Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - EXCLUSIVE!: Prison Life for Jay-Z | Extortion, Snitching & Desperation

Episode Date: December 15, 2024

Use promo code COX to double your first deposit at https://www.mybookie.ag Get 50% sitewide for a limited time. Just visit https://GhostBed.com/cox and use code COX at checkout. Chad's YouTube Cha...nnel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2BfsAN7eb-76zlPmVbetgQ/videos/videos Do you want to be a guest? Fill out the form https://forms.gle/5H7FnhvMHKtUnq7k7 Send me an email here: insidetruecrime@gmail.com Do you extra clips and behind the scenes content? Subscribe to my Patreon: https://patreon.com/InsideTrueCrime 📧Sign up to my newsletter to learn about Real Estate, Credit, and Growing a Youtube Channel: https://mattcoxcourses.com/news   🏦Raising & Building Credit Course: https://mattcoxcourses.com/credit 📸Growing a YouTube Channel Course: https://mattcoxcourses.com/yt 🏠Make money with Real Estate Course: https://mattcoxcourses.com/re Follow me on all socials! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/insidetruecrime/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@matthewcoxtruecrime Do you want a custom painting done by me? Check out my Etsy Store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/coxpopart Listen to my True Crime Podcasts anywhere: https://anchor.fm/mattcox Check out my true crime books! Shark in the Housing Pool: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0851KBYCF Bent: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BV4GC7TM It's Insanity: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08KFYXKK8 Devil Exposed: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08TH1WT5G Devil Exposed (The Abridgment): https://www.amazon.com/dp/1070682438 The Program: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0858W4G3K Bailout: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/bailout-matthew-cox/1142275402 Dude, Where's My Hand-Grenade?: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BXNFHBDF/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1678623676&sr=1-1 Checkout my disturbingly twisted satiric novel! Stranger Danger: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BSWQP3WX If you would like to support me directly, I accept donations here: Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/MattCox69 Cashapp: $coxcon69

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 The new Bimo V.I. Porter MasterCard is your ticket to more. More perks, more points, more flights, more of all the things you want in a travel rewards card, and then some. Get your ticket to more with the new Bimo ViPorter MasterCard and get up to $2,400 in value in your first 13 months. Terms and conditions apply. Visit Bimo.com slash Viporter to learn more. Jay-Z was there. He was the first dude to jump on her. With the trial coming up, this discovery is going to come out, the people that were there.
Starting point is 00:00:36 If Diddy doesn't settle, then eventually whether Jay-Z settles or not, his name's going to come out. Now people go, oh, man, I didn't know that. Oh, because that's not a 30-second soundbite on NBC Nu. When you start to get the real story, things change. You know, I knew there was a bunch of lawsuits on Diddy. And then just recently, I saw that they added, I guess he was named as like an unnamed co-conspirators. something and they just revealed that it was Jay Z and they specifically, did they follow a new lawsuit against him? What they did was they went in and they really followed a new one and they
Starting point is 00:01:08 added him into it, right? And then, you know, you got to think like this. You know, there's thousands of pictures out there with Jay Z. He's at these parties with Puff Daddy. You can't, you know, you can't be hanging out with this dude every day and going to these parties and not know what's going on, right? Right. And you're like, yo, this is my man. We're together. I mean, did Jay Z know that, you know, Puffy's playing the skin flu, that he's a sword fighter. I mean, you would have to think that, yeah, he probably does know. And of course, you know, there should be speculation like, yo, he was this close with, you know, Puffy at the time. You know, is this dude a sword fighter too?
Starting point is 00:01:41 I'm not saying he was or wasn't, but you never know. And then as far as, you know, the new lawsuit, I mean, really the lawsuit really pounds away. You know what I mean? It pounds away at Puff Daddy. I mean, this is the lawsuit. They really pound away at him. And then, you know, later on in the lawsuit, they say, look, this is what happened. Jay-Z was there.
Starting point is 00:02:00 He was the first dude to jump on her. She was 13 years old. Then he gets done and then Puffy jumps on her and that there's another female celebrity there. And back then, who's the female celebrity? Is it J-Lo? I mean, it's somebody, right? Right. This really did happen, you know, so to speak.
Starting point is 00:02:17 But, you know, there's just too much shit that was going on with Puffy for you to be like, look, you know, you're supposed to, hey, he's not guilty until the jury. Look, man. the evidence doesn't look good for Puffy, right? And, you know, in the beginning, Puffy was like, hey, you know, there's a bunch of bull. These people are out for a money grab. Kind of what Jay-Z is saying right now, right? There's a money grab, whatever.
Starting point is 00:02:37 And, you know, eventually it doesn't work out for Puffy. And he's probably going to prison, I would say, for the rest of his life. I mean, it looks like he's probably going to go to trial. I said before. I think he's like the dude's an absolute maniac, I believe. But as far as Jay-Z goes, is this just, you know, the beginning of the end? Who knows? Only time will tell.
Starting point is 00:02:55 And I know that, you know, I did a video about, you know, Puff Daddy and people were writing me and they're like, hey, you know, check this out. You know, this dude ain't indicted. What's going on? It's three months later. You're, you were wrong. I'm like, hey, man, they're going to get slowly. Yeah. They're coming to get you. But, you know, Jay-Z also responds to this lawsuit and says, hey, check this out. You ain't getting one red cent. All of that stuff. And that's kind of what puppy did too, right, man. Go ahead and sue me. You ain't getting shit. Then, you know, the lawsuit, you know, from his producer there, once that was done, I said, hey, this looks like an indictment. And eventually, you know, that lawsuit became what you could say was an indictment. An indictment that might cost him his life. And then as far as Jay Z goes, I mean, he says, hey, man, don't file a civil complaint, file a criminal complaint. Is that because the statute of limitations is up? Yeah, that's what I was thinking.
Starting point is 00:03:45 Yeah, this is the 48 laws of power. This is the deflection, right, for anyone that's read the 48 laws of power. You know what they say, Matt, birds of a feather flocked together. You can't separate yourself from all these pitchers and being at all these parties with Puffy and act like, man, you didn't know what was happening or what was going on. So, yeah, I think that maybe he might be a little bit.
Starting point is 00:04:05 At the very least, bro, I mean, they're going to probably destroy his reputation to a certain extent. Where people are like, damn, bro, implicated 13-year-old girl. You're hanging out with Puffy. He's playing the skin flute. Like, what's up with judo? You know, you're this gangster-ass dude, rapper.
Starting point is 00:04:20 I don't know, man. And then you go back to some of them, like that Ether song by now. where he talks about, you know, he, he crushes Jay Z and Aaron and says, look, man, you know, pretty much sleeping on the couch. You were ugly and you didn't have no chicks. You know, you were kind of like a hunkass back then. You didn't have no money. Eventually, Jay Z becomes, you know, I mean, he's got more money than you could count probably.
