Clinton Jaws - RCMP Commissioner Bullies Police and Interferes with Investigation allegedly | Clinton Jaws #99
Episode Date: June 23, 2022RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki punished police officers and made them cry when they refused to provide her with specific information regarding the Wortman investigation. Did Trudeau and Lucki interfer...e with the investigation to push their political agenda? Trudeau goes on an American Podcast. Lets take more calls from viewers. I was deferred for 3 years after my RMAQ. I am 42 in the military, should I try to become a cop? call the hotline 604-330-2512 Latank coffee https://www.downeastcoffee.ca/products/latank-coffee-blend Clinton Jaws: Official Website https://www.clintonjaws.com https://thegoldenbadge.comJoin this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWxFkykJzUk32iGqzSzXNYQ/join https://www.instagram.com/clintonjaws/ https://open.spotify.com/show/3hWntbop6gLEg6RFR0aOzJ https://www.facebook.com/clinton.jaws.7/ https://twitter.com/ClintonJaws #rcmp #trudeau #novascotia
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Discussion (0)
You're never getting bullying out of the RCMP, especially when your top dog is the biggest bully of all.
Clinton Jaws, guys, Clinton Jaws. There's a website out there. It's called Clinton Jaws.com. Go to it.
Okay, this is what we're going to talk about today. And for people who have never tuned in before, and all of a sudden this is your first time you're tuning in, I want to let you know how it goes, okay?
Because I don't want you sitting there and going. Get to the point. Get to the point. Will you just get to the point, Clint?
This is how I do episodes.
I say a couple things about my life, and then I get to the point.
And then after that, I take calls from viewers, and that's what we're going to do today.
Okay?
If you want, you could always fast forward.
Because you've seen the title, and that's probably why you've tuned in.
But I don't do it that way.
I'm going to be editing every now and then because I cough.
I still got the vid in my system.
well, I'm not testing positive for it, but it's still there.
It's hanging on.
It's hanging on.
And, you know, isn't it something?
Trudeau says he's got it three times.
He got it three times.
Not one symptom.
Incredible.
The guy's a superhero, ain't he?
When I got the vid, I phoned my brother to tell him the news.
I told him, he couldn't stop laughing.
I'm like,
Are you okay?
You got it?
I'm like, really?
Is that that funny?
Why is that funny that I got it?
Kind of sick.
But he was really happy for me.
And the woman, I mean,
she was upset that I wasn't suffering enough.
Strange.
It's, what's really strange is how it hangs on.
Kind of hangs on.
It's in here.
And constantly coughing.
I always clear the throat anyways,
constantly coughing. I'll stop talking about it. Guys.
Officially tomorrow, I'm declaring it's summer.
Tomorrow's going to be the real first day of summer.
A part of me can't wait.
Oh, and also, people interrupt me like my kids.
Bet you wants a ride home.
Okay.
Dad, can I have a... Please, Dad, pick me up.
Hello?
Hi, Dad.
Hey.
What?
Hi.
Hi, can you pick me up?
No.
No, you live two blocks away.
Dad.
No, I know.
Please, Dad, please, no.
No.
Dad, I lost my jacket and I need help.
It's 20 Celsius.
Why would I help you with your jacket?
No, I lost my jacket.
I'm in the middle of a podcast a little mad, okay?
Two blocks.
Two blocks.
What?
Are you mad?
No, I'm not mad.
I'm doing a podcast.
Well, can you just pick me out, please?
No.
Dad.
No.
Oh my gosh.
I know, eh?
I don't get it.
Okay, I'll talk to you later.
Do your papers.
Bye-bye.
It's tough babysitting.
It's hard job babysitting.
All they do is make you feel bad.
Like, I feel bad.
He literally lived.
It's a three-minute walk, guys.
It's like two blocks away.
And I'm to blame because sometimes I pick them up.
Once I picked him up, he was 30 seconds
away from the house. I can see the school from our house. That's how close it is. Summer. It's summer.
Tomorrow is summer. Summer. Tomorrow is summer. Tomorrow is summer. Tomorrow is summer,
guys. And a part of me is really looking forward to it. Because that means we move out to the lake.
We got a little small place out of the lake. But it also means that we have to meet up with our
neighbors that hate our guts. Here's our place. The people right here hate us. The people right here
hate us. The people down there hate us. The people over there hate us. Last year, the cops came
to our property. We wanted to turn a forest into lawn, but first we had to cut down a tree.
And this cutting down of this tree grouped about eight people together in the area, surrounding
area, called the cops, and all hell broke loose. One girl told me I was, I was effed.
I'm in big trouble.
Another lady said,
Clay, you don't have permission to cut down those trees.
So you didn't get permission to do that.
But I did.
I had all the permission in the world.
Already approved.
But I'm going to tell you something.
You know what feels good about when a police officer retires is you're not really held to that higher standard anymore that you had to try and maintain.
tape. When people, when I was a cop and people would drive by me and give me one of these,
because I did something wrong on the road, I would just have to smile and wave. I could never,
you know, back because I was a police officer, even on my day off. But now, now that I'm
retired, I don't have to follow that rule anymore. When somebody tells me where to go,
take a beast of shit trailer and get the fuck out of my neighborhood.
I could tell them what they can go do to themselves.
Go fuck yourself, Eddie.
And a part of that makes me feel good.
It makes me feel good that I'm able to do that.
And last year, one year ago, I did that.
And I videotaped the whole thing.
And maybe one day I'll show you the videotape.
But a couple people get fired if I did.
I know it.
But who cares?
It feels good not to be held to a higher standard anymore.
But it also feels good.
but it also feels good to be held to that higher standard, which I kind of miss.
I know I brought myself down to their level.
I wanted to.
I wanted to bring myself down to their level.
For so many years, you guys have no idea how much I wanted to fight back, stick up for myself,
and tell them how I really feel, and tell them where to go.
So that felt good, but the police officer that showed up that day, he thought I was a wingnut.
