Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Five o five. I think about k r C the
talk station. Happy Tuesday, we will.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
A vacation call Kenny Loggins because you're in the danger zone. Yeah,
well we may be. Hope you had a wonderful three
day weekend and it took some opportunity to reflect on
those who paid the ultimate price in service of their country. Yesterday,
Memorial Day, there were a lot of events around town,
and maybe you went to one, I hope, so, uh,
(00:49):
let us see here. Oh, the Reds thing was awesome.
The Ford Oval of Honor salute to the veterans that
were there, hand selected veterans who were honored for their
service to our country. Oh my god, amazing. And a
couple of World War Two vets there, and some highly
highly decorated folks from various eras of service, including all
(01:10):
the way up through the Cold War. Just an amazing,
amazing group of folks. So if you're out there, I
hope you had a wonderful time at the game. It
certainly was a pleasure meeting and speaking at that event.
It's just just such a great thing that the Ford
Oval of Honor is. Anyway, that was my Sunday. Let
us see here, what's coming up today. Thank you. Joe Strecker,
Executi producer of the fety five Casey Morning Show. Without Joe,
(01:32):
the show don't go. We don't get guests. Guests like
Peter Bronson. Amazing. Peter Bronson a wonderful author, and if
you've read his book Forbidden Fruit, it is an amazing,
amazing account. And tomorrow is the forty eighth anniversary of
the Beverly Hill Supper Club fire. I mean, he's written
all about that, so Peter's going to be in studio
at seven oh five to talk about that. Just a
(01:55):
brilliant guy. Peter is. I just have so much respect
for him.
Speaker 3 (01:58):
It's just.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
In a whole bunch of books. All of them are worthy,
worthy reads. So if you get your books on Amazon,
go to Amazon, type in Peter Bronson, or go to
Chili Dog press dot com where you can find all
Peter's books. Maybe you can give you got a sign
copy of one over there. We'll see if Peter still
does that seven oh five Inside Scoop it is Tuesday.
We do that every Tuesday. At eight oh five. Today,
(02:21):
Bob Price return Texas Border Editor Bob Price, and we'll
get some border updates.
Speaker 4 (02:27):
I just.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
As we learn more and more about the Biden presidency
and all the cover ups and all the scandals and
all the craziness, and still kind of puzzling over who
was operating in the auto pen since Joe Biden's reportedly
to have been far more cognitively impaired than we ever
really believed he was. I just think about, you know,
(02:50):
the regular laments from the Democrats. We need a bill,
We need to pass a bill. There's nothing we can
do on the border unless we pass a bill, a
bill of course, which that would have ensured the citizenship
or a pathway to citizenship for all those who illegally
came into our country in the first instance. But obviously
that didn't happen, and obviously you didn't need a build
to shut the border down. It's just one of the
(03:13):
most amazing, profound accomplishments that Trump has done since he
took office. And whether you're an open borders advocate or not,
you can't deny the success he's had on shutting down
the mass of humanity. It was flown across our border.
It's just like you flipped the switch. No new wall boom,
it just stopped. And of course word gets around about
(03:35):
that the numbers dry up when they realize they're going
to be facing deportation. Okay, let's no longer fly them
directly into our country anymore. Let's turn that program around
to an opportunity for them to choose to fly back
to their country on the taxpayer dollar anyhow. Just an
amazing turnaround. So we'll see what's going on at the
Texas Board of the Bob Price again eight h five
(03:56):
for that. And yes, things are spiraling out a control
between Russia and Ukraine. The Daniel Davis deep dive Russia
escalades and Donald Trump calls putin crazy, and let's dive
under that right now, because things are not looking good
from my perspective. Russia launched its largest ever drone and
(04:18):
missile assault in Ukraine Sunday night into Monday, of course,
in defiance that Donald Trump's calls for an end of
the bombardment Ukraine Air Force in Russia wants more than
three Ukraine's Air Force SETTL. Russia wants more than three
hundred and fifty explosive drones nine cruise missiles at least.
(04:41):
Latest attacks just hours after Trump issued a strong rebuke
of Russian president President Vladimir Putin denouncing airstrikes on Ukrainian
capital and other cities. I guess this is two waves
of attacks Sunday and then Sunday night into Monday. Donald
Trump in a truth media post, he has absolutely gone
absolutely crazy. He is needlessly killing a lot of people.
(05:04):
And I'm just talking about the soldiers. Missiles and drones
are being shot into cities in Ukraine for no reason whatsoever,
criticized Vladim Vladimir Zelensky as well, saying Zelensky is doing
his country no favors by talking the way. He does
not quite sure what specific words were uttered by Zelensky
(05:25):
that drew Trump's criticism along those lines, but Kremlin said
the strikes on Monday were in response to Ukrainian attacks
on Russian territory. More on that in a moment, which
Moscow said involved dozens of drones over the weekend of Ukraine.
Officials say the strikes damaged several Russian military industrial facilities,
including a factory that makes parts for ballistic missiles, which
(05:50):
apparently Russia is ramping up. I read some place sit
there converting old malls into drone manufacturing facilities in Russias.
First in Dmitri Peskov keeping Track at Home. Peskov, this
was a ochalatory strike, he called Trump's criticism of Putin
and emotional reaction at a time when Russia and Ukraine
(06:12):
were taking some serious steps with US encouragement to open
talks about the end of the war, and I kind
of scratched my head over how serious Russia is, considering
that every time they mentioned sitting down at the table
with Ukraine, Russians launched further missile attacks. Zlonsky, for his part,
denounced the tax yesterday. Calling for fresh economic sanctions against
(06:33):
Russia is something that many in the I guess the
Senate and the House are actually pushing as well here
in the United States, he said in a post on
social media. Vlansky only a feeling of total impunity could
allow Russia to launch such strikes. There is no meaningful
military sense to this. Well, it can't have a demoralizing effect.
(06:58):
I'm not quite sure what's going on through Putin's mind,
but if you continue to launch massive strikes in Ukraine
and they're running out of soldiers and weaponry, then yes,
it could have a significant demoralizing effect. The will of
the citizenry may be challenged Russia last month dismissed a
proposed thirty day seasfire that Trump tried to brok her
(07:18):
Ukraine accepted, it, insisted the kiv first agree to discuss
its disarmament and the abandonment of its aspirations to join NATO.
That's been a precondition for Putin for months now, and
of course Zelenski never agrees to that. After a call
of Trump last week, Putin said a memorandum could soon
(07:39):
be drafted committing Moscow and Kiev to working on a
peace veal. But the spokesperson Peskov said yesterday that even
the initial document, essentially an agreement to keep talking, hasn't
even been finalized by Russia, let alone handed over to
Kiev for contemplation. That says, the only tangible result of
talks this month between Russia Ukraine was a prisoner swap
(08:02):
involving a thousand soldiers from either side, and they did
start exchanging those prisoners. And here's that part about the
increasing production. Apparently both sides are stepping up production of
strike drones capable of flying hundreds of miles. Russia has
been expanding its military industrial complex, turning shopping malls into
(08:24):
drone production. Facilities and expanding a fact factory that specializes
in making shah head strike drones with the help from
yay Iran Great and here's another development, Russia also evolved
in its methods of evading Ukraine's air defenses. The drone
(08:45):
attacks it launches now feature an array of decoiled decoy
projectiles that are meant to imitate strike drones but don't
even carry explosives. Ukraine uses up expensive air defense missiles
and ammunition to shoot down the fake projectiles, leaving the
explosive projectiles to hit their targets. And not a shocking
(09:05):
development along those lines. And there in lies the challenge
because the defensive weaponry is outrageously expensive, and I'm sure
Daniel Davis will confirm that there's only a finite them out.
It's like you know the iron Dome. You shoot one
of those things off, it's millions of dollars, you hit
one target, and then uh, okay, the one target you hit,
what we're eight grand or something like that. It's quite lopsided.
(09:26):
Drones are comparatively very inexpensive compared to the weaponry used
to shoot them down, so of course you might want
to use a whole bunch of decoys in there, maybe
thousands of these things flying around in the sky. It's
so dystopian, it's it's I don't know. It's like Fahrenheit
four point fifty one nineteen eighty four and Brave New World,
(09:48):
all stirred into one big mix that we're actually living
right now. Anyway. Yesterday, Chancellor Friedrich Mertz of Germany said
that Germany, along with other key Western backers, had lifted
range restrictions on weapons that they send a Kiev to
(10:09):
fight against Russia. Mer Is also vowed that we will
do everything in our power to continue supporting Ukraine, including militarily.
There are no longer any range restrictions on weapons delivered
to Ukraine, he said, neither by the British, nor by
the French, nor by US or by the Americans. This
means that Ukraine can now defend itself, for example, by
(10:30):
attacking military positions in Russia with very few exceptions. It
didn't do that until recently. It can do that now.
Does it sound like World War three? Bruin there, Joe,
All then Ato countries getting together and get providing long
range weapons for Ukraine to use so they can bomb
inside Russia. And I know that kind of makes sense militarily.
(10:51):
If there's a giant shopping mall that Ukraine has now
converted into a drone manufacturing facility, you might want to
blow it up. But the risk of escalation seems to
be unfolding right here in front of our very eyes.
The prior administration, Olaf Schultz administration of Germany wouldn't allow
the longer range what they call Taurus missiles. Merge said
(11:16):
he favors delivery of those, but didn't say anything out
loud about delivering them, keeping his well playing it close
to the best. Kremlin said that after Merde's comments on
that any Western decision to lift range limits on arms
delivered to Ukraine would be dangerous. Quote, if these decisions
have indeed been made, they are completely at odds with
(11:37):
our aspirations for a political peace settlement. These are quite
dangerous decisions if they have been made. That again from
spokesperson Peskov, HM, Well, I would call this a downward spiral.
I'm very anxious to see what Daniel Davis says to
say about it, coming up at eight thirty. Interested hear
(11:59):
what you have to say two three, seven, four, nine,
fifty eight and eight two to three Talk found five
fifty on eight and T phones got a comment on
something going on the world feel free. Since our police
officers have sued the city police chief are the chief
and the city claiming discrimination against white males. We'll talk
about that coming up maybe at the bottom of air news.
But a Dave Hatter warning about your router. Got an
(12:23):
interesting and yet frightening article about the FBI warning about
cyber threats coming from your router at home. Stick around
with your right pack after these brief words.
Speaker 5 (12:34):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
Here is your channel nine first one and worldboecasts. Got
rain likely today, best chance rain east of ice seventy one.
Few storms are possible. Today's high sixty four, overnight little
fifty seven, which is a few showers possible, mostly clouds.
Tomorrow slight chance rain high at seventy overnight, cloudy sky
slight chance of showers on a little fifty seven and Thursday,
more clouds, more rain chances and spotty showers during the day.
(13:04):
Hi andy low seventies on Thursday, right now at sixty degrees.
But about Pear CD talk station, it's coming about five
twenty one between TARCD talk station and a Happy Tuesday
to you. I always look forward to Friday's since we
get Tech Friday with Dave Hatter, And it's nice because
throughout the week Dave will send all kinds of crazy
articles and links to information that are really valuable. He
(13:25):
doesn't always get to them because we're limited to three
segments on a Friday, and we always allowed Dave to
steer the topic of conversation. But I thought I'd passed
this along to you because Joe, let me ask you.
Just let me pull the room. Joe, do you have
any idea how old your router is at home? Oh?
Is that all two or three years? Okay? You should
(13:45):
be safe though. Anyway, the FBI issued a warnings to
replace outdated internet routers immediately. Cyber criminals apparently are hijacking
them to a stall malware and commit crimes through your user,
home and business networks without your knowledge. This new alert,
which came out earlier this month, federal agent said criminals
(14:06):
are targeting end of life routers and da've talks about
this all the time over models no longer supported by
the manufacturers with security updates. This would be like using
an old version of Windows XP because they don't upgrade
those anymore, so the opportunities for ferreting in there and
infecting them with the variant of in this case something
called the Moon malware infect the devices that then use
(14:30):
as proxy servers, which allow the criminals to mask their
real locations committing online crimes ranging from financial theft to
illegal transactions on the dark web. I can only imagine
what illegal transactions on the dark web include. Maybe they're
doing child porn or drug trafficking. Who knows. Anyway, The
FBI said that many older Internet routers no longer supported
(14:52):
by the manufacturers, who means the routers don't get security
updates anymore, and once again in the hackers install harmful
software lets them take control of the route. Hackers then
use the hijacked routers in different ways, like launching cyber
attacks or selling access to them through services out there
in the world. This is amazing. Your computer can be
(15:14):
hijacked by someone out in some foreign country and used
to launch a cyber attack. That's exactly what happens. It's
crazy stuff. This allows others to use the routers to
hide their identity online or do illegal things without getting caught.
I suppose if someone gets caught, they're going to trace
it back to your home computer. So the Moon malware
(15:34):
first attackted a long time ago, twenty fourteen. Apparently it's evolved.
They keep working on it now, scans for open ports
on vulnerable routers, and installs itself without needing a password.
They say. Once inside my work hans spread to other
systems and remain hidden while passing on illegal activity back
and forth, leaving people unaware that their network has been
(15:54):
turned into a digital accomplice. Again the FBI, and according
to the FBI, here's where you you need to find
out how old your router is. Routers produced in twenty
ten or earlier are very vulnerable, they say, especially if
remote administration is enabled. Many users may not realize their
devices are outdated. They don't have the firmware protections, making
(16:16):
them easy targets. So I just passed along the fun information.
So I'm going to have to I got a job
to do when I get home. It's like, go home
and find out how my router is. I don't think
it's that old, but I don't know. So every little
bit helps when it comes to protecting yourself from cybersecurity.
And then there was a Wired article or seeing that
article kind of related and I can't thin get all
(16:37):
the details in it, but it's worthy to note that
some Wi Fi routers are tracking your browsing. They said.
While most router manufacturers collect some form of data about you,
there is other There are routers out there which apparently
collect all of your browsing information and may very well
even sell at the third party. So if you don't
(16:59):
want folks know about your browsing information, you might want
to take some stock and find out if your particular
router passes muster again. Cnet dot com the letter c
net dot com is the website, and again the headline
of the article just from about a week ago. Do
Wi Fi routers track your browsing? Worthy? Endeavor checking out
(17:21):
that one as well. So there is your tech update
on a Tuesday, Tech Tuesday, but still thanks to Dave Hatter,
it's five twenty five right now for five cares to
you talk station. Let us see here discrimination against white males,
lawsuit against the police department, That and other local story
is coming up. Or alternatively five one, three, seven, four
nine fifty five eight hundred eight two to three talk
(17:44):
pound five fifty on AT and T fus.
Speaker 6 (17:45):
Be right back fifty five KRC thinking about buying your.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
Channeline first one to one the work ass We have
well rain likely today, that's chance east of I seventy one.
They're saying, with a few storms possible, we'll high sixty
four down to fifty seven overnight with a few showers possible.
Seventy to high tomorrow with clouds and a slight chance
of rain. And it's happening overnight as well, slight chance
of shower, cloudy skies fifty seven for the low ana
(18:12):
high and the low seventies on Thursday, more clouds and
more chants of rain. Sixty degrees right now. If it's
about KERCB talk station, it's five twenty eight COVID of
A five twenty nine five point three seven four nine
fifty five hundred eight hundred ty two three talk pound
FI fifty on eight and T phones. Look up the
call screens suspiciously absent. No tim this morning anyway. Pivoting
(18:33):
over to the local stories, let us see here Channel
nine reporting. Thank you ex Alex Nelt for since a
police officers soon the city of Cincinni as well as
the police chief, claiming they were discriminated against for being
white males. Fed a lawsuit filed yesterday apparently claims or
foul Monday, I guess last, claims the four officers were
(18:55):
denied opportunities for preferred assignments and weren't promoted because of
their race and gender. Officers found the lawsuits Robert Wilson,
Patrick Canton, Gerald Hodges, and Andrew Mitchell. The claim police
chief three STRATEGI gave preferred assignments more often to officers
who are minorities or women. Also list nine examples of
women or minorities who were lower on the promotions list
(19:17):
but were promoted over the officers who filed The lawsuit
states that a preferred assignments, including perks and monetary benefits
such as take home cars, additional overtime opportunities and pay
and call out on call pay that are not afforded
to relief assignments. Preferred assignments are also generally regarded within
the police department as career enhancing, including for promotional purposes.
(19:43):
Lawsuit claims of CPDS minority lieutenants, seventy nine percent received
preferred assignments. Again, that's minority lieutenants. Of the female lieutenants,
eighty nine percent given preferred assignments, and of the white
male lieutenants, forty four percent were given preferred assignments. Hmm,
So we'll see one person taken to the hospital after
(20:07):
a drive by shooting and over the rhine happened last night.
According to Cincinnati Police, they were called to the sixteen
hundred block of Walnut Street about nine pm. Got there
found that twenty five and fifty shots had been fired
as individuals and two vehicles exchanged gunfire. What the hell?
(20:27):
One person was grazed. I guess they don't get much
range time in, do they. Joe, makes you want to
take your family downtown? Yeah, it does, doesn't it. The
grazed person taking the ec Medical Center and stable but
non life threatening condition. According to police, they don't have
(20:48):
anyone in custody at least as of the time of
Fox nineteenth reporting on this shooting is still under investigation.
Twenty five to fifty shots fired like a war zone
down there, But yeah, Aftab says it's safe. Joe, You're right,
are you gonna believe? Watching nineteen reporting on the twenty
(21:12):
five to fifty shots and since a police reporting on it.
Are you gonna believe what AFTAB says. It's biased reporting.
