Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Thank you all so much. What a super.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Tuesday, and what a super Tuesday it is, and Happy
Veterans Day. You don't text a vecter and you call them.
If they're not in your vicinity, give them a call
out there. We're going to listen to what the president
had to say during the next segment here on the show.
But recruitment is up, that's really good with the military.
And Newsom wants to be president and he would run
(00:26):
it all. So what are we three years so the election?
What do we work? Two hundred and twenty two days
a year times three? Let's see here two times three,
six oh, six hundred and sixty six day. It's perfect
that you're going to hear a whole lot about Gavin
Newsom here because we have to. I mean, let people
that live in other states start your own campaign. Don't
(00:47):
let them be swindled by this serpent. No, there will be.
He's down in Texas. I saw what was that New
York Times did a thing on him full. I mean,
the color photography looks so good and they even timed
it with the sun setting back there and he was
outdoors and almost looked Friday night. High School Texas football
(01:09):
shined up like Newsom likes to do it there. So yeah,
it's starting, it's starting. Let's see. This was a appolling
from a Republican affiliated firm. The TPP survey said Newsom
holds an early edge over Vice President JD. Vance among
young male voters for twenty twenty eight. They had Newsom
(01:32):
at thirty eight, they got Vance at thirty three. And
I'm going to get in the habit of doing this one.
I don't like something. Remember when Newsom said Democrats had
to get out of their own quote damn bubble. Here's
what he also said back in May. I just think
(01:52):
we need to really have a deep introspection. We need
to own up to what has happened over the last
few elections, not just this election. I think we got
to start, got to start square with our agenda. Where
the American people are. What does that even mean? See,
there's gonna be so many things. When you hear him
say it, you go, Okay, that sounds like a governor's
(02:13):
statement or something there. But when you read it in
your own words and act like you're saying it, you'd
be like, what is okay? It is just so surface. Yes,
we need to get our family budget under control. What
a great leader financially of his household. It's like, okay,
(02:33):
and you're gonna do what. We're going to keep spending
this money on this car that doesn't work. It's in
the garage. We keep making pay you know, like high
speed rail stuff. If we scaled it down to our
own house. No, he would not be a good leader
steward of our money, would he. But we know back
(02:53):
in I think it was in July, it was around
it was after the fourth of July. He said, hey,
Texas doing a power grab California, and we need to
get ready. If Texas does it, then we got to
do it. And then he found out it was going
to take too long for Texas to do it. Remember
they were flying all over the country, Democrats doing that
all that. He thought, oh, it's getting too quick. Here,
(03:14):
I'm under a time schedule here. Yeah. He had to
get the legislature almost instantly, and then he knew there
were gonna be legal challenges, and it went all the
way to the California Supreme Court and they said, oh,
go ahead and do it. Just set aside that well
established law that voters created in two thousand and eight
and go ahead and do it. Then Arnold started picking
(03:35):
a fight, but he he did a little more than
lip service out there on this. And yeah, seventy five
percent of the vote counted. I thought it was all
maybe already done. No, they're at seventy five percent right now,
because what that's right? Class California counts our votes slowly
to make sure every vote gets counted. Prop fifty leading
(03:57):
right now sixty three point eight percent to thirty six
point two percent. There, But there's no better indicator that
the serpent, the serpent tongue Governor Bills above is running
from president and his sudden interest in what he is
promoting is God's will. Gavin, what about the three hundred
(04:20):
thousand missing kids, illegal alien kids that were brought over
during the Democrat surge to the border, that you know
are scattered all over this state. What about them? What
about one hundred and eighty thousand people sleeping on the
sidewalks in your state? What about them? No? No, he
suddenly turned Reverend Newsome. Let's go listen to Gavin tell
(04:44):
us here that I think what he's saying is that
the Bible's about food. I guess it's a is it
a recipe book, Gavin, Is that what you're going.
Speaker 3 (04:52):
On so interesting to me because I spent a little
time at a wonderful Jesuit University. If there was anything
I remember about my four years with Father cause is
that the New Testament Old Testament have one thing dominantly
in common. Food and Matthew and Isaiah Henneys Luke proverbs.
