Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - The Truth About John McAfee_s Death | Matt Cox True Crime Podcast
Episode Date: January 4, 2024The Truth About John McAfee_s Death | Matt Cox True Crime Podcast ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This guy was saying, I have evidence of corruption in the government.
He's saying that the CIA is going to kill me.
He said, if my body is found, I did not commit suicide.
Hey, this is Matt Cox and Zach.
We're back.
And we're going to do.
We're going to talk about a, I want to say, a question.
A question.
We're going to talk about John McAfee and and the questionable, the questionable passing, his questionable suicide, you know, the whole, the whole situation of what's going on.
You question whether he struggled or, yes, the suicide.
Yeah.
How he, how he hung himself in a jail cell.
Did you see the jail cell?
Yes.
It's tiny.
listen, like I'm five, six, I couldn't hang myself in there.
I don't know how a guy who's like six foot fork hung himself.
I don't know where are you hanging yourself.
I mean, it takes a lot of effort.
You got to hold your knees, a lot of effort.
You would have had to have tied himself.
Like, I guess if you tied your hands behind your back, which I don't know how you'd do,
and tied them to your feet and tied a rope or like you'd have to really and then dropped
yourself, I don't know how you do it.
Yes, but I'm not saying it's impossible because there are people who lean forward
and hang themselves.
I don't get that.
At some point,
you know, at some point
you're going to relieve,
you're going to relieve the pressure
off of your neck.
I'd be doing it and I'd be thinking.
It's human instincts.
Right.
Well, when I started to,
you know,
if I was trying to hang myself
and I did it that way,
as soon as I started,
you know, started to really tighten,
I'd be thinking,
I can't breathe.
Like if I first thought,
I'd be like, I got to,
who,
okay, now.
And then I'd try it.
You know,
but I like,
to me,
yeah,
My, my fight or flight, my survival instinct is just, absolutely.
I just couldn't do it.
Plus, the guy was a narcissist.
Like, I'm never killing myself.
It doesn't matter how bad it gets.
Narcissists don't kill themselves.
Only, only with bad jokes.
Like, I'm killing myself here.
So bad.
I know.
All right.
So, wait, let's go back.
Let's go back and just say.
So, because some people don't even know who McAfee was, right?
Well, I mean, I'm sure they've seen the name.
It appears every time they turn on and off their computer.
Every restart brings you McAfee in your life.
It's just, like, it's just now YouTube is just now getting populated with videos on him.
And it'll be crazy for the next six months because it's so odd.
You know, he's going to be the next Epstein.
Only the difference is Epstein didn't say any of the insane stuff
that this guy said. Like this guy was saying
I have evidence of corruption in the government.
He's saying that the CIA is going to kill me.
He said, if my body is found, I did not commit suicide.
He even coined the phrase, which I think he coined it, Epstein.
If they, Epstein, if I'm found, if Epstein, it was not suicide.
Well, okay, so I think the term Epstein doesn't really refer to suicide.
It's probably, it's something I've seen on it.
I mean, but it's if the government kills you and makes it look like suicide.
Right.
Is that Epstein?
Yeah.
Right.
Well, that's the new term, but I thought Epstein would mean something different.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
But let me say, like, he did not have near as much.
My mind is immediately seeing like a 17-year-old, a 16-year-old girl saying to a teacher, my stepfather
Epstein.
Yeah.
And like, I'm being signed out by a guard.
That's the term Epstein to me.
Like, my guardian is signing me out of school.
Like, Epstein should not be connected.
The term Epstein should not be connected.
With this?
With McAfee.
Okay.
That should be something, definitely should be something sexual with a superstar.
But so what did, so John McAfee, why is he famous?
Like that's like, why is he a big deal?
What did he?
This is a quiz?
Yeah.
I can tell you you want me because because I don't want to talk the whole
Last time I talked 90% of time.
Right.
And people were like, bro, let your guests talk.
Well, so I'm saying to you, why is he?
You got to explain, you got to listen, I'm commentary, right?
This, I'm to give opinion.
He used to give facts.
You know, you got to break down on his work sometimes.
So, so John, I'll tell you, John McAfee is the first person back in the late 80s who actually.
Late 80s?
Was it early 80s?
I think it's.
I think it's early 90s
Well, he sold his company in 94
So I thought that's when they made it big
But well I'm no
So you're saying you didn't know what I'm saying
I'm gonna say in the 80s
He came up with the first
commercially available
Antivirus software for computers
Which is still used massively in computers to this day
Yes
So he came up with the software
He was a brilliant software
designer. Is it designer? Software
Engineer? Engineer, design. Whatever. He wrote some stuff.
Those are two different positions. You know that, right? I don't know. So he wrote some stuff. He wrote
some software that, and he started a company, you know, McAfee software design or
anti-sauphi, anti-viral software. So it came out. It was, it was widely used in, so for years
he ran this company. Apparently the company was insane. Like from what I heard they're having like
I'm looking at him.
