Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - U.S. Marshal Fired After Revealing Government Corruption
Episode Date: December 28, 2024Robert Ledogar (former U.S. Marshal) shares his disturbing story of being fired for exposing sexual harassment within the department. Despite 20+ years of service, he was subsequently setup by his col...lege's and terminated. Follow me on all socials! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/insidetruecrime/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mattcoxtruecrime Do you want to be a guest? Send me an email here: insidetruecrime@gmail.com Do you want a custom "con man" painting to shown up at your doorstep every month? Subscribe to my Patreon: https: //www.patreon.com/insidetruecrime Do you want a custom painting done by me? Check out my Etsy Store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/coxpopart Listen to my True Crime Podcasts anywhere: https://anchor.fm/mattcox Check out my true crime books! Shark in the Housing Pool: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0851KBYCF Bent: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BV4GC7TM It's Insanity: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08KFYXKK8 Devil Exposed: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08TH1WT5G Devil Exposed (The Abridgment): https://www.amazon.com/dp/1070682438 The Program: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0858W4G3K Bailout: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/bailout-matthew-cox/1142275402 Dude, Where's My Hand-Grenade?: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BXNFHBDF/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1678623676&sr=1-1 Checkout my disturbingly twisted satiric novel! Stranger Danger: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BSWQP3WX If you would like to support me directly, I accept donations here: Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/MattCox69 Cashapp: $coxcon69
Transcript
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She was a female, and she was, she's an Army veteran. She's a U.S. Marshal, and these guys did not want to take orders or directions from her.
Well, one of these task force officers, local cop, urinated in her cookies. That man at one point grabbed her in the office when she was trying to walk by and started almost groping her and just filling her up.
Other people saw it, and they laughed. She felt embarrassed. She was crying.
and she was humiliated. She left. So then she called me and it went from these accusations,
these complaints, these, you know, charges to these guys controlling an investigation and
investigating themselves. And keep in mind, well, all this is going on. I have some of the
biggest cases of the world I'm working. I'm part of the investigation, arrest, extradition, and
trial of El Chapo. I'm a drug dealer.
I'm a drug addict, I sell drugs, I steal drugs from the evidence locker, I steal money from
the evidence locker, I sell social security numbers to her for fake ID.
So while this is all going on, my wife's like, I want out of here.
How many times you hear people, men, you know, you mess with my family, I'll kill you.
Right.
Really? Really? You're going to do that?
You're not going to do it. Everybody talks a big game. I had to do something.
Hey, this is Matt Cox, and I am here with Bobby Letiger.
He is a former U.S. Marshal.
Yes.
And he's got an interesting story, and we're going to go over it real quick.
So check out the interview.
I'm originally from Queens, New York, Rockway Beach, my whole life.
I went to grammar school there and then high school.
And after high school, I went in the Navy for about seven years.
I was military police, but in the Navy that's called Master at Arms.
I served in Desert Storm and I became a military police investigator
and then became a instructor for shipwashed security engagement tactics.
So while I was in the Navy, the Marshal Service was recruiting.
They created this program called Operation Shining Star
and it was going after targeting military personnel to join.
And I was one of them and was selected and went into the Marshal Service in 1995.
So how long were you in the Navy?
Almost seven years.
I went in right out of high school in 1988.
And I got out of the Navy on a Saturday in June and 95.
And on Sunday, June of 95, I was in the Marshal Service.
I didn't even have a breaker service at all.
Okay.
And, you know, went to training in Glenco, Georgia.
And then after that, I went right to Eastern District of New York, Brooklyn, and served
almost all of my 25 years there in Brooklyn.
In the beginning, I started out as a deputy in working court operations, prisoner
transport, serving some like civil process, administrative duties, and, you know, doing my little
rotations in the Warrant Squad. So it took a little bit of little time and then I, you know,
gravitated right to doing warrants and working the street and doing fugitive investigations.
And after some special assignments of protection details and even some high-profile trials, I eventually
was right into the Warrant Squad and did that. I bet your majority of my career is working warrants.
And I was lucky enough to be part of the New York, New Jersey Regional Fugitive Task Force,
which started right after September 11th and funded by Congress.
It's one of the biggest task forces in the nation and still is.
And is that what you like if you're like if you're a police officer, like, you know, a lot of them,
you know, ultimately they want to work like homicide.
You know, they want to like that's like is working the, the, um,
the fugitive and the warrant squad.
Is that like what you, like when you join, is that like that's the goal?
That's it for the, yeah.
When you're a deputy marshal with the U.S. Marshals, that's the, that's it.
That's the pedestal of being in the Marshal Service.
I mean, there's so many different divisions and sections, but everybody wants to work
fugitive investigation warrants.
You want to be on a task force.
I mean, I worked with the greatest cops in the world.
I worked in, when I was in Brooklyn and the city, I worked with NYP.
and, you know, coming from New York and then dealing with everybody in the nation here with different states,
there's nothing better than, you know, NYPD detectors. They're like the best. And we had dozens of
them. We had NYPD sergeants, lieutenants, then we had state police officers, immigration customs
officers there, DHS. We even had relationship with DEA and ATF, even FBI and Secret Service.
and we just work together great and it's you know when you when you join the
Marshal Service you know you see it on TV and the movies everybody wants to work
fugitive investigations and and track down the worst of the worst out there you know and
in New York you know there's there's no place better to work the street than there
so I did that for years and stayed in Brooklyn mainly and then
I was moving up, you know, with seniority and then I put in and I took the test and I became
a supervisor back in like 2009, 2010. And my chief is a great man. He had a lot of trust and
confidence in me, selected me to become the supervisor. I had to do a couple of months in the
courthouse, you know, you know, working with everybody in there. And then eventually my chief
put me back into the Warren Squad. And next to you know, I'm there supervising now the guys and
girls I worked with for years. But it seemed like everybody wanted that. You know, they wanted
me back there because I knew what I was doing and I made things happen. And I did that for almost
10 years. Our Warren Squad was part of the New York, New Jersey Regional Feudor Task Force,
which was in Brooklyn, New York City, as well as out in Long Island, which was Nassau and Suffolk County.
I was also responsible for that, along with other supervisors. So what happened is out in Long
Island, it was a sub-office, and we had deputy marshals rotating through there. Well, we had one young
lady who was really interested in doing it. And it was me and another supervisor who selected
her to go back there and work with the local officers from Nassau and Suffolk County in Long Island
to be full-time on the Warren Squad. And she was going to represent the Eastern District and
she was a U.S. Marshal. And this is now our task force. We run it. Okay. Well, she was doing
good for a couple of years. And then some of the guys that she gravitated to, they were older
and they retired, you know, and that was kind of like her go-to guys. Well, the other guys in the
task force didn't really take too kindly to her. They would make fun of her, tease her. And then
it just started escalating and then it got into bullying. And then they would blackball her. They
would ignore her. They would start messing with her desk. And at one time, she went, you know,
you go to Costco or BJs and you get those big plastic tubs of cookies, animal crackers.
Right. So she would put them on her desk and share it with everybody. Well, one of these
task force officers, local cop, urinated in her cookies and left it there. And she knew you could
smell it. Yeah. Well, what's the issue?
Like, why did they...
Well, it came out, and she was a female.
Right.
And she was, she's an Army veteran.
She's a U.S. Marshal, and these guys did not want to take orders or directions from her.
They just did not want to deal with her.
They wanted to be...
It was an all-guise group out there.
Right.
And the icing on a cake is she was a lesbian.
And she was an open person.
she spoke about she was gay and she had a girlfriend and they did not want that in their group
they didn't want to they didn't want to be part of that but this girl she her name's out there
at dawn she was well known well liked the courthouse everybody in there loved her she was
she was athletic played softball soccer she participated everything she was you know a fun person
have around. How many guys are there here that are doing this? Is it three or is it six? I mean,
is there like... It was up there was four to six guys that were messing with her. And it got to a
point where she brought it to my attention and then I confronted the supervisor that was out
there running, handling those guys. And he just ignored it. He said, you know, suck it up. You know,
he's not here to be a babysitter when in fact you are you're the supervisor you have to babysit
some of these people and everybody has to they need to get along they need to work as a as a cohesive
group all the time and you know you have you have to develop a relationship you have to be friends
you have to be partners you have to get along with each other you have to build something there
I mean these guys guys and girls are carrying guns wearing vest you know work in a street and
you're doing a lot of hours so she would do things and be like hey
you're not checking in with me, you're not telling me you're doing hits.
They were just going to do interviews and arrest people and not even tell her.
And she's the team leader.
She's the boss.
So after these guys found out we spoke to the supervisor out there, they got more in range.
So then they would, now they would bully her and argue with her, totally ignore her.
And then start teasing her.
