Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The night. Michael Brown joins me here the former FEMA
director talk.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Show host Michael Brown. Brownie, No, Brownie, You're doing a
heck of a job the Weekend with Michael Brown.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Do you know what I love about doing this weekend program? Well,
there's a lot of things. I mean, one is the building.
When I'm doing it from my studio. In the building,
it's really quiet, like there's not a bunch of people
running around, and so it's very quiet and peaceful, and
it's a it's just a nice time to work. And
I like this smaller studio that I'm working in. But
(00:31):
I like the idea that people tune in on Saturdays
and listen to what I have to say. I can't
tell you how much I appreciate you doing that, And
so I just want to say thanks because I was
just during the break scrolling through the text messages and
for a topic that I was a little nervous about
talking about again simply because I guess in a way,
(00:55):
it's kind of like me talking about, well, you know,
having a baby is like you know that deal or whatever,
you know, because I'll never have a baby and I'll
never be catholic. I'm a Protestant. So and I'm not
no intention of converting to Catholicism. But the insightful text
messages from all of you that have been writing and
(01:18):
sending things in today, I just I find it astonishing.
I mean not an astonishing, not surprising because I think
this is I think you're really smart. I just find
it astonishing because I kind of, well, I kind of
expected to get blasted. I thought I was gonna get
blasted by it. And I'm sure somebody still will too.
(01:39):
And and even if you agreed with me, now that
I've said that, somebody else send me a nasty Graham.
Nasty Graham. What was that in Blazing Saddles Telegram? Bongo Congo?
But what was his name? Mine? Bongo for you Longo?
Mango Mango? Yeah, telegram from Mango. Telegram from Longo. Anyway,
so we came with my glad have you with me.
(02:01):
The first rule of engagement is if you want to
send me a message, as we were just talking about
the text line that numbers three three one zero three
three three one zero three keyworders Mike or Michael, and
then I'd appreciate it if you would go follow me
on X and that's at Michael Brown USA, at Michael
Brown USA. So well, here we are, and it's almost
(02:24):
May first, so the the end of the much hyped
up first one hundred days of Trump two point zero.
You may have noticed that, and you may be one
of these people too that are growing kind of restless
at what you perceive to be in action by some
(02:47):
of Trump's cabinet officials. I know I've got a lot
of friends who are throwing in the towel because as
far as hope for drastic change goes, they've just kind
of given up. I think of that feeling of despair
is probably owed to the again just barely one hundred days.
(03:09):
I think it's because of the It was like one
of the Elon Musk's rockets. It wasn't even that because
those kind of just even an atlas, they just kind
of build up momentum and slowly get up speed. No,
this was like some sort of you know, missile silo
opening up and just zoom. It just took off. It
(03:30):
took off like a rocket, like a missile. And I
think that has skewed our perspective of everything that's going on,
because in those first one hundred days, there were a
lot of key campaign promises that were boom fulfilled just
within weeks. So now everything else seems kind of like
(03:52):
we're kind of standbagging, We're kind of just delly dialing
around right now by comparison. But remember, things were so
rapidly accomplished that there was a time, and to some
degree still is it was kind of hard to keep
up with everything going on. I could walk in on
the on the weekday program. I wouldn't do this, but
(04:14):
I could have and just opened up because I get
all of the emails from the White House Office of Communications,
the from the White House itself. You know, I'm on
the list, serf, so I get all of these emails.
I could have come in and just opened up emails
and just read emails for three or four hours every
day and just give them my commentary about everything that
(04:36):
was happening that day that it was literally I set
up a rule. I set up a rule in my
inbox so they would all go to a folder because
there was so much stuff going on. So think of
that like a long distance run. Some of the runners,
you know, always start out too fast. They race to
the head of the pack, and then what happens. They
(04:57):
start to run out of steam, they start to slow down,
and then they look like, oh, yeah, you're a human being.
You're not really a track star at all, and the
distance kind of piles up. But not only has the
administration plucked a lot of the low hanging fruit as
far as policy is concerned, and some of these truly
and I don't mean this derogatorily but no brainer executive orders.
(05:21):
But the enemy has learned two more effectively and selectively
resists the Trump agenda. How so well, first and foremost,
there's not a lot that can be achieved legislatively to
the benefit of either side. Trump's majority of the House
(05:44):
isn't really big enough to pass anything that's truly controversial,
which means that a lot of the really significant key
changes that we're looking for are going to be done
by the executive branch and through his cabinet officials who
controlled the various arms of government. I'm it's that started.