I got to tell me not to look at Colby.
Don't look at that guy.
Apparently, from what I understand, they're having sex parties.
They're having, like, it was just, it was insane.
And he was insane anyway, as you'll see as he went on in life.
Well, I mean, when you got a 20-some-odd-year-old running a multi, a company about to be worth billions.
Right.
You know, they're not mentally equipped to run that corporation.
Right.
mentally equipped for the amount of money and sales that are coming in.
You're hiring people.
Back in the 80s and 90.
Yeah, double your elder.
So, yeah, this is back when you could still be, you could, you could, you could still harass
women and, you know, and, you know, horrible things.
And that's where I thought the term Epstein came.
But go ahead.
I'm sorry, but go ahead.
So what happened is, is in 94, he retired from the company.
Right.
Like, he sold it.
And I think they said he was, this is back before there were all these billionaires.
He was like worth $100 million.
and they were like, oh my God, like he's one of the richest men in the world.
He's amazing.
Out of nowhere.
Right.
So he then up and moves to Belize?
Well, what about the situation he had with his, oh, no.
No, it was in Belize.
He moves to Belize.
Complaining about the American tax code.
Of course.
Yeah, he's saying I'm getting crushed.
He's sick of it.
He moves to Belize.
He buys a house.
He actually, did you know, he built a police station in the village?
No.
He's, yeah, built a police station.
He starts getting super paranoid.
He starts saying that the police government's after him now,
that he hires his own, the police.
He hires his own little security force.
So he's got his own little security force, private security.
And he's, he builds a police station in the middle of this little village
because he says it's overrun with drug smugglers,
even though there's tons of people there that say,
I don't know what he's talking about.
But anyway.
Obviously, it's overrun with drug smugglers, but I mean, it's beliefs.
So he comes in.
and he just starts behaving crazy.
He gets really into guns.
He's having sex with these 15, 16, 17-year-old prostitutes.
Actually built a bunch of little bungalows
and would have this prostitute lives here.
Or this, now they're just girlfriends.
This girlfriend lives here.
This one lives here.
He's having sex with them all the time.
He builds a lab where he's manufacturing drugs.
Although when the Belize government eventually did raid him,
they found very little.
drugs. He ends up getting connected with this woman who's trying to do this anti-aging drug
treatment and she's doing stuff and they have a falling out. She leaves. She's like, look, he's got
guns. He had tons of dogs. And that was a major issue. So eventually, I'm trying to get through
this so we can get to the other part. So I'm skipping over stuff. But there's a great article in Wired
magazine, by the way. And there's stuff on the internet too or on YouTube. But the fact is,
is that he starts having a long-standing dispute with one of his neighbors, who is also an American.
And the problem is that the other American, that's a couple houses down from him, is like,
look, your dogs are running wild.
You have to keep them locked up.
And McAfee's kind of a jerk, and he's like, and he's not going to do that.
So the dogs, the neighbors, like, are they harassing me, my family, everything?
Well, suddenly one day, his dogs are all poisoned and a bunch of his dogs die.
You know that?
Yeah, this is a dispute.
So two days later, his, and he's saying, I don't know whether it's proven or not, but the next door neighbor killed my dogs.
And so two days later, the next door neighbor is found dead.
Someone shot him, killed him.
I'm pretty sure, let me know if I'm wrong, I'm pretty sure he was shot and killed.
And the Belize government immediately says that they focus in on McAfee because he's threatened to kill him in arguing and shouting matches.
He's threatened to have to kill him.
So the guy ends up dead and McAfee flees.
Like literally they raid, huh?
He flees, Belize.
So they raid his house, by the way.
He hides like under a box, which is under sand.
He actually has like a little hide away for like five or six hours.
And then he sneaks out and then he sneaks across the border into some other country.
I don't know whether it was Honduras or what it was.
Sneaks over there eventually moves, eventually goes to Canada.
he's never indicted or anything, I think, for the murder.
It's just always, like, it's never proven.
Right.
Then he gets into Bitcoin.
And by the way, this entire time, he's getting crazier and crazier.
More and more paranoid.
And he's still making a fortune.
Oh, of course.
Now he's into Bitcoin.
He's one of the original guys that went into Bitcoin.
And he makes these insane statements about Bitcoin, by the way.
Like he says that Bitcoin, someday it's going to be worth $500 per Bitcoin.
and people are like, that's insane, but now it's not insane.
So they indict him for one running what they considered,
with the U.S. government considered a pump and dump scheme.
They indict him for not filing taxes on,
now he filed taxes, by the way.
This is what's funny.
He filed taxes, but he didn't file taxes on his Bitcoin profit,
which may or may not even be like,
it's questionable whether you have.
to, if you're not living in the United States and I'm trading Bitcoin, whether I have to
claim taxes on my Bitcoin profits in the United States, that's questionable.
