Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I hate this news story, so I'm gonna be brief
about explaining it.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
I'm only mentioning it because it's getting a lot of
attention today.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
A University of Kentucky cheerleader has been arrested after her
newborn baby was found in a dumpster, black trash bag
in a closet.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Oh that's yeah. There's not much to say about this,
assuming she's guilty. It's just awful. I'm assuming you didn't
say the dead, dead newborn? Yeah, that's dead.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
The University of Kentucky student and a competitive cheerleader was
arrested after the body of her newborn was found stuffed
inside a garbage bag and tossed in a closet, and
she was cups Sunday after cops were called about an
unresponsive baby at a residence near the campus grounds in Lexington.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
What goes through a person's head? Anything? You can just
throw away a baby and nobody's gonna notice or say anything.
I mean, so many questions, right, so, and no answers,
none that would make any sense.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
She was confirmed to be the baby's mother. The newborn
was pronounced dead. Uh, what is there to say? It's
disgusting that's way worse than anything I was about to
tell you about. She's a cheerleader and a beauty queen,
and so I think that's why this is going to
get a lot of attention.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
M hmmm. It's a pretty blonde lady and a dead baby.
So yeah, boy, yeah, anyway, nothing else to say about it.
It's awful.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
Assuming she's guilty, shame on her. If she's not, I
hope they'd figure out what really happened. And what else
can you say?
Speaker 2 (01:24):
Sounds like they've already pretty much wrapped this up. She's
the mother, she obviously had just given birth recently, and
then the baby's dead in the bag. Not much more
to figure out there is there. I mean, it is
always possible she's not guilty, but boy, it doesn't look good.
I was about to tell you about that jail break.
You remember the jail break for New Orleans a while back,
when they had them Tan Bull's broth out. And there's
(01:46):
still one that's on the loose. I'd laughs. I heard
he's still out there roaming round. I don't think they
even looking for him anymore. This, yeah, well, it is
probably gonna lead him out pretty soon anyway. They gave
up on him. He's probably in Mexico now. Jail break
at the Washington Parish Jail Sunday afternoon looks like a
Sunday good day for a jail break, although there are
(02:06):
more people out and about to witness you making a
break for it. And it turns out it's a good thing.
People notice because they were unaware at the jail that
two cats had made a run for it. How could
they not have noticed? They didn't notice. It was about
four o'clock this past Sunday afternoon. These two men climbed
(02:29):
a fence after a yard call. See they out in
the yard. I don't know if you know how it's
working out. But then the the corrections officer, the deputies
will escort them back to the house. I see, okay.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
These for those that don't follow all the prison and
jail colloquialism.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
So lingo, it's really tricky.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
House would refer to the jail itself, and then a
yard would refer to the land surrounding.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
The exercise or perhaps or something like that. So as
they gordon the inmates back from the yard, two of
them craftily hid behind a structure of some kind. They
hid and nobody noticed. It's that easy, And then they
(03:16):
scaled two separate fences with ball wire at the top
at exactly four six pm. The deputies did not notice
that two of the cats had climbed the fence and
escape until about thirty minutes later, when a citizen, a
member of the public at Lodge called the jail to
(03:38):
confirm that this dude that he know had bonded out,
and they said, no, he ain't bonded out. He over here,
He's still in jail. He said, no, y ain't him.
Him and a partner here they over here running around now.
So they went and rounded them up, and I believe
they brought them all back. They was caught later that
same night. How could he be that easy? You just
(03:59):
hide kind of thing and climb over at times? Were
they geniuses for making the great escape here? Or these
deputies vastly underpaid or undermanned? I wonder probably a little
of both. Yeah, yeah, I would think right, I don't
know much. Glad to know I put them back where
where I belong. One of well, two things that we
(04:21):
just passed the anniversary of obviously, last week August twenty ninth,
Friday was the anniversary twenty years since Hurricane Katrina, and
just I think two days before that was the eighth
anniversary of Houston's Harvey. Another situation that you know, killed people,
(04:41):
displaced a lot of people. Katrina actually killed somewhere in
the range of fourteen hundred people. You know that after
all that kind of stuff, after they've done all the counting,
and of course tens of thousands of people had been displaced,
some didn't go back.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
Have you ever wondered, of the fourteen hundred people, how
many of them were already dead before the hurricane started,
Because you do wonder because they were victims of crime,
and you just don't know, because back in the day,
walking around New Orleans a dead body, you wouldn't now
that was like finding a quarter on the sidewalk.
Speaker 2 (05:15):
That just happened once in a while.
Speaker 4 (05:17):
You know.
Speaker 2 (05:17):
There's a documentary on one of the streaming services now
that doesn't need me to promote it for them. But
I've talked to a lot of my friends still in
New Orleans have returned, and some of them are like,
oh my god, I watched it and I just h
and some people can't watch. It's like I lived it.
I don't want to relive it after twenty years, it's
still too much for some people.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
On Netflix, it's the top thing right now. Also, they're
paying you, No, I just saw it there.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
Well, I feel no reason to give them any special
promotion unless they're going to pay for the privilege. And
yet you seem to be on the take. I am
not being paid nothing, but get like five dollars every
time you mentioned Netflix, Netflix, Netflix. I'm rich.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
I would take it, but I but to that point,
it is just a bunch of eclips from the news.
I mean, what could they possibly tell you that you
didn't already know.
Speaker 2 (06:05):
Now, the other anniversary that happened the day after, on
August thirtieth was an anniversary from nineteen fifty six. And
think about this for a minute. That's nearly seven years ago,
sixty nine to be exact. In nineteen fifty six, the
Punch Train Causeway bridge opened to the public. It was
(06:30):
just one side, narrow, two lane bridge, not like too
lane the school or the street too lane. That's just
a coincidence, yes, spelled differently that it was not to
some people north pound southbound, passing each other. I saw
some pictures from nineteen fifty six when they were building
(06:54):
the causeway, and it just terrified me looking at it.
How I mean, obviously it's a much more substantial structure
now and it was also built in the fifties. It
just doesn't look safe. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
People worked harder back then, didn't they build? Yeah, they
I got to think that's bridge back then. We're safer
at the time.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
Yeah, they build you a new one today. I won't
be the first one on and I'll tell you that
for sure. Well, we take you now from New Orleans
to the to the New Orleans and the North. If
you will shake must cargo, all right.
Speaker 1 (07:28):
Trump's been spending a lot of time talking about the
Windy City, and for good reason.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
It's not a safe place.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Bodies are piling up on the streets to Chicago over
Labor Day weekend. It's your Chicago Weekend Crime Report, and
it's brought to you by.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
The Walton Johnson smartphone app slash store. You know, you
can get to the store from the app. I don't
know if you can get to the app from the
store not though. Bro.
Speaker 1 (07:51):
There's a lot of great stuff on the Walton and
Johnson online store right now, and there's three ways to
access it Walton and Johnson dot com, the Walton Johnson
smartphone app, or you could take a shortcut to I
Love WJ dot com. Now, with all that's going on
right now, JB. Pritzker, the Illinois governor, and Donald Trump
feuding over whether or not the National Guard should be
(08:12):
allowed into the windy city, one has to wonder is
it even necessary?
Speaker 2 (08:17):
Why would they even need to do that.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
Well, it was an average labor day weekend for Chicago,
and there were fifty four shootings over the week.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
No boy, Now to that point only seven people killed.
But still only seven. Now was that fifty four shooting
and seven dead or seven of the fifty four that
fifty four shots including seven dead? Okay, so the percentage,
it's still about the same as it always has been
for years.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
Just hours after Trump posted to social media criticizing Pritzker's
handling of crime in the city, at least seven people
were shot around eleven pm in Bronzeville. All the people
are in a critical shape now they're recovering in a
hospital nearby. And I'm sure it's a nice place at hospital.
I'm sure you'd love being in a windy city. Low
income neighborhood County operated jail the hospital. Sure Trump called
(09:08):
the governor week and pathetic for dismissing the need for
National Guard presence in the Windy City. As somebody that
used to live there for a while in my twenties,
I gotta tell you, it would not bother me to
see a National Guard or two walking around on the streets,
because one thing I didn't see was cops very often
now now, I have seen people get shot. I once
had a person break into my car to steel dirty laundry.
(09:30):
I witnessed a stabbing once outside of a night club,
more than one sexual assault outside of popular areas in
the city where there are bars, and that sort of
thing pretty common.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
You know, most people have a story about it. Yeah,
that's probably nothing compared to the lifelong residents and the
things they've seen. Sure, you were just there for a
little while and you got all that in. It sounds
like a big week for you.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
Mayor Brandon Johnson ended his speech over the weekend about
he doesn't want to have to it was workers over
billionaires March.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
He says we shouldn't listen to billionaires. Yeah, And JB.
Pritzker was there and he's a Unfortunately for him, I'm
sure he wishes he wasn't a billionaire. And that's the
best part of the whole thing.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
The guy that Illinois shows to go out and feud
with Trump is a billionaire. While they're trying to make
the point that we shouldn't listen to billionaires.
Speaker 2 (10:20):
That's Democrat life.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
It's just in.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
A recent study has proven that one of me doesn't
give a fuck. Wolton M. Johnson just like us. They'll
dedicated to the funk.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
We are dedicated to the funk, and we like mustard
on our hot dogs, not catch up.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
Ever, over forty two years of funkiness is what the
Waldam Johnson Show's famous for.
Speaker 1 (10:42):
We now take you to Nashville, where a former police
officer is in a little bit of trouble. His name
is Sean. Sean is thirty five years old, and apparently
Sean is friends with a model. She makes money selling
photos of her punani on the internet.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
Oh really, site I've heard of?
Speaker 1 (11:01):
Yeah, yeah, you probably heard the one. I bet you've
probably heard of this website before. It's called fans only
excuse me, only fan something like that.
Speaker 2 (11:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
Anyway, this cop got into trouble. He got arrested after
showing up in an only fans video. The video itself
is I mean, it's tacky and tasteless, but it's not
like he had sex. It's a promotional video for her page.
And in it, she pretends she's getting pulled over by
a cop.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
So he's not appearing as a police officer, is he? Yeah,
he is. He's wearing his uniform. Okay, I can he
thought that might have been troubling for the department.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
He pretends to pull her over and then to get
out of the speeding ticket, she lets him grab her boob.
Speaker 2 (11:44):
Listens to me here, so that's a good rack. How
do you think that you're gonna get a ticket? You're
watch a man as Johnson officer Johnson. No, well, how
you going to city? I've gone forty five back there? Okay?
Do you have your license registration on him? I actually
don't have it in this car. It's okay, but boobs,
(12:07):
what if I show you the What if I show
you these guys on time? He says, I could see
him on the internet and time, and then she lets
him grab it and he's like, oh no, you get
a little hands. Huh. All right, he got fired back
in May. Notice you didn't see his face, no, but
you see his name and his badge when he bends
(12:28):
over exactly. They thought there were being you know, clever,
I guess, or or respectful of the uniform by not
showing you his face, But everybody knew who.
Speaker 1 (12:38):
It was because it had his badge number and his
name on it. When he well, he got fired back
in May.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
He should have borrowed one of his uh you know,
one of the guys that worked with him that he
didn't like, or put tape over the badge. Could could
have got that guy fired, or don't do it. That
would be another thing. But you said he didn't just
get fired, though you said he got arrested.
Speaker 1 (12:57):
I actually think firing him is totally reasonable action of this.