Starting point is 00:04:42 But, you know, back then he wasn't that dude. And I'm sure we've all grown up around kids that weren't that dude. Didn't really get no chicks and stuff like that back then. Who knows what he was doing when he started getting famous? Well, you know, all these, so all these lawsuits coming out now, you know, of course, you know, one or two come out and then, of course, they all jump on. They all jump on them. But the criminal case obviously makes it, it gives these guys even more of a reason to file. If they were questioning it before, what a lot of people don't understand is when these lawyers jump on a case or file a case, you know, that they have. have to it's just like a just like a what do you call it a um a bodily injury case or something like that right like you the lawyer's putting up all the money so they have to have a good likelihood that they're going to get paid back that they're going to be successful in filing this this case now
Starting point is 00:05:42 in this case maybe if you had a client that was like came to you and said look this is what's going on you know i i was you know taking advantage of this is what has happen. They're like, yeah, I don't know. I'm not sure I want to sue one of these guys because they're going to have the means to fight it out in court. And yeah, they probably don't want the, they don't want the bad press, the bad press, but you know, they've got a media machine. That's prior to them being indicted or all having the other suits, right? So then they get, then someone like like, like Diddy gets indicted and it looks like he's going to get, he's going to end up being found guilty or at least pleading guilty. Well, what, what ends up
Starting point is 00:06:20 happening then is lawyers go, okay, wait a minute, we didn't have much of a chance. It didn't look like a great case before, but now it looks like an amazing case because once he's found guilty, he can't even defend against this case. So anybody that jumps on the bandwagon now just before he's found guilty or pleads guilty, their case is a shoe in that they're going to get some kind of a settlement unless he claims bankruptcy or something. So a lot of these cases that are coming out now were cases that probably were in existence before, or these were facts that were known before by attorneys, but the attorneys were like, you don't really have a case. I can't spend $200,000 fighting this fucking guy's legal team, but now that these guys are
Starting point is 00:06:58 being indicted, now it looks like a good deal for them. You know, and they're, they're open. Let's face it, if Diddy's found guilty, Jay-Z's going to have a real problem. Just like you just said, oh, this is my best friend where we hang out together all the time. I go to all those parties where we're like two peas in a pod. Oh, but I didn't know he was doing this. this and this. Well, you were there. Your photos are there. You're at every party. How do you not know that? Let me say this, right? Because when we did that other video about Puffy, I had said
Starting point is 00:07:29 something on that video. I said, look, man, there's like, you know, allegations of minors. And people like, there ain't nothing like that in the indictment. There ain't no allegations. Like, there were comments on your video about that, right? I think I got two or three emails about it. But now, you know what? Like I said before, you know, be prepared because it's coming. They're going to indict this cat, right? And eventually they did. But now, here you go. here's the minor but it's not she's not the only minor you know they talk about 16 year old girls i mean 17 year old and it's just look it's yeah the downfall but you know if they get on some real hood shit right what i would do is i if it was me i mean look if i'm going to prison for the rest of my
Starting point is 00:08:05 life i probably would have moved all my money because i'm not found guilty right now and i wouldn't give nobody shit we're not settling take sell me so what are you going to do i'm in federal prison i don't need anything i'll send money to other people in prison and that's how i'll get my commissary So, you know, you want to hit my commissary account if it gets $500 in it, whatever. That's petty money to him, right? Do you like free money? Right now, my bookie is offering a special deal where new customers get double their first deposit. Meaning, if you deposit $1,000, they'll give you another $1,000 in free play.
Starting point is 00:08:39 Whether you're into sports betting, live betting, or even casino games, my bookie has it all. Play your bets on everything from football, basketball, alexible, actions, and even esports. MyBooky offers so many ways to bet. Bet on the spread, the money line. You can even place a live bet while the actions unfolding. There's no better way to stay in the game than with MyBooky's easy-to-use platform and top-notch customer service. And the best part is new MyBooky customers get double their deposits with the promo code Cox. That's free cash to make the next game unforgettable. There's a reason MyBooky's been the go-to platform for betting for the past 10 years, whether it's UFC, NFL, or college football, bet on anything, anytime, anywhere,
Starting point is 00:09:25 only with my bookie. But yeah, I would just operate that way. He doesn't have to pay nobody's shit. And this lawyer, right? I mean, this lawyer is really like going after these people. You know, he had sent a demand letter to Jay-Z. He puts it in, it's in here. And he says, look, you know, pretty much, you know, we can settle this.
Starting point is 00:09:42 And this doesn't have to go public if you want to, you know, go ahead and pay this couple of hours. And he says, you know, I'm not paying you shit. And next thing you know, they amend this, you know, this civil lawsuit. And they're going after them now. Now they're going after them through the court. Will he end up, you know, settling this? If he settles it, guess what happens? There's going to be people not going to.
Starting point is 00:10:03 There's some of them are, you know, some of this probably, I'm not saying this specific case because I don't know the particulars, you know, we don't know what happened or if it ever really did happen if it's some bullshit. But I'm sure, you know, this happens all the time, right? There's always people out for the money grab. People are always making up shit. I'm not saying this girl at 13 years. old made this shit up. But I mean, it happens all the time. People jump on the band.
Starting point is 00:10:23 Right. She's 37. I think she's 37 years old now. Yeah, she's living in Alabama. No, country girl. But what I'm saying is, is that when this stuff starts happening, you know, people do start filing law. So say, let me try to get a couple dollars, right? I was in prison with a dude that, you know, he was suing like he'd order a pair of sneakers from Nike on the commissary. And he would actually sue them from prison. They were defective. And he'd sue them and they'd settle out. And you get a $1,500 check. or all the people that were suing hooters right dudes were just going into hooters and saying hey i want a job and they're like well you don't have any hooters you're a dude so you can't see you know we're not
Starting point is 00:10:59 hiring you so you know they filed the discrimination lawsuit never banging hooters bro i mean people find ways to you know to scam the system so to speak listen i have i have a buddy named uh a Zach, whose brother, and I, and I always say it's his brother. I actually think he ended up correcting me. He said, no, it was my cousin. So his cousin was good friends. So Zach's black, his cousin's black, obviously. His cousin's best friend was a white guy that worked at like Shoney's.
Starting point is 00:11:36 And so Shonies, and I don't, I actually don't think it was like Denny's or so. It was one of those breakfast restaurants. They were being sued for discrimination, right? So blacks are getting together and suing saying, look, they won't hire us or they're firing us for no reason or they're not giving us service. They're not sitting us. They're sitting whites before. So it was a big deal. All these lawsuits start coming out.
Starting point is 00:11:59 So Zach's cousin has a friend that or a good friend that worked at like Denny's or something, let's say. I don't know if Denny's or Shoney's, but at Denny's and he'd worked there for a friend. like six months and all these lawsuits are happening so they come up with a scheme for the cousin to go in sit down and order food he asked for him to get a refill on his drink and the guy and and the white dude turns to him and says yeah yeah yeah okay in a minute i'll get it in a minute takes another order goes and gets the order brings it back he says hey uh did you don't forget about my coke my refill he He goes, yeah, yeah, no problem. Leaves, 10, 15 minutes go by.
Starting point is 00:12:46 He says, hey, man, can I get, can I get an, he goes, yeah, yeah, bro, I'll get it. I'm on it. I'm on it. Another 15 minutes go by, he goes, bro, what's going on with my coke? He goes, man, calm down. He goes, that's why I hate waiting on you inward. Says it loud, all the other patrons hear it. This guy's like, what the hell?
Starting point is 00:13:08 They get the manager, a manager comes over, says what happened? he's man so he gets all upset like oh i'm sick of waiting on these people and he gets all upset the other patrons go to the black guy and say listen man we heard what he said take my phone number down that's some bullshit they take his phone number he sus listen and i forget exactly what the amount is but we're talking about within a couple of days they are being contacted by a lawyer that immediately wants to settle the case for like 30 grand. You see what I'm saying? Like it's sometimes you jump on, like you said, sometimes you jump on the bandwagon.