So, you know, I'm a U.S. citizen, but guess what?
My residency isn't in the United States.
So I don't have to pay those taxes, but the code is arguable.
Maybe, not the government doesn't think so.
So the second thing that happened is this, real quick.
He also had a bunch of speaking engagements, not in the United States, that he also made money and didn't claim taxes on the
speaking engagement, but he's indicted.
Right.
Eventually he is caught.
He still never goes to the United States.
He's staying in international waters.
He's got a yacht.
He eventually gets caught in the airport in Spain,
and the Spanish government holds him
in a prison holdover,
like a U.S. Marshal's holdover,
and he fights extradition.
While he's fighting extradition,
we can go from there.
Is that good?
I'm sorry.
I just wanted to wrap that up
and succinctly, so you know who we is.
right so the the arrest and the fighting of extradition was this year yeah all right just no no no no
no he was arrested in october of 2020 right but he's been held the whole time it takes a long time
fighting extradition you know court takes a while yes even in spain yes all right so then what
happens is he starts sending out tweets and and multiple he's doing he i don't think he does
he does do an interview doesn't he yes but by the way can i'd like to mention that's how
laxed the Spanish
the Spanish prison system is?
I watched a video. I've watched videos
many of them, but one of them is like the toughest prisons
in the world. Like, you know, there's like the top
like 30 of them. None of them are in Spain.
Like Spain is not a tough prison system.
No. Their penitentiary system
is like a low security prison in the United States.
So he's in a place where he can literally tweet
an email. He has a cell phone.
He can pick up the phone anytime.
His room looks like your bedroom.
It's not like he's in a dungeon dungeon.
It's not that horrible place.
I mean, I'm not saying it's like being in your apartment,
but I'm saying it's not like this horrible situation
where it's layer upon layer of security and lockdowns.
And so he starts tweeting while he gets arrested,
he's now super paranoid,
depending on what your belief is.
And he starts tweeting on a regular.
basis. So, do you know what some of the tweets were? Well, I mean, yeah, he's talking about
when he's tweeting out that he's being framed and that this is not just a tax ploy. He doesn't
want to go to the United States. He hasn't committed any crime. And what he's done is not
unconstitution, not in the Constitution. And he's crying that he has information on the CIA
and how they frame and set him up. And that if he is found dead, he would have been murdered. Is that
where you got the term Epstein and.
Yeah.
Oh, here it is.
It's a, no, that if I, if I hang myself,
uh, I,
it says L. Epstein.
Like, I don't know.
If I hang myself L. Epstein.
No, la, Allah, Allah.
Oh, okay, I'm sorry, bro.
I'm sorry.
Well, I'm not that sharp, bro.
I mean, come on.
I mean, what is?
A la mode.
You think is L.A mode?
I was, listen, I was, I was educated.
in the South. All right, no problem. So if I hang myself a la Epstein, it will be no fault of mine.
And he says, oh, the food is good, all is well. I am content here. I have friends. This is not a
suicidal guy. Correct. Well, he's letting you know up front that he thinks he might be murdered.
Yeah, he, oh, he's, he's already concerned. He's got a very, super concerned about it. Yes. And
Lo and behold, what happens?
Well, by the way, he also tweeted this.
I've collected files on corruption in governments.
For the first time, I'm naming names and specifics.
I'll begin with a corrupt CIA agent and two Bahama officials coming today.
If I'm arrested or disappear, 31.
31 plus terabytes of incriminating data will be released to the press.
Yes, yes.
So he's making these.
You know what?
And I said Epstein, like there never was Epstein.
We forget about that.
He did.
He said, a la Epstein.
I thought he said Epstein.
I don't know why I heard that somewhere.
Me and somebody else were joking me.
I thought that was something that he had phrased he coined.
So let me correct that.
Oh, he said he's getting subtle messages from the U.S.
U.S. officials saying, in effect, we're coming for you, McAfee. We're going to kill. Oh, wait. We're going to
kill yourself. I got a cat. That's what it says. We're going to kill yourself. It doesn't make
sense. But that's fine. That might not be his words, but go ahead. I got a tattoo today just in case
if I suicide myself, I didn't. I was whacked. Check my right arm. And he actually got a tattoo.
that says
whacked
on his arm.
I mean, you know, it's not
a joke that he's dead, but this guy's
something else. This guy's great.
Right, but that doesn't sound like someone speaking English
giving that.
Well, I mean, he's, if you ever heard him talking
and just on the interviews, he's,
he, this is a guy, no filter,
he just, blah, la, la, yeah,
some of his sentences are just
running on.
And, yeah, well, I mean,
he doesn't speak extremely succinctly.
No.
All right, so he turns up hung.
Well, here's what happened.