(06:05):
Look see what day it is? Well done? Saturday? You
realize that Congress has been on an Easter break for
two weeks now, actually for more than two weeks. Easter
was last Sunday, and they're there there they'll they'll they'll
be back to work maybe sometime Monday after. They might
have a roll call Monday at four o'clock just so
(06:27):
they can claim that they worked on Monday. So and
and and I know, was it Mark Twain or somebody
that talked about we're better off when the legislature is
not in business because now now our wallets and our
pockets are safe. Well, yes, that's true. But when we
(06:47):
have majorities in both the House and the Senate, then
we ought to get off our butts and start doing
some stuff. There ought to be some more reform done now.
I hope that what Congress does is they do some
of that reform with very just quietly do it. You
know why, because I want to avoid the cabal latching
(07:13):
on because we're gonna we're talking. We're going to talk
today about the judge that are judges so bizarre to me,
judges that were arrested by the FBI this past week. Well,
if you look at the reaction of the left to
the arrest of those judges, that's exactly what you're going
(07:36):
to get if Congress really starts in acting reform. So
I still want them to do it. Don't make a
big deal out of it. Just get it quietly done,
and then you might also avoid some court battles, although
I think those are inevitable. The Democrats and then key
(08:00):
Republican members of the UNI Party, Lisa Murkowski, Mitch McConnell,
I'm looking at you. They realized long before Trump took
the oath that the only way that they could successfully
wait at his four years would be to screw the
people over with activist court rulings and compromise judges. So
there's a cycle going on. I want you to think
(08:22):
in terms of a cycle, not a bicycle, a cycle,
you know, like a process. So Trump doesn't have a
useful here. It is. It's the I've got one, two, three, four, five,
I've got six parts of this cycle. Number one is,
(08:43):
are we need to recognize that Trump does lack a
legislative majority for many things, particularly in the Senate. So
if you if you don't have the sixty votes that
you need to invoke cloture to shut down debate so
you can actually vote on the bill where you just
need a majority, uh, you're not gonna get a lot
(09:06):
of stuff done in terms of Congress. So let's walk
through this cycle and maybe it'll give us a different
perspective on why things are starting to seem a little slower,
and at the same time, maybe that might be a
good thing. It's the Weekend with Michael Brown. Text the
word Michael, Michael the three three ones zero three, go
(09:26):
follow me on x at Michael Brown USA. I'll be
right back. Hey' So the Weekend with Michael Brown. Aren't
you glad you tuned in. I'm on a roll today.
I've pissed off the Catholics and now I'm gonna piss
off Trump supporters by telling you to just calm down.
(09:52):
It's coming. It's coming. So there's this cycle going on,
and if you step back again, this is like, you
know what I talking about. Politics is infusing our lives
wherever we turn. I mean, it really is. That's why
I if I don't want to get to new age here,
but sometimes you really do. You do need to find
(10:12):
the time every single week, maybe every single day, to
step away from it. Go for a walk, go walk
your dogs. We'll take your girlfriend, boyfriend, or your dog
out to dinner or something. Do something besides politics. But
let's go back to politics. Since I've given you that sage, advice.
(10:37):
So here's the cycle. So Trump really doesn't have a
very useful legislative majority, just a few in the House
and a few in the Senate, which means that for
if he really wants to do something today, then he
has to take executive action. So that's what he's been doing.
He signed more executive orders in the first hundred days
(10:59):
than I think any other president in the history of
the country. I don't know that for a fact, but
that would be my guess. So that's the first cycle.
Then the second thing happens. The opponents of Donald Trump.
They know that these legislative defeats are unlikely for key
agenda items outside of confirmations, So why commit to stalling
(11:26):
out Trump in court? Or go stall out Trump in court?
And that's exactly what they're doing. So we can't defeat
any Here's this is this is the Democrats talking. We
can't really defeat anything legislatively, and he knows that and
(11:47):
we know that, so he's doing executive orders. So then
let's you know, we'll just do the confirmations because we
you know, we don't care about those, although the you know,
once we get unconfirmed, then we'll try to kill them.
So that's what they're doing with Pete Heggsath. So you know,
we confirm Hegxath, you know by what one or two votes,
and now we try to kill him. It's just the DC.
(12:09):
It's the DC Malstrom that just continues to go on.