Starting point is 00:13:48 They will figure out a way to sue you. I mean, 100%. So what happens with, so what does the actual lawsuit say that this girl is saying? Right. So this is what it says, right? Soon after Combs entered the room. So look, first of all, 13-year-old girls at the VMAs. She's out looking for a limousine. Hey, man, are you got any after
Starting point is 00:14:11 parties? 13-year-old girls shouldn't be at the VMAs anyway. Like, where's your parents at, right? Like, they're not really, you know, 13 years old. So she finds this limousine driver, allegedly, according to, you know, the lawsuit. And dude's like, look, I got to take Puffy back to the after party. Stay right here. Once I drop him off, I'll come back and get you. You're just the type of girl that he likes. He likes them young, whatever, right? So I guess he allegedly takes, you know, Puffy to the after party, comes back. The chick's there. He picks her up. he takes her there. They end up getting to the place. She says she gets a little drink and he tells her, hey, man, you're ready to party. That is home. And they end up going into this room and this is what
Starting point is 00:14:48 it says, soon after Colms entered the room along with Defendant Carver and a female celebrity, Celebrity B, Plaintiff immediately recognized all three celebrities. Colmes aggressively approached plaintiff with the craze look in his eyes, grabbed her and said, you are ready to party. Whoa, come on, Puffy. Now look, you know, coming from this dude, I think it's possible. I mean, this dude's an egomaniac. He's an absolute, the dude's a nutcase, man. I mean, he had a bunch of money, but probably not a good guy, right? Coles then threw plaintiff toward a wall, causing plaintiff the fall. I don't know, man. So he comes in there and wants to party, but throws her towards a wall. I don't know about that. The lawyer probably should left that
Starting point is 00:15:23 out, even if it's true. Plaintiff got up and stumbled, at which point Combs grabbed her again and threw her on the bed. At that point, Carter began removing plaintiff's clothes, that's Jay-Z, as she grew more and more disoriented. Plaintiff was held down by Carter as he, her while Combs and Celebrity B watched. After Carter finished, he stepped back toward the wall. Combs then stepped forward and did the big R while Carter and Celebrity B watched. Combs then knocked plaintiff down and attempted to force plaintiff to perform, whoa, the skin flu, right? She fought back, standing up quickly and punching out at the same time, hitting Combs in the neck. Taking aback, Combs stopped his attempt. When Combs backed away and surprised, Plaintiff grabbed
Starting point is 00:16:07 her clothes and shoes and ran out of the bedroom holding her dress in front of her like a towel she ran toward the residence until she found the front door and was able to leave the party although there were other guests still at the party no one appeared to take notice of plaintiff's distress or attempt to help him once outside she put her clothes back on and left the scene in the dark and then she you know goes to a corner store calls her father tells her father that she was out that she lied to her parents and this is where she was at and this is what happened and you know i mean but they also in here Like I said before I mean they put like I mean there's pictures in here Right There's not no pictures of her from the actual party After drinking just a portion of that drink Plaintiff began to feel woozy
Starting point is 00:16:48 And lightheaded making her need to lie down A photograph of an actual container Used by Combs and or his agents Employees to insert GHB Into alcohol drinks is seen below See Was he really you know Hitting these chicks with the Mickey's?
Starting point is 00:17:04 I think he was I think that there's a bunch of allegations throughout. But I don't know. They dead. Like I said, birds of a feather flocked together. Jay-Z can't be hanging out with Puffy and not know what's going on. Did this actually happened? I mean, it's going to be sorted out in court, right? And there is a part in here, which I don't know exactly the page it was on, where they actually write it up and say, look, you know, they committed a violent act. They committed a violent crime. Remember, when you look at that, you know, little Rod or whatever, his lawsuit, like I said, it was wrote like an indict. And they alleged all the federal violations that Puffy committed. And now they're alleging, hey,
Starting point is 00:17:40 look, these guys violated the law. They committed a violent crime, a violent felonies. So, you know, what else is to come? Is there more to come? So I don't know. It's kind of looking for that part about, oh, here you go. Let me, I think this is it, right? Plaintiff hereby incorporates each of the foregoing paragraphs as it fully set forth herein. By forcing S contact on the plaintiff as a minor female, the defendant at Cohns and Carter committed a crime of violence motivated by gender under the Victims of Gender Motivated Violence Protection Act as defined in New York City Administrative Code, subsection 10, 1103.
Starting point is 00:18:18 So now, you know, what are they going to do? I mean, are they going to start shooting at these people? Are they, so, you know, like when this happened with Lil Rod, I think they went and took this stuff over to the feds and was like, look, man, you know, we dropped this lawsuit. Here's the videos because he wanted to get paid, right? So if he drops these videos and writes it like a criminal complaint, it's a lawsuit, but it's a criminal complaint and Puffy ends up in jail and gets convicted.
Starting point is 00:18:39 Guess what? There's no way out of it, bro. You're getting a couple of dollars, right? So I mean, like what you talked about earlier. I mean, once you're convicted, I mean, it's hard to get out of it, man. Yeah, you don't have much of a defense after that. That's why a lot of times when you see these fraud cases that involve the, you know, Wall Street and stocks, they'll have like the SEC come in and file a complaint and sue you civilly and you'll fight
Starting point is 00:19:06 these guys will try and fight the case civilly right and then the criminal cases will then follow and they'll use a lot of that information that was discovered during discovery and during the trial in the criminal case i mean it can work both ways so right now you're saying that that basically what this is going to do is is what open them up so first they're going to try first JZ is going to try and get the whole thing thrown out. What do you think the case that the chances of it getting thrown out? I mean, I don't think it gets thrown out. I think that they're going to litigate it.
Starting point is 00:19:39 And I mean, he's going to have to, I mean, at the end of the day, how is he going to prove that it didn't happen? Right. So the other thing is that opens at some point that will open up JZ to discovery. I think it does open it up to discovery. I mean, and whatever they, I mean, the lawyers file in this lawsuit, does he have anything that he hasn't put in the criminal complaint lawyers hold back there may be other things right and maybe they do have some evidence maybe she does have some pictures and i mean if she has a
Starting point is 00:20:06 picture that shows that she was actually at the party with puffy and j z in the picture like you know i mean look is there a lot of times they'll wait like lawyers will hold back so that you then say this woman was never here we don't know who she is i don't know what's going on and then suddenly boom four photos show up of you taking selfies with her or you you know what i'm saying and they're like oh shit you just said you didn't know who this person what you know sometimes they'll hold back and wait for those types of things um so yeah i think it's possible i mean if that stuff starts coming out what do you think j z does he's in a dilemma this is why he didn't settle if he settles then what it gets out there like oh shit j z settled for you know doing the big r to a 13 year old girl
Starting point is 00:20:46 like what else is that and then people do start line it maybe there are some other people that didn't come forward or some people are like oh man i was in bad situations with this dude um And there's, you know, you got to, you know, there's a video out about Rihanna, right? Where Rihanna was, she was like, oh, I was stuck in the studio. I mean, they can turn it into propaganda. And J.C. says, man, she wasn't leaving that studio until she signed a contract. That was at 3 in the morning. She couldn't leave until 3 in the morning until she signed that contract.
Starting point is 00:21:11 I mean, this video's out. It's out there right now. So they strong armed her? I mean, I mean, people are making it look that way or was it just them saying like, you know, we were working on that contract or, you know, are people turning it into, You know, they strong-armed her, kept her in there and said she was, he said it. She wasn't leaving until that contract was signed. And she left at three in the morning.
Starting point is 00:21:32 I mean, how many 16-year-olds, you know, should be up until three in the morning in a studio with a bunch of dudes? I don't know, bro. I mean, people are going to turn it into what they wanted to be. You know what I mean? But look, you got that going on, right? How old was Foxy Brown, you know? You got him hanging out with Puffy. And pretty much, man, I think Puffy's cooked.
Starting point is 00:21:51 I mean, there's a lot, wherever there's smoke, there's usually fire, right? Yeah, I, you know, here's the thing, look, and I, I, I said this on another podcast one time, you know, and I'll, I'll mention it again, is that, so my wife's daughter, um, what was staying with us for like six months to a year. And she had, and this is, she's like, she, I think she was like 15 years old at time. And she had some little friends and stuff, right? And so after she, she left, one of her friends, like, came back by you know he thinks i'm cool i'm doing youtube he's 16 years old you know what's saying so he comes by he's like hey what's going you know hey how's it going i open the front door i'm like hey what's up she's not here and he's like no no i know he's like um what are you doing i was like i'm just you know working and he was like and i'm standing at the front door and he's like oh he's like you know i got a new car i'd wreck my car i got a new car and i'm like look at i said yeah i said good that's great bro that's great but you know i got to get going and i could tell
Starting point is 00:22:54 he wanted to come inside, he wanted to talk or hang out. You're 16 years old. I'm a 55-year-old man. I got no reason to be hanging out with a 16-year-old. Do you see what I'm saying? And I'm nobody. In these guys' positions, any lawyer should explain to them. Some girl comes in, she even looks, she looks young. You assume she's too young. What's your ID? Do you have How old are you? What? You're a target. You don't invite someone in there unless you have bad intentions.
