Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI Am sixty and you're listening to The Conway
Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
They are saying it through my trusted for source, Michael Krozer,
who is with us as we continue on The Conway Show,
Thompson sitting in tim'soff this week, and we are in.
Speaker 3 (00:22):
The middle of the what is it?
Speaker 2 (00:24):
A conversation that's really playing itself out publicly in a
lot of different media corners, and it's around the Jeffrey
Epstein file. You know, the Jeffrey Epstein file was oftentimes
spoken of as the Jeffrey Epstein list, like it was
the Heidi Flics list of clients sort of. And there
are lists of people who were on his plane on
(00:48):
his island. There are all these kinds of flight manifests,
and I'm sure they are part of whatever file they have.
But the idea was that once the Trump people got
into power, sort of, the Biden power block would be
busted up and we'd actually get to know what was
in the Epstein file and what happened, for example, with
(01:10):
his incarceration and what was deemed a suicide. Anyway, was
asked about this and Donald Trump swam away from it
and said, you know, why are we still talking about this?
The Epstein thing? It was, you know, I can't believe
people are are still talking about this. It was kind
of an odd thing for Trump to say, because, as
(01:30):
we were saying before the break, he normally steers into
this kind of are you still.
Speaker 4 (01:34):
Talking about Jeffrey at Epstein?
Speaker 3 (01:36):
Yeah, so this guy's been talked about for years. You're
asking me. We have Texas, we have this, we have
all of the things.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
Anyway, he goes on and he sort of says, you know,
why are we still talking about this? But he does
hand it off in the same meeting to Pam Bondy,
who is the Attorney General, and she does comment on it.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
You go ahead, sure.
Speaker 5 (01:56):
Sure.
Speaker 6 (01:57):
First to back up on that, in February, I didn't
interview on Fox and it's been getting a lot of
attention because I said, I was asked a question about
the client list, and my response was it's sitting on
my desk to be reviewed, meaning the file along with
the JFK MLK files as well. That's what I meant
(02:20):
by that. Also, to the tens of thousands of video
they turned out to be child porn downloaded by that disgusting.
Jeffrey Epstein, child born is what they were never going
to be released, never going to see the lighted day
to him being an agent, I have no knowledge about that.
We can get back to you on that. And the
minute missing from the video we released the video.
Speaker 2 (02:43):
The agent thing, as you know, was associated with the
cover up of the death in prison, like why why
the kid gloves? Why is no one talking about this?
Is he an agent? Is he in league with Masad
or something? I mean, you heard every manner of conspiracy,
and I don't mean to laugh. If ever, there was
(03:05):
a narrative that called for a conspiracy theory. This is
one of them, and there's no shortage of them.
Speaker 6 (03:11):
And the minute missing from the video. We released the
video showing definitively the video was not conclusive, but the
evidence prior to it was showing he committed suicide. And
what was on that there was a minute that was
off the counter. And what we learned from euro of
(03:32):
Prisons was every year, every night they redo that video
is old from like.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
A minute off the counter, you understand means the video
in other words, the video was missing a minute. There
was like a minute gap. It was just a cut
for a minute, and she's now explaining that every.
Speaker 6 (03:49):
Year, every night they rede that video is old from
like nineteen ninety nine, so every night the video is
reset and every night should have the same minute missing.
So we're looking for that video to release that as
well as showing that a minute is missing every night.
And that's it on Epstein.
Speaker 3 (04:07):
Well, so that's Pam Bondy. She's the attorney general.
Speaker 2 (04:09):
She has access to everything FBI files and everything else.
It seems to me that if you were doing an
investigation this goes back to the moment that Jeffrey Epstein
was found dead in his cell, you would grab all
those security videos. I don't understand how there's a minute
gap that is allowed to be written over somehow. I
didn't quite get that. But there's every manner of different
(04:34):
explanation and changes in tone. This is Dan Bongino before
he became number two at the FBI. On his podcast.
It was right here on iHeart Radio and he was insistent,
we're going to get now the real story on Jeffrey Epstein.
