All Episodes

January 9, 2026 138 mins

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
A fifty five KRC the talk station. Happy Friday.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Will vacation there.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
It is confirmation absolute that it is Friday. Got a
little woo who thank you Joe's director Executi producer of
the fifty five Cadency Morning Show, Brian Thomas right here,
hosts of the fifty five KRCY Morning Show, and a
pleasure to be in this position. And what an interesting
day yesterday. FOP President Ken Kober speaking of interesting day yesterday,
the comments from Ken Cober rather revealing one of the

(00:45):
reasons why he's joining the program today. Coming up in
one hour. Yes, Ken, we'll be asking the question who
has more credibility Joe wants to know, Ken Cober or
the city manager Chery along. Are we really going to
write our settle eight? This settle the Rodney Hinton junior
man charged with pre meditated murder Hamilton Kenny, sheriff's deputy

(01:06):
Larry Henderson. You remember that guy. His son's the one
that got gunned down by the police department in a
justified shooting, at least according to the prosecutor's office, totally justified.
And then his dad goes and kills the sheriff's deputy.
Now we're going to settle with the underlying settle the

(01:28):
underlying death matter. They has even a lawsuit file. Here's
what Ken said yesterday. Here's the statement that started it all. Oh,
and speaking of which, Ken Cober's on. And then we
get tech front of it. Dave had her seven o'clock
or we're talking about health. It's brand new year. George Brenneman,
Keith Tennenfeld, the healthcare experts recall trying to get everybody incentivated,
to incentivized and motivated to you know, take take stock
in their own health. Looking got RFK Junior went it

(01:50):
over to skeptics overhauling the food guidelines. We'll talk about
that a little bit, but they'll join the program at
seven o five for the full hour. Then signal ninety nine.
Carolyn is her name. She's just a wonderful resource on
Facebook and always pointing out things that she knows about.
She's got little birds floating around giving her information about
what's going on in downtown sin Sinny, because clearly they're

(02:12):
not letting us know out here in the world what
they're doing, like for example, with the taxpayer dollars. Here's
what Ken, and we'll talk to her about this ye
other day, we'll talking about the settlement with the Hinton
family investigation. A police chief threesa Thiji apparently is finished
and there's nothing there. So there's another settlement check that's
going to be written, income taxes and cameras, all with
signal ninety nine of the eight o'clock hour. That's gonna

(02:34):
put my feet up and let her go. Anyway, here's
what Ken said yesterday, and then we'll see what the
response was. Since a city manswered, Cheryl Long is quietly
negotiating a massive settlement potentially worth millions, that would hand
over taxpayer dollars to the family of Rodney Hinton Junior,
the man charged with the premeditated murder of Hamilton County
Shriff's debuty Larry Henderson. Backroom deal being rushed forward in

(02:54):
secret the city manager share a Long not even bothering
to inform City came council members the details of the
potentially staggering amount involved. You'll get confirmation from some city
council members on that very point that Ken made yesterday. Anyway,
he says the proposed settlement stems from the May first,
twenty twenty five, officer involved shooting of Hinton's eighteen year
old son, Ryan Hinton, who fled from a stolen vehicle

(03:18):
while armed with a handgun, pointed the gun to the
Sinsee police officer. That officer fired in self defense. Hamilton
County Prosecutor reviewed the entire matter and determined the use
of force was legally justified. Ken said, quote, this is
an absolute outrage. Crime literally pays in Cincinnati under the
city Manager Sheryl Long is sneaking around behind closed doors

(03:41):
trying to shove taxpayers hard earned money at the family
of a cold blooded cop killer who deliberately mowed down
Hamilt Deputy Henderson just days after his son pointed a
gun at one of our officers. It's a slap in
the face to every law enforcement officer risking their lives,
a betrayal of the public trust, a disgusting message that
targeting cops has no consequences. The shady, underhanded deal must

(04:05):
be stopped. This on the heels of it, he put
it out in his announcement. Remember, we just got done
paying eight point one million dollars to settle the class
action lawsuit with the five hundred people that were arrested
during the twenty twenty protests. I understand the realities of
that settlement. Not happy about it. They could have been
arrested for blocking traffic. Instead, they're arrested for violenting your curfew,

(04:29):
and therefore that calls in a question your first First
Amendment rights of free assembly. Let's not go back down
that road. Let's focus on this one, so he concludes
in his media stavid this week mayor parival proposed a
big tax hike to cover massive budget short falls. Hard
working sin sinety families are getting hammered from both sides.
Huge taxpayer payouts to law breakers and their families draining

(04:50):
the coffers, followed by higher taxes on the rest of us.
The city leaders stopped recklessly throwing millions of criminals, rioters
and cop killers who wouldn't face another tax increase on
law abiding citizens who keep the city running. I'll put
an exclamation point on that, although his statement does not
have one. Now pivoting over to the follow up investigative
reporting by local news media, what do we got so

(05:13):
you know the background just mentioned it. There's no there's
no factual disparities in what Ken did in terms of
summarizing how we got to the point where Rodney Hinton
Junior ran over Larry Henderson, killing him. This settlement relates
to the underlying shooting of his son, Ryan Hinton. Again,
no lawsuit has been filed. But remember Connie Pillinch announced

(05:34):
last summer that the officer who shot Ryan was in
fact legally justified in his use of force. In other words,
there will be no criminal prosecution, there will be no
referral to a grand jury. That officer did nothing wrong.
Now the lawsuit, a lawsuit rather, could have been filed,
It has not been filed. A lawsuit by Ryan Hinton
Junior's family the deceased, alleging perhaps the civil rights violation

(06:00):
because the police officers took his life from him. That's
kind of the nature of the lawsuit. Cheryl Long, the
city manager behind all this, apparently said in a statement
that the news of the settlement with a family being
reached is not true. Now notice the words used. Wait

(06:23):
a second, is Ken lying or is she dodging the truth?
Quote the city has not reached, noticed the emphasis on
the word it just use has not reached a settlement agreement,
and vehemently reject the notion that any discussions are being rushed.

(06:46):
Are happening in secret, or are designed to keep information
from city council. Now ignoring this whole idea that it
seems to be kept in secret, which I think it
kind of has based up on what some of the
council members have even said, which we'll get to in
a second. So they haven't reached the settlement. You know,
she didn't deny that they were not in disc or
she didn't deny that they were in discussions. The easiest thing,

(07:08):
if this was all fabricated, if this was all whole
cloth created by ken Kober anybody else, that there isn't
a settlement discussion going on. That No, that officer did
nothing wrong. There is no reason for the city to
write a check to the family. That's an easy thing
to say. I reject the idea that we are even
talking with the family. I reject the idea that I

(07:29):
would even enter into a settlement negotiation with them. The
officer didn't do anything wrong, why would we write a check?
See how simple that is, clear, concise, definitive. There's no
there there Boh, that's not what she said, though ken

(07:50):
Cober said, a settlement with outrage officers send a message
that crime in fact pays. He said, they can say
it's not true, but when people from the City Hall
are calling me saying you need to make this public
to stop this before an agreement is completely finalized, it
tells you a lot about what's going on in city

(08:10):
Hall astute observation. So pivoting over to Seth Walsh reached
for a comment last evening, Walsh said, this city administration
has consistently not given clear informations and answers to council members,
to the public, and we need that. I can't believe
that we would even entertain a settlement if our officers

(08:34):
did nothing wrong, as we have said, given the severity
and the enormity of what happened. So he doesn't know
about it. Going back to Cheryl longs, David that this
has not been hidden from the public or council. So
since our council is going into an executive session on
Monday to talk about a possible settlement, the pivoting over

(08:57):
to Enquire's reporting on it. They're having a meeting on
the potential settlement on Monday. Seth Wall said he was
told of the settlement by his colleagues, not by City
Manager Long apparently, and I have to have par Ball's
name doesn't come up in this at all. Jeff Cameron,

(09:19):
picking over to another since any council member, chair of
the Budget, Finance Committee and Governance Committee, said the city
administration will update council members in executive session on these negotiations.
During the meeting on Monday, he said city council should
have a vote on any settlement agreement and he does
not support a settlement with the family. Quote. I think
the city's position is that the officer has not done

(09:41):
anything wrong. I see nothing in the video contrary to that.
I do not feel a settlement as Warranton and I
think we it would send the wrong message to the
CINCINNTI Police. Amen Walsh, apparently speaking of the inquire called
the situation abhorrent, saying the Cincinnati communities own an explanation

(10:02):
about why a settlement with Hint and Family is on
the table and why it was deliberated behind closed doors.
Wait a minute, I thought Cheryl Long said it was
not being hidden. Let me go back to her statement.
City hasn't reached the settlement agreement. I vehemently reject the
notion that any discussions are being rushed are happening in
secret or are designed to keep the information from city council.

(10:26):
Is that where we're trying to weigh the credibility of
Ken versus city manager Long But we can clearly come
up with a conclusion based upon what council members said
that the council members have been kept in the dark.
This was revealed yesterday, I guess because of the actions
of Ken bringing it out to the public's attention at
the behest of people behind the scenes saying Ken, somebody's

(10:47):
got to raise this to a level of awareness where
we can all chime in on it. Thank you Ken
Kober for doing that, and thank you for Local News
to reaching out to the council members who apparently were
also in the dark about this. But they'll be talking
about it on Monday. Unbelievable Seth Walsh quote. The city

(11:12):
administration has consistently or not given clear information and answers
to council members to the public.

Speaker 2 (11:18):
And we need that.

Speaker 3 (11:19):
Amen.

Speaker 1 (11:21):
Well, at least you got a couple of council members
on records saying wow, news to me. Guess we'll be
talking about it on Monday. By the way, I don't
think we should pay them a dime. It's also been
widely reported and Signal ninety nine talking about it that
this is apparently the exclusive purview of the city manager.
Am I to understand that the city manager has the right,

(11:42):
the unilateral right to enter into a settlement negotiation without
the approval of counsel, without the approval of the mayor,
over the prosecutor's office decision not even to refer this
thing over to a grand jury for investigation after clearing
the police officer of any wrongdoing. How in the hell
can the city manager have the authority to enter in

(12:03):
the years on your behalf, taxpayers, those who live and
work in the city. Don't you think there should be
some checks and balance?

Speaker 2 (12:14):
Isn't that.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
Maybe there will be on Monday when they talk about
the settlement discussions with the Hinton family rather outraged over this,
and I'm looking forward to to six oh five and
the mic turns on so we can talk to Ken
Kober and get what his take is on this, and
of course signal ninety nine coming up at eight oh five.
If you're not familiar again with signal ninety nine, just
go to Facebook, type in signal ninety nine and follow

(12:39):
what she has to save day to day. That's where
you find the breaking news. Seems to start there five eighteen.
Feel free to give me a call five one three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eight two
three talk or pound five fifty on AT and T phones.
I'll be right back. Fifty five KRC dot com and
Cloudy Winny on Sunday, maybe some afternoon Florida. It'll be

(13:00):
a high thirty one on Sunday. Right now it is
sixty three degrees at fifty five ker CD talk station.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
And DONJ.

Speaker 2 (13:05):
Trump, can I improve this message?

Speaker 1 (13:07):
Thank you out.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
Sure.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
Every time my wife hears that is relieved because when
it was Joe Biden. I just got a text message
somewhere FJV. But regardless who's inn office, we always get
hear from Lemmy on a Friday, the very happy Friday
to year five one three seven fifty eight two three talk.

(13:35):
I miss seeing you at listener lunch Westside, Jim and Abe.
Been really busy man, But when you're not there, it's
not the same. Welcome back, my friend. Good to hear
from you today. Happy Friday.

Speaker 4 (13:44):
Brian.

Speaker 1 (13:45):
I'm not the good mood.

Speaker 4 (13:47):
I mean this the vote of no confidence is the
minor thing we should do, or the FOP should even do,
about this woman who supposedly as a city manager. I just,
I just I can't. We're in this. It's a different realm.
It is I I'm trying to be nice. I don't

(14:07):
get the dump button on me, but god, I mean,
I can't believe this is happening. I mean, she's lying
and they're finding out, and then she just tells another lie,
and you know, Ken brings it up. Signal ninety nine
brings it up, the newspeople bring it up, and she
actually just sits there and denies everything. And he thinks said, oh, oh,

(14:30):
puppy dogs. You know, here comes the unicorns. Everything's going
to be fine, and all this write a check. I mean,
these people are murderers, murderers. The sun was out there
with a firearm. What was he doing with the firearm
and a stolen.

Speaker 1 (14:45):
Car at eighteen years old too.

Speaker 4 (14:49):
And pointing it at a police officer.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
Yeah, let's not overlook that fun fact.

Speaker 4 (14:54):
And now she wants to write a check for millions
of dollars.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
Well, well, okay, let's we don't know. I have not
seen in any of the reporting from Ken Kober all
the way over to the enquired local news or anybody
else say anything about a specific dollar figure. Obviously they
are having a settlement discussion. That seems evident, because that's
why they're having an executive council meeting on Monday to
talk about the very nature of what's going on behind

(15:18):
the scenes with this settlement discussion. But we don't know
how much. But you know, hey, they're going to be
writing to check the former Chief Washington. You knowefully Chiefdiji's
probably going to be getting a big fat check. We
poor an eight point one million dollars for the rioters
out in the street who could have been charged with
a crime, but we're not. But moving aside from that,
we're writing a lot of checks.

Speaker 4 (15:36):
Well, they're not going to give them buddy cards and
they're not going to give them skyline, you know, cards
to go to lunch. These are millions and millions of
dollars because they're afraid of a lawsuit. Somebody needs to
sue her who has bucks in their pockets. And I
don't know what it is. Not an attorney, I know
you are, but she needs to be sued. She needs

(15:58):
to be settled.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
Back the city manager. Yes, well, yeah, I think most
most of the law suggests that they're immune from prosecution
for their actions within the responsibilities of government. Now she
was stealing something or you know, doing something like that,
that's a different thing. You'd be prosecuted for that. But
this is her perception of how the job is supposed

(16:19):
to be done. And clearly she has free reign, or
has been given free reign by the mayor perhaps to
engage in this type of discussion. So she's been delegated
to responsibility tax listen, taxpayer money. I understand that. That's
where I said out loud before. Upon what authority does
the city manager have to commit taxpayer dollars to settle

(16:41):
a case? Does she have that authority? I don't know.

Speaker 4 (16:46):
She's got to have pictures, like we always say, there's
got to be pictures out there of a purvall or something.
I mean, this is just disgusting. It's got me so
fired up. I can't believe this pathetic city is actually
thinking about giving me a Aris family millions of dollars.
Like I said, it's not buddy cards, it's millions.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
Of dollars, yep.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
And we are struggling with budget problems, so much so
that right after being sworn in, Pervoll wants to raise
the income tax. So clearly we have.

Speaker 4 (17:16):
Track the railroad money, Brian, Yeah, railroad.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
Where is that railroad money anyway? Yeah, west side where
it's at. It's Friday. Step off from the ledge, hang out.
Listen to what Ken says coming up at six oh five.
Hang out for signal ninety nine. Who I know you're
going to be looking forward to hearing at eight oh five,
and maybe lower your blood pressure because Restore Wellness dot
Org is George brought him in and Keith ten feldabe

(17:39):
in studio for an hour at seven to try to
get us on the right path. In twenty twenty six,
you know I love you, Brather five twenty six, so
free to give you a call. I got local stories
beyond that. Five one three, seven, nine fifty five two
to three talk pound fay fifty on a t A
T F will be right back.

Speaker 5 (17:54):
Him mad as hell, and I'm not.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
Trying to take this anymore.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
Fifty five where else Tom five one three seven fifty
five hundred eight hundred eight two three to five fifty
seven eighteen th fotes No, he does not own Pote Democrats. Well,
at least we got the message out. A little worried
about him. He tried to call in yesterday, wasn't even
able to get in through. There was something wrong with
a phone system or something. At least that's what he said.
Other callers were able to get in, and you could

(18:20):
be one of those. It's like here, what people have
to say maybe a reaction to the idea of settling
with the hidden family. How do you feel about it? Anyway?
Pivoting over to matters in crime local news gun violence.
According to the report, it's dropped to its low lowest
level here in Cincinnati in three years. Congratulations, two hundred

(18:41):
and forty one shootings in twenty twenty five compared to
three hundred and thirteen and twenty twenty three. They skipped
a year in there. Where's the twenty four data anyway?

Speaker 4 (18:52):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (18:52):
That twenty twenty five total represents the least deadly year
for gun violence since the pandemic. Courted Brady Williams Fox nineteen,
providing this information after talking with local folks. Pandemic residents
obviously staying at home because we were subject to stupid lockdowns.
Remember Amy, acting when you're trying to consider who you're
going to vote for governor of the state of Ohio.

