Episode Transcript
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(00:08):
Five o five at fifty five rC, the talk station Every Wednesday,
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dude does a bibe. Brian Thomasdoes not frustrated this morning. Can't see
Joe Trecker. My teams isn't working. It's not an issue for you,
It's an issue for me. Settingme off on the wrong foot this morning.
I hate that. Anyway, Igot a good show lined up by
UH. Brianna Morello, who hostof the Brianna Morello Show. She's going
to be joining the program this morning, coming up at seven oh five.
UH. Diving into the topic aboutwhy they are the US Marshals covering up
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a local story here about an internat the Butler County Jail smuggling drugs and
having sexual relations with an inmate.Apparently, students had internships at local jail,
paving the way for a possible careeras corrections officers. Future of the
program, as reported by the Inquiry, now uncertain after one student has been
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charged with smuggling drugs into the jailand admitted to having a sexual relationship with
an inmate. One of the inmatesshe's reportedly involved with is a convicted murderer.
A teenager was a roled in ButlerTech Criminal Justice Program charge of beginning
in March with two felonies a onemisdemeanor for bringing in weed, ecstasy and
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a cell phone in the Butler Countyjow while working there as an intern a
court to the court records. Alsocharge of the misdemeanor for obstructing official business.
So what's the story on that,Well, we're going to hear about
it made national news and Brown andMorello. We'll be talking about that at
seven to five fall by State RepresentativeJennifer growth Gross. Judge stripped the Ohio
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House Speaker of control over campaign funds. And why are they voting on sixty
bills today? Sixty? Orlando Sonza, We're gonna him at eight oh five,
Love Orlando good Man and worthy ofyour vote. Going to respond to
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an op ed piece about well OrlandoSonzo. Of course, Judge Jenna Pultano,
Julian No Sane is free, andJudge Jenna Paul's Judge Edna Paulatana's column
is about that Julian Assange is free. And I think that is something the
judge is probably pretty happy about,considering that what did Julian No Sane do?
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He just published the information. Igo back to that the Pentagon papers
on Vietnam, those were also improperlystolen or liberated from the government lords and
masters hanging on to them, andthey were published, and I think the
New York Times got off on thatone. So why would Joy Assange be
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in trouble for publishing something that wasstolen by Chelsea Manning and who was then
pardoned anyhow, Judge A thirty followedby Cheryl Pop on a fly tri state.
Cheryl Pop going to be talking about, well, a big event airpower
history tour which is coming to LunkinAirport the week end of Independence Day.
Independence Day weekend, So we'll getthe details from Cheryl Pop on that at
(03:30):
eight forty five. You can feelfree to call five one, three,
seven, four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three Taco
Tom five fifty if you have anAT and T phone. In the meantime,
and there was much rejoicing how closelyyou're following politics in New York.
But you may be familiar with theantics of Representative Jamal Bowman, who is
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no longer going to be around.He was defeated by the Democratic challenger George
Latimer in the primary. Why well, for a whole bunch of reasons.
Jamal Bowman one of the squad members, and he's just batcrap insane. He's
the guy that pulled the fire alarmin order to prevent a vote. Anyway,
The Associated Press declared Latimer the victor, described as a popular guy.
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Latimer is winner in a race thatset the record for the most spending in
a House primary, and there's kindof some funny comments associated with that.
You know, we all got upsetwhen the outside money came in and influenced
Ohio's elections on the abortion issue,millions and millions and millions of you know,
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quite often attributed to George Soros likegroups. They have literally millions of
dollars, if not billions at theirdisposal, and they come in from outside
and start interfering with local races.Right, I think we're all getting used
to that happening. It's really ifI may be so bold as to use
the words hasted off the left inthis particular race. Bertie Sanders angry about
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the money coming in interfering with thisparticular election. Anyway, two term lawmaker,
a member of the Squad. FirstDemocrat House lawmaker to lose a primary
this year. His stances on Israeland Palestine obviously have gotten him in hot
water. There's a lot of Jewishpeople in New York, for example,
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and he came across as kind ofan antisemitic guy. Just sort of my
summary of mister Bauman, just notnecessarily trying to label him. But if
you're going to put him on oneside of the ledger or the other,
I think it's easy to put himon the side of being anti Israel.
Heavy spending from the American Israeli PublicAffairs Committee APAK, and he was screaming
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about APAX involvement in this. Infact, APAK pumped in fourteen million dollars.
Bowman speaking to supporters on Tuesday,Now, our opponents, not opponent.
They have won this round at thistime in this place. But this
will be a battle for our humanityand justice for the rest of our lives.
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Really hum Representative Alexander Acasio Cortez,who won her primary, Bernie Sanders,
met with Bowman at a rally overthe weekend, where Bowman went off
on a tear and was dropping fbombs and exports left and right. Rather
embarrassing AOC and Bernie Sanders claiming APHEXwas undercutting the democratic process by putting so
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much money in the race. AndI fight back laughter when I read that.
They don't care when it happens,you know, when left wing money
comes pouring in to impact Republican racesor Republican issues. Again, going back
to the abortion issue in Ohio.Now they love that, that's aoka,
but yeah, when it happens totheir side of the ledger, they get
angry. You may recall back inSeptember of last year, Bowman pulled the
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fire alarm at the Capitol Complex,later pleading guilty to a misdemeanor. He
voted against the House resolution affirming thatthe Chamber stood with Israel following the attack
by Hamas, which obviously, themurders and rapes of elderly women, children
and like didn't sit well with thevast majority of US. Most people voted
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to stand with Israel after they wereattacked by Hamas. Bowman not so much.
And that was in September. Latimerentered the race in December, or
that was in September. Yeah,And Latimer entered the race in December,
challenging Bowman. APEX affiliated super Pacspent again over fourteen million dollars in advertising
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to defeat Polman Bowman described as anonslaught of advertising emphasizing bowman opposition to President's
but President Biden's twenty twenty one infrastructurelaw and his vote against last year's deal
to raise the federal debt ceiling.Four times as much money spent by Bowman's
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opponents than Bauman was spending on himself, again the most expensive primary in US
history. Total advertising spending on thisone race twenty four million dollars, according
to ad Impact, which follows thiskind of thing. APAC, which obviously
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supported Latimer, says his win representsa major victory for the Democratic mainstream that
stands with the Jewish state and adefeat of the extremist fringe. Lotimer,
for his part, claims that hewas ahead even before APAC stepped into the
ring and started advertising on his behalfhead of the vote. This is an
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opportunity to go to Washington trying tomake some contribution at whatever level I can.
I think for him it's something muchbigger. Speaking of Bowman, he's
a spokesperson for a movement, andI think he's got a strong ego connection
to these things, you think Anyhow, A Kasio Kortes, for hers part,
easily won her primary yesterday, andapparently most of the other squad members
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are expected to win another term.One exception Representative Corey Bush and Missouri,
who is facing a tough Democratic primarychallenge. So maybe saner voices will prevail.
Obviously Bowman and fringe element, outlier, far far left winger in the
Democrat Party. Hell, he's partof the squad. And this is you
know, it's not like a Republican'sgoing to ever win this race. This
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is a blue, blue, bluearea of the country. But even within
their own party, some are sanerthan others. And of course Bowman has
been given his walking papers and arguerightfully. So five one, three hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two to three. Talk oh with pound five fifty.
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If you have an AT and Tphone, I loved here from you.
Maybe got a comment about that.Oh look, Surgeon general says gun
violence is a public health crisis.I wonder what that's going to lead to
use your imagination, we dive oninto that. Got other things to talk
about of course this morning, andlooking forward to the guests beginning again at
seven oh five by first stored formy good friend doctor Fred Peck. Need
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her. She's fantastic and especially forthose folks who don't like the dentist,
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of cosmetic dentistry, huh, doctorFred Peck, can anybody be better?
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It's like, can that be thesame person? Absolutely? If you're not
happy with your smile, talk todoctor Fred Peck. Fellow with the American
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peck smiles dot com. Fifty fiveR the talk station our iheard radio
music floundstation about twenty A Happy Wednesdayto you, maybe even happier. Just
got a text from my U lovingwife. Out of my element, out
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kick my coverage. Say it allthe time. It is our anniversary thirty
two years. Happy anniversary to you, sweetheart, Love you. Definitely lucky
to have her thirty two years.We've been together since. Actually a lot
longer than that, I believe,the December of eighty seven. Gosh,
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honey, has it been that long. We started dating December of eighty seven
in law school, looking at herfrom across the room in contracts class.
Oh yes, kept me from focusingon contracts. I do remember that anyhow,
again, I'm a lucky man forconvincing her that it was the right
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thing for her to do to marryme. So anyhow, back over to
well the US Surgeon General described asa landmark advisory. US Surgeon General VVAK
Murphy has declared gun violence a publichealth and of course that means calling for
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wide ranging firearm controls Second Amendment.Did he swear to uphol the Constitution in
the United States of America which doesin fact contain uh the Second Amendment which
allows us the right to keep inbare arms which shall not be infringed.
It's public health crisis. Though hmfor such major report on gun violence from
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a surgeon General, their office islimited in authority. They have nothing to
do with with guns, handgun ownership, use, et cetera. Firearm violence
is an urgent public health crisis thathas led to loss of life, unimaginable
pain, and profound grief for fartoo many Americans. We don't have to
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continue down this path, and wedon't have to subject to our children to
the ongoing horror of firearm violence inAmerica. See here, Let me circle
the word fire firearm and a firearm. Can you take that word out and
just talk about violence being an urgentpublic health crisis. Does that make sense
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anybody? I mean, if youwander the streets of New York, You're
likely to be subjected to violent actsby crazy people running around, punching you,
stabbing you, randomly pushing you ontothe subway tracks. That's violence.
Why is he focusing only on firearmviolence? Take out the firearm? Do
you think the violence might continue onsome level? Might we substitute the firearm
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for a baseball bat or a bassguitar, as the case may be.
You can get club to death witheither of those, maybe a knife,
a stabbing. The report apparently sitesgovernment another day to show in the United
States an extreme outlier on deaths andinjuries from guns, especially for children.
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Firearms in recent years become the leadingcause of deaths Americans one to nineteen above
motor vehicles, according to the SurgeonGeneral's report. Of course, the NRA
came out in opposition to this,an extension of the Biden administration's war on
law abiding gun owners. They saidAmerica has a crime problem caused by criminals,
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said the director of NRA's lobby armRandy Cose. It's that's the point
yeah, we may have a healthcrisis in the form of criminal activity,
violence inherent in the system, crazypeople, people influenced by social media.
I have no idea where it comesfrom. People seem to have a low
tolerance for anything these days. Don'tdisrespect me, whatever that's supposed to mean,
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resulting in a violent act, sometimeswith the firearms, sometimes as again
I point out, with a knifeor just punching. Surgeon General's report said
back in twenty twenty two, overforty eight hundred people died as a result
of fire firearms, disproportionately affecting BlackAmericans and men. I wonder why that
might be suicides? They pointed outin this report, suicides have increased twenty
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point one percent between twenty twelve andtwenty twenty two and representativer half of the
gun related deaths. Do you thinkthat maybe a mental health crisis. I
think if someone is planning on killingthemselves, whether it's with a firearm or
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by some other mechanism, we havea mental health problem going on. Has
nothing to do with the firearm.And I appreciate that. Firearms. You
know, they're convenient, they're quick, they are obviously very effective. If
you want to end your life.If you take the firearm out of the
equation, is that going to stopsuicidal ideation? It's the suicidal ideation that's
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the problem. That's a mental healthproblem. I will take the collective commitment
of our nation, or rather itwill take the collective commitment of our nation
to turn the tide on firearm violence, he said, asking for investments in
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research, community education programs, mentalhealth support, and tougher controls on buying
guns. Again going after the itemas opposed to the core problem, which
seems to be perhaps a mental healthdeterioration, an intolerance problem, a violence
problem five twenty five fifty five caresee de talk station. Feel free to
(17:38):
call love to hear from you.You don't have to agree with me.
You can feel free to call anddisagree with me. That's okay. The
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fifty five KRC dot com. SoHappy Wednesday, what's with the tims?
(19:08):
I got two tims online? Weelstarting the order in which they receive TIM
number one. Welcome to the program, sir, and Happy eat Wednesday to
you. Hey, good morning,Brian, if I'm number one, well
there's I just look up and there'sTim and there's Tim. It's just kind
of funny. So Joe labeled thesecond caller in as Tim number two.
That makes you Tim number one.Okay, Well, good morning, hey,
(19:32):
longtime listener, first time caller.First of all, I want to
thank you for speaking truth in themorning to all of the Cincinnati area.
Well, thank you and bringing itup. And then I guess I'll have
to say happy anniversary to you andyour wife. I appreciate that. Yeah,
I'm sure you're like me. Youprobably married up. Oh yeah,
(19:52):
absolutely, Tim smartman Mary smart outof their element, out kicking coverage and
that's me right there. There yougo. Hey, I want to make
a couple of comments and then I'lljust listen to your reply. First of
all, the morning after Trump wasconvicted of these stupid crimes that he wasn't
guilty of, I woke up andwas thinking, I absolutely cannot stand Joe
(20:17):
Biden, even though as a religiousperson, maybe not, I shouldn't call
myself a religious person, maybe aChristian person. The Bible tells us that
we should pray for our enemies,and I woke up that morning and I
couldn't even pray for him anymore.So the prayer changed from that to expose
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this man. Lord, let thewhole world know who he is. And
I think with of Bates coming upon Thursday, we should pray that God
would just reveal what's going on inthis country and that he really shows who
he really is, no matter ifhe's caffeinated or not. And I would
say, don't vote Democrat, don'tvote Republic. Hope we the people and
(21:06):
there's only one candidate to send itfor the people, and so we need
to do that. And I wouldI would say that we have we have
a really important time ahead of us. Yes we do. And I hope
Rump does not choose JD. Vans. He does not need Ohio. He's
(21:26):
going to take Ohio by storm.We need someone that can help him get
over the cross across that finish line. And so I'm hoping he does that.
Yeah, I'm a little skeptical aboutJD. Vance as a selection as
well. He's fairly new to thegame. I know he's got some you
know, business props, but inthe final analysis, is he enough to
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really help push Trump over the top. And I'm not quite sure he is
the man for the job. Itremains to be seen. You're right though,
in your observations about Ohio and insofaras divine intervention, I don't know,
man. I It's like when footballplayers win the game and they thank
God for the victory. I reallydon't think God had anything to do with
the team winning. And since wehave wars raging around, we have pestilence,
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famine, starvation in the plagues ofthe modern world, generally speaking,
happening all around. If God wasto dedicate any time to solving problems,
I doubt that he would spend awhole lot of time, you know,
influencing Joe Biden's performance on the debatestage. Hate to be jaded and cynical
about that, but you know,I do believe it's sort of you know,
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in many cases where because we areleft to our own devices and we
are left with our own choices,it's one of the freedoms that we enjoy
as human beings. God expects usto make the right choices without forcing us
into any particular choice. Just thethought tim number two, welcome to the
program. So that is not aderogatory common it's just the timing of your
(22:55):
call relative to the first tim Goodto have you on the show this morning.