Speaker 7 (04:54):
I don't know how Jeffrey Epstein died. I'm not going
to sit here and tell you I wasn't there. All
I can tell you is it's off suspicious. How that happened?
Oh look the camera's broke. Oh look he strangled himself
on a bed team. Wow, amazing how that worked out?
You now, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (05:09):
In a subsequent interview, just a month ago, this was
his response in regard to Epstein.
Speaker 4 (05:16):
You said, Jeffrey Epstein committed suicide.
Speaker 5 (05:20):
People don't believe it.
Speaker 4 (05:21):
Well, I mean, listen, they have a right to their opinion.
But as someone who has worked as a public defender,
as a prosecutor, who's been in that prison system, who's
been in the Metropolitan Detention Center, who's been in segregated housing,
you know a suicide when you see one, and that's
what that was.
Speaker 7 (05:38):
They killed himself again, you want me to get I've
seen the whole file. He killed himself.
Speaker 2 (05:44):
Okay, So now this guy's totally changed his tune. That's
Dan Bongino and then finally Tucker Carlson. He's also just
astounded by the fact that we're not going to get
a look at all at the Epstein files, and he
can't really understand how everything falls into place.
Speaker 8 (06:02):
I never thought that I would be offering an apology
to Jeffrey Epstein. I think of all the times I've
maligned that guy, all the times I'm accused him of crimes,
blackmailing people, of trafficking children to powerful figures around the
world on behalf of Global Intel Services, and then I
learned yesterday from Attorney General Pambondi that's totally untrue. The
(06:22):
guy killed himself after thirty days, thirty six days in prison,
and then his best friend, former girlfriend, Jelane Maxwell, doing
twenty years in prison for no crime. There are no victims.
Speaker 5 (06:32):
Yes, it's a victimless crime. They're obviously persecuted by the state.
They're political prisoners. Really, I don't want to be lied to,
and I specifically don't want to be lied to by
the very people who built careers, and I'm talking here
specifically about Cash Betel, Dan Bongino and many others who
now worked for the administration, who fed MAGA and the
(06:53):
American people and promised them to get to the bottom
of this, only to turn their tune immediately upon assuming office.
Lying before Congress talking about this is an obvious case
of suicide. Going on the Joe Rogan podcast and effectively
asking for some level of trust.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
So this is where we sit. There'll be no file released.
It looks as though the administration is whimming away from
this Epstein thing. I don't know what is going to
happen to Gallayne Maxwell. I've heard every manner of conspiracies
associated with her as well. She was the girlfriend of
Jeffrey Epstein, the purveyor of so much of this loathsome
(07:31):
life that Jeffrey Epstein had. But if you're looking for
help from this administration, from Pam Bondi and the crew
and Dan Bongino and Cash Mattel, all who really were
demanding that the Epstein files be released, you're not going
to get it now. As was said, they're on the
(07:51):
inside and they say, hey, the official report is the report.
Now let's move on to something else. So but in
this of moving on to something else, a Las Vegas
hotel is the scene of a major lawsuit that follows
(08:13):
from a widow. She is suing the Vegas hotel over
her husband's death after it was she says, caused by
the prostitute he was with. Yeah, there are a lot
of moving parts here.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
Too, so to speak. We'll get to that story next.
Speaker 9 (08:35):
You're listening to Tim conwaytunire on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (08:42):
Las Vegas is a place that Tim likes. Las Vegas
is a place that I like. What's not to like?
A chance to be richer than when you arrived. All
those people chasing a dream, all the shows, the night
dusk when the lights of the hotels start to take
(09:04):
on a shimmer, all of the major performers, magicians, illusionists, singers,
comedians so great.
Speaker 3 (09:14):
I love it.
Speaker 2 (09:16):
Once in a while, though, the story jumps out and
you realize that somebody was chasing a little too much fun.
Speaker 3 (09:23):
And that's what this story is about.
Speaker 2 (09:26):
This guy, Colorado guy shows up to Las Vegas and
he decides to contact.
