The Megyn Kelly Show - Menendez Brothers’ Fate, Dark Past of Baby Emmanuel's Dad, Adelson Trial Takes Shape, Entitled "AG" Arrested - "MK True Crime"

Episode Date: August 22, 2025

Megyn brings you this bonus episode of the new MK Media podcast network show "MK True Crime." The legal experts discuss the Menendez Brothers parole hearing, new disturbing details about missing baby ...Emmanuel's dad, the Donna Adelson trial jury selection, the viral entitled "AG" arrest video, and more. Subscribe to MK True Crime:Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/mk-true-crime/id1829831499Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4o80I2RSC2NvY51TIaKkJWYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MKTrueCrime?sub_confirmation=1Social: http://mktruecrime.com/

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Megan Kelly Show, live on Sirius XM Channel 111 every weekday at noon east. Hey everyone, I'm Megan Kelly, and today I want to bring you an episode of our newest MK Media Podcast Network show, MK True Crime. You're going to love it. Check it out. Go ahead and subscribe on YouTube and wherever you get your podcast. Now, just type in MK True Crime in the search bar. and you will find it and you will love it. Here you go. Welcome to M.K. True Crime. I'm Jonas Philbore, your host today. I'm a criminal defense attorney and founding attorney of Jonas Bilboer Law. Here's what's on the docket.
Starting point is 00:00:49 The Menendez Brothers Parole hearing started on Thursday, the day of this taping, with Eric Menendez up before the parole board first. We will likely know his outcome by the time this show airs. Emmanuel Harrow, a seven-month-old baby from California has now been missing for over a week. We'll bring you the disturbing new revelations about his parents. Donna Adelson's trial gets underway for the murder of son-in-law Dan Markell. And Brian Colberger files a what? A sexual harassment claim in prison and more. I am joined by a fabulous team, M.K. True Crime contributors, Mark Garagos, he needs no introduction, but he is a criminal defense attorney and Dave Aaronberg, former state attorney from Palm Beach County, Florida, and managing partner at Dave Aaronberg Law. We are going to kick things off with the Menendez brothers and how lucky are we that we have Mark Garagos in studio today, the man, with a lot of inside information. Mark, we are we.
Starting point is 00:01:55 you tell us what's going on in there because you actually took a break from the hearing to join us today so bring us up to speed so the hearing is going on started after a little bit of legal skirmishing this morning at around 830 Pacific uh shortly after 9 it started and basically what a parole hearing looks like this is tracking almost exactly you've got a couple of parole commissioners is what they call them the uh Eric is present from remotely from San Diego, from the R.J. Donovan Prison. Heidi Rummel, the one lawyer that we have doing the hearing,
Starting point is 00:02:38 is there present, along with Habib Ballion, who's the DA present. Nathan Hockman apparently tried mightily to monitor this and was not allowed to do so. And there is an LA Times reporter that is squirled away somewhere in the CDRC named James Queeley who is covering this but is embargoed until after the hearing. So this is not going to drop until after the hearing. I will tell you that what normally would happen is exactly what is happening, which is the commissioners
Starting point is 00:03:15 go through and have a conversation with Eric. They are asking Eric about the crime. They are asking Eric about the sexual abuse they're asking Eric about things that questions so to speak that a lot of people in the public might have any way about the crime what did you do afterwards why did you have to do this why did you have to do that there is not they are not softball questions it is I think you can characterize it as a grilling and what will end up happening is they will go all the way through the crime itself which I can tell you as we're taping this it is appears that they have done and then they will focus on what has happened in the prison since that time and yesterday we're taping this on the 21st yesterday August 20th was 36 years to the day
Starting point is 00:04:04 from the crime 36 years if you can believe it they have been in custody since then and I will prognosticate that they will go through every my all the minutia of that 30 some odd years that they've been in the prison because remember they were in the LA County Jail, not only were their two trials sandwiched between the O.J. trial, and that's always been my argument, that the second trial started eight days after O.J.'s acquittal, and so that's why you saw the judge do all the things that he shenanigans that he did. But remember, while they were waiting during those two trials, they were in the L.A. County Jail where O.J. was. In fact, there's a lot of people who tell the story that Leslie,
Starting point is 00:04:51 Abrahamson was responsible for Johnny Cochran representing O.J., and Leslie, of course, was the lawyer for Eric Menendez, both in trials one and two. We will have, by the time this drops, a decision, because at the end of the hearing, when they finished asking all the questions, the victims will all weigh in. This is one of those incredibly unicorn-like situations where All of the relatives of the defendant are also the victims and they are uniformly asking that they be released. The two, you'll get closing statements and then they'll retire. The two commissioners will actually deliberate and announce their decision today. That's incredible.
