Pablo Torre Finds Out - Inside Rick Pitino's Private World of Scandal-Fixers, from Strippergate to Trump
Episode Date: March 5, 2024The legendary basketball coach has made a comeback at St. John's, which paints him as a role model. But Pitino's past has only become more and more mysterious, beyond the Adidas bribery scandal, a lov...e triangle and so-called Strippergate. Correspondent Tim Rohan speaks to the private investigator who gave Pitino a lie-detector test... then gets a bizarre letter, a late-night phone call and a trip down a rabbit hole that leads all the way toward dirt on the Clintons and the federal investigation into Donald Trump. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out.
I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
Hold on to your testimony.
Don't get cute with me because I promise you.
I'm telling you the truth.
Right after this ad.
You're listening to Giraff Kings Network.
This is going to be one of those episodes, Cortez.
What does that mean?
One of those, like, you dive into my brain and it's really...
Long-winded?
Well, I was going to say fascinating.
surprising and entertaining while also being deeply substantive.
But yeah.
I have a lot to say about the fact that it is March, it is college basketball season.
The most fascinating character in all of this, most fascinating storyline actually,
in all of America right now, in terms of this sport, it's not a player on any team.
To me, it is this guy.
The return of Rick Patino to the Big East won the big storylines heading into the college
basketball season.
Patino has taken five different programs at the NCAA.
tournament. Could St. Johns be next? The 71 year old is the only coach to ever win national titles
with multiple programs. It is Rick Petino's season, Cortez. Of course. That is why I'm bringing you to this
table because the Big East tournament is starting next week. St. John's, where Rick Petino is now
coaching. They won three in a row. They might make it to the tournament, the NCAA tournament now,
in his first year. They look good. They do. But the thing
I have never questioned is whether Rick Petino is like good at winning college basketball games.
The thing I have been mystified by, truly this entire time,
is simply how Rick Petino is still being branded
as not just an all-time coach, but an all-time role model.
As his now university president, Reverend Brian Shanley, at St. John's,
a very Catholic school, introduced him one year ago.
And I believe that Rick not only will bring a winning culture to St. John's,
but he will be a transformative figure.
in the lives of our student athletes.
And that's the most valuable quality
that I think Rick Patino brings to St. John's.
He's going to change their lives.
They are going to be shaped indelibly by this man,
which is a loaded statement when you do realize
that in 2017, this happened.
Rick Patino, college basketball's highest paid coach
for perennial powerhouse, the University of Louisville.
Coach, did they fire you?
Today, placed on unpaid administrative leave.
After a federal criminal investigation Tuesday,
alleged two unnamed Louisville coaches worked with an Adidas executive
to pay high school recruit six figures to go to Louisville,
a school sponsored by Adidas.
And by the way, I'm like pretty numb to college athletes being paid
and all that stuff.
The thing about Rick Patino, though,
is that two years before that in 2015,
he got in trouble because his players were getting,
something else. Head coach Rick Patino of the college basketball powerhouse Louisville Cardinals
taking to his blog amidst allegations that the team hired female escorts to Wu recruits,
writing, I'm sorry we all have to endure the pain of these allegations. But despite the public
outcry for him to step down, he says, I will not resign and let you down. Side deals were
sex. And if they wanted to make extra money, that's what the side deal was. Sex. But that's
That also is not even the first sex scandal that Rick Petino has had to deal with at Louisville.
We're just scratching the surface.
And this is where I first scratched the surface because it was 2009 when this news came out.
And Rick Petino had to publicly admit to cheating on his wife with a former model slash windshield saleswoman.
That's right.
named Karen Seifer.
You might remember this.
Karen Seifer, by the way, would eventually go to prison for trying to extort millions of dollars from Petito.
Last month, Karen Seiford told police that Petino raped her in 2003 at this Louisville restaurant.
One month later, she reportedly told Petino she was pregnant and wanted an abortion.
Patino gave her $3,000.
He says, to pay for health insurance.
Seifer says it was to pay for her abortion.
And just for the record here, Rick Petino was never charged with rape, never charged with any crime at all.
And in fact, Karen, the woman in question, who I interviewed, was in fact a deeply unreliable narrator
about a lot of the things she claimed.
But the reason why this scandal remains the single most batch scandal
in college sports history to me,
and maybe even just all of sports in terms of anything that I've covered before.
Wow.
The reason why I believe that is because when I flew down to Louisville in 2009
to report on this thing,
I did in fact confirm a bunch of important events.
One of them is that, in fact, Rick Bettino in 2003,
that one night did meet Karen at a friend's restaurant in Louisville.
Okay.
It's sort of like an upscale Italian.
place, its name is Porcini,
he's a half dozen photos of himself
like hang on the wall, his friend is the owner.