Happy Wednesday, Hey, good morning, Bron. A quick quick question
regarding your comment earlier about firearms anduntil Hell yeah, whatever happened with that
guy who tried to run you offthe interstate and you pulled a firearm on
him? Did he ever prosecuted?I believe he was. I know his
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bail was set at five hundred andforty thousand dollars. I really don't think
he had any defense, probably apublic defender situation. I really didn't follow
up at all on that. Ididn't know him, he didn't know me.
It was fortuitous that that I happenedto be the guy that he came
up on in the expressway when hewas going like one hundred plus miles an
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hour, and so I really don'tknow. I know his bond was set
really high, and that's the lastI heard of it. So maybe he
got some jail time. Maybe oneof the woke judges just let him out
and smacked his hand. I don'tknow. I really don't God, bless
and appreciate some thirty two years Thanksbrother, I do appreciate that. Yeah,
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it's quite a mile stone for me. And I'm very proud of those
thirty two years. As reflecting onthat with some friends of mine and not
that long ago, and as youlook out among the group of friends,
how many people have been married thatlong? And how many among my friends,
I haven't lasted that long ended upgetting divorced. Not that divorce was
a bad idea, mind you.If you're miserable, why stay married to
(24:21):
a person makes you miserable. Inever have understood that life is too damn
short way, too damn short tobe miserable. You get can you?
I have this vision pulling into thedriveway, your home, home, my
bastion. It's my fortress of solitude. I love my home, I love
(24:42):
my home life, I love myfamily. I feel great when I pull
in the driveway. If you pullin the driveway and you are plagued with
that sinking feeling like, oh,dear God, I'm going to go in
and it's going to start. Yourspouse is just going to start right up.
(25:03):
You're miserable about the whole idea ofpulling in your driveway, You might
want to reconsider things. Sorry,just me, that's my philosophy. Life's
too damn short. Uh cover senseof you for you know, have you
got medical insurance? I know it'sexpensive. Medical insurance is expensive. It
doesn't have to be as expensive itis. And how about getting something like
dollar one coverage. Imagine going toyour you know, annual physical and having
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the whole thing paid for with nomoney out of your pocket. Yeah,
that's a good thing, right,Well, that's cover sensing. That's what
John Roman and the team that covers. Since you're all about getting your dollar
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the medical insurance the employer planned.Why Well, because it costs several hundred
dollars or more a month, andthen they got to pay like ninety five
hundred dollars out of pocket to evenget insurance coverage. They don't have it.
What's the point of paying the premium? Well, I'll tell you what.
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learn more. Fill out a formonline to get the process started. He
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talk station by forty two. HappyWednesday, have you anniversary to me and
my wife. Locals are stacking stupidby my phone calls are always welcome here
five one three seven point fify fivehundred eight hunred eight two three talk before
(27:17):
I jumped to the phones. Ayoung woman falling backwards off of the treadmill
out of a third floor window dead. What security foage from press agency newsflash
shows the moment this jim goer stumbledoff the back of the machine and out
of what appeared to be an openwindow. Happened Tuesday, June eighteenth to
(27:37):
Jim and ponk Tanak, West Calamtonin Indonesia. I probably mispronounced all that
at least five treadmills lined up ina row, facing away from large windows,
people running on either side of thiswoman at the time. She could
be seen walking slowly patting her facewith a towel seconds before she fell.
(28:02):
Here she attempted to grab the sideof the window but wasn't able to save
herself. Reportedly twenty two years old, yet to be named. Seconds before
she fell, she was seen walkingcalmly on the treadmill, fell backwards out
of the window while others ran oneither side of her in the machine.
Her boyfriend asked to ask her toexercise with him on the second floor,
(28:23):
but she wanted to work out onthe treadmills on the third floor. It
was reported she'd only listened to herboyfriend working out for about thirty minutes when
the fall took place. According tolocal media report, she was reportedly rushed
to the hospital with serious injuries,doctors unable to save her life. Police
noted that the position of the treadmill, only about sixty centimeters from the window,
(28:44):
created a dangerous situation. Really.The gym issued an apology to the
woman's family and closed its business forthree days after the fatal fall. Is
that like flying a flag at halfmast? Bobby, Welcome to the progress.
Happy Wednesday to you, sir,Happy humpday, my brother, faith,
flag and family. And you knowwhat the other one is. It's
(29:08):
a public it's a public health emergency. It's a public health emergency, Bobby,
Surgeon General. I think the SurgeonGeneral needs to go ahead and look
up exactly where all these so calledevents are happening, and you know,
disseminate them and find out exactly who'sdoing it. The fact way you can
narrow it down a little bit more. Yep. I'll got a question,
(29:33):
but you yeah, Butler County Internships, what's going on with these people?
Who's monitoring the situation. Well,what I'd like to know up until recently,
apparently no one, nobody or oror insufficiently monitoring. We're going to
have Brianna Morello on the program todaytalk exactly about that. But yeah,
you've got teenagers in a in aprogram that trying to get them into the
(29:57):
law enforcement situation, working at thejail, inappropriate relationships with inmates and smuggling
in weed and cell phones and thelike. Yeah, that's a serious,
serious problem. So obviously it's broughtit's been brought to the national attention with
a Louder with Crowder and of coursesome I guess that's seven oh five Ronda
Morella, host of her own show, so we'll get the details from her
(30:21):
and her perceptions of it. Butyeah, I think the program probably needs
to be revamped, just to Scouchappreciate it. To call Bobby take care
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It may be down from you anyway, Go east on Tylersville two streets
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You'll find them at feign xformthletterax dotcom, fifty five KRC. Hey if
(31:47):
you're listening to me, by ifyou want to think about HERECD Talk Station.
Happy Wednesday. Ronda Morello join theprogram to talk about this local story
Butler County jail teenager having sexual relationshipswith inmates and smuggling things in including drugs.
State Representative Jennifer Gross, Orlando Sonza, Judgment Politano, and Cheryl Pop
about the Air Power History Tour comingJuly fourth weekend all on the program.
(32:12):
This morning, let's ump over thephones. Who with Dave's got for?
I go back to the stack ofa stupid Dave. Happy Wednesday to you,
thanks for calling. Happy anniversary,brun Oh, thanks man, appreciate
that. Hey, A question foryou. A lot of people talk about
Republicans need to get over the hesitancyto vote early. What if you're not
going to change your vote, whatdifference does it make when your vote?
(32:35):
Well, I suppose if the ideaof getting large numbers in order to encourage
people that it's that, it's youknow, it's a worthy effort to get
out and vote. Just go ahead, get it done, Get it over
with. You never know on anelection day. You wake up, you
may have the flu, you maynot make it to election day. Get
your vote in before you die.Whatever, just go ahead and vote.
(32:58):
I mean, I understand the point. You and I probably more inclined to
go vote on election day. Thathas been the norm for me for years
and years. I enjoy going tovote on election day. I've never had
a problem. But just because I'venever had a problem doesn't mean this election
in November, I won't have anissue on election day that'll prevent me from
getting to the polls. So,you know, I just get out in
(33:19):
large numbers, show the left thatwe're strong, we're able to win,
encourage other people by early voting,and when the numbers come out of like,
oh my god, look at allthe Republicans. Look at this strong
showing. Psychologically, I think itgives people a boost a number of reasons.
But I suppose in the final analysis, if you're going to go ahead
and vote, and you know you'renot going to change your vote, why
not just get it out of theway ahead of time. Democrats do it
(33:42):
with great success, and those youknow, and when you're organizing people,
you know and the Democrats. Yougot to give them props over the years
for going over to nursing homes gettingbus fulls of people taking them to the
polls on election day. Well,the same kind of organizational effort can be
done on the right. Go ahead, get over to the nursing homes,
help people early vote, get thoseRepublican votes locked in. People might not
be inclined to get up off thecouch on election day and go do it.
(34:05):
So it's a it's a variety ofreasons, and I can certainly see
the benefits in it. But thenthe downside is what happens if you get
some news after you have cast thevote that would change your opinion and how
you vote. It does happen.Speaking, I'm going back to the Surgeon
General's report who he claims that wehave a health emergency because of gun violence.
(34:28):
And my point is, no,we've got a violence here you go
right here, illustration of It's thesituation is beyond guns. It's just people's
attitude. We got a twenty yearold gamer from New Jersey accused of flying
nearly one thousand miles to try tokill another gamer with a hammer because the
(34:49):
two got into an online altercation whileplaying video games. Amen brother Edward Kang
arrested in Florida, taking the custodySunday, charged with the one kind of
at tenp to the second agree murderone kind of attempted burglary over the incident,
described as violent probable cause Affidavid saysauthorities the dead. Following the spat,
(35:10):
Kang flew from Newark Liberty International Airportto Jacksonville International to assault the victim,
who had never met in person.Deputies with the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office at
about two am June twenty third,responded to a home located in the thirteen
block int of Harrison Point Trail inFernandia Beach, Florida, where which is
about one hundred and sixty miles northof Orlando, got to the scene.
(35:32):
Lead detectives said deputies could see asubstantial amount of blood located near the entryway
and into a bedroom leading to theright of the doorway. Kang and the
other and the victim were no longerat the scene. Detectives spoke to the
victim's stepfather, who said he hadbeen awakened by the sound of his step
son screaming for help. According tothe affidavit, once the stepfather approached the
(35:57):
victim, he observed him lying facedown on the ground. Noticed the victim
was laying atop another individual who wasin possession of a hammer. Stepfather said
he had never observed this individual beforethe encounter and that no one was expected
to be at the residence. Victimat the hospitals received several stitches to close
head wounds and gave investigators his versionof the vat Victims said he was playing
(36:17):
an online game. While playing thegame, the victim went to use the
bathroom, walked toward the doorway ofthe room, and opened the door.
Once the victim opened the door,he noticed the person standing with a hammer
raised in the air in an anticipatedstrike position. Do what Happs. Suspect,
later found to be Edward Kang,struck the victim on his head with
(36:37):
the hammer. The victim side ofremembering being struck once, but believed it
happened several times. They struggled briefly, the victim managing to get the hammer
away from Kang as he screamed forhelp. Stepfather showed up a few moments
later, and they were able todetain Kang until the police showed up.
Jeez Louise a video game. Thankyou, Joe Strecker emphasis exclamation point,
(37:06):
bold in caps and underscored. Fivefifty six fifty five krs of the talk
station. Feel free to call fiveone, three, seven four nine fifty
two three talk planning to talk aboutthe six o'clock hour before we get the
Brandon Morello on this local Butler Countyjail smuggling incident that'll take place at seven
oh five. I'll be right back. Donald Trump is it's what motivates your
(37:27):
vote, the biggest unifier for theDemocrat. Fifty five KRC the talk station.
Tife can change in an instant,so staying informed, damned up to
date is critical. I want toknow what's happening. Fifty five KRC the
talk station at six oh six.If the gop Care CD talk station,
(37:53):
Happy Wednesday to you listener, launchJuly tenth. And for those who are
planning on going to Smoke Justice andcoming, we're not going there. Mix
up with a fair to communicator orsomething along those lines. Now, don't
hold it again, Smoke Justice.No reason to do that. In fact,
they invited us to come back laterin the fall, just a mix
(38:13):
up in terms of scheduling. Idon't know specifically why we're going to be
at the Turf Club, which putsa smile on my face. That was
my default restaurant to choose in Debbie. God bless Debbie, who retired from
the sales department here at fifty fivekrs. She still winds up the fifty
five kr s listener lunches and sheasked me, well, where do you
want to go? I said,we'll see if Turf Club will open up
(38:34):
early for us, and they are. It's normally not open for lunch on
a Wednesday, they open it forbut because it's listener lunch and I dearly
love Turf Club, that's where we'regoing to be, So put it on
your calendar for July tenth. Ihope to see you there. And again,
a happy anniversary to my wife thirtytwo years today. Been together a
lot longer than that. But it'sa wonderful thing. I am blessed as
(38:55):
I can possibly be as a humanbeing. So I just feeling very good
about that. It's more than waymore than half of my wife with my
wife, which is just truly anamazing thing. I know who I am
I look at myself from the mirror. I am painfully aware of all of
my faults. And there She's beenthrough thick and thin with me in spite
(39:17):
of all those faults. So I'mout of my element. I know that.
And I'm just singing the praises ofmy wife this morning. So thank
you, paul ed for being mywife. So five one, three,
seven, four nine, fifty fivehundred, eight hundred and eighty two to
three pound FI fifty on eight Tand T phones coming up one hour by
request and had a listener specifically mentionedBrianna Morello. She has her own show.
(39:38):
She's going to be joining the programcoming up about why the US marshalls
are seemingly covering up a local streamand an intern a teenager in this intern
program with the Butler County Jails,she ended up smuggling in drugs and having
sexual relations with an inmate. Howdid this ever happen? But it's made
(39:59):
national coverage and we'll be talking aboutBrianna Morello coming up in an hour.
State reperendors Jennifer Gross Representative Gross atseven forty judge stripped the Ohio House Speaker
of control over the Republican campaign funds. Why is that and why are they
voting on sixty bills today? That'sa good question. Hopefully Jennifer can answer
that. She'll be on at sevenforty And Orlando's Sons was an off op
(40:22):
ed piece about Orlando. He's goingto join the program and talk about that.
He's a great guy. I reallyreally hope you check out and support
Orlando Sons's campaign. Terrific, terrificguy. Judge Jena Polaton another terrific guy.
Julian Assange is free. I suspectJudge of Polatana was happy about that.
Not going to be locked up,time served and a guilty plea just
(40:42):
yesterday, So he'll be out andabout or he is out and about Judge
of Polatana's column Julian Nosanje's Free.That comes out tonight at midnight. I'm
lucky enough to get an early advancedcopy of that. And Cheryl Pop.
God bless Cheryl Pop and all thework she's done on behalf of veterans causes,
including honor flight tri state. She'sjoining the pro I'm going to eat
forty five to talk about the AirPower History Tour which is coming to Lunkin
(41:04):
Airport July fourth weekend. Really coolopportunity to see some awesome, awesome airplanes,
airplane tours, you got military vehicles, classic cars. There'll be some
exhibitor booths there, food trucks,free parking. They got it all and
that'll be Lunkin Airport July third throughthe seventh again, Cheryl pop at eight
forty five to talk about that.Feel free to call them and go to
(41:25):
the phones because Fred's on the phoneright now. Before we get another stories,
Fred, thank you for calling thismorning in a very happy Wednesday to
you, sir. Pack at youBrian, Hey, I think the Surgeon
General miscalculated on his numbers about whatkills people eighteen or under, because it's
not guns. I'm pretty sure it'sabortion. So we we've got to get
(41:46):
rid of all the surgical equipment that'sused to abort a fetus or, as
they like to say, a blobof tissue. Yeah, that's that,
you know, A good point dependson your definition of murder, and I
hear you all day long. Goahead, and while we're at it,
we're going to be have knives andhammers and baseball bats and literally anything else
(42:08):
that can do harm to another humanbeing, just you know, you know
what blows me away, Brian abouta boy because I've talked to people I've
been around forever the abortion issue,and I just finally tell people, there's
no way we can talk about thisbecause we can't come to an agreement of
where to start from because I thinkthat that's a life and you don't think
(42:32):
it is, So how can weYou know, I understand your point of
view. If you don't think that'sa life, well then what's the big
deal about killing it? But forsome reason, we can look at the
same evidence and I can come upwith that's a life, and the other
person thinks that it's not. Uh, And I just have a hard time
wrapping my head around that, whichwhich maybe they've convinced themselves that it's that
(42:58):
it's not a life for some reasonthat I don't understand. But yeah,
and quite often that issue does goback to viability, which was you know
that that Roe v. Wade.Legislating from the bench just outrageous decision.