(19:14):
And let me just interject on that on a completely
parenthetical side note, going down a little cul de sac here,
I heard someone on one of the politically connected folks.
It was that talking had being interviewed about the goobernatorial election,
saying that A. V. V. Ramaswami selected his lieutenant governor
running mate because the man probably apparently is a very
profound Christian, a devoted Christian man, a man of well

(19:35):
Christian principles. And is that really the criteria that it
justifies him being selected as lieutenant governor?

Speaker 3 (19:43):
Like?

Speaker 1 (19:44):
Did I just hear that correctly? This is to negate
the fact that Vivi Ramaswami is Hindu in religion. Would
would someone hold that against him? Look at the records,
compare amy act in the Viva Ramaswami. Look at what vv.
Ramasam He's been able to accomplish. Look at how brilliant
the man is, look at what he is saying he
wants to do for the state of Ohio. And let

(20:05):
me point out should be the major point. We don't
live in a theocracy. So the fact that he's a
Hindu guy. That does not matter. He can't impose his
religious will on anyone. But the idea that someone out
there is like, I'm not going to vote for romise
from you. Oh look at his running make he's a
devout Christian. Okay, that makes it all right. I struggle
with that regularly throughout my since I've been active and

(20:26):
engaged in politics as a young man, I've always just
consider that to be bizarre. Why because again, our founding
fathers didn't create a theocracy. Okay, I got off the
cul de sac and got it out of my system. Anyway,
Over the Ryan highest number of shooting incidents over the
three year period eighty eight total over the Rhine shootings
West End following seventy eight incidents, Maybe we should put
some cameras over in the West End, Avondel seventy four.

(20:49):
All those neighborhoods saw decreases last year compared to twenty
twenty four, which is a good direction, of course. So
despite the overall decrease in shooting shootings involving juvenile though
about the stagnant In twenty twenty four, forty two minors
shot forty one in twenty twenty five. They say gun

(21:10):
violence death showed a similar showed similar patterns. Sixty six
fatalities in twenty twenty four, sixty seven in twenty twenty five.
So as of this year, according to the reporting and yesterday,
unless there was one overnight, six shootings have occurred so
far this year, including one fatal incident. And yes, we
have talked at length about those. Let's see. Suspect in

(21:31):
Cincinnati bank robbery confessed to a murder during his post
arrest interview. Fox nineteen reporting the James Courtney, who's forty
four from North Bend, arrested for robbing a bank in
early December. While he was being interviewed by detectives, Courtney
confessed to a murder. According to the Hamilton County Prosecutor's Office,
forty four year old total investigators, he shot a man

(21:52):
described as a family friend. Prosecutor's office set a body
was at an address on Hamilton Cleaves Road. I guess
he told where the where the evidence was. No other
details released at this time. At least he admitted to it.
Covington police investigating a shooting resulting in a man being
hospitalized happened last evening. Coming to Police Captain Justin Bradbury

(22:13):
said the victim was shot at victim was shot at
Barb Cook Park and Covington six pm. Officers found the
victim on Madison Avenue with a gunshot to the gunshot
wounded the abdumen. According to Lieutenant Bradbury, burgcy Creuse took
me to UC Medical Center. Condition not known at this time.
No arrest have yet been made at least as of
this morning. Tennant Bradbury in a press release, anyone in

(22:36):
the area is asked to review home or business surveillance
systems for footage that may assist the investigators. People with
information can also give information to the Covington Police or
Crime Stoppers easiest number for all Northern Kentucky crimes and
Cincinnati crimes. They share the Crime Stoppers number five one three,
three five two thirty forty five one three, three, five

(22:56):
to two thirty forty It's five. I have thirty five
right now. If you Bob k ste talk station, we'll
get to some stack of stupid. Friday stack is stupid, which,
of course you know there's going to be some naked
folks in it thanks to joe'stracker.

Speaker 3 (23:10):
Appreciate it.

Speaker 6 (23:12):
Don't go wavy, right back fifty five KRC.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
You're one stop for advertising talk station. Can you play
John the Fisherman.

Speaker 1 (23:20):
Putting a smile every week at least one listening todays.
I ain't that right, Jeffrey. I was getting instant message
from him. He doesn't count down to this moment in
time every Friday, Big Primus fan like Joe'stracker, Happy Friday.

(23:50):
To lighting things up over to the stack is stupid. Remember,
if you're in a down mood, things don't feel like,
aren't going your way. Looking for some positivity in the world,
and you're just struggling to find it, You're not in
the stack of stupid. Let's just put it that way.
Like this woman. We go to Louisiana where Union Paris

(24:13):
Sheriff's Office deputies were dispatched. This happened. The event happened
in November. This is a residence and the community of Marion.
It's in Louisiana. Caller reported a neighbor standing in their driveway,
screaming and refusing to leave the property despite having been
warned previously to leave the property. When a patrol deputy arrived.
Authority said the suspect was found nude and swimming in

(24:35):
a pond at the caller's property. Why are you doing that?
Let's find out together, shall we. Woman later identified as
Aaron Elizabeth Sutton. She's forty one from Marion. She initially
refused to exit the pond or even speak with a deputy,
telling him that she was, in her words, trying to
be a mermaid. What After repeating command, Sutton eventually got

(24:56):
out of the pond. It was really cold, so emergency
medical service as were called and they gave her a blanket.
But as the blanket was provided and the deputy attempted
to escort her inside the residents to just warm up,
she charged at him. Authority said Sudden ignored multiple commands
to comply, resisted detention. A taser was deployed but had

(25:17):
no effect. As a tradition, she was taken to the ground,
allegedly continued resisting, kicking and punching the deputy before being restrained,
taken to the hospital for treatment, and during the transportation
to the hospital, she allegedly threatened to kill the deputies
and the paramedics as tradition, so they gave her in
the medical care and so they didn't They didn't issue

(25:39):
any formal arrest yet, so she did surrender on January sixth,
arrested on multiple charges, including three counts of resisting an
officer with force or violence, two counts of public intimidation,
two counts of battery of a police officer, disturbing the peace,
slash drunkenness, and criminal trespassing.

Speaker 6 (25:58):
The arithocrat not in front of.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
Judge Silverstein here in Hamilton County. Her bond set at
sixty two thousand dollars. I just got to throw a
shot at against Silverstein, don't we? Just the constant reminder
as we fast approached the November elections. Remember, elections have
major consequences, and you should pay attention to who you
were voting for. In terms of judge, We've got a

(26:22):
local one here in the story Local twelve reporting a
young West Price Hill woman young, she's eighteen years old
and I'm saying probably should know better. Accused of showing
what is described as an inappropriate video of a juvenile
to other teens in a group chat. Her name Lenayah McCall,
now facing felony charges of disseminating matter harmful to juveniles.

(26:44):
This happened August twentieth last year. Charge filed back in August,
but McCall just arrested on the fifth of January this year.
The court of the reporting what was shown involved a
juvenile quote apparently, the court papers in a state of
nudity and in the performs of sexual activity close quote.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
Idiots doing idiot things because they're idiots.

Speaker 1 (27:08):
Unbelievable, some twisted people out there in the world. It's
go to Mayfield, Kentucky. Sixty two year old Mayfield man
now facing multiple charges. Police found him naked in a
roadway swinging sticks following a disturbance call. That's why you

(27:32):
put this one in here, isn't it, Joe, Yes you do.
Leonard Starks arrested January fifth after officers with the Mayfield
Police Department responded reports of a man in the roadway
swinging a batras. Officers got there finding Starks unclothed holding
two sticks which he was swinging around. Police determined under

(27:54):
the influence of illegal drugs as opposed the prescription drugs
vestcot To say he had destroyed a significant amount of
property inside the residence before the incident, prompted the call
to the police. Transport of the gravest kind of restricted
custody center charged with second degree indecent exposure, second degree
which makes me want to contemplate what first degree indecent

(28:16):
exposure is anyway, Menacing public public intoxication, we controlled substance,
second degree disorderly conduct, resistant arrest, and first degree criminal
mischief the aristocrats. I'll just add that one in there,
and I'll also add a positive, a very positive word
for the Chimney care fireplace and stuff. These folks are
great everything related to chimneys. Hey, it is five fifty

(28:42):
here fifty five ker CD talk station five one seven
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two three
talk found five fifty on ET and T phones. Had
a caller online, look hung up? Guess then one talk
to me? What happened to that one?

Speaker 3 (28:54):
Joe?

Speaker 1 (28:56):
I know you're not responsible for people's actions outside of
your little studio there. Just wondering, anyhow, what else we got?
Remember after the top of our news ken cover about
this whole idea of the city manager settling with the
Hinton family. Of course, the eighteen year old Hinton gunned
or who got shot by police officers because he actually
had a firearm and turned and appointed the firearm and

(29:17):
a police officer bad idea, much in the same way
it's a bad idea to take a deadly weapon, oh
I don't know, for example, like a car, and drive
it and try to run down a police officer. Justification
of use of deadly force comes into play when you
have eminent apprehension of grievous bodily harm or death and
it is a reasonable apprehension. So if a fleeing juvenile

(29:41):
jumping out of a stolen car has a gun in
his hand and he turns towards you, he's already evidenced
that he is involved in criminal activity and represents a
threat to the community generally speaking. And then it becomes
an immediate threat to you because you're the police officer
trying to arrest him, and he's got a gun in
his hand and he turns and points it at you.
You are authorized to use deadly force. Your life is
in peril, or at least you have the reasonable expectation

(30:03):
that it is, and a family isn't worthy of a
check if that young man gets murdered or I see,
I use the liberal word when I was describing that
that young man's life has taken in the actions as
a consequence of his actions with the firearm. Anyway, we'll
get to can after the top of the air, and
he's looking forward to that one back over the stack.

(30:24):
Officers arrested a man accused of armed robbery of a
meat market in Lake City, Florida, wearing nothing but a mask.
Is he still listening to Doctor Fauci? Anyway? Lake City
Police Department officer said they responded to reports of a
robbery Bjay's Meat Market formerly Shafts Market for those who

(30:45):
knows I happened Tuesday close to nine pm. Officers say
the robbery suspect, later identified as Kobe Watkins, twenty four
years old, walked into the store completely nude except for them.
He had a piece of cloth wrapped around something in
his hand that employees believe was a weapon. Wawkins broke

(31:08):
into the cash box took more than one thousand dollars
from the store before running away. Fortunately, no one hurt
during the robbery. Officers established a perimeter and located him
a short time later, with the help of the Columbia
County Sheriff's Office also found items believed to be connected
to the crime in the area. What is it trail
of meat or something phrasing. Wawkins taken to the hospital
for medical evaluation, then booked into Columbia County Jail facing

(31:31):
charges of armed robbery, exposure of sexual organs. Doesn't mention
to what degree on that one different state, different charges
first degree exposure of sexual organs. Now you know what
I think the difference between first and second degree is, Joe,

(31:52):
second degree would just be exposure of the sexual organs.
First degree would be the penalty box guy. I'll let
that analysis just stay put behind the microphone. Job what anyway?
Facing charge of armed robbery, exposure to sexual organs, grand theft,

(32:14):
and criminal mischief. According to the Chief of Police, Gerald Butler,
in a statement, incident like this are unsettling, but our
officers responded quickly, secured the scene, and work with our
partners to identify and arrests suspect. We appreciate the swift
assistance from the Columbia County Chriff's lavas and the cooperation
from the business employees that help bring this to a
safe resolution. I really do believe it was the the

(32:35):
items believed to be connected with the Robert. He went
in there, stole a thousand dollars and meet phrasing. And
finally we turned to Mason City, Iowa, where a woman
has been arrested for indies for an incident rather forcing
a convenience sort of close its doors. Thirty two year
old Cherry Ray Decker picked up on Tuesday and an
outstanding warrant for first degree criminal mischief and assault causing

(32:58):
bodily injuries or mental illness. Enforcement says she entered the
Casey General Store about nine thirty am of the summer
nineteenth last year. Court documents state that she was nude
and covered in blood. She allegedly knocked over a shelving unit,
broke glass bottles, through items and employees, covered multiple store

(33:19):
items with blood, and slapped a man in the face,
breaking his glasses and leaving him with a small cut.
That's good. I don't know about that. That's going to say.
The victim of the assault went to the hospital to
be evaluated. Police said there was so much blood in
the store that it had to close until a professional
cleaning crew could be bought in brought in an estimated

(33:40):
cost of ten thousand dollars. She's being held on a
six thousand dollars Bond five fifty five fifty five kres
detalk station wait for it, asking the general question, who
has more credibility can cover FOP president or did you
spell that word? The word is city manager, Joe. You

(34:03):
spelled it in an FEC non compliant way. I'm guessing
that was just a typo. Yeah, it was auto correct
because the autocorrect feature realized that you were talking about
Cheryl Long. Don't go away, Ken Cover next, follow by

(34:25):
Tech Friday with Dave had Ter be right.

Speaker 3 (34:26):
Back Today's top headlines coming up at the deal.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
At six oh five. Here if you about kr CED
talk station by times wishing everyone a very happy Friday,
and if I do you stick around Tech Friday. At
bottom of this hour, George Bennaman, Keith Tenenfield restore Wellness
dot Org and studio for an hour, try to get
us on the right path as we start the new
calendar year, signal ninety nine controversial. She is well connected. Definitely.
She'll be in the studio all hour, the entire eight
to eight o'clock hour. We're gonna talk about this topic

(34:56):
that we're bringing up right now. And thanks to Ken
Cobra FOP President for return to the Morning Show for
the second time in a week. Welcome back, Ken Cobra,
and I appreciate the announcement. Apparently you're bringing this to
everybody's attention, including members of Cincinnati City Council who didn't
seem to really realize that Cheryl Long, the city manager,
was negotiating a massive settlement behind the scenes with the
Hinton family. Who might that be? Ryan Hinton, eighteen years

(35:19):
old shot and killed by a Cincinni police officer last year.
His father then a day later, ran over Hamilton County
Sheriff's deputy Larry Henderson, killing him. Eighteen year old Hinton
no longer with us, but Connie Pillach, Hamilton County prosecutor,
announced last summer that the officer who shot Ryan was
justified in doing so because he turned a gun on
the police officer. Joining the program today to talk about

(35:40):
why in the hell would the city of Cincinnati write
a check to the Hinton family over that incident. FOP
President Ken Kober, thank you very much for bringing this
to every day's attention and joining the program this morning
to talk about it.

Speaker 5 (35:52):
Hey, good morning, Brian, Yeah, thanks for having me. It's
been an interesting day yesterday.

Speaker 2 (35:57):
That's for sure.

Speaker 1 (35:59):
Well, I guess I don't want you to do any
sources because apparently someone from behind the scenes let you
know about this. But how is it that this settlement
agreement could be negotiated or even discussed? Now? City Manager
Long issued a statement after you brought out the point
that this was being negotiated. You didn't say it was done.
You didn't say it was settled. You say it was
being quietly negotiated behind the scenes. Cheryl Long comes out

(36:23):
in response to the news of that your news saying
the city has not reached a settlement agreement, okay, and
vehemently reject the notion that any discussions are being rushed,
not that they're not happening, I might interject, she said
are happening in secret or designed to keep information from

(36:44):
city council. Now the latter part of the statement, I
guess it really has happened in secret because local News
reached out to Seth wsh and some other council members
and it sounded to me like they didn't realize it
was going on. Either. Where are we on this, sir No?

Speaker 5 (36:59):
And that's exactly It's funny that she put this statement
out because I had several council members that reached out
to me last night that said, look, we're just learning
about this. We were absolutely against against this, and we
saw the article article that the Inquire posted, where you know,
Jeff Kramerton, who's the head of the Budget and Finance,
said this sends a terrible message to the Cincinnti police.

(37:19):
He's like, when these officers did absolutely nothing wrong. He
was I'm against this, he said. As late as almost
eleven o'clock last night, I had council members texted me going, look,
we support the police. We were absolutely against this. We
had no idea. So obviously the information that I had
was absolutely correct because these council members are supporting what
I put out. And it's interesting because I did I

(37:41):
had a source inside city Hall that thought that this
was so egregious in how this was being done and
the fact that they were doing this, that asked me
to make this public before it was finalized. And unfortunately
the city manager is up about the fact that this
has become public before it could be finalized. Yeah, and

(38:05):
I think, you know, not only do the officers that
were involved, but certainly to the Henderson family to fight this,
to make sure that taxpayer callers are not being given
to a family that created such chaos and tragedy of
the course of a twenty four hour period back in May.

