Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Something seemed weird about that song. This song seems weird too.
Did we get it, Evan? I hope we got it. Sorry,
I'm sure everything is fine. I'm sure it is.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
But you don't know what hurts you? How long? Hi,
we're back from break? How do you know? Kind? I
hope we are we hope? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (00:17):
Oh okay, you know it's that end of the year
kind of everything gets a little lax. Party.
Speaker 1 (00:28):
The computer did something weird. Sorry, it was doing something
that wasn't supposed to do. Speaking of parties, though, man,
this sounds like a good time. I don't know exactly
where this is. Forty three state police officers in a
Mexican border town, Tamilipas.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
I don't know. I don't speak Spanish.
Speaker 3 (00:52):
They've all been suspended now under investigation of turning their
police station into a bar and being drunk.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
On the job. Huh.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
Forty three officers that started early Monday this week, high
ranking officials with the police there arrived at the police
station and found dozens of officers who were drinking and
already intoxicated.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
As a result of the visit, the forty three officers.
Speaker 3 (01:25):
Have been I guess just put aside for a moment
while they do a little investigating, and so far they
haven't determined exactly where the officers, in fact, where they drunk,
or were they just you know, like on the way
to getting drunk. Internal affairs people or whatever they call it.
I don't speak Spanish, you know, got into that, and
(01:47):
they're looking into it. They're pretending to be surprised by this,
but police officers drinking and having parties at the police
station isn't anything new. They report that they previously called
officer drinking at the station, confronted them, and then soon
(02:07):
after saw officers from another station in another town also
drinking and having parties. So they've decided that they need
to maybe look into this. It might be that some
of these people had ties to organized crime and probably
were told that they couldn't be fired.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
I didn't know that organized crime was still a thing.
Is it still a thing? I heard it was on
the way out, especially in Mexico. Huh.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
Well, I don't know if they call them the mafia
down there, or it's just an organized group of criminals
who get together and party with the police. And some
of them are police, and some of the police are
you know, how that works.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
Oh, he's correct about that.
Speaker 1 (02:50):
In Mexico, the federal government and the criminal element, they're
one and the same. In fact, the corruption of the
cartels and the influence they have on a monetary level
goes all the way.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
Up to the tippy tippy top all that way. Yeah,
that's a long way up there.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Guatemala has deployed special Forces soldiers after the Mexican cartel
forces invaded some border towns. So it looks like the
Mexican Mexican border is still an unsafe place, but now it's.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
The other border. Yeah, that's the one on the other end.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
And Texas troops stand guard over security operations at the
historic Alamo right now?
Speaker 2 (03:28):
Have there been threats?
Speaker 1 (03:29):
A bunch of Texas Department of Public Safety troopers are
apparently protecting the historic site a group called the Alamo Trust.
It's a nonprofit organization responsible for the daily operations of
the historic site.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
The train ones it'll make you take your hat off. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
They transferred security responsibility to the troopers, who have been
in place since September. The move was mandated by the
Texas Senate Bill thirty fifty nine.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Well, the Mexicans calls some trouble again down there. Well,
I think it's been a people have been a little
people have been a little honery there. Oh yeah, people
get harnery. Yeah. I wish everyone would just behave themselves.
I know, I don't know why people can't act right.
I know, what is the deal with that? What is
going on with that?
Speaker 1 (04:10):
It's not all bad though, Even CNN and is admitting
the economy is uh is better, begrudgingly explaining.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
Way from the all time high set back in twenty
twenty two under former President Biden above five dollars a gallon, and.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
It is lower, although only a little bit lower than
at this point last year. Okay, well, I think they
have to admit five dollars for a gallon was kind
of insane.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
That was a little pricey. Yeah, and now it's better.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
They're like, and do you ever find that gas that
they tell you two dollars a gallon? Do you ever
see it? I mean, it's somewhere out there. I don't
think they're lying. I just think it ain't two dollars
a gallon around here where we.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
Live here in the city. It's almost like Joe Biden's
still president. Also, you don't buy the cheapest gas do you.
I mean, do you have a car or truck that
runs on regular that's the that's the low price. I
do have to buy the premium gas. I mean I
don't have.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
To, but yeah, you won't that car toill last. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
One of the things I find the works great is
sometimes after I fill out my tank, I tell the
guy I'm just going to pay later and then I leave.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
Oh that works.
Speaker 3 (05:19):
Yeah, yeah, No, don't do that. You're probably keeping a
list of how much you owe those.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
So I'm making a list. I'm checking it twice. That's
all we can ask of you.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
Forty three Mexican Border state cops have been suspended after
turn Oh you just explained that one that was turning
the police station into the bar. That was really funny.
It's just a different headline for the same funny year
when you say it though.
