hanson, I'll be sitting in here
tomorrow morning at this time, just after ten o'clock to
talk more about this operation and similar operations here in
our community. This was apparently a tip from someone. I
don't know how you would notice, like, hey, I think
that guy is on the most wanted list in El Salvador,
(05:13):
unless you have some sort of knowledge of such things,
or you're just calling the police all the time, going
I think I've got these Latino drug members. Let me
next to me, and it's a couple of kids playing outside.
But what should people look out for here in Omaha,
I wouldn't know if I was sitting next to a
criminal war lord at any restaurant here in town.
Speaker 2 (05:36):
Probably well, the chance would be really small that you
would pick up on the fact that they're one of
the most wanted, see their photo and remember it. So
typically how these things arise is either someone's disgruntled within
their organization. Sometimes it's a scorned girlfriend. Again, there was
a case here in Omaha that I personally know the
officer that worked at and it was a wife of
(05:59):
a basically have a drug dealer involved in cross border
drug operations and he went to prison, and she was
so upset that he took the fall for it that
she basically his wife being she basically went around worked
as an asset for the police and got a lot
of people put in prison for it as as an
act of revenge. That or they've arrested someone in their leveraging.
(06:20):
I mean, that's all kind of common sense, But you
the average person, you're not going to pick up in
someone whether they're a drug kingpin or not.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Do I need to feel onsafe as I move around Omaha?
Speaker 2 (06:30):
I don't think so Omaha's relatively safe. There are certain places,
times and activities where she'd be concerned, especially right now,
you know with these attacks on.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
Yeah, but I do all those things at those hours
in those places. Should I be concerned?
Speaker 2 (06:43):
Well? No, So you know if something I talk about
frequently is what I call the hybrid threat and environment.
So in the old days, you know when I said
cop coming up in the nineties, if you didn't want
to get yourself hurt pretty much, don't involve yourself in
a gang, don't sell crack, don't go to bad parts
of talent late at night, and your chance of being
attacked or.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
The weekend starts tomorrow, you're going to take away my
entire itinerary.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
Well, I'm sure there's some fun places you can still visit,
but they're fun usually because there's a little bit of
risk involved. But today it's you know, the environment we're in,
like anybody could be attacked. I mean, crazy people are
throwing kids in front of subway trains. Now we have
ideologically based violence pretty much everywhere. It's been normalized through
the media. We have people that are extremely mentally unhealthy
(07:25):
in large numbers. You know, twenty percent of all of
all people are pretty much experienced some type of mental
health crisis nowadays, and I read a stat that forty
percent of all teenage girls consider suicide and break down
to the family social norms. And then social media and
the media are just accelerating this. There's just adding fuel
on the fire. And there's these little niche spots that
(07:46):
people can go on the Internet and find like minded
individual individuals who just build the idea of these crazy,
random or ideologically based attacks, and anybody can be victim
of that.
Speaker 1 (07:57):
Trevor Thrasher is with us, your former law enforcement, former
military green beret trains law enforcement, and I want to
talk with Trevor here in just a moment about something
that you just said there when you were talking about
some of the horrible things we're seeing in our society today,
and that is, you know, ideological based violence. We have
(08:17):
a lot of targets against law enforcement and specifically ice.
Some of these guys were ambushed in Texas just the
other day, and I'm going to talk about that next.
As members of the United States Senate are trying to
take masks off these guys so people know exactly who
they are and where they live and where their families live.
We'll talk more about this with Trevor Thrasher. Next Scott
(08:41):
our guest in the studio, former military, former law enforcement,
one who trains law enforcement, one who is a public
safety expert. Trevor Thrasher with us here, and I want
to read a couple of quotes here as we talk about,
as you mentioned a moment ago, Trevor, ideological violence and
threats in our community. We had the rather famous comment
(09:03):
across the country by the governor of Minnesota, Tim Walls,
former Nebraskan, says, Donald Trump's modern day gestapo is scooping
folks up off the street in unmarked vans, wearing masks,
being shipped off to foreign torture dungeons. In the wake
of that, there are members of the United States Senate
that want to take masks off of these ice agents.
(09:27):
As these guys are doing their law enforcement activities, many
of them wear masks. What reason would they do that?