Well, first of all, so he turns up hung, but literally, like, the day the court says,
we are going to allow you to be extradited.
And by the way, in front of the court, when he got in front of the, they had like a little trial,
he explains to the judges that this is politically motivated, that the government in the United States
wants to get me back to the United States.
They want to throw me in jail forever.
Like, this is all political.
I didn't
you know like all
these are all trumped up charges
to try and get me back to the United States
you know so he says all these things
he's in fear of his life the whole thing
he's talking about the CIA killing him
he says all this in court
then
so the day they make their decision
they say we are going to allow you to be
extradited back to the United States
and potentially face a 30 year
prison sentence for tax evasion
for tax evasion which is ridiculous
like a judge over there is probably like what
That's funny.
Nobody gets that.
Well, you know, what's so funny is like, like, depending on how much he owes, he could have probably gotten 10 to 20 years.
But let's face it, he's 75.
That's a death sentence.
You're dead.
The average person in the United States, 75 years lives to 75, average man.
Right.
But, but look, look, think about this also.
To another country facing 30 years for not paying taxes.
Unheard of it.
Judge me like, what?
That's got to be a lie.
Where would you be facing 30 years for not paying?
In Norway.
Why not just make you pay?
I don't understand what to...
In Norway, you basically murder carries like four or five years that, you know,
they gave the stiffest murder sentence, uh, sentence they ever gave out.
Do you remember the guy that took automatic weapons in Norway and went and killed something
like 80 some odd children and camp, um, staff members in Norway?
Wow.
At a, at a, um, at a summer camp, he killed 80 of them.
He got the maximum sentence.
The Norwegians could give him 22 years.
Government gave me for 26 years for filling out some paperwork.
So in the United States.
And making a lot of money.
I mean, there's that end of it.
And, you know, if you look at the, go on YouTube and check out what Norwegians prisons are like, they live better than me.
Yes.
Now.
Now.
Now.
Now.
Yes.
So anyway, so Epstein.
They do get the upgraded iPhone.
But go ahead.
I'm sorry.
Two hours.
So I can't look at you, but I need to look at you.
but I need to look at you to know that I'm not the only of this.
But that's, that's, that's, that's you saying the joke was not funny.
And I can't believe he made it.
That's what you're saying.
You're like, hey, hey, people don't know.
Stop him.
That's what you're saying.
It's so corny.
Okay.
And what bothers me the worst is that now that 80% of the comments on our videos are about
how amazingly wonderful you are.
And what about me?
Thank you.
Nobody says I'm great anymore.
Like 20% are like, oh yeah.
And Matt was there too.
Right, that's right. So anyway, so two hours after the court says, yeah, you can go back to
face, go back to the United States, to McAfee, he's found dead. He's found dead. Right. In a cell
that has a bunk bed, has nothing to hang yourself on. There's nothing on the ceiling to hang
yourself. There's just, the tallest thing in the room is the door frame, which, and is bunk bed.
So I don't know. And then before there's no, there's no autopsy anything. Immediately they come out
And they say, and this is the Spanish government comes out immediately and says, suicide.
How do you know it's suicide?
Like even, look, when people go crazy on Epstein, I'm like, it wasn't murder.
He's committed suicide.
There's no way to get in those facilities.
But in this case, I know you disagree, but in this case, I have to admit, it's suspect.
Do you think he committed suicide?
Who, Epstein?
Or McAfee.
Either.
Well, Epstein and I think he committed suicide.
You've been in U.S. Marshall holdovers.
There's no way to get into those facilities.
That means that...
You mean another inmate.
How about the guards?
Well, that's what I'm saying.
Like, even the guards, they have to go through layer after...
How are those cameras...
Listen, we're not...
We can't do it.
We're talking about McAfee.
That's a whole other...
McAfee.
So, you think, you think,
I think it's suspect
that he was found dead
And that he
So you think he killed himself
I think it's questionable
Like so like
You say that as if death will find a way
Like he's looking around like
Okay I don't exactly
Know how I'm going to take my life
So I'll come up with this makeshift
I'll come up with this makeshift
And kill myself
Death is not going to find a way
For you to take your own life
It will if someone else is taking
in your life. So for him to be that determined and that good at suicide, I mean,
well, let's, let's, let's, let's, let's, basically what you're saying, basically what you're
trying to say in a really bad way is, it's hard to kill yourself. Yes. It's not easy to kill
you. Right. Like, because you go, okay, I'll, because I'm sure the first attire, oh, my knee,
I'll try it tomorrow. Right. Given the right circumstances, like if you have the right tools,
it's easy. A gun. Yeah, if you have a gun, you know, it's pretty easy to kill yourself.