Speaker 3 (09:36):
A sex worker.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
He wasn't having enough fun just being in Vegas and
doing some of the things that I was just talking about,
the dinners and the shows. You wanted to up the
ante a little bit. So he met this Chailey Kessey
is her name. She's called a sex worker by authorities
and by prosecutors. She met her at a hotel bar
(10:00):
trying to you know, you called down for a sex
worker and you really probably won't get too much response
from room service or the front desk or concierge. You
need to probably work the bar, I guess, and that's
where they connected. At the hotel bar, the hooker and
the husband walked around the hotel casino for about forty minutes.
(10:21):
They know this because of video. They went to a
cashier's cage area and he withdrew one thousand dollars. She
reportedly went with him. He's fifty five years old, heads
up to the hotel room, but left only eight minutes later,
(10:42):
and after his wife, who was not with him. Will
come as no surprise to you, couldn't reach him. After
some time, she called the hotel to see if somebody
there could check on her husband. They did, and they
found him unresponsive, slumped on the bathroom floor. So they
(11:07):
trace the events back to her and her pimp, who's
involved in this as well, and they are both accused
of giving this gentleman, Jacoby, a deadly dose of fentanyl.
Apparently they smoked the fentanyl together. This is what Kessi
(11:30):
is saying, and that led to his death. Doesn't help
her story that when they found Jacoby dead, his cell
phone and wallet were gone, so she may have left
in a panic, but her panic was not so overwhelming.
That she couldn't rifle through his pockets first. Now this
(11:53):
comes with the extra twist. His wife is now suing
the Palazzo hotel. She's saying, you, guys at the hotel
should have known that these people, the pimp and the hooker,
(12:15):
you should have known that they were bad news and
you should have never allowed them into your casino and
into your hotel. Security guards, it's alleged in the lawsuit
should have warned this guy, Jeff, that he was being
followed by these two people, that this was sort of
(12:35):
a setup, and in particular, the pimp was following him
while he was chatting with KESSI. Apparently now you may think,
as I did, come on, man, you know you're doing this.
You hooked up with this woman. It turned it, you're
(12:56):
smoking fentanyl with he, and you end up. I mean,
it's horrible because you're a guy with the family and
all the rest of this, But I mean, a lawsuit
on the part of your wife, you'll never ever see
anything from that. The sad fact is that you're dead
and now your wife is going to have to soldier
on the family without you. But that would be a
(13:19):
shortsighted reading of things. There are lawyers who have looked
at this case, and they're saying it is reasonable, potentially
to argue that the casino should monitor on some level
people of this sort who are a danger to those
(13:39):
people who are frequenting their casino. And they're both charged
with murder after being accused of supplying the lethal dose
of fentanyl, and they're going away. But the question becomes
now on the part of his wife.
Speaker 3 (14:01):
She says they were soulmates.
Speaker 2 (14:04):
They met in Fargo, North Dakota in nineteen ninety and
she's lost her soulmate. She raised three girls with him,
and she's saying the hotel, the casino should pay something
for our loss. And as I say, legal minds who
(14:26):
are looking at this case say that she actually has
a chance to win some kind of settlement at minimum
against the Palazzo Hotel. It's not going to bring back
her husband, it's not going to bring back her soulmate,
but it might teach the Palazzo at minimum to keep
(14:48):
track of who is populating their bar and who is
cruising around with their guests. It's a bizarre case, I know,
and I know what you're saying. How can she call
him her soulmate? Given the fact that he's scaring up
escorts or hookers or sex workers as they're called in
(15:11):
the criminal complaint and in the civil complaint. I mean,
I always feel like I don't know. I mean, I
don't know what. You know, who knows what that relationship
is about, you know. But she obviously feels the loss,
and she may feel a win at the end of
all of this. They really feel that she's got a chance.
(15:32):
They legal experts say. You know, I thought, oh, come on, man,
this is crazy. But legal experts say that she does
have a chance to actually win this case.
Speaker 3 (15:42):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
Yeah, the hooker and the husband walked into the hotel casino.
That's the way it starts. And it may end with
a big settlement and a big check paid out by
the Palazzo Hotel to the surviving spouse, who says they
didn't take enough care to make sure that her husband
didn't end up with somebody who could kill him. When
(16:07):
we come back. What's happening when we come back, Matt,
I have no idea what we're doing next.