That same night, that friend
let Rick Petino
hang out after hours. And in the
restaurant, there were just three people remaining.
It was Rick Petino. It was Rick Petino's executive
assistant, this man named Vinnie Tatum,
and it was Karen.
The woman he had just met.
When he got up to leave, Patino says
she whispered something, opened his pants,
and the two had sex very briefly.
Oh, yeah, that's the 15 seconds.
second thing. Yeah, I remember this. It was 15 seconds. That's how long it took Rick Petino to finish,
according to his own obviously instantaneously viral court testimony about this. I mean,
in basketball, 15 seconds or less is a turn. No, it's seven seconds or less. Oh, I mean,
close enough. So in that way, I mean, I guess not as bad. But the point being, this took place
at a table by the restaurant bar, but the craziest part about all of this I've not even gotten to yet.
Because what happens next, Cortez. So Karen tells.
Rick Petino that she is pregnant, that the baby is his. But the reason I've been thinking about
all this for 15 years is because what he proceeds to do is send one of his most trusted
assistants, one of his closest friends, this inner circle guy named Tim Seifer. And Tim ends up
driving Karen to Cincinnati across state lines to get an abortion, an abortion paid for,
with money from Rick Petino. Wow. And then, less than a year later,
thereabouts, Tim Seifer proposes to Karen and they get married.
This is insane, dude.
So the right-hand guy, Tim Seifer, marries Karen.
This is why her last name is Cypher.
This is why she's Karen Seifer.
And this is also why Karen would go on road trips to games with Tim and with Rick.
And they'd be at parties together and at team functions together after all this shit at the restaurant happened.
That's like straight out of Vanderpump rules.
is wild.
That's nuts.
Objectively wild.
And Karen would, by the way, later allege that Rick Petino paid Tim Seifer to marry her,
and they deny that for the record.
But the point here is that Karen and Tim did go on to have a daughter.
Okay?
And as Tim revealed while testifying at his now ex-wife's federal extortion trial,
this is 2010, Rick Petino quietly provided them with financial support.
His testimony began talking about a college fund that was set up for his and Karen Seiford's young daughter that was set up back in 2007.
Tim Seifer says, Patino, Rick Patino initiated that fun.
So all of this Cortez is to say, and I've been talking at you a lot today, but all of this is to say that this is the transformative figure, the role model that St. John's, this Catholic school, wanted.
And so what I wanted to do was find out more about these people around Rick Petino.
The people around him who most people don't know about,
the people who are seemingly there to help keep his image pristine and very clean.
Of course, what we discover is that this whole story is somehow even weirder.
This is already a weird story.
It seems hard to believe that it's going to get weirder.
You have seen nothing yet.
I have a million tabs open my computer.
I walk around this office sort of like muttering to myself about Rick Petino scandals.
So thank you for joining me in the rabbit hole.
Yeah, thanks for having me.
I have been obsessed with Petino and this story.
I mean, I guess the Karen Seifer story in specific.
But I want to be clear that you are not like this or you weren't like this.
You were an outsider.
I was living my life peacefully, normally.
And then you called me and said you had a story you wanted me to look into.
Yes.
because you are a really good reporter.
You're an investigative reporter who's also done just human stories about people.
And I just wanted someone else to take a look at this thing because I've been looking at it for way too long.
And I feel like you got potentially more than you bargained for.
Yeah.
Yeah, that'd be safe to say.
The Petino Cipher thing, I want people to understand the degree to which this has been,
it's a lot.
It's even more incestuous than I just laid out in that first segment.
Like, I remember just reviewing paperwork with Karen Seifer at her home when I was in Louisville in 2009, so long ago now.
And I was reviewing baptismal certificates, Tim.
And it said the priest who baptized Tim Seifer and Karen Seifer's daughter was Rick Petino's priest.
That's just one side of this story, though.
And so I sort of threw it to you.
Like, hey, Tim, there are these three big scandals that this guy's been in the first.
involved with, that's one of them. Go report out what this sort of network of people in the
shadows is really like. And so what was your approach? You and I start talking and it's like,
what is this world that Rick Patino operates in, right? Like who are these people that work for
him that carry out these tasks that are almost like fixers? There's this guy Vinnie Tatum,
for instance. Yes. And Vinnie Tatum. The guy in the restaurant. The guy in the restaurant.
He's Petino's designated driver, essentially.
Yeah, which explains why he's there at the restaurant, Porcini, after hours, as Rick Petino
and Karen Seifer are doing it at a table.
He does whatever Petino needs in whatever aspect of his life, apparently.
But he goes by the moniker Vinny Good Times, and that's his Instagram handle, that's his Twitter handle.
He's posing with his former boss.
He's posing with Rick.