(05:14):
I mean, go down the list like bear Diner. It's
around the food. It's about serving those that are hungry.
It's not a suggestion in the Old and New Testament.
It's core and central to what it is to align
to God's will, period, full stop.
Speaker 2 (05:31):
Period, full stop. I got it down. I'm Reverend Gavin
Newsom now that I'm running for president because I know
there's going to be some Democrats in Texas that go
to church, so I can't be the real guy that
I truly am, the pro abortion governor right, the anti Catholic,
I'm a Catholic activist. But no, now he's got religion,
(05:54):
and now that he has religion, he's going to start
turning around and telling everybody else that when they get
up extra probably pretty extra early, to go meet a
bunch of other Christian men. You know, Catholics, Christian, Protestant,
they get together, they do prayer breakfasts. But now he has,
(06:15):
now that he's found God, I guess his newfound interested God.
I guess he'll tell you it's always been there since
his godmother, Nancy Pelosi gave him a crucifix or something.
I don't know that it's it's a new We haven't
heard him talking like this. But he's attacking Republicans.
Speaker 3 (06:31):
I say that because these guys need to stop the
BS in Washington, DC. So they're sitting there in their
prayer breakfasts. I mean maybe they got an edited version
of Donald Trump's Bible and they edited all of that out.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
Very Christian of you.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
I mean, enough of this cruelty is the policy. That's
what this is about. It's intentional cruelty, intentionally creating anxiety
from millions and millions of people, five point five million
here in our home state.
Speaker 2 (07:00):
Wow, I think you're saying that's a lot of people
that are hungry in your home state. You must not
be doing something right as a leader of your home state.
But yeah, those people at those prayer breakfasts that don't
want to feed the poor, those people at those prayer
breakfasts that you know they could care less about. Snap,
(07:23):
just a bargaining ship for them. How can they dare
face God? Hey, you watch Newsom start courting Pope Leo.
That's my prediction of be coming out here. He'll be
going after this. Nancy Pelosi used to do that. Nothing
grosser than having Governor Satan lecture us on God. It right,
(07:48):
Let's go listen to what Newsom is said America is
going to be like in two years.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
We've got to hold the line because I think America
will become unrecognizable in a year or two.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
Fight back, fight back, fight back, Schumer said, fight back.
We've heard that, fight back. That's all you've been doing
is fighting back. What are you fighting back against? Maybe
you could Oh, oh you don't want to king, Okay,
well that's not happening. What are you fighting back against. Oh,
he's rounding up people that don't have passports and some citizens.
No that none of that's happening either. Only people that
(08:22):
have broken the law are getting rounded up. Well, I
think here's a here's aman that has an opinion on
Gavin Newsom.
Speaker 4 (08:30):
I mean I knew Gavin for four years. I got
along grid with him. But he's gone radical left. And
you know he's building a training system from San Francisco
to La that's got about a two thousand or three
thousand percent cost over It's the worst thing. I've never
seen anything like it. I've seen coast over runs. I've
never seen anything like that.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
Yeah, the President was even talking about southern California fires
that nothing's happening. It's almost the end of the year.
Speaker 4 (08:58):
If you take a look at what he's done. So
they lost twenty five thousand houses. Do you know they
haven't issued one building permang yet, So these people are
trying to rebuild the houses. But he does something, he
did something even worse than that. She's now taking a
big section of Palisades or some area and he's going
to build low income housing where they used to have
luxury housing. He's going to put low income housing in
(09:19):
His fire stuff is out of control. The force of
burning down all over the place.
