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August 29, 2025 • 156 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Five o five at fifty five k r C Detalk
station Friday.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Well, the vacation.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
There, it is a definite confirmation it is Friday. Little
woo whoo there. Brian Thomas right here, glad to be
host to the fifty five Casee marnsh I appreciate you
tuning in, and I always enjoy phone calls. Feel free
to give me a call this morning five one three
seven eight hundred eight two three talk or pound five
fifty on AT and T phones, and a reminder as
always fifty five cars dot com. And you can't listen

(00:50):
to line or want to hear it again, go to
the podcast page and get a dose at Jay Ratliffe
on aviation issues every Thursday at eight thirty talk with
Liz Keating running for Cincinni Council. Well, h I enjoyed
the conversation, obviously, in my humble opinion, better option than
sticking with the status quo. Delvo Democrat Dave Williams Taxpayer

(01:14):
Protection Alliance looking out for your taxpayer dollars. Always enjoy
those conversations because well revealing the insane ways in which
the federal government spends our taxpayer dollars. So it's all
there fifty five caresy dot com. You tryheart Media app
buyer there and see you can stream the content listen
wherever you happen to be on your smart device or
stupid devices the case may be. Ah, let us go

(01:37):
over to the rundown. Yes, it is Friday, so we
do Tech Friday with Dave Hatter every Friday six thirty
businesses and government impersonators during after Older Adults Life Savings.
Continuing a theme on that one, our senior friends out there,
you've got to become jaded and cynical and skeptical. Don't

(01:59):
answer the phone if you don't recognize the number. Don't
respond to the emails that have links in them. Don't
click on the links. Please, dear God, don't click on
the links anymore. I'm gonna miss out on something. No,
you're not not, really, you're old enough to remember time
before the Internet existed. You're old enough to remember time
before hell even like, when did answering machines come out?

(02:23):
Wasn't that like the sixties or seventies or something. If
you're older than that, I mean, you didn't even have
an answering machine. At one point, there was no call
waiting even you had to kind of wait for that
person to get back with you. And if it's an
important message and someone really truly is out there in
the world that needs to meet that reach you and
communicate with you, they're going to make an extra effort
to do that. The random email with the link and

(02:46):
it is going to be dangerous. And apologies as always
to my mom for me not opening the stuff that
she sends me to his links into it, But then again,
I don't treat her any differently than anybody else. I've
been listening to Dave had Her for long enough to
know that those links can be extraordinarily dangerous in my life.
Probably won't be any worse for me not seeing a

(03:07):
real link, Right, I missed out on a piece of information.
In this great world of ours, with the Internet and
me having access to all the information that's floating around
out there, I'm going to miss some things. Yeah, I'm
not gonna see it, And I don't think my life
is going to be harm for not clicking on that
link you sent me anyway. Maybe a little overzealous, am I,

(03:30):
but I've learned from Dave Hatter. Please please, please, you
gotta protect yourself That's why I love having Dave on
the program every Friday. Also talk about scam text messages
impersonating Amazon and ups early targeting millions across the US.
There it is again, and a hack of a federal
court filing system exploited security flaws known since twenty twenty. Yeah,

(03:55):
it's like those announcements that well, but we've uncovered a
serious hack into our system and five billion people's names
have been impacted and some of the data has been stolen,
some personally identifiable information. This happened last year and January,
and then yet we don't hear about it until the
following year. Betsy Sunneman Jen Look, I'm looking forward to.

(04:17):
Betsy's Sonnaman joined the program at seven thirty FOP endorsements.
She got it, Judge sunnamon hypocrite AFTAB telling everyone Cincinnati
is safe while being surrounded by playing close officers. Yeah,
another ribbon cutting ceremony for AFTAB provall the other day.
You can get him to show up for one of those.
Can't get him to respond out loud in public to
a viral beatdown that well made national headlines. Take him

(04:41):
three days for that. But if you introduce there's a
ribbon cutting ceremony. He'll be there on time. Court. Does
he have his own scissors, Joe, his own ceremonial scissors,
designers designer scissors does as they're in the truck of

(05:02):
his car, just in case anywhere he happens to be
if the ribbon comes out and needs to be cut.
Corey Bowman an alternative to mayor have to have purvole.
Corey Bowman returns to the fifty five Karsay Morning Show
eight oh five? Is Corey coming in? Joe be on telephone,
don't mind. Cory's got lots of stuff to do lately.
He'll be on an eight oh five and again. You

(05:24):
can be on right now if you want to call
five one, three, seven, four, nine, fifty, five hundred, eight
hundred and eighty two three talk bound five fifty on
AT and T phones. Oh my lord, what a just
a variety of stack of stuff going on? Why not
start locally? Hey, this never happens. Police investigating a shooting
happened this morning. Hot off the Presses Taco Bell employee

(05:48):
fatally shot in the restaurant's parking lot in Queensgate neighborhood.
Again twelve fifteen this morning, the Taco Bell on Guest Street.
Say the victim man in his thirties or forty, shot
multiple times. Please confirm the man was Indian. An employee
at the Taco bell, please said. The suspect fled in
the vehicle. That and they don't have a description at

(06:10):
this time. Victim's identity not yet disclosed. Police urging anyone
with information about the incident to please Dear God come forward.
So the investigation is ongoing and the homicide unit was
on the scene at least as of the reporting I
got this morning. There you go, a new day, another
shooting in the city. All right, Oh, apparently it's not

(06:38):
just Hamilton County. Props to Support the Blue in Cincinnati.
Dan Hills is still posting on Support the Blue in
Cincinnati's Facebook page. Former FOP president Dan Hills, What do
we got here Butler County? I thought this only happened
in Hamilton County. I thought Butler County had some tough
on crime judges. Apparently not so, Dan Hills. Rights. Ah,
it's so nice to live in Warren County from those

(07:00):
week on crime judges in Hamilton County. But wait one second,
my fellow Warren County residents have to introduce you to
Judge Robin Peeler. Former Butler County educator David Campbell found
guilty of twenty three counts of possession and distribution of

(07:20):
child pornography. Dan points out, we're talking about teenagers all
the way to small toddlers as victims. Did Judge Peeler,
before sentencing, imagine his grandchild's our grandkid's images were some
of the ones his six scum distributed other perverts. Did
Judge Peeler sentence Campbell to so many consecutive terms that

(07:41):
he will leave prison just in time for a one
way trip to the boneyard? Did Judge Peeler at least
sentence Campbell to a sightseeing excursion of the double digit
years to one of Ohio's most luxurious penitentiaries. Tragically, it's
no to all the above, Warren County, Your neighborhood pervert
only has to serve two lousy months in local jail.

(08:08):
Dan says, you want to be even more pissed off?
The judge ordered paran forced the detectives to go through
all of these disturbing images again so they could then
return all of Campbell's quote family photos close quote to
this convicted felon. Judge Peeler, also called the pervert Campbell

(08:30):
an upstanding citizen, Dan concludes, your honor, I don't want
this jerk free in any state or county, but especially
in my own Warren County, Ohio, USA. I hope you
explain yourself. Local news reporting on this one former Butler
County educator will not serve prison time after being found

(08:52):
guilty on more than twenty charges related to the possession
of distribution of child pornography. Again, Judge Robert Peeler and
Warren County on Wednesday this week sentenced David Campbell to
five years of probation, sixty days in the county jail,
community service, two year counseling program, and register. He must

(09:12):
register as a two tier sex offender order to report
to jail next Friday nine am. Judge Peeler said of
community control as violated, a longer time under the community
control sanction or even prison term may be imposed. Oh well,
we're going to consider prison if he violates the terms
conditions of this light sentence. Judge Peeler said he came

(09:35):
to his decision after listening to the trial going over
the evidence and reading dozens of letters in support of Campbell. Campbell,
who was in possession of like apparently twenty three illustrations
of child porn. Judge Peeler cited no delinquent record, no
prior convictions besides an ovi IOH from twenty years ago,

(09:57):
as reasoning for his decision to issue community control cent
rather than a prison sentence. Quote. This has been this
is an unbelievable sentence. Again, we're talking about child porn here.
This has been devastating to his family. That's a given,

(10:18):
and I'm sure something that will be a burden on
him for the remainder of his life. Close quote, Well,
who gives a pile of extremen if it's going to
be a burden on him? What about the burden on
the children who were displayed in the child porn? What
about the horror that they experience being molested by some pervert.

(10:42):
I can't believe that that's m Campbell's a teacher, and
a teacher and I have more than twenty years. Found
guilty last month again, twenty three charges stemming from an
indictment on childborn counts include pandering sexually oriented material involving
a minor or impaired person in illegualis use of a
minor or impaired person in nudity oriented material or performance.

(11:05):
He sent out multiple photos and videos depicting children engage
in sexual activity. Campbell spoke ahead of the sentencing, saying
he's unsure what will come over the next few years,
but said he's quote dedicated to continually improving myself for

(11:28):
my friends, my family, and those I come in contact with.
Oh well, okay, I'm sorry I can't abide on that one.
I'm in accord with former FOP president Dan Hills on
that one. Six seventeen. Right now, fifty five KERO see
Talks Station, Feel free to chime in. Got some local
stories coming up at bottom of the air. Got the

(11:49):
stack of stupid to ive on into. Maybe we'll hear
from Tom, Maybe we'll hear from Jay, Maybe we'll hear
from you. You know, it is your option to give
me a call. I'll mean right back after these brief words.
Fifty five RC is your retirement plan? Missing a peek?
Outstanding weather over the weekend? Five about r CV Talk Station.

(12:14):
You words from Lemmy on a Friday. I hear that
song in my car Joe, it has a profound impact
on my right foot. I'm not quite sure why that is.
And to go to the let's go to the phone
five one two three talk Mark, thanks for calling this morning.

(12:38):
Happy Friday to you.

Speaker 3 (12:40):
Good morning, Brian.

Speaker 4 (12:41):
So should we uh, should we have any doubt on
what the political leadings are at that judge that came
down with that US what do.

Speaker 5 (12:51):
You want to call it?

Speaker 6 (12:51):
That?

Speaker 4 (12:54):
It's amazing to me after watching video this week and
the Democratic uh, I don't know, they had some sort
of a convention or something, Yeah, and listening to some
of the stuff that was said at that.

Speaker 6 (13:12):
And.

Speaker 4 (13:14):
I just I don't understand how these people can go
that far left and their belief their beliefs, and they're
willing to knowing that there's microphones and video cameras, you know,
people videotaping their conversations, and they're willing to say this

(13:34):
stuff out loud. I mean, we we're involved in a
case right now. I called last year when this happened,
and we had a we had one of our employees
hit by a car in a construction zone and we're
we're still involved in that case right now in Cincinnati,
and we've already been warned that this judge does not
hand out harsh sentences. Did not expect this guy to

(13:58):
do any time, you know, for hitting a construction worker
in a construction zone. And she's still not back to work,
and it's she'll probably never work again. I don't and yeah,
and and but we've already been mourned by the prosecuting
attorney that hey, you know, and and the our employee.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
That was hit.

Speaker 4 (14:20):
She's not looking for this guy to be put away
for life or anything like that, but he needs to
he needs to have some sort of punishment. But we've
already been more these judges. I'm sorry, I don't understand
when I guess when you get to that level, you
don't feel like there's anybody that you have to answer to.

(14:42):
But I mean people do vote them in, like like
Tom has said, you know, you want something to change,
you've got to vote differently to make change. Uh, get
these people out of office. And Uh. The other thing
I wanted to touch on this morning was the wa
that shot up the school the other day. Another example

(15:05):
of mental illness that's being supported. It's being is actually
being encouraged, but it's also being supported by the parents,
and I'm sorry any parent that goes along with anything
like that, I'm sorry you. You you suck as a parent.

(15:26):
I mean, there's just no other way to say it.
I mean, I remember when my I had my son
when he was five years old here at a race
over at Indianapolis, and my friend's daughter was about the
same age, and they were playing like they were puppies, right,
And if my son would come to me afterwards, he said, Dad,
I'm a puppy. I want to God would said, well,

(15:47):
the doghouse is in the backyard. I'll get you a
fresh bail of straw and I'll start feeding.

Speaker 7 (15:51):
In a bowle.

Speaker 4 (15:51):
I mean, you know, it's bull crap, and they support
and then the news will sit there and call this
black job. You know, well she did know. It's not
a she. It's a guy that's pretending.

Speaker 8 (16:05):
To be a girl.

Speaker 4 (16:06):
And I love already. But if I'm going to expound
on Tom saying, and maybe on a T shirt it
can say fight mental illness on the runt and don't Yeah,
the two go hand in hand. So uh, they just
want to run that past Tom and see if he
thinks that could be added to it.

Speaker 1 (16:26):
Well, hopefully, he's out there. Yeah, and Mark, I think
the reality behind this is you have parents, you know,
and and nobody who has a child for the first
time knows anything about parenting. We all know that we've
all been through. Anybody's got children out there, No, you
don't know anything. You can read books, you can take advice,
but you're new. And everybody's new to the whole concept

(16:46):
of puberty and going through these teen years. And I
think that's primarily when the young people, the children can
get influenced by outside forces which want to convince them
that their agenda, that they're not Maybe they're engaged. They
have some sort of genderice for you, because of what
they've been exposed to on television and children's programming. Maybe

(17:08):
it's came for the K through six education incorporating sexual content. Anyway,
by whatever reason, they come to this sort of perspective
that they want to be a girl when they're a boy,
or vice versa, and uneducated, perhaps ignorant parent who's surrounded
it by this swirling concerns over gender dysphoria and this

(17:29):
concept of we need to understand these children, and we
need to help them along their path. We need to
encourage them. Yes, if you say you're a girl, yes,
you need to support that and help them along the
path and get them the resources they need to make
this transition. Some ignorant parent who's gonna abide by this
leftist propaganda is going to say, oh my god, little

(17:51):
Johnny thinks he's a girl and go along with it.
They've been manipulated by a very sliver, tiny sliver of
the general population. The vast majority of us believe, no,
you can't become a different sex. Get an old copy

(18:13):
of the DSM before they got rid of gender dysphoria
and started suggesting we all enable it, and when it
was treated as a mental disorder, you can't be someone else.
If I said it was Jesus Christ, would you just say, okay,
you are and enable me on that path. I'm just

(18:35):
beside myself and disbelieve that this is actually a thing.
You know, we've been talking about this for years. It's
not a thing. It's probably a mental condition that can
be addressed with counseling and therapy and parents who won't
abide five twenty seven fifty five k CED talk station.
I'm obviously firm of conviction on this particular point. Local

(19:00):
phone calls are welcome. We'll be coming back in just
a few minutes.

Speaker 7 (19:04):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (19:10):
Here is your ten of nine first morning weather forecast.
Sunny day to day, feeling like a fall day. It
is a fall kind of day. Seventy eight for the
high fifty four overnight with a few clouds. Tomorrow is
going to be a sunny day. Seventy seven for the
high overnight low of fifty four with mostly clear skies.
Fireworks day, clear skies. I have seventy eight fifty nine

(19:32):
right now, fifty five kerr CE Talk Stations five thirty
one on a Friday. Happy Friday to you. Somebody sent
out a search party, Tom. It's not on the phone
waiting to be picked up here anyhow. If I went
three seven four nine fifty five D eight hundred eight
two three talk so in Liua, Tom, don't fold Democrat,
Mike my curbage, Mike Friend submarine or Mike and active

(19:56):
in support of the war birds and the Lunkan Airport
days this weekend, he said, setting up the harbor Fly
honor flight tents last night from Luncan Air Show B
twenty nine, B twenty five, all on the tarmac. So
let's get in there and enjoy the warbirds at Lunkan
Airport days this weekend. Information on my blog page fifty

(20:17):
five Carosey dot com. And thank you Mike for all
your continued service to our country. Sad news this morning,
Gary Burbank, he passed away yesterday. I saw Bill Cunningham
and who had posted on Facebook and everybody, we need
to pray for Gary Burbank. That was two days ago.
I didn't know Gary, that Gary was suffering from illness,
but yes, he passed away. Yeah, maybe the goat greatest

(20:42):
of all time. Rest in peace, said Bill Cunningham. He
started out in Louisiana, Mississippi, becoming one of the first
white disc jockeys. This is an interesting fun fact. One
of the first white disc jockeys at Memphis Radio's WDA,
which was one of the first in the US programmed
entirely for black listeners. Joining w ak Y and Louisville

(21:07):
move from music to political and social humor. There After
spending time in Canada, went back to Louisville to join
WHAS and then moved to Cincinnati, where he spent the
balance of his career over WLW the Voice you remember him, right,
Reverend Deuteronomy Skaggs, Earl Pitts. Of course he was famous
for those characters. He kind of reminded me a lot
of my dad with the characters. I'll let you decide

(21:30):
who was more talented, but he was an extraordinarily talented man.
He was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in
twenty twelve. Fond Memories for Gary Burbank and Rest in peace.
Former Cincinnti fire chief Foual wrongful termination suit against the
City of Cincinnati got a partial win. Cincinnati officials Cheryl Long,

(21:55):
specifically Cincinni manager, terminated Michael Washington Marched twenty twenty three
Sharrel Long citing concerns about workplace culture in the department.
After being fired, Washington final wrong col termination suit against
the City of Cincinnati, accusing leaders of violating his due
process rights and defaming his character. Lawsuit states before terminating

(22:17):
being terminated, the city manager and mayor did not raise
any complaints or issue to issues to Washington concerning his
performance or implementation of his wyoming Helping Women's program. Lawsuit
states he was not given prior notice of his termination
or an opportunity to be heard on the charges against
him before termination. Kind of a due process problem they've

(22:38):
struggling with here. Judge agreed his pretermination due process rights
were violated. Jury trial set to begin September twenty ninth,
that it will be in the hands of the jury.
I got high hopes for him and his chances for success. Oh,
thank God, Oh, all the problems we have in the

(23:01):
city is Cincinnati. I am so pleased to know that
more than three dozen air quality monitors have been installed
across the various city neighborhoods in an effort to educate
residents and improve the air quality by twenty twenty eight.
Fox nineteen Mary L. Bus Reporting, the Cincinnati Health Department

(23:21):
in the Office of Environmental and Sustainability collaborated to create
the SINCEI air Watch Project, a subset of the twenty
twenty three Green Cincinnati Plan. Because we all know that
we hear in the city of Cincinnati have great control
over the global climate change impact. Yes, my god, if

(23:41):
only Cincinnati curved its pollutants, the world would be a
better place. Initiative includes installation of purple air flex monitors.
They collect data that appears online, which will allow you
to access information about the city's air quality. Whatever you
want coming in a cost at two hundred and eighty

(24:02):
nine dollars per air monitor, in addition to a power
supply that is sold separately for forty five dollars. Totally
What the are the Fox nineteen reports as twelve three
hundred and fifty eight dollars according to environmental epidemiologists. Merril

(24:22):
Vigran quoted quite a bit in the article, thirty seven
monitors have been placed so far, with a goal to
place one in every neighborhood was important to us. We
placed these monitors at locations that people go to, so
we have been very fortunate to have found wonderful community partners.

