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February 10, 2026 29 mins

(February 10, 2026)

Amy King and Neil Saavedra join Bill for Handel on the News. Lawmakers don’t rule out exposing redacted names of powerful men in Epstein files. Ghislaine Maxwell appeals for clemency from President Trump as she declines to answer questions from lawmakers. Judge blocks California ban on federal agents wearing masks but requires badges be clearly seen.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
You're listening to Bill Handle on demand from KF I
am six forty.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Germany stood up to Europe, I Russia Putin will stand
up to NATO, and NATO's probably getta cave. That's the
way I view it. A bunch of horses, Europeans, the French,
a bunch of surrender monkeys, okay, And Kono is the
only one that laughs at my stuff. So Kono, you're

(00:31):
going to be here next week, and.

Speaker 1 (00:38):
Now handle on the news. Ladies and gentlemen. Here's Bill Handle.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
And good warning everybody, it's Taco Tuesday, February tenth as
we start the morning show. By the way, Kono, just
to let you know, in reference to the statement the
surrender monkeys, actually it is borrowed from a phrase of
a congress person who referred to the French as sheese

(01:05):
aiding surrender monkeys. And I thought that was the perfect
description of the French. I don't know if you've seen
the French flag. Originally it was just white, and that
was right during the war, and then some French government decided,
oh no, we don't want it to be white. Also,

(01:27):
when their army marches, it's the only army in the
world that marches backwards. Okay, enough of that with the French, right.
I told you the first time I went to France,
I did it with my ex girlfriend, ex girlfriend. It
was French Canadian and I had her teach me several

(01:47):
phrases like your mother was a collaborator during the war,
wasn't she? And when the Hitler marched down the Shampsta
these a your family had these little Nazi flags, didn't they.
I don't know if you look at if you look
at the several of the French people actually waving a
little Nazi flags, you know, the way you see people

(02:10):
who with that. Anyway, Good morning everybody. Uh, it's Tuesday.
We have a fair amount of news to cover.

Speaker 3 (02:17):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
The latest on the Nancy Uh. I just forget Guthrie
uh story. We'll talk about that. My mind is already
going way ahead. How unusual, you know. I was talking
to other members, particularly KNO yesterday, Uh, and I think
and and unfortunately I speak before. My brain processes a

(02:42):
lot of stuff and I just tend on blurting it
out that when my partner save my friend and my
one of my one of my best friends, because I
pretend that Neil is also a best friend.

Speaker 4 (02:56):
Anyway, best friend, that's fine, sa.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
He he has a horrible disease called scleroroderma, and scleroderma
is a terminal disease in which the organs harden and
you die from it. I mean, the prognosis is it's
death and the basically the survival rate after diagnosed with
scleroderma is five years and then you die. Well, he's

(03:21):
into his ninth year and he has beat the odds
and he's doing just flying. But when he finally told
me that he had scleroroderma and I'm aware of the
disease with the hardening of the organs, the first thing
I blurted out, so we get to play hockey with
your kidneys, right? And then I realized that wasn't a

(03:41):
really good thing to say. And on top of that,
because the skin tightens, and if he doesn't exercise constantly,
his fingers sort of curl up and can't extend. You
see that with very severe arthritic people when it becomes clawlike.

(04:02):
And I also immediately invited him to play a game
of rock paper scissors, because you cannot lose with someone
who cannot move their fingers. You know that don't you
all right? Good morning, Kno, good morning, Good morning, Neil.

Speaker 5 (04:18):
You're a short stint at Hallmark writing for cards. Yeah,
good morning, Yeah, good morning. And Will Colesriber, good morning,
Good morning Bill.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
And so if it tightens the skin, he probably has
no wrinkles, certainly not.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
In his hands. He's affected physically. It's affected his hands
more than anything else. The rest of them. He's just
doing fine.

Speaker 4 (04:43):
Oh, he looks great. He's a handsome guy, and he
looks great.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
He has the best head of hair of anybody I've
ever seen male wise and Amy, good morning, and thanks
for sharing your story, by the way of what's medically
going on with you, and it's really important, which is
one of the the reasons that we put up the
results of my colonoscopy. And yeah, there are photos of mine.

(05:09):
Keeping in mind that the inside of everybody's colon looks
like a Japanese paper Landard.