Speaker 2 (09:35):
Well, the reason they're wearing mask is simply because dosing
is a very difficult modern day problem. That's something that
has occurred in the past. Again, I had a partner
whose family is called late at night, threatened by gang
members that he had arrested. They'd found his phone number
and put them in a great deal of fear. But
this is one Tim, This is very irresponsible for Tim
Wilson and honestly a lot of other Democrats to use
(09:57):
this comparison, and it's it's very problematic. But the face
masks are on specifically because the actions of people like
Tim Wallace, who will also probably complain about the face
mask but then call these people, these ICE enforcement agents,
basically calling them Nazis.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
Well, yeah, President Trump has pointed out that they don't
seem to have any problem with Some of the protesters
in the streets, like Antifa, wear masks to protect their identities,
and there's the political COVID message about everyone needs to
wear a mask all the time. But somehow when members
of ICE wear a mask, they don't like them. Another
reason is these guys get spin on a lot, don't they.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Yeah, you see all sorts of attacks on them, you know,
spit fists, bricks, Now we have you know, gunfire from
semi automatic weapons.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
Well, a mask doesn't protect against all that, but I'm
sure be happy to wear one of the guns someone's
trying to spit in my face.
Speaker 2 (10:46):
Yeah. The problem is that the power again of the
Internet doxing isn't what it used to be. Or you know,
if somebody get lucky enough to find her phone number
or go through their trouble to look up your your address,
I mean doxing. Now you can get the information about
an officer. You can do facial recogniz and you can
find out every location that officer is and basically almost
track them in real time. Yeah, and his family and
(11:06):
his family and that's kids. And that's why I think
there needs to be a balance here. I think ICE
could do a better job of making their officers more identifiable.
So they're not required to have any type of agent
number on them unless they're involved in some type of
riot control duty and there's some basically a federal law
that deals with that, but in their day to day operations,
they're not required to do that. And also there's a
(11:26):
wide variety of uniforms being used right now, and that's
because there's a wide variety of agents involvements. Every federal
agency is now sworn in I believe it's called Title eight,
so they're basically given ICE arrest authority, and so there's
a wide variety of it has day called uniforms because
they're not really uniforms. They can wear whatever they want,
but you'll see different patches, different badges, and that's because
they come from different units. But without having an identifiable
(11:48):
number on them, it does cost some concern when they
see the face mask and especially when they don't have
a clear uniform. So I understand when citizens are concerned
about it. I don't think ICE is managing it well.
I think the ask are a necessary thing right now.
I think we need to balance that out with some
type of identifiable number and also some type of legislation
to make Docksing that leads to purposely leads to fear,
(12:11):
especially for family members, should be a felony.
Speaker 1 (12:13):
Yeah, well, let's be honest here. I can make a
badge with an identifiable number on it. It's all fake.
I cannot wear a mask and people can see my face.
If I'm up to no good, I can say I'm
with ICE or Homeland Security Investigations or Department of Homeland
Security or local law enforcement, and I can go and
and terrorize people and do whatever I want. We're talking
(12:35):
about members of law enforcement in this country who are
protecting the law of the land and getting out guys
like the two guys arrested just over twenty four hours
ago here in Omaha on the most wanted list from
L Salvador MS thirteen gang members. And these guys are
getting targeted, not just with getting mocked online. These guys
(12:57):
are getting shot at. These guys are getting threatened. These
guys are getting followed around. People are shooting the bullets
fireworks at some of these detention centers. In Texas, the
Department of Homeland Security says attacks on ICE agents are
up nearly seven hundred percent here in the last few weeks.
What are these guys supposed to do? And who's going
to want to be the next crop of immigration customs enforcement?
Speaker 2 (13:21):
Yeah, ambushes as a whole, and unprovoked attacks against officers
constantly kind of risen since the nineteen eighties. And again
part of that ideological violence is turning it against law enforcement.
And when you have irresponsible politician saying things like they're
the Gestapo and somehow making the connection that you know,
going through some type of deportation activity for somebody who
(13:44):
is here illegally is the equivalent of what the Nazis
did to the Jews in World War Two. Is just
shameful and honestly it minimizes what the Nazis did, which
to me seems like something a Nazi supporter would do.
