PBD Podcast - "No One's EVER Seen This" James O’Keefe BREAKS Epstein Files, FBI RAID Plot & Project Veritas Split | PBD Podcast / Ep. 591
Episode Date: May 26, 2025Patrick Bet-David and Vincent Oshana sit down with James O’Keefe as he reveals leaked info from inside the U.S. government. He details an FBI raid, seizure of his phone, and access to his Signal mes...sages. O'Keefe dives into his politics and gives his opinion on Pam Bondi, Dan Bongino, and Kash Patel.----Ⓜ️ CONNECT WITH JAMES O'KEEFE ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/3Hq2h5O 🖥️ VT WEBINAR: HOW TO BE A KILLER IN BUSINESS WITHOUT KILLING YOUR MARRIAGE | JUNE 11TH | 12:30PM: https://bit.ly/4hVTkPK📺 SUBCRIBE TO HER TAKE: https://bit.ly/4k95Tb6🎫 THE VAULT 2025 | SEPT 8TH - 11TH | THE GAYLORD PALMS | ORLANDO, FL: https://bit.ly/4dJlmfL🍋 ZEST IT FORWARD: https://bit.ly/4jYg3Lh📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": https://bit.ly/41rtEV4🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: https://bit.ly/4g57zR2🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: https://bit.ly/4g1bXAh🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: https://bit.ly/4eXQl6A📱 CONNECT ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/4ikyEkC👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: https://bit.ly/3ZjWhB7📰 VTNEWS.AI: https://bit.ly/3OExClZ🎓 VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: https://bit.ly/3BfA5Qw📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/4g5C6Or💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time!ABOUT US:Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
No one's ever seen this before.
I get sent this.
I'm like, holy s***.
This is not public.
Someone inside the United States government gave that to you.
That's correct.
The FBI pointed guns at me and took my reporter's notebooks.
Because I have to call my lawyer.
And the moment that I unlock my phone,
they snatch the phone out of my hand
because I unlocked the phone.
Now the FBI has access to all my signal messages.
Do you know what's in my signal messages? All the people in the government that come to me with
information. And then they raid your house. Correct. That is the justification for the raid
against James O'Keefe. So that means they can do whatever they want. That's a question that Dan
Bungino and Cash Patel need to answer. Will they?
They need to answer.
If you want something that is revolutionary,
a breakthrough, it's Diddy because he's alive.
What is the thing that needs to be on video in your mind?
Oh, it's very easy for me.
Tell me.
I've never ever talked about it on any podcast ever.
This is the first time.
I commit to you that I will do this.
This is also very dangerous, wouldn't you admit, to do these stories?
Well, you subscribe to this lifestyle.
I almost feel like they're concerned that I'm gonna, like, record them trying to bribe me.
Mm-hmm.
Which I would.
Yeah! Of course! I'm sorry. You are a one of one? My son's right there. I think I've always said this before.
Oh he is? Yes.
Oh you gotta be kidding me. Yes he is.
Positive. I'm certain of it.
We're live right now though.
So he is part of the Skako family?
Correct. Yes.
So okay folks, first of all
if you're tuned again
James the last time we sat down was February of 2022 roughly three and a half years
I've seen nothing's happened since then for you life's been the same. It's been normal. You know things going good, but last night
You sent me this this documentary and
I'm leaving town so I'm going out of the country and I said listen
Let's see if we can do a podcast before we leave and then last night I
sit down going through it's called the truth of project Veritas part one that
just came out this week and I'm more I'm watching it I'm like you got to be so
this is what happened here because originally when the whole scandal took
place over go you know what James O'Keefe what was he up to he was spend
the money he was doing this,
he was taking helicopter rides,
he was taking one too many Ubers and black cars
and all this stuff.
This is what you kind of see in then your apology letter.
But walk us through what happened with Project Veritas.
Thank you for having me.
This film I've released, The Truth Inside Veritas,
takes you inside of Project Veritas,
which fired me two and a half years ago.
And it shows you what happened at the board meeting
where they were throwing all these grievances out at me.
You hear the grievances, you meet the employees,
and you meet this board member in federal court
because they sued me.
So they fired me me and they indefinitely
suspended me without pay, aka terminated me. So I just started a new organization called OMG O'Keefe
Media Group, which I've been doing. And then they sued me to try to shut OMG down. So in this
deposition footage, in the video tapes from federal court, depositions are public proceedings.
I took the depositions, I put them in the movie,
and you see what happened, and it's an insane story.
It's a crazy story.
Yeah, so the event, the sequencing of the events,
which is kind of weird, is when you got the big Pfizer,
one of the directors that talks about what they were doing,
Rob, if you want to go through the timeline,
so the sequencing was kind of weird when you first are
I want to see if I got the dates here or not. Let me see. Yeah, right there January 2023
You know we hear about the under your leadership release an undercover video featuring a man identified as Jordan Tristan
Walker this the one that he's running out. Yeah, this is the biggest story ever.
This is the biggest story, guys, at the peak.
The director, the mRNA director
of scientific research at Pfizer talking about
mutating the virus at Pfizer.
This video was viewed an insane amount of times.
I confront this guy, if you remember this,
I confronted him with a microphone
and he physically assaulted me.
That's right, I remember that.
And he took the iPad out of my hand and he smashed it on the ground.
This is the gay date, the gay guy at Pfizer.
YouTube took it down, it's still on X, and he's talking about directed evolution at Pfizer,
something that Pfizer denies, but he says it. He's a director at the company. And we released this video and I can find him in a restaurant in New York
city. And a week later I was removed from project Veritas.
So conspiracy theories were a bound. Did Pfizer bribe somebody?
Did they put pressure on people? This is the guy, Jordan Walker.
There he is right there.
Change your music. Why I remember this guy. Yeah,
this is this is this is a Yale educated doctor, director and high up within Pfizer pharmaceutical.
And there he is freaking out. grabbed the iPad out of my hand. My cameraman had to push
in self defense, push him away because he was physically assaulting me you could probably find a better a better video there oh there's
the one of him undercover click on that Pfizer ultimately is thinking about
mutating COVID the undercover journalist asked and he said well that is not what
we say to the public no no no don't tell us any don't tell anybody what I'm
telling you promise me you won't tell anybody can we hear the audio of this
guy saying this Rob go Go back a little bit.
Yeah, this part, I hope there's no Titanic music
in the background, but go ahead.
Not sure if you have audio on the clip.
And James, while he's looking for this,
how in the world can you expose something like this,
this guy, plain and simple, and then nothing happens?
Like nothing happens?
The truth is what? To him or to me?
No, let's stay on this.
Okay, well I'm tired. Let's sequence things.
Okay, my bad. Let's stay on this. while this is happening while this is happening. This is being released
Okay, do you have the audio Rob or no? I do I let's see
Our undercover journalist so you're on a date with him or somebody else's
Vaccines are ineffective against virus variants.
What he said is disturbing.
Listen to this.
We're exploring, like, you know how the virus keeps mutating?
Yeah.
Well, one of the things we're exploring is, like, why don't we just mutate ourselves so
we can create, I mean, we can develop new vaccines, right?
So we have to do that.
If we're going to do that, though, there's a risk of, like, as you could imagine, no
one wants to be having a pharma company mutating fucking So that's like one of the things we're considering.
Like the future, like maybe there's like great new versions of the vaccine and things like that.
Okay so Pfizer ultimately is thinking about...
To the audience who may not remember this, okay we remember we reacted to this multiple times.
Okay.
But how high ranking of a person is it?
Pretty high.
Okay, pretty high ranking.
At the time when I released this,
the mainstream media were like,
well, we don't know if that's really a Pfizer director.
They denied that this guy was who he was.
I got internal Microsoft Teams messages from sources
within Pfizer that confirmed he was who he said he was.
He's a director. high up in the company,
two below the chief executive officer,
and yeah, high ranking guy.
Okay, so when that happens, you release that.
What happens, give me the sequencing of what happens
with Project Veritas trying to fire you,
the 25 employees that turned against you,
what happened then?
Yeah, so this was released January 26th, 2023,
January 25th, pardon me.
The confrontation with it was released
the very next day in Brooklyn.
It was just filmed in a pizza restaurant in Brooklyn.
And then I was, board meeting was on February the 6th,
where they brought in a six and a half hour
grievance session out of 75 employees,
about 12 employees spoke with these grievances,
which is what you watched in the documentary.
And then on February the 10th,
they indefinitely suspended me without pay,
AKA fired me from Project Veritas.
Now the claims they made is you fired a CFO
and you fired, is it Hinckley, or what's his name?
Yes, Barry Hinckley.
Barry Hinckley, so he was the chief strategy officer, if I'm not mistaken.
Correct.
So walk me through what their concern was.
Because you don't have the right to fire the CFR, the chief strategy officer.
Look, I'm the CEO, the founder.
What do you mean I can't fire you?
They said that I was wrong for me to fire the chief financial officer.
Who is they? The board?
The board.
These individuals that you saw on the film.
board, these individuals that you saw on the film, they, their names, Matthew Tiermond, George Schakel,
other individuals who no one knows their names,
Joe Barton, but these board members said,
James does not have the authority,
and it turns out I did have the authority.
And the chief financial officer sent me a message
on February the 2nd saying,
we're gonna have an emergency board meeting
to remove you, James O'Keefe, as CEO.
I was like taking off on an airplane at the time.
I was like, this is the Twilight Zone.
I said, what are you gonna say to the public?
Do you have a press release written?
They said, no, the public doesn't need to know.
So for me it was like, are you kidding me?
Like this was like the Twilight Zone.
Were they using counsel to threaten you to follow every order they were giving you or
else? Is that kind of what they were doing to you, intimidation or no?
No it was just a, this is the story of what, this is such a crazy story. They weren't threatening
me, they were just informing me
that they were going to remove me as a CEO of the company.
So my number three guy saying,
we're gonna remove you and restructure the company.
I said, okay, you're fired.
This is not gonna happen.
I'm not gonna let you do this
because it's gonna destroy the organization if you do this.
And this is the phone call we're having
as the airplane is taking off from Nashville excuse me to Nashville on February the
2nd. All of this is in this film I just released. You can hear some of the audio
of what transpired. And then they have this board meeting on the 6th that's
Monday February of the 6th 2023 some a week or so after you just video you just
watched and and that's where you had this bizarre struggle session,
Maoist struggle session, where they marched in employees,
and it was almost like employees went on strike,
and said, we don't like James O'Keefe, he's a mean boss,
he works us too hard, and they have these weird grievances,
and you could hear all the grievances in the room.
Yeah, one time apparently you ate
a eight-month pregnant woman sandwich,
which she later on came back and talked about.
Yes, the pregnant lady said it didn't happen.
Yeah, she said it didn't happen,
but they literally said you ate
an eight month pregnant woman's sandwich.
I stole a pregnant woman's sandwich.
I took, Barry Hinckley said I took black SUVs around he said you
shouldn't be transporting the CEO around like this. A bunch of really strange
accusations which never made a sense to anybody anybody watching was this is
insane and questions are what how could this happen why could this so many
things to dive into here about what went down. So on on George Schakel Rob if you can pull this up now the George Schakel
Schakel I keep pulling up is
Ethel Kennedy's father Ethel Kennedy married
RFK the
Bobby Kennedy's father the agent of
AG who got assassinated so you're saying that George Schakel family
is related to the George Schakel
that was one of the board members.
Yes, to be clear, Ethel Kennedy,
the Kennedys and the Schakels are two famous families.
Kennedy's Democrats, Schakel's Republicans.
Ethel Kennedy is the mother of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
This same Ethel Kennedy is the aunt of that man right there,
George Schakel, so they are in fact related.
So they are in fact related.
Okay, so George Schakel,
one, when the conversation comes about
at the end of the documentary,
when he says, hey, you can never have a house like this,
is it all about money?
How much money do you make?
Is it all about money for you?