So then they just go, well, let's just run to court,
because think about this, there are plenty of public interest
law firms, and there are plenty of NGOs whose sole
job is to do nothing but take money laundered tax
(12:30):
money and go sue Trump in court. So that's step
number two. And then you get to the third part
of the cycle. Trump gets pissed off. So Trump issues
orders or the cabinet members themselves, the cabinet secretaries, they
direct reforms. They're just like, okay, we can't get Congress
(12:51):
to do this, we'll just do it on our own.
And you know, really, there's many times when you can
do that. I did that when I was the undersecretary.
There was stuff I couldn't get. I could never get
Congress to do certain things for me, so I would
just I just go back to my staff and say,
you know what, screw We're gonna do it ourselves. Sometimes
I'd win sometimes I'd lose, but at least I would
(13:13):
force the issue. So there's the third step. Trump issues
orders to the cabinet or the cabinet members themselves start
doing their own their own reforms, and then that gets
to the fourth part of the cycle. Then the people
that are opposing those reforms or opposing those orders go
(13:34):
forum shopping. What do I mean, Well, what would be
the best place to sue Trump? And who would be
the best judge. So they decide to sue in oh,
I don't know, in Los Angeles or New York or
DC itself, and then they hand picked the judges, and
(13:57):
those hand picked judges are probably compromised or otherwise controlled
some way. So that gets you through the four of
the six cycles. And then the fifth one is once
they do their forum shopping, once they file their lawsuit,
then the judge issues are ruling most generally a temporary
stringing order a tro against the Trump administration, and then
(14:20):
they make it apply nationally and so then everything gets
shut down based on one individual suing in one district
court in say, the district of Wyoming, and then that
judge in Wyoming, I'm just making this up, and then
that judge of Wyoming, shuts down the entire country from
doing whatever it was that they suit about. Now we
(14:40):
get to the end of the cycle. That ruling goes
to the US Supreme Court, and that's going to be
a roll of the dice. So if that's the cycle,
did you write it down? Of course you didn't. If
you had written the cycle down, then I could ask
you what's the result of the cycle. Well, that Trump's
(15:03):
agenda can get squashed, delayed, stopped entirely. But it prevents
a chain of Trump agenda items being strung together where
you can look at victory, victory, victory, victory, victory. Instead
you're looking at, oh, a victory and then a string
of temporary restraining orders. Well, as much as I dislike that,
(15:28):
and as much as you're probably screaming at your radio
right now or your phone or however you're listening, that's
just the way it is. Why, because the courts are
the only thing that the opposition has right now. The
Trump administer Trump two point zero, despite some unforced errors
(15:50):
like Pete Heggs, has got to get his act together
and clean stuff up. So and I think that is
an unforced Trump two point oh was a lot stronger
at thwarting internal sabotage than Trump forty five Trump one
point oh was which dealt with leakers and miscreants from
(16:14):
the words so help me God. They started immediately Trump
gets sworn in the Chief Justice Trump one point oh.
The Chief Justice say congratulations, mister President, and all of
those in the cabinets started going after him. Well, Trump
learned his lesson, and so now the nngos and the
Democrats and all their useful idiots in the judiciary are
(16:37):
now the ones that are going after him. So where
must that leave Trump Trump two point oh in terms
of forging a path ahead to implement the agenda, Well,
there's no way through judicial corruption other than straight through.
(17:03):
I bet you've asked this question. You've asked one of
two questions, maybe both. Why isn't Pam Bondy doing anything
u Wor's cash Battel. Remember, everybody told us that cash
Battel was a threat to the FBI while he was
going to walk in and just destroy the FBI and
(17:25):
Pam Bondy she was a lightweight and she wasn't gonna
do anything. And I bet there are people in this
audience that are wondering why isn't Pam Bondy doing anything?
And worse cash battel at the FBI. Well, I'll tell
you where, and I'll tell you where the arrests are
and when are people going to get rolled up? We're
(17:45):
starting to see it already and the left is losing
their minds over it, and I think it's hilarious. It's
The Weekend with Michael Brown. Takes the word Michael Michael
to three three one zero three. If you're not following me,
following me on egg at Michael Brown USA, then we
can't be friends. I'll be right back tonight. Michael Brown
(18:11):
joins me here the former FEMA director of.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
Talk show host Michael Brown.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
Brownie, No, Brownie, You're doing a heck of a job.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
The Weekend with Michael Brown.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
Hey, welcome to the Weekend with Michael Brown. I appreciate
you tuning in. Send your text messages to three three
ones zero three, keyword Mike or Michael. Go follow me
on x at Michael Brown USA. So I thought the
end of the world was occurring this week. It was
bad enough. I think it was early this week. So
(18:41):
maybe be in like Monday or Tuesday when we first
heard about the judge and his wife den in Las Cruces,
New Mexico, that were harboring members of Trenda or rod
with it Venezuelan gang. A judge, I don't care whether
he's a municipal judge, a magistrate, Joe, the federal distrect judge.