Speaker 1 (38:23):
Well, you know, well, I just I tell you. Let
me just quote the Jeff Kramerting statement and also Cess
Wall statement because again going to what Cheryl Long had
said again to this idea, this is being negotiated behind
the scenes, it's being hidden from people, or it's being rushed.
Kramerting said, he's the city council is going to be
talking about this on Monday. I think the city's position

(38:46):
is that the officer has not done anything wrong, which
is exactly what the prosecutor said last year. I see
nothing in the video contrary to that. I do not
feel a settlements warranted. I think that that would send
the wrong message to the since a police amen to
your point, Walsh, it is a tremendous disrespect to the
families involved to make a public spectacle out of a tragedy.

(39:07):
I think it's unconscionable for the City of Cincinnati to
be considering a settlement without the full deliberation of council.
The tragedy that unfolded and may devastated our community, and
it's our responsibility to heal the wreckage, not to create
more division. So apparently they're going to have an executive
session on Monday to talk about the details of this.
I guess what Long denies is a rushed, quiet, behind

(39:29):
the scenes settlement negotiations. So it's going to get a
little sunlight. I don't know if you know, but I'm
frustrated by the whole concept that city Manager cher Along
has any authority to enter into what seems to me
moving toward a binding agreement without the approval of council.
Does she have the ability to enter into agreement that

(39:51):
may involve millions of dollars? We have no idea what
the dollar figure that's being discussed is, but it's potentially millions.
Who knows. But does she have an off authority to
enter into any settlement for an the amount without council's approval?

Speaker 5 (40:02):
Lots of questions. I don't know, And you know, we
talk about shedding light on this. They're going to be
an executive session. If you know what executive session is
that kicks everybody from the public out. This is done.
There are no notes that are taken, This is done. Quietly,
just almost like what I said in my press release,
and we won't know, we won't know what that discussion is.

(40:22):
Why shouldn't it be done in public? Why shouldn't public
have a right to know what's being discussed, why it's
being discussed, you know, and what council has to say
about it, what the city administration has to say about it.
Maybe maybe somehow I can't famom a scenario where this
would seem like a good idea, but I don't know.
Maybe the city administration has this. Why would you be

(40:45):
doing this in executive session where if the public doesn't
have any ear to be able to hear what's being said?

Speaker 1 (40:51):
Yes, because right now that's the cop was cleared. It
was certainly a justifiable use of deadly force, considering he
was facing emin an apprehension of green his bodily harm
or deaf because the kid turned a firearm on him.
So that's all behind no grand jury referral by the
Hamilton County prosecutor, who is quite liberal, I might point out.
So the council members all seem to be in agreement

(41:12):
with you and me and the general public that this
would be crazy to write a check to the family,
because why none of us have any information that would
justify the negotiations or the payment of any money. What fact,
what piece of information has been deprived of us thus
far which would justify even sitting down at the table

(41:32):
with the other side to talk about writing a check.
It was all above board, We've got video of it.
I mean, what are we missing, Ken Kober?

Speaker 5 (41:41):
Yeah, that's that is the million dollar question. And my
guess is absolutely nothing. And I've said this Senta this release.
Crime apparently does pay. You know, we've paid rioters in
twenty twenty eight point one million dollars and now we're
potentially paying out a family you know who won points
a gun at the cop, puts this offsh position where
he has to act to save his life. And the

(42:02):
next day another family family member viciously murders a deputy
and somehow we're going to even talk about a settlement.
To me, it is absolutely uncumtionable that they would do
something like that. But you know, he said, in the
city of Cincinnati, where crime does pay, it's not surprising.

Speaker 1 (42:19):
Well, and the timing couldn't be better on this revelation.
Can Cobert, considering a mayor have to have Prowall's proposal
of a big tax kite because a tax sit because
apparently he needs extra money. Again, maybe it's because we're
writing a bunch of checks to people who to whom
we do not need to write checks. And it also interesting,
Ken Cober that, in spite of the fact that some
of the council members seem shocked by this and are

(42:39):
on the record saying this is a bad idea, city
Manager Cheryl Lung did issue his statement as much of
filled with prevarication as it is no word from the
mayor on this very important issue. Don't you think it
would be important for the mayor of the City of
Cincinnati might maybe chime in on this himself.

Speaker 5 (42:57):
Well, unless he's being left in the dark light councilors
who knows, don't now? Going back, I was not given
any indication whatsoever that the mayor's aware of this.

Speaker 2 (43:09):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (43:10):
Sounds to me like we have a city manager run
them up free reign. Ken Cober pause. I want to
bring you back if you don't mind, because I want
to ask you about the revelations six twenty at fifty
five karrosee the talk stage. By the time I'm switching,
everyone are very happy Friday, trying to figure out what's
going on in the city council. David, that's a good thing,

(43:33):
and thankfully we have folks like FOP President Ken Cobra
to let us know and let maybe even some council
members know about this potential settlement with a Rodney Hinton family,
but pivoting away from that and we all of our
popcorn out even though we're not going to find out
because it's executive session, as you pointed out, that's in
closed doors. They don't even keep notes, so we're not
going to really get all the details maybe ever. And

(43:54):
that's kind of consistent with what happened the other day.
Going back to Signal ninety nine, Ken, she's pointed out
and made an announcement that the executive session just the
other earlier this week to discuss a former or at
least un administrative leave police chief Teresa Thiji. They were
given an oral report from Frost, Brown and Todd, who
has retained to investigate the whole situation. Because Ken and

(44:15):
correct me if I'm wrong. When she was placed on
administrative leave, they didn't cite any particular action that justified it.
They just put her on leave, right We never did
find out what the impetus was behind that, did we.

Speaker 5 (44:26):
No, absolutely not. In fact, I was that was part
of this whole investigation is determine whether or not she
should still be the police chief. And it's like, I
kind of it's kind of like making an arrest and
then decide what the charges are going to be. Yeah,
And it's just it's wrong the way that that Chief
Figi has been treated, and it's it's not surprising that

(44:48):
we're doing more things in executive session. And I think
it's important to note that the law firm does an
oral report. They don't they don't want to put anything
in writing because clearly what they're signaling is there's nothing here,
because otherwise, why would you not put a report in
writing saying here's what we discovered here. You go, well,

(45:10):
they're not going to do that because they're not going
to put their name on the line and say that, yes,
you have just cause to fire her because it's just
not there.

Speaker 1 (45:20):
Well not there, or you know, if there was a reason,
certainly they would let the public know because it would
at least provide some measure of justification for putting her
on administrative leave in the first place. The silence I
think proves that there was nothing there.

Speaker 5 (45:37):
Yeah, without a doubt. I mean we're talking now that
they spent almost fifty thousand dollars and coax payer dollars,
fifty thousand dollars and cox pair dollars and it's nothing
but silence.

Speaker 1 (45:49):
Well, and according to the Well again, we're apparently relying
on an inside source that provided signal ninety nine with
what the Frostbound Todd oral statement said. And the point
is apparently they spoke about some nepotism, favoritism, that she
lacked leadership. Some of the police officers believe that. Now
I guarantee any police chief that's running this ins a

(46:09):
police partment, there are gonna be some officers lit'll suggest
there's lack of leadership or favoritism. So that seems to
be run of the mill. Maybe some handling of the
issues regarding Somemmer violence, but nothing else, no cause for termination,
and we hear nothing from the city on this. The
silence is definitely again going back to executive session, we're
not entitled to be there, so we got to rely

(46:30):
on inside sources. So is this true? Is it not?
Maybe we'll find out, but as of right now, I
think we're setting ourselves up for yet writing yet another
settlement check. If they don't do right by Fiji and
put her back in her position, I think she's going
to have a lawsuit on our hands.

Speaker 5 (46:45):
Yeah, I mean it's likely, and Nona, maybe that's why
we're going to raise the be able to pay for
some of these lawsuits. But it's interesting if what's being
said is true, that these are the reasons. You know,
I've been here almost twenty six years now, worked under
several different police chiefs. You know, I regularly talk to

(47:07):
retire guys that were cops in the sixties, seventies, eighties, nineties,
well before me that have complained about these same things.

Speaker 1 (47:16):
Yeah, that was like. So that was like, I was like, under,
is there any police chief that is completely one percent
supported and endorsed by every single police officer? And I
think we all know, like he just said, no, never,
That's never happened ever.

Speaker 5 (47:30):
Yeah. So the interesting thing is that's the case, and
this is what they're going to try to hang their
hat on. They're expecting Chief Fiji to fix a culture
of policing that has gone on in Cincinnati or the
administration that's gone on in Cincinnati for I don't know,
let's just say sixty years. You want her to fix
that in two years? That's just come on. If that's

(47:52):
what they're hanging their hat on, then yeah, I would
suspect if they do Terminator, that they can expect to
face a rather hefty lawsuit. She's probably going to have
a pretty good chance of prevailing in that.

Speaker 1 (48:03):
Yes, Now the question is, and I'm not quite sure
how this all ultimately works, given how weird the whole
scenario is, we have an interim police chief. Since she's
on administrative leave, is there still a possibility that she
could be brought back and placed back in the position
of police chief.

Speaker 5 (48:18):
I think it's possible, but I think it's also highly unlikely.
The damage has been done. I mean, it's how could
she go back and work for the same administration that
has done this to her? You know, what does that
look like? I just I don't think that makes any
good sense. And I think if you asked her, she
would probably agree that at this point the damage has done.

(48:41):
If I I certainly wouldn't want to know. I wouldn't
want to come back, and because then you're going to
be looking over your shoulder. You're going to be walking
the eggshells. Yes, that's not any way to live. It's
not any way, certainly to try to run a police
department of nearly a thousand people. I think at this
point the best thing that the city could do is
come up with an agreement that both sides can live with,

(49:03):
and you know, let her retire and move on with life,
because you know, as bad as this has been, like
I said, I just I don't see a scenario where
she could come back and be able to work in
these conditions.

Speaker 1 (49:16):
Yeah, this has all created what will be a toxic
work environment for police Chief Dji. So I hear and
I agree completely with what you're saying. FOP President can Cover.
Thank you for coming on the program today talk about this,
and I want to thank you on behalf of all
the CINCINNTA taxpayers for bringing this to everyone's attention. And
I'm sure since A council members are pretty appreciative of
you for doing it as well, because at least the
ones that have talked on record are against the concept

(49:38):
of writing a check in this particular case. Ken have
a wonderful weekend. I hope to talk to you again
real soon, and keep your popcorn out and see if
we find out anything from our inside sources and counsel
about what happens in that closed door. No note, executive
session Monday. Take care of my friend.

Speaker 5 (49:54):
Yep, thanks for having Brian. I appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (49:56):
Anytime, man, anytime six twenty six tech fright me one.
If you have care see detalk station Intrust dot com.
If you have a business, I know you have computers,
you need Interest I to help you out with any complications, problems,
best practices, the man for the job and his team.
Dave hat Or from Interest I joining the program every Friday,
and welcome back, Dave. It's a pleasure having you on.
I'd love this segment so informative it is. And a

(50:18):
happy new year to you and the crew at Intrust.

Speaker 2 (50:21):
Brian, always good to be here. I'm happy to be back.
Happy new year to you and Joe and all your listeners,
and hopefully we'll continue to do some good out there
in twenty twenty six.

Speaker 1 (50:29):
Yeah, man, if you're talking the truth that you talk,
it's all good as long as people pay attention to it,
and you know real quick. I know, Walmartin Kroger now
scanning your ID before we get alcohol and we can
get to that. I just want to shout out I
saw this article and I printed out specifically to bring
it up to you, because I know you hate Google
Chrome and you never use it and recommend people don't
use it. Security researchers apparently uncovered some Chrome extensions that

(50:52):
have been stealing user names, passwords, card details, personal information, cookies,
et cetera from people's browsing behavior. That's a giant red flag.
Now they say they remove these extensions from the availability,
but the damage apparently has been done for a lot
of people. Passwords stealing, that's a real, real, real problem

(51:13):
and concern.

Speaker 3 (51:16):
It is.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
And the cookies are an even bigger problem potentially because
once you log into a website. One of the main
reasons why cookies were created Brian so cookie is a
small file that gets stored on your device, your phone,
your computer, whatever as you interact with a website, not
only so it can track you, but also once you've
logged in and it's verified your identity, it tells it
creates a cookie so that you don't have to keep

(51:37):
logging in over note, so that cookie keeps getting sent
back to the website to say this is Brian Thomas.
Does that make sense?

Speaker 1 (51:44):
It does, so I usually delete mind.

Speaker 2 (51:46):
Whether I steal your that's a I encourage folks to
do that as well. But I'll get to that. So
first off, this isn't necessarily a Chrome problem. I think
the main reason they counted it in terms of Chrome
is Chrome still the number one browser out there. You know,
any browser, any modern popular browser, Chrome, Firefox, Brave, Edge, whatever,

(52:07):
allows you to use extensions, which are essentially software you
can plug into the browser to extend its capability, something
like EFF's privacy Brandcher which helps tamp down cookies, or honey,
which is a thing that helps you find cupons. Right.
A lot of people will use these extensions because it
creates additional capabilities above and beyond what the browser can
do on its own. So extensions and the in and

(52:29):
of their own right are not a bad thing, and
in fact, it can be a really good thing. You know,
if you have a password manager, usually that password manager
will have a browser extension, so when you go to
log into a website, it will recognize the website interface
with the password manager through the extension and allow you
to enter your credentials right. So extensions on their own
aren't bad. And again you can get extensions for just

(52:50):
about every browser. Not every extension is available on every browser.
But the real there's two key points here. First off,
it goes back to something you and I have discussed
now for over ten years. If you just go out
and download some software right just because it's in the
Apple Store or the Google Store, or you found a
good review online or something, and you download it, whether
it's a browser extension, an app for your phone, or whatever,

(53:13):
unless it's coming from a credible, reputable source, and unless
you have thoroughly vetted it, you could very well find
yourself in a case like this, whether it's a bogus
app collecting your data or that's basically spyware, or an
extension like this, if it is not thoroughly vetted, if
you can't trust it, if it's not coming from a known,
reputable source, you run the risk of having this at

(53:34):
best a lot of tracking and surveillance. At worst, it's
essentially spyware running in your computer, stealing your insensitive data
like passwords and so forth. So the real the short
answer is, while extensions aren't bad, you should have the
least number of them possible, just like apps, and you
need to do your homework and vet them carefully. I mean,
I have several browser extensions, but they're all privacy related.

(53:57):
They all come from sources I trust and vetted. So yeah,
if you have extensions installed in Chrome or any browser,
you should take a look at this article, and you
should be very judicious and how you download these things,
install them and use them because it could put you
at significant risk.

Speaker 1 (54:13):
Right and the article which was reported on Fox News
Kurt Newtsam, if you've got it, will you add that
to your LinkedIn page? So people, because they give you
specific instructions on how to check for this and how
to get rid of it and reconfigure your Chrome browser
if you're stupid enough to use it. I suppose Dave
to make sure that you're safe. So we add that one.

Speaker 2 (54:32):
Yes, wonderful, I will throw that in the list because
it's people need to understand this in general and then
these specific issues for sure.

Speaker 1 (54:40):
Yep, absolutely, let's pause. I thank you for indulging me
on that one, because that was a giant red flag
and I know Chrome is a thorn in your side,
so hold on we'll come back. We'll talk about cool
gadgets and the FBI, common frauds and scams, and maybe
a word or two on why you're getting carted at
Kroger for buy and eye when alcohol when they clearly
can tell you're sixty years old. First word for place

(55:00):
ti plumbing, plumbing done right. The folks that plumb tight,
outstanding they are. That's why they enjoy a plus with
a better business beer because they know you deserve better
and deliver on better. Here if you have kre CD
talk station, Happy Friday, Tech Friday me Dave Hatter. Thanks
to intrust it dot coms Day's company. Accord to the
business career, they're the best in the business when it
comes to your business computer needs. Dave Hatter, let's talk

(55:21):
about cool gadgets real quick. I know you brought up
the idea about Walmartin and kerb being forced to check
your IDs, and I've been carded at Kerroger buying beer,
which always cracks me up because I clearly am over
the age of twenty one. But it's a new law
that forces them.

Speaker 2 (55:37):
To do that. Right, There's a new law in Utah
that's forcing basically anyone that's selling alcohol to do this
here locally, some retailers have started doing it. You know,
My issue with it really boils down to the fact that, ultimately,
do you trust these retailers, especially some small mom and
pop shop, if they have to actually scan your ID
to store that data in a way that won't be leaked, stolen,

(56:01):
or you know, elsewise breached somehow. So yeah, I'm I'm
not a big fan of this. I can tell you
here locally, I would not buy booze or anything else
that they want me to scan my ID from that.
I would go elsewhere. Apparently, again, it's a state wide
law in Utah. I don't know what the rationale is
for why they think they need this law. Again, you

(56:22):
can just show someone your ID and they can eyeball it,
and you know, look at a calendar on the wall
or whatever where you see the signs. You must be
this age that the idea that we're going to give
that kind of sensitive data like a driver's license number
to just any old random place, totally against it. One
last thing, Brian, you know you mentioned deleach your cookies
kind of closing out that last segment. I agree, that's

(56:44):
a good idea. In most browsers, you can go in
and you can manually if you go into like the
privacy and security settings to leach your cookies. You can
also set your browser up so that we'll just automatically
delete them every time it closes. Now, that will cause
some inconvenience, you'll have to log into websites again and
that sort of thing because those cookies get deleted. But
it's a good idea to get rid of them.