They would, in any, any marshal's office you work in, you know, you transport prisoners
and they try to bring their legal work to the Excel block.
Right.
And in their legal work is porn books.
Right.
You know, so we would seize that.
They would be in a box.
Next to you know, some of these magazines are heading up on her desk and they're opening up pitches
of girls on top of girls.
They're playing porn in the office where you hear the moaning.
and she's the only woman back there.
So it's a couple of guys against her.
We bring that forward to and nothing happens,
but now it just escalates more and more.
Well, there was one task force officer who was,
had Spanish heritage and he came out
and he made her kiss him every morning to say hello.
And this is on your team.
These are your co-workers.
and she just did it all the time and just fell into that, you know, comfort of doing it.
And when she told me about it, I was like, are you kidding it?
You got to be kidding me.
Like this, we don't do this.
I don't even do that with half my family members giving kisses hello.
So that man at one point grabbed her in the office when she was trying to walk by and started
almost groping her and just feeling her up and calling her a sexy bitch.
Right.
And other people saw it and they laughed.
She felt embarrassed.
She was crying.
She was humiliated.
She left.
So then she called me and then that was it.
I was like, you're just stay home and then I confronted the supervisor again and he now then
went and said something to the guys and it went over the weekend and that guy was told not
to come back. Well, two other guys didn't like that. So they showed up on one morning while
they were preparing to do a hit and the rest. And people were like, why are you guys here?
You're on a different team. And they were like, oh, we're just here to back you up. So when they
went in the house, they get the perp. But Dawn was sitting on another person in the house,
just watching. Right. And one of those guys walked by and pushed or shoved their hitter, like
a shoulder to the back and made her stumble. And this gave her a look. And the look was after
she told me was, we can get to you. Right. You know, what are you doing? Why are you talking
this stuff? So that moment I told, I took her off the task force, had to go report it to my chief
and she just reported so much more stuff that was happening. And it went up to chain to
headquarters at the Marshal Service. And in the beginning, Internal Affairs was going to investigate
this. But some other leadership personnel who were over the task force got involved and suggested
that they have an investigator come and investigate what was going on there. And it went from
these accusations, these complaints, these, you know, charges to these guys controlling an investigation
and investigating themselves. And this executive from the headquarters selected an investigator
who was at a New Hampshire, who was part of the task force in New Hampshire, who knew the guys
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So he investigated it and it turned from these, you know, an assault, sexual harassment and, you know, bullying, all these things.
to an investigation on office culture,
which lasted a couple of months.
And the finding in that report was that I was a bad supervisor,
and Dawn was the problem that enraged these guys
because she was not a good coworker.
Okay.
And all these people involved,
even they interviewed people that were never even there,
but were part of the task force,
just couldn't stop praising the great work.
and personalities of these other guys.
Right.
Which we all knew was fault.
We all knew.
You just know, you know, and too many other people were coming and making, supporting Dawn's
allegations.
Well, well, that was going on to one task force officer who hit Dawn, shoved her.
He found out I was going to a New York Mets baseball game during this investigation.
And him and a couple other task force officers made it a point to go to that baseball game,
which was in Queens.
and it was on law enforcement appreciation night
and he confronted me at the game
and we got into a big argument cursing
and nose to nose we were going to fight
and it went on for a couple of seconds
and then it just stopped I walked away and left
and I reported it to my chief like this is what happened
this is going to be an off-duty incident
you know I'm going to get investigated
but so strange that it was
law enforcement appreciation night, there was a bunch of members from the New York City
task force office there who witnessed this, and one happened to be the chief of the whole
task force. So the next day, he made it a point to remove that task force officer from the
task force. And, but he was still able to work with them, but he couldn't be in the courthouse
anymore. It couldn't be in the office space. So the results come out about the
office culture investigation.
Right.
So now my chief is livid.
He's like, this is insane.
You know, first of all, I wasn't even there when these things were happened.
So how can I be a bad supervisor?
And when I did hear about it, I reported it, got involved and confronted the supervisor.
So my chief and the marshal then argue with the leadership from the marshal's headquarters.
And he's, you know, they go through the whole list of complaints.
So like, you investigated all this and went through this stuff and found nothing, nothing at all.
You're going to let this deputy marshal female tell you that somebody peed in her food.
Right.
And you're going to ignore it.
Well, one of the people on that telephone call said he didn't know about that.
And now that we bring that to his attention, he's going to instruct internal affairs to investigate that specific incident, just that one.
Right.
Not these are the ones that she had listed.
So you wait a month or two, internal affairs comes into the office, which they're terrible.
They're absolutely horrible.
They're the people that cannot get into the Warren squad.
They're jealous, they're angry, you know, they're tools.
Right.
So they come in.
Now their first person they want to interview is the guy who tried to fight me at the baseball game, who's no longer on the task force.
So now we're a year after this all started from the office culture investigation.
And he comes in and they sit him down in internal affairs out in Long Island.
They come up and they ask them, you know, do you know why you're hearing?
He says no.
And they're like, well, does there anything you would like to tell us?
And he goes, yeah, I would.
He goes, Bobby Lediger is a racist.
He covers up crime.
He's the biggest problem in the task force.
This is a year later now.
This never came out during the office culture investigation.
I wasn't even mentioned.
Is this guy black or?
Oh, no.
He's Greek.
Okay.
From Long Island, white guy.
Right.
And we all hung out.
Like, we were all worked together, went out to the bars together.
Well, that's the worst thing you can say.
That's it.
He's racist.
Racist.
so then him and his co-worker partner who was on the task force kind of agreed and then he
interviewed him yeah he's a racist he says to N word all the time and everybody knows about it
and we're only coming forth now because of how much damage Bobby Lederger caused to the task
force by having him removed like okay so this goes on so now
Now, they try to create scenes or scenarios or incidents where I said specifically the N-word.
And one was during an arrest and they said that, and one of the other guys who were one
of the bad actors in this, tased the perp when we were arrested him.
And it was a white guy.
And in the past, they had stolen a car, we got into a car chase, it was an arrest in Long
Island in the gas station.
And they were like, yeah, Bobby Lettaker went up to the white girl.
and there was a black guy passenger in the car and there was supposedly a white girl in
the back seat and said that's what you get for dating a black guy the end guy yeah yeah but so odd
is that the white girl on scene was dawn the marshal right who was in my car during this
but internal affairs didn't want to hear that but they were using that scenario that incident right
But what's more strange is that one of the guys, the marshals, tased the part, the perp, who was getting arrested.
So if you would have pulled that taser incident report, you would know the full investigation of that, what it was.
So you could see all the players there, but they didn't.
Right.
So then he came out and they were like, yeah, we hear that he says the N-word at parties, you know, we're out at bars, one of them, and it makes us feel uncomfortable now.
And we have to tell you this now because it's so bad.
Because it took us a year to come up with this.
Longer, yeah, it's going on for years, but yeah.
But then they started shooting themselves in the foot because then the supervisor goes,
yeah, I think he does say the N-word.
Well, you're a supervisor.
Why didn't you report me instantly when you heard that?
So you're a dereliction of duty.
These other guys are not supervisors, they're investigators.
So they'll play that.
So they investigate me and they're like, you're a racist.
Then they said one of my sources of information, an informant,
was married to my wife and that's why he's my informant and what what yeah that one of your
informants was married to your wife this is what the the bad actor said about me that i was associated
with a felon right and he and i owned a gym together okay and that same guy is my informant and prior to
that he had been married no this was a story they made up okay that he was married to my wife
So your current wife, he, so your current wife was his ex-wife.
Correct.
Okay.
Yeah.
All lie, totally.
Right.
Well, you would think that would be easily discounted, you know, proven.
Oh no, no, they were questioned me about that, everything and they were like, you'd let
your informant live at your house.
He was married to your wife, they're having sex.
I'm like, this, internal affairs, these are my own people asking me these questions.
So what are you trying to get at?
So it's all lies.
Right.
And, um, you can easily.
find it. The best is that they said, I owned a gym with him. I don't go to the gym.
Right. You know, I'm like, look it up. Do these reports. There's no financial gains here.
Nothing lies that people were making about me. Other cops were lying about me, but we're not going to
go after them. Right. And that's really the culture now, isn't it? You could basically lie,
blatantly a lie and accuse people. And then when you find out that that's untrue, nothing happens to
the person that lies. Nothing at all. And now, what if would have a famous quote, we would say,
to people when we were investigating to a fugitive
and you're fine and like, oh, we're gonna charge
you at harboring a fugitive, aiding and abetting,
and lying to law enforcement.
If you lie to me, I'm a federal agent.
You go to jail for five years.
Right.
But what about these task force officers
who were deputized that are lying to internal affairs
so about another government official?
Nothing ever happens to it.
I mean, these people should have been arrested in charge,
but no.
