Julian Dorey Podcast - #350 - The NBA’s Mafia Gambling Ring Scandal Could Get Way WORSE | Jeff Nadu
Episode Date: October 30, 2025WATCH JEFF NADU'S PREVIOUS EPISODE HERE: https://youtu.be/asKQgeVsjVk PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/JulianDorey (***TIMESTAMPS in Description Below) ~ Jeff Nadu is a Sports Bettor, Content ...Creator, Hoops Junkie, Mafia & Crime Independent Reporter & Host of @thesitdownwithjeffnadu JEFF'S LINKS: X Personal: https://x.com/jeffnadu X Podcast: https://x.com/sitdowncrimepod INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/thesitdowncrime/?hl=en YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/@UCMYV0eyKQFhNZwLXpx7I0Ng FOLLOW JULIAN DOREY INSTAGRAM (Podcast): https://www.instagram.com/juliandoreypodcast/ INSTAGRAM (Personal): https://www.instagram.com/julianddorey/ X: https://twitter.com/julianddorey JULIAN YT CHANNELS - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Clips YT: https://www.youtube.com/@juliandoreyclips - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Daily YT: https://www.youtube.com/@JulianDoreyDaily - SUBSCRIBE to Best of JDP: https://www.youtube.com/@bestofJDP ****TIMESTAMPS**** 00:00 – Chauncey Billups Mob Scandal Breakdown 06:47 – Chauncey & Pierce Poker Scams 12:08 – NBA & Mob Gambling Ties 24:01 – Future Charges & Digital Evidence 35:25 – Last Real Mafia Hit (2014) 41:00 – Violence Returns to Gambino Family 56:21 – Inside Luxury Underground Poker 01:08:18 – Aging Gangsters & Reckless Crews 01:17:51 – Injury Leaks & NBA Corruption 01:39:51 – Media Myths & Conspiracy Frenzy 01:59:05 – Sports Integrity & Gambling Fallout 02:17:36 – Charlie Kirk Shooting Breakdown 02:28:56 – Evil vs Mental Illness 02:41:31 – Viral Moments & Rico Feuds CREDITS: - Host, Editor & Producer: Julian Dorey - In-Studio Producer: Alessi Allaman - https://www.youtube.com/@UCyLKzv5fKxGmVQg3cMJJzyQ Julian Dorey Podcast Episode 350 - Jeff Nadu Part 2 Music by Artlist.io Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, guys. If you're not following me on Spotify, please hit that follow button and leave a five-star review.
They're both a huge huge help. Thank you.
comes all full circle for me, you know, kind of what I do and some of my other life, you know,
with the gambling and all that sort of thing.
So I appreciate you having me back.
Of course, of course.
You were the first guy I thought of, like, when this dropped, I'm like mob, gambling, sports.
I need to hear what they do.
Yeah, you were very nice about it.
You said, you know, you're the only one I want to talk to on this.
I said, beautiful.
I'll make it up.
Well, I have the indictment right here, physical form, old school.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That is, I mean, the thing about this case is like, it's not just one case. It's two cases.
Yes. And a lot of these people know each other. And you hear a lot of this, oh, there's still shoes to drop.
I believe that's absolutely true because there's a lot of this stuff going on. I think you really just have to kind of remember what we've seen happen over the last year or two. So.
Yeah. Well, maybe at the top before we get into the nitty gritty, let's just start with the first.
case, the poker case. Can you just break down what the indictment says and, you know, where
you actually can talk about some things like, you know, what you're hearing from mafia sources
and stuff like that? Because this is literally straight out of Tony Soprano, except they also cheated.
So I want to make this clear right out of the gate, okay? The mafia for years, I'm going to
in decades in New York, in certain businesses,
take a tax from everything.
And when I say tax, they get a percentage of,
and nowadays it's more like kind of seedy business.
So like strip clubs, poker games, things of that nature.
Back in the day, you know about regular extortion.
They were extorting everybody.
Now it's more or less, it's kind of a circuit group of people.
They run poker, dice.
This goes on in New Jersey.
This goes on in Staten Island.
all the boroughs, and in particular areas in Manhattan, so for instance, Greenwich Village,
or one of these games was, that goes to a certain family, and they have a representation in that
game. He collects, he gets a piece of every game. So, like, the fact that the mob's involved
with this is not surprising. If you're playing at a game underground in New York, it's 99%
sure there's some connection to the mob, whether it be an associate,
There might be made guys in these clubs.
And then there's always going to be that captain or made guy that is kind of the overseer
of making sure everything runs, everybody gets paid.
That was one of the things, though, in the indictment that I don't want to say it surprised
me, but it seemed like a little convoluted in that the way they wrote it up and maybe
they were just a little careless with how they wrote it in here, it seemed like games
were being protected at the same time by multiple families.
Well, yeah, so, and that's the thing.
Like, I think there's this premonition.
I've heard it on, you know, I'll say this real clear.
In this case and the other case, some of the worst reporting you'll ever see went on with
this case.
I mean, it's just salacious.
It's, you know, bringing up the, it's cool to say, Chauncey Billups, it was with the mob.
Chauncey Billups, I could almost assuredly tell you, has never spoken to a mobster in his life.
And if he did, he didn't know.
He didn't know it, right.
Maybe he took a picture with somebody or something.
But, like, it's not like they were calling Chaunce in the phone and said, hey, bro,
You showing up tonight?
Like, it didn't work like that.
But yeah, I mean, these indictments can be a little, like, confusing
because you first have to understand the background of the games
and how they work.
And these families work together.
There's this thought in the media that they don't like each other,
their rivals.
These families, they all know each other.
Most of them are cool.
These families aren't fighting in the street.
They all know each other.
They all work together.
Everybody gets a piece.
So, like, in one of the games,
the Gambino and Genevice families,
both had representation in the game, allegedly.
And like I said, if you're in the poker, underground poker scene, these games,
like I said, they're all over the tri-state everywhere.
So, yeah, I think kind of understanding that side and that the people that are also involved
in this are going to be some of these people are some of the biggest cheaters in the gambling
world, whether it be sports betting, poker.
Like who?
For instance, Amwar Awadi
is a known scam artist.
He's one of the biggest cheat
scam artist in America.
Also known as Flappy.
Correct. Correct.
Got it.
And Amwar's name popped up in the Jonte Porter
case. Oh, shit.
Tell people who Jonte Porter was.
Yeah, so last year, Jonte Porter,
Jonte was an NBA player.
His brother Michael Porter
is quite a good player.
where Jonte played for the Raptors
was kind of like a
you know, it wasn't a particularly prominent player
by any means.
I think the biggest thing you have to realize
about the NBA people, whether it's Jante,
Chauncey, Terry
Ruggier, and
Damon Jones.
These are all people that
gamble regularly. Some of these
people, Chauncey Billups has been playing poker
for a long time. Just poker?
Or is he not going to do a lot of other things too?
Like, I'm not going to say he's played poker.
poker's whole life, but, like, I've heard his name over the last five-ish years.
In what context? Just playing poker? No. No. If you really know, and any, if you go to Vegas,
L.A., really, wherever, I've heard that Chauncey and another individual who is not in this
indictment, but I've talked about, it's a prominent NBA player. I don't mind saying his name
either. They scam games. They've been scamming games for years. We're going to get a name?
Paul Pierce
Everybody knows that
But to say they've been scamming games
puts it beyond just them playing in like some regular
They've been cheating in games
But they're actually like cheating
Now when you say the cheating
Because we're going to get to specifically what they did
And they're accused of in this indictment
But when you're talking in that context
Of like Chauncee and Paul
What you had heard
Are we talking regular old school like chip stacking
And signaling
Or are they actually using some of the things
No they're using like there could be some of that stuff
but they're using these shuffling machines, glasses.
And I'm not going to say that they're like,
what's interesting here is like,
and this is why these indictments overlap in a way.
Because if you read the sports betting indictment,
there's a person in it called Eric Ernest.
He's also in this indictment.
He's in both.
Eric Ernest, from what I've been told,
is a close friend of Chauncees.
Eric is pretty tied into the gambling, poker communities, everything, has all sorts of contacts.
And I think that's kind of where some of the bridging of this goes as far as, you know, they know each other through poker and somebody knows somebody else.
And they say, well, maybe he'd be willing to give us something, you know.
But with poker, yeah, Chauncey's played in games.
I talked to one person that told me, in this indictment, there's a reference of a game in April 2019.
In Vegas.
Correct. And this has come out publicly in the media. I posted it and Pablo Tori then posted a day or so later that Kevin Grenet played in that game. I think he played for about an hour and I was told that he left. Did he win or lose? That I don't know. But my source told me that Chauncey, quote, cleaned up in that game. Now, the same source also told me that when he had met Chauncee, he knew that he had played, but he wasn't really good at it. And then he just all of a sudden became really good at it quick, you know? And it did him.
make a lot of sense. And like the stuff I say about Paul Pierce, like, it's not a secret. Paul
Pierce plays poker. He was, he was, in the ESPN, when he was fired from ESPN with the strip
club. Yeah. There was, he was playing a poker game. He's played at some of the, he's played on
stream poker. You know, when he plays poker, he gets drunk and, and acts crazy. And there's nothing
wrong with playing poker. It's a matter of if you're cheating people. Right. If that is the case.
And there's this, there's this thought like, well, these guys make so much money. Like, why?
Why do any of this?
And it's such a ridiculous point
because it's like everybody gambles.
I mean, Dana White is a billionaire in gambles.
You know, some of the richest people on earth
love to gamble.
I think in terms of these athletes,
this is, it started as they love to do it.
And when you really play poker,
when you really bet on sports,
most of these people are degenerate gamblers.
I mean, they just get in too deep.
And before you know it, it's, you know, like I'll take Chauncey, for instance.
Like, let's say he makes five.
I don't know what is.
Yeah, I was just going to say, can we actually Google that, Danny?
So we got Danny filling in for Deef today.
Shout to Danny.
He's new on the team here doing a great job.
But we should get like the year-by-year breakdown of Chauncy Billup's contract.
So Chauncy Billup coaching contract.
But let's just take it.
And let's say he makes $5 million a year.
Okay.
You and I hear that.
Danny hears that.
any guy on the street hears that that's a lot of money right but think about this he makes five
mill a year he really only makes about two two and a half he's got a wife he's got kids he's got to put
them through school he's got family he's got i mean he lives in probably a really nice home like
before you know it like it's a good amount of money but when you're gambling some of the levels
that he is he's not gambling jillion for five ten dollars on the street he's playing games with
50, 100, 200,000 on the table.
You get in quick.
I mean, 200,000's a lot of money.
But that's not what he, just to be clear, like I hear you.
And it sounds like that might be a pattern that he has.
What's so fascinating about his winnings as it's reported in this indictment, though,
is that we're talking about, you know, 10 grand here, you know, 15 grand there for a guy that's making,
we did pull it up 4.7 million in salary and made, I believe, over $100 million in his MBA.
But remember, in this.
indictment, the poker indictment, he's only listed as playing in one game in this indictment,
and that's the one I told you back. In 2019, 2019, correct. Yeah, you were saying he was done,
you tweeted this the other day. They did Chauncey Billups dirty with how they marketed this.
Well, they did because they marketed it that he was in New York playing in Mafia-run games.
Right. He wasn't. Like I said, I don't believe Chauncy Billups has ever met a mobster. I don't
think he ever played in the games in New York. But this is a nationwide ring of people who go to different
cities and run games.
So, for instance, there's a woman in this case.
Her name is Sophie Wee, I believe.
They call her Pookie.
She's run games for years.
Whether it be in New York, whether it be in Vegas,
like, some of these people have, like,
Zen You, he runs games in New York.
There's a guy Saul Botcher in this indictment.
Same with him.
Would anyone, but Jeff,
the FBI is always going to look for a kid.
with organized crimes so if they can make one they'll make one but would anyone really care if it was
like the sopranos games where it's just they it's a big game so it's outside of a casino it's illegal
in that respect but they're just taking a regular rake and whoever wins wins whereas in this one they were
rigging the actual games that's why people and that's and that's the conversation i've had with so many
people that are in the street and not in the street people that are just they play poker i talk to one
guy that plays in these games he's played at lexington avenue and he's played at washington place both in this and
indictment, big guy, and he told me, that's the question I asked him. Because I know, for a fact,
the rake in these games is more money than you could ever need. Oh, yeah, yeah. But they
took it up a notch and said, you know, not only are we going to take an insane rake. We're going to cheat.
We're going to cheat. Because, you know, the people that are playing in these games, some of them
have tons of money. By the way, I should have done this. Sorry, Jeff. But for people out there who
aren't familiar with the case, Chauncey Billups is the current head coach, like literally currently
of the Portland Trailblazers, NBA legend. I kind of allude to that. But when we're saying
rake, it's basically like when you're playing a hand in poker, I'm going to use round numbers here,
and there's $100 in the pot and someone wins it at the end. The house, which would normally be a
casino, takes 2% or something like that. And it's every hand. Yes. So, but it's a little different
than if you go to the brigada to play 2-5.
It's like the rake that they're taking is insane.
So let's say it's a 5K pot.
They're palm and chips.
Like it's,
you don't even know how much you're taking half the time.
They're palm and chips.
Yeah, it's crazy.
So like in one game,
they're making hundreds of thousands just off the rake.
And it's like, that's the ridiculousness of it.
And that's, I'm going to guarantee what some of the old-timers
and some of these families are saying,
what the fuck, we had a good thing here.
And that's why in a way, like I say the mob and Chauncey kind of got screwed.
Because one makes the other a lot more salacious, right?
If the NBA guys aren't in this, this is just another indictment.
That's right.
No one talks about it.
This has happened four or five times against the mob over the last year.
Yeah.
Business expense.
There was one in this state within three months ago.
But there was no Chauncey Billups or whoever else.
So only I heard about it.
I remember Jeff Ney-Doo reporting on that.
Yeah, because I'm one of the only people that does this.
So it's like, but this is now a international story on every news station
and every talking head in sports media is talking about it
because it's a current NBA coach.
Chauncey's problems are not in this case.
They're in the other case.
The fact that you're an open coach in the league currently.
He coached the first night of the season just days ago.
Yeah, I got indicted the next one.
And then a day later, he's, you know, that's going to ruin his legacy.
Like I said, if you're in these circles, like the gambling circle, like it wasn't overly surprising, at least to the people that I talked to, that Chauncey Billups was involved with this.
So, I mean.
They had a feeling.
As far as the poker.
Okay.
We're going to come back to the poker thing and get into the nitty-gritty with that.
But we keep referencing this other case, which is the one you have it up here, Danny.
it was the DL one
Yeah so this one has
You said Chauncey's involved with this one
Despite the fact that he's not listed as a defendant
Yeah so I want to start to be getting in this
Because this is this is really like
It's fascinating how it all comes together
So there's two names in this six person indictment
That are important
Uh huh
Number one is a person De Niro Laster
Okay
Now De Niro Laster is a kid from
near Cleveland,
Shaker Heights area.
Played college football,
University of Kentucky,
that kind of,
you know, he's a pretty decent player.
He played on D1.
Terry Rozier.
Scary, Terry.
Correct.
Went to a high school
within five miles of him.
They have friends.
They've been friends.
I believe they both graduated
in 2014, I believe.
So it all kind of comes together there.
So there's the connection.
They know each other.
Okay.
Okay. The biggest name, though, is Marvis Fairley. He's this guy from Mississippi. He goes by
Vizino. He's in this indictment also. He is a sports betting tout handicapper. He has
Instagram pages, that sort of thing, where he sells picks. So he's like the Stu Feiner
in Mississippi. Right. And these are really, these people are very pervasive now, whether it's
on Instagram, Twitter, you know, you'll see him driving around in really nice cars.
And they kind of sell the, you can be me if you listen to my gambling advice, you know.
And I'm not stating whether he wins or loses.
I don't know.
I'm just going about what the indictment tells us.
Rozier, there was talk that in a game, I believe it was 24, 2024 against, he was only
play for Charlotte.
He plays in a game.
He goes out eight minutes into the game with a injury.
there would be extremely irregular betting into that prop.
And that's the one thing that before I think you get into the actual case itself,
one of the reasons that this is, I think, very pervasive now is prop bets.
Because when you were fixing like a point spread years ago,
you almost have to have one or two or three people involved.
I guess you could have one person do it.
But a prop is so much easy to rig because it's,
literally the only they're the person the person controls whether they get enough
rebounds or assists or whatever and you look at a person like Ruggier who isn't a big
he's not a wing player he's a guard so rebounds are his unlikeliest stat to gain they were
slam in his under rebound prop was it like 1.5 I don't remember what it was but it didn't
matter because he went out of the game anyway and as long as you play they action counts
So they won automatically.
And what they would announce in these indictments is it was extremely irregular.
And what was happening was, Rozier was communicating to Mr. Laster that, you know, this was going to happen, according to the indictment.
He went to Marvis Farley and some of Fairley's co-conspirators.
And they went to legal sports books and bet a ton of money on them.
Do they have any text messages indicating that or is it all like phone logs?
That hasn't been explained in the indictments.
but I would imagine, yeah, whether it be, there is some mention of apps like Damon Jones
or sent money through Zell, things like that.
And I'll have to tell you about a text message where, and when we get to the day, because
it's all, every athlete has their own kind of story.
Now when we talk about Billups, Chauncey had a friend who I mentioned called Eric Ernest.
Eric Ernest's name is involved in both poker and sports bang.
He's kind of, someone described him to me as like kind of a hustler.
he's kind of always out there
making money in games
I don't know how he makes a living
but people said that he's a guy
that's out there in these games
playing betting sports
that sort of thing
Billups has
it's towards the end of the season
the trailblazers are out of
the playoff race
and now we're fighting for
spot in the draft lottery
so the worst team has the best chance
he initiates a conversation
with Mr. Ernest
that certain people aren't going to play,
they're going to tank, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And this is, again, an NBA sitting head coach
doing this.