If you're a constitutionalist like me,you know that you don't legislate from the
bench. You are there to interpretthe Constitution of constitutionality of laws written not
(43:21):
whole cloth, create rights and lawsthrough a legal opinion. So, but
inherent in that debate is the state'sinterest. And if the state has a
vested interest in the life, andyou have something that is narrowly tailored,
which you know, one can makean argument the state theoretically can take the
baby from the mother who doesn't wantto carry it. Once the baby is
(43:43):
can can be viable outside of thewomb. That's where we tend to get
bogged down. You know, thewomen's rights activists and the people who believe
in killing babies say, well,you can't force a woman to bring that
baby to full term, but ifthe state could actually go in and grab
it. It's like that old whereyou're going to just state the fetis,
You're going to put it in abox. Argument. Well, if the
state could actually take the baby andbring it to term through a you know,
(44:06):
an incubator or whatever, you canmake an argument that it could.
Can the state afford to do that? This is where we know the sort
of the dynamics run into very complicatedrealities. Theoretically the state could, but
it can't really because it would forcethat woman to have to go through a
medical procedure, which would be inducinglabor and taking the baby. So it
(44:28):
just gets more and more complicated.But right once you have that argument is
it a life or not, peopleare going to come to different terms and
understandings on that. That's when thewhole thing falls apart. You firmly believe
it is a life. Many peopleout there in the world, and the
vast majority of them, all thePoland, believe in some right to abortion.
Look what happened in Ohio. Youknow sixty percent of the books wanted
(44:50):
to enshrine that right, and thatis a very broad right, as the
language was written, far more sothan I think people who voted for it
even believe. You get that wholeidea of late term abortions, which is
literally murder. I'm going back tomy viability thing. You can abort a
baby. I mean, both ofmy kids were born a month early eight
months, and yet there are peopleout there that think that you should be
able to abort a baby at eightmonths, that babe's ready to go,
(45:14):
doesn't need to be in the wombany longer. Might both proof of that?
Anyhow, Hey, Brian, HeyBrian, the uh in the road
decision. It was there's a there'sa and I don't know exactly when it
was, but they talked about theviability, which was part of the decision
because I've read it because I haveno life, but it's it states that
(45:36):
there's a certain time where the fetusis viable after a certain time. And
ever since that decision, the viabilityhas gone more towards conception than birth.
Because technology gets better every year,viability is young is smaller and smaller,
Like you get a viability of liketwenty two weeks now. Yeah, it's
(45:57):
even I think it's even less.I've known people, uh when women that
have had I mean, my gosh, I can't believe how what they can
do now. Uh. But theone thing that I know is in my
lifetime, I've never heard of awoman given birth to anything but a baby.
Not a cat, a dog,a toaster, nothing. It's always
been a baby. I so scientifically, and until somebody has a toaster or
(46:22):
a cat, we have to saythat that's alive. And we got to
believe in science, right, Sotrue. I'm sorry to laugh though,
Fred yea a very very very disturbingtopic. You ended up, yeah,
putting a funny spin on it,though, I honestly I appreciate that.
Oh yeah, you can't. Ifyou can't laugh, then let's laugh,
(46:45):
right, exactly right. If youcan't laugh and the other guys win,
yeah, that makes if your lifeis miserable, the other guys have won.
So don't let that happen. Fred, I appreciate the comments. I
truly do, very complicated issue andone that well, it's in the state's
hands. Now go ahead to thewhole federal election. I don't I'm just
I'm still lamenting that anybody in afederal office election is even going to engage
(47:07):
in a debate about this anymore.The Supreme Court said it is not within
the constitution. The federal government didnot reserve powers. Our founders did not
reserve the powers over abortion in theConstitution. Look at a tenth Amendment.
It's one of the rights that's reservedthe states, giving the states and their
citizenry the right to make a decisionalong these lines. Some states believe in
(47:28):
life more than others. We allknow that. Look what's happened. But
I you know, I'm just waitingtomorrow. The big debate is is that
topic going to come up and ifI was a candidate for president of the
United States of America, I'd lookat whoever brought that up and say,
didn't you read the decision? Thisis not in our hands as federal officials
(47:50):
anymore. Talk to your state representative, talk to your state senators, talk
to your state governor. It extricatesfederal politicians from a very very, very
charged and difficult decision, putting itin the hands of every single state official
that runs for office. And I'msure they're so thrilled about having to deal
with that themselves. You used tobe able to hide behind Row. Roe's
(48:12):
the problem. Look at Roe,we need overturn Row. Guess what it's
overturned. You got what you'll wanted. Further complicating the matter, six sixteen
fifty five Kcity Talk Station five pointthirty seven four nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two to threetaco with pound five fifty on eighteen and
two phones. And let me stronglyencourage you for the certain general gets his
way to get into twenty two threeFirearms Range gunshop on Route forty two between
(48:34):
Mason. That is where you aregoing to be met with a wonderful staff.
They are just terrific people. Attwenty two to three and near the
concealed carry license classes are still verypopular and it is an important thing.
I know. We have constitutional carry, which means you no longer need a
specific license, but if you wantreciprocity, if you're traveling and you choose
(48:57):
to take your firearm with you,in states that have reciprocity, quite often
they do require a concealed carry license. That's where the reciprocity comes from.
Now, if you're in a constitutionalcarry state other than the one you reside
in, it's a different story.But for peace of mind and knowing that
you're gonna get you enjoy the benefitsof legal reciprocity. Get the concealed carry
license. You're gonna learn some valuableskills when you get the class. So
(49:22):
it's just one of many classes thatthe twenty two three Folks offer, including
the Pistol First Shots class for folkswho've never handled a firearm before. They'll
hit the ground running to the verybasics and work your way up to the
range where you get some range time. They have membership options for their indoor
range, which is the best oneyou're ever gonna shoot on clean and safe.
You're gonna feel real comfortable shooting attwenty two three and for a selection
(49:45):
of firearms, you are in theright spot handguns, long guns, ammunition
accessories they have at all tell Wnnyand Jeff the owners. Brian said,
how when you stop in on routeforty two between Mason and eleven and to
learn more go to the website twentytwo to three dot com. That's the
number twenty two the word three spelledout twenty two to three dot com.
Fifty five krc and iHeartRadio Station,the exclusive audio home on NBC's coverage of
(50:09):
the twenty twenty four Paris Olympics.Our iHeartRadio Music Fundyou KRCD talk station Happy
Wednesday. All right, So youscream and yell and you complain. The
police departments are all, you know, irredeemably racist. The defund the police
movement kicks in in full earnest.Police are demonized. Police quit the police
(50:31):
force because no one has any respectfor them. Woke prosecutors, woke judges
do not prosecute criminals. They letthem back on the streets, rendering the
police department's job absolutely pointless and reducingthe morale and so the numbers start dropping,
the numbers of police officers actively roamingthe streets and protecting the citizenry,
and crime goes through the roof.So the left starts backpedaling on their efforts
(50:55):
to defund the police because their citiesare a wreck. They can't get anyone
to join the police department thanks totheir demonization efforts. Seattle has a solution,
wonderful. They've opened up city policejobs to illegal aliens in the Deferred
Action for Childhood Rivals program. Currentlyat their lowest staffing levels in decades,
(51:19):
ninety seven sworn officers left the forcein twenty twenty three alone. Court of
the Seattle Council President Sarah Nelson SPDcontinues to lose more officers than it is
able to hire. Twenty twenty three, no exception, ninety seven sworn officers
left the force. And out ofone thousand, nine hundred and forty eight
applicants, I'm surprised they got thatmany. Only sixty one or three percent
(51:45):
were hired. What is with theapplicant pool? So, since they're at
their lowest staffing level in decades,apparently they had passed the law there state
law allowing jurisdictions to hire non citizensas police officers. Democrat dominated statelat legislature
recently passed Senate Bill sixty one pointfifty seven that allows jurisdictions to give DACA
(52:09):
recipients police powers. They say onereason the bill is needed because so many
liberal cities have wiped out their policedepartments with the BOM policies, defund the
police schemes, and other policies,generally undermining their departments, making it difficult
to find recruits. Those are thepoints I mentioned a moment ago issue question.
(52:31):
Illegal aliens have no right to ownor carry firearms in the United States.
Now. For his part, JoeBiden, waving his executive pen apparently
soften the law to a degree byruling that illegals hired as police officers may
carry guns on duty, but haveto turn those weapons over to the department
(52:52):
when they're off duty. Can't taketheir guns home with them when they're off
duty. But that is not apermanent solution. That policy change. The
Biden's Bureau alcohol tobacco on firearms anexplosive float. It could easily be rescinded
by a future president, maybe DonaldTrump, so it isn't a permanent solution.
So if you do hire the dackafolks, and let's say, oh,
(53:14):
I don't know, Donald Trump getselected and waives his executive pend and
undoes the garbage that Joe Biden hasdone, those police officers will be no
longer eligible to carry a firearm whileon the job. Do people think it's
an appropriate thing to allow an illegalimmigrant to police the public? I mean,
(53:35):
really, let that sink in fiftyfive Krcity Talk station. Feel free
to call comment on that. Dohave local stories coming up and more on
the illegal immigrant crisis we've got goingon, and it is indeed a crisis.
A couple other stories on that forthis hour as well, unless you
choose this to hear the conversation adifferent direction of the meantime, though,
(53:57):
I'm gonna recommend calling electric for electricprojects on your residence. Confidently call my
friends at Cullen twenty five years inbusiness, A little family owned and operated
Andrew Cullen has an outstanding team ofelectricians, well oiled machine. They are
done some superior work for me.Most recently the bathroom modeling project. Had
a lot of wiring work for that. As you might imagine, they did
a great job at the right price. And that's always the case. You
(54:20):
get great customer service, license electriciansdoing the job, and it's always a
great price. So you got nothingto worry about when it comes to big
project, small projects, anything inbetween. If you have a house,
a residence of some sort and youneed electric work, Cullen Electric online.
You find them at color Electriccincinnati dotcom, Colen spelled c U L L
E N color Electriccincinnati dot com.Please tell them, Brian said, how
(54:40):
and you call the A plus withthe BBB Electricians at culin five one three
two two seven four one one two. That's five one three two two seven
four one one two fifty five KRC. Here's your nine first one to weather
forecast. Scattered showers of storms today. A few stronger storms are possible.
We'll see I. I have eightyfive drying out and going down to sixty
(55:00):
three overnight, mostly sunny, lowhumidity tomorrow eighty three for the hive,
down to sixty overnight, and thenon Friday, mostly sunny with high on
ninety one seventy four degrees. Rightnow, let's go to traffick update.
Jason from the UC Health Traffic CenterUniversity of Cincinnati Cancer Center is opening the
most comprehensive blood center in the nation. The future of cancer is here called
(55:23):
five one three, five eighty fiveu CCC. Moving pretty well so far
on the interstates, really no timedelays. I seventy five North checking in
well through the cut in the hill. Two seventy five looks good, across
the top side in South, seventyfive in good shape, still through the
Lockland split. Jason Earhart on fiftyfive KRC, the talk station six point
(55:51):
thirty fifty five kr C, thetalk station AF top of the our news.
Rianna Morello, host of the EranoMorello Show, back to why the
US marshals seem to be coming up? That local story about the intern A
teenage in turn of Butler County jailsmuggling drug and having sex with an inmate.
Frightening situation. State Representative Jennifer GrossAt seven forty We have a judge
(56:15):
stripping the Ohio House Speaker of controlover the Republican fund campaign funds and why
are they voting on sixty bills today? Orlando Sanza coming up at eight oh
five. I'll be responding to theop ed piece appearing in the sinsin I
inquire the other day Jude, JennaPolitano and Julian Asan's being said, free
and we'll hear about the air PowerHistory tour coming along an airport. Great
(56:36):
opportunity to get your kids out andsee some of this historic aircraft and other
vehicles and the like. Over thelocal stories. You can feel free to
call though if you'd like. Rememberfifty five cars dot com and you can't
listen live, get your podcast.Got Daniel Davis Deep Dive and of course
we heard from Breitbart's Emma Joe Morrison the upcoming debate. Tomorrow's the big
day for that one. I imaginea lot of people are going to be
(56:59):
tuned into that. Northern Kentucky attorneyconvicted a trespassing into his ex girlfriend's apartment
is going to be spent in thenext six months in jail. Thirty one
year old Chase Cox coming to baselawyer appeared before judge yesterday for sentencing in
Campbell County Circuit Court, specifically JudgeJulie Reinhardt, where he argued his case
(57:20):
in the past or cases rather.Hearing came a week after he was found
guilty of misdemeanor, criminal trespass,and criminal mischief. He was acquitted of
felony burglary, which was apparently themost serious charge he was facing, as
well as theft by unlawful taking andanother criminal mischief count. Jurors recommended he
serve six months in the Cambilton CountyCampbell County Detention Center for one count,
(57:42):
in ninety days for the other,a recommendation the judge agreed with. Also
ordered to pay a five hundred dollarsfine. This goes back to October of
last year, when Cox broke intothe apartment of a woman he was in
a relationship with, stole her iPad, tracked the woman down by reading through
her text messages, and broke theiPad screen. Thank you, Joe Strecker.
(58:06):
Ryan haard Ward said Cox kicked downthe woman's door, broke the door
frame, took a laptop for overtwenty four hours, and denied having it
or being in the apartment. Hepreviously said that he paid restitution for damage
to the woman's door and to replacethe iPad, writing it a letter to
the court quote, I made horribledecisions, said terrible things to someone I
loved and cared about. And thoseour consequences I will have to live with
(58:30):
for the rest of my life,Amen Brother. He dated the woman for
several years during he's wrote in courtfilings, adding that the pair had lived
together and even considered getting engaged.HM well Cox and his family. He
pleaded with the judge to spare himfrom jail time. Prosecutor said Cox could
have accepted responsibility and pleaded guilty toa peony in exchange for probation, but
(58:54):
chose to go to trial and saidhe told the judge, I will show
you that I can be successful inthe community because I know I can.