Speaker 3 (16:13):
We will figure it out. Oh, that's decisive. We will
figure it out.
Speaker 9 (16:21):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on Demand from kfi
am six forty.
Speaker 2 (16:27):
You know, I used to be a big DJ in Washington,
d C. Out of college. It was one of those
clubs dancing. And I've told you these stories before, but
I mean they I feel like that's when I was hip.
It was a long time ago, so I've now had
to pass the baton of hipness numerous times, as you
(16:48):
might imagine, and now I think you've ended up with it.
I guess that's what I'm saying. You've got the baton
of hipness on this show. You and Krozer, I would say,
has a degree of hypnos too. You know, I feel
like you guys are still in the game. I don't
know that I'm in I'm oh, yeah, of course Angel is.
Speaker 3 (17:06):
Very much You're right, Mark.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
It was so fun to see Angel at the sponsor thing,
you know, the barbecue thing that we did. Was it
two weeks ago or no, just a week ago?
Speaker 10 (17:20):
Two weeks ago, the Conway Barbecue.
Speaker 3 (17:22):
Yeah, that was a lot of fun to have you
up there.
Speaker 2 (17:24):
Was also not expecting to see Angel, so it was
really kind of a pleasant surprise and it was a
really great event. I hope they do a lot more
of that stuff. But all right, I have some kind
of at least for me, it's bad news. I don't
know about the rest of you, but I've figured out
that CBD has helped me in one way or another.
(17:47):
My sister, as you know, went through I see, as
you know because I've mentioned it before. Maybe you're not
aware of it, but she was in a very serious car accident.
She has a lot of chronic pain, and she's helped
by CBD. So I mean gummies, edibles, oils, lotions, I mean,
they're all sorts of packaging and all sorts of delivery
systems if you want to call them that for CBD,
(18:07):
and it's inevitable. I guess that you know. Now there
is a new FDA study and it suggests that CBD
is not so great for you, as they a.
Speaker 1 (18:23):
New warning for the FDA that even load doses of
CBD could cause harm to the liver. CBD is the
ingredient distracted from cannabis that does not cause a high
and is not addictive. Of the group that took part
in a clinical trial, five percent experienced elevated liver enzymes,
which is a sign of liver stress or injury. Researchers
(18:44):
say that while most tolerate CBD, well, a small minority
are vulnerable. They are now urging doctors to screen for
CBD during liver function tests.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
All right, let me just speak on the positive side
of CBD five percent. First of all, is I think
it's a low number. When you're talking about liver damage
and the effects on liver enzymes, you really have to
be specific about what you're talking about. You can't just
(19:14):
tell me liver damage, Well, how much damage is there.
I mean, when I go out and have a glass
of wine tonight, there is damage that's going to be
done to my liver, presumably, right, So all of a sudden,
the specifics become really important, and I suspect that presented
with the specifics, I would still be overwhelmed by all
(19:36):
the numbers and unable to really know what they were.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
But let me try.
Speaker 2 (19:40):
Over the course of four weeks, two hundred volunteers got
either a five milligram per kilogram of body weight, like
it's two point three milligrams a pound for a one
hundred and fifty four pound individual. So let's see. The
goal was to give them a typical amount that might
(20:01):
be used by consumers. So everybody in the study underwent
weekly lab tests. This is for CBD. If you're just
joining us. The vast majority of people in the trial
were unaffected. Five percent showed greatly elevated levels of the
liver enzyme amino transferrace. That's a marker of liver cell
(20:23):
damage or inflammation. Now this is in JAMA the internal
medicine part of JAMA, and women appeared to be more
vulnerable than men. According to the study released in JAMA,
the liver enzyme returned to normal within one or two
weeks of stopping CBD. But who wants to stop it?
(20:43):
Seven participants withdrew from the trial because they were showing
clinical signs of potential drug induced liver injury. They are saying,
and this is the researcher at King's College, this is
a significant finding. Here's the quote. It suggests that CBD itself,
even though the absence of other drugs, may pose a
(21:04):
risk to liver health.