Speaker 1 (57:03):
And men, brother, it's really easy to do too. If
I can figure it out, anybody can. All Right, a
consumer electronics show. Apparently it's a huge, huge event. What
do you eyeball on at the computer electronics show? That's cool,
Dave Hatter?

Speaker 2 (57:16):
So, yeah, the Computer Electronics Show happens this time each
year out in Vegas. It is a big event. You
usually get a huge turnout for this. It runs the
whole week, and you know, all the major vendors making
anything tech related typically show up. That's consumer oriented, right again,
this is this is all stuff that's focused on consumers
as opposed to more industrial enterprise type stuff. But increasingly,

(57:39):
as everything becomes digital and as everything has software embedded
in it, you now are in a situation where there's
a lot of overlap between the two. You know, Brian,
you know when you say cool stuff, you know, there's
some new TV technology out there, micro RGB TVs. TVs
obviously keep getting bigger and bigger and bigger in terms
of their screen size, while the actual you know, width

(58:01):
and depth gets smaller and smaller, they get lighter, the
quality of the screens continue to go up. Yeah, it'll
be interesting to see because you know, I know some
folks now that have like one hundred inch TV relatively
inexpensive and have amazing pictures, right, So.

Speaker 1 (58:19):
A wall space to put something like that, I mean,
like in our living room, for example, the biggest TV
that you can fit in there is like, what a
fifty inch TV. That's it. I don't have any other space,
and I'm sure as I wouldn't want a hundred inch
thing hanging over my fireplace or whatever. So I'm waiting
for the technology that has a high resolution four K,
five K whatever. It's sort of an old school, you know,

(58:41):
pulled down kind of like we used to use with
the slide projector kind of deal.

Speaker 2 (58:46):
It's funny you mentioned that, Brian. I can remember back
in the day, there was this really high end stereo
store up in Columbus and they had like a screen
that came down like a projector screen or a movie
screen that came down out of the ceiling, you know,
with a projector. And it was insanely expensive at.

Speaker 1 (59:01):
The timeous dollars.

Speaker 2 (59:02):
And yeah, the picture quality was nowhere near as good
as what you're getting out of these modern TVs. So
it'll be interesting to see where that goes. Foldable phones
is another big thing. I don't really understand the attraction
of this. I mean, I understand why if you could
have a larger device that could fold up, you know,
potentially it would be more convenient to work on. You know,

(59:25):
the issue I always run into with people who are
so bound to their phones is, you know, even if
the thing could unfold to twice the size or maybe
even three times the size, it still doesn't have like
a full size key Yeah, you can use on screen keyboard.
Maybe I'm gonna since I typically have a computer with
me all the time. Anyway, you know, I don't want
to work on a phone. I don't want I want

(59:46):
to have a full sized keyboard. I want to have
a full sized screen or screen, So you know, the
foldable phone thing. I get it to an extent, but
you know that's that's sort of taken off of course AI.
You can have a conversation out out AI in it
robots and the Internet of Things. My issue with all
these robots, Brian. You know, first off, I'm not convinced

(01:00:08):
that most of them are capable of doing anywhere near
what the hype claims they can do, especially out in
the wild. And then secondarily, think about this for a second.
You and I have been discussing the Internet of Things
and the privacy and security problems they create for a
long time. You know, anything that's got software in it,
anything that's quote smart quote unquote, is vulnerable. And we

(01:00:29):
see this over and over again, whether it's AI toys,
whether it's ring doorbells, nests, thermostats, pick pick your thing.
You know, in most cases, the vendor isn't providing software
updates after a certain period of time, just automatically putting
you at risk. People don't know how to configure this stuff,
and now you're potentially going to have some kind of
robot that's got microphones and cameras in it doing things

(01:00:51):
moving around inside your place. I mean, you know, we've
talked before about like the rumba, where somehow people photos
of people on the toy we're uploaded to the Internet
thanks to their rumba. So I understand the cool factor
of some of this stuff, but I can tell you
for me, there is not a chance I would have
any of this stuff in my home, simply because it's

(01:01:14):
incredibly immature and it is a giant privacy and security
dumpster fire. For the most part, most of this stuff
is coming from China. We've seen our own government warned
now about backdoors and software back doors in the power
grid through solar panels and so forth. Almer Lucky from ANDROL,
the founder of ANDROL, talked recently about how you've seen

(01:01:34):
you chips the size of a grain of sand that
potentially have back doors that would allow someone to, if
nothing else, surveil you, but potentially take the device over.
So you know, self driving cars is on this list again.
I see all the stats about self driving cars and
how they're better than humans and so forth. I'm just
going to tell you, as a guy who's written a

(01:01:56):
lot of software and created a lot of bugs, none
of which were ever intentional, I'm not riding in any
fully autonomous car anytime in the near future, not only
because I just simply don't trust the tech because it
could be taken over remote Yeah, that's been well documented.

Speaker 1 (01:02:11):
Yeah, I'm just well, we have protesters that have webinized
automobiles themselves, and if some evil actor out there Chinese
Communist Party wants to take over a vehicle and it's
got some backdoor, they could do that, let's put an
exclamation point on that. Let's move. Let's pause for a
when we'll bring Dave back and talk about some common
frauds and scams. The FBI is alerting us too, That's
why we have Dave Hatter and you have you find

(01:02:32):
Dave Hatter for your business computer needs. Over to the fraud.
The FBI dot gov website announced some common frauds and
scams twenty twenty six. These fraud and scam ideas aren't
going to go away, or that's why we have you day.
Let's talk about some of these what's on the hit list.

Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
Yeah, Unfortunately, they're not going to go away, Brian. In fact,
it seems like these things are only increasing. So first off,
folks can go to FBI dot gov slash scams. Secondarily,
and I'm mintioned new many many times over the years,
the FBI has the Internet Crime Complaint Center IC three
dot gov literally Indigo Charlie number three dot gov where

(01:03:09):
you can go and report fraud and scams, and also
a lot of the same information gets shared there. So
these are good resources, especially if you have maybe older
parents who aren't as hip to these kind of things,
or maybe younger kids who aren't as hip and you
want to kind of make them aware of what's going
on out there. They've got several short videos you can
watch to kind of explain this stuff. They've got some

(01:03:31):
longer form videos you can watch where they really get
into the details of some of these things. And then
there's just a long list, like on the page I'm
on now when I scroll down, there's numerous rows of scams,
and then they go in and explain these things. Adoption fraud,
business and investment fraud, business, email compromise, something we've talked
about many, many, many, many many times, charity and disaster fraud,

(01:03:52):
consumer fraud schemes, crypto investment fraud, cryptocurrency, job scams, elder fraud,
election crimes, and security, healthcare fraud, holiday scams, money mules,
operation level up ransomware, romance scams, sextortion, skimming, spoofing and phishing,
tech support scams, and timeshare frauds. So each one of

(01:04:12):
these is something you can drill down into and learn
more about that particular type of scam. You know, one
of the most common scams we've seen since we've been
talking on the air about this stuff minus tech support
scams where you know, you get an email, you might
get a phone call. It might be that you somehow
visited a bogus website and a message pops up telling

(01:04:33):
you you've got a virus or something. So they go
into this here right then they say, for example, they
may impersonate any type of personnel appearing to be to
offer support or assistance for the following and they list
a long line of things. How the scam works. You know,
they tell you there's some sort of issue with your device,
your account. They try to reach out to you a
number of ways, including unsolicited phone calls, internet pop up windows, websites,

(01:04:56):
are online ads, financial institutions. Once they get your ten
they'll tell you they can fix the issue right and
then they want access to your device sometimes they just
want you to send the money, and in most cases
they want to get access to your device, because once
they have access to your device, then they can potentially
take you down all kinds of other rabbit holes, including

(01:05:16):
installing back doors, you know, keystroke loggers, that sort of
thing on your device so they can capture all your
keystrokes and hit your bank account at some later point.
So it's a real problem. You should never, never, never,
under any circumstances, give a person who has reached out
to you in some unsolicited way. You know, as a business,

(01:05:37):
this is what we do for customers. But they're calling
us and asking.

Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
For help exactly right.

Speaker 2 (01:05:41):
We have a relationship with us, they know us. We
have ways to verify they're who they say they are,
and vice versa. If someone tells you just out of
the blue you have a problem with your device, guaranteed
scam and they talk about all this stuff here. So again,
this is a great resource FBI dot gov slash scams
IC three dot gov of to go learn about the

(01:06:02):
kind of scams that are out there. They're always updating
this stuff. It's pretty easy to understand, and again it's
a great way to help you avoid the coming a
victim of these sort of scams, and then you know,
your family members, your friends and so forth, point him
to this site. I'll link to it so that you know,
folks can understand what's happening out there, get some free
useful education and hopefully be aware and avoid these things.

Speaker 1 (01:06:26):
Check them out LinkedIn dot com. You just type in
Dave hat or you'll find him. He's got all this
important information posted on his LinkedIn page. Dave can't thank
you enough for joining us on the Morning Show again
for another year and providing all this valuable information keeping
us out of trouble as long as we heed your advice.
Smart thing to do, folks, and you don't need a
tinfoil hat to believe what Dave's.

Speaker 2 (01:06:45):
Done, you know, Brian, It's funny along many years ago
people would be like, oh, that's crazy, that can never happen,
or that you know, now, that's not possible, and you know,
people they get you're crazy man, Yeah, you're one of
those tenfoil hatters. I'm like, well, you know, that's an
appropriate name in my case. But people are slowly seeing
that perhaps maybe I'm not as crazy, and that's right,

(01:07:06):
you know. Yeah, stuff is real.

Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
Going back to my comments on conspiracy theorists, which we
now call pattern observers, everybody thinks they're backcrab crazy at
the outset, and you just wait a little bit and time,
and oh that I guess they were right all along. Hmm,
maybe I'll listen to them next time. Well, don't wait
for that. Listen to Dave now. Podcast available if you
have KRC dot com again LinkedIn dot com, find Dave
Hatter and get all the breeding materials. Dave, have a

(01:07:30):
fantastic weekend, my friend. Thanks again to your company intrust
it dot com for sponsor in the segment, and I'll
look forward to another edition of this segment next Friday.

Speaker 2 (01:07:39):
Always my pleasure. I'll look forward to chatting with you in.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
It's a new year. Probably have a right action, not
just scrolling through the events of the day.

Speaker 2 (01:07:46):
They want to hear this message.

Speaker 1 (01:07:47):
Venezuelan Crude Oil.

Speaker 3 (01:07:49):
Check in on fifty five KRC the talkstation.

Speaker 1 (01:08:09):
It's seven to six, Happy Friday, Happy new Year again.
I know I'm saying happy new year since it came
back to work this week, but you know what, it
is a new year, and quite often new Year's means
new Year's resolutions, and I think number one resolution for
most people on the list is, you know, I'm going
to lose some weight this year. I'm gonna go on
a diet, I'm gonna start exercising, I'm gonna take some

(01:08:29):
better stock in my health. Well at least you know,
this year seems to be a little bit different because
the timing of the New Year came out with his
brand new food pyramid Federal Food guidelines, and they have
changed over the years, but this is rather dramatically different.
But also how does one in spite of the food
pyramid changing, which we're going to talk about right now,
how does one stick to their motivations to stay healthy

(01:08:54):
or improve their diet and healthy to talk about that
in studio, George Brunneman and Kei Tenenfeld. You can find
their website, which is I've got it pulled up right
here Restore Wellness dot org and right there at the
top becoming you want to be Why resolutions fail and
what actually works? What you're going to talk about this morning,
George Keith, it is always great having you in the studio,
and I appreciate your willingness to come in and try

(01:09:15):
to keep us on the straight and narrow fellas.

Speaker 3 (01:09:17):
Thanks Brian, It's always great to be here.

Speaker 1 (01:09:19):
Good morning. I hope you get some results out of this.
And I have a lot of people that have chimed
in and said, I really appreciate you know, I got
to talk about that.

Speaker 3 (01:09:25):
And what was that thing that Keith mentioned? You always
got some.

Speaker 1 (01:09:27):
Kind of you should take this minute. I got to
write that down or I'm going to forget about it myself.
But that's why we have a podcast page. So where
do you want to start. You want to start on
how to maintain this initiative, this motivation or do you
want to start with this new food pyramid? And we
want to talk about the vaccine things.

Speaker 3 (01:09:43):
I don't know we could go anywhere to New Year's stuff,
cause I mean it is that time of year and
you know everybody takes a shock and says I want
to lose five pounds. Well then if you don't lose
the five pounds, you feel horrible. If you do lose
the five pounds, well, hey, you really should have said ten, fifteen, twenty, right.
And the key that came out on the podcast with
Keith and Jimbo was instead of focusing on numbers. Focus

(01:10:07):
on who you want to be. So I want to
be someone that can walk five miles, or I want
to be someone that doesn't get tired going up and
down the steps, right, you know, focus on the long
term goal and on how you want to change yourself,
not these little statistics like you know, the number that
comes from the from the scale, or you know, stuff
like that, I want to look different. You go after

(01:10:29):
the course stuff. Go after what is going to make
your life better?

Speaker 1 (01:10:34):
Right?

Speaker 7 (01:10:34):
And you know, and I want to thank you very much.
You put me on a task. You said, if there
was a pill for motivation, yes, you know, we would
take it. And I have not let that come out
of my head ever since you said that. So I
am the least motivated person on the planet. I'm good
with the diet anymore. And I've been really good about
my diet since October of what was it, twenty four

(01:10:57):
because I was hoping it might have an impact on
my cancer, well ultimately over the long term. Apparently not
because I got to start my cancer treatments next week.
But it was just a theory, because some cancers can
really benefit from eliminating sugar, for example, exactly which I've
kept too very good, but it's the elimination completely of
carbs and doing that ketosis thing, which was a struggle
to start with, but I was able to do that

(01:11:18):
for a while and after Thanksgiving a twenty four, I
just kind of pair back and allow myself some carb.
So I don't know if that screwed it up and
that's what led. I don't really don't think it has
any connection with that cancer. But the point being it
had a positive impact, not just because I was able
to lose some weight I lost about fifteen to twenty pounds,
but because I feel better right, and I attributed that

(01:11:40):
to getting rid of the sugar and motivation said that
the magic word there, he said, I can handle the
diet now is because it went from being something you
thought about to becoming a habit.

Speaker 1 (01:11:50):
It is a habit.

Speaker 3 (01:11:51):
Secret to all of this is to somehow get it
to be a habit.

Speaker 1 (01:11:54):
Right. And for someone out there saying there's no way
I can liminate sugar, no again, you know what, Yes
you can, and once you you know, commit yourself to
trying to keep it out of your diet because it
is it's bad for you. I mean, study after study
after study after study, and that damn corn syrup and
that's sure, yes, oh it's pervasive. Start reading labels and
look at what you can't eat if you pursue this

(01:12:16):
course of action like I'm recommending, and you're going to
find that the vast majority of Kruger is off limits.

Speaker 3 (01:12:22):
Yeah, right there. And with the new food pyramid, which
we'll get to, basically entire aisles of that sort totally useless.

Speaker 1 (01:12:29):
Never go up the chip aisle ever. Ever, we haven't
had a bat the breakfast atle or the breakfas. Oh
my god, the bread that's one giant row of sugar
products and carbs.

Speaker 7 (01:12:38):
And I'm really glad that the word grass fed is
becoming a normal, you know term now these days they
desired right exactly, there's to be corn fed.

Speaker 3 (01:12:46):
Well milk. You know the fact that you know people
are now lactose intolerant. Well, if you drink raw milk,
there's lactase in it, so you don't have any trouble digesting.
It was when they introduce homogene and pastorization, suddenly the
raw milk lost everything that made it digestible and good.

(01:13:07):
And now it's got a long shelf life and there's
no risk of bacteria. Well, some of that bacteria was
actually good for you, and that's do you see raw
milk coming back. I know that there are some people
who Thomas Massey a huge fan of that. Also, the
whole concept of.