It's a simple statement of fact. Three people taken to
the hospital after a multi vehicle crash in mount Airy
last night. Corna since I police called it the twenty
three hundred block of West Northmend Road about six forty pm.
(21:35):
Got there found out that a driver of a red
truck had crashed into a house. Two of the vehicles,
attempting to avoid the truck, lost control and collided head
on with each other. No one was severely injured, thank god.
Cause of the crash still under investigation. Motorcyclists suffering from
(21:58):
life threatening injuries after crash. Crash involving a semi tractor
trailer happened Anderson Ferry Monday, three forty three pm forty
three hundred Blocker River Road. A fifty nine year old
driver of a twenty twenty four kenwith tractor trailer heading
east on River Road made a left turn, colliding with
a west bound Kawasaki motorcycle operated by a twenty year
(22:21):
old man. Officer said the motorcycle is taken a UC
medical center with serious injuries. I can only imagine a
motorcycle got hit by a Kenworth. He was wearing a helmet.
Wear a helmet. I was out riding my bike yesterday.
I felt very comfortable ride in that beautiful weather, had
my helmet on. Officer said the semi driver did not
sustain injuries. Well, the physics behind the two, the differences inside,
(22:48):
I would expect that the driver didn't sustain injuries. Excessive
speed and impairment are being investigated as factors. Cause of
the crash still under investigation. But if you've witnessed the
accident since a police department's traffic in would love to
hear from you. Five to one three three five two
twenty five fourteen. That's five to one three three five
two twenty five fourteen. Winton Lake open again this after
(23:14):
a brief closure by a sewage lake. I guess it
was reopened yesterday. Lake reopened for all recreational activities, including canoeing, kayaking, paddleboarding,
and fishing. Greg Park's officials announced on May twenty fourth,
swimming has always been prohibited in the lake after the
source of the contamination. Stop water testing found the e
coalie levels to be below both state and federal standards,
(23:38):
leading Hamilton County Public Health Commissioner could Ken or Greg
Ksterman to lift the previous recommendation to avoid the lake.
It's okay to boat fish and recreate on the lake,
he said in a statement. We still recommend good hygiene
after water recreation. Metropolitan Sewer District officials believe a sanitary
sewer line which takes sewage from homes about a mile
(24:00):
north of Winton Woods, leak sewage into a creek that
fed into Winton Lake. Water Testing soon found elevated e
coal eye levels there at the lake. Great Parks officials
followed Health officials recommendation after what they called the concerning discharge,
suspending all recreational activities back on May twentieth. Wow, there
(24:23):
are one hundred and thirteen camps site campgrounds around the lake.
It's also two thousand and twenty nine acre park right
there at Springfield Township. Just shy A five thirty five
fifty five k C the talk station jay, I see
you're on the line. I'm happy to take your call.
Just got to wait a couple minutes, be right back
after these brief words.
Speaker 5 (24:42):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio staking.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
Channeline first water Weather Horcans got likely rain today they
say the best chance of ragin to the east of
Ius seventy one. These storms are possible sixty four for
the high down of fifty seven over night with a
few shower a slight chanceer rain with most with cloudy skies.
Tomorrow high have seventy overnight fifty seven again clouds, had
a slight chance of showers, more clouds, more rain chances.
Thursday high have seventy and low seventies. Rather it's sixty
(25:10):
degrees right now. Time for first traffic from the UC
Help Traffic Center. You see health.
Speaker 7 (25:15):
You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal it makes your
best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect more,
and you see health dot Com. Highways are in good
shape early on this Tuesday morning. No accidents to deal
with coming off of a holiday weekend. Still have Fifth
Street blocked off for cleanup from dayste of Cincinnati. That's
(25:36):
between Maine and Columbia Parkway. Chuck Ingram on fifty five
KRC the talk station.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
It is five thirty nine of the five k CD
talk station. A very very happy Tuesday too. If we
get to the stack is stupid and go straight to
the phones. Jay, thanks for holding over the break there.
Welcome to the program.
Speaker 8 (26:03):
Hey, good morning, Brian. I notice that there's an article
on Breitbart that says Trump.
Speaker 9 (26:08):
Tells Senate Gop to quote make the changes they want
to the big beautiful bill. My question is, why didn't
he tell our good friends Thomas Massey and Warren Davidson
the same thing instead of throwing a hissy fit and
saying we need the primary the two best leaders we
have in the House.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
If I had to guess Jay, if I had to
guess Jay, I think he knew what the tally was.
He knew that he could afford to lose Davidson and
Massey and still get the bill passed without any changes.
And he knows he's up against the wall in the
Senate because they've already come out one hundred percent Democrats
against it, and Senators Ran Paul and a few others
also have come out against it. Meaning something's going to
(26:48):
have to give in the Senate side to get anything done.
So that's my guess.
Speaker 8 (26:53):
I was thinking maybe because the Senate is more liberal,
maybe a few more rhinos over there that he al right,
he had.
Speaker 4 (27:02):
Lower risk.
Speaker 8 (27:03):
Let's say, he already knows how it's going to go,
but it sure helps his optics after he made an
ass out of himself and for I don't know the
time I suggested that Thomas Massey get primary. Sure, but
it sure is a stark contrast that maybe he had
kept his mouth shut. And how did the hol's our
(27:25):
friends say, keep your stupid mouth shut?
Speaker 2 (27:30):
Well again, yeah, I'm used to Trump flying off the
handle randomly and seemingly with no ultimate reason. He did
not have to go after Massy and tell him that
he needs to be primary. He didn't have to do
it against Davidson either. They're both wildly popular in their
districts and they stood up for what was right. And
that's that the buil didn't contain enough spending cuts and
(27:51):
it does it It increases the deficit two three trillion
dollars over the next ten years. So why, I mean,
it already passed, which is makes even less sense for
him to go attacking those guys because they had the
votes it went through. But again, that's your comment is
consistent with what I presume of the the The The
point is with him saying, go ahead and make your
(28:13):
make your changes, because we have to get it passed,
and in its current form, apparently there aren't enough votes.
Speaker 4 (28:18):
To pass it.
Speaker 8 (28:21):
Yeah, I agree, it's it's just a shame that and
maybe he's got some some polling teams came back to
him that said, uh, that was wildly unpopular if you
keep doing that.
Speaker 3 (28:31):
But he's not really one.
Speaker 4 (28:32):
I don't think change with the polls.
Speaker 8 (28:33):
But now it just came like a stark contract, a
sudden shift in a short amount of time. But and
and of course, you know, I'm a little disappointed sometimes
into the right wing media that they don't have an explanation,
they don't follow up and say, hang on a second
and ask the.
Speaker 4 (28:48):
Obvious question of what's with the sudden change.
Speaker 8 (28:53):
It seems like, you know, the right wing media can
be just as biased as a left wing media.
Speaker 2 (28:58):
Of course, Jay, of course that can. It's just which
echo chamber do you want to surround yourself with? Now there,
I imagine a comment like that, a critical comment about
Trump and his going after Massi and Davidson would be
more in an op ed type piece. I mean, a
fact is a fact. He said what he said, and
further analysis suggests, and you know, an op ed piece
(29:19):
saying why the hell does he bother doing this? That
that's when you get into opinions and analysis and criticisms.
But in straight reporting, it's he said what he said.
It's passed. Now let's move on and see what you
said it does with it.
Speaker 8 (29:31):
Good point, all right, man, have a good morning.
Speaker 2 (29:33):
Thanks Jay. Good to hear from you. Man. Let's see here,
Uh you don't get your tacos. Let's smash the drive through.
We go to Port Charlotte, Florida, Florida, of course. Charlotte
man smash the drive through window of a fast food
restaurant after workers refuse to sell him tacos because it
was past closing time. Charlotte County Sheriff's Office saying that
the Dell Taco restaurant Murdock Circle was closing just after midnight.
(29:57):
Man driving a Cadillac convertible, drove up with the drive through,
asked for four tacos. Employee told him to said the
store's closed, couldn't be served. He then drove up to
the window, where several employees heard loud popping noises and
saw that the window had been cracked and the driver
had driven away. Deputies got there noticed the drive through
window had been struck by a heavy object at least
four times. Surveillance video was reviewed. Of course, a man
(30:20):
described as wearing a blue shirt baseball cap shown driving
up to the window, grabbed a pipe ranch and smashed
the window four times out of anger, then drove away.
Using license plate recording technology because they got video, deputy
was able to trace the car to Anthony Izzo over
on Birch Crest Boulevard, found his car parked next to
the house. They made contact with him and he admitted
(30:42):
a smashing the window. Pipe ranch also found inside his car.
Arrested and charged with felony criminal mischief. UH fast food
news making to the stack of stupid we got to Monroe,
Ohio Local Monroe. A McDonald's worker there allegedly attacked by
a woman upset about how long her drive through order
(31:04):
was taking Please said. The incident took place at McDonald's
on New Garver Road in Monroe on Friday, after the woman,
identified as forty three year old Taie Hatch ordered food
from the drive through. Reportedly began arguing with the employees
about her order and not arriving in a timely manner.
Then allegedly exited, the vehicle, approached the drive through window
(31:26):
and hit the employee who was attempting to give her
a refund. She drove away from the scene, courting the police.
Arrested in charge with assault What is with people?
Speaker 4 (31:38):
Hey?
Speaker 2 (31:38):
Joe uh Kentucky, Kentucky man bit off a cat's ear
during a domestic dispute. Zachary L. Rollins twenty two charged
with one kind of torture of a catter dog, Class
felony punishable by one to five years in prison if
the initial charge. A deputy obtained a warning charging this
(32:01):
so and so oh I almost said a bad word
there with two or more counts a torture of her
catadog for allegedly causing the death of two other cats
in early April. This, according release from the Pulaski County
Sheriff Bobby Jones, Rollins listed Russell, Springs address leedged domestic
dispute happened at home in Burnside, though Deputy Noahedishman said
(32:23):
in a citation he was dispatched May ten to investigate
the domestic violence incident, and the callers set her boyfriend
was drunk and had bitten off one of her cat's ears.
Dishman Ray found Rollins in a bed trying to hide
under the blankets and ultimately arrested him. According to the citations,
the girlfriend provided photos of the injured cats screenshots of
Facebook messages in which Rollin told his mom he bit
(32:44):
off the cats here after it bit him. Rollins told
the deputies deputy he didn't bite the cat, but had
tossed it after it bit him. Rollins in the Plaski
Kennedy Detention Center in lieu of a fifty thousand dollar
bond on three torture charges. Is bond conditions include random
drug testing and an order not to possess or be
(33:07):
around animals period.
Speaker 10 (33:11):
Amen, the biggest douche of the universe, in all the galaxies,
there's no bigger douche than you. You've reached the top,
the pinnacle of doue dum good going douce. Your dreams
have come true.
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Speaker 6 (34:38):
Four eighty three fifty five KRC The Riveting Podcast eight.
Speaker 2 (34:50):
Here's your Jen and I weather forecast right is likely
thaty They say the best chance east of.
Speaker 11 (34:54):
Ice seventy one maybe with some storms.
Speaker 2 (34:56):
Sixty four for the high overcast tonight do showers fifty
seve clouds with a slight chancer rain tomorrow with the
highest seventy clouds with a slight chance of showers over night,
fifty seven low seventies for the high on Thursday. More
clouds and more opportunities for some rain. Right now sixty
one degrees Typer Travick.
Speaker 11 (35:13):
Probably you see up Trampic Center.
Speaker 7 (35:15):
At you see Health, you'll find comprehensive care that's so
personal and makes your best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care
from better outcomes. Expect more at you see how dot
com highways not bad to deal with going back to
work on this Tuesday morning. No anks at instid do
you with nothing close to a delay as of yet.
In Bend seventy four included under ten minutes between two
(35:37):
seventy five at the coal ring split to the seventy
five ramp. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRCA the talk station.
Speaker 2 (35:44):
Fifty one fifty five kr SE the talk station, A
very happy Tuesday to you. I'm chuckling, and you may
detect that in my voice that it's got a reading
from Joe's trecker. Whether it was acceptable for me to
even cons read this article. I'm going to try to
be delicate of it, as delicate as I can get
(36:07):
your slap shot sound by ready, Joe. We have a
guy that fits the description of the guy that was
described in the movie slap Shot, who would get deliberate penalties.
A registered sex offender who calls himself master m ast er,
(36:28):
second word baterter, b ai t e er and I
don't think he's referring to fishing. Has again, I'm just
reading has again been arrested for indecent exposure, this time
inside a grocery store in Seattle. Described as a prolific
public and I'll substitute self pleasurer by prosecutors. Keenan Pearson,
(36:53):
forty six, arrested earlier this month after being observed by
witnesses openly pleasuring himself in front of numerous members of
the public, including children.
Speaker 4 (37:03):
Deliberate.
Speaker 6 (37:03):
That's a guy we could get in the penalty box
all by himself.
Speaker 11 (37:07):
And you know what happens next.
Speaker 2 (37:11):
If you haven't seen Slapshot, I would say that one
seems worth seeing it for. When confronted by police, he
reportedly confessed that he was stroking that's in quotes inside
the store court to the probable cause Affidavid, he wasn't
working on an old automobile engine Court probable Cause Affidavid.
(37:31):
While speaking with officers, he was actively looking at women
and saying that they should be in his show and
could also participate in the act of self pleasure. Pearson's
extensive rap sheet includes conviction for assault, voyeurism, burglary, domestic violence,
possession of deadly weapons, and multiple convictions for indecent exposure.
(37:53):
State sex Offendery registry currently list him as non compliant,
locked up in the county jail a little one hundred
and fifty thousand dollars bond. What in God, there's no
flag for us in this case, Thank god. Convicted felon
(38:15):
who engaged in the hot chip challenge. Are you familiar
with that? Where you eat a tortilla ChiPT AND's covered
in like spices that are the upper limits of the
Scoville scale. They're hardly I mean, it's almost impossible to swallow,
and then of course you your throat in your mouth
burn like crazy. Anyway, did the hot chip challenge. He's
now behind bars, charged with violating his parole by swigging
(38:38):
from a bottle of beer to the chip being so hot.
Darren delkis thirty six, arrested for allegedly violating parole terms
that bar him from using or possessing alcohol or even
go into places that sell alcohol. Pearl conditions part of
his sentencing in Colorado for in connection with felons felony
stalking conviction. Delcas lives in Florida, where he was busted
(39:02):
during a meeting with a probation officer who reviewed video
showing him with a corona in his hands. Dalcas quote
is at risk himself into others with any further alcohol use,
according the affidavit from the probation of a parole officer. Joe,
for his part, does not consider corona beer. It's like
(39:23):
having a bud, Like, yeah, you're right, Joe. Anyway, the video,
reportedly recorded in late March, showed him doing the hot
chip challenge. Confronted with the clip, Delcas admitted to taking
a swig of corona due to the chip being so hot.
Court records did not indicate how probation officials learned to
the video. Those social media accounts and phones of those
being supervised are often reviewed. There's always video these days.
(39:48):
In addition to the alleged beer consumption, he was cited
earlier this month for violating a parole requirement to carry
a tracking device. Rap sheet includes convictions for dealing in
stolen property, cocaine sales, grand theft, credit card fraud, heroin
possess cocaine possession, theft, burglary, and violating the domestic violence
Protection Order. He has so far spent a combined total
(40:08):
of seven years in state prison. His parole was supposed
to terminate late this next year. Sorry you blew it, buddy,
fivety six fifty five KRCD Talk Station. All kinds of
stuff to talk about in the six o'clock hour if
you care to steer the topic in any particular direction.
I welcome phone calls. I'll be back after the news
at the top of the hour.
Speaker 5 (40:28):
Every day we discover something new and important.
Speaker 2 (40:31):
To day's top stories on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Did you know if you five care CD Talk Station,
Happy Tuesday. I hope y'all had a wonderful three day
weekend and you did contemplate and reflect on those who
served our country proudly and gave the ultimate sacrifice in
service of our country yesterday Memorial Day, of course, and
(40:54):
you can feel free to call five one three seven
four nine fifty eight hundred eight two three talk pound
five fifty on AT and T phone. See Bobby's called
in twice this morning. Didn't bother coming on the radio, Joe,
he'd just like to talk to you. I guess he does.
A man who I dearly love talking to one hour
from now, Peter Bronson. What a terrific man he is
(41:15):
across the board, an amazing writer too. Today we will
be talking about one of the books we've talked about before,
given to Tomorrow is the forty eighth anniversary of the
Beverly Hill supper Club fire, which I do remember like
I was yesterday. We're gonna be talking about Forbidden Fruits
and Cities Underworld and the supper club inferno. Of course,
Peter is of the mind as I as of any
(41:35):
as is anybody who's looked at the facts, the information,
and the suspicious the cover up that was the intentional
burning down to the Beverly Hill supper Club. It was
like a mob thing, and Peter knows all about it.
We'll talk about that coming up in an hour. Love
having him in studio, Peter looking forward to heaving you here.
Fast forward to eight oh five. We get the inside
scoop every Tuesday from brightbart News. Today the return of
(41:56):
Texas Border. Editor Bob Price got an update on the
border and the number of arrests, probably two hundred and
seventy five illegal aliens arrested in seven days. That article
came out yesterday. Actually San Antonio ice raids netting some
benefits there and again an amazing thing Donald Trump was
able to accomplish and just what seemed like a moment's time,
(42:21):
followed by Daniel Davis Deep dive. It's fallen apart Russia Ukraine.
Russia's escalating its attacks on Ukraine. It looks like any
kind of discussions not advancing. And Donald Trump calling Vladimir
Putin crazy the other day. I'm not sure that he is.