He's a judge, doesn't make any difference. He's bound by
(19:07):
the code of judicial ethics. And here he is harboring
known gang members. And actually some of the facts are
even worse than that. And then and then we go
up to was it Detroit or Milwaukee? I forget where
was this other judge? Was Wisconsin? Is in Wisconsin where
(19:30):
we got another judge that actually helps a fugitive elude
capture by the FBI and Ice. And I'm thinking, holy crap,
what's going on here? That's how bad things have gotten.
(19:53):
But why did I think the world was coming to
an end? Because I started listening to those on the
cable channels that always have something to say when something
like this happens. Let's go to MSNBC.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
Actually the way that they did today. The argument that
the folks and Trump miministration are making is, hey, no
one's above the law, including judges. This is a this
is an impartial, unfair application of the law. Well, I
absolutely agree that no one is above the law, but
that also means that no one is beneath its protections
(20:33):
as well. So we don't need to litigate this case
out in public. We don't. We're going to see this
happening throughout the court system. But regardless of the facts
that this was put on to be a show.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
He's talking. He's talking about the judge Wisconsin. It was
put on for show. Wait, hang on a minute, on
what basis do you make that claim? Because I just
happen to have right in front of me the arrest warrant,
which is fascinating, the criminal complaint and the arrest war
(21:10):
signed by a federal district judge for the Eastern District
of Wisconsin. Here's the affidavit. I, Lindsay Schlomer, being first
newly sworn to poses to say this one. I'm a
special agent of the FBI. I'm gonna parafrale. Don't read
a word for words, I'm gonna paraphrase it. Okay, I'm
(21:33):
a special agent with the FBI. I have been since
twenty fourteen. I'm assigned to the Milwaukee Field Office. I'm
an investigative for law enforcement agent of the United States
under Title eighteen, Section thirty fifty two. That is, I
am an officer of the United States who is empowered
by law to conduct investigations, to make arrest, and to
(21:53):
collect evidence for various violations of federal law. I'm also
a CPA. By the way, just happened to be a CPA.
I've been a CPA for seven years since my employment
with the FBI, she says. I'm currently assigned to a
white collar crime squad, which investigates public corruption crimes, civil
rights crimes, and financial crimes. During my tenure with the FBI,
(22:15):
I have participated in investigations involving the corruption of public officials,
to include facilitation of payments and kickbacks. I have participated,
she writes in this affidavit, in all aspects of investigations, including,
among the other things, executing arrest warrants. I base this
avidavit upon personal knowledge and upon information reported to me
(22:39):
by other federal law enforcement officers during as a part
of their official duties, all of whom I believe to
be truthful and reliable, and she makes the affidavit. She
says in support of a criminal complaint charging one Hannah
Dugan born in nineteen fifty nine, So she's what sixty
(23:00):
will there be sixty six years old? A criminal complaint
charging this judge with the following obstructing or impeding a
proceeding before a Department or agency of the United States
in violation of Title eighteen, section fifteen oh five two,
(23:21):
concealing an individual to prevent his discovery and arrest in
violation of Title eighteen, section ten seventy one. And she
says that the purpose of this abidavit is to show
that there's probable cause for the criminal complaint and for
the arrest warrant. That's the probable cause. Agents from the
(23:41):
Department of Homeland Security identified flor Azri Rriez. This is
the guy that was in her courtroom as an individual
who was not lawfully in the United States. It indicated
that he is a native and citizen of Mexico, that
he has been issued an I eight sixty notice an
order of expedited removal dated two thousand and thirteen. Now
(24:08):
here's something that's really important. He was removed to Mexico
through Nogallus Arizona Port of Entry. There is no evidence.
She says that he sought or obtained permission to return
to the United States, but they determined through biometric fingerprint
(24:31):
comparison that this guy charged in Milwaukee County case number
blah blah blah matches those of this guy, so that
means he has come back into the United States after
having been removed, which is a felony. So the guy
standing in front of the judge's bench in Wisconsin was
(24:55):
a felon wanted by the fence, by DHS and the FBI.
