Investigate Earth Conspiracy Podcast - Ghislaine Maxwell Trial Conspiracy Podcasts | Day 2 | Corruption
Episode Date: November 30, 2021On this episode, we discuss what happened on Day 2 of the Ghislaine Maxwell Sex trafficing trial and why there may very well could be corruption from the very start of this trial. All of that and more... on this episode of Ghislaine Maxwell Trial Conspiracy Podcasts | Day 2 | Corruption
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And welcome to Investigate Earth Podcast.
This is going to be day two, a recap of day two,
Jisleine Maxwell trial.
That is taking place in New York.
And, you know, we had last night's episode of the Jolene Maxwell trial day one.
We basically just kind of recapped what exactly happened,
which was not a ton of stuff that happened yesterday.
There was open arguments.
They called the first witness yesterday.
And, you know, the usual stuff they do in these cases.
But tonight and today, we're going to briefly go over what happened on day two.
And as we know with trials, there's things that happen.
And but, you know, especially in the beginning of trials, it kind of is slow going.
And, you know, you don't get as much information right at the beginning because everybody's kind of doing their, you know, their procedures and how they're going to do things and everything else.
The Kyle Reading House trial happens with everything.
So, but they were able to call more witnesses today.
and but we're specifically, we've had requests from our listeners to talk about the corruption aspect,
a little more in depth today.
So we're going to talk about that and talk about the specifics of who, who is who,
what this could mean for the trial, what this can mean for the outcome of the trial,
and what would be the point of some of the people they've appointed,
and what this could mean for the whole situation.
So I am your host, Chad, alongside of my beautiful wife, Sherry.
Hello guys, how are you?
And just to add a little bit with Chad said, yesterday, I think it was the plane, the pilot that was a witness yesterday.
And today, do you know how many witnesses it was today?
But we know for sure one of the Jane Does was a witness today.
Yeah, one of the females.
Yeah, one of the females.
She was 14 years old.
She testified today.
And so we're going to recap basically what happened today briefly.
we're not going to go, you know, an hour on everything that happened today.
But we are going to recap at least, you know, to let you guys know.
And honestly, there wasn't a ton of stuff that happened today, with the exception of calling the witness and all that.
So basically, an accuser testified today that she received payment from Epstein Victim Fund.
She also testified that what happened when she had went to the mansion in Palm Beach.
and all of that was kind of taken place today.
So the first Maxwell and Epstein accuser took the stand today and said she received a multi-million dollar payment from a victim fund set up by financier's estate.
Because of that, the accuser identified as Jane told assistant U.S. Attorney Allison Moe that she agreed to dismiss a civil suit in 2020 that she brought against Maxwell and Epstein.
Jane said she ultimately received more than two million from the fund and added that she had no financial stake in the outcome of Maxwell's criminal trial.
So obviously, these victims were trying to be paid off through the funds.
You know, she's basically saying that she doesn't really care what happens with the Maxwell trial or not.
And I guess that is something they have to kind of dig into a little bit, especially since she's been paid.
You know, will she fully cooperate and will she actually say what really happened and all that?
You know, the similar situation with Gage Gerst courts in the Kyle Reddinghouse trial because he was suing the city for $10 million.
So obviously, you know, that was something the defense brought.
up in that case was, oh, well, you know, how likely are you to win the case and actually make
money off the city if Kyle Ridinghouse has found guilty a murder in this? And it would have been.
He would have had a much greater possibility of, well, to be honest, I don't think he has no chance
of a lawsuit now. But very similar circumstances. That's why they have to ask, you know,
hey, so even though you receive $2 million, was there some kind of promise here that, you
you would testify, either not testify the correct things or, you know, hide certain things from
the prosecution or whatever the case may be. So I think that's important that they kind of
mentioned that in the fact that they had $2 million that she got, which obviously that was like
a common occurrence, I think. I think they did this to quite a few victims. Yeah, after he died,
right? Is that what you're talking about? Maybe, I mean, who knows?
The settlement, you know, because they settled out of court without a civil lawsuit. Because, you know,
a civil lawsuit is way easier to win than a criminal lawsuit because you don't have to approve beyond a reasonable doubt.
So she could have like easily won that suit too.
But I think that it's making a stance saying, look, I'm here.
This is what happened to me.
I'm testifying based on the facts.
And even though I got paid off, I have, you know, I have nothing, you know, I'm not getting paid for this.
trial at all. So what I tell you is the truth and the truth only because I have nothing, nothing to gain or lose from this trial.
Well, I think she has something to lose because I really feel like she was a victim from both Jeffrey and, you know, Ms. Maxwell.
Yeah.
So I think that, you know, deep down inside, I know she wants to see justice be served.
Yeah, exactly.
You know?
Well, you would think, yeah.
I mean, she's gotten the money now.
She was a victim.
Yeah, and, you know, and the best of reality of it.
And victims want justice more than money.
Yeah.
So the first witness that actually took the stand today, besides Jane Doe, I guess we can call her.
Jane took the stand in the afternoon, and the testimony carried over from yesterday from the pilot of the Lulita Express.
And Lawrence Paul Vesoski Jr., Jeffrey Epstein's longtime pilot, basically described Jeffrey Epstein's properties.
he talked about the Zora Ranch in New Mexico.
He talked about a very nice apartment in Paris.
Basaski, who took the stand again today,
was also asked about the layout of Little St. James,
Epstein's Caribbean Hideaway,
nicknamed Pedophile Island by locals.
And there were actual locals that nicknamed this island at
because everyone kind of knew that to begin with.
He testified about the Bowen 727.
He used the shuttle of the financier
and his guest between 2000 and 2004
calling a recreational vehicle.
and he basically, you know, this jet was named the Lolita Express, as we talked about yesterday,
because of Lolita, I guess, meaning the little girls that he would take on this airplane all the time.
And this aircraft was actually located in the storage facility in Georgia in August 2020.
And so there's pictures, and they brought up a lot of that in court today, pictures of the airplane,
just showing what the inside of the plane was, was all about.
So he actually testified that he never actually saw any sexual activity.
He said that he was under cross-examination that he never witnessed any sex acts or underage girls
without their parents aboard several private aircraft that he piloted for the multimillionaire millionaire pedophile.
He said, I never saw any sexual activity.
He told the defense attorney Quishon Everdell,
who quizzed the pilot on the stand about the 1,000 or so flights he piloted from the early 90s to 2004.
He said he did not notice any underage girls without their parents on the planes.
That included both Epstein accuser Virginia Roberts and the victim identified as Jane at the trial.
Vasoski said he flew Roberts in the mid to late 90s but believed her to be a shorter woman with dirty blonde hair.
He added that he believed an Epstein associate named Jane that he met on one of the planes was a mature woman with some piercing powder blue eyes.
So, you know, it kind of goes on, you know, they ask him about, well, did you see any sexual activity ever?
during your time. And even one of the females that testified today, Jane, was obviously
14 years old. And, you know, he even went on to say after they questioned him about, okay,
well, what about Jane? You took her, right? Do you remember her? Oh, yeah. Well, she looked like a younger,
or she looked like a woman to me, a short woman, you know. I mean. And let me ask you something,
Chad, and I don't know if you know this, but what, first of all, first question, what kind of jet were they on?
This jet are, you know, when the pilots are flying, or pilot pilots, whatever, when they're flying, is it, does it look like a commercial airplane where they can actually see what's going on in the passenger part of the plane?
Or is it blocked off?
Because I think that would make a big difference.
If, you know, if they're in the cockpit and they can't see their surroundings behind them, then maybe they wouldn't see things that did go on.
Well, I mean, and they may not have.
But a Boeing 727 is basically, I mean, it's like, it's very similar to what Southwest Airlines flies, the 737.
It's just the little cousin.
Not little, not much smaller, but it is a smaller version.
You know, but the reality is, you know, if there were underage girls, which obviously there have been underage girls on an airplane, as the pilot, you are, part of your job is to, you know, greet the guests.
You know, you talk to the guests.
you do all these things.
You interact with the guests on a regular basis.
Now, when you're flying, you do not.
But, you know, before the flight, after the flight, so on and so forth.
I mean, yes, obviously he's going to see girls on the plane.
I think he's probably lying.
Can't say that for sure.
Well, as far as saying in lying, you know, younger girls, when they're dressed up with makeup and clothes,
they look a lot older than their real age, right?
And we've seen this all the time.
Like we have friends that their daughters are like models and are in all the competitions.
And they look like, you know, just regular girls until they're made up.
So I don't know.
Yeah, I just, I just, I'm just, I'm just, I'm still, 14 years old though.
I mean, 14 years old.
And, and only that, I mean, there's obviously been wide scale reports of girls much younger even.
I mean, I've heard there's been reports of eight and nine and ten, you know, girls on these planes.
I mean, these rumors and these quote unquote conspic.
theories that were nothing more of the conspiracy theories for years and years and years.
And as we said, Alex Jones is one of the first one to break it.
There were multiple other sources that broke this news as well.
This was more than 10 to 15 years ago.
I mean, inside sources do talk.
Whether people know it or realize it or not.
Part of the problem was, though, was that Epstein was what many, you know, said about him as he was untouchable by law enforcement for years.
and you know everyone thought nothing was ever going to happen to him he had way too many connections
and local law enforcement federal uh everything else and we're going to get a little more into that
um in just a little bit as as far as how the corruption was then and how it probably plays into
why and who is over these cases and stuff right now and what that means i looked pretty heavily
into this today uh last night we kind of got out we really wanted just recap yesterday kind of what
happened, but today I really wanted to kind of dig in a little deeper and just see what maybe
this means and why, you know, why the prosecutor is who they are and so and so forth.
So they also talked about Epstein's gift giving. Maxwell's defense attorney, Christian
Everdell, during a cross-examination of Jeffrey Epstein's former pilot, asked about gifts the sex
friend, sex man bestowed upon his longtime employee. So the pilot who worked for Epstein for close
the 30 years received a number of pricey gifts throughout his employment, including 40 acres
of land on the pedophiles' New Mexico Rants for him to build a house.
He even paid for his two daughters' private high school education.
And so he went on to say, yes, he believed in higher education.
But he listed a number of fancy sports in Vasasi's name, including a Land Rover, Mercedes,
a Jaguar.
He also said that the cars were Epstein's, but he and other staff were allowed to drive them
near his Palm Beach mansion.