Speaker 3 (05:17):
Just that's actually a pretty good explosion.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
It actually is true, just in time for the lunar
New year. Yeah, and any case, thank you for sharing that.
Because people they don't normally get colonoscopies at an age
where they should, and the medical world is bringing down
the age for a baseline very quickly, as they should,

(05:44):
and so I went, Yeah, I went into I did
my third colonosopy. I'm almost out of my coupon book.
But it's I assume your last one.

Speaker 3 (05:55):
You were clear correct, there's no there's no bad stuff,
but I still there, there were still polyps. So I'm
on the three year plan. If there's anything going on,
then you have to come back more than once every
ten years.

Speaker 2 (06:10):
Yeah, I had. I had tiny little polyps, two of
them that were removed.

Speaker 3 (06:15):
So you're on the five year plan.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
I'm on the ten year plan.

Speaker 3 (06:17):
Now, oh you're on the tenure.

Speaker 2 (06:19):
Yeah, yeah, I'm on the ten yure.

Speaker 4 (06:20):
Hew.

Speaker 2 (06:21):
Also, the doctor found graffiti inside my car.

Speaker 6 (06:25):
How that subway, you know, for a phone number, and
that somehow I it referred to Amy for a good
time with Amy called puppet. Yeah, our guys, it is
time for a handle on the news with Amy.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
Good news that she's here. Unlike Catherine Kathy O'Hara. No, no,
I'm saying. I'm saying, unlike Kathy O'Hara, who unfortunately died
of colorectal cancer. It is hugely unfortunate. That was not
a joke.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
That was she died of an embolism, but.

Speaker 2 (07:02):
Yeah, that resulted from her coorectal cancer. I think Farah
Fawcett also died of co erectal cancer, as did who
else newsperson.

Speaker 3 (07:17):
Katie Katie Kerk's husband, Katie.

Speaker 2 (07:19):
Couric's husband, and she even had her her colonask be
done live on the Today Show. I mean, that's how
serious she viewed it and good for her. Her husband
died in his forties early forties of coorectal cancer. You
have a toughers and it's easy to prevent. It is

(07:39):
so easy to prevent. You grab it early and it's done. Okay,
let's move out and move on and start hitting the news.
It's signed for a Handle on the News with Amy
Neil and Me lead story.

Speaker 4 (07:57):
Well, the issue.

Speaker 2 (07:58):
About the public released materials relating to Jeffrey Epstein that
the Justice Department had and released pursuing into a bill
that was passed by Congress almost unanimously, and President Trump
was forced to sign it because he wanted to hold
on to those files or at least names. While two representatives,

(08:21):
one Democrat, no surprise, but Thomas Massey, leading Republican, is
saying we want more revealed, and more importantly, we want
revealed the names of six men because they are high
profile men and there's more to this story than meets

(08:42):
the eye. Now, Prince Andrew was caught red handed. I
mean there is no issue. He's probably the most blatant
the portrayer or an advocate, not advocate his acts of misappropriation. Yeah,
misappropriate behavior. I mean that's there. And you know King

(09:03):
Charles had to basically disown him and remove all honors.
The current the current Prime Minister of England, Kirk Starmer,
is also in deep trouble and there's a call for
his removal. This is affecting people all over the world.
So we'll pick that story up later. I'm sure as

(09:24):
this thing pans out. Okay, one more story and we'll
take a break.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Got a quid pro quote on the table. Gallaine Maxwell
appeared virtually before a House committee yesterday and took the
fifth but then said, Hey, if President Trump ends my
prison sentence, I'd be willing to testify that he and
former President Clinton didn't do anything wrong.

Speaker 2 (09:49):
She already said that that's for starters, so I don't
know how much she can bring to the table on
top of that even if she could, can you imagine
the pushback that would happen? Can you imagine the blowback
that would happen if the president either pardoned her or
gave her a clemency, where the screaming of you are

(10:12):
supporting a child molester would just explode. So I don't
think this is going to happen, not anytime soon, not ever.

Speaker 3 (10:22):
Although to hit her testimony, I'm sorry. I don't think
they need her.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
That's exactly the point. That's for starters. But even but
even if they did, can you imagine what would happen?

Speaker 3 (10:33):
Now?