Starting point is 00:23:32 You're not parting with 13. I don't care if she's, oh, she didn't look 13. No, if she's 13, she doesn't look like she's 25, you know? And so I don't see why these guys put themselves in these situations unless they're in a situation where they're trying to take advantage of, of people. Like, you know, you have people checking the door. You got to know you're a fucking target for you to sit here and say, what am I supposed to do? that yes that's what you're supposed to do you're a target so whether it's true or it's not true
Starting point is 00:24:01 you shouldn't be putting yourself in the situation i think it probably is true but the point is is that even if you said oh it's not true then what was you why was she there what are you thinking she's 13 years old so a lot of these people a lot of these people you know look the harry Weinsteins like you see what that dude's wife look like let's keep it real you know what i mean she was pretty hot, right? You think that she's like, man, I love Harvey Weinstein. He's the dude that I, yeah. And back then, you know, this is, this is, unfortunately, this is how this shit worked. Reese Witherspoon, you know, she says, hey, look, he did this to me. You know what he told he said, you want to be in movies? You want me to make you famous? Yeah. This is what it is. And,
Starting point is 00:24:40 you know, and, you know, look, man, it is what it is, right? These people did a lot of bad shit back then. A lot of these people thought they were above the law. They weren't being held accountable. You know, they're in these big circles. Those are the celebrities. They got all the money. People aren't charging these people. Women aren't coming forward. You know, they were in compromising positions and they're like, man, I want to, you know, I do want to be famous and, you know, I do want to hang out at the VMAs and be around these celebrities and, you know, this is what I really want. And these cats were using that stuff to, you know, whether they were white, black, Hispanic, a lot of these dudes were using that to their advantage. I mean, Harvey Weinstein isn't, you know, he wasn't the,
Starting point is 00:25:15 he wasn't the flyest guy around, right? And he's marrying people that look like supermodels and having kids with them. Why? They're, you know, you know what it is, man. She was paper chasing, man. I don't know if you ever saw that video of Harvey Weinstein, uh, hitting on this, uh, there's some chick pitching him a product and she, like videos, the whole exchange, or, oh, creepy, I mean, just predator all over him leaning in. Oh, what are we, uh, what, uh, I mean, just creepy as I'll have to say this video, you'd be like, oh, my God, bro. So over the top, just Chesterish. Some really sick dudes out there, bro, and then they end up, you know, look, I look at life like this, right?
Starting point is 00:26:00 And not a knock to anybody, but you can take YouTube, for instance, right? Some dudes could have the best content in the world and not make it. And some dudes could have some real bullshit and make it. Sometimes you just get lucky in life. You see, I see some of these real estate dudes. I'll use them for an example, too. I'm like, this guy is one of the goofiest dudes I ever. ever met, but he owns 50 properties. Sometimes you get lucky, man. Sometimes you get lucky in
Starting point is 00:26:22 life. And you know what? People like Harvey Weinstein, things happen. He got lucky in life. And now he's using, you know, he used his influence, his power and his money and forgot who he really was as a person. And they become, well, or maybe they actually become who they really are. You know, he was really a predator and would never in normal circumstances be able to do the things that he did until he had his influence money and power, right? Well, I think a lot of times, too, it's, It's cutthroat individuals that make it to the top, unfortunately. So the other thing I was going to mention is I was thinking about this earlier. I was thinking, you know, why wouldn't Jay-Z just pay some, pay a million dollars,
Starting point is 00:27:02 $2 million to try and get out of this? And this is what I'm, what I kind of came up with is because he, because the lawsuit has initially been filed against Diddy, if Diddy doesn't, doesn't settle. then eventually whether Jay-Z settles or not, his name's going to come out. His name's going to get, so he could have come in and said, look, I'm going to give you $2 million. I don't, I'm going to settle. I don't want my name mentioned. Doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:27:30 If Diddy doesn't settle too, guess what? His name eventually is going to have to come out if it goes to court. There was just no way for him not to set or not to say, I'm fighting this because it's not true. He probably wanted to settle. even if he didn't even if he did or didn't whatever i mean with the trial coming up this discovery's going to come out with the people that were there um you got you know pretty much you got the trump administration coming in like yeah we're going to put out these lists and you think trump trump don't have a you know he don't have a ax to grind with puff daddy like he felt like they were friends
Starting point is 00:28:04 at one time and he didn't come out and support them and help him with the african-american community and now you know you get the fbi nominee director there a couple weeks ago and they're like, look, we're going to put out the Weinstein list. We're going to put out, you know, I mean, the other cat's list. They're going to put his list out. They're going to put out, you know, the list for Puff Daddy. I think they probably are going to do that. So eventually people were going to see these names and these allegations anyway.
Starting point is 00:28:27 So whether or not Puffy, you know, settled or JZ sell, if he did, it's still probably going to be discovered. I think that he didn't settle when they sent this letter to him saying, hey, look, we can resolve this because he can't have his name attached to settling with an allegation. involving him with a 13-year-old girl. He just can't do it. I mean, because once you do that, guess what? The snowball effect, right? It just keeps getting worse, and it keeps getting bigger, and it keeps getting bigger.
Starting point is 00:28:55 And how many other people, and of course, Matt, you know, whether this is true or not, and I keep saying that, there are going to be some people that are going to make some allegations that probably aren't true. There are going to be some lawsuits that aren't true where people are just going to go ahead and try to, you know, get a couple of it. Even if it's, let me jump on this thing for 25 grand. Yeah, I was it a party now, Matt. Let me, yeah, I was at that party too.
Starting point is 00:29:16 I'm from New York. But, you know, like, come on, man. I think that that he has to defend himself. And in defending himself, just like people say about Pete Hiddy, had he have, you know, settled with, you know, with Lil Ron and Cassie, which he ended up doing in the beginning anyway. I mean, look at that. If he ends up, you know, settling all of that, it just gets worse.
Starting point is 00:29:36 And I mean, and here, there's every law, almost every lawsuit's named in this in this uh indictment we'll call it right in this new lawsuit i mean they outline everybody man like look he's been sued by this person sued by that person because he's guilty you know well that's what happened with the cassie lawsuit is you know is that when she soon she came out within a week there were within within two weeks there's three more lawsuits yeah you know i think little ron was he was he was plotting the whole time this is his little videographer guy he was plotting i mean obviously they're taking pictures of people and you know come on man you've got pictures of cuba gooding junior grabbing your ass you knew what you were doing you were lining them up for the right day look
Starting point is 00:30:19 i was in prison for 20 years straight this is what i did man i did legal work every day i didn't watch tv um the only tv i watched the news right i was a i was a political junkie so to speak and i was a you know you know people say it i don't have to say i was the best jailhouse lawyer in the system and you know you can look at this daniel penny case you know you got this This one dude that's, you know, the BLM guy, he's like, hey, there needs to be riots in the street. Okay, all right, go out and riot and this guy isn't going to even know your name if you kill somebody. He's not going to send you a dollar. And, you know, look, it's unfortunate when someone loses their life, right?