So obviously, Epstein paid him a not only ton of money,
but he gave him gifts and gifts and gifts,
which were probably more so bribes than anything,
because this pilot probably knows a lot more
than he's ever going to say on the stand.
And the reality is, is, you know, how deep are they going to go?
We don't know.
You know, it seems like anymore,
if you guys watch testimony in Congress or anything else,
you know, all the government does anymore is lie.
They lie on the stand.
They lie in front of Congress.
They lie under oath.
It doesn't matter.
Under oath or anything else doesn't matter anymore.
Because it's just like the justice system, as long as you're protected, you've got nothing to worry about.
And we're going to talk about.
I believe everyone in this case is protected.
I really do.
As far as defendants and witnesses or defendants or what?
I know.
I mean, I'm saying anyone that is going to testify, especially on behalf of.
of because look here's the here's the interesting thing this is the very interesting thing about
this case and we're going to talk about the corruption side of this but you got to you have to
understand that prosecutors usually prosecution attorneys usually are out to win they're out to
win they're out to bring anyone and everyone down that they possibly can to look good on their
resume and so these witnesses that they're calling especially prosecutions say the the pilot and these
girls and whoever else.
Well, we know that part of what prosecuting attorneys do to begin with is they they coach
or help their whoever they're going to examine, yeah, their witness.
They coach these people into kind of, you know, how to say what and not necessarily what to
say, but they go over with them like the basics and all this stuff.
Now look, in a high profile case like this, don't think that, you know, if the prosecution
wanted to not bring up certain things, you know, from these witnesses, they're going to say,
look, you know, don't got to mention that. We're not going to kill you on this. If you don't say this,
we're not going to do this. You just stick to like this little plan. Right. Right. And we'll get
through this. And I believe by watching Kyle's trial that if the prosecution doesn't bring it up,
then the defense can't bring it up. It has to be like almost like a rebutal or, I mean,
I don't know if I'm right or wrong, but that's what it seemed like.
like in the last case that we were really into is that if it wasn't brought up,
it can't be brought up unless it's a witness for the defendant.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
So the former pilot went on to say basically that he would have quit his job
if he would have known that either of them were abusing young girls.
Now, the thing about it is, is we just talked about the entire elaborate gifts that he got.
And, you know, for me, you know, I have morals, obviously, to the point where if I knew that was happening, I would have quit, period.
Gifts or not.
But, but that's just me.
I think that's disgusting, you know.
But there are probably a lot of people out there that, you know, getting millions of dollars plus all these gifts and this and that.
And you don't have to, you don't think you're ever going to be charged or whatever.
I don't know.
But, you know, the thing is is that screwed up people kind of,
They tend to attract or they tend to find people that are going to be their, you know, their co-conspirators, per se.
Right, right.
Or people that are not going to go and run and tell on them.
They're not going to snitch on them because they're part of their little group, you know.
Right.
And more than likely, you know, here's the other thing is Epstein and Maxwell could have had something on this pilot.
That's what I was getting ready to say is that, you know, I think a lot of what Epstein did to get away with what he did was he blackmailed very important people.
You know, and we're talking about that last night.
Well, if I know you did this and I did this and we both did this, then neither one of us can rat each other out, basically.
So I think that, you know, Jeffrey Epstein is like, you know, maybe he did say like, oh, here, go, you know, have fun with this girl, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Nothing, you know, there's nothing to it.
But after the fact, you're like, he's like, I got you, bro.
If you even say a word, you're going down.
You know, it's like almost a blackmail.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, and that's exactly how he got away with so much stuff for so long.
And so there were some high profile names that were brought up.
Bill Clinton was among one of those.
He was basically brought up by the pilot.
He testified that he would have been told in advance of a guest like Clinton was going to be flying on Epstein's jet.
He said there might be special catering.
The defense attorney asked about Clinton who has been photographed on Maxwell aboard the Lillity Express.
And the pilot replied, yeah, absolutely.
And when asked if remembered a victim in this case identified as Jane riding on the plane,
the pilot said, I can visualize their sit in the pasturing apartment like I would, say, President Clinton, he said.
So Clinton's name was one of them that was brought up by him.
You know, as we've already talked about before, Clinton's name was on the flight log.
I don't know how many times, ridiculous amount of times.
And that's just interesting.
He's like, I can see her like he's visualizing her in the same seat or close to where Clinton was.
And so he obviously saw Clinton a lot on this airplane.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So then besides, you know, obviously the pilot, they had the first accuser, which was named Jane.
She was most frequently in the room when you had sexual contact with Jeffrey Epstein when you were 14 years old.
The prosecutor asked Jislane Maxwell.
Or they asked her, Jisleine Maxwell.
So they were asking her, was Jisleine Maxwell in the room a lot when you were being sexually assaulted by Jeffrey Eppesley?
Epstein and she said yes.
And Jane says that she first met Jeffrey Epstein and Gisland Maxwell when she was at Camp
Interlocking in Michigan in the summer of 94 between seventh and eighth grade.
She said in one instance, she said Maxwell and Epstein brought her up a staircase in
Epstein's bedroom at his Palm Beach mansion and started undressing.
They moved me over to the bed and took their clothes off and they started to sort of like fond
to each other, Jane said, adding that they casually giggled about it.
She said they asked me to take my top off.
Then there were hands everywhere, she said.
Hands, I would assume both.
And that's why I talked about last night.
I don't think it was just,
Jislane, you know, finding girls for Epstein.
I think it was her also participating in the abuse as well.
So, and actually that was, you know,
if you guys watched the documentary, you know,
the documentary showed a lot about how she was, you know,
we talked about last night.
She was very good with these girls.
She kind of was like almost like
motherly type figure.
But that's also, she kind of gained their trust.
And so many times it would be her that was kind of instigating things to begin with.
Or, you know, making it seem like everything was okay and so on and so forth.
So.
But for Jane to actually testify that, yeah, there were hands all over.
It wasn't just his hands that Dazleen's hands were all over her too.
That really is a strong testimony right there because.
it's putting her in, you know, the same kind of position that Jeffrey was in, you know?
Yeah.
She, you know, she can deny and say she was like Adam and Eve and, you know, she told Adam not to eat the apple, but he did anyways.
Well, she ate the apple too.
She was involved in the same thing and doing the same thing and, you know, doing the same acts.
So she is just as guilty.
Yeah.
In my opinion.
No, I agree.
So let's get into where the corruption is.
we believe and like what this really means because to me this this type of shit blows my mind i mean
it always i mean we talked about last night that we we were involved in a case as well nothing like
this but uh you know it was a civil thing and you know how we saw corruption and how things can be
corrupt and how things are set up to be corrupt you know money talks and not just money but when
you have blackmail i mean that's you take that a step further so when you have both high uh large amounts
of money, power and blackmail, you have a recipe for absolute corruption.
So here's how this whole case is laid out and who is a part of what and who is handling what.
And then we're going to talk about why that is.
Because I think this is where the corruption kind of begins.
Not begins, but it's there.
I mean, this is where it begins for the trial.
As far as a trial, yeah.
Maxwell was basically apprehended by federal agents in a small town in Bradford, New Hampshire.
And so the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York, which is SDNY, was handling the inquiry.
As a result of the brief hearing on Thursday afternoon, which was, I guess this was a while, when she was first apprehended, between Maxwell and the government, the SDNY will have unopposed jurisdiction.
So the specific SDNY unit taken charge of Maxwell's case immediately raised some eyebrows for a lot of people.
During a press conference, acting U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss noted that the SDNY's public corruption unit would like the Epstein case before be tasked with overseeing the prosecution.
Quote, it says, I worked to SDNY and did sex trafficking cases, noted former federal and state prosecutor and current CNN legal analyst Eli Honig.
They do not run out of public corruption unless there was some potential angle against a public official.
The Department of Justice basically describes this on their website.
They said the public corruption unit works in close partnership with the FBI and other federal, state, and city investigative agencies to maintain and protect the integrity of all levels of government.
The unit oversees the investigation and prosecution of corruption crimes committed by elected and appointed officials,
government employees, and individuals and companies doing business with a state, city, and federal government.
Corruption crimes investigated by this unit include bribery, embezzlement, and frauds committed against local state and federal government agencies.
they went on to say that a case like this ordinarily would not be staffed out of public corruption.
It would ordinarily be staffed out of what's known as the Violent and Organized Crime Unit.
So the Violent and Organized Crime Unit is where the SDN-wise human and sex trafficking coordinators are located.
So this is usually the unit that takes high-profile big cases that have to do with sex trafficking.
The fact that it is staffed out of public corruption tells me that a public official past or present is involved in at least some capacity.
capacity, she said.
So somebody else was involved so they couldn't take?
No.
I don't understand.
This is a public corruption unit.
The only reason that they should have any reason to take this case whatsoever is if there is a public official a part of this case.
So meaning they're going to go after a public official, they're going to try to prosecute a public official or government official.
But here's going to be the question is, are they really going to do that?
you know, they basically overstepped and said,
no, we're taking this case, sorry,
peace out the people that usually do this.
You know, the unit that usually does this,
the violent and organized crime unit,
they're the best of it.
That's what they do all the time.
This is what they follow up on, you know,
every day, 365 days a year.
They handle major cases all the time.
And for whatever reason,
the public corruption unit took this,
which just so happens to have a,
you know,
kind of a famous daughter,
or a famous person's
daughter as a prosecutor.
So the Maxwell case is,
they say tons of speculation
as part of the General Epstein story about a mysteriously
wealthy entrepreneur who allegedly ran a global sex
trafficking enterprise for years.
He was untouched by law
enforcement. And
so during his sentence,
he was allowed to work from home and entertain female
guest. You know,
he was untouched by pretty
much anyone. And was given
he was, now before this whole
thing. Epstein was basically given a sweetheart plea deal where he admitted to charges of soliciting
prostitution from a minor and the fact that they literally let him just go home, you know, chill,
he was, he still had females over, probably child, children again.
While many of his unnamed co-conspirators were gifted as an unprecedented and highly criticized
non-prosecution agreement. So most of everybody that was involved with him around him,
was granted a non-prosecutionaryment,
which means we won't prosecute you.
Don't worry.
Don't worry.
You're good.
Yeah.
You're good to go.
So I would assume a lot of these people, no, not her.
Obviously not her because she's being prosecuted.
I'm talking about the cases before.
Well, I'm just, I mean, who knows?
I'm just saying, yeah, I mean, she apparently wasn't going to, well, maybe she got that.
I mean.
In the cases before when he had to go to court, maybe.
Yeah, I don't know.
Yeah.
I have no idea.
But all I'm saying is people around him, probably what I would have,
assume as these high big-wig, you know, government officials, I wouldn't doubt probably were all
handed these little non-prosecution agreements that we'll probably never know about.
Oh, talking about all the people that went on the plane.
Yeah.
Yeah, the flight log people.
Yeah, we don't know.
So the U.S. attorney that ran the initial investigation and while he believed sham a prosecution
later threw up his hands complaining that he couldn't really punish Epstein because
of the serial sex offenders apparent catchet with an unnamed intelligence agency.
So the one that was trying to prosecute Epstein from the beginning, he couldn't because he had some kind of close relationship with some intelligence agency in our government.
I mean, this could be CIA, whoever.
Obviously, he has bigwigs and CIA or FBI or whoever.
Right.
But so he threw his hands up and said, I can't prosecute this guy because, I mean, he's in some close relationship with CIA or whoever.
Right.
And although he didn't go on to say why exactly, I'm sure he was probably threatened or whatever.
but this guy said it for some reason.
All the while, Bill Clinton, Chelsea Clinton, U.S.,
U.S., Barack, Bill Gates, Elon Musk, Prince Andrew,
and Donald Trump were global elites
were known associates of Epstein or Maxwell
or at least appeared with him in photographs,
while many maintaining their relationships with a duo
even after Epstein's 2009 sentencing.
So, you know, the SDN-wide's public corruption unit,
it may suggest some of the more high-profile government figures
associated with Epstein and Maxwell
may somehow be involved, obviously, with the case
as speculation and conspiracy theories abound,
which, I mean, you can just look at the flight logs.
I mean, maybe they weren't always going to Petitaph Island,
but the fact that his island was pretty much for that,
you know, a lot of those people that were flying to the Petitiful Island,
you know, who knows, even though you would have to prove,
and that would be the key.
You would have to prove it.
You'd have to get witnesses,
whoever that may be,
You would have to somehow get witnesses to testify to who these people were or whatever the case is.
And just the amount of women that he allegedly raped and, you know, whatever they did,
I just wonder how many, how many of those are actually going to come forward or even appear in this trial?
Because, you know, if Maxwell, whatever happens with this, you know, I think Maxwell,
going to go down. I think that she's going to go down hard. I think that, you know, the defense attorney,
as they say, which I think she should. I think she should absolutely be put in prison.
But if I'm the defense attorneys in this, at the very least, I'm going to try to bring everybody
else in this. Now, this goes back to the question. Are we going to, you know, is that going to happen?
Is it even able to be to happen? Especially if there's non-prosecution agreements in this case,
we don't know. But if there were non-prosecution agreements, we don't know. But if there were non-
prosecution agreements with the whole Jeffrey Epstein case, that would probably apply to this as well.
So that's what makes me think that Maxwell never signed a non-prosecution agreement because she
wouldn't be able to be prosecuted for anything.
I don't know.
I think that 2009 and this trial are like totally two different trials.
So I don't know.
You know, that's a good question.
Well, it all has to do with the sex trafficking.
I mean...
Yeah, it does, but it's two different trials.
Like, he already got busted in 2009.
This is a whole different thing that he was getting busted on before he died.
So the public corruption unit was the unit that brought the original Epstein charges and thus these additional Maxwell charges.
Likely because the involvement of public officials in Florida and given Epstein a sweetheart plea deal a number of years ago.
And so this is what noted former SDNY Deputy Chief and current CNN legal analyst Jennifer.
Roger said. My educated guess is that part of this investigation has involved whether any of those
officials had done anything wrong, like accepting bribes in connection with the matter. Bullshit.
See, this is where it starts already getting bullshit because now they're trying to say,
oh, well, the only reason, and by the way, this is a CNN analyst, which you already know
all they are is just bullshit anyway. But when you start trying to put off the fact that this
case, I mean, the fact that she's trying to say is probably because of some Florida official,
some Florida official that like, you know, just some little guy down there in Florida.
Don't worry.
I mean, that's probably the only reason they were able.
Well, regardless, I don't at all believe that the SDNY, you know, corruption unit is going to bring any of these big time people in.
And there's a lot of reasons behind this.
I think that is the exact reason this corruption unit even has this case.
As crazy as that sounds, it sounds asin.
It sounds asinine that like, well, hey, maybe there's some hope.
The public corruption units got it.
So we're going to find out who all these big wigs are and all this shit.
No, you're not.
No, you're not.
Because we're going to talk about who the prosecution attorney is here shortly.
Because I think that means everything.
So who is the prosecution attorney?
And what does this have to do with anything?
The lead prosecutor in the Maxwell case is a lady by the name of Maureen Comey.
okay
so if her last name
sounds familiar whatsoever
it's because she's the daughter
of the ex-fbii director
James Comey
now James Comey
for what many people believe
now if you remember his involvement
and everything that he tried to pull
when Trump was in office
James Colmy is
a deep state
clown
is what he is
I mean he
is so if you want to
call out someone that has
been almost publicly
who realized to be a deep state agent,
it would be Comey.
Everything that he did with Trump
and all that bullshit that he tried to pull,
this is his daughter that is the prosecution attorney,
one of the main ones.
The problem is there's, with this whole case,
there's so many familiar faces
that has turned up in this whole trial.
Well, so you kind of have to ask yourself,
like, okay, usually in a trial,
of this magnitude, the other, like, things would have been prosecuted.
The other team would have been prosecuting, right?
Yeah.
But in this case, this team that's prosecuting wanted it.
And it so happens that it's Comey's daughter that's prosecuting.
That tells me there is some kind of corruption right there.
Well, yeah, obviously.
Yeah.
But see, the problem is that Maureen Comey was actually one of those people that helped
to make sure nobody ever got to the bottom of what happened to Epstein.
And that was in 2019.
Yeah, so she already has like a vested interest in it, I guess.
Yeah, the video from the maximum security jail never surfaced.
And part of the team of legal people that was who made sure nobody was ever held responsible was Maureen Comey.
She was one of the ones that made sure nothing ever happened.
That nobody knew or nothing happened or...
Well, because look, look, who would have been prosecuting any of that corruption around there?
I mean, the security camera tapes being disappeared all of a sudden never happens.
and then when he decides to hang himself,
no security footage.
The logs where the guards sign in
and do all this stuff was gone the same day.
All of this stuff.
And even the fact that the autopsy of Epstein,
and there was one M.E.
that said, I don't really, I can't really say it
if it was, you know, suicide or not,
even though later, I think it was like two days later,
it came out of suicide.
So there was an initial report that he's like,
I don't know.
It was almost like an inconclusive type thing.
But then it was like no longer than one or two days later it came out.
Oh, it was suicide.
So that's what it was officially ruled.
So now she's basically here to make sure that she doesn't get prosecuted or that no one around her gets prosecuted.
I don't think it's, I don't think they're going to screw Maxwell.
I mean, I think they're going to put her in jail.
I think they're going to try to lock her and throw away the key.
But you think they're trying to be there to protect the other elite people.
Yeah, I mean, the thing is, like, Maxwell and Epstein both have friends in high places.
You know, Maureen Comey, you know, just a simple fact that they were over the case of Epstein.
And they were over the case that, you know, when you have something as, you know, when normal people, most people in society, if we remember when Epstein got murdered, basically, when we remember what happened and there was memes and everything going around for, they still.
go around. And by the way, Epstein didn't kill himself. You know, there were, there were things that people would say on live television. If they ever got an opportunity to be on live television, a news or something, you know, whatever. I saw people saying, and by the way, Epstein didn't kill himself. Yeah. It was like, it was for once. It was a time when a lot of people in the United States were together on one thing. And it was the fact that we all knew that was bullshit. He didn't kill himself. I mean, it's just crazy that they lost all these things because they didn't. They destroyed them, obviously. Yeah. Yeah, they did. I mean,
and it was all a very coordinated, well-done thing.
And the thing is, it wasn't even well-done.
I mean, it's so obvious when you have tapes disappeared the night before,
you have logs missing, you have all this stuff.
I mean, and it's like so obvious, but this is how blatant and brash they are.
They don't give a shit.
They don't care.
Because they got extreme power.
You got to understand the SDNY, the public corruption unit, as they call it,
you know, they got a lot of power.
And the fact they just basically took this case over
and I'm sure use some bullshit excuse,
oh, well, you know, we got to see what happened
with Epstein, whatever, and blah, blah, blah, blah, you know.
All it really means is that they're going to protect
anyone from getting in this case to be prosecuted outside of Maxwell.
I don't think they're going to protect Maxwell.
The more I've thought about it and the more I've looked into this,
I don't think they're going to.
Now, one of the ways they're going to be able to do all this is simple.
I mean, outlets like CNN, MSNBC, ABC, World News Tonight, all of this stuff.
You know, unfortunately, and if you didn't listen to Last Night's podcast, federal court cases cannot be video.
You cannot have video or audio recording in a court case.
I think it's just video.
It could be, I think there is possibly audio recordings that can happen.
But the problem is that that's just a federal thing.
It's not something that, you know, it's not something they're trying to hide or whatever.
They've done it for years.
Well, I think a lot of times federal could be just like people like you and I, but a lot of times federal court is, you know, people of interest that everyone knows.
Sometimes, yeah.
But, you know, but those news outlets are going to be doing their very best to cover up all of anything that happens in this case.
They're going to avoid talking about it and or they're going to make excuses.
I mean, even like the CNN legal analyst when we were just.
talking about that a minute ago.
You know, this CNN legal analyst is saying, oh, it's probably because of some official
in Florida, like a prosecutor or something like that.
See, look, here's the deal.
I don't doubt for one minute that there were people that were paid off in Florida.
I think there's been reports on that of people and, you know, even possibly law enforcement
and whoever that were paid off to look the other way during this whole case.
But the problem is that that's not why the public corruption unit has this.
I mean, it's, you know, James Comey and his entire career is, was awful.
I mean, you know, when James Colmy was over the FBI, it really started to show how corrupt our, you know, federal law enforcement is.
I mean, and.
Well, at the time, they're investigating things that.
Well, that they knew were lies.
Yeah, that they knew were lies.
and they tried to make these lies truths.
Yeah.
I mean, there were articles that, you know,
saying that, you know,
James Colmy is going to go down as one of the,
if not the, most corrupt FBI directors
ever to be in the FBI.
And this was all coming from the FISA report.
And so, you know, there was a New York Times post
that talked about how Jay Edgar Hoover
can now rest peacefully because James Comey is now the most corrupt FBI director ever.
I love it.
I mean, I don't love it for him, but that's funny.
Yeah, and so you don't, and they went on to say,
you don't make mistakes when you're doing an investigation of this magnitude.
And in reference to the 17 significant errors of admissions in the FBI application
to surveil former President Trump's campaign, advisor Carter Page.
And they said, we're not talking about a single person made a mistake,
a whole team, an entire team, he continued.
They set it up so there'd be a redundancy.
So there'd be supervision and supervision from the top.
And so the ability to bypass all the safeguards to make mistakes is just not credible.
See, the problem with Comey was is that he was spying.
He was spying on a campaign.
He was wiretapping.
He was doing all of this shit.
The government was essentially using the FBI as a weapon against a political.
candidate.
And
Comey says there was no spying because he doesn't define it by any logical definition.
I mean, he literally sounds like...
Like fauchy.
Yeah.
Oh, it's not gain of function. We changed the definition.
So, yeah.
I'm not spying. We changed the definition.
Yeah, the National Security Advisor Michael Flynn's attorney and former federal prosecutor
Sidney Powell said, but yes, they sent an agent into the presidential daily briefing in August
of 2016 and then the same agent
went to interview General Flynn on January 24th
when he had just arrived at the White House
and did it particularly to give the agent
experience engaged in Flynn, getting to
know him and how he reacted to things. So yes,
they went in and spied on this
campaign. They sent agents in. Now
the FBI has not stopped
doing this since.
They're doing it now. There are
ex-fbi agents that have come out and said, look,
there are good people and good men and women
at the FBI, but the problem
is, and there's been many FBI agents that
since resigned, quit, I'm gone, that have said, you know, the problem at the FBI and these big
intelligence networks or organizations or departments, I guess you can say, is that the leadership
is the most corrupt leadership you will ever see. Yeah. And the people that have quit,
you know, their ethics and their standards are so high that they cannot continue to work with
people that are corrupt like that. So thank God there are people that have higher standards and have
ethics that are willing to say, you know what? I don't care how much I'm getting paid. I would say thank
God, but I wish those people would stay because that's the only chance these organizations have.
Because the more good people that quit, the more corrupt people are going to get.
But when you have somebody that is the director of FBI and they're corrupt, there's not much you can do when you're under them.
You know, all you can do is say, you know what, my ethics are higher than that and I cannot work for this
person because I feel like, you know, they're corrupt.
Well, look, here's a problem with these organizations, and this is how this all ties back to Epstein case.
When you got FBI and you got CIA and you got all these people, so James call me director of FBI.
You got CIA directors.
You got all these people.
These people are not elected.
They're appointed.
And when you appoint them, then they appoint their people.
And then those people appoint people under them.
And so once it finally starts getting down the ladder of leadership, when you have one corrupt leader at the very top where he's going to be, say, a very big, deep state agent,
obviously he's going to appoint deep state corrupt people under him.
And then those people are also going to have to appoint corrupt people under them in leadership.
And then under them and then under them.
You have to have a, it's like if you look at a food pyramid or whatever, right?
And then you have, say, from halfway up to the top, you have the leadership, right?
Everybody below that is workers, people that have to apply and get accepted, right?
Well, it's hard to kind of find corrupt people to hire, right, at FBI, which I think they're making their way in.
to doing that now.
They're finding ways of hiring politically driven-based agents.
So say, you know, they want people that are, that hate Trump or hate Republicans or hate
conservatives and they'll dig in their past and their history.
Look, if you get a job to FBI, you don't just go and apply and, you know, they do a little
background check or whatever.
They check your social media.
They do everything you've ever done.
They probably read your text messages without you even knowing.
I mean, they do everything.
I mean, law enforcement is not an easy thing.
So much less FBI.
But the thing is, is that, so you've got all this corrupt leadership, and all of them
are going to be corrupt.
And then you've got these people that apply for the FBI and CIA and everybody else.
And when you have all these corrupt people, yes, they can apply, and yes, they're going to do their best to be the best.
But when you have a political goal, or you are a part of a deep state, which I believe a lot of our deep state
comes from these intelligence agencies.
I think a lot of what's happening and how things are happening,
you look at the parents being targeted and school boards,
you know, being labeled terrorists, they're talking about, you know,
when you hear Trump or FBI people saying the biggest threat to the United States is white nationalists
or white supremacist, I mean, are you serious?
This is what we have to look forward to in our future.
And unfortunately, James Colmy being someone as corrupt as he is,
And then just so happens his daughter's taking a case with Maxwell, the same daughter prosecutor, that didn't do anything to get to the bottom of what really happened to Jeffrey Epstein?
Because could it be possibly, could it be possibly that that unit or those people had something to do with the fact that he just killed himself one day?
You know what I'm saying?
Mm-hmm.
I exactly know.
Because...
I mean, I'm not saying they did, but, you know, but if they're going to hide it, you know.
And they definitely hit it.
And I think that they put her on that case so that it could be hidden.
And no one, you know, I don't know.
I just, it makes no sense to me.
Like, part of her, I don't know.
It's just weird that she was on this unit to pretty much say that he committed suicide.
And now she's on this unit prosecuting his girlfriend, you know?
No.
Well, it's, look, here's what I think.
this all says. I think that no one's going to be prosecuted outside of Maxwell. I do believe
she's going to be prosecuted. I do believe that she's going to be held to the fire.
You know, the whole non-prosecution agreements, I would love to know how many people they actually gave that to,
because I don't know that we even have a record of that. I don't know if there's a way to even know that,
because I guarantee you there's not. If there were non-prosecution agreements given for any reason,
why would they even give those agreements to anybody? I mean, especially if you're corrupt.
you know what I mean
I mean and the fact that you're
literally talking about this
this public corruption unit
is over this case
Comey's daughter
and this unit was responsible
for not doing anything about what really happened to Epstein
I mean
you can you can try a 17 year old kid
that was self-defending himself that was legally
owning a firearm for murder and doing it
immediately and lying in
in court numerous times
thank God they had the worst prosecution
ever. But the thing is, it's like, you can do that, but yet you can't even even investigate
whatsoever, the Epstein thing? Or is it because that they were involved with the Epstein thing
to begin with? Meaning, you know, they made sure that when this happened, when he killed himself,
that he would be taken down. Now, the question is, is like, why has she not been killed?
Why has she not been suicided? I mean, and then, and so then you got to think about why did
they kill Epstein? Well, obviously...
Yeah, because he doesn't even get to go to trial.
No. Well, that's exactly why they killed him,
though. Yeah. I mean, they didn't want him to go to trial.
Yeah, because... They didn't want him to, like,
tell all.
Yeah. But why wouldn't Maxwell?
And, and, and, but that could go back
to it does not have to do with Jeffrey Epstein.
I mean, it does, but,
you know, I wonder how involved she was
with big name people.
As far as she didn't...
And keep in mind, we,
We got to keep the big picture here.
The prosecution is the one that is prosecuting.
Then they're prosecuting her, not him.
Yeah, but what I'm saying is that the prosecution cannot bring up things that they don't want to.
Right.
And the defense don't want to just bring up other shit, you know, because that's going to hurt her case.
Right.
So it's kind of like, well, the prosecution is like, well, we're not.
Edged sword.
Yeah.
Prosecution is like, well, we're not going to talk about that.
We're not, you know, whatever.
Even though there probably will be some witnesses to talk about it.
And hopefully the defense can get some witnesses in to talk about to kind of bring it off.
of if I'm a defense, I'm going to try to bring it off Maxwell as much as possible as well.
You know, it's kind of hard to do that.
But, you know, if you've got witnesses coming on trial saying, yeah, she was a part of it, she was a part of it.
But I just wonder how many of those witnesses are going to even mention big name people.
Well, that's what's interesting to me is they have these witnesses that were actually molested and raped by Epstein.
And like today, the Jane Doe lady said that she was involved, Maxine.
Ms. Maxine was involved also,
I don't know.
It just is, I mean, like, if they,
I'm thinking about the corruption part of the whole thing.
You know what I'm saying?
If they don't want the big names out,
but they're letting these witnesses come out and talk,
maybe they've told the witnesses, you know,
don't bring up these names.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I mean, that's possible.
I mean, I don't see how, well, look,
but here's the thing.
They're the prosecution witnesses, right?
Right.
So they can tell, they can coach them how they want to coach them.
And they can bring in who they want and who they don't want.
You know, I think it's interesting that this first witness got paid $2 million.
Right.
And then prosecution doesn't necessarily have to ask them who molested them, right?
Because they're really on trial with, I guess, Epstein and Ms. Maxwell.
But the other people, the other elites are really on trial.
So why bring their names into this trial is probably the prosecution.
way of not getting, you know, not leaking out the truth of everybody else there.
Well, you know, what I find interesting about this is this, is this legal fund, or is this
fund of money that they paid out.
Right.
They just paid out of the goodness of their heart to these, to these victims of Epstein,
right?
Two million dollars here.
How many other victims did they pay?
I don't know.
But was this fund made created when he died?
I'm not sure
Because if that's the case
Then that makes sense that
You know whatever monies he had
They would create funds to his victims
Even though he wasn't prosecuted
And found guilty
I guess
So his fund paid out more than
$121 million
Okay
$121 million
Jane Doe got two million of that
$120 million
Yeah think of it
about how many.
That's a lot of people to pay off.
It is.
So his estate is what paid out over a hundred and something million dollars.
And they settled with 61 of the victims.
So they settled with 61 of the victims.
Now, the question is going to be is that, so all the women basically agreed to participate in a victim compensation fund that will assess each claim before issuing a payout within 90 days, meaning that, you know,
They could have their settlements just before the anniversary of the Pedophiles' death in August 10th.
The Epstein estate has entered a settlement talks with 61 women.
And so there were filings of the state that 44 victims have joined the 12 women represented by Jordan K.
Merson and Mersen Law and five women working on Lisa Bloom, the Bloom firm.
Among the women two have joined that, the initial group of 17 or Annie Farmer, Maria Farmer, Theresa Helm,
Helm, Juliette, Brian, Jane, Sarah, Ransom, and Virginia.
Virginia Roberts.
The total of those sediments at this point was likely to exceed $100 million.
The women will now have to sign a four-page contract that states that they can never again file legal action against the Epstein estate and co-executors, Darren Endric and Richard Kahn.
They will also be unable to file suit against any entities or individuals who are or have been engaged by whether as independent contractors or otherwise employed by, worked in any capacity for, or provided any services to.
Mr. Epstein, the Epstein entities, or the Epstein estate.
So they signed this?
The agreement does not, however...
What about this court case?
Well, I don't know.
The agreement is not, however,
prohibit the women from suing individuals
that may have been trafficked to...
While being accused by Epstein.
So they could sue other people that they were trafficked too.
That means at least one woman.
Roberts could potentially file a lawsuit against Prince Andrew, for example.
she claims that she was trafficked to Prince Andrew
and has provided a photo of her in the role
at the home of Jislane Maxwell.
But the prince has strenuously denied her claim
and suggested the image of them is Photoshopped.
So I'll be curious to see if the Prince Andrew thing
comes up in this trial.
They also allow the women to remain anonymous
should they wish,
but they also are not barred from speaking
about their compensation or allegations against Epstein.
So after receiving her conversation,
women will also have three days to dismiss with prejudice any legal actions, whether
lawsuits, probate claims, or otherwise.
But, you know, I still wonder, I still wonder what else was coming out of that.
And keep in mind that Epstein's trust was $600 million.
So they got paid a little over $100-something million of his trust.
So these women already pretty much got paid off, but now they're testifying against Jislein's, you know,
just lean on the court case or whatever.
Yeah.
Are they paid off not to say anything?
Well, so six of the ten cases have been filed by women who chose not to invite themselves.
And they have all been filed, well, the majority of them have been filed in New York.
Six to ten have been filed by women.
So Maria Farmer, who claims she was violently raped by Epstein and Maxwell in 96, is one of the women.
Her sister, Annie, who alleges the Epstein made her give him a topless massage when she was underage,
also filed a separate complaint.
But I'm just curious how many of these women that were a part of this settlement, which we have
one today, Jane, not wanting to say, I guess, maybe that's her name, maybe it isn't.
She's a part of the settlement.
She got two million.
Two million.
But I just wonder how many of those will come forward in this trial, you know?
I mean, because the thing is, is that we got Prince Andrew here.
We got all these, all these people that were involved in this case.
A lot of high profile people.
None of which have been brought to trial whatsoever.
Right.
You basically got Ghislane Maxwell.
And I think at least in one point that the defense mates an argument and saying that, you know, they're using Maxwell as a scapegoat to settle Epstein's just crazy whirlwind, political power, pedophile ring, essentially.
And I think that's what this prosecution wants to essentially do.
I think they want to get this case over with.
They want to put her in jail.
and they want to end the Epstein thing forever.
If they can get through this, prosecute her and get it out of the way,
no more talk of this will ever be done.
And that's what I believe.
I don't believe anyone will come to, I mean, the elites in this.
Look, there are too many powerful people.
There are too many deep state people involved in this whole thing that, you know,
even from the very start, Comey, for example,
and what he, you know, in his corruption while he was FBI drug,
not saying his daughters like that but we got to go back to the fact that you know she they were over the
Epstein case when he died and they supposedly brought no legal charges and they said nothing was to see here
yeah and meanwhile the whole world is looking at them like are you crazy you think this was honestly
suicide and you're not going to do anything to discover or research anything like to me whoever was in
charge, which it sounds like she was, did a terrible job or they did a great job trying to cover
up or a bad job trying to cover up because we all see through the cover up.
Yeah, and whereas this agreement and news reporting agencies that will say that, you know,
these women, you know, they can do this and they can do that.
One thing it doesn't say is that they, you know, it doesn't mention anything.
I mean, it says you can sue other people that you were trafficked to, but it doesn't specifically
mention anything about being witnesses in
say Maxwell's case, right? I mean, we don't know. We don't really know what the deal was.
Yeah, well, obviously they can be witnesses because Jane Doe took the stand today.
Yeah, she was already paid out $2 million. So she testified
on the behalf of the prosecution, not the defense. So they're going after her with the witness.
Now, I know a lot of you out there may be thinking that, you know, the corruption in this case
is going to end up with Maxwell not being charged
or not facing justice, right?
I just don't think that's the case.
I don't think that is the purpose of bringing in, say,
Comey's daughter.
I don't think that it has anything.
I just, I think this has to do with, look,
if you have a prosecution that you are in control over, right?
Because look, you get to remember,
if she's Comey's daughter, which is the FBI director,
and don't think that he's not still extremely connected in the government,
including these people.
A lot of times when you are a big corrupt power like James Comey was and everybody under him,
which a lot of them are still there, you know,
that's exactly when you appoint people in positions of, say, corruption units to make sure that no one tries corruption, right?
I mean, if you, I don't think people understand.
how corrupt this government is.
I mean, it's corrupt.
There is corruption all the way down to the local district courts and so on and so forth.
I mean, and then you go to the state courts and then the federal courts.
And the federal courts can get a little, and it's all politically based.
It's all, if you're on this side and you believe in this theory and you are, say,
accepting money or doing this from this entity or whatever the case is, that's where this thing
just keeps going and keeps getting deeper.
So what I think you're saying is that apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Like Comey, we already feel like he was corrupt.
Well, we know.
We know.
Okay.
And then we go back to his daughter where, you know, she's already been in a thing with Epstein and nothing happened of it.
We're thinking she's corrupt.
And now she's the one prosecuting, the one that said he committed suicide.
I mean, that's corruption right there.
There's a lot of corruption going on in this whole thing.
And I think it does stem with combing, you know.
Yeah, but I, yeah.
And I just think the deep state is trying to protect their elites.
And I think the way you do that is you appoint the prosecutors.
Yep.
You get the people that you don't want to really prosecute.
Like, you don't want like a prosecuting attorney that's like really going to prosecute
everybody and everything.
Right.
You want somebody you have a little control over.
Yeah.
So that is saving the grace of these other people that are high profile
people.
Yeah.
And who knows,
you know,
these non-prosecution
agreements and stuff,
I'm sure that,
you know,
but I think that was,
that goes back to 2009.
Yeah,
but if they're going to do it for that,
don't think they're going to do it
for everybody else.
Why wasn't she tried in 2009
and now she's being tried?
That wouldn't make sense.
I don't know,
because what was 2009?
It was the same stuff.
Yeah, it was sex trafficking.
Yeah, but that's what I'm saying.
It's all the same.
I mean, she's being tried
for the same thing, even the 2009 stuff.
No, not that you, no,
well, I guess.
But it's all the same.
same stuff. I mean, she's being tried for everything to happen with their entire history.
So obviously, she wasn't given a non-prosecution agreement. And the reason for that probably is,
is they said, well, we've got to have a fall guy on this. I mean, at some point, we got to have
somebody that, and we got to make sure that whoever's prosecuting this, we can control and make
sure that we don't bring in these other people. And let's just give all these other people
non-prosecution agreements so that they can't even bring up these people. I mean, that could be
part of the deal. It could be. You know, but I just, it's hard to believe that they're making her
the fall guy because, you know, she is very influential.
She comes from a lot of money.
Well, I don't know.
Excuse me.
Well, the thing about it is, though, is that, you know, coming from a lot of money
don't mean shit if you have the government that's supporting.
I mean, I challenge you guys to, you know, watch the local, not local news.
Watch the mainstream media and just see what they talk about.
See how much they talk about Jislane Maxwell trial.
See how much they're really in this case and having specials on it and giving their,
their big opinions on this.
And when they do talk about it,
don't think they're actually going to mention any other names besides Maxwell.
I mean, this whole thing is...
It's a cover-up pretty much.
It's supposed to be to where everyone thinks Maxwell's the end.
She's the last person that they can try.
And once she's tried and she's in jail, everyone can rest her mind.
Because someone went to jail.
Even though...
Unless these girls,
go after them because you said they could sue the people that they were trafficked trafficked to
right yeah but see the thing is then then these people will just settle with these girls so they'll
make more money it'll never get to court so that it'll never be in the media or anything yeah
they'll they'll never it'll never get to court i mean they'll they may they may reach out to an attorney
for these people or whoever it is and say look you know we're about to take you to court so you
better either settle with us and that may have already happened. We may have not even known it because
we haven't heard anything. There's been no other cases brought yet. Well, I didn't even know that
they settled for anything from his estate. I didn't know that. But the thing is, that's what I'm saying,
with these elites, you know, these attorneys obviously are going to say, look, you know,
if you want money out of this, which is going to be your best bet, you know, you probably
want to just go, let's go ahead and send a letter to this person and say, let's send an intent to sue
letter because that's what they do.
And, you know, then whoever these elite people are, obviously, are going to come back with
a settlement.
I mean, you know, they're going to have to.
Because the last thing they want is to be brought in court.
Now, I want to make one thing clear, too, as well.
I've seen so much shit about, you know, and this is something the media does, and I think
it's hilarious.
The media loves to put Trump in everything that has to do with Epstein when literally, you know.
I'm glad you're bringing.
this up. Well, because I want to bring it up because
you know, Trump had, I guess, been
on this plane before, not very
often at all.
You know, the thing about Epstein was he was
acquaintances with many people, many,
many powerful people. Now,
it's funny because I researched this
today, but I do know that Trump banned
Epstein from his
Mar-a-Lago
home. And
I started, and it's funny because
the media tries to make it out like Trump
banned him after
the charges were brought.
Not true. I found out
and it looked more into it and
there's a book written about this and they talk
about it and then so on and so forth.
Trump actually banned him in 2005
because of his weird
actions around
I believe it was, I think
it was one of Trump's daughters maybe when she was
young or something or somebody
that Trump knew he banned
him because he thought he was acting
weird and like, you know, whatever and probably
I didn't like it.
he probably knew a lot more
probably something happened
that you know
I don't really know what happened
but well obviously
if he banned him from his properties
something happened
and Trump even made a quote
you know and here's the other thing
Trump actually was quoted in saying
yeah he you know he likes beautiful women
like I do he said but he likes him
a little on the young side you know laughing
laughing about it you know
but I think he's really serious about it
no but I don't think Trump was mean
like underage I honestly don't think Trump knew that
because if you knew that this guy's having sex to all these underage girls,
the last thing you're going to be quoted in saying is he lacks him a little on the young side,
you know what I mean?
You know what I'm saying?
Because, like, you just wouldn't say that shit.
Yeah.
If you, you know what I mean?
And so, but that's the funny thing is that they,
instead of talking about Clinton and, you know, how many times he flew on jet.
And not just that, man, there are people in the intelligence agencies that they have on these names.
Famous attorneys.
There's all kinds of people.
Yeah.
You can go look it up.
I think it's public information.
I believe.
The flight logs.
But yeah, I mean, but it's just the media wants to put it out there as that is Trump is the one who's flying on the plane.
The media is against him.
Because they want to hide all the people that mean something to them and the donors that send, you know.
They have money to have a job.
The mainstream media is liberal.
It's obvious.
They're left.
90% of media is left media.
They are paid for by the Democrat Party.
They are paid for by the deep state.
and unfortunately everybody
I hate to tell you guys this
but we're just not far from communism
we're so close that like
you should be able to taste it by now
I mean
the number one thing communists do
and we talk about this a lot
is control the media
you know they control the media
and when they can control the media
they control the people
and we've learned this
I've learned this especially even in my own family
about you know COVID
we've learned it I mean not
saying COVID isn't real. It is. If you guys
have not listened to our other podcast on COVID,
COVID's definitely a real thing.
But it's just the media controls the
narrative. They control everything.
And who controls the media is
our government. It is the deep state.
It's not necessarily the president.
It's not whoever. It is the deep
state. It is the people that are behind
this elaborate,
crazy bullshit that they
and the reason there is
even a deep state is for many reasons.
A lot of it's huge amounts of money
that is involved in moving hands and this and that.
But, you know, for those of you that are listening,
some of you may not believe in New World Order and one world government,
which is, I believe, and many of people believe,
quickly forming in this world right now.
You look at all the tyranniness happening around the world from COVID.
You look at Australia.
You look at Austria.
Now Austrians are the ones that are unvaccinated right now are facing prison time.
This is reports coming out today.
Australian indigenous people are being taken away to quarantine.
camps and they're literally pleading with people on their videos asking for help. This is happening
everywhere. You know, you have South Africa that has the case of the Omicron variant of COVID,
and everybody's saying it's mild cases or asymptomatic. UK is reporting now mild cases,
asymptomatic. But what is our media doing? They're freaking out and trying to make it out
like it's going to be the next big thing because they want more control. They want to keep
lockdowns going. They want to keep all the stuff. They want to re-lockdown. And this all goes back
to the deep state though.
Yeah.
And meanwhile,
they're going to lock out Africa.
Yeah.
Because they have this.
Which, by the way,
they lock out Africa.
It's funny because,
you know,
Trump actually locked out the Chinese people from coming.
Any Chinese people from coming to the country.
China.
Yeah,
he was xenophobic,
supposedly.
But yet he locked out the freaking country
where the virus was coming from.
And yet,
you know,
now Biden has put on a travel ban from South Africa
and African countries.
And it's a mild case.
Yeah.
And we're not going to stop it.
What kind of phobic is that?
I don't know.
I have no idea.
But it's racist, I guess, because it's Africa.
Racist.
Yeah.
It's racist against Africa.
You're right.
So, but no, it's, that's the thing.
The deep state controls all the narrative.
They, they've control it with everything.
And they're going to make sure that their people are always protected.
You look at Dr. Falci, and this all has to do with Epstein.
It does.
It, you know, I know this sounds crazy, but it all has to do with Epstein.
You look at Dr. Falci.
You look at how he is protected, even though,
We've talked many times on this podcast about how the NIH and him and what he's over is directly, allegedly, appears to be responsible for partly creating this virus that has killed millions of people around the world.
And there were labs in the United States has been a part of this as well.
And he literally went in front of Congress and Senate and everybody else and lied on oath or under oath.
He's lied every time he talks about it.
He just recently said that he is science.
Like, oh, you question me.
You question science.
represent science.
This is a new thing he's talking about now.
But this all, everything you see on media,
and I hope some of you are awake enough to see this shit,
all these lies that are being spewed on a daily basis.
This is the same thing that it's the same deep state
that is protecting and killing possibly,
people that could have information on some of their deep state people.
And, you know, Bohemian Grove, we talked about last night,
Bohemian Grove with Alex Jones,
and infiltrated and all that.
You know, that was really another way for politicians to have dirt on other politicians
so that they could get away and do dirty shit and corrupt stuff.
And nobody could really tell anybody because it was, you know, you had something on the other one.
Jeffrey Epstein was just another tool on that.
And in some ways, many people believe that this whole Jeffrey Epstein thing was actually created
all because of that.
Some people believe that Epstein was actually kind of pushed into this a little bit.
No, there are, no, I mean, I'm not saying he was unwillfully doing this.
I'm saying that people that he was involved in, that all the powerful people used Epstein and his, whether or not, you know, I guess his, is, the fact that he was a pedophile or whatever the case may have been, the fact that they had power and they could get away with this.
But I think once they realized that he either was doing this or would do this or vice versa, they used.
used Epstein as the new bohemian grove if that makes sense they used Epstein uh and Epstein did the same
but other politicians used this entire situation I believe to be another Bohemian Grove to where
they had dirt and the worst dirt by the way yeah Bohemian Grove it used to be politicians having
sex with other men men having sex with men and then they had something over the other person right
they didn't want them to say what they did at Bohemian Grove that's why all of them went because
and he had everything on each other.
But then take it a step further now.
Now you got a pedophile ring that you're a part of,
and now you really are going to protect each other,
and you're going to protect the deep state,
and you're going to protect all this shit.
And this was part of it.
I mean, and it worked for Epstein for years and years and years.
And then when it came out that someone, somehow he got in jail,
his ass was dead.
He was dead because whatever happened with that, you know,
I would love, I would just love to know, like, the guard,
in that place and who those people were.
I wonder what, you know, I wonder if some of them...
Were hired by the government?
No. Or just disappeared.
Or if they...
No.
Or... I'm talking about the guards and all these people in there.
Yeah.
I'm saying, did any of them disappear afterwards?
Did they become rich and quit?
You know, so on and so forth.
Yeah, that's a good question.
Because I'm sure somebody knows something that is either no longer around that place, whatever the case may be.
Because those guards that had to say whatever happened with their logs or whatever, I mean, they honestly, they had to lie about something.
Yeah.
So they had to get something pretty good to do that.
Yeah.
There was something that happened to where somebody else is involved besides whoever came in to do whatever they did.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, that's just without question.
I don't know how you pull that off exactly, but they do.
I mean, that, you know, and especially, you know, the one prosecutor that was trying to prosecute Epstein from the beginning.
And they said, you know, he's got some kind of sweetheart relationship with.
some intelligence agency.
I can't even, you know.
And so when you have a relationship with intelligence agency,
not only if you have a relationship,
sometimes your relationship backfires on you,
in his case, you know,
meaning, well, you know, he's somebody got him in now,
so you know what we got to do.
Well, he can't come to trial.
He might have a sweet heart relationship with intelligence,
but I think the elite people
were better able to get their job done
than he was to get his job done, you know?
Now, you know, and here's the thing.
There's other conspiracy theories of Epstein's not even dead, right?
Good being.
You know, and that's interesting to think about, even though something I've never, you know, been like, yeah, he's not dead.
We've not done a Jeffrey Epstein's Not Dead podcast, but the thing is, is that, you know, who the hell knows?
Seriously, I mean, because that was the most odd death I've ever heard of in my life.
But who knows?
So maybe he's not dead. Maybe it was all just a lie to.
Yeah, and guys, by the way, a few things.
think the government won't do crazy shit and have these things.
Why don't you go back and listen to JFK episodes that we've done or anybody's done?
Or even Martin Luther King, which, you know, Martin Luther King in 1999, or 1999, there was
an actual court case with Koretta King and that they all had jurors and all the evidence of what
happened that day when Martin Luther King died and come to find out, these jurors ruled that
the government was involved in his murder and it wasn't just some random murder.
and 99% of people in this country or the world doesn't know that.
I mean, and it was a jury that actually determined it was the government that was involved in this based on, I think it was, what, five weeks of testimony?
And the jury concluded that the government was responsible for Martin Luther King's death, Martin Luther King, Jr.
And, you know, same thing with JFK, same thing with, I mean, there's numerous.
Then you look at Operation Northwoods,
where they wanted to overrun and overtake Cuba,
and they wanted to, and this is actual declassified documents.
This is not conspiracy theory.
Operation Northwoods is what many people believe,
why JFK was killed because they wanted to carry out terrorist attacks on U.S. soil,
but our government doing it and then blame it on Cuba to overtake Cuba.
And so when the Joint Chiefs of Staff presented it to JFK,
JFK was like
Heck no
Are you kidding me?
And he probably took it a step further
And he was about to go after their ass
For even thinking this
And that's when they knew they had to kill him
Right
And I think that once they knew
They had to kill him
They had to go after Marilyn Monroe
Yeah I don't know
Maybe I mean yeah
I mean that's possible yeah
I mean we did a podcast about that too
Yeah it's possible
Because she was involved with JFK
And you know
Who knows what she knew
And so on and so forth
You know, if she was actually dating him, like, you know, conspiracies say,
then there's a possibility he told him, told her everything he knew,
or they thought he told him everything.
So, you know.
Well, and the thing is, so, yeah, and that's the deal.
The reason we bring all this stuff up is because we want to give a bigger picture,
especially for those of you that are listening,
that don't typically listen to, like, what really goes on behind the scenes.
You know, some of you might be involved in this trial,
because you like listening to trials, right?
And this is a very important trial.
But I think we all have to understand and realize
how corrupt this country's government is.
And it's sad.
It really is.
I mean, I'm a patriotic American.
I love America.
I love everything that this country stands for.
I don't love everything in our history,
but I love where we have gotten to,
even though it's going backwards now, unfortunately.
But we have fought and died and had soldiers die
and we've had people that are slaves and that never deserved to be.
And we had just Indians die from white men.
And there's all this shit.
And it sounds like a democratic thing I'm saying.
But all these things are true.
It's not like they are not true.
We have had slaves.
We have had Indians be murdered and killed and they're land taken.
And to this day, you know, we still have land taken.
The government's still doing it.
There's 30 on 30 plan that Joe Biden is trying to do.
It's not Joe Biden.
It's a deep state.
They want to take land.
They want to take people's land.
They want to do all this shit.
It's going to be the next generation of land grabs.
I mean, it is.
And it's not just land grabs.
It's just another way of controlling people more without it being so visible right now.
But they're using COVID to do it and they're using all this stuff.
So when you look at this Jeffrey Epstein thing where highly high-profile people are involved,
you have to say that obviously it's probably going to be corrupt.
I mean, if we all believe that Epstein was murdered, which I think many people do, and the same prosecution that is over this case was over the fact that they did nothing about that, then you've got to say, well, damn, I mean, that sounds pretty corrupt to me.
And I can't wait for the outcome of this and throughout this process.
We're not going to do an episode every day on this probably, but I am curious as to who they bring in, like how many names they talk about.
and what they don't say, what's put in, you know, to testimony, what's not.
I mean, that makes a huge difference in the way this whole thing goes.
Well, the interesting thing is, like, just looking up, like, I guess they have reporters in the courtroom.
And that's kind of what we try to do is kind of read the trans, well, as many of the transcripts as you can.
But the thing is, like, there's really not a lot that's being reported or said about what's, I mean, you've got entire days in the courtroom, right?
and just we did the podcast.
We wrapped up basically 30 minutes of what was said in the courtroom today, 20 minutes.
You know, it was the pilot.
Didn't really say a whole bunch.
Mention Bill Clinton's name once.
You got this victim, number one, known as Jane,
that kind of came in and talked about what happened between Maxwell and Epstein
and how she was involved in that a little bit.
But I think that's going to be much of the same throughout this case.
They're just going to kind of get through everything.
Hey, you just say how she was involved.
and how she molested you.
Yeah, it doesn't matter about these other important people.
Yeah.
Don't bring them up.
And I will be, I will be, well, see, but here's the thing.
They don't have to bring up other people that molested her or these victims because it hasn't, there's not their case.
It's not their case.
This is her case.
Yeah, that's what I was talking about with Kyle.
Yeah.
We want you to say what she did to you.
We don't care about what Bill Clinton or.
Any of those other people.
We want to know what she did.
She's the one on trial, not any of these other people.
Yeah, you're right.
Yep.
And so unless one.
one of these other people were brought to trial, you're probably not going to hear about them.
So they just want a fall guy, which she needs to fall.
She's, you know, she's a pedophile.
But just don't expect this case to bring anything new that you didn't know before or, you know, whatever.
I mean, don't think it's going to, there's some public corruption that's going to just blow everything wide open.
That's not going to happen.
That's the exact reason this prosecution team is over this.
Right.
Because maybe if it was another prosecution team, maybe they would be like, hey, you know, you just tell.
about tell me about your whole experience
what happened after you got on the plane
what you know tell me step by step
what went on you know yeah because
the defense is not going to object to
right like the prosecution saying
well who else molested you besides her yeah
because you know the prosecutor or the defense
will be like yeah see see she was being
molested by all kinds of people you know or you know whatever
and they would try to use that to her defense
yeah
hell I mean they could probably possibly even
use powerful people to her defense
by saying that these people force
her to do shit or something. You know, I don't know.
But I'm just saying, prosecution ain't going to bring it up.
It would be interesting to be in this courtroom and just...
I know. I wish we could just watch it.
Yeah, see how this whole thing plays out. But unfortunately, we're not going to be able to.
Corruption at his finest. Yeah. And we're about to see it. But, you know, if she gets prosecuted, I mean, she's being prosecuted. If she gets found guilty, she goes to jail for life,
it's not going to prove anything. It's not going to prove anything. It's not going to disprove it.
obviously know there were elite
and politicians and powerful people
that were involved in this.
And this case,
in my opinion, we're not ever going
to see that. I will be hell
surprised if they bring someone else into this.
Unless there's someone
powerful that they want to fall.
For whatever reason. All right, let me ask you a question
real quick before we go. So if
Epstein was still alive and he
was going to trial,
would it be the same thing as what we're facing
now? Would they be like, you know what?
has nothing to do with these elite people.
This has to do with you and what you did to these girls.
Nobody else.
Or would it be like, well, no, you trafficked these girls to these guys.
So these guys' names should come up in public.
And maybe that's why they took him and not her.
Because in his trial, they knew those names were going to come up.
Obviously, he was the ringleader.
Obviously, he was the main dude over everything.
and if you're going to try him for some massive thing like that,
well, she was involved in it,
but not as on the detail and level as he was from the very beginning,
I think it'd be hard or impossible not to bring in co-conspirators.
I mean, that's the thing.
These other people should be co-conspirators, period.
They're not being tried, though.
And I don't think anybody ever will be.
I think it would have already done.
Unless she says she set up these meetings and not him.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't.
Just to bust other people, but I don't think she would ever do that.
No.
I just think it was too risky to bring in the main goat to the party.
You know, the greatest pedophile of all time.
Yeah.
You know, you can't bring him into trial because, you know, who knows?
The power influence, you know, he had relationships with these powerful people.
Well, I'm sure she did too.
Yeah, she did.
But I just think it was too risky.
He might have had something out with someone.
A couple of them that, you know, he was going to make sure that he was going to bring people down with him when he, you know, when he went down, however that may be, he would have had more resources and money than she would have, even though she's spending $7 million on a defense, but he probably would have spent $30 million.
You know, he had over $600 million in trust.
Yeah, but we have to remember that she was his, like, lover, friend, partner, whatever.
Yeah.
So even though he's dead, I would assume that she still wants to protect his image and his integrity.
So maybe she would, like, say, listen, I don't care.
I'm going to bring these people.
If I'm going down, they're going down.
But we also don't know.
Also, you know, she might have agreed to something to even be brought in and so on and so forth.
Or they said, hey, look, you know, if you don't agree this shit, we're going to kill you.
And Epstein may have not agreed to something and said, no, I'm bringing people down with me if I go, you know, whatever.
Who knows?
I doubt he didn't agree if he knew he's going to be murdered.
Well, he may not have known.
You know, he may have thought that was just bullshit.
I don't know.
You just, we just don't know.
It's a big, obviously there's a conspiracy here.
There was a conspiracy for years that the media, by the way, the media lied about for years and years and years and covered up and saying, oh, this is some big conspiracy pedophile ring.
I literally remember when they were talking about this big conspiracy theory, the Alex Jones and all these people were pushing of this elite pedophile ring.
And I swear to God, I mean, it wasn't even that long ago.
I mean, you know, he was, so he was, the first thing was 2009 and it was like 2000 and what was?
When did he die?
I can't even remember the year.
I mean, it was like, what, four years ago, five years ago?
But anyways, before all that stuff, it was just, the media was pushing this like it was some big conspiracy theory.
It was all bullshit.
And now they want to be quiet about it because they've said this big elite conspiracy theory for so many years.
Right.
And now it was true.
And I just wonder how many people in the world believe this conspiracy theory that he molested over 61 million.
Well, that's not a conspiracy theory.
That's a fact now.
Yeah.
That he, you know, molested 60, over 61 girls.
And that's just him, apparently.
And trafficked them to elite people in the world.
Who believes that?
I mean, it's a fact now.
I mean, there's 61 people that have got funds from this legal fund or whatever.
It's not been brought to trial.
No, it hasn't.
But when you get paid off because you know it's true, then, you know, that's pretty much saying, yeah, there was at least 60 something.
You know, who the hell knows?
how many, because I mean, like I said, we said on last night's podcast, there was,
there was girls from all around the world involved in this.
Yeah, all over the world.
Part of those conspiracy theories, quote unquote, back in the day,
were the fact that he was flying to Paris and all these other places.
And their parents were coming.
And sometimes their parents would come with them.
That's the funny thing is like when the pilot said, oh, well, I didn't really see a lot of times or ever that.
There were minors without their parents.
But there was a lot of these times that these parents were being paid for their kids.
And these parents were willingly giving up their kids to pedophiles.
These parents thought that it was for like a modeling career or something else was going on.
But a lot of people that actually was kind of whistleblowers back in the day said there were a lot of parents that willingly knew that their kids were being sex trafficked.
Well, that's just sick and they need to be in prison.
And they were making shit tons of money off their girls.
That's sick.
Well, I mean, but sex trafficking happens all the time.
It happens in Mexico.
It happens.
Oh, I know.
And it's all sick.
And it happens in this country on a daily basis.
I know.
There are houses.
You think about all the.
missing kids in the United States and in the world.
Yeah.
You know, they're not, they're not all dead.
They're in self, you know, they're in the sex trafficking world.
It happens all the time, yeah.
I mean, sex traffickers have ways of doing things.
I actually was just reading a thing the other day.
This girl came out of the, she had, well, it was her 16-year-old daughter,
got her, she had a car, whatever.
She had just got a car like a month before this.
She went to the mall and she had noticed the girls,
which she didn't pay any attention to at first,
but when she had went into mall to the mall with these other,
she was with her two friends,
she went into mall and she had noticed these two foreign dudes.
I don't remember, like what,
but like kind of staring at them from like two parking rows across.
And she didn't think anything of it.
Anyway, she came outside.
They went shopping for like an hour or something.
And when they came out,
no one was there, you know,
she didn't see the guys, obviously.
But as they were driving,
she did notice a car.
that was kind of following them
once they got out of a certain area or whatever
it was following them
and then they get on this like two-lane road
and notice that same car
which was like there were six miles from there
from where the mall was at this time
heading to their house
noticed that this car was still behind them
and was starting to aggressively come up behind them
so they called the police because they thought someone
was following them
and so the police were actually luckily close by
and got up on
on, I guess they had their blue lights on coming up the road.
This car dipped out.
Never found the people that were following them.
But what they did find was a,
some kind of little X sticker on the back of their car they never had.
And so what these traffickers do is they'll put these tags on young girls' cars.
They'll watch for these young girls.
They'll put a tag on the car.
And then whoever is responsible for like rounding these girls up or kidnapping them,
they'll go through the parking lot and see if there's that tag on their car.
And if there is, they will wait or wait somewhere to follow them and then try to ram them off the road or some other shit to kidnap them.
This is happening across the country.
There is a very, there are, I mean, it's a coordinated thing.
Yeah, it's very coordinated.
These people are not dumb.
And it's very reminiscent of like taken, you know, the movie.
That shit happens.
And it happens in the United States.
It's not just overseas.
And it happens a lot more than what we know or even hear about.
Yeah.
There's tons of girls.
You know, I wish they would show more of that in the media and show like every day, oh, you know, there's 100 girls missing from Utah today or whatever.
Like, we don't know because they don't tell us this in the media, you know?
No.
No, they don't because, I mean, all they want to talk about is the same bullshit as they usually do.
But this is what happens.
And I, you know, I encourage all of you to have daughters that are young and especially younger girls that, you know, you got to be careful of that shit.
Even if you're a parent, they can mark your car, especially if you're a female parent and you have a kid that's like 12, 13, whatever.
You just got to watch, man.
Nowadays, you've got to look everywhere.
And I hate to say it, but with the border filling up, I mean, we have more people in this country right now that we have zero clue who the hell they are.
There are millions of people coming across our border.
And it's not just from Mexico.
It's not just from South America.
There are people flying from all over the world going to certain countries and then just coming in.
Many of these are traffickers, drug traffickers,
people traffickers.
And by the way, these people that are coming from Mexico
and El Salvador and all these other places,
they're expert human smugglers.
This is what they do.
And by the way, the biggest countries for sex trafficking,
some of them is Mexico, some countries in South America,
Ecuador, all those, they are huge in sex trafficking.
And so now we have all these people coming in.
And this is the thing that the government
or the media damn sure don't tell you is the real risk of what's actually coming across the board.
It's not just terrorist attacks.
It's not just drugs.
It's sex trafficking.
Because you think if they do that and they're experts over in their country, they're going to come and infiltrate our country and do the same thing.
Yeah, not just with fentanyl, but with taking your kids.
With our kids.
And that's not just girls either.
It's boys too.
Yeah, because they make a lot of money.
They traffic a lot of kids.
And look, yeah, and the thing is, is that we don't know how many of these people are connected with elites and, you know, whoever else.
I mean, we just don't know.
And so it's a dangerous world.
And that's why a lot of times on this podcast, we encourage for you to carry a weapon
and get a concealed carry permit, you know, do things that, you know, depend less on society,
depend less on going to big department stores and letting your kids do shit.
Like, I mean, it's just a different world than we live in nowadays.
And I'm not saying you can't live your life, but you also have to live prepared and you've got to live,
you've got to know your surroundings at all times.
And that's something I would always be teaching my kids on a daily basis.
shout out to some of those apps out there that you can track, you know, your kid, your husband,
your wife at all times.
You know how fast they're driving, where they're driving.
Yeah, maybe they'll sponsor.
How much battery they have left on their phone.
I mean, it's a really good tool to have if you have children.
Yeah, for sure.
No, I agree.
Apps are great.
And, you know, there's things you can do just to make sure your kids are safe.
And this is just one case.
This is just Lane Maxwell case.
The reason that it's even in the news at all
is because it involves elites,
even though that's also why they are kind of skipping over the fact
that this could be one of the biggest cases ever.
It would have been if Jeffrey Epstein would have been in,
but now it's Maxwell.
So they're trying to just brush us off.
It doesn't fit their narrative.
It involves people that also pay these networks
to report things that they want to be reported.
And so obviously, they're not going to talk about this shit.
These news agencies are paid millions of dollars
and funded by
the deep state. And the same way China funds their media, the same way they control their media,
same way North Korea controls their media. It's the same way our government now controls most of our
media. And, you know, I've heard people say, oh, what do you watch Fox News? I'm like, yeah, well,
I do watch, if I watch a news channel is Fox, and I'm not saying everything Fox says is true,
but it's just everything everybody else says is just all propaganda. And, you know, you can't
really say Fox News is propaganda because they're not involved in a deep state.
obviously they go against everything that Deep State stands for, most of them.
And there's even some people in Fox that are still kind of like on that side.
And that's why.
On the fence.
That's why like Tucker Carlson, for example, he's, he created a Daily Caller, which is a news website.
I didn't even know this, but he created like, I guess a few years back.
And I think you're going to start seeing, once you start seeing people like Hannity, Tucker Carlson, things like that kind of start disappearing from Fox.
you're going to start seeing
Fox being infiltrated, I believe,
especially once the
founder, or not the founder,
but the guy that owns Fox,
like Rupert Murdoch, I think, is,
is it Rupert Murdoch?
Anyways, one of the really old dudes that own Fox.
He's really old, but once he dies,
we'll see what happens with Fox,
see if it gets infiltrated as well.
Because there's a lot of money that's out there,
that someone's going to take that over.
Because you only got like one or two.
But I have to say that
all the ratings with other stations are way down and Fox is way up.
They're like number one.
Yeah.
So why would they change a good thing?
Because if they get paid the right amount of money once the owner died.
I mean, the only reason the guy that is the founder, I guess he's a founder or the creator, whatever of Fox News, once he dies, you know, and he believes in the mission to have, you know, well-versed news, not just one-sided.
And I'm sure he's been offering.
Which Fox is a little bit one-s-sides.
cited also.
Well, yeah, they have to say it is.
They have to be at this point.
I mean, you kind of have to be.
Yeah, it's almost like it's this or this.
That's the only thing that a certain amount of people in our country have is that in
newsmax or whatever.
But I'm not a big fan of newsmax or anything.
But you were talking about a new thing that I think journalists are starting to want to go to.
Yeah, like Hubstack.
Yeah, hubstack.
But, you know, even where they can do real journalism.
Yeah, they can write freely.
Even though, you know, they're, real journalism is.
It's tough to say because it's like, what is real journalism anymore?
I mean, people don't consider anything in real journalism anymore if it doesn't fit their opinion.
Real journalism is literally looking at a story and reporting the facts.
And the problem with that is nowadays is that what you're reporting on, like, facts to people don't matter anymore.
Facts are like, I can literally state off statistics on a particular subject.
But if they don't want to believe that, then it's no longer facts for some reason.
Oh, well, no, these are facts.
These are numbers from this and this and this.
Oh, well, no, that's not facts.
That's just your opinion.
No, it isn't.
Here's the numbers.
Nope.
Sorry.
Or you found it from this site or something, you know.
Well, even if you find it from the FBI data or the, you know, DOJ data.
But if you found, if you found it from like a right-sided place, oh, well, you can't cite it.
You know, you're getting your facts from this place, you know?
Yeah, that's why I usually don't cite facts.
If I'm, if I'm like a, if we had somebody on the podcast, I'm debating somebody about something.
I'm not going to find facts on Fox or whatever because I don't think, because
that's going to hold no weight.
I'm going to try to find facts on actual government things, even though, you know, shit.
A lot of that's weighted, too.
Yeah, but nowadays, it's waited for whatever I'd be arguing.
Yeah, against.
Yeah, so it's like, so you know, I mean, it gives them credit, I guess.
But yeah, so I think that's all we have for today on this dislane Maxwell trial.
I mean, obviously it's corrupt.
I don't think you're going to see anything come out from any elites in this case.
I think they're going to try to put her down.
They're going to do what they can to close this case in this chapter of the Epstein thing.
They want to use Jislane Maxwell to close the chapter on this to where no one ever hears about it again.
You're not even going to hear much about it on mainstream media.
And it's sad and unfortunate, but I think that's just the way it is.
Guys, if you're coming to us and listen to the trial, go listen to some of our other podcast episodes.
I mean, we talk a lot about the corruption that happens.
on a daily, yearly, monthly,
every second basis in this country
from our government.
And this is something that we're fighting.
We're fighting, in reality, we're fighting tyranny.
We're fighting against communism and socialism, socialism and communist, socialist communist.
That's really what is trying to be implemented.
They control the information now.
You know, Twitter, speaking of which Twitter has a new CEO,
Jack Dorsey stepped down.
He, one of the first things he was quoted in saying that,
the First Amendment does not apply on Twitter.
So that's basically just saying we don't give a shit about your First Amendment.
It is our platform.
And we are not bound by anything to care about your First Amendment.
That's literally what he said.
And by the way, this guy has said some crazy shit in the past that people have already brought up.
So this guy's actually probably going to be worse than Jack Dorsey, which is why I don't even get on Twitter.
I actually just...
This could be a whole new podcast.
Yeah, we went on Twitter or I went on Twitter the other day and I just saw that.
I guess people have been tagging us, which we don't have a lot of followers on Twitter because we never go on there.
But people tag us in certain things.
I was reading through stuff and I was like, well, I didn't see any of these.
But, yeah, if you want to find us, we're mostly on Facebook.
Go check us out there.
We do have a social media platform, which I'm working on still.
But I think we should have it out.
I might just release it tonight, but you got to go to our Facebook, like our Facebook page.
I may release it tonight.
If you guys have issues, don't bitch tell me anything because it really needs a little more time.
but I still want people to come on the platform and try it out.
And so the only way you're going to find our new, our new social media platform launching
is by coming to our Facebook, liking our Facebook page, and you'll see it there.
So if we get enough likes on our Facebook page, then we'll release the social media.
And then we'll see.
We'll just see what happens.
I mean, there's going to be some bugs and issues, mostly a little bit on the sign-up process.
But I think those are things we can fix pretty easily.
That's what we're trying to do now.
But I don't think it's going to be.
any worse than some of the other things that were tried out and were like major fails.
No, once you're in, no, but once you're in, you're going to be fine.
Once you're in the platform, everything works great.
It was pretty easy for me when I signed up and did all that thing.
Yeah, it has everything Facebook does for the most part of me.
You can't live stream or anything.
There's a couple of things that we have disabled, such as like videos.
You can't, like, post long videos in there because, I mean, we are, you know, we're not
rich and loaded.
We don't have storage.
Yeah, we don't have tons of storage.
but depending on how the platform goes and all that is, you know, how it'll all work out.
So go like our Facebook page, check us out, give us some good ratings wherever you listen to us at.
And I think that's about it.
We'll definitely touch base back on the Jislane Maxwell case as we get more information.
We're probably not going to do it every day, but we'll keep you guys updated.
And I'm sure we are bound to see something corrupt come from this very, very soon.
So just stay tuned.
And we're going to have, I think our next podcast is going to be about the Waukesha Christmas
Parade and what is really behind that because the media is not talking about that idea.
They're blaming that on a car, not a person.
So that'll be probably one of our next one, guys.
But until next time, we love you.
And bye by now.
Bye bye now.