Speaker 4 (10:33):
All right, you're blocked. You got a judge.

Speaker 5 (10:36):
Now, federal judge just yesterday blocked that California law from
going into effect that would ban federal immigration agents from
the face coverings that have become all too familiar to
us on television and in print and everything else. They'll
still be required, which makes sense to where clear identifications

(10:57):
showing their agency and badge number.

Speaker 4 (11:00):
That's a no brainer.

Speaker 5 (11:01):
But the judge here, Christina Snyder, she said that the
issue really about the ruling is because it's discriminating because
it's just federal officers, it's not state law enforcement, and
so on, and so forth. So it's either all or none.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
Okay, I got nothing, okay, all right.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Like it never happened. Emotion signed by US Attorney Jeanine Piro.
The Justice Department is asking US District Judge Carl Nichols
to dismiss a two count indictment against Steve Bannon that
the DOJ brought against Steve Bannon more than four years ago,

(11:48):
following January sixth. The charges from November of twenty twenty
one were filed after the Democratic led House voted to
hold Bannon in contempt for defiance congressional subpoena to testify
about January sixth. So this would wipe that out.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Yeah, and he went to prison for four months. But
and this Justice Apartment, as you said, that has filed
this lawsuit. And I don't know why President Trump just
doesn't straight out pardon him. Done finished. I find that
kind of surprising because that could wipe out any conviction.

Speaker 5 (12:26):
I just wonder how a homeless guy got so close
to a president.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
Oh, because he looks homeless. Yeah, he does look homeless.
And of course the reason he got convicted is because
the Biden administration has weaponized the Justice Apartment. I find
it so ironic that the Justice Apartment, which is clearly weaponized.
I mean, there's no question, I don't care who you are,
tell me that President Trump is not using the Justice

(12:52):
Department to go after his perceived enemies straight out retribution.
I'm going after your my enemies, doesn't even pretend to
cover it up. And he's going after the weaponization of
the Justice Department. I mean, that's the part that I
find just ironic, And no other president could dream of

(13:13):
doing this stuff. And then Nancy got three business.

Speaker 5 (13:18):
This is so heartbreaking and it's hard to put yourself
in her shoes, but the Today host Savannah Guthrie yesterday
just face to face looking into the camera post that
she put online on social media of just begging for
help to find her mom.

Speaker 4 (13:38):
Nancy Guthrie.

Speaker 5 (13:40):
This is about a week or so after the eighty
year old was abducted, and she just calls it as
we're all seeing it. She's saying, Hey, this is our
hour of desperation. We need your help. We believe our
mom is still out there. Law enforcement is working tireless

(14:00):
lee around the clock trying to bring her home. If
you hear anything, there's anything that seems strange to you
report it to law enforcement. She thanks people for their prayers.
She felt them, she says, their mom feels them. She's
sure of it. But there's just not yet that we
know anybody identifiedly that.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
You would think that during the course of all of this,
the family and or the police would be asking for
proof of life.

Speaker 4 (14:31):
I think they're holding this one.

Speaker 2 (14:33):
And that maybe they've already done that and we just
don't know what's going on. Yeah, because they're keeping a
lot in this close to the vest I.

Speaker 5 (14:41):
Think they're doing things behind the scene and trying trying
to smoke some information out.

Speaker 4 (14:47):
We shall see.

Speaker 3 (14:50):
This may be a bridge too far for President tur
The President says he will not allow a bridge connecting
Detroit and Windsor, Ontario to open and until the US
is fully compensated for everything. So it's the Gordy how
International Bridge costs four point six billion dollars to build.
It's one and a half mile infrastructure project that connects

(15:13):
you know, US to Canada, and it was approved back
in twenty fourteen. It's expected to open in early twenty
twenty six, but Trump is now bocking at it, saying
that Canada used our stuff. They didn't or you know
they it's not us products. We don't have control of it.
Canada has control of both the Detroit side and the
Ontario side. And he wants fifty percent ownership of the

(15:37):
bridge or he's not going to let it open.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
Not one hundred percent. No, it's happening now, only fifty percent.

Speaker 3 (15:44):
Well, we have an annexed Canada, Canada.