I mean, the more Vladimir Putin attacks Ukraine, the more
(42:42):
advances he makes, the more opportunity he has to expand
the control over Ukraine. It seems to be what he's after. Ultimately,
I don't know. That's why we get Daniel Davis on
retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis and also here from my
friends at Rhino Shield, they're gonna be on our ask
the expert good product. I had them out to my
daughter's place and they're going to be painting my daughter
(43:03):
and her fiance's barn in Rhino Shield. That's a really
cool product, guaranteed a twenty five year guarantee on that
it will not ship or flake or anything like that.
So anyway, a word in for Rhino Shield. So without
calls and you want to call, feel free love to
hear from you if you've got something you want to talk about.
This one really blew my mind. The article came out
earlier last week and I didn't get a chance to
(43:24):
get to it, but talk about corruption of the Biden administration.
As I mentioned the last hour, we're finding out more
and more and more about Joe Biden's frailties and his
incompetence and his not really know what day it is.
Everyone's speculating on who was actually controlling government during his
well struggles with memory and cognitive decline. We all know
(43:47):
about the autopen by now, at least I hope you do.
The thing was used to sign almost every single executive
order that came out of the Biden administration with like
one notable exception anyway, But there was a gout an
Appropriations Committee hearing last week, Republican Senator John Kennedy talking
with Energy Secretary Christopher Wright, asking questions and pointed ones,
(44:13):
and that's when he learned that the Department of Energy
handed out ninety three billion dollars in loans and commitments
during the final seventy six days of the Biden administration. So,
by way of comparison, you're like, well, what does that mean?
That's more than double the loan total from the previous
(44:34):
fifteen years combined, and done of course, in a period
after Donald Trump had already been elected, before he was
sworn in. Kennedy quote, the seventy six day period you're
talking about, that's the period between the time President Trump
was elected and President Bryden left office? Is that right? Right? Confirmed?
(44:55):
That's correct. Then he wondered out loud how the agency
could vet such a massive spending today and ninety three
billion dollars over such a short period of time. Quote,
how do you do due diligence on one loan, much
less ninety three billion dollars? Rights response, I think it's
(45:17):
probably pretty clear it wasn't done. In many cases, there
were commitments made from businesses that provided no business plan,
no numbers about their own financial solvency or how this
project actually worked. The follow up, So, so you're telling
me that the Department of Energy, in the seventy six
day period before their boss was going to leave office
(45:40):
gave or loaned money to entities that had no business
plan rights response, correct, Kennedy, no financials, right, correct. I've
come in with great concern about how this institution, this
great American institution, has been run, and how American expayer
(46:00):
money has been handled. Right. Acknowledged that his department is
now conducting a sweeping review of those loans in grants,
saying we are, and yeah, my blood pressure is rising
just thinking about what we have seen and what did
happen at the department. Kennedy inquired, does anybody ever come
to the Department of Energy to get some of this
free money and lie to you? Interesting question? Right for
(46:25):
his parts that he hadn't experienced that yet, and said
it was a reasonable assumption that this has happened. Of course,
he got no financials, no commitments, no particulars about the detail,
just a hand in the cookie jar request agreed to
by the Biden administration. Now do you think Joe Biden
personally actually agreed to all this? Do you think someone
else had their hand in the cookie jar or was
facilitating that?
Speaker 4 (46:46):
I do.
Speaker 2 (46:52):
Kennedy raised concerns about the nature of applicants who sought
the funds, pointing out the potential for fraud. Quote, is
it conceivable that some of these folk came to you
with a half baked idea?
Speaker 4 (47:03):
Right?
Speaker 2 (47:04):
Very conceivable. In fact, I've seen such plans that didn't
have a business plan, just to promise to develop one.
Later said what SEAQ Kennedy the most wasn't just a
lack of oversight, but the arrogance of it all. Quote,
they were spending money at the Department of Energy like
it was ditchwater. Their budget went from sixty billion to
(47:30):
one hundred and sixty billion since fiscal year twenty twenty one,
any of the appause, and you think about where's the
congressional oversight? Clearly there was no congressional oversight. How did
the Department of Energy's budget go from sixty billion to
one hundred and sixty billion in such a short period
of time? Were those funds approved by Congress Right, for
(47:54):
his part, pledge to turn down wasteful projects and refer
the thieves his word to the Department of Justice. Quote,
they shouldn't be upset, they should be ashamed. Kennedy issued
a warning, it sounds to me like there were a
lot of people coming to the Department of Energy who
had all four feet and their snout in the trough.
(48:15):
I hope you'll take whatever time you need to go
through these projects, penny by penny, and will they be accountable?
Will someone be accountable for this? And you know that
I can think of since these obviously weren't projects that
were approved by Congress. Nobody's referring back to congressional actions
the seventy six day period after Trump got sworn in.
They didn't do anything during that period of time except
(48:35):
apparently hand out all kinds of money to people who
may have no legitimate reason for taking it other to
enrich themselves. You know, we all sit out here, the
unwashed mass is kind of scratching our head wondering how
someone who goes through Washington, DC makes one hundred and
seventy six thousand dollars a year as a salary can
walk out a few years later as a multi multi millionaire.
Speaker 6 (48:55):
Hmm.
Speaker 2 (48:57):
Maybe the securitest root of money flowing through Department of Energy,
and it's way back into some of the politicians pockets.
And I don't know how anybody can defend this. I'm
sure Democrats will try to figure out some way to
say they're trying to claw this money's back, or there'll
be litigation over you can't do that. But you know what, yeah,
(49:18):
you can. This is the kind of fraud, waste and
abuse that we have been You know that that's been
out there in the world for I think as long
as you and I have been alive, not much much
much longer. But you know what, Apparently it's a lot
easier to figure it out when you got the Department
of Government Efficiency looking into it, applying computers and technology,
(49:42):
going through literally millions and millions of documents, documents with
the speed that never before existed. This is how you
figure this kind of stuff out. Apparently it's a whole
bunch of money missing from the Treasury Department too.
Speaker 11 (49:58):
Hm.
Speaker 2 (50:00):
Forms not filled out properly, money cannot be traced. And
again take another shot of the Department of Defense. The
trillion dollar defense budget they can't pass an audit. Don't
I personally cannot abide by an increase in defense spending
when they can't pass an audit on prior, many prior
years of defense spending. I'm going to go from eight
(50:20):
hundred billion dollars annually to a trillion dollars now, and
they can't account for the money that's been handed over
just because it's the American military, and we all should
have a lot of respect for the American military and
the men and women who serve. I don't blame many
of them for the problem. I blame our elected officials
for just failing in their obligation to you, the American taxpayer,
(50:45):
to engage in some extensive oversight of the money. It's
because some politicians state it's the benefit of some fat,
huge military industrial complex contractor doesn't mean it should be
supported without some of an audit, without someone looking into
how the money's being spent. Frightening stuff, folks. Six sixteen.
(51:11):
There's all kinds of fraud, waste and abuse in Medicaid,
and here the Democrats are running around talking about how
they're going to be pulling the plug on elderly women
and disabled individuals, when that is an outright lie. More
on that six sixteen right now. If if I have
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Speaker 6 (52:19):
Exit dot com fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (52:25):
Here's your channel nine first one and went to forecast.
Got a well rain likely today They say the best
chance east of ice seventy one and a few storms
are possible. Today's high sixty four overcast with a few showers.
Tonight fifty seven for the low clouds with a slight
chance to rain. Tomorrow with the high of seventy overnight
pretty much the same clouds with a slight chance of
showers fifty seven and low seventies to high on Thursday
(52:45):
with more clowns and chance of rain sixty degrees. Right now,
city About traffic conditions, Chuck Ingram from the.
Speaker 11 (52:53):
Uc hout Tramphing Center. You see health.
Speaker 7 (52:55):
You'll find comprehensiative care that's so personal it makes your
best tomorrow possible. It's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect
more at ucehelp dot com. Highway traffic, it's it's still
in pretty good shape this morning. No major time delays
to deal with, although I am so starting to see
some heavier traffic southbound two seventy five to come across
(53:15):
the Carroll Propper Bridge thanks to construction John ingramon fifty
five KR see THEE Talk station.
Speaker 2 (53:23):
Five KRCD talk station at b Tuesday. Well, you got
to get profits to the Republicans. I know. The Big
Beautiful Bill's got the Democrats all freaked out, mainly focusing
on Medicaid because I guess they don't like a work
requirement for able bodied adults. I guess they don't like
keeping illegal immigrants off the social welfare safety net. But
(53:46):
moving over and going back to this ninety three billion
dollar Department of Energy grants in the last waning days
of the Biden administration again, that's got me puzzled and angry.
Built into the Big Beautiful Bills some opportunities to well
save money Federal Employee Health Benefits program. Now they're going
to be required if this bill stays intact, or at
(54:07):
least the component of it, depending on what the Senate
ultimately does. And why would they get rid of something
like this, because this actually enjoys bipartisan support. There was
a separate bill out there previously, the Federal Employee Health
Benefits Program won by the partisan port support with a
standalone bill and a houseover Cite Government Reform Committee. Earlier
in the year. That now incorporated into the quote unquote
(54:28):
big beautiful bill, Federal Employee Health Benefits program is going
to check marriage and birth certificates to make sure that
people claimed on employees policies really are part of their family.
Apparently thousands are not, and kicking them off the rolls,
it's been calculated by the Government Accountability Office will save
you the American taxpayer one point five billion dollars over
(54:50):
the next decade. Also cut Medicaid paying for gender transition
periods procedures. Rather, Washington Times reported the one study fifty
thousand page, and patients underwent gender transition surgery, a quarter
of them on Medicaid. They didn't translate it into a
(55:12):
dollar amount, but why should we be paying for that?
Moving over the Education Department, the bill boots people here
on special immigration status like human prolees, refugees, and trafficking
victims from being able to receive student aid the rule.
The bill also Stiffen's rules regarding pelgrams, those help fund
(55:34):
college for low income students. Applicants would have to report
any foreign income they have so it can be counted
toward eligibility. It's income they have and they should be
reporting it. This is a change apparently also going to
be facing higher requirements to be considered full time students
thirty credit hours, up from only twelve annually. Congressional Budget
(55:58):
Office calculated about twenty percent would the course load to
meet the now thirty credit hour requirement. Again, that's annually.
That's anyway, fifty percent, the CBO says, would keep the
lower schedules and so their rewards would be cut down.
That change alone, they calculate, would save the government and you,
the American taxpayer, seven billion dollars.
Speaker 11 (56:21):
What else.
Speaker 2 (56:23):
The bill also tries to cancel double dipping in Medicaid
by doing name and address matching. See these are the
kind of things that were virtually impossible to do previously.
Now with modern technology, they can do this. Republicans set
as many as one point six million people are improperly
enrolled in multiple states at the same time, and Medicaid
(56:46):
agencies in some states have made payments to dead enrollees.
Times reported that one part of the bill would require
more frequent eligibility checks of the eligibility of Medicaid coverage.
It was expanded under Obamacare, going from once a year
to twice in order to boot people off whose incomes
rise in the months after they enroll in Medicaid, who
then wouldn't be no longer eligible if their income was
(57:08):
properly tracked. CBO said that change would save three point
eight billion dollars over the next decade. You know, all
this low hanging it seems to be low hanging fruit,
doesn't it. This is common sense legislation designed to curb
this runaway insane spending. Now I add up all the
(57:30):
savings right here. You're look at it. More than ten,
twelve to fifteen billion dollars just with a few minor
changes like that, changes which are easy to accomplish again
with modern technology going to work here, agencies sharing information
about maybe death certificates pairing back to Social Security ranks
(57:50):
after people die. There's an idea, and I'm sure there's
a bunch of Democrats out there that are against that
concept too, for reasons wholly unknown to me and impossible
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five one, three, eight, four seven, zero zero one nine
fifty five. The talk station bream high this time for
the Channel nine first warning WEATHERFOE casts kind of repetitious
rain is likely today. They say the best chance are
(59:33):
going to be east of I seventy one with a
few storms possible, sixty four for the high overcast guys,
with a few showers possible tonight, fifty seven for the low.
An they're mostly thirty day with a slight chance of
rain tomorrow. I have seventy same thing overnight, fifty seven
for the low and yes on Thursday, more cloud than
another chance of rain. Low seventies for Thursday's high at
(59:54):
sixty degrees. Right now, it is time for a traffic update.
Chuck from the UCL Tramphings Center. You see health.
Speaker 7 (01:00:00):
You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal and makes your
fast tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect
more at ucehelp dot com. Good traffic on the highways
for your Tuesday morning commute. The return from the holiday
weekend not banned at all. I understand Fifth Street is
now open from Taste to Cincinnati.
Speaker 11 (01:00:19):
Being closed from Taste to Cincinnati over.
Speaker 7 (01:00:22):
The weekend, still closers on the side streets and Columbia Parkway.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR see the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:00:30):
Sixty one if you five KRCD talk station at the Tuesday.
Perhaps in my neighborhood association. It's kind of a weird
thing that happened the other day. I still scratching my
head over it. We had this guy, he was on
one of those two wheeled scooters and his motorized scooters
and his cruiser in our neighborhood. He's going door to
door asking about if we are interested in pet service
(01:00:54):
or pest service. So I one interaction with him, shows
up to the front door, and of course our dog
is us barking his hat off. You know, we got
a Doberman named Liam, and you know he goes on
alert every once in a while, and he was on alert.
This guy stayed pretty far away from the door. He
inquires about pest service. I'm like, no, we got a guy.
We've been using him for twenty years and if we
ever have any ant show up, we call him and
(01:01:14):
he solves the problem. So he starts to asking me
a few more questions. I said, no, we got a guy.
We've been happy with him. We don't need anybody. So
the guy scooters away. Well, as it turns out, he's
going around all the neighborhoods and he's going all to
the doors and he's using a fake nail. I talked
to John down the street and he's going to sign up.
We don't have any John in the neighborhood, for one.
(01:01:36):
But he came back to people's houses multiple times during
the day, and then he was back in the neighborhood
the next day. My wife pointed out, he goes, there's
that guy in the scooter again. I'm like, what the
hell is he doing. So someone called the Sheriff's department
that apparently they took the guy away in the sheriff vehicle.
(01:01:57):
So I'm still waiting to find out for my neighbors.
But we got this great neighborhood association. We all look
out for each other, and we have a Facebook, you know,
a closed Facebook site, so we can report suspicious activity.
We had someone knock over one of the mailboxes in
the middle of the night with a car and we
all had video footage of it, so we were able
to piece together who that was and how that happened.
(01:02:18):
So just a props to every one in my neighborhood.
I appreciate each and every one of you looking out
for the folks in the neighborhood and raising questions and
sounding the alarm. So I hope your neighborhood has something
akin to that too. It really gives you a great
peace of mind. Anyway, back over the local story. Sorry
went off on that tangent. It's just that we still
don't have any update from the Sheriff's department what this
(01:02:40):
guy was up to, but I suspect no good for
Sincinni police officers suing the City of Cincinnati and the
police chief of the Cincinni Police Department claiming discrimination for
being white men. They claimed four officers were denied opportunities
for preferred assignments and were not promoted because of their race.
Lawsuit claims that police Jief Teresa Thiji, gave preferred assignments
(01:03:03):
to more often to officers who are minorities or women.
Also list nine examples of women or minorities who are
lower on their promotions list but nonetheless got promoted over
the officers who filed the lawsuit. Lawsuit states that preferred
assignments include perks and monetary benefits such as take home cars,
additional overtime opportunities, and pay and call out slash on
(01:03:24):
call pay that are not afforded to relief assignments. I'm
not quite sure what that means, honestly. That's a quote
from the lawsuit. Preferred assignments are also generally regarded within
the police department as career enhancing, including for promotional purposes.
Again that's from the lawsuit. And in a lawsuit they
claim of the CINCINNTI Police departments, minority lieutenants seventy nine
(01:03:44):
percent preferred assignments, of the female lieutenants I guess of
any race eighty nine percent were given preferred assignments, and
as far as the white guys, the male lieutenants, forty
four percent given preferred assignments. So see if that bears
fruit and make sure you got your helmet on and
(01:04:06):
may have saved this guy's life, although the motorcyclist involved
in the accident is now suffering from life threatening injuries.
Crash involved a semi tractor trail or It happened on
Anderson Ferry or over in Anderson Ferry on Monday River
Road forty three hundred block. At about quarter to four
in the afternoon, fifteen nine year old driver of a
twenty twenty four Kenworth tractor trailer heading east on River
(01:04:30):
Road made a left turn ran into a westbound twenty
four Kawasaki motorcycle operated by a twenty year old man.
Taken a UC medical center with serious injuries. Motorcyclist was
in fact wearing a helmet. Officers say the semi driver
didn't sustain any injuries, which, as I pointed out last hour,
that doesn't shock me considering the size of a vehicle's
(01:04:50):
relative size. Successive speed, and impairment are looking being looked into.
His factors in the crash still under investigation. But if
you're a witness, the Cincinni Police Department's Traffic Unit wants
to hear from you, and here's that number. Five one
three three five two twenty five fourteen. Five one three
three five two twenty five fourteen. Feel free to call
five one three seven four nine fifty five hundred eight
(01:05:12):
hundred eight to two three talk love to hear from you.
Maybe you got something on your mind, But I also
want you to call Colin Electric, Family and nonoperatives it's
nineteen ninety nine. If you've got a residential electric project,
you are the best possible hands with the well oiled
machine that is the team from Colin Electric. Of course,
they're all a license. They're great at customer service, the
price is always right, and three of the reasons why
they enjoy an A plus with a better business bureau.