You come in one time, it's kind of like getting
a parking ticket, and it's more like getting a speeding ticket.
But once you get removed and you come back in again,
that's a felony. And that's what this dirt bag did.
(25:16):
And that dirt bag was in front of this judge
on charges of domestic violence. So what happened. I'll get
back to the affidavit in just a minute. Any judge,
whether it's I don't care if it's a misdemeanor, I
(25:37):
don't care if it's a felony, and I don't care
if it's a felony for murder or it's a felony
for some financial crime. It's a white collar crime or
it's a bodily injury crime. It just made any difference
to me. You have somebody in front of you as
a judge who is wanted by another court for a charge,
(25:58):
and you help that person and escape custody. You help
that person escape and arrest. If courtrooms are spaces where
the ideals of justice, truth, accountability are meant to be realized,
(26:19):
then that means a judge has a higher standard of accountability,
a higher standard of behavior than you and I do.
I used to practice law in federal court, and federal
judges were sticklers. You got to be on time, you
(26:41):
gotta be you got, you know, certain formatting for briefs.
I mean, the rules in federal court are just so strict,
But in many district courts, in many state district courts,
they're just the same way. Well, this case in Wisconsin,
where Judge Hannah Dugan facilitated the escape of the illegal
alien during an active trial, really provides us a grim
(27:06):
and urgent illustration of how this country is literally turning
into a craphole nation. It's turning into a little ten
horned dictatorship. And it's not Donald Trump that's doing it.
It's the judiciary. Now, the Democrats of rush to frame.
You know, all these acts as bold defenses of due process,
(27:27):
due process. Uh, this guy did not get due process.
He got an escape vow back to MSNBC.
Speaker 2 (27:39):
Really to show intimidation of judges across the entire country,
because we know that Republicans in Congress have not been
standing up to these terrible policies. It's been our judiciary.
Speaker 1 (27:52):
What what what terrible policies. Remember what we have here
is a judge. Well we have two judges. We have
one who was harboring trenda Rogwad gang members, knowingly doing it.
And we had another judge who knew that outside her
courtroom were agents of Ice and the FBI waiting to
(28:16):
arrest this guy when he walked out of the courtroom. Now,
when defendants walk out of the courtroom and you're not
on you're not in bond, You're not you didn't come
from the jail. You sit at the desk with your
lawyer in front of the judge, and assuming you're not
(28:37):
being held on a bond, when your case is over
for the day, the judge will call the next case
docket and you and your lawyer will stand up and
you'll open a little swinging gate and you'll walk out
the back door, the the main door of the courtroom.
It's not what happened in Wisconsin. What happened in Wisconsin
(29:00):
was the judge said, you, the defendant, go sit in
the jury box. Why we'll just go sit in the
jury box. Well, she's thinking, because I know that they're
waiting for you outside this door, So I'm going to
have you sit up here in the jury box. Then
when I finished with your case, I'm going to have
(29:21):
you go through the door that where the jurors would
come in, because that will take you into a back hallway.
These courtrooms are all essentially the same. It'll take you
into a back hallway where there is another door that
judges use and court pork personnel used so they don't
have to mingle with the public. So that will take
you in essence, you know, just make a joke out
(29:43):
of it. They'll kind of dump you out into the
alley and then you can escape. That's what she did,
and that's what this Yahoo ONNBC is trying to justify.
That's the system.
Speaker 2 (29:56):
And so now they're under attacked, and it's important now
than ever that we're not only protecting due process but
talking about the need to protect our democracy.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
Wow, we're talking about a judge who is literally undermining
our so called democracy. And this guy's saying, Ah, what
we can't arresting a judge, Why that's undermining our democracy?
Guess what else he has to say? So The Weekend
with Michael Brown takes the word Michael Michaels to three three,
(30:27):
one zero three. I'll be right back. Hey, So Weekend
with Michael Brown, glad to have you with me. If
you have not subscribed to the podcast, you need to
go do that. On your podcast app. Search for the
Situation with Michael Brown, The Situation with Michael Brown. Once
(30:48):
you hit that. Once you find that, just hit the
subscribe button and that will automatically download to your podcast
app all of the five days of the weekday program
plus the weekend program, so you get all of the
Michael Brown programming you need, not the MSNBC. We're talking
about this judge in Wisconsin that gets arrested her in
her courtroom for helping a felon evade arrest, and the
(31:18):
county executive in Milwaukee is really upset.