Yeah.
Okay, so he then gets this to Ernest.
Ernest also goes to Marvis Fairley,
who's this sports betting handicapper guy,
and they make money off this.
So the idea, though, that a sitting head coach
would be involved in fixing their own team's games,
especially to the downside,
is like worst case scenario.
I will say, and I think it is important.
Like, fix, I think, is a bit strong.
I think he was giving information
that the public was not given as well.
So it was insider trading, essentially.
Fixing would be like, I know what you're saying.
If he takes out a guy who's got 37 points
in the fourth quarter with two minutes to go
because he needs to get some.
some sort of prop bet through, and then they lose the game.
That's fixing.
I'm just looking out for you.
You never know.
They take every word you say.
Hey, everything today is allegedly.
Sure.
And it's all alleged.
And it's all in these indictments.
I mean, that's the thing about indictments is like, I wish people would just read them.
They map out everything.
You know, and I think what the problem in this case is in both these cases is literally
no media read the indictment because they're saying a bunch of shit that just hasn't happened.
Like what?
well like again like that billups was playing with mobsters right he didn't um but yeah so so billips gives
that information that the public was not made to know or didn't know at that point why is he not
listed as a defendant on the indictment though that's what i'm confused that uh he he's oh oh
because he's co-conspirator eight they didn't they didn't name him go to the part where it discusses
Portland Trailblazers. It essentially describes him. He's co-conspirator 8. Do edit find next,
Danny, and type in Portland. Yeah, it's the part where they discuss the Portland.
Okay. So the NBA, this is Section 7. The NBA was a professional. Oh, no, that lists all the team.
Go to Next. Yeah. I think it's maybe page seven or eight. March 24, 2023, Portland Trailblazers game.
I'm going to read this, Jeff, so people have it. All right. Fair know.
On or about March 24th, 2023, the Portland Trailblazers played the Chicago Bulls.
Prior to the game, the Trailblazers record was 32 and 40, and the team was out of playoff contention with only 10 games remaining in the season.
Prior to the March 24 game, co-conspirator 8, there he is, told the defendant, Eric Ernest, there's your connection, that the trailblazers were going to be tanking, i.e., intentionally losing to increase their odds of getting a better draft pick in the upcoming NBA draft.
Co-conspirator 8 told Ernest before the news was publicly announced that several of the Trailblazers' best players, including Player 1, an individual whose identity is known to the grand jury, but is not announced here, would be playing in the March 24th game.
The information that the Trailblazers would be tanking and not playing Player 1 was not available to the public, including the betting companies.
Prior to the March 24 game, the defendant, Eric Ernest, provided this non-public inside information to the defendant, Marble.
fairly so the fairly could place fraudulent wages on the game and show the profits with and share
the profits with earnest in exchange fairly ultimately promised to pay earnest at least $5,000 if the
bets let's go down a page ding if the bets against the trailblazers were successful in
addition fairly texted earnest there it is a screenshot of a purported $20,000 wire transfer from
fairly's bank account to earnest accompanied by the message address for wire.
That's insane that you would put that on it.
Well, and what also you didn't read is they described co-conspirator 8
and he's a NBA All-Star Hall of Famer that played in the league
from these days to this date and he's a prominent coach for the Trailblazers.
So it essentially makes Chauncey Billups co-conspirator 8.
So why didn't they put his, I'm so confused.
What's the legal thing there?
I think there's all sorts of, there's some co-conspirators in here that are named
co-conspirators.
There are a player, certain one to be needed.
named like they figured out you can figure out who these people are right my guess is though
there could be superseding charges on on right so they'll actually charge him in a later
indictment probably because right now he's technically not charged in that indictment technically
technically but why good and that would have to be something the feds would have to answer like
why is he not listed but like this is comp you know everybody's put this out already but yeah
I mean it's really as simple as it says here and this is again something I've tried to understand
when you were a criminal, really in any circle, this right here is the end for you.
Yes, because the phone.
Yeah, and it's just so, you know how hard it is to communicate without a phone,
you know, even as simple as something like you go to do a murder and the phone's in your pocket
and you think it's turned off and it's not, like, that doesn't mean shit.
Yeah.
The only way you can stay away is by not having the phone with you.
And you know what?
To your point is everybody, bro.
I just had Mike Eagley in this chair two times.
Yeah, I watched that, yeah.
So he literally tracked and went to the government to say you have a problem from his bedroom with
publicly available data.
He tracked phones leaving Fort Bragg, going back to certain addresses, got the names of everyone
there and that would watch these phones every month or two go to fucking Syria to Lafar's
concrete company and went to the government and said, hey, guys, your Delta Force undercover operation
is findable in my bedroom.
What do you think China's doing?
So it's, like, now, now if you're a regular two-bit criminal, think about how easy it is.
But, but, like, what even is more, like, amazing about some of the stupidity in this is, like,
you don't even try to use, like, signal or telegram.
Like, you're just doing it on, like, a regular text message.
You're then taking the money, wiring it.
Like, there's just so many things that, like, these people do.
And, again, like, I think anyone thinks, like, I'm not going to get caught.
And I think in terms of like why the players did this, why the coaches did this, I think most of it probably goes back to the fact that they owed money.
And like when you look at Jonte Porter, who I talked about, Jontay Porter owed a gambling debt.
Yes.
And he owed a gambling debt to some of the people that are listed in these indictments.
So I think they go to them and say, look, you know, we're not going to threaten you.
We're not going to do anything like that.
But you owe me.
Just don't grab a rebound.
No one's ever going to find out.
you know and and and and he thinks like well i do owe this and you know i want to keep betting or
i don't want to have any problems so i'm going to do it and i just think the thought is knowing
whatever get caught you know you know what i want to know with this this is where my head goes to
this is going to be very interesting if it's if it comes out in court is these platforms these
betting platforms they're obviously you know online electronic they have their automatic data
collectors, I wonder if people at the company flag these. Well, I'm going to tell you why they
absolutely are. And this is how these people have been caught. I mentioned prop bets and kind of how
they work. If on tonight's Monday night football game, there's millions of thousand. Actually,
that's going to be very normal, right? But some random prop. And that's the thing about these people.
They didn't even try to hide like and bet, you know, 10, 20,000. Right. It was we're going to bet as
much as we can on some random prop and we're the only people that know about it.
Like it, and, and this is why when someone brings up, well, see, this is what gambling's doing to these leagues.
No, this is the good thing about why we have legalized gambling because regulators spot this shit.
And without, that's what the good thing about a regulated market is.
It's regulated.
It's just like this has been one of my thoughts on why we need to legalize narcotics in America.
Because when you legalize something, there's a regulated board that,
looks over it and make sure that everything's working.
So here's the one thing about that, Jeff,
because I would like to think that way too.
But like something that I supported forever and do support
is a legalization of weed.
And yet I just had Steve Robinson in here
who's uncovered all the ways that because they mass legalized it at once,
all the ways fucking everyone's breaking every law
and the regulars aren't doing shit about it.
And that is true.
That said, when it's illegal,
there is no sort of oversight.
and everybody's doing it anyway.
That's true.
And when I talk about gambling, like,
if we didn't have legalization
and we didn't have some of these big sports books
and a regulated body that look over it,
some of this stuff maybe wouldn't be under scrutiny.
And remember, before PASPA was passed,
the legalized betting law,
this was all done offshore.
So that brings in the fact of you're now dealing
with foreign governments,
maybe in some that we don't even deal with,
and there's no way to even understand what's going on.
So, yeah, I think the flagging of the wages,
That's why this stuff popped up.
And we've seen that with some of the other investigations that these bodies are doing.
There was investigations the last several years into various college games, Temple University, New Orleans.
Can you explain that one?
The Temple University one?
Yeah.
So there was irregular bets on point spreads, wide moves in the line.
I'm talking 13, 14 point moves in a basketball game, which is insane.
And what we've seen is a lot of those are and have been under investigation.
So I think all these people, and I'm going to maybe say something that no one else has heard,
but if you don't, and I'm not saying it's these people and these indictments,
but there is a group of people currently, and it's not the mafia or anything like that.
It's young kids that have a bunch of money that bet.
They're going to athletes and saying, look, everybody's doing this.
You want to make some money sometimes?
hit me up we'll make it work for you i think that's absolutely going on because when we hear nil you
know we think about you know the cooper flags of the world or make a tons of money a lot of the
schools involved in some of this stuff that were investigated you know schools like you know
north kina a and t was yeah they're making nothing you know people like that they're not making
little if any money and you know i i think it's just a real simple thought of like the money
just dropped off on your stoop, you know, and, you know, you do what you got to do.
Now, that hasn't been involved in an indictment.
There's been investigations.
Are they working towards something with that?
If they do, that's going to be really big.
Oh, dude, I'll bet it's coming.
And I think what's the sad part for me is, like, I love college sports.
It's my bread of butter when it comes to sports betting.
I thoroughly enjoy it.
And to hear, I bet on that UAB.
Temple game, the one that I talked about.
I mean, I remember the game perfectly.
So it's...
When was this last year?
This was...
I remember the game, it was like a hundred to 72 or something.
It was a wild game.
Was it...
The years run so consecutively.
I think it was late 23, early 24.
And I remember it was a big story.
And the reason this whole, like,
there's a shadowy group that's doing this,
there was a TikTok that went viral
from some, like, third street.
quarterback at like vanderbilt or something and he said that he knows that there's this like mafia
like group that came to him and people just threw it out like oh this fucking kids rage bating or
something engagement farming and you know i think in the circles that that i've gotten to know and
been in like this is definitely happening oh yeah you know and i again want to i don't want to be
city or not, like, I'm an apologist for the mafia because I'm not. But, like, I think what it really
is is people that are likely maybe running games, poker games, and they also are sports betters.
Maybe they're someone who knows a mobster. And they use it as, you don't want to say no to me.
Right. Right. It's a pressure tactic. I don't think they're out there, like, threatening to hurt people.
It's just kind of, and that's the funny thing that I learned about in all the mob stuff I'm doing.
Like, I think most Joe Q public, they hear the word mafia, and they think like, you know, what the movies have told us, you know, or what the mafia maybe was 50 years ago.
The mafia is not the powerful group that it was once.
Right.
But most people assume that it still is.
Like, if I go out, you know, on the street right now and I ask five people, when you hear the word mafia, what do you think of?
You know what they're going to say generally?
Murder?
No. Tony Soprano.
Oh, you're thinking of my gosh.
They're just going to bring up some fake movie actor or something
or John Gotti or something like that.
I think that the most of America has a lost thought on like what,
like even some of the reporting in this, it's like the mafia.
It's like from someone that I don't like to call myself an expert, but like...
You're an expert in the mafia.
Okay, well, and I'll tell you, like, I've been doing this four years.
the amount of people in that life
that have contacted me
in one way or another that say
I love your show
I mean I could write a book
I mean it's not like they're bashing down my door
a lot of the time look
would I walk around certain neighborhoods
in Staten Island or something by myself?
Probably not.
No one would.
You know I think it's really just like
you worry about maybe some of the young kids
that get upset or something
but like I'm trying to point out here
is the mafia I don't
They don't have that capability to go to athletes and stuff.
They're not doing that.
These are young people doing this.
You've made the claim, though, publicly that the mafia hasn't dropped a body in years.
Now, before I go into this, there is no doubt that as far as, like, dropping bodies and stuff like that goes compared to 30 years ago, there's no doubt that that would have pulled back a lot.
But you're telling me that they haven't whacked anybody in the last decade.
There is a no-kill order in the mob right now.
What kind of source do you have on that?
There haven't been any.
Yeah, that we know of.
No.
But let me explain it like this.
So I want to also backtrick because there will be people in the comments saying, well, hold on a second.
Frank Cali, the alleged acting boss, the Gambino Cry family, he was killed in 2019.
He wasn't killed by someone in the mob.
He was killed by a crazed individual that he was.
he had a beef with. Right.
Who was not in the mafia.
Conveniently.
Right. No. You can look it up.
Anthony Camelo was ruled insane.
He's in a nut house somewhere in New York.
That's the truth.
I mean, does he have like a good coach as a lawyer or?
Look, I don't like that pause.
Do I think, I did an investigation into Anthony Camelo.
I talked to people that knew him as a child.
I talked to people that knew him as a high schooler.
do I think at some point Anthony Camillo had a dream to be a mob guy
probably he was from Staten Island every kid does right
but was he in a family connected to a family and did it for you know
maybe in his stupid warped head he thought he was going to impress somebody
but he was not sent by someone else Frank Callie if you talk around
was very respected by everybody that that I know of in that life
no one said a bad word about him he was a very powerful individual
He wasn't somewhere out there, you know, in public, like a John Gotti would be.
He was very low-key, made money.
He was a Sicilian guy.
He was very respected.
Wait, he was actually, so he's a zip?
He was actually from Sicily.
Yeah, he was part of the Sicilian faction of a family.
Got it.
And he, you know, he married into a pretty prominent family.
So there's no involvement.
Camelo was not like work for someone else and another family who won't have Frank Callie dead.
The last known murder involving the mob, involving the mob, was a guy Michael Meldish, who was taken out in I think it was 2014 in the Bronx.
Michael Meldish was a Jewish guy.
He was a gangster, and he had worked with the mob for years off and on.
The alleged people that did that hit were associates of the mafia.
And why did they do it?
Well, there's a number of reasons why Michael Meldish was taken out.
It's never truly been proven, one of which was that he owed money, a large amount of money.
and he was basically telling them the fuck off
and he was not going to pay it.
There's also a growing concern
that Meldish was dating a woman
that was connected to another member
because Meldish was actually a beaten
at a festival about a year before
by members and associates
to the Monano Crime family,
one of which is right here.
Ernest Iiello.
Wasn't he just found guilty of something else too?
No, that's Joe Lonnie.
I'll talk about Joe.
Joe's had a bad couple of weeks.
But Ernest ILO, weirdly enough, was someone who beat up Michael Meldish at,
I think it was the Gileo Feast, which is in Harlem.
I think it's every October.
I think it was just a couple of weeks ago.
Michael Meldish was attacked.
And Ernie was supposedly one of the people that did that.
And then a year later, he's dead.
Yeah.
So there's growing thought.
The people that they ended up finding out, supposedly did this,
were tied to the boss of the Lucchese crime family.
the guy, Maddie Madonna.
He's actually serving life for this hit.
Yeah.
He's old.
He's like in his late 80s.
They sent two hitters.
One of them was a black associate.
Terence Caldwell.
He did pieces of work for the family occasionally.
And then another kid, Chris Londonia, is his name.
And yeah, that was the last known mob hit.
Some families, like the Colombo family,
the last known murder involving a member of the mob
by another member of the mob was way back in 19,
99. Again, though, that we know of. Well, here's the thing. I mean, we would know if someone was
killed. It would be reported. Nobody, no crime. Someone would wonder where they are. Sure. But
there's missing people every day. All I'm saying is, and you could talk to Jerry Capesia at Gangland
News. You could talk to any prominent, bigger than me, reporter on the mob, the ones that are still
out there. There's largely been a no-killer. And we know that, too, because if you notice,
Where are all the rats now?
They're on YouTube.
Right.
They walk around Little Italy.
Yeah.
The mob doesn't even kill them.
That, now, hold on.
That would make sense to me, though, because of the public availability of who those people are.
I'm going to tell you why they don't do it.
Because they've been neutered by the government.
That's why.
They don't have power to do that anymore.
And they're under scrutiny.
They're constantly, look at any time they can use the mafia in something.
Look at what happens.
Right.
anybody will tell you they're not killing nobody it's not happening could some nutcase go off the
deep end and do it and go off cold cock maybe now why don't they make and i know they make some cases
but you don't hear about it i'm just going to name one for example about cases made against the russian
mafia a lot because that's totally different i i've talked to fbi guys who have been very specific that
to be clear more along you're thinking the mafia doesn't really drop a lot of bodies anymore
they don't go as far as you and say they do not
none, but they do say like it's not like it used to be for sure, but they're like the Russians.
What I also want to, and I also want to make this, because this is really important to say,
when I talk about no kill order, I'm talking about Kosoostra.
Yes.
Five Fabres.
Yes, I know that.
I'm not talking.
Like, you look at other organized, and this is why the mafia is no longer on the criminal
totem pole at the top.
But that's why I'm asking, Jeff.
Yeah.
If another type of mafia faction in this case, like the Russians are doing that shit, which they are.
Albanians, you got cartels.
And they're not getting.
There's not a giant public manhunt for the fucking Russian organizations.
What's stopping the Italians from being like, well, I guess we'd be okay too.
Because the difference between these groups and the one, the word talking about here,
is there have been some of the greatest films ever made about them.
You don't like Eastern Promises?
It's a great movie, but it's not the Godfather.
It's not good, fellas.
It's not the greatest television of all the time, the Sopranos.
The mafia has become a pariah for the government, and they've done a great job,
them out. I'm not going to tell you they haven't. That is probably the one thing this government
from an organized crime at the FBI level did very well. And all these guys, and I use that word
neutered because that's what they are. They are a clipped group that they cross the street the
wrong way. Oh, yeah. They're getting jammed up. And I think this is what makes this indictment,
this poker thing, so kind of crazy to me because some of the people that they did end up doing
business with here are considered what I would say to be hotheads. I do find it interesting
that most of the mob guys in this, so you're Ernie ILO, Didino, Lee Fama, Tommy Jolardo,
they're all in terms of the mob young. Wasn't Ruggiero's kid in this too? Yep, quack,
yeah, junior. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You also have Joe Lonnie, who I could talk about. Yeah, Joe Lonnie's
the one who's having a bad month. Yeah, Joe's had a really bad month. And you do,
look at, and what I referenced in a recent show I did about Lonnie and his people, I would say
if there is a semblance of some violence coming back, we're starting to see it in some of the
recent indictments, particularly Joe's indictment. Joe was involved in late 2023 in an indictment
surrounding members and associates of the Gambino crime family. Joe is a captain, allegedly.