However, Cox testify to trial,violating the conditions of his bond by calling
and texting his ex girlfriend. Accordingto the court records, Right at Word
(59:14):
found him in contempt at court andplaced him on thirty days of home and
incarceration with an ankle monitor. Idiotsdoing idiot things because they're idiots on fire
today, Joe with the comments,Amen brother. Parents of five adopted siblings
have been indicted on multiple child abusecrimes in Clarmont County. This according to
(59:36):
the I Guess Indicatmond Yesterday, Charlesand Matthew Edmondson charged with five councilman child
in dangering. Prosecutor Mark Tokulby saidthe five siblings originally brought to the home
as foster children, were eventually adopted. He said they've been in and out
of the hospital for various injuries.Prosecutor To Caulby said the Claremont County Sheriff's
(59:58):
Office was able to secure evidence afterCharles Edmondson was convicted on two counts of
gross sexual imposition last year, currentlyserving three years at the Noble Correctional Institution
in Caldwell. Colby said, quoteDetective Mike Ross recovered numerous videos of defendants
treating these beloved special needs children worsethan prisoners of war in their own home
(01:00:23):
in videos too graphic to describe.He said, it is very clear that
these children were tortured, abused,and traumatized on a nearly daily basis.
Kolbe said one of the videos showedchildren appearing malnourished and huddled on a basement
floor trying to stay warm. Theedmundsons are each facing up to eighteen years
(01:00:49):
in prison if convicted. We'll justgo ahead and give them a nod to
the bath in all the galaxies there'sno big a douche than you. You've
reached the top, the pinnacle ofdouche them good going, Douce. Your
dreams have true. So how doyou think he's doing in prison on that
(01:01:15):
gross sexual imposition count there? Joesix thirty six. Well, we know
that you mean to hit the soundeffect button, just that it's not working.
We all know which sound effect Iwas suggesting you play. Presti's interior
is getting touched there. It isbetter late than never. Ah, back
(01:01:39):
to Presty's interiors. Kitchen remodeling iswhat John Ryan is all about. It
is what he's been doing almost exclusivelyfor like thirty five years. John is
a guy that did our kitchen.We gutted it started from scratch, and
with his advice and recommendations, endedup with a bigger kitchen. How well,
it's it's one little tiny wall hebumped out, but gave us so
much more flow and space. Therefrigerator is nice and flush up against with
(01:02:04):
the cabinet. Try now, itlooks fantastic. I just love what he
did with our kitchen. You're gonnalove it too. Whether it's a small,
simple project like simply replacing the countersand countertops and cabinets, or gutting
the old thing and starting all over. He's been doing kitchens for so and
he's seen it all, done itall, and he'll have great ideas for
you to improve the flow for betterstorage solutions up and down the line.
He's a really good guy. He'swith you from the very beginning, initial
(01:02:28):
design to final installation, riding herdover the installers. You only have one
call to make, and that's theJohn Ryan and make sure it all happens
to your satisfaction. A plus witha BBB, probably serving Greater Cincinnati and
northern Kentucky. Get online, checkhim out, see some of the work
that he's done. Go to Prestigeone two to three dot com Prestige one
two three dot com and give himmy regards when you call him up to
talk about your kitchen remodeling project.It's five one three two four seven zero
(01:02:52):
two two nine fifty five KRC sixforty one Happy Wednesday five one three seven
hundred eight hundred tre two to threetalk. Go to Hybobcarsey dot com.
Why are you there? Getting thepodcast? You get the information. I'm
sure Joe will be posting it laterabout the Airpower History Tour coming along in
Airport. We're dealing with that onewith Cheryl Popp at eight forty five.
(01:03:13):
But the podcast my conversation with thePolitano and Orlando Sanza State Representative Jennifer Gross
and Brianna Morello will all be postedthere, like the podcast from yesterday's show,
which you can check out at yourconvenience, but also get the apps.
You can listen to those podcasts whereveryou happen to be with your device
or stream the audio back. Overto illegal immigrants, so I move away
from Seattle where they're hiring I guessnon citizens to become police officers since they
(01:03:37):
can't find people. I'm still goingback to the fact that they had nineteen
hundred and forty eight applicants and onlythree percent of them were hired. They've
lost more than seven hundred officers overthe past five years. Nineteen hundred people
apply for it, sixty one ofthem I guess were eligible. Anyway,
(01:04:00):
enter the DAKA Apple DACA folks here, illegal immigrants here on a free pass
becoming police officers. I don't thinkthat is a recipe for success. What
else is going on related to illegalimmigrants. We've got the Department of Homeland
Security claiming they do not know thewhereabouts of around fifty illegal immigrants who are
what they described as subjects of concern, described as part of more than four
(01:04:26):
hundred brought into the United States byAre You Ready and ISIS affiliated smuggling network
oh Joy of joys four hundred releasedin the United States under Biden's border policies
because they were not on a terrorwatch list. More than one hundred and
fifty have been arrested, some deported. Department of Homeland Security knows the whereabouts,
(01:04:51):
they claim of another two hundred whoare scattered across seventeen states, but
are around fifty who are roaming thecountry and being actively searched for by ICE
agents. Question will the sanctuary citiescooperate with ICE agents when they're trying to
hunt down ISIS affiliated folks who weresmuggled into the country. Just asking for
(01:05:13):
my friends out there who don't believein border security, they say. The
worry is an unknown number of thefour hundred possibly linked to ISIS or maybe
one of the offshoots like isis Killegal immigrants possibly from Tajikstan, Ubekistan,
Moldovia, Kurzikstan, Georgia and Russia. At the counter Terrorism Section Chief Chrys
(01:05:40):
o'liary speaking with NBC, the factthat the whereabouts were unknown is clearly alarming.
Oh okay, I'm glad you atleast feel alarmed about it. ICE
has charged the one hundred and fiftyarrested illegal immigrants with immigration violations. They
say that's a charge that we'll useagainst the remaining fifty if they find them
(01:06:01):
again. Larry speak with NBC.I believe the US is scrambling to locate
these individuals and using the immigration chargesis not uncommon. They are in violation
of that law, and if youneed to take somebody off the street,
that's a good approach to it.Huh. They're not in a terror watch
list. They're believed to be affiliatedwith ICES, but apparently no direct affiliation,
(01:06:25):
or maybe they would be on thewatch list. But they're going to
use the immigration laws. They're actuallygoing to enforce them relative to these individuals,
but not the ten to twenty millionothers who could be in a similar
situation having come across the open borderand given a free pass to enter the
country with a court date. Sothey're worried about some of them, and
they're willing to enforce the immigration lawsfor some of them, but the rest
(01:06:46):
of them. Now, none ofthis makes any sense to me. And
of course this comes on the heelsafter eight tagic natives with suspected ties to
ices where arrested in New York,Philadelphia, and Los Angeles. That happened
like two weeks ago. Separate reportlast week set more than fifteen hundred tagis
have entered the United States through Mexicobetween October twenty twenty and last month.
(01:07:08):
Oh Joy, Republican led Homeland SecurityCommittee Center leted at DHS on Monday,
requesting the unredacted version of the DHSOffice Inspector General's report released June seventh,
which found that DHS is failing toadequately screen and vet asylum seekers. Again,
going back to the tens of millionsof folks who have come in,
(01:07:30):
have they been properly vetted? Theanswer is, most assuredly no. Look,
here's four hundred of them released intothe United States, all of whom
are believed to be suspects of subjectsof concern with affiliations. The isis,
how do they make it across theborder in the first instance, What happened
since they were released into our countrythat brought these individuals, these four hundred
(01:07:51):
to the attention of the Apartment ofHomeland Security. You and I don't have
access to that particular information, folks. But again, I keep going back
to FBI director raised comments about hehas never seen a worse time in his
time in office or in his life. I guess about us being potentially subject
(01:08:14):
to some sort of terrorist action hereon our own soil. How are these
Biden administration policies working out for you? Six forty six fifty five cadercet the
talk station, Michael, hang onhis buddy. I will take your call
in just a second. I lookedup and saw that I was out of
time in this segment. But happyto take your phone call and others if
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(01:09:21):
MLS number four zero one zero eightseven. They're federally insured by NCUA and
they are an equal housing lender.Fifty five KRC Weather and let us go
to the phones. Go Michael Scott, Michael, thanks for holding over the
brake and welcome to the program.Hello. I'm sorry to redirect your topic,
but somethner aggravated me yesterday when Iheard to know that you that somebody
(01:09:44):
is crooked. When you hear this. Did you hear the topic yesterday that
a couple of news outlets Biden refinancehis homes thirty five times? So I
(01:10:04):
don't don't say other than that it'sdifficult to respond to something. I guess
one has to ask oneself why it'sthat is the problem. I thought it
(01:10:26):
was my headset going out. Apologies, my microphone has went belly up there
for a moment. But no,I had not heard that topic, no
idea about that or why anybody wouldhave to refinance her home that many times.
So I'd love to know the sourcefor that. Joe, maybe you
can look it up Biden refinance hishome thirty seven times, se if you
can come up with some information onthat one. And he have one more
story on immigration. We try todeport some folks, and sometimes we can
(01:10:50):
and sometimes we can't. Venezuela isnot really good in terms of their record
with illegal immigrants in our country.You know about the twelve year old girl
in Texas to as well and illegalimmigrants in Houston murdered, murdered this young
girl in a horrific way to illegalimmigrants. Johann Jose Orangel Martinez twenty one,
(01:11:17):
Franklin Jose Pena Ramos twenty six,now facing capital murger charges in that
young girl's death, jos Joscelyn NungaryA horrific thing that has really turned this
whole immigration thing and brought focus tothe problems associated with Biden's open border policies.
And so I did to believe thatthey raped her. They did torture
(01:11:40):
her for a couple of hours beforethrowing her body into a river. Immigration
customs folks people confirmed last week theywere in the country illegally. Martinez apprehended
by border patrol in Marge Penia apprehendedin May. Both released on an order
of recognizance pending their immigration court hearings. Huh, these two, I guess,
(01:12:05):
along with a four hundred those relatedto ISIS affiliated smuggling networks. Looking
for those two and what happens whenwe release them and in awaiting their hearing.
Their arrivals came after Venezuela in Januarystopped accepting deportation flights from the United
States and Mexico. So to theextent we were going to try to throw
(01:12:26):
them out of the country for beinghorrific human beings or having violator immigration laws.
Venezuela won't take them back. That'sbecause we implemented sanctions against Venezuela.
The response basically, screw you,guys. We're not gonna let any any
and of our people back into thecountry. How's this all working out,
(01:12:49):
folks? This is like the numberone issue in the country. No one
is happy about the border situation,other than the non governmental organizations who are
well making fat bank on keeping thesepeople in the country, situating them in
well far better conditions than we providefor our own our own citizens, feed,
(01:13:12):
clothing, shelter, housing, schooling, everything you name it. Overwhelming
cities resources to no end, whichis a problem across the board for everybody,
most notably people who rely on thegovernment to provide them with goods and
services. Guess what the money's dryingup because of this outrageous immigration problem.
That's no R, that's no D. That is just a general Charlie foxtrot
of a situation. Biden's on thewrong side of it. How is it
(01:13:36):
that Trump's only a couple points aheadin the national polling with the most important
issue being a massive failure for thecurrent administration. I'm left wondering, I
really am is Trump hated that much? Is the hatred that deep? This
(01:13:59):
is one of those areas where Trumpis just a winner in terms of he
can demonstrate, he can show onwith with paper, with real figures,
what it was like for the fouryears he was president versus what it's like
now. I hope he gets achance to do that tomorrow six fifty six
if you five krcitey Talks station,because it depends on what the CNN folks
(01:14:21):
do. By way of questioning anyhow, we're gonna hear from Brionna Morella aft
the top of the R News,host of the Brianna Morello Show, and
how is it that a teenager endedup with the Butler County jail smuggling drugs
and having sexual relations with an inmate? This story made it nationally. State
Representative Jennifer Gross coming up at sevenforty after Brianna Morello, hope you can
stick around. It's what motivates yourvote the Democrats. Then fifty five KRS
(01:14:47):
the talk station. This report issponsored by State Just I have seven o
six at fifty five KRCD Talk station. A very happy Wednesday to you,
(01:15:14):
my anniversary Wednesday, thirty two yearsof marriage today and again happy university to
my better half Paul led And withoutfurther ado, I'm pleased to welcome to
the fifty five Cassey Morning Show.You may already have her bookmark Brionnamarrella dot
coms or you find her host ofthe Brionna Morella Show, of course,
Brianna Morella. Welcome to the fiftyfive Carsy Morning Show. It's a real
pleasure to have you all today.Hi Brian, Happy, happy anniversary.
Congratulations thirty years of a big accomplishment, it really is. And knowing me
(01:15:39):
and how many faults I've got,I'm lucky that I found somebody who was
willing to put up with me forthat long. So I'm I out kicked
my coverage beyond honestly I did.I got a big kick out of your
your your fluent and sarcasm in common. You actually quit Fox over the COVID
vaccine mandate. You're you're, you'reknown for having made a stand on that
one. Let me give you propfor saying no, thank you, thank
(01:16:03):
you. Yes, I know,yeah. Fox was trying to comply with
the New York City private sector vaccinemandate and I told him now and I
packed up and left and then onthis independent journalism journeys instead. It's been
good for me. Yeah, that'swonderful. Very successful you are, and
you, along with some others nationallylatched onto this local story here from Butler
(01:16:23):
County about the intern program. Wehad a teenager, a seventeen year old
teenager that was doing an intern programat the Butler County Jail. I guess
this was designed to facilitate pave theway for a possible career as a corrections
officer. And I understand the logicof that, getting people involved in a
work situation so they know what it'slike. But you'd like to think there's
(01:16:45):
some supervision going on there. Sinceit's a teenager in a jail. She
had sex with at least one ofthe inmates and smuggled some drugs and other
contraband into the jail and scotten caughtfor it being tried as a juvenile and
juvenile court. How did you comeacross this, Brianna, Well, it's
a very interesting story. I wasworking with Ladder with Crowder's investigative unit,
(01:17:08):
which is known as the Mug Club, and Vage received a tip and he's
been investigating since then, and it'sbeen very, very interesting because you know,
like you mentioned this, key atall of this is supervision if you're
going to have a program like this. Unfortunately, we have Butler County Sheriff
Richard Jones, who you know,I've liked for quite some time, but
(01:17:29):
he doesn't understand the fact that whenyou have these types of minors of their
juniors and seniors of high school,meaning it could be fifteen, sixteen,
or seventeen years of age in thesejails. We don't put him with violent
criminals. And we're talking about peoplein this field. Because I got an
interview with him while we were onair with LADERI Crowder. He could walk
(01:17:50):
over after refusing to do an interviewwith us at first, he could walk
over to discuss it with us afterhe gets agree with our coverage on a
story. And so him and Ion my Twitter page, Tim and I
kind of went back and forth disputingour coverage. But the main point is
this is he will tell you thatthis was supervised, this program. But
(01:18:10):
again, if it's supervised, thenhow does a minor end up going into
a cell And allegedly she originally admittedto, according to reports, having sex
with two federal inmates. Now,the problem with this is as well is
a simple fact that these are federalinmates. So the Butler County Sheriff's Office
is practically renting me. That's thefederal government. And so when you have
(01:18:33):
a team who number one said thatshe had sex with these inmates and number
two is smuggling contraband into the jailallegedly, she wants these remarks, these
submissions to be pulled out as thecourt records. But she made them initially
and the judge told her no justrecently. But ultimately, what we're talking
(01:18:54):
about here is is something that's potentiallya bigger issue. You know, one
of these inmates that she alleged hehad sex with is a convicted murderer,
and so basically he didn't try tokill her. And that's the big point
in all of us, and theSheriff's office is just so dismissed up in
all front. You know, initially, when I went there their jail to
talk to them about this and handover some evidence that we had, they
(01:19:15):
threatened to press criminal charges against meif they caught me recording our discussions and
so and then you know, theSheriffs two days later comes out to talk
to me on camera after he walkedaway. Originally she thought we were on
air, and then we thought wewere off their he came over and talked
to me. The issue here isthat these people are sitting here saying,
you know, oh, it's supervised. Oh we learned the US Marshals.