Speaker 2 (09:24):
That's an applause line. Yeah, I know you like those
low income housing going in in the Pacific Palisades. When
you say the media likes interview democrats, see, they don't
ask him serious questions the way they might do of
a Republican newsom running for president. You know he should
be asking and hopefully will. I mean, he had a debate,
(09:47):
let's see with DeSantis, he did an interview with Hannity,
he sat down with Charlie Kirk. But he's going to
be facing the media from around the world and here
in America. I mean, he's going to try and be
like Trump, like I'm gonna be like Biden. Just he'll
be like, yeah, anybody, what what He'll do that? Watch
He'll he'll try and do that. What do you think
of Arctic Frost with Biden's attorney general and the FBI
(10:09):
director issuing subpoenis foreigner Republicans and groups went after him
spying on the senators. I bet he's never even been
asking anything like that, Hey, should mentally and physically able
people be required to work or you know, to get
(10:30):
government benefits. And he'll say something like, well, Democrats are compassionate,
and then somebody over at Fox News will say, well,
Democrats voted for that in nineteen ninety when Bill Clinton
was president. Hey, Gavin, is capitalism better than socialism? And
(10:51):
if he says yes, he loses all those radical those
radical loves out there hey, and they'll ask him about
Trump's first term about poverty hitting record lows. Why are
they lying about the tax rate cuts that only helped
the rich, it helped all of America? Governor Lucifer, you
(11:15):
have a wife. You think women deserve the right to
privacy and safe spaces. These kind of questions, just simple
basic questions. Is that okay for men to compete against women? Well,
when Charlie Kirk was on, he said he thought it
was unfair. Well, he's gonna be followed up with all
these Right, you're gonna have somebody in the oil business.
(11:39):
Somebody's gonna have a lot of money in the oil business.
Those super packs got influence over some of these reporters.
I'm sure, yes, Governor, what about oil, natural gas and
coal and the price of energy in your state? Is
that not the best way to keep things affordable?
Speaker 5 (11:58):
The governor?
Speaker 2 (12:01):
Now, for Democrats, it's only power for Democrats, that's what matters.
Speaker 4 (12:07):
And honestly, I always liked him, but he's a horrible governor.
He's a horrible governor. If he ran the country like that,
we would have an absolutely gonzo country. This country would
be done. The fact is, if I weren't president. If
Kamala got in, you wouldn't have Not only wouldn't you
have twenty trillion dollars coming in, you would have money leaving.
Speaker 3 (12:28):
What's happening in MacArthur Park with theater on the six
month anniversary after all of these fires. That's the message
from the polluted heart of the President of the United States.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
It's when the ice was down there arresting people, look
at him acting like the fire and he hadn'tdone anything
about it. He's a theater major.
Speaker 3 (12:50):
Yes, the polluted heart of Stephen Miller. Those National guardmen
and women that were out there protecting people are is
this political pawns out there on horsebacks running through soccer
fields in the middle of the day, timed around announcements
and events like this says everything you and I need
(13:16):
to know about the state of mind of the President
of the United States in this administration.
Speaker 6 (13:23):
This is the Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk.
This is Super Tuesday with Trevor Carey on the Valley's
Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
Every captain of industry, every pioneer of science, and every
star whose brilliant says lit up the lights of Broadway,
All share one.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
Thing in common.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
They only had the chance to soar because the veterans
had the courage to serve. They took care of those people.
They took care of all the stars. The stars that
you read about wouldn't be here without our vets. Everything
we have, everything our country has achieved, has been purchased
by the muscle, spine, and steel of the United States Military.
Speaker 2 (14:10):
We owed all to the fierce.
Speaker 1 (14:12):
And noble men and women of the Army, the Navy,
the Air Force, Space Force, Coast Guard, and the United
States Marines.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Yes, indeed, Happy Veterans Day to my brother Army two
oldest sons Air Force. Make sure you reach out. I'd say,
do more than a text if you can. On the
eleventh hour, the eleventh day of the eleventh month. All
started after World War One. Originally called Armis arm in
(14:42):
this day Armanis Day, it was. We've had forty one
million veterans since the the American Revolution, forty one million
of served. And again some people kind of get it confused.