He was like, you're an ex-cop?
ex-cops don't talk like that
and I was trying to explain to him
but I finally can
I get to finally do it
and you retire
you're gonna want to too
so when you showed up
and he's like who the hell is this guy
because I lost my mind
not on the cop
me and the police officer
got in an argument as a Porto-Burning police officer
and to this day I feel bad
I feel bad
because I told the crime
crowd. The police officer's over in the corner talking to somebody and I told the crowd,
it's just me and the crowd, the crowd that hates me. And I said, guys, the cops, the cop ain't
going to do nothing. He's got no authority. They shut him down.
The RCMP is not going to shut me down.
Oh, because you're an ex-R-CMP. Yeah, he knows that he's not going to shut me down. He's got
no authority to shut me down. I got permission. It's the park.
The cop heard me say that, but I wasn't trying to hide behind that. And then afterward, he
comes up to me and goes, did you tell them that I have no authority? And I'm like, no, I didn't say that.
Well, I did after I rewound the voicemail, the, uh, my video. I did say that. But I didn't say it,
meaning it was a bad thing. I was just saying the truth. The cop has no authority.
Do you understand how many calls I've went to that are civil? For example, a property line.
The neighbor didn't like the other neighbor's property line. And I would tell you,
them I got no authority to change the property line. This is not a police issue. I got no authority.
And that's all I meant when I said that to the police officer. And then later on in that year,
somebody followed my kid home. My kid was driving a golf cart around, followed him home into the
property and started calling my kids A-holes. And I just lost it. It was a rough year.
It was a rough year. And I said some real bad things to her.
after she called them A-Hulls.
And I don't think I'm going to play any of that.
So yeah, we got to go back there.
We got to go back there.
We'll see what kind of year it is.
It's going to be one of the guys.
He doesn't even belong to the property.
He's way over there.
He was out walking his dog one day.
Huge German shepherd.
I got a little tiny baby dog.
We got a toy shepherd.
He's a toy.
It's called a toy shepherd.
He's a thousand feet of,
away. Going in the other distance, my dog is by me, starts barking. He's mad because my dog is not
on a leash. I'm on my property. He's irate. So he starts swearing at me. I start swearing at him.
He wants to fight me. Come on. Like literally wants to fight me. Like we're back in grade 12.
Get over here. I'll take you on. And so he was part of the mob too. He was drunker than a skunk when he
called the police that night saying that I didn't have him.
any authorization to log a tree on my property.
This property has nothing to do with him.
And unfortunately, he's still out there with his nutty, nutty girlfriend.
Why did I share that with you when I, it took me a year to share that with you.
And I always said to myself, I wasn't going to.
But why not?
It's kind of interesting.
I guess my story, this is my thing.
It felt good to stick up to them because I was no longer a police officer.
I was finally able to do this to them.
But in a weird way, it also didn't feel good.
I didn't react to it well.
I did bring myself down to their standard and that didn't feel all that good.
I don't take it back.
But there is something for being held to a higher standard.
That is something.
I would rather be held to a higher standard, I guess.
But every now and then, in a weird way, it feels good.
to lose your mind. I'm going to get to lucky in a second, but this kind, this, what I'm about to say
kind of goes into what I'm eventually going to say. And I know everybody's talked about it, but they
haven't raised the points that I'm thinking in my head. Trudeau goes on a podcast in America,
talking about guns to Americans. Isn't him, right away it blows my mind. He won't go on a podcast in
Canada. But when he goes to America, he goes on a podcast.
and they interview him for over an hour.
I'm not going to show you the entire hour.
But this is what he says on the podcast.
Prime Minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau.
Welcome to Los Angeles.
Thanks.
It's great to be here.
You're here to pitch a show to HBO Max.
Is that right?
How's it going?
Yeah.
I'm sorry, I can't help it.
I can't help it.
Sounds like my brother after I told him I had COVID.
So two-part question.
Does the lack of gun control,
in the U.S. make your job harder? Is it a security threat to Canadians because weapons are getting
trafficked across the border? And two, I mean, obviously the U.S. and Canada, we have very different
political systems. We have a different constitution. But any lessons that you might have for
demoralized Americans about how to actually get something done? You know, a couple of things.
First of all, over the past, you know, a couple of weeks, including on your show last week,
There's a sense that Canada responded to the shooting in Texas by suddenly turning around and banning guns.
But lovely if it were true, but we've been working on this for seven years.
Seven years.
We've been working on this for seven years.
I can't stand the guy.
I can't stand it.
I can't stand.
I have to imitate them.
I have to make fun of them.
It makes me feel better.
But that's not true.
Yes, it is true. He's been working on it for seven years.
When things happen in the news, in mostly America, this guy responds.
Yeah, he's working on it for seven years. Of course he was.
But the moment that happened in America, that school shooting, that's when he pushed it through.
His idea. No more guns in Canada.
And that's what he tried to do with the mass shooting in Canada, which I'll get to later.
He uses what happens in the news to push him.
his agenda. But he wants you to think that what happened in America had nothing to do with my
decision. It's not true. I just wanted to bring that up. Since we elected seven years ago,
we've been steadily working on strengthening gun control to a conservative party that is pushing
back on us for everything we do. Because everything you do is stupid. We've been able to actually
advance. And two years ago, we banned all military style assault weapons. So,
military-style assault weapons.
He doesn't even know what he's talking about.
What's a military-style assault weapon?
I'm not going to get into it. It's so stupid.
Is that what you banned?
And just a few weeks ago, and we've been preparing this legislation for months,
we moved forward on a total freeze on handguns.
So when this legislation passes, and it will pass,
I mean, the conservatives are pushing back hard.