Starting point is 00:05:41 Can we read the tea leaves because I think there is a butt. And correct me if I'm wrong, I think the buzz is on the side of the brothers. Is that correct? Has anything changed? And are you a flight on the wall in there? Or did you get to prepare them? Tell us what's your feeling? Look, my feeling is if anybody ever deserved to be paroled, it would be these two.
Starting point is 00:06:05 I have been down to R.J. Donovan. I have seen the hospice program. I've told me, I watched Lyle graduate in the first class that was UC University of California Irvine in conjunction with the Department of Corrections for a. graduate degree, Bachelor of Arts and Sociology. It was, I watched that class of 22, and I watched the valedictorian, it was not Lyle, but a kid, a young kid who was there as a third grader, illegal alien, as you say there want to be called, give that, basically grew up in prison, and I've watched and interacted with these people. I've seen the murals, I've seen Lyle's
Starting point is 00:06:47 Green Space Project. You watch the hospice program. which is very much moving. Here in California, we were on the vanguard in the 90s of lock them all up. Well, one of the things about locking up all of this young population is they age. And by now, they are truly an aging elderly population in the prison. And Eric's hospice program deals with that. So, yeah, they really did some pretty remarkable things behind bars, and they've had three decades to do that.
Starting point is 00:07:19 I get it. But after today, the cases, once both hearings are done, the cases are going to land on Governor Newsom's desk, if I'm correct. And I think we have a SOT, if we could play SOT, zero. He's giving a statement to a reporter in his pure GQ fashion. Let's take a look at that. We're just a few weeks away, August 21st and 2nd, I think, where the Pro Board is going to make a decision and make a recommendation. to you that lands on my desk right mr murphy that's heavy stuff heavy stuff and you know what intentionally and i remember that conversation with you i remember going back and i kept having a
Starting point is 00:08:01 temptation to want to see it but with the recognition always in back of my mind that this thing may land on my desk i don't want to be persuaded right by something that's not in the files yeah i get that guys i apologize he was speaking to uh ryan murphy who was the creator of the Netflix series, Monsters, the Lyle and Eric Menendez story. But still, what do you think, Mark? You think he's going to rubber stamp this a go? Well, I've had my issues with Governor Newsom on parolees and getting favorable rulings and him reversing it in the past. I have about as good a feeling as one can have, having said that, that if, you know, if, they get the ruling they deserve, that he's not going to stay in the way. In fact, I would
Starting point is 00:08:54 probably urge him. This is a nuance. Maybe you guys can appreciate it. We also have a live habeas. If they get parole, that habeas is still alive, so to speak. If he grants clemency, meaning he just says, that's it, you're not under state control anymore, that habeas arguably goes away. So it'll be very interesting to see what he does in the event that we get the ruling we think we deserve and that he says, I don't need to wait the 120 days. I'm convinced at this point because I think that's what will happen. Yeah, it doesn't sound like he's going to take a whole lot of time. Dave, you've been following the case too. Do you think these guys have a good chance at, I don't know, what are they going to do for a living when they get sprung if they get
Starting point is 00:09:44 sprung? Oh, they'll make lots of money. First off, they've been. got a great lawyer, Mark Garagos, and I have a lot of respect for my friend Mark. We just happen to be on different sides of this. I were just going to say, that is, by the way, that's the about to bend you over, Mark and check you in the head. Oh, man, I remember when these guys were on trial and their lawyer dressed them in those sweaters to make themselves look so angelic. Meanwhile, they had such brutal, they committed such brutal murders that law enforcement at the time thought it was a mob hit. There was so much blood on the scene. They shot Kitty ten times. They had to go outside and reload the shotgun because she was crawling away