(01:05:34):
I'll give them an A plus plus for the work
that they've done for me over the years. Everything that
they do for you comes with a ten year wiring warranty. See,
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they do. To learn more, you can go to the website.
You can sign up for an appointment on the website too.
(01:05:55):
It's Cullen CEE U L L E N Cullenelectriccincinnati dot com.
Tell them, Brian, how can you give them a call?
Five one three two two seven four one one two.
That's five one three two two seven four one one two.
Speaker 5 (01:06:06):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 2 (01:06:11):
Here's your channel nine first one to one of forecast
rain is likely today best chance rain he's device seventy
one and a few storms are a possibility Today sixty
four for the high, overcast with possible showers. Tonight fifty seven,
overcast with chance rain. Tomorrow seventy clouds overnight with the
chance of showers. Wednesday night fifty seven. And on Thursday, Yes,
(01:06:31):
more clouds and yes more chance rain. Low seventies to
high on Thursday sixty degrees. Right now, try for a traffic.
Speaker 7 (01:06:38):
Update from the UCL Traffic Center. You see healthy, You'll
find comprehensive care that's so personal it makes your best
tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect more
at you sehealth dot com. Highway traffic in pretty good shape.
I'm not seeing any major time delays to deal with
as of yet. I did just hear a dispatch for
problems westbound two seven five near Reied Hartman, But so
(01:07:02):
far I'm not seeing any slow traffic in that area.
Choh Kingbramont fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:07:10):
Say forty fifty five ker Seed talk station have a Tuesday. Yeah.
Going back to this door to door character in my neighborhood,
maybe Maureen has stumbled on the answer, she said, there
are cases of theft rings using door to door interactions
to determine if somebody's home. According to link she sent
me real link, burglars made a sky themselves as utility
workers hand them and or surveyors to gain information about homes,
(01:07:32):
occupants and their routines. So yeah, our routine is to
have at least one Doberman, if not two, in the
house at all times. Most I love my wife and
my work schedules, somebody's there all the time. She'd hang
a sign on the door about how heavily armed we
(01:07:53):
are as well. Anywall just gives me great comfort again
knowing I've got neighbors that are keeping an eye peeled.
This is Kravitz from Bewitched. We got a whole neighborhood
full of those. And going back to the fraud wasted abuse,
I mentioned medicaid and the stuff that's in the big
beautiful bill that's really valuable, and things you never heard
(01:08:14):
from the Biden administration. They didn't lift a finger to
After fraud, waste and abuse Amendment Odds over the weekend
said federal spending riddled with waste, fraud, and abuse, costing
taxpayers literally billiam says, medicaid a glaring example, which means,
(01:08:35):
as he pointed out, people who are truly in need
of medicaid are being deprived of it. Those who need
it the most. Remember, the program is designed to help
those on life's margins, not able bodied adults who are
capable of going out into the world and working, or
at least, you know, putting twenty hours a weekend in
community service or maybe going to a trade school. As
(01:08:56):
I keep pointing out, he's on Sunday morning, futures over
the weekend, there's about fourteen billion dollars you've identified with
Doge again. Ooh, that evil Department of Government efficiency. Fourteen
billion dollars fans of people who are duly enrolled wrongly
in multiple states. He said, you live in New Jersey,
you move to Pennsylvania, and which state gets your medicaid?
(01:09:18):
Turns out both states collect money from the federal government.
And I guess, because they get most of the money
from the federal government, it's better for them to not
bother looking for fraud, waste, and abuse because that deprives
them of a check. Administrator of the Center for Medicaid,
Medicare and Medicaid Services Amendment Odds urged Medicaid be cleaned
up so it serves the people that was initially designed
(01:09:40):
to assist those at the dawn or twilight of their life,
those living in the shadows, and those with disabilities who
are unable to receive access to care because of others
clawing at the cloth of the system. His words, and
I and this whole Medicaid reforms of one of the
things that Democrats are screaming about, making up things about
(01:10:02):
how billions or millions of people are going to get
thrown off the ranks. He said. We have to eliminate people,
for example, on Medicaid who are not actually eligible to
be here, able bodied workers, young men who should never
be on the program at all. He said. The problem
goes even further, pivoting to the lack of federal work
requirement for Medicaid, something that exists for other federal programs,
(01:10:24):
for example food stamps. Oh, you can do it for
food stamps, have the work requirement. But no, my god,
the Democrats are going to die on the hill of
refusing to require able bodied I'd say, men, just to anybody,
able bodied, without children, without disabilities, to get out there
and at least make an effort. He said, let's be
clear what this means. It doesn't mean you have a job.
(01:10:46):
It means you're trying to get a job, which is
a good thing because we have twice as many jobs
as there are people looking for them right now. But
if you don't or can't seek a job, you can
volunteer somewhere. You can get an education, you can help
out with other people inside the household. There's many ways
you can chip in. Anyone on to point out there
(01:11:06):
is a work requirement for snap the food stamps program.
There's a lot we can do. I think there's a
moral hazard if we don't, because you've got people who
are not working, who could work, who should work, and
it's better for them and better for the country if
they do. He also pointed out a real bad scenario
that exists out in the world. States are currently incentivized
(01:11:26):
to not cooperate with the federal government, pointing to a
provision under the program's expansion that's Obamacare expansion, that allows
the federal government to cover up to ninety percent of
the costs in some states compared to fifty percent or
sixty percent in others. Pointing out the uneven structure incentivized
(01:11:47):
of states to keep more able bodied adults enrolled in
Medicaid to bring in more federal money. Right now, you said,
in many states, if you go to the hospital and
you're an able bodied person, the hospital gets paid more
for a Medicaid and of fishery. Then you're if a
Medicare beneficiary. People work their whole live chipped into Medicare,
(01:12:10):
they get the program, they retire thinking they've got a lot,
they've got a great system. The hospital tells them, listen,
you guys don't pay as well as the able bodied
focus on Medicaid who haven't been able to get a job,
so in a way, we value them more. And that's
what ends up happening. That disrupts the system. So it's
rigged against seniors. Medicare the program for the seniors out
(01:12:32):
there in the world. Medicaid the program that's supposed to
be for people on life margins, not basically the entire
population in the United States of America. And again, who's
against the reforms Democrats? Democrats, that's heartbreaking. We're on a
(01:12:58):
sinking ship. Get total chimney care. Fireplace in stove still
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nine ninety nine certified chimney sweep going to take a
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any problems going on there. Maybe you had a prior
chimney fire and your lining is cracked. You wouldn't know
that ab some an inspection. They'll sweep it make sure
everything is safe so when the winter months returned and
the cold weather returns, you can no you can use
it with a peace of mind. Great folks, they are
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Speaker 6 (01:14:19):
Hundred fifty five KRC dot com.
Speaker 12 (01:14:22):
Wait lons my RSUs na.
Speaker 2 (01:14:26):
Here is your nine first warning. Wether forecast very repetitive,
so rain's likely today, best chance east of I seventy
one and a few storms possible sixty four to the
high Tonight, clouds, few showers possible fifty seven. Tomorrow mostly
clouds with a slight chance of rain and a high
have seventy. Mostly cloudy overnight with a slight chance of
showers and a low of fifty seven and more clouds,
(01:14:48):
more rain on Thursday. High in the low seventies sixty degrees.
Right now for about PAIRCD talk station time for traffic from.
Speaker 7 (01:14:56):
The UCL tram Fink Center. You see healthy, you'll find
comprehensive care. That's personal. It makes your best tomorrow possible.
That's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect more at you
sehelp dot com. Highway traffic in pretty good shape. I'm
not seeing any major time delays to deal with as
of yet. I did just hear a dispatch for problems
westbound two seventy five near Reied Hartman, but so far
(01:15:18):
I'm not seeing any slow traffic in that area. Chock
Kingbramont fifty five KRSC the talk Stationday.
Speaker 2 (01:15:26):
Six fifty if if you about KRCD talk station, Very
Happy Tuesday, Jay, Peter Bronson after the top of the
UR News, I be in studio for the hour talking
about the forty eighth anniversary of Beverly Hill supper Club fire,
which he wrote about in his amazing book Forbidden Fruits
in Cities Underworld and the Supper Club Inferno. So uh,
Peter Bronson. Always an enjoyable conversation with him, and I
(01:15:47):
hope you will stick around for the program. I have
to tell you our news and the meantimes go to
the phones. Doctor J. Welcome back, Doctor J. It is
always a pleasure hearing from you.
Speaker 4 (01:15:56):
That's always a pleasure to talk to you, Brian.
Speaker 3 (01:15:58):
And you know, I was going to bring up two things,
one a personal thing at the end, and one something
about brain metabolism that I've been threatening to call and
talk to you about it because George Brenhaman and those
guys were said a lot of interesting things, but you
hit on a different topic at the Beverly Hill supper Club,
and I guess since I called in on the correct day,
(01:16:20):
just to remind you, I was there at the Very
Hills supper Club when it burnt down.
Speaker 2 (01:16:24):
Oh you were, Yeah, I had I'm sure you had
mentioned them to that that to me previously, but I
had forgotten that was a John Davidson performed, and I
always had it in my mind. My elementary teacher at
the time commented on it, saying that she loved John
Davidson and had seen him seen him perform, but wasn't
(01:16:45):
planning ongoing. I guess they had plans that night, or
maybe it was a week night. I don't know what
her problem was, but she didn't go, and I thought
I always thought about her that her life could have
been lost in that fire. Had she actually gone? But wow,
And briefly I.
Speaker 3 (01:17:01):
Told you personally the whole story. I have told it before,
I'd mentioned it, but and we don't have time, goodness.
But briefly, I was the host at the main dining room.
It was my third day on the job that particular day,
so you know, I was let's see, I was in
college and needed a job over the summerh and so
(01:17:21):
that was a kind of a great job. The owner's
wife kind of hired me. And you know, I had
no idea anything was happening there. But as I as
I walked down the stairs this is early evening, six thirtyish,
I don't remember exactly, And as I walked down the
(01:17:41):
stairs into the main dining room, everyone turned and looked
at me. That's a very unusual experience for its old
And I turned around and look, why are they looking
at me? I look, is there some famous person behind me?
I look, there's this little bit of smoke coming down
the stairs with me. That's how I knew something was
(01:18:02):
going on. So I turned around and everybody's looking at me,
and I said, could you all please get up? And
they jumped up like like there was going to be
a panic, and I said, and take your time, and
could you please exit the restaurant go behind me, you know,
we are close to the main entrance. And everybody left
(01:18:22):
because I thought, that's what you do when you see smoke.
Speaker 2 (01:18:24):
Yeah, it was.
Speaker 3 (01:18:27):
It was a pretty amazing kind of experience. I've never
had people listen to me so well.
Speaker 2 (01:18:32):
Well, you know what, I'm just thinking to myself, you
may very well have saved a lot of lives just
by calmly explaining to people they need to leave. I mean, yeah,
as a twenty year old, I might have been a
little reluctant to make that pronouncement to a whole room
full of people when you know, it could have had
some logical explanation behind the smoke coming out right now.
You walked out for no reason, idiot, Jay, Why did
(01:18:53):
you tell people to leave? You know? Wow?
Speaker 3 (01:18:56):
And interestingly enough, that was my thoughts. Because I got
the whole room out, I went into the kitchen, which
was back behind there, and I mentioned it to them,
and I went out through a door in the kitchen,
and some I was because I walked away from the
smoke to tell people. And then I got out in
the bright sunlight and I thought I'd made a big mistake.
(01:19:16):
I was all away around the building.
Speaker 2 (01:19:18):
I had hit the dump button. You used the S word, uh,
doctor Joe, I sure did.
Speaker 11 (01:19:24):
Oh I can't do that.
Speaker 3 (01:19:25):
Gave me from a big fine. Thank you for saving
me from a big fine.
Speaker 11 (01:19:28):
No, I think, oh that's even better.
Speaker 3 (01:19:34):
But I did you save yourself?
Speaker 2 (01:19:36):
Yeah, all right, that's why they had the dumb button.
Speaker 4 (01:19:39):
Thank you.
Speaker 3 (01:19:40):
So I went to the front and there were crowds
of people coming out. There was huge, thick smoke coming.
Speaker 2 (01:19:46):
Out of the building.
Speaker 3 (01:19:47):
I realized I did the correct thing.
Speaker 2 (01:19:49):
Yes you did.
Speaker 3 (01:19:51):
Yeah, Yeah, that was a big night. That's the first
time I saw dead people.
Speaker 11 (01:19:56):
It was.
Speaker 12 (01:19:57):
It was a big night.
Speaker 3 (01:20:00):
So you sit there for hours, hours and hours before
I can get out of the place, and they're just
wandered around, what are we going to do? And emergency
vehicles started coming and then there must have been hundreds
of them, maybe a thousand of them by the time
it was done. And you know, we sort of watched
the place burned down.
Speaker 2 (01:20:14):
Yeah, I watched under around. I was at home watching
the reporting from the fire. So my parents used to
go to the Beverly Hill supper Club. You know, quite
a bit. I don't say all the time, but they
they were there quite a bit over the years. So anyhow,
Bronzon will talk.
Speaker 4 (01:20:29):
All about it.
Speaker 2 (01:20:30):
You had one other comment you want to make for
We Park Company today, Jay.
Speaker 3 (01:20:33):
Yes, I don't know if I can talk about this,
but hey, I'm actually playing guitar at a bar this weekend.
I wonder if I can say something about it.
Speaker 2 (01:20:39):
Oh, I had, Yes, I knew you were. Go ahead
and tell the listening audience you've only see doctor J
Wheeled and acts, where are you going to be?
Speaker 3 (01:20:47):
I'm playing acoustic guitar and singing kind of old songs,
my kind of rock and pop. It took the ACX
Cinemas in Blue Ash Saturday night, the thirty first. I'm
six to eight pm at their backlot pizza. It's a
really nice venue if you haven't been to this movie theater,
and they have twenty seven beers on tap or something,
so you a nice pizza, nice beer, and unfortunately if
(01:21:08):
you come, you have to listen to me between six
and eight pm, So congratulates very most times.
Speaker 2 (01:21:13):
Obviously you have some measure of skills or they would
not allow you to perform there. So check it out.
It's probably covering some folk music for back in the
sixties or something like that. Yeah, you got me here
and some rock. Yes, that's me for you. I hope
it's a well attended event, Doctor J. I appreciate our
friendship and thanks for calling in and sharing that story.
I'm gonna have to pick your brain over that a
(01:21:34):
little bit more as when we get together then take
care of brother, give you a long story. Yeah, definitely.
We'll talk more at length about that with Peter Bronson
after the top of the air news don't go away from.
Speaker 13 (01:21:44):
A full rundown and the biggest ten lines just minutes
away at the top of the hour.
Speaker 2 (01:21:49):
I'm giving you a fact now the Americans should know
fifty five krs the talk station.
Speaker 6 (01:21:54):
This report is sponsored Advice.
Speaker 2 (01:22:10):
Seven six Syrip about KROCG Talk Station A very special
Tuesday the return and in studio which I dearly love.
I love talking to Peter Bronson. I think everybody in
the audience knows Peter Bronson, a long time with The
Inquirer and famous aunor author and publisher. Chilidogpress dot com
is where you find Peter. If you're interested in having
(01:22:31):
your book published, you might want to consult with Peter.
I know he has published quite a few books, and
he has written some absolutely amazing books. Props for his
writing style and how interesting the books are. The Man
to Save Cincinnati. We've had him on for that one.
Behind the Lines, the Untold Story of the Riots, the
Cincinnati Riots exactly a great chapter in the City of
(01:22:54):
Cincinnati's world. But in the book we're going to talk
about today a little bit o The Man You Save Cincinnati,
History of Queen City and the Queen City of the West.
That was fascinating, Peter. You revealed some really wild stuff
about how absolutely I guess, completely lawless the area was
(01:23:16):
before things got settled down, and I thought the most
this was weird thing. Interesting thing is it was a
lot safer over in Kentucky than it was Cincinnati.
Speaker 11 (01:23:24):
Couldn't hand you back in man.
Speaker 12 (01:23:26):
Hes a surprise. Hey, thank you for the kind introduction, Brian,
it's a pleasure to be with you.
Speaker 2 (01:23:30):
Well. And the one we're going to focus on today,
I don't know if I have to put him in
order of favorites. I think it is my favorite. Forbidden Fruit,
Sin Cities, Underworld and The Supper Club Inferno and you
Trace the whole Newport, Kentucky, Northern Kentucky area from its
its mob heyday, all the way through the burning down
of the the Beverly Hill supper Club, which anniversary forty
(01:23:54):
eighth anniversary tomorrow. And I know when you were coming
in you heard my friend doctor j called in. He
was the manager, a twenty year old kid, and he's
the one that got the folks out of that living
room right when, or the main dining room right when
the smoke started coming.
Speaker 12 (01:24:07):
There are so many stories like that, Brian. Now that
I've been out kind of on the tour of speaking,
I always talk about the Beverly Hills supper Club when
I do speaking events, And when I asked the people
in the crowd how many of you were there that
night or know somebody who was there, you'd be amazed
how many hands go up. This is something that's still
all these years later, forty eight years later. Yeah, Lingers
(01:24:32):
and people. It's like for people in Cincinnati. I always say,
that's kind of equivalent to how all of us felt
when JFK was killed. We know right where we were
and what was going on. Well for people in Cincinnati
when the supper club burned, they can tell you exactly
what they were doing, how they saw the lights in
the sky and all the fire engines going there from everywhere.