Starting point is 00:30:54 And we've been in prison, but we can look at, like, the dude that dies, right? I want to pull this up while we're talking. So what's happened real quick, the Daniel, he, he, what, he put somebody in a headlock that there was a guy walking around a, a subway cart screaming and hollering or something threatening people he puts jordan neely in a chokehold right jordan neely's a mental health patient been arrested numerous times in new york city um he gets gets you know he gets on the public transportation starts talking about he's going to do this to people he's got a knife he's got a gun i'm going to kill this person kill that person but then when you and then you have people out here defending them right you have some people that like have prison
Starting point is 00:31:33 content and stuff like that and they're like man i hate choskis i hate people that do stuff to kids i hate people that are SOs. I hate people that are ours. But you know what? This Daniel Penny man, this dude's a piece of shit. He killed this dude. But let's look at Jordan Neely. In 2015, he kidnapped the seven-year-old girl. Is this the guy you want to defend? In 2019, Jordan Neely punched a 64-year-old man in the face. And I believe this, I might be wrong about this. I think it might have been an African-American 64-year-old man. In 2021, Jordan Neely slugged a 67-year-old woman in the face. and she exited the sub man that's somebody's grandmother bro breaking her nose and fracturing her orbital bone nearly was arrested 44 times but never faced real justice for terrorizing new yorkers
Starting point is 00:32:18 does that mean that you know daniel penny should go throw jordan neely in a chokehold and kill him probably not but let me ask this question right for your viewers that are watching and i did a little something on this on a live on the razor wire tv leave that clip in there um you know look he gets on he gets on this public transportation what if he did have a gun everybody's in danger whether you're Hispanic you're black you're white everyone's in danger right and then after all this stuff happens a couple weeks ago we see this nut case in new york city you ever been to new york city man i've been to new york city numerous times i'm from new york right people are out there screaming you're like damn man there are some real weirdos there there's some people where you're like
Starting point is 00:32:58 yo this dude he ends up killing three people so now some little boy doesn't have a mother anymore because this guy who had mental health issues, like Jordan Neely, decided, you know what, I'm just going to start stabbing people out of it, construction worker. I think he was 36 years old. His son and his daughter don't have a father anymore because this guy killed him. So these are the people that you're dealing with. So what happens if Jordan Neely did have a knife on him that day? And he started stabbing people on the train.
Starting point is 00:33:22 Would Daniel Penny have been a hero now? I mean, you don't know what this guy, you don't know what this guy was capable of, absolute mental health case. Do I think he locks in this, you know, chokehold and says, you know what, I'm putting is doing to sleep forever? If you sleep hot at night, you know how disruptive that can be. Whether you're having trouble falling asleep, you're waking up sweating in the middle of the night or all of the above. That's where ghost bed can help. As the makers of the coolest beds in the world, ghost bed is your go-to for cooling mattresses, cooling pillows, and cooling bedding. From their signature ghost ice fabric to patented technology that adjust to your body's temperature,
Starting point is 00:33:55 every ghost bed mattress is designed with cooling in mind. So whether you want a plusher mattress that cushions your shoulders and hips or a firm option with exceptional support, your ghost bed will keep you cool and comfortable all night long. When you purchase a ghost bed mattress, your comfort is guaranteed. You can try out your mattress for 101 nights, risk-free, to make sure it's the right fit for you. Plus, they offer free shipping, and most items are shipped within 24 hours. If you're not sure which ghost bed is right for you, check out their mattress quiz. You'll answer a few questions and get a personalized recommendation. Even better, our listeners can get 50% off sitewide for a limited time.
Starting point is 00:34:35 Just visit ghostbed.com slash Cox and use the code Cox at checkout. Again, that's ghostbed.com slash Cox with the code Cox at the checkout to save a whopping 50% off site wide. I really don't believe that was his intention. I believe his intention was like, man, I am a little bit nervous. You know, I was confronted with a situation at the post office where this dude was a nut case and this was probably about a year ago. and I guess dude comes in there and threatens them all the time. And they don't even come arrest them. We're in New York.
Starting point is 00:35:06 You get a appearance ticket, right? And I'm thinking, damn, man. I'm thinking I'm in a real life situation. And I do have a little PTSD. I spent 20 years straight in my life in prison. And I'm thinking, man, what should I do to this dude, man? Am I in danger? So when you're putting this dude in a chokehold, I don't think he's intending to like take
Starting point is 00:35:21 this dude's life or he's like, oh, this is a black dude. I'm going to kill this dude. No, I don't believe that at all. I believe in the heat of the moment, man. He was nervous and he locked it in and maybe he should have let him. go when people, hey, it's over, you know, whatever. But sometimes you're not, you know, when you're in the heat of the moment, you're not in the right state of mind. You know, I was on a prison yard in USP Big Sandy where I'm being jumped by like five dudes because I pretty much tell
Starting point is 00:35:43 the shot caller, go fuck yourself. You're not telling me what to do. I'm not doing doing what you tell me to do anymore. You're a junkie. Stevie Burke out of Boston, straight junkie, right? And his, you know, his case really is based on some of that stuff from the movie of the town. He was our shock caller. He was a vicious dude. And he sent him. some people to get me because I pretty much tell them like, bro, I'm not listening to you no more. You're a junkie. You don't tell me what to do, bro. You don't tell me, you know, go attack this person or go stab that person. So dudes are out there. We're out there working. Dude has a knife. Tries to stab me. I get lucky and I drop them. They take the night. One of his
Starting point is 00:36:15 other homeboys, when the police come, he throws a knife in the grate at Big Sandy. And I'm out there working with these dudes, you know, and I've interviewed people that talk. I don't, I don't usually talk about my own shit, but I'm out there working. And I'm not stopping. In the heat of the moment, they're shooting. Boom, boom. Get on the ground. I'm not stopping. Those dudes stop. I grabbed the dude to hit me in the mouth, who was a kid named Ace, wore him back. he split my lip open. I still got a bubble inside my lip. I had to get stitches. But he gets on the ground when they start shooting. I'm not getting on the ground. I grab his shirt and I start hitting him. Boom. I'm cracking this dude. I'm not stopping. Even though they're firing, sometimes you're not aware of everything that's going on because you're in this panic mode. And in Big Sandy, I'm fighting for my life, literally. Eventually, this kid Ace ends up getting shot from the gun tower. When an AR-15, they shoot him through the back, blow his guts out. And the nurse is trying to push his shit back in and get the dirt. off him he dies he loses his life but you know when you're in when you're in the heat of battle in the heat of the moment you might not be paying attention to everything that's going on you're like
Starting point is 00:37:15 oh shit i'm in danger yeah your adrenaline your adrenaline gets pumping and and you get tunnel vision you don't see all the you're focused on one task and and if it's survival it's survival right like you're not listening to what these got through other people are screaming you know he's he's thinking he's thinking he might be thinking if i do i let him go he might get up and attack me like this may be my only opportunity to you know to subdue him yeah so i mean people are up in arms you have people that are that are promoting you know i'm trying to find this while we're talking but you have people that are promoting propaganda you know they're like hey man go out and do this like this guy right uh hawk newsome calls for vigilantes he's asking for the african-american
Starting point is 00:37:58 community and it says for black vigilantes and this ain't i know racial shit man it's it is what it is. I help more black people get out of prison than anyone else. To step up in some of my, you know, I got some really close friends that I help get out of prison. To step up in response to Daniel Penny's acquittal. So you want these people to go out there and create havoc, right? You want these people to go out there and go nuts. What are you going to do for them if they get arrested? That's what I want to go. You're going to send them some commissary money. You ain't going to do shit for these people, man. You're inciting these people and you're doing all this shit, man, to pad your pocket. That's what you're doing. And you know what? I'm so tired of people, you know, the political correctness and
Starting point is 00:38:32 all of that bullshit, man. Look, man, if I was, you know, if it was a white dude on that, on that public transportation, you know, doing that shit, man, and your grandmother's sitting, I want Daniel Penny to choke him out. You might not want, you know, want to kill a black dude or white dude. You know, I don't think people, you know, I don't like when people lose their lives, man. But you know what, man, it's a dangerous place. I would want that dude to save my grandmother. I'm sure most of your viewers would too, you know, but when people are, hey, that's enough, maybe he should have stopped. Maybe he should have stopped. Maybe he should have, not maybe he probably should have you know because when you ever put someone in the sleeper hold
Starting point is 00:39:06 they once they pass out it's over with man it's over you see it the ufc all the time they're tapping or the refs like hey that's it it's over yeah it was over and maybe do just you know he was in a panic mode but i don't think we should just go out and destroy you know communities and you know i i don't like one do is do shit like that look here's the thing no matter what you or i think a jury of his peers heard the entire story and decided that it was justified So you and I didn't hear, we didn't sit in a week-long trial and hear the experts and hear everything, but a jury of his peers did, and this is what they determined. Do you see what I'm saying? 100%.