They filibuster to prevent us from, you use,
methods to prevent us from debating it last week as we were supposed to. But we will, we have the
votes, we will eventually get it passed, hopefully sooner rather than later. And then it'll be illegal
to buy, sell, transfer, import handguns anywhere in the country. We're basically freezing the market
and, you know, that will make a big difference. And punishing the good person. Freezing the market
and punishing the good person who owns the guns. I can't buy a handgun. Shouldn't I be the one who has a
handgun? He's saying I can't buy a handgun. I'm not going to be able to buy a handgun. The problem
isn't the good people. The problem is the bad people. Do you understand how much power he is just
given a bad person who owns a gun? Well, he owns something rare. He owns a gun. That gun is now 10 more
times powerful. It's gold. Less good people have guns. More bad people have guns. You take the guns out of
the hands of good people? There's going to be that many victims. He's not taking guns. He's not taking guns.
away from bad people, he's taking guns away from good people. It's senseless. How does that make
Canada safer? It doesn't make Canada safer. I feel unsafe. I feel unsafe. The bad guy now knows
that less good people that they want to hurt and rob have a bigger chance of not having
a weapon. A lot of these guns are coming in. They're getting smuggled in through America. What's he doing to stop?
that. No. He wants to punish the good gun owners. Why would you take a gun away from somebody like me?
You do you take guns away from bad people, not good people. You take guns away from bad people and
crazy people. That's who you take guns away from. All crimes involving guns? I'm done by bad guys.
They're not done by good people. Just wait. He says a lot more dumber things than that.
There are debates.
And we have a culture where the difference is guns can be used for hunting or for sport shooting in Canada.
And there's lots of gun owners and they're mostly laws respecting and law abiding.
Most of them are. All them are. All gun owners are.
It's not easy getting a gun in Canada.
You got to go through some things.
You don't take the guns away from those people.
And if they're reasonable and they're good gun owners, why are you punishing them?
But you can't use a gun for self-protection in Canada.
That's not a right that you have.
You're in the Constitution or anywhere else.
If you try and buy a gun and say it's for self-protection, no, you don't get that.
You get it for hunting.
You can get it for sports shooting.
You can take it to the range.
No problem, as long as you go through our rigorous background checks.
But there's a difference around the culture.
And one of the things that we're seeing with the debate in the states is you get more
and more of the American style, you know, right to carry self-defense arguments filtering up
through the usual more right-wing communications channels.
Yeah.
I just want to flag that the prime minister is aware.
You hear these guys.
You're doing the podcast?
Yeah.
Okay.
Uh-huh.
Who are these guys?
Oh, yeah.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
He just said so much there.
They don't even say anything.
Yeah.
Oh.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
Good interview, guys.
But did you hear what Trudeau said there?
Guns can be used for hunting or for sport shooting in Canada, and there's lots of gun owners,
and they're mostly laws respecting and law-abiding.
But you can't use a gun for self-protection in Canada.
That's not a right that you have, even the Constitution or anywhere else.
If you try and buy a gun and say it's for self-protection, no, you don't get that.
You can't use a gun for self-protection?
Oh, is that right?
Hmm.
So what do you mean by that?
He uses a gun for self-protection.
Do you know how many guns he has for self-protection?
Tons of guns for self-protection.
But he wants to take the guns away from you.
He gets to keep them.
If he really wants to do this to Canadians,
then he should start with himself.
Start with his security.
His police officers.
He has hired police officers.
Do you understand how many guns he has?
Not only that, he doesn't even have to use them.
He hires somebody that you pay for to use his guns.
Sharp shooters.
Not only is he allowed to have guns, he's allowed to hire people that are experts in using guns, sharpshooters.
Now, do you not see a problem with that?
He's saying how terrible guns are.
You're not allowed to have him for self-protection.
But every day of his life, every minute of his life, he is self-protected by guns.
The guy's a complete cracker check.
He likes guns. He believes in guns. He just doesn't want anybody else to have them, but himself.
But you can't use a gun for self-protection in Canada. That's not a right that you have.
Idiotic. You can't use a gun for self-protection. What are you talking about? Somebody breaks into my house or raping my kids.
Okay? I can't use a gun? Do you think I'm going to go to jail?
If I use a gun and shoot them in the head? Really? Do you think that happens in Canada? That doesn't happen in Canada.
I've been to a call. I've been to calls where people had to use guns in self-defense.
Do you think they were convicted? But you know what he wants you to do? This is senseless.
He wants the rape to just to kill. Does he really expect people that own guns in a house, somebody breaks in, stabbing everybody, somebody breaks in, stabbing your family to death.
you cannot use a gun for self-protection.
You're full of it.
You're completely full of it.
It's a lie.
I'll give you another example because this is just complete stupidity.
A guy breaks into my house.
He points a gun at me.
We get into a fight, hands-on fight.
He's going to kill me.
He's saying I can't take the bad guy's gun and shoot bad guy.
That's not my right, he says.
And who can't?
cares. If it isn't, that's not the point. I don't care if I go to jail. That's not what we're
talking about here. I'm not going to be thinking, hey, I can't use my gun. The kid, he's doing this
to my children. He's killing my family. I'm not going to think, I can't use a gun because I might go to
jail. I don't care if I go to jail. I want my family to survive, you idiot. That's like,
that's like saying you can't print. If I had a bow and arrow on the wall, Trudeau said,
saying you cannot use that bow and arrow.
That's for hunting.
I'm going to use anything I want to use
to protect my family, obviously.
Hunting knife is used for hunting.
Are you saying that somebody comes in to kill my family?
I'm not allowed to knife them with a hunting knife
because it's only used for hunting.
This is how stupid this guy is.
Everything he says is idiotic,
but yet he has 24-hour protection.
The interviewers don't even talk about that.
He's protected by guns with sharpshooters.
Complete crock.
That's a complete crock.
It's a complete crock.
It's amazing.
It's amazing when you listen to this guy talk.
Literally, you have somebody break into your home,
and he wants you to,
bad guy has a gun, breaks into your home.
You wrestle the gun away from him,
and he wants you to,
know that you're not allowed to pull the trigger to save your life of you and your family.
That's what he's telling you.
Am I wrong?
That's exactly what he's telling you.
This is who runs Canada, guys.
The bow and arrow stay on the wall.
The knives stay in the drawer.
Because that's not what they're meant for.
Google it now.
Google.
Google a Canadian man goes to jail because somebody busted into his house, tried to kill him.