He is part of the Sicilian faction. He has ears to some of the top brass in that group.
Joe and his associates were attempting to take over the carding and demolition industries.
So essentially garbage and demolition.
And in that indictment, there are pervasive acts of violence.
I'm talking about beating people with hammers, lighting things on fire.
And that's what I'm talking about.
And that's where, and I talked about that in a recent video,
and I discussed kind of why the Gambino crime family on certain levels is starting to come back just a bit.
And I think what goes to your argument and why you could see it.
maybe the next few years is recently,
and what's funny is the FBI had mentioned about a month ago
in a press release that you probably didn't even see
that there's actually only one FBI squad now
looking at all five families, C5.
That's the only unit left.
And I think with that and like less oversight,
and some of again, these families are starting to get more young.
And I talked about why the Gambina,
they're starting to make new members,
20, 30, 40 years old.
You know, these are younger people in terms of the mob.
Yes.
And what I find that goes hand in hand with this is in the Lanny indictment and in this
indictment, younger people.
Tommy Jolardo is like 40, 39, I think.
And he has some sort of kind of senior role.
Violent stuff.
Yeah.
And, you know, so I think if, as I said, I don't believe there's been any murders,
and I know there hasn't been, could there be in the next few years?
it wouldn't surprise me
but if you read to these indictments
there is starting to be more and more
violence and for anyone that says
this isn't a violent case
I mean you have to go back to
for instance count six
Hobbs act robbery conspiracy
we talked about the cheating
how they cheated was
they were using rig shuffling machines
now any casino in America
you've played poker
they all have shuffling machines
the thing that makes these different is
Think of it like a ghost gun.
You have to get parts to assemble a ghost gun.
You have to have someone add a switch to it even.
Right.
That has to be done by a person in particular.
Not anybody can do that.
Oh, shit.
They're doing that with shuffling machines?
Yeah.
Whoa.
Think of it also like, if you watch Breaking Bad, right?
Yeah, I did.
So one of the challenges that Walt and Jesse have early on is they're trying to cook meth by using
pseudofed, which is you have to have a ton of suitor fed.
Right.
And there's actually a law where, like, I have Zyrtec D.
I use it for allergies.
You can't buy more than one pack of Zyrtec.
I don't know if you know that.
You have to sign like a paper.
And that protects it against people.
They would, they call them Smurfs.
They would take Smurfs and send them in the drugstores and buy a bunch of Sudafed.
And what Walt and Jesse realizes, if they get methylphenidate, I believe it is, they get
in the big drums, they can make all sorts of meth.
And it's way easier.
But getting that's hard.
same thing with a rigged shuffering machine you can get a shuffler but getting someone with a certain
set of skills that can shuffle it and rig it that's another story and what these guys did
the greed they didn't even pay for it they just jammed the guy up and stole it from them that's your
hobzac robbery conspiracy and not only these geniuses they use their own cars to do it you see them
on pole cameras there there's toll records and
they set them up. They picked the guy up with the shuffling machine. John Doe 7. He has the shuffling
machine in his hands. Two of the defendants have a car in park and two other defendants
come up and rob him with the shuffling machine. Where is that in count six? That's in count
seven. Okay. And I'll find where it describes what they did in particular. And we're about between
September 2023 and October 2023, both dates being approximate and inclusive within the Eastern
District of New York and elsewhere. The defendants Saul Bell, Betcher, Zen, who, also
known as Jonathan Chan. I love how it's Jonathan. Yeah. Jonathan Hu, Scruly and Stanley,
and Seth Trussman, together with others, did knowingly and intentionally conspire to obstruct
delay and effect commerce and the movement of articles and commodities in commerce by extortion
in that the defendants and others obtained property to wit United States currency from John Doe
number six with his consent, which consent was induced by wrongful use of actual threatened
enforce violence and fear.
I'm going to send you the detention memo in this.
The detention memo?
Yeah, that will describe it.
That's actually better than the indictment.
I can email it to you right now.
That's right there.
Yeah, that's enough.
Okay.
All right, sorry, we couldn't find that for a minute.
So we're back now.
All right, I'm going to read this, Jeff.
So this is the, what's it called a detention?
This is a part of the detention memo.
Yeah.
Okay.
So robbery of John Doe number seven, count six, as charged in count six of the indictment
defendants.
Awaday, Hodi, Mazzola, Manucci, and Stroud plotted to rob a rigged shuffling machine from John Doe No. 7 in September 2023.
The robbery was successful in the early morning hours of September 7, 2023, specifically Stroud, learned that John Doe 7, who was also involved in the operation of rigged poker games, had a rigged version of the deckmate one shuffler, and he plotted with others to rob it from John Doe 7 at gunpoint.
In the early morning hours of September 7, 2023, John Doe 7 was in a car with Hodi and Mazzola
where two individuals recruited by Mnucci approached the car, brandish a gun, and demanded the box from
John Doe 7. At the time of the robbery, Hodi, who was to driving the car and in on the scheme,
along with Mazzola, kept the car in park and did not drive away.
John Doe number 7 turned over the rig shuffling machine to Mnucci and the gunman.
Evidence of the robbery includes text messages, pull camera footage, and lightens plate ready information,
showing the cars registered to Manucci and Hodi participated in the robbery.
For example, on September 6th, 2023, the day before the robbery,
Goodson sent Stroud a photograph of John Do 7 at the airport,
apparently confirming that John Do 7 had arrived in New York
at approximately 12.31 a.m. on September 7th, poll camera footage,
showed Manucci's car arrive at Lexington Avenue at the same time,
right by the location too.
At the same time, Hodi texted Aouday.
Nick is here.
Do I let him up?
I guess, meaning light him up, to which Aoudi replied,
tell him I'm coming down.
No, that's, Nick was there to see him.
Oh, right, right, right.
Kind of like when I came here.
Right, right, right, come up.
Okay, so scroll down, Danny.
After the robbery, Hennaday and Awaday exchanged the following messages about how Al-a-day
had participated in the robbery of the decade.
And so these messages are kind of quite funny.
Henan texts Awadi and says, so you're robbing D1 machines now.
Uh-huh.
And he sends a meme back like, you hide your wife, hide your kids meme.
and yeah so it's just like very like
it's nice to mobsters use memes too
yeah like but these are like just young
like game runner cheats that are like stealing
chuffling machines
and there's also another situation where eventually
so I mentioned there's two games
there was one in Greenwich Village 80 Washington place
and then there's one up in Midtown
it's Lexington Avenue 147 Lexington Avenue
it's in Kipps Bay
at one point the mob
Great neighborhoods too
yeah at one point
the mob members and associates decide that
they're going to combine both of the games.
They're going to just have one big game on Lex.
To which defendant Awadi says,
fuck you guys, I'm starting my own game
and I'm going to keep it at Washington.
And you're not going to do shit about it.
And I'm going to have it the same day and time as you.
To which the other count of violence comes in
where defendant Gilardo and Ziliani,
they're both ones a mob,
made guy, the other's an associate
they run in this house
during a game and beat
up Awadi
and then Gilardo texts the other
co-conspirators and says
keep him the fuck away from us, don't talk to any of
him and his people. He's dead to us
basically. Imagine
telling the mob, fuck you, I'm doing my own
game. Well, but I think this
goes back to what I said earlier that
like I think some guys just don't really worry
about it and I think think that nothing's going to
happen and there are still some, sometimes
guys that are willing to hurt you like gelardo's a you know anybody that i've talked to is a tough
guy like he's a you know he he he goes to the gym guy you know he's if you've ever seen
tommy gelardo you know like he's you know he dated a mob wife he's you know like from the show
yeah yeah which one uh she's in one of the pictures okay um it's beautiful girl i mean i i i'll
tell you what thing about tommy he has no trouble with the ladies yeah hit images
yeah he's a he's a big that guy right there oh yeah yeah would you mess with him he's he's a big
dude yeah and Tommy is you know uh you know he's a moneymaker they they see this fucking
hey yo trotsie yeah trotsie won in what are you doing here yeah you know and they just ran
in the game and i think that's when this all kind of came apart these games because i think
one thing like when we look at these game runners some of the guys in this indictment so like
Amar Wadi
Saul Betcher
Like all these guys
They run the games
And they just kind of work in unison
With these guys
What is that
See the one that says
Exclusive Shell Shock
To the right
To the right
To the right
A little more
Right there
What does that say
That's Chauncy Bill
Yeah but okay
I didn't know
If it was showing this guy
In the picture it doesn't
Is that Way
Is that Sophia way
Right there
I don't believe so
I think this is
Some sort of
Like charity game
or something
but um okay yeah that's just kind of i think showing us that he plays poker i don't know what that's
from it could be i i've only seen her in one photo so i don't know offhand but um but you would to go
back to truancy for one sec just as a sidebar so as you laid out towards the beginning of our
conversation you had heard that he was big into just gambling in general for years yeah did anyone
ever insinuate to you that he was in debt to a lot of people and that he would therefore
be a threat for insider?
Well,
you know, here's what I'll tell you.
And this actually went viral the day this came out.
This was said several years ago by a guy Matt Berkey.
He's a poker professional, poker, big poker player.
Oh, I saw this video.
Yeah.
Burkey has a podcast.
And he talked about years ago, he said it in 2019, you know, I knew this game is no good.
And Chauncey was at it.
But like I said, the reason why I think Chauncey, at least in the poker stuff, like, I've said time at time again, I don't think he ever knew anyone in the mob.
He played in a game that some of these defendants kind of worked overlapping on the West Coast because these guys are all around the country.
Well, Jeff, that's also underscoring like a wild point here.
The fact that at some of these games where they're rigging it, they invite professional poker players who do nothing.
but play poker and are poker geniuses, they are that confident, wrongly so, that they're not
going to be caught, that they invite guys whose job it is to play the game and assume they're
going to be like, oh, well, I guess I just got cleaned out by Chauncey Billups. Like, come on.
Well, and that's why they reference, like, the face card thing. Yeah. Which a face card,
yeah, so a face card was, you know, a member of the cheating team that received some sort of, you know,
money from it he was then you have the quarter or the quarterback which like directs all the people
and what to do because when you get these uh shuffling machines there's also like stuff under the table
that could read the card that has to be pushed to someone else and then in turn to someone else
so there's a lot of people that need to be involved and then chauncey and damon jones were involved
in you know bringing like like a cabin arnard or or attracting big fish yeah right victims and that's the
as well. I mean, I think the big thing that I would include in the poker stuff is there are two
separate sets of games, the ones that are controlled by New York and the mob, and then all the other
ones. Yeah. You know? Yeah. I think, you know, also, it's got to be said, the fact that
if you're going to attract big fish, forget just the poker players, they're also allegedly
attracting celebrity friends with deep pockets. And by the way, Kevin Garnett is someone who got
taken for, I believe, $77 million by a financial advisor back in the day. So this is someone
who's been a victim to stuff before. And if this is alleged to be true, you, his friend,
Chauncey Billves, bring him to a game that you know is getting rigged. That is some low,
I mean, it's all low life, but that is some low, low life. Yeah. And I, and I, and Kevin Garnett
was just in fucking uncut gems, which is a movie about, like, I mean, you can't even make this
shit up. But, but I do think, like, I think we have to also remember, like,
There's a, there's a fine line between, like, playing poker and though taking a rake is
illegal, like, everybody does that, you know?
But, like, where it becomes really scammy is when you're, again, like you just said,
you're cheating.
Like, you're, you know, also, like, when you play in these games, like, I talked to one
guy that played at Lex, the Lex game, he said, played there many times.
He said, I asked him, I said, so if there are 10 games, how many are being cheated?
He said, all 10.
And he knew it.
Yeah.
So he stopped playing those games.
Exactly.
Right.
And he even told them.
a lot paying you. What kind of guy was this? Like, any, someone mob associated? I mean, yeah,
I mean, this guy knows people for sure. I mean, is he a may guy? No, but like he, he plays,
you know, a lot of guys play. Maybe they run a game or something, but like, he knew what was
going on. I mean, I think, but then again, there are people that just don't care. They have money.
They don't care. Like, some of the fish that are in these games in New York, they don't care
that they're losing and being cheap. No, they're degenerate gamblers. But they, if they can't
win but i don't know if they knew that's the thing right okay some people didn't some smart
guys like you just said like the poker pros yeah they probably know i'll tell you right now if i went
to a home game and there are two things going on i wouldn't play if they allowed phones
or they had a shuffling machine i wouldn't wonder no yeah be like so i played it um i'll shout
at my hustler casino live uh it's a big prominent poker stream yeah no phones uh-huh you put them in a locker
Yep.
And it's a one-hour delay on the stream.
So, like, if you watch the words is a poker, it's not live.
Oh, right.
There's a delay to prevent this shit.
Of course.
You go to some game in New York that is underground
and off the beaten path.
You know, and what's, I think what I want to tell the public
about these games that's so kind of inviting
is these games anybody would want to play at.
Like, it, I've always said,
the funnest thing you can do is play poker.
It's so fun.
And it's a great game.
And like you're there, and especially if you're winning, it's great.
And these games are particularly great
because they're in a beautiful home or like apartment.
You get escorted up with like a big security guy.
Everybody's money's good.
It's not like you walk in with $100,000.
It's all sent up before you get there.
You walk up, beautiful table.
I mean, you can, any food you want, they'll go get you.
great liquor
there are women there
and I'm talking
I've seen the women
that are at these games
and they do approved
they're just beautiful
they're topless
you know
I'm sure if you need it alone
someone will give it to you
like it's a nice inviting
type of poker
it's better than going to
like a burgada or something
you know it's great
and I think that's kind of the inviting
and that's a sad thing
I think about this stuff
is like I said before
they didn't need to cheat
right like these games are already big enough they're basically doing like what the astros
did except at a poker table yeah and what what i think makes it really hard on like the
the chauncies and people like that damon jones as well and i still want to talk about damon
yeah we're going to talk about him in a minute yeah yeah i think what sets them up and and i want
again make it clear in this poker indictment there's only one mention of mr billups playing in one
of these games.
2019.
Correct.
You know, do I believe and have I heard that he's played poker for years and he's been
involved in some tough stuff himself in poker?
Yes, but that is not involved in this.
Can we pull up Chauncey's Wikipedia?
I just want to see a timeline here because he's been the coach now, the Blazers, the last
two, three years.
I just want to make sure before I speculate something here that I know.
I mean, one other thing that I'll point out.
Go ahead.
I mean, in and around July or in June of 23, one of the games, John Doe won, lost approximately
$1.8 million.
That's a, I mean, that's an insane amount of money, you know?
That's how big these games can go.
Yeah, let's see.
All right.
So go all the way down, Danny.
I want to go past his professional career.
I think he's been the coach since 21.
Right.
But I want to see.
I believe he was.
in keep going it's a while he had a long career all right okay okay so big three 2017 billups
was a player in that 2020 November 2020 so a year and a half after that 2019 game he's hired as
an assistant coach to the clippers with to Ron Lou and then he's named head coach of the trailblazers
less than a year later in June 2021 wasn't he in broadcasting before that yeah I think he did some
Yeah, I think he did, I think it was at ESPN, which is over here.
So is Paul Pierce as well.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Very interesting.
Over here, dangerously close to where some New York games were being played.
I'm not making any claims here.
I'm just pointing out some geography.
That's it.
This is all allegedly.
But that's interesting.
And again, I'm not saying this.
I was told by people that Paul Pierce has played in New York games before.
But then again, like, there have been stories that, you know, baseball players,
I'm not going to name which ones played in these poker games.
Like, that's public information.
Yeah, and it also, to be clear, just playing in the games doesn't make it guilty or anything
for all we know.
And actually, it's more probable than not, especially if they're not named in this indictment,
a lot of them were marks.
They were, quote, unquote, as you said, the term was used face cards who were brought
there for two reasons, to be a mark for their money, to be taken for a fucking ride,
and also to attract other people who have deep pockets without a high profile publicly to come
there and be taken for a ride, which makes a lot of sense. It's just sad that it would appear
that sometimes it was literally their friends, quote unquote, inviting them to these games
to get taken. Yeah, and I think, you know, that's, if that truly is what happened in the
Garnett type thing, I know Antonio Gates, it's been reported he played at one of the games
of Miami. You ended that early. I did. Yeah, I did. Pablo Tori then put it out, which I don't,
I mean, Pablo's bigger than I am, you know, it's just just what it is. But I think-
You don't have a hashtag, though.
Well, he doesn't.
But what I think that's cool about that is it gave me kind of some confirmation that the reporting that I'm getting is good info.
What were they saying about Gates?
What was the specific just that he played in one?
Gates played at the game of Miami, which is referenced here.
I've also heard another prominent athlete, a boxer played there and others as well.
I think that's the...
Is it rhyme with Schmoid-Schme-Weather?
No.
Okay.
No.
It rhymes with...
I won't say it out, though.
There were a game in the Hamptons, you know?
Oh, yeah, I saw that.
June, 2023, by the way, during dangerously close to free agency, tampering period.
Yeah, I mean.
Right.
And again, like, I think people see this money.
It's like, you go to a game, you lose 105K at a game.
I went to Hustler and lost four or five grand.
It's like, that's a decent amount of money to lose in a game.
That's a tough night.
You lose 100K, I mean, if it's over two or three games.
Yeah.