You're not supposed to do that you're on duty.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
Shame on you. It's not a good look for the department.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
But he's now been charged with two felonies and a
three thousand dollars bond. Doesn't that seem like overkill.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
Especially when there are a lot of criminals out there
doing actual crime that is not They're not being if
they are arrested, they're not being kept in jail.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
Yeah, let him go. Who cares, guys, I don't know.
He he already lost his job. He already he can't
work in law enforcement anyway. He's been punished for what
for appearing in a stupid video for thirty seconds that
didn't really affect anybody's life?
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Infect's life? You did you get to grab the boob though? Yeah? No,
what is this? It's somebody he knew. It was a
friend of his. He's probably done it before, maybe multiple times.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
I'm not I don't know anything about the woman. I'm
just going to climb out on a limb here. I'm
guessing a lot of people have grabbed those boobs. Well, sure,
consensually would be mine?
Speaker 2 (13:54):
Bad? Do you think about that when it's your return?
No pens? Who depends? Meanwhile, in Harris County, if you're
a taxpayer here, that's a that's Houston, Texas right there.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
We have a forty eight million dollar deficit. Just so
you know, But somehow we managed to come up with
a half a million dollars for the Gay Softball World Series.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
Well, how can you not? I mean, it's the Gay
Softball World Series.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
Oh I'm sorry. Two hundred and twenty million dollars. The
approval came in spite of a projected budget deficit of
two hundred and twenty million.
Speaker 2 (14:27):
Yeah, that sounds more like it.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
Four hundred and seventy thousand dollars of local funds have
now been allocated for the Gay Softball World Series.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
I hope they didn't take that away from our airport entertainment,
didn't you.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
I was there the other day and I couldn't believe it.
There was a live band playing.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
You go to the airport in Houston, and they've actually
spent hundreds of thousands of dollars of taxpayer money to
have somebody play the piano of who goes to the
airport to stay? Nobody was watching. I was just there,
are on the way to an airplane, or they're on
their way to a car because they just got here.
(15:04):
Nobody goes to the airport just I mean, some people
are forced to sit around and kill time, especially if
you fly United anytime recently, because my god, I know,
all airports or carriers are just awful. Traveling has just
become such a pain. Nothing's on time. Nobody knows any
(15:25):
service industry anymore. I mean, none of that counts.
Speaker 1 (15:29):
I was there the other day, the place of the
crowded airport. Four live musicians on stage at one time,
all of them elderly white men performing jazz music.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
And they just stop and stay for a while and
enjoy the show.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
Nobody did, Nobody does. They had seats around the musicians.
Everybody was playing, coming and going, that's all. And as
I was standing there waiting in line to buy food,
I noticed that they were wrapping it up, and I
wanted to go ask them. Oh boy, I wanted, hey,
what you guys get.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
Paid for this? Is that a good gig?
Speaker 1 (15:57):
But I figured they wouldn't tell me anyway, probably not,
probably thousands of dollars.
Speaker 2 (16:01):
And what's really sad is that I don't know about that.
But in the Houston airports, this isn't available unless you
have a ticket, go through security and get to the
other side. Right, You can't just go to the airport
and see a concert see it without having to go somewhere.
Speaker 1 (16:20):
Well, there's a lot of money in government. And if
you don't believe us, look at Representative il Han Omar,
a squad girl. About a month ago, she was in
the news denying that she's a millionaire because of a
viral news story.
Speaker 2 (16:31):
Well, how could she possibly be a millionaire? They make
I mean it's pretty good money, but they make what
one hundred and fifty two hundred thousand a year, and
they got you know, they got expenses like the rest
of us. How you going to be a millionaire and
making that kind of money.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Giving quote unquote speeches would be the short answer.