(01:19:38):
They won't give us any physical evidenceof that. US Marshalls and Stephen Crowder
called specifically said that they did notknow about any of this and that the
Shaf's office did not notify them.And so that's the concerning part in all
of this. Now US Marshalls haslaunched an investigation because they're still claiming they
were never informed. Although the butlerhad a Shaf's office will tell you that
they informed them, they have notshown any evidence that they've done so.
(01:19:59):
Wow, well, you know localsince I inquired some reporting on this,
and I'll give Victoria Morewood, whowrote the article, props on it just
to acknowledge that she had something todo with it. This is incorporated into
the article. It was the BublicCounty Sheriff's Office Chief Deputy Chief Deputy Anthony
Dwyer said that this girl was notleft alone in the jail's holding pods.
A guard was in the building.However, the student said in her confession
(01:20:24):
that she went inside the inmates cellwhile the guard was walking away from the
cell. According to Dwyer, theChief Deputy also said it was his understanding,
and here's where the scary part comesin his understanding that another inmate was
keeping watch for the guard during theencounter. So we're relying on inmates,
(01:20:44):
convicted felons, or whoever they happento be to keep an eye on a
seventeen year old intern. Yeah.Yeah, First off, I spoke the
dwire directly. He was actually theone who would refuse at first to come
on camera with me, and healso threaten this prest criminal charges against me
if I was recording him. Andthis happened on several occasions during my time
(01:21:05):
of dropping off more evidence for themto stay. The interesting part is this
is Dwyer is number one dismiss himof this girl's age. He continues to
pretending she's an adult, even thoughshe was not during the time of the
incident. But she was confused bythe inmates as a CEO. It's what
he told me. So the inmatesthought she was an officer working there at
the jail. They had no ideathat she was a minor. They had
(01:21:26):
no idea that she was an intern. That's the first thing. The second
thing is is he showed me thecameras. I asked actually for a tour
of their jail, and they couldn'tgive me a tour, so they brought
me over to the cameras to takea look. Keep in mind, this
is a massive pod where they keepthese federal inmates. In this pod.
He explained to me that there isninety eight inmates in this pod. And
if that's that officer, there's oneofficer too, by the way, only
(01:21:47):
one officer to watch ninety in inmates. That officer is in charge of opening
their doors and closing their doors,so he could let twenty out. He's
let thirty out of, let allninety eight out whatever, Madam office,
but it maates he wants to letout, he can do so. It
is humanly impossible for any person towash over ninety eight in ma plus two
college interns. Now. I specificallyalso asked the Sheriff's office, well,
(01:22:10):
I know you got this one camerafor going into the cell. You have
to have it on camera because Isaw all their cameras, all of their
cameras record all those doors. Solet me see the footage. And he
wasn't very dismissive of it, buthe never showed me the footage. You
know. Again, he said thathe alerted the US Marshals. I asked
him how, and he said,by via phone. He called it's someone
to the office called to form theUS Marshals of what took place. And
(01:22:32):
I asked for phone records. Hewon't hand over the phone records. So
there, it feels like a coverup. Although they don't like the word
cover up or the term cover up, it feels like a cover up when
they're not being transparent, when they'rethreatening to press criminal charges against journalists who
are recording them potentially, and they'renot showing you any evidence of anything else.
And so I think for those whoare familiar with Butler Tech need to
(01:22:55):
really ask these serious questions. Iwent to the board meeting and sadly there
were no parents there, but II spoke to the board and even the
board was very dismissed on us.Two board members actually when they walk down
the board meeting, my producer forthem in the parking not saying if it
believes it leads as if we're beingdramatic about this report. Any parents should
be concerned if they're putting their childin this program because they think these children
(01:23:17):
are adults and they are not adults. Now, also keep in mind,
and they wrote this girl, theywrote letters to her house, they called
her cell phone, and this entiretime when they were doing this, the
jail had no idea, an ideathis was going on. The jail's responsible
for scanning these letters, the jail'sresponsible for reading these letters, and they
are also responsible for monitoring phone calls. So they missed several opportunities to intervene
(01:23:38):
before this young woman is manipulating tobring the drugs or having sex with federal
inmates. Lovely well, And Iknow parents have to give the permission for
the children to children. I say, I have seventeen year old that was
a child to enter this particular thisprogram. But are the parents notified of
the conditions, the working conditions thatyou just explained with one guard response for
for ninety seven some odd in themand opening and closing the jail cells.
(01:24:01):
And I think it's anybody could reachthe conclusion that there's no way one guard
can keep track of all of themat all times while also keeping track of
a teenager working in the jail asan intern. But was there full disclosure
upfront to anybody on this well,I asked that too, and we didn't
really get into our answer. Butif you look at this Butler Coddies the
Butler Tech website, you'll notice thatthey only really admit that the only interaction
(01:24:25):
that these students are supposed to reallyhave with inmates is through the booking program,
and so there's nothing that SUTs Ome walking around freely around pods with
federal inmates. Now, it wouldbe one thing that these are lowes funders,
people who would maybe you know cwisand thinks of that nature. But
the fact that the sheriff, andhe's very defensive in the video that we
(01:24:45):
posted in my interview with him,the fact that the sheriff thinks it's okay
still to this day, that heput minors, women, young women,
seventeen sixteen year old women potentially incells with violent criminals, is deeply,
deeply concerned. I mean, it'stwo individuals whose names came up during all
of this on the convicted murderer andone was convicted of violent robberies, and
(01:25:09):
this is a very serious issue,and he doesn't see it that way.
He said, you know, shewas only three months away from being eighteen,
so we would have hired her inthree months potentially. Well, that
doesn't help the situation. That justmakes me question your judgment even more as
a sheriff. And again he's sayingthat in the new school years they're going
to bring this program back up,and when I asked him if there's been
(01:25:29):
any changes, he had no answers. Well, that's disturbing. Now.
I guess the other component of thisis she was allowed in the cell.
I mean, there's evidence that shewent into the cell. So that's a
breakdown in and of itself. Asyou point out, obviously thirty two year
old Willie Adaway is one of themand thirty three year old Larkin McGowan is
(01:25:51):
the other guy that she had theseencounters with. What is strange as the
exchanges, the letters that were written, the text messages that there was obviously
and the sexual relation. Excuse methat they were able to develop a connection
with her. This wasn't sort ofa one off encounter where you know,
(01:26:13):
a young girl got molested when theguard turned his back and it just happened
all of a sudden. This isclearly something that developed, or at least
it appears to be something that developedover time. Yeah. Yeah. The
letters that are available right now forthose at home who want to read them,
actually are available on Louder with Crowderdot com. He'd made us all
available, seemed crowd. It isall available for you guys to look over.
(01:26:35):
These letters are very clearly showing thatthis young girl wasn't manipulated. Now,
I get it. You know,she shouldn't have the communicating with them.
I understand that. But when you'rea child and you know there's you
got a lot going on in yourworld, especially nowadays at social media and
stuff, insecurities, anything that couldtake place makes you a potential you know,
(01:26:57):
victims being manipulated, right, andit is up to the jail to
protect you from that. And soI do view her. I know,
we view her as a victim andall of this. We don't view her
as somebody who should be held accoutableat all. At this point. I
think she's learned her lesson and Idon't think that she should be the one
who has to face criminal prosecution rightnow. But the fact of the matter
is that there are letters that arespecifically and they're very vulgar. So I
(01:27:20):
will repeat what's in it, butI highly recommend your audience heading over to
look at those themselves. But thepoint is that this young woman could have
been saved if the jail did hisjob at the jail a derveing with the
letter the jail in debw with thephone calls are being made to her home,
to her cell phone allegedly if theywould have actually supervised her, because
(01:27:41):
the jail will tell you that shewas supervised. But ultimately, come on,
how does somebody sneak into a jailcell to have sex allegedly twice on
two occasions and you have no ideathat they've done this until and this is
according to the chief swire, thatthey found out when an informant informed them.
Yeah, and that's the only waythat they found out. So that
doesn't help. Well, jails arekind of open places, so if she's
(01:28:05):
in there having sex with one ofthese inmates, it seems logical and reasonable
to me that a lot of theother inmates might really be aware that that's
happening. So at least one ofthem came forward and rotted them out on
this, or we wouldn't even knowabout that this has happened, that this
had happened. Now we keep goingback to the letters that were exchanged,
the text mails and a like thatthe Butler County Sheriff's Department should have known
about that. Are they at libertyto do? Does the student in this
(01:28:29):
particular program give up the rights toany so called privacy that they might have.
Are they supposed to disclose or handover their phones and other things to
the Butler County Sheriff's Department on aregular basis or is that just something we're
looking at with hindsight? Youanna,Yeah, Well, we don't specifically know.
I asked specifically if they were allowedto bring their cell phones the pods,
(01:28:50):
and I was told by Dwyer thatsome do bring their cell phones into
the pods. But her phone whenall this went down, was confiscated.
How it was told by Dwyer thata copy of herselfhone if thrond of the
copy of her cel phone wasn't made. So they have all for data available,
So they're very well aware of whatwas pisiness place that day. All
right, well this story over.Yeah. Briona Morello of the Briona Morella
(01:29:13):
Show, which you can find againonline at Briannapmarrello dot com. Keep up
the great work. I appreciate youelevating this to the level of attention that
deserves along with the latter with Crowderprogram, and I'll encourage my listeners to
check out all the details, whichat least we get from you since we
can't get them from the sources locally. I know it's really disappointing that coverage
has been really bad, but thankyou, Brian. I appreciate your time.
(01:29:35):
It's been my pleasure. Beon tokeep up the great work, and
I'm sure we'll get the chocol we'lltalk again. Take care of yourself.
It's seven twenty fifty five KRC detalkstation. Give me a record. Let
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IRD Radio music fector Hey seven thirtyhere fifty five Krcdtalk station and Happy eight
Wednesday five one, three, sevenfour fifty fight hundred eight three talk coming
up next segment and State Representative Jennifergross on the house taken away, the
(01:31:02):
taken away control from the speaker overthe Republican cam campaign funds. What is
going on with that? And whyare they voting on sixty bills today?
Jennifer gross On that in the nextsegment. In the meantime, I do
have local stories at real quick herebecause the caller called earlier and I was
I hadn't didn't see the article myself. New York Post is where Joe Streker
found it originally reported, I believein Daily Mail. So Daily Mail reporting
(01:31:30):
a New York Post sub reporting Joeand Joe Biden refinanced their Delaware home twenty
times, raking in four point twomillion dollars from the three hundred and fifty
thousand dollars property. That's the headline. And apparently they took out whole bunches
of mortgages on their various different properties, several mortgages. Refinancing thirty five times
(01:31:54):
goes back to the nineteen seventy shortlyafter they were married. The pair of
negotiated new mortgage or credit deals approximatelyevery seventeen months, according to the Daily
Mail reporting, raising eyebrows. Onefinance expert says that, well, it
doesn't make a lot of sense unlessthey were desperate for cash. Current residents
and mansion they purchased in nineteen ninetysix still has an outstanding mortgage of five
(01:32:17):
hundred and forty one thousand dollars.They bought the thing, I think it
was for three hundred and fifty grand. President's previous Wilmington home bought in nineteen
seventy five fo one hundred and eightyfive thousand dollars, sold in ninety six
for one point two million dollars,had fifteen mortgages and lines of credit attached
(01:32:38):
to it before it was sold tothe vice chairman of creditor card Company MBNA,
Delaware's largest employer, which apparently hiredHunter Biden that same year. Huh
Getting out from underneath the leverage onthat one record show Biden purchased their current
four acre spread for three hundred andfifty grand in ninety six, have since
leveraged it with twenty different home creditagreements and mortgages totaling four point two three
(01:33:02):
million dollars. It goes on fromthere. It's obviously some serious eyebrows ring
being raised on this. I meanthat sounds to me like they're in financial
dire straits. I might add itin spite of the money coming in from
the Chinese Communist Party via various LLCs, through Joe and through Hunter Biden,
(01:33:23):
who just lost his law license afterthe guilty verdict on the gun license charge.
Anyway, over the local stories,this was our award winners for the
morning. This is a horrific,horrific local story from Betavia. Parents of
five adopted children were indicted on multiplechild abuse crimes in Claremont County yesterday.
Charles and Matthew Edmondson charged with fivecounts of child endangering. Prosecutor Mark to
(01:33:46):
Culby said the five siblings were originallybrought to the home as foster children,
were eventually adopted. They've been inand out of hospital for various injuries.
It's called he said. The ClaarmontCounty Sheriff's Office was able to secure evidence
after Charles Muson was convicted on twocounts of gross sexual imposition last year,
now serving three years in the NobleCorrectional Institution in Caldwell. To colby sudden
(01:34:10):
statement, Detective Mike Ross recovered numerousvideos of the defendants treating these beloved special
needs children worse than prisoners of warin their own home in videos too graphic
to describe. It is very clearthat these children were tortured, abused,
and traumatized on a nearly daily basis. Close quote Kelly said. One of
(01:34:30):
the videos showed children appearing malnourished andhuddled on a basement floor trying to say
warm. Edmondson or the Edmondsons.Both of them are each facing up to
eighteen years in prison if convicted.How can people do that? I just
don't understand. Man standing outside astop vehicle on I seventy five early yesterday
hit by a semi and a truck. Twenty one year old Damon Mattson died
(01:34:57):
at the scene of the crash.According to the high State Highway Patrol three
as northbound lanes I seventy five inLiberty Township, police say that twenty thirteen
Mazda c X five stopped in themiddle lanes of the roadway for some unknown
reason. Two people, one ofwhom being mats and Maston, got out
of the stopped car. Twenty oneyear old from Dayton, was hit by
an oncoming Kenworth Semi. According tothe troopers, he was then hit by
(01:35:21):
a twenty twenty one International truck.Other documen from the Maza taken to a
Triam hospital with non life threatening injuries. O High State High of Patrol is
still investigating. Wow. I guessthat falls into the category of uh,
don't do that. Seven thirty fiveif you have ker City Talk station and
state Representative Jennifer Gross returns to theprogram. I'm talking about antics going on.