Yeah, I bet you can never have a house like that,
and he's got a nice house that's to the side. How did he make his money? How much money do you make? Is it all about money for you? Yeah, I bet you can never have a house like that. It's got a nice house that's to the
side. How did he make his money? That's not exactly clear to me, but
his father's grandfather founded a company. I forgot the name of the company.
Big company. Probably find it online here. Was it carbide or Union Lake carbide?
Some type of coal processing?
So it's generational money, so he's like a third generation, fourth generation
money. Correct. Okay, I got it. So when he said the four, when they asked the
question and they said, so how much money did James O'Keefe steal or whatever
the question was? And he said seven hundred and eighty five thousand and
twenty three cents, seven hundred and eighty five thousand and twenty three cents.. So $785,023.
And he asked the question,
so how'd you come up with that number?
I can't tell you.
What was he talking about?
He literally just made it up under oath.
He was flippant.
He was being flippant.
It's a remarkable piece of footage.
He's under oath.
This is a federal deposition.
Your audience might be asking,
how can O'Keefe play courtroom videos?
Depositions aren't under seal,
meaning they're public proceedings. It's videotaped. He's under oath in a federal courtroom proceeding and
the attorney asks, you alleged that James O'Keefe owes you money or stole money.
How much did James steal? And he has it. He found it. Watch this clip.
I'm interested to know how much James the key fogey. Yes, sorry.
Playback speed to normal, there you go, watch this. Oh, $785,000.25.
How did you arrive at that figure?
With a very, very complicated algorithm
I cannot reveal because it's confidential.
And it's based on the employment agreement?
Obviously, it looks very honest here.
How many violations did you identify? 27. 27 violations on the employment agreement? Obviously, he looks very honest here. How many violations did you identify?
27.
27 violations in the employment agreement?
And that led you to what figure?
I just told you, I'm not repeating my answer.
Is that analysis in your documents of reporting today?
No, it's not.
Is it done in your head?
No, not partially.
Where else?
Well, I'm not allowed to disclose that. I mean,
these people were just impeaching all of their credit. Okay, so this guy, George
Skakel, when he's saying that, prior to them coming after you, you drop the Pfizer
thing that it talks about four companies he's invested in. One of them, I don't
know how many of them was Pharma. what was his link, if there is any theories
to say well the reason why he did this because they got a phone call saying this, what are
some speculations that you have that caused them to want to fire you right after the biggest
story you guys ever dropped with Project Veritas?
Well there was another clip in the deposition, you can pull it up here in a minute, but he
says that these companies could, this is his quote, could be sold to Pfizer.
That's what he says.
And these companies, now when you're in a
non-profit organization that investigates these things,
we have to sign a conflict of interest policy.
And this is very important in my business,
infinitely more important than any other business.
If you have financial investments in these,
you have to disclose it. I did not know this, but every one of my board
members were co-investing in these companies without my knowledge. They
were soliciting money from each other to put into these companies and I didn't
know it until I got to this lawsuit. And this is an ongoing lawsuit.
He found it. This is the clip.
If you want to play that clip, Rob, about three or four companies, you just had it.
Go for it.
The only thing that has changed is that we broke the biggest story in our organization's history.
It was a story that was so big that it was a combination of the board thinking they finally could do this without James O'Keefe,
but also maybe some conflicts of interest per their own words. Is it fair to say that three
of the four companies you've invested in you would consider to be in the medical field?
Or Petrogen could be sold to a big pharma. Like Pfizer. You agree with me what Pfizer could be a
candidate for? Maybe, potentially yeah I mean you know I think if I was a banker
you'd be crazy not to let Pfizer know that it was available. Yeah it turns out
I was up against all these people who are financially aligned. We can pause it
right there Ron. Yeah so three or four companies. James, the board members that you had,
if you can give a one, how did you find them?
Two, profile, because if I'm on your board
and you're having to raise $2 million a month,
because this thing takes a lot of work,
the whole $24 million you were talking about,
they say, well, we want you to stop raising money.
How the hell do you want the company to run
if we can't raise the money?
Yes, so if you bring these guys in,
don't they have to be 100% locked in
to realize who you are?
Like everybody knows what you're going to do
and what you're not going, you're an acorn guy.
When you drop that whole acorn story,
go into an event with an underage hooker
that you showed up to as a pimp.
Awesome pimp.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, come on in, come on in, come on in.
And I think you were with Breitbart at that time,
if I'm not mistaken.
That's right, yes.
So don't these guys who are part of your board members
know who they have as the product that they're marketing?
The problem was nobody was willing to be on my board.
The people that I trusted and respected the most
said I can't be on your board.
I'll write you a $100,000 check.
I'm just not gonna be on the board.
This is non-profit, tax deductible money.
Someone even wrote us a half a million dollar check
but he says I can't be on your board
because it's too risky for me the liabilities
Pat the liabilities of what I do approach infinity
I've been sued dozens of times. There's no at least not yet. I hope to make it sustainable and profitable. There's no profit in this
You can't become wealthy doing this
Why because you get sued so much and the legal fees on the balance sheet,
the liabilities always outweigh the assets.
So you have to be a little nuts,
at least in the right way to do this.
You have to be-
You're fully nuts.
No, you are.
You're qualified to be able to-
In certain ways I am.
But the problem is,
self-interest is a very powerful motivator for people.
And the instinct for self-preservation
is extremely powerful.
So when you get raided by the FBI, which we were in 2021,
a year before this happened,
and you're getting sued by everybody,
the problem is, is if you're not messianic,
if you're not mission driven,
corruption-
Why would you let them be on your board?
So that was my mistake.
That was my mistake.
I did not discern this.
And I had a founder's board.
I knew these guys from 10 years prior, right?
When I was scrappin', when I had nothing.
And they were willing.
So the mistake that I made is they were willing
to be on the board and I said okay.
And I couldn't find anybody.
The hardest thing about what I need.
How many do you need?
What's that? How many board members do you need? What's that?
How many board members do you need?
501C3s require a minimum of three,
but you really should have five optically, oversight.
How many did you have at the peak?
I had three at Project Veritas, 501C3,
and then I had three at 501C4,
and they combined the boards when they did this.
They just put everyone on the same board.
So six, that's an even number though.
Is it a six equal voting or the one that votes
on a 501C4 doesn't have influence over the 501C3?
There were only three board members when they did this
and it was a two to one vote.
Just a two to one vote all was.
Who was the one?
Well I was the third board member
so I was opposed of course to this. So it was Tireman and Garvey, John Garvey. well i was the the third board member so i was opposed of course to
this so it was tierman and garvey john garvey and then they combined the other board which was george
skakel and joe barton and a man named steve alemik is now deceased so it became four to one it became
five to one five to one okay so profile of those guys we just me four to two when steve alemik
voted against it he the one that passed away correct So he was with he actually committed suicide
You can't make this stuff up
It was a four to two vote when they combined the boards and they voted to an indefinitely suspend
You know he committed suicide correct. What was the timeline of when he committed suicide?
It was within the year after this happened and is there any
Stories of why he came is it not related to this event? Did this event cause so much trauma that he just didn't want
to deal with it? I don't know. It may be unrelated. I don't know.
Okay, it may be unrelated. Of the four board members that were against you, we just
learned a little bit about Skakel. Can you tell us a little bit about the other
three? Absolutely, and there should be some clips in this film to to back up
what I'm saying. As you know know I like to make factual statements this Matthew Teremond was the was the number one
Orchestrator the the top guy and I'll you want to take you through a little bit of each of these guys Matt Tereman
I was on a boat in the Bahamas pad about eight nine years ago with a big big support a big philanthropist
And he said to me you have to beware of this man.
I said, why?
He said, because this man is incredibly jealous of you, James.
And he wants to be you.
You need to get him off your board.
Now at the time, I didn't know what that meant.
I was like, oh, what does that mean?
He admires me.
I didn't have any life experience to inform me
what could happen to someone who wants to be you.
But apparently people saying this guy
was very envious. He wanted to, you know, to, to, to be me or to have what I have, whatever that,
we could talk about that. That's Matthew Tirmann, the guy who orchestrated everything.
And there are some insane pornographic obscene messages he sent me. Now, Matthew Tirmann was
soliciting the board members to put money into his companies that he was his for-profit
Wall Street, he worked on Wall Street
He has an economics degree from the University of Chicago
His father was a famous a famous
Polish anti-communist dissident a lot of these guys had fathers who were wealthy and famous
So one theory is that they lived in the shadow of their fathers.
We could talk more about him in a minute.
There's George Skakel, who we've been talking about.
There's a man named Joseph Barton.
There's federal deposition clips of him in the film.
Joe Barton said some pretty crazy things in his deposition.
He said, I'm not entitled to a private life.
So these guys were publishing
messages about my personal life with my girlfriend. There's a man named John Garvey, who has is
about to be deposed. He hasn't yet been deposed. And then there's Steve Alembic, who committed
suicide. Those are the board members.
Of the four, how many of them have you had communication with since they fired you?
These guys have been obsessively, I mean obsessively, posting and tweeting on X about me non-stop for the last two years.
Crazy stuff, demonic stuff. You wouldn't even believe me unless I pulled it up on the screen.
One of the ones, which one was the one that kept texting you, I love you,
listen, I feel so bad about what's going on,
and then afterwards, you're my mother fucker,
and all this stuff, so how often did that happen?
Was that as board members or were those employees?
You're referring to in the film,
these are some of the employees.
Now again, at Project Grown-ups, people don't realize,
when I came on your show, you had like 65, 70 employees.
That's a lot of people.
And you saw about 12 or so were acting in this
demonic way. You're referring to a couple of the younger employees who were behaving
like this. So they came in the boardroom, they said, Oh, Keith's a mean boss. He yelled
at me one time. He's a power drunk tyrant. And then a week later, they would send me
an Instagram. I'm so sorry I feel
horrible for what I did I never should have done this and then like a few
months later they're calling me I can't even say it on the air but horrible you
know expletive words on on on the DMs so now are you at a point that are we
because to us when it happened the first thing I said is, I don't know what Project
Veritas is without O'Keeffe.
And I know they don't like to hear that.
A lot of times people think certain organizations can get the same kind of results without the
face.
Most companies can survive without a face.
Most companies could.
And you're like, oh my God, Apple will never make it without Steve Jobs.
Apple goes from a 100 billion auto company
when Steve Jobs dies.
Tim Cook did a great job.
It's a three trillion auto company.
He 30x what Steve Jobs had, right?
But this is a small nonprofit that,
when I said you're crazy enough to do stuff like this,
the average person doesn't wake up saying,
let me go expose Pfizer
in the middle of all the shit that's going on. Let me go expose Acorn and have the guy I work with suddenly have a heart attack that
nobody knows what's going on. And then Michael Cormier, who is the leading investor, I don't
know what role he had. And then he all of a sudden dies and they don't know what he
died from.
They're saying arsenic poisoning in the LA coroner's office
The average person doesn't want to do your job the average person just wants to consume the content you create so project Veritas
We saw one of the recent clips and the most common question everybody asks is wait a minute
Why is it say Veritas and OMG right? Oh Keith? Right right? What was that all about?
Are you at a point right now what Veritas is coming back under you or not yet?
Yeah, so they're on the verge of bankruptcy.
When I was raising $2 million a month,
$24 million a year, it's a lot of money
to raise as a nonprofit, remember.
There's no annuities.
You have to ask people for money.
Constantly.
And when they got rid of me, the donations just stopped.
Everybody wanted their money back.
And in that board meeting, I had one Trump card,
because these guys were, it was like a struggle session.
They just wanted to make me feel abused.
It was a lot of envy and just petty human things that,
this is not unique, it happens in a lot of organizations.
But to your point, what are they gonna do
if they get rid of the guy who's raising all the funds?
They didn't have an answer and they didn't care.
Now, in the movie, I noticed your producer
had that 54 minute movie.