Speaker 2 (05:39):
Yeah. Sorry, I was just working my way down the
list here. I don't know we had a list, I do.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
Oh yeah, I have a whole bunch of stuff in
front of me that I wanted to talk about this morning,
like releasing criminal illegal immigrants to own MAGA and the
Republicans Illinois now released seventeen hundred violent criminal illegal immigrants
with ICE detainers since January.
Speaker 2 (06:00):
Some of those arrested.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
We're in trouble for murder, rape to children, pornography, child pornography,
armed robbery.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Take that maga.
Speaker 3 (06:08):
Yeah, a lot of that stuff seems to be on
the aught not list.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
I think it's all on the audience. Then all of it,
don't okay.
Speaker 3 (06:15):
I was sure if there was one or two things
in there, we could probably like, let's slide.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
I find it to be kind of disgusting how there
are people that hate Trump so much that they're willing
to let child predators free into society, and yet they exist.
And now imagine trying to have a conversation with those
like a rational like no, these people have rights too,
they do not.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
You don't have conversations with those kind of people though.
They tell you what they think and then you're supposed
to agree. If you disagree, then don't say anything because
they don't want to hear your side.
Speaker 1 (06:49):
If you're a child pornographer, you have a right. You
have a right to a firing squad.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
There you go. You have a right to lethal injection.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
Sick repeat child predators, letting them go for free because
you hate the Republicans.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
Yeah, I don't think so. Sorry. I know our side
isn't perfect, but geez, the other side seems demonic by comparisons.
It does.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
Pray for them, or pray for yourself, or pray for
the kids.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
More appropriately, juice side, pray for somebody, pray fall everybody.
How about that? Pray for everybody?
Speaker 1 (07:18):
All right, let's do something to get this terrible taste
out of our mouths.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
Right now? He comes to Florida man.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
All right, I will admit this is one of my
favorite Florida Man headlines we've seen in a while. We're
about to tell you about it. You haven't heard it yet.
It's not about the child pornography. Well good, And it's
prought to you by a bout to you by Heywood Harvest.
Speaker 3 (07:42):
Especially this time of year when everybody's so stressed and
everything's old, you know, just running around traffic's worse than usual.
You getting out to Heywood Harvest can can really work
wonders for your your attitude and your mood, if you
know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
Yeah? Absolutely, And is there a promo code?
Speaker 3 (08:00):
Well yes, it's so complicated. I'm not sure if anybody's
gonna be able to remember it. But if you do,
you earned savings promo code it. Heywood Harvest dot com
is here, it is here comes W. Yeah and Jay.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
So the word and in between the W and J,
would you say the W and J stand for Walton
and Johnson.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
I'd go with that. All right, cool, let's say it
did all right?
Speaker 1 (08:25):
Today we take you to Valujah County, Florida, where the
Sheriff's office said a man with a BMW left his
car unlocked at a place called by Centennial Park. He
had the keys in a closed cup holder. I think
he just thought his car would be safing there. The
man was walking his dog and when he came back,
well and behold, I bet you know what happened?
Speaker 2 (08:44):
Was his car not there? His car was stolen? Oh no.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
A few minutes later, Valujah deputies say the car, the
exact car that he had just lost or was taken
from him, crashed at Old Dixie Highway and Plantation Oaks Boulevard.
I don't know where that is, but I do know
I want to crash. Yeah that is or Plantation Oaks.
Speaker 2 (09:05):
No, I don't want to be there.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
That's two names for two both of those streets. Of
a racist name. They got to stop that way. We
gotta start a campaign to just wipe out that whole thing. Somehow,
the intersection's name offends me even more than the news story.
Speaker 2 (09:18):
Let's sell anyway.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
Witnesses got the driver out of the crash vehicle and
they told the deputies. The driver, who was later identified
as thirty six year old Calvin Johnson, Calvin, I'm sure
as a white guy, was going about one hundred miles
an hour when he crashed. Johnson told deputies that he
didn't steal the car, and they said, what do you
mean you didn't steal the car?
Speaker 3 (09:40):
He was in the car, it was flying down the road.
It's not his car. What does he how does he
defend that? Okay, great question.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
He claims that he teleported into the vehicles.
Speaker 3 (09:55):
An hour and I swear to gods, I don't teleport
to something.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
Where'd you get the car from? I don't know, I
don't know. No, No, it's a did you come from
by Centennial Park? I don't know he stole the car?
Hell you got you saved me from the aliens.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
You saved me from the aliens. He teleported into the car.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
He sounds genuine. He sounds believable. Yeah, the alien party
cops need to back off. Man.
Speaker 3 (10:26):
This guy survives something that you can't even begin to
try to get a hold of in your little mind.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
Because when I think teleportation and fast moving sports cars,
I immediately think.