Memorial Day those that lost their lives. Veterans Days to
(15:03):
celebrate those that are all around us. We can think
them in person and also remember their families because they
go through so much as well. Eleventh Hour, Eleventh Day,
leven Pont back in nineteen eighteen. Eisenhower flipped it to
Veterans Day in nineteen fifty four. There, so make sure
(15:24):
you get out and do that. Greater love has no
one and Leah's light down for as trends and veterans.
I know that on Veterans Day, you're I mean all
day long, you're reminded of it. If you've got good
people around you, and it makes you think back and
those that served in combat and you know that lost
(15:47):
lost your friends. It's it's like Memorial Day again. For
the veterans. It has to be. You would think back
about your service and the time and all those memories
and you're smiling and saying thank you, and sure there's
some hurt there, but they're strong people and they do
that for us because they know they served us and
they like for us to feel that way. And please,
(16:09):
by all means, don't be California driving and close your
garage door and go inside before you move those groceries
in when you're back at the grocery store before you
did that, and act at all California, thank that veteran
you see in the meat aisle at the grocery store
that's got the Vietnam vet hat on who might be
in a scooter with his wife. Yes, I've never had
one look say to me like let me alone, And
(16:32):
even if I did, I would think it was dementia
or something. But thank the man when you see that,
any insignia like that, gope and thank them for that.
Let's get back to the Commander in Chief on this
happy Veterans Day.
Speaker 1 (16:47):
From the very beginning of our country, our great American
flag has always been shielded and protected by a special
cast of citizen who has stepped forward to safeguard liberties.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Cause when danger came, when.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
Duty called, when Almighty God asked who had the will
and the strength to defend the land of the Free,
each and every American veteran stood up and said, here
I am, Send me, here I am. They've come from
every corner of this nation, from the cornfields of Iowa
to the hills and valleys of California, from the steel
(17:26):
towns of Pennsylvania to the vast plains of Texas, from
the banks of the Mighty Mississippi to the Five Boroughs
of New York City, with selfless commitment and unyielding conviction.
They made themselves Americas ramparts and became the shield between
(17:46):
Alhomeland and those who would do us harm. With everything
they had, they did one thing above all else. They
put America first.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
A man, Happy Veterans Day.
Speaker 6 (18:03):
This is that Trevor Kerry show on The Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Man, what sports betting is done to our athletes? We
got another pro like talking about how he gets death threats.
I read where we got another and I went, I
didn't know they were getting death threats over games. Here's
a Giants kicker he's ever said, you gotta started listen
to this. This is this is.
Speaker 7 (18:28):
Staggert the I mean shoot, ever since sports betting started happening,
I get people telling me to kill myself every week,
and you know, because I'll hit a kick that loses
them money, I'll miss a kick and lose them money.
Speaker 8 (18:39):
Uh.
Speaker 7 (18:40):
He was the other day somebody told me to get
cancer and die. So I mean that that stuff's part
of it. But just being like playing this long, that's
stuff You're used to it by now, so well you just.
Speaker 2 (18:51):
Get used to death threats now.
Speaker 8 (18:54):
I know.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
Jackie Robinson racial death threats. I know I've heard of
death threats and sports, but not over you missed that kick.
But I should have thought about that. I guess I
just don't want to think the world's is corrupt. I
guess I want to think some things were still someone innocent. Oh,
there's some really upset giant fans. They're probably drunk, gonna
get in fights outside with the opposing teams fan. You know,
(19:18):
I knew things happened, people got mad about field goals
being missed, but not down to that level. Then I
read today that Mike Shildt retired as Padre's manager over
death threats and sports batters. He retired in fifty seven.
He said he began to get in laid aggs about
the possibility of retiring. He said, during the past season,
the experience for sleep, chest pain's hair loss because of
(19:42):
sports gambling. That means threats. Guys, threats, threats. Listen to
this guy. He was college and then he went to pro. Listen.
Speaker 8 (19:52):
I'm Johnson Battomosi, a native Washingtonian, Stanford graduate, nine year
NFL veteran and sports fanatic. I remember to a day
practices and playing high school football games on Buchanan Field,
which is less than a mile from where I sit today.