Starting point is 00:39:44 You know, what I really want these people to do when they're out there like, hey, we've got to take to the streets. Hey, man, go to that federal courthouse, right? Go down there and tell me to let LaValle Farmer out of prison. This is a black dude from Brooklyn. You know, I did a case for him. He's probably completed more programs than any dude in prison in the whole prison system. I mean, this is a guy that, you know, he's an educator. He turned his life around. He ended up with a life sentence as a young man. Grew up without a mother. His mother, like, drops them off at, you know, at the courthouse Monday and says goodbye.
Starting point is 00:40:14 This kid was doomed, man. Mother makes him stand outside on the gate November, December, out there on the fire escape, you know, with no clothes on his punishment, feeding them rice with ketchup. This kid had no shot at life. He ends up in prison with a life sentence. He's been in prison over 20 years. turned his life around. I want this dude right here to go down to the federal courthouse and get all these protesters, right? I want Hawk Newsom to go down there and protest that this African-American dude that deserves a second chance, this black dude right here, who's actually a really good friend of mine, deserves to get out of prison. Go down there and march at the courthouse for that shit. Let's go to the White House and march for people like Michelle West, right? Michelle West's got a life sentence. Her boyfriend was a major drug dealer. She's been in prison
Starting point is 00:40:56 30 years, man. Why didn't they fucking protesting for that? Go down there. and protest for that. Go down. Trump's going to grant the, we can talk. Trump's granting pardons to them January 6ers, bro. It's not even a doubt. And once, once Biden did that shit for his son, he sealed their fate. So when he, when he partners the January 6ers, let's get the Michelle West's in there. Let's get the LaValle farmers in there. Let's get the Ian Owens. These are all African American people that are serving life sentences, man, that deserve a second chance. They turn their lives around. I got a second chance, right? And my second chance, I think I've done pretty good with it the last four and a half years. I've been out of prison. But
Starting point is 00:41:31 They deserve it probably more than I did, yet they can't get out of prison. Ian Owens can't get out because he's in the Sixth Circuit. They're like, oh, no, Stack 924 Cs, we're not, we're just going to blow you off. And the Sentencing Commission didn't mean that. They didn't mean it over there in the Sixth Circuit, but they meant it in the second. That's all bullshit, man. It's ways for, you know, we'll call it what it is, ways for a white judge to keep a black dude in prison. You know, I mean, that's the reality of it, man.
Starting point is 00:41:57 Am I a bleeding heart liberal? No. Do I deserve there has to be punishment for crimes? 100% that I deserve to go to prison? Of course I did. I didn't deserve 40 years at 24 years old. I think I deserved a 10 year sentence. It would have taught me some shit, right? Same thing with these people. So when these people are out here, and then there's this other young dude, there's a video out on, on Twitter where dude's like, I'm tired of this American justice system. You can tell he's got some sugar in his tank. He might be a little bit mentally disturbed. He's calling on people to go out and just start, you know, doing shit to other people in the street. like dude you don't even have a concept of life and you probably might end up in prison now for
Starting point is 00:42:33 you know inciting the riot in new york city you don't know shit but you go down there and march for them people that deserve to get out of prison let's get down there let's get down to where the real justice is needed right so you know that's that's my opinion let's go down to the white house when trump's getting ready the paperwork's probably already being done he says on day one man he's january six or there's a whole bunch of them are getting out so let's include all the other people too. Yeah, it always kills me when people hear, they hear what the media is saying about somebody. But then these people go to trial and they end up getting, you know, they found not guilty or quitted. You know, they get the people that actually sat down and probably heard all of the
Starting point is 00:43:12 evidence, let them go. And people, oh, that's bullshit. That's this. That's that. Well, you know, it always reminds me of, did you ever, do you remember when there was an old lady who sued McDonald's and make got like two million dollars for the hot coffee yes now whenever people the media went nuts oh that's ridiculous she she dropped the coffee on herself she burned herself it's not mcdonald's fault but then during you know that's ridiculous but then the trial happens and in the trial you find out that that McDonald's had been cited something like 1500 times for violations that their coffee was too hot. It was burning people. It was burning employees. It was burning customers. They wouldn't settle the lawsuits. They were fighting all of them.
Starting point is 00:44:02 And then this woman, what really happened was it was so hot that the cup lost its integrity. And so when it was handed to the woman, the top wasn't on tight because the cup was so hot, it lost its integrity. So when she grabs it, it immediately crumbles, right? Everybody's had a hot coffee. that lid is what keeps the integrity of the of the of the actual container that lid comes off it crumbles very easily so it crumbles it hits her it burns her it gives her like third degree burns she has to have um skin grafts on her inner thighs and her vagina now you tell me if you had to have on your scrotum and your fucking shit if you had to have skin grafts how much money do you think you deserve for a company that knew and had been told for over a decade that they were burning people. Now, what do I deserve? Well, I deserve $2.5 million. You probably deserve more than that if it hit, you know, hitting the midst of the way I mean?
Starting point is 00:45:06 Suddenly it changes. Suddenly, that's what came out in the trial. And guess what? Now people go, oh, man, I didn't know that. No, because that's not a 30-second soundbite on, on the, you know, on NBC News, right? on six at six o'clock news when you start to get the real story things change so that's that's the same thing i mean it's the same concept of everybody this guy up oh we should do this we should do what you don't know what the you don't know what happened you know i mean i mean that's that's
Starting point is 00:45:38 the real narrative you know um i mean there's all kinds of wild things going on in the world right every day you know you got i mean look at the guy with with the insurance thing i mean this this kid The family's got money. He seems like a pretty, you know, educated dude. They own a bunch of golf courses in Maryland. The family has got a master's degree. You know what I'm saying? This isn't an idiot.
Starting point is 00:46:02 You're right. He's definitely educated. He's got like a master's degree or something, doesn't he? I think I'm not positive, but I know he went to some, some big schools, right? I don't know if I read about the master's degree. He meant it may very well have. But you can tell, you know, educated dude, but he's bent. He's like, look, man.
Starting point is 00:46:20 He ends up getting hurt, I think, in a surfing, you know, incident, get some stuff in his back. And, you know, sometimes people are like, look at these insurance companies, man. They're just, they're robbing people. And I talked about this the other day, like, car insurance. I pay $500-something a month in car insurance for me and my wife. And I'm thinking, damn, man. You know, my wife hit the garage door and she's like, well, I'm not going to report that insurance. We'll just pay out of pocket.
Starting point is 00:46:43 So it's, what, another $1,200 out of your pocket? What do we have insurance for? Well, if we report it then, you know, they'll jack it up even more. So the insurance company, you know, you're paying these people. These dudes are living in these houses. Just think, I'm just one person. Were they making off us, 6,000 a year? And we never report it.
Starting point is 00:46:59 We never get anything back. So, you know, your car lasts you five, six years. I mean, we're paying these people $40,000 for nothing. They're living off of us, 30, 40 grand, you know. And there's thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of people. They're just, they're milking people, man. Did you, did you ever read the book? Did you ever read any John Grisham and when you were locked up?
Starting point is 00:47:22 Every John Grisham book there is, my friend. Oh, the Rainmaker. The Rainmaker, when, the twins, they're twin boys for people listening. There are two twins. They're like 19 years old. And one of the, they have health insurance. They pay the premiums. Their mom pays them every week.