And internal affairs would just turn around
and be like, well, we're just,
we're gonna investigate.
the accusation that's brought forth, but it's a lie. Right. And we've told you that. So this goes
on, and I completely deny everything, and there's no evidence to show I'd do anything. But some people
from the Marshal Service, the Internal Affairs investigates it, and then they push it forward,
and they write up their report, and they cherry-picked the words. Right. And it's all selective and
opinionated. And then we have what's called a proposing official. This
person turns around and says, I don't believe Bobby Lediger. I believe these four to five other
people that you are a racist and you use the N-word hundreds to thousands of times a day. Even
though the only people saying you do it are these four guys that I have four bad actors that are
originally named in the complaint of sexual harassment. And even though you're, you have outstanding
evaluations, you have awards and you, you know, you work with a most diversified group of people
and there's no complaints at all about you, nothing ever brought up. You don't have any complaints
from any people you arrested, anybody in the public, nothing. We believe them. You're a liar
and we're going to fire you. And so this was in 2017. I was proposed removal. I had to hire a lawyer
because we have no union and we have some silly association the federal law enforcement enforcement
officers association it's a joke and uh i have a private attorney of course you're a lot of money
right and um i go before this deciding official now we have like two months to prepare
i collected hundreds of letters of support my background was perfect and um i go
before this woman who's a chief and plead my case to her and present evidence of those people
being racist and sexist and degrading and lying about me. But what's so strange is that before I get
to do that and sit down with her, the day before she oddly gets a phone call from a civilian
who wants to report to her that I steal cell phones from people I arrest and I gave her one
and that I'm a bad person.
Okay.
It's very confusing, right?
So this woman was the ex-girlfriend of one of the guys I worked with in the task force
who was friends with these bad actors in the task force, wrote a motorcycle with them,
Well, somebody, one of those men gave her their name and phone number to the deciding
official, which is all secret.
This is all private.
Which should tell you something's wrong, right?
Right off the bat.
And then that I stole a cell phone and gave it to her.
So you're in possession of stolen property.
Right.
Does she have a cell phone?
Does she provide the cell phone?
Well, this is even better.
That deciding official tells us, and my lawyer is like, you have to start in it, you
to report that to Internal Affairs. Right. So now I have a new internal affairs investigation on me
while I'm getting proposed to be fired. Right. And now we move forward towards our hearing,
talk to her for a few hours, and the woman is just blown away. Like, she can see it. Yeah.
She's like, this is pure retaliation. This is horrible. So are you allowed to present witnesses? Are you
just no it's just me and her with my lawyer couldn't show up and say this is what's going on no but
dawn wrote a letter in support of me that's the best you can do is that we have letters of support to refute
that and she read everyone she listened to me um and she just asked her some additional supporting
documents that my lawyers provided but keep in mind i'm being proposed to be fired right i lost is a big
deal for a federal agent i lost i lost my gun my badge everything but i still had my title and i have
to go to work every day in administrative roles while I'm being like waiting.
Yeah.
So this is in 2017 and now we leave and it was on Good Friday and she when we left the lady
was like have a happy Easter.
I knew I was going to win.
And it was like a week later and she found she cleared me of everything.
It was unsubstantiated but keep in mind I don't get my attorney fee money back.
Right.
I don't get any personal money I spent nothing.
You don't get nothing back, you know, it's just stress on you.
And now I have an open internal affairs investigation for supposedly given this woman a cell phone.
So now I have IA looking at me again after I just got cleared.
Cleared.
So that goes now, that's April 2017.
Are you starting, I'm sorry, I hate to interrupt.
No, please.
Are you starting to feel like, like, this isn't going to work?
Like, they already know this might not work, but we're going to keep throwing stuff until we get rid of this guy.
Like, at this point, it's like, okay, so at this point, these guys are just going to continue to hound me until they get rid of me.
Well, are you feeling like that?
Like, I mean, look, they've already lied this investigation.
You know what?
Throw another one at him.
Throw another one at him.
Throw another one.
Like, something will stick eventually.
It got to that point a year or so later, and I'm not a lawyer, I'm not a scholar,
and maybe I'm too stupid to realize what was going on.
And I'm very shocked, like, how could you do this to me, knowing that I have my chief
and my marshal and everybody's supporting me?
Even other people from the task force are like, this is crazy what's happening.
And I'm still in my position of power of being the supervisor at a warrant squad.
And keep in mind, well, all this is going on.
I have some of the biggest cases of the world on work.
and I'm part of the investigation, arrest, extradition, and trial of El Chapo.
Okay.
So my name is right there on the paper as being a supervisor on this investigation.
With other marshals I worked with, with the DEA out in Long Island, huge.
Right.
And it's happening in Brooklyn.
As I'm being investigated, this is going on.
So I'm going to investigation.
It lingers for two years.
not until April 2019
do I get a notice from Internal Affairs
that they want to talk to me
it's like you gotta be kidding me
this is been going on forever
right so
I'm thinking nothing's going to happen that they would have just
dismissed it right
as that's happening
I also
arrest a U.S. Marshal's top 15
it's like an equivalent to a FBI top 10
right this guy Andre Neveson
wanted in Brooklyn
on the marshals top 15 for a decade
was on America's Most Wanted
with that John Walsh
yeah yeah and he murdered his sister
and his girlfriend
so so many people worked that case
they stepped all over it it was a disaster
I come in and
we get a teletype that
his FBI number is hitting
in Connecticut
but what does that mean
that he was fingerprinted and it comes back
to his match
his fingerprints matched this FBI number
but the name and the date of birth aren't
the same so Bridgeford
Connecticut let him go
they let them go they don't follow up
so we come into work the next day
and I got to teletype and I'm reading over it
and I asked one of my analysts to call up
there to find out
and
we go back and forth
but like can you share a picture with us
So we're like, holy shit, this is the perp.
This is the guy.
So now I have to make a couple phone calls.
People like, no, there's no way.
He's in Trinidad.
He's dead.
He's that.
It's his fingerprints.
It's him.
It's solid.
So now we're trying to do some due diligence because of the different
akas and that.
So now my, it's not hard to get a DM.
It's not.
It's not.
So it wound up being like a traffic violation.
And so at Bridgeport, PD, we start working well with them and they're giving us information,
sharing photos.
information on the car and I go in and my chief now is working with a couple of other supervisors
and they're planning the trial security of El Chapo. So I walk in and I'm like, hey, we're
going to arrest a top 15 and he just laughed. He's like, yeah, okay, whatever. Meanwhile, I just
got done working El Chapo with the extradition and I'm under investigation. Criminal investigation.
Right. So within an hour, I had set it all up with guys up and
Connecticut coordinated everything and they were sitting outside his house and they're calling me
and they're sending me video and photos of our guy sitting on his porch but the marshal
like hey we're waiting for some backup you know this guy's a major player you know we kill two people
right his sister and a girlfriend so yeah and you know he knows he's gonna go to jail for the
rest of his life yeah he's he made very well you did yeah but he's got away with it so many times
he's been on the run but he's i'm like he's wanted out of brooklyn and he's in bridgeport this so
in an hour, they call me up, send me a photo, like, we arrested him. And I got the deputy
marshal up there, he's like, thank you, you just made my career. I arrested a top 15.
I'm like, yeah, no problem. Not looking for anything. I did my job. So I go in and I tell my
chief, and he's like, I can't believe this. That year, our district, east of New York, as district
of the year, for being one of the largest districts in the age, eighth largest district in the
nation for the work we did with El Chapo and the arrest of this top 15. Right. Right.
because of me. Right. But no crap. I'm like, yeah, and whatever, you did your job. And I'm under
criminal investigation. So now I go after that, the same guy from the marshal's headquarters
who made the decision to investigate me, to investigate themselves, the task force, this guy comes
to Brooklyn a day or two after we arrest the top 15 because he wants to walk through the
courthouse to see what's going to go on with the El Chapo trial. So he's an executive.
He's like the number two guy of the Marshal Service.
So he comes in, sees me, he gives me the typical handshake and, you know, the street hug.
Right.
You know, like he's proud of me and all that.
But never congratulates or thanks me for doing a job well done.
Right.
Because he's stabbing me right in the back as everything's going on.
So there I have my opportunity to call him out.
This is the number two guy at a Marshal Service.
Right.
So I'm not a coward, you know, I'll do whatever you want.
We can talk, we can debate, we can fist fight, we can all, I'll do it all.
Right.
So this guy is just a regular deputy just like me.
He came up through the ranks, you know.
It's just that he took all the test and he transferred from where he was.
Now, backpedal, he was from New Hampshire.
And the person who investigated the office culture case was from New Hampshire.
Okay.
So they all know each other.