Then also there was this guy, Tim Seifer, another central character to this Karen
Sefer's scandal was at one point in time a private investigator in Massachusetts, and at Louisville,
Tim Sefer is the equipment manager.
You know, like typical private investigator resumes suggest.
You go from that to equipment managing.
Exactly.
But then also, I kind of expanded it to think, you know, through all these scandals,
Rick Petino, he's still coaching.
He's back coaching.
He went to Greece, went to Iona.
Now he's at St. John's.
But there's other people that were caught up in these scandals that are not in
basketball anymore. It derailed careers, if nothing else. It derailed careers. So the natural question is,
you know, who are these people? What are they doing now? What role did they play in Rick Petino's life
back then? What role do they play now? When Petino started getting in trouble at Louisville, starting with
the Karen Seifer scandal, Patino's lawyers hired a guy named Carl Christensen. He's a former FBI agent
turned private investigator to come work on the case. What was the purpose of your
investigation there. Well, the purpose was to get to the facts, to see exactly what did occur.
And Carl walked me through his whole process of what he was doing and he would go out,
interview sources, track down witnesses, and build a report about what happened.
It's not totally dissimilar from what I asked you to do, except he was being paid by Rick Petino
to do it. Exactly. And he made that point several times. He's like, you and I were not so different.
Really, when you think about it, you know, I'm saying,
simply collecting what other people have to say, pretty much like you do.
He investigated all three of those scandals.
He investigated the Karen Seifers scandal.
He investigated the escort scandal.
And he investigated the Adidas scandal.
So then Petino's legal team had a report and they knew what they were dealing with when they would have to defend him.
But the number one question that I had from the outside about a guy like Carl doing this job is how do you possibly prove that this?
that this guy, Rick Petino, does not know what his own employees are up to.
Yeah, I mean, that was my question as well.
The Escort Scandal, for instance.
From 2010 to 2014, Andre McGee, who was a member of Rick Petino's coaching staff,
he was a graduate assistant at first.
He was allegedly arranging for women, strippers and escorts,
to come party with Louisville basketball players and recruits.
Yes, on campus.
And during those four years, Rick Patino promoted him, made him the director of basketball operations.
The idea that this was happening in that place without Patino knowing, allegedly.
The question people have is, if all of these other people knew, how did Rick Patino not know?
He's a micromanager. He's a college basketball coach, right? They like to know bedtimes, curfew.
And so I asked Carl Christensen. And Carl had conducted this investigation, and he was, you know, sure of the results.
You know, many people were in disbelief that how could a coach not know that this was occurring,
and it had occurred on several occasions.
And so he continued to insist he didn't know.
And to this day, I don't think he did know.
As he's doing those two investigations, the escort investigation and the Adidas investigation,
at a certain point in the process, Rick Bettino and his team, his lawyers,
they'd say, hey, let's put Rick through a lie to time.
test. Carl Christensen, former FBI guy, he's trained to give lie detector tests. Petino passed the
test both times. The only thing I could say is I've already taken a lie detector test given by an FBI
agent, ex-FBI agent, and I passed it saying I knew nothing about any money given to anybody. I
knew nothing about Adidas doing anything. And so for all these questions we have about did Rick
Patino know, did he not know, Carl Christensen, former FBI, did these two investigations and he
believes, you know, Rick Petino didn't know. And he's steadfast in that belief. He believes
Rick Petino. Based on all the evidence I've collected over the years, I don't have any,
there's been no one, not a single individual. Usually, you know, in many instances,
you have somebody that is just going to, you know, maybe hate Patino for some reason
and make up some kind of story. The only person that did that was Karen Cipher.
So the Karen Seifer thing, we're back to her now.
If Carl is the guy who believes fully in Petino's innocence on all these levels and his honesty on all these levels,
what about the actual people, though?
What did they say when you try to reach out to them personally?
I tried reaching out to Vinnie Tatum.
He said, I'm not interested in hung up.
Yeah, Vinny Good Time's not seeing you as a good time.
I reached out to Tim Seifer.
You responded a week later saying, quote, not interested.
Time moves on.
tried calling Tim Curry, the owner of Porcini, the restaurant.
Never heard back from him.
Andre McGee, the director of basketball operations involved in the escort scandal.
I sent him a letter in the mail.
Never heard back.
Jordan Fair, the assistant coach who was involved with the Adidas scandal.
Same thing.
And then Brian Bowen.
After the whole Adidas scandal, he did not play college basketball.
And now he's in the G League.
And so his career was completely changed by this and never heard back.
And so the brick wall in front of you, how do you get past that?
Yeah, I had nothing.
I was dreading.
I remember, I was like, I don't know what I'm going to tell Pablo.
You know, I didn't get anyone to talk.
I don't know what we're going to do.