I began playing. I began playing team sports to make
friends during my experience as a collegiate student athlete and
(20:13):
when I joined the NFL as a professional twelve years ago.
Legalized gambling in sports, or sports betting as it has
come to be, did not exist, but the intense scrutiny
and external pressures that athletes often received from fans and
critics did. As a result, the rise of legalized sports
gambling has increased levels of fan engagement, but has introduced
(20:37):
more stress, new mental health challenges, and has increased the
number of threats and incidents of harassment to both amateur
and professional athletes. I have to acknowledge that incidents of
harassment sometimes extend much further than Internet exchanges.
Speaker 2 (20:53):
Well, I think so. This blew my mind. This involved
the Land Guardians formerly the Indians, a guy named Emmanuel
Clase or Classy Clace Clas, we'll call him Emmanuel, and
a pitcher, Luis Ortiz, manipulating bets on individual pitches. So
(21:16):
the word got about US Attorney Office or Eastern District
in New York came after him. DOJ. Charson with wirefrog conspiracy,
conspiracy to influence sporting contests with bribery, money laundering conspiracy
in the year twenty twenty three, or tees began in
June and the other guy started. The guy that started
in twenty twenty three affected seven hundred grand, the guy
(21:38):
that started in twenty twenty five made about four hundred
and fifty thousand. And they even said they were texting
with betters during the games, and you're going, well, there
just won't be able to get into the Hall of
Fame and they'll be kicked out maybe a baseball Now
they could face up to sixty five years in prison
if convicted on all these charges. According to the Department
(22:01):
of Justice, they agreed in advance with co conspirators with
those specific types of pitches and speeds of pitches. Now,
I don't think they should get sixty five years. No,
not for messing up a base I know a lot
of money was involved. Give him ten years to me
if I were keen, care you give the more for
(22:21):
messing the game up like that? Okay, I yeah, yeah, okay,
twenty twenty five, twenty five. Because they're young guys, they'll
get out and they'll to me still be young guys.
All right, they said back in the year twenty twenty three. Okay,
I'm just going to read down this list I just
highlighted if you here, and there's a lot more they
(22:45):
Let's say betters made twenty seven thousand on a pitch
that was faster than ninety four miles an hour, thirty
eight thousand on a pitch that was slower than ninety
four miles an hour and called the ball. So on
that June third, twenty twenty three game with Cleveland playing,
I would have bet that a certain pitch at a
time would be slower than ninety four and be called
(23:05):
a ball. And if it was slower than ninety four
it was ninety three miles an hour strike on the
outside corner, I'd lose my bet. They're betting down to
pitches like that. I really have naive to it. I
had no idea it was down to this kind of thing.
Can you guess the temperature too or the wind velocity?
(23:26):
You can no stop it? You can bet on that.
Can you bet on somebody's gonna run naked during the
World Series? And stuff like, Oh my word, this could
be fun. I don't need to I don't need to
hear about this. This is all right. They made sixty
eight thousand dollars on a pitch slower than ninety four,
(23:46):
fifteen thousand un a pitch slower than ninety eight, and
called the ball another one clock slower than ninety seven.
I mean, this lisk goes on and on. Man, let's
see the other guy twenty twenty five agreed to throw
his first pitch of a second inning for a ball
in exchange for five thousand dollars made twenty six thousand
dollars for the betters. Okay, five thousand dollars are major
(24:09):
league baseball player at the risk getting kicked out of
the league and go to jail prison there. It's for
the thrill of it, that's it. That didn't make any sense.
He'd be like, hey, Trevor, I'll pay you five hundred
dollars to still the iHeart microwave. I'd be like, well,
I can go get my own microwave. I don't need
(24:31):
to do that now. If I agreed to that, it
would be the thrill of it to make five hundred
dollars to lose my job for being a thief. See,
that doesn't make any sense. And this doesn't makes sense
for a major league baseball player, even paid at the minimum,
to take five thousand dollars for one pitch. I guess
in their mind they're just never gonna get caught. And
(24:52):
maybe they grown up hearing about this in the minor leagues?