But this guy, the number two guy, he's now running.
in the Marshal Service. Totally forgot where he came from. Right. So I'm like, you know,
you're a real, you really suck, man. I go, you know what they're doing to me and you're letting
this happen. He's like, we're just going with what internal affairs is investigating. You know,
whatever it comes, whatever accusations are made, we have to investigate. But you initiated
the investigation. You created this and now it just snowballed out of control. And because
you want to protect your congressionally funded task force because if Congress hears about this
or the public hears about this, you're going to look like a real piece of garbage because you let
sexual harassment take place here and you didn't defend or protect one of your own. You went
against your own to say that we were wrong and look what we did when our own were wrong.
We got rid of them. When the other people, the outsiders were wrong but you didn't want to have
that political battle with outside law enforcement.
Right.
It's silly, but it's true.
It happens.
So now I just do this big arrest.
I'm under IA.
Now I get noticed that they want to talk to me.
So finally, now I have to go to headquarters with my own private attorney.
Again.
Again.
Right.
So now I go there and I'm summoned to be there for two days.
two days of investigation against me
and it's stemmed and it's a whole list of things
and it's just because of a phone call from a woman
that's how it started that's how it started that's how it started
and that was in the middle of the interviews
in the very beginning they asked me if I was a racist
if I used the N word so my lawyer's enjoying this
like that was already investigated and closed what are you doing
you're harassing them you're retaliating
so we put it on the record it was there
then they said
they asked me about the man
who started
started all this
so we're like this has already been asked and answered
it's already done what are we doing here
so then they went in and said
one of the deputies that worked for me
years ago got pulled over in New Jersey
for speeding and he got a ticket
I'm like okay
they're like we have a text chain of you two
talking and you tell them like, all right, well, just go take care of it.
Right.
Did you, you called the New Jersey State Police and fixed a ticket?
I'm like, that's what you get in North States.
So they said, I misuse my power to get a ticket fix, which I didn't.
And that deputy admitted it saying I didn't do anything.
Right.
But still, they use my...
They just throw enough at you.
But that was one thing.
That was abuse of power.
Then they went in and said, I stole a cell phone that they have a photo of.
it, but they don't have the cell phone. Then that lady said, I gave, she had a shotgun and I gave
her shotgun bullets, but they don't have any of that. And now she has a criminal history. She's
been arrested before, so she shouldn't be in possession of a gun. She said, I stole a camcorder
and gave it to her, but they had a pitcher to camp quarter that had the serial numbers on there,
but they didn't run it. We don't know what that is.
Right. We don't know if that was stolen.
Well, it gets even better.
I was going to say, first of all, she's admitting that she's a felon in possession of a firearm.
That's three-year mandatory minimum.
In New York. In New York.
I was going to say federally, that's...
But that's New York. It's the worst state in the world to get charged with a gun crime.
You know, you're going in.
But they don't care.
Because it's against me, Bobby Lettinger.
Right.
Then she just adds more to it, and it gets better.
I'm a drug dealer. I'm a drug addict.
I sell drugs.
I steal drugs.
the evidence locker. I steal money from the evidence locker. I sell social security
numbers to her for fake ID. So me and her are collusion for with social security numbers to
people. I filed for bankruptcy, which destroys your security clearance if I ever did that.
Right. I am a bouncer at a bar. I'm five foot six, 160 pounds. Right. I'm a
bounce her to bar. I don't fight, you know. I cheat on my wife. My wife cheats on me. I misuse my
government vehicle. I... You dislike, you don't like children or small animals. Nothing, all that
stuff. But yet I would hang out with this woman with her then boyfriend when we were working all
together. We went out to dinners, restaurants, bars, but all of a sudden this. But can't
provide any evidence on any of this stuff. So the Marshal Service takes it and runs with it.
And they're going more and more and more and asking me all these questions. They never give
me a drug test. They never do an inventory of the evidence lockers. They don't want anything
that doesn't support their version of the events. But why not? Why wouldn't you want to know the
truth? Why wouldn't you want be like, wow, this guy is getting screwed here? And he's another
marshal. We're going to investigate one of our own. That's what it really comes down. And we're
to destroy him right he's well known he's got over 20 years in the martial service he's a supervisor
he's in a warren squad i've been involved in four shootings i got a great reputation the men and
women i work with love working with me or for me i don't have any complaints against me why wouldn't
you want me to be cleared why wouldn't you want to find a truth so as i'm sitting there with internal
Affairs. I'm hoping you know that. Do you know the answer to that? No, I'm still looking for a man.
I'm trying to think of one. Well, I think it's funny as I have people ask me and they're like,
who is Bobby Lediger? Like, who am I? That you came at me so hard that you spent hundreds of
thousands of dollars to investigate me. I mean, it got so bad. We lived in Long Island, New York.
I had a beautiful house. I had a mother and daughter house on a half acre of land. Nice, big pool in the
backyard. I would have parties at my house every year for all the guys and girls I worked with
friends, family. And I had to work in Brooklyn, and I was a good hour or so from home. And my wife
was home alone. My mother-in-law lived next door. And the neighbors would tell my wife and my mother-in-law
that there's undercover cops sitting on the block. And then we were getting screws, putting our tires.
They were coming on our property and putting stuff in our cars. We were getting pulled over.
All of this started because you told a couple of fraternity guys stop bullying this chick.
100%.
And it's a fact.
That's why it started.
It's a fact it all came out because those same men who were bullying her and hit her and harassed her.
They omit it in their own statements that I violated the blue wall.
I went against them.
I believed her over them.
And they admit it.
And the internal affair saw it, and in my own people, my own leadership, Reddit, saw it.
And they knew people were coming after me.
So now these people put my family in life jeopardy.
They put my wife in fear.
So while this is all going on, my wife's like, I want out of here.
We turn around, snap it a finger, and we sell our house in Long Island.
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And I'm still working and she works.
I have a couple of years until I can retire.
My family is good.
We have a condo in Queens.
So me and my wife are staying there.
My mother-in-law had to go stay with another family member.
And then we wound up buying a house in Florida while we're still working.
So my wife's like, that's it.
She talks to her boss.
He finds out what's going on.
People are like, this is insane.
This can't be happening.
And it's like the movie Copeland.
You know, it's the rest of the salon where all the dirty cops are live in one neighborhood.
So we're like, no, it's happening, you know.
And even my own chief just couldn't believe it.
And they were like, what do you do?
Like, I'm like, how do you protect, how do I protect my wife?
Right.
What do I do?
You know, you hear all these people, you know, and I, not to diminish anybody or anything,
but how many times you hear people, men, you know, you mess with my family, I'll kill you.
Right.
Really?
Really?
You're going to do that?
You're not going to do it.
Everybody talks a big game.
I had to do something.
And the only way to protect my wife was to leave the state.
And that's what we did.
And I stayed in New York.
and I would take leave and go back and forth to visit with her in Florida.
She worked from home now in Florida with her company out of New York,
which was great. They helped us out a lot.
And now this was in 2019.
I was going to say that I think the problem is that you wouldn't like it's not a far
leap because for you to do that because given the situation like you wouldn't think
it would have gone as far as it has already gone. So the idea that it wouldn't go a step further,
it would be stupid to think, oh, no, they won't, they won't do anything to my wife. They won't mess
with my family. They won't do, no, no, they've already continually pushed that bar. There doesn't
seem to be a limit. So I can, so to say, hey, look, let's just, let's just sell, let's get out of
this. Let's, let's, I mean, I can totally see that. Because I was thinking, wow, that's, that's like,
you know, you really, that's a huge step. But at this point, they don't,
seem to be stopping. So I don't see what other choice you have. Nobody seems to be looking out
for you. No one is looking out for me. I granted I had the support of my own district. The people
backed me and like you're a good guy, but that goes so far. You know, I need presence. I need
protection. I need money. You know, what do you do? So I, that was the best thing we could do.
We didn't want to do it. You know, we changed our whole lives. And the agency, the Marshal Service,
knew I was doing that. I told them in internal affairs that I had to leave because you people
did nothing for me. You knew they were coming after me. They told you they were coming after me.
And you did nothing. Right. And they still, to this day, you never helped me. Nothing. They have,
they tell you when you're in internal affairs, you're sitting there like, well, you can call EAP,
you know, the employee assistant program, you know, to vent to some lady in India that I'm feeling
depressed or something. Like, come on. So, and I'm still working. And I'm still working.
So now
we'll back up a little
bit again. I'm still in internal
affairs being interviewed.
So they're asking me about being a drug deal
or stealing money. They're asking
me then if I'm a bouncer. They're asking
me if I fix tickets.
Now they want to see my cell phone.