(24:42):
Article can suggest we only have moderate air quality issues
most of the days, nothing hazardous rarely, It says, do
we have an unhealthy or hazardous air quality day within
the last seven years? So not even a problem. And
what are you going to do about it? Right? I know? Nothing?
Five thirty seven fifty five car se de talk Station's

(25:04):
that is stuid coming up, Hoho, you can stick around
fifty five the talk station.

Speaker 3 (25:10):
This is the CEO. You should know.

Speaker 1 (25:12):
Five forty one on a Friday, or roughly around it's time.
The answer is always yes. Because Joe Strekker is executive
producer at the at the five Karsite Morning Show. He's
got an Afinity for Primates and a hot baseway. There

(25:39):
you go, Jeffrey. Jeffery always sending me a Facebook instant
message looking forward to this moment in time. Let's go
to the phones. Always look forward to the moment in
time when callers call up. So, Fred, welcome back to
the morning show. Happy Friday to you, man.

Speaker 9 (25:52):
Hey, Happy Friday.

Speaker 2 (25:53):
Do it?

Speaker 10 (25:53):
Good morning. Hey, I'm considering you my morning therapist. Man,
you save me a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (25:59):
How's that?

Speaker 10 (26:01):
You saving me a lot of money.

Speaker 4 (26:03):
I don't have to go to the therapist.

Speaker 10 (26:04):
Just just call you and listen to you in the morning,
and I'm.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
Good for the rest of the day.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
I guess.

Speaker 10 (26:13):
Let me say something happened yesterday. I'm sitting down in
front of my house and spect you picked the new
line up, and I'm on the internet and I see
the guy on the phone.

Speaker 9 (26:22):
He goes down the street.

Speaker 10 (26:23):
He didn't get lower enough, so he tears my line
out from my house.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
Oh my god.

Speaker 10 (26:28):
So I'm looking at him and he throw the line
in me are, so first, I'm thinking, like, what, wait
a minute, are you gonna doing say anything? He keep
on going. So I had to stop go down there
and say, look, you just tore the line from my house.
He said, okay, let me make a call. He comes back,
he said, well, I'm sorry, there's nothing we can do. Uh,
you got to take care of it. I said, this

(26:50):
is customer service from Spectrum. You you messed the lineup
from my house. Now I can't work you telling me
it's my fault. And I just want to know to
have it happen to anybody else that they've messed somebody
lining up and then now it's my fault, I have
to pay for it. If uh, oh my god, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (27:11):
That's just crazy.

Speaker 6 (27:13):
It is it is.

Speaker 10 (27:15):
I called the manager and uh he said he's on
the road and there's nothing he can do. And uh
so I give out one eight hundred number. You can
call these people and there's nothing they can do, and uh,
you can found a complaint. But you tore a line
from my house. Now I don't have internet, I can't
work you saying it's my fault. Basically I have to

(27:36):
take care of it, and y'all won't do anything.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
Well anyway, I wouldn't say.

Speaker 4 (27:42):
Barnie, and I appreciate you letting me ben.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Thank you, Fred. But you know, from a legal perspective,
I think you're in the right. I think you have
all the facts on your side of the equation. Question.
Does anybody across the street from you or in the
general area have a ring doorbell camera that might have
videotaped this guy yank in the line off your house.

Speaker 10 (28:00):
I'm sitting on a porch, so I've seen do it
in four or five is workers seem to do it
the same thing. They say, picked the line up to
it in my yard.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
Yeah, yeah, I understand that. And if you could sit
them down, like for example, if you had to ultimately
file a lawsuit to have this taken care of because
it's not your fault and you shouldn't have to incur
the expense, you'd have to depose those guys, sit them
down and ask them what they saw. That would take
you time and effort. If you had a ring doorbell
camera video of it happening, pretty definitive proof that they're

(28:31):
the ones that did it, and they should be held
accountable for it and responsible for it. You know, shoot
it over to the manager and say, look, here's what
I'm talking about. How can you tell me that I
need to file a complaint or whatever. Look, here's what happened.
This is not on me, It's on you. That's all
I'm saying. I mean, I'm trying to expedite the process
of getting your satisfaction. Fred, I do not understand that

(28:53):
at all. I mean, they got the resources and the
skills to fix that thing. Probably take them about ten minutes. Fred,
You know.

Speaker 4 (29:00):
Right banks doctor, and.

Speaker 9 (29:04):
I'll talk to you later.

Speaker 2 (29:06):
I love you.

Speaker 1 (29:06):
Fred. You have a great weekend, man, enjoy it. Three
day weekend for me. I will not be on on Monday.
We're gonna do a best of show. At least Joe's
going to put one together. And thank you for that.
Joe's record. It's five forty five. Feel free to call
and vent yours fleet or consult me for therapy. That's okay.
I'll be right back after these brief words.

Speaker 10 (29:24):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station by forty
nine fifty.

Speaker 1 (29:29):
Five KRC DE Talks Nation. It's Friday, Love my Friday.
Tech part of the day I've had are coming up
at six thirty. That's Sunderman got the FOP endorsement for judge.
She'll be on at seven thirty and Corey Bowman at
eight oh five. We'll talk violence. We'll talk about whether
we should send in the National Guard. We'll talk about
the air pollution monitors. I'm sure Coreys all fired up
about those as well. Graffiti also reportedly a big problem

(29:51):
in the greater Cincinnati area. And uh, how was the
meeting at the Farm on Wednesday with Christopher Smithman among
other topics? Over the phones? Who will Bobby's got this morning?

Speaker 11 (30:00):
Bobby, Happy Friday, Happy weekend, my friends at Flag Family
and Firearm Friday.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
There you go. I tell you what.

Speaker 11 (30:12):
The weekend has already started today through Monday. And I
put the shooting handicap at five and a half.

Speaker 1 (30:19):
You're handicapping gun violence in Cincinnati.

Speaker 11 (30:22):
We've already got one today. I've already kipped at it.
I put it over the five and a half handicap on.

Speaker 1 (30:28):
Doaco Bell Gustreet, twelve fifteen this morning. It already started
for the weekend, so we can already started market down.

Speaker 2 (30:37):
That it.

Speaker 11 (30:37):
Hey, I got one thing too, the violence we had
of Minneapolis and murder up there and the one we
had down Tennessee end up in New York. It's it's
already it can be pretty well evaluated because I went
to the Department of Justice and read about what their
interpretation was, and it's the mv ME Holistic violence extreme

(31:01):
is it's the profile and all of them and you
can't stop it.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
And it's hard to identify them ahead of time. Yes, yeah,
I read an article about that the other day. People
who just engage in violence are quiet, they don't have
anything on the radar, and the next thing you know,
they just kind of snap. It's a big societal problem.
We face mental health challenges exacerbated, i would argue, by
the Internet and crazy is out there, which dominate the

(31:28):
narrative on the Internet and represent a very small sliver
of the population. Going back to my comments about those
who think it's aoka to listen to a child who
believes there are different sects and go ahead and back
them on that, rather than helping them work through the
challenges of dealing with the reality that they can't be
a different sex. Yeah, I'm going back to that one.

(31:48):
Appreciate it, Bobby. Let's see here the stack is stupid
Lincoln County. We're in Montana here. Lincoln County Circuit Court
judge signed and arrest weren't for Troy, Missouri or Missouri.
I'm sorry. Man accused of causing a public disturbance by
exposing himself to a woman and her child while they
were camping as Lincoln County shaff probable Cause Affidavid says.

(32:09):
The incident occurred on August eleventh. Logan Life Conservation Area
deputy arrived at the Conversation or Conservation area a quarter
after ten in the evening found a naked guy sitting
on the ground, specifically Nicholas Shall, appeared to be under
the influence of narcotics. Sheriff's office alleges he claimed to

(32:31):
be a guest at the campground and just come back
from a bar. Victim told the deputy that this guy
walked into her campsite while naked, began to perform a
sex act on himself. I don't know if he was
a hockey player. Joe slapshot Jeff Shall to leave her

(32:52):
alone multiple times, Sheriff's office said, but he followed the
woman and her daughter and dog as they returned to
their car. He's been charged with first degree sexual misconduct
twenty five hundred dollars cash only bond. KUWAITA County deputy's
arrest of a guy named Frederick Riley, sixty five years old,

(33:14):
for two counts of indecent exposure after two different door
dash drivers in one night reported he had opened his
front door naked to receive his food orders. Why are
you doing that? I don't think we'll find out if
female deputy is seen on the body camera video knocking
on the door and announcing door dash and Riley's seen
opening the door without any clothes on. It's doing idiot

(33:36):
things because they're idiots. One of the driver's report of
this guy asked her to step into his house. Another
driver took a picture of him. Charged with two counts
of public indecency after doing this. Both female drivers claim
he was indeed fully naked, and both called nine to
one one. That's when the deputy set a female deputy

(33:57):
to knock on his door. They did, dogs heard barking
from the inside within a minute, perhaps long enough for
him to put his pants on. Riley opened the door,
but naked Wysa again, not for the first time that night.
Giving the prior reports of him opening the door naked.
What's hard, is it? I exactly? Let's see, maybe just

(34:27):
run through the headlines in further stack of stupid stories.
I won't be able to elaborate on the following headlines.
Customer tried to kidnap bikini barista, women thwarted drive through
window extraction attempt, police, police arrest nudeman allegedly trying to

(34:49):
get into rigby homes. This guy showed up naked on
folks doorsteps, mess key messqu police chasse, naked man in
stolen ambulance? What and to arrested after naked man walks
into Quick Trip, which is a convenience store, claiming to

(35:10):
have been stripped and robbed. I need to do is
type in those headlines. YouTube can read all the fun
facts revealed in the reporting. Five to fifty five fifty
five kr CD talk station stick around. We got a
little to talk about before we get to Tech Friday
with Dave Hatter, and the first story being business and
government impersonators are going after older adults life savings, looking

(35:35):
out for seniors, as we always are with Tech Friday's
Dave Hatter Every Friday at six thirty, we'll do that
coming up. I hope you can stick around today's top
stories at the top of the hour. What I'm informed,
I feel smarter. Fifty five kr D Talk Station Hugs
from Tech r CD talk Station Brie Thomas, wishing every
one a very happy Friday as we head on into

(35:57):
hopefully for you too, a three day weekend will be
off on Monday. Apparently going to do a best of program.
Thank you to Joe's Trektor for sewing that together five one, three,
seven for nine to fifty two to three talk before
I get Maureen, followed by Pat on the phone, I'm
going to quickly remind you that coming up at bottom
of the hour Tech Friday with Dave Hatter. Another warning
for my senior friends out there, well, including everybody else. Sadly,

(36:19):
seniors tend to get duped more than anyone else with
these online scams. Betsy Sunnerman. Of course, Judge got the
FOP endorsement. Betsy did show be on at seven thirty
and Corey Bowman obviously running for mayor of the City
of Cincinnati a better choice as far as I'm concerned.
The FOP agrees with me on that. Corey Bowman at
eight oh five and we've got him for a while
in the eight o'clock hour. Again, over to the phones.

(36:41):
Let's see what Maureen's got. Maureen, thank you so much
for holding. Welcome to the Morning Show, to Happy Friday,
to you.

Speaker 5 (36:46):
Thank you, good morning.

Speaker 12 (36:49):
Well now, apparently then you were talking about the parents
with the transgenders and different things like that. Well, apparently
the mother of the Minneapolis Catholic school shooter lawyer. Yes,
she was about ten minutes from me in Naples and
she always has a condo there. But they were the
FBI swarmed her place yesterday and yeah, and nobody answered

(37:11):
the door. So they were questioning neighbors as to her identity,
and so they were showing them pictures of her on
social media of her retirement party, and they gave a
positive identification. But what's interesting is she was retiring from
she was secretary at the parish office of that school,
So there's I did not realize that. But anyway, so

(37:34):
they said down a gateway pundon article yesterday that she's
longering up and they can't find her. So we're not
sure they're But another interesting thing is that RFK Junior
was on Fox yesterday and they were interviewing him about
the psychotropic drugs that are used a lot on the
transgenders because of treating the anxiety and depression, and he

(37:56):
said that they're currently doing studies at the NIH on
the contribution of some SSRI, which is selected serotonin reuptake
inhibitors of the drugs and other psychiatric drugs that might
be contributing to violences. Yes, many of these drugs have
a black box warning of.

Speaker 1 (38:14):
Suicidal and suicidal ideation. Listen, I'm no expert in the
field of these drugs, but you know if you watch
Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy, you know damn well that
these drugs come with the risk of suicidal ideation because
that's like big red flag warning number one on every
one of these damn drug commercials.

Speaker 12 (38:34):
Yes, and home homicidal tendencies. So he said, we can't
exclude these drugs as a culprit and these kinds of
studies that they're doing, and that these ideations are definitely
found in clinical trials and so it just needs to
be looked into.

Speaker 1 (38:49):
It does need to be looked into, Mauring, it absolutely does.
Those are widely prescribed and you should know fully the
risks associated with taking taking them, and if you're a
parent of a mind her child, it's your obligation to
research this and do a cost benefit analysis and figure
out whether it's the right path to go on. Oran,

(39:10):
always appreciate your calls. I hope you have a wonderful weekend.
Thanks for the update on the local connection with the
shooter's mom. That's wild. Let's go to see what Pat's got. Pat,
Welcome to the Morning Show.

Speaker 13 (39:19):
Happy Friday, Good morning to you, Brian, and I wanted
to thank you for the Turf Club because I actually
took my wife's there on her anniversary and it was
an eye opener for her.

Speaker 3 (39:32):
But it was very enjoyable.

Speaker 10 (39:33):
Good.

Speaker 1 (39:34):
I love that place. My wife and I ate there
just a few weeks ago. It had been a while,
but yeah, it always puts a smile on my face
going to that joint. It's such a so comfortable relax
It's just like you have all the visual the optics
with the old neon signs. The people there are really
cool and it's a hell of a good burger. Did
you get the onion rings? Bidy chance?

Speaker 2 (39:54):
Pat?

Speaker 5 (39:55):
I had to yeah on your behalf and I did
the chili too.

Speaker 9 (40:00):
Good for you?

Speaker 1 (40:00):
That chili is killer.

Speaker 10 (40:01):
Well.

Speaker 1 (40:02):
Shout out to the Turf Club. It's been a long time.
I miss advertising for them. I love the sponsors that
I advertise for and it always breaks my heart when
I'm not doing spots for places that I love so much.
So shout out again to the Turf Club. Thanks for
bringing it up.

Speaker 2 (40:16):
Pat.

Speaker 1 (40:17):
What else are we ask you?

Speaker 5 (40:19):
Well, I was going to say something, and Maureen really
covered a lot of it. When you throw the kind
of drugs to these children, and you throw in hormones too,
you have got a cauldron of insanity waiting for a
place to boil over. And it's proven again and again
and again, and the percentages do not deny it that

(40:40):
you give them this stuff and fifty percent of them
lose their mind and want to kill people. And when
are the people that make these chemicals going to be
held responsible for making this stuff in the name of
making somebody feel better when they want to be something
that God created them.

Speaker 1 (40:59):
Otherwise, legitimate point, I know there is there can be
some liability associated with the reactions to drugs. Although if
you were warned ahead of time, you have been given
a warning, you make an informed decision. We told you
on the black box warnings that this might make you
go backcrap insane. Yet you chose to go ahead and
take the drug anyway. You did that at your own risk.

(41:21):
That's quite often how to get out of it.

Speaker 5 (41:24):
You'd like to think that maybe the doctor would say
something about it, but he probably got a nice little
trip because he's selling the stuff. And that's part rankles
me intensely. But now, the other thing I was going
to talk about was in the United States, for an
American man woman to get a CDL commercial driver's license,

(41:46):
you have to get retested every four years. You have
to have a medical certificate where you get a physical
every two years. You have to have a TWIT card
that allows you to go into places where there's any
navigable water. And each time you do any of the above,
you have to have a background check. And a background
check means you have to wait for the FBI or

(42:08):
whatever to go through your database to say, yeah, no
new new felonies, no murders or anything like that, and
then then you can be an American driver. And they
let these people from all over the world that do
not have any ability to read English, let alone understand laws,
and they drive like they're in Senegal or Mumbai or

(42:30):
who knows where, and it's it's when you get on
the highway, it's dangerous.

