Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - Exposing The Largest Auto Fraud In History | Gavin Newsom, Elon Musk, & More!
Episode Date: June 29, 2025Stop leaving yourself vulnerable to data breaches. Go to my sponsor https://aura.com/matt to get a 14-day free trial and see if any of your data has been exposedMatt Cox hosts attorney Jason Ingber to... reveal how Toyota’s “green” hydrogen cars became one of the biggest automotive frauds in history — leaving drivers stranded and taxpayers footing the bill.Jason's linkshttps://www.instagram.com/jasonmingber/https://jasoningber.comGet 10% sitewide for a limited time. Just visit https://GhostBed.com/cox and use code COX at checkout.Do you want to be a guest? Fill out the form https://forms.gle/5H7FnhvMHKtUnq7k7Send me an email here: insidetruecrime@gmail.comDo you extra clips and behind the scenes content?Subscribe to my Patreon: https://patreon.com/InsideTrueCrime Follow me on all socials!Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/insidetruecrime/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@matthewcoxtruecrimeDo you want a custom painting done by me? Check out my Etsy Store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/coxpopartListen 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/B0851KBYCFBent: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BV4GC7TMIt's Insanity: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08KFYXKK8Devil Exposed: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08TH1WT5GDevil Exposed (The Abridgment): https://www.amazon.com/dp/1070682438The Program: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0858W4G3KBailout: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/bailout-matthew-cox/1142275402Dude, Where's My Hand-Grenade?: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BXNFHBDF/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1678623676&sr=1-1Checkout my disturbingly twisted satiric novel!Stranger Danger: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BSWQP3WXIf you would like to support me directly, I accept donations here:Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/MattCox69Cashapp: $coxcon69
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The largest fraud in automotive history.
Elon Musk, who's interviewed a few times about this, and he's like, I don't want to talk about this.
I sued Governor Gavin Newsom because it's hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars that are being spent.
It's the largest fraud in automotive history.
The problem is it's only in California, and it's such a subset that it hasn't gone national.
But Toyota is like a, it's a family business to this day.
Okay.
And they start in the early, like, or late 1800s.
It's just they're doing wooden looms.
And then this guy sees his mom's a seamstress, Saccichi, Toyota, whatever his name is.
And he invents the first electronic, like a machine-powered seamstress machine.
Okay.
And he has this vision of selling cars, and he keeps them in the family.
And eventually they make cars, and then they start gaining success in the United States.
Right.
They have luxury exports to the United States.
This is probably what in the 70s and 80s?
Yeah.
Okay.
They couldn't break into the market because the terrain of Japan is so vastly different from the highways here.
So they were making bigger, bulkier cars and people wanted more muscle cars.
But they figured that out and then they started making luxury cars, luxury experts, you guys, Alexis.
They had that brand.
And then in around probably the 80s, right?
So before I'm born, they already can see that electric batteries are going to be the next thing.
Japan has the highest holdings in liquefied natural gas of any country.
They brokered Australia.
They're big player in that region.
Okay.
So they need to have some kind of way to keep LNG relevant
because they're also the largest automaker of ice engines,
internal combustion engines.
Okay.
Tell me again, LNG.
Liquidified natural gas.
Okay.
So it's like fossil fuels.
All right, whatever, boring stuff.
LNG.
In any event, they come out with this idea of hydrogen.
Okay.
It's an abundant resource.
hydrogen is the most abundant resource on the planet
and they're going to be able to steam
reform methane. Okay.
And that keeps it, it's a fossil fuel.
No carbon capture, so it's bad for the
environment. But this at least keeps them
relevant. Are you following? Yeah.
Okay. It's not like here.
Elon had a brief stint in the government, but otherwise
no private company
has any seat at the table
in the government officially, right? They do a lot of lobbying.
But in Japan, in the ministry
is the CEO of Toyota. I mean,
it's the backbone of their country. It's a
huge part of their GDP.
So they're really pushing this hard.
They sell this in Japan.
And the only other market that they bring this to is California.
Okay.
So in the early 2000s, through Governor Schwarzenegger at the time, they start building
the California fuel cell partnership.
Fuel cell is the technology to generate hydrogen into a car.
So it's basically hydrogen powering an electric battery in a car.
I'll get to the fraud in a second.
Okay.
No, no, you know, I'm not in a hurry.
No, I'm just thinking, what is,
the process very dumbed down of turning hydrogen into liquid hydrogen?
I think of hydrogen as a gas.
Yeah.
So they're isolating hydrogen.
I can only give you the dumb down version.
They're isolating hydrogen from methane through just extreme heat.
They're able to isolate those particles.
Then they don't clean up any of the bad stuff.
So that goes into the environment.
But then they have hydrogen.
And then they're able to pressurize it.
it has to be pressurized the equivalent of five miles into the ocean.
So it's extreme PSI.
Right.
And it has to be chilled like many degrees below zero.
Okay.
And then they have this.
So now you've got a block of a block of ice hydrogen.
Well, well, they have it.
They have it in different forms, actually.
You're right.
They could do it in liquid.
They can do it in ice.
They can sit in this in your car.
Right.
But it's gas.
They store it at this really cool temperature.
Okay.
So, and they, they, at the same.
time that they're developing this bizarre technology that you're identifying kind of already sounds
a little weird, they're already starting to roll out the cars, right? And commercially, the cars
hit California in 2015 and 2016. And they start selling them in Japan, too. Only other
place that they sell it. Okay. So you're selling cars, so the cars, the cars as fuel is
liquid hydrogen, correct? Liquid hydrogen or gaseous hydrogen. Mostly gaseous. Okay,
gas, okay, hydrogen, that's what the, that's what the vehicle runs on.
Correct.
Like, what are they marketing in as?
Like, hey, we have a new.
Yeah, they market.
Exactly.
I went into Toyota of Santa Monica to pose.
So I get a call.
This is how it starts for me.
Okay, I represent a thousand people that are suing Toyota.
Not like I filed one class action and then I'm hoping that other people will be able to
be part of this class.
I represent a thousand different people.
Right.
I'm in a telegram chat with them.
I got like 300 people in one telegram tribe.
Do these huge zooms, town halls with like updates on the case.
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This woman calls me.
I'm already like, what, a year into practicing my own firm.
I'm kind of scrappy, just doing things for friends and family and stuff like that.
This woman calls me, hey, I, you know, was recommended to you, and Toyota sold me this car,
and the car don't work, I can't get fuel, and it's cooking my ass, Jason, it's cooking my ass.
And I'm thinking, like, this sounds insane, right?
She sounds crazy.
Hydrogen and Toyota's like the most reliable company.
What is she talking about?
So the heatseaters on the generation one would turn on randomly, and you couldn't turn them off.
She literally would have to put towels on the seat in order to, because it's hot.
And if she was in Northern California, it gets hot in the summer.
So if you're ready, it's out, the ambient temperature is outside like 100 degrees.
And you have heat cedars.
I mean, you are in trouble, right?
So she's like, it's cooking my ass.
So I'm thinking like, this woman's nuts.
I don't want to, Callie Williams.
I love you, Callie.
Really.
And she keeps calling me.
She wouldn't stop calling me.
She's like, no lawyer wants to take this case.
I cannot get a single lawyer to listen to me, but Toyota is making unreliable cars.
They fooled me.
And I'm getting the car towed.
I'm constantly getting stranded.
I can't get fuel for this car.
Yeah, she sounds insane.
She sounds insane.
And she's telling you that's a hydrogen.
I'm like Googling it.
I never even heard of it.
What are you talking about?
Right.
Okay.
That she wouldn't stop calling me.
You have gas and electric.
That's it.
There you go.
I go into other lawyers offices.
I put her on speakerphone.
I'm like, boom.
And they're like, you cannot, even if she's saying anything that's true, right?
Which they're like, we don't believe her.
She sounds nuts.
Like we're not, we're not going to deal with this.
Fine.
Her son finally calls me.
And he's like a calmer dude.
He explains the situation.
And I'm like, okay, this is, there's something here.
send me your paperwork because there's no way once I digested it and explained it to the other attorneys
they're like there's no way that they didn't sell it with these disclosures up the wazoo like you go skiing
you can't sue me you know if something happens whatever course so I'm like that's for sure
nothing right there's not a single they don't mention that there's this alien technology that
you're getting involved in so I'm like oh that's fraud right you can't sell and the second
generation looks like alexis it's built on the same frame so I went in around this time I
go to Toyota Santa Monica myself.
And I'm like, are you guys selling this?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, we're totally selling it.
I'm like, oh, yeah, tell me about it.
It's the next best thing since sliced bread.
It's the next Prius.
You're getting in early.
You should get in on this car.
And there's all these rebates and free fuel.
Free fuel at the time in L.A.
Gas went up to like seven bucks a gallon.
Right, right.
So free fuel, you tell it to someone, that sounds really appealing.
And it's Toyota, right?
And the salesperson says, we drive it.
I'm like, oh, you know, I'm hearing in the media that you can't get,
you can't get fuel though.
Oh, don't believe that.
They're building more pumps.
It's going to be amazing, right?
Now, by this time, I represent hundreds of people that are telling me that they're running the same script on them.
So, okay, they're clearly being fed this from corporate to tell them that.
Right.
By the way, everything until I tell you otherwise is publicly available information.
This is not some, like, tinfoil conspiracy type of thing.
Right.
So.
And the Toyota's saying that the fuel is, it's free.
Where do you get it?
Do you have to go to the dealership?
No.
There are hydrogen stations around California.
So the California energy, yeah, it's all California, baby.
So we got bleeding green hearts and you're able to just full.
They got over $100 million from the state of California, Toyota, directly, in order to fund this nonsense, right?
So the state will help pay for these stations.
Okay, each station that gets built inevitably closes down within two years because the, let's see, when you go fill up gas, okay, it smells, there's a
a certain smell, that's put in.
That's not natural to the gasoline process, experience finery, right?
They put that in there in case there's a leak, you know.
Right, like they do, yeah, like they do with your gas stove or because you have a gas leak,
you can walk and go, oh, wow, there's a gas leak.
Precisely.
Hydrogen needs to be that pure, right?
So I told you it needs to be stored like the PSI at five miles below the ocean, super cool.
It also needs to be that pure that if they even put an odor in, the whole machine would get messed up.
All right.
Okay, so you're talking about the most, you need to be that pure.
I mean, that's insane.
All right, just that basis alone, you know, it's not commercially viable.
There are only two major, there's three, but there's really two major companies that even have it.
It's first element true zero, which was a shadiest, most shelly company I've ever seen in my life.
You can't figure out really how they're getting money.
The only money that they actually have is from Toyota or the California government.
Okay.