The government cell phone,
here you go. They take it,
they bring it in the back, it's gone for a couple hours
so they're downloading it. They
come back and they had a folder
and they open up their folder
they give me back my cell phone
government cell phone
and they're showing me pictures
of a naked playboy model
I'm like okay
they're like do you know who this is
like yeah I know her very well
and she was a fugitive that we arrested
right so I'm like okay
so internal affairs is blown away
to like she's a fugitive
I'm like yeah
it was all over the news it's all big
thing. I go, it was a Hague act. She kidnapped her daughter from the husband who was in France.
She was from Vietnam. And they issued a warrant for her. We arrested her the next day trying to
flee the country with the daughter and brought her in. I said, we photographed everything that she
had. She was an international playboy model, a DJ. And I'm like, I took pictures of the playwright
Playboy book for identity and evidence. Here's all her clothes. Here's all her jewelry. Here's
her five cell phones, a laptops. Here's everything. Everything we have. Here's all the emails from
the U.S. attorney saying thank you for all that information. So it's a case file. It's a case file.
100%. 100%. And it's all there. The emails are there. No. You should have deleted those
pictures. I'm like, no, you can't. It was on the work phone. It's literally.
legit, it's evidence. I said it's saved in the cloud, you can't get rid of that anymore
because you people and the government created this cloud to keep it. And plus, everybody
knows about it. No, we think you kept those photos for self-gratification. That's a crime,
you know, in the Marshal Service. Okay. Yeah, it's self-gratification. So the lady
who say that to me, I just assumed that she was jealous because she did not look like the
Playboy model. So that was a personal hit toward me. I'm like, I'm married. Been married for 25 years.
my wife is absolutely gorgeous and this is the year of the internet right I don't need to take
pictures of a playboy book when I can just go on the internet and find whatever you want this is
what we're dealing with these are grown adults we're coming up with these disinformation so
that was thrown out against me too then at I was at one point being looked at or so-called
groomed to be appointed as the U.S. Marshal in eastern New York, Brooklyn under President
Trump. So, like, I had people above me saying, you should put in your application to become a
presidential appointee. While I'm being criminally investigated, while that's going on,
and then because my background is so well, and then I have such a great relationship with other
people that are endorsing me. But I have my own agency trying to put me in jail.
jail. Right. But I have powerful people saying you should be in charge. This is, it's a true
tale of two cities, this whole story. So I put in, I'm like, this is great. So while they're
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So now we move forward into 2020.
And I'm still lingering under internal affairs.
I've been interviewed by some people under the Trump administration for an appointment.
Right.
So just can't believe it.
And at this point, my wife is totally disgusted with the government to no end.
What a waste of money so far.
It's just, it's a shame.
And I, I, what is it, proudly can say that the American taxpayers got their money out of me.
Right.
I worked my ass off every day.
So now we're in 2020, this is the year I'm eligible to retire to have 25 years in the
Marshal Service.
I came on June 95.
I can retire June 2020.
So I think it was in February.
February, March, I put in to retire, that I want to retire at the end of June 2020
because all the, I just went out.
Yeah.
Well, one I put in to be to request that I can retire in June 2020, I am now hit
with another proposed removal from everything in internal affairs did to me.
And of course, it's abuse of power, failure to supervise, lack of candor.
misuse of my government vehicle, my phone,
anything you can throw on there.
So I have my lawyer again.
We have to write up a rebuttal.
I collect more letters than the first case.
All my awards again, being part of the arrest with El Chapo and Nevesen,
great things.
So we go now to headquarters to speak.
with the deciding official and this lady actually knows me personally knows me she was my class
advisor we even had e-mail exchange that she knew what was going on at the task force in long island
of how i was protecting dawn and that it was all messed up right but she forgot that so we sit down and
talk to her she only talked me for about 15 minutes so we knew she made up her mind she was going to
get me fire me and i sat there and i begged i go listen i'm just going to retire i want to retire june
I can retire in June and I'll have 25 years, you know, leave me alone.
So like I said, it's the end of February 2020.
You know it just kicked off February 2020?
Worldwide pandemic.
Oh, yeah.
We're shut down, man.
That's it.
The government is shut down.
Everybody in headquarters is teleworking.
They're at home.
I think that would help you out.
We all thought it would help me out.
I'm like, I can't win this fight anymore.
So, April 17th, 2020 is Friday.
I get an email from Human Resources, Marshal Service, headquarters, that I am
awarded retirement June 30th, 2020.
I can retire in June 30th, 2020.
Perfect.
I'm in Florida.
I'm using up my annual leave.
sick leave because I only have a few months left.
Right.
I have more time in my hand to use up than on a job.
Yes.
So that was April 17, 2020 of Friday.
Monday, April 20th, 2020, 4 o'clock, my chief calls me, you're fired.
They terminated you.
Holy shit.
Just like that, snap of the finger.
And I just sat there.
And I was just, I couldn't believe it.
And then I could believe it.
And I'm like, all right, this is a joke, you know.
Worldwide pandemic, we're shut down.
So I read what they write.
And this lady who knew me, she's like,
the Marshal Service leadership doesn't have the confidence in you to perform at a satisfactory level.
I respond back.
I, too, don't have the confidence to respond at a satisfactory level.
But I've always performed at an outstanding.
level for the last 20 years and you all signed off on it which in my record. You don't even
know what my evaluations are. Right. I'm above what you want me to be. And the best one was
that the naked pictures of the Playboy model. I find that you did keep these pictures for
self-gratification. Where's your evidence on? Where you can never prove that? I've never
printed them. They weren't on the, there was nothing to get like it was insane. But this is what they
come up with. So we then file an appeal with what's called the Merit System Protection Board.
It's a joke. It's a kangaroo court that's created by the government. It's supposed to be more
for the employee, but it's totally turned tides and it's more for the government. And what happens
is a guy like me doesn't fight them. You don't go up against the government. You don't have
the money to do it. You have to pay for lawyers.
I now am fighting them and I'm very fortunate.
I have the National Police Defense Foundation backing me over the Marshal Service and they created
a legal defense fund to help pay my legal fees.
Nice.
My case is sitting and it's going to take a while.
It takes years because it goes before a quorum, a three panel quorum.
And they're all appointed by the president.
So Biden just last year appointed three of them.
One already resigned.
So now there's only two.
It's like you just can't.
Right.
So that comes 2020 and what do you do?
I got no job.
I lost everything.
I lost my salary.
I lost my pension.
I lost my medical benefits.
Everything.
Everything is gone.
And so for about a week.
You know, I sat in a corner crying.
Stop.
Do you know how fast you were going?
I'm going to have to write you a ticket to my new movie, The Naked Gun.
Liam Nissan.
Buy your tickets now.
I get a free Tilly Dog.
Chilly Dog, not included.
The Naked Gun.
Tickets on sale now.
August 1st.
Depressed, feeling shame and embarrassment.
And my wife was like, what do we?
That's it.
Let's go.
You know?
And I did some great things, man.
I had to go, I went on unemployment at New York.
And I did that for several months.
And then she's like, we got to get a job.
You got to get something.
But it's the pandemic.
I'm screwed.
What are you doing?
Yeah, what job?
I put in for Home Depot.
I couldn't even get that.
And next you know, down where I am, I put in and I became a supervisor at a pre-planned
retirement center and it was pretty, it's well off place, but it was horrible, you know,
getting $25 an hour, you know, but I had to do somebody. They gave me benefits, you know, so I had
to have it. But I was really lucky too because I'm a veteran and the VA here in Florida was great,
you know, so I had medical protection there. My wife had medical protection from her company.
They were helping. Then I started searching around a little bit more.
more. And I wound up finding a good job through LinkedIn, which pushing my story out there.
Right.
And I now currently work as a security consultant for a nonprofit organization, international.
I do a lot of traveling. It's great. The organization supports the hell out of me for what
I did and they can't believe it. But also what happened during all this time,
is I connected with some great people on LinkedIn.
LinkedIn was great for me, for me.
I didn't do Facebook or any of the other social media and I met this one guy who's an
FBI agent, lawyer who got jammed up, they went after him and he's fighting them as well.
He put me in touch with another FBI agent who, um,
resigned before they could fire him and he waited a few years until he reached a certain
aged and he went back and got a government job so I connected with that guy and he was telling
me about it and I'm like I can't do that he's like you have over 20 years as federal law
enforcement right and he goes you're over the age of 50 now because you have seven years in the
I was terminated with 24 years and 10 months.
Right.
Yeah.
If that's not personal retaliation, you can't.
And everybody knew it.
So this guy educated me and gave me the policies and the programs to follow.
And I like saying I used the government against the government.
And I got my retirement.
Okay.
So I beat them at their own game and I got my full 32 years retirement, law enforcement,
everything.
I have my medical benefits and they give you a Social Security supplement to the age of 57.
I mean, what did you do?
Go get another job and work for two months?
Yeah.
I don't want to go into great deal.
Okay.
I understand.
That's fine.
It's fine.
Because I'm writing a book and it's going to be in the book.