Speaker 1 (01:13:22):
Grassman beef, the idea that you could slaughter it locally,
that needs to be expanded in a loud or you
could support your local farmer. If you can do that,
you'll get higher quality, healthier beef. All the reasons in
the world. But my wife grew up on raw milk.
I mean, she grew up on a dairy farm. For
god sake. The cows were right there, the POWs were milked,
and you brought the milk in the house and you
drank it. Wow, it's like the healthiest person on the planet. Yep,

(01:13:45):
that's great. So anyway, that's.

Speaker 3 (01:13:47):
The whole idea though, is you know, everybody comes at
the beginning of the year and Okay, let's get a
Planet Fitness or some other gym membership, and I'm going
to lose x amount of weight and it feel so
bad because you've just been eating all the Christmas cookies
and stuff, right, But the real motivation should be what
am I gonna do long term so that, you know,

(01:14:08):
if I'm thirty years old now and in great shape
and I can eat anything I want, but I'm building
all these bad habits where you know, I'm drinking alcohol
a lot. I'm drinking a lot of drinks of you know,
Coca cola and pepsi and crap. You have to get
into your head that, hey, I'm not gonna be able
to do that when I'm sixty five, because it's just
gonna make you feel horrible. You got to start those

(01:14:29):
habits now, and so look further down the path instead
of Okay, the first month, I'm going to get a
gym membership and by March I'm done.

Speaker 1 (01:14:37):
Okay, And you see when I said a lot motivation.
Clearly I had enough motivation to pursue this, you know,
elimination of sugar element element in my diet. And it's
become very easy to do, and I don't even think
about it anymore. I just default to go to things
I know I can have and enjoy the exercise part though,
that's what I want. The pill four key, that thing,
you know, joining a gym, that's like the furthest thing

(01:14:59):
from my mind. If I joined gym today, it would
sit there. I'd never go. I know that it's just
like built into my psychology, and there are other people
that feel the same way. I just can't get motivated exercise.
Tap into that one. You're gonna make yourself a billion dollars?

Speaker 7 (01:15:12):
Well, I think it's what is your why? Why are
you doing what you're doing?

Speaker 2 (01:15:16):
All right?

Speaker 3 (01:15:17):
Are you going to do a.

Speaker 7 (01:15:18):
Diet and lose weight because you want to look good
in a dress or a certain pair of pants or
whatever it might be? That why is pretty shallow, and
often if you get something that blocks that pattern, like
for instance, to say you get a sidetracked and then
you're like, oh, maybe it's not that important. There's a
Netflix movie I want to watch right exactly about all?

(01:15:39):
Your why can be deeper than it's ever been before.
Odds are you going to change it? For instance, if
you get a major illness, your why is going to
go way up on the list there you go, right,
But make make that why something wonderful. Maybe you want
to be a great grandpa, or you want to you
want to travel to the outbacks of whatever and hike
the entire trail and you don't stop and you put
that into your head, and you create that why so

(01:15:59):
strong that nothing gets in its way. You prioritize yourself.

Speaker 1 (01:16:03):
Okay, so my homework assignment and my listeners homework as simon,
Assuming they want to get on this path and they
struggle with getting up off the couch like I do
in the first place, come up with that thing you
want to do that is going to require you to
engage in physical fitness.

Speaker 7 (01:16:18):
Yeah, I would put a why at the top, and
then I would put the benefits on the left and
the cons on the right, and really just hit that through.
And when you ask your whis don't just hit it
from a physical standpoint, hit it from a spiritual standpoint,
an emotional standpoint, a mental standpoint, a family standpoint. Really
just kind of get those whole spectrums of your life
and ask what is that why.

Speaker 1 (01:16:36):
If you're willing to go through the pros and cons
elements like that, the cons of exercise, that list is
going to be virtually empty. And I know the reason
you're pushing people to go down that road, because that's
what my wife wants me to lose weight. My wife
wants me to exercise. She wants to actually wants me
around for a lot longer. There's a reason why it
will be better for me. I would look better, I
would feel better. I could walk the five miles if

(01:16:57):
I wanted to. All those are in the plus column,
and then you go over to the negative column. It's like, well,
I won't be able to be lazy. Do you know
that they're to watch my movies?

Speaker 2 (01:17:06):
Now?

Speaker 7 (01:17:06):
Here's here's maybe a good pill. For instance, for exercise.
In exercise, if you increase your muscle mass by through
global exercising, right, you will improve every single health matrix
known to man in your body. So therefore, what that
means is that there's no other medicine on this earth
that can improve every single biological medical function improve all

(01:17:27):
of your quality data points across your body than resistance
training and exercise period period end stop.

Speaker 1 (01:17:35):
You wrote it from Keith here on the fifty five
Carsine Morning Show. Restore Wellness dot organ That's where you
find Georgie and Keith's website on wellness topics and issues.
Some great resources there, and of course you can check
out the interview. I see the link to it right there.
Restore it. Well, it's dog. We will continue. We've got
a whole hour with these guys some great information. We'll
talk about the new food pyramid of what it might
mean for us. I love the new food pyramid parenthetically

(01:17:56):
fifteen Right now fifty five KRCD talk station Odor Eggs.
I love Odor Exit because well Odor exsit products work
guaranteed one hundred percent it seven twenty Here fifty have
KARCD talk station trying to do some good work here
for the listening audience and hopefully get me motivated and
off my butt and maybe start to exercise. Here in

(01:18:17):
the counter year, got to find that specific reason, the
goal you want to achieve that will move you toward
the idea of diet and exercise improvements. And Keith Tennefeld
from Root Cause. But you can find Keith and George
Brenneman it restore Wellness dot org. Great resources there and
some great information and some action points that we can
use this year to help us stay on track. Now,

(01:18:39):
I had mentioned going into the break about this food pyramid.
This different you know, prioritization of foods, what you should eat,
what you shouldn't eat. You know, based upon the training
I got when I was a kid. This thing's been
flipped on top of a tat. This is a whole
radical different direction, and some people are rejecting it completely
outright because they have been brainwashed their entire life to
believe eggs bad, butter meat evil bad, it's all gonna

(01:19:02):
cause cholesterol to increase, We're all going to die, and
that's just not true, right, you know why they're saying it.

Speaker 3 (01:19:07):
The primary reason is everything you just named has a
short shelf life, so you can't make mass produce it
and keep it on the shelf for two months. That's
a that's you know what, never thought of it that way.
It's purely because it's too hard to keep it supplied.
You know, eggs the best eggs you can get it,
so you go up to the chicken coop right up

(01:19:28):
the street and get them. But it's because they can't
keep fresh food fresh for long and so you know
the bread in the United States lasts forever.

Speaker 1 (01:19:41):
Well, if you don't wash the egg you can leave
them out on the counter right last a long time.

Speaker 7 (01:19:45):
Yeah, it's kind of funny when you think about what
a chicken does. So you're telling me, a bird lays
a protein bag right there, and it's shelf life and
it comes in a little packet.

Speaker 2 (01:19:56):
What is that?

Speaker 1 (01:19:58):
The perfect pill farm? Eggs are so good? Are you
gonna get me thinking about that all morning?

Speaker 3 (01:20:02):
Is the pyramids finally got it right?

Speaker 7 (01:20:05):
Let me flip, let me, let me do a little background.
So you got cavemen right way back when. Let's think
about it. What a cave man did he hunted? And
did he hunt three meals a day? No, they would
eat a large bolus protein meal and then they would
probably not eat for several days. And in the meantime
they would pick berries and mushrooms and whatever other little

(01:20:25):
fiber and high vegetables you have. If you look at
the food pyramid, it matches our Paleolithic era, and the
new one does right right, The new one does right,
And so you run through that paradigm and you say,
wait a minute, I don't need to be eating as
much as I do. It needs to be based on
a high protein diet and scourging through our vegetables and
our fruits and our seeds and our nuts exactly what

(01:20:46):
you see here. And then because there was no Bob
Evans on every corner, there was no bread everywhere. And
I believe that is a cornerstone to why we have
inflammation and disease.

Speaker 1 (01:20:54):
Well, and you couldn't hunt and gather pop tarts.

Speaker 3 (01:20:57):
Right man, that must have been miserable for them. You
think about it at this point. My wife and I
had this conversation just yesterday. Breakfast is a marketing tool.
There is a deep, most important meal of the day. Yeah,
you can excite every one of the marketing slogans, you know.
You know, if you guys, after talking with you, I

(01:21:17):
still bring I bring up banana in every morning and
I have not eaten since five o'clock last night. I
will not I just have it here just in case.
I'll take it back home with me. I usually will
you eat it during the day though, maybe get around
to it, or I'll eat something healthy it to get home.
But the idea is I have I kept this huge
window where I have not consumed any calories from you know,

(01:21:38):
at dinner time till about a minimum nine point thirty
the next morning, usually more like ten or eleven o'clock.
So I got that big giant night going out my body.

Speaker 7 (01:21:48):
I just completed a ninety six point five hour fast yesterday.
And the interesting thing with that is that number one
I did water, I did Celtic Sea salt for the electrolytes,
and I sometimes would do creatine in the morning, apples,
I had vinegar for digestion and blood sugar regulation. Fantastic
experience that I haven't I haven't done with the Celtic
Sea salt. But I felt great, I felt energized. And

(01:22:09):
the entire time, the one thing that kept on coming
to my mind was I'm kind of bored. I think
I want to eat, or I'm kind of bored, I'm
kind of hungry. And it was in the boredom, it
was in the empty space that that made me think
of food. And not to mention, my heightened smell was
a mile away. I could smell food forever and other things.
And anyway, the funniest thing about that was that once

(01:22:31):
you overcame, or once I overcame, that urge like, oh,
that's just you know whatever.

Speaker 3 (01:22:35):
I was fine.

Speaker 7 (01:22:35):
I wasn't hungry, you know, I felt fantastic. My inflammation
was down, my mental clarity was on top, and I
just I just thought, for a minute, if I'm reducing
a foreign say inflammation in my body, because anytime you
get you get stung by a bee, it comes in
and swells your arm up. Right, every time you ingest food,
your body's got to say, hey, is this allergic?

Speaker 2 (01:22:57):
Is this not?

Speaker 7 (01:22:57):
So there is an initial immune response created a little
bit of inflammation, and then it goes down after you
haven't eaten. But in America, inflammation we eat inflammation, We
eat inflammation, wet. It never gets a chance to really
settle down. And it's in that inflammation period where disease comes,
where corner vanscar disease comes, where diabetes comes. We're joint
and arthritis pain come well.

Speaker 1 (01:23:18):
And another component of that is going back to you
know how often we eat. I wish we would stop
using food as a reward mechanism for kids. Good point.
That will be a simple thing to change. You know,
you can reward a child with something that will put
a big smile on the face. And it doesn't have
to be a cupcake, right, you know what I mean?

Speaker 7 (01:23:37):
And of sort of post it notes at the end
of sports, you know what are they given out?

Speaker 3 (01:23:41):
They're given out hohs and gatorade.

Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
And yeah and oh sure pizza athletes, right, and a
giant pitcher of pepsi. That was what we got after
the Little League Baseball games go to Clearview tavern. Giant
pitchers of pepsi and cook and all that junk food
sprawl aer on the table. The adults are at the
other table, drinking giant pitchers of beer popcor or eating
nuts chips. You all remember those days. Seven twenty six

(01:24:03):
fifty five kres to detalk station. We got more health
to talk about with George and Keith again it's Restore
Wellness dot org. First one I mentioned FOREI in exchange.
I finally made my phone call yesterday, got myself scheduled
for the oil change. And I'm also getting a new
set of rear tires because my winter alpine tires are
shot out. Talking Restore Wellness dot org, talking to George
Retterman and Keith Tennefeld and about some really some healthy

(01:24:26):
initiatives we can engage in, and a new way of thinking,
a rethinking of the entire dietary system. And some people
may look at the roll out by RFK Junior and mahah,
you know this is just crazy. RFK. The guy's a
nut job, he hates vaccines, he's a lunatic. Friends, he's
conspiracy theorist whatever. But this is not just him Unilaterally saying,

(01:24:47):
let's load up on the proteins. Let's start going back
to meat and eggs and butter and all the stuff
that this recommends. He is backed by major medical associations
and actual research. Am I right? Yes, absolutely, yes.

Speaker 3 (01:24:59):
I mean everything that we've been reading and talking about,
every single book starts off with the need to protein
and just you have no bodily need for carbohydrates, and
certainly no need for processed foods. But then, like like
you're saying, if you walk down the aisles at Krogers,
what is it, it's processed foods.

Speaker 1 (01:25:18):
I found if you stick to the edge your dairy
side and your eggs and of course your milk aisle,
then comes the meat aisle. If you stick to the
back end of the store, and then you run right
into the bed fruit and vegetable and then you can
just go to the front of the room and leave right.

Speaker 3 (01:25:33):
If you notice now most of the Krogers will put
a bunch of there's always these donut carts in the
middle of those sections, trying to.

Speaker 1 (01:25:41):
The size George Impulse buys.

Speaker 3 (01:25:44):
But the whole idea that came out with that food pyramid,
it was not only what they had in the pyramid.
But the text though and with it. Oh yeah, you
mentioned that, Keith.

Speaker 7 (01:25:53):
Yeah, So from the US Department Health and Human Services,
you can go to realfood dot gov. Then pyramid. It's
a great handout right there. So realfood dot gov. And
the protein dairy healthy is at the top now, and
let's just quickly go through that because it's very, very important.
So what it's saying basically is we are ending the
war on protein. Every meal must prioritize high quality, nutrient

(01:26:17):
dense protein from both animal and plant sources, paired with
healthy fats from whole food such as eggs, seafood meats,
full fat dairy, nuts, seeds, olives, and avocados. And they
even give you a target range, and I agree with
this target range one point two to one point six
grams per kilogram of body weight per day in protein correct.

(01:26:38):
And so some people might even convert that into zero
point five to one gram of protein per body pounds.
So if you're two hundred pounds, you're looking at anywhere
from one hundred to two hundred grams of protein, Okay,
And it adds up and you just kind of stick
with it, you'll be surprised how much protein you're probably
not eating. When I was working out, I found that
I was under eating my protein amount, Like.

Speaker 1 (01:27:00):
Oh wow.

Speaker 7 (01:27:01):
So so next down the line is your vegetable and fruits.
And we all know what vegetable fruits are. And they're
recommending three servings of vegetables and two servings of fruits. Now,
I just want to give you guys a quick biohack here,
because you guys got buy all these fruits and vegetables
and you're wondering about the outside peel.

Speaker 3 (01:27:19):
Of is it contaminated? And how do I wash it?

Speaker 7 (01:27:22):
A very very very good way to wash your fruits
and vegetables is you put it in a pan and
you put water in there, and then you take baking
soda and you sprinkle a modern amount of baking soda
in there, and then you take vinegar and you and
you dump that in there, and it creates this fantastic
strends of cleaning agent, and your grapes will taste so
much better. It gets rid of all those harsh, harsh

(01:27:42):
chemicals and layers. It's amazing.

Speaker 1 (01:27:45):
Vigar I used to make the volcano little.

Speaker 3 (01:27:48):
It does fuzz a little, but what's interesting is when
you pour the water out the color, so like if
you do that with strawberries, all the red comes out.

Speaker 1 (01:27:57):
Are you telling me that there's artificial dye in the strawberries?
What you just said without saying it, George, Seriously.

Speaker 3 (01:28:04):
It was disturbing the first time I did that protocol
that keeps this way.

Speaker 1 (01:28:07):
I've never read the box label on strawberries. I was
kind of assumed there's strawberries. Like when I buy salmon,
I don't want anything with you know, added coloring, what natural,
you know, wild caught, non adulterated salmon. But if they
add something in it, they got to warn you about
that is there on the label?

Speaker 3 (01:28:23):
Do they tell you there is anything on the label?
And it seem's true? Actually with oranges, the reason they're oranges,
they paint them.

Speaker 1 (01:28:29):
But I don't eat the peel on an orange. Nobody does.

Speaker 3 (01:28:31):
But I mean the whole idea is you don't even
know what the orange really is because you can't see
the true orange.

Speaker 1 (01:28:36):
Although, but you know, I will take a wedge of
orange and squeeze it into my glass if I'm having
a cocktail that involves using an orange, So the peel
is in there. Yep, oh great, something else for me.
I am next, George.

Speaker 7 (01:28:49):
I am not going to call you out on radio here, Brian.
All right, So the last head, the last one is
whole grains are encouraged. Now, this is the carbohydrate section.
It's now down at the bottom where it was basically
the meat and potatoes of the food pyramid prior SOT. Interestingly,
it's only two to four servings they're saying here they're
encouraging a whole grain. Let's let's underline whole grain versus

(01:29:13):
enriched or refined carbohydrates, which is basically in everything that
you're eating, your breads, your cereals.