So like 50 million, 100 million from Toyota and then another 50 million from the California government to help them build these stations.
Okay. I have another question. Maybe you'll get to it. But how does the government just give away $100 million to fund a project that Toyota should be funding themselves? If it's there. Well, because they're they're telling the government that this is going to be green. This is going to become one day the greenest thing. And the government is like, nice. And so.
So each democratically elected governor is just hiking up DMV fees.
You know, three bucks here, five bucks there.
Right.
And there's the money.
You, there's, you know, 40 million people in California.
I know where taxes come from.
I'm saying, like, I can't believe that they would, they don't look into this to make sure that it's.
No, no, no.
It's not even, you don't even look into this.
Like I'm saying, everything is publicly available.
Right.
So the federal government canvassed all of the California hydrogen stations from 2015 through the second quarter of 2021.
So the second quarter of 2021 is really the richest data set because by then stations are already operating.
They've sold thousands of these cars.
So you kind of know like if there's faulty parts, they should have fixed it by then.
The stations were down.
According to the feds, that's a pretty neutral place.
It's not me getting an expert witness coming up and going around.
Yeah, it's not California.
It's not California.
Who needs to make it look like it's a good thing.
How you doing?
The feds conclude that the stations are down more than they're up because they keep going down for maintenance.
because these are extremely complicated machines, right?
In order to store it, move it, like get it into the car.
A small nuclear power plants that were just placing on the side of the road.
Oh, 100%?
Waiting for people to come and use it.
And every once in a while, they go offline.
100%.
When you say the liquefied thing, you know what makes me think of back to the future
when Doc Brown is pulling out the plutonium and it's like steaming
and he's like, puts it in the back, let's go, you know.
Dude, for sure.
About a year and a half into the litigation, I got a phone call from this guy.
And I'm getting calls left and right, because I'm finally the first.
And this whole time I'm in this, even until this day, right, there's a couple other firms that are doing it and I'm helping them, right?
But there's really very few people that even know about, like, the litigation surrounding this.
And especially not in the beginning, right?
I'm literally the only attorney that's prosecuting this.
And I've had a couple hundred clients.
But there's something in the back of my mind that's like, this is insane.
What is going on?
I get a call from one guy, hey, are you doing the hydrogen litigation?
I literally like that.
And I go, oh, you know, yeah, I think it's another client.
And I'm ready to get into my spiel of like, yeah, screw Toyota.
This is like they're making unreliable cars.
This thing's a total fraud.
And he goes, ah, no.
And something about the way he started talking, he started having a lot of technical information.
And I was driving.
I pull over.
I'm like, where are you?
I'm like, I want to come meet you because of how much.
he knew. This guy's name is Michael Dre. He's an attorney with a background and an alternative
energy. His wife was a professor at a UC school.
He just happens to sound like a hillbilly. He has the most authentic southern drawl that
just like you just would believe anything this guy says. I mean, but he happens to be a really
he's a beautiful person. Mattlock. He helped me for years for free. Just that nicest guy.
Okay. So I go meet him at his porch in Pasadena. He's always smoking a cigar. And he starts telling
me that he got hired by this
UC school, they got a grant
from the state of California, their
UC school, so all their money is really from the state,
but they also get an additional grant, some from philanthropy,
but some from the state, to build a hydrogen
station. Now, he
has this background and alternative energy,
his wife's a professor there, he gets tapped
to manage the project. Okay, and it's
millions of dollars, and he
figures out, there were certain pressuring systems
that weren't working, he figures out how to get it off the ground.
And this UC school is
actually making green hydrogen.
Right, they're making hydrogen fuel you can put in a car from water.
They're the only ones that are doing it.
Everyone else is from that weird steam reforming methane thing that I was talking about earlier.
Right.
Okay.
So he's actually making it green.
Okay.
Toyota, in order to sell hydrogen to the public, you have to go through the California Fuel Cell Partnership, which is this quasi.
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business forever forward. Like governmental entity, that's essentially run by Toyota, and this
guy named Spencer Kwan, who is like an engineer kind of guy, but he's running these meetings.
And when he finally gets, he gets it, he gets from, like, the fire department and all the other necessary certifications in order to make this thing get off the ground and be safe for the public, certifiably safe, Toyota goes, yeah, no, this doesn't work for us.
We're not, they knock him off.
There's a website, h2fCP.org.
That's where people know where the hydrogen stations are up or down.
Right.
Right.
They look like regular gas stations.
Sometimes they're in a gas station.
There's just one pump that says hydrogen.
okay right um and teota goes no you cannot uh be you know you're you're you're uh stations yeah
you're off the list it doesn't doesn't work for us here why oh you don't have a credit card
reader we need a credit card reader because and they they they actually can control because they
gave these free fuel cards to people right so if you don't have it they actually have a lot of say
they can say if they they uh cancel people's warranties for the car they threaten them if you go to fill
it up anywhere you find some mad scientist
on the road that figured out
to make hydrogen,
we're not going to honor
the warranty of this car.
Okay?
So he has to go put
a credit card reader in this machine.
He spends,
you know,
100 grand of the university
money to do that.
Oh, well, you know,
we need you to store it
at this thing.
We need you to do that
and they just keep moving the,
they keep, right?
Yeah, yeah.
They don't let him on this,
on the website.
So they have a chokehold
on the regulators
in relation to this entire industry
because they want to keep it gray,
hydrogen, right?
They don't want it to go green.
Why not?
Because they have holdings in liquefied natural gas.
Oh, okay.
So they don't want to, if you can suddenly just take a salt or sea water,
you can take water and do it yourself, then they lose control of their.
Which you can't anyways, because it is so energy intensive that it's not commercially viable to the process.
I mean, I'm distilling it.
But the process of what he's talking about, he had to hire NASA, like jet propulsion engineers
in order to get in there
and figure out
how to even make it happen at all
and the whole thing's being funded
by the university
this entire time
which is why he's crying
in these meetings
going this is state tax dollars
like why are we not being
allowed to sell this to the public
people would come to him
for fuel
and you'd have to turn them away
at different times
the interesting thing is also
this I don't know
I don't know this for sure
but he claims that
before they ran this car
to the EPA
and said that this is
we want to get it
certified of
like what the
mileage is on the car
they would
go to his station
because he had
enough control
to put more
fuel into the
car to get more
mileage out of the car
that's what he says
and they said
that the car
gets 400 miles
I represent like
a thousand people
like I said
not a single one
of them gets more
than 250
now at the time
in 2021
hydrogen fuel
for these people
it was like
you know
10 bucks a kilogram
and it's five
kilograms for the car
so it's
50 bucks to fill up the car.
It's a lot.
50 bucks to fill up a car.
You're from California.
That is hilarious.
You're griping over $50 to fill up a car?
My wife fills up.
Did you have you drive by the thrice?
They're like 280 a gallon.
My wife fills up her whole truck for like $32, $35.
And it's a Toyota, by the way.
I don't even remember a time in California.
I'm sure there was a time when I was alive,
but probably not when I was driving.
I don't remember people went nuts
because it went to a dollar a gallon.
A dollar a gallon.
This is communism.
That's what I look out.
I don't understand.
Okay, well, then this is going to knock your socks off.
It's now $39 a kilogram.
So.
But I thought they said it was free gas or free fuel.
They give free fuel to people.
They give you a card.
But that card's going to run out real quick
if it's $250 to fill up your car.
Oh, so they give you an allowance.
Yeah, it's a debit card, a $15,000.
debit card or three years.
But I thought I buy the car and all my fuel is free from Toyota.
They pay for all of it.
No.
You're saying they give you a debt.
They say, oh, $200 a month.
No, no, no, no.
They give you a card.
They tell you that this should last three to six years, this card.
And it's a $15,000 card.
Right.
Okay, so they give you $15,000 worth of hydrogen.
But if it costs you $250 to fill up.
I understand.
And you're only getting $250 miles.
You're paying $1 a mile.
It's dropping very quickly.
That card is done within a year, easy.
Okay.
So now this person is stranded with a car.
They cannot get.
So Callie Williams, the person who was cooking her,
numerous times, and they know this.
If you have back-to-back fuelings because of how cold they have to keep it,
the pump will freeze onto, if you do a back-to-back fueling,
it will freeze onto your car.
It's just a matter for how long.
It will be two minutes, we'll be 10.
And if you did back-to-back-to-back fuelings,
you could be there for an hour.
It'll just click onto your car.
And people, you know, you ever watched the Big Lobowski
where the guys like doing that with a bowling ball, right?
So people take cowls in their car in order to, like, heat it off the car.
And, like, people would go fuel and, and they'd look at the other guy and they'd go,
first time, you don't have a towel, you know, like, as if that's supposed to be, like, a normal thing.
And you're not told any of this when you go to the dealership.
Right.
So this is pretty crazy, right?
They sold 20,000 of these cars.
The only other person that got involved in this was Hyundai.
They sold about 2,000.
Honda sold 100 Clarities.
That was their version of this.
not only did they say uh-uh
they didn't even let people keep the car
right so it was like closed in leases
and if I spoke to one person that owned it
they said if I ever complained about oh I can't get fuel
they're like yeah it's free for this month you don't have to pay us
you know we'll forgive your note your car note
okay um the Americans this Michael Dre with the southern
accent he was there through the inception of this whole
fuel cell partnership even growing um and it runs on fuel cells
like Elon Musk in 2014 he was interviewed a few times about this
and he's like you know I don't want to talk about this
this is so stupid like you'll see the litigation coming and I'm like I'm that guy I'm the
litigation and I came we should find that we should find that clip oh yeah it's like a grainy
he like doesn't want to even get into it he's like this is such a stupid idea there's public
there was in in Japan there was a trade show I guess the guy didn't think that it would make
and but it's still out there one of the chief design officers of the Toyota Marai Mariah is
Japanese for future he says the same thing he goes yeah this was stupid right this is just not
working so why aren't they going and saying hey
let's swap these vehicles out for Camry we'll give you a Camry there's nothing wrong with Camry you know how like why not swap them out and try and quash this whole thing do they have so much money in it yeah that they it's not it's not about they have so much money in it I they're trying to create a market that they can control that but I think it's more about the fact that they have such large stakes in the liquefied natural gas sphere that if they can divert any amount of commercial activity consumer
awareness or knowledge, like we're talking about hydrogen now and make it seem like it's a
competitive thing to battery or even that battery is bad.
Look, hydrogen to work.
Batteries are bad.
Like any sort of delay and retarding of the battery adoption, they're winning, right?
It's like a trillion dollar a month.
I don't know the numbers, right?
Astronomical insane numbers.
So they can delay it by one day, two day, three, whatever they're delaying it by.
Anything that they're delaying, they're winning.
Okay.
They have, and they're still selling the cars?