Well, even then, how many people shoot themselves and don't. I don't, give in the right?
don't die. I've known people that have shot, they've shot themselves and the bullet just went through
their eye sockets and they lived. I know a guy that shot himself. And they don't go for a second
attempt. No, I actually do. Like after you're told you're like, I didn't know the guy, but give me the
gun again, please. This guy's father. Uh-huh. Shot himself once. Boom. The bullet went through his eyes,
his eye sockets. Now he's blind. He woke up. He knocked him out, obviously. A couple of minutes
later, he woke up, searched around, had to find the gun, and shot himself again. That's
commitment. That is commitment. That is commitment. That is commitment. That is commitment. That dude wants
to die. Yeah. Like at that point, how much pain was he in? First of you didn't want to die
anyway. Now you're blind. So I was already depressed. And now I'm blind. Yeah. I went out of
there. I went out of there. Okay. So, but this is a guy who really didn't have the tools to commit
suicide other than to be able to hang himself. A blanket. You got. Which is rough. That's a rough way to go.
That takes innovation. I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
Sorry, but who has the innovation to turn a blanket into a tool for suicide?
If you have scissors, I mean, it's, and first of all, it's either way, look, look, either way.
Come on, come on.
The nice thing about hanging.
Like, how good are you at slip knots?
So they found you hung.
Can you tie a slip knot enough to kill you.
Look, the great, the reason hanging is such is a decent way to kill people is that if you know
how to do it, you measure and you can drop the body, the nepsis.
necks snaps and it's over.
The problem is he doesn't have that luxury.
He has to affixiate.
Affixiate.
Affixiate.
Right.
So he has to choke himself to death.
So is it hanging?
I mean, yeah, if he was hung, but I don't know that he was hung,
he basically has to figure out a way to tighten so tightly and your instinct.
Right.
I agree.
But put that aside.
Why?
Because look, we know some, even if someone held it and killed him, put that aside.
Here's my problem.
My problem is if someone killed you in the United States, other than a camp, it's difficult to get through all of the layers of security.
Stop, stop, stop.
I'm talking about in the United States.
I'm saying in, in, in Spain, though, this guy is not being held in a massive facility.
Spanish prisons are not at this level, are not overly secure.
So I can see that it's possible that someone could maybe get to him.
But still, you have to imagine there has to be video.
Like, you know, these are things that will come out.
Get out.
Have to be.
Supposed to be.
Right.
And those things malfunction.
It's amazing.
Like with that scene.
Like with that scene.
Yeah.
They not function like that.
Yes.
That's legit.
Somehow you're on my body cam turned off.
right before he was shot 18 times.
And then a couple of minutes later,
I turned it back on.
I realized it was off during the incident.
Oh!
I'm back.
Hello?
Yes.
All right.
So first of all, so you think how, if that were to have happened,
if they killed him, first of all,
where's this terabyte of all these, all this data?
We don't know.
We don't know what he had, if he had anything.
Probably buried with him, probably up his butt as he was buried.
What do we put the terabytes?
Up his terror.
It's just so bad.
I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
Listen, when you do the, when you do the words, what do they call?
The keywords, you put it in corny.
Just in case people search corny, our video will come up and they'll be like corny.
And then just put like corny.
So, all right.
Thank you.
Anyway.
And?
Go ahead.
No, no.
So first of all, all this data that's supposed to be released if he found dead,
which he said it will be released if I'm found dead.
Where's that?
That's a debt.
Those are what you call bluffs.
Okay.
Bluffs are not just apartment complex as you were searching.
Bluffs are also.
Bluffs are also things that you say to try to scare governments.
Like, hey, if something happens to me, there'll be evidence released that there'll be evidence release
that will frame Donald Trump.
Right.
Something happens to me
and you're like,
hey, what happened to that evidence?
Like, yeah, whatever.
Yeah, I didn't really have any of it.
That's what I tell.
That's what I tell my assailants.
I don't really have any.
He kills himself.
I know.
I'm so funny.
I don't know what.
All right.
So,
oh, man.
So one,
so you think it's possible he was killed.
So how does that happen?
um a bill turn the camera off um me and john are going in here right quick we're coming back out
we're catching the flight about 20 minutes from now and what you'll get your money in the morning okay
cool all right click so you think that so you think this is what you are we saying it's an assassination
so the CIA goes to goes to the guards that are going to be on duty they go to the guards at home
so they connect to them at home they say look you're going to get this much money I can't tell you who I am
It's a whole black bag operation, but we know that they're going to, they're going to allow him to be to.
Well, first of all, if he was going to the United States, they could have done it in the United States.
But killing someone in another country makes the investigation that much more difficult.
No, if he gets to the United States, you'll probably get to talk to a lawyer.
You'll probably be able to tell him something.
And there's a lot more security as you go, but it's easier to kill him in Spain.
We kill him where it's the most convenient.
Right.
Okay.
And here's the press release.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And that's the code.
So this is the other thing that bothers me.