Can he bet on minor league ball? I know you
can bet on college and all that. Anything that's being
played that's making money. I bet it they're betting on it.
Let's see in twenty twenty five, artees are agreed to
throw his first pitch of the third inning for approximately
seven grand. Now you're innocent until proven guilty or Tease
(25:16):
has denied all allegations against him. Clayton he has never, would,
never improperly influence a game, not for anyone, and not
for anything. His lawyer said, all the payments of money
transfers were for lawful activities. So they'll have to bang
this one out in court here. And this was a
couple of weeks ago, the Miami Heat guy, the whole
(25:38):
betting scandal down there, A couple of other ones thrown
in on this.
Speaker 3 (25:42):
Man.
Speaker 2 (25:43):
When gambling was legalized across the country, What did they
think was gonna happen now, now I would I was,
I guess street smart enough to know that there had
to be betting going on in sports. I thought there'd
be some teams that would a guy that might bet
(26:04):
on his own team, like Pete Rose did, and I
thought it they probably give the money to somebody else
and have them go bet for him. A third cousin
twice removed somebody like that. You know, I knew, but
not to this level. And when I said I thought,
I would have thought it'd be a handful less than
(26:24):
maybe fifty in all sports that were doing it because
they wouldn't want to risk it. I thought there'd be
a that that many knuckleheads. I thought it was that
small of a deal.
Speaker 8 (26:35):
But no.
Speaker 2 (26:36):
Let's see last year MLB band a San Diego Padre
infielder for life, suspended four other players. See the A's
did the Padres did? The Phillies did that? Diamondbacks did?
They were discovered to a bet on baseball games, not
involving their teams. Now you going, well, they're not playing
in it, they can't influence it. Yeah, but they could
(26:57):
get a call from the dude. They were in Double
A in Tucson with who goes who's on the major
elite team and says, hey, our stars is pulled a
groin muscle. He's not playing today. Oh, then I'm going
to bet on the Hey, thanks for that. Heads up, right,
let's just take how Nancy Pelosi became rich in Congress
insider trading. Back first of this year, the MLB Commissioner
(27:22):
Manfred he reinstated some of the worst gamblers in league history,
the nineteen nineteen Black Sox. I have the frame picture
from the Sporting News of Oscar Felsch, the Lsch. I've
told this story probably four times in the last ten years,
so some of you it will be new. I saw
(27:45):
when I lived in Stanford, Connecticut, they had this little
marketplace newspaper thing, and I saw old Kennedy papers and
some baseball photos. So I went over to the guy's
house and he sold me. It came up about my
waist stack of all the Kennedy stuff and the Warren
Commission papers he saved, and he goes, here's some old
baseball pictures, and they were from the Sporting News. I
(28:07):
mean they're from the twenties. They're all frazzled. I got
Chicago Cubs. I got the Cincinnati Reds that I framed
and gave to my boss in New York because he
was a Red Sox fan, like the nineteen twenty two
team Babe Ruth as a pitcher for the Boston Red Sox. Yeah,
and Oscar Felch and I was like, I don't know
who that is, and I looked him up and he
(28:29):
was on the nineteen nineteen Black Sox. He's one of
the guys that bet and got kicked out there. So
they got reinstated because that lifetime band ends with the
player's death. Now you're just not going to be able
to say you were in the Hall of Fame or
anything like that, or that you're still in baseball while
you're alive. The minute you're dead, will hold the ceremony
in Cooper's Town for you.
Speaker 6 (28:51):
This is the Trevor Kerry Show on the Valley's Power.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
Talk podcasts about nuclear weapons and things that went wrong.
I don't know if you've seen on Prime, but there's
that documentary about in Arkansas nineteen eighty. But when the
Titan two warheads, what happened was you had the mechanics
on it way up high, as like eight stories high.
They were inside where the missile was in the silo,
(29:16):
and they had a big ratchet and wrench and socket
and they were turning it and it became it separated
and one of the big pieces fell all the way down, bounced,
came up to the right, hit the rocket and bust
knocked out a fuel fuels started filling up inside where
the Titan two was. And the incompetency how it was handled.