(01:35:45):
The Ohio House Speaker has been well, had his control over the Republican
campaign funds taken away, plus votingon sixty bills today. Explanation from Jennifer
Gross coming up next. After Imentioned my good friends of Plump type plumbing,
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two seven tight five one three seventwo seven eighty four eighty three fifty five
krc dot com. Time for thenine first twenty one, The forecasts going
(01:36:55):
to be a scattered shower kind ofday to day. Some storms are possible
and they may be strong. Eightyfive for the high, down to sixty
three over night. It's going todry out overynight. What mostly sunny skies
tomorrow along with low humidity. They'repredicting eighty three for the high sixty overnight,
clear skies in a sunny Friday witha high of ninety one seventy three
right now. High for traffic Jasonfrom the UC Health Traffic Center. University
(01:37:18):
of Cincinnati Cancer Center is opening themost comprehensive blood center in the nation.
Future of cancer is here called fiveone three five eighty five UCCC northbound seventy
five typical slogo from Buttermilk Pike headingnorthbound up to the Brents Beets Bridge attack
an extra five to ten minutes onhere mute South seventy five is off rampant
Kyle's you'll find a broken down Alsogoing to find a broken down west two
(01:37:41):
seventy five, but three mile onthe Ohio side. You're tapping the brakes
south seventy five through the lock onesplit down the paddock. Jason Earhart on
fifty five krc the talk station seventhirty nine, Come one seven forty here
fifty five KRCD Talk Station. I'mberhappy. Wednesday two. We've got Orlando
Sonza, who heading up the HamiltonCounty Veteran Services. He was appointed to
(01:38:03):
that job and some are questioning andcalling out why he is doing that when
he's running for office. We'll hearfrom Orlando in response to the criticisms from
the Democrats in the meantime. Iam pleased to welcome back to the debat
Cassey Morning Show. State Representative JenniferGross. Jennifer, good to have you
back on the show and a veryhappy Wednesday to you. Thank you.
Happy Wednesday to you too, Brian. Another is this just another illustration of
(01:38:27):
the dysfunction of the Republican Party inColumbus, because I know it started early
on with the appointment of a houHouse Speaker, Jason Stevens, amidst some
you know, the Blue twenty twoturmoil and everything that's gone after that.
But a judge, Franklin County CommonPolice Judge Mark Surrat, on Friday,
stripped Stevens of his control over theGOP caucus campaign fund. How did this
(01:38:49):
end up in front of a judge? What is going on and where did
this controversy come from? Jennifer GrossWell, Brian, first, I want
to tell you today we are moreunited than ever. However, he wasn't
appointed. The speaker was voted inby twenty two Republicans and thirty four Democrats.
(01:39:11):
So it wasn't Republican caucus and forthose listening caucuses, our majority.
It wasn't the majority of Republicans whoappointed this speaker or voted him in.
It was thirty four Democrats and twentytwo Republicans. So what then happened was
we appointed then the leaders of ourcaucus, and we did a formal declaration,
(01:39:33):
we signed, we had a formalmeeting. That's the majority. So
there are forty five of us whosaid we will control the campaign fund.
And there's forty five that is themajority. That's a caucus, right,
he has twenty two, we haveforty five, and so we set that
all up. Then he proceeded toNow most of the money was probably theirs,
(01:39:54):
and I can't say how much wasin there, but he proceeded to
spend all the money in the primarysometime against candidates that and by the way,
he was censured by the Ohio RepublicanParty also, so then he spent
all the money down to approximately twentyfive thousand dollars. But there are benefits
(01:40:15):
to having that account, and theyI wasn't involved in the legal part of
it, but there were three attorneysthat worked and together they succeeded in making
sure and because he continued to functionas a leader, did not ask the
rest of us how we wanted tospend the money. Where the money was
(01:40:36):
going to go. It's a campaignfund. So that money was taken and
he spent it all and they wedidn't give up the fight and so now
we have the campaign committee. Youneed to have that when you're when you're
getting ready to run into the general. We have some pretty hefty battles ahead,
(01:40:57):
got no question about it. Thestory, well, according to reporting,
the fund raised and spent four pointseven million dollars since last year.
And as you illustrate, some ofthe AD campaigns were against Republicans who ran
against Stevens supporters and others allied withthe Marin camp in this year's primaries.
I guess did he have exclusive sayover who got money, who got AD
(01:41:18):
campaign money or not? I mean, was there no oversight from the caucus
the rest of the Republicans in Columbus. That's a great question, Brian,
because actually there was. Phil Plummerwas our appointed member that should have had
a role, So it should havebeen both sides. We agreed that there
would be representation from the side,the part of the caucus, which is
(01:41:40):
the majority, let's be really clear, the majority of forty five of sixty
seven Republicans, and that we wouldhave a say in how that money went.
But what happened during the primary washe took it and ran. Who
made all those decisions? I wouldguess since seize the head that he had
the final decision, but ultimately wehad no say my side of the caucus,
(01:42:02):
the mayor in camp had no sayin what happened. But I want
to I want to say to youtoday, excuse me that we met last
night and we there were smiles allthroughout the room. There were actually some
people from the Stevens camp at ourmeeting last night because they realized the writing's
on the wall. We are united. We're getting ready to run into a
(01:42:24):
huge battle. You know, Trumpis pulling slightly lower nationally if you can
imagine. I mean, I don'tknow whatever polls, but but in Ohio
he's winning a resounding win. Butwe've got a Marino race against the guy
who was the final vote on Obamacare. We need to get rid of that
guy. And we've got some massivebattles ahead. And that's the down ticket.
(01:42:46):
Our justices, our judges, andthe state rep people need to understand
that their vote counts, even forthe representative like me on the ballot.
They need to vote all the waydown and they need to care about who
is beyond Trump. So, withoutquestion, so anyway, so we're united.
I'm glad to hear that that's somepositive news under what always appears to
(01:43:08):
me a rather dysfunctional I mean,Republicans run the state. Why they aren't
in lockstep unity for the good ofthe state of Ohio. Just storming makes
me scratch my head where the bluetwenty two came from and what their motives
are kind of befuddling to me,and why listeners as well, And that
is I mean, that is sothat's what's so heartbreaking for me. A
(01:43:28):
solid look at the platform, solidRepublican, I mean, fiscal limited government,
you know, pro liberty, Republican. That's what's so amazing and frustrating
to me is that people go,you guys are in the state, Well
not really. Our speaker was electedby thirty four Democrats and twenty two Republicans.
So who elected our speaker not Republicans. Democrats did because Republicans by a
(01:43:54):
majority, chose Derek Marin. Sopeople, and I think a lot of
people are like, whatever, Republican'sa Republican. But today we're going to
beat We're going to We're getting readyto vote on the largest capital budget in
the history of Ohio, increasing spendingcurrently by four point two billion dollars.
People ought to be writing the representativestheir senators saying this is ridiculous, or
(01:44:17):
if they want it because they're gettingwhatever in the budget they should, they
should go ahead and say yes,vote on that. But we need to
hear your representation needs to hear fromyou. I listen, though some of
my lefties would say I don't,but you know, I'm not into some
of the things they're into. Well, Representative growth, Let's pause for them,
(01:44:38):
because I want you to put alittle more flesh on the bones of
that statement, because it sounds likean outrageous amount of money, and I
guess are there. I have tohear my notes. You're voting on sixty
bills today, just about I'm hearingfifty six bills. Fifty six bills.
Let me just take a break rightnow. We'll bring you back and we'll
let you complete the thoughts on this, because now I got even more questions
(01:45:00):
more with Representative Jennifer Gross some fortyseven right now, be right back with
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Fifty five KRC the talk station.You too could buy advertising time on
(01:46:23):
the fifty five KRC Morning show justsaying I don't control the content. Scotter
showers and storms today. A fewstrong storms are possible high eighty five drying
out of a night down to sixtythree sunny tomorrow in low humidity. I
like emphasizing that eighty three for thehigh a pleasant sixty degrees overnight and on
Friday mostly sunny sky is going upto ninety one seventy three Right now.
(01:46:44):
Time for a traffic update. Jasonfrom the uc Hell Traffic Center. University
of Cincinnati Cancer Center is opening themost comprehensive blood center in the nation.
The future of cancer is here.Call them at five one three five eighty
five u CECC soundbound, but hewon's starting to slow down now as well.
From fire for down toward Montgomery Roadin Kenwood, seventy five south already
(01:47:04):
a slow goo through Blackland Split downto pattic inbound seventy four crowds up Cole
Range in northern Kentucky. You've gota broken down south seventy five s grand
with Kyle's northbound line is of seventyfive slow from Buttermilk Pike to the bridge.
I'm Jason Earhardt on fifty five krcthe talk station fIF about KRCD talk
station. Brian Thomas, Sherwood StateRepresentati Jennifer Gross talking about north of fifty
(01:47:28):
almost sixty bills are going to bedealing with today and today we're currently working
on the four point two billion dollarsspending bill. You mentioned that that sounds
like a whole lot of money,Jennifer, and I note that for one
of the line items includes four hundredand fifty six million dollars for higher education
institutions across the state. I meancolleges are getting almost five hundred million dollars.
(01:47:53):
Not for me, Brian, no, I know that. And real
quick, I need to say,your wife, you are very very smart
man. Sounds like you got marrieda very very great woman. Say out
of my element, OutKick my coverage. I always say smart men, very
smart and trust me, I hita home run on that one, no
question about it. So yeah,I mean, there's some really bad bad
(01:48:15):
things in there. There are somegood things in there, and so that's
what makes it really hard. Ithink that you know, we're having a
hard time. Remember we knew thatwhen the Cares Act money came in.
We knew when ARPA money came in, we were going to have to decrease
the demands on spend that was supposedto be a one time spend. Remember
that now that me has dried up, and so people are still wanting all
(01:48:36):
the money. And some Republicans,because Democrats don't do this, need to
use the word no, no.We you know, everybody, we're paying
twenty six percent more for eggs andfifty percent more for whatever. I was
looking at a list I can't remember, maybe chicken or beef or whatever.
It's great and it's costing everybody,and I just I'm I don't mean to
(01:49:00):
plug for him, but I'm aDave Ramsey person. So whenever I vote
for every Ohio and I think,you know, how am I going to
answer how I spent your money?It's your money. We don't make money,
so well, this is one thingthat defends me. And I know
your fingerprints aren't on this or atleast I presume so correct the record if
they are. But the Cincinnati OpenTennis tournament is going to get twenty seven
(01:49:21):
and a half million taxpayer dollars fora sporting event. The Mason is that
the Mason one. You know,they were going to leave the state,
and it brings in a large amountof money. I wasn't instrumental or even
part of the development of all ofthat, but the revenue it brings in
(01:49:44):
compared to the spend is more so. It's a revenue pluck and Paul Brown
Stadium or whatever it's called these days, pay course. I mean, you
know you're like for me once.Yeah, that's where that skepticism comes from.
I do want to say with allthose bills, I want to I
just want to call out a couplethings. First of all, we're going
(01:50:04):
to put pet insurance on our insurancethings, so we're doing that today.
We are recognizing September twenty second asVeterans Suicide Awareness because suicide Awareness month is
September and we lose twenty two veteransa day, and so September twenty second
is so we're just redating that andthen expunging some records of human people that
(01:50:28):
are victims of human trafficking, likeif a woman or a young girl was
forced to prostitute herself, expunging someof those records. So there are some
good bills, but there's also someexpansion of medicaid in these bills. There's
the four point two capital budget.There's lots of bills with appropriations. What
that means is that they either aremoney from the budget that was already passed,
(01:50:51):
or it's again new spending. Andthat's my issue. If there's new
spending in a bill, it isn'tthat I don't like the topic. It's
that we already had a budget thatshould have been all in the budget in
January. And the little secret isif you didn't get your money in January,
just keep trying to apply for itduring the year and the softies will
(01:51:11):
give you more money. Well,whose money is that yours? Including seven
and seven million dollars for the Rockand Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland.
Wow wow, yeah, uh huh? You see I mean? Is that?
Oh and let's not forget we're alsotaking out a bond to pay for
it. So what that means iswe're also taking out a loan debt service,
So are highest spend plus the loanequals no for Jennifer Gross. And
(01:51:36):
interest rates are still high, aren'tthey, Jennifer on you're going to be
borrowing money at a Yeah, okay, they're not a three percent any longer,
so debt service always a big problem. Anyhow, Jennifer grows can't thank
you know for coming in the morning. Should to talk about this, Get
in touch with your elected officials.If you're unhappy with spending, and I
know a lot of people are,now it's the time to act. Maybe
it's too late, I don't know, but all of that's going to take
(01:51:57):
place today today. And there aresome other bills that may come on too
that are not They're equally not good. So I bet you don't have time
to talk about all of them thoughwe are out When you have what I
want to tell people, when wehave fifty six bills in one day,
there's no way everybody to know what'sin those bills, and that needs to
stock. Yeah, really excellent point. We'll put an exclamation point on that
(01:52:21):
underline and put it in bold andall caps. Jennifer Gross look forward to
having back on the Morning show.Keep fighting good fight on behalf of the
the Ohio taxpayer. We need responsefiscally responsible folks like you to take care
of matters. So good luck onthat today and look forward to having me
back on the show real soon.Thank you as always, Brian, have
(01:52:42):
a great anniversary. Thank you verymuch. Coming up off top of the
our news, Orlando Sanza taking someheat from the Democrats because they appointed him
as Hamilton County Veteran Services Boss.Yeah, he asked him to do it.
Let's hear from Orlando after the news. I don't care about it any
It's what motivates your vote. There'sevil for Verden and they're trying to destroyer.
(01:53:04):
Fifty five KRC the talk station.This report is sponsored by All State.
Some people just know the best ratefor you is a rate based on
you with allsto fighting versus Trump.He wanted to debate me again. Here
this smack He's getting beaten before thisSmackDown by fifty five KRC the talk station
(01:53:30):
at O six. Here fifty fivekr CD talk station. A ain very
very happy Wednesday to you. I'malways pleased to welcome to the fifty five
KRC Morning Show. The right manfor the job. Orlando's sons a running
for Congress's got to kick out GregLandsman. Orlando sogns a dot com is
where you find him. There's alittle donate button on his page. I
clicked that one day, about amonth or so ago, and Orlando's in
(01:53:51):
rarefied air since the Thomas household washappy to donate to his campaign. Orlando
Sons will welcome back to the fiftyfive KRC Morning Show, my friend.