But you know what?
Yes.
Yes.
But you don't know what I did but how long I did it.
but it's it's amazing and it's what you do to to protect your family and yourself and you know
you can't let them get to you and that's like the whole thing of my story is do you know don't give up
don't don't ever give up don't don't give in don't don't let the bad actors take you down
you know and that's what i try to put out there um even when they come at you with things
you know and the lies that people say about you and the false accusations and it just it sucked
but you know you fight through it and now you can you know i can look at these people right in the
eye and know that they're you know they're garbage you know and i'm not impressed by them you know
the government lawyers are not anything they're still government lawyers if you were that good
you'd be in a private sector right right i used always say that like you don't get to the top of your
field and end up working for the bureau of prison like you know like the dot from the doctors all the way down like
that's just not how it works no so um yeah it's it's uh i was gonna say there's a guy i interviewed who
runs a youtube channel i should put you in touch with him he'd probably be interested in your story too
because he um he actually uh you know wade remember the guy that that that it was a self
self-defense, but it was
stand your ground where he was
attacked in his own home by a guy
and shot him, you know,
but he was attacked, the guy was drunk,
they'd both been drinking it, the guy was drunk, he attacked him
multiple times, he told other people he was going to kill him
and then he attacked him
and Wade shot him
and they arrested Wade and he got out
and he's like, I was in my own house
you know, and this guy attacked me over and over
again, you can see that I've been hit, you can see
that like the whole thing and it was
really just one detective that had
She was brand new detective.
First case she worked, decided she wanted to get him.
And they fought it.
He pulled $100,000 out of his retirement to fight the case.
And it took like two years.
And the only reason it didn't go forward, they didn't go forward with it,
is because a new district attorney came in.
And his lawyer went in and said, I want to sit down with you,
and just show you the evidence.
And he said, and he told Wade, look, it's a risk.
because we're laying out our whole case
and they laid out the whole case
and showed it to him and the guy was like
oh yeah yeah I'm dropping this
okay but yet you know it's
you know they the other
you know they pad the file
they hire somebody to come up
with to come up with a
forensic report that supports
their version they
and I've done a lot of I don't know if you know
much about me but I've written a bunch of stories
right and I have true crime
stories and you know I have a guy who
like literally they
the FBI
continually investigated
this one person
and asked
they padded the file
with all of these people that said
he did it he did it he did it he did it he did it so by the time it's done
you've got 30 people
28 of which said he did it
but out of almost all of those
they can't really tell you who told them that
And it all really stems from one guy telling this guy who tells this guy who tells this guy.
And so this guy talks to the FBI and says, yeah, yeah, this is what I've heard.
But it all really comes from one guy.
Of course.
You know, and then when you're completely done, it's like it does look overwhelming.
And if you were to go to trial, it would seem overwhelming because all these people would get on the stand and say, yeah, this is what he did.
You know, but really, if you look at it, it's like, okay, well, you padded the file.
Like, you only investigated people that supported your version of the story.
You're a narrative.
Yeah, your narrative.
so why didn't you matter of fact they actually gave people people um lie detector tests
until they came up with their version and then when they came up with their version they stopped
giving it they just took the thing okay did you did you give them a lie detector test on that version
well no because we knew we knew that was the version that we wanted to go with so why would we give
them a lie detector test well that you know it's me you bring that up about the lie detector test
and you look at something like the Marshal Service
and you wonder like what makes it,
what's happening today with law enforcement?
And I'm sorry, I jump around a little bit,
but the Marshal Service does not do polygraphs.
They don't lie detector, new employees, or even their staff.
Why not?
Right.
Why wouldn't you raise the standards
to have the best people out there?
Instead, you lower the standards.
You're doing away with some of the fit requirements,
the education.
Right.
Why wouldn't you want the best people, your weapons qualls?
And it's amazing.
And it all come down to like the way the culture is today, you know, current events.
And it's a shame.
I mean, I was watching something a few days ago on ESPN.
And they were showing a story of Whitney Houston singing the national anthem in 1991.
Right.
What happened?
What happened today that now everybody's a racist, you know, and that's the thing to call out there.
Well, you're white, you're a racist.
everybody's white supremacy really and what happened because she came out beautiful woman she's
wearing sweats she wasn't dolled up in a in a gown or anything and she's sang the national anthem
the best anybody's ever heard it and when i went through what i went through and to see that they
pulled the race card against me to come at me they just come out left field because you
never saw that coming never saw it coming the best that they said to me they were like
I was such a racist.
And I didn't have any, you know, I don't even know the proper language to use anymore because
you don't know what to say, but they're like, you don't have black people at your house.
Like, we had dozens to picture.
I'm like, I have to prove that I had black people at my house.
My own family members are married to someone of color or anything.
Right.
And I have to prove this.
And I had a guy who worked with big guy.
And we're the same age, same exact age, and black guy from Queens, and we're great friends.
And he lives in California now, retired.
He wrote one of the best letters for me ever.
And he goes off on the letter saying, you know, I'm proud of the Marshal Service for investigating racism and doing what you're doing.
But you got the wrong guy.
Right.
Why don't you ask me, and I'll tell you who the racists are.
but this is how you're going to do it yeah they don't want to hear that no they don't and it's a
shame and you want to hear the truth and then just the the girl dawn i defended she's defending me
today so we still in the marshals no she retired and what's odd is though during her last year or two
she um they were going after her and making accusations like the same bad actors that she complained
about made complaints about her that she took her dog to work she she misused the government car
like all the petty-ass things and the same lady that decided to fire me made a decision to suspend
dawn so then she filed an e-e-o and they settled with her because they knew the deciding
official was showing favoritism toward the task force so dawn settled
her EEO, they gave her back all her lost days, they promoted her and they gave her money.
But you still came after me when the original thing was I defended Dorn, you know, for what it was
and it was all pure retaliation. But they pile it on. It's just like you said, they pad the folder.
They pad the case and they put so much in there. And they weren't even complaints against you.
Like you're investing, you're finding stuff to investigate.
Well, I understand like they, like the racism thing, like they have your phone, right?
Like there's text messages, there's, like if I was so blatant and I'm saying this
hundreds of times a day, then I certainly would have said it in a text.
I certainly would have thrown it into an email.
I certainly would have like nothing, right?
Nothing at all.
But here, well, here's the conversation you and I just had now for the last hour or so.
It's the most you're going to speak almost in a week.
it's as long as we spoke and it's been hundreds of thousands of words we said maybe right not once
did we say the N word right but I say it all day long yeah and I you know I can hold I hold my head up
you know like this you got me you know and and my dad says it and I get what he's saying and it's a shame
that he thinks like that there he goes even when you win you lose because all the money you I've lost
over the years are going through this and somebody just called me the other day looking for help
and he's like well how much did the did your lawyers cost I'm like more than your salary yeah
but don't you can't ask those questions you know every everybody has a different amount but
if that's what you're worried about to fight to yeah yeah to prove your yourself don't call me
because you're going to spend a lot of money to fix this well you know like I told you about that guy
weighed. He spent over $100,000. What if he didn't have it? You don't have it. You don't have it. You don't have it. Nobody has it. That's your life
investments or whatever. What's I going to do? Remortgage my house to pay for my attorneys. Right. That's why they got you. The government got you. You can't. It's impossible. You can't go take out of loan.
Yeah, especially not if you were to go to the bank and say, oh, I need it for my legal fees. They'd be like, you're going through something. We're not interested in being a part of. Well, especially during a pandemic. Oh, yeah. There's no jobs out there to get a job to pay anything back. Right.
So that's where they think that you can, they can win.
And they do.
And they intimidate you and you're afraid of them.
Of what?
You know, when you sit down and you start talking to these people, it's not impressive.
You know, they're lawyer.
Like we said, they're government lawyers.
Listen, there's some U.S. attorneys out there that are unbelievable.
And they're very comfortable just staying in the position that they're in because they have a family and it's a nine to five job.
Right.
You know, but you go to the private sector.
you're putting in 20 hours a day
to make 18 million a year
so you're going to work hard
yeah
so you're waiting
you're waiting for this
you're waiting for your
it's not a trial it's
it's an appeal you're waiting for the appeal to go through
yeah and what I'm waiting for that is that my appeal is
to get my Marshall's retirement
right
and to get my back pay for the two plus years I've lost and to get attorney fees and then
that's it okay in the meantime I'm I work I'm I'm currently writing a book right um putting it all
out there, you know, and living in Florida, man, you know.
All right.
Do you have anything else?
No, you got anything?
One thing that I would think would be interesting if you can't talk about it,
like the Dale Chapo stuff or like the catching the guy on like the top 15 list
in the marshals, like the story about that.
It can be like a 10-minute version, five-minute version, whatever.
I can go into that too and there's another thing too.