(29:42):
They were so ashamed what they did. They didn't truly
report really really what happened till like eighteen minutes into it,
if I'm remembering correct it. And anyhow, two guys. One
of the guys went in. He got burned to death
when it exploded. They didn't know what to do. They
were calling up to missile command and it was just
utter chaos and they were afraid it was gonna catch
(30:03):
on fire, and sure enough it blew up. I mean,
this was all reported all over the news, but amazing,
and I don't remember the name of it. Then why
bring it up now? I gotta go search for it.
Oh thank you, director Ryan Nigel. Yeah, it was in Arkansas.
Titan to documentary on Prime might be a good search
right there. Politics is finally Pelosi free, is it?
Speaker 7 (30:26):
No?
Speaker 2 (30:27):
I know now, hold up, not yet. Her daughter, Christine
Pelosi looking to keep the trade secrets in the family, right,
She was gonna run for her mom seat in the House.
But she's gonna do something that's wise in politics, not
to say, you know what. I've never run for office,
(30:50):
but I'm gonna run for Congress. She's gonna run in
the state Senate. Well, she's got the name recognition. I
don't know if I would want that name recognition. Hither
Oscar Oswald? Yeah, there's just some Pelosi I I don't know. Oh,
(31:10):
this was crazy. Did you see the the car chase?
How many counties did it go through? No? No, not
counties to two countries. Driver got away.
Speaker 5 (31:21):
And I can tell you that officials in Tijuana now
are meeting to discuss what happened and see if they
can figure out how to locate her Wan. I can
tell you it has been many, many, many many years
since we have had to pursue start in Los Angeles
County and end up in Mexico.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
Yeah. I'm not blaming the CHP. I'm not blaming any
law enforcement involvement. And I know their hands are tied
by probably regulations, But I saw so many what I
would assume we're kind of Keystone cop moments where it's like,
if I was behind that car, I would have rammed it.
This was a van, stolen minivan, This woman taking off
driving crazy all like they said, from La County all
(31:56):
the way down to the border. Now, have you ever
gone to the border. I know it's more crowded on
the Mexican side than the US side most of the time,
but have you ever gone down and been like, Oh,
it's wide open. Which of these open lanes should I
pull up to? Maybe at one am sometime on a
Thanksgiving maybe I don't know. I don't know. Maybe that
(32:19):
is it's wide open and you can just be the
first car to pull up. I would think there'd be
some backup. I would think that they would have. There
were helicopters that were following her. They would have followed
her all the way down to the border and told
the Border patrol she's pulling right up to lane let
me see three, she's moving over to lane five. Okay,
(32:39):
Oh she's jumped out. No, none of that happened. Something
fishy is up. How could it not be? How do
you have a helicopter over you with United States law
enforcement behind you. You're a woman in a minivan and
just a helicopter. Let's say the cops lost them, still
got helicopter something now, uh uh, it's more to this
(33:05):
story now.
Speaker 5 (33:06):
The California I have A patrol says that they tried
to notify it US Customers and Border Protection that the
car was headed towards the US Mexico border, but it
is unclear what action they were able to take. We
do have a call out of Customs and Border Protection
to see if they tried to make any attempt to
stop the vehicle or stop lanes. But when the chopperger
from our sister station KFMB got down here to the border,
things were still free flowing. And we now know that
(33:26):
that suspect and that car made it through to the
Mexico side.
Speaker 2 (33:30):
Of the border. Okay, you think you could have pulled
that off? Right behind you really overhead on TV news
lights on you, and you're like, I'm gonna make it
to Mexico, and you made it and nobody knows where
you went. Hey that's a quick over here. Yeah, it
(33:56):
has to be. And they had to have the helicopter
foot I mean, come on, so something's up with that there,
that was a serious run for the border that somebody
opened up the gate and said, quick, quick, it has
to be
Speaker 6 (34:11):
This assistant Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk