Age alone should not be considered a mitigating factor in criminal cases, as older individuals can commit violent crimes just as younger individuals can; this is demonstrated by cases like Larry James Simpson (68 years old, facing 66 charges for a violent crime spree) and Chung Kim (76 years old, who killed his neighbors over a dog poop dispute), showing that age does not diminish criminal capability or responsibility.
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Patron Hangout #243 #harveyweinstein #metoo #kyronhorman #ashlyrobinson #crimesbyseniorcitizensAdded:
Hello everyone. This is criminal profiler Pat Brown and this is patron hangout number 243.
Welcome everybody who is in the chat room. I think I've said hello to everybody unless somebody just rolled in. Melrose just rolled in. Glad you're here. Uh yes, Melrose. Um you asked if there any recent updates with the Christian Smart case. You must have missed last week's hangout. Uh they found they they had evidence that there had been a body buried on the property of the mom of the D guy who's been uh uh convicted, but they did not find her body. So they still don't know where her body is. So yes, uh that is state of that affair. Hi Lisa S, you're here in Radiant Potato.
Well, I've never heard of a Radiant Potato, but that's cool. And welcome to your first live.
I love people choices of names on here.
It's It's rather amusing. So, um I just use Pat Brown because well, I should.
But anyway, if you're new to the channel, by the way, and you would like to be in this chat room with these lovely people, please do consider joining Patreon. Uh it's five bucks a month. I keep it cheap. uh five bucks a month and you can come to two lives a week, a hangout like this live and the live show on the weekend which is case show and uh also you're part of the community and five bucks a month believe it or not makes a big difference in supporting an educational channel. But if you don't want to do that, please do subscribe to the channel. All of my videos go public after the live. So there's these the lives are patron only but after they're done everything goes public. So you're not going to miss any of the content. You just won't be able to be in the chat room. Uh so because I want everybody to be able to learn from the channel so I don't want to hide stuff. So please do subscribe to the channel and please the reason you really need to do this is because the algorithm is favoring AI stuff and throwing all the AI stuff out there and uh the majority of regular uh people like me real people who have channels have lost 50% of their views and 50% of their income. And so a lot of people are quitting YouTube because they're like what's the point? So please please subscribe if you see this show. If you even see this, even if the algorithm lets you see this, please do subscribe.
And that does help get you to be able to see the next content because if the algorithm isn't showing the content, you're not going to see it, which means you probably aren't even seeing this now. It's lovely. Anyway, let's get to the good stuff. Okay. All right.
That was my spiel for today.
It's just a frustrating thing. Um, okay.
So, first I want to talk about Well, We have the new Channel 5 uh Maline Macan drama. Okay. And this is the woman playing Ma uh Kate Macccan. Uh this is Laura Bason. I've never heard of her, but she feels she does a pretty good job playing Kate Kate Macan. And the whole thing is about Kate McCann's uh who well the title tells you everything under suspicion. So this is all about when Kate McCann became an aguido, a suspect along with Jerry Macccan and the disappearance of her daughter. And here is what is being said. Now I haven't seen it yet. I'm as soon as this show is over, I'm going to go watch it. So I'll be doing a review of the documentary. No, I'm sorry. It's not a documentary. It's a drama. Um but this one cracks me up. Channel 5's Maline Macan drama is catnip for conspiracy theorists under suspicion.
Kate Macan's Kate Macan is designed to dramatize two wrongheaded oh of course they're wrong-headed uh police interrogations of Maline Macan's mother in 2007 but it ends up merely reiterating many of the bogus allegations of course the allegations are all bogus that it wants to debunk writes Adam White. Adam White.
Okay, I'm not even going to say the word I was gonna I'm gonna restrain myself.
All right. Um, now mind you that the Macs have said they were not asked about this documentary and they're not in favor of this documentary or support of this documentary. So the question is, was this documentary supposed to make you believe the Macs are innocent or was there some nefarious thing that they were trying to like let you know the evidence out there? Uh I I tend to believe it's more the latter and not I'm sorry, the former, not the latter. But yeah, anyway, I just want to read you a little bit. Uh around a decade ago, this I guess this is is Adam is this the Adam fellow? Okay, Adam White, I guess, is who's writing this.
Around a decade ago, I discovered that an acquaintance very serly believe sincerely believed Mila Macan's parents were involved in her disappearance. The acquaintance was by all appearances deeply normal.
Wow. Normal. I mean, you would expect people who might believe that there is evidence supporting that the mechanics were involved in the disparance of their daughter are abnormal people. Guess I'm abnormal.
She had a job, paid her taxes, enjoyed going to gigs and movies because that's what makes you normal.
Darn it. I am Am I doing all those things? Am I normal? Anyway, she also insisted that Kate and Jerry McCann, whose pained expressions have been splashed all over the world's papers and news bulletins were slightly punishing with slightly punishing regularity since 2007, weren't telling the truth about the night their three-year-old vanished, and that tales of kidnappings, wide open windows, and German pedophiles in the shadows were all a hoax. She came to this conclusion after reading about the case on the internet, trolling vast subreddits and conspiracy threads. Maybe she went and read Gonzalo Armoral's book, The Detective on the Case. Maybe she read my book, The Criminal Profiler, Who Analyzed the Case.
Maybe she and other Madal Macan truthers, of which there seems to be many, will be delighted by the arrival of Under Suspicion Kate Macan, a Channel 5 docu drama.
Okay, let's find out. They also mentioned in here that, you know, the Aguido status was lifted. you know, the old old thing where the Mac cans were cleared, which they were not.
Anyway, I'm going to watch this to see. Um, I'm stealing deeply normal. All righty then. She's a good She's a good actor.
She looks just as unlikable as Kate.
>> Um, oh, you're going to make me laugh a lot today. I don't know what it is about today, but a thank you Kristoff. Being a patron makes a big difference, especially because of the great chat and interaction. I'm glad you're seeing it from your side, or my side is keeping my channel on live. And I also I absolutely do love having live shows and people a lot of people have said, you know, just can the live shows um just do videos because they're more popular people. But personally, uh I I can't stand just talking to a camera forever, you know, every day of my life. just it's just a camera and I have no interaction with people. It makes it it feels pointless to me even though I know I can read the comments and all that because I haven't blocked comments, but I still like the interaction. So I I it gives me some you know I like it. Yeah. Oh, Allison says, "I'll be so grateful that you will watch a report back so we don't have to watch it." Well, thank you. I I hope that that I will do that for you. And while I'm on that thing here, um there's another book out called Swams Don't Wait a minute. Hold on a second. Let me I just want to pull up the uh the page on this. Um so this is Cheryl McCullum's new book. Cheryl McCullum and I were on uh Nancy Grace for many years together. I was there first and then she came along a little bit later. Um and she did a fine job on the show. I don't have any objection to her. She became very much friends with um uh Nancy Grace because they both lived in Atlanta and she's still friends with Nancy Grace to this day and they do all kinds of stuff together and she's still on Nancy Grace's show. Mind you, Nancy Grace doesn't pay anybody just to let you know. HLN doesn't pay anybody.
So when you do anything on for most of the media, uh you don't get paid. And so that's not why the person is there.
They're not they're they're maybe professionals, but they're not getting paid. Um, and now that a lot of stuff has gone to YouTube, if if a person is appearing on one of these shows, um, any kind of show that's uh on YouTube, which is very popular like News Nation or uh, uh, surviving surviving the forgot the name of it. I like the guy who runs it, but nobody gets paid except the host of the show. So Nancy Grace made all the money and the people came on her show made zero. Uh, she never fought for anybody. And all the people that do these YouTube shows and have all their guests on, they make all the money and their guests make zero. That's the way it works. And the only reason why I actually got paid during the days of HLN, Nancy Grace, because I did the whole lineup, I did Prime News, Jane Bles, uh Nancy Grace, Dr. Drew or Joe, what's it Grace? I've forgotten her forgotten her name. Anyway, um uh I did their whole lineup. I did a lot of other HLN shows. I did every single channel and the only reason I ever got paid was because they were willing to pay for a limo but not willing to pay their commentators. So I developed a car service called always available transport service. I told them I'm happy to come in but your your limo services suck. So you I I I use only I only use only available transport. So they all hired only available transport to bring me to the studio. So I drove myself in and out and every hour I from the time I left my home till the time I got back I paid got paid $80 an hour and that's why I continued on television because I got myself paid because I don't think it's right that commentators who work and they're the professionals don't get paid but that's the way it works. So and I've always amazed that none of the hosts of the shows ever stood up for their commentators. They just took their big huge salary and let the commentators starve. So anyway, that's a little rant I got here. Anyway, so anyway, Sh McCollum has a book out called Swans Don't Swim in a Sewer and I was kind of amazed this book came out because the case she is writing about went to court, got and the jury came back after two whole hours and found the guy not guilty. Um, so I'll read you what it says. Um, a serial killer turns crime victim when his own daughter is the one viciously murdered.
He asks law enforcement for help, but the case goes cold. He then he turns to Cheryl McCullum and the Cold Case Investigative Research Institute. That's not exactly true. His his his wife who is like they're like Bonnie and Clyde.
He killed five people. He's not really a serial killer. He just killed people who know who annoyed him. Um, he killed five people and his wife helped him get rid of the bodies. she was willing to talk uh pull pull up a plea deal. So, he went to prison and she testified against him, but she's always been on his side and he they they were both trying to get him out of prison. a plea deal. Uh they he wanted him to get you know when he went to the parole board to get parrolled and I think I personally think that exactly why he suddenly wanted to find out who killed his daughter and and so the wifey went to crime con or whatever she went to and met Cheryl and said oh don't will you help me and Cheryl says I don't hold it against people just because they have a you know just because they're psychopaths and kill people. Um anyway, uh it says there's never been a case like this in history.
Okay. Cheryl and her team of experts get involved. They hatch a plan. What happens when Cheryl uses a serial killer as bait to catch a killer? There was no bait. There was none of that happening.
Only thing that happened was she reviewed the case and decided the husband probably did it and between her and Nancy and a bunch of other people decided to push this case to court where it failed. um dismally because there was never enough evidence to take this case to court. It was absolutely ridiculous.
Um and so I was surprised when her book came out. Um I really was. I was like, you know, if I were you, I just let it go. Uh but she didn't. And so I'm going to do a review of the book just because I'm absolutely it's not even a true crime book. It's mostly a look what I've done in my life book and how how I'm buddy buddies with a serial kill.
Not really a serial kill who is a father of Melissa Wolfenberger. It's bizarre.
No. Okay. Um, no. There's going to be no money made. I can tell you that right now. She went with Postal Press. Postal Press is a scam company. Uh, scam publisher. What they do is they give you they tell you that once they've covered their cost, they're going to give you 50% of of the of the proceeds of of the the royalties.
And most most uh most places, most publishers give you only 15%. So, it sounds real good. You go, "Oh my god, you're going to get 50%, not 15%."
But the other publishers also don't have you cover their cost before you get the 50%. So what happens is publishers other publishers will offer you um an advance and you can always tell by the advance how much they think your book is worth.
If you get a v if you get a big advance you you hey they're thinking your book might sell. If you get a small advance, they're just rolling the dice on and they're figuring that the 15% that you get compared to the 85% they get will cover their costs. But this new place says, "We'll cover our cost first and go will give you any advance and then you get 50% or whatever." She's not going to see a dime. It's not selling well as it shouldn't because it's just I I'll get into it when I do the review just because I'm I'm I'm kind of appalled mostly because it's not a true crime book. It's just it's got so many bizarre things in it. I just have to review it. But uh no, so she's not making money off of it. I think she likes she likes the notoriety.
She's very big on, you know, being seen and um Yeah. Yeah. Um so uh anyway, I I will I will I will show you this. So this kind of did make me laugh. Um she wrote this in her book one time when I was on Auntie Gracia's show. Uh one of the uh I can't read it. It's underneath my uh that's Wait a minute. Hold on a second. It's It's underneath my uh camera holder, so I can't see it. Okay, here we go. Let me One time when I was a guest on Nancy Grace's show, one of the other guests was a wellrespected and smart criminal profiler. Thank you very much, Cheryl. It's nice of you to say that I'm smart and well and and and well respected, but I find it interesting that you didn't mention my name considering you had like 50 other people's names in the book that you put out there. Nancy asked for my assessment of the crime scene and who I thought was responsible. I gave my answer without hesitation. I believed I was right. The wellrespected profile was next up and said, "I agree with half of what Cheryl said." Laughing, I said, "Well, then you're only half wrong." Of course, I was joking. Kind of. There's truth and humor.
Really? I mean, I don't mind her joking on the show. I joked on the show. She joked on the show. But the fact that she's saying she was right and I was absolutely wrong. Tell me what case that was. Shall because I'd like to know what you were so right about and I was so wrong.
But I don't think we're ever going to find out. So because I I'm sure she doesn't even I don't even she knows remembers that whatever the case was. I don't remember. I've been on so many shows with her. But all right. Yeah. Um I saysly don't take a case to trial unless you're fairly certain you have enough for a conviction. They had squat for conviction. And in the book, Cheryl goes on, the the jury got it wrong. No, the jury did get it right. Much as I'm against civilian juries, I'm not against them for doing their best. And most sometimes I think they just don't know enough to do the right thing to make the right decision, but I don't I'm not against the jury. So, when they do actually come through, I'm like, "All right, guys. You you managed it this time." Yay.
Uh they came two hours. They're like, "Yeah, there's not there's not enough to convict this guy." And it was absolutely nothing but, okay, the guy's squirly and you didn't like him. You could have done it, but that's not what you take a case to court on, but they had so much publicity going with Nancy Grace and Cheryl McCullum and Fanny Willis at the time. I mean, they pushed this case to court, and they should never have done it.
and she got and so I read the book to find out what she said in the book that would tell me more about the evidence that she thought was significant. It's not in the book. It's mostly a brag brag book about all the things she's done in her life and all the people she knows.
I'm not happy about the book.
And of course, right now she's got like eight eight eight um eight reviews only actual three I think only three real reviews and they're all five stars and oh my god the most wonderful book ever.
Okay. Anyway, I will do the review on that just because if you're going to write a true crime book, for God's sakes, put the evidence in it and don't ignore the the reasons that the thing went down the toilet in the case. She just ignores everything coming from the defense side, which was very legitimate. Whether you think the guy's guilty or not, I don't know if he's guilty or not, but he could have been guilty. I'm not saying he couldn't have done it, but there was no evidence. And if Cheryl McCullum as a profiler can't admit, there's no evidence to take him to court. got a problem there. Anyway, so all right. Um, speaking of that, let's talk about another case that shouldn't have gone to court. Just unbelievable. I mean, I was like, what the heck? Okay, where are you, buddy? Uh, nobody's going to like them, but hey, that has nothing to do with it. Okay, good old Harvey. Um, but unbelievable. So, let me find let me find my uh Okay. Judge declares a mistrial in Harvey Weinstein's rap retrial. Retrial.
Okay. He Okay, you you better god's sakes. Keep reading with a CNN uh subscription.
Sorry. Hold on. I got to find the other one. I did find another version of it.
Where is it? Crap. Um, I hate all these these pay walls that are being thrown up all the time now. All right, hold on. Is that it? Okay, where did I find the extra one? Okay, AP News. Okay, I found it. All right.
A jury jurors deadlock in Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Har Harvey Weinstein's rape retrial retrial forcing another mistrial in the Me Too error case has gone to trial three times. Now, I have a whole bunch of issues with all the other trials. I mean, the guy's a scumbag, but I have issues with a lot of the me too stuff and those trials where I did not think it was proven that he was a rapist and proven that he's a scumbag. Yes, rapist.
And believe me, some of you know, I was in Hollywood for a year. Um, and I got the casting couch thing was thrown at me a lot and it was despicable and I refused and I got no work. I didn't wasn't that talented either. So, I was good-looking, but so was all the other girls who would sleep with the guys. So, anyway, um I did not run into Harvey, but I ran into people like Harvey, and they were scumbags.
However, there's a difference between being a scumbag and being a rapist. So, anyway, uh while the former Hollywood mogul has been convicted of other sex crimes on two US coasts and remains behind bars, the mistrial leaves the New York rape charge in limbo. Prosecutors are pondering whether to try the case a fourth time. Dude, you shouldn't have even done it one time. What kind of crap is it when prosecutors just like the Cheryl McCullum case, the um the Cheryl McCullum's case, uh uh Wolfenberger case, Melissa Wolfenberger case, why did you take her to trial when you absolutely had nothing to really the evidence was so freaking weak? So prosecutors are pondering whether trial the case a fourth time after some jurors sat outside court sat outside court that nine of the 12 wanted to acquit Weinstein. Nine out of 12.
He showed little reaction. Okay. But he was pleased with the outcome. All right.
All right. So the majority male Manhattan jury. Oh my god. That must have been the reason, right? Wadew Weather Weinstein raped Jessica Man, a hair stylist and actress.
Weinstein's jurors uh lawyers uh argued that the encounter was consensual. It happened in 2013 during a fraught relationship between the then married Weinstein and the decades younger man.
All right.
Oh, interesting.
Uh one juror said Josh said the prevailing thought was that the witness had a lot of inconsistencies in her story. Yeah, thank I tell you what the inconsistencies are. It's outrageous.
Another juror Perez Sarah Perez or Sare Perez noted that she studied feminism and is wellversed in me too hashtagme too but she also couldn't overcome uncertainties in the man's account I mean if you're going to take a case to court for God's sakes don't take the worst case possible there were places where we couldn't trust her word you think all right man man and said in a statement that the mistrial doesn't in any way detract from the truth I told it's probably her truth her story um I deserve justice.
And which which is why I stand up and face unbearable public scrutiny in the name of greater good.
I don't think that's why I think it's that may be that crapload of money you got. Um because they were just trying to keep you from annoying him any further.
Anyway, the district attorney Alvin Bragg, who had no respect for a person, hailed man's perseverance and bravery and then a statement that prosecutors a good soldier about the next steps. Oh, yes. Whether they'll retry the case or not. All right.
So, what happened? Accuser's account.
Listen to this account. I mean, Jesus, it just it's an embarrassment to the public that to the the our our system of criminal justice. And that again is why I say we need professional jurors because if there were 12 if there were 12 professional jurors here instead of 12 people bus stop, this case would have never gone anywhere. And they probably wouldn't have taken it to court if there were 12 professional jurors because this is the stupidest case I've ever seen. man, now 40, met Weinstein at a Los Angeles party in early 2013, where she had hoped to build a handful of acting credits into a big career. She said his pushy intimate overtures discomforted discomforted her at first, but she asceded to them and decided to develop a relationship with him. She was going to use him to get ahead in Hollywood.
However, she said she made it clear she didn't want sex on March 18th, 2013.
Only on that date. She had sex with him a whole bunch of times before that date, but just not on that date. When he unexpectedly got a room at a Manhattan hotel where she was staying with a friend, I said no. Over and over and I tried to leave. She said Weinstein slammed the door, grabbed her arms and ordered to undress. Scared, she gave up protesting, gave up protesting and she said alle and alleged that he ultimately raped her. All right. However, Pan wrote herself two days later about this. She made a little note to herself while saying nothing about the alleged rape.
The note discussed her conflicted feelings about becoming emotionally attached in a non-exclusive relationship with a man she didn't name.
Okay. So, her early issue is whether she should she should keep going with this this this married man just to get her head in in Hollywood and keep sleeping with a guy.
But she testified she had needed to write down the alleged rape. You know, that was a minor thing compared to should I keep sleeping with him to get ahead in Hollywood? Uh anyway, uh let's see. His lawyers said that man was a willing partner in a closed closive relationship with a show business insider who opened doors for her, but she turned on and once became he became an outcast.
In the months and years after the New York encounter, she kept seeing and communicating with Weinstein. Emails and testimonies showed at times she pulled away to pursue another relationship. At others, she turned back to Weinstein, who validated her acting dreams and comforted her when her father was terminally ill. I love you, anything you need, Weinstein wrote. He helped her get a movie audition that went nowhere. And a hair styling job. She asked him for help with such things as car problem.
Though she declined cashing tried to send send one, she couldn't make rent.
In one of her last emails to Weinstein in 2017, she wrote, "I love you. always do. But I hate feeling like a booty call.
Hey, you were a booty call benefits because all you you were using him to get ahead in Hollywood cuz obviously you weren't that amazing. You couldn't actually make it in Hollywood. So, you were hoping somehow he'd get you there.
When he responded by suggesting she was joking and should stop using his company email, she said it was a joke and apologized. Eight months later, news reports about other women's allegation prompted her to go to the police. Man never sued Weinstein, but after his 2020 conviction, she filed for and got half a million dollars from sexual misconduct settlement fund because he was using his power over, you know, that and he was his big guy, a producer, you know, and if she slept with him, she might get a part.
His lawyers didn't mention the payout at the Trump.
She she's a so he's a scumbag and she's a hoe.
If you're willing to sleep with a guy to get ahead in life, sorry, but that's what you are.
And that's what a lot of women in Hollywood do. They sleep with actors.
They sleep with producers because when I was there, I saw it around me.
All the all the so many willing willing people because they wanted they knew they were no more special than the next person and they wanted to get a part in a in a TV or a movie or whatever and they knew they had to do one up on somebody else and the one up was lying under somebody else and they hoped that would give them a chance. So they sleep with people to get ahead in Hollywood. That's called prostitution. Although maybe well it's not even good prostitution because you're not even get paid for doing it.
You're just getting hopefully paid for doing it. So any prostitute will tell you you should get the money up front.
Oh my god.
Okay. Let me see what you um what Stockholm syndrome. There's no stop syndrome going on here. Who said that?
I gotta check that one out.
Yeah, they should give up on this one.
It's ridiculous. Um Um There's no Stockholm syndrome. Stockholm syndrome was in captivity. They're not in captivity. They just want to get ahead in life. And you you go Hollywood is a place of when I when I arrived in Hollywood at 19 years old and got off out of my car and saw all the other beautiful girls. I'm like dang, you know, I look good at 19. They look good, too. You know, it's like I was competing against people who are just like me. I wasn't any more special than anybody else. And I spent a year refusing to h to have sex with anybody who I ran into. I had I had I had uh managers try to have have pull me in, producers, uh actors. I was at Universal Studios one day when I went in. Uh they called me in because of my resume and they loved my picture and a guy looked at my picture and he says, "Oh, you got great legs." And I said, "Well, thank you." He was trying to I supposedly a part for police story was prostitute and police story, but you know, hey, um it would have been a speaking part for the first time. I was an extra. So, wow. And he said, "Hey, well, why don't we go out and get some dinner?" And I said, "I'm sorry. I'm I already have dinner plans.
And he took my he took my resume. Didn't he kept they kept the picture, threw it across at me and said, "Let me know when you get into the union, baby." Because I wasn't going to sleep with him. And I never made it in Hollywood. I didn't I I It was very unsuccessful. I did a lot of extra work. And it was interesting. And I realized how I'm not willing to sleep with people so to get ahead because I find that humiliating and I don't do that. But guess what? Most of the girls I talk to, that's exactly what they do.
They sleep with everybody. They sleep with all sleep all kinds of people because they just they're like, "Wait, you know, I want I want I want to make it. So, I don't mind. You know, we'll go out. We have some drinks, have fun, we we have sex. Big deal."
They were on the pill. That was a thing in the 70s.
So, no, no Stockholm syndrome at all.
Just if you if you you know that's why the casting couch exists because people who are scumbags run into people who are willing to give up sex on the hope that they'll get something from the other person.
Both both parties are messed up, you know. Uh yeah, basically it's prostitution, but they just didn't get the money.
She got some money from Weinstein. She, you know, he got she got some advantages from him. He really tried for her. I think she must have really been a very poor actress. Um.
Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. Weinstein thing.
It's a complicated it's he's a nasty guy who took advantage of position like many people who have every time somebody has money uh they're they're a sports guy or or or an actor or or a producer or the head of CEO of a company they're accused of using their power to take advantage of women.
That is the way world has worked for the last 2,000 years. You know what are you talking about? They're always more attractive to women because what's interesting to me is the guy at PetSmart doesn't get to go to bed with any of these women because he doesn't offer them enough. Women like a guy who's going to give them the life they want.
And if they're willing to have sex with them to try to sucker them into being with them and only them, that's a that's a dice they're willing to roll. So I I just yeah, you know, if you're willing, if that's what you the game you want to play, you play the game. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. Some people have won. I think with Lauren Hutton who just said something like that. Well, you know, I slept with him. That's how I got to the top. I think it was on Johnny Carson show. I was like, okay, at least she's honest. I think she's gorgeous, too, by the way. I always like Lauren Hunt, but I don't know. I can't remember if she really said that or not. So, don't sue me, Lauren. Is she alive?
Wait. I I think she's there. I've always liked Lauren Hutton. I was always impressed by her. Um but you know, you make your choices in life. Um I was going to, by the way, somebody asked me if I would do talk about this guy. Um where are you, dude? Where? Oh, where'd you go?
Wait. Oh, I put him up here. Hold on a second.
This guy uh this this young man. All right. Um, and I was going to talk about him on today's show.
Uh, his name is, um, hold on a second.
Let me let me pull it up here. Um, his name is Okay. Devonte Morgan. All right. And this was a case where he went missing at in 2020, I believe. A young man, I was I think he was like 28, 28 years old. He went on a trip with his girlfriend who was 20 years older than him uh to Mount Shasta, California. Um and uh disappeared out of Mount Shasta, California. Um and there's there is a documentary on it. Um did I put that up here or did I forget to put that up here? I did forget. Uh it's on Disappeared. It's called Mountain of Mystery because it's Mount Shasta. Has nothing to do with the freaking mountain. And it's I don't know why they decided to call it Mountain of Mystery, but you know, they got to come up with titles. So, it's on it's on it's on Discovery. It's called Disappeared Mountain of Mystery. If you happen to have Discovery, you want to take a watch because I'm going to do the show on Sunday. I wasn't going to because I thought there wasn't enough to talk about. But as I learned more things, I I said, you know, I I I think there's it's really kind of a fascinating case and there's so many things to talk about because of the way people view this case um and all the theories surrounding this case. So, I'm gonna I'm gonna do a full show on it just because I I I started getting very interested in a lot of the theories and why the theories came to be and how they presented everything on the uh the documentary and what I've seen on Reddit from what from the family and everything. Um he's still missing, never been found. Um and uh seemed like a pretty cool guy, pretty nice guy and uh it's very sad case. Um, but I I do want to get into it as a as a actual full show. So, I'm not going to talk about it today. So, anyway, oh, let me talk about I want to talk about agism. You know, I I you know, one of the things I always hate about agism is there was a poor woman that got she got out of a car in New York and she stepped into a manhole that was a truck had hit this manhole cover and popped it off. She jump steps out of her car and she falls straight into the manhole and and she's in the manhole and she's screaming, "I'm dying. I'm dying."
Which she was cuz uh she died. But of course, they have to say grandma grandmother falls into, you know, this uh manhole. Why do you have to say grandmother? Is that is that what I mean? Is age I mean always about that's what you're labeled as? I mean, I'd like to see something like, oh, let's say somebody if some somebody um in in uh politics, and I don't I don't do politics on this channel, but just you can pick any political person. Would you say a certain senator or lady or man uh who happened to be 70 or 80, would you say grandmother felt or would you say the senator fell? I mean, it's it's always annoying annoying to be labeled as grandmother. I'm a grandmother. Yes, I have one grandchild, but you know, if I found dead in my house, grandmother found dead in her house. really freaking annoy me, you know, because I anybody could be found dead in their house. Gr my grandmother title has nothing to do with it. If you want to say 70-year-old woman found dead in the house, fine, do that. But grandmother because I mean, do they check to make sure the person is actually a grandmother? Because there's a lot of people who die who aren't grandmothers. They could be 80 and not be grandmother or grandfather. Are they just going to get that title? Just annoys the crap out of me. But anyway, that's just a joke for where I'm going to with this uh this this um next case here. Uh I'm going to talk about two cases. One which I think the guy it shows you you should never count a guy out who's older for being a scumbag and a murderer having the ability to do it. And the second one is somebody who's older who committed double murder. I kind of feel sorry for and that's pretty rare for me to feel sorry for somebody like that.
Let's see who's the guy. Oh yeah, here.
Okay, so this guy, this dude.
Okay, so this guy can't count him out because of his age. He is okay. Okay.
His name is Larry James Simpson and he has facing 66 charges after carjacking and a shooting spree in Prince George's County. And he is 68 years old. He's almost as old as me. Give him credit.
That guy can guy can go out there and do the same thing a 20-year-old can do. A Maryland man, this is my county, got slammed with over 60 charges after police said he carried out a violent crime spree. cream cream spree a crime spree across. What if it would be a cream spree? You hit 71 and got all the little cream containers and anyway carried out a vi sorry a violent crime spree across northern Prince George's County that forced multiple schools to lock down and left two people hospitalized. Okay.
Larry James Simpson, 16 of Glenn Bernie, is is facing 16 counts of attempted first-degree murder, 16 counts of attempted secondderee murder, and related charges in connection with multiple shootings and carjackings that happened on May 15th. Okay. All happened at 2:30 p.m. when officers received a call about a man pointing a long gun out of a car out of car window um in College Park, Maryland. And then um then shortly after, he said they shot a car with a 64 year old man in it. The man was not struck by gunfire, but a round hit the car's window, causing Glass to cut his head. He was taken to the hospital with injuries and expected to survive.
Minutes later, police said Simpson's vehicle hit another car near 67th Avenue and Patterson Street in Riverdale, causing Simpson's vehicle to flop flip over. Then Simpson got out and carjacked a Nissan at that location. During the carjacking, he shot at least four people. One man was struck and critically injured. Uh they expect the victim to survive. Several minutes later, he shot at a woman and stole her Toyota near Kennorth Avenue in Good Luck Road in Riverdale. She wasn't hurt.
Police said an offduty PG uh Prince Georgia Police Department. That's the one my daughter works for. Um who was driving his personal vehicle was unharmed and saw one of the carjackings and started following Simpson. He called his wife who is also Prince George's police department officer. According to authorities, the officer's wife relayed Simpson's location in real time to officers and they they they were trying to pull come in and get him. Uh Simpson later tried to steal another car, a Honda in Green Belt and fired in the direction of the offduty the officer.
The officer was not hit and they finally took him into cover custody and a AR-15 style rifle was found at the scene.
So anyway, many more charges are maybe pending against Simpson. I guess 66 charges were not enough for a 68-y old man. But let who is this this guy and and and why was he this guy's obviously a very violent guy. And so immediately I'm thinking this guy got to be a major felon of some sort. So I went and what's called a Maryland case search and because Maryland does have a case search so you can look up uh people's records if you know their name. you can hopefully they have a name it I had a middle name that helped otherwise you sometimes can't find um the information but anyway uh there was something there and then I actually a come through for me uh before his arrest for a violent shooting and carjacking spree in 2026 Larry James Simpson had a severe criminal record most notably featuring a conviction for first-degree murder most notably uh in 1983 he committed a murder an armed robbery. Uh he uh shot a Radio Shack employee with a sawoff shotgun during a robbery in Beltsville, Maryland.
21-year-old guy named John Alistister Parker. His convictions on the incident included first-degree murder. He was originally sentenced to life in prison for 40 years. Uh oh. Um oh, he'd already had prior to that he had a shootout with District of Columbia Colombia police. You know, he had already even had a shootout with the with the DC police. Now he was then he killed somebody in a robbery in Maryland. And then Oh, what? Then there was a Virginia robbery conviction. By 1987, when he shot the guy dead in Maryland, he was already serving a 10 to 30ear prison sentence for a robbery conviction at a maximum security facility in Virginia. This guy Okay, so he this guy is pretty bad. Now, let's see what why the heck, you might ask, why is he out? Despite his 40-year sentence, Simpson filed for a postconviction sentence modification requesting a drug and alcohol health evaluation in 2022. In October of 2023, a judge who should be removed from the bench modified his sentence to time served totaling of roughly 35 years behind bars and placed him on a one year of unsupervised probation resulting in his release from prison prior to his 2026 offenses because I guess the judge decided since he was getting older, he wasn't dangerous anymore. I guess they proved that judge wrong.
Yikes. Um, unbelievable. I mean, this guy should never have been back on the street.
Absolutely crazy. So, just nuts. Um, that guy I don't feel sorry for. I think the judge should go in prison with him.
Um, and you know, he is lucky nobody died the second time around with this whole thing. So, um, the other guy I want to talk about, the one I feel sorry for rarely do I feel sorry for somebody who commits a double murder. I actually feel sorry for this guy. His name is Chung Kim. He was 76 when he was accused of killing his neighbors because of dog poop. And here are the neighbors that he killed. Okay. Now, happened back in 2013. Now once in a while you just get to this point where people can you know the old thing you know people say oh you must have been pushed over the edge the straw that broke the camel's back type of thing and most of the time I say you have to have some ideation in your head some willingness to do something to commit a crime to this level and I believe that's true um but there can be a point where you've gotten so fed up. So hate so angry that not only is your what's what what your what your concern is not being taken seriously enough, but the people that are causing you this problem don't care and think it's perfectly okay to do what they're doing to you. And I know I I've had that feeling when I've thought somebody somebody uh did something uh when I was out shopping or something and they did something really know the whole thing about somebody cutting in line in front of you like whoa I was waiting in line. They're like I don't care that you're waiting in line. I'm I I I'm going to stand here and you can do see what you can do about it. It does cause rage. Now most of the time we manage to control it in spite of the fact we won't punch that person right in the face. Well, this guy, you gotta wonder. Um, you know, he um he put up with a he put up with a lot and so I kind of feel sorry for him. I do. Let me find let me find the story on this. It's like uh no, not that guy. Um let's hold on a second.
Let me find it.
Where'd you go, buddy?
Now, maybe this is it. Oh, here we are.
Trial begins. This is This is back This is written years ago, but I just think it's it does go to show that once in a while you can maybe have some sympathy for somebody. Uh this is back. So, 2014, Chungu Kim, 76, allegedly shot and killed Michelle Jackson and Jamie Stafford on February 4th, 2013 at a Stable Ridge condominiums in North Dallas.
Okay. They lived in the unit above Kim and his wife.
All right. It is well documented that Jackson and Stafford frequently watch dog feces from their balcony onto Kim's.
So they had the dog that they let [ __ ] on on their balcony and then they just took a hose and washed the [ __ ] right down onto the guy's balcony below. So this guy can't go sit on his balcony because there's dog [ __ ] all over.
The condo homeowners association received reports of dog poop pump dumping dated back to August of 2012.
This guy kept reporting and reporting and reporting and they didn't do anything about it. That was meaningful.
Before the murders, Kim provided photos of his balcony's poop streak windows.
They didn't even hit his windows, floors, and walls to the police, city officials, and the condo association.
The guy went everywhere trying to stop this. Now, in other words, his only choice was either to move or put up with like dog poop all over his just unbelievable.
So, animal control eventually took the couple's dog away, but the poop problems didn't end. In December 2012, after Jackson gave birth to her fifth child, the couple began tossing dirty diapers over their balcony onto the unit below them.
Kim and his wife owned their first floor condo and lived there for more than a decade. Jackson was renting her unit through section 8 housing on a month-to-month lease. In addition to voicing his complaints with the condo association, Kim reported the excrement issues to the Dallas Police Department, the city of Dallas Health and Human Services Department. Condo maintenance supervisor Keith Moore said he was aware of the ongoing dispute between Kim and his neighbors. That's not a dispute.
That's not a dispute. The neighbors were specifically destroying his his property, making doing things that were absolutely not acceptable. There was no dispute. Morris said he had personally cleaned Kim's balcony on at least two occasions and once used a power washer to remove the poop. If you over there and you actually removed the poop and you didn't remove the people who were putting the poop there, what the hell is wrong with you people?
Morris testified that he was picking up trash in the parking lot when he heard Kim yelling followed by two gunshots.
Then he saw Jackson's body lying on the floor of a sec second story balcony.
I shouldn't laugh, but maybe he can just power power their balcony.
So anyway, um they uh Carly Carla Robinson, the condo HOA president, who was obviously shitty HOA president, testified about the extent of the animal and but baby feces on Kim's property. She said the amount and location frequencies of the feces made it a health issue. On January 31st, 2013, more poop appeared on Kim's balcony. This time instead of being washed down from the balcony appeared to be piled up deliberately on his property. They were purposely throwing that stuff on his property. This issue has been ongoing for months. Robinson wrote in an email the same day to the HOA boy about Jackson and Stafford's behavior. Mr. Kim is about to reach his breaking point. I think they Robinson had helped coordinate the couple's eviction process which was to begin February 1st, but she never told Kim about the pending eviction. Why not?
Three days later, Jackson and Stafford were dead.
So then, who was Woods? Um, somebody says, "This is terrible tenant behavior.
It's not the way neighbors are supposed to behave, but is taking a Glock 45 and shooting people in the head a reasonable way tool dissolve resolve a dispute?" I guess he just got to the point where he just Yeah, maybe he just couldn't stand it anymore. he just had it, you know, and you know, again, he did break the law.
Um, they were, yes, horrible tenants.
And I don't I don't know if they they the police didn't respond to when they were essentially breaking the law by doing this stuff to his property, which is vandalism. The police did not respond.
The condo did not respond. So they allowed a year's worth of vandalism and didn't do anything about it.
So those people were breaking the law over and over and over again. So I guess this guy's one time breaking the law.
Uh that's true. The mistake was he thinking he was no risk because he was an elderly person. Yes. Yeah.
Well, yeah. I'd feel better for the dog if they went home with a more sensible owner. What you'd think they can't take the kid away. They got five kids who now have no parents because they are the parents were selfish, crappy, horrible human beings and God knows what they did to those children. So maybe the children lucked out. That's I say if that's your parents, maybe the children are better off not being with them. So you can tell them back gets upset, rightly so. I mean that I say normally I I very rarely do I say you know kind of kind of understand where he's coming from because I mean I think sometimes it's not so much what they do but the fact that they don't care that they did it to you that they think it's perfectly fine for you to suffer. Haha. I can be rude to you. I can be terrible to you and and and I don't care. Like somebody takes a let's say a a shopping cart and slams it into your car and and smashes it actually into your car because they don't want to they don't want to walk the thing over to the thing. So they push the thing and hit your car and you go, "Hey, wait a minute." You know, he can't do that. And they go, "I can do whatever I want." And you're like, "What kind of attitude is that? I can do whatever I want." You hit my car. I don't care.
That's what drives people over the edge.
That makes people enraged. And um I'm not saying you have the right to pull out a gun and shoot them then.
But if you don't want to be shot, don't enrage people.
Just saying. You know, that might be what you don't want to do. Now, I have a question about this. What is the weirdest thing about this story?
This story.
New Jersey man New Jersey man set let's say set off fireworks inside a Maryland Walmart and and burned up he caused like millions of dollars of damage but he I read Hold on a second. My thing is um Come on now. Stop doing that.
It's stuck. It's one of those things when you're trying to move the page it gets. Okay. Anthony Rhodess 36 of New Jersey. Why did he come to a Maryland Walmart? Get out of my my state. Anyway, he allegedly used camping fuel to set off a shopping cart full of fireworks in a children's clothing section and it caused $10 million in damages the store.
And it said here, as customers and staff fled the fiery chaos, officials say he broke into the display counter and stole near $10,000 worth of jewelry.
So that's what that's why he set the store on fire was to steal$10,000 worth dollars worth of jewelry.
I had one thought immediately. I'm just curious if anybody else has the same thought.
Come on, somebody.
Oh, by the way, I do want to say that uh the elder abuse thing. Yes. And as I've gotten older, I have seen pe I have had problems in my town of people being really nasty to me. And I and I'm always amazed. I'm like, you know, speaking of grandmothers. I could be your grandmother. Why are you treating me like that? Could be your mother. I could be your grandmother. And it's like they don't think I have value because I'm older. So, they think they can abuse me.
And that get that it gets some kick out of it. Um, yes, it's in Walmart, but that's true. But, but this this thought came to me immediately. I just I I'm still trying to understand it. Tell somebody else.
He broke into a display counter and stole nearly $10,000 worth of jewelry.
Come on, somebody. I can't be the only one who is like finds this fascinating.
Wow. silent. No. No.
Has anybody here been to Walmart? Have you been to the jewelry section in Walmart?
No. No. Not that. No.
I would have gone with Barney's. Walmart jewelry isn't worth that much. That's what I'm trying to figure out. You Okay.
He's breaking into a counter.
A counter. He's only got so much time to smash the counter and pull out jewelry.
Since when does Walmart have $10,000 worth of jewelry? I'm like, isn't that why you go to Walmart so you can get like cheap [ __ ] earrings like these?
Like I bought these actually. I bought these on Amazon. This like I just I bought one of these things from China that's like for $10 you get like 50 different pairs of earrings. So I can wear these things and just stuff to throw on my ears when I'm not going any place fancy. You know, go to Walmart. I bought I bought I think I bought some earrings there at Walmart, too. It cost me all $15. How do you $10,000 worth of jewelry in some place that he can break into and grab? I'm like, how do you because I don't even see the guy have as a sack or anything to carry stuff in. Let's say it's $10 for a bracelet.
You would have to steal $10 bracelet. Let me think about this. I guess you could if you could steal a like you'd have to steal like a thousand bracelet. I can't count a thousand bracelets to get $10,000 worth of jewelry. I just like are they just is Walmart just lying about this? Well, you got $10,000 worth of jewelry and I just can't figure it out. Nobody. Who the hell would go to Walmart to steal jewelry? And even if you stole the jewelry, it was quote worth 10,000.
Where are you going to sell that [ __ ] You're gonna sell that stuff because you stole it for like what?
2,000 gold and diamonds at Walmart.
Yeah.
How long was the counter a mile? I mean, I don't understand. Oh, Kristoff says there are no Walmarts in Germany. Never been in one. Don't ask difficult questions. Yeah, it's it's it's a Walmart is our like what do you call Walmart? Um like it's it's a store with stuff that's cheap basically. You go buy shirts like this, you know, nothing fancy in there. You can go buy reasonably priced clothes. You can you can go get your dog dog food and crap, you know, and you can buy some groceries there. It's nothing fancy. And they do have a jewelry section where you can get cheap jewelry. So, you know, you want something quick and Oh, that's cute.
Yeah. But it's not worth much. Good lord.
Makes zero sense at all. I don't I I think I think that I think you might be right. Tassels. Walmart's trying to ddle their insurance company.
I cannot absolutely not figure out how you could get $10,000 off of of a counter of jewelry at Walmart. That's just ridiculous. I say most of the stuff is cheap stuff. It's just it's all costume jewelry. It's just nothing.
There's nothing like No, there's no diamonds or gold in there. It's just costume jewelry that you buy for your, you know, your kid. You take your granddaughter in there and you you buy her a bracelet. You buy her a pair of earrings. You know, you It's just cheap stuff.
Geez.
I don't get it. It's just bizarre. Oh my. Some of these things you just Oh, I do want to mention um this just because it always annoys me.
So, uh, the moss, you know, I don't talk about mass murders because I don't want to give, um, fame to the people who commit mass murders. Uh, I don't want to give their name or show their face, so I'm not going to do that. But I find this bit interesting because this is the one thing that I think people should go to prison for. Well, they're dead. The two two gunmen are dead. But one of the gunmen they s they search warrants were served and they found dozens of weapons in one of the gunman's houses including pistols, rifles, shotguns, ammunition, tactical gear and a crossbow. They were but guns were not registered to the shooters and belonged to one of their parents. Now one of the mothers of this guy that the shooter that that's where the weapons came from. She called the police and said, "I think something's going to happen because my son's acting weird and I think he took some guns and stuff.
She needs to go to prison along with the other people who have had mass murderers kids. Use their guns. If you have 20 to 30 weapons in your house, they need to be locked up. If you leave them around for your psychopathic son, which clearly he was as psychopathic and as mentally disturbed as you can get, you deserve to go to prison. I hope they charge her as they did that one couple. They charged two other people now been charged. I forgot that which ones they were, but I'm not going to mention the names of the mass murders. Doesn't matter. But thank God they charge the parents in one case and the father in another case. And I think it's is this is something they need to do more often so that if you you got a whack job kid, you're not allowing them to use your weapons to go shoot shoot shoot down other people. It's you know you need you you need to get nailed for aiding at a bedding. So I'm waiting to see. They haven't arrested the mother yet, the dad in that house. I don't know who they belong to, but both of those parents ought to go down. Um so yeah. Um, let's see. What else do we have here?
Um, oh, I want to mention this because this is just kind of interesting. I mentioned this I talked about this case the other day. It is a case of this this couple that went to Tanzania and it went to Zanzibar. Um, where where are where there they are with the zebras.
Ashley uh whose real name is Ashley Robinson. Ashley Robinson died while on trip to Zanzibar celebrating her 31st birthday days after getting engaged to her boyfriend Joe McCann.
And this this is Ashley, another picture of Ashley. She is a she was a you know influencer type and she supposedly they had an argument and the the the hotel staff or whoever ran the hotel actually separated them, put them in separate rooms. It was so bad. Then then then she ended up hanging supposedly hanging herself supposedly suicide family thinks she was murdered by the Joe McCann boyfriend and certainly looks suspicious as heck but then this information came out and I'm like there may be this is kind of fascinating. So Ashley supposedly I'm I'm on a supposedly thing right now.
This is why I say when you look at cases you got to look at all if the evidence isn't there. If you don't have information, a lot of times you just say, "Well, this seems more likely. That seems more likely." First of all, hanging incidents usually are suicide and rarely are they murdered. But this was so strange that they just had this big argument and they're getting married and she's going to go off and hang herself, you know. But supposedly she called the hotel and asked that they bring some uh charger thing or something for the phone. So, she was trying I guess she was trying to plug it into the wall, whatever she asked for. And they came and gave that to her. They knocked on her door and they gave it to her. She said, "Come back in 15 minutes." Which I can't understand why she wouldn't want them to come back. Maybe it didn't make a lot of sense because I I I don't even understand that part. She said, "Come back in 15 minutes." They came back in 15 minutes, knocked on the door, and there was no answer. They knocked on the door again, kept knocking and no answer.
So, they got this guy used a master key to go in and found her hanging in the closet. And uh they took her to the hospital and she died the next day because apparently she hadn't been hanging very long. So if that is true then then the boyfriend didn't have the fiance didn't have anything to do with it and the question is what the heck first of all I don't know say the accuracy is I'm still going to be looking at it. Um, why would she, if she wants to hang herself, why is she asking anybody to come back in 15 minutes?
Because theoretically, she rushes over to the closet. She might she would be, you know, you it's only like six minutes before, you know, if you're hanging yourself on that takes for for basically your that's it. Six minutes. So, in 15 minutes, you should be thoroughly dead.
She wasn't thoroughly dead. So, it takes a while. I guess she got the thing. She had to go do whatever she do. But I mean, then she has a guy come back. If you want to kill yourself, wouldn't you not have the guy come back?
I mean, that would be more sensible.
Just say, "Thank you. I'll I'll return it tomorrow at the desk." And then you can make sure nobody's going to find you.
So, if this is true, what they're saying, one is then the the fiance is not guilty of anything. Two, and suppose he was nowhere near when this happened.
Now that's all unless this is all a bunch of lies but he was nowhere near but two uh so if this is true um why did she ask the guy to come back and the one the only thing I can think of because I I have another case one day I'll present it uh is that there are occasions where somebody wants to be found in order to scare somebody. In other words, I don't really intend to kill themselves but they want to be found just as they're doing it so that then they'll say, "Oh, I see what you made me do."
That's only that's only and I I know I know another case which is is really a fascinating case. I I'll say I'll present one day um where I believe that's exactly what happened and uh it was labeled a suicide and the family thought it was murder but I thought it was accidental death and so I wonder if that's what the situation here is. She didn't really intend to do it, but she thought the guy would then come in and he'd be coming back. But why she would think he would just cuz he knocks on the door and she doesn't answer too. Just cuz she says come back in 15 minutes, there's no proof that she just didn't leave the place and go out. Why he would immediately think something was wrong? I don't know. So, there's a lot of unanswered questions in that case. Kind of fascinating. Let's see. Yeah. Did she want to be found in time to be saved?
Maybe. And that's what I don't know. She wanted her body to be found. Well, possibly just wanted her to be found, but why? It will be found the next day.
So, her body's not going anywhere, right? Wouldn't it be better to have her boyfriend fiance come around and knock on the door and she doesn't answer and they break in and then oh my god, you know, so weird. Um, that's funny. Kristoff says, "The Walmart story reminds me of a joke that goes around among teenagers here in Germany. Kik is the cheapest cheapest junk shop. Your mother steals from Kik.
exactly what's wrong with this dude stealing from Walmart. Um, so anyway, I just thought that was interesting that that I read about that. I thought maybe it maybe there's more to this story and that's why it takes a while when you're analyzing anything to go through all the stuff that's there to make sure you're coming up with the right conclusion. So, oh, I for I want to mention this. Oh my god, this is the stupidest thing ever. And this is why sometimes I despise the media because they deserve to be despised. Um, Kyron, where are you, Ky?
Oh, there you are. Kairen Horman. I've done a show on him. If you haven't seen my show on him, please go and look, put into the uh uh search engine at YouTube, profile of Pat Brown, Kairen Horman, and you'll see my show. All right. Missing boy Kiran Horman. This just came out from NewsNation, which it makes me disrespect you, News Nation. don't put this garbage out because it's disgusting that you do and it's it's not news and that you would put it out there on something a news nation's supposed to be. I have a lot of crime news that's you know believable. This is garbage and the fact that you put it out I don't know who the hell these people are. Meg Hilling and Marne Hughes you don't you don't deserve to be called journalists.
Missing boy Kiran Horman named it FBI tip found in Epstein files.
The case of 7-year-old Kairen Horman who reportedly missing 15 years ago is receiving renewed interest.
No, this is not why this case is not getting renewed interest because of this tip. renewed interest after his name was included in an uncorroborated tip in the Justice Department's file on Jeffrey Epstein. Burn's name was mentioned in an online tip submitted to FBI in July 2019 regarding child trafficking allegations in Ontario, Canada. The tip came from an unidentified person using Canadian IP address suggesting a connection between Epstein and Kairen's disappearance.
Everybody knows that no matter what disappearance you have, there going to be a hundred people giving a tip that it was something to do with Epstein and child trafficking. I mean, the FBI is an uncooper piece of crap thrown in online meaningless, which is why they ignored it, but it be showed up in these files.
So, people jump on. Oh my god. See, they got a tip and they ignored the tip.
They're not going after the Epstein connection. Kirn Horn six. According to the file, the tips are references reports of an quote extensive daycare abdoption ring in Thornhill, Ontario, where Epstein was purportedly spotted with his hair dyed brown.
God. The tipster suggests Kairen and other missing children, including Maline McCann and Haley Cummings, could be linked to the ring.
Dylan McCann is dead. Kylie Cummings is dead. We all know who probably did them in. This is absolute garbage and nonsense. I understand why it's in the FBI and files because it's a tip that came in. So, it has to be It just simply was written down. But, News Nation and your stupid two supposed journalists making an entire story out of this garbage. You're just embarrassing.
Absolutely embarrassing. Let me read Let me read your names again. Meg Killing and Marty Hughes. I don't know who the hell you are, but you suck. That you would make this a story with a headline on NewsNation. News Nation, you need to fire both of them and you need to you need to start acting like journalists because a lot of times you don't act like journalists News Nation, which is why I don't appear on your show.
Anyway, that was my rant for today.
Oh my god.
Um, this ridiculous. We all know what happened to poor little Kiran. Well, we we believe we know what might be happened there. Yeah. Um Oh, you thought that the they were trying to keep the she was trying to keep the fiance from having to find her body. Interesting. Because usually when you do something like that, you want your fiance to feel bad.
Interesting though. Maybe you're right.
Maybe she did do that for that reason.
Interesting.
You know, that's maybe she's now possible. Just to go back to the uh the the Zanzibar thing, it's possible. And here's what we don't know. That she had a lot of more problems than is stated.
In other words, she may have had severe depression, suicidal ideiation for a long time. And that may be an issue that the family is not talking about because they want to point fingers at the at the fiance. So, it may be that they had a fight and she she she it triggered her depression or whatever and then she took her life, but she didn't really hate her fiance. Maybe she just felt she was worthless or whatever and didn't want it. So, that's a very good point. I like that point. Excellent work. Good profiling. That may exactly be what it is. It's it's unusual, but that may be why. But again, we don't have any clue of what was really going on with her life. It looks all happy. You know, she say she's a happy girl. She blah blah blah. She's doing well. You know, she's very attractive. She's doing well on uh whatever influencer stuff she's doing.
She's making good money. She's in Africa. I mean, Zanzibar and this wonderful vacation with she just got engaged. I mean, it all looks good. So, you don't think she would be depressed or suicidal, but I wonder, you may be right about that. You may. Yeah. Um, uh, who murdered Kyron? Go check out my u my video on that. Um, but I do I do believe he's dead. He's not. He isn't being uh child traffic nonsense. So, yeah. But what this is this is why I have a lot of disrespect for the media because they just don't care. They will put out constant anything that's clickbait essentially clickbait clickbait clickbait and it and it I find it pretty revoling.
Um uh let's see what else I might have here before I I'm going to mention this because somebody asked me about this a while back and you know sometimes I don't get to cases right away and then they're like why you never you never talked about the case I asked about. But anyway uh her name was uh Lacy Ellen Fletcher. It's an old case, but I think I might have talked about this way back when, but anyway, she was 36 years old.
Um, this was when she was 16, but she was 36 years old when she was found. She was dead on a couch. The coroner believes she was left on the couch for 12 years. Okay, it's a very strange story. This is the house that she was on the couch. I'm not going to show the picture of couch because it's kind of gross. And these are her parents who seem perfectly nice. All right, so what the heck is this story here? Um, and so 66-year-old Sheila Fletcher and her husband Clay Fletcher of Slaughter, Indiana, Liliana, great term, um, had found their 36-year-old daughter, Lacy Ellen Fletcher, dead on their couch. It was revealed that for at least 12 years, she had been neglected by her parents after becoming unable to leave her house due to a cognitive health decline. It was discovered after this decline that they had left their daughter on the couch to suffer, failing to get her medical care. She was covered in her own excrement and insects ate her body. They were charged with murder for her death uh in 2024. They got a a plea deal for a lesser degree of manslaughter. They were both sentenced to four years in prison with 20 years suspended.
I'm okay with that. Now the question is which is kind of weird and and the reason they got convicted not I mean it's pretty awful they found her on the couch and so the couch like had this dent in the couch and then she sort of sunk into the couch and I don't know that she was actually on the couch for 12 years. I think that may be a great exaggeration um because I think a lot could have happened in the recent days maybe a week before this happened and I think they may be exaggerating that but she had autism and support and she reportedly have experienced bullying bullying in her high school. They withdrew her from school in favor of homeschooling which I am a homeschooler of three children homeschooled them all the way through. So I'm not one of these people that goes oh my god they're they're bad parents because I homeschooled because that would be amazing. I homeschooled these three children and they've grown up to be decent adults and um I didn't pull I didn't pull that sometimes people pull people out of school because they they feel that their children are are are going downhill because they're not doing well in school because of bullying or because of poor poor poor schooling or because of violence in the schools or sexual assault in the schools or drugs in the schools whatever they got their reasons and I I respect people who decide to homeschool their children for good reasons.
Now, this is a problem though. Sheila and Clay were known to complain about Lacy, stating they did not want to become caregivers when they became parents. So, the par problem here is that it was, you know, when you're taking care of somebody who's got issues and supposedly she had major issues and I don't know what the major whether she had the major issues from birth or whether they made her have the major issues, you know what I So, did they mistreat her to the point where she had major issues? And that I don't know, but they didn't apparently like to take care of her. So, when Lacy was 24 years old, a decline in her cognitive help led her being unable to leave the house. So, they claim she became confined to the family's leather couch.
Well, just because you can't leave the house doesn't mean you can't leave the couch. So, I I personally, yes, there was feces there supposedly, but I'm I don't know that that means for 12 years she didn't get up and go to the bathroom. I think that's probably untrue. I think that probably she did do that. There were levels of where she left the couch, but maybe the couch was her place. You know what I'm saying?
They she sat there watching TV or what?
They did not seek medical assistance.
And this is where I think they nailed got nailed. They left her on the couch.
They left her under tender for such a long time. She was later found dead, covered in her own ex bugs, maggots, blah blah blah, and became fused to the leather couch. Well, okay, that could have happened in a certain amount of time. Don't know how much but I do believe that probably for years she didn't die she didn't die she was there for 12 years in the house so that didn't happen till the end not to give them an excuse all right following her cognitive health decline which we know nothing about which led to ability okay they left ability to leave the house they left on the couch placed towels next to her so her feces and urine would be easier for them to clean the rest of the house was well clean except for the couch she where she could not move independently. I don't know why she can't move independently.
I that I do not understand. I don't know what the cognitive decline is. Even if you're autistic, can she not get up at all? So, obviously, they weren't using proper stuff. They could have used uh you know, things you use in a hospital, put things on the couch that were proper and then they could, you know, whatever, but they didn't do that. Anyway, her muscles atrophied. Oh, they would leave her days to go on vacation and leave her to starve. That's a problem. Um, so over time her clothes would no longer fit. They drape simply draping them off her body.
All right. Uh, she had severely mounts and atrophy. Uh, there were signs she had been trying to lift herself out of the couch to avoid pain. Poor girl. I mean, it's a horrible horrifying story.
Uh, just nasty. And so she was on the couch for quite a while. I'm not saying she wasn't. I just don't think it was 12 years. I think over time they pro that just became her place.
Anyway, they stated Sheila called 911 and stated she found Lacy dead on her couch and they tried to perform CPR supposedly audible over the phone. Uh the coroner came and they've discovered her dead partially closed and malnourished 96 pound body.
I don't know how tall she was. That's not extreme. I mean that's could be malnourished. Um it was determined she'd been dead one to two days before she finally decided to call 911, which is why CPR really did not work. Um they lied to police saying that Lacy had decided to live in those conditions for 12 years. Her autopsy ruled her death a homicide. Absolutely. And stated that investigators said they couldn't sleep or eat after investigating the killings.
They were so grossed out by the whole thing. Now, what's interesting to me is Okay, wait a minute. I want to find the one thing. Okay. So, anyway, they went to prison, which I should go to. I wanted to look up um and I I had it on another um I did have it on another thing. I think I it went missing, but I want to put what their jobs were because I thought this is what was really fascinating to me. Uh what were their I'm I'm asking AI this. What were what were their jobs?
What were their jobs? All right. So, their jobs were Sheila Fletcher worked in local government and the court system. That's that was the thing that interested me like so you weren't like an ignorant putts. You worked in the court system.
You knew you were committing a crime for sure. Uh the Clay Fletcher worked at a nearby nuclear power plant and served as an officer for a historical nonprofit.
Oh, she was uh so Sheila Sheila Fletcher's jobs were uh she worked for the she was a police clerk and she was also a prosecutor's assistant.
And um yeah, so they didn't take the girl to the doctor. They didn't get any help. And this to me is where it's it's clear that whatever happened to that girl, I don't know whether they tortured her or they they don't want to be caretakers. Maybe they were terrible to that child when she was young. By the time she got to school, she was already messed up, but they did not seek any kind of help. They obviously if your child is autistic supposedly and can't function, you would be taking that child to a doctor. You'll be taking that child to some kind of psych psychologist, whatever. You'd be doing something to regularly get help to take care of the child and you did none of that except let her rot for 12 years and die. They're where they need to be. I don't I don't even know if I think manslaughter is appropriate.
Yeah, that's pretty pitiful. Um yeah, they were. And a lot of people don't realize, you know, investigators, they do get traumatized. I mean, and I'll say this, um I've said it before, I'll say it again. People ask me how can you how do you handle looking at crime scene photos and all that kind of stuff and some of the videos I've seen aren't nice. Um I am not at the crime scene and that is very helpful. My daughter has been homicide detective. She also in child abuse and she's seen stuff at the scene that will just burn into your brain and you will never forget. That's why there's a lot of stress that that uh a police police officers deal with, detectives, um EMT people, even if you're working in the field and you're willing to work in the field. when I worked at the hospital which 13 years I worked at the hospital doing ER work uh with interpreting for deaf patients and still to this day more than the photos I've ever seen stick in my head the things I saw at the hospital because I was standing there I was standing there when I heard or saw what happened and I had to interpret for people and explain to them I remember one day this girl was um beautiful college girl. She was um uh t-boned. A guy t-boned her car and it killed her and she didn't have a mark on her body. I saw her body. Her friend was saying her friend was also in the car. Her friend was okay except for some bruises and she and she saw her her friend being taken out of the vehicle with no bruise no bruising on her body at all. And the friend was the one with the scrapes and bruises and and you know hurt felt pain. And she says, she was like, "Where where's my friend? What's what's happening with my friend? Is she okay?" And and I had been in the room long enough to see the friend.
And at that point in time, she was naked. I don't know why I end up in that room, but I saw her laying on lying on the stretcher naked as they get moved closer. I don't know what that I don't know why I saw this, but her body was absolutely pristine. What had happened was the car hit her liver just shifted.
so hard that just went too mush and that's what killed her is the liver and then her parents showed up and I had to interpret for the parents and I had to tell them a doctor saying I'm sorry but your daughter is dead and I had to interpret that stuff that sticks in my head because I was there to see it happen and you know looking at a photo it's it can be sad and awful and all that but it's not the same thing as if you're at the scene. So yes, so I think people don't have enough respect for people who do uh police work, emergency work, fire, firefighters and all that stuff because what they see is right in front of them, the actual death of people uh and the brutality.
So have respect. Yeah. Yeah. So that is true. Homeschooling is their job. I was home for, you know, many years. Uh, you know, I I was home when my children were babies and then I homeschooled them and I became a sign language interpreter along the way when they were older. Um, but yeah, pretty much I homeschooled them. Yeah. So, mostly a full-time job. Yeah, that is true. Um Um, okay. I I'm only going to comment on this quickly, but you know, let's not get into homeschooling thing here.
You don't have to know it. You can learn from this. Most of the teachers teaching don't know a lot of stuff either.
Elementary school teachers are not historians. They're not they're not they're not scientists. They're not mathematicians. They're teaching very basic stuff for for six years. After that, then you get people who start specializing in junior high school and college. So homeschoolers are perfectly capable of teaching children to read, write, and do arithmetic. as they get older, there's a lot of parent homeschooling parents who use actual homeschooling systems with the books that have all the information in them or they send them to uh like my son went to my son went to a college at the age of 14. Uh he just started a community college and uh to take classes there because I I did not want to teach calculus and science and that was what he is into and um so he went to community college at 14. So, and so then there are people who will teach their children maybe through a certain point and they will decide to send them to school. There's all kinds of ways but children forever have been tutored uh and believe me a lot of people who tutor in the old days and people tutored. It wasn't that they were brilliant that they had books and they taught from books and they learned along sometimes with the students. So yeah, people um the whole concept that somehow you can't possibly teach a six-year-old this put a hold up picture. What is this? This is a dog. This is a cat.
Yeah. And you're teaching them oneon-one or one on two or three. And so, you know, um Yeah. So, yes, my children aren't stupid anyway. But, so learn to read up on that a little bit because I know there's also a whole thing of anti-homeschooling because like supposedly people who homeschool couldn't possibly teach what the teachers teach in third grade. Yeah.
Yeah. Um, sorry. I don't want to argue about that here. Um, let's see if there's anything left over I want to talk about today that I meant to really talk about. Um, what is it? Um, hold on one second. Let's see if there's anything else here or I'm going to go make dinner. Huh? One of the two. Um, oh, I do want to mention this one. This woman got off really easy. Speaking of, speaking of schools, yeah, how about this this thing? This thing. Um, this was a principal, Dr. Doctor Mary Tracy Morrison. She made 18 students surround a 13-year-old boy and instructed them to physically and verbally assault him in a makeshift fight club.
Um, a school principal in Arkansas was called on camera instructing 18 children to physically assault a 13-year-old boy.
She will just serve 30 days in jail after striking a deal with the prosecution.
She was charged with 11 felony and 19 misdemeanor counts at the time of her arrest and entered a guilty plea to a felony count of permitting permitting child abuse and four misdemeanor counts of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The judge sentenced her to 30 days in jail on the felony count and a 12-mon suspended sentence for each of the misdemeanor counts and 5 years of probation. She also have to do 120 year days of house arrest after she is released from jail wearing electronic ankle monitor and prohibited from even working with children in any professional capacity. Good. She never ever should.
So, uh, what the heck? Um, and there was audio and video footage, so we're not just talking about uh gossip here. Um, she instructed the This is Dr. Morrison instructed the juvenile child to sit on the floor while being surrounded on the outside by a circle of 18 students and herself. She could then be heard telling other students to put their hands on the juvenile child located in the center while also being seen putting her hands on the child as well as well as hitting the child with an unknown object. Is that not called assault? Where where did the assault charges in it? The boy sat in the circle for 30 minutes while she bered the child the whole time as she watched many other students sitting in the circle punch, kick, and choke the juvenile victim. She should also be attempted murder. If somebody's choking that child, she should be aiding and abetting attempted murder. Um, at one point, she could be seen giving a student a high five and displaying her pleasure with the student's action after they choked the victim.
Morrison is also seen asking one student if the victim had ever made fun of him after witnessing the boy hit the victim hard. The aff went back and proceeded to choke the victim what what she should have been in prison for like 5 years. Yeah, that is absolutely true. 30 days in jail. That is a crime in itself. Unbelievable.
Just unbelievable.
Yeah. I mean, what what what the heck? I mean, really. I mean, I don't understand some of these judges. I mean, if they were responsible for what happened.
Yeah. Um Oh, okay. One more thing I want to mention. Uh because I want to talk the girl on the couch. I do want to mention this and then I'll that'll be it for today. Uh, like I watch that Macan thing, you know. Um, uh, where is she? Oh, yes. This little boy, Noel Rodriguez Alvarez.
And, uh, this is his thing. Uh, the mother, the thing. I call her a thing. Uh, Cindy Rodriguez sin.
Um, so what happened here was a little boy is 5 years old and he went missing, you see, and she said, "Oh, my ex-husband must have taken him off to Mexico."
Uh, but she then fled the country. Her husband um, uh, what's her husband's name? Where's the husband's name? Um, the Sing guy. Rodri. Oh, Sing. Where's Sing? Okay, it's down here. Anyway, she and her husband fled to India because he's a Singh. He's from Punjab, India.
Anyway, uh she was added to the FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives for capital murder and unlawful flight because his kid disappeared and the husband did ex-husband did not have her. Uh they finally captured her in 2025. Um when did when wait a minute? Oh, let's see.
So, he dis Wait a minute. When did he disappear? But they captured her in August 20th of 2025 in New Delhi, India.
and she's extradited to United States on a $10 million bond. She gave birth as a little boy. He was born premature, several physical and developmental disabilities, including visual impairment, a limp, speech delay, esotropia, which I've never heard of, and a chronic lung disease, which required regular treatment.
Rodriguez Singh reportedly shunned her son as evil and possessed by a demon.
She was alleged to have abused him by depriving him of water and food to avoid having to change his diaper.
He was kn Rodriguez Singh was known to beat her son with a set of keys when she caught him drinking water.
Uh in 2020, she got sentenced to 10 years probation following a repeat offense for driving while intoxicated when she crashed her car into a pole with two of her children.
Between 2020 and 2021, three of her children, including Rodriguez Alvarez, were put in a foster family before being returned to this woman.
The three other children remained with their grandparents.
Why do they return children to people like her? Obviously, she wasn't taking care of him to begin with. Um, by fall 2022, Rodriguez Alvarez, a little boy, had not been entered into compulsory schooling and lap scheduled doctor's appointments beginning in 2022.
his mother had asked an acquaintance to borrow their child for a medical visit during that time. So in 2022 is when the kid vanished. He had last been in October 2022. Um uh let's see he looked at the hospital he at the for the birth of his twin sisters he looked malish unhealthy and malnourished. Then in 2022, Rodriguez Singh applied for passports for her children, not including the little boy.
You know, why not, huh? And then um she thought that the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services would take away her other children, which had occurred before due to her history of drug and alcohol problems. Shortly before her own disappearance, she had told her mother and brother she sold her son to another woman in the parking lot of the Fiesta Mart. you know the old I just sold the kid that's been used a lot and a welfare check was done and um she said oh the boy's living in Mexico with his father or some who've been deported anyway meanwhile her husband Arshadep Singh who was a stepfather of Noel stole $10,000 from his work p place 8,000 of which he deposited at bank then the same day she and her husband Singh and six of their children drove to Dallas Fortworth airport where they boarded a flight to Istanbul Turkey and then they went on to India which is where Singh is from. His family is from Punjab the s. So anyway anyway so uh before they disappeared she commissioned the construction of a concrete patio. Her husband threw also threw away a carpet later to contain traces of human remains. Stiffer dogs detected human remains of a patio but they demolished it and didn't find a body which was interesting. And so it turned out that where did they finally find the baby? Um poor poor boy. Um the body was found behind the house, not under the poor not under the thing they built. But anyway, they got the husband too. Um they're trying to get well they get they trying to get him out of India uh because he clearly should be in prison with her. Um, but here's this kid just like that other girl who was not what the family ordered. You know, you order a perfect healthy child and then you get one that's really a problem and requires a tremendous amount of care and some people don't want to do that care.
And unfortunately, for whatever reasons, they don't find a way to get help uh or give up the child or whatever. uh they simply don't like the child because the child becomes a nuisance to them and they do as little as possible or even eventually kill them because they just don't want to have to deal with that, you know, evil child as as as she's she says, you know, uh that obviously there's something wrong with the child and doesn't she doesn't think he should be part of the family.
Of course, she's a complete waste of space and she should never have the children other children should never been returned to her and the social service system collapsed completely on this. And yeah, but you know, sometimes when you have a child born into a family that doesn't have the ability or maybe they're psychopathic or highly narcissistic, that child is just gets a really bad bad shape. Um, uh, Christoph said, "Children with disabilities are really, really tough spot, especially with the wrong parents." Absolutely. I mean, you know, and the thing is children are hard to take care of as it is, but when you get a child who's even more difficult to take care of, you know, I understand it's kind of the same reason you get elder abuse, tell you the truth. I mean, it's when people get older and even if the kids have loved their parents up until a certain point and now that person's having Alzheimer's, maybe they're they tend to get angry and accusative and nasty and and they they they don't have control of their bladder and and extra, you know, they need to wear the diapers and you got then you got they get just they're not pleasant to be around sometimes. You know, my mother had Alzheimer and luckily she was pleasant to be around, but she was still difficult because to care for her was it was very difficult because it was a constant stress trying to help her, you know, get through the day when she didn't understand what was going on and she couldn't handle things. And um so um when my mother my mother was in uh she she know she went to memory care because she had got more help than she could have assisted living. assisted living said we can't do it anymore and moved her to memory care. Um, so even even the professionals get to a point where they don't they it's too much for them. So they have to get another level of professionals to deal with it. Or maybe people pay it even less because you know they get the harder job and and sometimes you see tremendous elder abuse in um nursing homes and and assisted living places which why a lot of people say I'm not ever letting my my one of my parents go to one of these places. And it's because you get people just like this mother who can't handle it's it's a very tough job and it's it's not um a lot of fun. And if the per if the the child or the the elder elder is not pleasant to be around on top of it, it makes people pretty nasty toward the person they're caring for. And so if you'll have if you're a decent per decent enough person, you may you'll figure out how to deal with it because you still have concern and love and you want to do the right thing and you'll get you'll do whatever you can to do the right thing. But if you're not that kind of person, the child or the elder is in terrible trouble. Yeah.
Oh, that's that's really sad. Pissed off. She does realize it. Yeah. Um it gets worse when they don't realize it, actually. But when they real and she's probably frustrated and angry and fearful because it's it's terrible. You can't stop it.
So, and you and it's one thing to be having a a physically, you know, which is a physical thing, which cancer. Um, my sister had ALS, which was a horrible disease, and she had tremendous amount of frustration, depression, trying to trying to trying knowing that it was it was terminal, but she was still thinking there's some way she's going to beat it, which she didn't. Um, but at least her mind was clear, you know, she was cognizant of everything. She understood things, and sometimes it was sad she understood what was going on. But if you if you get you've got the early early Alzheimer's and you realize you can't remember things, you can't function, you know where it's going and you know you won't be able to control your life and you know you're going to go down that road and it's it's frightening which is why a good portion of people are terrified of Alzheimer's for that reason. It's like please anything but Alzheimer's, you know. Yeah. It's it's Yeah. I don't wish they figure out what the heck is causing that. So yeah.
Um, Cheryl says, um, about elder care, sometimes the staffers who are supposed to be helpful turn out to be a nightmare. They do. Uh, but you know, yeah, it's it's it's one of these sad things where just like children when a baby is born to somebody, they're supposed to be loved and cared for. If that person has that ability, if they don't, then the child's in trouble. For elder care, the pay is terrible and the work is not fun for the most part and it's really rough work. You either have to have a heart of gold or a heart of steel. And you know, if your parent is there, you want the heart of gold people to be there. But because it's hard to get people to staff all those nursing homes and all those memory units, you get a whole lot of people that are not exactly quality, you know, and that's a reality. So yeah. Oh, on that pleasant note, is there anything pleasant I can do at the end of this? Let's see. What do you think? Fun. Okay, that that was sort of sad, but I was hoping it was a fun thing here. Oh, anything fun? Oh, yeah. Maybe not. Maybe I'll just have to stop. Um, yeah, of course, this is a show on homicide, so it's rarely has really pleasant stuff. So, life is a box of chocolates. You never know what you're going to get. That is true. I want dark chocolate on the outside at least, though. So I know I know what I want and what inside um Oh, an expert at assistant living says Cheryl told me to bring candy to staffers who care for my brother. Yeah.
Well, you know, they do I mean I I'm always amazed at the good staffers. I mean, they they do an incredible job.
And I think we should appreciate good teachers because they're having to put up a lot of crap in school these days with children who are ill behaved and the parents that are more ill behaved than the children. We should be thankful for the police that put up with the citizens hating them these days and having to to work extra hard. My my daughter's police department's down what she say 200 officers or something. Can't get new people because of the hatred toward police these days. people aren't joining the police force and now they're o they're just overwhelmed with with case work and um it's a it's a hard thing to to deal with. Um and so police departments are desperately trying to hang on to anybody who is not going to retire on them. And my daughter's on 21 years and she's effectively retired, but she she's going to continue to work for five more years. So she gets retirement plus because they can't replace her. Um and they want her there as much as they can. And so we should appreciate the police that do a good job. The teachers that do a good job. Uh the staff at nursing homes in the hospital who who do good jobs. I mean there's so many people to appreciate um uh that are are good good workers and kind and and and aren't you know they're I mean it's kind of neat to see how many good people there are out there. That's the way that is the way I'm going to say it at the end of the day. There are a lot of good people out there and they work uh the work they do is is admirable and just because there's a bad apple in that, you know, somewhere around there, which and there isn't every profession. There are bad teachers, bad principles. We just heard about bad principal and we we've definitely got bad police officers and we've got bad nursing staff and uh whatever. They're they're out there, but thank God for all the good ones, you know, and they're doing the same job, but they're they're they're good people.
And so that's that's freaking amazing.
So anyway, so thank you all for being here in the chat room as um and again I'm going to do for for Saturday I'm I mean Sunday I'm going to do the case of Damonte um forgot his last name. Um shoot I forget his last name. I don't know. I got I'm trying to find it. Whatever. Damonte.
Yeah. Anyway, Mason. Mason. Damonte.
Um, yeah, I think I think it's a little late. You can't be a cop at 70. See, agism strikes again. Yeah. Um, even as a profiler, I mean, I was think, you know, I I mean, personally, I don't want to be on the street, but I could work in the police department for sure, but it's it doesn't happen like that. You know, after a certain age, it's very hard to get any kind of employment. Agism is very strong. But, uh, so anyway, I'll be here on Sunday with the show. Again, it's a live show. If you're you're a patron, of course, you can come to the live show. If you want to be a patron, click the link below for Patreon. And please do subscribe to the channel and fight AI because otherwise if we don't fight AI, none of us are going to be around anymore. That includes you. Thank you guys for being here. See you next time. Bye.
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