Speaker 3 (21:08):
Damn, I know it. We can't have nice things.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
It is really awful. I mean, this is and then
I don't need to tell you, but I'm going to
tell you and remind you that THC was just identified
as having negative effects on a heart and cardiovascular conditions
(21:31):
that was last week.
Speaker 3 (21:34):
I mean, one of the true.
Speaker 2 (21:40):
Wondrous kickback things that I've embraced is a little edible
and a little CBD for the aches and pains a
lot of us have. And apparently we are a walking
lab rat headed for bad stuff. Between liver injuries and
(22:02):
cardiac issues. We could have some serious involvement from these things.
It's interesting, though, that I look at somebody like Willie Nelson,
I mean he or Snoop, it's a good point, but
Willie Nelson particularly, he's what is he ninety.
Speaker 3 (22:21):
Or eighty eight? Pretty, he's up there.
Speaker 2 (22:23):
I mean he's fine, and he's high all the time.
He's awakened. Baker, Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 11 (22:30):
I mean it is pretty generic because yeah, I've experienced
both ends of it. You know, you have a little
too much to drink in the next day, you got
the head, you got this, you got that. But I've had,
you know, a decent amount of gummies and it knocks
me out. I feel like I've gotten quality sleep, and
the next day I wake up kind of like clear headed,
(22:50):
maybe a little a little dehydrated, but that's about it.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
Yeah, I mean, you can feel hungover and it also
depends what gummies you're using. And there's so much that
is associated with the specifics of whatever you put in
your body always, you know, like even when you say drink,
I had a drink, Well, we had a drink of
what tequila whiskey?
Speaker 3 (23:11):
I mean it matters, yes, yeah.
Speaker 10 (23:14):
You know what I'd be interested in knowing is in
the control group, like what was the source of cannabis?
Was it all grown the same or did they they
they take it from from different sources, because you know,
there's different standards for growing cannabis, and there's the Kentucky
standard in the United States. They grow cannabis around the world.
(23:38):
So is it an organic process? Is it being loaded
up with you know, chemicals that you wouldn't want to
sure sure to use anyway? I mean that probably has
something to do with it as well.
Speaker 2 (23:53):
Yeah, there's and you're right to ask all those questions.
I mean, I just think there are a lot of
specifics here. I will say that when they released this
study in jama and maybe I'm just describing too much
credibility to Jamma, but when they release it that way,
and then you get this guy who's a researcher at
King's College, saying this is a significant finding and it
(24:17):
shows that CBD itself, even in the absence of other drugs,
may pose a risk to liver health. The results have
important implications for individuals using over the counter CBD supplements.
Speaker 3 (24:26):
I mean, that really does swing my head around.
Speaker 2 (24:29):
But again I point to many who've been helped by CBD,
I mean critically helped. I mentioned my sister, but a
lot of people with chronic pain or help by CBD.
In other words, honestly, it's probably worth if you're fighting
a kind of chronic pain associated with injury or for
any other reasons arthritis, et cetera, it might be worth
taking the chance. I mean, so there's a five percent
(24:50):
chance that you could have I mean, based on this study,
and these study results are played out in real life,
that you could have liver damage, but you may be
in the ninety that that's not the case. And if
your pain is bad enough, you're looking for some ways
to treat it. So look, I'm as bummed out as anybody.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
You know.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
Don't blame the messenger, that's all I'm saying.
Speaker 9 (25:18):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
We talked a lot about what's happening in MacArthur Park.
We talked a lot about the city and County of
Los Angeles being joined now by other organizations in suing
the federal government for all of these raids and the
way in which it's being done. And Karen Bass on
(25:47):
social media this week, also in person, as she attempted
to stop the ICE agents conducting immigration raids, calling it
out rageous, un American. She's been a vote opponent of
the rage in the city and again this MacArthur Park
thing was a wild scene on both sides, with the
(26:08):
FEDS coming in hot and coming in with the you know,
officers on horseback. You had a black Hawk helicopter overhead.