It's just, on both accounts, it's not, it didn't have to happen.
And it all goes back to the theory we're talking about with the mob.
You know, it's a lot of these defendants mob-wise are young, you know.
And it's, I think, some of you're starting to see some of the younger guys
starting to get in a little bit deeper to some of the violence and willing to take chances.
What do you think is causing that the fact that they're having success now suddenly would like,
let's call it like gen z and millennials and recruiting is it the pop culture aspect not maybe i think
you know a lot of these kids you know i've always said like if you're a family member of these people
you know it's pretty likely that you'll get into the life so like if your father's a mob guy
you know everybody wants to do what their dad did you know right um and and i think to be a mob guy
yeah there is a part of like i'm a cool guy and then like let's see you live in harrow beach queens you know
being a made guy is is big thing you know how small communities are you know I know like in the
town I live in you know dude in Jersey it's yeah you know and like those little towns like that
like I'm in like I'm not some celebrity but like I get recognized it's cool you know like people
I see a bar store whatever like that's kind of how it is but for like mob guys it's it's a certain
level of like they get respect yeah it's an interesting like in the internet culture where
it's not the same as it was and now everyone can whip out a camera and whatever, I never knew
any of those guys, but I was in a restaurant a few different times where it was understood
that one of those guys walked in and it's like, oh, no one's whipping out their phones,
you know. No. And like I said, when you live in like a small like Staten Island type
place where everybody knows everybody, you know, sometimes you just get into the life because
it allows you to like have, you could be a businessman. You might own a car dealership or something.
it allows you like a leg up and like negotiating and shit you know um so it's it's it's a lot
different now you know it's you don't have to kill somebody to get in you don't have to be a big
drug trafficker to get in like a lot of the businesses that these guys are involved in not poker
obviously but there are a lot of them are involved in legitimate businesses so how do you now in the old
days when it was pure you know for a guy to get made very often it was he had to make his bones first
right so that's not by making my making your bones it's you kill a guy so they're not doing that
now so what's the and what are you hearing are the equivalence of them making their bones to get
made they're not doing it they just crime the method of money making the method of inviting at this
point and i'm going to tell you something that's pretty wild that not a lot of people who ever bring
up there are guys in this indictment i'm not going to say who one of which there's a question of
years ago he was involved in a crime he gave statements to the police there's paperwork on it
he mentioned other people's names um now in that world that is no good you don't do that's a
cheese eating rat bastard right you can't like even like and it's as simple as like if you're on a fed
case and they they call you down and you like start make a small talk what a cop like that's no good
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You know, but one of them in this case.
you know that's that's a question he's involved in this now and it's like well how like why are you
dealing with him but i talk to somebody and they told me like nowadays it's as simple as you could be a
stone cold rat but if you can make money for people they're letting you around nobody cares
some people nobody cares that now i'm not saying every one of them guys is like that because
there's you know there's still some people in that life that you know are dead in the wool
gangsters but are they are they going to that's wild yeah and that's that's kind of the real
concern that i have is just how how how how is an organization can you continue like that
because we've seen it just get brittle down through government scrutiny and all that sort of thing
and i think that's another thing and we've seen that in life in general where values are gone
i was listening um driving up here i was listening to wip and they had uh they had set
joiner on who played for the Eagles.
And he was telling this really fascinating story about how when he was coming up as a
player, anybody that could provide him some sort of guidance or advice he would listen to.
And he told a story about, I think it was maybe 10 or so years ago, he was an intern for
the bills.
He was a linebacker intern.
He was helping coach.
And he went to the head coach Rex Ryan at the time, or one of the Ryan's instead.
Yeah, and he said, you know, we're not getting enough time with this.
these kids, like, where we can actually teach them something.
Because nowadays, the league, like, everything's mandated, practice-wise.
And he asked the kids, he said, give me 15 minutes after practice.
I just want to show you guys some things.
He said, the first day, they all came.
They never came again.
And it was kind of trying to explain how, like, kids today are just way different.
Like, the level of just, like, value and understanding of, like, older people and, like,
values and ethics.
are just kind of gone.
And I relate it to kind of what we're talking about here
because the gangsters that were coming up,
you saw in the news from the 80s,
you know, the John Gotti's, the Chin Giganties,
those kind of people.
They grew up significantly different
than these younger kids today.
These younger kids today didn't have to struggle for anything.
They live in nice houses.
They can run up bookie tabs and say, fuck you,
you know what my father is?
That's the best thing.
When someone says that, you know who my father is?
Yeah, they're a little pussy.
Like it's just a pussy move.
Like if you lose,
Who's, you know, a good amount of money.
I'm not saying you have to, you know, if you can't pay it back, you get on a fucking payment plan, you know.
But to just like not pay it and be like, fuck you, you know, you know who my dad is, that's crazy.
That's the kind of shit you're dealing with with these people out here.
And, you know, again, if there was an informant, I asked one guy said, I named the guy that that is a known cooperator.
He's on YouTube.
I said, if he was in your neighborhood today and he can make money, would someone work with him?
He said, without it down.
They wouldn't even give a shit.
There's no, you know, because I think that's also the problem, too, is there are certain guys in that life now that they don't have the ability to make money like some others.
There are some guys that are rich construction tycoons and stuff like that.
There are some guys that they might be a bookie or a loan shark, and it's not as easy for them not to make money doing that.
You know, it's a lot different than it once was.
The neighborhood's a little bit different.
So they're kind of fighting hand and mouth.
There are guys that are in that life today that are on.
Social Security, you know, and it doesn't, that life doesn't stop. You still have to earn.
Yeah. So, like, there are times you become desperate. There was a case, it was about 10 years ago,
a guy Vincent Asaro. He was a Bonano captain. Yep, I remember this guy. Vinny, yeah,
Howard Beach guy. And throughout his life, Vinnie Isar, always had gambling issues, big gambler.
He was actually at one point in the 50s addicted to heroin. He beat it. But he'd always
had that dependence on something and he got older and he was still a you know a button man
made guy he was running out of queens and he was always this knockout guy where like he didn't have
like construction and stuff like that he was out breaking heads doing what he had to do um and late in
his life he was about 80 years old he started he had a younger crew like i'm talking about 20s
in fact john got his grandson was one of them he was indicted for this there's a guy jean beorello
as well he's on youtube oh yeah they were they were doing they were doing stuff for viny um and
in the end you know they they were doing some real crazy stuff like running it running in houses
pistol whipping people um there was one situation where vini assara was driving in howard beach on
uh cross bay boulevard and was cut off by a motorist and he gets pissed and he takes the license
plate and goes and looks up the guy he tells them to go light his car
on fire. Oh. They go do it. And, you know, in the end, long story short, they all got arrested.
They were doing bank robberies, all sorts of stuff. And some of them cooperated. And Vincent
Osoros' dependence on young associates who he could not trust and didn't know much about,
they were hothead, revolutionaries, did what they wanted. He ended up going to prison over that.
He was in prison in his 80s. And the desperation some of these people have is when you're desperate
to do things, you maybe will do things that you're not normally going to do.
That's right.
And I think it goes whether it's old or young, you know, some guys just think nobody's
ever going to catch me.
But look at what we just talked about with the robbery of the deck shuffling machine.
It's, you're in your own car in literally one of the most surveilled cities on the planet.
Yep.
You're not.
You can't go anywhere in New York without being in some facial recognition.
And the thing is, like you're not in like, even in like,
maybe like Staten Island where like there's some trees or something like you're literally doing it
in midtown yeah like and that's i think the the wildness of this but um in terms of like
damon jones we go back to some of the other stuff let's go to jones and rosier and really break
that yeah so d i i do have to say when i saw when i saw this whole indictment immediately everyone
was talking about billups and yes is shocking he's a sitting head coach in the NBA and all that
the name that I went woo because it was tied to you know things that had to do with games was
damon jones and i say this lightly because people love just taking this like six levels up
right away the reason i went woo though is because damon jones was a career role player
who's been out of the NBA for a while now who is lebron james's maybe oldest friend in the
NBA and one of his closest friends. And in this indictment, in the second indictment specifically,
it mentions how Damon Jones, who is allowed full access, or at least was allowed full access
to the Los Angeles Lakers locker room and everything in 2023, Damon Jones gave information
on LeBron James as it pertained to an injury that then led to bets that were made. Now,
does that mean LeBron James knew what Damon Jones was doing? Absolutely not. If I were a betting man,
no pun intended, would I probably say that LeBron James didn't have any idea about that?
Yeah.
But it is not a good look for the NBA when the biggest name on the planet has a close buddy
who's very intimately described.
It actually goes back to, I interviewed Matt Boyer, who was a bookmaker for Shaheotani's interpreter.
Can you explain that whole thing to people?
Yeah, so it goes hand in hand with this because I think it's kind of the same.
same scrutiny level, right? Because Otani's this world-class baseball player. So is LeBron? These guys
are high-level athletes in it, you know. But I asked Boyer, I said, you know, you took millions
of dollars in wagers from Ipe Muzihara. Did you, A, ever meet Shohei Otani and B, do you think
you had any idea what was going on here? What do you say? He said he was at events and saw him
across the hall or across the room, never really had any sort of conversation with him. Maybe
hello, that's it. He said, as far as betting, do I think he knew that the guy was a better?
Probably. Did he bet with him? No. And he told me that like Muzahara would always pay
on the day that Dodgers payroll was paid. Interesting. Like it would always come at that point.
Meaning he was very confident that Shohay Otan. Well, they were very good friends, these two.
Like they were, they were very close, like to the point that. Otani and Muzahar, yeah. Like,
Muzihara was so close to Otani that he had control of his bank account.
And, like, when Shohay would get paid, like,
Shohay had his own accounts for, like, promotions and stuff and, like, partnerships.
But, yeah, like, when he would get paid, like, he'd just get this big wire.
And look, I don't, there's nothing wrong with being a good friend, you know?
No.
You know, if you have millions of dollars and your friend is in deep, you know, you'll help him.
You know, there's nothing wrong with that.
But in terms of, like, LeBron in this situation, I think it's a similar,
one. And it's less even close to that because I think LeBron just happened to be someone that they knew would would make money if he was out. And, you know, Damon Jones, like a scumbag, you know, gave out that info. Damon Jones was an assistant. And what's crazy about Damon Jones is like he was really like, he would do this stuff, like give information. And then text him and be like, hey, make sure you get enough down. So Dame can be taken care of here. Crazy. And then they would then send him zels. Like,
straight from the people
can you go to the DL doc and type in
Jones
Portland right there
it's all very
type in Jones
I want to read
and it wasn't just LeBron either
it was Anthony Davis also
he's player four
in this
alright hold on one sec
here we go
now type in
do fine next
okay
the fraudulent wagering
scheme
in or about
salad down a little more
I think
down a little more
I think that
is that it there
yeah yeah
so in or about
between December 22 and March 24, the defendants, Eric Ernest, there he is again,
Marvis Fairley, Shane Hennon, Damon Jones, De Niro, Laster, and Terry Rozier, together with others.
No, that's the actual broad one. There's actually a particular spot with Damon Jones where they
go over his involvement. All right, go up. It's like they did. Go to the next one, Danny.
Go to seven. There it is. The Portland Trailblazers game. No, it's Chauncy.
We already read that one. There's one where it's clear. Yeah, yeah. Or,
Orlando Magic. No, that's Cleveland. God damn. There were so many fucking games here.
I was right wrong on the number. There we go. Okay. By virtue, why did that not come up the first time?
All right. By virtue of his relationship with Player 3, the Lakers and other NBA personnel, the defendant, Damon Jones, had access to non-public information, including medical information that had not been released to the public. This is for the February 9, 2023 and January 15th, 2024 games. On multiple,
occasions during the 22-23 and 23-24 NBA seasons, including as early as approximately December
2022, Jones sold or attempted to sell for profit non-public information to others, including
to the defendants Eric Ernest and Marvis Fairley and others for the purpose of causing or
enabling them to place fraudulent wages based on the non-public information. For example, on or about
February 9, 2023, the Lakers played the Milwaukee Bucks. On the morning of the February 9th game,
the defendant, Damon Jones, sent a text message to co-conspirator 9, writing,
get a big bet, Omo, walking tonight before the information is out.
It's insane.
Player 3 is out tonight.
That's probably referring to LeBron James, could be Anthony Davis.
Be enough, bet enough so D. Jones can eat two now.
At the times, Jones provided this non-public information about player 3 to co-conspirator 9.
player three was not ruled out of the NBA's injury report for the February 9th game.
Due to a lower body injury, player three did not play the February 9th game, which the Lakers
lost. On multiple occasions during the 23-24 season, including in connection with the January
1524 game between the Lakers and Oklahoma City Thunder, Damon Jones and Eric Ernest sold
or attempted to sell to the defendant Marvis Fairly non-public information for the purpose of
causing or enabling fairly to place wages on the non-public information. In exchange, fairly,
to pay Jones via earnest. Player four, an individual whose identity is known to the grand jury,
was one of the Lakers' best players during the 23-24 season. Prior to January 15th game,
the defendant Damon Jones claimed to have learned from the trainer for player three and four.
The player four was injured and was only going to play a limited number of minutes and or his
performance would likely be affected in the game because of the injury. Jones shared this non-public
information with Ernest, who then sent a text message to fairly saying, hit me ASAP,
got one for you, dude. He got some info.
Ernest then shared the non-public information about Player 4 with fairly, fairly paid Jones
approximately $2,500 through an intermediary via a peer-to-peer mobile payment platform
accompanied by the message fee. And it's only $2,500. Let me just pause one sec, Jeff.
I want to tell these guys to stop drilling next door, and then we'll get your reaction on this.
Sounds good. All right. We're back. So just I read all that.
information right there download mr nidu i mean i just i'm always fascinated by uh both criminals
and somewhat pretend criminals you know even but even regular people like the things you go to to
lie about and a lot of it's just like do you know how easy it is to it's like when a person's
cheating on their spouse you know like they do such stupid things yes like any any any like
pee-wee detective could could figure it out that's what i'm saying look at this look at the text
yeah and it's like you know this is why like i never give i'm not really going to give the fbi
credit for much but like they don't really need to be that like particularly good investigators to
find this shit out you know when you have resources like that it's like it's like it's really
just right there you know yeah why do you think that because all these games happened
the poker thing goes back as far as 2019 and then the games happen in 23 24 and
Is this just a matter of like they didn't have the whistle blown for this until recently?
Because I would think a case like this doesn't take that long to put together.
Maybe the poker one does a little bit, but the sports betting one's pretty straightforward.
Well, I think in terms of what I'm about to tell you, my theory is, and I say this because
I have documents and I'm actually, I wish I could have spoke to him before, but I have a connection
that could actually, that was involved with one of these people.
There's a guy in both of these indictments
named Shane Hennon.
Okay.
Goes by Sugar Shane.
Sugar Shane.
Yeah, so Shane is similar in a way to Marvis Fairley.
He's a sports betting pout kind of guy, a poker player.
He's very close with Amar Awadi, which is also in this indictment.
Shane is a guy who in the late 2000s was selling cocaine and was arrested by the feds,
and he cooperated.
He was a government witness so much to the point that
the person that he flipped against thought of motion that his witness testimony should be suppressed
because of, you know, some of the things in the case. So this is a government informant. It's proven.
Okay. Number one, and this goes back to money. Why are we dealing with people like this?
Crazy. Okay. So my thought is, and I think in essence it will come out. And like there's a guy in
like this, the, um, the mob reporting world. I believe he was even talking.
talked about it. I think it's abundantly clear that Shane Hennon has been a long time informant
and he's served these cases up on a silver platter to the feds. But he's listed as a defendant
here. Right. For now. Every rat's listed as a defendant at one point. Yeah. Meaning they didn't
make it. He's not a John Doe that they made the case with and aren't listing here. Right. Right.
And when I say, I also want to make one thing clear. When I say rat, like I probably should say
informant. It's just easier to say and it's quicker and whatever. It's more fun. I'm not a mob guy.
So I shouldn't say that.
But he is, for all intents of purposes, we have paperwork.
He's an informant.
He testified in the case.
It's so simple to find.
You could just Google Shane Henan cocaine, and it's like the third thing on Google.
Let's do it.
Shane Henan cocaine.
Yeah.
He testified in a case against a person, Franco Bedini, out in western Pennsylvania.
Cocaine.
And then, yeah, cocaine.
Yeah, yeah, put cocaine on the end of that.
Well, that's not him.
That's a different chain.
So there's going to be, if you go down a little bit, maybe it's not...
Well, now it's probably...
There's the Villanova University.
Oh, USA versus Franco Bidini.
There it is.
2013.
Now, you have to go down a little bit.
I don't know the exact page, but there's a part in this and a motion where...
Type in Hennon to find next.
Yes, that would be perfect.
H-E-N-N-N.
Yep, okay.
So Bidini next argues that the conviction should be reversed.
This is an appeal, I guess, because the district court,
improperly admitted testimony of government witness, Shane Hennon, who testified that he had bought
and sold drugs with Bidini in transactions unrelated to the conspiracy involving Koran.
Okay, so what more do we need to see?
Yeah, this is a government witness, okay?
Now, when you were a government witness, okay, there are multiple levels of a government witness,
but there are, I mean, and anybody that knows anything about the FBI knows this,
there are hundreds of thousands of informants in this country right now that are being paid
to make cases against people.
Shane Hennon is also a known cheater.
He's involved in poker, sports betting, all that stuff.
And his names popped up in the John Dave Porter case.
His names popped up in this case and in that other sports betting, Terry Ruggier rig thing.
Oh, he's in that too?
Yes.
He's in that as well.
What's his role in that?
He benefits off the information like Marvis Fairly.
he goes and makes wagers.