Speaker 2 (15:46):
Yeah, that's true. We haven't made it the fifty first state.
Gordi Howe, I'm not mistaken. Wasn't he the great hockey player?
Gordi how.

Speaker 5 (15:55):
If I'm not mistaken, there's a fifty to fifty chance
of Fe's from Canada.

Speaker 4 (15:59):
Yeah, that's wrecked.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
And he's the one. He was one of the last
ones that didn't wear a helmet or didn't wear a
face mask either. So he had no teeth because he
was grandfathered in because his grandfather, his grandfather father had
no teeth either. So Corno was looking that up. Was
Gordia Hockey?

Speaker 4 (16:16):
It was play twenty six seasons.

Speaker 2 (16:18):
Yeah, they're naming it after Gordi. How interesting when the
last time a bridge was named after a hockey player.

Speaker 3 (16:25):
Well, their heroes in Canada.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
Yeah, I mean I'm starting a new spot for lasting smiles.
They do implants and they're trying to get Gordi Howe
or a I to be a spokesperson for lasting smiles.
All right, moving on, Oh, let's take a break. Okay please, wow, Okay,

(16:47):
I know it's we have I have mentioned that to
them yet? No, I'm sure I will.

Speaker 4 (16:52):
You got playing hockey forever?

Speaker 2 (16:56):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (16:56):
Oh yeah, forever?

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Smile Yeah todaybviously everybody wears the helmet and wears a
face mask. That's sort of you got to do that
in the NHL.

Speaker 5 (17:06):
Back to Canada, famous Canadian and one of my TV
and movie crushes, Katherine O'Hara. We all learned about her
death and the cause has been released. Pulmonary embolism. It's
blockage in this case in lung artery and this is

(17:26):
you know, it comes from a blood clot. But this
was in response or part of the rectal cancer that
was listed on her certificate as the underlying cause of death.
But man, I go back to watching her on SCTV
as a kid, and just brilliant, that whole group, Eugene
Levy and John Candy and all of them together. She

(17:48):
just absolutely brilliant.

Speaker 2 (17:50):
Yeah, She died at seventy one, which is way way
too young, and she was still.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
Working on a show, yeah, in the studio.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
And it's one of those it's a message. I mean,
I think it tells people that you have to have
to get a colonoscopy. And there are all kinds of
other tests that don't do anything. They don't go to
the same level of colonoscopy that is a gold standard.
And it's if there are no symptoms that's bleeding, I'm

(18:19):
assuming stomach issues. Then normally people don't get them. Well,
I think I got my first one when I was
in my mid fifties. Second one ten years later, and
I got mine because I had some symptoms and they
actually found a couple of polyps in my colon singing polyps.

(18:46):
Very strange.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
Hey, Catherine O'Hara had not publicly revealed any health struggles too.

Speaker 4 (18:54):
I know that's it.

Speaker 5 (18:55):
You know, I don't know if a woman wants to
come out and broadcast.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
I do tell you you don't want to know, But
you did. Only you know why I did because Chadwick
Boseman died of it. And it was right after that
I was like, we didn't know he was fighting it
either and like, think of the difference that the black
panther could have made. So but that's okay. I totally
also respect her desire for privacy because you don't have

(19:22):
a lot of Sich celebrity taking more control. Israel's government
has taken unilateral steps to give itself greater control over
the occupied West Bank. So apparently that's going to make
it easier for Jewish settlers to buy land and undercut
the Palestinian authority in parts of the West Bank. Appears,

(19:45):
that appears to get in the way of agreements that
Israel signed under the Oslo peace process decades ago, and
is also an opposition to President Trump, who's saying, you know,
any annexation of that territory could be a violate of
international law and.

Speaker 2 (20:02):
In violation of the entire international community as they view it.
I mean, there is no question if one views believes
in a two state solution, which I do and many
people do, this guarantees that will never happen, because it
turns out, for example, arguing that one state there should

(20:25):
be a well, no, that's a bad analogy because we've
done that. But what it does is virtually guarantee that
These are basically towns and villages, Israeli towns and villages
that have been created in the West Bank, and Israel
can't give them up. How do you give up fifty

(20:45):
thousand people in a town? And that's their argument. And
it's going farther and farther east to the point where
there are no There is going to be no land
for Palestinians. The two state solution is done, which means
that this will go on for ever. With insurgency, it
will go on forever. With terrorism. Terrorism if you want

(21:08):
to call it that, I mean, who is If you're
on the side of it, you're a freedom fighter. If
you are on the other side, is terrorism. So unfortunately,
that's what's going on there, all right.