More to add to my case, which makes it insane too is that in August 2014, we were involved
in a shooting, arrest of a shooting of a guy named Oswald Lewis in Queens. And it was a drug case
out of Virginia and tracked the phone. And it was like 11 o'clock at night, a house chopped up
into apartments. We knock on the front door to the owner of the house. It's like, no, he lives
in the back. So we're there.
There are about eight marshals there and about, eight, ten NYPD guys there.
We surround the house.
We knock on the door.
Notting you hit a TV.
We take the door.
This guy goes into the back of the makeshift apartment and barricades himself into his bedroom.
And so we start making entry.
And me and this one other woman I worked with, we didn't even get into the door yet.
We were on the frame of the door.
and the perp puts his hand out and starts shooting at us.
And now there's six marshals in this little place like, and, you know, they start returning fire.
And you can feel, you know, it's hard to say, but you can feel the bullets going past your head.
You can feel it, you know, the fear and the stress and anxiety.
And so some of the marshals wound up when he put his hand out, they shot.
his hand and shot the gun and then the perp went and grabbed another gun and started shooting
out the window where the NYPD cops were outside so during the you know he finally comes out
he surrenders we arrest him and uh that's gonna be bad I was gonna say like you know after
shooting to the cops I think I'd rather just go ahead because you're about to spend the rest
of your life in prison no this gets better this gets better so we get them we put him we are we
have EMS there and everything on scene within seconds. And it's New York, you know, everybody's
coming. So we take him to the hospital and now he's getting charged with, you know, attempted
murder, federal agents and everything. Well, of course, in the courts, you know, it starts getting
dwindled down. They're like, yeah, assault, you know, use of a firearm. We're like, it's felony
for Z. Like, what do you do? So he defends himself in trial.
So while he's, but before the trial, NYPD talks with him.
Now he's going to start talking.
They hit him with a homicide in New York.
He's got a drug case out of Virginia, and then he's got the shooting at us.
Right.
So right now he's in jail for 40-something years.
Right.
Okay.
So while he's in there, during now I'm under Internal Affairs investigations, he's making
all these accusations out of it, was police brutality.
You didn't even get in the room before he started shooting?
No, but we were handcuffed and we were beating him up, calling him the N-word, everything.
There's hundreds of people there watching this, including EMS, neighbors.
Other body cams.
Everything.
Right.
So this goes on.
And the actual, the actual, one of the actual marshals who shot him is not a white guy.
Right.
I'll leave it like that.
He's not a white guy.
He shot him, the purp.
They, they remove him from the complaint.
And then they remove the Spanish female from the complaint.
Then they remove one or two other people from the complaint.
So it's down to you.
It's down to five people on a complaint that are white on the complaint.
While I'm being investigated by internal affairs, it's all coming down.
So now the U.S. Attorney's Office is representing us because it was in the line of duty that we did this.
It was a case.
So now the U.S. Attorney's Office has to rehabilitate my reputation because I was fired.
Right.
by the Marshal Service, which works for the Department of Justice,
just like the U.S. Attorney's Office works for the Department of Justice.
Right.
So they're like, how do we do this?
Meanwhile, the U.S. Attorney's Office, we know you're a great guy.
So this is all going.
I'm like, yeah, let's look what I did because they've already known.
It's like, they pull up and they're like, well, he's part of the whole investigation,
extradition, trial of El Chapo in eastern New York,
where we had the biggest criminal in our lifetime now.
And it's like we don't know what to do.
And then I put on there too about the top 15 fugitive, Andre Neverson.
You know, it was one of the most high-profiled cases for the Marshal Service for years.
It was, you know, on America's Most Wanted several times.
and they've interviewed several marshals that were work in that case.
Right.
And then here it is I, Bobby Lettinger, working with an analyst who worked with me,
we tracked down and locate this guy and Evans and all these great people from the task force
that worked on that case.
Right.
Didn't arrest them.
It was us.
So, you know, that all went on.
But now to go backwards to add to it, that person, the perp, Oswald.
Louis who made the complaint against me and other marshals of police brutality and racism
that was finally dismissed that but it was going to go forward in eastern New York as a trial
against us that he was suing us while he's in jail and it's like you just you can't make this
stuff up what was going on and this is all in my life this is my life for almost five years
of complete hell and people are like how did you and only a couple people said i would have killed
myself right to go through what you're going through and you're like no i'm not going to kill myself
you know it's almost like um it's like a badge of honor you know when i'm accused of all these things
from people and i almost try to simulate it to those people who made all these accusations
against me are like stolen valor right you know they've done nothing you know and
you know and they have to come take me down to get something and you know these people that i
worked with that did all these bad things you know they they wear the t-shirt of the job i did
right you know and i give my dad my t-shirts because he's proud of me and not them so okay
anything good with that or yeah that's good yeah we're good yeah all right i'll wrap it well one
i appreciate you you coming out making the drive how far what was a drive um it's like an hour
and a half it was almost i think it was like 99 miles but you don't think of it because i'm just down
south you know in sarasota so i'm like oh tamper's an hour yeah so no and it's it's all it's it's
I-75. But this is better anyway doing it. It's a better relationship. Yeah. Talking like that,
you know, and I'm all open. I mean, I'll, these are great. This is great for me, you know,
for me and for you, you know, even if you had Q&A and talk about other thing. And look, I'm even
open. I'm close by. If you've got talks you want to do to bounce things off as a, as from a
cop point to your point, be like, what do you think? You know, I'll debate with your own things or
whatever, man. Yeah, no problem.
I was just thinking, it's funny, this, no, never mind.
I was going to say this might be the, the public information officer for Okachobee Sheriff's Department
because I'm actually supposed to interview the sheriff of Okeechobee County Sheriff's Office on a story I'm writing.
So I was going to say they were going to call me today.
I'm never getting phone calls during the day.
So when it was ringing, I was like, that's probably the punch.
because he's calling me to schedule it yeah um but it's funny too how things turn out like i i
do talks in front of law enforcement i you know well i get that now too is i have some stuff on
lincoln like these people and they're like hey will you talk this like people and i'm blown away by it
and maybe because maybe i'm cold-hearted right in a way but i'm like i'm not going to kill myself
you know i'm like i didn't go to drugs i didn't go to to alcohol or medication
And I didn't go to religion.
I'm not, you know, I am who I am, and that's it.
Maybe I say things and I shouldn't say them, but I say what I say and I own it, you know.
Well, you said people call you from.
People call me and they ask me to talk to other people who are in a tough spot.
Right.
And it seems like a lot of veterans and it's really heartbreaking to hear it and for what they go through.
And you feel horrible because you see the way it is today with law enforcement.
And I can't believe in America is how much we discredit.
the military guys and girls.
Right.
And like military people, especially if they were in special programs like military police
or any kind of rescue squad in the military, like special forces or anything, they should be
given the top of the list to join the police departments back here or the fire departments.
You know, we should not be recruited just going to, you know, to Harvard to get somebody to be a cop.
These guys and girls earned it and they should be given a job right away.
right and they don't and then you come back to america when they're overseas and
these military guys and girls have the toughest time in the world to get their gun permits
to carry a gun in the country that they defended right and you why and everybody wants to put
these these tags on them well they got PTSD really you know try to stand the post for eight
or 10 hours you know protecting other people right just that in itself protecting the front gate of
an overseas base is glorious to what happens here in America.
Yeah.
And it's depressing.
It's to go backwards again to talk about Whitney Houston singing the national anthem in
1991.
Like, what happened?
Why did our politicians do this to us?
I don't know.
Listen, I went into prison.
13 years later, I came out, and it's just such a vastly different world.
Like, imagine being removed for 13 years.
When iPhones came out, there were no iPhones.
Right.
So I go to prison.
I come out.
Everybody's walking around staring at their phone.
Nobody talks to each other.
Nobody wants to work.
Kids don't want to work.
Like, I couldn't wait to work.
Kids don't want to get their driver's licenses.
They don't want to.
It's like it's insanity.
And people don't know how to talk to each other.
They don't know.
You know, there's so many, you know, the things that people argue over are, you know,
initially when I hear the arguments, I kind of scoffed it off and kind of laughed about it, you know.
and and now they're so passionate about things that seem so irrelevant and it's like are you serious
like like do you guys know that china's probably going to invade Taiwan right you know that there's
that Russia's invading you know it has invaded um um what do I want to say Chechnya Ukraine Ukraine
Ukraine like you know there's like other things that are going on there are bigger problems you know
you're you know we're in trouble we're in trouble as a country our military has been dismantled
oh man it's it's dismantled and you need to spend so much money on things like that and again
and where's the pride and want like i went in the navy when i was 17 i loved it i had i loved it
and let's revisit some some other things like if you want to change the uh the criminal justice
system let's invite criminals joining the military instead of going to jail at certain things
let's let's revisit that let's make things happen out there instead of focus it only on you know
listen to the sports figures tell us how to live our lives right or entertainers you know it's silly
it's very silly you know i mean there's yeah it's the stomach stuff things but i didn't look at them
like you're going to explain the whole thing anyway and I have a brief understanding of what happened
but honestly I've been absolutely booked the last few days so on the last week or so um but I mean my
basic understanding of the of um I don't know what it's not like I really typically just I
typically do like true crime stuff I don't know if you look at
the channel or anything.