And then I got a letter, a letter from Rick Petino's attorneys.
Dear Mr. Rowan, we represent Mr. Rick Patino, Coach Patino.
This letter is prompted by concerns recently expressed to our client by persons you contacted
regarding Coach Patino's personal life, including matters that may have occurred more than 20 years ago.
Normally, interactions with the press do not warrant apprehension,
and particularly in these instances, which includes the incident
where the felon who perpetrated crimes against Coach Petino and others
was found guilty and served significant prison time.
That would be Karen Seifer, the reference there.
The official records have been public for many years,
and given their lack of current newsworthiness,
one may be forgiven for believing your interest is purely salacious.
The tenor of your conversations, however,
led them to suspect an agenda to manufacture a purported
expose that threatened to place Coach Patino in a false life, if not defame him.
It is our sincere hope that those impressions were mistaken and that you would not act negligently
or with malice because our client cannot allow serious or damaging misstatements to go uncorrected.
The purpose of this letter, therefore, is to ensure that any publication is factually accurate,
fair to its subjects and does not unduly invade privacy rights or interfere with personal and business relations.
We would be remiss not to address these concerns now if together we can prevent dissemination of inaccurate, invasive, or unfair content.
So I should point out here that I have never received a letter like this before in my years being a journalist.
Yeah.
Have you? What is the, what is the?
No.
Yeah. No, not that I can recall. No, I mean, I've done, you know, I do investigative reporting and have reported on sensitive subjects on powerful people. But here is this letter in my email inbox and physically at my address.
This feels extreme. And this feels like somebody who is very conspicuously on guard against you finding out something.
Yeah, that was my reaction too. I hadn't really done anything. I had made a, you know, a couple of phones.
calls. And this feels, I mean, just to put a blunt point on this, like, it seems like the point of
this letter is to intimidate you and me into not continuing with this episode. Yeah, I think
the point was to scare us. But it's getting weird, Tim. Like, I set you off on this thing with,
like, a blank slate approach, and it started getting a little weird. This is when it gets weird,
and it's going to get weirder. It was actually the day before I got the letter from Petino's
attorneys. I got a phone call from a number in Massachusetts. And so I pick up the phone and the voice on the
other line, you know, greets me with, you know, warm, hey, you know, how's it going? I say, hey, this is Tim,
who is this? They don't really answer. They don't really, they don't tell me their name and they just
kind of are talking in circles. This is bizarre. It was very bizarre. The call lasted between 20 and 30 seconds.
And I finally am just like, okay, have a nice day and I hang up. And then the next day, the same day I
the letter from Rick Patino's attorneys, that same number called me back twice after 10 p.m.
I did not pick up the phone, but it occurred to me when I saw the missed calls, like,
why is that person calling me back? So the next day, I called the number back and the guy picked up
and he's like, I'm busy right now. I'll call you back in two minutes. Like, what do you mean you'll
call me back? I don't even know who you are. What does the voice sound like at this point?
It's a distinct Massachusetts accent.
He did not call me back in two minutes.
He called me back a couple days later, and it was a Sunday morning.
I did not pick up that call either.
I was sleeping.
And later that day, I tried calling him back, and I get his voicemail.
This is the first time I get his voicemail, and it's for a guy named John Moynihan.
I had just received this letter from Rick Petino's attorneys a couple days earlier,
and I'm like, could this be someone associated?
with Rick Bettino. And so I googled it. John Moynihan came up as someone who works for Clark Hill,
the same law firm that sent me the letter, the same law firm that represents Rick Petino.
Why the fuck would this guy be doing this? And so he calls me back. You know, he's like,
hey, how's it going again? Like, we're friends. Like, we know each other. I'm like, hey, it's going
good. And I ask, who is this? And he hangs up the phone immediately.
Hi, hi. Is this John?
Hello?
Like, what is the, is he, is he messing?
Is he fucking with me?
Is he trying to intimidate me?
Is he, like, why is this happening?
So as all of this is happening in January, Tim, I want to establish that we were sitting at this desk.
You came into the office and we sort of like put our heads together as you, I don't want to speak for you here, but it felt like you felt like maybe now you were being watched.
Yeah, it felt like, yes, it felt like.
felt like they're coming after me.
And so this is where I should say, like, sorry for the assignment I gave you.
But you come into the office and now I'm just like super invested, right?
I'm like, oh, fuck, this is now, now there's a mystery I did not anticipate that we have to
solve, which is this John Moynihan guy, is he who we suspect he is, the same John Moynihan
from the law firm that had also sent you the letter at home at your address that you did not give
them and is now like calling you at weird hours of the night.
and it leads us to another rabbit hole.
And what we find is a video from December 2018.
It's C-SPAN.