If you can find this moment where it's about 3 quarters
of the way through towards the end of that board meeting,
that's the guy, Matthew Tereman,
you just saw him on the screen right there.
There was a quote that's the guy Matthew Tierman, you just saw him on the screen right there. There was a quote that's incredibly important and I said, point of order, what are you guys
going to do?
Because that's the trump card I had, what's your plan?
Okay, you want to lash me, you want to crucify me, you want to make me feel abused.
And Tierman says something and I hope we can pull it up, that same guy, goes We have 65 employees. We're gonna be fine without James O'Keefe
They actually believed or they wanted to believe not for product like this
But but but you see that's so interesting about human nature, isn't it?
Because when you're that envious when you're that resentful when you're that diluted
There it is right there. You got it. Yeah. 65 employees that you just passed a moment ago.
My question is what is the plan
of if you implement this solution?
Project Dark Pop is an organization
that has 65 incredibly talented individuals
who are capable of doing journalism.
We don't believe that there will be any lost output
on the margins.
Cut.
There it is.
So they actually believed
that there wouldn't be any lost output on the margins.
Literally the exact opposite happened.
Every donor wanted their money back.
Nobody trusted anything they had to say.
Now they believed, but content is king.
Our journalism matters. But the problem, what they had to say. Now they believed, but content is king. Our journalism matters.
But the problem, what they failed to understand is
investigative journalism is all about trust.
And if you behave like this,
nobody's gonna trust anything that you report.
And I think that's what they failed to understand.
But Matthew Tiermont actually believed
that Project Veritas didn't need James O'Keefe anymore.
So they also apparently lost 200,000 followers, like within days of us, you know, the audience
finding out that you're no longer tied to them.
So even the Veritas account, I don't know what it was, but I saw somewhere that they
lost a couple hundred thousand followers as well.
So what number did that $24 million go down to?
The revenue you mean?
Yes.
Oh, zero, negative equity.
There was one individual, I can't name the donors
under the Freedom of Association, under the First Amendment,
but one donor said, I want my $1 million check back.
The chief financial officer said,
it's unlawful for us to return your check.
That's not true.
The donors wanted their money back,
so they went deeply into debt.
So when I left, there was somewhere around
10 million dollars in cash and no debt.
No debt.
And now they're like two million dollars
in debt with no cash.
So is that gonna come back to you?
Is that where you are?
Where project...
Eventually.
And your audience might be wondering,
well why can't O'Keefe talk about
the specifics of the negotiations? Because I promised the court I won't, and I'm a man of my word. On
settlement negotiations, you can't talk about the details. I can talk about the proceedings,
that's public. I just can't talk about the details of the so-called settlement, you know,
the talks of acquiring or getting the information back.
All I can tell you is that I'm in talks to reacquire Project Veritas.
When you put that Project Veritas on the back of that most recent video that you did, why
did you do that?
Because we had filmed a video in front of that brick wall, brick wall backdrop.
We literally, brick by brick, rebuilt the Project Veritas studio here in
West Palm Beach, Florida where I now live because I was about to, imminently about to,
announce that I'm reacquiring Project Veritas. Oh, so it wasn't finalized yet. So did you have
permission from them to use that? Can you use that? Was that a conversation you have with them? There is no trademark of the logo.
In fact, I've applied for the trademark myself.
So I'm allowed to use it.
Okay.
I'm allowed to report.
The same reason I'm allowed to report on the court proceedings, for sure.
Well, I mean, look, the work you do and did is not everyone's work.
It's not something everyone wants to do,
nor can do in the manner that you do it
because you stay poised and calm
in the moments that you're in
and you get in the faces of people
yet still stay respectful.
That's not easy for people to do
because some people in that moment,
they get so emotional, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
and then they don't know how to come down.
You stay. So you can't even train somebody to be like that. Because some people in that moment they get so emotional And then they don't know how to come down you stay
So you can't even train somebody to be like that you either have it or you don't have it one can get better
But you can't just train someone and say why can't you do what O'Keefe does?
It's not a skill so they can teach anybody so hopefully to go to that direction because I think your job is a
very important job to move on is there anything else you want to tell the audience before we move on from
this story?
Because obviously we're going to put the link below to go watch the documentary.
But is there any final thoughts on this story?
A couple things.
Number one, you can watch the movie O'Keefe Media Group.com.
It's nine dollars.
People say, why are you charging for journalism?
Well most of the journalism I don't charge for but I think this movie is incredibly cinematic
I know you watched it yesterday. It's it's an incredible experience and it's a really story about human nature
This is about human nature. How do I build an organization? It's not really a business
I mean it is a business but it's it's a mission
How do you create a sustainable entity a team of people going after the most powerful
people in the world, which I will continue to do. We're about to talk about Epstein and all these
other things I'm doing right now. How do you build that without it getting corrupted, without people
lying about you to the FBI to protect their families, right? These are really hard questions
that I haven't yet fully figured out yet. I'm learning, I'm experimenting.
Nobody does this.
So I'm trying to create a sustainable organization
that can do it at scale.
And to be fired from the company that I created
and to build something from nothing,
you mention in the film, George Kekel says,
you can't afford my house.
That statement said so much about him, didn't it? Anybody who says that says you can't afford my house that statement said so much about him
Didn't it anybody who says that you can't afford my house it?
I don't know if you can play that look all the way at the end right this is the thing that actually struck people them
Of all the things in the film. It's the very last like thing that happens in the movie
This really struck people and it says so much about the character of these people. It's about like 30 or-
Yeah, they're literally standing,
that's right there, right there.
There it is, played it.
They're lying.
They're loyal to each other.
Go, go, go, go.
George.
Were you an investor in the same company as Matt Tremont?
Some of them.
You didn't disclose that.
But I wasn't an investor in the companies
while I was on your board.
While you were on the board?
Yes, I think I was on the board then.
You weren't?
No.
When did you become an investor?
After I left your board.
Is that right?
How much did you invest in each of Matt's
here minutes companies?
I don't think that's any of your business.
I think it is.
How much did you?
We have a disagreement.
Are you refusing to answer the question?
Yes.
I want to talk about your investments
in the medical companies.
I want to talk about you.
How much money did you spend on private helicopters?
I wasn't particularly concerned about the financial stuff.
There is no reason for me to disclose anything.
My personal investments?
Yes.
That's ridiculous.
Well, you said you're a businessman and Pfizer could be a buyer.
What did you mean by that?
I invest in businesses.
That's not news
It's about me. That's how I made it. It's all about making money, isn't it?
How do you think I pay for this? Is it all about money too bad? You can't afford that there it is right?
So you're a liar. Yeah, well, it's all about money, isn't it? It's all about money
Because I'm not a business guy. It's all about money isn't it? This was one of my closest associates,
it was almost like an uncle to me,
and unfortunately, I think I would say the last comment is,
I don't know whether the commercial imperative,
the profit making mechanism is compatible
with absolute truth telling.
When I watched the people closest to,
I mean, this guy was an uncular figure.
His wife was like my second mother.
And money just unfortunately tends to corrupt.
So that's a deeper, more philosophical concept.
I just wanted to get that out
and tell you that I'm working on it.
And I think the solution is to find really strong people with
really strong convictions who are not for sale and
Unbreakable and if I can surround myself with those types of people I think I'll will be okay
That's a perfect transition into the one video clip Rob if you can
About your life, right? We've all seen this clip Vinny. You love this. Can you put Rob? Is there music in this one?
I think there is right. I believe there is it gonna be okay to play it with the music
It's on YouTube shorts without music to whichever your preferences. What is the message of it Rob?
If the price isn't your life, then you're for sale. Yep
Let me see if I can find it on YouTube without the music. So if you can find shorts is without music people
I mean the music. So if you can find it. It's YouTube shorts, is without music. I mean the music adds a.
It adds something to it.
You feel like you wanna cry.
Yeah.
There it is.
Is that the one?
That's it without music.
Okay, go for it Rob.
What is your price?
Is it 10 million?
Go back to the beginning
because you clipped out the first two steps.
Is it 20 million?
What is your price?
There you go.
Is it 10 million?
Is it 20 million? Is it 100 million? What is your price? Is it 10 million? Is it 20 million?
Is it 100 million?
What is your price?
Because if your price is not your life,
then you are for sale.
If your price is not your life,
then you are for sale.
So if you're gonna be a truth teller, your price has to be your life. I
can't surround myself with people whose price is not their life because the enemy, whatever
the enemy is, whether it be physical, legal, spiritual, will attack the vulnerability of
the person who can be compromised. So you get real spiritual, real fast,
if you're gonna do this type of work.
What is your price?
James, and I've seen this multiple times.
I've shared it with people.
We've played it on the podcast.
I think what you're doing,
you're hands down the best journalist.
You don't give a shit.
You even said right now that you're not in the,
like what money are you making from exposing the truth?
I know it's gonna be damn near impossible
to trust every single person
because what you said about the money situation.
But in regard to this video, James,
with the price of your life, has anybody,
I'm pretty sure they have, approached you
of any people of power that have tried the offer?
Maybe a Soros, maybe somebody to tell you,
like James, shut up, here's money,
we'll give you this disappear. Leave us alone
It's it's a very interesting
Yeah, this one and I remember a venue you DM to me. I appreciate that very much
You're very touched by this. Yeah big time at the time people were you could hear the murmurs in the crowd
These are men twice my age. Yes, just a simple statement. They're like, whoa. Yeah, what a concept
Yeah, it's not you know, these are, there have been a couple times in meetings
where people have, the closest thing I could say
where as a person of wealth would ask me to do something,
and I would say, I can't, I can't,
this is not an exchange of goods and services,
I can't do something in exchange for you paying me to do it.
That's not how I work as a journalist.
I have to operate impartially without fear.
And when the person realized where I was coming from,
they kind of backed off.
They're like, oh, no, that's okay.
I almost feel like they're concerned
that I'm gonna record them trying to bribe me,
which I would.
Yeah.
Of course, that's who you are.
So when they realized, when they danced on that precipice
and they realized where I was coming from,
I think they realized, oh, Keefe could expose me.
And to their credit, they back off.
And there's that interesting dance
where they're maybe in their, trying to corrupt me,
but they then realize I could expose them.
Yeah, so there's been that.
So you hear a message like that with life
and your life's on the line,
and some of the stories you pursue.
Now here's the thing, politically, James,
what would you say you are politically?
I don't even know anymore.
I say the truth, I did a story on Pam Bondi.
That's exactly what I'm going with this.
I took a hit.
I think I tell stories by way of example
because I think it's better than abstractions.
I did a story on the Attorney General of the United States
and it was hard for me because I don't dislike her
or like her, it's not about whether I like someone or dislike them.
It's about whether the public has a right
to know the information I'm exposing.
I tend to have been branded as a conservative
only because I felt the legacy media in the last decade
and two decades has been not telling the truth.
And if you do tell the truth,
then you're branded as a right-winger.
But I don't even know what these terms mean anymore.
I really don't know what it means
to be a liberal or conservative anymore, do you?
I don't understand.
I think conservative values are pretty clear.
I think liberal values are not to date.
They're confused.
But conservative values, family, country, America first, making sure we're not going
for nonsense wars where people's kids are fighting a war that's unnecessary because
somebody's making money on the back end and deals are getting done, faith, freedom of
speech, those are conservative values, right, that I would say they're there.
And watching you, I would say you have- Well, constitutionalists.
Okay, there you go.
I'm a very strong First Amendment,
perhaps one could say absolutist on the First Amendment,
with some exceptions.
So I would say I believe in, for example,
one of my values and virtues is I believe
in equal justice before the law.
I think the law should, I know that it's impossible,
but we should try to emulate this.
The law should treat people equally.
Some would say that's a conservative value, right?
That's an American and quite conservative value.
And I also believe in the freedom of speech,
and I'm an absolutist when it comes to that.
Yeah, and where I'm going with this is the following.