(01:24:53):
It was like the hugest calamity in Cincinnati that anybody knows.
Speaker 2 (01:24:57):
Bob, Yeah, I could not possibly disagree with you, because
you know, I remember where I was. It was a
home watching on television where he had the live reporting there.
Yeah uh and I mean yeah, yeah, he remember.
Speaker 12 (01:25:10):
Who he got to jump on it because he was
the only one who had the mobile unit the van.
They had just debuted their van that week.
Speaker 2 (01:25:19):
How about that?
Speaker 12 (01:25:20):
And he was the first mobile report van in the
whole Tri state area.
Speaker 2 (01:25:24):
It's amazing how far we've come that everybody with a
cell phone can literally anywhere you.
Speaker 12 (01:25:29):
Are, anybody everywhere.
Speaker 2 (01:25:31):
But fortunately, and the what I've learned over the years,
And you know, I remember being in law school and
uh Stan Chesley, who does not exactly have a stellar
reputation anymore considering everything that he's done over his life,
but he was the lead plaineiff lawyer in the lawsuit
against the aluminum wiring manufacturing companies. H And he gave
(01:25:53):
this presentation to the law class, and you know how
he had this smoke. This is the smoking gun letter
right here, and this is the and when it had
literally nothing at all to do with the wiring.
Speaker 12 (01:26:05):
Actually, yeah, I mean that's it's very obvious now from
the evidence that I was able to uncover.
Speaker 2 (01:26:11):
Well, the evidence that was covered up. Oh, it's been unbelievable.
Speaker 12 (01:26:14):
It was like a twenty thirty year cover up, and
it's all there now you can look at it. I mean,
things like in the FBI memo where people a guy
came in and told the FBI two weeks before the
fire that he heard guys on an airplane sitting near
him talking about torching the supper club. They mentioned the
family that owned it, the Shilling family, had people on
(01:26:36):
the inside. All these things, it's all in an FBI
memo that you can obtain if you know how to
get to the FBI vault and so forth. But then
there was also a letter that was in the mailbox
for the These are just scraps of evidence, but lots
of it. A letter that was in the mailbox at
the Shillings home when they got home that night after
the fire that said, you keep building, will keep burning.
(01:26:58):
Is it more obvious than that that it wasn't some
accident of aluminum wiring.
Speaker 2 (01:27:04):
And then the photographic evidence that was hidden away in
a box that wasn't turned over, that the fact that
the fire marshal didn't do an inspection, that they bulldozed
the building, That.
Speaker 12 (01:27:16):
Fire marshal was told to get the bleep out of
here by the governor because he wanted his Kentucky State
Police commander to investigate who was also corrupt? Who was
everybody was corrupt? Well, the mob. This is the bigger story.
When the mob moved in and this is true today
too in a lot of ways. But when the mob
(01:27:37):
moved into a community and they were everywhere, the corruption
was like a cancer and it went everywhere and it
went as high as long as you could be there.
The higher it went, the higher it went, through judges,
through politicians, through state reps, then to congressman, then to
the White House. I mean, we've seen all this in
our history.
Speaker 2 (01:27:55):
Well, and you if you watch any of the mob movies,
think of The Godfather, you think of all the old
mom movies that you know, we owned the police, and
I need the protection from the police. You got to
share the police. That was all I mean, that's all
based on fact. You think it's some kind of cliche
some all that's just the movies. No, no, this is
all real.
Speaker 12 (01:28:13):
And there's a funny line I read the other day
from uh it's attributed to in Mexico. But that's true
for this too. If you have a problem, a crime committed,
and you go to the police, now you have two problems,
exactly right.
Speaker 2 (01:28:29):
Well, let's let's start in you know, the May couple
of minutes. Let's get a little tip of the iceberg.
Because the supper Club fire was like the culmination of
what had been building for decades in terms of the
corruption of mob activity in northern Kentucky. How did the
mob and this was the I guess Northern Kentucky was
(01:28:52):
the hub in at least the Midwest for mob activity.
You know, people want to think about New York and Chicago,
Las Vegas, they.
Speaker 12 (01:28:59):
Called it Mexico, they called it sin city. But it
was big time.
Speaker 2 (01:29:04):
And how did it land here? How did it get established,
of all places Northern Kentucky.
Speaker 12 (01:29:09):
Well, it really started with George Remas, who was the
king of bootleggers. And if you want to back it
up even a little farther, it started with Prohibition. The
mob was really kind of an isolated phenomenon before Prohibition
that was confined to the New York New Jersey corridor
in Chicago and LA you know, the big cities where
they had huge Italian American communities. But after Prohibition, the
(01:29:33):
mob saw this opportunity, here's this vast public demand for
something the government has decided won't be legal, and they
started providing the bootleg booze. And it was George Remas
in Cincinnati who really cornered the market. So he was
not only the king of bootleggers locally, he was the
king of bootleggers nationally. And his distribution hub, he said,
(01:29:54):
he bribed so many people in Cincinnati it was unbelievable.
But it was a lot lot easier to bribe and
take over the government in Newport because it's smaller and
your people with the handout. So he put his distribution
center in northern Kentucky and from there he corrupted the
entire Newport Covington area. The whole thing was just I mean, police, judges,
(01:30:20):
council members, everybody, prosecutors, just.
Speaker 2 (01:30:25):
So the established mob networks that existed pre prohibition were
they was it mostly protection money and prostitution and maybe gambling.
I guess I don't know to what degree gambling was illegal,
But did they do like numbers rackets kind of thing
back then.
Speaker 12 (01:30:41):
Yeah, numbers, But I mean gambling was supposedly illegal, but
it was pretty flagrant.
Speaker 11 (01:30:47):
Everywhere really cares.
Speaker 12 (01:30:49):
Yeah, I mean Cincinnati had Elmwood Place was the bookie parlors,
and I mean there's all over the city we had
places that were doing that. And northern Kentucky, of course,
you couldn't even walk in. According to the Key Fauv
Report in the nineteen fifties, you could not walk into
a cafe anywhere in Newport without finding slots and bookie
(01:31:10):
chalkboards in the back room, taking bats on the horses
just right there, right there, in flagrant. They even had
horse races broadcast on the radio in these places. That's great,
so you wouldn't miss you know, you can just go
in and lose all your everything you made that morning
at work, and.
Speaker 2 (01:31:26):
I'm sure a lot of police officers came in and placebook.
I made book two.
Speaker 12 (01:31:30):
Oh yeah, absolutely.
Speaker 2 (01:31:31):
My grandfather, my dad's father, was a bookmaker. He ran
Pat's Saloon, which is right next to the courthouse really
owned it pat and the primary source of income for
my grandfather was bookmaking. I think the bar was just
basically a front for it. But that was here in
the city of Cincinnati.
Speaker 12 (01:31:46):
Well, the corruption was so endemic. For example, in Wilder, Kentucky,
the town marshall Big Jim Harris. He was also the
owner of the city's biggest brothel, and it was everybody knew.
Actuallyboddy knew it.
Speaker 2 (01:32:01):
Lots more fun stuff like this with Peter Bronson. This
hour will continue after these brief words, beginning with affordable
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This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
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Here is your channel nine, first one to wether forecast.
It will sound repetitive because it is so. We start
with rain likely best chance east of by seventy one
to day with a few storms possible sixty four. Overcast
tonight with a few showers possible, fifty seven clouds and
a slight chance of rain. Tomorrow high at seventy clouds
with a chance of showers over night fifty seven and
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(01:33:55):
high or rather a low I'm sorry, high in the
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right now. It's time for traffic update from the UCL
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Speaker 7 (01:34:07):
At you see Healthy, you'll find comprehensive care that's so
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traffic not all that bad, including getting pans an accident
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Chuck king ramon fifty five KR.
Speaker 11 (01:34:36):
See the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:34:39):
Seven twenty one if you've out CARCD talk station Bright
Time is with Peter Bronson in studio, author Extraordinary and
publisher again Chili Dog press dot com, where you find
Peter's publishing company talking about Forbidden Fruits in City's underworld.
In the supper club in front of which of course
refers to the Beverly Hills Supper Club anniversary tomorrow, forty
eight years since the Beverly Hill supper Club fire, which,
(01:35:00):
as Peter pointed out, everything in the Cretison same area knows.
It's like everyone knows about it and where they were
when it happened, if they were alive or have at
least heard stories about it. And as the years roll on,
the more and more we learn about it. Peter writes
all about it and Forbidden Fruit. Now going back to remus,
the guy that cornered the liquor the prohibition liquor distributions.
(01:35:23):
But I know in your book you point out beginning
in nineteen thirty six, this mob activity that I guess
existed already in the in the northern Kentucky Newport area,
I guess drew the attention of the Cleveland mob. Yes,
I guess so if you're just because you have control
over a territory doesn't mean you're going to keep it.
Speaker 11 (01:35:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (01:35:42):
Well, you know what happened is in Atlantic City in
the twenties, the Mob got together because they were having
too many problems with al Capone calling too much tension
with his violence and Valentine's Day Master Yeah yeah, And
so the all Mob leaders got together in Atlantic City
for a summit and the idea.
Speaker 2 (01:35:58):
Was the Five Families, Yeah, only this is more.
Speaker 12 (01:36:01):
Like fifteen twenty families. And the idea was, we're going
to divide the USA into territories or franchises. And that's
when the Cleveland Mob was given. The franchise included Michigan, Ohio,
and Kentucky.
Speaker 2 (01:36:15):
Okay.
Speaker 12 (01:36:16):
So then Mo Dallas, who's the big boss of the
Cleveland Four, the Silent Syndicate. They were the opposite of component.
They kept a very low profile, didn't want any publicity
or attention drawn to them.
Speaker 2 (01:36:28):
Very smart, right.
Speaker 12 (01:36:29):
And when he came down to see the Beverly Hills
Country Club, which is what it was called, that it
was still the showplace of the nation. And this was
the finest carpet joint anywhere. I mean it was the
carpet joint was the classy casino. Sure, or mob joint.
So this was the finest carpet joint anywhere, and he
dress up with the Yeah yeah, they were their best.
(01:36:51):
I mean men were actually were tails and bow ties
and everything, and the women were all dressed to the
nines and their gowns and jewels. So the carpet joints
also were more fair. They didn't cheat you quite the
way the bust out joins did. Okay, But when he
saw this place, it's so classy and so cool, he said,
(01:37:12):
I've got to have this, and he issued an ultimatum
to Pete Schmidt, who was a crony and gangster for
George Remas I see. So when George went to prison,
Pete kind of took over Newport and he's running this
fantastic place, and he tells him, we'll buy you out
or will burn you out. And Pete, being a tough
gangster who'd been in shootouts with the Feds and run
(01:37:33):
a lot of really oh yeah, Pete says basically nope
and turns his back on him, and sure enough they
burn him out. They set fire to the club in
nineteen thirty six in February, maybe it's January. They have
to check anyway, and early in the year, and a
little girl who was five years old was killed in
(01:37:54):
that fire. She was the sister of the caretaker, caretaker's
wife who was staying night with them, and the men
went in and set that on fire. Were finally caught,
except for Red Masterson.
Speaker 2 (01:38:06):
So Red Masterson, Yeah, that name, that name doesn't ring
a bell to me.
Speaker 12 (01:38:11):
I know.
Speaker 2 (01:38:11):
You mentioned all kinds of characters, and I never knew
that sleep Out Louis was a guy.
Speaker 11 (01:38:16):
I knew it was a club. On second.
Speaker 14 (01:38:21):
Yea.
Speaker 2 (01:38:21):
They have all these mob characters, which is just really fascinating.
All this connection with our with our local community.
Speaker 12 (01:38:29):
It's really hard to believe this stuff really happened here,
isn't it.
Speaker 13 (01:38:32):
It is?
Speaker 2 (01:38:33):
I mean it it's That's why I thought this book
was just so absolutely fascinating. It's one of those you
can't put it down. I mean, familiar at all with us,
with the with just the concept that northern Kentucky was
this hotbed for prostitution and extortion and gambling and uh
and bootlegging, and the line goes and it is a
real page turner. So make thank you listeners get a copy.
(01:38:55):
Joe added back to the website of fifty five cares
about copy. Will continue with more conversation about mob activity
in the Beverly Hill subber Club fire with Peter Brownson.
After I put a good word in for my friend
Susette Loasa Camp. She is with Cross Country Mortgage, and
the name Cross Country Mortgage really sums it up because
I don't care what state you're in, even Puerto Rico.
She can help you with all of your mortgage needs.
Want to buy a house, you call Susette Loadsa Camp.
(01:39:17):
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a mortgage already, you want to refinance it or maybe
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(01:39:38):
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(01:40:00):
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Suzette dot Lowscamp at CCM dot com.
Speaker 6 (01:40:09):
Fifty five KRC the talk station. Your story has power
and it can help Jean and I first.
Speaker 2 (01:40:16):
One one the four KASS got clouds and rain possible.
Overnight clouds and rain possible fifty seven. Today's high sixty four.
By the way, tomorrow we're going to see a high
seventy with clouds and a slight chancer rain overnight, same thing,
clouds and a slight chanceer raine. Fifty seven for the
low and a high and the low seventies on Thursday
with more clouds, amature, more chance rain sixty Right now,
let's get a traffic update from the.
Speaker 7 (01:40:38):
UCL Tramping Center. You see healthy, you'll find comprehensive care
the subpersonal. I'll make sure best tomorrow possible. That's boundless
care for better outcomes. Expect more at you see health
dot com problems found seventy five in the lock one split.
There is an accident before you get to the Reagan
Highway and that's starting to back up traffic rather quickly.
(01:41:00):
Jock King ramon fifty five KRS the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:41:06):
Seven thirty fifty five KRCD talk Station. Yes, I am
remissing my obligations to thank you. Peter Bronson. Has it
come off Memorial Day weekend and thanks to cribbage, Mike,
my submarine or friend proudly served his country underwater for
a long time. Wanted to thank you for your two
Legacy of Courage books that you collaborated on with Cheryl
Pop from Hoterfly tri State.
Speaker 12 (01:41:26):
Well, the honor was all mine to be with those
veterans and tell their stories. And I was thinking of
them and their stories a lot over the I bet
the Memorial Day weekend. It's just there were so many
amazing tales of what these men went through. And these
are people that a lot of us would know. Some
you don't, but some of them are pretty high profile
people in Cincinnati, and they just they did some heroic
(01:41:49):
things and then came back and that was all put away,
and nobody.
Speaker 2 (01:41:53):
Talked about it, I know, And that's the thing that
nobody talked about it. I understand that is just a
phenomenon among veterans, especially those who've seen calm, that it's
just not something you want to be reminded of, and
to speak of it brings back some bad memories. But man,
the heroism, it's so worthy of them, you know, letting
us know what they went through and the courage and
(01:42:13):
bravery it takes to serve in the American military. So
God bless you for putting that penda here.
Speaker 12 (01:42:19):
Thank you. Cheryl does a great job. He does, Cheryl
and Tom Popp with the Honor Flight, that's just.
Speaker 2 (01:42:24):
Fantastic, terrific organization. Pivoting back to Forbidden Fruit, and I
wanted to find out because I was wildly curious. You
mentioned the succession we go from Remus to the Cleveland
mob taking over and their designs for the Beverly Hill
Supper Club. You described it as one of the best
finest places show place of the nation kind of place.
Speaker 12 (01:42:46):
Yeah, it was still the country club up until they
closed it up in the nineteen sixties when Bobby Kennedy,
the attorney General came to Newport and fumigated it, and
all the big boys from Cleveland and the New York
and Chicago mobs fled to Las Vegas.
Speaker 2 (01:43:02):
So that's the turning point, that's the big spot.
Speaker 12 (01:43:05):
And then that the country was known as the Beverly
Hills Country Club. It was absolutely gorgeous place, fantastically expensive
chandeliers and all the furnishings were spectacular. It was boarded
up for about ten years, just empty.
Speaker 2 (01:43:20):
So that's how the Shillings ended up acquiring. Yeah, so
he always wondering about that transition because obviously since the
mob burned it down again later with the forty eighth
anniversary tomorrow of the Supper Club fire, there was demand
for it. Why was it boarded up for those ten years?
Is that because the mobs had just been eliminated and
no one had designs on it.
Speaker 12 (01:43:41):
Well, when Bobby Kennedy got involved with the Ratterman scandal,
he came and sent one of his top us attorneys
to come to Newport with the mission to clean it
up and declare war on the mob on behalf of
the Kennedys. So the Kennedys declared war on organized crime
in Newport, all right, and that led to that vendetta
(01:44:04):
that It's very interesting, but that's where a lot of.
Speaker 2 (01:44:07):
The conspiracy theories come about. With Kennedy's sad with the
mob being involved. Yeah, yeah, yeah, right, they're still getting
information out about that. We got another book to write, Peter,
and your book on Kennedy to the list of the
nine thousand books that have been written on Kennedy.
Speaker 12 (01:44:22):
Ads.
Speaker 2 (01:44:23):
All right, So the Shilling family, now I knew they
owned the Lookout House and that would burn down too.
Any suspicions around how that happened, Oh yeah, definitely.
Speaker 12 (01:44:35):
You know there were before leading up to the Beverly
Hills Supper Club fire in nineteen seventy seven, every year
in northern Kentucky there was a spectacular suspicious fire, and
in all of those cases the fire marshals suspected arson
and said they found evidence of accelerants and they just
couldn't look Out House was.
Speaker 11 (01:44:53):
One of them.