Speaker 1 (01:29:18):
All your crap process white flour, yes.

Speaker 7 (01:29:20):
Fantastic, yes and so, and it's got to be fiber dense,
fiber rich. That's where you're really gonna benefit. If you're
gonna be bringing in a whole grain or carbohydrate, let
it do the work and make it a high fiber,
high grain type of thing. And also make sure that
when you're doing this that you're not getting you're getting
a fold eate rich carbohydrate.

Speaker 3 (01:29:40):
That doesn't have fullic acid as part of its incur
hold on.

Speaker 1 (01:29:43):
You're gonna have to break that one down for it.

Speaker 7 (01:29:45):
So we don't process fol aid very well at all,
and humans and in fact, there's a large, large, large
population of people who can't process fulic acid. So if
you're taking a supplement with folic acid in it, I
highly encourage you to throw it in the garbage because
odds are you bought it because it was cheap, and
get yourself a methylated multi vitamin or methylated fol eate

(01:30:05):
and you'll see it'll say methylcobalamine or methyl tetrahydrofolate. Please
do that. You're gonna in three months your energy will
be notably different. And most breads or or refined carbohydrates
have folic acid or enriched flour which is fullic acid.

Speaker 1 (01:30:22):
Okay, we're going to continue, and maybe even a word
or two. I know there's got to be a vegan
in the audience somewhere out there. Can you even ascribe
to a healthy diet? You if you do not want
to eat anything that's animal, animal or living or connected
with human or rather animal life, or even fish. Sometimes
people won't even eat fish on these strictied diets. I

(01:30:43):
can't imagine, but apparently Keith has the answer to that question.
Will continue with George and Keith after these words for again,
I guess it's a Chimney Care fireplaces, though I feel
like I just station. Yeah, fifty five KRC detox station.
I'm very, very happy Friday making it a special with
some health information Keith Tennefeld and George Brenneman. You can

(01:31:03):
find them on their website get all the great informations
they regularly post Restore Wellness Dot or guy Now George Keith, I,
I personally couldn't understand the motivation because I enjoy all
types of food. I'm a foody kind of guy, so
in the in the nature of just at least addressing
what someone out in the audience is saying, I'm not
going to start eating a whole lot of protein and
beef and eggs. I'm a vegetarian and I'm a vegan.

(01:31:26):
Can you achieve a healthy lifestyle and diet on those
types of diets?

Speaker 7 (01:31:30):
Yes you can, Yes you can. And and I think
that the problem with current vegan options right now is
they tend to do a high carbohydrate diet because oh
yeah it's sess sashable and it fills them up. But
it's living on and it's not good so you want
to make sure if you're if you're vegan, that you
also limit your carbohydrates because it can cause you a

(01:31:51):
lot of problems.

Speaker 3 (01:31:52):
And the other key is don't don't envy meat because
those you know, burgers that are made entirely from plant.
You ever look at those ingredients lists as long as
your arm and it's all garbage. So if you're gonna
go vegan, don't try and buy this imitation meat stuff
that's got every chemical known to man on it. Just

(01:32:12):
stick with what you said you wanted to do. You're
a vegan, eat vegetables, eat, eat, you know, the fruits stuff.

Speaker 7 (01:32:20):
Let me kind of go through some of the vegan
approach when you're when you're managing what you what are
you going to do and how you're going to eat. Lentils,
beans fantastic, fantastic sources of protein, along with some high
fiber carbohydrates. But if you're gonna list for proteins, per
things like hemp seeds are really high. You've got flax

(01:32:41):
seed and chia seeds. You got almonds. I'm a big
walnut fan. Walnuts are probably for me, one of the
most healthiest forms of nuts, So I would lean on
a heavy walnut diet.

Speaker 3 (01:32:51):
Avocado would probably.

Speaker 7 (01:32:52):
Be my main go to vegetable if I was going
to be doing some type of vegan vegetable diet.

Speaker 1 (01:32:57):
Tofu again, you go a little bit.

Speaker 7 (01:32:59):
Of the the estrogen in it, but it's a fantastic
plant based protein. And then aedime is another one. So
if you're kind of looking at the bigger picture, I'd
be leaning heavy on the lentils, the black beans and
those type of sources along with with avocado.

Speaker 1 (01:33:14):
Well, you stumbled upon something that I was thinking about
earlier when I was doing the keto thing. Part of
the reason I think I lost ways because I just
got sick of things that qualify under the keyto diet.
You know, I can't eat another slice of blank and bacon,
or you know, another piece of cheese or more eggs.
I've been eating these damn things now for three weeks.

(01:33:35):
I want variety. There seems to be lacking in a variety,
and the list that you just gave me, I'd get
tired of eating that crap within the first day or two.

Speaker 7 (01:33:42):
Probably possibly, And and maybe that's why some nema I
did and I didn't want to use the dumb button
but I think that when you are doing a keto diet,
a lot of people think that it's high in fats
and cheeses, and I'm I say lean green protein often
when I'm telling people about my kito diets. You know,
you got the avocado, obviously, you've got chicken, you've got fish.

Speaker 1 (01:34:05):
You got to kind of diversify that.

Speaker 7 (01:34:07):
And I think that even though the butters and the
eggs and all that are readily available and they taste good,
I'm not a big fan of nitrate bacon. A lot
of bacon and sausage has nitrates in and if you
can get if you can, then go for a child.

Speaker 1 (01:34:20):
That flame, non process, non nitrate bacon. It's out there.

Speaker 7 (01:34:24):
And see this goes back to the y and it
goes back to the self worth. You've got ground beef
and you've got grass fed ground beef, which one is
the majority of the population probably going to be buying
a probably the ground beef because they possibly don't think
they're bougie enough, if you want to call it that,
to get the grass fed beef, but you know they're
worth it. You make money as a tool to manage

(01:34:48):
you and take care of the meat. Suit that you
woke up in and so get the grass fed beef,
Get the beef that actually is good for you. Get
the grass fed chicken or the fresh raised chicken eggs,
and all that good stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:34:58):
Hormone free stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:35:00):
Right, You're worth it.

Speaker 7 (01:35:01):
Stop stop telling yourself this negative rhetoric that you're not
worth a good quality selection at the supermarket and that
you're not worth a damn gym membership. You're worth it.
You, you love yourself. You motivate yourself to take care of
yourself because it is your responsibility for you. No one
else is coming to save you. You get out there
and say, I'm gonna start loving myself, treat myself well,

(01:35:24):
give myself the high quality things I need in order
to function in this life, because it's my one life,
my one shot. Why poison it?

Speaker 1 (01:35:32):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:35:32):
Why do it? Half asked?

Speaker 7 (01:35:34):
Because you don't want to get off the couch because
you like your Netflix show, and Netflix is they just
want you to sit there, right, So take care of yourself.

Speaker 1 (01:35:41):
Guys, we love you out there. I brought it up.
I admitted it. At least you know I've I know
my fault. I know my faults to a t. I
could write a book about my fault, Keith. So yeah,
I know that was directed at me, and that's okay.
But see, I know I'm not alone in my desire
to just sit on the damn well.

Speaker 3 (01:36:00):
And my motivation is at least as far as the
diet and going from you know, normal ground beef to
grass fed is I find it useful to know the
backgrounds of some of this stuff. So why is it
you want grass fed well? Because it has lower omega
six versus omega three, which means you have lower inflammation,
lower chances of getting all of the other problems that

(01:36:22):
come with the seed oils, lower LDL on higher hdo
you think of seed oils, that's a mega sex. So
there's all these chemical reasons for doing this stuff. But
the net result is you feel so much better. You're
in much better shape. It's all because you're now paying attention.
And the whole rule of thumb is the longer the
ingredient list, the further you should stay away from it.

Speaker 1 (01:36:43):
That's a good rule.

Speaker 7 (01:36:44):
And on the vegan thing, Avocata oil olive oil right,
Abocato oil olive oil, get rid of any other canoa
oil vegetable will get rid of it. You're killing yourself.
And don't do fried anything, fried, okra, fried whatever, vegetables
because that's in seed oils that are fried temperatures carcinogenic.
Stay away from fried foods everyone.

Speaker 1 (01:37:03):
What if you fried in lard or in beef.

Speaker 3 (01:37:05):
Tallow Okay, you caught me very good, you know what.

Speaker 1 (01:37:08):
Good? That's what I do. I love fried food from
time to time. It's not good for you. But got
that tallow and the lard in the cabinet along with
the avocado oil. Because I follow, you.

Speaker 7 (01:37:19):
Can buy chicken fingers now that way okay, yeah, made
and fried in talloway much better.

Speaker 1 (01:37:25):
Pause. We'll bring it right back for one more segment
before we get to yes over the top of the hour.
New is signal ninety nine in studio. I hope you
know who she is. If you don't go to Facebook,
find out who she is and follow what she is
to say. She's got the inside skinny on everything going
on in downtown Cincinnati. Leis in so far as policing
is concerning a lot of hot topics with her on
that whether you're buying home refinancing or existing mortgage, you

(01:37:46):
need Susette Low's a camp with cross Country mortgage. Watch
some contuity about Garasheedy talks a good by the Thomas
wrapping up in the full hour of great information and
I will be honest motivation from George Venman and Keith Tennefeld.
I recommend you head a to their website Restore Wellness
dot or book Market because they updated all the time
with some great information and they're going to be bringing

(01:38:06):
a cancer expert into town in March. This is real exciting,
especially for a guy like me as to deal with
that kind of.

Speaker 3 (01:38:11):
Well and So Thomas E. Freed is from Boston University,
Boston College, I think, sorry, and we did a podcast
with him in November that was just outstanding. We actually
did it into three pieces because his piece was so technical.
But he is so in the forefront of new cancer treatment.

(01:38:31):
I say new, but it's because he's going back to
one nineteen twenties protocol of starving the cancer of sugar
and glycogen.

Speaker 2 (01:38:39):
Never.

Speaker 1 (01:38:40):
Yeah, that's exactly the motivation that prompted me to do
exactly right.

Speaker 3 (01:38:43):
So Thomas is going to be coming into town as
part of a Restore Wellness of seminar we're going to
do with him on March twenty eighth, so mark your calendars.
There's nothing out there yet, but we're going to start
putting some of the pre information out there.

Speaker 7 (01:38:57):
He's going to be here in March, and not only
it's going to be you know, Thomas Seafree talking about
cutting edge, easy ways to manage your cancer. I'm hoping
to invite a lot of cancer physicians and other people
in the medical space there. We're hoping to have booths
that are going to be there so in case you
want to do some adjunct things like hyperbaric auctions in
therapy with Jimbo or anything like that, it's going to

(01:39:19):
be available so you can get more information as well.
So it's going to be pretty informative. We're really really
looking forward to It's probably gonna be pretty big too,
and so if any family members have cancer, please stay
tuned and come to this Thomas Seafree conference. It's going
to be it's it's going to be a sweet prize
in Cincinnati to have him here.

Speaker 2 (01:39:35):
Well.

Speaker 1 (01:39:35):
I plan on attending since you did invite me in
the over the break there sounds like it's going to
be very interesting, informative and maybe even potentially life saving
if you think.

Speaker 3 (01:39:43):
Well, and we've been so fortunate. At the end of
the year, we had doctor Robert Lufkin in, we had
Thomas seafried in, we had David Dalen Fisher, who is
famous as an actor, but he's also now hugely into
how to get your emotional health in line and you know,
how to get your mind in the right place. So
our last few podcasts are definitely worth the listen. You

(01:40:05):
might want to do it in pieces because there's a
ton of information there, but you know, we just want
to give everyone a chance to understand you can make
yourself better. It's up to you. Don't don't depend on
the doctors.

Speaker 1 (01:40:17):
It's up to you.

Speaker 3 (01:40:18):
Get the information, get the motivation, do it yourself.

Speaker 1 (01:40:21):
Well it's at restore well org on X. Have I
got that right? Yes, at restore well dot or. There's
no store well org. It's just restore well dot org.
But restore well org. I'll get it out. Everybod's gonna
be confused, Like, thanks, Thomas, I try to find what
you were saying is not there at restore well org.

(01:40:43):
That's X. You'll get that. Get the podcasts and listen.
You can find the podcast on iHeartMedia. App and I
hope it's a Joe's Trecker production. He does do a
lot of our stuff here. There you go, see Joe,
I put a plug in for your brother.

Speaker 3 (01:40:56):
Well, we're training his daughter involved in the videography too.

Speaker 1 (01:40:59):
So oh wonderful, wonderful family affair. George Keith. I can't
thank you enough for that minimum motivating me. And hopefully
you know if you guys impacted one personal listening audience,
I considered that a victory right there.

Speaker 7 (01:41:11):
Let us now please reach out to us or Brian
and let us know that we're helping change your life
for the better.

Speaker 1 (01:41:16):
Yep. And of course the website restore Wellness dot org
that one I got right, and head on over there regularly.
Bookmarket guys, you know, I look forward to having you
in from time to time throughout the year. I appreciate
your willingness to do that, and I appreciate your efforts
to motivate me and get me on the right track.
I'm working on it, I promise you. There you go,
Thanks everyone, have a great day. Stick around at the

(01:41:37):
big event. Signal ninety nine in study Talkstation Potato five
fifty five KRCD talk station, A very Happy Friday to you.
I've been excited about this all week. I found out
from this lovely lady in my studio right now that
she was going to be at my program, and it
was because she posted it on Facebook and you know her.

(01:41:58):
And if you don't need to know her, if you're
on face, we'll go to signal ninety nine. Just search
for signal ninety nine and you will be welcome to
the hot off the press inside information like, for example,
what goes on an executive session of Cincinnti City Council.
Since they don't take notes and they won't let the
public in there. You know what, there are whistleblowers and leakers,
and there are connected people behind the scenes who will

(01:42:20):
get this information out into the world. And that's how
we find out that we may be entering into a
settlement agreement with the Hinton family. Welcome to the fifty
five KRCY Morning Show Studio Signal ninety nine. It is
such a distinct pleasure. I've been excited about this since
I found out.

Speaker 3 (01:42:34):
You were coming on.

Speaker 6 (01:42:35):
I've been excited to surprise you, Brian that you've known
me for years.

Speaker 1 (01:42:38):
I know and see this is so we I have
known her for a long long time. I just didn't
realize that she was the we'll say, the voice behind
Signal ninety nine. It is your post, it is your page,
but you're a vehicle to get those whistleblowers or those
connected people with the information that we're all clamoring for.

(01:43:00):
They bring it to you, and you post that you
have credibility because what you post usually comes armed with
the documents and information that supports the specific statements that
you're making. So what can city manager share along do
but try to argue with you, But she doesn't have
anything to refute what you're saying.

Speaker 6 (01:43:16):
Well, the best thing is is yesterday when I released
the screenshot of her denying all of it and basically
call on Ken Kober a liar. Yeah, I released that
and I said, you know, for the city managers, for
the people that work in city hall, for the council members,

(01:43:36):
you know that this is not true. You know that
she's actually lying in this statement. Step into the light,
get out of the shadows, and step into the light
and call it out.

Speaker 1 (01:43:48):
Well, and if you are in any way, shape or
from confused about this subject matter, I went over earlier
this morning, Ken Ken Cober, FLP present was on the program,
and I specifically gave him credit because he made the
announcement as a by virtue of position as the FOP president,
talking about the behind the scenes apparent negotiation between city
Manager Cheryl Long and the Hinton family. Specifically, for those

(01:44:11):
who don't remember about Hinton, it was that Ryan Hinton,
the eighteen year old who was shot and killed by
a Cincinnati police officer. Happened last May, and it was justified.
Ask Hamilton County Prosecutor Connie Pillage, you know you are
allowed to use deadly force when someone turns and points
a firearm at you. So he was put in the clear,
this officer was. There has been no lawsuit file, like

(01:44:34):
a wrongful death lawsuit on behalf of the late Ryan Hinton,
and yet here's this announcement from Ken Cober that whoa
lo and behold. Apparently behind the scenes, Cheryl Long is
sitting down with the Hiddon family and talking about settling
this underlying shooting incident. I'm thinking about it, so as
is everyone. Council members apparently didn't know about this. You're
the one that gave Ken Kober the information that this

(01:44:55):
was happening.

Speaker 6 (01:44:56):
Absolutely. I actually call Kenkober quite a bit to dispel
rumors and speculation, and I'll say, hey, is this true?
And he said, I have not heard this.