So I think it's completely irresponsible, and I think it's
sign of somebody who's completely irrational if they try to
make this comparison. Those people should not be in charge
(14:04):
of anything. And you can ask a lot of the
people in the Jewish community about how they feel about
these comparisons being made all the time. And what happens
when you call somebody a Nazi or Gestapo is you
dehumanize them. You no longer paint them as human. You
make them much easier to attack. So that enables these
people in fringe groups who are mentally unstable, often broken homes,
they get their little niche social media groups to come
(14:26):
together and more easily dehumanize them, target them for violence,
and then attack them. So it just encourages it.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
Here's the comment on x slash Twitter from an Omaha
State Senator Megan Hunt. Her district is in central Omaha
and she recently posted blank Ice. This is also something
you see painted on the grain silos going into downtown.
Blank Ice and anyone who helps them always be ready
to stand between an Ice Gestapo thug and their target.
(14:56):
Now I've seen some of this, we'll see some of
the video for people who decide to be citizen journalists
or they just want to get in the way of
law enforcement as they're doing their job, Ice cops, whomever.
If someone takes her word and says be ready to
stand between an ice gestapo thug and their target, what
(15:17):
might happen to them?
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Well, that's the kind of rhetoric that will easily lead
to the violence we just saw in Texas. In fact,
they spray painted those border agents' cars with f ice
and words like that in order to draw them out
and then shoot them and engage them in an ambush.
So a rhetoric like hers, honestly is directly responsible. And
I want to know, is she condemning this current violence
against border patrol agents where they were attacked in ambushes
(15:41):
and active threat situations. I want to hear the condemnation
from them, the words that they say, and I want
to hear them turn around and condemn these acts of
violence because they were their first condemn them if they
proceeded as being on the other side. Let's be fair here.
Let's get politicians who were relatively fair mentally stable and
don't say such irresponsible thing.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
I did check her Twitter today and there's a picture
of a sandwich on there. There's something about your favorite sandwich.
Speaker 2 (16:03):
Well, that's probably more important to her.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Yeah, nothing on there, but for her to tell just
regular citizens when law enforcement are out there doing their
job and apprehending a suspect, to physically stand between law
enforcement and a criminal that they're bringing into custody. That's
going to get you arrested or worse.
Speaker 2 (16:22):
Yeah, a lot of people have the misconception that these
ICE agents and other people working with them can't make arrest.
They're federal officers. They can make arrest for federal crimes
that occur in their presence, and a lot of those
crimes are felony. So interfering with an arrest abstracting, you know,
there's a million things that they could be charged with.
So she's basically just asking to get people arrested by
the Feds, which is a really bad idea.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
Can you hang out for a few more minutes here,
I've got a question for you on that line about
how law enforcement and ICE would be trained to deal
with those who are trying to provoke them into doing
something worse. I'm only for a few more minutes.
Speaker 2 (16:57):
I'm only one third through my cup of coffee.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
All right, hang out here. Trevor Thrasher is with us here,
former military law enforcement, also a prolific author online. Where
can we find your stuff, Trevor.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
If you go to substack, I have a newsletter called
the Threatproof Newsletter, and I've actually covered some of the things.
We've talked about, the ideological violence. I've talked about the
gunman that just recently assassinated politicians and disguised as a
police officer. And I discussed these attacks on ice and
just other ways that people can keep themselves safe in
this hybrid threat environment.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
So look up Trevor Thrasher substack, or go right to
substack dot com and search Threatproof Newsletter threat Proof Newsletter.
We'll talk more with Trevor next.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
Scott Fores NewsRadio eleven ten k FA.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
He is former military, former law enforcement, current good dude
and one who trains law enforcement. Trevor Thrasher with me,
Scott vorhees here on news radio eleven ten KFAV. Trevor,
we were just talking about how ravokaateurs many who think
that they're doing the right thing. I mentioned the the
(18:06):
comment there from a Nebraska State Senator, Megan Hunt of Omaha,
who encourages people to get between the Ice Gestapo and
their targets. If you physically get between law enforcement, whether
it's Ice, Omaha police, whomever, while they're doing their job,
you're going to get yourself arrested or worse. But these
(18:29):
guys always go up there, They've got their video camera
phones out there with their smartphones, and they're getting them
right in the law enforcement or ice face and all
that and calling them names and everything. They're trying to
provoke these members of law enforcement into doing something wrong, illegal,
or something that looks rather rough, so we can get
(18:50):
some of these guys fired. Law enforcement knows that this
is what they're trying to be provoked into doing. But man,
when you're you've got dangerous guy you're trying to take
into custody, You've got this screaming little person over here,
you know, calling your names with a phone in your face,
how do you keep calm there? What is that training like?