Speaker 12 (01:44:55):
There were a bunch of nightclubs, there were all these
famous restaurants people would remember, and every year this happens,
and they're all mob fires, right, And then all of
a sudden, in nineteen seventy seven, the supper club burns.
And the first thing the governor says when he shows
up on the scene is it's an accident. That's kind
of like saying nine to eleven. Oh, just an isolated incident, folks,
(01:45:17):
has nothing to do with terrorism.
Speaker 2 (01:45:20):
Nothing to see here, all right. So the vacuum that
was left when Kennedy came in and cleaned out the
Chicago mob, the other mob activity Northern Kentucky. Who filled
that void? What mob came in and then started engaging
in this you know, the arsons and I guess probably
illegal gambling, prostitution and drugs.
Speaker 11 (01:45:39):
Yeah, who was it?
Speaker 12 (01:45:40):
It was kind of a period of disorganized crime. But
the big boss at that time was Screw Andrews, who
grew up right here in Cincinnati.
Speaker 2 (01:45:48):
Screw Andrews.
Speaker 12 (01:45:49):
Yeah, his real name was Frank Andreola Well and he
was a really bad guy. He was a murderer, a brawler,
a thug. He ran the numbers rackets on the West
side of Cincinnati and all the black neighborhoods. There was
a huge numbers racket. He ran that out of Newport,
and he ran all the brothels in Northern Kentucky and
there were many and then the northern Kentucky scene gradually
(01:46:13):
devolved into Cincinnati's sin strip.
Speaker 2 (01:46:17):
Yeah, just as long as it was taking place over there.
The politicians in Cincinnati were like, Okay, I don't care
to keep it over there, going over there, yep. So
we had a more we had a less corrupt environment
on the north side of the river. And as long
as you were able to fulfill your your sinful needs
across the river, that would say, okay.
Speaker 12 (01:46:36):
Yeah, you had your adult playground across the river. So
cincinnati sinstrip really was Newport and all cities in the
seventies had a sin strip, right, I mean if we
grew up in that period, you knew it. That's where
the X rated theaters where, Yeah, the X rayed theater,
the dirty bookstores, the topless clubs, all of that stuff.
(01:46:58):
So at that time Newport had seven teen strip clubs
on Monmouth Street alone. He's Louise, Yeah, I mean it
was totally the sin strip. It was pretty ridiculous. But
so Screw Andrews took over and he's pretty much running.
And Bobby Kennedy when he came in, he did had
the I R s to a study and he determined
(01:47:19):
that the handle, meaning that's the word for the take
the profit of the mobs gambling in Newport, and they
were the national hub for layoff betting, which is sort
of the betting of that insurance for all about anyway.
But the handle was greater than the combined tax revenues
of Ohio and Kentucky.
Speaker 2 (01:47:39):
Oh god, yeah, oh, I told you folks. Fun facts
from Peter Bron's and author of Forbidden Fruits in Cities
Underworld of the Supper Club Inferno. More with Peter after
these brief words. Here for bud Herbert Motors. I love
those folks at Butt Herbert. And thank you Jim Key
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(01:47:59):
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Speaker 5 (01:49:16):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 11 (01:49:20):
We lost my herses at Kenoni.
Speaker 2 (01:49:23):
What a forecask clouds, yes, chance rain, yes, sixty four
for high today, same thing overnight clouds with a few
showers fifty seven will mostly cloudy, slight chance raine tomorrow
seventy for the high overnight fifty seven with more clouds
and slight chance of showers. Oh look, Lord Bowl Thursday,
same thing, more clouds, well, possibility for rain and high
in the lowest seventies sixty degrees right now, traffic.
Speaker 11 (01:49:44):
Up day time from the ucup Tramphing Center. You see health.
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You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal and make sure
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chucking rom on fifty five krs.
Speaker 11 (01:50:14):
The talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:50:18):
Fifty ft Kercite talk station A very happy two is
the extra special Peter Bronson and Studio talking about the
forty eighth anniversary of the Beverly Hill Supper Club fire.
That's tomorrow written about in Forbidden Fruit, which traces all
the mob activity in northern Kentucky from its earliest days
through the burning down of the Beverly Hill Supper Club,
which he and I both agree was done by the mob.
(01:50:39):
And okay, so we have it closed. After Kennedy shows up,
it's boarded up. Then at some point the Shilling family
acquires it. Yes, this is after the Lookout House fire.
Speaker 12 (01:50:53):
The Lookout House burns and under suspicious circumstances, I should add,
Shilling makes this move with his brother and they go
over and buy this, this kind of time capsule of
all this heyday. I mean when they went in there,
the craps tables were still there, the roulette wheels, which
are extremely valuable today, but all of everything was just
(01:51:16):
set up, like they just locked the dark poker chips
on the table. Everything.
Speaker 2 (01:51:20):
But they didn't have vandals back in nor they Kentucky
in the day.
Speaker 11 (01:51:23):
I guess not.
Speaker 12 (01:51:24):
I mean, or maybe people were just wise. They wouldn't
mess with that property. You might break into somebody's house,
but you would not mess with that property.
Speaker 2 (01:51:32):
Fair enough on that, and so any connection with the
Shilling family and the mob back behind me. I was
just wondering, Yeah, because usually when you think about this,
the place got burned down because let's say they refuse
to pay protection money or something. If they're not any
direct ownership by the mob and no competing mob, fashion
(01:51:53):
wants to go burn it down. Is that what you're
able to complete conclude? Because I know you have FBI documents,
you issued foier request, you have talked to people when
you were writing this that had knowledge about the interactions.
So any who worked there, what's the story about leading
up to that?
Speaker 12 (01:52:06):
Well, the interesting thing is that to set the context,
in nineteen seventy seven, there was a lot of national
push in Congress was considering legalized gambling much like we
have it today with legal casinos and state lotteries and
all the rest. And so Dick Shilling had big plans
for that hilltop. He even had bulldozers on the site
when the fire occurred, getting ready to expand, build a
(01:52:28):
hotel and going big, really big to legalize casino gambling.
It was a perfect spot for it, oh sure. In fact,
after the club years later, Dick Shilling becomes the godfather
of riverboat gambling in Mississippi. Oh yeah, he was always
aiming for that, and he did make a killing with it,
(01:52:48):
you could say, pardon the pun. But at this time
he's planning to expand his hugely popular and nationally known
supper club showplace nation And according to the employees that
I interviewed who were working there during that week, they
said that these two guys, uh kind of menacing types
(01:53:10):
showed up one day and met with Shilling and his
son and told them, basically, you fill out the check.
Here's the blank check. We want this property, and you
fill out the chick check or else wouldn't it be
ashamed if your if your nightclub here burned down? And
so they Chilling was a repetition of the prior it
(01:53:31):
is and just like Pe Schmidt, Shilling basically showed him
the door and no uncertain terms and uh, what do
you know? Lo and behold Uh, within a short period
of time, the place burns.
Speaker 2 (01:53:45):
Wow and such a just a tragic loss of life.
Makes you wonder And based upon you know the photographs
I've seen where the fire actually started, Yes, the Saber room. Yeah,
if if they intended it to catch fire when it
was fully packed, or maybe the explosive device went off
at the wrong time or something.
Speaker 12 (01:54:05):
Yeah, I think that's That's the theory that I think
is most plausible, is that even the mob didn't want
to kill all those people, I mean, one hundred and
sixty five people. Yeah, and of course brought national attention,
and then it really did. Between that and other reasons,
the whole push for casino gambling kind of never went anywhere.
Speaker 2 (01:54:26):
Fell by the way side, at least for a while.
Speaker 12 (01:54:28):
So really it was a contrary to their their own
interest to have this this so tragic.
Speaker 2 (01:54:33):
And yeah, and particularly we can conclude in the next
segment on the obvious ownership of the politicians and the
police and those that were charged with, you know, actually
doing an investigation or following through on this, because clearly
it never happened. Seven forty six fifty five cares De
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Com fifty five KRC.
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Speaker 11 (01:56:11):
Right now, traffic tight from the UC Tramfic Center. You
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You see health dot Com crews continue to work for
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Northbound seventy five.
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There's break lights from Buttermilk to Kyles and Mitchell to
Town Kingbram on fifty five KR.
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See the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:56:46):
It's seven forty nine, close to seven fifty fifty five
KER City Talk Station. Boy, this hour's just flown by.
It's always interesting conversation with Peter Brownson's here in studio.
Most notably we're talking about black in one of my
favorite books he's written, Forbidden Fruits, Cities Underworld, and The
Supper Club. Inferno brought this one back to the top
because it is the forty eighth anniversary of the Beverly
Hills Club, supper Club to fire tomorrow. Okay, we got
(01:57:09):
all the background. You trace this through in brief form.
It's all in the book, folks. You got to get
it the fire. So you got these shady characters, you know, No, No,
s Cipriano whoever, coming in and threatening the Shilling family.
Shilling says no, get out of my place. Yeah, and
then the place mysteriously burns out of the ground normally
(01:57:29):
And I alluded to this earlier, and you wrote about
it as well, and it's been written about in other books.
A fire marshal's going to come in and do a
thorough inspection. They're not going to knock a place down
the next day. That's Nonetheless, you have an organized attempt, which,
with hindsight, an organize attempt to just completely cover this
up and just bury it.
Speaker 12 (01:57:50):
Yeah. It was an amazing cover up. And it really
surprised me because I came to this with a blank slate,
and I really I was skeptical that anything like this
could be up because somewhere somebody's got to tell you
the truth. Yeah, but they did a very good job
at it. For example, I interviewed the assistant State Fire marshal,
who was there on the scene, went to the governor
(01:58:11):
and said, I want to declare this The fire marshal said,
this is a crime scene. We need to treat it
that way, and I want to start my investigation. And
he was told by the government to get the bleep
out of here. State police are taking over.
Speaker 2 (01:58:24):
And that fire marshal he's the one that took the
initial pictures that got covered up, right.
Speaker 11 (01:58:28):
I think so.
Speaker 12 (01:58:28):
And also the state police. State police took lots of
pictures and then we never saw them for decades. And
he puts the state police. Now, why would you put
the state police in charge of a fire investigation. That's
like saying I want the fire marshal to go after
this serial killer.
Speaker 2 (01:58:45):
Yeah, that doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 12 (01:58:46):
No, it makes no sense. But it was because the
commander of the state police was corrupt. And as I
went through the people that were in charge of the
investigations on a panel of about six people or seven,
I can't recall, but there were about six people on
this panel, all but one were involved in terrible scandals
(01:59:06):
shortly after that or later in their careers involving corruption. Oh, so, gosh,
what do.
Speaker 2 (01:59:12):
You do with them. It only caught up with them
later revealing their maybe mob connections or their organized crime
connections down the road on things unrelated to the supper
club fire. But like, oh, well that explains that.
Speaker 11 (01:59:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (01:59:26):
For example, you had a chief of staff for the
governor who was later arrested for threatening a federal judge
and threatening to kill him. I mean, you had all
of these guys that were very shaky, I mean just
really mobbed up or close to it, or you know.
One of the best ways to put it is that
(01:59:47):
they're very vulnerable to extortion by the mob. Okay, they
were involved in things that could have destroyed their careers,
and the mob only has to pick up a phone
and say.
Speaker 2 (01:59:56):
Like, we've got photographs of that night you were in
the hotel room in north in Kentucky with the prostitute.
Speaker 4 (02:00:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:00:02):
Yeah, Well that may explain the connection to the governor then,
because the governor is the one that ordered the place
knocked our bulldoze the following day.
Speaker 12 (02:00:09):
Correct, Well, we're not sure exactly who ordered that, but
we do know that the following day the Zebra Room,
which was where the fire began, right in the basement
below the Zebra Room there's huge evidence of fire down there.
Yes there is, and they denied that for about twenty
five thirty years too. But so in the Zebra room,
what we knew. Notice is that I have pictures in
(02:00:30):
the book of the Clamshell Cranes the very next day
destroying that place first. That is the first place the
Clamshell Cranes went to and destroyed. And they were not
just demolishing a burned building, they were covering up a
crime scene.
Speaker 2 (02:00:46):
That's still heartbreaking when you think about that level of
corruption that it existed, and that you know, and to
this day probably still it does exist.
Speaker 12 (02:00:53):
On some level, it becomes less implausible, does it not
as we read more about what was going on with
some of our our federal agencies.
Speaker 2 (02:01:01):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I mean you mentioned off air
the FBI. I mean they had the goods on literally
everybody under Jaedgar Hoover.
Speaker 12 (02:01:07):
Yeah, and Jaegar Hoover was about as corrupt as they come.
I was surprised with that, you know, when I'd got
into this what a whitewash he did for the Kennedy
administration or assassination. He literally covered up mob connections between
that were directly linked to Oswald by signing his initials
on a memo with comments this does not need to
be included. Well, you know, he was compromised. It's just
(02:01:34):
you know, when you're in spend like I did a
career in the newspaper business, you think you're pretty cynical.
But I was not cynical enough. I was surprised again
and again and how deep the corruption was.
Speaker 2 (02:01:45):
So you went in with a clean slate, with no
preconceived notions, only to discover all of this.
Speaker 12 (02:01:50):
Yeah, and it's kind of a story that I'd heard
around the newsroom when I got here in ninety two,
and so I was fascinated by it, and of course
I thought, well, let's find out what really happened. And
I was quite surprised. A lot of things that didn't
match the story I'd been told that were more interesting,
or things that I thought was kind of minimized, were
(02:02:12):
actually much worse than I expected.
Speaker 2 (02:02:14):
Yeah, and you paint such a brilliant picture of this
and all the information and details. Along with some of
the other books that have been written, I'm not going
to discount the work that others have done on this.
Speaker 12 (02:02:23):
Oh yeah, there are some great books out there.
Speaker 2 (02:02:25):
But the volume of evidence, you could get a grand
jury indictment in no time. If this you spun back
the clock and we were closer in time to the fire,
it would be easy to get a grand jury indictment.
And then I think easy to get a conviction because
this is guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. If you can
hang it around some person or some organization, this was
(02:02:45):
murder outright.
Speaker 12 (02:02:46):
Oh yeah. I think one of the fire investigators was
a man from John Jay University, which has a school
for that type of thing, fire investigation. One of the
professors there went back and investigated this as a cold case,
and he's put a lot of time into it, and
his quote was that this is the biggest unsolved mass
murder in US history.
Speaker 2 (02:03:07):
Peter Bronson, God bless you for bringing coming in and
talking to my listeners to me today. I always enjoy
having these conversations with You could talk for hours. Get
the book Forbidden Fruits since it he's Underworld and the
Supper Club Inferno. Joe Strecker's LinkedIn on my blog page,
but five Carsey dot com and why You're at It.
Get the rest of Peter's books. They are absolutely just
wonderful reads Chili Dogpress dot com. If you want to
(02:03:28):
go directly, Amazon's got them, but your link is up
on my blog page, Peter. And it's always just a
distinct pleasure.
Speaker 12 (02:03:34):
For me talking with Thank you, Brian. It's always a
pleasure to be here.
Speaker 2 (02:03:36):
I look forward to doing it again sometime real soon.
Don't go away, folks, Inside Scoop and bright Barton News
the return of Texas Border editor Bob Price got some
updates from the Border, plus the Daniel Davis deep dive
Russia's situation with Ukraine kind of going off the rails.
Daniel Davis on that at eight thirty, be right back us.
Speaker 11 (02:03:54):
Happens fast, stay up to date at the top of
the hour. Not gonna be complicated. It's going to go
very fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 12 (02:04:04):
What matters to you?
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Who concerns me the most?
Speaker 2 (02:04:07):
Matters to us?
Speaker 7 (02:04:08):
You're US economy, I'm not the fall one k fifty
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Mitato five a fifty five kr C the talk station.
It's Tuesday, State in the obvious, it is that time
a weekn get the inside scoop from bright bart News,
which I always start the segment out by reminding folks
book mark the website b R E I T B
A R T dot com. You be glad you did
great stuff there. And if you're reading about the border
and things related to illegal immigration, you're hearing it from
Texas Border editor Bob Price. Bob, welcome back to the
(02:04:39):
fifty five KRC Morning Show. Great to hear from you,
my friend.
Speaker 14 (02:04:42):
Hey, good morning, you'd be back in Cincinnati.
Speaker 2 (02:04:44):
I'm glad you're here, and uh, I just wanted to
comment on and get your reactions to. I mean, as
we all know, I mean, this isn't like revelation to anybody,
but Joe. Donald Trump gets sworn in and almost immediately
is able to solve the the problem that existed the
entire Biden administration, this unregulated, unchecked, absolute flow of humanity
(02:05:06):
across the southern and off in northern borders. And we
kept hearing over and over again from the Democrats, we
need to pass legislation, We need to pass legislation. Donald
Trump killed the legislation that would have solved the problem,
and Bob, you know it as good as anybody. The
legislation was being proposed would not have solved the problem,
and it actually would have provided a vehicle to get
a lot of these people legal status here. But the
(02:05:28):
night and day difference between the two is just absolutely amazing.
It's like he flipped a switch and stopped the problem.
And it makes me kind of wonder as we learn
more and more about Biden's cognitive decline and how far
back it went and his use of the autopen, or
rather the puppet master's use of the autopen, makes you
(02:05:49):
really kind of wonder if this doesn't solidify something nefarious
was going on and quite intentional on behalf of the
Democrats and those who were in charge.
Speaker 14 (02:05:59):
The fraudulent Biden administration left President Trump a lot of
major problems to deal with immigration, border security just being
one of those. And so he's quickly resolved most of
this border issue by for the most part, re implementing
the programs that he had in place that Joe Biden
did away with or his autopen did away with. And so,
(02:06:23):
you know, we see this going back and forth. But
when you look at the number of border apprehensions people
crossing the border illegally, at one point during the Biden
administration in twenty twenty three, we had ten to fifteen
thousand crossing the border illegally per day. That number is
now right around three hundred per day. That's just to
(02:06:44):
see the ninety six percent decrease in that is just
astounding by just having a president that's willing to enforce
the law.
Speaker 2 (02:06:54):
Yeah, enforce the law. It's not like he did something
by way of executive order and created something whole claw
that would end up in court litigating. And because there's
no law in the books. These are laws on the
books that he's enforcing.
Speaker 4 (02:07:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (02:07:06):
Unfortunately, we have judges that think that it's their job
to determine national security and border issues and foreign policy issues,
and so they're trying to stop him through these lawsuits
coming from Democrats. But you know, it really is the
president's job to secure the borders of our country. The
Constitution is very clear on that, and the president's moving
(02:07:28):
forward at breakneck speed.
Speaker 2 (02:07:30):
And you know, to me, and I think the vast
majority of Americans have you looked at polling to the
extent anybody believes in polls anymore, most people approve of
the work that Donald Trump's doing in securing the border.
If for no other reason, how many nefarious characters, rapists murderers, criminals,
gang members have been revealed have flown in or have
(02:07:50):
come into our country since Biden's open border policies began.
All of this is terrible for our country just from
a security standpoint and a child trafficking standpoint. I mean
think issues that I think most Americans, you know, there's
no political stripe to this. In other words, Bob, this
is something that all Americans, I think, uniformly say, wait
a second, No, we don't want criminals and child molesters
(02:08:13):
and and criminal activity going on in our country, and
this is one way to stop it.
Speaker 14 (02:08:20):
Well, this is a place where the Democrats are on
the wrong side of an eighty twenty, maybe even a
ninety ten issues. Yeah, you're right, they don't want these
criminal aliens roaming about the country. You know, there's some
pushback about some of the incidental people that are getting
picked up and put into the process, but they came
into the country illegally, and you know, when you're doing
(02:08:41):
a raid and you're picking up criminal aliens, there's going
to be other people around as.
Speaker 4 (02:08:45):
Well, and so they get picked up also.
Speaker 14 (02:08:48):
But the impact has been just been unbelievable in terms
of not only the national security issue. We had hundreds
and hundreds of people on the Tears watch list crossing
the border, many crossing the northern border, not from Mexico,
but crossing from Canada into the United States. And now
we're picking up a lot of those around the country
(02:09:11):
as well. But unfortunately, with the northern border five thousand
miles plus of wide open, non secured border, they can
pretty much cross it will and move about the country.
Speaker 4 (02:09:25):
We don't know who they are, where.
Speaker 2 (02:09:26):
They are, Yeah, and that's going to be a different
challenge to get a handle on if the if the
focus for the illegal immigrants crossing for whatever purpose is
moved away from the southern border, because clearly we've got
better security there, you know, it's going to be moved
over to Canada. And you know, one of the more
alarming aspects and components of this, BOB is the sheer
numbers of military aged Chinese citizens that have come into
(02:09:51):
the country. And you know, given the control of the
Chinese Communists Party has over travel and literally every aspect
of their people's lives, you know, is no act incident
that they ended up here.
Speaker 14 (02:10:02):
Well, and yeah, there's no way you sneak out out
of China and make your way to Mexico or into
Canada and then across the border in.
Speaker 4 (02:10:11):
The United States.
Speaker 14 (02:10:12):
We had thousands crossing per month in San Diego and
then the Del Rio sectors, and even in Miami we
were finding them being smuggled in in the Miami sector.
Speaker 4 (02:10:23):
So it was an.
Speaker 14 (02:10:24):
Asserted effort by the Chinese government to move all of
these young military age males into the United States.
Speaker 4 (02:10:31):
And it wasn't just Chinese in that military age bracket
as well.
Speaker 14 (02:10:35):
We reported continuously about Middle Eastern people from countries with
ties to terrorism, yes twenty five to thirty five years
eighteen to thirty five years old, who were being apprehended
acrossing the border.
Speaker 4 (02:10:47):
What about all of the gotaways?
Speaker 2 (02:10:50):
Indeed, and you know, I think one of the lasting
challenges this is going to be is if there were,
if there are cell organizations that are mixed in with
these with the flood of illegal immigrants that are just
sort of waiting for the command to launch some form
of attack.
Speaker 14 (02:11:07):
Well, if you remember nine to eleven, what eleven terrorists
who were visa overstays for the most part, what they
did to this country. It doesn't take much, you know,
it really doesn't take very many people. But we know
that there are tens of thousands, if not hundreds of
thousands of them here ruamming about in the United States,
and the president is doing everything they can, using a
(02:11:30):
whole of government approach to try to find them, identify them,
and put them into custody and get them removed from
the country.
Speaker 2 (02:11:38):
Well, and every little bit counts. I mean, one of
the things you just recently wrote about in Breitbart again
Breitbart dot com, two hundred and seventy five illegal aliens
arrested in a seven day period in San Antonio. It
sounds like a huge volume, and I'm glad that they
were able to find them and arrest them. But how
many millions of people are we talking about that fall
(02:11:58):
into the category ofenctually potential deportees. This is going to
be a long, long, challenging effort, is it not.
Speaker 14 (02:12:08):
It is, and people need to be patient with this.
You know, law enforcement is not pretty. If war is
not pretty. That while whenever you see television coverage in
war zones, the popularity or support for that war effort
goes down. And so you're seeing some of that in
the United States, where the liberal media picks up specific
(02:12:30):
cases and touts them as, Oh, the evil Trump administration
is doing this to people that shouldn't be deported and
blah blah blah blah blah. And so, you know, two
hundred and seventy five in San Antonio, we had five
hundred a week or so before in the Houston area.
You're seeing these in cities all across the country. It's
(02:12:51):
not just in Texas, It's not just in California. You know,
there are cities all over the country where these ice
I saysn't like to call him raids, they call them
targeted enforcement operations. But they're doing the job and they're
picking these criminals up. And of the two hundred and
seventy five that were arrested last week at San Antonio,
(02:13:12):
one hundred and seventy of the one hundred and seventy
eight of those had criminal records. So you know, these
are not your lawnmower people and dishwashers that have come
here to quote unquote make a better live for themselves.
These are ongoing criminal aliens who are engaged in criminal
activity in the United States.
Speaker 2 (02:13:30):
Well, and creepy and frightening it is. I know, you
can find a multitude of different stories along this line,
but again props for writing about it. We had right
here in the state of Ohio, a twenty four year
old Venezuelan who is enrolled as a high school as
a high school junior, actually was the father of a
He had a girlfriend out there. I guess ultimately turned
(02:13:52):
him in. He has a child with this one, but
he's twenty four years old living with a I guess
a foster family. That that's that's easy, Bob.
Speaker 4 (02:14:01):
Yeah, it's pretending to be sixteen.
Speaker 14 (02:14:03):
And when you look at the photograph of him, you know,
he does it to me appear to be under twenty one.
I don't know how he got away with this, but
you know, when you have some people with this liberal mentality,
there's a support group immigrant support group there in that
part of Ohio that is still saying that, oh no,
(02:14:24):
we just believe that he's a human trafficking victim.
Speaker 4 (02:14:26):
You know, well, let's look into who this guy is.
You know.
Speaker 14 (02:14:29):
One of the other horrible things that the Biden administration
did was they stopped the DNA testing of miners that
were crossing the border, and now we have hundreds of thousand,
three hundred thousand unaccompanied migrant children who were released into
the United States to god knows who, and even the
Biden administration didn't know who, and they were still wandering
(02:14:51):
about the country.
Speaker 4 (02:14:52):
But this this young man, you know, there's another message.
Don't take off your baby. Mama.
Speaker 14 (02:14:57):
She's the one that called in and reported that he's
actually a twenty four year old man. And you know,
they finally arrested him and took him into custody. It's
not clear when he entered the United States illegally or
oh no, he had an expired visa. He was here
illegally since twenty twenty three was when his visa expired,
(02:15:19):
but that visa he obtained as part of this fraud
on the United States government.
Speaker 2 (02:15:25):
Well, and I guess when the visa expired, that's when
he turned himself into a sixteen year old high school
student and got a foster family to look after him.
I is that is that sort of the order of things?
Speaker 8 (02:15:34):
It is?
Speaker 14 (02:15:35):
And you know, you've got these these other children who
are living in this house, a couple of adopted children
and some other foster children, and then you've got this
twenty four year old man who just you know, he's
playing soccer and other sports activities in the school. You know,
(02:15:55):
probably dating like a sixteen year.
Speaker 4 (02:15:57):
Old boy would date.
Speaker 14 (02:16:00):
You know, that's that's very scary situation. And it's three
hours from your backyard.
Speaker 2 (02:16:07):
Well, and you mentioned accountability in terms of where the
illegals were placed, and you had to have a family
member or a host family that was willing to accept you,
and there was supposed to be some measure of accountability
on that. Apparently zero. The Biden administration didn't care ultimately
where these people went, which is a real problem considering
a lot of miners are out there being traffic and
(02:16:28):
sexually exploited.
Speaker 14 (02:16:30):
And put into forced labor all across the country as well.
And so you know, the Biden administration created such a
massive crisis that they didn't have time to do any
betting on these people that were quote unquote claiming to
be sponsors or claiming to be family members, even distant
family members. They didn't you know, the Trump administration put
(02:16:51):
DNA testing in place to make verify these claims. The
Biden administration did away with that completely, and because they
didn't want to know, they didn't want to be burdened
by the extra step of doing the right thing for
children that they invited into this country and then put
into the dangerous hands of people who had exploited them
(02:17:12):
sexually and exploit their labor. And you know, it's just
unbelievable the thing this administration would fall to.
Speaker 2 (02:17:24):
And all this was not I mean, and I get
props to Breitbart because you were one of the first
media outlets that was reporting about this unchecked flow of
humanity across the border when the mainstream media was in
a constant state of collective denial. They didn't even bother
reporting on it. They didn't show any video of this
actually happening when you were standing right in there watching
it happen. And they of course didn't bother looking into
this reality that, yeah, there's a lot of children coming
(02:17:47):
in who are sent out into the world, and nobody
in the Bide administration is paying attention or caring about them.
All varying newsworthy stuff, But then again, so is Biden's
cognitive decline, which is the flavor of the month right now,
because at least they got caught red handed covering it
up and now have to admit it.
Speaker 4 (02:18:04):
Yeah, and and who's going to be held accountable for that.
Speaker 14 (02:18:07):
You know, hopefully the Congress is going to call Kamala
Harrison and some of the other senior cabinet members of
this administration and senior advisors to the president and and.
Speaker 4 (02:18:17):
Get to the bottom of this and let the American.
Speaker 15 (02:18:20):
Public know just how bad because even as much as
we talk about it, you know, you guys do a
valuable service there in Cincinnati providing truth and honesty as
to what is happening around the country.
Speaker 4 (02:18:32):
But most people don't see that. They watch CBS and.
Speaker 14 (02:18:36):
NBC and you know, ws W, X, y Z and
all of that kind of stuff, and they they don't
get the picture of what's really happening. You know, I've
been met with Breitbart for eleven years now and writing
about the border the whole time, and it's it's ebbed
and flowed throughout that period. And during the Obama administration
(02:18:57):
we had some crises, and during even during the first
Trump administration, we had some time where it got up
to you know, one hundred and twenty one hundred and
thirty thousand per month crossing the border, and it was outrageous.
But you know, you see these liberal members of Congress
who refused to do anything about this during the Biden administration.
(02:19:18):
Now they want to exercise congressional oversight of these ice
facilities where eighty percent of the people being held there
are criminal aliens. Where were they when Joe Biden was
packing thirty five hundred people into a shelter that was
only designed to hold one thousand. You know, where was
their congressional oversight?
Speaker 4 (02:19:38):
Then Trump?
Speaker 2 (02:19:39):
Trump was putting them in cages, Oh my god, as cages.
But then again, these processing centers were far worse than
anything it had curt under Trump administration. You know, Bob
even wrote about that the progress is demonstrated because the
San Diego migrant processing center had closed because the rest
fell so low that they don't need the processing center
over anymore. Demonstrable improvement in the situation. Bob Price, he
(02:20:01):
is the Texas Border editor. Breitbart dot COM's where you
read about what Bob's writing about and all the other
great reporting in Breitbart. Thank you for spending time on
my listeners with me today, Bob. It's great having you on.
I'll look forward to having you back on again soon,
hopefully with more encouraging news. We'll keep it up, Thank you, sir.
It's a twenty one right now. If you have KCD
talk station, don't go away. We got the Daniel Davis
(02:20:21):
deep dive coming up. Russia and Ukraine falling apart, it seems.
Don't go away.
Speaker 6 (02:20:26):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (02:20:29):
Here is your channel nine first one to one forecasts.
It's gonna be rainy. Best chance of rain today east
of I seventy one if you storms possible, sixty four
for the high, overcast with some showers possible Tonight fifty
seven clouds with a slight chance of rain. Tomorrow seventy
for the high. Overnight low of fifty seven with more
clouds and more chances showers, and Thursday a lot of
(02:20:50):
the same, mostly cloud are, mostly cloudy skies with the
chance of rain low seventies to high.
Speaker 11 (02:20:55):
Then it's fifty nine. Now it's time for traffic from
the Ucuptram thinks you see healthy.
Speaker 7 (02:21:00):
You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal, makes your best
tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect more
atu sehelp dot com. The lake times continue to drop
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ten minutes out of Evendale down to the lateral North
(02:21:21):
Found seventy five has cleared North Found seventy one a
bit slow at Red Bank Ingram on fifty five KR
see the talk station.
Speaker 2 (02:21:31):
Hey twenty nine here fifty five KRCD talk station. Good
time to be tuned in because every week at this time.
Good to hear from Daniel Davis to win the Daniel
Davis Steve Dive. You can find his podcast out there
in the world where your podcast, Daniel Davis. Good to
see you, my friend. At least I can see you
my listeners camp, but they can hear you. Welcome back, Welcome,
thanks for having me back.
Speaker 4 (02:21:50):
Man.
Speaker 16 (02:21:50):
I almost had to do therapy for mission you last week,
so eager to get back going today.
Speaker 2 (02:21:55):
Yeah, I was. Every once in a while I got
to take a day off, and I certainly miss our conversations.
And I presume you at least Gauge engaged in some
reflection on those who paid the ultimate sacrifice and service
for their country yesterday, Memorial Day. Yeah, I indeed I do.
Speaker 16 (02:22:11):
I do that all the time, and obviously that's what
we're supposed to do on that day. So always, you know,
harken back to that and respect the sacrifices that have
been paid by so many, especially by the family members
who still survive, and just always want to reinforce the
message on that day that let's make sure we don't
ever make unnecessary sacrifices to our country by asking them
(02:22:34):
to die for causes that have nothing to do with
our national security.
Speaker 2 (02:22:37):
Yeah, or causes that are just seemingly crazy. And then
speaking of crazy, Donald Trump has suggested Bladimir Putin, in
his words, has gone absolutely crazy. Is that crazy like
a Fox? Or is he unhinged? Daniel Davis? Because some
of me thinks it's based upon our prior conversations and
my observations and reporting in the news, it's more crazy
(02:22:58):
like a Fox.
Speaker 11 (02:23:00):
Well listen.
Speaker 16 (02:23:01):
I mean, I was a bit perplexed because in that
both the truth socialist Trump posted as well as his
comments that he made there before he got back on
Air Force One, he talked about how he was really surprised, etc.
Speaker 11 (02:23:15):
That Russia was doing that.
Speaker 16 (02:23:16):
And I don't understand why he would be surprised, why
anyone would be surprised, because Russia is doing exactly what
they've said they were going to do. They said they
will not have a thirty day unconditional ceasefire. They will
keep fighting and keep talking at the same time. They
want a negotiated settlement on their terms or they'll simply
keep fighting for it and listen. Also, this drone attack
(02:23:37):
in t Kiev that Trump was so animated about, is
the fact that there has been back and forth. For
going back to the several days, like five or six
days in a row, Ukraine launched hundreds, like seven or
eight hundred drones into Russia, tried to attack into Moscow.
Moscow retaliated every day. So it's a back and forth deal.
It's a war, and both sides to continue. So I'm
(02:24:00):
not sure why anyone would be surprised by these sequence
of events.
Speaker 2 (02:24:04):
Well, and you know something you and I talked about before,
uh and is the expense of launching missiles to knock
down drones or other missiles from the sky. And as
I read now, the drone attacks feature in array of
decoy projectiles that I'm meant to intimidate drone strikes, but
(02:24:24):
don't carry explosives. So Ukraine starts shooting at objects which
don't have any destructive power. But there's no way for
the Ukrainians to know whether or not they have they're
armed or not. But obviously that frees up an opportunity
for other drones to fill in the holes and attack
the targets. I don't this is modern warfare, and I
don't know how it's going to evolve down the road,
(02:24:46):
but this it seems to make perfect sense to me
that you would use, you know, a bunch of fake
ones in there in the mix with the with the
real ones increasing the likelihood you're gonna actually hit your target, right.
Speaker 16 (02:24:56):
And that's that's the problem that you really illuminated there
that from the Ukraine side they have no idea which
is which because a lot of them are what's called
repurposed S three hundred and anti aircraft missiles and they
look just like incoming missiles on the radar screen you
can't tell the difference part. But they're just basically rocket
motors that are flying in the air and you have
to or even the slow drones, there's a medium speed drones,
(02:25:19):
et cetera. All these things require you either have to
shoot them down or they're going to strike their target.