It was crazy. And then Bass pulls up to the
scene and she leaps out of the cards as they
need to leave. They need to leave right now. They
need to leave because this is unacceptable. And so the
(26:30):
announcement today that there will be a legal remedies sought
and even signing on to the ACLU legal action. So
the thing that's happening now and the social media sphere
is associated with a lot of you know, smack talking
(26:50):
on both sides Karen Bass. She said, minutes before there
were more than twenty kids playing than the military comes through.
The second I heard about this, I went to the
park to speak to the person in charge to tell
them it needed to end. Now, absolutely outrageous. And then
(27:11):
she gets this, if only Karen Bass worked as hard
for fire victims in Los Angeles as she does for
criminal illegals. That was from Daryl Isa. You know he's
he's a congress person, and he was joined by others.
Democrats aren't used to seeing the law being enforced. The
(27:33):
federal government would not have to deploy against foreign invaders
if you would just stop harboring them. That was again
from another Congressman, Mike Collins. So this continues and La
is being made something of an example. I fear did
you see what happened to the Russian minister. Hours after
(27:54):
Vladimir Putin tells him we don't need you anymore, he
ends up again committing suicide, takes his own life. He's
dismissed by Putin in the morning. There was a decree
announcing his dismissal published by the Kremlin on their website
(28:18):
and then asked by reporters for the reasons behind the dismissal.
The spokesperson for the Kremlin, Dmitri Peskov, denied the notion
that this was because of a lack of trust, but
didn't give any alternative reason. Then on Tuesday, Peskov told
(28:39):
journalists that the Kremlin was shocked by the news of
his death, describing it as tragic and sorrowful. This cannot
but shock any normal person, they said at the Kremlin.
Naturally it shocked us as well, But an investigation is
(28:59):
underway to answer are all questions, and while it continues, speculation,
they say, is best left to the media and political analysts.
It would be inappropriate for us at the Kremlin. The
Investigative Committee of Russia said that his body was found
inside a car in a suburb of Moscow, who was
found with a gunshot wound, and the circumstances of his
(29:23):
death being investigated. The main theory this is a quote.
The main theory is suicide. Just seems like a lot
of these suicides and these stuff happens over there, doesn't
it when you just end up on the wrong side
of these various putinesque circumstances. Another Transport Ministry official died
(29:46):
on Monday. He was forty two years old. These are
young people dying. He worked for the Federal Agency for
rail Transport, and then the Russian state media saying that
he died at his workplace, maybe from acute heartfare. No
indications that the deaths are linked. So you can really
(30:08):
be a rising star in Russia, but you really have
to be careful because stuff goes sideways very quickly there. Meanwhile,
in Ukraine, that entire situation grinds on, but it was interesting.
Donald Trump actually saying at a private gathering of donors
(30:30):
that he once thought about deterring Vladimir Putin from attacking
Ukraine by threatening to bomb the s out of Moscow.
He says he said with Putin, I said, if you
go into Ukraine, I'm going to bomb the s out
of Moscow. I'm telling you, I have no choice. And
(30:53):
then Putin goes like, I don't believe you, but he
believed me ten percent.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
Trump.
Speaker 2 (31:00):
This is now comments surfacing around a twenty twenty four fundraiser,
So a lot of stuff said. I don't know if
I necessarily believe it, but it's interesting that that is
now floating to the surface. And he also claims that
he related a similar warning to President She So one
(31:22):
never knows, but these remarks are all of these remarks
coming to the surface in any number of its reporting
in books all about the current president and how he
said certain things on the campaign trail that seemed at odds.
Speaker 3 (31:39):
With what he was doing once he got into office.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
Anyway, Look, it's Prime Day and I got to get home.
I got a double click on some stuff. Prime Day
is four days, as you know, it runs through Friday,
July eleventh. You know, in the Bible, prime day was
only two days, but somehow they've made four days. I
don't know how that happened, But in any case, I'm
(32:03):
going to get home and start double clicking mo is next.
Thanks for all the love everybody, and we will see
you tomorrow on The Conway Show. We're KFI AM six
forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 9 (32:18):
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
Now you can always hear us live on KFI AM
six forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and
anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.