Speaker 2 (10:37):
You're gonna go back in time. But tally, but he's
But then the aliens. That's what threw me off.
Speaker 3 (10:42):
Yeah, he was teleported by aliens and they just I
guess they were through with him and they just sent
him and they said, well, let's just throw him in
that car right there.
Speaker 2 (10:50):
Maybe he meant illegal aliens. I mean it is Florida,
that's true. Yeah, Good morning, Reasons why I drink. Good
morning morning, Good morning, boys and girls.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
Wolton and Johnson Radio lifted not really amazing news this morning,
our friends at Wheelchairs for Warriors are presenting a wheelchair
to a monk who was injured on the Walk for Peace.
Fantastic non profit organization, Wheelchairs for Warriors, presenting a wheelchair
to Buddhist monk Prara ajarn Maha dom promis on.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
Very well done.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
That was perfect after he sustained an injury during the
Walk for Peace, resulting in the imputation of his leg. Dang,
that was a serious injury. Did he slip off the curb,
did he slip on a banana peel?
Speaker 2 (11:41):
Or what happened while he was walking? He walked from
Houston to Washington, D C. That's pretty long.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
Wait, and the pilot vehicle that drove alongside the monks
was struck by a truck.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
Oh, and pushed into this gentleman. So much for peace.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
He was taken by a helicopter to a Houston area
hospital and they had to imputate his leg.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
That he was walking from Houston all the way to Washington,
d C.
Speaker 3 (12:05):
Yeah, and I'm assuming that this accident happened while he
was still in Houston.
Speaker 2 (12:10):
Well, he's still in Texas, but he said he was
airlifted to U. Yeah. He hadn't been walking that long.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
He'd just been barely out there and all of a
sudden somebody coming to slam into his ride.
Speaker 2 (12:21):
All right. I don't know if you're aware of this,
and I don't.
Speaker 1 (12:23):
I don't claim to know all the details, but there
has been a problem recently with illegal immigrant truck drivers
causing car accidents.
Speaker 3 (12:30):
I've heard something something about that. What's going on there?
Speaker 1 (12:33):
Yeah, anyway, right, well, look, whatever you think about that,
I'm sure you would agree that Wheelchairs for Warriors did.
He just needed a regular run of the mill wheelchair.
They got him one very quickly, because that's the kind
of thing they do.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
This is the first time in the years of checking
out our friends at Wheelchairs for Warriors and the fantastic
work that they do that uh, that a wheelchair went
to a religious leader.
Speaker 2 (12:57):
Yeah that's cool, Yeah, exactly, very nice.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
Yeah, the vast majority of the time it's either a
soldier or somebody that was a first responder.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
And anyway it's a religious warrior. Yeah. Well look, I'm
I think what they're doing.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
I'm not a Buddhist, but I've never heard of a
Buddhist hurting anybody.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
So, you know, good on them.
Speaker 3 (13:14):
So we don't think it was a Buddhist that was
driving the.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
I get the impression. That doesn't sound that doesn't sound
very Buddha.
Speaker 3 (13:22):
It does not. Well, good good on Wheelchairs for Warriors.
They always looking for a little extra help. If you
got a little extra you can help him out with,
they'd love to hear from you.
Speaker 1 (13:30):
It's a tax deductible donation and it is a really
good cause. We heard this story the other day about
this gentleman that they presented with a wheelchair. He is
a military hero and he very sad story was affected.
Speaker 2 (13:44):
By what was it the flesh eating.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
Bacteria and man it ate a lot a lot of
him and he tried to kill himself. They stopped him,
They got him a wheelchair, and now he's what was
it tennis? He's playing our volleyball if you yeah, tennis? Yeah,
he wanted to. He said tennis saved his life. Basically, yeah,
that tennis.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
You know, being an amputee, but being able to play
tennis really helped him out. That's got to be tricky, though.
Speaker 3 (14:07):
You got to, you know, wheel yourself around, then grab
the racket, whack the ball, then wheel yourself around some more,
grab the racket, and hopefully he's playing against somebody else
in a wheelchair on the other side or else.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
I think that's the idea. You're good. It's really pasting.
You have it.
Speaker 3 (14:24):
We was just in Florida, but if you don't mind,
we're going Yankee back over to the hind down state
for just a minute, because Florida is technically famous for
at least two things crazy people. And we already talked
about the crazy guy. And also don't forget executions.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Yeah, they do execute some bad guys in Florida.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
As much as we laugh at some of the crazy
people that occupy that state, the people that run the
state of Florida seem to be pretty good people.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
Mark Alan Jerrolds he has to have three names because
he's on death row. Well he was, he ain't there now.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
Fifty eight years old, was off earlier this week at
the Florida State Prison for a murder committed in.