So video comes out, because a lot of conservatives were told on day one, week one, you know,
we're going to find out about Epstein, 9-11, MLK, John F. Kennedy, we're going to find
all that stuff out.
And we've been wanting it for a while to see what's going on with this, who's behind it,
especially the last few years at a whole different level.
And we're going to find out who the assassination attempt was.
Was he tied to anybody?
Was Thomas tied to anybody?
And then we all see the same clip that you've seen, right?
It's the clip with Bongino and Cash Patel.
If you can pull that clip up, Rob.
And you know, these are two men that almost anybody who knows them would call them patriots.
Right?
They've served their country.
They've given their lives to the country.
Dan has at the highest level, so has Cash Patel.
And then we see this clip here that throws a lot of people off.
Go for it, Rob.
You said Jeffrey Epstein committed suicide.
People don't believe it.
Well, I mean, listen, they have a right to their opinion
But as someone who has worked as a public defender as a prosecutor who's been in that prison system
Who's been in the Metropolitan Detention Center who's been in segregated housing?
You know a suicide when you see one and that's what that was
He killed himself
You again you want me to I've I've seen the whole file. He killed himself. I know it's hard work
You said and you saw people that have done body language, you know, Dan looks uncomfortable
Saying what he's right the way he answered it
You can tell that roleplay that and you know, they've now this is purely what people are speculating, right?
And then you have this one clip with Pam Bondi crowd if you have the Pam Bondi one
I'd like to play so maybe walk us through what's going on here before You have this one clip with Pam Bondi. If you have the Pam Bondi one.
So maybe walk us through what's going on here before we cut.
I don't know if you want me to narrate live
as opposed to watching me on the screen narrating.
What's better to do?
Perhaps we go to the beginning of where you see Pam Bondi
on the hidden camera, so I'll just talk live
what I said on the camera.
Okay, so there she is at the White House.
Go back to the beginning of that clip of her,
so that was a tough one for me to publish
because I, you asked if I'm political
and I think I'm, you know, you have to decide
who you want to be.
Are you a political operative or are you a journalist?
And to be a journalist, it's hard
because you have to do things like this.
Pam Bondi was caught in a restaurant
telling a stranger, a nanny, on April 28th or so,
that there are tens of thousands of videos
involving little children.
Now, I didn't target her, I didn't seek to get this.
People send me stuff, sometimes I've undercover people
all over the country and they happen to get a conversation
in an airport. I
Get sent this I'm like, holy holy shit. Mm-hmm. This is not public
The Attorney General of the United States and by the way cash I believe the FBI reports to her
So this is the top dog. Yep is saying to a nanny in a restaurant
Something that no one knows and to me I'm like, well, that's an interesting story, is it not?
So I do what I have to do.
I reach out to the attorney general's office for comment.
I say, you know, Pam Bondi, the attorney general
of the United States was caught in a restaurant saying,
and I actually wonder whether I should have done that.
I probably did him a favor by giving them the exact quotes.
And then a few days later, she says the exact same thing publicly that I emailed the Attorney
General's office for comment, saying, and played the clip before at the White House.
This is what she said.
... thousands of videos of Epstein with children or child porn.
Now, this is the first time an official has publicly acknowledged that videos of Epstein and his victims exist.
What you may not know is just nine days prior, the Attorney General had a very similar conversation
with a total stranger in a restaurant.
Do you know when the Epstein files are going to get released?
We hope soon. I don't realize it's We hope soon. Okay. Okay.
So any dates?
No, you know what it is?
There are tens of thousands of videos.
Yeah, and it's all with little kids.
So they have to go through every one.
So it's interesting because she said it privately in a restaurant to, well, publicly, publicly
in a restaurant, not privately.
And to me, it's like, that's something, something.
So I felt like I had to publish this.
Now, if she hadn't have gone publicly and said this,
and I had released this clip in the restaurant,
it would have been a much, much, much bigger deal.
But it does raise questions, doesn't it?
Why is this, why are they not being transparent
with the American people?
Why are they telling a nanny in a restaurant?
So it raises questions.
Do you point about Cash?
I know Cash a little bit.
I think he is a good man.
And I mean that.
Based upon what I know about him.
I don't know Dan as much, but I also think he's a good man.
I don't trust the bureaucracy that reports to them.
And if you put any good man, and the most ethical person,
at the top of that bureaucracy,
I think you're setting them up for failure.
Let me give you a specific example of where I'm coming from.
I was raided by the FBI shortly before I met you.
The FBI pointed guns at me and took my reporter's notebooks.
They just recently closed the case against me
a few months ago, the FBI, in February
of this year.
And they gave me back my phones that they had for three and a half years.
When you get a search warrant to conduct a raid, you have to go to a judge, right, with
a reason.
Oh, we have this probable cause, the reasons why to raid.
When you close a case, which is very rare for the FBI to execute a search warrant and
not bring charges, it hardly ever happens, you rare for the FBI to execute a search warrant and not bring charges it hardly ever happens
You are required by law to give a copy of the probable cause that is the reason why you conducted the rape guess what they did
They redacted
Every single word of the probable cause used to raid my newsroom every word
Maybe your producer can pull it up on Google or something. I have
Every word there's a black bar pat
it's a it's a it's a it's ridiculous it's literally black bars
we're not talking about terrorists we're not talking about jeff epstein
we're not talking about child molesters and drug traffickers talking about james
o'keith the journalist
so far f b i our attorney general's office, can't be transparent about why they raided
a journalist's newsroom, why do we have any faith in the FBI to be transparent about these
other issues?
That's where I'm coming from on this.
Is this in regard to the Ashley Biden diary, James?
This is it, right?
Because somebody contacted you and told them that they found the diary of the daughter And is this in regard to the Ashley Biden diary, James? Correct. This is it, right?
Because somebody contacted you and told them that they found the diary of the daughter
of the President of the United States staying a bunch of stuff and also claiming that her
father showered her with her probably at inappropriate ages and then they raid your house.
Correct.
Yeah, it's an affidavit.
It's my, go down, go down. It's Roger Garedos, journalist, detained, devices seized, affidavit. It's my go go go down go down It's Roger Garedos journalist that detained devices seized. This is not it, but it's on my ex page
There's a there's a there's on page 47 of the affidavit
Every word is redacted. I mean I I was
Enraged
The AC the American Civil Liberties Union, which is a liberal group came to my divin this is like this is crazy
You take if if another country like Ukraine or Russia or North Korea did this our State Department would so my point is I
Don't have a lot of faith in these institutions. I just don't what do you think happens when they get in?
That's what I want to know. Because to me...
There it is right there. I apologize.
Could you just, I apologize, interrupt.
Is that real?
That's a real document. Can you zoom in please?
It says, probable cause justifying search of O'Keefe's person and premises.
Every single word is redacted.
They even redacted the footnote.
Isn't this insane? There's more of this.
So that means they can do whatever they want.
And they don't have to show you why they came in your house.
It's literally, it's a violation.
Look at this, look at this.
The whole thing, keep going, Rob.
Okay, I see what they did there.
Okay, wait, there's something unredacted.
Read the bottom.
What's the bottom?
Read that.
Based upon my, this is an FBI agent,
I have learned, among other things,
that cell phones are capable of sending emails.
Great.
Are you kidding me?
I'm shocked I didn't redact that.
This is not Saturday Night Live.
And then it goes on to the rest of the affidavit.
But the previous three pages are the probable cause.
That is the justification for the raid against James O'Keefe.
And James, if you don't mind,
what were they looking for, the diary?
They weren't looking for the diary.
They already had that.
What were they, well that's a loaded question.
What were they really trying to do?
What were they really trying to do?
They were really trying to get inside my cell phone
because people in the government come to me
with information which is a report
or I have a right to receive and they don't like that.
Of course.
Now if you think about it.
Did you give them the password to your cell phone?
This is another very interesting story.
Cause you know what happened with Ron Johnson
where when they walked up to his house
and they took his phone and rule of thumb,
if you ever hand your phone over,
never you're not supposed to give the password.
How did he get into your phone?
This is a crazy story.
They bang on the door and it's the loudest pounding,
you know it's the feds, you just know.
And I go to the door, I'm like,
oh, I'm opening the door because they're gonna shoot me.
And then they open, they put me in handcuffs,
I think I'm under arrest.
They say, no, this is a search warrant.
I say, I wanna speak to my lawyer.
I say, over and over again, I wanna speak to my lawyer
because I learned I was arrested 10 years prior.
Don't talk to the FBI, just don't, even if you're innocent.
They say, would you like to use the iPhone
on your nightstand?
I said, yes.
And then I unlocked the phone
because I have to call my lawyer.
And the moment that I unlocked my phone,
they snatched the phone.
Not get out of here.
This is, they snatched the phone out of my hand
because I unlocked the phone.
And then the FBI agent,
like almost to torture me in front of me,
he goes to the settings and he changes the settings
to make it not go to sleep.
Wow.
And then they put the phone in an evidence bag.
Now the FBI has access to all of my signal messages.
Do you know what's in my signal messages? All the people in
the government that come to me with information. Wow. So the Department of Justice, this is the
Biden Department or the month before Trump was elected in 2020. Excuse me, Biden was elected in
2020. Now they have access to all of my sources. So this is what's considered to be a constitutional
raping because the American Bill of Rights have special
protections for reporters and you're talking to the only newsroom that has ever been rated
by the FBI. We're the only ones that have ever been rated and they did it just to get
the information. So what's behind all those black bars? I believe confidential FBI informants.
People who lied to the FBI to set me up.
So I could tell you so many war stories guys,
but you ask me questions about cash and Dan Bungie.
They're great guys.
I think they mean well.
But if you put me in charge of the FBI,
I wouldn't know what to do.
I mean, how do you trust a bureaucracy like that?
Where people behave, that by the way,
that is totally illegal.
You can't take a
gun, point it against your forehead and say, give me your reporter's notebooks. If that
happened in Eastern Europe, our state department would be issuing sanctions against that country.
But it happened in New York.
So, guys, one question, James. So they promise all this, day one we're going to do this,
day one we're going to do this day. We're gonna do that
What do you think happened meaning they're in now Donald Trump is the president?
He's told them go ahead you guys do whatever you want
What who who makes a Pam Bondi a damn Bonjino a cash Patel?
All of a sudden change their tunes and not release what we know because James at the end of day
She even said tens of thousands. I'm assuming James is let's say 30,000 hours of
grown men having sex with children and James I don't know if you're familiar in
the movie JFK Jim Garrison says and I quote let justice be done though the
heavens fall which basically means going after truth no matter how powerful the
people and no matter what happens to the system. So what happens?
What do you think they go in and who tells them you are not releasing any of this because
our friends and blah blah blah are attached to it?
I don't know if anyone tells them.
Some have said they put you in a skiff.
This is more of a, this is not a fact, this is speculation, but a funny notion that might
illustrate what could happen is, you know that image of JFK getting shot? This is not a fact, this is speculation, but a funny notion that might illustrate
what could happen is, you know that image
of JFK getting shot?
Yes.
Do they put the leaders in a skiff,
that's a secure, compartmentalized information facility?
Do they show the Zapruder film of JFK getting shot
and said, you better do what we tell you to do?
Or that could be you.
Now I'm not saying they did that to these gentlemen,
and I actually genuinely mean this I've met cash
I think he's a genuinely good man. I just don't I think the system is institutionally
Corrupt and everyone says you know what they say to me Pat. Oh called cash. He'll help you out
Call BAM call Pam. Yeah, like I got him on speed dial. They're getting asked for 10,000 favors a day
I don't have I don't have, I don't
have any money to give them. The system is so broken when you need the guy at the top
to be so influential. It's the system. It's the article three judges, the courts, it's
the line prosecutors, the agents in my apartment. Do you know that when the agents were in my
apartment, I could tell by the looks on their faces that they didn't want to be there.
Like this is crazy.
This is wrong.
But they did it.
You know?
Well, speculate a little bit.
What do you think happens when they get in?
Because they tend to change when they get in.
Speculate.
You mean you're talking about the FBI agents?
Anybody and everybody.
The moment they get in, and the whole quote by Mario Cuomo,
people campaign in poetry, but they govern in prose.
Once they go in, they used to communicate and talk to you.
Now the only way they talk to you is with emojis.
Hey, when they were campaigning, they wanted to talk to you regularly.
I want to come on the podcast.
I want to do this.
I want to do that.
And then all of a sudden they're in.
They're more quiet about it.
What do you think happens when they get in?
Good question. Politics. Politics. I'm working on a story right now,
one of the directors of the agency, they mean well.
They go into FEMA, they go on the IRS,
they have all these notions of freedom and prosperity
and eliminating waste, fraud and abuse,
but then they get in there and they're such snakes
in these entities.
Just, you know, I mean, DC, it's a land of phonies
and narcissists.
They're not attracted to do the right thing.
They want power and money and sex.
Are we under some delusion that the people in Washington
want something other than power and money and sex?
What percentage of the people in Washington
inside these agencies are actually there
to do the right thing?
What percentage, For real.
Are we naive and foolish enough to think that people are in these places?
I think they start off wanting to do the right thing. And then through peer pressure they get
forced to filter out their statesmen in them.
Or there's a few people that are there who do the right thing, but there's so many snakes
and manipulative... Look Look what happened to me
Look why I'm on your show. I started my own
institution because I didn't want to be part of the snakes and
And the snakes infiltrate and I think in some regards its human nature
And this is a really good question. You're asking I'm learning in real time. I started an institution because I didn't trust institutions,
and then I'm removed from my own institution by snakes.
Hello, everyone, I'm James O'Keefe,
been doing this journalism thing for about 20 years,
truth, justice, exposing corruption,
everything that comes along with it.
If you want to connect with me, talk to me about any of this,
you can connect with me through Manect.
You can see the QR code below.
Look forward to hearing from you.
Yeah, but what I want to know is you have a creative mind.
Okay, let's say out of a hundred people that get in there, okay, let's say 50 of them are in there because they're driven by power, fame, prestige, narcissists,
all that stuff.
Let's say 20% get in because they're statesmen, they love America, they just really want to
go out there and make a difference.
Let's say 30% get in because they think it's a good job.
It's like, it's a pretty good job.
I'm going to go try it out and see what I can do. I'm gonna go be a lawyer
Okay, the 50% are the ones that found a place where they can use their evil tendencies and I understand
Yeah, I understand what you're saying once the 20% gets in. Yeah, the 20% are the ones that are getting in that I'm a statesman. I
Love America. Got it. You know, it's bigger than this. What do you think
happens for the 20 percenters to flip? What I think is, you would you say 20
percent statesmen get in there something like that? Let's say it's 20 percent. I'm just making up a number.
I think that's accurate. I think that's accurate. I think there are probably 20
percent. I was probably embellishing. The problem is, is if you're in an
institution, you have leakers or one or two people at the top, all it takes
is a couple that are sabotaging your campaign, that are leaking your confidential informants
to the press.
It completely sabotages your operation.
So the problem in these institutions, if you don't have your team, which is like 100% loyal
and in high integrity, even a few of these snakes can destroy the entity.
So that is the problem in my view,
is that you have a couple people at the top
who are engaged in gaslighting destructive campaigns.
Maybe Bongino, here's another thing,
they're getting fed information that is not true.
And they're put in a position, an untenable situation,
where it's difficult for them to be successful.
That's what I think.
Well, James, here's my question, though.
If they're, from her words, everybody heard it, twice,
one to a stranger, one in front of a camera
on the White House lawn, they have tens of thousands
of hours,
that's mind-boggling, of grown men having sex with children. Okay? Who has the power, James,
to not let them expose those people right now? Because those people are still walking around
pedophiles, sexual assault, pedophiles that belong in prison prison and to me. I believe they deserve to die. Okay, that's my thing
I was stopping them James from releasing one of the names
We know the whole backstory would have seen but you mean to tell me you guys are watching these videos every single day
And nobody's been taken off the street. That's a question that Dan Bongino and cash Patel needs to answer
Well, they need to answer will they do they have the courage to answer it?
Why aren't they answering it? By the way, people expect me to answer that question. I don't have
any power. I mean, I'm other than the authority that sources give to me when they give me free.
I'll tell you something. I released some videos in the last week inside of Epstein's bedroom
in the British Virgin Islands. Excuse me, the American Virgin Islands. I'm releasing images inside of his temple.
Some interesting stuff on the chalkboard, by the way.
There's a weird picture of a baby in his in his dining room.
So there's this there's this chalkboard.
The FBI had those videos, but you know who released it?
Oh, Keith Media. Yep.
So why can't they release the binders that was remember the binders they released?
Yeah. OK, if they release, Why can't they release this stuff?
Why am I releasing it?
Yeah.
I mean there's no sex of children in there.
That's something you could show the public.
That's Epstein's writing, by the way, on the chalkboard.
Some mysterious and cryptic messages there.
I think our government...
What's it say?
Power, deception, music?
A mirror in face, either dank brain or dark brain.
The public is deciphering these messages that Jeff Epstein.
This is video, by the way, if you're wondering what this is, this is days after he was raided,
shortly after his arrest there in 2019-2020.
And that's the penmanship to show that it was in fact Jeff Epstein's writing on the
chalkboard.
So we released this video and my point is someone inside the United States government provided that to me.
Someone inside the United States government gave that to you?
That's correct.
That you're in communication with?
That's correct.
High ranking or mid-level?
I can't say.
Okay. But they gave it to you because they knew that the government wasn't going to release
it so let me have it released by an OMG.
They gave it to me because they don't trust the FBI.
And they work for the FBI.
I can't say.
Okay, and some of the stuff that I saw, the statues, the angel statue, right?
The girl in the bathroom sitting there, the...
There's a strange statue here. the girl in the bathroom sitting there, the...
That's a strange statue here.
It looks like eyes wide shut like sort of stuff there
with the weird...
Is it an angel?
There's a woman doing something to her private parts there.
It's a freaking demonic house, bro.
There is a book regarding Satan in the bookshelf.
We got some books there.
So yeah, this was provided to me.
You're looking at the library, the bedroom of Jeffrey Epstein
and the little St. James, the Epstein Island,
this is inside of his library.
No one's ever seen this before.
Some people attacking me for publishing this,
oh, we want the names, James,
we don't care about his library.
But my, oh, there it is,
Satanic Verses and some other books there.
Satanic Verses by Salman Rush.
Salman Rush, right, that's different.
But people were attacking me because they want the names
and my philosophy is that if I continue to publish
all these things, sources will continue to come out.
Okay, so let me ask this question to go to the next level.
Your method on how you get it, right? Your method on how you guys
gather intel. It seems to be a pattern that a lot of these like it's almost like
if I was to audit you to see what your game plan is, you tend to target
people that work in the office that are gay,
let me just say it and just flush mine out and call me out and say, no, I disagree.
So through Grindr, dating sites, you'll go in,
step number one, let's identify anybody
on this administration that is gay.
All right, great.
Step number two, go on Grindr and see if you see
their profile that matches this, Great. Let's make 20 different
profiles and let's see if one of the ones he'll fall for. Great.
4. Schedule day to go out and put the camera and the recording on you and nonchalant ask
what are you doing? Act like you don't know what they're doing, you don't have a clue
who they are and act dumb. And then step number 6. Let's have a couple drinks, loosen them
up, make them up,
make them feel like you're ready to go home
and have some fun with them.
Step number seven, say let's follow up,
I have to go home, I'm so sorry,
and then number eight, release the information.
Is that pretty spot on on the system
and the approach you guys take,
or am I missing a few steps?
You might be missing a few,
but I think that's not 100% of what we do.
That might be like 30% of,
that's one technique to get information, yes.
Okay, so if that's the case,
if that's the case,
how come, have you had any, or have you tried,
maybe the better question is to say,
I am sure you've tried to get Fauci.
I'm sure you've tried to get Fauci. I'm sure you've tried to get his people.
I am sure you've tried to, you know,
see how you can find him to get him in a place
to open up and talk.
The question would be one, have you two,
why have you not been that successful with Fauci?
Specifically Anthony Fauci.
I am specifically talking about Anthony Fauci.
The man, not his staff, for example.
Anybody that's his lieutenants,
that would be his staff as well.
That's still a very valuable asset,
because what you did with Pfizer was very powerful.
Why haven't you, Ghan, been successful with Fauci?
You know, I don't have a legitimate excuse there,
I suppose.
I like to say this to my staff that,
and I hate to refer to myself in the third person,
but O'Keefe, O'Keefe Media, my organization, we always get the story.
Sometimes it just might take longer for us to get it.
So I would say we haven't gotten them yet.
Have I made the attempts?
I mean, we did so many stories about Pfizer specifically, but to your point, why haven't
we gone after this man in particular? I remember about two three years ago I did some everything I'm talking about is
legal but I did some a lot of surveillance on him for a number of
days and moved on to the next story so I suppose I don't really have a good
excuse there and and that's something that I should get him to open up. I don't
know if I told you last time we were together there was a story of an
insurance guy who had a couple prostitutes on his payroll
and this guy sells big insurance policies,
something called premium financing.
And one day, one of his competitors steals a,
give or take a $5 million insurance policy away from him.
And he finds out that he stole that $5 million
insurance policy and coerced the client to go with him
instead of the other guy
Anyways, this guy's step number one. Someone's computer keeps going
Can you lower the audio? Yeah, so he sends first the private investigator to see patterns for about a month
They measure his patterns what restaurants he goes to at what time where he sits what he orders who's his waiter
Who's his waitress a month later after doing a private investigation and seeing his patterns, he sends the girl.
The girl goes, sits at the bar,
she knows where he's gonna be at, what time,
and right next to him she gets emotional
and she smiles at him, he starts talking
and say, what's going on, is everything okay with you?
I'm so sorry, I'm just really going through
a really hard time.
She starts crying, she opens up to him,
she says, I'm so embarrassed crying here.
He follows her, goes upstairs to a room,
boom, they have the recording, the footage.
He sends the footage to the other agent, says,
hey, this is what you did,
you need to send that client back over to me.
Do you go as far as that to measure patterns
of an individual to see what restaurants and places
to go to to be able to track it,
or is that one of the other 70%?
That's an extreme example,
but we have done things like that.
There is something that we're working on right now
where we were tracking down corruption in DC,
which you'll see in a month or so,
which is serious, serious story.
And we had to find a specific individual
or a specific organization.
So you can't do a dating app thing.
You gotta do it a specific organization. So you can't do a dating app thing. You gotta do it a different way.
You might pretend to,
and we don't do exactly what you just said,
but you might create an alias.
Let's say you're a headhunter,
or you're a hiring,
whatever a person needs, someone needs something.
Undercover work is about identifying what that need is
and providing that thing to them
so that you can get access to them. Undercover work is about identifying what that need is and providing that thing to them so that you can get access to them.
Undercover work is all about access.
How do you get access to someone?
The easiest way is a dating app
because everyone needs love and affection
and so forth and so on,
or they believe the person they're meeting with
could be a possible future partner.
That's the easiest and most expedient way.
But you make a really
good point about Anthony Fauci and frankly I don't have a good excuse and
I usually don't do this on live television but maybe I should send a
team to get him to open up. It's a good idea. I don't think me saying this will
stop him. That's the other thing these people are so arrogant that people
often say how do these people
keep talking to you like this?
And the truth is because, I'm not a psychologist,
but for lack of a better word, they're all narcissists.
They think they're untouchable.
That's right, and they don't even look at us.
It's almost like they're confessing.
They just don't even think.
It's impossible for them to think
they could be held accountable for what they're saying.