And what we're seeing, by the way I told you,
there's this big, huge like multi hundred drone striking both directions.
Nearly all of the ones from the Ukraine side to
Russia were shot down. Hardly any made it through handful
of a few. But on the Russian side when they're
(02:25:40):
firing into Ukraine, a substantial portion of both the missiles
and the drones are hitting their target, and especially not
before last in Odessa, there was just catastrophic damage in there.
And of course you've seen the videos i'm sure from Kiev, etc.
You don't see a commensurate vision on that on the
Russian side because they have the air air defense missiles
(02:26:01):
and the Ukraine side has insufficient air defense missiles and
this point it is a mass problem for the Ukraine.
Speaker 2 (02:26:07):
Side, right, which continues a theme that you and I've
been discussing now for what seems like months, which well,
I guess it has been the lack of arms that
the Ukraine has, and I guess the inability of NATO
to keep up with the with the demand, and the
United States, of course I believe pairing back it's provision
(02:26:28):
of weapons the Ukraine, and I see German Chancellor Mrce
now is telling the Ukrainians that there's no longer going
to be any limit on the range of the weapons.
That so it seems like that this is like another
step toward World War three if NATO countries are providing
long range missiles for Ukraine to fire deeper and deeper
into Russia, and I know, I guess the military strategy
(02:26:49):
as well. If they're building a bunch of these drones
at a factory that's two hundred, three hundred and five
hundred miles inside Russia, then of course that facility is
fair game since it's funding the Russian troops or providing
weapons for the Russian troops. But this is going to
more directly implicate NATO and to the extent they start,
you know, intruding into Russian real estate, that increases the
(02:27:10):
likelihood of some kind of armed conflict, doesn't it.
Speaker 16 (02:27:13):
Well I'm glad you brought that up because the comment
by Chancellor Mets, the new Russian Russian, the new German
Chancellor made a point of saying on German television yesterday
that uk France, now Germany, and he said the United
States have all lifted all restrictions on all these weapons
and now they can fire deep. Well here's the Well,
(02:27:34):
there's many problems with it. They don't have that many
missiles that we're talking about. Russia can launch literally hundreds
per month, every single month, because they have the industrial
capacity of long range missiles. Most are a good portion
of them get through. But on the US and NATO side,
we had probably a couple hundred total. I think there's
(02:27:54):
two hundred Taurist missiles from Germany that could be put
into the mix. We've already said that our our attack
ofs long range missiles, we were near the end of that,
at the end of the Biden administration. We don't have
a lot to put in there. So why in God's
name would you want to like escalate the situation by
striking something deep inside Russia with one of your missiles
when you know that Russia can fire ten back for
(02:28:16):
everyone you can shoot and risk exploding the war. Yesterday
Russia said to Merits, if German missiles fire deep into
Russia and strike a target, we will consider that as
a direct participation of Germany in the conflict and will
react accordingly. They left it vague what it is, but
it's very clear they could either strike Germany itself, German assets.
(02:28:40):
There's no telling what they could do. But if we
think that Russia is going to allow that to happen
and do nothing, I don't think we've been paying attention.
Speaker 2 (02:28:48):
Yeah, and the other component of this is a lot
of the hardware that we provided to Ukraine, and we've
had our own people there helping them to operate it
because they don't have the security clearances necessar to make
the longer range missiles work. And I presume that's got
to be the case with Germany's weapons systems, which means
there are boots on the ground in Ukraine from foreign lands,
(02:29:10):
most notably NATO countries, that are helping out in the
waging of this war. I mean, you know, I don't
know what the rules of engagement are all about, but
that sounds to me like we're already engaged in direct conflict.
Just we don't have the uniformed troops on the front
line shooting with small weapons.
Speaker 16 (02:29:28):
Yeah, we just don't have them on the front line.
But also, by the way, both the storm Shadow and
the Taurist missiles require us help also for targeting and
other telemetry data, et cetera. Not just the German boots
on the Kiev ground so to speak. You know, where
they're being launched from, so our fingerprints. Even the United
States is on the all these missiles at fire long range.
Speaker 2 (02:29:51):
And so going back to the fort about Ukraine hitting
further and further or deeper into Soviet into Solvie. Here
I go again, channeling backwards into Russian tech territory. Say
they are going after the drone factory militarily. I guess
that makes sense from Ukraine perspective. But if a NATO country,
say Germany, is providing the war waging equipment to Ukraine,
(02:30:14):
then it seems to be fair play for Russia to
go ahead and bomb the factories that are making that
particular type of equipment.
Speaker 16 (02:30:21):
Yeah, we don't want to ever put them in the
position to make that rational calculation, because here's the thing,
there is too little thought on what is the intent
of using a given military a piece of hardware or
a tactic.
Speaker 2 (02:30:36):
Yes, you can say from a certain.
Speaker 16 (02:30:37):
Perspective, totally legitimately that anything in Russia is fair game,
because everything in Ukraine is fair game.
Speaker 2 (02:30:44):
That's one issue.
Speaker 16 (02:30:45):
But then you have to say, what is the probability
of helping the Ukraine side and changing the balance of war,
and what is the risk of retaliation against US and
drawing US directly into the war. That's where the calculations.
Speaker 11 (02:30:59):
Aren't being made.
Speaker 16 (02:31:00):
They're just doing the easy one and they're not doing
the harder one, which could, as you very clearly point out,
cause escalation. They could actually drag US in. And the
last thing anybody in the West should want is the
possibility of having this thing escalate what it should be,
and it's death throws the whole war.
Speaker 2 (02:31:16):
Indeed, every day that goes by, Russian makes more and
more progress insofar as it's moving movement into Ukraine, so
less and less more and more land is taken by Russia.
And that's where I started out with crazy like a Fox,
because the longer Putin drags this out and refuses to
sit down at the table, the more likely it is
he's gonna end up taking over the whole country if
(02:31:37):
he wants to. But in terms of a peace process,
any negotiation, it's still Russia's position that they will not
sit down unless Ukraine agrees to disarm and disavow its
desire to join NATO.
Speaker 11 (02:31:50):
Correct, that is correct, Yes, yes.
Speaker 16 (02:31:53):
Sergey Lavrov reiterated that about four days ago in a
little known clip from the West, where he just categorically said, yeah,
not even going to consider anything short of demilitarization and denotification,
and of course the no NATO part two.
Speaker 2 (02:32:06):
So yes, So we're not making any forward progress here.
Speaker 11 (02:32:10):
It's there.
Speaker 16 (02:32:11):
No, The two sides continue to go in opposite directions,
with the Chancellor match with this, with Zelenski continuing to
talk really antagonistic toward anything Russia continuing to say I
want more stuff. You have more people on this now
with Trump making these comments, more people in the US saying,
you know what, more sanctions and let's do more weapons.
(02:32:32):
Jack Keane was on Fox News this morning making that
impassioned plea, all of which go the opposite direction of
bringing this to a conclusion and increase the chance that
Ukraine will ultimately be militarily defeated.
Speaker 2 (02:32:44):
Okay, real quick for we part company on sanctions is
do you think that sanctions could be a potential inroad
to getting the Russia to sit down and maybe take
a little less stronger stance at the outset? I mean,
do we have anything left in our sanctioned arsenal to
give too harm to Russia?
Speaker 16 (02:33:00):
You know, I'm not a skilled mathematician, but whatever the
number less than zero is that's the chances for the
sanctions having any impact. If you've had zero for seventeen
rounds of sanctions when the US was fully on board
and you know, had the quote crippling sanctions and Russia
weathered all that and now their economy is growing at
(02:33:20):
a faster pace than ours is, then that tells you
all you need to know that Russia has made themselves
sanction proof. And it is more insulting than it is
effective to think that you're going to have another sanctions
round that's going to do what almost four years of
efforts before have failed to do.
Speaker 2 (02:33:38):
It's irrational. Didn't pull any punches on that response, Daniel Davis. Now, finally,
one final question in terms of the available troops to
fight the war on behalf of Ukraine, they got to
be running out soon or their numbers have to be
perilously small. They've lost so many people on the front lines.
Is do they have a well to go back to anymore?
Speaker 4 (02:33:58):
No.
Speaker 16 (02:33:59):
In fact, there's been there's been a couple of research
reports issued in just the last handful of days in
the West and some of Ukraine as well, that have
calculated that Russia and I think it was just the
last month. Recruited fifty thousand troops in a single month,
fifty thousand, and the casualty rate is way less than that.
(02:34:21):
So by maybe ten to fifteen thousand, they're adding more
troops than they are losing. But Ukraine, even with forced
mobilization where they literally take people off the streets and
that's now a routine thing in Ukraine, they're not even
able to offset losses. So the Ukraine side is shrinking
every day. The quality of what they can put it
up to a quarter and in some reports say that
(02:34:42):
they actually flee the battlefield when they get there. And
then you have the Russian side getting bigger, stronger, economically,
industrial capacity, everything is growing. So any way you want
to look at this, it's bad news for the Ukraine
and the Western side.
Speaker 2 (02:34:57):
Daniel Davis deep Dye. I find them online, get his
podcat cast. Tune in every every Tuesday at eight thirty
fifty five KRC Morning Show. I'm not sure what we
call that news, Dan, It depends on which side of
this love the ledge you're on. But wow, truth it's true.
Speaker 14 (02:35:11):
There you have it.
Speaker 2 (02:35:12):
I love getting truth and we all get it from
you until next Tuesday, My friend, have a great week.
Speaker 11 (02:35:17):
See you next time. Eight forty three fifty five kr
SE Detalk station.
Speaker 2 (02:35:21):
Be right back.
Speaker 5 (02:35:22):
This is fifty five KARC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 2 (02:35:27):
One more time with the channelnine first one forecast rather repetitive.
It is rain is likely today, best chance of rain
east of by seventy one. Few storms are possible. Today's
I sixty four fifty seven overnight with clouds and a
few showers. Tomorrow clouds and a slight chance of rain
seventy for the high body Skies overnight slight chance of
rain fifty seven and yes on Thursday pretty much the
(02:35:50):
same with more clouds and more opportunity for some rain.
Low seventies for the high Thursday, closing out at sixty
degrees time for final traffic, Chuck.
Speaker 11 (02:35:57):
England from the UCUP Traffic Center. You see healthy.
Speaker 7 (02:36:01):
You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal, makes your best
tomorrow possible.
Speaker 11 (02:36:04):
That's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect more.
Speaker 7 (02:36:07):
You see help dot Com southbound seventy time continues to
run an extra five inn and adam Ackland eastbound two
seventy five. You're off and on the breaks between Mostellar
and Reed Hartman northbound seventy one heavy guest out of
Kenwood towards the Reagan Highway southbound. That's a slow go
approaching Red Pink Chuck King Braman fifty five KR.
Speaker 11 (02:36:26):
See the talk station A forty nine if you've.
Speaker 2 (02:36:31):
Got KRCD talk station and Happy Tuesday. It is time
to ask the expert. The expert and someone who convinced
me that it was a way to go. Rhinos Shield.
Welcome back, Todd Harville. Good to talk to you today
about the rhino shield product.
Speaker 13 (02:36:47):
Thank you, bra, thanks for having us on today.
Speaker 2 (02:36:50):
Happy too. And I talked to David the owner. He
came out and met me at my daughter's place. They've
got a farm. If I called a farm at it's
five minutacres. But they've got a big barn. That barn
really needs a paint job bad. And so I got
a quote and I'm gonna have a rhino shield for him,
because you know what, it's the stuff lasts. I mean,
it's like one and done with this product. Tell my
(02:37:10):
listeners about rhino shield.
Speaker 4 (02:37:14):
Right.
Speaker 13 (02:37:14):
Rhino shield is a ceramic coating that eliminates the frequency
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Speaker 2 (02:37:35):
Yeah, like on the bar of my daughter's place.
Speaker 11 (02:37:37):
It's yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2 (02:37:40):
Well, the key to Rhino Shield not just the ceramic coating.
You guys really really do some major league prep work
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Speaker 13 (02:37:49):
Absolutely, the prep work and the primer is the total
success of our twenty five year system. And there's the
first thing we do is we get out there, we
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Speaker 4 (02:38:05):
That we have all the loose pain off.
Speaker 13 (02:38:08):
And then we're really you know, you know, dialing in
on is to ensure that there's no you know, rotten
wood or anything that's damaged. And you really find that
out when you're well, you're putting a handscraper onto.
Speaker 2 (02:38:24):
It, right, so you're not just slapping up the ceramic
coating over something that's gonna flake off. That's how you
can give that twenty five year guarantee. I mean you
can hang your hat on that. Imagine not having to
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environmentally safe too, isn't it.
Speaker 13 (02:38:41):
Absolutely, We're a green product. Our our product is made
in destined, Florida, and we're members of the Florida Green
Builders Coalition. And it's just very very low e and
low VOCs that it's just a bitsh of smells that
any kind of coatings or driveway ceilings amidst into the atmosphere.
Speaker 4 (02:39:06):
And where again we're.
Speaker 13 (02:39:07):
A green product.
Speaker 4 (02:39:08):
Well.
Speaker 11 (02:39:09):
Also energy efficiency.
Speaker 2 (02:39:11):
Explain to our listeners how rhino shield will improves your
energy efficiency absolutely.
Speaker 13 (02:39:18):
You know, regular paints on home, you know, a trictional
home will have one hundred and thirty the one hundred
and fifty degrees you know, temperature rating that's on the
wall with ceramics. In our rhino shield, our surfaces never
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(02:39:38):
summer time of your you know, are your EIGHTC bills?
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Speaker 2 (02:39:50):
Is it does? Can you apply this to any surface?
I was thinking because on the back of my house,
on the upper rear side of my house, I have
hardy board. I suppose it's painted. I don't know, But
are anything and are there any limitations on the type
of service you can apply the Rhino Shield product.
Speaker 13 (02:40:09):
We do an enormous amount of hardyboard and cedar homes
as well.
Speaker 2 (02:40:14):
Okay, you broke up at the outset, So hardyboard check,
cedar homes check and what what did you start out with?
Because the phone call dropped out there for a second
or two.
Speaker 4 (02:40:22):
Yeah, the hardyboard.
Speaker 13 (02:40:24):
We we do the hardyboard as well. We do the
mind's share of.
Speaker 4 (02:40:29):
The stuff that we do. Nowadays, a lot of folks
have hardy on their homes.
Speaker 2 (02:40:34):
Okay, good to know that. And so obviously it's an
investment because it's going to save the homeowners they need
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terms of colors that are available, how many options do
my listeners have when it comes to Rhino Shield. I
know this number, Go ahead, Brian.
Speaker 13 (02:40:53):
Brian, there's there's fifteen hundred colors. Sometimes it just feels
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just making sure that they're getting in the right color
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(02:41:14):
want to make any mistakes when it comes to a color.
Speaker 2 (02:41:16):
Oh so you're not just staring at a fifteen hundred
pages or fifteen hundred different colors on a piece of paper.
You'll if you whittle it down and maybe pick a couple,
you'll put it up on the building itself to let
the homeowner know absolutely. Oh that's great. Well you're not
going to regret the decision. Then it doesn't look the
way I thought it was going to look when it
was up there. Anyway, that's great. So superior expert installation. Obviously,
(02:41:40):
the key behind Rhino Shield the ceramic product which lasts
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reach Rhino Shield Todd to get a quote?
Speaker 13 (02:41:58):
We can call Lindsey today at eight eight eight Rhino
forty one eight.
Speaker 2 (02:42:04):
Eight eight Rhino forty one, And do I understand correctly?
Your website is rhinoshield ky dot com.
Speaker 4 (02:42:11):
That's correct.
Speaker 13 (02:42:12):
Or you know you can do rhinoshield Cincinnati dot com
as well.
Speaker 4 (02:42:16):
Okay, to the same.
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Place, great rhinoshield Cincinnati dot com. Or just if you
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it'll take you right to the links. And I found
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I'll strongly encourage my listeners to consider your product, considering
all the benefits versus plain old paint. Todd Harville, great
having you on the show today. You have a great day.
Speaker 11 (02:42:38):
Thanks Brian, my pleasure.
Speaker 2 (02:42:39):
Eight fifty five folks, you didn't get a chance. Peter
Bronson what an incomparably amazing guy. He wrote a book
about the Beverly Hild supper club called Forbidden Fruit, Sin Cities, Underworld,
and the Supper Club Inferno. The sort of the book
ends with the supper club being burned down. That would
be forty eight years tomorrow, that's the anniversary. But the
mob connections and and Sin City, which was literally all
(02:43:02):
of northern Kentucky there for a long time inergally connected
with a supper club fire. Got the inside scoop bright
Bart News Border editor Bob Price plus of course the
Daniel Davis Deep Dive today tomorrow Jack Atherton, The Big
Picture with Jack add and of course Judge Ennena, Paula
Tan among other guests. Thank you Joe Strecker for all
you do and executive producer of the fifty five KRC
(02:43:25):
Morning Show. Folks, have a wonderful day and stick around
because Glennbeck's coming right up.
Speaker 6 (02:43:29):
News happens fast, stay up to date at the top
of the hour.
Speaker 12 (02:43:33):
You're moving very quickly.
Speaker 11 (02:43:35):
Fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 6 (02:43:38):
This report is sponsored by twenty twenty five FIFA Club
World Cup.
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The twenty twenty five FIFA Club World Cup is coming
to Cincinnati,