Speaker 2 (16:49):
Sure, that's it.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
Ilhan Omar reported, according to her own latest financial disclosure,
a net worth of thirty million dollars.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
Oh not just a million, thirty million dollars.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
She was a and this is just weeks after claiming
that it's ridiculous and categorically false that anyone's accusing.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
Her of being a millionaire. And didn't you just show
up here one day from Somalia somewhere and just you know,
didn't have two sticks or rub together to make fire? Guys,
something just happened. That's a different squad member.
Speaker 1 (17:17):
Her and her husband experienced a roughly thirty five hundred
percent increase in net worth over the last year.
Speaker 2 (17:24):
What a year, well compared to twenty twenty three, So wow,
So what the hell happened? Good question?
Speaker 1 (17:31):
How did you get how did you take the amount
of money you have, and you got a three five
hundred percent increase of that in such a short amount
of time.
Speaker 2 (17:39):
I know as financial planners out there that would love
to know her secret. I would like to know too.
I bet you was.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Yeah, please teach us run for office. I'm very curious.
She'd probably tell you show me what you know. I'll listen.
Speaker 2 (17:51):
I will take the Johan Omar financial advice course at
my local community college. I don't love to notice, but
your golfriend Chris Dnom was a all over the news
again recently. She upset with CBS because she made a
statement in an interview about this kill maw Brago dude,
(18:12):
and about how he needed be out of his country
and since she in charge of homeland security, they want
to ask her about this. And then CBS recorded the
interview and then they edited it out so that she
didn't say nothing too bad about this this killer.
Speaker 1 (18:31):
And they have a long history of doing that. CBS
is kind of famous for editing interviews. Remember remember Katie
Kirk used to do it. Yeah, this time it was
Face the Nation. I don't know if anybody even watches
these Sunday shows.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
He were. It's kind of like late night television, like
the Old Tonight Show, the Letterman Show, and stuff. It
used to mean something ex actually did people made a
special appointment to stay up late and or on the
weekends to watch Sunday news. I have not.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
Now I have the uncut response and then what actually
aired on CBS.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
Would you like to have a listen? Is it lengthy? No,
it's about thirty seconds. I didn't deal with it, and the.
Speaker 3 (19:06):
One thing that we will continue to do is to
make sure that he doesn't walk free in the United
States of America.
Speaker 2 (19:12):
All right, So that's one thing that she said, right, Yeah, the.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
Individual was a known human smuggler MS thirteen gang member,
an individual who was a wife beater and someone who
was so perverted that he solicited nude photos from minors,
and even his fellow human traffickers told him to knock
it off. He was so sick in what he was
doing and how he was treating small children.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
So our second part rector none of that, where she
told you about all of his all of his crimes
and misdeed, none of that was only that. Well they
chopped it. Yeah, they just took it out. Yeah. Imagine
they said that that is how do they how do
they work? You know, because they've got a way of
wording these things. That Secretary nomes facination review was edited
(19:58):
for time and met all CBS News standards, But the
entire interview is available in a like a transcript forum
at the website.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Yeah, if you're willing to go digging deep through the
sub pages of our website, click click click click click SUBMNU.
After submanu, you'll finally find the unedited interview buried somewhere
at cbsnews dot com.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
Now you saw how long that took to air that,
but they said they had to edit it for time.
Does that make any sense to you? That's an extra
twenty seconds. Yeah, okay, cute little dog you've got there.
But hold on.
Speaker 4 (20:32):
In a previous life, he could have been George Washington,
nice cat, perhaps Annie Oakley and look at him? Why
it's Napoleon reincarnation? What human being was your pet in
a previous lifetime? Mester reincarnationist E. David Scott will tell you.
When you call this number, Just answer simple questions with
your touchtone phone. A dollar ninety five permitted for entertainment
(20:53):
only under eighteen. Get permission?
Speaker 2 (20:55):
Call now?
Speaker 4 (20:55):
Learn who your pet was as a human in a
previous lifetime.
Speaker 2 (20:59):
This is the Walton Johnson Show.