How about the fact, by the way, sorry to go off the side here,
but how about the fact Damon Jones, for example,
is making $2,500 for information?
Well, I think that could be just,
I don't know if that's the only,
maybe he was paid more.
But yeah, I think,
and I think the biggest question that in all of this,
people will ask is, like, why were they doing this?
And I think it really just probably started
as they liked to gamble.
They probably got in it, like Porter,
a little too deep and they said look like work it off another way right you know you know who had
we're amongst friends here because all these people we found most of these people know each other
yeah like whether it's billups eric ernest like all these people know each other they're directly
connected but there was a very interesting interview with michael porter jontay's brother a few months
back where he was very candid you know obviously he had nothing to do with what his brother was
doing and all that but of course he was asked about it because it's his brother and he
He said, he's like, you know, legalized gambling itself is one thing.
But when you do it and then have it so close to the sport itself where you're hand in hand, where the NBA, for example, has partnerships with all this stuff, you are inviting these kinds of things to happen.
Now, his brother was a situation like the most kind of extreme.
Like he got, he was a gambler.
He got in debt to people.
He got in debt to dangerous people.
They said, take a fall as the ninth man.
We'll put some prop bets on it and then got fucked.
but he's like even what Michael was saying is even less than that like someone that gets in trouble
and then can do something where they're coerced to do it it's like you are inviting people
to just you know fuck around and open up a draft king's account and then make the wrong bet sometimes
and then the entire integrity of the sport is put into question and I got to say I really
it was hard for me to make arguments against what he was saying as it pertains to the direct
partnerships between the two well I will say like in terms of that is a discussion
Number one, I probably say on a weekly basis,
people DM me and say, like,
if you were a novice gambler, how would you do this?
Or I want to get into this.
Can you give me information on how to do it?
And I always tell them, like if someone asked me,
would I redo everything I've done
as far as where I gamble this long, that sort of thing?
There's nothing good in it, really.
If you're going to gamble, it can start very, it's like drugs.
You can start with just doing it.
weed and then you're like you know what coke looks pretty fun yeah and like gambling for most people
is very some it's something you can control i'm sure everybody here is gambled but then you start
maybe decide you know what i want to bet more and you bet more and then it's like well i've been a gambler
so maybe i'll start taking bets or or or something else and it's for you know it you when you when you
are around people my mother used to talk to me about this when i would go to casinos and i was a kid
like I was 18, 19 years old.
And she would say something.
And I never really thought about it.
And then when I got older, I realized,
oh, she was told right.
She called casinos dens of iniquity.
Dens of iniquity.
Yeah.
And essentially just means that look at everything
that goes on in a casino.
Look at the people that go there for the most part.
It's for the most part a place
where very little good happens.
And it's,
It's something I didn't really ever think about, but, you know, it's no secret that if you start gambling in sports betting and playing poker, you're going to be eventually around characters.
And in terms of what Michael said, like, I think he's 100% right.
You know, before Pass was introduced, like gambling was the backroom thing that it used to be.
And it wasn't involved so heavily.
But the way you stop this is number one.
And what makes this really bad for these defendants in the sports case is they're going to drop the half.
on them and say, look, you fuck around with this shit,
this is what's going to happen to you.
So Porter, banned for life, gone.
These people, similar.
It's going to be something really bad for them.
And you look at someone like Billups.
You know, Chauncey, as you stated, you were very correct.
He was one of the best players in, like, he was a great player when he was with
Detroit and some of those teams.
I mean, he's a Hall of Famer.
His career and legacy could be ruined.
and they're through no fault
they're through his own fault
throw in you've
if you want to eliminate this
which they'll never do
stop allowing people to bet on props
that's really
how would you like just in general
just ban all props
I'm not saying that would cut out the legs of the industry
right right they make a lot of money on that
yeah and that's that's that's the
sad d'enumois that we're at here
because these companies
they don't want to lose any money right but then when this stuff happens it's like we're not involved
and it's now but again it's interesting and we'll find this out once they actually start presenting
the case but if the companies are also doing the i don't know like honorable thing or what they're
supposed to do where they are reporting this when it happens then they would have a good argument
to say look we're doing our job we don't want to see any illegal gambling so we're reporting it
and then you guys go make the case and deter people in the future well that's the that's the interesting thing
about like when people talk about shoes to drop like because we see the feds do this a lot where
they'll they'll go gung ho and stuff and they'll try to make a like a proclamation if you do this
this is what's going to happen and we're going to have the dope on the table type thing you know
which they did with cash patel and this whole thing it'll be interesting to see if they continue
to investigate because as I told you if you were betting and if you're involved with the sports
betting stuff and you know some of these investigations are going on it'll be interesting to
see if something comes from those investigations where they were just sitting on it and building
their case and we get another indictment of all in college and then we get another indictment
involved in this and that or they just do this set an example to a couple of people yeah they
then start you know hey you got to stop with this yep i don't know we'll see but this is bad
for these people if they are either found guilty or they plea and they accept the responsibility
you know they're they're fucked what kind of prison time you think if if they accept responsibility
like a year or two kind of deal i don't know that i think that's also something like i keep kind of
going off but like like this case like outside of the violence that we talked about and with
some of the mob guys most of these charges are pretty weak i mean as far as like you're not
going to get like years in prison right like a simple bookmaking charge like you take bets
I mean, a lot of the time, you're not even going to get together.
Yeah, but rigging a game, which is robbery.
I would, and that's another question, like, and I heard someone mention this, like,
do gamblers come together and file clash action lawsuit against, because to be fair,
if I bet on these games, I was fucking cheated.
Yeah.
They had information, I didn't.
Yeah.
So it's almost like when you have a cop that is corrupt, it taints every case.
That's right.
every game that Mr. Billups or Rozier
or any of these was involved in
could have maintained it.
Yeah.
So that's going to be interesting, too,
to see if there's some sort of class action lawsuit
against some of the, you know,
whoever it's against,
where gamblers try to get something out of it.
Like I said, to stop this,
if you eliminate a props,
I think that would help,
but they're not going to do that.
That's such a huge part of their business
and their share, market share.
But because like I said,
it's harder to fix.
a you know a game like a point spread what about the fact that so like Adam silver the commissioner of
the NBA is now being called before Congress to discuss this and one of the things that he's going
to get drilled about is the fact that they did and they were very public about it did an investigation
specifically into Terry Rozier and four months ago cleared him of all wrongdoing and you and I both know
when it comes like the NFL MBA in these major leagues, when they have an investigation done,
the people that they have doing this are like ex-CIA, X-FBI, like serious, the highest-powered
forename law firms in America, basically.
And so not to say that guarantees they're going to get everything right, but when you publicly
say we're investigating someone, go through this whole investigative process, probably throw a lot
of money at it too. Of course, there are a lot of money at it. And then publicly say, no, he's good
only for something like this that seems, in hindsight, painfully obvious to come out months later.
Do you think that that is the kind of thing that will lead to like an Adam Silver being forced
to step down? Yeah, I mean, he's really got some explaining to do with that. Because again,
like you said, you should believe in the, you know, oversight of the MBA in their backroom
people that are doing this stuff, the security. And this is why, like, when you look at someone
like, you know, that guy, Big Dom.
I was just, you took the words out of my mouth.
Like, that's why I think he's gotten so much, like, love in, in America because he is
really good at that.
Oh, dude, I've heard some stories.
Like, he's, like, he's particularly efficient at finding negative things to sway people
away from a particular person.
He does a very good job at security.
They should learn a little something from him.
I mean, and you mentioned, like, some of the three other organizations that maybe, maybe
work with these places. One thing I learned in doing the mob stuff that I do and like talking and
getting sources and stuff is that like the FBI like they watch my show. Like I know more about
the mob than they do. You know, it's like it makes you wonder sometimes I think like like I'm sure
in on your show on the Julian Dory show. I'm sure you've put out stuff that the FBI is like we didn't
know that. Like maybe they if you don't think they. I don't think they.
If you don't think the FBI watches these shows.
I know for a fact, whenever you have an ex-intel guy on here, they have a department
where they probably don't watch it.
They probably have AI to scan it.
But they literally, even local police departments, the New York City Police Department,
and that's not local, but that's a huge police department.
They have literally a group, like a squad called the Internet Squad.
They basically just watch shit on the Internet.
Yeah, they try to find crime.
Like, if they're a group.
doing this, you don't think they're watching you, me, they watch this stuff. So I think my thought
and what I'm saying there is like, I don't know, maybe the end basis is getting the worst
agents that weren't really good. And I don't know who looked into this case, but they're going
to be fired, I would have to imagine. And because they have Ruegg on their face here because
the thought is you ran this investigation, you gave us clearance. But we've also seen that, like,
the NFL, they do investigations into people. And, you know, it's like, well, how are you seeing
this like this guy was charged with this how did you know yeah the one i can think of on the NFL that
blew up in their face was ray rice because the video wasn't out but they did they did like they just
mishandled it and they should have punished him much more than they did but i believe they had had
access to it and they did suspend him six games and say he was clearly guilty of this so at least
they weren't like oh no nothing happened here but it was a bad look because then people saw
the video and they're like all domestic violence is bad that's like fucking
that's all that's like the worst video like this yeah i mean it was it was horrific but i also think
too that um and i i want to this should be the most important thing that we say here today because
i've been on your show and i've said this before and i want to make clear everything alleged in this
indictment is alleged and these people should be awarded their day in court just like
you know i was in your show last time i was one for one coburger i was wrong on did he i was
absolutely right on. Yeah, you were, you were right about Diddy, you were right about another one
and then wrong about Kobe. Yeah. What was the other one you were right about? Um, I don't remember,
but, but what I'm, what I'm leaning towards is like, we need, we obviously see that these are
pretty, pretty strong charges. And I would imagine that this is a federal case, which is different
from state. The feds, as we've talked about before, look at how much information is here.
They look, the case is already delivered. And that's why you see the, not.
98% conviction rate. It's not that they convict every person. It's literally 90% of the 98% plea.
Right. And that's counted as a conviction. Right. So they're going to come to a lot. Like most of these defendants where they're 31 in the poker indictment, I would have to venture to believe that three or four will cooperate, maybe more, and the rest will plead. I don't think one of these people will go to trial. I think you're probably going to be right about that also because they have, I mean, the text message data is in so.
insane, especially on not the poker one, but on the other one, that data is so, it's not
circumstantial.
But in that case, it's very one plus one plus one equals three.
But in that case, you have higher profile names with more money and they're going to state
we didn't do this and we'll prove to we didn't do it.
We're going to see, though, if they have the superseding indictment where then Billups
his name and then maybe, who knows, there's no evidence to this right now, but some other people
as well.
And it could, it could turn very bad.
and this could be a culture shifting event because like you mentioned some of the college stuff
and allegedly maybe some investigations going on into that. I believe we definitely talked about
this. I can't remember if it was off air or on air. I think it was on air when in episode 301 when we
were here together. We talked about like NIL and I told you what my theory on this has been and
I can't say I'm right or wrong yet, but I'm looking a little better every day is that you had all
these old dudes at the NCAA who profited off all these kids for free forever and said,
fuck you, anytime someone wanted to just, you know, go make money at an ice cream store
for, you know, an appearance. And then finally the public pressure got so heavy that they had to
give in. And my thought was they sat in their back office and said, okay, you want it? We'll give
you all. And now it's open season. And now it's open season. And you mix it into where you have
things where gambling is directly supported and you have fucking 18 and 19 year old kids who are
by definition not bright at that age with decision making it's like what what the fuck do you think
could happen in terms of the college and i won't i will not put names but i've heard big names like
bigger type players that that either were pro whatever if it comes out it'll be bad now i think
what this will do these cases is it does give like everyone's now on notice and if you keep
doing this you're doubly as stupid I mean because I mean there's a lot of scrutiny throw in like
like I said I have it on pretty good authority that already people are flipping over this case
and like I said Shane Hennon.
Lobsters or no no not mobsters like a lot of the like the poker sports betting people but like
Shane Hennon I mean it would probably be a pretty strong indication that
that, you know, he's involved, he's done it before, he's cooperated before.
And like a lot of these guys, they'll just go to them and say, look, man, like, we got you here.
There's a bunch of mob guys in here that will just say, you know, what are you offering?
I'm not cooperating.
Okay, well, you can go to trial.
We'll give you football numbers if you get guilty.
Or you can just take three years.
Right.
Plead, boom, boom, game over.
For these mob guys, this is a small pinch.
This ain't a big thing.
Yeah, they're just annoyed by the public scrutiny because of the name.
names. Yeah. And that's the big thing. Like, that's what's wild about this is like if, like I said
earlier, if it was one or the other, like if it was just Billups, right? And like there was no
mob involved. I don't think it would be as big a story. It would be a big story. I agree 100%.
But and like the mob, if there was no Billups involved or any NBA thing, it would just be a like a
poker. It would still be a big story because he's a sitting coach. But the allure and sexiness for a
headline of adding in the fucking mafia.
Like this is the godfather with the NBA.
Bad look.
And it also was bad for like some of these people.
Like Joe Lonnie is listed here.
And I mentioned him earlier.
Like Joe Lonnie two weeks ago.
Pled guilty.
He pled guilty in federal court.
He was initially offered, offered 15 years.
He declined.
Got a better deal.
So he's going to get, he pled.
He's going to probably get, I would say 72-ish months, maybe more.
It's like six years.
And Joe's aged pretty badly over the last year or two.
Yeah, he's got to be in his 70s, right?
No, I think he's like early 60s.
But I mean in aging, like he looks a lot different than he did just a year or two ago.
Yeah, yeah.
But then he gets hit with this case, and it's like it was just literally like a two-week thing.
Now he's going to have to face another case.
So it was a particularly bad way for him.
What was the case?
Because it's a great example.
you were one of the few guys even that really talked about it.
But this was in the last year where all the guys in Wayne, New Jersey,
connected to the mob were taking out.
What were they charged with again?
Yeah.
So that was kind of funny because that case was almost really similar to this one.
Was it gambling?
It was poker games and bookmaking.
And it was a state case out of New Jersey, the Attorney General.
And that's what's wild now.
Like most of the cases we see are state cases against the mob.
the feds really have not made the mob a priority it's new york state leticia james and like her people
and then in new jersey they've been making the cases um and yeah it was it was a series of poker games
that are hosted in like the northern new jersey area um and a couple of the guys ensnared were big people
and one of the guys georgia paula he's he's a rumored administration member he's on the top levels of that family so
So, you know, there was a sitting, a councilman, I believe, out of one of the, one of the areas up here, maybe near Newark somewhere.
Sounds about right.
Yeah, but like that case, nobody even heard about.
Yeah.
There was a case in 2024 with the Gambino Crime family, the same group here.
They were jammed up in a $20 million gambling ring.
They were taking $22 million in wagers.
They had loan sharking.
sorts of stuff. Did you hear about it? Nope. Didn't have Chauncey Billups on it. Exactly.
Yeah. So like if I'm an old timer, I'm thinking to myself, what the fuck are you assholes?
And what's crazy is, Chauncey Billups, in terms of these guys, none of these mob guys even knew him.
Like, it would just lumped in because they all, like, when you have an indictment a lot of the time,
like, you don't even know some people. Like, I'm going to guess that like, I don't know,
Lee Phama, probably didn't know some of these people.
Sure.
Yeah, yeah.
There's a lot of different people, a lot of different roles.
But he see a lot of crossover, too, because, like, Lee Phama, alleged made guy, his uncle
is a big, or not his uncle's brother's a big timer in that Gambino family.
He's also a big time poker player.
He plays poker.
He won tournaments.
He's kind of a weird and a way condo it.
So the thought of this, the rigging these games, it just didn't have to happen.
And they got greedy.
and now they're in an international investigation with the NBA
and I think I've got to have a lot of scrutiny.
And now a group that wants to stay quiet, the mob,
now they're in the press.
Now they're in, yeah, now they're in the press.
Yeah, it's a bad look.
The other thing that happened on this that could absolutely be nothing
that was just very interesting to me is Chauncey Billups gets arrested,
He gets arraigned, and he walks out of, I think it was the courthouse after, you know, he left on his own volition.
And he's wearing a clutch sports hoodie.
And I'm like, of all the pieces of clothing you could have picked up that morning.
You picked up the one that was like LeBron's agency where he's got one of his friends in this case.
Was that a bad signal?
I think this is one thing about the world now that I get kind of annoyed with is that.
Everything is a conspiracy.
Yeah.
And it's like, people have to start putting themselves in the position.
So when that happens, it's literally still dark out.
Okay.
You're with your wife in bed.
She probably doesn't have shit.
You get that knock on a door.
And like we go back to the dope on the table type thing.
They also have something where they want to parade you out in front of everybody.
Now, they didn't do this necessarily here, but I'm going to guess that Mr.
Billups was arrested quite early in the morning.
And that could have just happened.
to be the sweatshirt.
If he was wearing a, I don't know, some Sean John, not that that's popular.
Right.
Will we connect him to Did he?
Right.
If he wore Donald Trump, would he, would Donald Trump be involved?
Right.
You know, it's, I think it's an easy thing.
And those people are so famous, like the LeBron James of the world.
I think you're probably right.
Like we connect everything.
Look, was it a statement?
I know when I come here, like there are certain things I'm not going to wear, but I'm not
like, you know, because again, I, you know, I have to think about like, I'm going to be on a show
for three hours.
I'm not going to just sit here and wear some advertiser that's not paying me, you know?
So, like, I think a little bit about it, but like if I was arrested by the feds, you know,
I've gotten not that knock on the door, but like constable came to my house once and it was
early in the morning and I, I just grabbed whatever I could see first just so I could answer the door.
Right.
You know, so it's like, I think that's kind of what happened here.
Now, if it was choreographed, and maybe there's a moment.
message there. I don't know. Yeah. I don't think it would. You have to, I'm with you. I don't think
it's anything, but like it was just kind of like little cherry on on top of the Sunday kind of
thing. And to Biggie Pack off that, Gilbert Arena started trolling in this because Gilbert
did. I didn't see this. Yeah, because Gilbert was arrested about six months ago in a poker game thing
also. Yes. And according to some people that I talked to, they told me that Gilbert owned the home
and he essentially rented the house out
and they were running poker games there
so Gilbert got jammed up
and Gilbert you know
had been trolling recently and people
I did some videos in this
you don't know how many people
Gilbert's the snitch Gilbert says Gilbert's that
and it's like
I don't think these cases are totally separate
they have nothing to do with each other
but you know it's easy to connect the dots
you know and like you know nowadays
like when you post stuff like there's always
going to be someone that mentions
that EPS
S-T-E-I guy that got, you know, that mentioned.
Everybody works for some shadowy government.
Like, you have those people.
I just think there are certain groups of people that are conspiracy theorists.
Yeah, my issue is that every, it's fun to talk about some of them, for sure.
Like, you know, when you're just sitting on a fucking podcast and shooting the shit.
But there is a large swath of the population that thinks that every fucking thing ever
was a conspiracy and that feels like that is programming to me because if I there are real
conspiracies and there are real powerful people who do those things and if I wanted to discredit
the masses from being able to point out conspiracies I would make sure that they I turned them
into loons pretending like you know throwing a fucking piece of meat into a pile of dogs just to watch
them rip each other apart so that the real conspiracies could kind of be tucked away in the
middle of all the clear bullshit. And I worry about that because I get it. You know, people live
through COVID. They saw things that were fucking insane. I totally get it. I saw the same things.
I have a lot of the same thoughts on those things. But it's like you have to still look at things
on evidence. When people talk about Epstein, the evidence there's insane. Right.
That's the problem that I have in like, like, and that's the challenge I think in even doing
some of this stuff and like talking about cases is like people are.
program now to just believe what they're told. Yes. And I saw a quote once, and I think it's one of the more
prophetic quotes I've ever seen. It's by this old writer, and she made a quote once and stated that
all you need is one group of people to brainwash a generation that reality doesn't exist. Yes.
And I think what we've seen, and there's that, there's that meme of that KGB agent talking about
the warfare. Ideological subversion. Yeah, and you don't need a bullet. You just need, you know,
of that subversion of things.
And like, and I saw it so profoundly in that Diddy case.
It is really, look, I'm not going to, I said that in the episode before, I'm not going
to try to tell you that Diddy is not, you know, a scumbag who beat up Cassie.
We saw that.
Yes.
He's a bad guy for that.
And he should always have to remember and be told that.
But was he a person who trafficked people?
No.
But he was made to believe that my, I know people very close to me that brought up child sex
crime there's none of that here he so and this is where you nailed it on the case because you were
looking at the indictments and what they were bringing then you were looking at it once they presented in
court and you were i can't think of anything you were wrong about the thing is like do i think
did he is probably a scumbag definitely a scumbag for sure do i think that it's probable that he
probably did do things like sex trafficking and stuff like that yes did they prove any of that in
that case or did they even bring charges that made sense to
something like that. No, they did it. And they overcharged him badly. And certain people lost their
jobs because of it. Yeah. And I think when you look into the high profile cases like this one,
like that, you look into Mangione. Prime example there as well. I think I stated this on your show.
That was the other one you were right about a lot of things on it. It is, and I'm no attorney.
I mean, I'm sure you talk to like, you know, attorneys. Yeah, I had Jesse Weber on here.
Yeah. Like even, I think he'll tell you. Jesse Weber and you had almost the same exact
takeaways. But it's an insane idea that the federal government in the eastern southern districts
are prosecuting a lone murder charge. That never happens. The only time they charge murder is an
overt act in some sort of racketeering case. So let's say the mafia whacks somebody. And it's part
of a racketeering case. Racketeering, murder in the aid of racketeering. One lone insular murder
charge, why is the feds even involved in that case? It's headlines. They wanted that, that remember
the shot where he's handcuffed.
Yeah, like he was walking off the helicopter.
Yeah.
And what I think they're not realizing is it's going
against them. And I'm not
going to tell you that I don't know, I don't know if Luigi's
guilty or not guilty. The evidence seems
pretty bad against them.
But what you're doing is you're taking
groups of people that feel marginalized.
Whether it be younger people, poor people,
people that hate insurance companies,
you're marginalizing them and saying
this is a bad guy
and what's the problem is
he's a good looking guy
young people like him
wait what do you mean marginal one
you're basically
like
you put it out there
that he's a bad guy
he's a murderer
which he could be
for what you're in a way doing
is
he's then in his defense
coming out and saying
I did this
because something of my life
happened in an insurance company
fucked me
and that's why I did this
and there's a certain group of people
that are saying, you know what?
My grandma died because of an insurance company.
I see what you're saying.
I've been fucked by insurance too.
And there are most people in America.
I don't know if you take 20 people off the street.
My guess is more than half would say,
I'm not a big fan of the government.
Right?
Yes.
So what we're starting to find is in this day and age,
there's more people that are sympathetic
to a person like Luigi Mania.
I see what you're saying.
And it's like, fuck the government.
Look at what they're doing to this guy.
do I think it's right to to you know celebrate him look you know insurance companies are bad
is that guy that was killed he's not the scapegoat you know what he allegedly did he he screwed
up but it almost seems like what you do all that stuff you mask yourself up and then you keep the
gun how does that make sense yeah I mean look it's and they paint him look as a crazed nutcase
It's a, and hopefully we're going to actually find out some truth for, I have some doubts on that.
But like, it's a simple situation here.
You can look at the insurance industry and say it's a disgrace and it totally is, completely agree.
I've seen that pain on my own when I had my health problems.
Now extrapolate that to someone who has fucking cancer, like something that's actually life, like it's insane.
And I told you this when I came here on 301, I think it's going to be really hard to find 12.
impartial jurors.
Yeah.
Because that is such a problem in America of someone.
I'm sure everyone here, anyone out in the street you talk to,
they've had some sort of run in with car insurance or medical insurance or whatever.
And it's, that's the thing about federal cases.
Like, you've got to, or any case, really, whether someone did something or not fair,
you have to prove in court.
Like, in federal cases, there are people that I,
know that absolutely said to me under a shadow of it out i did not do this but i can't prove
it so i'm just plead guilty and hopefully they don't give me too many times you know that's the
crazy thing so but you jeff you should be able to say that the scumbaggery of the of the
of the healthcare insurance industry i like i use that word a lot but like that's entirely
the case and also the government deserves a lot of blame in that too for that system being fucked
and a hand feed hand feeding hand system for a long time all that's true you can also say that
therefore there are some people in that industry who are just not good people whether or not
this CEO is one of them or not i'm not really sure but like maybe we also live in a society
though where like basic standards have to be the case for this to not be mad max fury road
And when you have a dude taking a fucking city bike down 57th Street to whack a guy on security camera at 6.30 a.m. in the morning in the biggest city in the country because he runs a company that he doesn't like, the precedent of that is not good in any way you look at it.
But what I'm trying to point out here, and I don't mean to be a conspiracy theory, so we just talk about how I'm really not. But we do have to remember, we see a guy doing this. We don't see his face. We don't have to.
any idea if that's him. That's why it doesn't make sense. Like you did all that stuff,
but you kept a gun? You kept a bag? Why? Why did you go through the method of masking up and
stuff? All to just keep the gun? Like, there's just things about it. But what my point is
in all of bringing up this is we go back to this case, because this is also out of the
largest, like eastern southern district. These are the biggest districts for the federal
government and the, you know, the courts in this country are in New York City.
And I heard a lot of people, you know, you look at Kyle Cash Patel.
I'm not going to say I like or dislike him, but he couldn't even pronounce these
family's names.
Like, and it's like, you hear some of these people talking about like the mafia was
involved in point.
No, they're not.
There is no defendant.
The word mafia is never in that sports betting indictment.
Not once.
No.
There's no mention of the word mob, mafia, la Cosa Nostra, which by the way, it's
Cozonostra. La Cosa noosa does not make sense in the Italian language. If you read that
fucking indictment, there is not one mention of the mob in it. There is no mob defendant in it.
There is no associate in it, nothing. That's the point I'm trying to make here. So it's like
that's indictment too, right? Yeah, the Rosier. Yeah. There's, that's what I'm trying to say.
Like, it almost seemed like, and I tweeted this, Cashita doesn't even understand the case he's
prosecuting. That wouldn't be the first time. It's like he's just out there. And,
And I've also heard people say, like, are these, this administration, every administration has acts to grind with certain people is, I heard a conspiracy theory that I think it was Stephen A said this, that this is the Trump administration getting back at the kneeling and all that kind of stuff.
So he's sending his justice department after them.
I don't believe that.
I actually don't believe that either.
No, but like Stephen A is talking about this is what's going to happen in sports.
And it's like, so I would just tell anybody that sees these big cases,
most of the time these are public indictments.
Go on, you don't even have to print it out.
Just read through it a little bit.
Right.
Because, like, someone said to me on my show I did the other day, it was so amazing.
And it's like, well, I don't know.
I mean, really just read it.
I did a little research on who Shane Hennon was.
And I found that he was a cooperator in a previous case.
I know about some of these defendants.
So it kind of just all pieced together.
And, you know, I would just tell everyone to, do I think Chauncey Billups new mafia members?
No, I don't.
I don't think he ever met one.
Makes a great story, though.
And why let the truth get in the way a good one?
That's right.
Steve Bouchemmy, season one.
So I think it'll be interesting to see what happens next.
You know, is there another indictment?
Are other people involved?
Is there a college one that comes out?
I have to wonder, though, if these people in this cohort that weren't,
arrested and they're still out doing this shit yeah this could be and hopefully it's not just
for the sake of well let me ask you it could be the tip of the iceberg let's say you were a cheater
like you were involved in a sports betting world and you were doing this and this happened would you
keep doing it absolutely not right so you'd hope that it's some sort of diversion yeah yeah
for like yeah best case scenario yeah it's going to get interesting though i hope i hope that this is like
I said, not the tip of the iceberg. And I hope we actually do get some more information beyond just, you know, the 23 pages here in this indictment and however many pages are in the other because it'll be interesting to see, you know, in court, even if it doesn't go to trial, but if there's information out there that kind of clears up who was actually involved with who that goes beyond what, you know, people are making with happens right now. And it's just simple really, you know, it's just simple looking up things. Like the, the connection between.
De Niro Laster, who was from Ohio, and Terry Ruggier, who went to high school in Ohio.
You know, a lot of these people, like I said, we're friends.
And I think in terms of the worst things for this, the basketball players and coaches,
they're going to have real problems.
Because, again, that whole business is about integrity and, you know, being a, you know.
Yeah, yeah, there was a guy, you remember Fay Vincent, he was the commissioner before
Bud Sealing and the MLB.
Okay, yeah, it was a while.
back. So, 89 to 92. So Faye Vincent, my grandfather knew him. And so I knew Faye Vincent
when I was growing up. He was a great man. The guy wrote, you know, like a letter in my support
for some stuff later in my life, just an amazing, amazing guy. And he didn't give a fuck
what people thought of him because he was not viewed as popular because, among other things,
he was the guy who kicked out Pete Rose from baseball for life. And what I will say,
Fay Vincent died earlier this year. So rest in peace to him. But he, what I respected...
Sort of Pete Rose, actually.
Yeah, they both did. That was interesting. But what I respected a lot about Fay Vincent was
he looked at it truly like the integrity of the game. And the integrity of the game
involved people in America being able to have a family event that they go to and watch the
greatest at their sport compete in an honest way.
where crime doesn't get involved and where problems that, you know, would affect that experience
don't get involved. And with what I never could understand when I was younger and I get it now
just because, you know, I guess like you get a little wiser when you get older. But I could never
understand why Fay Vincent didn't say some of the things publicly that he would say, that I would
hear him say behind the scenes. And I'll say one of them now. He used to tell me that he had no
intention of kicking Pete Rose out for life. He went to Pete. They had him dead to rights. There was
no question here. Like they knew for a fact. He had done this and it was a problem. And everyone loved
Pete Rose. He was an amazing player and a fucking legend and played the game the right way, all these
things. And he and Bart Giamatti at the time it was first starting. Bart was still alive. He was
Faye Vincent's close friend and the commissioner before him. He had a heart attack during this
investigation and died suddenly, Paul Giamatti's father. But they went to Pete.
and they just said, hey, we got you, you fucked up, this is bad, you're going to be punished.
But like, just tell the truth and you'll get kicked out of the game for a few years.
We will rehabilitate your image, rehabilitate the game's image, and you will be able to have some dignity
and eventually get into the Hall of Fame and stuff.
And he told them to go fuck themselves.
And he wouldn't admit to anything.
And the things he would do behind the scenes, some of that stuff, I'll let him take the grave with him.
And it's like, this is a guy.
now I see what's happening now with sports and some of that integrity just being so blatantly
affected. And that is exactly why he had the stance that he did because this cannot fucking
stand. This is horrible. And you can't blame him for that. And that's why I said you're going to
have to set an example here with the punishments here, particularly in the NBA, because
you need to, I mean, you need to get a handle on this. I mean, the Jonte Porter stuff kind of opened
that all. And, you know, look,
Jonte was, you know,
you know, a lower level player, but
it doesn't matter. You have to nip it in the bud.
That's right. And this was going on during that.
But now you almost, I don't know if you have a clean slate.
Do I think more NBA players would be
picked up for this? I don't think.
I truly don't believe there's a lot of professionals
that are involved in this type of thing. I think if there's
anyone that would be involved in some of the recent stuff
as far as with the college and stuff, I think that's more of like
your lower level programs.
That's right.
And again, we saw the investigation into that.
Yeah, I think the guys who it's always going to be regardless of what the, what the
platform is, whether it's the actual pros in the NBA where they're making X number
of money or, you know, kids in college making Y number of money, the lower ends of those
platforms, the people that are on the edges that are most vulnerable are the ones that could
get caught up in this kind of thing.
And the thing that they tell you about gambling, but they don't really want to tell you
but they have to tell you, but it's most important.
This is why anybody that listens to this,
I'm sure most people that do gamble,
you got to do it responsibly.
Because eventually you could be put in a situation
where, you know, you can't get out of it
or you're going to work for some people
you don't want to be around.
These people here, most of them, are dead in the wool.
They are scam artists, cut-throat motherfuckers,
and that's just who they are.
Right.
Most people aren't like that, though.
but this is who you have to deal with,
just people you don't want to deal with.
Right.
And it is also a shame to me too
because, like, I do know people that went to these games
and they told me, like, they're fun.
You know, they had a great time.
There was a lot of good people in them.
It's just, I think they got a little too, you know,
little too involved.
And again, some of these people are really bad.
Like, some of them are some of the biggest scammers in the country.
They owe millions of dollars.
They would steal from you for your,
as dollars. So when you gamble, sometimes you got to get involved with this. Stick to just
having fun. You know, don't try to be the next, you know, Stu Finer or something.
Well, even Stu talked about that, man. And he will. He'll tell you the same shit. I'm sure he went
into the stories he had to deal with. You know, and Stu's a really sweet guy, man. You know,
I've met him many times at Barstool. And he'll tell you, you know, I'm sure he would tell his own
kids stay out of this shit you know um but it's so gambling so pushed in your face now that it's
you pick with us now well you were going to be coming in here sometimes soon no matter what and then
this case drop so it's great we could go through this whole thing and we'll see how this all develops
and everything but you know what what i like about you is whenever a shit goes down i know i'm getting
in the do take online i know there's going to be some sort of like all right everyone's saying this
what's Jeff saying? And sometimes it's in line.
Other times it's like, well, we're not looking at this the right way.
And one of the ones that's been driving me nuts just with the fucking insanity of people making
claims that are just sometimes changing videos with AI or, you know, speculating on things
that just seem to have absolutely no proof behind it is the whole like Charlie Kirk thing.
You and I were going to be talking about that.
So I think also in light of some of the things we're bringing up, we should go through that.
But I just recorded with Brian Enton the other day.
That's going to be coming out next week.
He's, I can guarantee you, Brian, who's like a long time great reporter, is going to get
shit for what he said about Charlie Kirk.
But he's reporting on the case, in my opinion, the right way.
He's talking to sources.
I will say on you real quick.
He's on the ground and he's trying to play it like a newsman and not someone trying to, like,
inject the fucking theories of the universe.
Which is, I respect that a lot about Brian.
I will say I do have a bit of a bone to pick with him about having people like John
A light on your platform to talk about stuff.
John A light told me this guy was blue
I wouldn't believe him
John A light is a awful individual
Can you explain to people who
Counseling A Light is?
Yeah, counseling in A light
That's the crazy thing about it
I just discussed with someone the other day
This has come up a few times over the past few years
But him coming on the show
Which is interesting
Well, just know that everything you have
That he tells you is going to be insane
I have voicemails four or five minutes long from him
You know, threatening me calling me as
fucking idea you understand yeah you fucking blow job
you know this and that you're fucking fat albanian i would you know our word you on the
street shit like that um he's essentially john aylate's a guy albanian guy uh it's funny because
back in the day he pretended he was italian to get into that cohort um he was tertiary
is that the was that a word uh we're gonna go with it he was somewhat close to junior goddy at one
point the son of john gotty they were close friends uh in fact uh he was junior was his best man at
his wedding they were pretty close and eventually there was a big falling out because john a light
is a you know drug dealer uh as john would call him a garbage pail uh and and he flipped and cooperated
and nobody believed him he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he he
real convictions that came out of his testimony, John Gotti beat the, John Gide Jr. beat the rap
on the case because nobody believes John A-Light. He over-inflates who he was. He says he was the
chief, and that's what I get a kick out of at these news programs, the chief enforcer. I don't even,
what does he mean? What does he the number one guy you pick? He didn't even know John Gotti.
He's talking about on documentaries, this guy, John A-Light, that he had principal information
about the night Paul Costalano was going to be killed. He's like, he was, like, he was.
was like in his early 20s. Yeah, they're going to tell some random Albanian guy that nobody knew
Paul was going. Was he insinuating that he had something to do with it? No, he was like he directly
knew about it. He claims. He's talked about like in the 70s, we were running New York. What are you?
He was 14, John. What are you talking about? He's, he just overinflates who he is. And people believe
it because he looks kind of like a guy that would do that. And I'm not going to lie. Like,
I've done shows on John. I think they're fair. Um, has he shown?
shop people? Has he beat people up? Yeah. At one point, John was a tough guy. But what he's
taken his story, and he's overinflated it into saying that he was this like principal hitman
for John Gotti's senior. And he was this and that. And he's just gotten to the point now where
they put him on and it's laughable, some of the comments he makes. I mean. So Brian talked to him
though? Yeah, they had him on the News Nation the other night. And I just get a kick. He goes on a lot
of stuff. Yeah, I get a kick out of it. You know, he was on this new Joey Merlino documentary on
Netflix. Yeah, Shratt, Dave Shratweiser and George Anastasia are supposed to come in here
sometimes. Yeah, they did a nice job. And they had John on it. And it's like, John wasn't even
like, what does he know about Philly? You know, it's just, it's weird. I don't want to say I have
an action ground with John, but John's been overly ridiculous to me in the time that I've done this.
And I've learned with a lot of these guys
They don't think I should be talking about this stuff
And maybe in a way they're partially right
But what I've been able to do is build something
Why not? You're not in the world
Well, that's the thing
They think that what do I know about it
And I think some of them are like
Why does he have more follows than me?
I was in this like, you know
And it's like, you know
I've had some guys that are cooperers
That have told me to go fuck myself
When I try to talk to them
They don't want none to do with me
And it's, when I started this show, I never, it was just a hobby.
I just enjoyed that stuff.
I watched the films.
I wanted to kind of like understand some of the things.
I never envisioned that it would become something that I could make money off of and like
being on things like this.
I never thought it would become that.
And in fact, I didn't really ever want it to become this.
But I did it and it's worked out for me in a way.
And I think they've gotten to the point where they don't think I should be talking about it.
Because they always reference, like, there are guys that.
aren't in the streets, and they don't know nothing about this.
But go back to Enten.
I think he's terrific.
His Coburger stuff that he did was, I mean, I thought it was some of the best reporting.
And there's not a lot of good reporters left, you know.
He's one of them.
I've raved.
He's great.
I've raved to you about Catarina.
I mean.
Shultz.
Yeah.
I mean, Brian does a great job.
Which, by the way, shout out to Kat, the amount of shit she got for reporting that baby
trafficking story, and she was a thousand percent right.
do want to say this as well because this is some credibility. That's another thing they don't do.
I would have never and she and I, we've done, we had done multiple podcasts before, before we did
that one as an emergency podcast. I would have never done that podcast if she didn't have the
goods. And when she and I went through like over the phone what she had, it was irrefucking futile.
I'll put it this way. Everything that I've seen publicly since then, she already. And that's my,
that's another kind of problem that I have
with some of the news media
you know and I'm not saying news nation
but even like some of the big you know CNN's places like that
in importance in like the Pablo Tori stuff
I know I'm not as big as Pablo Tori
okay I get that but I had information
and because I'm not as big in an account as his
you know like it's
and that's one of my problems that I have about Kat
like I think Kat is a terrific journalist
I think she she is a
just it's really well
done and the fact that like nobody had her on to talk about it crazy she went and got that
information she put her life at risk yes to went down there after she was here yeah and like to me
that's really wrong that like i get and and i know all these people that watch this show i know
you don't like my fucking haircut i know you don't not like me or whatever but the truth of the matter
is whether you like me or not i am one of the foremost authorities right now on the mafia in this
country it's that simple and it bothers me that like we're putting on this salacious bullshit and it makes
me wonder do we really want the truth or do we just want to fuck around people want credit that's what
they want it's like the old ESPN thing according to sources that's how they would always report
something when like another network had it first or another reporter but then when someone does do that
like cat it's we're going to just pretend she doesn't exist right and we're going to push it as our
own story exactly you know and and that's why i do really
some of the people that are in, let's say the cartel journalist world, you know, there's a guy
all-source news, you know, he always credits people, you know. A lot of those guys, they understand
the, you know, the dangers of doing that, you know. And I never compare myself to Kat because
Kat is going into Mexico and, like, she's really getting into the crux of this stuff. And
it's just wrong to me that on big level shit like that, like that story, she didn't necessarily
get the credit for it. And it bothers me. She should have been on every night.
news program in America. Absolutely. And she, you know, there's also, like in all these worlds you're
talking about within that particular lane, like the cartel lane, for some people, you know,
there's like certainly a jealousy factor and stuff for like, like, who the fuck is this upstart doing
this? I can tell you someone who's not like that is Ed Calderon. Ed Calderon's like,
hey, whatever. Who's ever got it? Let's go. What I don't understand, too, about that. Because I deal with
that a lot in the mob genre. Like, um, I know that they may come on your show.
I've tried to talk to George, Dave.
I've never talked to George.
I know Dave personally.
I've tried to talk to all those guys.
They won't talk to me.
Why that is?
I don't know.
Maybe they don't think I should be doing it.
But here's the truth.
And I said just a couple of seconds ago,
I've been able to build this platform.
And it helps you.
Because on YouTube,
when I do a video on John Gotti Jr.,
if you're doing a video on someone else
connected to John Gotti Jr.,
someone might see your video
because of mine.
And I might get something out of something you did.
I never understood the thought of like,
I've always tried to help people.
And I realize it's hurt me
because it's kind of screwed me in the mob world genre.
You try to help you because I think it's beneficial
if a new person comes in, you know?
100% man.
But in this business, unfortunately,
and it goes far beyond like the mob niche.
It's really all the niches.
Unfortunately, you know, there's a lot of people
who are thinking for me to have, you have to have not.
And like, you know what?
If that's how they want to think, hey, all the best to them.
But I can only control what I control in here.
And my, when I do stuff, it's always trying to help the people who come on or help them with stuff afterwards.
And like if it comes back around, great, if not great.
Like, you just control what you can control.
And that's what I.
And that's what I've learned.
And look, I know you were talking about Charlie Kirk.
I didn't mean to go off on that.
No, we'll come back to it.
But, um, but yeah, I just wish like, you know, I always know.
Like, in terms of what I do, I've always said, like, there are always going to be people that
are never going to give me credit for anything, you know?
And, you know, like I said, many times, you know, whether or not you like the person
that I am or what I look like or whatever, I have made a living off the Internet for over a decade.
Yeah.
And that when I look back on everything I've done in my life, the best thing I can ever say
is I can do things like on a Monday drive up here and speak to you.
because, you know, I see it out, you know, in front of my house, you know, guys working, you know, hard jobs.
Like, my father did.
And I think, like, man, I'm so lucky that Monday is not Monday for me like it is everybody else.
You know, I can find ways to make money.
And, like, that's, to me, what I've won in doing.
And I guess there's just people that don't, that bothers them, you know.
Can't worry about it, man.
It's just a drag on you.
I see what you're saying.
But, you know, it's also another thing when you're on.
on the, like, I'm not doing this when you're on the ground reporting stories and stuff
and you're so, like, you don't have a lot of your own show. Like, Kat just got her own show
recently, but she didn't for a while before that. It's like when someone doesn't give you credit
for it, you don't get anything. It's almost, you know, like I said, with what I was saying,
like you, you just, maybe just don't have as big enough account to reach to people. But
what don't you agree with with Charlie Kirk and me? I was curious. You said that I say things,
sometimes you don't agree with.
No, just in general.
I didn't mean that towards Charlie Kirk.
I wanted your, now that we were over, we're a month and a half removed from us and the
internet's running wild.
It seems like so long ago, doesn't it?
It's crazy.
Seems like that was months ago.
But like what, what do you think of where, forget like what people are speculating
on?
I mean, bring up whatever you want.
But as far as what we've been told, Tyler Robinson shooting up, you know, and just
didn't like him because he had political differences related to the trans issues.
like what do you think that's the truth or do you think we're not being told things well look
when it comes to this kind of stuff you know i'm just an onlooker you know i'm not a weapons expert
i'm not a military expert you know i remember when it happened just in some of the small like true
crime stuff i've looked into and that sort of thing it seemed like a shot that a normal person
probably couldn't do especially a really young person who probably has limited weapons training
my first thought was
it's an incredibly proficient shot
from a far away
and it was only one shot if you notice
that comes across to me as
that is a hit man who is trained to do that
most of the time when you see a shooting on a street right
you just shoot randomly
and you just hit whoever you hit
it takes a special kind of person
I said this in your other show
to walk up to a person
and shoot him in the back of the head
and walk away like nothing happened
it takes a special person to perch themselves up on a building several hundred yards away
and fire a shot with that proficiency because when he was hit and any person that knows anything
about the human body knows that and I've seen my fair share of carotid arteries being severed
that's what happened yeah he was dead as soon as it hit him instantly because when you sever an artery
it's not like you can go to the doctor and they can tie it up when that hits hit it's over yep
And then I started talking to people, and I know you've talked to, you know, guys that have been in the military and high-level training and things like that.
And they said, well, with their weapon that he had, it's not as hard as shy as you would figure.
But I'd really be interested in speaking to somebody, most notably that was maybe an expert in that Las Vegas shooting with Paddock.
Because, like, I remember when that happened, like, when you're that high shooting at the trajectory of the way he was,
Because, like, I don't, normal people can't do things like that.
And it just, I thought of that when this happened.
Do I think that the kid that they brought out did this?
It doesn't make a lot of sense.
Why doesn't it make a lot of sense?
Just because, like, I just don't feel like people like that are capable of doing things like that.
The part to me that's above my pay grade that I'm going to have someone in here, we're trying to find those right now to go through.
is the 30.06 bullet. I'm just going off of what people who are experts in shooting have gone
through. And it seems fairly unanimous. Please correct me in the comments if you're seeing
contrary cases made about this online. But it seems fairly unanimous that like from sub 200 yards
a 30.06 bullet would blow someone's entire head square off. And that did not happen here.
And then when you had his producer come out and basically do like the magic holy bullet tweet, which also, you know, the context of that tweet was, yeah, he was basically Andrew Colvette was saying a few weeks ago on Twitter.
He's like, yeah, I actually got to talk with the surgeon who worked on Charlie at the hospital.
And he said it was nothing but a miracle.
I believe that's the word he used that the bullet did not go through the other side.
He said Charlie was basically built like Superman, which is like magic bullet.
theory all over again and also he's saying it like it made Charlie special or whatever and I hate
to break it to you but not to be morose here but he he's dead yeah it didn't change like whether or not
it's not some fucking miracle he died right you know and also like I want to I said it when this happened
I mean this is one of the sickest most wrong things we've ever seen happen in this country because
it's it's really just a war on media and what you don't or do agree with my whole thought
just is in the turns of the kid that did it, supposedly.
Like, it's a really also hard thing to,
once you do something like this,
to then get, like, literally get up and walk out and blend in.
And like, that, like, most people can't do shit like that.
Right.
Especially a young person who really has no experience doing it.
You know, it's, we're trying to sell the fact that a young person
callously walked up and killed someone the way he did.
Now, I'm not going to say that my,
guess is he probably had major mental problems. And that's my point in all of this. The biggest
problem America faces is a mental health crisis. Agreed. It has nothing more to do with that than
anything. You know, I'll go back to a shooting that happened a couple of months ago in Minneapolis.
It was a Catholic school shooting. I mean, I watched a video of the individual that did that.
He put out a 15-minute video the night before where he went over every bullet, every piece of
weaponry he had. I mean, this was a deranged character, man. And like, I don't want to rehash
like what we've talked about on the show we did. But like, I have a small amount of experience
with that. And it's like, it's a shame that we've seen over the last 20 plus years. Not only are we
not investing in that department, but we have eliminated it. Even the little town that I live
in, you know, it's a town of, you know, 60, 70,000 people. When I was,
was a kid, we had multiple mental institutions for young people, for older people, for
whatever. You know how many we have now? One. So where are the mentally ill people? They're on the
street. And then we go to a city like this, New York, let's say, and you just 10x, 100 exit. And it's
where are all the mentally ill people? They're in the subways. They're in, they're on the street.
at what point are we going to understand that this is the problem it is a problem and even beyond the
extremely obvious examples like that when you go up next to the subway and you see someone who's
screaming into the air clearly not well when you look at a lot of these mass shooters in any event
normal people don't walk into school that's right and shoot people in the head kids and stuff
But why don't we talk about the fact that almost every time they're on SSRIs and drugs like that that are completely fucking with their head?
No, I'm not saying those drugs aren't made for a specific reason.
I will.
I will.
But they're handed out like fucking jellybeats.
I told you that when I went into the place that I went, after a while, it was just I had to stay there and I just started observing.
And I saw all the people.
There were 31 people in my unit.
I was the only person, not on medication.
And I thought to myself,
this medication is clearly not helping,
but Andrew, it's probably making them worse.
And like I said to you just now, like normal thinking people don't do this type of shit.
I could understand you have a hardship and maybe you go through a breakdown, let's say.
That's normal.
That happens.
But when we were younger, let's say in the late 90s,
school shooters were just like kids that were bullied well the first real one we knew about was
Columbine in 99 well what if I told you there was another one before that it was way worse and it's
actually I was having this conversation with my mom and I'm sure there will be a person in the
comments that says what I'm about to say I'm glorifying this person but I'm not and I would never
but I think we need to look more into the sadness of how do kids get that broken what was
the school shooting before there was an individual
in 1999, his name was Kip Kinkle.
So same year?
I believe it was late 98, I'm sorry.
Okay, Kip K-K-K-K-K-K-K-E-L.
Let's plug that in.
K-I-P, and then what is it?
K-I-N-K-E-L.
Okay.
What was it?
K-I-N-K-E-L.
Yeah, that's fine.
That's that I'll do it.
Yeah, and he's old now.
He's in his 40s.
Okay, he's in prison.
Wikipedia, down to the right,
1998 Thurston High School shooting.
Yeah, Kip Kinkle.
On May 28th, 1998, 15-year-old freshman student,
Kipling Kinkle,
opened fire with a semi-automatic rifle
in the cafeteria of Thurston High School
in Springfield, Oregon,
killing two of his classmates
and wounding 25 others.
He had killed his parents at the family home
the previous day following his suspension
pending an expulsion hearing
after he admitted to school officials
that he was keeping a stolen handgun in his locker.
Fellow students subdued him,
leading to his arrest. He later characterized his action as an attempt to get others to kill him
since he wanted to take his own life after killing his parents but could not bring himself
to do it. And I want to, I always like to give shoutouts to creators that I think do a really
good job. There's a YouTuber documenting evil and he almost exclusively talks about school shootings
and he goes to two, three hour videos where he does this incredible research on these people.
and like when you look into kip kinkle
it was one of those damaged people
you could ever come across
you hear his interrogation tapes
where he's just talking about
my whole he's crying my whole life
all I hear is people telling me to do things
like he was an incredibly broken person
and I wonder like how does a person like that
how do we not see this
you put him on medication but then he
he has a couple of good weeks
and you take him off it you're buying him
you know like i just wonder like people like this and kip kinkle is still in prison
kip kinkles in his 40s he did this massacre when he was about 15 and you know i'm not going to
tell people they should go listen to his interrogation but it's i don't feel bad for him but like
the way he cries and like just i don't know what to do i didn't know what to do like he talks
about systematically killing his father and how like he and why he's talking about he's literally
fucking sobbing crying this is a 15 year old child with major mental problems right we then find out
that like people like kip kinkled they did a study of um the shooter of sandy hook's brain
and there was a a brain doctor that said it was the most damaged brain i've ever come across
I think I remember that.
How are these people at these ages this mentally ill?
It's a great question.
You know, and it's, I'm not, I'm not sitting here trying to, like, say that these aren't bad people, but most 100% of people that do this type of stuff are mentally ill.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I guess there's maybe one or two that are just evil people.
Yeah.
But that's a mental illness, isn't it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I think what you're talking about is more actually documented.
completely chemically imbalanced beyond just being like an evil person. And yeah, I agree with you.
And I think it's, I think it's horrible. I mean, look into it. If that's something, if that's
also something that did in fact happen here with Charlie Kirk, you now have it on a level
where, you know, you create a huge political problem out of it because of who was shot for free speech.
And that's what it turns into. I mean, you look at a, you look at the Nicholas Cruz, the Stoneman
Douglas here? I mean, he said he had weed psychosis, I think, right? Well, but if you look in his
background, he was a foster kid. His father was never in a picture, and his mother was a,
a doctor would also state that she, he had never seen a pregnant woman that consume more alcohol
than her. And what people don't realize is alcohol is the worst thing possible for a growing
child. Oh, yeah. And like, I'm not going to say that that's the reason, but like,
we always find that most of these people come from horrifically bad backgrounds and or
that leads to major mental illness.
So I don't know what, and go back to Kirk, like I think all of the, you know, that person
obviously had.
And then all the, all this political stuff is thrown at you.
And you never quite know who you are.
You never know quite what to believe or what not to believe, you know.
And I think a lot of people, too, there's a, there's a group of people that want to just belong
to something.
Yes.