Speaker 2 (19:12):
Well, the only really training that can get you to
get through that without losing your cool is to be
basically immersed in kind of that level of stress or
a similar situation. It's these situations are growing and they're
they're definitely an unfortunate byproduct of all this ideology that's
going on, this anti police culture. And you have to
respect someone's right to protest. Of course, peacefully protest is
(19:35):
that's a right found of the constitution. You have to
respect their right to film. But it's double edge here
is that they also have to respect the fact that
law enforcement is doing a very dangerous job and they
have to give them a reasonable amount of space and
distance in order to do that. Law enforcement is allowed
to use reasonable force to secure a scene. So if
they get too close, all that does is adds and
(19:56):
purposely add stress to and antagonize the officers. It is
going to stress them out more. No matter who they are,
there's no such officer as someone who's been trained to
never be emotional. These are human beings trying to do
a very difficult job, and if you continuously antagonize them,
you're going to add to their stress level, which is
going to make them make worse decisions. So if you're
really trying to look out for the person they're arresting,
you're actually creating a more stressful environment where the officers
(20:20):
may use force that is ultimately ruled to be unnecessary,
and that's because you've driven it. So I kind of
see this antagonism like I do self defense. You can't
antagonize someone into attacking you and then claim self defense.
And these people aren't antagonizing officers trying to trip them
up emotionally, get them to react and then claiming that
their civil rights are violated when that's their sole goal.
(20:42):
So again, I think there should be some type of
measure in this. Now, what they can do themselves is
that they really have to have a division of tasks,
or they have to have people that are detaining the person,
and they have to have a group of people who
are really more focused on the outside to deal with
these bystanders and these people that are interfering. So they've
got to take some active measures to deal with that.
(21:03):
But you can't. You can only take so much as
a human, and nobody can expect them to not be emotional,
Like how much you pay someone to train the emotions
out of them, like it's a switch. There's no such
amount of money that you could pay anybody.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
During yesterday's arrest and in the wake of that, ICE
Acting Director Todd Lyons specifically warned the public not to
get involved during arrest. He said, when ICE agents move
into make an arrest, it is extremely important that the
public not interfere. The misinformation and sometimes blatant lies being
spread around the country could result in someone stepping into
(21:36):
a federal operation and suddenly find themselves face to face
with a killer who has nothing to lose. Now, this
guy arrested here in Omaha. He's accused of five murders
and his native l Salvador. He's accused of being a
kingpin with an MS thirteen gang and another MS thirteen
gang member with him. Did you see the video of
them taking him into custody, ordering him to step out
(21:59):
of the vehicle and put his hands up and back
up towards the officer so they could put the cups
on him. It was it was. I mean, it didn't
look like a killer who had nothing to lose. Are
you a little surprised at how docile this guy seemed
to be for as dangerous as they claim that he is.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
Well, there was. I didn't I didn't see the arrest,
so I really can't comment on that. But it's not
surprising when they know kind of when they're captured and
any response is probably only going to make things much
worse for them. So sometimes they are rational about it.
They weigh the pros and cons of resisting, and they
decide to come out peacefully and just you know, you know,
(22:40):
locally in Washington County had a similar event. They were
getting a guy out for basically a warrant, felony warrant,
and he chose to shoot it out with the officers.
So you just you just never know. And the issue
now is, you know, maybe somebody sees a hispanic being
pulled out of a car and like, oh, those are
ice agents. My local representative told me to get in
between them, and they're going to jump in the middle
of the felony stop a very dangerous person, and end
(23:01):
up in the middle of that gunfire. So again, this
is another second third order effect of these irresponsible words
by indoctrinated politicians who are just building this ideology of
hate against the police.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
I was a little surprised if we have someone who
has nothing to lose, he's killed before, he'll kill again,
this kind of a guy, you know, for him to
just get out of the vehicle he tried to plete
his case and stay in the vehicle. They said no,
out of the vehicle and walk back towards it with
your arms up, and then they put the kuffs on him.