Well, so first of all, so CIA goes to the guards.
They say, we're going to give you money.
You're going to, at this time, you're going to shut off the cameras.
We're going to come in.
We're going to have a talk, a little chit-chat with this guy.
You don't just shut the camera.
You hit the breaker.
Yeah, whatever.
So the camera's malfunction.
We go in.
We have a discussion with the guy.
He stops breathing.
We come out.
You turn everything back on.
You guys find him a couple hours.
later you try and revive him that's it you'll get the x amount of dollars whatever okay so i get that
maybe that's possible maybe it's not i disagree but whatever we'll see we don't know but here's what here's
what really this is the part that i literally when i went on youtube and was doing little research on
on youtube just to see kind of i was looking for a documentary and one of the first things that came up
after i'd read the article and i was already thinking this is odd like this is weird but the first
feed that came up was
CNBC News
came up and this
is after I'd read all of these
all of the tweets about him saying
they're going to kill me
if I'm found dead I was it wasn't
suicide I'm not suicidal
like he said all of these things
the first thing that comes up is CNBC
news and the guy says
starts talking about Epstein and how he
came up with this antiviral software
and had a crazy life and had been
indicted and was looking at 30 years in prison
and they say
the newscaster says
you know
here's the thing
he was about to be
he was fighting extradition
he was looking at 30 years in prison
and then they read it he reads a quote
he says a week prior
to
prior to his death he wrote this or days
days prior to his death he wrote this
I have no Bitcoin left
all of the money
is gone. I have nothing. I love my family, or I love my family dearly, something along those
lines. And he says, the court then said he could be extradited. And hours later, he was found
dead in his cell via suicide. And I thought, and then they were like, you know, you know,
God rest him or whatever. And then that was it. And I thought, well, that's like, is that the
press release? Like, like, you might as well work for the fucking government, bro. Like, like, you don't,
like, that's what you're going to say. You're not going to say anything.
about all the tweets about suicide about don't believe it i'm not suicidal i'm happy i have good
food i have friends here coming directly from his mouth right those quotes that he
personally spoke in interviews right and you ignore those you read the one thing that makes it
sound like he's potentially suicidal the one thing you read that to support the idea that he
committed suicide and that was when i read that when i when i saw that i thought that's the first
time, like typically I'm very skeptical of people that say anything about conspiracies or anything,
but when I heard that, I was sitting there looking at it on my phone and I thought, wow,
like that was straight out of the U.S. Attorney's Press Release Corps. I mean, that that was,
that was a press, like, and I just, you know, and I hate these guys that are always saying
how the media is 100% on the government side and it's bias and this and this. And I'm like,
Well, that's not true.
They're just going off of facts and they're going up.
And but that in this instance, I thought, wow.
You have to be leery of what I call the succinct press release of what happens.
When it comes to things like that, the succinct, the very directly to the point,
the believable statements that are easy to follow and like, ah, that's very possible.
Like all indications say that he committed suicide.
like what you're thinking there is like well people looked around and said well I mean this and that
I mean that's suicide we looked at it's the same it's the same with the George Floyd
the the press release that Chauvin and the other police officers put out and I have it right here
right it's and when they were arresting George Floyd right but this this is proof this shows
you how much it can change how much of a lie I mean everyone knows what happened to George Floyd
and the press put out this is the first press release that came out right he was
ordered the step from his car, George
Floyd. After he got out, he
physically resisted the officers. The
officer was able to get the suspect
in the handcuff, and noted he
appeared to be suffering medical distress.
Officers called for an ambulance.
He was transported to Hennepin
County Medical Center by ambulance
where he died a short time later.
Body cams.
Yeah, well, they did
note that the body cams were turned on. And the body cams
were on at all times. And no weapons were used.
So if you read
that, you immediately think, well, the body cams are on,
though it was on video.
No weapons were used.
So he probably wasn't murder.
He resisted and he had a medical issue.
Yes.
He died.
I mean, yeah, that means that happened.
Like if you read that, that sums it all up.
Let's move on.
Exactly.
That's exactly what that's saying.
Move along.
We've covered all angles.
And what was it?
His family basically through such a, such a...
Well, the girl, when she saw this in the newspaper,
she's like, no.
That's not what happened.
What girl?
The girl that videotaped George, I forgot her name.
Right, right, right, right.
When she saw this.
He was up against the wall kind of in the court.
Yeah, yeah.
No, she was standing there like with the other people on the street.
There were other people standing there like yelling at the cop, right?
But when she saw the press release, she's like, no, no, no.
Here's what happened.
And when she released that, like that went out to all the news stations.
I think she released it via Facebook.
I think she got a pulsar.
A Pulitzer, Pulitzer.
Pulitzer.
Right, for that.
When they released that and they saw it, they're kind of like, whoa, do you know the police came back and said, well, here's a little bit more about kind of what happened.