And it is the House Oversight Committee holding a hearing that is investigating because, of course, this story goes here, the Clinton Foundation.
Mr. Moynihan, you are recognized for up to 10 minutes.
Thank you, Chairman.
I'd like to thank you, Chairman Meadows and other members of the committee for having us here today.
My name is John Moynihan, and I'm one of three partners that engaged in this investigative effort involving a 501c3,
and in particular, the Clinton Foundation, the subject today's hearing.
And what we learn pretty early on here is that John Moynihan is, in fact, a former federal agent.
He used to work for the Drug Enforcement Administration, and he is sitting in this video, Tim, on C-SPAN, in front of a microphone on Capitol Hill.
he's been invited there by Mark Meadows, whose voice you heard there,
who was at that point the Republican chairman of the House Oversight Committee.
He would then later become the last man to hold the title of Donald Trump's chief of staff, incidentally.
But we realize that John Moynihan is an expert in investigation.
At this point, I'd like to answer two questions.
Who are we?
We are apolitical.
We follow facts.
That's all.
None of this is our opinion.
I emphasize none of this is our opinion.
These are not our facts.
They are not your facts.
They are the facts of the Clinton Foundation.
Why did we do this?
This is our profession.
People will ask us, are you doing this for money?
The answer is yes.
This is how we make a living.
We do cases.
It's that simple.
I hesitate to profile this gentleman, Tim,
but that sounds like a Massachusetts accent.
Very, yeah, that's a...
That's the guy who was calling me.
It's an incredible video this hearing, by the way, as he wears his suited tie,
and he's sitting in front of Mark Meadows, because it goes off for another hour plus.
So we were able to actually, like, check out, okay, this does seem like him.
And when he says, we, John Moynihan, he's referring to the guy sitting right next to him,
which is this guy, Lawrence Doyle.
When you look him up, you find out that he worked for a company that was called DM Income Advisors.
And when you Google DM Income Advisors, you find out, you find out that you find out that you find
a listing at of course this story goes here next the Worcester chamber of commerce their website and at the
bottom of that listing for DM income advisors you find a phone number next to the name john moynahan
that is spoiler alert the number that have been fucking calling you over and over again exactly so i mean
what did you think i mean we were sitting here at this desk i had goosebumps all over my body
because when I set out to do this story and assign you this,
I did not anticipate we get to the House Oversight Committee so quickly.
Yeah.
But we've just connected him to his Clark Hill Law Firm bio page in which we find what?
Yeah, if you go to the Clark Hill website, John Moynihan has a listing.
And he's called a special advisor for Clark Hill.
Clark Hill, the law firm that sent you the letter to your house.
Yes, the one in the same.
But also on the Clark Hill website, they have a whole press release page kind of touting this victory that they had in representing Rick Petino.
And in the press release, they mentioned none other than John Moynihan for having worked on the case and for having provided, quote, investigative assistance.
And so it appears that John Moynihan is now the new Carl Christensen.
Clark Hill enters the picture around 2022.
when Rick Petino is defending himself in front of this NCAA investigation with the IARP,
the independent accountability resolution process.
Another very deeply bureaucratic sounding committee.
Petino basically had this hearing in front of this independent panel regarding the Adidas
scandal.
And so he had to defend himself in front of this independent panel.
And so he hires Clark Hill to represent him.
And they go through this process.
and after the panel's review, they decide not to punish Rick Petino at all.
He is apparently found not guilty.
And the lawyer sitting next to Rick Petino at this press conference is Stephen Stapleton,
the very same person who sent me this letter regarding my reporting.
Which is all to say that we also were able to find video of Steve Stapleton sitting right next to Rick Petino
at a hearing of a different import,
and that sounded like this.
Good afternoon, everybody.
Again, my name is Steve Stapleton
from Clark Hill Council for Coach Petino.
This has been a long and tedious five years for Coach Patino.
It's been very stressful for him and his family.
He lost a job that he loved, a lengthy contract.
He listened to lies that were told by many about him
these past five years.
Although the IARP panel's decision,
completely exonerates Coach Petino.
There are no winners.
As we got to know, coach,
and review the voluminous record before the panel,
it was clear to us that Coach Petino
did not commit a violation.
He did nothing wrong.
So just to be very clear here, Tim,
when he says full exoneration,
he did nothing wrong,
I feel obliged to point out
that not everybody has that same interpretation of the ruling.
Yeah, Sports Illustrated in particular,
wrote a column that, you know, called out the panel on the board.
And one of the questions was the panel ended up putting down sanctions or punishment against
two of Patino's assistants.
Right.
But they also concluded that Patino did not have, I guess it wasn't his job to oversee his
assistance.
And so there's this kind of, you know, disconnect.
The question of oversight.
It is, I would say, very interesting how oftentimes,
it's these leaders of men, these great head coaches, these all-timers who write books about leadership.
And I'll quote Rick Petino book. This one is called Success is a Choice. And the quote that feels relevant here is this.
Quote, you create your own luck. You create what happens to you based on your decisions.
You create your future, both by your actions and your non-actions. End quote.
Which is to say, when it comes to just telling people how they could be better at leading others,
it's very easy for these guys to say,
you're responsible for what happens to you
because you're a leader.
And then when it comes to a committee
judging whether you are actually responsible,
you say, actually, it's not my fault, it's whose fault?
He's consistently placed the blame on his assistance.
The only thing he's guilty of is hiring the wrong people.
And so the question of who is Rick Petino hiring
brings us back to John Moynihan.
And it brings us back to him to the fact
that now we know who the fuck this guy is. We have heard his voice. We have seen his face.
We have a sense of his biography and full clarity. Now we've linked the number to the man.
And at this point, the next move here is obvious, which is to say, it's time for the investigative
journalist to actually investigate the investigator. I guess it's time for me to try to call him to
get him on the phone. Because at this point, you know, the story, we're so far away from
Vinnie Tatum and Tim Seifer at this point. At this point, it's like, who is John Moynihan?
Right. Why is he calling me? How is he now a main character in this whole thing?
And then also, what is Rick Petino's role? Did Rick Petino tell John Moynihan to call me?
We return to the fundamental question we started with, actually. In this way, it's the same story.
Who are the people protecting Rick Petino? And how do they operate? And so when you try to get John Moynihan
And now on the phone as you are the guy outgoing, making calls, what happens?
So I called him up and, you know, he answered very warmly as he had done in our previous calls.
And right off the bat, you know, I asked him, and maybe this was a mistake in hindsight, but I asked him, is this John?
Hi, hi, is this John? Hello?
And immediately hangs up the phone. I tried calling him with Google Voice.
didn't answer. He knows that you know who he is. And so that's kind of where I left things for a little
bit. This is where I get almost unhealthly obsessed with John Moynihan myself, because when you continue
to watch him on C-SPAN, Tim, which you realize is that, oh, the reason he's in front of the
House Oversight Committee in Mark Meadows is because he has promised that he has the dirt on the Clintons.
And Mark Meadows is asking repeatedly, can you share with us the dirt you
have and he becomes as frustrated as I imagine you were with John Moynihan when he wasn't answering
your basic questions. Based on your facts, do you believe there's probable cause of wrongdoing?
Yes or no? Yes. Mr. Doyle?
Hugely. Yes. Okay. All right. So let me get to this. I think you guys have been well advised
in terms of trying to protect your interests. So let me just be blunt. I checked with the IRS commissioner.
nothing that you say in this forum, according to him,
will actually affect any potential claim that you've already submitted.
That's what he told me.
So if that is indeed the case,
do you have a problem giving the 6,000 pages that you've submitted,
if it will not affect your financial claims,
to the minority and the majority of this committee,
do you have a problem with that?
We'll take that under advisor to counsel.
Well, then you need to go ahead with your counsel right now,
because listen, my patience is running thin.
You're here to provide expert testimony on what you've found.
And what I'm saying is, is that if you have a legitimate claim,
we will protect that.
But if you're not going to share the information with this committee
and cut to the chase, my patience is running out.
And this kept going, by the way.
And Lawrence Doyle, the guy sitting right next to John Moynihan, his partner,
decides to shy ben.
We shared our materials not only with the attorney office in Salt Lake, also in Little Rock,
but other U.S. attorney's offices as well that had been indicated as, you know, providing support
or working on Clinton-related matters.
You've shared all of those documents with those entities, and yet you somehow do not believe
that you should share it with Congress and the American people?
Well, this is...
answer that one for me, Mr. Monaghan.
I'll answer it very clearly. I want to hear this because, quite frankly,
are you going to prosecute the Clintons? Are you going to bring an action against the Clintons that
would yield us economic consortium? I don't think you are. Those entities.
But I thought, hold on your testimony. Don't get cute with me because I promise you.
I'm telling you the truth. I promise you. I thought you said you were all about the rule of law.
That was in your opening statement, all about justice and truth.
And that's where it kind of became just Keystone cops, Tim, in a way that might be familiar to you
talking to this guy on the phone.
And John Moynihan was a thing in D.C. for reasons that get even weirder.
Because you further tumble down the rabbit hole on him and you realize that, okay, one of his
longtime partners and associates is another former federal agent, a former CIA analyst,
turned conspiracy blogger named Larry Johnson.
Mr. Johnson, please turn on your microphone.
Usually I'm loud enough to talk over it. Sorry.
pleased to be here today with my partner and friend John Moynihan.
And Larry Johnson became notable in the world of American politics
because of an appearance he made on the esteemed news network known as OAN in 2019.
Larry Johnson was an analyst for both the CIA and the State Department.
He told One American News that now that the Mueller probe is closed,
is time for the American people to learn the truth about how the British government
helped the Obama administration dodge the Fourth Amendment by spying on the 2016 Trump campaigned for them.
One of the strengths and weaknesses or dangers of this five-byes cooperative is that it provides a channel for sharing intelligence information.
Wait, what's going on?
So that is Larry Johnson, a noted conspiracy theorist, who is a longtime business partner of your book.
John Moynihan. And that news appearance on OAN, and I use news and scare quotes, was a thing because
President Donald Trump tweeted about it. But I want to bring this back to closer to the present
and to John Moynihan himself, Tim. Okay. John Moynihan reemerged to file a whistleblower complaint
alleging that the special prosecutor currently pursuing Donald Trump, Jack Smith,
over electoral interference and January 6th,
John Moynihan has, he's reemerged to allege
that Jack Smith was engaged in an extortion scheme
while he was at the International Court of Justice.
In Larry Johnson, his boy, who we heard on OAN, is writing about it.
And Michael Flynn, General Michael Flynn,
another member of the Trump cabinet is that he's here tweeting about it.
And all of this is just this conspiratorial bullshit
but it feeds directly into the top of American politics as Donald Trump himself is attacking
Jack Smith like this.
The prosecutor in the case, I will call it our case, is a thug.
I've named him deranged Jack Smith.
I wonder what his name used to be, Jack Smith.
It sounds so innocent, doesn't it?
Jack Smith.
What's his name?
Jack Smith.
He's a very nice man.
He's a behind-the-scenes guy.
But his record is absolutely atrocious.
In some ways, it was both incredibly shocking
to know that we were going to wind up with Donald Trump.
But in another way, it kind of felt perfect.
Like, of course, the guy who is now very much a character
in Donald Trump's latest convenient conspiracy theory
is the guy calling you seemingly on behalf of Rick Petino.
Yeah, like, what?
How did we get here?
I mean, just, it's, it's, yeah, it's weird, it's surreal.
Where's this going?
We need to go back to Clark Hill.
The law firm that warned us against reporting on this, it's time for you to go back and say,
we've been doing a little bit more reporting on this.
Exactly.
You and I put together a list of questions here, and we sent them over nine questions.
There are just some basic ones in there.
The Clark Hill direct John Moynihan.
to contact me via phone. Did Rick Petino direct John Moynihan to contact me via phone? Or did he have any
knowledge of Moynihan's efforts to contact me? What was the purpose of these calls? Did Clark Hill's
lawyers consult Rick Patino about the letter? What involvement did he have? And then we also asked,
does St. John's University contribute financially to any of Rick Petino's legal fees?
Right. It's worth to remember a year that, oh yeah, right, St. John's hired this guy to be the
leader of, the face of their school, basically, the leader of men that they had touted him to be at
their opening press conference. I believe that Rick not only will bring a winning culture to St. John's,
but he will be a transformative figure in the lives of our student athletes.
We asked him those questions and a few others, and they, we got a response from Stephen Stapleton.
Yes, and the excerpt in this case was shorter.
Yeah. And he, he, Stephen, response.
to me and said, we received your emails. We again attached our letter dated January 16th,
2024. The first sentence of the letter disclosed that we represent Rick Petino. The letter is very
clear and you should read it carefully. And so they're not mad at you, Tim. They're just disappointed.
Steve Stableton's response went on to add. He said, if you have specific unprivileged questions
related to Coach Patino, please send those in writing to us and we will pass them on to Coach
Petino for his review.
And that was promising.
Yeah.
We asked versions of the same questions, but now rewritten, so they're directed towards Rick.
And so we sent that letter, the Steve Stapleton, on the morning of Sunday, February 18th.
And, you know, we told them, hey, it'll be great if you can get back to us in a couple days.
And it just so happened that Sunday, St. John's had a basketball game.
And they played.
played Seton Hall.
Didn't go well.
They blew a 19-point lead,
Popolo.
And in the post-game press conference,
Rick Petino goes off.
And he calls out his players by name.
He's naming names.
Shockingly, Rick Petino is blaming others.
This has been the most
unenjoyable experience I've had
since I've been coaching.
His day started with a letter from you.
It resulted in this presser
that was miserable.
But all,
All of this reminds me that John Moynihan is not going to be answered for by Rick Petino or Clark Hill, his employer, or any of the people that were going through here by knocking on their door.
And so what happened to John Moynihan?
So, you know, throughout all of my interactions with John Moynihan, never got a chance to ask him these questions we want to ask him.
The whole point of trying to contact him toward the end was we wanted to get an interview.
the same opportunity to speak for himself
that we've given every single person
that we've sent letters and phone calls
and texting emails to.
On Sunday, February 18th,
the same day we sent the questions
to Rick Petino's lawyers,
I sent a text message to John Moynihan
asking him, would he do an interview?
Would he sit down and talk?
We had all these questions
that we wanted to ask him.
At this point, you know,
you and I had gone down the rabbit hole,
we had looked up the phone number,
the voices matched up.
Like, there had been all these confirmations
that, okay, this is the same John Moynihan.
But the back of my head, I was like, really?
Like, there's no, it can't be.
Why is the former federal DEA agent calling you from his own number with his voicemail activated?
And then he texts me back and confirms, you know, in responding to this text that it's him.
You've asked him, will you siffer an interview?
Yes, and this is what he writes back.
He says, absolutely not.
Please let Rick Petino alone.
He's been through a lot in his life slash career.
Please note, somehow your phone number.
number populated into my phone. Calls made to you from my phone were not intended to you,
rather to the contact in my phone your number populated to. I've contacted my carrier how something
like that could even happen. Which is an incredible, I mean, tip. Yeah, I mean, I don't even know
what to make of that. Like, he's, I've contacted my carrier, Tim. It doesn't make any fucking sense.
And then there's another
there's another line.
He ends the text by saying
the carrier has opened an investigation
into that
and stated to me
they were contacting the FCC
to review.
So he's getting the FCC involved.
Thank God.
Finally.
Finally the FCC has been brought
It's just phenomenal bullshit.
All of this though
brings us at the very,
very end here
to just like
wanting to still hear from the guy behind the guy behind the guy, right?
Like, Rick Petino, I was really hoping to hear his voice just to speak for his own self,
finally.
And instead, I feel like the closest thing we have on the record is that presser that we
played before.
It's him sitting next to the guy that wrote the letter to you, sent it to your house,
Steve Stapleton, who employs the aforementioned John Moynihan.
and Rick Petino gets asked in this mission accomplished presser in which he's vindicated supposedly.
He's asked like, you know, like how does it feel to finally be exonerated?
And Rick Petino says this.
My son said to me, Dad, you wrote a book, knock it off, please.
My son was my assistant coach who's a brilliant mind in his own right and he's not a head coach in New Mexico.
He said, Dad, that's it.
Stop with, we know you're innocent.
your players know you're innocent they know what you're all about your family knows what you're all about
stop trying to convince people and i took his advice i hate taking advice from my son richard
but i took his advice and uh he was right so tim when you hear rick petino saying i've taken my son's advice
i'm done writing books i'm done defending myself this was 2022 he said all of this um he's done
speaking for himself um what goes through your mind as we contemplate the question we started with
which is how is Rick Petino still here, still avoiding a stain that feels like it would have knocked out pretty much any other person who might have been linked to the same things?
Well, my thought is, you know, maybe Rick isn't the one defending himself out there in the public square.
And maybe he's not doing that, but he doesn't have to.
This legal apparatus will leap into action to defend Rick Patino.
Yes, a legal apparatus that is otherwise being used, by the way, to defend Donald Trump and election deniers and conspiracies in Washington gets trained upon the journalist who dares to knock on the front door.
So that's what I wonder is. How many other people have asked similar questions and have gotten responses like this, right?
Like how many letters of Clark Hill sent out to this effect to, you know, how many people started this process got pushback from Clark Hill and then abandoned it, right?
It's a good question.
Yeah. And so that's that's the thing, right? It's not we're not debating what Rick Petino knew,
what he didn't know. The fact is he's been linked to these three scandals. And what we've learned
through this process is behind the scenes, there's this whole group that is working on behalf
of Rick Petino to make sure that his image stays clean, that whatever he's been accused of,
whatever he's been linked to, his suit is going to end up looking nice at the end of the day,
because they are working for him to make sure that people don't ask questions that he doesn't want answered.
Right. And there's a loyalty that's conspicuous too.
Yeah. I mean, look at the text message John Moynihan sent me. Please leave Rick alone.
And that's what we wanted to know. What is the relationship between John Moynihan and Rick Petino?
Why does John Moynihan feel such an affinity for Rick Patino that he would say something like that, right?
Why Vinnie Tatum and Tim Seifer, right?
These two guys we started this story with who were working with Petino at Louisville for all those years.
What loyalty do they have to Patino, right?
I mean, those are the questions we started with.
Yeah.
And I don't know if we got concrete answers, but we learned a lot, right?
Hopefully.
I think we learned both very little and so much more than I ever dreamed we would.
That's a good way of putting it.
Yeah.
This has been Pablo Torre finds out.
a Metal Arc Media production.
And I'll talk to you next time.