But the owner killed him.
first. Google that and see if that guy went to jail. You're not going to find it. Even if you do,
even if you find one instance, who cares? It's not the point. Yes, Canadians have guns for hunting
and target shooting and practice. But they also have them in case all hell breaks loose.
Like this guy running Canada. His decisions make me want to go out and buy some guns.
I've never felt like that before.
Hunting, you can get it for sports shooting,
you can take it to the range,
no problem, as long as you go through
our rigorous background checks.
But there's a difference around the culture,
and one of the things that we're seeing with the...
And if the background checks are so rigorous,
why are you punishing the gun owner?
There's a freeze on the handgun.
You guys aren't the problem.
But we're going to do this anyways?
Does that make any sense to you?
It's already.
difficult. I'm not allowed to take a handgun
to just drive around town with it and carry it.
It's got to go from point A to point
B. I've got to fill out a bunch of
paperwork, even if I want to take a handgun
to go shooting at a range.
People like me, those people
shouldn't be punished.
Every crime that's involved
with guns, it's a bad guy
doing it. Not a good guy.
Bad people who aren't allowed to have
the guns. Anyways,
really good interview, guys.
you're knocking it out of the park.
Now this leads into what I wanted to talk about today.
He came out with this legislation and presented this legislation
after what happened in America at the school, the school shooting.
April 2020, there was a mass shooting in Canada, okay?
22 people were killed.
Guess what Trudeau wanted to do.
He wanted to use that as an example
to bolster his gun legislation idea.
He wanted to interfere with a mass shooting investigation to get his political point across.
You got to hear this.
You got to hear this.
Okay.
And what I'm about to say is, it's just my opinion, okay?
Maybe I'm wrong.
I might be wrong.
Just my opinion.
We hear one side.
So far we've only heard one side.
And this came out yesterday or today.
A bunch of people emailed me this.
I had already seen it.
And I knew I was going to talk about it.
it. But it says RC&P Commissioner Brenda Lucky tried to jeopardize mass murder investigation to
advance Trudeau's gun control efforts. And when I first read that, I was like, don't you mean
Trudeau tried to jeopardize mass murder investigation to advance Trudeau's gun control efforts?
Because that's really who the RC&P Commissioner is. It's not lucky. It's Trudeau. What I'm about
to read, I found incredible. Disturbing.
creepy. This is completely creepy. You gotta hear the creepy part. If it's true, it's creepy.
Wartman killed 22 people. They find them at a gas station, a dog handler and an ERT member, I believe.
They find them at a gas station, they open firearm. They kill Wartman. Wartman had five guns on them.
Some of these guns, they came from America. A week after the murders,
Lucky pressured RCMP in Nova Scotia to release the details of the weapons used by the killer.
But RCMP commanders refused to release such details saying doing so would threaten their investigation into the murders.
That happened in April 2020. In May 2020, the Trudeau government's gun control objectives were spelled out in an order and counsel issued in May 2020.
Bill C-21, which was tabled last month,
but the concern in April 2020 was the extent to which politics threatened to interfere
with a cross-border police investigation into how the killer managed to obtain and smuggle into Canada
for illegal guns used to commit many of the 22 murders.
The RCMP learned that this killer, Wartman, ended up getting one of his guns
from a guy named Neil, okay?
He also got two illegal handguns.
from another guy named Sean.
But the cops who were doing the investigation
on where did Warpment get the guns?
They didn't have that information.
They didn't know where Warpment got the guns.
That's another investigation.
They want to find
how Warpment got his hands
on these illegal guns.
They didn't know in April 2020.
In fact, after the murders,
the media asked this cop, his name is Campbell,
Superintendent Darren Campbell
They asked him
Where did he get the guns?
Where did Wormann get the guns?
And Campbell said he couldn't get into the details
Because the investigation is still active and ongoing
Except to confirm the gunman had several semi-automatic handguns
Now it's important
And you guys might not understand this
But it's important that the police don't give all the details
If you're working on an investigation, you're trying to find
has the guns. There's a ton of reasons why you wouldn't want the media to know that.
There's a ton of, when somebody gets murdered, the police aren't going to give you the information
on how the person was murdered. They want that information to come naturally. If I, I'll give you
an example. If I admitted to a murder and the police interview me and they asked me how, okay,
you're admitting to this murder? How was this person murdered? Well, I shot the
person in the head. The person didn't die by a gunshot. There were no gunshots. The person died
by being drowned. There's a good reason. There's a good reason why police withhold important
information. They don't want to wreck their investigation. It's much more effective if I say,
yeah, I murdered him. How'd you kill him? I drowned him. Okay. And then I, well, what else happened?
I covered it up, covered him up in a duvet.
Those are details that don't, they don't want getting out into the public in case somebody actually, for example, admits to the murder.
I'll give you another example, but it might be a little bit too, it might be a little weak.
What if a witness came?
They're doing, at least they're doing an investigation, where do you get the guns?
And then a witness comes to a police station and says, I know how he got the guns.
He got the guns because Sean told me that he gave Warpman two guns.
Okay, what kind of guns were they?
Nine Mills, Smith and Wesson.
Now, that's pretty important information, isn't it?
I mean, that might be enough to go and arrest.
But if you have the same witness come and say that information
after it's already been divulged to the media,
it makes his statement less important, less relevant.
Because only the police know,
only the police know the details of the firearms that Wartman has.
Nobody else.
So if you get somebody coming into the police station describing the firearms that Wartman has,
the police are going to listen.
And it's going to be more grounds for a search warrant and an arrest.
And I'm probably missing the point.
But there's a ton of reasons why police don't give you all the details.
We had a murder in Port Alberti.
Years later, this guy admits to the murder.
how do we know he was telling the truth
PC gave details of the crime scene
that's how she was strangled
how did he kill her what did he say
I strangled her important information
and they hit it
the police hit it from everybody
hid the details of the crime
you have to but you got to hear
so after Campbell tells
the news
I can't tell you I can't get into the details
It's an ongoing investigation. I can't tell you what kind of guns he had or used.