Starting point is 00:10:25 and they wanted to finish her off and then shot her in the head. And then they went on a shopping spree, a spending spree. You can see them on the back of Mark Jackson's NBA card. He's dribbling in the back. There they are on the front row seats of the Knicks. So I guess people grieve in different ways. Well, let me disabuse you, Dave, of a couple of things. First of all, the Mark Jackson card, I don't believe is them, although it does kind of look like them. I'll give you that. Number two, the grand jury here twice rejected, and you know how hard that is, twice rejected the financial motive. And number three, I've always said about the Y Kitty. Besides the fact that that shows that there's a whole lot of rage there, Eric is testified, by the way, and Lyle is the one
Starting point is 00:11:06 who testified about going out to reload. Nobody would know that but for Lyle's testimony in trial number one. And number three, doesn't that, or number four, doesn't that speak to the amount of rage they had in, I think, corroborate Eric, who said he had found out that his mother was protecting his father all this time, which we now know from the resentencing earlier this year. She was also the enforcer of the hallway rule, and Dave, I don't know about you, but I know If somebody was saying, I'm down the hall with my sons
Starting point is 00:11:38 and the wife is saying you can't go down the hall and I'm enforcing that rule, that would be incredibly peculiar to me and be an earmark or a red flag for something is going on. Then you, you know, and I mentioned the habeas, then you layer over that, the Roy Rosello declaration from Minuto, who says, Jose raped me also
Starting point is 00:12:00 and felt safe enough to do it in his house, I think when you look at all of that, and you've got the clear pronouncement in the law that resentencing is appropriate, which the judge found, even in spite of our elected DA kind of throwing a hissy fit, if there was ever anybody who should be out, it should be Eric and Lyle. Well, I... Yeah, go ahead, John. I was going to say that sounds like the arguments that are probably all within the habeas. Yes? Yeah, in the habeas, you've got that, and then you've got this other kind of tragic piece of evidence, which was Eric's letter to his cousin Andy, who testified in the first trial, and it was eight months before the killings, and he talks about how disturbed he was by his dad
Starting point is 00:12:51 coming in and making him do it again and how it's a hard thing for him to kind of keep or secret to keep and everything else. I think, and by the way, the DA threw all of the day of, he wasn't as articulate as Aaronberg, but apologies to Habib and to Seth, who were the deputies who filed it, but they threw all of that at Judge Ryan already once in response to the informal, twice in response to the formal request, and still there's, there's an order out there that we made a prima facie case, so they're worried. I mean, the DA's office is worried and rightfully so that the conviction is at risk. Oh, I think they're going to get out early. There's too much momentum.
Starting point is 00:13:36 They've got great lawyers, meaning Mark Garagos and team. Also, it's nice to have Kim Kardashian and Netflix on your side. I mean, there's a lot of momentum here. And that's why they're going to make lots of money when they get out, which is another reason why I don't think they should. But here's a thing about the sex abuse. Yeah, there are some evidence, the Minuto letter, the cousin letter that maybe there was with Jose. Although, keep in mind, the stories changed. Eric and Lyle weren't consistent that there was sex abuse.
Starting point is 00:13:59 In fact, after the murders, Eric confessed to his therapist, the guy, and you know this, Mark, a drone Oseal, that he had killed his parents out of a desire to be free from his controlling father. And his father's high standards, but not because of abuse. So the stories changed over time. And then it doesn't, to me, changed the fact that they murdered Kitty, who maybe was an enabler. She was married to a guy who was cheating on her, who was a pretty bad husband and father. And she had her own issues and mental health issues, but she deserved to be murdered in the way that she did. They were both apparently sitting on their couch where their backs turned watching TV, eating ice cream. So I think there are some crimes that should fulfill the destiny of life in prison.
Starting point is 00:14:46 Life in prison means life in prison. And there are a lot of people in prison right now who were probably just as good, just as model of a prisoner who did a lot less. and they're not getting out. Well, actually, we put on it, the resentencing. We put on X-Rated, who's one of my favorite names, if not witnesses. And X-Rated testified that he went to Menendez University and turned his life around and spent a lot less time on a murder case and was released. And he was a very compelling witness, number one.