Yeah, I searched around a little bit.
You know, my whole thing is trying to get my story out there and trying to get to
bigger platforms, you know, like reaching up to you got to you and telling it because it's
just insane like what people say.
Right.
But I get what you're saying.
And I looked you up a little bit too to see your background.
Right.
And being my background, it's an odd thing too is I arrested a Ponzi schemer years and years
again, and his name was from New York, Long Island, but his family, his parents lived in
Spring Hill, Florida.
Okay.
And I had to send the marshals there, but we're not me with the U.S. Attorney's Office and to revoke
the bond and seize the parents' house.
Oh, man.
It's a scumbag move.
Right.
Well, I mean.
But he's a scum, you know.
Yeah, yeah.
But, I mean, it's, you know, the problem is that, like, if you're the, if you're the,
victim, silent mode, no, on, if you're the victim of that, then, you know, obviously you're
trying to claw back as much money as possible.
So if he bought his parents' house with the money, well, I mean, look, I'm sorry, your son's
a scumbag, but we're trying to get this retiree as much money back that he stole this money
from a retiree or something.
Well, he did good.
He was good for a while.
He scored like $250, $300 million, you know, and whatever he was doing.
But it was him and his girlfriend, kind of wife, and, you know, to go, don't let people
on bail, man.
You can't, you can't do it if you're going to, he's on trial in Brooklyn, and then he, he fled.
He was gone to, yeah.
Do you leave the country?
Yeah, he went to, we went up to Canada.
Oh.
And, but we hit his cell phone and hit him, he was hanging out.
He, he, he turned his phone on and, uh, in a subway.
deli store you know like a fast food place right and uh boom we had his phone and then Montreal
police went in there and just dragged them up there and then you know it takes extradition
is a pain in the ass and it took us a few months to go up there and get him and uh came back
but what's really sad about the whole story is that his father was a loyal father and then
his father died after they seized his house like he just he destroyed it
Oh, yeah, so his last few six months or a year, your house is being, your son's thrown in jail, you're...
Yeah.
Yeah, I understand.
I've been that disappointment, so...
But that was like the most intense criminal investigation case I ever did.
Otherwise, I just worked warrants and worked the street up in New York and part of the task force
and then just went off the, you know, street savages.
right you know savages completely i've been in shootings fights everything you know um but you know
you know you can tell that you know clean clean business crime yeah well i it always it always
killed me when you know like you talk to these guys these white collar guys that where the marshals
show up and they pull their guns and they scream and holler and they're just like what the
fuck is going on like whoa like i filled out some paperwork like i don't have a weapon like
Like, I get it if you've got a history of violence and stuff.
But, you know, it's the whole overwhelming force or it's funny.
There's a guy, Rashi, I forget his name.
And it was in New York.
And, like, he was a Wall Street guy.
It was like half a billion dollars or something outrageous.
And for him, they came and they like knocked on the door and they were like, listen.
You got to come with us.
Yeah.
You know, they were real nice.
And he was upset because, like, they parked in front of my building.
I was parked in front of your building
like you still laugh at them
or you were accused
that Marshall doesn't know
whether it's valid or not
you know they don't know
like I was giving it to what
I got to get this guy
they said he's a bad guy
he's got to come to
yeah so yeah he was
he was upset because like
oh they had they had
their lights on
they embarrassed me
I'm like they didn't pull their guns
they didn't kick in your door
they didn't grab you
when you were you know what I'm saying
like he he was complaining
that he had been treated unfairly
and it was probably the most
fair arrest that I'd ever seen you know like when they what who came from me show secret service
they didn't even call the marshals for me those secret service just staked out the house for like
three days and then they pulled up and jumped out well a lot of these agencies they don't want to
turn over the cases to the marshals because if they work it's so long they want to have you know
the success of making the arrest but unfortunately some of them can't and that's where they call
turn it over to the marshals like we had a great we have a great work in relationship with
But DEA and ATF, you know, but they're out in the street every day.
They're building cases all day long.
And they actually don't have the time to do surveillance and go get the perp.
Right.
You know, they have so much other stuff to do.
Yeah.
And I was just say in my case, like they knew exactly.
Like they were giving an address.
Yeah, you were there.
I was there.
Like, they're going to watch it.
They actually watch.
I actually had, was staying in a hotel with, we'd had a robbery.
And so, you know, we weren't staying there anymore.
And we were staying in a hotel.
And the local sheriff's department or police department just, they knew we'd had a robbery.
So they called and said, hey, can you meet us there so we can get the surveillance tapes?
And I said, sure, no problem.
And I pulled up because they'd watched it for three days.
They were like, this guy, where's this guy?
He's not here.
And so I showed up and they pulled up.
But it was funny, too, because they, the secret service, the FBI wasn't, the FBI had an indictment out of Florida.
Secret Service had one out of Georgia.
and like they weren't cooperating.
Yeah, and so, you know, with each other.
And so I don't know if they didn't want to call the marshals.
I'm not sure when they finally grabbed me.
I know that it was so funny.
I had called the FBI agent when I was on the run at one point
just to see if I could turn myself in.
Like, maybe I could get to deal or something.
And I was talking to her.
And at one point, I said, okay, she was going to call you as attorney
and see what he could work out.
and she said um she said uh i said well okay and she's well here just you know
give me your phone number which i'm sure she already had you know like i called on a cell
phone she said give me your phone and i'll call you back and i said you're probably tracking
this call i said i'm going to shut the phone i'll call you back she says oh get over yourself
she's you're not that important and i was like yeah like who do i think i am you know and i was
like yeah and stop watching tv yeah and i was thinking no you know what i'm gonna i just feel like no
I'm going to so I said no you know what I'll call you back in an hour she's okay I hung up the phone turned it off later when I got to prison I ordered my Freedom of Information Act and I found out that she immediately called the marshals the marshals called like Verizon Verizon said that phone number was just issued to a phone that was purchased at it was like a 7-Eleven that was connected to like a subway sub sandwich place and I was sitting in the subway this whole time I waited the whole time and
they immediately issued two marshals to drive to that location and i just happened to leave before they
got there how long ago was your case was your case uh that would have been 2000 that would have been
that specific thing happened in 2005 yeah those days are over that's not happening anymore and the
government does it to themselves they just screwed themselves with reporting so much to the courts
and everything because now you can't do that now you have to have a full blur and start
search warrant to go after a phone.
Really?
Oh, my God.
Oh, it's funny, too, because...
Back in a day where you could do a lot more and that you had actions and circumstances to
pull up, you know, to work with...
It's funny how you mentioned Verizon and different companies that we had a good work in
relationship with.
But now, because of politics get involved and, you know, the way the current events are...
Right.
It's, you can't do that anymore.
And it's funny because, you know what hurt law enforcement was TV and the way?
media and even things like this, these conversations.
It's like they use it to sell and, you know, watch law and order and you hear all the
language.
That's law enforcement language.
So they have law enforcement representatives there who are retired and giving them the good
street lingo, you know, and now you see the movies, you know, it's all there.
So you can't do that anymore.
You have to, you know, make a report.
The agent would have to go to the U.S. attorney.
They have to draw up a complaint issue for a search.
By that point, the guy is way long gone, long ago.
And now the big cup of it.
They put two guys in the car immediately and they still miss me.
But, but I mean, who knows, if I had stuck around five more minutes, they might have grabbed me.
Of course.
And it's funny, too, because I didn't know I was writing my memoir when I had ordered all this documents, right?
So I kept saying it was a track phone, track phone.
I forget what I was referring to.
And when I actually got the documents in, I actually saw, like, they had the phone number.
they had like it was whoever was like virgin or verizon whoever it was i was like oh wow like it was
so you can only go back so far now because you're not allowed to look at so much information
and it's the same thing like trying to do your IP address on your your computer the computer
that is what they won't they won't you have to have to have a warrant you have to have a search
warrant to get any of that stuff now it's hard it's real hard i appreciate you coming by
and uh yeah thanks for making the drive and uh let me know how things work out and when your book
comes out you know we'll do another we can do another thing another um podcast if you're interested
and i'll try and put you in touch with uh wade he you know he i'm sure he'd be interested in doing
a podcast too and uh yeah so let me so if you like the video do me a favor hit the subscribe
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