This is what happens after. Shortly after the news conference, Campbell, assistant commander
Lee Bergman, Chris Leather, I believe that's his first name, and Nova Scotia Communications
Director Leah Scanlon, were summoned to a meeting by the RCMP Commissioner, Brenda Lucky.
And guess what? Lucky wasn't happy. They have this meeting.
You got to hear what happened in the meeting.
This is the creepy part.
And how do we know this happened?
Because Campbell, Superintendent Darren Campbell, made notes right after the meeting.
Describing what happened.
This is what he says.
The commissioner was obviously upset.
She didn't raise her voice, but her voice of words was indicative of her overall dissatisfaction with our work.
Could you imagine?
worst mass shooting in Canada a week later you have to have a meeting with the commissioner and she's dissatisfied
that makes me cringe right there let's see why she's dissatisfied the commissioner accused us
me of disrespecting her by not following her instructions i was in re i was and remain confused over
this. The commissioner said she told comms. The commissioner said she told comms. I don't know who
comms is, but I think it's Leah Scanlon. To tell us at H Division to include specific info about the
firearms used by the killer. So according to this, the commissioner said, hey, I told Leah Scanlan
to tell you guys that you need to mention to the media what firearms were used by the killer.
However, Campbell said we couldn't because to do so would jeopardize ongoing efforts to advance
the U.S. side of the case as well as the Canadian components of the investigation.
Campbell noted that Lucky went on at length and said she was sad and disappointed.
That's what Lucky said.
I'm sad and disappointed.
You're disrespectful and you've made me sad.
And now I'm very disappointed.
Think about those words after what those people just went through.
And the hugest boss in the RCMP in Canada, shits all over you.
She was sad and disappointed that he had not provided these details to the media.
Now, why would she say that she's sad, even though he just told her that it would jeopardy.
that it would jeopardize the investigation.
He says it's going to jeopardize the investigation.
And she goes, I'm sad and I'm disappointed.
Why would that make you sad and disappointed?
You want to know what?
The commissioner said she had promised the Minister of Public Safety
and the Prime Minister's Office
that the RCMP would release this information.
Campbell tried to explain there was no intent to disrespect anyone.
However, we could not release it.
info at this time. The commissioner then said that you don't understand. This was tied to pending
con. This was tied to pending gun control legislation that would make officers and the public safer.
She was very upset and at one point Deputy Commissioner Brian Brennan tried to get things calmed down,
but that had little effect. Some in the room reduced to tears and emotional over this
belittling reprimand.
Brenda Lucky made people cry.
Why? To save her credibility.
She promised Trudeau
and the Minister of Public Safety
that she would get this
information released. Brenda Lucky is more concerned about a promise that she has
to break. She would rather
jeopardize an investigation
than break a stupid promise.
And they, apparently
they talked forever in this meeting.
And she wouldn't let up.
up. You're disrespecting me. You're not obeying me. I'm sad. I'm disappointed. Even though Campbell gave
good reason, why not to do that? Why not to release that info to the media? She doesn't care.
She only cares about herself. She went to great lengths to bully these people. Some people cried.
I guarantee you one of them was Leah. What that girl has been through. She thinks,
about this every single day. There's not a day that goes by. Something stupid like she didn't get a
tweet out on time. She's beating herself up over that. It's ridiculous. You can't beat yourself up over that.
Somebody sent an email. She didn't read the email. Guys, well, you stop sending emails. Pick up the phone
to talk to people. Don't just email something expecting that they're going to read it right away.
I'm not going to get into that part, but I guarantee Aaliyah was the one that was crying. She makes people
because now her credibility, Brenda Lucky's credibility, is going to be damaged.
She wanted so much to go to Trudeau.
Hey, Trudeau, I'm able to help you out, okay?
With the gun legislation that you want to pass through, these are the guns he used.
These are why we should ban these guns.
Everybody will be behind you.
Here are the details.
She wanted instant gratification from Trudeau.
Peace, that would give her pleasure.
honest to God
she didn't care about these guys
and that's what a lot of the RCMP bosses do
if they don't get their own way
they'll turn to bullying
these guys were bullied
by Brenda Lucky
you're never getting bullying out of the RCMP
especially when your top dog
is the biggest bully of all
RCMP members you think your boss is lucky
your boss is Trudeau
She's a puppet.
Always has been.
She's done this before.
She didn't want to get scolded by Trudeau again.
Do you remember when she struggled with the definition of systemic racism?
And then Trudeau came out and said,
I think she needs to rethink that.
What did she say a couple of days later?
Yes, there's absolutely systemic racism.
Yeah, all of a sudden, absolutely.
She got scolded by Trudeau.
This is your boss.
Interfers.
It looks like it.
Interfers with an investigation.
tries to make them change their mind by making them feel bad.
I'm sad.
I'm disappointed.
You're disrespecting me.
Throws that at them as a tactic to get them to change their mind.
She doesn't care about those people.
Who does she care about?
I don't know.
And I guarantee you, I'll put money on it.
After those members, did she ever contact the ERT team?
After Warpman was taken out?
Did she ever ask the ERT team, how you doing?
how you're making out. You had a pretty tough few days there. Did she ever make the call?
Made that call that day, right? Or maybe the next day? Guaranteed you, she never made the call.
But she's sure quick to jump on these people. Disatisfied. That's what bosses do. Too many of them,
not all of them, but too many of them. And how do you think? Guaranteed this Leah girl has PTSD.
after going through that, beats herself up over a silly, you know, a silly reason, I think.
I should have, I should have, I should have sent it out quicker.
It's my fault.
Maybe there'd still be people alive.
No, it's not your fault.
But of course you have PTSD.
It's not just the trauma.
The trauma is Brenda Lockheed, too.
That adds to it.
She made people cry in there.
What a leader.
Reprimanded them.
for making sense.
When there's a crime scene and we put tape up,
police officers are instructed to stand at the crime scene.
We take notes of who comes in and who enters.
That's our job, okay?