He either thought like he's untouchable or he's just gotten
(23:39):
used to being here in Omaha, which begs the question
when you've got people in this country who have gang
ties from you know, whether it's Mexico or Central America,
South America. In some instances you got people here with
gang ties. Are they here in Omaha to continue gang
activities or are they looking to just lay low and
(24:00):
stay way off the radar and not do anything wrong.
They don't even want to weed in their yard or
a piece of mulch out of place. They just want
to live quietly and secretly up here in Omaha and
they don't want to cause any problems. Which do you
think is going on?
Speaker 2 (24:13):
Well, the smart professionals will try to draw as little
attention to themselves as possible, and they can coordinate a
lot of their drug activities via the Internet, via phone,
via courier. There's a lot of ways that they can do.
I mean they even do it from prison sometimes, so
they don't need to actively get their hands involved in
things like that, and that's what the smarter ones will do.
(24:33):
I just want to give a shout out. It was
my former offstar work with Brian Bogenoff wrote a book
called Three Bodies Burning the Anato. We have an investigation
to murder money in Mexican marijuana and he wrote a
book about basically these kind of events. And this occurred
quite a bit ago in Omaha. So again it's nothing new.
Speaker 1 (24:50):
People want to read more from you. Once again, where
can they find you?
Speaker 2 (24:53):
Substack threat Proof Newsletter.
Speaker 1 (24:55):
Threat Proof Newsletter. Trevor Thrasher not affiliated with Thrasher Phone Repair,
a friend of the program. As are you. Trevor, thank
you so much for coming back in here today and
talking about some of these issues. As I mentioned earlier,
Douglas County Sheriff Aaron Hanson will be sitting here tomorrow
morning just after ten o'clock. Trevor, thank you very much
for lending your valuable perspective to this story that has
(25:17):
everyone talking here in Omaha to day. Thanks a lot
for coming in.
Speaker 2 (25:21):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
We will wrap up this show next.
Speaker 3 (25:23):
Scott Boyes News Radio of Levinson KFAB.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
We talked about the big issues happening here in our community,
around the world, some fun and dumb stuff as well,
And I hope that you get what you expect to
get out of this radio station. Speaking sincerely here, I
mean everything I've seen on social media, people I've talked to,
emails from Kfabean Nation throughout the day has been related
(25:53):
to the arrest of a member of the L Salvador
Most Wanted List as someone described as an MS the team,
which is a terrorist designate gang organization out of Central America,
and he and another MS thirteen member were arrested in
Omaha yesterday. Two weeks ago, we had a Venezuelan gang
(26:13):
member also in the country illegally arrested here. Now this
news came out yesterday. We have statements from members of Congress,
the governor, both Nebraska Senators have yet to hear from
Mayor John Ewing on that. But I don't normally do
this or look to do this. Maybe I'm wrong, but
(26:35):
I look at the Omaha World Herald front page of
the Omaha World Herald. Nebraska officials are split over bill's effects.
This is the big beautiful bill and taking medicaid away
from people. Here's a couple of guys that the Jocelyn
says Creton and the Joslin team up to document eighteen
thirties expedition. That's the big story on the World Herald
(26:58):
front page, and then below the full Trump plans fifty
percent tariffs on Brazil. So nothing on the front page
of the Omaha World Herald about the arrest of these guys.
Nothing telling you to check the Midland section for more.
Because the Midland section teas says Heartland Pride will host
parade this weekend after year of LGBTQ plus setback. So
(27:23):
I go to the Midland section and I see it
finally here on page two, and it says Ice says
it arrested an MS thirteen kingpin in Omaha area. And
you know, there's like a claim they say they who
knows if they did or not? They say they did,
(27:44):
And it's right next to what's on the Midlands of
page three, which is Songs of the Summer predictions for
the season's hottest tunes. So I don't know, Maybe maybe
no one is interested in whether or not Omaha has
a problem with illegal murderous gang members hiding out in
(28:04):
our community.
Speaker 3 (28:07):
Scott voices mornings nine to eleven. Our news radio eleven
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