Speaker 14 (42:35):
Yeah it's not.

Speaker 5 (42:36):
It's dangerous. And I love cars and I love motorcycles.
I'm a little I want another bike, Brian, but I'm scared.

Speaker 1 (42:46):
So you don't currently own one. I was going to
ask you what kind of bike. I't at it, so
you don't currently own them.

Speaker 3 (42:51):
I don't have one right now.

Speaker 2 (42:53):
I mean I still have.

Speaker 5 (42:55):
I so much of an ambassadorcycle that whenever I'm around friends,
they're get on my bike. You always used to say
you can ride mine. I said, my rule was, if
you break it, you take it. How are you you're
But they could ride them, and so many friends that
I let ride. So hey, watch come on over and
we'll go ride. Because I have two bikes now and.

Speaker 3 (43:16):
I know you love to ride.

Speaker 5 (43:17):
And I went on a Hiatus one. I became a
dad kid.

Speaker 1 (43:22):
I did the same thing Pat, I did the same
thing sin as Jerry was born. As I sold my bike,
I felt because society suggested that I do that. And
at the minute the guy rode away on my former motorcycle.
I had a sinking feeling in my heart. I'm like,
this is not going to last. Within about a year
or two, I had another motorcycle. I'm gonna ask you, pat,
every time you walk out in your garage and you

(43:43):
don't see a motorcycle, it makes you feel bad, doesn't it.

Speaker 14 (43:46):
It's heavy, I know, real, real heavy.

Speaker 2 (43:49):
I know that.

Speaker 5 (43:51):
It is the closest thing to flying without leaving the ground.
And there's a sense of joy and I treat him
and and it's just an exhilaration that you can't duplicate.
And if you don't love bikes, that's not my fault, right,
that's not my fault. And the other thing, if you
don't mind your dad and Gary Burbank were two of

(44:14):
the most incredible crazy minds, and there was so much
going on in her head. They were able to share
that love and insanity in a good way with all
the different characters, and you could listen to you look
forward to certain segments of their shows because you knew
a different character was going to be presented at that

(44:35):
time and you were like, Okay, what's come out of
his brain today? Yea, And I mean that wasn't an insult,
that was just a sharing of love and enthusiasm and genius.
I mean, you were brought up by a genius.

Speaker 1 (44:47):
Well, I can't thank you enough for those kind words.
And I agree, Gary Burbank was an amazing talent. I
thought my dad was too. And I reflect back on
my dad's ability to engage in these conversations with you know,
alter egos, if you want to call him that. It
sounded like literally two people in the room. It almost
sounded like and sometimes they were able to talk over
each other. But that was my dad. He did have

(45:08):
an amazing ability to do that. And I can't thank
you enough for listening to him, Pat. And as I
say to everybody who listened to my dad for any
length of time, thank you very much for helping to
put me through college because that's what you did. Listen
to my dad.

Speaker 5 (45:21):
It's not like we ever suffered.

Speaker 3 (45:22):
Ah.

Speaker 1 (45:23):
That cat's great.

Speaker 2 (45:24):
Pat.

Speaker 1 (45:25):
Maybe I'll ride past you someday you get back on
that wagon of that bike, as the case may be.
But I understand how you feel about the roads. Absolutely,
they have become crazy. And I am, a without question,
a fairweather rider, and I'm embarrassed today I got a
twenty eighteen BMW K sixteen hundred B and it only
has less than five thousand miles on. It shows you

(45:46):
how much I ride every year. For the reasons that
you're expressing, Pat, it's a dangerous world out there. God
bless you man. Thanks for calling this morning, six fifteen
fifty five KRC. The talk station family on an operating
since nineteen ninety nine. Cullen Cullen Alone Electric right here
in Cincinnati, serving the greater Cincinnati area, A plus the
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Speaker 15 (47:05):
Fifty five krc our iHeartRadio Music six twenty fifty have
KRCD talks Dation, Happy Friday, Tech friend of a Dave
hat or coming up next.

Speaker 1 (47:15):
Real quick here going back to the Minneapolis shooter, and
I saw this statement attribute to some doctor, uh, transgenderism
the only mental illness, demanding that the rest of society
adopt the patient's delusion as part of the treatment. Something
to ponder there, That's exactly what it is. Anyhow, over

(47:37):
to uh, thank you John Lott and Thomas Massey Congressman
Thomas Massey, couple of John Lott, author of More Guns
Less Crime. In the Wall Street Journal regarding the Minneapolis killer,
they ride on a mass shooter is struck and the
media is again refusing to say why he chose his target.
Note the gender pronouns there. Like other killers, he openly

(47:59):
admitted that he sought out gun free zones. That's un quote,
yet mainstream outlets refuse to acknowledge it, thereby ignoring a
policy solution that could save children's live The Annunciation Catholic
school shooter Minneapolis spelled it out in his manifesto quote,
I recently heard a rumor the James Holmes, the Aurora
theater shooter, may have chosen the venues that were gun

(48:21):
free zones. I would probably aim the same way. Holmes
wanted to make sure his victims would be unarmed. That's
why I and many others liked schools so much. At
least for me, I am focused on them. Adam Lanza
is my reason. If you recall, Lanza committed a mass
shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. Many
of these attackers may be crazy, but none are stupid.

(48:45):
They plan to die, but they want to die with attention.
They know that more victims they kill, the more coverage
they'll get. That's why they target places where no one
can fight back. Yet searching media coverage, we turn up
no articles. Mentioning that the Minneapolis killer picked a school
because it was a gun free zone. The media clearly
read the passages the shooter wrote. CNN highlights his quote

(49:07):
obsession with school shootings, clothes quote, Washington Post describing the
manifesto's quote reverence for other mass shooters. Close quote. But
instead of reporting the killer's own words about the vulnerability
of gun free zones, the media infers that he targeted
the school because his mom was a former employee at
the parish. Everyone wants to stop mass shooting, but we

(49:27):
need solutions that work. Having someone on site who can
quickly intervene and stop and attack is crucial. Gun control
advocates to push background checks on private transfer of guns
and red flagged laws. Yet Minnesota has both. The annunciation
Catholic school shooters still obtained three firearms legally. These limits
didn't keep the children of Minneapolis safe. Neither did Minnesota's

(49:50):
law banning guns in school. The attached penalty of five
years in prison is a strong deterrent for law abiding Americans,
but not to a shooter who's going to face multiple
life sentences anyway, and that assumes the killer lives. Some
sixty percent of these attackers, including the Minneapolis shooter, die
at the scene. Many seen intent on ending their lives

(50:12):
in the attack. They don't care about more theoretical prison time.
Far from making people safer, in practice, these bands guarantee
than only the attacker will be armed. That's why such
place as are targets. There's no accident that ninety two
percent of mash public shootings occur in gun free zones
where civilians are not allowed to carry firearms. The Nashville

(50:32):
Covenant shooter admitted she avoided another site because it had
too much security.

Speaker 9 (50:37):
Quote.

Speaker 1 (50:37):
There was another location that was mentioned, but because of
a threat assessment by the suspect of too much security,
they decided not to according to Nashville Police Chief John Drake,
explaining no one at Covenant carried a gun to fight back. Buffalo,
New York supermarket attacker in twenty twenty two made the
same calculation, writing in his manifesto quote areas where CC

(51:00):
concealed carry weapons permits are outlawed or prohibited maybe good
areas of attack close quote. Many other killers have written
nearly identical words, So why not station more police officers
at schools. Sheriff Kurf Hoffman of Sarasota County, Florida explain
why that approach falls short. Quote. A deputy in uniform
has an extremely difficult job in stopping these attacks. These

(51:24):
terrorists have huge strategic advantages and terminated to time in
place of the attacks. They can wait for a deputy
to leave an area, pick an undefended location even when
police or deputies are in the right place at the
right time. Those in uniform who can readily identified a
guards may as well be holding up neon signs saying
shoot me first. My deputies know that we cannot be

(51:44):
everywhere close quote. Arming teachers and other employees with concealed
firearms deprives an attacker of those tactical advantages he can't
tell which teachers and staff are armed. More than twenty
one million people hold concealed handgun permits, and in the
twenty nine constitutional carry states, no permit even required. While
across America, when you stand in the grocery store, there's

(52:05):
a good chance somebody nearby carries a concealed hair and handgun.
The same should be true of schools. More than twenty
states and more than ten thousand public schools already allow
armed teachers under various rules. Other than suicides and gang
violence at night, not a single death or injury has
occurred in a school that permits teachers to carry one

(52:25):
of US. Representative Thomas Massey continues to reintroduce the Safe
Students Act to repeal the nineteen ninety Federal Gun Free
School Zones Act. We shouldn't make the national default one
that advertises children as defenseless targets. If the media ever
reported why these killers consistently choose disarmed victims, the push
for more gun control would collapse and more lives would

(52:48):
be saved. It's time to take these killers at their word.
Thank you John Lott and Congressman Thomas Massey for stating
the obvious. That's why I say each and every one
of you are the first responders. Each and everyone one
of you who has a concealed carry permit are the
people out there who will save lives. You are your
brother's keeper. Why don't you act that way? And damn it,

(53:11):
get on the fire range, firearms range and practice practice
practice so you will be an effective protector and keeper
of your brother. Six twenty six fifty five care Cedtalk station.
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they offer, go to Chimney Careco dot com fifty five
KRC dot com. On a Friday, it's that time of
the week we get the Tech Friday with Dave Hatter,
brought to you by intrust It. You can reach Dave
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intrust dot Com Business Couriers as they are the best

(54:36):
in the business for your business computer needs, keeping you
out of trouble and well fixing things when you get
into trouble. Dave Hatter, welcome back to the Morning show.
My friend's always good to talk to you.

Speaker 2 (54:47):
Always my pleasure to be here, Brian, and.

Speaker 1 (54:49):
I appreciate your efforts looking out for all of us,
most notably the senior community out there. And this is
not a criticism of them. They are well a little
bit older school, and they have far more trust in
what's going on in the world and are a little
less likely to have enter a well in exchange on
electronic communication with a measure of skepticism. So they will

(55:09):
click on that link and they will get duped by
well government impersonators.

Speaker 2 (55:16):
Sadly, Brian, that seems to be the case.

Speaker 16 (55:18):
If you look at sites like the Internet Crime Complaints
Center IC three dot gov, which is hosted and sponsored
by the FBI, or information from the Federal Training Commission
Trade Rather Commission, you see these kind of things. So
the FTC recently put out a public service announcement business
and government impersonators go after older adults life savings and

(55:40):
you know, kind of, as you alluded, this is not
at all surprising to me because again a lot of
older people are somewhat new to this stuff. You know,
they didn't necessarily use all this technology in their work,
They didn't use it in school like younger people did
and do. And you know, consequently, they don't really understand
all the risks that are out there, may not be

(56:00):
asked familiar with things like deep fake voice cloning and such,
you know, which has been reported on extensively. You've even
got guys like Sam Altman, the CEO of open Ai,
the people that make chat GPT, going to the FED
and warning about deep fake voice cloning, and that's thread
to the banking system. So I get that a lot

(56:22):
of this stuff doesn't seem real to people. I really
do understand it because you know, if you're not in
it every day like me, you kind of think some
of the stuff has got to be science fiction. But
per this PSA, and I'm glad they put this out,
and I would encourage all your listeners. You know, two
good sites to follow for this type of information that's
not real technical other than listening to me and you
every Friday, Brian and following old stuff that I'm constantly

(56:44):
putting out on social media to try to warn about
it are the FBI and in particular the Internet Crime
Complaints Center IC three dot gov and FTC dot gov.
They're constantly putting out public service announcements warning about what
they're seeing out there so that you can be aware
and you know.

Speaker 2 (57:00):
Take steps to avoid it.

Speaker 16 (57:01):
But this particular PSAU, you know, warns of three different
types of fundamentalized they see all the time someone is
using your accounts. You know, you get a text, you
get a phone call, you get an email that claims
one of your accounts has been taken over and you
need to do something immediately. It's urgent so you don't
lose your money. That kind of thing, when in actuality,
it's the scammer that wants to get access to your

(57:23):
account so they can steal your money, lie to your
information is being used to commit crimes, and then lie three.
And this is the one I have seen the most
often personally. There's a security problem with your computer, right Yes, Google,
Google and Microsoft are not going to call you and
tell you we see a problem on your computer. Again,

(57:43):
I say this to you all of the time. I
defy you to see if you can get someone from
Microsoft or Google on the phone, or Apple, that's what
problems might laugh. I'm serious, I was thinking about that.
Good luck, Yeah, good luck getting someone from them on
the phone, unless you're a large corporate client or something.
They are not honitoring your computer or your phone. They
are not detecting viruses or problems on your phone. If

(58:05):
you get any kind of contact that claims to be
from Microsoft or Google or Apple as an individual and
they claim there's some sort of problem with your device,
there is the likelihood that that is not a scam.
Is less than you and I both being struck by
lightning right now, despite the fact that we're about thirty
miles away from each other at the moment. You know,

(58:25):
I mean, they're not monitoring your devices, they're not calling you.
That is an absolute scam. And you know, really, Brian,
and they get into some of this anytime you get
anything that was unsolicited, right an email, a text message, a.

Speaker 2 (58:39):
Phone call, because they will call you.

Speaker 16 (58:41):
The people behind these scams are essentially technically savvy, professional
con artists. They'll tell you any lie they need to.
They want to steal your money. There's no load that
they won't stoop to to get to your money. You know,
if you get any kind of unsolicited message and there's
some urgent action you did it, or some direct threat

(59:01):
to you, like you have an overdue parking ticket or
you didn't pay a toll and the Hamilton County Sheriff
is going to come arrest you if you don't send
gift cards or pay in venmo or something guaranteed to
be fake. You know, go to the Hamiltin County Shriff's
website via information that you have obtained, Do not use
the links in the email or the text, don't call
the numbers they send you on your own, go verify

(59:24):
this and you're going to find out almost always it's
a scam. And that's what the FTC is saying here.
That's what the FBI is saying here. Local law enforcement
has often weighed in on these kind of things. Again,
go to the IRS's website and see how they will
contact you. They will not send you an email asking
you to make a payment via venmil. They'll tell you

(59:45):
that on their site. Again, folks, there's a lot of
information out there, but if something comes to you unsolicited,
you should assume it's fake. You should assume that the
links in it and the phone numbers in it are
set up by the scammers. I know we're about a time, Brian,
real quick. I got a text the other day and
I posted this on LinkedIn claiming that my Apple pay

(01:00:05):
was charged twelve hundred and thirty dollars. Well, first off,
I don't use Apple pay right right, But there was
an actual phone number they wanted me to call.

Speaker 1 (01:00:12):
I've gotten so many of those days I've lost count.

Speaker 16 (01:00:15):
Yeah, but they don't want me to clickly, they want
me to call a number because they know there's a
con artist waiting there to suck me down the rabbit
hole and steal my mom.

Speaker 1 (01:00:22):
Yeah, probably asked to remote into your computer to solve
whatever problems. Yeah, don't let them do that either, don't
do that, Yes, do not allow that. Scam text messages, yes,
all there's those out there too. Dave will talk about
that coming up. I'll tell you what I've been harping
on firearms ownership. Because you are your brother's keeper. Get
these crazy mass shooters out in the world. You could
be part of the solution. Yes, protect yourself, protect your neighbors,

(01:00:44):
protect your friends. Someone goes all shooty and they're insane,
you might want to have a firearm. And that's why
I recommend twenty two three Round forty two between Mason
and Lebanon indoor shooting range. Learn how to operate your firearm,
so if you're in a situation where it's required, you
will know how to do it because you've taken classes
by the great folks at twenty two three on Route

(01:01:05):
forty two between Mason and eleven, and they have the
you know, sort of like I've never picked up a
gun class before, but want to learn how to shoot
kind of class all the way through some high level
classes for those experience shooters out there. They have a
great selection of firearms where people are well versed and
everything they sell and they are friendly, so if you're
a little reluctant to go down this road, you need

(01:01:26):
to be a twenty two three on Route forty two
between Mason eleven and to learn more, head on over
to the website. It's twenty two to three, then number
twenty two followed by the word three spelled out twenty
two to three.

Speaker 15 (01:01:34):
Dot com fifty five KRC the talk station Nation interest
it dot com is how you reach Dave Hatter and
the crew for your business computer needs pivoting over more
scams in the form of text messages.

Speaker 16 (01:01:48):
Dave Hatter, Yeah, at we just discussed Brian. You know
text is an increasing channel for scams. This is a
story headline scam text messages in personally Amazon and ups
targets across the US. I would bet you every one
of your listeners has seen something similar to this, if
not the good old toll scam that.

Speaker 2 (01:02:09):
Was running around.

Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
Oh yeah, I even got those, Yeah you didn't.

Speaker 2 (01:02:12):
Pay your toll or whatever?

Speaker 16 (01:02:13):
And uh I you know, I get a lot of
these things, including the old Hey I thought we were
meeting Wednesday at four from some number I've never seen before,
or you.

Speaker 2 (01:02:23):
Did you block me? I can't get a hold of you.

Speaker 16 (01:02:25):
You know things like this, and usually yeah, Usually my
reply to that is yes, I did scammer.

Speaker 1 (01:02:31):
And then I report and block and see. I don't
even go down that road, just delete it and ignore
it like it never was sent.

Speaker 16 (01:02:38):
It's honestly smarter to not reply, Brian, because anytime you
reply to one of these, you said, any four you
you are telling them that that's a live number, right, yeah,
and you know that's just going to ultimately lead the more.
Sometimes I just can't resist the urge though, to let
them know. I know they're a scammer, you know, but yet, Yeah,
these text based scams are huge, huge, As I said

(01:03:01):
in the last segment, you know they'll go wherever people are.
People increasingly use text. It's easy to spoof a text
and make a text appear to come from any number
you want. It's hard for someone to look at a
text and know whether it's legitimate or not because frankly,
there's not a lot of information embedded in the text,
and since the phone number is easily spoofable, it's hard

(01:03:21):
to know.

Speaker 2 (01:03:21):
It's easy to.

Speaker 16 (01:03:22):
Create links that you can't look at to the naked
eye and know what they do. And as I mentioned
last segment, you know, the app will pay one I got,
which again I posted out on social media so people
could see what these things look like. And another recent
one I got. You know, they actually wanted me to
call a number. It wasn't click a link or something
like that. They literally wanted me to call a phone number.
I'm sure there was a boiler room somewhere in India

(01:03:43):
or Pakistan or China waiting for that call with you know,
trained con artists waiting to steal your money. They'll they'll
tell you any lie, you know, they'll say whatever they
have to do to steal your money. But this particular
one here, you know, there it's like, okay, your package
is delayed, click this link to find out the status

(01:04:04):
or you know, you have to come get.

Speaker 2 (01:04:06):
Your package or whatever.

Speaker 16 (01:04:07):
And usually usually those kind of scams aren't they're not
trying to get you on the phone, right. They want
you to click a link because you need to log
into your Amazon account or your UPS account or whatever
it is that you know, they claim that the shipment
is coming through, and you know at that point, ideally
they're going to get your username and password. Now, if

(01:04:28):
it's for something like Amazon, that gets them the money potentially,
because you often will have a credit card associated with
your account. By the way, I recommend people don't do that,
you know, for any online shopping I do. I never
store a credit card number with that.

Speaker 2 (01:04:41):
Venever I put it in each time.

Speaker 16 (01:04:44):
Yes, I know that creates a good two seconds of inconvenience,
but the two seconds of inconvenience is well worth the possibility,
or well worth blocking the possibility that someone could get
into my account and then charge up a bunch of stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:04:56):
Right, and stay up on that too, because if you
flag the tra transaction is a fraudulent one, the only
liability you're going to have is be capped out of
fifty bucks under the UCC.

Speaker 16 (01:05:06):
And that's why you should use a credit card instead
of a debit card. That was just about to say, Brian, Yeah,
never link a debit card to something like that because
if I can, if I can hack your Amazon account,
I can literally steal all the money out of the
account connected to that debit card. So you know, folks,
they're coming at you. I hate to say it, but
they're coming at you anywhere. There are people through video games,

(01:05:27):
through text messages, through phone calls, through emails, all.

Speaker 2 (01:05:31):
Of this stuff is easily spoofable.

Speaker 16 (01:05:33):
It's easy to send a text message or make a
phone call and make it a peer to come from
any number I want. It's easy to send an email
and make it a peer to come from any account
I want. You got to be skeptical. You've got to
understand that if you get, as I said in the
last sement, anything that you get unsolicited, if there is
some sort of urgency to it, if they're asking you

(01:05:54):
to do something unusual, you need to do something right
now to save your money, save your freedom, whatever it is,
right because they come up with all kinds of creative scams,
very high likelihood.

Speaker 2 (01:06:06):
It's a scam.

Speaker 16 (01:06:06):
If you get a text telling you that your package
is delayed or whatever, then you go to Amazon or
Target or Walmart or UPS or whoever this purportedly came from.
You log into your account on Amazon, right, don't click
the links, don't call the numbers. Any of that could
be spoofed. They could be there could be con artists
waiting for you. You go to Amazon, you go to

(01:06:29):
UPS or whatever the text claims. For the most part,
I just ignored these things because I know when I
ship something exactly. Yeah, exactly. I know when I can
go to my I can open my Amazon account or
Target or whatever it is and see what the status is.
I just ignore this stuff, and your advice really is
the best. Don't do what I'm doing and sometimes respond
to these idiots. Just hit report and block and move along.

Speaker 1 (01:06:51):
That's it. Move along, appreciate today. One more on. Oh look,
a hack of the federal court filing system. It's a
good thing they didn't know about it for five years
before the hack happened. Let's continue a day after these
brief words beginning with Gate of Heaven Cemetery, yate to
having Catholic cemetery. They've been serving the Cincinnati Christian community
for about seventy seven years, and they just want you

(01:07:13):
to know it's a place to honor life, a great
place for prayer and reflection on the beauty of God's creation,
from life, life's milestones, passing on of course into eternal life.
It is a cemetery and consider that to be your
final resting place at Gate of Heaven Catholic Cemetery. But regardless,
all are invited to enjoy and celebrate life and an
opportunity to engage in some meditation and prayer on the

(01:07:34):
beautifully maintained grounds. A tranquil landscape surroundings are perfect for prayer,
reflection and remembrance. So take them up on the offer.
Head on over to Gate of Heaven Cemetery and take
a nice stroll on the beautiful, impeccably landscaped walking paths
to learn more about the cemetery and all the information
they've got. It's Gate of Heaven dot org. That's gateof
Heaven dot org.

Speaker 15 (01:07:56):
Fifty five krc OHC Cincinnati's if you buy krc DE
talk station one more with tech Friday's Dave Hatter interest
it dot com.

Speaker 1 (01:08:06):
Oh, here's a fun statement from the article. You're going
to talk about a sweeping hack of the federal judiciaries
case filing system, exploited unresolved security holes discovered five years ago.
Oh great, they just let it go.

Speaker 2 (01:08:19):
Dave.

Speaker 1 (01:08:19):
What's about what's going on with this one?

Speaker 2 (01:08:21):
Yeah? Your government at worked right.

Speaker 16 (01:08:23):
I got this is a really disturbing story quite many levels,
and I'll get back to the specifics of it here
in a second. But the thing that it points out
to me, besides the fact that you seem to find
these kinds of issues with lots of government systems.

Speaker 2 (01:08:39):
I don't know if you happen to see that.

Speaker 16 (01:08:40):
Apparently there's been some sort of pretty devastating cyber attack
on the state of Nevada, and like Scissa has gotten
involved in it and so forth. I didn't really prep
that story for this morning, so I don't know the
details yet. I just happened to catch it before I
went to bed last night. But my point really is
this illustrates how it's so important to a understand what

(01:09:01):
legacy systems, older systems that you might have that aren't
getting support from a vendor or manufacturer anymore in terms
of patching issues, and also for anything that is patchable,
how critical it is patchable, meaning updates, right software updates.
We talk about these things occasion on here. Microsoft releases updates,
Apple releases updates. You know, as a general rule of

(01:09:23):
thumb for most people, in most instances, it makes sense
to apply those updates as soon as possible because in
many cases, you know, the bad guys are aware of
the flaws and they're out there exploiting them almost immediately.
So if it takes you months or years to patch
the software, there's a strong possibility that the bad guys
will find your systems and exploit them. And I find

(01:09:46):
it utterly crazy when you think about this being a
federal case of courts information system, and you know, as
a lawyer, you would probably know more about the ins
and outs of this than me. But apparently there's all
kinds of sensitive case details and documentation being uploaded into this.

Speaker 1 (01:10:02):
System, including the old cases cases that aren't released to
the general public. Well not they ain't sealed no more.
Apparently that's the problem. You know, five years they knew about.

Speaker 16 (01:10:13):
This, Yeah, five years, nothing done, and you know, two
different administrations. It's it's absolutely insane. And you know, when
you look at some of the now there are people
out there who argue that you can get security by obscurity,
by having these ancient, obsolete systems that people aren't familiar with.
But you know, this article goes on to say that

(01:10:36):
multiple times, yeah, data has been stolen out of this
You mentioned, you know, sealed cases, and apparently while they
try to figure out what to do about this, they've
gone back to paper and pen In sum it, here's
a quote, and I'm sure this is probably one of
your favorite members of Congress, Brian in twenty twenty two.

Speaker 2 (01:10:57):
Rep.

Speaker 16 (01:10:57):
Jerry Nadler said the three Britin nation state hacking groups
had simultaneously breached the case filing system back in twenty twenty.
He described the incident as having a quote startling breadth
and scope unquote at the time to tell that, yeah,
that's from three years ago, three separate nation state hacking
groups think people like Iran, China, Russian North Korea, and

(01:11:20):
you know, here we are three years later after that
quote he made, and apparently they've had to go back
to paper and pen in some cases because this hasn't
been addressed and information of being stolen. It's very disturbing
to me. I don't think this is a standalone instance
of this kind of thing. And you know it again,

(01:11:43):
it speaks to the need to have systems that are patchable,
to patch the systems, and to take this sort of
thing seriously. I mean, could criminals get off because their
information was released in the case, and again, you're the attorney,
you tell me, But if information is released to the public,

(01:12:04):
could that potentially invalidate a case?

Speaker 2 (01:12:06):
I don't know.

Speaker 16 (01:12:07):
Could informants be killed? We've seen this recently, reporting that
you know, hackers were hired by the cartels explicitly to
get information that led to informants being killed. So, you know,
a lot of the consequences of something like this may
not be obvious to people, but we have got to
get serious in this country about protecting our critical infrastructure,

(01:12:29):
including systems like this, before there is a catastrophe. It's
coming if we don't get serious about protecting this stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:12:37):
Well, the comment about them returning to paper and pen
in order to avoid the hack, that seems to be
in a great argument and support of going back to
paper ballots in voting to avoid the possibility of hacking,
or even the perception of hacking, since it goes on
all the time.

Speaker 16 (01:12:51):
Dave, Yes, there is no system, if it's connected to
the Internet that can't be hacked. And in fact, you know, Brian,
there's plenty of evidence out there from people like MIT.
They can shoot a laser beam at a light bulb,
pick up your keystrokes and figure out what your password is.
It all kinds of wild stuff. Now again that's super esoteric,
high end stuff. That's your average hacker can't pull.

Speaker 1 (01:13:12):
Off shelf available item on Amazon.

Speaker 16 (01:13:16):
There's no system that can't be hacked. You're right, about that,
and I mean this, this is just another example of it.
And I mean we we've got to put pressure on
our elected representatives to allocate the funding and require that
these government systems are brought up to speed. Now, again,
there's nothing you can do to make something completely one
percent unhackable, but in so many instances we just see

(01:13:38):
they're not even doing the most basic things, not even
the simplest, most basic things, and thus exposing our entire
society to things like this and much worse, like the
grid going down, your water being corrupted. It's we just
I don't know, you know, I get very frustrated on
this subject. I talk about it all the time. We
have got to get serious about this or there is

(01:14:01):
going to be a catastrophic consequence.

Speaker 2 (01:14:04):
To our entire society.

Speaker 1 (01:14:05):
Well, one can already make an argument there have been
catastrophic consequences. If you have all your personal information and
data in any number of hacks that we've all been
subject to released out of the open world, that's a catastrophe.
It's just because people haven't died. Money's been stolen, and
lives have been ruled, but nobody's died yet. It's like
it's like the Jay Ratliffe talking about you know, lithium

(01:14:25):
ion batteries and airplanes and the hold and things like that.
You know, it's going to take some major freaking incident
of death and dismemberment kind of plane wreck to get
the FAA to do something about the problems that they're
aware of. Sadly, that's the reality. I just the catastrophe
you're talking about is wow. I mean potentially societally altering.

(01:14:47):
You can hack into the water system, the electricity grid
and all that kind of stuff. Dave Hatter can't thank
you enough for what you do each and every week
here in the fifty five Carcy Morning Show Tech Front
of It Dave had Ter again brought to you by
his company interust It online, interest it dot com and
follow Dave on LinkedIn. Just look for Dave Hatter, you'll
find him. He'll post all the links to the segments,
topics and great information. You can follow Dave on LinkedIn

(01:15:08):
and I encourage you to do that. Dave, have a
great three day weekend, my friend.

Speaker 16 (01:15:12):
Always my pleasure, Brian, you and Joe and all your
listeners have a great weekend and I'll look forward to
chatting with you next week.

Speaker 1 (01:15:18):
I look forward to it already. Joe, open up the
phone lines five on three seven two three talk at
a little time between now and Betsy Sunderman got the
FOP endorsement for the judicial run. She'll be on at
seven thirty. I'll be right back.

Speaker 17 (01:15:31):
Today's top headlines coming up at the top.

Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
Of the hour.

Speaker 17 (01:15:34):
Something always happens when you leave SIXPEC fifty five krs
the talk station.

Speaker 18 (01:15:40):
This report is sponsored by OKN.

Speaker 1 (01:15:56):
Six here fifty five KARSD talk station. I'm so happy
it is Friday. Always happy on a Friday, even more
so on a three day weekend Friday. I'll be off
on Monday. Joe Jreckors sewing together a quote unquote best
of show for Monday. I appreciate you tuning into the
morning show this morning, and I hope you look forward
to hearing from Betsy Sunniman, who's of course running for
judge in the November election, got the FOP endorsement. She'll

(01:16:17):
join the show at the bottom of the hour, follow
by Yes, Corey Bowman, mayor for City of Cincinnati. I
hope Corey wins can pray for that. He'll be on
an eight oh five. We'll talk about violence, talk about
the National Guard and the all important air pollution monitors
coming to a Cincinnati neighborhood near you that's so important.
We'll also talk graffiti which has cropped up as a

(01:16:37):
real problem here in the Cincinnati area, and the meeting
at the Farm on Wednesday evening with Christopher Smithman and Toddzenser.
So those are the details of Corey Bowman coming up
in the eight o'clock hour five one, three, seven, four,
nine to fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
to three talk pound five fifty on at and t
pund springing off the heels of Tech Friday's Dave Hatter
with the alarming reality that our federal government knew about

(01:16:59):
a potential hack or at least an exploitable problem with
the court record system, the federal court filing system for
the judiciary five years, and they're only now getting around
to dealing with it. Along with similar lines, this is
really frightening. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegzeth launched a full

(01:17:20):
scale investigation into Microsoft because Microsoft relied on the Chinese
Communist Party linked engineers dealing with highly sensitive Department of
Defense cloud contracts. So this scandal goes back nearly a
decade in the Obama Biden era program. It's called the
Quote Digital Escorts close QUOTE program, which is US citizens

(01:17:44):
with clearance but limited technical expertise acting as go betweens
for Chinese engineers Chinese Communist Party folks. They said it
was initially framed as a compliance worker on the program
hand of the Chinese common has party direct access to
some of the most sensitive infrastructure protecting the America, the

(01:18:04):
United States of America. Pete Hagzath Quote. Last month, the
Department of Defense was made aware of an Obama Biden
era legacy program called Digital Escorts. For nearly a decade,
Microsoft has used Chinese coders remotely supervised by US contractors
to support sensitive DD cloud systems. The program was designed

(01:18:25):
to comply with contracting rules, but it exposed the Department
of Defense to unacceptable risk. I mean, if you're thinking
America first in common sense, this doesn't pass either of
those tests. So I initiated an immediate review of this
vulnerability and I will report our initial findings. Again, this
has been doing off for ten years, he said, the

(01:18:46):
use of Chinese nationals to serve Department of Defense cloud
environments it's over. We've issued a formal matter of concern
of Microsoft documenting the breach of trust, and we're requiring
third party audit of Microsoft's Digital Escort program, including the
code and the submissions by the Chinese nationals. This audit
will be free of charge the US taxpayers. I think

(01:19:07):
that means Microsoft's going to be paying for it. A
Moscow tasking Department of Defense experts with a separate investigation
of the Digital Escort program and the Chinese Microsoft employees
that were involved in it. These investigations will help us
determine the impact of this workaround. Did they put anything
in the code that we didn't know about? He asks,

(01:19:29):
We're going to find out, he goes on. Additionally, all
Department of Defense software vendors will identify and terminate any
Chinese involvement in DoD systems. It blows my mind that
I'm even saying these things. It's just common sense, and
yet we ever allowed it, and yet we ever allowed
it to happen. That's why we're attacking it so hard.

(01:19:53):
We expect vendors doing business with the Department of Defense,
but US national security ahead of profit maximization. I'm committed,
like the President is to ensuring that our national security
networks are secure. Again, it's America first, and it's common sense.
This should never have happened in the first place. But
once we found out about it, we've attacked it aggressively

(01:20:14):
from the beginning, and we're going to follow all the
way through the tape to make sure that this is addressed.
So DoD is working in conjunction with our partners and
the rest of the federal government to ensure that all
US networks are protected. God bless well. Yeah, see new
sheriff in town. But I'm approaching it from a perspective

(01:20:36):
that this when this program was launched under the Obama
Biden era, didn't anyone step back from it and say, well,
wait a second, isn't this a vehicle for the Chinese
Communist Party to get access to our systems and program
code that might exploit our systems for their benefit. Anyone
concerned about the Chinese Communist Party being the biggest, most
existential threat to the United States of America that ever existed,

(01:20:59):
Anybody concerned about that We're talking about the Department of
Defense here, that they allowed this to happen. I mean,
we've got states that are trying to ban the Chinese
Communist Party from acquiring real estate. These folks were directly
involved in Department of Defense coding unbelievable and pivoting back

(01:21:26):
over to Minneapolis situation. I thought this was rather troubling,
and I go back to this statement, and I mentioned
earlier in the program, attributed to doctor Paul mcew the
transgenderism the only mental illness, demanding that the rest of
society adopt the patient's delusion as part of the patient's treatment. Now,

(01:21:50):
whether at that is accurately attributed to doctor Paul mckeue,
the statement exists as a stark statement of reality in
contrast to this public left wing narrative that we're supposed to, yes,
adopt the patient's delusion. So yesterday on News Nations program,

(01:22:15):
Elizabeth Vargas the host, speaking with Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frye,
talking about the transgender nature of the student, wondering whether
that was of the degenderedyspia play a role in his
initial statements like I don't know. Vargus follows up with
a separate question the shooter Acord of the reports emerging

(01:22:35):
today from The New York Post reportedly wrote in one
of his journals. I am tired of being trans. I
wish I had never brainwashed myself. I can't cut my
hair now, as it would be an embarrassing defeat. Asked,
could this have been contributing to his depression, to his
suicidal ideation, even perhaps mayor Fry. I can't speak to

(01:22:57):
what is in a different individual's brain, and I'll agree
with them on that. Obviously, we love our trans community
they're suffering. Put them first. Follow By we love our
Catholic community. They're suffering. Just fire open on a church,
and we need to be doing everything possible to be
supporting them. Pivoting over. We've got to stop making this

(01:23:18):
about groups of people every single time one of these
things goes down. We've got to stop having this conclusion
that we each want to arrive at and then reverse
engineering the facts to meet the conclusion that we've already determined.
This is not about what team you're on. It should
be about team kids. It should be about team children.

(01:23:38):
We should be on team love. And the antidote to
all this hate we're seeing nationwide is not more hate.
It's not villainization of a whole group, villainize the act. Well, Amen,
but who among us divides us into group and paints
with the broadest possible brush about anything conservative related. Anytime

(01:24:00):
it's a shooting, it's immediately the default conclusion by the
left that it's some right wing fanatical gunmen, some evil
right winger, some racist, evil right wing guy, probably right.
They do this constantly. Is it worth considering the number

(01:24:22):
of transgender shooters involved in mass shootings and the percentage
of them when compared to the total number of mass
shootings seems to be a sizeable percentage, given the number
of transgender people in the community nationwide is a rather
small sliver, single digits. Maybe there is something to be
said here, Maybe there is a connection, maybe depression or
maybe regret over having decided to be trans and never

(01:24:46):
wishing that one had brainwashed oneselves, and following the left
wing narrative that yes, you can be whatever you want
to be, and we're going to force the rest of
society to join into your delusion by well ridiculing anyone
who doesn't use your proper ject under pronouns, which is
exactly what happened on NPR the other day. Amy Klobashar's
on NPR refer to the Catholic shooter moron as he

(01:25:08):
regularly and repeatedly dud during the interviews. Senator ad Clomashar,
Democrat of Minnesota doesn't even get the gender pronouns right,
and she was called out about it. Host Alyssa changs, well, well,
wait a minute. Just part of clarification, Senator Klobashar refer
to the shooter as he. Although the police have identified
a suspect, it's still unclear at this time what that

(01:25:32):
person's gender is or how they identify, suggesting of course
that if she he identified as a woman, then Senator
Amy Klobishar should have differ well acknowledged that and started
calling her she Why because the moron, who is a
murderer and obviously struggling with massive mental health issues, thought

(01:25:52):
it was a great thing to kill children at one
point in his life, decided he was a girl. Now,
Senator Amy Klobashar should abide that and refer to him
as her and not him. You must abide by the
deluded person's conclusions regarding their gender. You have no say

(01:26:13):
in the matter. Absolutely insane seven sixteen couple to seven
to seventeen fifty five krsee the talk station I feel
free to chime in. But first, Cross Country Mortgage. She's
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Speaker 15 (01:27:30):
Fifty five KRC Santos offers a freeloader car with appointment
when services.

Speaker 1 (01:27:37):
Channel nine first morning one to forecast ideal weekend, most
notably for the fireworks beginning today, sunny sky seventy eight
for the high fifty four overnight with just a few clowns,
seventy seven under sunny skies, Tomorrow overnight low of fifty
four with clear skies and a beautiful Sunday clear and
seventy eight fifty eight Right now, let's get an update
on traffic conditions from Chuck.

Speaker 19 (01:27:56):
Ingram from the UC how Trumfort Center. Trust the same
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Blackland split. North Pound seventy five A bit heavier at
Kyle's work Crew's done. West Pound seventy four near Montana

(01:28:18):
Left Lane's open again. Chuck ingramon fifty five KRCDE talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:28:25):
Seven one here fifty five ker ce DE talk station
every Friday, Besy Sunderman coming up. Next vote, Sunderman says,
the FOP says Brian Thomas as well, nothing, you need
to follow my opinion. I just know she's an outstanding judge,
So Betsy sundered. The next segment five on three, seven, four, nine,

(01:28:45):
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three.
Talk further to my point on this whole idea that
you and I are supposed to accept what someone else
decides to be their gender, flying in the face of reality.
Go to California, where all weird things originate and continue.
California School District now has a rule. It's a new

(01:29:05):
rule for young girls that are really uncomfortable sharing a
bathroom with a biological male pretending to be a girl,
which we're supposed to accept and adopt. This new rule
requires the girl to file a mental health accommodation request.

(01:29:29):
Temicula Valley United School District an act of the rule
that tells female students who feel uncomfortable sharing bathroom space
with biological males have to file a mental health accommodation
request if they want privacy. Your girl is the problem
in this case, prompting outrage from some parents and others

(01:29:53):
like me, who say that the rule treats those girls
who object to sharing private space with biological males as
the problem and treat the request for privacy is a
type of disability form required by the school district apparently
falls under something called section five zero four of the
Rehabilitation Act and California Education Code section fifty six thousand,

(01:30:16):
law intended to accommodate children with authentic disabilities. That's the
section that the girls who are uncomfortable have to file
under authentic disabilities like epilepsy, severe anxiety disorders, and diabetes.

Speaker 2 (01:30:28):
Huh.

Speaker 1 (01:30:35):
Woman named Sonya Shaw, run for California State Superintendent, described
the new rule as pure madness, saying the girls are
treated as the problem. This upside down, dangerous and exactly
what we warned people would happen. Right. Eleven Circuit Court
of Appeals earlier this year seven to four upholding a

(01:30:57):
Florida school privacy policy requires ring students to use bathrooms
based on the biological sex score one for people who
view biological reality as reality. However, other courts have ruled
in the opposite direction. So you can expect this to
end up at the Supreme Court at some point, and fine,
let the Supreme Court handle it. I'm perfectly comfortable, given

(01:31:17):
the current judicial makeup on the Supreme Court that this
one's going to turn out the right way. In other words,
the Supreme Court woul follow the Eleventh US Circuit Court
of Appeals and say no, you are batcrap insane. The
girls who are uncomfortable are legitimately uncomfortable being in the
bathroom with Well Johnson's swinging around all over the place.

(01:31:39):
Who we got time for a quick call Joe, No,
we don't. I apologize to Steve and Julie. We're gonna
have Betsy's Sunnomon on next and I am out of
time looking at the cock It is seven to twenty
five right now. A fifty five ker c detalk station.
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Speaker 7 (01:32:39):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:32:44):
Here's your Channel nine weather forecast, great one as we
approach fireworks Sunday, It's going to be a nice day
to day, sunny skies with a high seventy eight, a
few clouds over night down to fifty four. A sunny
date again tomorrow with a high of seventy seven. Claire
skies over night fifty four on Sunday. Hey, yay, clear
skies with the highest seventy eight fifty nine degrees. Right

(01:33:04):
now it's time for a traffic updates.

Speaker 19 (01:33:07):
You see how Traumatics Center trusts the same team for
your care that keeps so.

Speaker 9 (01:33:10):
You see bear cats on the field Countland.

Speaker 19 (01:33:12):
You see Health Orthopedic Sans supports medicine no matter the
injury visit. You see health dot com southbound seventy five
an an extra five in and out of Aacklan northbound
seventy five that slows a bit between term Play and
Donaldson thanks to a broken down that's over on the
left shoulder getting some help. Westbound thirty two shut down.
You're certain Nia dude to an accident. Chuck Ingram five

(01:33:34):
KR and see need talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:33:39):
It is seven twenty nine right now, I think about
pair CD talk station. I hope everyone's having a wonderful Friday.
Corey Bowman at the top of the Our News eight
oh five with Corey Bowman. Yes, Coreybowman dot com vote
for him for mayor of the City Cincinnati. We need
a change in the city. You don't do the same
thing over and over again being unhappy with the results.
Try a different path. That path includes voting for judge

(01:34:00):
Betsy Sunnemon. Betsy Sunamon, welcome back to the fifty five
KRC Morning Show. Always appreciate having you on the show.

Speaker 6 (01:34:05):
Thank you, good morning.

Speaker 1 (01:34:07):
Well, let's start with the congratulations. You scored the FOP endorsement.
That's a valuable endorsement.

Speaker 6 (01:34:13):
Yeah, that's an especially good one this year with all
the concern about rising crime in the city.

Speaker 2 (01:34:18):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:34:19):
Amen, So you're on Domestic Relations Court right now. As
a judge, You've got quite a history in the city
of Cincinnati. Going over your record, you're a magistrate in
probate court start out with, and you also run Sincinny
City Council. Back in the day when we had well
differing voices on the council offering difference of difference of
opinion and offering different solutions for problems. We don't have

(01:34:40):
that anymore, which is why I'm advocating for change in
elected officials for the election November. It was a different
time when you served on sin Sey City Council. What's
your observations of council right now? Moving away from the
judicial race.

Speaker 6 (01:34:55):
Well, when I was on council, I talked about how
important it is to have diversity of thought there was
a lot of diversity in other ways, you know, gender, race,
but there was there was no diversity of thought when
I joined council, and now there's no diversity of thought again.

(01:35:15):
I mean, it would be good if we could get
a couple of Republicans elected for council. Smitherman would be
great too, to get elected, just to add a little
a little bit of back and forth when they're voting
on something, because right now it seems like they all
just kind of agree on everything. Yes, And why do
you need nine council members when they all agree? Why

(01:35:37):
not just have one council member. The point of having
nine is so there's some kind of discussion and different
perspectives brought to the conversation.

Speaker 1 (01:35:47):
Indeed, and you know, let's I don't want to overlook
Steve Gooden. I mean, I think Steve Gooden is brilliant.
He's running as a charter right. So there's an alternative
voice as well, not under the R or D or
independent moniker. But you know, charter rights have a long
long time. You know, I think the view of among
most people the charter rights are good people and they're
for good governance. And there's your alternative opinion to the

(01:36:09):
Democrat leaning well, the uniform Democrat vote right now, we've
got so great options as we approach the fall. But yeah,
we were talking the other day about this with the
non governmental organizations getting all kinds of money out of
the city budget. Mayor AFTAB provol and city manager share
it long, just decide which ones of the multitude out
there are going to get money. And then, of course,

(01:36:30):
with only one uniform Democrat leaning vote all the council
members is basically rubber stamp it. And then there's no
accountability for the NGOs afterwards. So if Betsy Sunnerman's there,
or Kieve Gooden is there, or Christopher Smithman is there,
they can raise their hand and go whoa, whoa, whoa.
Hold on a second, this NGO has done the following,
or shouldn't be worthy of the money, et cetera, at
least interjecting that alternative voice. And of course, on the

(01:36:53):
bench you're running form municipal court, you're going to have
to be dealing with crimes. How does your experience on
the domestic Relations bench and your experience as a magistrate
and probate court help you and guide you in terms
of being ready for the municipal court bench. Bensy Suedman.

Speaker 3 (01:37:09):
Well, before those.

Speaker 6 (01:37:10):
Jobs, I was a Hamilton County prosecutor for fifteen years.

Speaker 1 (01:37:13):
True, I overlooked that funny fact.

Speaker 6 (01:37:17):
So of course I went through municipal court. In that office,
we just went through all the courts. You start in
the lower courts and you work your way up and
you kind of learn everything. Yeah, So I like how
it was back in the day. I liked it when
bad guys got locked up and people got reasonable bonds
to protect the public. And we voted on this issue

(01:37:40):
one a couple of years ago, saying that judges can
consider public safety when setting bonds, which seems really obvious.
But most of the judges are not considering public safety.
They're just considering what's the best for the defendant, which
is ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (01:38:00):
It is.

Speaker 1 (01:38:01):
And the other thing is, I mean that the standards
for evaluating what the bond should be. The judge can
say they considered public safety, but then I had to
go ahead and release someone on unrecognizance bond and sort of,
you know, explain themselves out of why public safety was
considered without really actually considering it. It's easy to say
you considered it.

Speaker 3 (01:38:22):
And not do it right right.

Speaker 6 (01:38:25):
And I would be curious to know if one of
the more liberal judges was a victim of the crime.
Would they'd be okay with the person getting an O
R bond if it was their neighbor who attacked them,
or you know, someone who they would possibly see be
scared of on a daily basis. What would they say
about another judge letting that person go free while the

(01:38:46):
case is pending.

Speaker 1 (01:38:47):
I don't know, Well, you know, I'm just reminded this
case that I brought up this morning because the Dan
Hill's former FOP president chimed in on it, wondering how
his former Butler County teacher got probation for having I
think twenty three instances of child porn, distributing child porn,

(01:39:08):
and transmitting child porn found guilty last month all twenty
three charges after the indictment on child porn, but only
got two months in jail. Now, I thought it rather
odd that the judge has said this has been devastating
to his In other words, a guy who possessed the
child's porn child porn devastating to his family. That's a given,

(01:39:30):
and I'm sure something that will be a burden on
him for the main of his life. It sounds to
me like he's only considering the victim and his feelings
and with the impact on his family. What of the
children who were molested and depicting this child porn I
mean probation. Now, I'm not asking you to come in
on that specific case, but you know, if that's something
like that's in front of me, you can't give an
advisory opinion.

Speaker 9 (01:39:48):
I mean, I.

Speaker 1 (01:39:51):
Just said a loss.

Speaker 6 (01:39:54):
I mean, I can't imagine the judges truly think that's
the right thing to do. I have to believe that
it's just pressure from the Democratic Party, because the Democratic Party,
including AFTAB primarily has told all the judges if you don't,
if you don't let everybody out, basically, I will run

(01:40:14):
people against you. So I don't know, do you think
that this is their true moral belief that everyone should
be out and about or do you think it's just
it must just be political pressure that I have to
believe that, because I can't believe an intelligent person would
think that's the right thing to do.

Speaker 1 (01:40:31):
Yeah, but pause as we go to a break here,
Betsy Sunnemon, how does one conclude that letting people out
should be the default position, regardless of what the crime is.
That's the position that's been suggested coming from the mayor's office,
that in and of itself exists in the land of
insanity from my perspective. But we'll pause. Bring Betsy's sunnymon back.

(01:40:52):
You can find her and help her campaign out. Betsy
Sunderman with two ends on the end Betsysunneman dot com
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Speaker 7 (01:41:53):
Two nine fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:41:57):
Accidents happen. Here's your Channel nine first one to weether forecast.
Beautiful day to day. The sunny sky is in the
highest seventy eight, just a few clouds overnight with the
lower fifty four. Another sunny day tomorrow with the highest
seventy seven, thirst skies over night fifty four comes Sunday
for the fireworks. Perfect day for it's seventy eight to
high with clear skies fifty seven degrees. Right now it's

(01:42:18):
hyper traffic.

Speaker 19 (01:42:19):
Run think U see up Triumphics Center. Trust the same
team for your care that keeps the U. See bear
cats on the field. Count on you see Health Orthopedic
sand supports medicine no matter the injury.

Speaker 9 (01:42:28):
Visit you see Health dot com. Sathbound seventy five.

Speaker 19 (01:42:31):
At an extra five in and out of Blackland northbound
seventy five that slows a bit between term Lay and
Donaldson thanks to a broken down that's over on the
west Shoulder getting some help. We's bound thirty two shut
down near Sertaginia due to an accident. Chuck Ingram from
five KR and see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:42:50):
Seven forty one fifty five KR seed talk station. Brian
Thomas here with Betsy Sounnoman judge Settlement sunnoment in the
Domestic Relations Court running for municipal court. Judge, you got
an opportunity to get someone who's gonna be tougher on
crime with a vote for Betsy's sentiment, will encourage you
to do that. Betsy pivoting over to the idea of
bond and the reasons for the criminal courts. It seems
to me that part of the problem with the crime

(01:43:12):
that we have in the city of Cincinnati, and we
keep going back to you folks that show up in court.
They've been there a million times before for a variety
of different crimes. The record is known to the judge,
and yet the judge issues neither no bond or a
soft penalty if convicted beyond a reasonable doubt, whether they're
a judge or for a jury trial. The soft on
crime is a problem, and the criminal justice system, from

(01:43:32):
my perspective, is to act as parents. The parents who
issue corporal punishment, the parents who smack the child or
otherwise hold the child accountable for the crimes that they commit.
But quite often the folks who commit crimes come from
broken homes, parents without ethics or morals, parents who may
be criminals or drug abusers themselves. Kids are out on

(01:43:53):
the street in the middle of the night. The parents
don't care, don't bother to even inquire where they are.
That's part of the problem. And the criminal justices some
has to be there to issue the correction, and without that,
they're going to be back in front of you in court.
I mean, isn't that the point of criminal justice and
you and the problem has been exacerbated over the years
of being lax on law enforcement and punishment.

Speaker 6 (01:44:16):
Yeah, that's funny that you compare it to parents disciplining kids,
because I always explain to my kids that being on
house arrest, it's like you're grounded. Yeah, it's like you're
you did something bad, you're grounded. So that might be
appropriate if kids do something bad at home, but if
you're out there in the community hurting people, maybe you

(01:44:39):
should go to jail sometimes. So I just don't think
it's always appropriate these O R bonds, these e M
D one of the one of the big problems with
these O R E M D which means own recognissance
which I call a pinky promise to come back to
court right. And then electric monitoring, which is the box
on the ankle that they're not going to get the box,

(01:45:03):
they have to walk down the street to get it.
A lot of them aren't doing that, and then some
of them who do get on the box just cut
it off and then they aren't monitored. So I think
the judges are saying, well, it might be O R,
but we have the box and that will keep everybody safe.
But if they're not getting it, or if they're cutting
it off, then it's the same as nothing. And the

(01:45:24):
Democrats rationalize this, they say, well, most people the research
shows that most people show up with an O R bond.
Well that's true, but we're talking about like very low
level crimes a lot of time, and people show up
because if they don't, then they get a warrant. Out
for them with a bond and then they got locked up.

(01:45:46):
But the theory now is that if someone doesn't show up,
you just keep getting them an oh R bond over
and over.

Speaker 1 (01:45:52):
It doesn't work that way, clearly, and you know the
fundamental problem. The ankle monitors reeled with the tragic death
of Patrick Hareer and over the rhine. Sarah Herringer has
been in my program talking about that he cut his
ankle monitor off in February, the murderer after being let
out of jail from prior crimes. He cut it off
in February, and local law enforcement apparently had no idea.

(01:46:14):
And a correlator to that seems to be you send
them down the street on their own, the defendant, to
get the ankle monitor. They don't do it. There's no
follow up. I mean, the ankle monitor issuing people aren't
made aware that someone's supposed to show up that day
to get an ankle monitor, and if they don't, that
isn't issue. Then an alert isn't issued to some law
enforcement agency that this guy didn't show up to even

(01:46:35):
get the thing in the first place.

Speaker 18 (01:46:38):
Not that I know of.

Speaker 6 (01:46:39):
I mean, I've heard people say, oh, I can't go today.
I have work. I'll go tomorrow, But I mean, there's
no sense of urgency to get there.

Speaker 18 (01:46:48):
No.

Speaker 6 (01:46:49):
And it's interesting you brought up Sarah Herringer. I saw
that she posted recently that she did an analysis. Somebody
requested from the city a crime report, and the city
made a PowerPoint dated after the request, so they prepared
this specifically for the request, saying that in twenty twenty
four crime went down.

Speaker 4 (01:47:08):
Our biggest problem is robberies.

Speaker 6 (01:47:11):
And Sarah did this whole post about what about domestic violence, homicide, rape,
aggravated assaults, all of these other crimes that were not
even considered. Why are we focusing on youth robberies. It's
really interesting because after all these shootings recently downtown, the
city said the solution is a youth only curfew, and

(01:47:35):
then of course they did this goofy unenforceable curfew where
they were just getting kids back to their houses. They
weren't arresting anyone or citing any parents. But why are
all the talking pigns about youth crime. I mean, that's
not why is that the focus? Is there something coming

(01:47:56):
along the lines? Are they trying to hide the fact
that adult crime is through the roof. I don't know.
I guess I'll wait to see what the next talking
point is from the liberal politicians. But somehow they're going
to blame all of this on youth. I don't know.
Maybe they're not asking juvenile judges to lock people up more,

(01:48:18):
which is what I think would be the obvious thing
to do if you think youth crime is out of control,
or give them higher bonds. I don't know what the
end goal here is. Maybe it's to fund some agency
that's then gonna help youth not commit crimes.

Speaker 3 (01:48:33):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:48:35):
Well, it's interesting to bring up the curfew, which I
thought was probably a good idea considering we had massive
gangs of roving youths roven around like Government Square in
the middle of the night. But Corey Bowman, who lives
in the West End, made the point. He said, wait
a second, why didn't they extend the curfew to include, like,
for example, the West End. Apparently it's limited in geographic scope,
so all the teenagers need to do is not hang

(01:48:56):
out in the divine scope and just move into maybe
the West End it commit crimes there and gather there.

Speaker 6 (01:49:03):
Right, Well, they didn't want to enforce it in neighborhoods
where parents would be more vocal and angrier about it, right,
But they also they couldn't. But they couldn't enforce it
only downtown because that wouldn't be fair. If kids downtown
are getting arrested and parents downtown are getting sighted, but
parents in you know, wealthier neighborhoods, possibly their kids aren't

(01:49:27):
getting charged or the parents aren't getting that would not
be fair. So that's why the city kind of created
this bogus system where there's a curfew, but they can't
enforce it because then they might be called either racist
or how is that lower income people?

Speaker 1 (01:49:45):
Does the curfew mentioned the color of one's skin? Betsy, No,
the answer is no. How could it be perceived to
be racist if on its face it's race neutral. If
you're a white kid hanging out after curfew, you're going
to get arrested. If you're black kid hanging out a curfew,
you're going to get arrested. This does not have a
racial compl to it, Betsy. So I call those arguments spurious, right,

(01:50:05):
But if.

Speaker 6 (01:50:06):
You only enforce the curfew in a in a neighborhood
that has more black youth than white youth, then maybe
that's really not fair.

Speaker 1 (01:50:15):
Well, maybe they should enforce it in all areas. I mean,
that's my point. Have a half a city wide curfew,
and I guess I have to respond to the parents
who would object to that. You want your kids to
be out at three o'clock in the morning, you're going
to object to them enforcing the curfew law. Why don't
you care that your child is out in the middle
of the night on a school night or something. I mean,

(01:50:35):
that doesn't make any sense. Maybe that's part of the problem,
right there, Betsy, Right, there was a youth curfew.

Speaker 6 (01:50:41):
I remember when I was in high school, and I
thought it was annoying because my friends and I wanted
to go to movies and things and we you know,
we didn't want to get in trouble. And you know,
when you have a whole family that follows rules, then
you don't want to you don't want to violate that.
But the curfew at Cincinnati took so many exceptions to it.
So First Amendment right, if you're exercising your First Amendment rights,

(01:51:05):
what does that mean? That could be freedom of assembly,
the freedom of speech, freedom of the press. You could
just say, oh, I'm with a newspaper. That's why I'm out,
or just.

Speaker 1 (01:51:15):
Say I'm exercising my right of freedom of assembly, me
and my fifteen others.

Speaker 6 (01:51:20):
That's a good point.

Speaker 1 (01:51:20):
Fourteen year old kids are exercising a right is a
freedom of speech and free assembly, you know, right.

Speaker 9 (01:51:26):
It's just so the.

Speaker 6 (01:51:27):
City can say, look, we're doing something. I think what
they need to do is say we need to arrest
more violent youths. We need the site parents who let
their kids out this late if there's a curfew. We
need to encourage the juvenile court to give higher bonds
to violent youth offenders. And then we need to encourage

(01:51:48):
the juvenile court to actually lock people up who are
convicted of violent crimes.

Speaker 3 (01:51:52):
But why not do those obvious talking points exactly?

Speaker 1 (01:51:57):
And the key is getting good judges on the band's
ones that will enforce the law. You can have the
best law enforcement out there in the world, the best
prosecutor in the world, both of whom want to enforce
the law. You get in front of a liberal judge,
it's it's own recognizance bond and it's a slap on
the wrist after a conviction. That's why you want to
vote Betsy Sunderman betsysunnoman dot com to help her out.
There's a little donate button. Why not do that? Get involved,

(01:52:20):
help her on the campaign. Nockdors get a T shirt.
Betsy Sonnam. Going to wish you all the best in
your election this November. I'll keep my fingers crossed. If
I could vote in the city, you know you'd have
my vote, and so I'm going to encourage my listeners
to consider voting for you.

Speaker 6 (01:52:32):
Thank you so much.

Speaker 5 (01:52:33):
I really appreciate it, my truly.

Speaker 1 (01:52:35):
My pleasure. Betsy. Keep up the great work. It's coming
up at seven fifty one fifty five KRSE DE talk station.
And please don't get your hot your images at a
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(01:52:57):
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dot com.

Speaker 7 (01:53:41):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:53:43):
All right, Gary Salvian here for shoot off tool rental
seven fifty four fast approaching seven to fifty five dispenser,
traffick and weather given them. We used up all the
time with Betsy Sunnamon, and thank you Westside Jim for
letting me know, so I can let everybody know. In
addition to the in addition rather the FOP endorsement of
Betsy Sunnemen, the Republican Executive Committee gave Betsy a unanimous

(01:54:05):
vote of support last night. So solid endorsements for Betsy Sunnyman,
So vote Sunnymon in November. Please coming up, speaking of
voting Corey Bowman and running from they of the City
of Cincinnati a better choice, hopefully so. Anyway, Corey Bowman
is going to join the program after the top of
the our news. I sure hope he can stick around.
Today's tough headlines coming up at the top.

Speaker 9 (01:54:26):
Of the hour because the news changes.

Speaker 1 (01:54:29):
Fifty five KRC the Talk Station. This report is sponsored
Summer pocket Knife of Information.

Speaker 17 (01:54:36):
It's the only way to stay in for fifty five
KRC the Talk Station.

Speaker 1 (01:54:43):
It's eight oh five and fifty five KRC the Talk Station.
Happy Friday, extra special three day weekend, at least for me.
I hope you're enjoying a Monday off. I will be
enjoying a Monday off. Just Trucker is going to sew
up a quote unquote best of show and lou Me
actually coming to work. So looking for to having a
Monday free and I hope you are as well. Welcome
back to the fifty five Caarasey Morning Show. On the

(01:55:03):
heels of Betsy'sunnoman running for Judge Endorsed by the FOP
and the Republican Executive Committee one hundred percent. We also
have Corey Bowman, who also scored the FOP endorsement. I
presume the Executive Committee endorse you too, Corey. Welcome back
to the fifty five Carasey Morning Show.

Speaker 8 (01:55:19):
Hey, good more and Brian, thank you so much for
having us. Yeah, last night we were at the Executive
Committee and we got.

Speaker 3 (01:55:25):
The official endorsement.

Speaker 1 (01:55:26):
Wonderful and congratulations. Add that to your website along with
the other endorsements which you're piling up. Your reaction real
quick here to the no confidence vote that the FOP
unanimously endorsed against mayor have to have pervall.

Speaker 8 (01:55:39):
Corey, Yeah, well, I think that we've got to realize
what it actually represents. You know, the FOP is representing
the voices of our cops that really are trying to
do the best job that they can. They continue to
come into my coffee shop and tell me about administratively,
how things are.

Speaker 14 (01:55:57):
Not done properly, and so vote of no confident.

Speaker 8 (01:56:00):
You know a lot of people say, well, what weight
does that carry? Well, those are your employees. Those are
the ones that are basically saying, administratively, they have no.

Speaker 3 (01:56:07):
Confidence in what you're doing.

Speaker 8 (01:56:09):
And I just think that that speaks volumes because typically
these brave officers are just wanting to do their job.

Speaker 3 (01:56:15):
They're not wanting to get political.

Speaker 14 (01:56:17):
And so it just shows the state that our city's
in right now.

Speaker 1 (01:56:21):
It really does, and I guess may as well dive
into the problem that is plaguing most everybody in the
city of Cincinnati. It seems the problem of violence. Corey Bowman,
where are you? What are your proposals? What would you
actually I can say, you know, what would your reaction
have been post beat down? I know it took mayor
I have to have purval three days to even issue
a response one of the specifically highlighted criticisms from the FOP.

(01:56:44):
You know, a good mayor would have been out there,
right out front, considering it was a nationwide issue. The
whole thing went viral in a matter of moments. You
might have thought that he would step up to the
plate and say something right away. How would Corey Bowman
as mayor approach that situation and probably going to have
to deal with it if you're elected?

Speaker 3 (01:57:02):
Yeah, well I.

Speaker 8 (01:57:03):
Would have approached it very similarly how I did approach it,
which I was responding that Saturday that it was happening,
and I was actually getting word from the cops that
we knew on the ground and kind of what the
status was of everything.

Speaker 14 (01:57:17):
Now, obviously, when investigation.

Speaker 8 (01:57:19):
Is ongoing, you have to allow all the factors to
come out, so you can't just say things that are
automatically going to divide people.

Speaker 14 (01:57:27):
You've got to let people know that, hey, we've got
to let the investigators do their job.

Speaker 8 (01:57:30):
We've got to let the SINCINNTI Police Department do their job.
But it's important to know that your elected officials are
at least on top of it, and they're not just
in the dark, you know. And I tell people, I
grew up with siblings and whenever we got in trouble
or whenever we did something wrong, we always went in
the corner and we always got our story straight before

(01:57:53):
we actually came to mom and death. And that's exactly
what's happening in city hall right now. They can't react
in real time because they have to have this united
front and they have to get their story straight.

Speaker 14 (01:58:05):
But it's not about getting your story straight.

Speaker 8 (01:58:07):
It's about reacting in real time so the public notice
that you're doing your job. And that's not what's happening,
and so you have to be proactive. You cannot just
be reactive when it comes to new things.

Speaker 1 (01:58:18):
Well, and it seems to me to be the quote
unquote leaders of the black community and maybe the prominent
voices that are given credibility within the black community, Cecil Thomas,
you know, like Iris Rau Rowley and others, came out
almost immediately and said that that white guy who'd issued
the slap should be charged. I think that they knee

(01:58:39):
jerk reacted to that because, you know, the prosecutor determined
and the law enforcement officials determined that they can never
be that a crime can never be proven in a
court of law. And yet here we are the city,
actually a city solicitor demanding the police department issue of citation.
I don't even get how that can happen, to be
honest with you, But they got into a knee jerk reaction.

Speaker 8 (01:59:00):
Yeah, well that shows why there's no confidence from the FOP.
The FLP is stepping into roles that they really were
never meant to step into, because if you have proper
leadership at the HELM, you're not going to have to
make statements like this. You know, the Monday after the
fight happened, everybody wants to make it about what side
of the fights that were taking.

Speaker 14 (01:59:20):
We're not taking any side of the fight.

Speaker 8 (01:59:22):
We're taking a stamp against the violence it's tappening in
our city.

Speaker 14 (01:59:25):
And that is coming from the top down. It's called
trickle down.

Speaker 8 (01:59:28):
And competence, and it's coming from the mayor, the city
manager's office all the way to the chief of police.
And so that's why we need new leadership. But we
have to focus on what's happening with the violence in
our city. But let's go back to the Monday after
the fight. I woke up put a suit on because
I just felt like, Hey, whatever's come in today. I

(01:59:49):
didn't schedule anything, I didn't play anything. I just said
I'm going to be ready for today.

Speaker 14 (01:59:54):
And from nine.

Speaker 3 (01:59:55):
Am on my phone was blowing up.

Speaker 8 (01:59:58):
I was taking interviews with nash Media and national media
had flown in reporters from all over the country.

Speaker 14 (02:00:05):
And I looked at them.

Speaker 3 (02:00:06):
Because I mean, I'm no big steal.

Speaker 8 (02:00:08):
I'm looking at them like, why are you interviewing me
right now? And they looked at me and they said,
we've tried to contact city Hall since Saturday. We've tried
to contact the police chief. Since Saturday, nobody is responding
except for you and the president of the FOP right now,
and so this is the only information on the ground
that we have to work with.

Speaker 14 (02:00:29):
And so that just shows the importance of.

Speaker 8 (02:00:31):
Being proactive about reacting in real time and showing the
public that you're doing your job and you're on top
of each things.

Speaker 1 (02:00:39):
You know, the one criticism I've had of virtually every
media outlet, if not all of them, is that every
time they even write your name down, it's always followed
up by brother half brother of JD. Vans, which I
think detracts from you your message. You're not Jdvans. You
have different thoughts, opinions and ideas. Yes you are related,
but you're not walking around running on the I'm the
brother of Jdvan ticket. But that that mere fact, in

(02:01:03):
spite of the fact that I view it as a
negative thing in terms of the reporting, that they always
mention it is probably one of the reasons National News
wants to even talk to you. You're a candidate running
in a very blue city with what they've perceived to
be very little chance of winning, and if history is
any indication Corey. You know the reality of it Cinsia
city since ant is very blue. So I think it's
an excellent thing though, that you have that advantage because

(02:01:25):
national news wants to talk about it, and you're getting
a lot of good press over it.

Speaker 8 (02:01:31):
No, I mean, and you know, whenever it is, whenever
all this violence happening, you know, all these you know,
political strategies and everything they want to say, what.

Speaker 3 (02:01:39):
Well, oh, this is really going in your favor?

Speaker 14 (02:01:41):
That mean, makes this abundantly clear.

Speaker 8 (02:01:43):
Twenty two people being shot in the month of August
in Cincinnati is not working in my favor. We need
to get a hold of this right now, because people
are getting shot, people are dying. I mean, there's things happening,
and I could we could talk about it later in
the show. But even last night, I was down South
at the Banks, I was on Newport at the Levey
actually drove through Queensgate right where the person was shot

(02:02:06):
at Taco Bell this morning one am. Yeah, and so
I and I actually was in real time reacting to
that on social media last night, trying to figure out
and get a handle on what was going on. This
is a state of our city that I'm not happy
with This isn't about a political aspiration.

Speaker 14 (02:02:24):
This is about, you know what, some people got.

Speaker 8 (02:02:26):
To step up and start doing their job because people's
lives are on the line.

Speaker 1 (02:02:31):
No doubt about it, you know. And I appreciate your
words that you know, this isn't I hate that death
and murder and people dying in yours to my benefit
as a political candidate. That's the truth and the reality
of it. But I hear where you're coming from. You know,
as a man of faith, most notably you know, you
have your own church, you minister to people. I can

(02:02:52):
appreciate the value of life and that you hold life
as very valuable.

Speaker 3 (02:02:56):
You know.

Speaker 1 (02:02:56):
I'll even draw a parallel Donald Trump. You give them
all the crap in the world that you want. But
he obviously and demonstrably wants to end death. He wants
to end wars. Why because I mean he keeps going
back to what people are dying. Well, here in the
city of sintinaty people are dying. Corey Bowman, you obviously
care about that.

Speaker 14 (02:03:13):
No, absolutely, And so where are my churches.

Speaker 8 (02:03:16):
We have a church in the West End and it's
right on the corner of Clark and John Street and
there's actually a gentleman.

Speaker 3 (02:03:22):
He probably wouldn't mind.

Speaker 8 (02:03:23):
Me, you know, talking about like this, But he's lived
across the street and anybody in the community a lot
of times, you know, especially if they're more on the
liberal side, but they don't mind.

Speaker 3 (02:03:32):
They don't want a church being there.

Speaker 8 (02:03:34):
And it's not just because that they want the community
to have some type of retail. They wanted to have
some type of business, and so when they see a
church coming in, they.

Speaker 14 (02:03:42):
Immediately have negative thoughts.

Speaker 8 (02:03:44):
But about probably about a week and a half, two
weeks ago, this shelman comes up and says, Hey, it's
all water under the bridge. My car just got shot
up last night. I'm tired of what's going on right
now in our city.

Speaker 3 (02:03:56):
We got to knew something about it.

Speaker 14 (02:03:58):
So we talk about FOP and endorsements. We talk about
the Republican endorsement.

Speaker 8 (02:04:02):
The endorsement that I care most about is the people
that are living on the streets of Cincinnati, and those
are the people that are being affected by what's happening
right now.

Speaker 3 (02:04:10):
These aren't red or blue issues. These are right and
wrong issues, and we've got to do.

Speaker 1 (02:04:14):
Something about amen. If I may be so bold, let's pause,
Bring Corey Bowman back. Find them on line Coreybowman dot com.
Help him out in his campaign, give use some common
sense in leadership in downtown Cincinnati. More with Corey. After
these brief words, fifty five car the talk station, here's
your ten of nine first warning one to forecast beautiful

(02:04:36):
sunny day to day with the highest seventy eight. Just
a couple of clouds floating around overnight with a low
of fifty four. Sunny skies again tomorrow seventy seven, clear
over night fifty four. And for the fireworks, it'll be
a clear day with the highest seventy eight to fifty
seven degrees. Right now, let's hear about traffic from the U.

Speaker 19 (02:04:51):
See how Traffic Center trusts the same game for your
care that keeps the UC pair Cats on the field.
Count on U see Health Orthopedic SAM sports Medicine, no
matter that injury. Visit uce health dot com. Northbound seventy
five continues slow out of her lunger into the cut.
Southbound seventy five breaking whites in and out of Lachland.
Westbound two seventy five are wrecking your seventy one is

(02:05:12):
on the shoulder. Eastbound there's an accident at Reid Hartman
on the shoulder, King Ramon.

Speaker 9 (02:05:17):
Fifty five KRS the talk station eighteen.

Speaker 1 (02:05:21):
Fifty five kr CD talk station Happy Friday, Brian Thomas,
The Corey Bowman Run from Mayor of the City of
Cincinnati Corey Bowman dot Com Corey Bouman pivoting over to
speaking on the continuing topic of violence in the city.
You know, it's really distressing to talk to someone like
Sarah Heringer, whose husband was stabbed to death in their
Over the Rhine apartment. Not only do we learn that

(02:05:41):
ankle monitors don't work, and that, you know, the corollary
to the problem that she was elaborating on her experience
and living in over the Rhine for multiple years in
a row with her late husband Patrick, they became desensitized
to gunfire. In other words, it happens so often that
it wasn't even something that would draw their attention, unless,

(02:06:02):
of course, the bullet came so close that it whizzed
by and Patrick had to dive onto the ground of
their building of their home to avoid what he thought
was being hit by gunfire. But that she talked about
it just was an every day occurrence, so often that
if you heard the gunfire, it's like you don't even
call the police. Why bother. It's like it's happens all
the time. You live in the West End. Your church

(02:06:24):
is on at five oh three Clark Street. You have
your King's Arms coffee shop which is in West End
two on Bay Miller Street. You live in the west End.
Is that your experience as well, because we had some
a lot of recent West End shootings, including them what
thirty plus gun shots fired at a building recently?

Speaker 8 (02:06:44):
Yeah, yeah, so what there was actually a couple of
nights ago is forty shots fired at six pm. Forty
shots fired at six pm and one block away was
pap High School practicing football on the field one block away.
So that's what we're dealing with us. And when you
talk to citizens that are in the West End, but
this is this isn't a lot of the two neighborhoods.

(02:07:06):
Is that, Yes, they have been desensitized because a lot
of these shots just go unreported or if it hits
a building then it's categorizes property damage, not as a sheeting.

Speaker 3 (02:07:19):
And one of the developers that I know, he.

Speaker 8 (02:07:21):
Went up to his building just recently and he saw
that there was a slug in the side of his building.
But that's not going to get reported. You know that
that's the casing that won't be found. So these are
things where people are like, what's the point and you know,
I want to talk to the voter when it comes
to that. Over the years, many people have had the
same reaction when it comes.

Speaker 14 (02:07:41):
To voting, what's the point in voting?

Speaker 8 (02:07:43):
Well, this election is incredibly important and November fourth, we've
got to get people out to vote because the last
mayor election, only twenty six percent of people voted, and
that speaks volumes. That's not speaking against the seventy three
percent that didn't vote. That's saying they didn't have really
a chant or something that represents them on the ballot,

(02:08:04):
So why did out and vote? But that's changed this
year with twenty six candidates for city council. We've got
choices for mayor, we've got choices for judges. We've got
to make our voices hurt.

Speaker 1 (02:08:16):
Well amen to that. I guess I have to just wonder,
you know, whatever became a shot spotterer. I mean, we
do we have information to the actively used shot spotter,
because at least we get it.

Speaker 8 (02:08:27):
Yeah, go ahead, Hi, I'm glad you mentioned that, just
because you, I mean, because y'all. But in the West End,
so right by our coffee shop. I look, I'm following
the scanner.

Speaker 14 (02:08:36):
And it says a shot spotter reported.

Speaker 8 (02:08:39):
I believe it was four gun shots that were fired
right on Bay Miller Street, which is right by our
coffee shop.

Speaker 14 (02:08:44):
Yeah, so I literally texted.

Speaker 8 (02:08:46):
I texted one of my friends who lives on that
street but lives like about probably one house down from
where it was reported, and I said, Hey, did you
hear this? He said, I don't remember hearing anything. I've
been here for the last ten minutes, but it was
reported about ten to fifteen minutes ago. But that same
person has told me that they've asked for the shot

(02:09:07):
spotter's data for their community to try to get a
sense of what's going on, and they and then they've
been refused that information possible time.

Speaker 1 (02:09:16):
That's kind of what I was suspecting, because they had
the technology. It does show you roughly where the gunfire
occurred through triangulation. That's how the thing works. You think
that that will be information to be readily available to
the general public because it's going to show you where
most of the gunshots are coming from. And something tells
me if you had a map that showed where the
fires are, where the gunfire has been detected, would probably

(02:09:37):
be the same neighborhoods in areas regularly.

Speaker 8 (02:09:42):
Oh yeah, but here's the thing that what you just said,
the transparency having the data available, You've got to go
in the corner with your sibling and make sure that
you got your story straight before you.

Speaker 3 (02:09:51):
Come to mom and dad.

Speaker 8 (02:09:52):
And so if the data doesn't line up with your story.

Speaker 3 (02:09:55):
Then they're not going to make it available.

Speaker 8 (02:09:57):
There's actually you know, tat and fat that are being
withheld on the public record right now in several cases.
And so this is something to where I'm telling people,
you know, when as far as national goes, you might
try to paint this one way or another, but we
are going to allow this to be the most transparent

(02:10:17):
administration in city Hall that there ever has that we've
got to make the data available for people. We've got
to let people know what's going on. We can't gas
like people. But then we have to have solutions to
these problems. We have to have a strong police force.
We've got to build a sense of community with the
police force, not just have community initiatives that divide the
police from the communities they serve.

Speaker 14 (02:10:39):
And then we've got to relook at.

Speaker 8 (02:10:40):
Administratively everything that's going on, from the chief of Staff,
the administrative staff of the chief, to the ECC, the
Emergency Communications Center. These are all things that we just
have to audit through, evaluate and make sure that people
are doing their jobs properly.

Speaker 1 (02:10:55):
All right, Well, Corey, we get back from the upcoming
break here, which is right in just a second. Here,
I'm going to ask you what you would do by
way of approaching additional resources in terms of being offered
assistance with law enforcement, and what you would do by
way of acceptance or rejection. Of course, we have the
governor of the state of Ohio offering assistance, and we
horse have the President of the United States offering assistance

(02:11:16):
with Corey Bowman, mayor Corey Bowman except either of those,
we'll I'm going to ask him that coming up. Also
going to ask him about how the meeting went at
the farm on Wednesday. Air pollution monitors are going up
all around the city of Cincinnati, and apparent we also
have a problem with graffiti that locally reported just yesterday.
Stick around eight twenty five more with Corey Bowman coming up.
I'll be right back.

Speaker 7 (02:11:35):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (02:11:39):
All right, Gary Solvent here for here is your TENA
nine first on one volcast. We have a sunny day
to day. I feeling like fall on highest seventy eight
fifty four overnight with just a few clowns. Sunny in
seventy seven for the high tomorrow overnight low of fifty
four with clear skies and a clear Sunday as well
for the fireworks h S seventy eight fifty seven. Right now,
let's hear about traffic.

Speaker 9 (02:12:00):
The you see how Triumphings Center.

Speaker 19 (02:12:02):
Trust the same team for your care that keeps you
see bear cats on the field count on you see
helpful with the penix Sands supports medicine no matter the
injury visit U see help dot com. South Bend seventy
five continues slow for an extra five to three block
on northbound seventy five.

Speaker 9 (02:12:17):
That's clearing out between erl Anger and downtown.

Speaker 19 (02:12:20):
Just a couple of extra minutes needed in ben seventy
four looks good in southbound seventy one, so thow's just
a bit approaching Fifer Chuck ing ramon fifty five KROC
the Talk Station.

Speaker 1 (02:12:32):
A twenty seven to fifty five KRCD talk station. I'm
very happy Friday to you, Brian Thomas with mayor ol
candidate Corey Bowman. Find him on line help him out
Coreybowman dot Com Corey Bowman. Sticking with the topic of
crime in the city. I realize, and it's painfully aware
to everybody in the City of CINCINNAI who's bothered to
pay attention. The crime is real. The gunfire is real,

(02:12:53):
the murders are real, the property crimes and everything else
is all real. Yet we have an administration, mayor pervall,
the city man, maybe even to some extent the police chief.
Don't know, but all of the city council members. The
silence absolutely deafening. And whan you suggest crime is a problem,
they try to deny it, saying no, no, no, no.
Crime rates down, crime rates down, crime rates down. In
other words, don't believe your own eyes. Don't believe your

(02:13:15):
own ears. Just listen to me, elected official trying to
make the city of Cincinnati sound like a great, wonderful,
crime free experience. That's not reality. But if you paid
attention to reality, and you listen to the citizens complaining
about crime, and if you look at the stats and
you look at the shot spot and all that, you
might think, hmm, we're down two hundred police officers. We
need to do something about this. We need to get

(02:13:35):
on top of crime. We need to take advantage of
all the available resources that are out there to address crime. Now,
the governor of the state of Ohio, Mike Dwaine, had
already offered some measure of assistant state police, for example,
patrol on the highways, in order to free up local
Cincinni Police Department officers to do well crime fighting work.
That's fine, but you also have Donald Trump sort of

(02:13:56):
making a general offer. You never highlighted or illustrated Cincinnati
being a problem. He's focusing on the major cities where
clearly there's a massive crime problem. But he sent the
National Guard into d C because he's allowed to legally.
Can't do it in other cities. But he at least offered,
if you want my help, look what I was able
to do in DC. We cracked down on crime. They
only had one murder in the past two weeks, where

(02:14:17):
they normally have one every thirty six hours. Look it works,
property crimes down, carjackings down eighty percent, et cetera, et cetera,
et cetera. You two, if you're out there, could get
the assistance that I'm offering. Corey Bowman, you're you're mayor
of the city of Cincinnati. What do you do when
you hear about offers of help out there? Do you
take them up on it? Or do you run the
risk of maybe alienating your voters by accepting like the

(02:14:39):
National Guards showing up for a while.

Speaker 17 (02:14:43):
Now.

Speaker 8 (02:14:43):
I mean, if you have asked me, you know, several
weeks ago, I think that there's some things that you know,
and I still believe that that administratively, the city just
have to take care of. I talked to a police
officer there was actually four of them in my cop
shops a couple days ago, and I was just asking, Hey,
we've got the WDB.

Speaker 3 (02:15:01):
And fireworks coming up.

Speaker 14 (02:15:03):
What do you think we need to do.

Speaker 8 (02:15:05):
I'll put a blast out, anything to save lives, anything
to protect people. What from your recommendation do we need
to have like double the force, do we need to
have over time?

Speaker 14 (02:15:13):
Do we need to call help and this is what
the officer said.

Speaker 3 (02:15:16):
They said, we just need to be able to do
our job.

Speaker 8 (02:15:21):
And that's just when they spoke to me, that they're
being told to not pursue, they're being told to just
walk on eggshells when it comes to the arrest or
the convictions.

Speaker 14 (02:15:31):
That's something that's just right now.

Speaker 8 (02:15:32):
You've got to switch that mindset that these officers they're
not handcuffs anymore, that they can do their jobs. But
I mean everything, So last night, I'm driving actually through
Queen's Gate around midnight because I took my boy out
to a late night movie, just me and him, and
so we drove back home through Queen's Gate, and so

(02:15:52):
I drove through that area of Taco Bell probably about
an hour before that shooting occurred. And that just kind
of hit home there too, because I realize we're in
a I mean, it's even worse than a lot of
people realize.

Speaker 3 (02:16:06):
We do need help. We do need help.

Speaker 14 (02:16:08):
So the city itself is an island under itself.

Speaker 8 (02:16:13):
Politically, a lot of times they alienate themselves because they
don't believe with the or the politics of the state
or the national But.

Speaker 14 (02:16:21):
We've got to put that aside right now.

Speaker 8 (02:16:23):
We've got to accept all help that we can right now,
especially a weekend like what we have coming up with
WEV and fireworks, with Labor Day weekend, we've got to
make people, make sure that people feel safe. We've got
to make sure that people are safe. It's not just
about the perception, it's about the reality that people need
to be protected and safe. And so I believe that

(02:16:43):
we need to take whatever help that we can right now.
They need to assess the situation. If it means state government,
but even you're seeing the results the on the federal
level as well. That's a very dangerous issue to talk
about bringing the federal government in. But the reality of
it is that people are getting shot in our city,
and we've got to explore every option we can. Put

(02:17:04):
the politics aside, put the red or blue aside, and say, hey,
what do we need to do help wise to be
able to protect our citizens.

Speaker 1 (02:17:12):
Yeah, and I guess I have to put at least
to interject a positive spin on at least my perception
of the web and fireworks. You get half a million
people or five hundred thousand people down there, half a
million additional folks going down to the waterfront and it's
a great event, and I think historically this is the
forty ninth year that they've been doing this. Historically, it's
not a problem from a crime standpoint, and I think

(02:17:34):
that's because there are strength in numbers. You know, there
may be some idiot out there who might want to
commit a crime or punch you in the face, but
if they're surrounded by us a throng of people who
are not on that side of the equation, they run
a big risk of well retaliation from the masses right
then and there, kind of like akin to what we
saw in that beatdown kind of thing. But see that
occurred at three o'clock in the morning when there weren't

(02:17:55):
that many people milling around on the streets. You know,
you had two people walking out of a bar going
to the car or whatever. When you're isolated in your alone,
I would think that presents a greater opportunity for crime.

Speaker 8 (02:18:07):
Yeah. But also to the word that I use is escalation,
You've got to be able to have a proper police
presence to prevent things from escalating because you know, for me,
in especially in the West End, but we see it
in the downtown area at the bank, in the central
business district. There's a lot of situations where, hey, emotions

(02:18:27):
get high, tempers get heated.

Speaker 14 (02:18:30):
You know, people you know, kind of crowds get together,
and it's not necessarily the numbers that are.

Speaker 8 (02:18:35):
Going to deter it, but a lot of times it's
if they see that there's police presence, If they see
that there's people around that will prevent it from being escalated, well.

Speaker 14 (02:18:44):
Then that is what's going to stop it.

Speaker 8 (02:18:46):
But that's what's happening, is that a lot of times
you don't see that police presence or you don't see
that being just for the sake of optics, And so
if something does escalate, they think, hey, there's no consequences
to this because there's nobody around and stop me. So
then the emotions just get more and more. So that's
what I would say. I go back to July sixth.
You know, July fifth for me was a Saturday night.

(02:19:08):
I'm driving in the West End. There's about forty kids
outside about two blocks away from my church, and they're
shooting fireworks into windows that are open.

Speaker 3 (02:19:17):
While you are driving, and so I called.

Speaker 14 (02:19:20):
Now, there was no cops around, but I called up
nine one one and I said, hey, you don't.

Speaker 8 (02:19:25):
Need to dispatch a city responder or an ARC. You
need to dispatch CPD because it might not be what
you know, what you want to dispatch right now, but
this is going to escalate. And I said, somebody needs
to get down here. I drove by fifteen minutes later.
This is about nine o'clock at night. Still there was
about fifty kids now and there was no nothing dispatch

(02:19:46):
well at midnight that so midnight that night, three hours
later lad gets shot.

Speaker 5 (02:19:51):
On that corner.

Speaker 8 (02:19:53):
And so that's what I'm talking about, is that we
have to be prevented. We have to prevent the escalation
from hol happening. And right now I don't have any
confidence in the current administration to do that, especially at
events like WBN. And like you said, it's not about
when the events are going on. Afterwards, people want to
go to a bar, they want to hang out. Afterwards,
They'll be out until one a m.

Speaker 2 (02:20:14):
Two a m.

Speaker 8 (02:20:15):
Three am during third shift of the Central Business A
lot of them are going to park in Queensgate right
where this shooting happened, at Taco bell YEP, right where
multiple shootings have been happening. They're going to park there
to walk over to the web and fireworks, what happens
when they walk back.

Speaker 3 (02:20:32):
Right, So these are the things that we have to consider.

Speaker 1 (02:20:34):
That's that isolation when you're away from the crowd component
that I was kind of thinking about when we were
talking about the fireworks. Good point. Corey Bowman coming up
at eight thirty six. If you have KARS talk station,
we'll continue our conversation with Mayor ol candidate Corey Bowman
online Corey Bowman dot com after these words fifty five
KRC dot com.

Speaker 9 (02:20:54):
Some are the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:20:58):
Hey thirty nine, I think you have KSD talk station
Brian Thomas with Mayor ol candidate Corey Bowman. Help him out,
Mayor of Cincinnati. I like that ring Mayor Bowman, Coreybowman
dot com where you find him and help him out,
and I encourage my listeners to do that. Corey pivoting over.
We already talked about shot Spotter. No, we are not
allowed to have that data. They will not allow it.
You've asked for it, you can't get it. We want it.

(02:21:18):
We'd like to know where the gunfire is. We're not
allowed to have it, but we'll be able to log
on any time we want any moment a day to
check out what the Purple air Flex monitors are reflecting
in terms of local air pollution. Apparently they've sent out
thirty seven of these monitors under the City air Watch project,
so we can know what the particulate level is in

(02:21:40):
any given neighborhood. Comes at a rather sizable cost, but
they have money for that, and we're allowed to have
that data real time. Corey Bowman, your reaction Is this
a priority for a Bowman administration?

Speaker 14 (02:21:53):
Well, there's pain.

Speaker 8 (02:21:54):
I mean when I posted this, a lot of people
callow you're a gift air quality, you know. No, I mean,
obviously I want clean air. Everybody else wants clean air.
But the priorities are they're putting up the air of
pure fire units. But yet, let's not forget that there
was actually a eleven year old kid, Dominic Davis, that

(02:22:15):
was shot in that area two years ago in the
West End, and they were promised to have cameras installed
to cut down on crime in the area. So wait,
we can actually install air monitors, but we can't, you know,
install the cameras that were promised to the families of
Dominic Davis.

Speaker 1 (02:22:35):
Yep, speaking volumes right there with that short sentenced Corey Bauman.
See because Mayor I have to have Parvoll. It's widely
reported and I think Christopher Smithman's commented on this numerous time,
among others that Mayor I have to have parvol has
said in the past that with any issue that's presented
to him, he always starts and views it first and
foremost through the lens of equity and the environment.

Speaker 8 (02:22:59):
Yeah, this is all has to do with priorities, you know,
from the City of Cincinnati. I've told people this that
the only flag that I'm going to stand by and
fly at City Hall is going to be the USA
Ohio and the flag of Cincinnati.

Speaker 14 (02:23:15):
And that's it, because those are the only agendas that.

Speaker 8 (02:23:18):
We're trying to push from city Hall. Clean streets, safe streets,
and proferss streets. And then when it comes to this,
the priority has to be public safety, it has to
be your crippling roads, and it has to be that
you're spending the money properly. And then on top of that,
if you have the ability to helping in other areas
or other issues with the city.

Speaker 3 (02:23:38):
But the priorities have to be.

Speaker 8 (02:23:40):
The main government focus, which is crime, infrastructure, and making
sure the budget is going to the right people, and that's.

Speaker 3 (02:23:47):
What we're fighting for.

Speaker 1 (02:23:49):
And apparently the City of Cincinnati of the past several
what probably decades, has dug itself a four hundred million
dollar hole in terms of being behind in road repairs.
You mentioned it as being a pro priority infrastructure, and
that's part of infrastructure. How would Mayor Corey Bowman get
on top of this problem that's been festering for so long.

Speaker 8 (02:24:10):
Well, one thing I would say is that we've got
to pursue proper contracts with the right people.

Speaker 3 (02:24:16):
That know how to do our roads properly.

Speaker 8 (02:24:19):
You know, we were we apparently sold three hundred acres
of amazing land that was owned by the city that
could have been outset for us for years, but we
sold this to be.

Speaker 3 (02:24:30):
Able to fix the roads.

Speaker 14 (02:24:32):
We sold the railroad to be.

Speaker 3 (02:24:33):
Able to just put money towards this.

Speaker 8 (02:24:35):
I have no SOOP issue, no confidence and their ASPAB leadership.
I have no confidence in this current administrator, the current
administration's ability to make sure that these funds are going
towards the right thing. Because you see how Sunset, by
the way, how Sunset doing Ryan.

Speaker 1 (02:24:54):
My favorite street to illustrate festering decay. They still have
a hole as far as I know. Fortunately I haven't
had to be on Sunset for a while, but we'll
be making our way back to price Heal Chilli soon
enough for a listener launch and so all experience.

Speaker 8 (02:25:09):
The thing is is that in our budget, we have
our kids funds that's supposed to go toward our roads,
and then we're supposed to be doing adding on top
of that with the railroad funds, and you can just
tell by our city streets if this ain't happen. We've
got to be able to prioritize the budget to make
sure we've got to get the right contract in place,
because let's not forget a couple of weeks ago, the

(02:25:29):
city announced basically a game show contest that says, Hey,
present your ideas of how we can fix our potholes
for a prize or for a chance to be able
to be the one that fixes our potholes.

Speaker 14 (02:25:43):
I'm like, this is your job.

Speaker 8 (02:25:45):
You're supposed to have the right contract, You're supposed to
know the right people. You're supposed to pursue this in
a proactive way to where our streets are paid, not
just patched, and so that's going to be a priority
for us is that we're gonna in the same way
that you need to accept hew from anything from state
and federal that is offered if you're in a chance
to where you need it. We need to be able

(02:26:06):
to look at solutions outside of our city to say
who can do this the best, Who can make sure
that we pay every road in Cincinnati within a two
years time, Frint. We need people to feel not only
safe from a crime standpoint on our streets, they need
to feel safe that they're not going to fall into
potholes or sinkholes in our city as well.

Speaker 17 (02:26:29):
Well.

Speaker 1 (02:26:29):
Corey Bowman, I got a couple of seconds left from
the break, but go ahead and pause because we'll wrap
things up in the next segment. Apparently graffiti's a problem
as well, and I also want to hear about how
the event at the farm went on Wednesday that you
and Todd Zenzer and Christopher Smith and attended. We'll pause,
Corey Bowman, one more segment here on this Friday. I'll
be right back fifty five KRC the talk station How.

Speaker 2 (02:26:49):
Are you met?

Speaker 1 (02:26:52):
Channel nine First one forecasts great forecast coming into the
three day weekend. I hope you've got one Sunday Today
seventy eight over night Love fifty four the clouds Sonny
in seventy seven Tomorrow fifty four overnight with clear Sky's
clear on Sunday for the fireworks highest seventy eight, fifty
nine right now fine for final traffic. Chuck from the.

Speaker 19 (02:27:10):
Ucup Traffics Center trusts the same team for your care
that keeps the UC bearcuts on the field. Count on
you see Health Orthopedic San supports medicine no matter the injury.

Speaker 9 (02:27:19):
Visit ucehealth dot com.

Speaker 19 (02:27:21):
Seth pound seventy five break Lads continue through blockbun northbound
seventy five, just about clear between Buttermilk and Downtown. Westbound
thirty two is shut down in Brown County due to
an accident just before Sardinia. Chuck Ingram on fifty five
krc the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:27:39):
Hey forty seven fifty five KRCD Talk Station by Thomas
with mayorol candidate Corey Bowman again online Corey Bowman dot Com.
Like what I'm hearing this morning. Corey Always like what
I'm hearing from you, especially when you contrast it with
what we've currently got. A better path does exist and
one of the things you got to get on top
of is mayor. Apparently we have a graffiti problem in town.
Was just written about a wlw's Aaron Thomasting and speaking

(02:28:01):
with some residents. Apparently it's a real profound problem in
the North Side, but graffiti all over the place. A
lot of people are complaining about it. We've had several
hundred graffiti tags and the city Department of Public Service
is responsible for removing graffiti, but only on public property.
But if a property owner gets hit, you have an
obligation to remove that graffiti within thirty days. And according

(02:28:22):
to the reporting quotes, to clean up that graffiti can
cost between two hundred and fifty and thirteen thousand dollars.
That's a big wait for a home owner, especially when
they have a thirty day window. Do you notice a
graffiti problem in the West End?

Speaker 18 (02:28:37):
Oh?

Speaker 14 (02:28:37):
Absolutely. You know, it's a funny story about this.

Speaker 8 (02:28:40):
You know where I live, right across the street, there's
there's a billboard of a law firm and that thing
has been tagged with graffiti multiple times.

Speaker 3 (02:28:51):
They keep on putting the same billboard up and it.

Speaker 14 (02:28:54):
Keeps hung getting tagged, and so you know, just as
a funny. You know thing, I'm just trying to entertain myself.

Speaker 8 (02:29:00):
If I gave a call to the law firm and
I just said, hey, and I was talking to the secretary.

Speaker 14 (02:29:05):
I said, let your.

Speaker 8 (02:29:05):
Partners known that if they're tired of getting their billboard
tagged with graffiti.

Speaker 3 (02:29:11):
Then vote for Bowman for Cincinnati.

Speaker 8 (02:29:13):
May you contribute financial maybe contribute financially to our campaign?

Speaker 14 (02:29:18):
And she just laughed. I don't think the message.

Speaker 1 (02:29:20):
Ever got no, probably not let me get Blake Baselin,
no another one, But I thought that was the solid guess.
I'm sorry.

Speaker 3 (02:29:30):
That's the easiest number to remember, though.

Speaker 8 (02:29:35):
But the thing is is that, uh, you know, I've
got I've got four kids. You know, three of them
are walking right now. The three of them have the
ability to hold a crayon in their hands. And if
they know that there's no consequences, my walls are going
to be filled with SpongeBob square pants, their names written
in backwards letters, all sorts of stuff because just.

Speaker 14 (02:29:55):
Say know that they're going to be able to get
away with it.

Speaker 8 (02:29:58):
And so that's what's people are running around. I mean,
you've got new bridges, new construction that's happening. It gets
tagged the next week and there's no consequences to it.
You know, that's something that we've got to crack down on.
But like I say, it comes down to administratively, is
there any type of law and order? Is there any
type of discipline that's happening from the top down? And

(02:30:18):
I see a bright future. You know, we actually touched
on that at the farm on Wednesday, to where I
realized that people can't just focus on the bad that's
happening in the past.

Speaker 14 (02:30:28):
We've got to focus on the good that can happen
in the future.

Speaker 1 (02:30:31):
Yeah, And the problem with graffiti is I perceive it
not only is it unsightly and ugly, quite often represents
gangs and things, but it's it's almost like it becomes
a competition. One guy tags and does some artistic piece
of work, and then someone else and comes over and
tries to outdo them, tags over it, or does multiple
tags next to it. It just gets worse and worse
and worse if it's not immediately addressed. So getting in

(02:30:53):
front of it is difficult, but dealing with the aftermath
needs to be done expeditiously. Corey Bowmen, You'll do that,
and you know, what I have a suggestion, And here
I'll be optimistic and say, when you get elected mayor,
you're going to get to be able to choose the
people who are going to serve and be around you
and offer you advice. I presume the Bowman administration will
not hire and retain Iris Rowley, which she was currently

(02:31:17):
a paid consultant, but you might want to hire and
I would encourage it if he's up for the job.
Todd zenz Er, Citizen Watchdog. He was at your meeting
at the farm on Wednesday. That guy is just pure brilliant.
Corey Bowman. I think he will be a major asset
to the city of Cincinnati if he is put on
the salary to ride herd over all the Shenanigans that
we identify.

Speaker 3 (02:31:37):
No, you're exactly right, and let's talk.

Speaker 8 (02:31:39):
You know, there's actually people that are good that are
working in the city.

Speaker 14 (02:31:44):
I mean, there's six.

Speaker 8 (02:31:44):
Thousand employees in the city and what I realized and
I've Todd about this, he's a great.

Speaker 14 (02:31:50):
Asset to our city.

Speaker 8 (02:31:52):
And I definitely think that there needs to be more
involvement in the future and we're in talks with that
with him about that. But at the farm, you know,
on in del High on Wednesday night, which by the way,
is you know packed room in about half the room
was actual city voters came to hear us. So a
lot of people talk about, oh, why are you in

(02:32:13):
Del High. Well, you know, half a mile away is
the city limits. So there's a chance that people in
the city might actually drive a half a mile away
to come see So that was a great night. We
had a great response to a lot of people enthusiastic.
But like I said, there it's very easy to talk
about the crime and the state is the cave that

(02:32:34):
our city's in.

Speaker 14 (02:32:35):
But you've got to give people hope.

Speaker 8 (02:32:37):
And one thing I found over the course of the
seven eight months of this campaign is that there we
do really have an amazing opportunity to turn our city around.
You know, with this election that's happening, it's not just
a mayor election. We've got twenty five candidates that are
on the ballot for council. There's a lot of great
names like our friend Christopher Smitherman, Linda Matthews, there's Keating,

(02:33:01):
there's a lot of other people that are on and
you know these aren't like you, so official endorsement front
of how that works, but I would encourage people to
do your research because these are great people. But one election,
one election, and the mayoral position from day one is
able to put in a new city manager.

Speaker 14 (02:33:20):
Obviously with the approval of the council.

Speaker 8 (02:33:22):
That city manager appoints new police chiefs and fire chiefs,
and then on top of that you also appoint the
new vice mayor. And so this is something to where
with one election we can take out and I'm not
talking about like take out everybody, it's just but there's
some real problems that have happened over the course of
the years, and it's been with people in administrative positions

(02:33:45):
that have been there for years and they don't have
the city's best interests at heart.

Speaker 14 (02:33:49):
We can turn this thing around. We can actually have.

Speaker 8 (02:33:52):
Clean streets, we can have safe streets, we can put
the right people in administratively for public safety, and then
we can actually put the budget in a way We're putting.

Speaker 3 (02:34:01):
The money right back where it needs to go and.

Speaker 14 (02:34:05):
That's benefiting the citizens of Cincinnati.

Speaker 3 (02:34:07):
And so I'm very optimistic about that.

Speaker 1 (02:34:09):
I'm optimistic for you and a turnaround for the city.
I just love the city so much, and I just
hope the voters do the right thing and choose a
different path, try something different. Obviously the path that we've
been on for a long long time now is not
service well. Coreybowman dot com. Corey, thank you for the
time you smell my listeners of me today. Have the
best of luck on the campaign trail. You know you
always have a spot here on the fifty five KRC

(02:34:30):
Morning Show. Have a safe weekend, enjoy the fun over
the weekend. There's lots going on and a great opportunity
to experience the city of Cincinnati at Riverfest. Of course,
don't be frightened about it. I think it's a great event. Corey.

Speaker 8 (02:34:42):
Take care of yourself, Brian, if I could, I want
to mention one final thing. We are having a door
knocking on Saturday at twelve o'clock. We'll be announcing that
on our social media our websites today, but if people
want to get involved, go to Coreybowman dot com and.

Speaker 1 (02:34:56):
You can get in touch with us great Coreybowman dot com.
Corey will talk again again. Have a wonderful weekend. Best
of health and love your beautiful family. Take care of yourself.
Come on with eight fifty five fifty five care Seed
de talk station. Early in the program Tech Friday with
Dave Hatter heed his advice. Had some great advice, most
notably for seniors out there. You guys are so much
targets all these scams going on out there. Be skeptical,

(02:35:19):
b j to B cynical. If you don't know what
I'm talking about, listen to my conversation with Tech Friday's
Dave Hatter from on the podcast page fifty five Carosea
dot Com. Another person worthy of your vote. We got
to clean up the judiciary, tough on crime. She will
be Betsy Sunnyman, Judge Sunnyman domestic relations judge now running
for municipal court. We'll talk with her at seven point thirty.
So the podcast is at fifty five careseea dot Com

(02:35:40):
plus the full hour with Corey Bowman. I hope you
enjoy your three day weekend again. I won't be here
on Monday. They're doing a quote unquote or Joe's going
to sew up a best of program back on Tuesday.
Hitting the ground running with a bright bart Inside Scoop
and of course the Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Be Safe.
This weekend Folks, enjoy yourself, live in the moment, don't

(02:36:00):
be mean, don't be that guy. Joe Strecker, thank you
for what you do. My brother, you are outstanding executive
producer of the fifty five KRSSE Morning Show. Folks, stick around.
Glenn Back's coming right up this labor day.

Speaker 17 (02:36:13):
Remember, our job is to tell you what you need
to know your job approval. It's good, not just what
you want to hear you the best for good. Fifty
five K the Talk Station.

Speaker 18 (02:36:23):
This report is sponsored by Aqua

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