Starting point is 00:15:16 And since that time, he's posted pictures of him with his children and the fact that the Menendez brothers were instrumental in him turning his life around. And by the way, just to respond to some of those things, you know, when people say, what about Kitty, you know what I have? My response is, I've never had a case, actually one case, murder case, where the victim's family was fully in support of my client. Well, in this case, you not only have all of the victims' family in support, you've got Jose's older sister, Terry, and you've got Kitty's older sister, Joan, both of whom
Starting point is 00:15:54 who are hanging on with extreme health challenges because all they want in life is to have these boys out, the brothers out, I always call them the boys, because like Dave, I was much younger when this went on. But the fact that the two sisters, who are the ones who have the position, and especially Kitty, Joan was, she was so much older than Kitty
Starting point is 00:16:18 that she almost testified under oath, that she had almost a maternal role in her life, that if they're saying we want, them out, they made amends and I've forgiven them, then who are we, whose interest are we vindicating at this point when we argue, no, keep them in, lock them up for life? And by the way, Judge Jessica, who gave them and resentenced them and gave them this opportunity back in May, he heard all of this stuff. He heard hours and hours of the DAs talking about this.
Starting point is 00:16:46 And ironically, one of those DAs who will remain nameless, because I consider him a friend and I don't want to slam him, is now in the sex unit. And I told him, and I said on the record, and I probably shouldn't have, I would take his next defense case pro bono because I want to be there to remind the jury that the DA's office is prosecuting cases where victims of sex crimes, stories change over time. And yet this DA's office is saying, if you don't testify perfectly when you're the victim, that you should be disregarded, which is a first cousin of Dave's argument. So I tend to be a lot more forgiving in these kinds of situations, and I think this is a unicorn, and they should be out, and anybody else similarly situated, the fame cuts both ways would have been out by now. I think the family support is going to be a huge factor for the parole board. I also, I'm willing to bet five bucks. They're getting out, and I'm not going to be offended by it. I'm kind of in your camp, but we're going to pivot now to a, what I'm I think is going to amount to be a really horrible case, the case of missing baby Emmanuel Harrow,
Starting point is 00:17:56 who's now been missing for, what are we up to? Over a week at this point, you guys might know, gosh, this poor kid, he's seven months old, right? Look at him. There's his picture. He just disappears. Apparently, according to the mother, she was changing his diaper in a parking lot,
Starting point is 00:18:17 because I guess that's what you do from time to time. somebody approached her, said, Ola, hit her over the head, knocks her out when she comes to her baby's gone. Let's hear it straight from her mouth for a minute. Let's run. I think it's sought one. I got him out of the car scene and I laid him down and so I could get his diapers ready. And somebody said, Ola, and that's all I remember. And I saw, I saw white. And you're hearing said I fell on the floor and I said as I got up I couldn't find my son I checked it all around my truck and I ran into Big Five and I asked the lady if she saw a baby or someone with the baby she said no it was a happy boy he smiled McKenzie loved to kiss him Dave do you believe
Starting point is 00:19:18 are these crocodile tears real tears what do you think i don't believe her and i think her shiner under her eye gives it away because according to witnesses who have posted on social media she showed up with that shiner before there was the incident that didn't apparently exist although maybe uh and also she was not with her child so this is someone who i think is acting and that's just my belief based on what i saw also it reminds me Susan Smith, she did the same thing, pulled the same act, and threw in the same casual racism, where it was the black kids who stole her kids, and then turned out she was the one who drove them into the body of water here. She puts in a little bit of the aura, so you know,
Starting point is 00:20:03 put that out there into the body public to poison the well. And so no, I think the walls are closing in on her and her husband. And there is obviously not an indictment, not a charge yet. We are speculating, but the evidence doesn't look good. They have lawyered up, apparently. And when people are trying to help them find their children, the father has told these individuals that they are trespassing. That's not how people would act if they were innocent. That's not how people would act if they really cared about the well-being of their children, especially one last point when you had the father who has a past of beating up a toddler. Yeah, I'm glad you brought that up. And interestingly, I also thought about the Susan Smith case and the Harmony Montgomery case when I was reading about this one.