That's not what happened.
Here's a little bit more about what happened.
Then they're like, hold up a second.
When we look at this video, this is not even close to any statement that we put out.
And then they decided, we're going to have to invite some of our guys.
Some of our guys are going to have to go down.
We usually can slip by with this, but Timmy, Jim, Bob, I'm sorry, you know.
I mean, you should have kind of stepped in.
But Frank, you've killed multiple people.
I know, but I wasn't on video, you idiot.
Look around.
I mean, geez.
I mean, the guy took nine minutes to pass.
I mean, at some point, you're like, well, maybe not this one.
But, okay, so the deal with McAfee is it's all indications that he committed suicide.
So it's definitely suspect.
Yeah, all, maybe most indications, not all.
It's questionable.
Yeah, I mean, what about the video before?
I'd love to see the video.
I'd love to see the video.
There has to be video.
Like, like, there's no way that there's a prison system out there that doesn't have
video.
Like, they have to have video.
Well, if they come forward and they have video, we, the camera malfunctioned.
Right.
Well, so, but that's my, that's my point.
All indications.
Or also, here's the thing, how hard is it to fake video?
Like, if you've got control of the prison staff, how hard is it to, how hard is it to
actually fake video.
I mean,
it'll be pretty hard
to fake him hanging himself.
At some point,
you'll know it's animated.
Like,
well, I mean,
he looks a little cartoonish.
They don't have videos.
That looks like Scooby hanging himself.
They don't have videos out of the cell.
But,
oh my God.
Listen,
they had video.
Did you have coffee?
Yes,
there's no coffee.
They had video in Epstein cell.
In his cell?
Not in his cell,
on his cell.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
And it malfunctioned.
Okay.
I understand.
We're talking about this.
I'm saying, like, if you had complete control of everything, to me, you would have someone come in and show, you wouldn't let it be malfunctioned.
What you do is you'd keep it on and you'd clip it and expand it so that you could slip in there, kill him and leave, and then have it there.
So it's like, look, nobody ever went in.
And you could look at the video and the time lap.
Yeah, but you got him alive and you got him dead.
I understand that.
So then it would be proof that he was in there alone and he killed himself.
Okay, explain it.
You're making an argument.
I'm with you.
I'm telling you.
But I don't understand what you're saying.
So you're saying you spliced the video.
So you show him standing there.
Not him.
If you're just videoing the door.
And what you're saying is right now what happens is the video shuts off.
It's not working.
So anybody could have gone in the door, killed him and left.
Well, what if the video shows he's in a bar in a cell with bars?
So what if the video shows him in the cell?
Well, I understand.
but in both these cases, they weren't.
They were the regular door with the window.
So you're not really seeing him move around in there.
You don't see in the cell.
You can see a little sliver.
If that's the case, you're right, there'll be no need.
But what's happening right now is the video that was on the door doesn't even work.
So someone could come in, kill him, and leave.
And they say, well, did we see anybody go in the cell and leave?
Well, no, but the video doesn't work.
But here's what I'm saying.
In Epstein's case, when you're on.
suicide watch, you're under video the whole time.
Well, he wasn't.
He was taken off suicide watch.
Correct.
Right.
And which took him off, but he was still, still solitary.
They can see you at all times, which is why the video malfunction.
A video malfunction means they can watch you.
And so if someone kills you, they should be able to see who killed you.
Right.
Right.
So if it's just the door, there'll be no video malfunction.
There will be splicing.
A video malfunction means, like when the police officers say, hey, my body cam went off.
Right.
That means I probably should have had video evidence showing you what happened, but I don't have it.
And in Epstein's case, the camera wasn't working.
Correct.
Because they could see him the whole time.
So you wouldn't be able to splice.
It wasn't just the door.
That's what I'm saying.
You're not just looking at the door.
You're looking at Epstein in the cell walking around, pissing, sitting down.
But that's if he was on suicide.
No, they also do that for solitary.
Oh, I didn't know.
I mean, I've been in SEG.
There was no video on me.
No, not, that's in SEG.
But you're not by yourself.
Yeah, I was in a cell by myself when I was in the shoe.
I only had a, I was there like, one time I was there like 45 days.
I only had a roommate maybe five days.
All right.
Well, it wouldn't be high profile.
Right.
But they did have a video going down the hallway.
so you could see when people come in and out of the cell.
And they spliced that.
That never malfunctioned.
Oh, okay.
But the video that was on his cell, in his cell, showing him the same was
the one that malfunctioned.
Same thing for McAfee.
The video would only malfunction if it distinctly showed him being killed or him hanging
himself.
Well, we don't know.