And we have a whole bunch of what we call swipers, we call them the American swipers,
and these are girls, some guys.
I do this sometimes, you know, and I go on these lunch meetings, dinner meetings, and
they just spill the beans.
A lot of guys in the deep state, in Washington, that work for these organizations, the Pentagon,
Department of Defense, and they're talking about the resisting Donald Trump from the
inside, don't tell anybody I'm doing this, and they'll always say it within the first
15 minutes.
And some of them have security clearances.
Yeah, that's the part where when you're putting a team together, you have to measure their level of ambition to be cool, right? To kind of
say, let me tell you what I know, wink wink, let's keep it between us, I'm cool.
You know, it goes back to Joan Amendez, the chief disguise officer I had on the
podcast, I interviewed her right in front of the White House, and I said, what's a
good quality of being a CIA agent?
This is a charming is it is it great in sales is it being great persuader? Is it being this is it being that he says it's all of that and then some however
There's one quality we look for what's that if you just got the information
That you know, you're watching TV. You just saved the free world. You don't need to brag about it to anybody else
That's the quality of a good CIA agent.
What a freaking perspective.
So for me, if you're bringing guys in,
like you almost have to size them up to see
how much are you trying to be cool.
Like for example, Scott Bessent gives me a lot of good vibes
of a guy that could give a shit about being cool.
Makes sense because this guy worked on the roof for 15 years almost 14 years first term was I think nine years under Soros
Then five years as his chief investment officer if I'm not mistaken
Prior to him going up there the average person didn't know who he was it kind of knew but they didn't know who he was
It was like whoa
Who is this guy right and then he goes in but some of the guys that get in there,
they're really, really ambitious with fame
and fame tends to get ahold of you
and corrupt you in ways because behind closed doors,
you wanna be sitting in a room saying,
let me tell you what I know.
That's very hard to find people like that on the inside.
Very hard to have people around you
that know information
on what things you guys are working on
and they wanna brag to nobody.
When I was running my insurance company,
we'd always have big announcements.
Like first time I had Kobe Bryant
as a keynote speaker, the late Kobe Bryant,
I didn't tell anybody.
At that event, I announced him and George Bush
as keynote speakers.
Until the very end, only two people know
that those two were the keynote speakers.
I didn't tell anybody.
And when we announced, my own wife didn't know, nobody knew. When we announced, everyone's like
what? Yes. But I could only tell two people. You didn't tell your wife.
Nobody knew because it's exciting news. It's not even like for some people like
they want to say it. They can't control the excitement. Oh my god I can't wait to
meet him. Oh my god I can't wait to meet him.
Oh my God, I can't wait that he's coming down, right?
So for some, it's purely from an innocent
excitement standpoint.
For some, it's about, let me tell you what I know.
Don't tell anybody, right?
Dude, that filtering process of getting people
like that on your team.
That's almost impossible.
That's almost impossible.
But that is the mission of how to surround yourself
with good people.
Ooh, that's a tough thing to do.
The only way you can do that is if you've never
had a run rate with them, to accelerate the testing,
because your character has to be tested.
It takes about a couple years.
How do you do that?
I'm just curious your thoughts on how you do that.
You test them, it takes a couple years.
You test them with level three information
and see if that gets leaked.
It's easy, go ahead and leak that.
I don't want you to leak it,
but if you do, I now know who you are.
And then once I do that,
I know I can never have you on level two type of meetings.
I can only have you on level four type of meetings.
I can't invite you to level two type of meetings
because you leak information.
That's the part where a little bit here, oh, you can't know.
Little bit there, oh, you cannot.
Like you have kids.
You know how you're like, let me test to see
if this guy can handle some bad news at this age.
You give it to him, he panics and has anxiety.
Like I can't give you bad news.
But you give this other guy some bad news
about what's going on with family, he can handle it.
You're like, this guy's a gamer.
He's not there yet.
Because this guy gets distracted.
This guy with bad news, he knows how to keep it to himself.
Stay strong, okay, good.
I can handle talking high level conversation with this level of my kid, but not this like a controlled leak almost
It's a controlled leak to test what the individuals know. This is a very
Difficult thing to do and I bet out a job with Donald Trump when you're at that level
All you can do is James, what do you think about John James? What do you think by cash?
Let's say you don't have a relationship with them Let's say you don't have a relationship with some of these guys. What do you think about John? James, what do you think about Cash? Let's say you don't have a relationship with him.
Let's say you don't have a relationship
with some of these guys.
What do you think about him?
I think he's good.
And then you're hoping the person I'm asking
is a tier one person that can filter out
a person that's a tier four.
Do I make this person a tier two?
I don't know if this is making sense.
Like you have to almost like,
lean on somebody else you trust to filter them out. So the reason why I'm going here is to see you know how for
somebody to get to the level of the president where you saw the first term
how many people he hired that turned on him flipped on him. What did his
methodology for phase two in 2024 change? How do you think about the team
then and the people that he's put together?
I think they're a good team.
I think they're loyal.
That's what I, in full disclosure,
I hiked with Bobby Kennedy in the Santa Monica mountains
and I found him to be a brave man.
I say brave, I mean, there was no incentive for him
to do what he has done.
He's a Kennedy.
So I agree with Tucker that Bobby Kennedy
is probably one of the bravest people
to have done what he has done.
But I think going back to your point about incentives,
in my case, I speak from personal experience,
let me give you a thought experiment.
I've been arrested by the FBI,
I've been raided by the FBI, I've been sued 50 times.
I've been through all these things.
Haven't been shot yet.
And what Trump has gone through is at the highest level.
I find that there is an incentive
to betray people like Trump.
Think of all the goodies you get
if you go to the New York Times,
and there's an incentive there.
I find that when you are pinched by the FBI,
which I have been, and by the way, totally falsely accused,
that doesn't matter if you did it or not,
you're an innocent man, forget that.
But they did this to Michael Flynn's son
or something to the effect of,
you better sign this form saying
that your boss committed a crime,
or you won't see your family for 10 years.
How many people would take that deal?
In other words, how many people would do the right thing even if they suffered?
That's a really terrifying and you hesitate to answer that question because this is where things get really deep.
Because when you're going after the most powerful people in the world,
which we are doing, which Trump is doing,
you have to find people, not Pat, who just won't leak information.
But if the FBI were to point a gun at you and said,
you better sign a form saying that James embezzled money,
they say, I will not do that because I fear God, not man.
Or whatever, if you're a Christian, you say that.
If you're something else, you say something similar.
I fear God, not man.
I will not bear false witness
because it's the wrong thing to do.
Well, then you're not gonna see your family for 10 years.
Okay, you have to find people like that.
That's hard.
It's hard to find those people.
I go back to my original point.
The instinct for self-preservation is an extremely important human behavior.
And if you're going to do what Donald Trump is doing, or to a certain extent what Project
Veritas is doing, going after Anthony Fauci and these types of people, and Pfizer and
BlackRock and the FBI.
You have to find people who are completely unbreakable.
And that's just what we're talking about.
How do you find that?
Very difficult thing, very difficult thing to do.
And Donald Trump, I'll say one quick story about Donald Trump.
I was with him a year ago in his apartment in New York City.
And this was like right around the week he was getting indicted for some stupid stuff
with the porn star.
And he was signing a hat to my father.
And I had done a story on the CIA,
exposed a CIA guy on tape who was
on one of these dating apps giving away information.
I'm resisting Donald Trump.
I'm not giving information to the president.
And Trump wanted to make a video with me
about reacting to this. And I said, how do you deal with it? I said I'm serious how do you and he
goes he's signing this hat to my dad and he goes I just don't care I just don't
care I was like you don't care he's like I don't care maybe he doesn't care but
he has been able to develop a way perhaps where he just got thick skin, you know
But it's tough. It's really tough to to face these attacks and I can be strong, right?
I cannot bear false witness, right? I can say I will not talk to you screw you
But my people around me have to be really really strong. Yeah, it's not everybody's job
You know, it's not it's not everybody's job you know it's not it's not everybody's job and when you go up to that position you have to also know that your own family
is not gonna understand the job you're even your voters are not gonna stand to
understand the job there's some decisions you have to make that's gonna
make 80% of people unhappy and then you're gonna be also in positions where
your character is gonna be tested you're hoping that part you don't fall for, okay?
But sometimes you wonder when these guys get in,
another reason why they, you know,
flip or change or any of that.
Who's more valuable to US government?
Somebody that I have information on,
that I can control when I give them the job, or somebody I don't have information on? I can control when I give them the job
or somebody I don't have information on I don't know if you understand the
question what I'm saying said that again so I understand who is more controllable
somebody I hire that I have information on them some Intel on them that's maybe
sensitive that they wouldn't want to be public right am I better off hiring
somebody that I have something like that,
or am I better off offering a job to somebody
that I have no intel on them?
That's an interesting question.
And it depends on your style of leadership.
Interesting.
And whether you have something, I mean, people,
everyone has skeletons in their closet, correct?
Maybe something we've done that we're not proud of.
Would you agree with that statement?
Maybe not illegal, although maybe you stole something when you were a teenager, but isn't it true that we've done that we're not proud of. Would you agree with that statement? Maybe not illegal, although maybe you stole something
when you were a teenager, but isn't it true
that we all, every single one of us,
has something that we're not.
No one walks on water.
Everyone sins in a different way.
We sin, and I mean, I'm myself included.
These board members of my company were trying to leak
like intimate messages between me and my girlfriend,
which made them look bad,
because everyone has an intimate life,
consensual life in your bedroom. But I think your point is
interesting. What I would say in response to that is that the motivation,
the incentive for people not to have those skeletons leaked is extremely high.
People will do anything to avoid being publicly shamed. And this is where this blackmail
and this extortion thing comes in. My philosophy, you want to know what I say? I say, go ahead
and make my day, leak it. I don't care. I don't give a shit. Publish everything. And
they did. Evidently, they don't have much on me because the FBI went through every message
in my phone for five years and all they could get with some kinky messages between me and my girlfriend. But I do think that the, what is your answer?
Which of those do you think is an employer you'd focus on between those two?
No, to me it depends what type of a leader you are.
Depends on what type of leader you are.
It depends on what type of a leader you are because I've watched how some of our guys led their
guys and some of my competitors led them. I was in a previous company and I watched
how one guy led one of his guys who he held them hostage because every
month that guy under the table was giving him cash for loans and stuff like
that mortgages and then all of a sudden, the day it stopped,
that guy lost all his licenses.
So he liked having information on his guys
to hold him hostage.
But deep down inside, that relationship
is a dark relationship.
You don't have the loyalty.
It's kinda like, imagine Anna Nicole Smith
marries that billionaire, whoever the guy was.
97 years old.
And he was, 88 years old, whatever his age was, right?
She marries this guy, old as hell.
And you think all the money in the world
is going to win her love over?
No, you just win her sex over.
You don't win her love over, right?
Whoever this Jay Howard Marshall was,
that she ends up with this guy, and next thing you know,
he dies
He's well, she's wealthy and then she dies from overdose
right
you can
you know
win
Someone's sex over their body over love
You can you can't win love with money that takes a lot of work to get someone's love, right?
So I think the part with trump which made him one of a kind
is do you realize we now know about Stormy Daniels,
Karen McDougal, grab him by this, we know all of that stuff.
And you know what people say?
No one gives a shit.
No one cares.
No one gives a shit, which by the way,
if you remember the moment Herman Cain 13 years ago,
whatever the timeline was, he's
in the bus.
He's not coming out because apparently him and his wife were fighting in the bus and
they found out while he was the CEO of this pizza company, he had a lover or he had a,
what do you call it, a mistress or something like that.
Because of that, he stepped out.
While Trump would come out and say, listen, it's my personal life.
It's between me and my wife.
We're moving on. What do you want to ask me?