Starting point is 00:47:41 It's kind of a poor man's policy, right? That they sell door to door. But she's been paying for years. Guess what? Her twin boys, they get sick. well, sorry, one of them gets sick. He gets cancer, bone cancer. So he needs a bone marrow transplant, which has been being done for 20 years, by the way.
Starting point is 00:48:00 The insurance company automatically denies them by saying it's an experimental treatment and we're not going to cover it. So the rainmaker, which is this kid that just graduated law school, takes on their case. Nobody wants to take on the case because nobody wants to fight an insurance company. insurance companies have a, they have a fleet of lawyers that work for them, um, full time. So they fight cases all the time. So no lawyer wants to take the case. This kid fresh out of law school, he takes the case. During discovery, he comes up with an, I want to say it was a claims adjuster that they can't seem to locate where they eventually get her. And she explains that the insurance company took on a policy to, for, it was like a 24,
Starting point is 00:48:49 month policy. For 24 months, they denied every single claim that came in unless they were minor claims. So any major claim they denied because an actuary had done the numbers and he crunched the numbers and determined it was cheaper to fight the cases and settle out of court than it was to actually pay the, pay out the claims. And they said, look, if we do this for a period of two years, we'll make $800 million, and then we can go back to business as usual. So it was a money grab. So she explains that. They go to court, of course, the guy makes a ton of money.
Starting point is 00:49:27 But that was their policy was, look, we're going to deny, even though they knew, they denied it on saying, oh, it's an experimental treatment. It wasn't an experimental treatment. It had been being done for 20 years. It was a standard treatment. It was taught in in a medical textbooks. It was common. And they denied it for the wrong reason. The kid ends up dying.
Starting point is 00:49:50 And it was all because the insurance company wanted to make money. They just, it was just a policy that they enacted and they thought they wouldn't get caught. And this guy catches them and they lose a bunch of money. But I mean, insurance companies do. That may be an egregious case, but it's not unheard of. I mean, these are, you know, you're going to get guys that are, you're going to get ruthless people in those types of positions.
Starting point is 00:50:13 These CEOs make $10 million a year, $30 million a year, $20 million, and there's a lot of pressure on them to make these companies profitable. And obviously, how do you make these companies profitable? You don't pay out as little as possible. You charge big premiums and pay out as little as possible. And you know what? This dude just was a state of mind. I mean, obviously he probably has some mental health issues,
Starting point is 00:50:41 despite how, you know, same thing like with that. dude that went and did that stuff at the Batman movie, right? Dude's smart as a whip. But some of these dudes might be smart, but they still have some mental health issues. This cat obviously had some mental health issues where he got bent on, he wrote that manifesto and said,
Starting point is 00:50:56 look, they deserve everything that they get. You know, and I'm going to give it to them. And they're like, hey, this is my mission. People believe in missions, bro. Whether you're in prison, whether you're in the street, whether you own a business, whatever your mission is, once you're locked in on your mission, it is what it is, and there ain't no stopping you.
Starting point is 00:51:11 This is your decision. And he made that decision, like, look, I'm going balls to the wall. And I think he wanted, I do think he wanted to get caught. He wanted to say, it's me. I did it, you know, I'm the guy that did it. But now he's probably going to prison for, you know, I mean, you got like Larry Levine goes on, I think he went on the news and said, oh, you know, you know, so a jury might not find this guy guilty. The jury's going to find this cat guilty, bro. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:34 Excuse me. I believe that. I don't, I don't think he's the rest of his life. I don't think he wanted to be found guilty, I think, because I think he took a whole. he made a mistake. The mistake was pulling his mask down. I think, well, first of all, he should have never gone in in New York City and done that.
Starting point is 00:51:49 There's too many cameras. There's too many ways to track you. There's too many people. That was a mistake. He made some mistakes, but he took a lot of precautions, all the fake IDs, checking in under fake IDs.
Starting point is 00:51:59 He took a lot of precautions. I think he probably thought he was going to be able to pop quite a few people. He probably had a long-term plan, and he got caught on the very first one. But, yeah, He definitely wanted, you know, listen, this is a guy that made a bunch of social posts and commentary on the Unabomber. Same thing, Unabomber, super intelligent guy, right? Super, super smart.
Starting point is 00:52:22 Went to MIT. I mean, brilliant. From New York, I might add upstate New York, but go ahead. But also, just like, look, you have, if you're, lots of extremely intelligent people have mental, you know, we've all got mental problems. Shit, I got mental problems. It's just to what degree, you know? And, you know, just because you're smart, you can be. super smart and sometimes you're super smart. I think it works against you. I mean, I think that
Starting point is 00:52:47 happens all the time. I mean, we're both in prison probably with some, you know, I did 20 years. I've been around some really intelligent dudes. And I've been around some really intelligent dudes that were absolutely nuts. I was with this one dude. He was a rabbi and doing legal work and you talk to him. You're like, man, this dude, way ahead of me, you know, mentally. And then he's like doing some weird old shit. You're like, look, dude, I was with James Kopp, the guy that was taking out all the abortion doctors, right? Very intelligent dude, but he used to do some weird shit. He'd have, he'd catch flies and rip their wings off and stick him in this coffee cup.
Starting point is 00:53:20 He had a coffee cup full of dead flies. This dude was an absolute weirdo. People would write him and send him money from all over the world, bro. I mean, he was a dude that was up here and he plugged the, went to France and all that stuff. He plugged the abortion doctor. The dude was, you know, very intelligent, but an absolute nutcase, man. I, so listen, I worked in the legal, sorry, in the library one time for like six months, maybe a year. You know, I had multiple jobs.
Starting point is 00:53:47 And I used to talk to this guy, super smart guy, did legal work. Same thing, smart guy. We had worked in the library for like five years. He had like a 30 or 40 year sentence. I mean, you know, very, very short guy. We used to talk about movies, what would make a great remake, you know, that kind of stuff. Like just really great conversations with this guy. and one day we're talking about six months of talking to him one day I mentioned something and I forget
Starting point is 00:54:16 what it was but I think it had something to do with Timothy McVeigh and he immediately was like and looked at me and I went what he said you know that that's that's all that's all bullshit and I went what do you mean he said the Oklahoma City bombing he's like the the federal building coming down because he has nothing to do with Timothy McVey and I was like what are you talking about? Like I just I told him I just watched a documentary or something and I'm like what do you mean? Because I'm already thinking uh oh he went on a 20 minute rant about how the how this is a guy from Florida how the government had stored his discovery in Oklahoma City in the FBI field office or D, whatever the field office was that was in that building, and that they had planted the bomb
Starting point is 00:55:10 themselves to take down the building so that they could then deny him access to his discovery so they could keep him in prison. I mean, like, are you insane? Your discovery's not kept in a field office. In Oklahoma, your case is out of Florida. It's kept at the U.S. attorney's office. It's, I mean, just absolutely bonkers, bro. And I talked to this guy for six months, and he was brilliant.
Starting point is 00:55:38 You just don't know. You have like you said, you'll talk to people forever. And then one day they'll say something, you'll be like, oh, wow, you're fucking crazy. There's crazy people, I mean, all over the place. And let's, you know, we're talking about New York City, right? You got that Venezuelan gang, that train de Aguero. You know, they have a battle the other night with the 42nd Street Diablo's. It's part of the Venezueling gang, right?