Speaker 2 (31:22):
Some Americans are not accepting Trump's dictatorial.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
Moves quietly dictatorial moves.
Speaker 2 (31:29):
Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley joins me. Now, mister Crowley,
thank you for joining me. I'm curious how you first
learned about this today. I first learned about this actually
planting trees in one of our parts. It is arbor day,
and as when I learned about this, quite frankly, I
was quite shocked. I couldn't believe what I had seen.
(31:51):
Was horrified by the actions of the SBI coming onto
our call.
Speaker 1 (31:56):
See, I thought he's gonna say he was horrified by
the actions of the judge who is there to uphold
the rule of law and instead is absolutely taking a
sledgehammer to the rule of law. No, he was upset
about the FBI.
Speaker 2 (32:14):
I couldn't believe what I had seen. It was horrified
by the actions of the FBI coming onto our county
courthouse grounds, literally going after a sitting judge who's not
a flight risk, and literally bringing so many officers.
Speaker 1 (32:28):
To you know, whether she's a flight risk or not
is not for the FBI to decide. That's for a judge.
That's for the federal district judge that they're taking her
too for that for that judge to decide she's going
to get her due process. This guy is a complete idiot.
Speaker 2 (32:46):
But the arrest her. I truly look at this as
a political showmanship. And there's absolutely no reason for the
FBI to have carried out their actions the way that
they did today.
Speaker 1 (32:58):
The art over this to do judge come with us.
I'm I suppose they could have done that, and then
when she refused to do that, I guess they could
have put her in cuffs then. But anyone, anyone who's
sitting on the bench who's more than willing to absolutely
let someone a domestic violence an abuser who is also
(33:24):
a felon walk out of the courtroom and invade arrest.
That's the demise of the republic. That's the demise. You know.
The other thing that we don't think about in this
case is that judge also robbed the victim, the survivor
(33:44):
of that domestic violence. She was entitled to a hearing.
The victims are not just bystanders to the judicial process,
they're actually vital participants. They're entitled to have their grievances heard,
their dignity affirmed, and if the laws so determines to
see that those who have wronged them are held accountable.
(34:05):
This judge telling that defendant to flee, literally in front
of his victim. The judge gagged her voice, subverted her rights,
extinguished her hope for justice. That is not mercy, it's
cruelty masquerading as compassion. But and here's where it really
(34:27):
pisses me off, that judge assault of the due process
rights of everybody, the American people, our elected representaes. We
have established laws that govern domestic violence, immigration, public safety.
We get a whole huge criminal code, and we have
entrusted enforcement of that criminal code to those agencies. And
(34:50):
we have built a judicial system that ensures fairness and order.
And when a judge, a judge thwarts that system, in
this case, a female judge, she usurped the sovereign will
of the people. She substituted her private moral sympathies for
(35:11):
the law in doing so. Doing so, she doesn't merely
just make a mistake. She attacks the very legitimacy of
this republic. And that's where we're at. So you want
to know where Pam Bondi and Cash Battel are. They're
in Wisconsin, They're in Las crusis and they're elsewhere. But
(35:33):
all of these cases, all of these situations take time
because you know you're under a microscope and you know
you're going to get sued. And it's not that I'm
not saying that they're afraid of getting sued, but you
want to make sure that you've crossed the t's and
dotted the eyes because you know that every single thing
(35:55):
is going to be scrutinized by the cabal and by
those federal judges that are issuing the temporary restraining orders
all across the country trying to shut down Trump two
point zero. And we haven't got into the details of
the new Mexico magistrate Judge Joel Cano'cano arrested for harboring
(36:18):
an illegal alien, a member of Trendo Arragua. Again, according
to Pam Bondi, the ag the Kaninos now face charges
of tampering with evidence. Huh. That seems to violate the
rule of law. That seems to violate all the tenets
(36:38):
of due process when you tamper with evidence, and in fact,
you can be charged if you're a defendant in a
case and you tamper with the evidence, you got an
extra charge against you now. And yet somehow we're supposed
to feel sorry for these people or just turn our heads.
(36:59):
No way, no way at all. So we came with
Michael Brown. Text the word Michael, Michael to three three
one zero three. I'll be right back
Speaker 2 (37:08):
Zero