So like, you know, someone like this kid, you know, he wanted to behoove the community
that he thought was right.
You know, there's like, I've looked into a guy and I'm really interested and fascinated
by like people from America that go and become terrorists.
Like Anwar Al-Laki, guys like that.
Well, no, like I'm talking about people that grew up in America.
Yeah, he did.
Did he?
But he would, I'm talking more or less like, you.
You, like, people that are, let's say, I'm white, right?
Like, not with a Muslim background.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I got you.
And I found a guy in Russia.
He was a Russian-born guy.
He grew up in, you know, near Moscow.
And he actually started in neo-Nazi beliefs.
And then randomly conversed to Islam.
That starts to jump right there.
Right.
And then starts believing in, you know, radical Islam, Salafist of Islam.
and anybody that knew him stated like this is who this kid was his whole life he would just go with
whoever would accept him and that's what a lot of these people it's about just like they're so
they don't belong anywhere a lost soul looking for a home and we talked about seven six four last time
i was hearing and thank god you know five six months later they've done some stuff about it but you
look at those types of people in society they're not respected they're often trampled and they don't
mean anything and they have no purpose but then they can go on the internet and say this is my world
that's it 100% i belong to something and and that's why i always get a kick out of like some of the most
goofy strange people in the world are moderators of things like on the internet like reddit
moderators it's like you know you think you're this like and it's like you're just a fucking
moderator or a reddit group chill out you feel important but you feel important yeah it's like
that kid in school that was always you know going to the principal on you you know like
why are you doing this?
You want to feel like someone cares about you.
I think that's another problem too.
We've been told that all these groups mean something, right?
Like we have to be a part of this or, you know,
what happened to just being a free thinker?
Yes.
And that's what I always have tried to do.
You know, there would be one day
where someone will call me a piece of shit liberal
and the next day you fucking Trump supporter, scumbag,
hick, you know?
Right.
And it's like, yeah,
You can't, you're not someone that can be put in any kind of box.
Like if people follow you on X and I would highly recommend it, like you for better or worse,
call it like you see it on stuff.
And I appreciate that because it is the easiest way to make money online these days or
build a profile is just, you know, picking a set of beliefs whether it's political or not
political and running all the way.
And I will never do that.
Right.
I will never, another thing that is a major problem with young people nowadays.
and, you know, the age group after me
is their willingness to throw away any ethics, morals,
or values they have
and excuse awful behavior for views.
And it's just for views.
Yeah, I'm hanging with child molesters,
but just views, yeah.
No.
There's certain things you don't do.
That's right.
You know what I'm saying?
That's right.
I'm not going to, I'm not going to be, you know,
this or that for view.
And what I also think is really concerning about social media is we have awarded that behavior.
100%. On Twitter, if you, you know, align with something and Elon Musk agrees with it,
you're going to make a ton of money. And as soon as you stop agreeing, Wells cut off.
That's all it is, man. It's just money. Where does the attention flow? Attention equals money.
And then we wonder, wherever kids went. They're trying to be the next fucking Jake Paul or this person or that person.
person. It's, it's just concerning, but. Or you could be Jeff Nade do and be the number one
trending worldwide person on X for three days because you get on a plane. And notice that,
that was a strictly, I've never done anything for rage bait. I've never. I've never
pretended to be someone I'm not. I am who I am. Right. I like my haircut. I like the way I dress.
I like the gold chain I wear. Good. I like who I am. I'm not going to pretend to be someone I'm not.
I don't, I don't want hair like yours. I don't like it. Not a lot of people do. You don't like my,
It's my life.
That's a good thing.
So what essentially happened was there's a rumor that had been started over a decade ago
that for a person that does not like me and I don't like him, we used to work together
where there was some sort of, according to them, confirmation that I was on a government
watch list and I was not allowed to fly.
It was on the no fly list.
Insinuating that you were a terrorist threat.
Correct.
And I, you know, I've flown my whole life, you know.
I can't say I could prove it
because like who really does that?
Who takes pictures?
Like, hey, I'm on the airplane.
Like, I don't do that.
But that company, Barstall,
I had, there had been some certain points
where I wasn't able to go to an event or, you know,
and it all comes to fruition.
Dave hears about it.
And Jeff doesn't show up to anything.
So, maybe he is on the no-fly-off.
So back in July, I mentioned,
I had gotten in touch with Hustler Casino
and we had agreed on me going out to play in a game.
and it was the middle of summer
and it was a Sunday
I was going to leave because the game was on Monday
so I was leaving Sunday night from
Harrisburg International which is
about a half an hour from my house. This is a smaller
airport but I could fly into Chicago
and they're running to L.A. And I like that because it's
real close to my house. I get
to the airport
about 3 o'clock I was leaving at 6
ish and
I get the
text that my flight's delayed
which is fine. I'm not leaving at 7.20
is what it is.
I'm sitting there.
And I had made a post because, you know,
everybody knew that I was on the no-fly list.
I took a video going through security.
Yeah, you're like, fuck all you mothers fuckers.
Like, I'm through security,
so I can't be on the no-fly list.
I then was bored.
I go up to the gate, United Gate,
and I was just like confirming.
Because I don't fly much.
I confirm like, hey, I just want to make sure I'm on this flight.
You got the right seat for me.
Because I'm big on that.
I like 1A or 2A or 2D, what, like I like front row stuff.
Gotcha.
You know, I like to be in the front.
First class kind of guy.
Yes.
Or just like at the front of like comfort or whatever.
And she goes, your flight was canceled half hour ago over the phone.
And I said, why would I still be here then?
And why would I be asking you if I'm on the flight if I canceled it?
She said, well, somebody can't.
canceled it. They called in a threat. So I called, I was working with a company. I was promoting
them. They paid for the flight. And I said, did you guys cancel this? No. I said, why would we cancel it?
I said, I don't know. And I'm arguing with this lady. I'm like, what is, what do I do? And she goes,
well, see if any other flights in this airport will take you. Otherwise, she said, I've worked
here for 12 years. You're not getting on this flight.
And I had already put out this video
And I had like a million views at this point
Like an hour
And I'm like, what do I do?
Like I'm going to look like I'm not
I am on the no-fly list now
So I remember I called
A friend of mine, Jack Mack
He didn't answer
He was a barstool
Yeah, he was a friend of mine
And no he didn't answer
And I'm like, you know what
I'm going to get this bag
And I'm going to go to my car
and I'm going to drive home
and I'm going to just turn my phone off
and I'm going to find a way
to get on a flight tomorrow morning
and get out there
and I'm not going to let anybody know where I am
I'm just going to go dark
because I figured if I just went dark
like no one would know
like I would just pretend like I got there late
and just went to sleep and I woke up in LA
you know and I would make it there
and no one would find out
so I went to bed
I actually wait I went home 18
dinner, went to bed. And I was on Twitter. I didn't like anything. I didn't do anything.
It was like I was a ghost. I didn't respond to text. People FaceTime. He called me. The only
person I answered was my mother. I didn't even tell her. I didn't tell anybody.
Mama Nay-Doo wasn't in on the floor. No. And I remember I got up the next day at 5.30.
I had said a, it was an 820 flight. I got up there. Everything was great. I get on the flight.
I get out to Chicago like 1050
Flight one so you already flew
Yes so I got I went from Harris or Chicago
It's like an hour and a half
I get out there and my concern I'd realized at that point was
It's now light out and there's a bunch of people here
You get to an airport early nobody's there really
But I'm like
What if somebody sees me
So I went to I forgot my sunglasses
On this flight
I went to sunglasses
I bought a pair of sunglasses
And just try to like
subvert people's attention.
And the concerning thing about me is, as you can see,
I'm not exactly a blend into the crap type of a guy.
You look like fucking demolition, man.
Yeah, like, everybody knows me.
Like, people, if you do see me, I'm not,
I'm kind of an eccentric looking guy.
But I got through everything.
Nobody came up to me.
I got on the flight.
And I'm on a United flight to L.A.
I'm landing there locally like 1.30 afternoon.
Gate 68B.
70B.
70B.
I'm on the flight.
I watched an episode of Sopranos.
I got something.
I was in first class that flight, so I was eating.
And I decided, you know what?
I'm going to get on Twitter.
I'm going to get some Wi-Fi and get on Twitter.
And I just get a fucking wave.
Like, yo, like they're talking about you in bars.
So right now there's like 30,000 people watching.
The whole company shut down.
They had live streams like of people gathered in large rooms with multiple cameras
watching to see if NADU would land at L.A.
somebody DM me, and I didn't respond, they said, yo, you're number one trending of Kobe.
And I said, Kobe, really?
And I turned the act on and I, it was around the time where they had invited these two
random people to like film me at the airport.
They're watching the flight simulator and everything.
And around when we landed, like I fully knew what was going on.
And I want to make it clear to anyone that's not aware, like when we say there was a lot of
people watch it. I think there was like 35,000 people watching. Oh, yeah. The stream was nuts.
It was insane. And I kind of knew, like, I was going to be like a second or third person off
the flight. And I just kind of played it cool. I never contacted anybody. And that was the first time
of my life I ever really kind of planned something and content. But I had thought by that point,
you know what, I deserve this. These fucking assholes fuck with my flight. I had to deal with
the stupid, no-flyless shit forever. And what people don't realize is, like, I was in a,
but kind of a bad spot because I didn't know if like an Aaron Marshall was going to come like
fuck with me over this like put me in a room and like is this true and like make me go on
to a bunch of bullshit. So I get there and then the rest was history and it ended up being like a
huge thing. Yeah, I can't play any of it. We did it with Riz Verk after we recorded right after this
all happened and it got like copyright claims so we had to take it out. But the edits were unreal.
oh, they had like, they had like the Kanye music of like people waiting for the reaction.
And they're like, oh, oh, there he is.
And then just people, ah.
Yeah, it was funny as shit.
Like, explaining this to my mom and dad for like a good 20 minutes, the entire story start to end was quite an experience.
Well, that's the thing about Barstow.
And I think that's why, like, Barstow in a way has become so popular just through stories like that.
Mm-hmm.
You know, like, I watched some of the videos on it.
Like, I mean, they were really, like, viral and crazy.
and it also goes back to like you'd have to then explain the story between me and this individual
and why we don't have it.
We're not going to say his name.
I just don't.
I've kind of tried to move on from that in a way, you know.
You know, he, Rico, he's.
Is it real?
Yeah.
It's real, right?
Definitely real.
And we've had running since then.
I saw the one where you guys went up and did the content and like, dude.
But that wasn't set up either.
I can't.
I can't play because, again, it's copyrighted.
But, you know, you got Portnoy and Big Couch.
sitting there and he comes over and you don't flinch.
So I'll tell you what happened.
We, I was contacted by someone at Barstle with, you know, with one of the sports books that
they work with.
They wanted to do a poker tournament and I play, you know, I play and they came to me and were
like, yo, would you flop the Foxwoods and play?
Yeah, you and Chauncey Billups.
Yeah, wow.
Right.
He wasn't there.
So I go to Foxwoods and I get to my room and he's like, the game starts at six.
He goes, but would you, would you come in to pick him, the podcast?
have and you know do some stuff and I didn't know what would happen I said you know if I go in there
it's going to be it's going to be bad and he said I'll just come in so I go in I sit down and the premise
was we were going to do like a football contest like pick games and stuff and it was weird because
it's like you two are sitting there and he was sitting closest to me and I remember I sat down and
just like very friendly I was like how are you like to him he's like don't fucking touch me and he
flipped the fuck out got him like it was crazy and i didn't flinch because i knew he wasn't going to do
you did not flinch um he i don't think he was going to do anything either because if you notice
every time he can you know he's screaming like a madman in your face every time he came to do he just
be like yeah like he was being like like fake holding himself back like if he wanted to hit you he's
going to hit and i knew that but like one of the problems that that that has persisted with him
for forever in this is and i i've asked him through emissaries to stop doing this and
he continues to do it and it's he cannot control himself but when we did the flight thing he made
a comment about my sister and you know i've said before like you can say whatever you want about me i don't
care don't bring up my family they have nothing to do with what i do and just like anybody someone's
family is separate yeah you know and my sister and my family are good sports like my sister gets a kick
out of some of this stuff you know because she's just like just like a regular person it's funny to be
mentioned but like during that casino thing he made a comment about my father and that that really
really got to me because you know that's a hard and and i don't mention family ever right i hate his
guts but i would never mention his family they have nothing to do with this yeah that's fuck and he did it
again and i that's when it it got to me and i i went to them and we had an episode the following week where
I went on Zoom and I said, look, I'm done with this.
I've asked this dude multiple times, stop mentioning my family.
I said, here's what we'll do.
Set up and rough and rowdy fed up, and that's how it went.
He didn't want to do it.
They don't want to do it.
I said, okay, then I'm out.
Yeah, fuck him.
I'm done then.
And, you know, he, I will say this, you know, to kind of end this, my, the cheer anniversary
came up and I will say he reached out to me and said something very nice stuff to me about
it.
It doesn't forgive what he did.
Um, and that's kind of where we, I think, got to a decent point. But that's really what got to me. And I said, you know what? Fuck this. I'm not doing this no more. Like, you've done this persistently for five, six years. We've been fighting for like 10. Um, and this is a very real thing. I don't like him. He doesn't like me. Um, but I always try to be at least fair to him. You know, and I tried to make it make it right. And he never wanted to do that. So, oh, good for you. You know, that's, you know, that's. You know, that's. You know, that's. You know, that's. You know, that's. You know, that's. You know, that's
that and I do my own thing and you know I've always tried to be sustainable in my own I was
sustainable before bars so I'll be sustainable after but I will say this they you know and I said
this before they've done it Dave's done a lot from me I like Dave and he was always good to me we
haven't always agreed you know I I think that he liked me respected what I was able to do do I get
them a lot of views yeah I never really complained about that because it helped me too you know
Yeah, yeah, it's mutually beneficial.
But, you know, what's crazy is, like, now there's talk that, you know, they want me to do this spring break thing they're doing, this, like, it's like a real world type of thing.
You wouldn't have to go to Mexico, would you?
I don't know.
I don't think.
I think they're talking about Florida.
But, no, I told him if it's in Mexico, I'm not doing it.
But, yeah, so we'll see.
I mean, the whole thing with me and Barstow is it's never over.
Yeah, you guys are like.
They do their thing.
I do mine.
Yeah.
Like, there'll be people that'll call me and, like, they'll say, hey, can you come on
and do a show about this or, you know, can you be in this or whatever?
You know, I went down to New Jersey this summer.
We did a...
Yeah, you did the Shorehouse, right?
Barstow Beach House for a night.
I saw, I saw all the videos of you just at the bar, Mac and teaching all the guys' game.
Well, real quick.
So, real quick, that's a kind of wild story that connects back to this, too.
So I go to the Barstow Beach House.
It was in Manusquan, which is, you know, central Jersey shore area.
And we're out.
And I don't think.
you can understand like we went out that night it was like awesome we were like celebrities ospre
had a line a block long we just walked right in and uh i got to talking to a girl and we we were talking
the whole night and um at the end of the night she says to me she's like we want to go to djs and i'm like
okay i mean let's go to djs and um i told her i said look i'm going to just be honest with you i don't
I don't think they're going to let me in.
And she says, well, why not?
And explaining to her anything about Barso was like,
you explain it to your family.
And I said, but you know, you see all these cameras and stuff?
We're doing like a, it's like a reality type show.
And she had to sign like a waiver to even be on it and everything.
So we go to DJs and I walk up
as soon as they made contact with the bar back,
the security guy.
Nope.
So you're not allowed in.
He said,
a memo today, you're not allowed in here.
You got a memo.
And they showed me my Twitter profile, the mugshot,
and he goes, you're not coming in.
He goes, fucking United, pal.
He said, listen, he says, I know who you are.
I think you're funny.
He said, but management told me, you can't come in.
And I made a big scene.
Oh, you made a scene outside DJs.
I stopped.
I said, to the girl, I said, it was great meeting you.
I said, have fun.
I said, don't let me ruin your night,
going with your friends.
And she went in.
Gentlemen, Jeff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't, you know, I don't want to push that life on anybody and like this fucking guy comes
out.
I guess he was like some general manager or something and he's like made a big deal about it.
And I basically flipped the fuck out.
I'm like, this is ridiculous.
Like who, what did someone call you and tell you I can't come in here?
Who the fuck did this?
And I think it led back to him.
You know, he's tight with them people there.
So yeah, fuck, fuck DJs.
Good for you, Jeff.
Yeah, fuck that place.
Letting, letting the girl.
going and have fun. That's why you're a great guy. She was a cool girl. I liked her a lot, actually.
She was cool. Well, I think you've handled the aftermath of that whole thing with Rico well.
It is funny entertainment. And you and Barstool, you know, you're like the, you're like the couple who's always broken up, but, you know, you still go back and
have a good time every now and then. We're good where we are because I do my own thing. They do theirs.
That's right. And we can come together and do stuff. Keep doing it, bro. I love your, I love your ex, Twitter.
It's always going to be Twitter made by I love your ex.
It's a great follow.
And thanks for breaking down this whole.
Yeah.
I don't know how it is a bit complicated, but it'll be interesting to see what comes from it.
Yeah.
Yeah, but people can go back and watch episode 301 with you.
This one will be, I think, episode 350.
And I do want to say one thing to you real quick, as we end.
You're terrific as well.
You do a lot of great work.
Some of your guests, I mean, I've really enjoyed.
I appreciate that a lot, man.
Checking them out.
I appreciate that a lot.
It's been fun talking with you, too, as always.
As always.
Thanks, man.
All right, everybody else, you know what it is.
Give it a thought.
Get back to me.
Peace.
Thank you guys for watching the episode.
If you haven't already,
please hit that subscribe button
and smash that like button on the video.
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