Starting point is 00:56:02 they see some black dudes that are you know immigrants or whatever they're throwing up gang signs they start fighting and one of the dudes gets hitting the chest oh they drag them into one of the drug stores and he it's over his life's over with you know long story short dude dies so now they're all over social media and they're like yo we're coming to get you guys yo anytime we see any of you cats it's on and popping these dudes are lining up a life sentence they're on social media doing this you think and look these these cats have obviously shown i mean they're all over they're in colorado they're in texas they're in new york they're in michigan and they're doing vicious vicious violence to people right and in lives so really what they're doing is
Starting point is 00:56:40 they're lining themselves up for life sentences how and then they these diabloes they got some of these kids are 13 years old 14 years old and they're brainwashing these kids and these kids don't even realize hey look this is what's about to happen to you you're going to spend the rest of your life in prison who to hell want to sign up for that you can't be that intelligent right to sign up for something like that well and nobody's and that you know and nobody's going to be sending you anything bro nobody's sending you calm they'll forget about you with all these people that are talking you into this they'll forget all about you 10 years later 20 years later all those guys are gone and the only people that are left don't even answer your phone calls
Starting point is 00:57:15 anymore you know how many gang members i've done compassionate release cases for that you know they quit you know some of them were leaders i've done some compassionate release for dudes that were you know prominent white you know prominent white gangs in prison dude was a leader a prominent blood. One of one of the dudes that, you know, was an originator of one of the sets of New York City had life. No longer a gang member. Did everything for his gang. No longer a gang member and begging the court like, look, man, please let me out of prison. I don't want this to happen. You know, I don't want to spend the rest of my life here. I'm not a gang member no more. But you gave your whole life to this gang. And now you're not a gang member no more. Now you want to get out of jail. And you got these young dudes running around in New York City, the Bronx, Queens, I mean, everywhere. These dudes are, These dudes are giving up their lives, man, 17, 18 years old for my gang. Like, I've been around some MS dudes, man, that I know now that were involved in, I was with him in FCI rape, but they end up in Lee County. And one of the dudes, man, I'm going to call it what it is.
Starting point is 00:58:12 I used to talk to this dude all the time. I thought he was a really good dude. He ended up with, you know, around 100 years, we'll say, because I don't want people to tag this kid. He goes to another prison. He ends up involved in a case where, you know, another dude from the Mexican mafia ends up dead. And now he's looking at, you know, pretty much another, another life sentence. And he doesn't really want to. And he personally told me, man, like, dude, I don't
Starting point is 00:58:33 even want to live like this, but I'm stuck now. I don't even want to be a part of this shit. He told me that. And then he goes on to another prison. And because he has to fake it to make it, right? He ends up involved in someone losing their life in prison. You know, this is just a road where these kids, man, are making decisions where you don't even know nothing about life. You're living just to live. You have no idea what life really is about. Here's another example. And I know everybody's seen this video. Dude goes in front of the judge in Las Vegas, right? He goes in front of the judge.
Starting point is 00:59:04 And he's like, look, Judge, you know, I got my mental health together. I got this new job. You know, I'm really, you know, getting my life together. You don't have to send me to jail on this probation violation, Your Honor. Like, I really turn my life around. And the judge is looking at a female judge. I'm sure you've seen it. And she's looking at him.
Starting point is 00:59:18 She's like, you know, she's listening. And dude probably thinking like, man, I'm getting out of this shit. Thank God. She's listening. And she goes, well, you know what? You're criminal history. you know, it's really messed up and, you know, I'm going to have to send, I'm going to have to send you to prison. The next thing you know, she's like, dude's flying through the air on her, right?
Starting point is 00:59:36 So people probably don't know. I think it was yesterday. You know, he does all that shit. He was going to jail for a minor amount of time. Now he gets sentenced to, I think, 26 to 65 years. So he went from a probation violation to becoming the flying Superman, jumping over the desk and trying to get on the judge to get in 26 to 65 years. years think about the shit that you think about the decisions that you're making you're making some
Starting point is 01:00:02 wild wild decisions in life that are going to cost you the best years of your life what happens when you're 30 years old and they give you 30 years right and you get out when you're 60 something years old you come home your mother's gone your sister might be gone you got nobody you got no family where you're going to live at where you're going to work at i mean is it i mean should you even get out yeah of course you want to get out of prison but man life's about you think life was bad wait until you get out of prison man when you're 60 years old you went in at 20 for killing somebody man think about that man i'm doing it for the gang gang all these dudes around social media you're posting the stuff that you're doing you're telling the the police what you're about to do and then you
Starting point is 01:00:42 go do it yeah they're going to come back and get you i mean i mean little burke another example right he you know they got his lawyers arguing look they got no evidence on my client no i mean they just got, you know, the plane tickets being purchased with, you know, his company card. They got him texting saying, hey, don't, don't book no flights, man, that connect me to them at all, you know, like, I mean, they got you, bro. Your lawyer's telling the media that, you know, they got, they got nothing, right? But, but they got a whole bunch of stuff. And there's people out here believing, oh, man, he's about to get up out of this. 50 cents said he had the best lawyer. You can have the best lawyer in the world. Same thing with pup daddy. He keeps filing
Starting point is 01:01:20 battle application after battle application. You know why, Matt? Because his lawyer's are telling him pretty much, look, man, we got a shot at this one. They're just getting the money, bro. You don't got no shot at getting out. You never had a shot at getting out. Not with what happened in this case. You're a threat to public safety. You're not getting out. But the lawyers keep telling you, look, man, we got one more thing. Or they did this thing. We got to file this motion. Okay, I'm going to approve it. Oh, sign off on. Okay, that money's gone. I mean, he had probably put millions and millions of dollars in, you know, an escrow account for these lawyers. And they're just, yep talk to puff daddy today for three minutes that's 400 bucks filed another bail application that
Starting point is 01:01:57 took 12 hours to write yeah probably took 12 minutes but they're charging them i mean it's just this is the crazy world that we live in brother yeah he's he's he's doomed i i mean i have a whole video on this guy uh Courtney burgess you know on the kim kim porter memoir um that guy you know he's muddied the water so much he's probably he's definitely helped puffs uh or um ditty's fucking his case because he's muddied the water so much he's been called in front of the grand jury twice uh on this thing you know which is all problem which that that whole diary is bullshit like this guy wrote that diary you know it's it's um and they made a chunk of money like I can't say how much money, but let me tell you, it's a chunk.
Starting point is 01:02:50 So, you know, it's all just, it was a money grab. And he's, and people are getting famous off of a Diddy right now and making tons of money. And a lot of times people on social media are helping the case. You know, they didn't call this guy to, they didn't call this guy to the grand jury because the, the government's not interested in what he's had to say. You know, he may end up being a, being a witness. So if Diddy was smart, he'd try, he'd be trying desperately to take a, 15 year 20 year sentence right now federal sentence and quash everything and kick back but you know who knows he's a narcissist we talked about this before i think this dude he's going to
Starting point is 01:03:26 prove that they're why he has to believe he believes that narrative he's going to prove it he's going to go to trial he's going to win and then when he loses he's going to say look man they rigged it but don't worry i got my appeals and then you know you're going to hear about him here and there then he's going to get his appeal denied then that he's just probably going to go away he'll be in FMC Lexington at some point when he's an old man and so he'll be pushing him around in a wheelchair and he'll still be telling people what to do in prison yeah you don't know I think that's probably if he doesn't try and take some kind of plea like you said you were saying he's not gonna but if he didn't try and take some kind of plea you're right he's spending the rest
Starting point is 01:03:59 of his life in prison the die at fmc lexington or butner north carolina you know and we'll be oh you know puff puff daddy died 30 years later as an old man in prison but like I said he'll be a shot caller in prison for the lames. You know what I mean? He'll have dudes around him. He'll be at an S.O yard. And he'll have, you know, some dudes out, you know, there's my dude where, you know, they're like, man, shit, puppy's, I'll spend the limit every month. Puffy puts $300 in my account every month. He's looking out for your boy. You know what I'm. It's my man. Yeah, 300 dollars to him is nothing, you know, but it is what it is, man. Hey, you guys. I appreciate you watching. Do me a favor. Hit the subscribe button, hit the bell so get notified of videos like this.
Starting point is 01:04:36 Also, please check in the description. We're going to put Chad's channel, the link to Chad's channel in the description and it's blood on the razor wire click it go there subscribe he's got a bunch of great content once again i appreciate you guys please consider joining my patreon it's ten dollars a month it helps colby and i make videos like this thank you very much see you

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.