These are, the Japanese, they're still selling the cars.
Okay.
They're still selling the cars.
So, by the one, I don't know when you release these, but whenever you release this episode, a couple weeks.
Amazing.
Amazing.
By the time you release it, I'll have filed an injunction asking the federal judge to tell them to stop selling the car.
And I think I have a 50, 50 shot of winning something like that.
I don't know, a federal judge is not really going to, I mean, you're pretty familiar with the legal system.
I mean, think about it.
A guy in a robe is going to go tell a private company to not sell a car.
it's, it could go either way.
It takes big balls for a judge to do that, and I hope one does.
Right.
I think what I would win is that they should stop negative credit reporting people that stop paying
these car notes, because that's what they're doing.
A lot of people, like, I cannot afford, I need it to get another car.
But if they live somewhere that's nowhere near a pump, and no new pumps ended up coming
to fruition, they can't use the car.
Why should I still pay for this car note?
That's $600 a month, right?
It's a luxury car.
It's a $60,000 car.
It might be more than $600 a month.
That doesn't seem like a luxury.
That's more like $14,500.
The highest note I saw was like an $8 or $900.
What are these five-year leases?
No, no, no.
They bought them.
They all bought them.
And you get a manufacturer rebate.
Some of them traded in or brought equity into the deal.
You know, imagine.
There's a guy, Zachary Graham.
So I have 122 arbitrations, go 110 arbitrations, a state,
case with like 500 plaintiffs and now I'm launching this federal case.
Why isn't Toyota just, as they'd not come to you and said, hey, look, let's just, like,
we'll take the cars back?
Like, why can't they just take the cars back?
They could do better.
They can convert the cars, get rid of this hydrogen contraption and just make them electric
cars, but they would never do that.
They're not going to do that.
I mean, I think it would be.
For the same reason, they're not going to take back the cars.
I'm going to admit that they messed up on this level.
But here's what I really think.
They're, you look at like a Mustang or whatever.
They'll revamp the whole car, like, year over year.
Like, American companies are nuts.
They'll just, like, the Japanese, they'll, like, add six horsepower.
You know, they're very calculated.
Yeah, yeah.
These vehicles look identical year after year after year.
You have to really figure out, like, oh, oh, they look, the reflectors are now four inches.
They used to be six.
Or now they're octagon shaped.
You know, yeah, there's very subtle, if any.
Right.
They saw this coming, right?
And they did a calculation.
They said if we only sell 20,000, it'll get diluted.
We're selling them in California.
It's a huge market.
20,000 cars over since 2016 to this day, that's nothing.
They sell 400,000 cars a year in California.
We're talking about a small subset of this market.
It's the pinto.
It's the actuary from the pinto.
Yeah, but no one's dying, thank God.
If people were dying, I wouldn't have the case, right?
They wouldn't have given it to baby-faced me as you were making sure I knew that I was.
They wouldn't have given it.
The people wouldn't have come to me.
It would have, if the cars were, but there was a big fire in 2019.
There was an explosion at a hydrogen plant.
But, I mean, you got to give them credit that none of the cars are blown up.
Yeah.
I mean, these things are crazy contraptions.
But they're running on ice pretty much, right?
It's hard to set ice on fire.
Right.
Yeah.
And to get it from to the computer within the car to read with the pump, the amount of, you know, computing power and anything could, they, they created the fueling standard.
That was another thing they did to this.
Michael Dre guy. They retroactively set a standard that was like really high. You know, things that
anything that could happen and needed to shut off the whole machine because they don't want
people dying. That would kill their brand. Right. So. That would bring a lot of attention.
That would bring a lot of attention. The American companies looked at this in the early 2000s and
they right away said like, we're not touching any of this like four or whatever they're like,
no, we're not. They had prototypes. They would go to this Michael Dre character and like fill it up,
drive it around a little of the university and they're like eventually they're like yeah we're not we're
not touching this their sort of thing so it's only been this pipe dream basically of Hyundai and
Toyota with Toyota being the 800 pound grill in the room okay so I mean you're saying you're
are you currently in mediation I mean you're currently are they there are they just saying go
fuck yourself they're not they're not saying they're not saying we'll take the cars back
nothing like that or they're fighting it tooth and nail or are they saying they're they're fighting
it, you know, they're fighting it. We're still in litigation. I'm talking about it with you. If it was
settled, I wouldn't be here. I filed an antitrust lawsuit against Toyota. And that was quickly
not the route to go, because like lingerie in law, less is more. Right. So it's a complicated
thing, antitrust. Antitrust is usually litigated by the government. Right now they're going after
Apple. Again, Apple's always getting hit up for antitrust because they're a huge company and they have a
chokehold on a lot of different industries.
Right.
So like, let's say
suitcases, when they first started charging
for suitcases, that was
a coordinated effort by
the airlines. And they actually
nailed them for that. The government
antitrust violation. It was
originally an entire area of law
conceived just because of Rockefeller.
Oh, yeah, the railroads, right?
And gas and like he, yeah.
Exactly. So my argument... I took intro of
business. I know some stuff.
My argument was that, look, Toyota created this industry of hydrogen-powered cars, and they
have control over it, and they're abusing that control.
And their argument was, no, this is way, this is, there's no subset.
There's no hydrogen-powered retail market, right?
There's just cars.
There's retail cars.
And we don't have a control over retail cars, right?
So they were able to broaden the scope.
And I was like, this isn't what that case is about anyways.
This case is about when someone goes to Toyota dealership and they're looking for a Camry, okay?
And then the guy's like, no, no, no, you don't want a Camry.
You want this thing.
You're going to be the pioneer of this and everyone's going to be like, you're a genius that you got in early.
So it's about fraud.
It's not about highfalutin antitrust anyways.
So I dismissed that and then we just went with this state court complaint because state court, California juries are like, you know, that's the best place in the world to be a litigator.
Right.
You go to, you get 12 retired actors.
You tell them a good story.
they'll get they'll pay you right and they we have this we have the face of those cases and we're
asking now the judge to make Zachary Graham so he's an active military guy he was serving in
the military his first tour he buys from like Toyota of orange he gets a corolla and he tells
them hey I'm going to get deployed I want to be able to return the car and they say yeah no problem
you can you'll be able to return the car and and he does he gets deployed out of out of
the country returns the car they take it back
cancel the rest of the note he's like that was perfect he comes back to the u.s he does
he does some more work for the military here in l.A and he needs a new car so the same thing he goes
to to go to santa monica and they're like you want this marai you want this hydrogen power car
he's like um i might get deployed they're like no problem so he ends up getting deployed to
virginia for like special ops training or whatever and because he got deployed within the
united states their program didn't allow for him to just trade the car in they're like you're
still in the U.S.
So it doesn't count.
He cannot take the car to Virginia because there's no hydrogen in Virginia.
Right.
He had to get a loan from the...
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Military.
That's like supposed to be a special loan for like small businesses or whatever to pay
off the car because the car was just going to sit there.
now he's paying interest on money
like double interest
right
to get out of this
to get out of the situation
where they should have just
taken the car back
all of the car notes
like 90% of them
are financed by Toyota Motor Finance
right
so they're in control
of the situation
and it's exactly what you said
they should just take the cars back
that's really that's really the situation
but the reality is
this is a huge scandal
this is like bigger
than the emissions scandal
because it has that component
it has the component of the fact
that they're messing up the environment
in the name of greenwashing the technology.
They're saying hydrogen, it sounds green.
They market it as zero emissions from the tailpipe
because there's just water that comes out of the tailpipe
as the exhaust.
And there's like commercials with like a guy drinking the water.
And they're like, this thing is just pure.
Wow.
Yeah.
So people, most of my clients, the overwhelming majority,
until they talk to me, they don't even know that it's not green.
And they don't care about that ultimately, right?
They want to do something good and they're trying to be good people
and, you know, just going about their.
day but and so there was a selling point but like they're like yeah there you go i don't know what that
manned but they're like they're like it's not green you're telling me this isn't even green i've been
drinking that water for two years no that part's true right it is just water i don't i think you'll die
if you drink that water but the but the water part's true but they're negating the fact it's like
when they first came out with batteries uh they weren't telling you how much the mining and the shipping like
you have to drive it 180 000 miles to get your first green mile out of a battery car
They've gotten way better because they learned how to recycle the batteries.
The batteries are much smaller.
It's less lithium, less precious metals.
So it's a different ballgame than when they first started.
But hydrogen is, was, and never will be in our lifetime, green or commercially viable.
How many young Chinese children have to die for you to drive that battery car, that robo car?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I can see the Chinese.
They got them all out there out there getting that lithium.
Little kids.
I mean, we're all complicit in that.
Our iPhones.
I'm okay with it.
You're okay with it?
As long as they're not Americans.
Oh, God.
They're all people.
We're all just humans.
They're all just humans.
I've also sued Gavin and Usum.
What specifically?
Gavin's funding the situation.
He's just unchecked, signing off on the legislature, just giving money to these companies.
Let's say, for example.
To these companies, you mean like Toyota?
Toyota.
The company that are saying it's green.
also Shell and those companies,
First Element Fuel, the fuel companies.
Shell got a, accepted a grant for $50 million.
I don't know if they actually took the money
or if they just accepted a grant.
I haven't gotten that far in discovery.
What we have seen is that Toyota actually had agreements
with these companies that they're giving money to.
I mean, obviously that they would.
Right.
So they're basically creditors to these companies,
and they gave Shell money too.
Shell
abruptly in
2003 pulls out
they were supposed to
make 50 stations
they had seven
and they just
shut it all down
inexplicably
they have like a
three line memo
that they release
on their website
like
oh we're not doing this
thank you so much
done
you know
and they got money
they got money
from the state
right
I don't know that
for sure
but I would
feel all right
right
so what happens
sorry go ahead
no
and I want to sue
so I want to sue Donald
as well
you got to sue Donnie
Donald
yeah
I know you
you love him. What did he do you do? I don't love him. Don't do that. We just lost 25% of our
fewer just by you saying that. But why? What did you do? Well, he actually did good.
Well, then T's heads on the chopping block too. That doesn't make sense at all.
Joe Biden, in the Inflation Reduction Act, put an uncapped tax credit for the hydrogen fuel industry.
all they needed to do was produce hydrogen they don't need to sell it it doesn't need to be green it doesn't need to do anything every kilogram of hydrogen they made
they got an equivalent dollar for dollar tax credit uncapped so these companies are just making hydrogen storing it they can't get it to people because the stations are breaking it doesn't matter
there's 20 working nozzles in the entire state of california right now because the stations keep breaking down newsom said oh we'll have 200 by this day
He was a liar about pretty much everything.
He's very villainy looking.
Yeah, yeah.