Anyway, this is all supposition because the fact is we don't know whether there was
even a camera or whether it was on or what the case may be.
but it will be interesting to see over time
if suddenly these videos do actually come out
and they show this was malfunctioned
or they say look he walked in the cell
nobody ever went in and out of the cell
and then four hours later a guard came by
to count everybody and they saw him in there dead
well then it's like okay well he was in there dead
now to me if it was someone who came in and killed him
and then left then you would splice the film
the film.
You spliced the door
to eliminate
showing that person
coming in and out.
But there,
first of all,
that video is not going to show up.
You think there is no video?
You think they have no video?
No, no.
The professionals that do this,
that video is not going to show up.
No, obviously,
you're not going to get,
allow yourself to be on camera.
Yeah, that's not going to happen.
That video is not,
that's a,
those type of things are professional jobs
because you've got
corrections and law enforcement.
involved. Those are professional hits. That video is never going to show up. And if it can be
spliced, there's never going to be a discussion about the video if it can be spliced.
Right. And if it can't be spliced, then it's like, okay, we had a malfunction. It didn't
work. So that's my whole point of saying that. So they, that's when you know there's a
problem. When the video works fine, except for the period of time that he dies. Did you,
did you ever see off subject? I hear you. I understand you. I get it. Everybody's following. I get it.
But did you ever see the movie Shooter?
Yes.
They actually come in, they grab the guy.
They actually have a device.
They put on the guy's thing with the crank the thing and the guns in the hand.
They just start twisting the thing.
It's like, he's like, oh my God.
Like, there's nothing he can do.
He's about to shoot himself.
You know what that guy says, don't you?
What?
He's like, hey, hey, this is going to happen.
Yeah.
He goes, this is not my first time using this device.
Yeah.
Like he says it very distinctly.
Like I've been through this many, many times.
This is going to happen.
It's going to happen.
It's like, hey, this is going to happen.
That little device is like, you know, as soon as boom, as soon as he fires it and they take it off, everything says he killed himself.
All indications is that he committed to suicide.
We know better.
It's like the, but all indications.
Look how perfect that all indications is that he tied that perfect knot, angled himself just right so that he could be affixated.
You know what the best thing would be is like somebody ordered.
Like you, what you really do is you have McAfee order a book on how to tie knots, like slip knots.
So he gets it, he gets it and looks at it and goes, why would someone send me this?
This is weird.
No, no, you ordered it.
And guess what?
A week from now, it'll be perfectly obvious why you ordered it.
As soon as our boys get here, the black bag guys come in and they, that's a great nod.
Yeah, thank you.
All right.
So, and obviously, we don't know.
what happened. Let's wrap this up. Because if we did, if we did, there'll be some
malfunctioning of video later. If we did, this video will malfunction. If we did, this video will
malfunction. If we knew anything, YouTube would immediately take this video down.
At one phone call from the federal government, they'd be, yeah, listen, you got this video.
I don't know what's going on. Take it down. That's right. Of course. We're all, you know,
we're, you know, we're, well, we're going to call that guy tomorrow. Can it be the day after
tomorrow? Give us a little time. But anyway. All right.
So, if you like the video,
hit the like button.
Yeah.
Subscribe.
Bam.
Share the video.
Boom.
Leave a comment for the algorithm.
Let us know if you have any questions for Zach or I,
and we're going to do a compilation video.
Compilation means a bunch of videos.
Forget it.
Forget I didn't even say that.
Okay, we're going to do a video where we answer all of those comments.
or all the questions in the comments,
we'll do a video where we read through the best comments
and we answer those comments
on a future video podcast interview style thing.
So that's it.
Do me a favor.
And if you like the video,
send it to 10 of your friends and family.
And let's try and get some views up and subscribers up.
And, you know,
so I can, you know, make a little bit of money.
He needs that.
He needs that.
He needs that.
I'm a fat boy.
Stop complaining about the ads, okay?
I'm tired of hearing the,
you go too many,
listen,
I don't work for free.
I just got out of prison.
I'm broke.
It's not like I'm making any money on this thing.
Those ads like don't take it.
But get YouTube premiere.
For God,
it's like nine bucks.
It's nothing.
It's not limited.
It's awesome too, bro,
because I've got it.
It's awesome.
And let me tell you something.
Music videos,
music.
You can download.
Here's the great thing.
Now when you turn off YouTube,
like when you get,
out of the app, it shuts it off. What's great is
you can shut off the app and it continues to play.
You can download free music. You can
download stuff. You have a playlist. You can download
movies. They've got a bunch of free movies.
You could do all kinds. Television shows. It's worth
$9. Matter of fact, cancel
Netflix
and Hulu
and just go with YouTube because it's
10 times better. 10 times there.
Absolutely.
Somebody's
texting. All right. So
that's what you need to do. Stop complaining about
the ads. I don't want to hear it. Or I think somebody told me you can speed through the whole thing
and rewatch it and the ads are gone. I don't suggest that. I feel like I don't get paid on that.
But anyway, so, um, you know, see ya.