Speaker 1 (01:45:08):
So Ken breaks this and the response you refer to
because I want to quote it because it is so
obvious that something's going on behind the scenes in spite
of what Charel Long is trying to say. I mean,
she can't outrighte live, but she does her best to
do it. Quote the city has not reached a settlement agreement,
note the emphasis, and I vehemently reject the notion that

(01:45:31):
any discussions are being rushed, are happening in secret, or
are designed to keep information from city council. Now, if
this was not happening, if there was not an actual
settlement discussion, then she would have said the city is
not discussing settlement with the hint And family. That is

(01:45:54):
clearly not what she said. So we know this is
going on. And then lo and behold, you find out
once the local news reaches out and speaks with councilman
Seth Walsh or who was the other counselman. That's what
Jeff Cameroning both of them expressed, like outrage at this
they're on the side of the officer, They're on the

(01:46:14):
side of justice. They do not want to settle this.
They're council members. How on the hell can Cheryl Long
sit down with anyone to start talking about settlement of
a lawsuit that hasn't even been filed. Council has the
power of the purse, don't they signal ninety nine?

Speaker 6 (01:46:27):
Well yes, And here's how I can tell you that
she actually did lie in her statement because she knew
there was a very good chance that Counsel on Monday
was going to vote down this settlement agreement with the
Hidden Family. So she decided and she said, I'm just

(01:46:50):
going to pass it myself. I'm just going to pass
it myself. I'm just going to take care of it myself.
Well see, you got to remember, Brian, you've got people
at work behind the scenes. Irish ROLLI was there in
the room with the manager, Cheryl Long, and the mayor
when h Ryan Hinton's father viewed the bw C footage

(01:47:15):
of his son getting shot by CPD A and a
righteous shoot. He actually took a swing at CHIEFDG and
then said the words you took one of mine. I'm
going to take one of.

Speaker 1 (01:47:27):
Yours and then the next day goes and runs over
sheriffs deputy and kills him.

Speaker 6 (01:47:30):
No that no, yeah, yeah, Well here's the here's the problem.
The mayor and Cheryl Long and Irish Rolly thought he
would be very bad optics to arrest him for making
terroristic threats towards a police officer and for taking a
swing at Chiefdigi. So it'll be a bad look for
the city. Well, let me tell you what, Brian. Had

(01:47:52):
they done the.

Speaker 1 (01:47:52):
Right thing, Oh yeah, Larry.

Speaker 6 (01:47:54):
Larry Henderson, my friend would be alive right shore. Yeah,
and you know, just and it was the same day,
by the way, Oh that was.

Speaker 1 (01:48:04):
The same yes, yes, I can't remember what I did yesterday.

Speaker 2 (01:48:07):
Yeah, the day.

Speaker 6 (01:48:07):
Before was when his son was killed. And the very
next day, and you know, the mayor and Iris Rolly
is good friends with the Hinton family. So she was
actually at the scene where that pos killed my friend
interfering with witnesses. She was actually put in the back
of a police cruiser for CPD for interfering with witnesses.

(01:48:31):
She was telling witnesses at the scene, don't talk to
the CPD, don't give them a statement. They're trying to
hang a brother. Don't don't cooperate. This is a homicide investigation,
and you're tampering with witnesses.

Speaker 3 (01:48:43):
This is irish, really, at the scene of the murder
of the sheriff's deputy.

Speaker 6 (01:48:50):
Yes, so she was placed in a cruiser and then
the officer was told to let her go. Now that
bw C footage and the cruiser footage, that will all
be coming out. Oh, it's locked in a vault right
now because the judge doesn't want it to taint the trial. Okay,
give me a break, it's not going to taint the trial.

(01:49:10):
But let me tell you what. That footage is going
to come out, and you're going to see in here,
Iris Rowley act in a fool, interfering in a homicide investigation.
And she should have been charged. Again, she should have
been charged. These are felonies interfering, tampering with witnesses, and
a homicide investigation. That's a felony. Okay. Obstructing a police officer.

Speaker 1 (01:49:33):
Hmm, Well you've got video footage of her obstructing police
officers at.

Speaker 6 (01:49:37):
All, all the time. Yeah, so that's all going to
be coming out. She can't hide from that.

Speaker 2 (01:49:43):
You know.

Speaker 1 (01:49:43):
And I hate to pivot over to the whole the
situation evolving the ice officer shooting in Minneapolis, But that's
interfer that can that is what happens if you interfere
with the police officer. If you do that, it's a
crime to do so. You're supposed to listen to the
police officer. Has they have the right to do that,
They have the right to stop. I have to go
about doing their business and enforcing the law, which is
what the federal officers are doing iris rawly. By interfering

(01:50:06):
with the officers demonstrably doing so, it's on video footage
and not suffering any accountability is the kind of thing
that encourages others to do the same damn thing.

Speaker 6 (01:50:14):
It enables criminal behavior absolutely. And because we have weak
judges in Hamilton County who refuse to honor their oath
or issue one from twenty twenty two on setting the
standards of bail and whatnot, we don't have any accountability
for the criminals. They revolve in and out of the
courthouse like it's no big deal.

Speaker 1 (01:50:34):
And maybe a prosecutor who's not willing to even take
on a case like that.

Speaker 6 (01:50:37):
Yeah, and then there's that so yeah, we have a
whole menagerie of loveliness in city, in the city and
in the county. And I do want to speak to
the ice thing, and I want to say this.

Speaker 1 (01:50:50):
Well, tell you what wordt break time. We'll just bring
it back up and let you finish the whole thing
that we end up. We don't have to cut you
off midset and said, okay, perfect more a full hour
worth with signal ninety nine. Follower on Facebook, cou'd be
glad you did a fifteen right now if you have
Ker City Talk Stations. In nineteen fifty five Ker City
Talk Station Brian Thomas with signal ninety nine, it's a

(01:51:10):
pleasure to have her in studio on the cutting edge
of all the shenanigans going on, most notably in the
area of law enforcement. She has spent her life in
and around law enforcement. Got all these wonderful connections what's
going on not just within the Cincinni Police Department, but
also other city organizations and of course the inside scoople,
what's going on in city Hall. And we were talking
about this whole idea that we the city or specifically

(01:51:32):
the city managers, sitting down with the Hinton family talking
about writing them at check because their son got killed
by a police officer justifiable shooting, and they called a homicide.
You mentioned this just a moment ago Signal ninety nine.
They called a homicide. But that's what the corner calls
any not murder, but anyone dying with a firearm. But
that does not mean it's criminal, correct, Like that would

(01:51:55):
be murder or first degree murder or second degree or manslaughter,
it would come with a criminal charge. It's just somebody died.
Point that's really all.

Speaker 6 (01:52:04):
That right at the hands of another human, at the
hands of another hum it doesn't And for guilt of
any kind or innocence, that is correct.

Speaker 1 (01:52:11):
And of course, going back to the justification for youse
of deadly force, eminent apprehension of grieve is bodily harm
if it's reasonable and also a reasonable belief that your
life is in peril. And I had mentioned that in
the context of iris Roli, who parenthetically is not an
employee of the city, who is basically a subcontractor as
a consultant, a consultant at a six hundred and fifty
thousand dollars contract she just signed. I know she employs

(01:52:34):
her son to do some of this work on Government
Square or whatever that's going to accomplish. I don't know,
but she is anti police demonstrably. So we talked about
all the time she's interfered with police officers police doing
their business. You mentioned a new one and just going
back to repeat a little bit about what you have said.
The whole idea when Rodney Hinton Junior ran over the
sheriff's deputy, killing Larry Henderson because his son was involved

(01:52:57):
in this criminal activity and ended up dying, that Iris
Rolly was there on the scene, and that she was
trying to interfere with the police doing that investigation and
ended up in the back of a police car. You
say that video footage is coming out, got her popcorn out?
We're waiting for it.

Speaker 6 (01:53:12):
It's coming.

Speaker 3 (01:53:13):
Add that to the.

Speaker 1 (01:53:14):
Other footage that we already have of Iris Rolly interfering
with police during their business, and I mentioned it reminded
me of Minneapolis. You know, you start messing around police officers,
you put yourself in a situation something bad may happen.
But people of power and prominence, in regardless of what
you might think of Iris Rollie, she is any position
of power and influence over a pretty darn large chunk

(01:53:35):
of residents in the city, and obviously has the ear
not just of share along the city manager, but have
to have par of all.

Speaker 6 (01:53:42):
The ear She runs them. Oh, Iris Rolly runs the city,
Make no mistake about it. Iris Rolly got the mayor reelected,
Make no mistake about that.

Speaker 1 (01:53:51):
Well, and that I think I have heard from multiple
independent sources that.

Speaker 3 (01:53:55):
She did the work. She did.

Speaker 6 (01:53:57):
She got people out there to register, to register for
people to vote, They handed out literature, they were at
every polling station. She did the work to get him reelected,
and lazy Conservatives and Democrats stayed home and didn't vote.
And now they want to complain, but they didn't vote.

Speaker 1 (01:54:15):
Joe Straker color coded map of the election results. I
keep it handy right here every day for the Morning show.
You're right, one out of four eligible voter showed up.
At the point. Thing that because of her power and
her prominence, she's in position to suggest that that's the
right thing to do. The more people should go out
there and do what she's doing, which is interfering with
law enforcement doing their job. That's how people end up dying.

(01:54:36):
Like in Minnesota, you were getting ready to make a
point about that when we went to break and it
took me this long.

Speaker 6 (01:54:42):
You have every right to protest anything you want to.
This is America, right, Did you do it the right way?
You stand on the sidewalk, you hold your signs, you
say your chance. You do not interfere with federal agents
or police officers. You do not the street, You do
not walk on the freeway. All of these things are illegal.

(01:55:05):
And when you block a street to keep an ice
agent from egress or ingress, that is against the law.
And when you point your car at them and try
to hit them, and she actually did. The officer did
bounce off of the corner of her car as he

(01:55:27):
was shooting her. He had to jump out of the way.
So the FBI has it now, which is great. He's
probably going to be exonerated. But you don't get to
grab a federal agent, you don't get to attack police
officers or federal agents. You're going to get shot. And
there's going to be a lot more of it because

(01:55:48):
these people have been enabled to break the law. Last
night Fountain Square, they took to the streets I had.
I could find no record at all, all of them
pulling a permit to be in the street.

Speaker 1 (01:56:03):
You know, And that takes us back to and this
is another thing. I'm glad you can unpackage this force
because what happened last night with these protests blocking the
street and didn't result in any rest of the best
of my knowledge, we just paid eight point one million
dollars to settle the arrests of folks for curfew violations during.

Speaker 6 (01:56:20):
The Okay, but let's be clear, these aren't these weren't
people arrested for curfew violations? No, no, no, these were violent protesters,
not peaceful protesters.

Speaker 1 (01:56:30):
If they were violent, though, why weren't they charged with
acts of violence which would have not resulted in a setting.

Speaker 6 (01:56:36):
They were told not to.

Speaker 1 (01:56:37):
Ah, that's the point I wanted you to unpackage.

Speaker 2 (01:56:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:56:40):
Do you remember the CPD officer that got shot in
the helmet?

Speaker 1 (01:56:44):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:56:44):
During that? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (01:56:46):
What what about that? I mean, they threw frozen bottles
of water. This was not Black Lives Matter and a
peaceful protest. This was a lot of ANTIFA types, chaos
anarchists pretending to be Black Lives Matter infiltrating the Black
Lives Matter movement.

Speaker 1 (01:57:03):
Well, they took their Black Lives Matter hat on off,
put in the back of their trunk, and they got
their protest ice hat out and put it on and
shut up and showed up last night exactly.

Speaker 6 (01:57:13):
And you know what a lot of these anarchists are.
These are paid actors. They're busted in from all over
the country. They come and they do these protests. They
get paid for it. I mean, this has all been proven.

Speaker 1 (01:57:25):
Going back to your point though, now I know there
was a police officer on the street the night that
last night, maybe in the night for the prior one
which resulted in this big settlement payment. Knowing, wait a second,
I can charge that there is appropriate charges here that
I can waiting against them. I could give them a citation,
as opposed to saying you got a curfew violation, you
block the street, you do not have a permit, you
threw a bottle of frozen water, you took a shot

(01:57:46):
at a cop. Citation, citation, citation.

Speaker 6 (01:57:49):
Yeah, they knew that that's what the city wants.

Speaker 1 (01:57:51):
But right you said the city doesn't want that done. Yep,
Who issues that directive and does the acting whatever police
chief is in sitting in that role, does that person
have to listen to say maybe the idle suggestions of
Irish Roi or city manager long or even have to
have parval.

Speaker 6 (01:58:07):
Well, I'm going to tell you years ago the mayor
walked into Chief Striker's office and said, your department's going
to do this, this, and this, And Chief Striker said, well,
come back when you graduate from the police academy. Until then,
get the f out of my office. He actually said that.
But under this charter, now, under this charter agreement, the

(01:58:29):
chief of police has no control over their own department.

Speaker 1 (01:58:34):
Is that the result of the settlement agreement from the
post riots and the.

Speaker 6 (01:58:39):
Yes, the collaborative collaborate. Yes, this is Iris rolly all
day long. They have no actual control over their own
departments anymore.

Speaker 1 (01:58:50):
So we're back to the Chief Striker observing the obvious, which
is people who have no training in law enforcement, who
were not having gone through the process and have no
real connection with how law enforcement works or maybe even
the underlying laws that are being enforced, have control over
the police department. Correct, Okay, I.

Speaker 6 (01:59:09):
Know it's common sense, it's hard. It's hard.

Speaker 1 (01:59:11):
Well, just further illustrating how much power some of this.

Speaker 6 (01:59:15):
And then let's tuck. Can we talk about share along.

Speaker 1 (01:59:17):
Let's talk about sherl long after the break deal. It's
a twenty seven. We'll continue with signal ninety nine. I'm
thoroughly enjoying this. You have no idea eight twenty seven
right now, but you have carze De talks Days.

Speaker 3 (01:59:26):
Today's Greenland.

Speaker 1 (01:59:29):
Trump wants Greenland. It's so strategic fraud in Minnesota. This
is fraud.

Speaker 2 (01:59:33):
Is breathtaking.

Speaker 3 (01:59:34):
Venezuela and oil. Take here's two more ships.

Speaker 2 (01:59:36):
Will seas check in for the.

Speaker 3 (01:59:37):
Very latest fifty five.

Speaker 1 (01:59:43):
It take thirty one if you five cars De talk station.
I hate the subject matter, but I love exposing it
and talking about it in studio signal ninety nine. And
we're obviously talking about all the shenanigans and troubles and
well basically a lot of withholding of information about what's
going on that's important to the city since behind the scenes,
this whole idea of the hint And family settlement exclusively

(02:00:04):
run behind the scenes by the city manager and maybe
Iris Rolly's input. We talked a lot about Iris rolling
her interference with the police work and the impact she
is capable of having on the city. And so let's
move aside from that. You said Signal ninety nine, who's
in studio follower on Facebook that you wanted to talk
a little bit more about the city manager as we
move into this segment.

Speaker 2 (02:00:25):
I do, I do.

Speaker 6 (02:00:26):
I want to talk a little bit about her. She
was a secretary for the city manager in North College
Hill and when that city manager abruptly retired, she wanted
a shot to try to step up and fill their place.
She was not qualified, but they made her the interim

(02:00:48):
city manager and then made a move to make her
actually the city manager without the love of Cancel endorsing that.
So that created some problems. And so while in her
role as the city manager for North College Hill, there
were issues there as well. But she's good friends with
Irish Rowley. So she was handpicked to be the city

(02:01:12):
manager for Cincinnati completely unqualified. Does not have the experience,
uh for North College Hill, let alone a city the
size of Cincinnati. And we have seen over and over
Michael Washington, chief of the since Fire Department fired him.
That's going to be millions of dollars.

Speaker 1 (02:01:35):
Chief Thigi, Yeah, we were going to get to that one.

Speaker 6 (02:01:38):
Yeah, Chief Thigi. Here's the thing, Chief Thiji, is a
legacy in law enforcement. Oh, Yeah, father brothers, you know,
big law enforcement, firefighter, first responder family. She had all
the degrees. She may not have done as much time

(02:01:58):
on the street as someone who typically would move up
through the ranks, but she moved up through the ranks.
She doesn't want the settlement. She wants the legacy of
being the first female chief of the Cincinnati Police Department,
the second oldest police department in the country. Yeah, she

(02:02:23):
wants She wants her job back. She wants to be
allowed to do her job unhindered without people like the
mayor and the city manager. In Irish Rollie telling her
what she should do with her cops and how she
should run them.

Speaker 1 (02:02:38):
Well, apparently, basedb on what you told us in the
last segment, she's been stripped of that ability anyway, And
basically she has the settlement agreement.

Speaker 6 (02:02:45):
She has And nobody was more critical of Chief Fiji
than Signal ninety nine was. We were very critical of her, Yeah,
but we knew why she was doing the things she
was doing. We were calling her out for him as
a person. Teresa Thiji is a great person and I
believe she could be a great police chief if they

(02:03:08):
would just leave her alone, leave her alone.