So Trump was the guy that because he was so trained in New York
To go up against these gangsters and tough guys and manipulators and media. He has been trained
To get to this position. That's not everybody's job. So I think for him
He got so much
Moral authority today that if
you cross him, the world is going to defend him, not you. Not the world. I'm not talking
mainstream media, but the people that are his supporters. So I don't know if he needs
it today. I don't know if he needs, I think an average regular president that got up there,
the traditional go be a lawyer and go be
Congress and Senate and bullshit bullshit yeah that person needs a lot of that I
think from Trump standpoint Trump is like look if you're in you're in if
you're not let's go if you're gonna roll your roll but I don't give a shit about
what mistakes you made I mean I know what I've done I'm like let's go I think
my concern as an employer would be,
I don't know if this falls into your dichotomy,
but okay, information on people.
Will the enemy, will the person allow the enemy
to use that information as leverage?
And I'm the type of person where they may have something
on me, I don't care, publish it.
But do my employees, are they able to be strong enough,
or will the enemy come and say,
we have this information upon you,
now betray your mission?
Well, by the way, guess you know what that is?
What?
That's a pure test to find out who was loyal and who wasn't.
It's an awesome situation.
It's a tier one test.
Tier one test.
Because that's a real test.
That's a real test.
Then you're like, oh, so it wasn't.
It was because it's, you know,
you're just benefiting from what you were getting.
I got it, cool, it's good to know now.
I got it, no problem.
You know, we're good to go.
You know, these moments where you're tempted
to steal money, where you're tempted to do certain things,
where you're tempted to go through,
you know what things were investigating somebody
right now that's been going on for a few months.
The stuff I found out yesterday,
one of these guys that we've been investigating has done.
You're investigating in your former boy?
A former person that used to work with us, yeah.
Do you know what things we found?
And by the way, you have to hear what he used to say.
All the lines.
James, you're like a father figure to me,
crying while behind closed doors,
taking money and taking all this stuff.
But these are beautiful situations,
because you know what happens
when an investigation's over with?
We're gonna publicly report it to everybody here,
to our employees.
You know why?
It's the same thing we did in the insurance company.
If anybody at all sold insurance doing forgery,
we told everybody.
We told everybody and said,
that guy's insurance license is lost for ten years
He can never do insurance again. Go ahead and test it on see what happens to you
If somebody went out there did any kind of stuff that was bad. We publicized it so people wouldn't do it again
Accountability, it's a form of accountability and it's a form of awareness
It's like, you know
you ever seen the
Mom or the dad is trying to feed the kid and the kid is not eating and he puts it in the dog
The doll's mouth and then goes to the kid,
goes this way, goes this way, and this guy's down there,
bam, hits the face of the little doll
and then goes with the foot in the mouth.
It's a form of don't make this effing mistake, right?
Which is what our FBI is not doing.
Which is what our FBI is not doing.
So that's the part where some people are not happy
with us not seeing the accountability
that we were promised.
Correct.
I would say people are enraged about this.
I would say they are.
I would say the part that they're, what's the word?
Battling with?
Battling with is, look,
there's so many great things that happened,
but I really wanted to know what's going on over here. So do I compromise these two things that I really wanted to know because what are you doing to these kids and innocent kids?
These are someone's daughter. They're someone's granddaughter. They're someone's sister. Are we not gonna find this out?
Are we just gonna go hush hush to this side? I
To this group that voted specifically to find out what's going on with Epstein and the kids
They're not the type that gonna forget about it.
Nope.
They're the type that's gonna keep bringing it up
until you either reveal or you have to deal with it.
We're gonna keep, we're five years in,
people are still enraged.
Yeah, I don't think that's gonna change.
Any other items right now that is going on
where for you politically, with what's going on with White House right now
We're politically for you. You're a little bit confused with well
With the tell me what you mean by that the White House some of the decisions, you know, there's a lot of good
There's a lot of victories right now. You're seeing a lot of victories. You're seeing the big big beautiful bill
You're seeing you know Russia Putin Trump talking you're seeing China you're seeing tariffs before we move on from from the Epstein thing real
quick we could go to this this is present day this is the John Daly clip
with Prince Andrew the guy on undercover camera didn't you cover this on your
show yeah we did oh you did okay you guys covered this yeah this is the
basically saying he was that he didn't like the fact that Prince Andrew
The brother of the late I mean of not the lay of the king was having sex with underage girls
And he didn't like it. This is this is someone who's quite
You know loyal and a confidant to Prince Andrew
I got a lot of heat for this too because people say this doesn't this doesn't prove anything and I think
I got a lot of heat for this too, because people say this doesn't prove anything.
And I think one of the challenges here
is that you're confirming suspicions.
You're getting them on video admitting it.
He's having sex with underage girls.
And then this guy goes on Piers Morgan.
I don't know if you're, I just think it's hilarious.
I don't know if your producer could find that clip.
But, and then he says, I think O'Keefe's great.
This girl that he said, man. She was powerful. No shame
What did you think about you said I?
Regret saying it I regret
be
He admits he admits that he was giving you credit for the girl and credit to Piers Morgan for grilling him big time
Grilling him I was actually shocked that that, it might be hard to find this clip,
but Piers Morgan was just grilling them.
So that's, I've been,
I've been honest to Pat,
I've been so heads down in my reporting.
I mean, heads down on this Epstein reporting.
I have not, you know,
I have not been as follow the news right now in the world.
So let me ask, make the second request.
So my first request was Fauci.
My second request is Diddy.
Have you at all thought about doing anything with Diddy?
Or you guys haven't focused on that one yet?
I think these are great ideas.
No, no, I think there's, I am and I should and I will.
And I did get some sources with Diddy a year or two ago,
but I think your idea, let me ask you a better question.
What is the thing that needs to be exposed?
What if exposed would change things?
That's helpful to me.
Yeah, I mean, if you think about, okay,
so if you wanna be part of something legendary,
I'm talking legendary, is in the
70s, 60s, 50s, 40s, 30s, Jayet Groover, all these guys, when the FBI first started with
him, there is no such thing as, you know, Italian crime family.
That doesn't exist, right?
Organized crime family doesn't exist.
All right, now they know he had, they had intel on him with the cross-dressing stuff.
But in the 80s, Giuliani was able to bring down the mob
with the help of the RICO law by this professor from Rutgers
that all of a sudden we saw a couple hundred mob bosses,
under bosses, consulieri handcuffed,
why can't I get arrested? That was un-frickin' believable. bosses, under bosses, consulieri, handcuffed, walking out getting arrested.
That was un-frickin'-believable.
It was something that everybody around the world heard about, the news.
Them being perp walked.
Of course.
If you, James, if you want something that is revolutionary breakthrough, revolutionary breakthrough,
it's Diddy because he's alive.
The people are alive.
With Epstein, you know, Epstein is dead.
But if you get something from Leon Black, Rob, is Leon Black still alive?
I believe so.
Go get something from Leon Black, which I don't know if you're Pursuit or not.
Yes, 73 years old
Okay, Leon Black is the one that apparently paid Epstein 150 million dollars in consulting fees alive for tax purposes, right?
Can you can you type in tax purposes or tax?
Epstein just type tax Epstein. So right there Leon Black gave 170 million dollars to
Epstein for Click on a rep so we can read the story. So Leon Black gave $170 million to Epstein for a click on a rap so we can read the story.
So Leon Black, according to US Senate Finance, he transfers $170 million to Epstein's accounts.
And when they asked him why you did that, he said he paid the accused sex trafficker
for tax advice.
This is the most expensive tax advice anyone's ever given in the history
of mankind. Leon Black, the billionaire financier and former CEO of Apollo Global Management
transferred $170 million to the Epson covers for the course of five years. US Senator Ron
Wyden said in a letter to the US Justice and Treasury Department this week, not $158 million
as previously reported. An investigation commissioned by Apollo's board appeared to have missed
$12 million in transfer transfer which were discovered by
Investigators working with the USO. So Leon black some of these guys are round. Okay, some of them are round on
What Epstein did but with Diddy you're talking about?
Epstein you come out Diddy Hollywood sports
You're talking about, know, these talent agencies, producers, countries.
I mean, Ditties is, and it's going on right now,
so if you did something while the hearing is going on,
it's like you finding out something
while OJ Simpson's thing's going on.
And you leak something during the entire investigation. It's like you're
doing something and you drop it during Johnny Depp and Amber Heard. But Diddy to me is the
comparable of an O.J. Simpson thing.
What do you think the thing if caught on video that would change things? I'd love to see
people perp walk. I don't have the power to arrest, but what is the thing that needs to
be on video in your mind?
It's very easy for me. Tell me. I don't have the power to arrest, but what is the thing that needs to be on video, in your mind? In your mind?
Oh, it's very easy for me.
Tell me.
It's very easy.
It's a gay sex with men that play straight.
I said that is released.
In other words, these men have internal conflicts
and they're blackmailed over this.
Oh, and I think those video footages,
believe it or not, I believe exist
in different people's phones,
because I think these guys are so,
Diddy thought he was so untouchable
that no one was ever gonna lose,
and they would airdrop a video to each other.
Like iPhone, iOS, just in the photos.
I am willing to bet that in some kind of a folder,
it's sitting there with these footages,
you know, that people save, that's got a specific code,
that the video's all the way in and say,
watch what I have, what we did here and here and there.
I think that too, and also the so-called blackmail,
how do you think it actually works?
Like, what is the conversation like in your mind,
in your imagination?
I'm just curious, you guys, because that helps me as an investigative imagination. I'm just curious you guys,
because that helps me as an investigative
understand what I'm trying to catch.
How do I think Diddy's model works?
Correct.
What's your hypothesis?
I mean, it's very simple.
You come to the house, you party,
you have one of the girls that locks on to one of the guys
who's one of your workers. They go upstairs.
There's 17 cameras in there.
They say, hey man, can I get a room?
Yeah, bro, just go use my room.
Goes to the room, leaves.
She's 17, she's 15.
Or there's a guy in there and I record it.
I have it.
And the next day I say, hey, I just just wanna let you know, here's what I got.
It's very simple.
Moving forward, anything I ask from you, I need you to do.
That's the thing that needs to be on video.
Yeah.
What you just said, that would change everything,
in my opinion.
I think that would be in text, not in video.
In a text message?
I think it would be in text, not in video. In a text message. I think it would be in text messages.
But I think that video, well, he's dumb enough to say it.
He's dumb enough to say stuff like that.
He's capable of saying stuff like that.
Well, you might have hearsay.
In other words, and this is what happened with Prince Andrew,
another guy close to him said that this is what happened,
which is still powerful.
Well, those guys are out there.
The Gene deals, the security, those guys have come out.
They've done their part.
There's a lot of people that have said stuff like that,
like Shug Knight talking about his link to Clive Davis
and all this other stuff.
That stuff is coming out.
But if you can get him tied to a few other people,
I think this will be the biggest story you'll break. If you can get him tied to a few other people,
I think this will be the biggest story you'll break.
I am working on this and I will work on this.
Okay, especially with some of the stuff that was dropped this week.
Some of the ecstasy pills and...
With Obama's face on them.
Some very weird stuff going on here, James.
And there's a lot, I mean just with Obama and...
Yeah, Obama, because he was hung out with them a lot
He was at the rock the vote thing at his house hanging out
Partying and then you have videos of like Christy Tegin with John Legend and and they asked Christy Tegin
Where's the craziest place you've had sex in public and she goes?
There was that Obama thing and John Legend's face looks like he saw a ghost
He looks like he saw a freaking ghost.
Did you see that, Pat?
Yeah, of course.
Okay.
Robbie, I sent it to you in the Slack.
I just think the part with what world we're living in today, we're living in a world today
where we're not sure the US government is going to drop these stories because these
are stories you can use to get intel.
I mean, this is, I commit to you that I will do this
and I usually do get the stories.
Sometimes it takes me a little longer than I'd like
but it's also very dangerous, wouldn't you admit,
to do these stories?
Well, you subscribe to this lifestyle.
I certainly did.