Only people that are allowed to cross the line have to do with the investigation.
For example, if my boss, my inspector comes,
Clint, I want to enter the crime scene.
For what reason?
I just want to look around.
No, you can't.
It's my job to say, even though he's an inspector, no, you can't come in.
You're going to damage the scene.
You're going to interrupt the scene.
There's no reason for you to come in.
Brenda Lucky crossed the line for personal gain.
People get fired for that.
She was willing to damage their investigation.
It's incredible to look good.
She helped out her boss.
She wanted gratitude, fulfillment, pleasure, instantly.
22 people were murdered, but she's sad because Campbell wouldn't tell the media what kind of guns were used.
That's why she's sad and disappointed.
Not that 22 people were murdered.
Campbell, how dare you make?
Brenda Lucky feels sad.
Nuddy.
It's completely nutty
She's sad because she has to break of promise now
Sad she's going to look weak in front of her boss
I'm going to get in trouble again
I don't care about your investigation
My credibility is on the line Campbell
You've disappointed me
You've made me sad
Yes, is there tears? Is there tears? Do I hear crying? Good
Have you changed your mind? Damn it
You don't get more political than this
She wanted to help Trudeau
Push this gun legislation through
That'll just add to his argument.
Need to tell the public. Get it out in the media.
What guns were used?
Assault military style, right?
I'm going to tell you that you've disrespected me.
You disobeyed me. You made me sad and disappointed.
I'm going to bully you.
So you'll change your mind.
What length will we go to?
Making somebody feel bad for political game.
There's nobody worse.
There's nobody worse.
She's helping.
the liberal government to stay in power.
That's what she was trying to do.
I don't know, guys.
Reading this just brought back memories.
It brought back memories.
You know, her using those words, I'm sad and disappointed.
This group of people went through the most traumatic experience of their entire lives,
and then you have a boss.
No kudos given to them.
Instead, it's the opposite.
They beat you down sometimes.
They don't care.
There's no compassion.
even with the RCMP top dog.
There really isn't.
I've seen it happen too many times in my career.
I've had a boss say to me how disappointed he was in me
over something ridiculous.
Something out of my control.
I didn't do anything wrong if you can believe it.
But those words will never leave my mind.
And to unjustly say that to somebody,
to damage them more, that just burns me right up.
That gets me going.
That's why I brought this up.
It's how Brenda Lucky treated these people in that meeting
after the worst experience they just went through.
And then doesn't even listen to common sense.
Just worried about her back.
It looks like Brenda Lucky had a conversation with this minister or Trudeau.
And she promised them.
I'll get that info you need.
I'll reprimand.
Be little if I have to.
I'll get it out of them for you, boss.
Because you're a puppet.
A sickle.
A complete sicko.
She's going to get a handle on bullying all right.
See, no other news outlet is going to talk about bullying.
But that's what I see when I read this.
How dare you?
Treat them like that.
Make them feel that way.
And damage.
Add to it.
damage. You're damaging their brain. I know. Hey. Oh, Clint, you're kind of taking a little bit too far.
Am I? Am I? Like when Leah thinks about this incident that happened in April, she's also thinking
about Brenda Lucky. It adds to it. Knocking on you, hitting at your head. There were tears in
the room. Who was crying? I bet you it wasn't Brenda Lucky. At first I thought, well, she'd be the only
one crying. I could see her crying over this.
Not getting her own way.
Gonna get in trouble from Trudy.
Dumb.
How dumb can you be?
I know people are just human, but you can't make that kind of mistake.
I know I just keep on talking about it, but I can't help it.
You can't.
I've never.
I was a boss for a lot of years.
I never sat down and told somebody how disappointed I was in them.
You're just disrespecting me.
You're not obeying me.
You're not obeying my.
my order, you've made me sad and disappointed in you.
I mean, Campbell came out and said she was upset, clearly upset.
What are you upset about?
It's a weird thing to get upset about.
I don't know.
Needs to be an investigation now.
How did Trudeau interfere?
Did Trudeau interfere?
According to Campbell,
Lucky said to him,
I promised Trudeau in the minister of whatever,
Blair or something.
that I would get the answer.
Why would they have that conversation?
What do you need the answer for?
To push Trudeau's agenda on guns.
We don't care about the investigation that you're doing, police.
And, oh, oh, something I forgot.
The commissioner said, you don't understand.
This is tied to pending gun control legislation that would make officers in the public safer.
How does that legislation that make officers
How does that make the public safer?
I'm just curious
because I don't feel safer.
Less good people have guns now.
The same amount and more bad guys
are going to have the guns.
That makes it safer?
What a liberal!
The world is, I can't believe,
the people that are running Canada.
And that's why Trudeau hired Lucky.
So we could turn her into a puppet,
a walking talking puppet so he can control her.
Anyways, let's take some calls.
I can't wait to see the investigation.
I can't wait to see it.
And you know what's silly?
Maybe I'm getting upset.
That's only really one side, right?
We don't know the other sides yet.
But it's going to be something to hear.
What comes out of this?
Because what do you do?
What do you do with that?
you have a cop that's willing to jeopardize an investigation
over a promise that you made with somebody
for personal gain, gratification.
Good job, lucky.
That's what she wanted.
Not a big deal, yeah, it's a big deal.
It's a big deal on how she made those people feel.
That's the biggest deal to me.
Hey, Clinton, Clinton calling.
Soon to be a long-time listener, love your show.
I had a question for...
Soon-to-be.
long-time listener. Love the show.
Thanks, dude. Thanks for Colin. I think you said your name was Sebastian. I don't know.
I know it's always up to the own individual to make their own decisions and whatnot.
But currently I have over 25 years in the military, three trades in the military, which is nice.
I could swap back and forth into different things that I enjoyed.
Now being at the point I am, being 42, I'm finally at a position where I'm not really doing my job.
more administrative, so I'm fairly high up now.
Looking at possibly going into policing,
I'm just wondering if you think 42 is ideal to move into a second career as policing.