Speaker 5 (21:19):
The Olympics, not since Bill Handle's last m seeing gig,
has a podium caused so much damage? But don't boom
the Olympics. The organizing committee there for the Milan Courtina Olympics,
they're apologizing for the surface of the podium used in
the Milano ice skating arena. It caused all kinds of

(21:42):
little damage to the blades of figure skaters. And you
have several athletes complaining about Nick scrapes and things like
that in their skates. So they're they're taking steps right
now to replace the surface to prevent this from causing
any more damage.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
Yeah, I didn't know that freshly sharpened blades were a
last resort. I thought they would sharpen the blades just
before going on the ice. And that's not the case.

Speaker 4 (22:09):
Yeah, one would think.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
Huh, yeah, one would think. But it's not the case
at all.

Speaker 3 (22:16):
Dad says Lindsay's done if he has anything to say
about it. Lindsay Vonn's dad said that Lindsay will no
longer race if he has any influence over her decision.
Of course. She fell and broke her leg during the
downhill run on Sunday. He said, she's forty one years
old and this is the end of her career.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
See, yeah, makes sense. As she said, she needs a
bunch of surgery. Also, it's difficult to find clothing that
you can wear when the bone sticks through the clothing,
it just doesn't work. It doesn't bode well.

Speaker 5 (22:56):
She made it clear though, that it was not a
result Yes, yeah.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
Right, she said it had nothing to do with the
A C. L. And no one's refuting that. I mean,
you could argue that psychologically it did. But I not
with Lindsay Vaughn. I think I just clipped it. Yeah,
just bad bad luck. It was just bad luck. It
would have happened anyway. A cl or not or the

(23:20):
A C L didn't get in the way, as you
pointed out.

Speaker 5 (23:23):
All right, Uh, you know best buddy to President Trump,
Senator Adam Schiff of California, And.

Speaker 4 (23:30):
Of course Burbank, our beloved Burbank is endorsing Representative Eric Swallwell. Swallwell,
for no one's heard of who the hell is Swalwell.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
And even weirder, he's a Democrat from Dublin, Ireland. I
didn't even know if someone from Dublin, Ireland can.

Speaker 3 (23:50):
Run California in the area.

Speaker 2 (23:54):
Oh okay, got it, all right, fair enough.

Speaker 4 (23:57):
But obviously shift is one of the state's prominent Democrats.

Speaker 2 (24:02):
Oh yeah, for sure, he's got enormous Well, I don't
know mind how much power he has in the Senate
because he's a new senator. I mean when he was
a congress person he had enormous power. Also, he led
the fight against Donald Trump on the first the first
impeachment trial. Silwell was the manager of the fight against
the second impeachment trial. So I don't know how big

(24:26):
the endorsements work.

Speaker 5 (24:29):
You know, I get a Christmas card from Adam Schiffiff
every year. Huh met a bazillion years ago.

Speaker 2 (24:37):
Wasn't he think it wasn't Didn't he represent Burbank? Yeah
he did? Yeah, he represented us right here? Okay, how about.

Speaker 3 (24:46):
A new trial. Rebecca Grossman's attorney is asking for a
new trial, of course. Rebecca Grossman is serving prison time
for running down and killing two young brothers in Westlake
Village in twenty twenty. The attorney is arguing that her
murder conviction should be overturned because of faulty jury instructions.

(25:09):
The jurors who convicted Grossman, according to the lawyer, were
not given the legally correct definition of implied malice.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
Yeah, that's really minor stuff. Although, as the attorney says,
in a close case, I don't know how close this was.
The phrasing matters, and so I'm looking at it and
it seems pretty close to me. But the language has
to be specific, and what the defense is saying it
wasn't specific enough enough. We need a new trial. Don't

(25:39):
know which way that she killed.

Speaker 4 (25:40):
Two kids with her car.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
Yeah, yeah, I was British joint driving in a crosswalk.

Speaker 4 (25:46):
Yeah, just going.

Speaker 2 (25:47):
Seventy and a forty five mile per hour a younger.