Speaker 2 (15:04):
Nineteen eighty nine. Wow.
Speaker 3 (15:08):
Wow, they really let this guy stretch it out for
a while. This is the eighteenth execution in Florida this year,
which means the state record just keeps getting bigger for
total executions in a single year. Another one planned for
next week. But this boy, here's what he did. And
the reason we talk about this is because this is
the kind of warning that I think women and definitely
(15:31):
children need to hear. The woman was attacked in her
home and then later the eight year old son came
home from school found his mother's dead, bloody body on
the kitchen floor after being stabbed many times. The man
who killed her and has just been executed for. This
(15:54):
was a carpenter who had done some remodeling work at
her home the year before.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
Wait wait, wait, wait, wait wait wait wait a second, wait,
it's just about to become a Christmas story or something.
Speaker 3 (16:03):
A carpenter during Christmas time. Well, I don't think he
killed her right around now. I don't know when she
was a gil but okay, yeah it's not it's not
a pleasant, fun carpenter story. He he came into her home,
worked for her home about a year before, and then
apparently ran into her and her kids at a store
(16:25):
one day and during a casual conversation, she just let
it slip that her her her husband was out of town,
and so he chatted with her a little bit, chatted
with the kids a little bit, and what he got
out of the kids was when daddy was coming back
(16:46):
and what time they leave and come back for school.
Starting to get a little odd, he just, you know,
it was just casual conversations. Uh, you guys, you kids,
y'all get home right after school or you gotta you know,
and kids don't know.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
So just the casual conversation.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
Tracking the whereabouts of the person that's in charge of
these children.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
That's a little weird.
Speaker 3 (17:05):
Yeah, And so you wonder what time they came and
went and when daddy was going home.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
He got all that.
Speaker 3 (17:10):
So then he went back and he was convicted of murder,
armed robbery and some other charges, sentenced to death, and
then the Florida Supreme Court vacated the sentence and then
they reconvicted him and then re sentenced in ninety two. Okay,
because you know they knew he did it, but they
had to do that, you know how that law has
got all those legal things. You know you got to Oh, well,
(17:32):
you didn't read him, you didn't do that anyway.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
You mean due process? Is that what you're matter, mister?
Speaker 3 (17:39):
So uh, they said one of the ways they caught
him was the same day after she was killed, he
was Then later they found he was hawking some jewelry that.
Speaker 2 (17:54):
Happened to have some of her blood on it.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Hawkta hawk hawking, okay, like pawning, Like gods, pawning jewelry.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
Had traces of the lady's blood.
Speaker 3 (18:04):
On It'll take you to wipe the blood off, wife,
But sometimes you don't get it all out.
Speaker 1 (18:08):
You know, Really, what was it like when you did it?
What you gotta do is boil that in uh in
in water? Uh huh, and then use some of that
hydrogen peroxide and pour that on there.
Speaker 2 (18:19):
How do you know this? I read a lot? Okay,
got it? Hey, you he does not. It doesn't seem
like you're watching a lot of TV. Since when are
you a reader?
Speaker 3 (18:26):
They also found the plastic ties that he used to
bind her in his car. Okay, yeah, I mean you
know you buy plastic ties, you don't use them all
on one one woman. So he had the rest of
them in his car. I see it, We get it.
Yeah that work? Sure, all right? So anyway he's dead now.
Speaker 2 (18:46):
Sounds like it. Way to go Florida. Florida is a
place where some odd stuff happens. Guys, you know.
Speaker 3 (18:52):
You're I'm not a parent. I'm not giving parental advice.
I just see things you're supposed to talk to your
kids about. Not good into a car with a stranger,
you know, not talking to giving out personal information about
like your parents. Uh, where they are, what's their schedule
they where do they come and go?
Speaker 2 (19:12):
What time?
Speaker 3 (19:13):
All that kind of stuff. And I'm sure that even
if you you talk to your kids, there are people
out there who are just so charming and disarming, and
that's the mark of well, that's why they're criminals.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
Sometimes. Did you ever think.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
About what it's like to be a kid today, Because
when we were kids, I mean you guys probably didn't
even have the Internet.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
And then when I was growing up, we.
Speaker 1 (19:33):
Were told never talked to strangers on the internet, never
getting a stranger's car. Now there's lyft, there's uh, there's uber,
the whole life, and we're.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
Just doing exactly the opposite of what we told everybody
not to do.
Speaker 2 (19:47):
It's a whole thing. Here's a real question.
Speaker 1 (19:48):
Do any of you people do any actual work?
Speaker 3 (19:51):
No?
Speaker 2 (19:51):
Not really. Walton and Johnson Radio Network