Right now I'm currently fit and still able to do the job, military-wise,
and would be able to do policing-wise,
but I'm just wondering if it would be something that you would recommend.
Thanks.
You're welcome. Thanks for the call, dude.
it's quite possible that this is the best way to do it.
Really, if you think about it, most people become cops young in life.
But why not become a police officer later in life after he'd done a bunch of things?
It's the same old thing like when people have kids.
Let's have fun while we're young and then when we're older, we'll have kids.
You've already done your career.
You got a pension.
You could have two pensions.
I worked with a guy from the military and I think he had two pensions.
military and our CMP, which is a great way to go.
You've done your job.
You got nothing to lose.
Like, why wouldn't?
You're only 42.
That's nothing.
You could be 63 and retired with a pension.
Or you could quit after five years, 10 years.
This is why you do it.
Because the experience of going to depot is amazing.
When I finished depot, I couldn't understand why people were saying to me,
like cadets were saying to me,
oh, I'm going to really miss this place.
And I'm like, you're weird.
How can you miss this place?
But now that I'm older and I'm retired, I miss it.
I wish I could do it over.
So yeah, just go.
I know I'm not supposed to say this, but just go for the experience at Depot.
It was the most, it was the best part of my life graduating from Depot.
There's two careers, Depot, and then your policing career.
And the best part was Depot.
because I made it through it.
And it felt good.
It felt good to get a real badge.
And I honestly think 42 is a good age.
You know, apply now, get in at 43.
There's no polygraph anymore.
There's no test.
Perfect opportunity.
You're fit.
That's one last thing to worry about, right?
And you said that you're not even doing your job anymore.
So yeah, go out and do something else.
Absolutely.
I wouldn't even wait, I wouldn't even hesitate.
And hopefully when you graduate, you'll have a new commissioner.
Good morning, Mrs. Jobs.
Just to follow up on my call yesterday,
I asked about stuff to take and not to take
and stuff that you wish you had left at home and whatnot yesterday.
One thing I forgot to add was just some stuff that they give you.
I remember in one of your videos you said that you had a wallet from depot.
you were there 20 some years ago
I was just wondering like what
is some stuff that they give you
and some I don't know some cool stuff
that you get like I don't know if you had bought that wallet there
either giving it or yeah
so just some some extra stuff that they give you
that just probably
make it a little easier to know what to take and what not to take
and that stuff but yeah I'll give me soon
and thank you much for your video
thank you very welcome baby
he's from Australia
um
he's called me four
sounds like a good guy
I'll do a video
I'll do a video on what to bring to depot okay
you don't have to bring a whole lot
tell you the truth
and yes I got this wallet at a depot
and what I love about it
back in the day when I loved what I loved about it
was that I would go to the cactus club
and I know I've already said this
but when I went to pay at the cactus
because I was so proud
that I was a police officer
I would go to get my bank card
and I am. Yeah, I am. I'm a police officer. That's how proud I was. Love this wallet. I love it when you
when you get pulled over and you got to look for your driver's license. Yeah, I used to be a police
officer. You know what I'm saying? Don't do that. I'm not saying to do that. But it's not my fault
if he sees it. And yeah, I had to purchase this. When they give you your badge, it's in a little
tiny wallet that you don't want to use. So you take it out of that wallet and you put it into a real
wallet and you get these at Deppo.
Thanks for your call.
Hey, Clint.
I hope you're doing well, man.
My name's Owen.
Owen, I used to work with Owen.
I won't tell that story.
Thanks for calling, dude.
Owen.
I'm 20 years old.
I just got the news today that I actually was deferred for three years for
a S&D process, but not.
after my armac so
you know I just wanted to hear your opinion on it
you know if that was just you know get back to me
you put in a video or whatnot but yeah
basically got
three years
deferred regular member application questionnaire
that's what a lot of people got deferred
I used to work on that questionnaire
in recruiting
and I had to defer a lot of people, not because I wanted to.
Got deferred for three years for Armac talking about, you know, at work.
I told them that I leave early sometimes.
Sometimes I half ask the things that, you know, the tasks at work and whatnot.
And, you know, just texting and driving was one of them as well.
It's just some stuff that was stacked up on top of each other
And it's really really frustrating
You know I I've never drinking in dry
I drove
In my opinion I think I'm you know
Ideal candidate to be a cadet at depot right
You know everything that I do my daily life
I think about you know
Oh will this affect my file or you know how it does affect me getting into policing
You know it's pretty
heartbreaking news still kind of trying to process it three years a long time but um well i'm in the
process for uh my municipal police here um halifax regional police so uh we'll see how that process
goes and um yeah it just doesn't really make sense to me um like i said still trying to process but
i'd love to hear your opinion on us um you know it's just just just heartbreaking um it's been a few months
and, you know, my second time applying, I failed the air pat the first time.
And, yeah, I just, I think it's, it's crazy just the fact that don't do anything.
You know, I've never, most have ever done to smoke weed.
Like I said, I barely drank, you know, I, I've been kind of set myself up for this for
years, but, yeah, this was, this is heartbreaking news, and she wanted to get your opinion on.
Thanks, Clint.
I love your videos.
Keep it up.
And yeah, just want to say thank you.
Okay.
I don't know why you got deferred,
but those reasons don't make any sense
that you get deferred for three years.
When I deferred people for three years,
it was because they committed a criminal act.
Maybe they stole something at Walmart.
Deferred for three years.
You said you leave early from work.
I don't know.
Maybe you got a weirdo
that was reviewing your questionnaire.
Maybe they're looking at that
as some kind of internal theft kind of thing.
Well, you're stealing from the company.
That's the only thing I could come up with, but these reasons, texting and driving, no, you're not going to get deferred for three years.
I wouldn't do that.
Did you know there's a way to appeal and I don't know how that was?
Because when I was in recruiting, there was a cadet that appealed the decision and it went to a board.
I don't know if they still have that.
I don't know, dude.
I don't know.
It was only when I deferred people for three years, it was only because they could.
committed.
So, for example, let's say marijuana is still illegal.
Hey, when did you do marijuana yesterday?