He's proof that if you're handsome, you can get father.
You look like you could be Sebastian Mascalco's like cousin.
Have you gotten that before?
Sebastian, who is that?
You don't know who that is?
Who is it?
Now you don't know if it's good at that.
I'm thinking my first thought was Lord Farquhar.
I used to have a...
The Bastion Menazcalco is an Italian comedian that has hit
some monochem of fame he was just in a um the irishman and he's had a couple specials out he's
very exaggerative in his performance he's very funny what do you think maybe i'll put a picture up
i got to make it okay okay i mean i'm trying out here okay no i do i think you do look like am i
stand by that this guy doesn't always talk about he's he's too far away he can't see um so you're
in any event the nozzles that are working are about the are about the tune of 20 okay and they
You go to these pumps, it would just be down.
And then imagine you needed gas and you go to a gas station and there would be one out of order.
You'd be like, oh, this could be a problem.
Right.
You can go down the block.
Okay, but what if the next station's 12 miles away from your house?
Right.
You're already down.
You're already need.
So these people are spending a third of their fuel looking for fuel.
Okay.
That's a problem.
And so Trump, what?
He said, no more giving out money for...
So Trump caboshed the inflation reduction tax.
credit for these for hydrogen for those companies so it jacked up the price it in 2026 i think that
that might have something to do with it but there's also a lot of grants from the department of energy
um i don't know what do you think should i sue don't sue don't it's good for news i mean i don't
know like don't say that um i don't think i can honestly even as i'm talking it out loud
the the paperwork's ready to go and like really that's the debate because i'm just trying to get
relief for these people that's another thing right like if you have
have a situation where someone gets injured.
So the person's injured.
The injury happened.
You can litigate that to the end of time to make sure that you get the justice that
you need.
But they're not going to be okay.
No matter what, they're not going to be okay.
They're not going to be okay.
The money, you know, this incredible, Bob Simon, he's an incredible trial attorney.
I read a few of his transcripts to prepare.
I did a trial in 2023.
We won.
We won $500,000 from a jury.
Nice.
And the closing argument, though, of Bob Simon is essentially.
Eventually, like, if you're in a car and Darth Vader, all of a sudden, freezes time, opens your car door, comes in your car, and goes, here's a suitcase for you.
And he goes, what was going on?
He goes, there's $3 million in that suitcase.
And you open us $3 million.
And you say, okay, this is amazing.
What do I have to do?
Getty is it's not what you have to do.
Someone's going to hit your car.
And it's going to affect how you can walk and your enjoyment of life, but you get $3 million.
No one would take the money.
Right.
Everyone would close the briefcase and go,
Darth Vader, I don't want the money.
But that's what the defendant did to my client.
Right.
They didn't give him the choice.
That's sort of the situation.
So in those types of scenarios where someone got injured and it was a one-time thing,
you can milk the litigation and just keep going.
And the family doesn't care either.
The injury happened.
In this situation, I got people calling me every single day.
What the heck is going on?
I'm still paying $600 a month, $300 a month, whatever it is.
or I'm not paying at all and I and my credit and they put it on my fucking credit and now I can't get even a car loan for a new car I can't refinance my house I got turned down for my security clearance or whatever the there's tons of stuff that you're you're the security clearance is you're right that I don't know how you knew that but Zachary Graham lots of stuff I guess Zachary is not even the only active military person that I represent and that was something that he was like such it was it was like grading on him like what if I that's why he took the loan.
That's why he took the loan because he didn't want to lose
his security clearance if they start negative credit reporting.
Yeah. Can't claim bankruptcy.
If you have a security clearance,
you can't claim bankruptcy.
A lot of people will go, they get into debt, they don't know what to do.
Bankruptcy is a viable option for someone that gets over their head.
I mean, it's legal, and it's reasonable.
Like, the government didn't come up with it because it doesn't happen.
It doesn't need to be out there.
Some countries don't.
They'll throw you in jail.
But the government, the United States said,
no, we're not going to do that.
we're going to get people a legal reason.
The problem is
is that it can affect all kinds of things.
One, it affects you for the next like seven years
can affect borrowing money on houses
and your security clearance.
That's a big thing.
So people can lose all kinds of opportunities
because Toyota gave me a car.
I'm paying 800 a month for.
They told me I had $15,000 for the credit.
It was only $10 per kilogram.
And then they jacked to.
up to $40.
Like, that's, that I can, that I would be like, well, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, this
was not our agreement.
You said it only cost $10.
A year and a half later, you jacked it all over.
You, you multiply it at times four.
Where's my, where's the difference?
And my, and my, my ass is hot, to be honest with you.
I'm sweating a little, you know?
I mean, so.
When I initially filed a class action, I was on the defense side, right?
I represented these credit facilities for automakers and automakers in general.
I never lost a motion to compel.
arbitration. So you're married, right? Even your wife, if you decide to sue your credit card
company for something you don't like, they have an arbitration clause. And pretty much everything
you buy in America has an arbitration clause. Okay. They could make your wife. So some people
got clever and they'll make the wife be the plaintiff. Oh, she never signed the credit card
agreement. No, no, no, no. The language says even your affiliates, your friends, whatever,
they're subject to this agreement. And we've won, I've won that motion. So initially, they
threatened to compel arbitration. I said, no, let's just go to arbitration. Right.
That's why I had 110 arbitrations.
But then in state court, I fought the arbitration.
Well, it was me, and there was one other plaintiff's firm that was grouped into this complex litigation.
And they lost their motion to compel arbitrations.
We get to proceed in state court and see a state jury.
And then we have one federal action that is going, and I've now subpoenaed through a federal judge, which is great.
I thought they'd fight it, but they haven't fought the subpoena yet.
I'm sure the day before they're going to.
but we subpoenaed the chief design officer for the Marai,
the person most knowledgeable for the fuel credits
and all these various different things
that they got to come and take a deposition.
Now, my buddy's doing the litigation for 9-11.
So there was Saudi money connected to the terrorism that happened.
And there's a clear link.
So the victims of 9-11 are suing the Saudis,
the government, the actual country.
Okay, that litigation is still going on in 2025.
Yeah, this just could be driving.
on forever.
Right.
The Saudis spent
like a year and a half
the first day
they come into court
with like they finally
serve them
you know if they serve them
through the hate convention
through like Switzerland
literally like there's all
these different
stakes like they couldn't serve
shimmy right
imagine the Saudis
okay so finally
they serve whatever
they get to the courtroom
my buddy's telling me this
they go to the courtroom
they go to the courtroom
we don't like this courtroom
and they leave
they just don't like the court
the wood paneling
didn't met
and the stakes are so high
and the lawyers that they have
are so well staffed
that they literally fought
for a year
about which particular
courtroom should the proceedings even continue in.
I'm basically litigating against the Japanese government.
That's who Toyota is.
They posted $64 billion in profit last year.
It means that if all their accounting wizards got together,
they're like, we can't hide $64 billion.
Right.
Like, this is what we made.
This is the profit we got to say.
So it's like me, I got like a few other lawyers that I'm working with on this
against the Japanese government.
So are you working for a large law firm?
Like tell me that there's somebody backing you.
It's not you in your spare room with six other.
idealistic lawyers that want to just do good.
No, it is that.
Oh, God.
Oh, man.
I've teamed up with a guy that's very senior.
He took Nissan to a class action jury trial for like a much smaller defect.
And he won a class action jury trial.
So I'm consulting with him and he's doing a lot of work in the background with me and to the foreground once the litigation even heats up more.
But, yeah, so it's still pretty early in the litigation.
I mean, 97% of cases settle, right?
I don't think the Saudis will settle.
I think that you'll actually see in like 10 years.
You'll see a verdict.
Money means nothing.
Right.
They don't care about that.
So for them, they won't.
They'll be in that 3%.
But that's a real stat that 97% of cases settle.
Did you ever read the book or see the movie with John Travolta in it?
It's amazing.
A civil action?
No.
It's so good.
And it's funny.
because when people think of lawyers, they think, oh, they're rich.
Most of them aren't rich.
When they think of, they don't realize that the lawyer has to pay out of his own pocket for this, you know, for this, for this, um, investigation or for this, this guy or for the, I'm out 200 grand on this case.
I haven't made a nickel in three years, you know, like, if you don't realize, and then they're like, he takes 30.
30% motherfucker or 40% you know 30 or 40 it's usually typically it's 30 but that's for like personal injury but it could be higher I'm sure and I think you go what what can go to like 50 this guy is so smart this guy is dialed into the economics of everything what like the people part of it too you're like 30% I don't want to short change you though so why do you give you like you're because that's personal injury and and I know that the more you have in it the more of a percentage you should get back I put 50% in my retainers I don't I don't I don't
I think that ultimately, if it settles, if I have to take it to verdict, I deserve 50%.
No one else even wanted to take these cases.
But if it, in the event, it's when we, I used to represent Audi and Volkswagen.
We would, we, by statute, in California, the Lemon Law, you have, the manufacturer has to pay the lawyer.
Okay.
So the contingency fee is not from the money of the, of the client.
Right.
It's a separate fee issue that even gets litigated separately after the case is settled.
So this has lemon law aspects to it
You know I talked about the seat heaters
The battery drains on this car
There's a screen glitches
The parking sensors are also too
Sensitive so people will be driving on a highway
And it'll think like a deer is coming out of nowhere
When nothing's there, a phantom thing
And it just jolts for someone
Like people have had real electrical issues with the car
Right
So there's a lemon law element to it
So ultimately I don't think
That I'd have to eat from the client's share of this
Right I have it in there to protect me
Which is what I've been telling people
people, and I think that that will come to fruition.
But to your point about costs,
when I sued, so when we first sued in the class action space,
then stipulated to go to arbitration,
in the class action on the federal docket,
the lawyers that Toyota hired,
they also represented the dealerships.
I was like, okay, that makes sense.
You know, Papa Bear is saying,
okay, I'll just handle all of this.
Then once we go to arbitration, those same lawyers,
when we get to the first few arbitrations,
and the lawyers are like, well, you didn't serve the dealership.
I'm like, you guys rep the dealership.
No, no, no.
We, you know, we, not officially.
So they made me go and serve and do the whole, like, I had to spend like 20 grand, 30 grand,
sending a process server to each dealership, reserving them, you know,
wasting three months and whatever, a bunch of money on that.
And they, they have a lot of these kinds of tactics.
Just delay, delay, delay, where you're down, where you down,
have run up the bill to the point where you're so desperate that I don't want to,
I may end up having to go to the fucking bankruptcy just to keep fighting for this thing
against this monster that's never going to run out of money.
Right.
Yeah, in the civil action, they go into that.
And I only know that, by the way, I know that because my brother-in-law was, once again, he was a personal injury attorney, and he's the one who's having to pay for this, pay for them, make deals with doctors to see people promising them, you know, writing up the notes, whatever that form is.
Well, that gets really shady.
We've talked about another firm that's based out of this state.
And we briefly on the phone, we mentioned another firm.
It's actually kind of how I even got here through that connection.
When I was working at that firm, I saw some pretty shady stuff with that.
Where doctors are cutting people open and they don't need to be cut open, but they know they'll get paid on the back end.
Yeah, no, this wasn't like that.
They can get pretty crazy.
No, this is more like you have a back injury and you need to be treated.
Yeah, yeah, sure.
Or it's a, what do you call it, chiropractor, like, you know, they go to chiropractor and then the chiropractor.
seized them for, they didn't charge them, but every time it's a slip, it's a slip.
So it piles up and piles up.
Or certain tests have to.
It's an MRI.
We need this.
We need that.
Well, somebody has to pay for that, right?
Like somebody has to pay that.
So my brother-in-law, you know, so these are the personal injury attorneys.
If they're either trying to get a deal or they have to pay for it or somebody's got to pay for it,
they have to send out investigators, they take photos, that the racks up and racks up.
And I know that.
So anyway, I did a mediation with an automatic.
manufacturer was unsuccessful right $25,000 though to get a federal judge to shuffle back and
forth in the room until 2 p.m. I paid for that but what were you thinking about the movie no in the
movie which is it's a real movie it's a real story it's called a civil action it was a book the book
I've never read it it's 850 pages or something they were outrageous I just couldn't get through
it because it's very technical it's a lot of it's a lot of a lot of walking in the courtroom law
this like very boring no offense um he's interviewing he's he's interviewing different clients he's
but it really goes into especially and the movie does this too a lot you really realize this in the
movie this guy's getting multiple mortgages on his property to pay experts to to to do research
to do surveys to do all kinds of stuff test the water test this and it goes on and on
he sells his Porsche he at the beginning of the movie he's a big shot by the end of the movie
he is destitutes he's living in the office sleeping on a couch all the staff has been let go
he's just he's destitute he's destitute if you sleep hot at night you know how disruptive that
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They just,
this company that was poisoning the water in this small town
and 50 people got different lesions and cancer
and all kinds of things happened
and he knew it and he couldn't figure it out
and he spent millions and millions
and they just wear them down to nothing.
At one point, one of the guys that owns like a chemical planter
that has involved in this whole thing comes to him.
He was like, what do you got in this?
You got to have, what, 10, 12 million?
And he kind of says, look, let me just give the 10 to drop the, get them to drop the case to this.
Like I'll just, he kind of just like, I'll settle for this.
You'll be made whole.
They'll get 20,000 apiece.
And he's like, they lost their daughter.
Her daughter died.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, he's like, no, I'm not doing that.
He's like, you can talk him into it.
But he's just because he knows that the other lawyers know, we've destroyed you.
Like, we have people.
look, we know how bad it is for you right now.
We're gutting you.
And they've got all the money in the world.
And, you know, this lawyer, and it's always so funny, too, is like, the clients are almost, they're angry at the lawyer.
And the lawyer's like, my life is being, is ruined.
It's over.
I'm going to be planning bankruptcy soon and may end up getting disbarred, you know, for other, whatever things, people aren't being paid.
There's all, I'm juggling all kinds of shit.
Like, it's fucking, you know.
And you're upset with me because this hasn't settled fast enough or because, and then they don't want to take a trick.
Because a lot of these, they don't want to take, I want to go to trial.
I want that apology.
It's like, you're never getting an apology.
It's so, you really, you should, at the very least you should watch the movie because you'd be like, oh, my God.
Like, it's a great portrayal of how, of the stress of representing these clients that can't pay you.
I know a ton of lawyers like that where they, they staked for years on one.
case and they were poor until it hit um the clients in this situation but you're saying until
it hit sometimes they don't hit sometimes you're 300, 400 half a million dollars in debt and it
then you get a letter from someone in prison that reveals that they had no case
no no the clients are super gracious their frustration is just with Toyota they're like
Toyota did me dirty.
Right.
That's it, you know, and it's just a lot of pressure around it.
But they've been very gracious to me.
I mean, I'm literally doing everything you can.
We're doing a rally.
The clients have organized a rally this Sunday in Sacramento.
The clients are rallying at City Hall.
And then in Los Angeles.
They had tried the vehicles in circles?
You should do a.
There's live footage.
Well, it's recorded.
Ukrainians used, I don't know how they got their hands on these,
Marais and they're blowing them up
in Russian territory.
I'm not kidding.
And that's probably the best use
for these cars is to be used as like
a war bomb. Some people are joking
to light the car on fire. I mean, I think that would be good for news.
But
by the way,
with Donald Trump suing him, there would be
reasons, right? He could have sunseted it sooner.
They're still bleeding money
on the tax credit. It hasn't been sunset.
The Department of Energy is giving a lot.
I'm being cavalier about it, but I'm not going to
risk my license. But they are
they are planning on doing a rally also in Los Angeles at City Hall
and I think if this continues they'll start protesting at dealerships
they'll just be like Toyota Tuesdays the first Tuesday of every you know month
we'll start protesting at you know Toyota of Glendale too
over a thousand or you have over a thousand the other plaintiffs firms that I'm in
touch with they have three 400 themselves so how many cars were sold total
20,000 it's just silly it's just silly of Toyota I mean it would cost them nothing
just to go in and say look we're just going to buy these cars
back shut this whole thing down they're still selling the car this woman called me two weeks ago
she's got disability uh you know she's a she's a bit kooky but i love her um debby alvarez
she's a sweetheart she just got sold the car like a week ago or two weeks ago whatever a teode
of orange no disclosures they're not telling her anything bad about the car she's a she the
i'm not as buff as you okay do yoga or i don't know if you're
lifting yeah i do california i could stop making fun of california california is beautiful place and it's much
better than florida oh my god humidity i was dying out here's getting just from my car to here
the humidity it's it's it's real first of all you could have just taken an uber why didn't you why did you
get a rent a car are you staying here for a few days this guy this guy's really dogged on me
am i right like both of us said this on the way no it was him on the way or cold he was like he's
renting a car i'm like yeah he's like no i got i'm taking another meeting in near orlando and i'm
flying out of orlando oh okay is this a
Another, is this a, another mirage?
What's it called?
It's the Jen Hardy show.
She actually, she's like putting a good word for me with Matthew.
Gen Hardy.
Yeah, she, voices of justice.
She's got 100,000 subscribers on YouTube.
She's really.
Voices of justice.
She interviews a lot of judges, Jen Hardy.
And she interviewed me and a couple clients on Zoom.
And then I said, hey, I'm, I got on your show.
I'm like, I'll let me make a day out of it.
I'll come to your studio.
Right.
So, um, you need to get the word out like he said about this case, um, which I'm grateful for it.
So it's, it's, uh, it's, uh, I think I, do I? Well, we got into a bit of a tip with the
California thing. No, I think that a big part of why this also isn't explosive in the news,
you know, I'm trying to do the- I don't have a problem with California, by the way, at all.
I'm serious, serious. It's the greatest place in the world. No, it's the people that are in
California. But go ahead. What's wrong with the people in California? Because they're just so, no, no,
no. Oh, yeah, it's so sad. They care about their health. They're buying, they're buying cars that
are not even green they think they're green i mean if you tell them they're green you could listen
if if i was active right now i'd take it all their money right now if you were active what a way
to say it what a way to say it and new you have that itch i don't know you're going to get mad
of me if i go weave back into his story you have that itch like course like an ocean's 11
as soon as they get out they're doing more they're running more game of course what's a good
scan that you see that is not being exploited by people right now that being exploited
I don't know about what's not being
You'd go back to doing the mortgage thing again.
Listen, there are these companies that will buy your house.
They'll send an appraiser out.
Like they're in California or they're in New York or one of those other liberal states.
They'll send somebody out, right?
They'll send somebody out to do a dry buy appraisal of your house.
And they'll say, and they give you an offer.
Your house is worth $500,000.
And you go, oh, I wanted $5.50.
and you can argue with them a little bit,
but they don't budge,
but they'll close in like five days or 10 days.
As soon as you get the title work done.
Well,
it's the whole thing is like,
I don't necessarily have to own the house
to get you guys to schedule a closing,
fund that closing,
and then wire that money into a bank account
that I've opened in that person's name, right?
I could satisfy the mortgage on the house,
the homeowner don't even have to know.
So I can call.
All these people schedule it.
They send somebody a drive-by.
I show up with a driver's license.
And I don't even have to go to the actual closing.
I can do it remotely.
So almost all but like 13 states or something do remote closings.
So I could show up and you show them your ID.
They see your ID.
Yes, it's me.
Okay.
And they do a notary closing.
And you close.
And then they'll wire the money wherever you tell them to.
I mean, that would be.
Of course, now, are you on film?
Yeah, you're on film.
But if you're already on the run and.
Did you use your special powers to get women?
Like, did you, you ever watched How I Met Your Mother with Barney Stinson?
There's the elaborate schemes this guy runs in order to get women.
I don't think I've ever, I don't, I've seen like one.
That you've seen them all.
Okay, it's the same copy pasta every single time.
Right.
They're just doing the same 800 episodes.
But the point of that character, which he's a great actor because he is a homosexual,
so it's pretty interesting how like he's such a womanizer on the show.
But like you didn't, you didn't run game.
Like, you know, what's that?
like being a criminal like the whole thing is the paradigm is if you're a bad boy you know women are
into that and they you know they they can't get enough of that well you were literally a quintessential
bad boy like what was that like for you when you were running game i don't think but i didn't
present myself that way but it does it does kind of um emanate right like if people they get this
feeling like something's not right yeah everyone knows i remember this one time i was dating
this chick and i mean this is let's say our third or
fourth date. We'd be going out, went out one night, went back to her place. Um, I was
amazing. Uh, and, um, uh, dated her again a couple times. And so we went out another night. And
that day, I had a closing. I told her, oh, I'm, I'm refinancing this piece of property.
And I needed to get money out. And so I was getting out like a hundred grand, but like for
some, whatever it was, the lender was like, we only,
let you get out like a hundred grand. I was getting out more than a hundred grand. So you can get
out like I'm trying to get let's say 120. And they at the last one, they're like, look, we can only
give you $100,000 out. And I said, well, wait a minute. I need you to cut a, I need you to cut a extra
$20,000. I need you to cut that to my second mortgage. They like, you have a, I have an unrecorded
second mortgage. And I provide them the second mortgage. And I called it like AG lending. And I said,
Yeah, and I send it to them, and I send it.
They go, oh, do you have a payment schedule?
It's funny you ask.
I happen to have one.
Here's the last six months, and here's the payoff statement.
They were like, okay, no problem.
So, yeah, we'll lend you the 120.
We'll pay off the $20,000, whatever it was.
So they cut the check to AG lending.
And then once it's all closed, it's clear.
I've got my check.
I deposited my bank account.
I come back and I go, oh, you cut the check here to AG lending.
But if you look at the payoff statement, it says down here at the bottom,
please bank all checks payable to Amanda Garland.
gardener and they're like oh my gosh i can't believe i missed that and so they they change it now
of course i didn't i we sent that to the lender because the lender won't allow a check to be cut to
an individual has to be a corporation so they i knew i need the initial check once they signed off on it
though i just haven't to have them change it and i took them into changing it that's by saying oh yeah
look just oh they didn't even notice that because they don't know what the lender's policy is
so they change it and then i went that night i go to dinner with amanda which is a girl i was
thing at the time. And we barely met. We don't even know each other. Probably it was fourth date.
And we're sitting there. And she's like, oh, how was this? Oh, yeah, good. Oh, she's like,
you want to go to such? Oh, I'd love to that. That'd be great. Yeah, yeah. And we're talking.
And she says, oh, you said you had a, uh, didn't you, you said you had a refinance or something
today? I was like, I was like, oh, shit. Yeah. Hold on. And I go, oh, and I pull out my thing.
And I have a check. And I go, can you deposit this? And she looks in and she goes,
What happened?
I said, oh, you know, so here they wouldn't, and then I give her an explanation that they wouldn't allow more than 100,000 be issued to me.
So I told them that I owed you a 20 grand and they just cut it to you.
Don't be, I said, it's just a glitch.
It's just silly.
And she was like, oh, yeah, I can, I can, I actually, she almost panicked.
Like, I can, I can deposit it tomorrow morning.
I'll deposit it.
And like, as soon as it clears, I'll get you a cashier's check.
Like, I don't know how long they're holding.
I mean, if you want, I can go to the bank.
I don't know where this bank is, but I can check.
And I'm like, no, no, just deposit it.
Once it clears, I said, if I need the money, I'll ask you for the money.
She's like, well, I'll get you the money.
I went, okay, well, I don't need the fucking money.
You know, it's like, I'll just keep the money in your bank account.
When you get it, if I need it, I'll take it.
I said, you can just give it to me.
And she was just like, holy shit.
Like, who is this guy?
Who is this fucking guy?
You know?
He is a cross between Trevor Wallace and Sebastian Manuscalco.
I mean, let's talk about a panty dropper.
that's right
give a chick 20 grand
I don't know
it was 20
about a 19
it might have been
22 I don't know
it was around that
but it was
it was more money
than she'd ever
deposited in her bank
I'll tell you that
and it was over
after that
it was over
I think she moved in
like a week later
I bought her
what did I buy her
did you have
different girlfriends
for different identities
you know
all the reservoir dog
characters
no no
no
what did I buy
what did a man to have
she got like a
50,000
it was like an
it was like an infinity
something
G,
No, it was like, was it a something.
It was some kind of a SUV.
Let me finish with DeVora Alvarez.
Okay.
Well, you went all the sideways.
Oh, 100%.
100%.
I keep going sideways.
Devora Alvarez, you know, it takes a certain personality to manage 600, 700, 800 clients.
You know what I mean?
Right.
You got to be a little bit.
It's a lot.
It's a lot of different personalities.
A lot of different people.
Yeah.
How many people can you maintain a relationship with?
There's some thing.
It's like 30 or 25 or something.
I don't know what you're talking about.
There's actually like a actual.
Like a study?
There's like a study that says you can successfully manage relationships with only up to it's like 22 people or something.
I'm sure in a professional context has got to be different.
I mean, I'm sure, but there's still a lot of people to keep track of and kind of remember that, oh, Jennifer's got two kids.
Some of them are really kind.
They don't talk to me for more than six months.
Yeah, I don't necessarily remember Nuggets.
Sometimes I save it into my phone.
I mean, I do zooms with them regularly, so I'm able to give updates generally and people do Q&As and whatever.
Right.
But this woman, so she buys this car.
What I was saying was you go to the gym even more than me.
That's how we got on the whole tangent.
That's right.
Right.
Right.
A little bit.
I have done fuel ups with people for the mori.
It is very difficult to get it off of the car for me.
Because it freezes up.
She's a disabled woman.
Right.
She cannot.
And I shouldn't be, you know, I shouldn't have said her name because, you know,
I'm kind of outing her a little bit with the medical thing.
But it doesn't, it's most of the women that I represent make this complaint.
Now imagine you're a woman and it's too.
clock in the morning, you're in a sketchy part of California, which does exist, by the way. So,
you're in a sketchy part of California. It's two o'clock in the morning. You are stuck to the
pump. That's terrifying, right? It's like off a highway somewhere. Right. That's part of the problem.
Is this fuel flammable? Yes. Oh, I don't know. I was thinking, like, can't you, can't they?
It's the most flammable. It is the most flammable. What are you going to do? Put a lighter there?
That's insane. That's insane.
You get rid of the problem altogether.
Yeah, a lot of problems would we've gotten rid of there and some other bigger ones.
But, you know, so discovery is about to heat up.
We have different venues, different legal vehicles, and we're prosecuting this with.
And it's just this story of complete corporate disregard, like these people in ivory towers making decisions that are in, like people get into this guy DeLoss, he's a cool guy.
He has an interesting startup, a robo-free.
Broyo machines.
How interesting is that?
Robo, Fro.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's part of what's great about being a lawyer.
You learn so much.
Frozen yogurt.
Oh, okay.
But the whole thing is automated, right?
So it, like, it drives out to locations and then it drives itself back, but it, like,
it sells and, like, an honor system is very interesting.
So he bought one of these cars.
The honor system.
California.
Oh, my God.
You see how that's working.
He bought one of these cars.
You know, he's very forward-thinking.
Hydrogen.
It kind of made sense.
He buys one of these cars.
gets into a tiny fender bender.
He was the first person with this problem,
and I've since had a lot of people with this.
They don't have the parts in California
to fix these cars.
So they're just saying each one's a total loss.
Okay.
But there's always a gap
in the value of the car and the insurance.
Right.
So now this guy's stuck five, six grand,
10 grand.
He's under pressure from that.
They're all upside down.
Oh, I cannot believe I didn't mention this.
These cars sell for like 60 grand MSRP.
The second you drive them off the lot,
They're worth $2,000.
Right.
Do you ever heard of that?
Depreciating by like 95%.
No, that's exciting.
And it's a Toyota.
You really don't see that coming.
So these people, they, after a week or two,
they're like, oh, this is a bloody nightmare.
I need it out of this car.
Right.
And then they go back to the dealership.
They're like, we'll give you $5,000 for it.
They're like, I owe you $30,000.
I owe you $40,000.
What does that mean?
You give me five.
What do you think?
If it sounds too good to be true,
it usually is
and Toyota is now
making itself
very unreliable
to these people
in California
Do you remember
of course
you weren't even born
yet
I'm gonna say
Audi
was making
45,000 cars a year
a woman
slipped and stepped on the gas
and the car shot forward
and wrecked into a building
whoa
and she
when the cop showed up
she said I
had my foot on the brakes
and it learned
it was the craziest thing ever and that was her story i didn't hit the gas i it
it was or it was in neutral or it was in and it shot forward i can't believe this it's a brand new
outy and kind of like people were whatever and within a day or two another person said i was
sitting in traffic the car jumped forward and hit this person in front of me and the newspapers jump
on it and said these Audis have a major issue. They talked to a couple experts who said,
well, I mean, yeah, it's just if this is wrong or this or the fuel injection or it's very
possible. It's clearly there's an issue. They jumped from went from 45,000 cars a year or the next
year, two years, year to two years. It dropped to 15,000 their closed plants. They did everything.
So by the way, these weren't the same types of outies. They have completely different engines.
fuel systems, everything.
But because the newspapers jumped on it, it destroyed Audi.
They almost went out of business.
They were right then.
They were just coming up on BMW.
This is back in the 90s.
No, this is in the 80s.
They just were about to approach.
BMW was doing like 55 or 60.
They were just coming up like, hey, we're coming.
We're going to be a competitor.
Boom, all the way back down.
Because two women, I don't know.
I don't know if. I know one was a woman. I don't know if both of them. It ends up, it ended up being two or three because then once the newspapers did it, boom, next thing you know, you got a couple other women and a couple other, I keep saying women. That's horrible. And I feel bad about that. As much as I could feel bad. But it's, yeah, two more people said, hey, the car lurked. Like when there was an accident, bam, guess what? Just lurched forward. Just I was sitting there. I stopped. I was on the brakes or I stopped. And so it just, like I said, dropped. But then as they did the research and research.
and researched and researched and they looked into it and the whole thing, they came back,
they were like, it's not possible.
We could not, we could not recreate that in any scenario at all.
It's absolutely impossible.
These people started that.
These people jumped on the bandwagon.
It almost destroyed an entire company.
It wasn't possible.
Never happened again.
Wow.
So I'm surprised you never heard that about the Audi's.
There's so many things like that, but I used to represent a company.
I won't want to say the name,
so we'll just say what it rhymes with.
Shmouty.
Okay.
And we were in litigation
and this guy
said that the car,
it's like an A8
and it just stalls.
The gas is not responsive.
And I depose this guy
and I'm like,
the jury's going to hate this dude.
He's like some rich white guy,
good looking guy.
They're not going to want to give him any money.
And I fought the case like crazy.
And I was going to take it
a trial and the
partner is
like call the expert in Germany
set up a call just to make sure
because you're really pushing this case
I said okay I call the expert and the expert
right away goes oh yeah it's a big
problem yeah and I'm like
oh shit I'm like
he's like tell he's like tell them
it's a new software update we'll clean it up
maybe in a few months I'm like
oh no I'm not I settled that case that day
I just paid them out immediately I was just
like done
So we're going to do you a favor.
Oh, I got a good deal.
It was interesting how much it activates, like, a sociopathic part of me, right?
Because I, I, my grandparents suffered at the hands of different German things.
Oh, for sure.
And yet I was like nickel and diming.
Anytime I could win and get an attaboy from like some random corporate guy that doesn't even know me or care.
I was like trying to win.
You know, when I represented the bank, same thing.
I was like trying to win.
It's very interesting how that, like this Stanford prison experiment,
you really, like, when you're in a certain position at the seat of the table,
you really try and win.
I guess maybe just certain personalities.
But, um.
Have you seen there's a meme of, I forget what his name is.
Oh, it was William Defoe playing the green, the green lantern or green goblin.
And he's at the boardroom.
And he stands up, he's like, he looks around.
He's going, you can't do this to me.
But the caption is.
Have you seen it?
Yeah, you know what I sacrificed?
Yeah, yeah.
But the caption is, um, uh, the, uh, the United States, you know, Japan, like,
it names off all these countries starting World War III without on it.
And he's like, do you know what I've said?
You can't do this to me.
Like, I started this.
That's great.
Fucking great.
Sorry, horrible.
What is this costing?
I mean, what is the dollar amount to correct this, this massive, you know, cluster fuck?
Well, in reality, the taxpayer.
dollars is like close to a billion dollars.
It's hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars that are being spent.
Another wise investment from on Gabon News and Spart.
Sorry.
No, no.
If the technology was green, by the way, I wouldn't have taken the case.
Right.
I'm okay.
You want to try something out?
You're making something green and it doesn't work.
I'm not going to sue you over that.
Right.
Okay.
Someone bought some alien technology.
It's on them.
Do more research.
They're trying to do something good for the environment.
But you're telling me that this thing is sinister to the bone.
that it hasn't been green
and what isn't going to be green
it's already 11 years into this thing
and the state is just given the money away
to build these stations that are helping who
the consumer's getting hurt
because the car does not work
car can't get fuel
okay
so who's benefiting from it
the environment's getting worse
it's not helping California's mandate
I'm pretty sure that they're but I don't know
if it's directly from Tesla
but they're buying carbon offset credits
could be from Tesla
because these EV companies get
they get tax credits
they get carbon credits rather
yeah right so how ironic would it be
if I could find in discovery
that they've been buying from the EV companies
like Elon Musk is selling them tax credits
that carbon credits rather
so they can pass this off as green technology
right and it's not
so yeah hundreds of millions of dollars
coming out of California's piggy banks
to fund just absolute nonsense
just nonsense there's nothing viable
about this. There's nothing commercially viable.
It's not helping the environment.
It's not helping the consumer.
The consumers are trying to,
they're screaming from the rooftops.
Toyota did this in other countries.
Right.
Okay.
Scandinavia, Germany.
Failed in every single one.
They gave the Canadian government
45 Marais,
and the Canadian government gave it back.
They're like, no, we don't want this.
So it's not like they've got a track,
they've got a track record of failure.
Track record of utter failure.
This is not working.
Now, people hate lawyers, okay?
And sometimes it makes sense.
All right.
Sometimes it makes sense.
You know, sometimes you love them.
In Russia, you go and try and tell them, oh, yeah, we'll do hydrogen cars.
They'll be like, no.
You know, they're just not, the government's not even letting you come in to try that.
Right.
In Norway, where they failed, this, this Marai stuff, or they're just eating mothballs, all these hydrogen stations.
And the government eventually steps in.
In the United States, these United States, it's the lawyers, it's private lawyers that keep companies in check.
It's much more free market-based.
So it's literally up to me and the other lawyers that are prosecuting this to try and knock this off.
Right.
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The government is not only not stepping in.
They're funding the situation.
Yeah, they're giving the money.
The only one that's doing that.
The Canadian government got it from them for free
and said it's failing at the pump two out of three times.
You keep saying the government.
You mean the state government?
The feds, like I said,
were giving through the Inflation Reduction Act.
They were giving a lot of tax credits to this too.
That was Biden.
That was Biden.
He wasn't looking good.
for your people here.
No.
But, you know, to the point of California, you know, you're making fun of us a lot.
And, you know, I'd take offense to that.
But the California, you can't, you can't.
The California consumer friendliness of the laws.
So the lemon law.
I was saying before, right, when I represented a company, let's say, Schmouty.
Let's, you know, it rhymes with shmouty.
Is the lemon law?
Is that a state law?
It's a state law.
Almost all, don't almost like, I don't, Florida has a lemon law.
They do.
But it is nowhere near California, right?
California is like, oh, you messed up.
You get triple damages, like, off the bat.
They have to pay the attorney's fees and costs, right?
You sell a lemon in Texas or Alabama.
It's like, no, good luck, partner.
Like, there's nothing you can do pretty much.
Like, even New York doesn't have good lemon law.
Right. California is not just lemon law.
The consumer protection, there's a Consumer Legal Remedies Act.
Like, there are so many different consumer laws that just overly protect the consumer.
That's why it's the best place to be an attorney.
because the laws there are just so favorable for the little guy.
So we're leveraging that.
We're leveraging that now to try and bring some justice
and get people out of these cars.
Right.
So partially the same thing that made it an ideal environment
to get this stuff pushed through
is also an ideal environment to get it corrected.
I interviewed the California Air Resources Board.
Yes.
Yes.
I interviewed the California Air Resources Board director, Mary Nichols.
She's twice been in that position.
It's a very high position.
It's the position that allowed the legislature to even be funding this.
And, like, it's just democratic, you know, I mean, I'm pretty, it's, labels are unhelpful.
And I hate the fact that it's, like, everything's so divisive and everything falls under two labels, whatever.
But, like, she just was not getting it.
She was just not understanding.
I was like, I represent hundreds of people that have been affected by your policies that are in this situation.
Yeah, well, do you know, Toyota was just trying to do a good thing.
I'm like, oh, well, it's not green.
She's just, like, dodging and weaving throughout this, like, you know, our Zoom that I had with her.
It's just sometimes when people get into these policy situations, they're just driven by idealistic things that never come to fruition that end up really hurting people along the way.
And we're seeing that now with this situation.
To be honest, when I first got the case, I didn't, I physically didn't want to sue Toyota.
I'm like, I drove a car.
It was the first, like, nice car that I bought.
And it was so good.
I never had to take it in for service.
It was like a beautiful car.
People love Toyota.
Yeah.
We just bought that.
Like I told you, my wife's truck is a Toyota.
She loves Toyota.
We bought Toyotas because we're like, I'm not spending the next every three years getting a new car.
Let's get something that we can drive till the fucking wheels far.
Like, you'd be driving that thing for 10 years.
Yeah.
You know?
And everybody I know that, oh, what's my buddy Steve?
Steve, Stefan.
Anyway, Steve, he's a, he's a pilot for, what's that horrible air line?
Frontier? No, no. Spirit. Spirit. But actually, they never, they never seem to be wrecking or crashing.
But anyway, he's a pilot for them. And he's ever since I've known him, he's been like, listen, you get a car, get a Toyota.
Like, he and his wife both drive Toyota. So he's like, you could drive him forever. They never break down. They go and go.
Taliban uses them. Those guys aren't fools. You know, they're, they're, they're, they're, they're, they're, they're,
They're great. That's why it keeps, that's why I keep thinking, like, and like you said,
how much money do they make? Or do they make every single year? Like, you're like a billion dollar
company. Like, what's the trillion dollar company? Why don't you just come in and fucking pick
these things up? Look, you chalk, chalk it up to, we made a bad decision. We fucked up.
You're certainly not the worst fucking decision you've ever made. You know, go in, say,
look, man, we're just going to take the cars back. Here's a little check. You know, there's all you guys.
bad. I'd have more respect for somebody who says, I fucked up. Everybody fucks up. You know,
I fucked up. Here's what we did. We made a mistake. Take these back. You guys stopped selling
these cars. It's not working. We invested in the wrong thing. And maybe in 15 years it'll be
something. Maybe it'll power satellites or rockets to Mars or something. You know, we'll track
a lot of different use cases. The expert that I hired from my case, he has shown, he's just expert. He's
slim guy, I was following him when I was
first getting into the case. He's just some guy that's running out of
his basement on hydrogen, hydrogen, hydrogen, constantly.
And I'm like, oh, I want to hire this guy. He knows. And he
had done some very high-level professional studies on this.
So I guess I just called him a nerd. I don't know.
But the nerds are running the world now, bro.
Right. Thank God. It's my time.
The buses, the buses that have
tried and failed, all of these city buses, right? They're doing
it again in Riverside. They're still spending money
on this nonsense, California. It's unbelievable.
believable. The bus failures, because
like you said, oh, maybe it'll power this power. They've tried all these things. It is
not commercially viable. This thing is too expensive to store
move to dangerous. It's too finicky.
Plus the energy to make it, right? You're saying the energy to make it. You're
spending a ton of money on the energy to make a product that's
doesn't work. Musk calls them full cells, hydrogen full cells.
Right. Yeah, full cell technology.
I mean, Trump just mentioned it in a speech. The hydrogen
car. So I'm like, oh, maybe there's some hope. And in Nebraska, while he was campaigning in
24, he mentioned it in a speech, hydrogen cars. I was like, okay, maybe there's something there,
but it's really hard to get to break through. I mean, he sucks up a lot of the news in general.
I mean, obviously, there's a lot going on in the world and whatnot. But really, Toyota's
ad dollars are just so tremendous. And they employ so many people. And it's just such a great
company. Like, obviously you know by now. I'm sure the McDonald's case with the woman burning
the coffee. I've mentioned it two or three times on this show.
you go same thing right like in the 90s the zeit guys people were like oh you're taking advantage
of McDonald's it's like it's so interesting how that is the way that we perceive so it's like a lot
of people are knocking me you know oh you're suing Toyota why you're doing that you know in the car
the car works like I had one arbitrator tell me that he's like um you know if if if you can't
get fuel why is that Toyota's problem and I'm like trying to explain that you were told me
there would be fuel stations you told me his counter to that was well if
you could just tell this guy has like 10 Toyotas this whole life he just loved them
I mean you're gonna get that right 110 arbitrators you're gonna get one or two bad eggs and he's
like what if they built a wall around your car would you be able to sue them for a bad car
because you can't get fuel you're a fucking idiot I can't talk to anymore like that you're saying
I can't say that to the armatured right but you see what I'm saying like I mean that's
you see what I'm saying like that like if that's your fucking rationale rationale that and that's
that's that's what you just came up with to to to validate your uh your stance then
you're not worth talking to like that's that's ridiculous like we got a big boy studio coming
that's exciting you better invite me back yeah yeah i was just thinking like if you but you know
jesus california that's that's a hell of a fucking flight but um yeah it's fun enough yeah
flor's not too bad well it's yeah it is the heat that's the only thing i don't like about flor
i hate going outside i hate walking in the car you could melt uh and i think it is it's like
living on the surface of sun it's like living on the surface of sun
I'll deal with it
It's not even
I'm not even a thought in my head
That I would think that would have you ever been to California
Multiple times
I go about every two months
And you don't absolutely love it
I love the weather
I love the weather
I really don't like the people
Well someone rubbed you the wrong way there
No yes
I think
The whole
I feel like
I don't understand
The homeless
that are everywhere.
Because it's better to live outdoors in California than in a palace in Florida.
Because they pay them.
And that's the kind of logic people use.
Because they pay it.
You can be a professional.
Because you can be a professional.
You make it lucrative to be a homeless person.
It's not lucrative.
Paid.
Like they get.
There's a lot of services.
A lot of services.
Right. So there's a lot of services.
Like, and then so, and News and how many times, you know, we're going to get rid of homelessness and then it triples in the next five years because he's coming up with all of these plans.
And there's so much fraud with that stuff.
Right.
Right. And then on top of that, then it's like, then the people running in and just stealing shit and leaving and, oh, because we're going to.
No, that's media hype. That doesn't really happen.
Well, so let me tell you what happened when I went, when I went to L.A. and stayed in L.
I walk out.
Where did you say?
Where did you say?
I just stayed a really nice place.
It was actually an older hotel that they just renovated.
It was right.
It was in downtown L.A.
I can't tell you that I don't know exactly where.
It was also five years ago.
It's not a true story.
That's five years ago.
This guy's recall when he's talking about his running game on people for mortgages,
he's like, and it was Wachovia Bank and the guy was a junior VP at the company.
And he's like, this thing I'm slender in California on, whatever, something.
It's not slender because it's true.
But I remember walking outside and we were, I was next to these condos, the condos are like
$1.5 million, right? And there's like one bedroom, one baths, one and a half million. And these
are nice new building that I was talking to the person in the, like the clerk in the hotel, right?
Because I walked out and there's a homeless guy who's living in the, in like the alleyway area.
And there's homeless people that have tents everywhere. Like there's tents. It's like,
five tens and I'm like these people are camping out here and they're and you can tell like you
could definitely tell this guy's taking it just taking a shit over here and what was so funny was
I come in when I went back I went down when I walked into like a I'm going to say I'm sure I got
this wrong by them I'm saying CVS I don't know if they have CVS I don't know because the other
day I said 711s and I said oh these guys are robin 711 there's no 711s in Atlanta that's a lie your
stories a lot. It's a fucking convenience store. I don't know if it's a 711. It's a convenience store.
Is it a CVS? I don't know. It's like a drugstore. So I went down there because I like forgot
hairspray or deodorant. Whatever I forgot once again, not positive what, but I had to go in.
When I walk in, they had a security guard who's like looking at me and he's like giving me like a
practically kind of following me and everything's locked up. This was maybe a few months.
months, maybe six months or so, they had made that law where it was like, if you steal
anything, under $800.
And so I go there and I pay for the thing, whatever, and I ask where is there a something?
I forget what I asked.
Is there such and such around here?
And because whatever it was, they didn't have what I wanted exactly.
So I bought what I could get.
And then she was like, well, she was like there was, but they closed.
And I was like, oh, okay.
and then whatever it was I asked I went back to the hotel to ask I said oh yeah yeah I just got
said did you get you what you want no they did this they said there they said there's another
place he said yeah there's a lot of places they're closed down here I said and I said why she said
well I mean they're just stealing them blind and I went what do you mean she's well it was like a mom
and pop and I went what and then so there's a guy there too he's like yeah there's like the mom
and pop stores can't make it he's like it's only the big chains that are still around Starbucks
he starts naming them off and I'm like what do you mean and he goes well they have
go in and they just steal everything and then you can't stop them you can't attack them you can't
I guess that way they have a security guard he's like yeah but he can't really do anything they have to
steal enough for him to try and stop him he's there he's like but he won't he won't grab you he won't
touch you and I'm like really he'll get arrested and I'm like so they just steal and he was like
yeah and I was like yeah and I was like what's what the I said so what is the homeless people I said
you know that guy took it like there's like this guy said it stinks out there like this guy
He just took a shit.
He goes, you want to hear what?
He said, the police, he can shit in front of a cop.
He said, but the guys in the multi-million dollar condos next door,
if he walks out with his dog and his dog shits,
he has $200 fine if he doesn't pick it up.
And I'm like, you're kidding me.
The laws are so ridiculously stupid.
Yeah, but that was under George Gascon who was the DA.
He lost recently.
There's a new guy, Nathan Hawkman, in there.
He's changing things up.
It's getting a little bit better.
I was actually friends with a homeless guy.
He edited about 10 episodes of my podcast.
Bumdog.
Bumdog Taurus.
Shout out to Bumdog.
Great guy.
I interviewed him on my podcast.
There's a whole psyche.
A lot of them are, it's really sad because they are on drugs,
so it's really terrible and they're dangerous.
But a lot of them aren't.
A lot of them just choose that life,
that vagabond lifestyle.
I agree.
I've surveyed many homeless people.
I don't even tell you anything about them.
One of the questions was,
do you believe that in the next year,
you will be gainfully employed, and not one of them said, yeah, I'm trying right now.
All of them were like, no, no, I'm not even, like, are you, are you even looking for it?
But no, this is it.
It's it for me.
So the idea that you're going to provide these people who don't even, aren't even trying.
And I get it, like a lot of them also have mental problems.
Like they're bipolar.
They can't seem to get along.
Like, I get it.
But to incentivize or cater to people that aren't trying to help themselves is a, you know,
It's, it is a waste of tax, of decent human beings who are working and struggling to take their tax dollars and put it in the hands of people that haven't earned it.
It doesn't make any sense.
And absolutely, it's absolutely unfair to people that are trying to raise families, people are trying to do decent things with their lives.
When these guys are robbing and doing drugs and polluting the streets and by giving the streets and by giving them.
then this safe haven, more and more people come there. And you know, where else I went?
San Francisco, 10 times worse than, uh, than L.A. And they were everywhere in L.A.
I went down to, uh, Skid Row because that's where the guy, soft white underbelly, he used to
film out of Skid Row. It was blocks after block. It's a city. It's a city. There's nowhere in
Florida that's like that. Nowhere. Drive downtown. Because you'll die outside. It's not because you'll
die outside. It's because the sheriff will make your life so overwhelmingly miserable you will
want to leave and go to California or New York where they'll be acceptant of you. Or you just make
things so difficult for people that they get jobs, clean their lives up, get off drugs, and do the
right thing. The one thing I learned in prison is that some people just need to be permanently
removed from society. It's horrible. It's wrong. It's sad. I
I feel bad.
I'm not sure exactly all the circumstances I think are different.
I think you have a federal sentencing guidelines.
I think they're strict.
You know what I'm saying?
But I think what I'm saying is giving that person a safe haven.
Like you could work a job.
By the way, you mentioned Aleph before.
I think I've told you I've done some pro bono work for them.
Okay.
They only help people that weren't Jewish.
They do not only help Jewish people.
There's a lot of good organizations that help.
my, I've never seen them help anyone that wasn't Jewish, but I also am not, you know,
pervy to all of their, their, uh, people that they have.
Oh my God.
I worked on this freaking clemency petition.
I submitted so many to Biden, never got a single one through.
Trump did like every single one that they asked for.
And a lot and mo, I mean, I think, I don't think I've worked on any of the projects to help
the, the way I got involved with them, all of us is because when the Afghan Taliban situation,
when they took over, the Taliban took over,
they were hunting down women, lawyer, and judges in the streets,
slaughtering them, hunting them down and killing them
because it's like Haram that you would imprison me,
you're a woman, you have no business doing that.
So, we're slaughtering them,
so Olive got involved with Kim Kardashian and J.K. Rowling,
and they jetted, they got private jets through Qatar,
and they managed to get people out.
So I was helping on, like, the legal end with the visas.
And that, you know, they're not helping Jewish people there.
So that was my introduction to the organization.
actually, and they've just helped a lot of other people.
I mean, the federal sentencing guidelines, that's what, that's what, John, my thinking on
this is just, they're way too strict and way too crazy.
It's very hard.
It's extremely hard.
The whole privatization of prison is insane.
The fact that you can, on the stock market, you can buy and sell stocks based on whether
or not there's going to be beds filled in the facility, like it's a nursing home, like it's
a hotel, like, oh, we had a great quarter this year.
Like, well, there's something, you know, the, the guys.
government shouldn't be in the position or in the business of pissing away taxpayer money,
but I also think that there are some things that the government should handle and shouldn't be
privatized. Prisons shouldn't be private. Police forces shouldn't be privatized. They need to be
monitored, but there's lots of things that the government, like you shouldn't privatize certain
things. And prisons are, I think, are one of those. I think it's a bad idea to try and do things
as inexpensively as possible, you know.
Another frontier that I'm capturing, and this is national, is solar panels.
So solar panels are completely rife with fraud.
You would love this.
It's total scams.
They lie to people about the loan terms.
So they say, yeah, you can easily transfer this loan.
I talked about this the other day, didn't I?
No kidding, really?
Yeah, yeah.
So I just filed a first class action.
I actually got picked up a little bit by the news.
But basically, they come in to these homeowners.
they say that, yeah, you can get these solar panels is the best thing. You're not going to need
electricity. And there's all these hidden jacked up fees. The biggest thing is that they essentially
require you. You get a tax credit from the government. You get like a check. They require you
to give it to them as part of this thing. But they're kind of hustling you that you don't realize
that that's what's happening. And not only that, you can't transfer the solar loan. So if you ever
want to sell the house, you can't really transfer this $80,000 loan that's tied to the panels on
your house on your on the new guy's house now you're still stuck with that payment well no the the loan
will if you want to transfer it they have to have new terms and so they'll be like 20% now for the next
guy and they get to they get to do that and they get to manipulate you but when you ask them because
people will ask them about that they'll say oh yeah no it's easily to transfer it's easy to transfer
so it's another class action that i'm working on that's that's even much more beginning stages
but if you have a solar panel issue i really want to hear about it because there's so many brokers
that are just sucking up the tax credits in nefarious ways
and really killing some people's vibe
because they can't sell their home
and they can't, you know,
imagine not being able to have a peace of mind
that if you want to move your family,
you literally can't do that.
And then that's when they start looking into the documents
and realizing, hey, that's a finance charge I didn't realize.
So solar panel is definitely a new frontier of litigation.
You're going to hear about that
because it was a huge boon during the Biden administration.
They gave a lot of extra money for that.
And again, Trump caboshed that.
So the person to clean up the bodies and get people out of these loans are the lawyers.
If these are extra fees, is it possible?
Like, what's the interest rate?
Is it possible that you can add the fees into the interest rate and claim usurage?
No.
But smart.
You should have been a lawyer.
Yeah, well, a lot of things should have gone different.
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No. But we're going to leave all of his links in the description box. You can go there. You can go to his website. You can go to his YouTube, Instagram. He's got all the socials. And like I said, you can fill out a forum if you need to. Please consider joining our Patreon. It's $10 a month. It really does help Colby and I make these videos. Thank you very much. See ya.