Speaker 1 (02:03:10):
But you know, going back to why she's on paid
administrative leave in your most recent post single ninety nine,
they gave her apparently in an executive session, so we
don't know necessarily, but you have a little bird apparently
was in the executive session saying that Frost Brown Todd,
who did an investigation to find out if there was
any reason to justify retroactively putting her on paid administrative leave,

(02:03:31):
they couldn't find anything. Sure, you had some officers that
were a little upset. You mentioned that you had some
criticisms of her, But has there ever been a police
chief for the since police Partment that hasn't faced criticism
from right? And he comes on the program. He had
some criticism with dig He thinks maybe she shouldn't gotten
the job of the first place. It doesn't matter, but
she didn't do anything that justified her termination.

Speaker 6 (02:03:54):
No, especially when you know back in July, we blew
her up, We blew up the over what they call
the brawl. It wasn't a brawl. It was an attack
beat down. Yeah, it was an attack. It was a
mob attack, but anyway, it wasn't mutual combat really until
you know the guy got tired of being punched in

(02:04:14):
the back of the head.

Speaker 1 (02:04:15):
Yeah, so or Holly stopped the punch when she right
with her face.

Speaker 6 (02:04:19):
So after that, you know, we were very critical of it,
the mayor, and we did a post that said, you
should resign in a blaze of glory, say this is
why my cops aren't allowed to do their jobs.

Speaker 1 (02:04:35):
Going back to the earlier point, the chief does not
control the police. It's apparently sly or after a parwell
or city manager.

Speaker 6 (02:04:41):
Luck correct. So you know we said this in a post,
and two days later, because I know the mayor watches
Signal ninety nine like a hawk. They all do, two
days later the mayor came on and touted how great
she was. He had every faith in her. She was
doing a great job. Oh yeah, he has said this
over and over and over. Well that post two days previous,
I had said, they're going to sacrifice you when it

(02:05:06):
gets closer to the election, They're going to sacrifice you
like a pawn in hopes of his reelection bid. And
you know what, that's exactly what they did. And that
is not okay, No, it is not okay.

Speaker 1 (02:05:20):
Well, in the whole the compounding insanity about all this
is they put her down, they let they put her
on ministeringly.

Speaker 3 (02:05:28):
They didn't say why they didn't.

Speaker 6 (02:05:30):
Well, you know why they did it, other than sacrificing
her as a pond. They did it because of the
chiefs meeting that she had every right to attend in
Hamilda County and try to collaborate with other chiefs on
how to fix the violent crime in Hamilda County, how
to fix attack these judges and make them start doing

(02:05:52):
their jobs, you know, arrests, how to get the sheriff
to open up those two floors in the jail. So
the Hamilda County chiefs all met, collaborated and shared ideas
to try to combat violent crime in Hammonda County. And
she was a part of that. And that pissed them.

Speaker 1 (02:06:09):
Off because they getting rid of crime in Hamilton County
and helping the citizens of Hamilton County live better, happier,
safer lives undermines the platform of the Provoll administration.

Speaker 6 (02:06:22):
Apparently it's all by design, Brian, it's all by design.
Back when provol was Clerk of Courts, he had a
meeting with the Democratic judges and he said he was
just a clerk. He said, you will do the low bail,
no jail, soft on crime and sentencing, or or I'm
going to have you primaried. He actually said that, and

(02:06:45):
one dump Democratic Judge Dante Johnson stood up and said,
then primary me. You're not going to tell me what
to do in my courtroom, and he walked out and left.
But that's exactly what happened.

Speaker 1 (02:06:55):
Went back to the chief striker like moment.

Speaker 5 (02:06:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:06:58):
Earlier, yeah, my dad would have said, I got two
words for a happy birthday.

Speaker 6 (02:07:02):
Yeah, yeah, I love those words.

Speaker 1 (02:07:04):
I know I do too. Hold on, it's a thirty eight.
We're going to continue with signal ninety nine and studio
got some more things to talk about, like lateral hires
the Sheriff's department apparently issues as well westside or west
end cameras, and Ohio state assistance from Ohio State Highway
Patrol with policing in the area. We'll see if we
can't stuff all that in. Signal ninety nine returns after

(02:07:25):
these brief words. Hey folks, this is Gary Sullivan from
at Home with Gary Sullivan Hoping forty two. If you
have car City Talk Station by Thomas wishing are on
a very happy Friday and thoroughly enjoying the information that
Signal ninety nine has been sharing with us this morning
about all these very controversial issues swirling around the city
of Cincinnati, the mayor, the city manager, and a lot
has to do with Iris Roli, apparently, as she is

(02:07:46):
well pointing out every day, as she does on her site,
which is signal ninety nine on Facebook, connected with all
the insiders, and of course happy to telegraph that and
allow us the information because apparently the city is Cincinnati,
and the Council of and the mayor and the others
don't want us to know about the shenanigans going on.
So what we got here after the brawl the beat

(02:08:08):
down last year, we talked about what happened with police
Chief Thiji, but we also had this reaction is like
Mayor Purval finally woke up and said, oh, we've got
to do something about the crime problem, because we ever
do screaming about crime, and he kept denying it. Oh,
there's no crime problem the City of Cincinnati. Someisode of
the narrative out of the Mayor's office, and then that happened.
Holly gets punched in the face. It's all on video.
It looks terrible the optics story. It made national and

(02:08:31):
global news. His response was at five point four million
dollars we're going to throw at public safety and an
allocation for some cameras over in the West End, which
had been promised now for like a couple of years,
never been done and up in only a moment in
time ago where cameras put in, we saw another eleven
year old girl get shot real close to the area
where ourn eleven year old got shot a couple of

(02:08:52):
years earlier. No love for the West End, but we
got offered all of this assistance from the state of Ohio,
and they also promised to do lateral hires. And the
interesting fact that I learned earlier in the week from
Ken Cober FLP president with that there are thirty open
lateral higher spots, but only seven people applied.

Speaker 6 (02:09:09):
We would you apply you if you knew you couldn't
do your job. You were handcuffed, you were sheep. Dogs
need to be free. They know what they're allowed to
do and what they're not allowed to do. This is
why they're trained and certified through the Commission of OPATA.
They know the law when you're not allowed to only

(02:09:30):
and for certain laws in a certain way. Why would
you want to work there?

Speaker 1 (02:09:36):
Yeah, and you don't get any respect or love from
the people who were in charge of how you do
your job every day.

Speaker 6 (02:09:42):
Great, same thing with the Sheriff's office. Why would you
want to work for an agency that doesn't support the
officers from the top down.

Speaker 1 (02:09:51):
But say what you want about Governor de Wine. He
offered a huge array of assistance. And now we got
a mayor who wants to raise income taxes in order
to improve public safety. The governor is offering all kinds
of public safety, maybe improving services free for free. Yes,

(02:10:12):
and yet the mayor hasn't accepted it. Where are we
with that's two days and then four days a month.
When was the last thing?

Speaker 6 (02:10:19):
Well, and then they weren't going to renew it, and
then I you know, we blew that up on signal
ninety nine. And then the very next day the mayor
said he released a statement that you know he's entering into,
you know, another agreement, renewing an agreement with the governor. Well,
here's the thing. The agreement is only what Irish really says,
aerial support from the helicopters OSP is only to do

(02:10:42):
traffic enforcement, not enforced laws. You know, she's tied their
hands and intelligence. So what about the state agents for parole,
for probation, for alcohol, tobacco. All of these things are
free from the state. And I got to tell you,
I'm a little honked off at the governor because he

(02:11:04):
doesn't need the city's permission to come down here. He's
he's the damn governor that he can send whoever he wants,
whenever he wants to combat violent crime. He could crush
the crime in Cincinnati. He could pull enough resources to
absolutely swat the hell out of it.

Speaker 1 (02:11:26):
It wouldn't cost us any money. We wouldn't have to
raise income tax.

Speaker 6 (02:11:29):
We would not, we would not. And you know what
the one hundred and fifty thousand dollars earmarked for those
cameras at the part Yeah, you know they three c
DC is in bed with the mayor and they want
the control of all the cameras. Everybody knows right now
that flock cameras are phenomenal.

Speaker 1 (02:11:51):
The license plate reader cameras, yes.

Speaker 6 (02:11:53):
Absolutely so, you know shot spotter, it's phenomenal. So if
you have these tools in these resources to combat violent crime,
what's happening is you see communities that are getting flock,
they're not getting cars stolen from there anymore because the
word gets out and they're like, if I steal this
car here and they have flock, they're going to track

(02:12:14):
me everywhere where there's a FLOCK. So I'm going to
go somewhere else and steal this car.

Speaker 1 (02:12:19):
And that technology is out there and it's available to us.
Do we own it already or do we have it?
Is it a difficult thing to like, did we really
need an extra hundred and fifty grand specifically allocated for
the cameras on the West End or did you think
they had that within their budget already? They could have
done it a year or two ago.

Speaker 6 (02:12:33):
Flock would have absolutely worked with them to get things
going and in place. And here's the beautiful thing. You know,
people shoot out surveillance cameras in the city, That's true.
They damage them, they throw rocks. Flock repairs them themselves.
Flock does all the maintenance on their cameras. So you
have a camera go down, Flock sends somebody out to
take care of it.

Speaker 3 (02:12:54):
Right now.

Speaker 1 (02:12:55):
Well, apparently you can't get a camera installed unless you
have your own bucket truck in this town. And there
is the bucket truck, but you have to make arrangements
to get the bucket truck to put the camera up.
It also requires working with apparently, is it Duke or
I believe it Duke. It's Duke who owns the polls,
the utility polls upon which the cameras are placed. One

(02:13:16):
of the excuses from the mayor's office that I read
the other day, I think was the enquire doesn't matter,
but that, oh, we need approval or we need the
processing to come from Duke. When Duke was asked by
local news, we haven't had any requests to instell the
West end cameras.

Speaker 6 (02:13:32):
Let's just chase another lie. We're all about transparency and accountability.

Speaker 1 (02:13:36):
Oh yeah, and that's why they're having that executive this
discussion on Monday behind closed doors about the settlement that
we just found out about it.

Speaker 6 (02:13:44):
And that's a little illegal. Brian. Oh, they could do
the personnel thing with Fiji in executive session, but they
can't do this.

Speaker 1 (02:13:51):
Does that suggest perhaps federal authorities should come in and investigate?
All right, let's end on that note. We'll bring it
right back. Signal ninety nine one more in studio. It
take four eight right now, if you have KRCD talk station,
Ice officers were out in an enforcement action. An agent
recklessly karc the talk station. Ah music to my ears

(02:14:14):
literally figuratively it is obviously Friday one more with signal
ninety nine. But first I just want to ask Friday
gotta listen to the first version of the song signal Well, yes.

Speaker 8 (02:14:30):
See, what a wonderful world and what a wonderful interview,
citing Monday ninety found on Facebook inside information.

Speaker 1 (02:14:40):
She's got it, She's got the goods to back it up.
And I've been This is my twentieth year in radio,
and Joe just let me know that of all of
the guests that I have had on the program over
twenty years, and that includes senators and you know, famous
authors and renowned doctors, and I mean go on and
on and on, I've been blessed as I can be

(02:15:02):
as a human being for the folks that I've been
able to talk to. This conversation has netted Jostrecker more
texts than any other interview that I have done. He said,
he's just getting flooded over there with people chiming in.
You got how many eleven so far? This morning, just
that since you've been sitting here, and I am honored.
I just found out from you off break that of
all the people have been asking you to be interviewed,

(02:15:24):
come on my show, Come on my show. A lot
of the local names that most people will know, which
won't get any credit here in the fifty five Cars
you More show, but you said if you're ever gonna
come on my show would be the one you came on.
I just feel so blessed that you would do that,
and I am you're the first. This is great. It's
just been a wonderful discussion and unbelievably enlightening, although admittedly
depressing on a lot of levels. But maybe by putting

(02:15:46):
the sunlight of disinfectant on it, maybe something will change
for the better. And that's why I applaud you and
everything that you're willing to do, including suffering the slings
and arrows that you get being an online presidents of
online presence of such.

Speaker 6 (02:15:58):
Prominence's cost me a lot jobs.

Speaker 1 (02:16:04):
Your health, yeah, my health a lot well, And I
know you didn't want me to do this, but to
say it anyway, you want to help Signal ninety now
because she has got some issues going on in her world,
there is a gives send go page. Just look for
signal ninety nine on gives send go, and you've got
halfway to your goal. The goal that the person that
set it up, Sherry Bowment. It looks like Corey Bowman's wife, right, no, no, no, oh,

(02:16:27):
apologies to Corey Bowmen my best friends for you, okay,
but kind she was to do this for you. So
if you want to help herrot, just go to give
send go you and on that note you uh we
had was it one more thing you want to commend? Yeah,
I want to use a couple of the council members.

Speaker 5 (02:16:42):
Yeah. Uh.

Speaker 6 (02:16:44):
Crammerdy and Walsh and Jeffries all came out and said
they were against the settlement offer for the Hintons and uh,
they're coming out, They're coming out of the shadows and
end of the light. So I want to commend them
for doing that because they might be ostracized for doing

(02:17:05):
that as well. So just so you now we see
you and thank you.

Speaker 1 (02:17:11):
Exactly, and I will I'll double down on it. Jeck Counselman,
Jeff Cramering and Seth a councilman, Jess Seth Walsh and
who else did you say, has chimed in Jeffries? Jeffries,
A salute each and every one of you.

Speaker 6 (02:17:23):
And I even heard that Scottie Johnson is against the settlement.

Speaker 1 (02:17:27):
Welcome to that.

Speaker 6 (02:17:28):
I can't confirm that, but I heard it.

Speaker 1 (02:17:30):
Well, if aybody's gonna confirm it first, I guarantee it's
going to be you. Probably hear get a phone call
from him after the show.

Speaker 2 (02:17:36):
We will.

Speaker 1 (02:17:36):
They're going to be having that executive session on Monday.
The council members are on this Hinton settlement, which sounds
like most of them didn't even know what was going
on until our friend in this studio right now, Signal
ninety nine brought it to the attention of FOP President
Can Cober, who announced it to the world. And that's
how we find out, Cheryl long prevarication, just a little bit.

(02:17:57):
Check it all out. You think, if you're just tuning in,
this is an hour of power worth listening to. And
hello to the others in local media who might have
been tuning in to listener hear what Signal ninety nine
has to say. Go ahead, print it, get some interviews
with the other council members, call up Iris Rawley and
talk to her. Oh yeah, that's what she has to say.
That would be fun. I hope you have a wonderful weekend. Again.

Speaker 3 (02:18:18):
I can't thank you enough for me.

Speaker 6 (02:18:20):
Though, come one on the morning, shank you for having
me on here.

Speaker 1 (02:18:23):
You know what, you have an open venue. Will you
promise to.

Speaker 6 (02:18:27):
Call in to come in all the time? Okay, I
have things to say.

Speaker 1 (02:18:31):
I know you do. But you get the breaking information,
so yours is better than a hot off the present
news story you might find online.

Speaker 6 (02:18:36):
And if you ever want want to talk to me
about something, Jeff, Joe's got my number.

Speaker 1 (02:18:42):
Joe's got the number. We will be hearing more in counterary.
You're twenty twenty six from signal ninety nine, but a
great way to start the year off. Thanks again for
what you do and for spending the hour with my
listeners and me.

Brian Thomas News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Two Guys, Five Rings: Matt, Bowen & The Olympics

Two Guys, Five Rings: Matt, Bowen & The Olympics

Two Guys (Bowen Yang and Matt Rogers). Five Rings (you know, from the Olympics logo). One essential podcast for the 2026 Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics. Bowen Yang (SNL, Wicked) and Matt Rogers (Palm Royale, No Good Deed) of Las Culturistas are back for a second season of Two Guys, Five Rings, a collaboration with NBC Sports and iHeartRadio. In this 15-episode event, Bowen and Matt discuss the top storylines, obsess over Italian culture, and find out what really goes on in the Olympic Village.

iHeartOlympics: The Latest

iHeartOlympics: The Latest

Listen to the latest news from the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Milan Cortina Winter Olympics

Milan Cortina Winter Olympics

The 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan Cortina are here and have everyone talking. iHeartPodcasts is buzzing with content in honor of the XXV Winter Olympics We’re bringing you episodes from a variety of iHeartPodcast shows to help you keep up with the action. Follow Milan Cortina Winter Olympics so you don’t miss any coverage of the 2026 Winter Olympics, and if you like what you hear, be sure to follow each Podcast in the feed for more great content from iHeartPodcasts.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2026 iHeartMedia, Inc.