I remember you said, what about a year ago,
you said James O'Keefe has chosen a tough life.
And it was a very, I think it was a more profound statement
than even you intended.
Not tough in the way that most people,
usually they use the courts against me, legal, lawyers.
That's a whole other conversation.
But this is very dangerous.
And the people that have come before me,
like the, what's the the movie To Kill a Messenger,
about a reporter in California who reported on the CIA
and the drugs and the CIA and they were given,
and he committed suicide.
I think he shot himself in the head twice, by the way.
Yeah, this guy.
It was based upon Gary Webb to kill a messenger.
These are the reporters that came before me.
Gary Webb managed to shoot himself in the head twice.
That's a really impressive thing to do.
You'd think the gun would fall out of your hand
the first time.
Yeah, he did some stories on the CIA.
It was a great movie.
And Gary Webb has a remarkable quote,
an incredible quote that I would like to read on the air
in front of all of you, and it's from this book
that was written called To Kill a Messenger,
and I'm gonna paraphrase because I can't pull it up,
but it's Gary Webb says, you know, I was winning, I'm gonna paraphrase it up, but it's, Gary Webb says,
I'm gonna paraphrase it, I was winning awards, I was getting accolades, I was giving speeches,
I won the Pulitzer Prize, and then I broke some stories,
he's talking about the one about the CIA,
that made me realize how misplaced my bliss had been.
I started messing with the wrong people
and I began to realize I misplaced my value
and what I actually valued.
I'm butchering the quote, but it's a profound quote,
and then he committed suicide.
So my point to you is that this is very dangerous, man.
No, the job you've chosen, it's tough because if you, okay, here's the next part.
If you have a lot of friends in high places, James, you're not doing your job right.
That's correct.
But you need, you know what everyone says in the conservative movement?
Do you know Cash?
Do you know Pam?
Do you know this guy?
It's all about rubbing elbows and people doing favors.
I don't do that for a living.
No, that's not the profile of this job.
No.
The profile of this job is exactly what you're doing
and it's not for everybody.
It's just not for everybody
because you're not a popular cool person.
For you to keep the T word for as long as possible,
you can't have a lot of friends.
And you know what the T word is?
The trust.
Trust?
Yeah, to keep trust, you can't have a lot of friends.
At high places, at high places.
That's right, it's a tough thing as a journalist
to navigate the relationship between
what I call autonomy and access. There's a tough thing as a journalist to navigate the relationship between what I call autonomy and access.
There's a tension in journalism because on one hand,
you have to protect your sources,
and on the other hand, you have to investigate,
and it's very difficult.
That's a very, it's an art form.
It's an ethical line.
At what point do I, I'm gonna burn this,
in business you call it burning bridges.
In journalism, you burn bridges every day.
You report on powerful people, so it's very tough.
It's very tough.
Well, Jake Tapper, look at what happened with Jake Tapper,
right, like with all the stuff
that he's going through right now.
Okay, why is he losing respect from other journalists?
Because we all knew what he's now reporting.
Like he's acting like it's news.
He's acting like it's news.
James, question, before we finish it up here,
because we got a few minutes here left.
So in your opinion, you spent a lot of time with Breitbart.
What happened to him?
You mean like how did he die?
What happened to him?
The timing of it is very strange.
I don't have any inside information.
I know his wife would always say to me,
don't tell people that he was killed.
Andrew had a heart condition.
He had an enlarged heart, I believe.
And the doctor said, you gotta stop eating all this steak
and drinking all this wine.
You have to stop traveling.
And I think he just truly pushed himself.
That's my belief.
I would share with the audience
if I had any evidence of foul play. All I have is circumstantial evidence. I have no direct
evidence. He dropped out of a heart attack at 43. This was March 1st, 2012. I was 27.
He was my mentor. Did you ever meet him?
Never. Andrew was a remarkable man. He, he edited the
Drudge Report at the time. He would tweet like a thousand times a day.
He was filled with righteous indignation.
This is a different world 12 years ago.
The media was different.
You could like engage with legacy media.
You could tweet back and forth.
You could have conversations.
And he was a mentor of mine.
It was, we were very different people.
He was more of an extrovert.
I was at the time much more introverted.
But he had a way about him.
He was a warrior, and that's what we shared in common.
I think what I would characterize myself,
and journalist, I'm also a warrior.
I'm at war all the time, constantly.
And he was too, but it aged him.
Like I'm now 40 years old.
He died at 43, and in the last few years of his life,
he just seemed to age.
And he took things personally, and he was angry,
and furious, and righteous, and indignant,
and tweeting every tweet at the reporter,
and holding them accountable.
It was, I've never met anyone like him.
I still haven't met anyone like him.
But I don't have any information about his death other
than I know he had a heart condition. That's all I can say. And God rest his soul because I was a
huge fan and that James that's how I found out about you. It was just weird that he was on stage
claiming that he had tapes on Obama. He would call him a radical. I remember another
time the camera in his face, some reporters holding, he's yelling at the guy's recorder
and he's saying, we're coming after you John Podesta. We're coming after you Big Soros.
There's this moment where Andrew Breitbart is talking to Dave Weigel. I know this well.
This is a perfect, perfect story. And Yeah, and the reporters reporters got his little pencil and paper. Yeah, I don't know if they do that anymore
pencil writing down and Andrew goes and Andrew is talking to the reporter and he and he screams into the reporter notebook fuck you
Like he's big
Andrew Breitbart he's talking to the reporter notebook,
not to the guy, but to the masses
the reporter's writing to.
That is a quintessential Andrew Breitbart moment
and I understand him because I'm,
I am similar in that particular way.
He was righteously indignant taking on
this mainstream media.
Oh watch this, watch this.
Concerted effort this politics of personal destruction
You John Podesta
Watch watch big sorrows look watch this watch this yeah
What's in your closet John talking to the reporter notebook big Podesta big sorrows
Do you want us to play these games? Because we're
playing to win. This is Andrew Breitbart. Dude, and then think about it James, he has
this attitude, I love the righteous indignation, I read the book, the guys, like you said,
he was going 100 miles an hour because he has the same, you guys weren't the same James,
but the message and getting the truth out there. No, we spoke, I mean Andrew, him and I, this man you just saw, him and I spoke 10 times
a day.
I mean he was constantly talking to me and then he died and I was alone.
I found the quote, I need to read this on the air, please.
Quote, this is the CIA, there were investigative reporter who exposed drug trafficking with
the CIA and getting drugs in America.
Gary Webb, I was winning awards, getting raises,
lecturing college classes, appearing on TV shows,
and judging journalism contests.
I won the Pulitzer Prize.
And then I wrote some stories that made me realize
how sadly misplaced my bliss had been.
The reason I'd enjoyed such smooth sailing in my career
for so long hadn't been, as I'd assumed,
because I was careful and diligent and good at my job.
The truth was that in all those years,
I hadn't written anything important enough to suppress.
Wow.
Gary Webb, to kill a messenger,
shot himself in the head twice.
Everyone that has come before me,
and who extreme truth tellers have been,
you think of even historically,
like on a much larger scale,
they've been assassinated, or JFK.
That's why the Breibart story is different.
And I understand your respect for the wife,
and I'm sure she's sick and tired of hearing all this stuff
because she just wants to move on.
So you can take that position,
but Rob, if you can pull that thing up,
it's a little weird when you read about it and you see stuff about um
You know, let me see this. Yeah, so this is the corner right pat. Yeah, so you got michael cormier
A forensic technician with la county office died on april 20 of 2012 the same day bribart autopsy results were released
Cormier was complained had complained of severe stomach pain and vomiting before being hospitalized,
where he later died.
Initial reports indicate that arsenic poisoning
was a possible cause of death,
and LA Department did not immediately rule out foul play.
What are the odds?
Little weird.
What are the odds that the day that that's a little
suspicious?
That's a little suspicious.
And the proximity of Cormier's death
to the release of Breibart's autopsy report led
to online speculation about a possible connection
between the two deaths.
However, officials clarified that Cormier was not involved in Breibart's autopsy.
Deputy Sheriff Ed Winters said that Cormier had nothing to do with the autopsy or the
investigation.
As of now, no definitive public finding has been released regarding the cause of Cormier's
death and no official connection has been established between his death and that of
Andrew Breibar. If you have to say the odds Pat, what are the odds
that because some people were saying that he ran out, Andrew ran out and turned a
completely different color as if he was choking on something that when the
autopsy of him comes out a guy in that same LA coroner's office dies of
arsenic poisoning. He didn't get hit by a car. He didn't fall
off of a bridge. He's not somebody poisoned him.
The problem, and I mean, this is Pat, this is extremely suspicious and God willing, the
if anyone has proof, if there's someone in the hospital, if there's someone with knowledge
of this, I'd love to report. The problem is, I walk a fine line too, because if I come
out and make a statement that I can't prove, then I lose credibility.
So I have to be careful.
But I hear what you're saying.
This is incredibly suspicious.
And I don't even know what to say about it,
except I hope that it's 13 years later here.
Yeah, exactly.
We're still talking about JFK and who shot JFK.
Yeah, but the point here is the reason why
I've never talked about Breibart's
and how I've never ever talked about it on any podcast ever.
This is the first time.
I don't know how many hundreds of interviews we've done.
We've never brought it up.
The only reason we bring it up
is because to me he was a true believer.
I think you're a true believer.
And I think there's a handful of guys
that are true believers, not mainstream.
Because you can't be mainstream.
You have to compromise to be mainstream.
Correct.
And for you to go work for any of the big platforms,
pick any one of them, you would have to compromise.
And I don't think you're gonna be doing that.
So for guys like that, you need additional protection
to be aware.
It's like the other day, Trump was in Saudi
and they offer him a drink
and he just keeps holding it like this.
I don't know if you saw that.
He's just keeping holding a drink like this.
He's going to hold a drink like that.
He's holding it like this.
So I think for a guy like you,
as you're going through everything that you're doing
with your circle, with your community,
with people that maybe, yeah, is this the one?
Look at this one here.
It's classic.
He's just holding it.
He's like, what do you want me to do with this?
He's not drinking a damn thing.
So MBS drank it, but he's not drinking it. He's just hanging on to it. He's like, oh, it's classic. It's like, oh, what do you want me to do with this? So, MBS drank it, but he's not drinking it.
He's just hanging onto it.
It's like, oh, it's great.
It's awesome.
Just give him the respect, but he's not gonna drink it.
Look at that.
And one more reporter, Michael Hastings,
died in a fiery car crash.
You report on Stanley McChrystal.
So, I'm well aware of the dangers,
but what do you really wanna know?
Am I afraid to die?
Not really. I've lived a good life. I mean, what do you really want to know? Am I afraid to die? Not really.
I've lived a good life.
I believe in what I'm doing.
And I'm also a spiritual person.
I believe in God.
I know there's that saying, you know,
no weapon formed against me shall prosper.
It's in Isaiah.
I genuinely believe.
I wear it around my neck.
Border Patrol agent gave to me.
I rode the train of death in Mexico.
I should have died.
I didn't, you know, so I believe in what I'm doing.
And maybe I'll be the one that got away.
That's all I can say.
Great, and Gang, as you're watching this,
do yourself a favor and go watch the podcast.
We're gonna put the link below, Rob,
let's make sure we do that.
Not the podcast, the documentary,
the movie that just came out,
the truth inside Veritas part one.
It's 54 minutes, it's gonna feel like five minutes too,
because that's exactly how I felt when I watched it.
It went like this, boom, and I'm like, wow.
Intense, the energy's gonna be high
from the beginning to the very end.
I really enjoyed watching it.
James, great having you back on.
Appreciate you for coming down.
Thank you.
Anytime, take care everybody.
Bye bye, bye bye.
Hello everyone, I'm James O'Keefe.
Been doing this journalism thing for about 20 years. Truth, justice, exposing corruption, everything that comes along with it. Bye bye.