Okay, you're deferred for three years.
Stuff like that.
Oh, you were drinking or driving yesterday?
Okay, well, three years deferred.
Leaving early, I don't think that's solid enough.
You said you're 20, but you're heartbroken.
I wouldn't be heartbroken at 20.
I would look at this as a good thing.
I really would.
Man, you're so young.
I think it's better to be 23 and going to Depple or 24 and going to Deppo.
You'll see what I mean if you make it.
And it sounds like you're going to stick with it.
It sounds like you're going to make it.
But I wouldn't necessarily see it as a bad thing.
That's my opinion of it.
I think it's silly for the reasons you give me.
You know, so many people.
And I'm not saying this is your case, okay?
But there's so many people I remember when I was,
people come up to me and like when I was a cop and they'll be like, yeah, I didn't.
what? I got deferred. They gonged me.
And then they'll tell me the reason why they were gonged and I'll be like, that's not the reason.
Okay.
People don't really want to tell you the real reason.
But I'm not saying that you did this here.
I don't even know why I brought that up, but Owen, stay in there, man.
Don't be heartbroken. Be happy. You'll get in.
Hey, Clint, city cop Jason here. I just wanted to start.
City cop Jason, you know what?
I've said this before.
You need to get a YouTube channel and name it Citicop, Jason.
By saying shout out to La Tank.
I just saw your episode where he talked about him and his MS and the whole coffee thing.
What an absolute inspiration that did is.
And the fact that he's still on the job and he's got the second thing going with the coffee and raising funds.
that is absolutely awesome.
I'll be looking to get some myself.
On that note, just wondering, I know you are retired,
and I think I'm approaching that way myself,
and I'm just wondering whether you had thought yourself
about side gig in your retirement.
I know you're doing the podcast thing and all that other stuff,
but I'm curious if people are throwing,
or family members are throwing different ideas at you
for different side jobs or other jobs that you could be doing
or if you're just enjoying retirement as it is.
Just really curious if you would be interested in something police oriented
or if you're happy to leave that behind
or if you're looking at something like coffee or, you know, you name it.
I'd just be curious your thoughts on that.
Love the show as always.
Thanks, bye.
Thanks for your call.
I like doing what I'm doing and no, I don't want to get a job.
I remember after I retired, my dad called me up and said,
hey, they need a city manager of some sort down at the police station
I just retired from.
And I'm like, Dad, why would I do that?
Make a quarter of the wage that I was making?
You know what I mean?
No, thank you.
No, but I did think about it.
I did think about going and doing something else,
and then I realized no.
Hey, man, I'm going to leave another link in the description
if you get this coffee.
And it is cool what LaTang is doing.
That video that I showed you,
what's my last episode, guys.
I talk about this guy, you should watch it if you haven't seen it.
This police officer has MS developed his own coffee brand,
and the proceeds if you buy it, they go to help somebody out.
And I started thinking, I started thinking, and I probably shouldn't say this.
I was laying in bed thinking about this.
Peace of cops are so cheap.
I know a lot of, nobody probably has, not too many people have purchased this coffee,
which they shouldn't.
Why wouldn't you?
then I started going down the wormhole of
What about the police stations?
All Canadian police stations should have this coffee.
Did you know every police station?
They buy coffee?
It's usually Nabob.
Why would you buy Nabob when you could buy this?
A police officer created it, basically, came up with the idea.
Now, LaTank, I don't know what police department police station he came from.
But does that police station have this coffee in the police station?
Why do we have coffee at police stations?
We serve coffee to bad guys, to inmates.
Now, I would hope that the police station he worked for has ordered this coffee piece of be pretty weird if you hadn't.
And how cool would that be serving this coffee to inmates?
They're drinking the coffee and at the same time they're helping out police and people who suffer from disease.
diseases. But you just know, you just know, right? Well, they can't go down. That's not a hill I'm going to
die on, Clint. Okay, we're people consider this. Maybe they consider it racist coffee. Somebody would
complain, right? An inmate would complain. That's why they're probably not doing it.
Well, we didn't know the coffee came from another police officer. We're not drinking that.
There'd be a big to-do to do. Be in the media. It'd be everywhere.
inmates forced to drink racist coffee.
But really, I was laying in bed, I started getting angry.
I started getting angry at all the police stations who don't serve this when you should be.
Like, why wouldn't you do that?
Why wouldn't you really get behind something this good?
And I know I don't know the answer, but if it, his police station doesn't serve it?
I don't know, you're screwballs.
You're an absolute screwball, whoever is running that place.
And I don't know why I jump to that conclusion.
Maybe they are.
But I jump to that conclusion because there's just not enough compassion in police forces.
And that's just another example that I made up in my head.
If they haven't purchased it, then you should be ashamed to yourself.
How about that?
That's what I think.
It's funny.
You're not allowed, right?
Some police stations have a coffee fund where they, if you're part of the coffee
fund, you can go and pour yourself a cup of coffee. But if you're not part of the, where
you're not paying monthly, you're not allowed to do it. You know how many members have gotten
in trouble by going back to cells and pouring themselves a little cup of coffee?
Every police station I went to, somebody was getting in trouble for pouring themselves a
cup of inmate coffee. The things, the things that you get in trouble for, it's like everything,
Every little thing.
I left my taser on my front, in my office, right on the table.
By accident, I went out to my car to grab something.
Oh my God.
Of course, a giant, huge email had to go out to everybody in the detachment,
showing how stupid I was, making an example out of me.
Why wouldn't you just come to me?
Really, it's a taser.
No, somebody could come in from the outside.
go into your office, take that taser and start tasering people.
Shut up.
The amount of things that you get in trouble for.
I should do a video on that.
You're taking too many notebooks.
The batteries.
Stop using all the batteries.
I'm so dumb.
Oh, was that the last call? I think so.
I think so.
I've been down here for, I don't know, a couple hours.
Thanks for watching.
And subscribe.
I'm getting over the vid, guys, okay?
So I'll be better next.
time. Bye-bye.