Speaker 5 (25:50):
Yeah, you're l lady and yeah Jesus all right. One
day before the hearing to explore whether of Los Angeles
misled federal courts, a lot of garbage going down with
his plan to clear thousands of homeless encampments. Promises were made.

(26:11):
So now the city's outside council asked an appeals court
to remove the judge from the case. So what's what's
all this mean legally? Is this just deployed to delay everything?

Speaker 2 (26:23):
Yeah, well, here's the issue with the city trying to
get rid of this judge. This judge, David o'carter is
fanatic about wiping out the homeless project problem, to the
extent that defendants say, he doesn't matter, it's he can.
He orders cities, counties to do some insane stuff. Matter

(26:45):
of fact, we talked to Todd Spitzer, and when Spitzer
was on the he was a he was a county
supervisor in Orange County. He said Carter would walk up
and down the Santa Ana River and count the encampments.
When does the federal judge walk up and down the
sant Anna River for the encampments there. Oh, so when

(27:07):
it was charged, I mean, it's uh. He is fanatic
about dealing with homelessness, and the city said this guy
is way too far and he made errors in overseeing
the settlement that happened.

Speaker 3 (27:22):
Kaiser News more peeps on the picket line. Pharmacists and
lab techs have joined more than thirty thousand nurses and
healthcare workers. They are striking for what they claim are
unfair labor practices by Kaiser. And some of the stories
that are coming out are pretty pretty crazy, like when
they're saying that they're understaffed. One guy says he works

(27:45):
pediatric er and a lot of times has six patients
for himself. Another says they're asking for CT scan and
the nurses, I don't have time to do a CT
scan for you. I got to cover breaks.

Speaker 2 (27:56):
I mean, yeah, I mean it's no, it is bad.
The shortage is bad.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
There's not only Kaiser either.

Speaker 2 (28:02):
Yeah, and Kaiser, which is supposed to be a great
place to work. And every time I talk to people
of the work at Kaiser, and I talk a lot
to those folks Kaiser says we're offering thirty percent over
the length of the contract. I don't know how long
the new contract is, but they're saying we're and that's
not including benefit enhancements. So why the shorts saying that's

(28:24):
not enough. But it's such a tough job being a
nurse is it's a tough job.

Speaker 5 (28:31):
It really is, all right, this is a horrible story.
Christopher Ramstead Ramsted forty seven years old. He is or
was a Passing A Fire Department captain. He's facing child's
sex abuse charges. He was re arrested. I guess he

(28:52):
was arrested on Wednesday of last week and then released
from jail after posting bail, and then he was re arrested.

Speaker 4 (28:59):
On front and held with no bail.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
His bail hearing is scheduled in like three days.

Speaker 4 (29:07):
On the thirteenth.

Speaker 5 (29:09):
Lives in Thousand Oaks, but it was hired by the
Passing A Fire Department in two thousand and five, promoted
to captain in twenty sixteen.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
Yeah, it's a horrible story, as you said, And if
he ends up going to prison, they have to keep
him in a secluded area. Chowd Molesters do not do
well in prison cops and child molesters. They have to
be protected otherwise they die. The general population they're not
going to survive. All right, that's it. We're done, guys.

(29:39):
This is KFI AM six forty. You've been listening to
the Bill Handle Show. Catch my Show Monday through Friday,
six am to nine am, and anytime on demand on
the iHeartRadio app

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Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Betrayal Season 5

Betrayal Season 5

Saskia Inwood woke up one morning, knowing her life would never be the same. The night before, she learned the unimaginable – that the husband she knew in the light of day was a different person after dark. This season unpacks Saskia’s discovery of her husband’s secret life and her fight to bring him to justice. Along the way, we expose a crime that is just coming to light. This is also a story about the myth of the “perfect victim:” who gets believed, who gets doubted, and why. We follow Saskia as she works to reclaim her body, her voice, and her life. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com. Follow us on Instagram @betrayalpod and @glasspodcasts. Please join our Substack for additional exclusive content, curated book recommendations, and community discussions. Sign up FREE by clicking this link Beyond Betrayal Substack. Join our community dedicated to truth, resilience, and healing. Your voice matters! Be a part of our Betrayal journey on Substack.

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