It's great to have you on today, Brian, always a pleasure. Thanks
for having me and thanks for yoursupport. My friend, happy to do
it well. You're a guy whoout kicked his coverage too. Today is
my thirty second wedding anniversary, andI'm blessed to have married such a wonderful
(01:54:13):
woman who's been able to put upwith me for all those years. And
I know you're graduate, happily married, family man, yourself a West Point
graduate where you met your wife,and obviously eminently qualified to manage the Hamilton
County Veteran Services Office which you arenow is responsible for, which, much
to the chagrin of some Democrats,there was an opinion piece or a piece
(01:54:33):
in the cincinn Inquire kind of ahit job. People complaining about, well,
how can you run a campaign andserve, you know, a full
time job for the veterans Orlando Sonza, You're here on the Morning show to
address these concerns. Yeah. Well, first of all, I have to
just say, right from the GeckoBrian, is that it's an honor to
serve my fellow veterans in Hamilton County, absolute honor, and to have the
(01:54:57):
vote of confidence of the majority ofthis board of Veteran Service Commissioners to lead
this organization. It's not only humbling, it takes me and Jessica back to
our time in the military, wherewhen we answer the call to serve,
we just again felt it as ahumble privilege to be able to lead whatever
organization that we were assigned to.So this isn't the same way. It's
(01:55:19):
the same answer to a call whetherI was an assistant prosecutor for Hamilton County
or now the executive director of theVeterans Service Commission. It's an answer to
serve my community, and I'm humbledby it. Look, the thing I
just have to say to these andI call them just naysayers, is I
asked them a question back if youare so concerned about veterans in Hamilton County,
(01:55:43):
Where in the world were you eightmonths ago? Where were you three
years ago? Where were you fiveyears ago when these issues were just rising
to the surface of as you andI both know, Brian, of the
thirty one million dollars that was reportednot being spent on veterans. If you're
so concerned about veterans, where wereyou? Then it's only now when your
(01:56:04):
political opponent gets appointed and hired forthe job, that now you decide to
say that you care about veterans.Well, look, all of the veterans
in Hamilton County, I at leastam speaking for two of them. See
pass this charade, and this politicalcharade belongs outside of this great organization,
(01:56:25):
and that's where it's going to stay. Know that while I'm in this role,
however long I have the opportunity toserve, we're going to do great
work for the over forty thousand veteransin Hamilton County. Well, I think
it's critical to point out that theythe Veteran Service Commission, approached you about
the job. They had fifteen applicants. You did not select yourself for the
job. You did admit to them, I mean even talked about it in
(01:56:48):
the inquire I submitted my resume,gave full disclosure to this board, and
said, look, I could begone in six months, all of which
was known upfront, and yet youwere selected among the fifteen applicants as the
best qualified to do the job.I think that speaks volumes in the face
of the fact that you're running well. And that's exactly right. I mean,
(01:57:09):
I told this board of five commissioners, I sat down with each of
them individually or at least had along phone call with all of them,
and said to that point that look, I could be here for six months,
I could be here much longer.It all depends on what happens November.
But know this is that if youbelieve that someone with my skill set
(01:57:29):
and experience, not just as aveteran, not just as a West Point
graduate, but as a CPA whounderstands financial systems and budgeting and accounting,
knowing that this board is responsible formillions of dollars of taxpayer money, and
also as an attorney, as aprosecutor, knowing that look, yes,
(01:57:49):
this Commission has gotten a lot ofnegative press because of money not being spent
on veterans, but at the sametime, this is an organization that must
have by Ohio law, and thatthis commission UNDERRC fifty nine oh one is
tasked to do very specific things andvery specific things only for veterans in the
(01:58:11):
county. So we have to makesure that there is a balance between giving
and affording our veterans in the countyabsolutely every benefit they're entitled to under the
law, but at the same timebeing good stewards of taxpayer money. That's
exactly, at least for me,the mentality that you would want for someone
as bleeding of organization, and Iput it back at them, is that
(01:58:32):
if you believe that that's more advantageousfor organization over someone that may have a
little bit more longevity to be ableto commit right out the gate, but
has different skill sets, the choiceis yours. And they made a decision
and again honored by their vote ofconfidence. And we've hit the ground running
from day one, because there's alot of work to do just in these
(01:58:54):
three to five months. Believe me, for veterans in the case, well,
you weren't treating your You recently steppeddown from the Prosecutor's office in order
to take over this role. Soyou weren't treating your prosecutor's job as a
part time job while you campaigned,were you, Orlando, weren't you able
to manage that full time job aswell as go on the campaign trail and
(01:59:15):
handle your affairs in that together.That's exactly right, and none of these
naysayers said anything about that for thislast ten to twelve months, when I
was a full time assistant county prosecutorin Hamilton County, doing a full docket
every day, doing trials whenever theycame up. And I have the luxury,
(01:59:38):
as I've told many people, ofhaving three full time jobs. I'm
a full time husband and father firstand foremost. I knew you're going to
have a full time day job andwhatever. I don't have the luxury,
Brian, that a lot of candidatesdo where they can take a year to
two years just to campaign. Ihave a family of four young kids under
nine that I've got to put foodon the table, and so it's always
(02:00:01):
been my commitment, ever since theannouncing for this race back last summer,
that I was going to be ahard working, diligent husband and father during
the day and then whatever comes inmy personal time at night on the weekends.
That's my third full time job runningfor office. To again answer the
call not just to serve my community, but my country is what I do
(02:00:25):
on my own personal time, andI think it just speaks to Look,
people need to wake up and understandthat this is exactly what makes this country
great, is that there are peoplethat believe in strong work ethic. There
are people that believe in true gritthat are not afraid to roll up their
sleeves and manage their time wisely whilethey're still supporting their family and continuing to
(02:00:47):
answer the call to serve their communityand their country. And that's what I
intended to do, and that's whatI continue to intend to do. Orlandosanta
dot COM's refiner Orlando Fory Park Company. I know you're on a real tight
schedule, so I'm not going tokeep you long. Just want to find
out how the campaign is going,that you are doing in your spare time
outside of your full time work.Yeah. Look, the campaign is definitely
(02:01:11):
heating up. I mean I amtaken out of the house almost every other
night, and the weekends are jampack. It's just speaking to the excitement
that is around this specific race.I mean, this is going to be
a big year, Brian, youand I both know that, whether it's
the top of the ticket or evendown ballot. So as we get closer
to November, the momentum just continuesto increase. And so I just invite
(02:01:34):
all the folks that just want toget energized with us and want to bring
again great policy, great policy forSouthwest Ohio across crime, safety, the
economy, education. Will then getinvolved Orlandosanta dot com. Gladly have you
on the team. Click that donatebutton, get yourself a yard sign work,
(02:01:56):
and do some door knock on behalfof Orlando. It's all worthwhile.
Get him in Congress, and we'regoing to be on a better path than
we currently are. Orlando, youknow you always have a shot here in
the fifty five Carasey Morning Show anytime you want, I'll do anything I
can to get you elected. AndI know you're going to do a wonderful
job on Behalf of Ohioan's keep upthe great work and we'll talk again very
soon, sir. Thanks Brian,thank you, and congratulations on the appointment.
(02:02:19):
I know you'll do a great jobfor the veterans here in Amblm County
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eye up. No traffic, JoeJoe summed it up. There's traffic.
Watch out, keep your eyes peeled. Sorry about that little computer glitch there,
which can happen from time to time. Uh, what else is going
on in the wide wide world ofsports? Again? I want to remind
folks since it is a Wednesday,can give me a convenient reminder to remind
(02:04:36):
folks that venue change for listener lunchtaking place on July tenth. Normally it's
the first Wednesday of the month,so we got a little time change there
because of course Independence Day on thefourth. I'll be taking the fifth off
after having celebrated America's independence the daybefore. So tenth of the month,
(02:04:56):
we're going to be at the TurfClub. We're not going to be at
Smoke Justice. Originally we were supposedto be there. There was some communication
breakdown in scheduling or something. Don'thold it against Smoke Justice. Then he
did invite us back later in theyear, but for whatever reason, they
can't have us on the tenth.So with that being said, I hope
to see a turf club. Theywere kind enough to open early just for
our fifty five k see listener lunches, which is what Turf Club has been
(02:05:19):
doing now for a long time.I love that place. I want to
keep it alive. And well,it's not a huge venue, and folks
who've been there know exactly what toexpect, but I dearly love the owners
and the burghers are there great andthe atmosphere is just so much fun,
so much fun, so many fondmemories from the Turf Club. So that's
where we're going to be. Tellyour friends mark it down for July tenth.
(02:05:43):
And what else do I got?Judge entered to Polton coming up,
Julia Soane let free so I knowI think the Judge I can anticipate he'll
be happy about that one. We'llget the details from Judge of Polatona coming
up next. And I started offthe morning show pointing it out. One
is that we got one, gotrid of one, at least the good
people of New York. One squadmember gone, and that would be Representative
(02:06:04):
Jamal Bowman. He lost the primaryto George Latimer Big. It was the
biggest, most expensive congressional primary inour nation's history. In case you not
for me with Jamal Bowman, he'sthe guy that pulled the fire alarm.
He was the guy over the weekendranting about Jewish people, bit of an
anti Semite. If I may boilit down my perception, you can draw
(02:06:27):
your own conclusion. Bernie Sanders wasthere at the event along with Alexandri Casio
Cortez, who did survive her primarySadly, it is New York, what
are you going to do? Butthat was when Jamal Bowman started going all
f wordy upset about APEX. TheAmerican Israeli Public Affairs Committee fundling in fourteen
(02:06:49):
million dollars of their money to defeatBowman because he is an anti Israel kind
of guy, outspoken supporter of Palestinianat the middle of this war, and
had some pretty charged comments after theOctober seventh attack on Israel by the murderous
thugs that are the Palestinian terrorist groupAMAS. So it cost him his job
(02:07:15):
basically. But the funniest part aboutit is the money that flowed in and
the fact that Bernie Sanders and AlexanderA. Casio Cortez were all angry about
the fact that the money was flowingin. We should be outraged when a
super pack of dark money can spendtwenty million dollars to brainwash people into believing
something that isn't true. We shouldbe outraged about that. Bowman said,
(02:07:41):
well, you know, I lookat the state of Ohio and a lot
of people were outraged the outside influencedmoney, the George Soros type funded organizations
to you know, fund things likeleft wing prosecutors vote for Hamilton County prosecuting
Melissa Powers. It's okay when leftwing dark money flows in, but if
it's anything other than something supporting theselunatics like Jamal Bowman, then they get
(02:08:03):
upset about it. That's a twoway street, folks. Sadly the street
is paved with mostly left wing dollars, and I wish we had some more
conservative organizations with billions of dollars tothrow at conservative races in support of whatever.
They call them brainwashing. And that'sthe other component of this, And
it always bothers me. So muchmoney does win campaigns. I think that's
(02:08:26):
the reason why we have these conversations, but that you can be twisted and
brainwashed simply by a campaign ad Usuallythey're not even on the issues. I
mean, if we all did ourown independent research, we all regularly studied
the media and read about the variouscandidates, what they stand for, what
(02:08:48):
they've done in the past, howwhat their campaign is about, and what
they hope to accomplish for the country. We could draw our own independent conclusions
based upon the words of the candidateand the records. Who wouldn't need a
campaign ad by some political action committeefunded by big fat out of state money
to sort of convince us to dosomething that we might otherwise not do,
(02:09:09):
And that that they can do thatsuccessfully is mind blowing to me. Anyway,
it worked in New York, atleast as far as the American is
Early Public Affairs Committee is concerned,that will be money well spent. I
believe if you pulled them today,Judge Ednapolitano. Coming up next, Chimneycare,
Fireplace and Stove. I'm recommending youget in touch with them. They're
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You should think about. Chimneycare,Fireplace and Stove does chimney inspections and
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that over the years, but youhaven't inspected. It'll give you peace of
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Why you're having them inspect your chimneychimneycare fireplaces though online chimneycareco dot Com since
nineteen eighty eight. Tell them.Brian said, how when you call for
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first forty one forecast. Today scottand showers and storms. A few strong
storms are possible. We'll go upto eighty five down to sixty three overnight,
clouds will move out. We'll havea sunny day tomorrow with low humidity
yay high of eighty three, sixtyovernight with clear skies, and Friday a
high of ninety one with sunny skiesseventy three degrees. Right now, let's
hear about traffic. Jason from theUC Health Traffic Center. U See's Cancer
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Center is opening the most comprehensive bloodcenter in the nation. Future of cancer
is here called five eighty five UCCC. Tap of the brakes right now behind
the wreck eastbound two seventy five,just before the I seventy five merging Sharonville.
Wet road conditions certainly not helping yourcommute out. They're going to find
a LA seventy one come in southboundfrom two seventy five down to Ridge.
(02:11:43):
The northbound lanes from Kenwood up toPfeiffer in northern Kentucky. North seventy five
still crowded from Buttermilk Pike to theBrent Spence and Jason Earhart on fifty five
KRC the talk station, Hey,thirty fift about KERC the talk station.
Ain't very happy Wednesday to you,of course, miss Chuck Ingram's comments,
given that we're talking to the JudgeJenner Polton and now, but Jo even
(02:12:07):
he gets vacation days sometimes. Welcomeback. It is my favorite time of
week, Judge Nned of Polton,and it's good to have you back on
the program. Sorry, it's apleasure to be here. But I missed
the traffic report. How am Igoing to get out of this traffic mess?
Fortunately you're in New Jersey, comfortablyin your own home. All right.
(02:12:28):
I thought this this whole Julian signsaying you and I have seen eye
to eye on this because you andI are both familiar with the Pentagon Paper's
case, and you even bring thatup in your column. I was pleased
to see because the facts almost mirrorthose involving Julian Assange and WikiLeaks. Juliana
Signs did not steal the government thedocuments which embarrassed the Bush and Obama administrations.
(02:12:48):
He merely published them. Publishing thosedocuments is not a vile, is
not punishable or actionable, criminally orotherwise. And yet there's Julian Assange being
charged criminally with espionage. I guess, your honor, how did this come
to be and why did it takeso long for Juliana soane to be released
under the circumstances, Well, youknow, the Obama administration charged Bradley Manning
(02:13:15):
now calling now referred to as ChelseaManning. Another issue for another time,
America sentenced to a military prison forthirty five years and forced the government to
spend fifty to seventy five thousand dollarson a gender transition surgery while you're serving
(02:13:39):
this thirty five year term. It'scrazy, but you know again, we
well, we're here to talk aboutJulian and then have your commute, your
sentence commuted by President Barack Obama.So President Obama and his Attorney General Eric
Holder decided that the thief should beprosecuted properly. He had a top security
(02:14:03):
clearance. He stole this stuff andhe gave it to Julian. He pleaded
guilty. Bradley Manning. He pleadedguilty to two or three counts in return
for dropping the death penalty. Hethen went the trial on the other counts
without a death penalty. He wasconvicted. He was sentenced the thirty five
years in jail and jail he hadthe gender transition, which has nothing to
(02:14:24):
do with the case, and thenPresident Obama commuted his sentence so that he
was released on the morning. Onthe morning of January twentieth, twenty seventeen,
hours before Donald Trump was inaugurated aspresident, Eric Holder and Barack Obama
both decided that the Pentagon papers caseprotected Julian Massage and he should not be
(02:14:48):
indicted. Trump overreacted, in myview, to the release of Bradley Manning
and caused such a firestorm attacking,attacking, Assage, attacking Holder, and
attacking by then former President Obama thatthe DOJ interpreted this barrage of attacks as
(02:15:13):
let's indict Assange and see what happens. Ah what happened. They indicted as
Sage. He was living in Londonat the time. The London police said,
would you come in and talk tous? He said, hell no,
because you'll never let me out.He goes to the Ecuadorian embassy,
which of course is international property,and he lives there for seven years until
(02:15:33):
the government of Ecuador changes and theykick him out, and then he's arrested
by the British police on an extraditionwarrant issued by a federal judge in Virginia,
where the indictment against him was filed. He is then put in solitary
confinement in a basement dungeon in themost severe and restrictive jail the British have
(02:15:56):
called Bellmarsh on the outside of London, where he stays for five years while
many many applications to reject the extraditionare filed. One of those applications is
based on allegations that Mike Pompeo,the Secretary of State at the time Massage
(02:16:20):
was indicted, but the head ofthe CIA in the two preceding years,
concocted a plot to lure him outof the Ecuadorian embassy and murder him.
That plot was never denied by thefederal government, and was taken into account
by the British courts, some ofwhich ordered the extradition, some of which
(02:16:41):
did. He had one appeal remainingfor the extradition when they cut this deal.
The deal was he would plead guiltynot in the United States mainland,
but a part of the earth Inever heard of, and I never knew
there was a federal court there.I thought, I'm an expert in this
stuff. I didn't know a federaljudge appointed where the President confirms by the
(02:17:03):
Senate sits on this island, fifteenhundred miles from Hawaii, the Marianna Islands.
So he flies there, enters aplea to conspiracy to commit espionage,
is sentenced to times served, thetime served in the British dungeon, and
(02:17:24):
then it's set free. And aswe speak, he's a free person in
Australia. If I were he,I would renounce the guilty plea that I
answered and simply saying I'm not guilty. Everybody knows I'm not guilty. I
just did that to go along,to get along, to get out of
that, out of that jail.The only crimes here were committed by the
(02:17:46):
British government which tortured him, andthe American government which prosecuted someone knowing.
The Supreme Court has forbidden this veryprosecution now, And that's the big point
that I've always had on this.You know, the Pentagon papers, we're
stolen in a similar fashion. Theywere handed over to a news outlet.
Of course, we didn't have theInternet back then, but substitute WikiLeaks for
(02:18:09):
the New York Times or the WashingtonPost. You got the same set of
circumstances. And the Supreme Court said, this is free speech, it's part
of the First Amendment. It's includingthe right to know what the government has
done. And that's what we learnedthrough the publishing of these WikiLeaks documents.
And I think we're better people forknowing what our government was doing, whether
or not it was right or wrongthat Manning stolen in the first place.
(02:18:31):
I'm happy that this information was revealedto the American public. Yes, yes,
How can you have a democracy whenthe government kills in secret and hides
it and lies about it. Wehave every right to know what's going on.
I mean, this Pentagon papers case, it's an unbelievable case. You
(02:18:52):
know, you're family, of course, with oral argument and the oral argument
is the judges asking the lawyer's questions. Argument doesn't show up in the opinion.
Ah, But in this opinion,Justice Douglas requested of the Chief Justice
that a portion of the oral argumentbe reprinted in the opinion. And the
(02:19:13):
portion of the oral argument is this, Douglas to the Solicitor General, Mister
Solicitor General, you're familiar with theFirst Amendment. Yes, you're familiar with
this language. Congress shall make nolaw abridging the freedom of speech. Yes,
Justice Douglas, mister Solicitor General,doesn't no law mean no law?
(02:19:35):
And he can't answer it. Hecan't answer the question. So, but
the opinion reminds us that the FirstAmendment not only stands for the freedom of
speech, it stands for the rightof the press to expose the government.
Because without a free press exposing thegovernment, free speech is meaningless. We
(02:19:56):
will then only utter the words thatthe government wants us to utter. In
the Daniel Ellsberg Pentagon Papers case,Elsberg is on trial for espionage. In
the middle of the trial, theFBI breaks into his psychiatrist's office. Today,
they would hack the psychiatrists computer,But in the day that broke into
(02:20:16):
the psychiatrist's office. When the judgelearned about this literally during the trial,
he dismissed the indictment and Elsberg walkedout of the courtroom a free person.
The jury was let go and thegovernment decided not to reprosecute. So is
this a happy day? You know, it's a happy day because he's finally
(02:20:37):
free. It's unhappy because the truecriminals in this case, the Justice Department
of the United States and the CrownProsecution Service in Great Britain, are not
being punished for what they did tohim. And as ecstatic as I am
that he's finally free, I've beenarguing for this for years. I interviewed
(02:20:58):
him twice when I was at whenI was at Fox, when he was
able to give interviews. The factthat they still got their pound of flesh
by this meaningless guilty plea in theMariana Islands infuriates me. But I'm happy
that he's free. Well, inhis efforts to stop the extradition, was
he ever able to make the legalargument that he would have made had he
been here in the United States aboutthe Pentagon Paper's case. Did that argument
(02:21:20):
ever see the light of discussion infront of any court of law. What
the arguments that were made. Theonly arguments the British government would hear were,
is he exposed to the death penalty? Because if he is, we're
not going to extra tide him becausewe don't have a death penalty in Britain.
They don't have one in all ofEurope. Can he get a fair
(02:21:43):
trial, meaning will the government concedethat the First Amendment applies to non Americans?
And if he is incarcerated, willhe be safe? That's the only
inquiries they had. That's what raisedthe issue of the alleged Pompeo plot to
to murder him. So they nevergot to the Pentagon papers issue. The
(02:22:05):
closest they came to it was canhe make a First Amendment defense? So
the government answered those questions, Yes, he can make a First Amendment defense.
No, he's not going to beexposed to the death penalty. Yes,
he'll be treated as if he wasan American citizen. Yes, he'll
be safe in prison. How didthey make that representation? In a letter
(02:22:26):
from the US Ambassador to Great Britainto the judge. The judge looked at
the letter, say this means nothingthis guy's political appointee, and he's here
in London. This isn't the AttorneyGeneral of the United States. The judge
threw the letter out and said,I'm gonna hear oral argument on all this
because I don't accept what's in thisletter. That's when the negotiation is to
set him free began. That's whenthe American government for the first time began
(02:22:50):
to fear that he might not actuallybe extradited. And if he wasn't going
to be extradited, he'd be freedimmediately, which meant he'd be back up
on the air releasing more documents,which I expect them to start doing tomorrow.
Tomorrow, Judge Anapaul Town, it'salways wonderful talking with you. I
appreciate your column which is coming outtonight midnight. Julian Assange is free.
(02:23:13):
You can read it for yourself andas we do, we'll part company on
talking about judging freedom, which peoplecan find online YouTube, Facebook. Who
are going to be talking to today, your honor. I have Phil Geraldi,
the longtime career CIA agent, talkingabout the massade in the Pentagon and
in the White House, Oh myword. And Aaron Mate, the Great
(02:23:39):
investigative journalist talking talking about why theUnited States destroyed the peace agreement that had
been signed between Russia and Ukraine inMarch of twenty two before the war started.
Those topics like that, it's nowonder it's such a popular program Judging
(02:24:01):
Freedom again. We'll find it online. You'll be happy you did. Until
next week, your honor, Ireally look forward to it as always.
I hope you have a wonderful week, and I appreciate the time you smoke
my listeners to me each and everyWednesday. Thank you, Brian, all
the best, Take care, myfriend. It's eight forty two here a
fifty five KR city talk station.And I love recommending fastening pro roofing to
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nine first one and weather forecast tillsIt's got scattered showers and storms today and
may be strong storms at times eightyfive For the high down to sixty three
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overy night clouds will move out tomorrowa low humidity high of eighty three with
sunny skies, pleasant and clear overnightdown to sixty and Friday is going to
be a mostly sunny day as well, but going up to ninety one,
closing out at seventy four degrees.Let's get that final traffic Jason from the
uc Hell Traffic Center. You seeas cancer Center is opening up the most
comprehensive blood center in the nation.The future of cancer is here called five
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eighty five u CECC accidents outbound seventyfive just before Town Street. Has the
left plane blocked your slow back towardsShepard inbound seventy four wreck at Shepherd Creek.
Both shoulders blocked your slow back tonorth bend east two seventy five.
There's an accident at Petersburg that's inthe left plane west two seventy five.
An accident just passed seventy five andSharonville left plane blocked your slow Back to
(02:26:41):
Reed Hartman Jason Earhart on fifty fiveKRC the talk station. It's a fifty
here, fifty five kar seed talkstation and a very happy Wednesday tea again
celebrating my thirty second anniversary with mybeautiful wife. I'm a lucky, many
lucky, lucky, lucky OutKick.My coverage like to say thank you,
(02:27:03):
honey for us sticking up with meand putting up on me all those years,
thirty two today, and thank youto Cheryl Pop. What she does
throughout the year for veterans, includingthe Honor flight work she does, does
not stop with Honor Flight being We'regonna pause for Honor Flight season. Isn't
that correct, Cheryl Pop? Itis. Next fight will be September seventeenth,
but we are working with the AirpowerHistory Tour. We'll he have an
(02:27:26):
information booth down at Lunkin, ohGood conjunction with the Cincinnati Werbert. This
is not a merchandise one. Thisis just information about Honor Flight Great so
it's one of the many one ofthe many boozs. They are going to
be at the Airpower History Tour,which you're on the Morning Show to talk
about today. When is this takingplace and what are we going to get
to see, Cheryl, Well,this is down at Lunkin Airport. Even
(02:27:50):
if the terminal was closed, theramp is open for business. And the
B twenty nine super Fortress Steefee iscoming in as our big attraction. That's
one of only two be nine's stillflying in the world. So really historic
and you know, we like tosay that, you know, spend your
Independence Day with the historic icons offreedom. Because all of the planes that
are coming in he had something todo with the war effort. The fifty
(02:28:15):
one a Mustang and all of theother planes were bringing in Steerman's Worth trainers,
so we're t sexes. So it'sit's really kind of a collaboration of
all the heritage of the Air Forcefrom the beginning to uh, you know,
the bomb that was dropped by thetwenty nine super Fortress. So it's
it's it's going to be a bigevent. It's run by the Commemorative Air
(02:28:37):
Force, not the Cincinnati Warbirds wereactually just the host. So there is
a rampty but that includes your tourand then your Clockpit tour and the tickets
are still of air built at airpowertourdot org. You can pre book your
seat if you like, or youcan buy them when you go down.
So it's Airpowertour dot org. CincinnatiLunkin Airport. We're hoping to be part
(02:29:03):
of the renovation and the you knowrein like live men or whatever you want
to call it, of you know, the resurgence of Lunkin Airport because it's
kind of you know, been caughtin the crossfires here for a couple of
years. But the ramp is goodand righty's fantastic, so you can see
all these planes down at lunk Andthis week, well it's the fourth of
all of July until the seventh,so anytime during that time period they'll be
(02:29:26):
open for business, including Independence Day, right, well, what better way
to celebrate. Oh I know,listen, you're not going to get in
the argument for me, but youknow it is a national holiday and federal
holiday off thank god. So butthat's what an awesome opportunity to feel really
patriotic and see these just amazing airplanes. Again, you got the the the
(02:29:50):
P fifty one Mustang that was thefighter airplane that was in Europe, primarily
a T six Texan, a Peatthirteen that's a bye Wing, the Steerman,
and the r C four P fiftyone j Expedier it's another twin prop
plane. That one's really cool tolook at too. And can you pay
(02:30:13):
for rides on any on any ofthese airplanes, Yes, yes you can.
You go to the Air Power Tour, Yeah, work and they'll have
the tickets available online if you getthem down there. But if you have
a certain time you want to pickout, this helps a lot so they
can book the flights, you know, figure out when they're flying. But
it's from nine to five every dayfrom the third to the seventh. And
(02:30:35):
we'll have some food trucks down therefor people that want to stay a little
longer. And you know, justhave your your kids come down and see
these fantastic airplanes. There's nothing betterthan all these rotary engines blast and all
the ways. Three oh, Iknow, and you know it's cool because
lunkin, I guess I hear thehistoric planes flying because they obviously have a
very distinct sound compared to modern aircraft. So I know when there's one of
(02:30:58):
these events going on, because Iwill hear them in my backyard because as
the crow flies, I'm really notthat far away from LUNC and so but
really cool. Plus there's a carshow. We can't we can ever look
the fact that there's a car showas well. Well, the car show
is not a bona fide, youknow, with trophies car show, it's
sort of an exhibition. And thesame with the military vehicles. But all
of these things are you know,weather permitted, you know, make sure
(02:31:20):
they don't break down. You know, there's so many things involved, but
these are all the things that areplanned. Okay, Well, Joe put
the link up on my blog pageif you five care Sea dot com.
But if you want to go thereright now, Airpowertour dot com, makesure
dot org. Make sure you getyour tickets if you want to fly on
one of these. But they're allthere on full display. Great way to
spend Independance Day, or at leastthe general time frame around Independence Day.
(02:31:41):
Cheryl pop behalf of all my listeners. Thank you for all that you do
for veterans causes and support the Americanmilitary. I really appreciate you. On
the pogram. Yes, sir,amen, have a wonderful weekend as Well's
a fifty five if you have kseat talk station ifty five care sea dot
com for the link for that.We heard from Brionna Morella, host of
The Ballo Show, about the shenanigansover at the Butler County Jail this intern
(02:32:03):
program, we had a seventeen yearold that had sexual relations with one of
the inmates and also smuggled drugs anothercontraband into the jail. Was she not
supervised? Question mark Broana Morello onthat topic made national news on Louder with
Crowder as well State Representative Jennifer Grossabout the Ohio speaker being strip control over
strip of control over the campaign funds. It sounds like with good reason.
(02:32:26):
Also the almost sixty bills they're votingon today, including a four point two
billion dollar spending bill. Orlando Sanza, he's the man for the job,
responding to the op ed hit pieceabout him being appointed to handle the Hamilton
County Veteran Services. But he isa great guy. He can manage it.
Listen to what he had to saypodcast fifty five carecy dot com along
with Judge Ennapolitano Today tomorrow I heardbe the aviation expert Jay Rattliffe. Love
(02:32:50):
talking to Jay. We'll have moreon the rundown. Thanks to Joe Strecker,
Executive producer, for all that youdo for the program. Have a
wonderfull day, folks, Uncle WeggGlenn Beck's coming right. We're just minutes
away from refreshing your newsfeed at thetop of the hours. I have never
seen anything like this. Exclusively fiftyfive Karcs the talkstation. This report is
(02:33:11):
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