Starting point is 00:20:51 And the father, apparently he beat the crap out of one of his other children so much so that that child got taken away from him. I don't know why the father's not in jail, number one. But you mentioned he was trying to shoe shoe away bystanders who wanted to help look for the child. Can we roll Sat 2? Hey, are you Jake? You guys are trespassing, I'm sorry. That's fine. I just wanted to see if we could help you in any way,
Starting point is 00:21:36 talk to you about what happened. Okay, that's not a problem. Thank you, Jake. Thank you. Appreciate it. Cool shirt, bro. I'm into Pokemon myself where I collect as well. All right, guys. He will refuse to talk. But there you go. You heard, Jake. He clams up and refuses to talk. But at least he opened the door. Mark, this guy pleaded guilty to willful child cruelty back in 2018. And now he doesn't want any help looking for his missing.
Starting point is 00:22:11 seven-month-old, what do you make of it? You know, a hat tip to Megan, Kelly, former lawyer and investigator extraordinaire. At her behest, I had somebody look at a file out here in California, and I will tell you, I won't step on any of it. I will tell you if I represented him, I would not have had him answering the door. There are some rather, if you're, I can tell you right now, having looked at a civil file involving this gentleman, the police have already got enough probable cause, in my opinion, to take the next step.
Starting point is 00:22:58 In addition to that, there was a restraining order against him recently that was denied, but some of the allegations. connected to that are extremely disturbing and if he is not good for this if in fact the story is true he's going to have every incentive in the world to want to find out who really did this because i'm going to tell you the the his history and i know you're not supposed to normally look at all that but his history is extremely troubling for something like this especially given what you cited or actually it was dave the black and blue mark the missing the story beforehand i mean if you take a look at this civil file which my partner just did this morning uh i think there's going to be some revelations that are going to that are going to have the people uh worked up into a feeding frenzy
Starting point is 00:24:01 so if you were this guy you want your kid found and found immediately and somebody else to be the perpetrator. Yeah, I, you know, look, I'm a criminal defense attorney, too, but this story stinks. I don't believe it. I don't believe their affect. I don't believe their words. I don't believe anything about it. So I won't be surprised when somebody gets, and probably both parents could get indicted
Starting point is 00:24:27 in the not too distant future, but we're going to move on yet again because there's so much. This is an amazing docket we have going on today because next, we have jury selection, which which I think is going to wrap up very soon in the case against Donna Adelson in your neck of the words, your neck of the words, your neck of the woods, Dave. And you also have a pretty personal connection to this case because the victim's case was Dan Markell was a friend of yours. Yeah, Danny was a great guy. When I was a state senator, I knew him in Tallahassee.
Starting point is 00:25:03 He was a law professor. He also went Harvard Law School. And instead of making the big money out there in the private world, he went and became a law professor in a smallish town because he cared deeply about students. And he was a prominent professor nationally. He got well known for his writings. And he loved his children so much. And it was his love for his children that led to his demise, his targeted murder, because he refused in a child custody dispute with his ex-wife to give up custody to allow the kids to move from talented. all the way down eight hours away to South Florida, where the in-laws wanted the kids. They even bribed him, said, we'll give you a million dollars if you allow it, but he cared more
Starting point is 00:25:46 about being with his children than the money. And then eventually the family, because the son, Charlie is now in prison for it, the family had him killed. And now Donna's Day of Reckoning is upon us. It's upon us. And I don't know. It's not looking good for her either, especially since we know she tried to leave with a one-way ticket to Vietnam because she needed some R&R, not exactly the place I think of if I want,
Starting point is 00:26:13 you know, a spa day. And also, I have so many questions about this case and I don't know if it'll come up in the trial, but why isn't Wendy Adelson charged with anything? The actual mother of these children who she wanted to abscond to Southern Florida. Next, Koeberger and Adelson. If you have any questions or comments for us, you can now. email mk. True Crime at devil make caremedia.com. We would love to hear from you. Don't go away. We'll be right back. You've heard me talk about jacked up fitness and their amazing all-in-one home gym. They know that many people are short on time and money but still want to get fit. Now you can start your fitness journey for under $60. And in just six minutes a day.
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Starting point is 00:27:37 If you're looking for a fun way to jump star or supercharge your fitness routine, get the all-news shakeweight by Jacked Up Fitness at jacked-upshakeweight.com. That's jacked-up shakeweight.com. Okay, welcome back. We are actually going to continue first with a little more on Donna Adelson because, as you know, that trial is about to start any day. Now, we thought it might start later this afternoon, but that's probably not going to happen. They are in the middle of jury selection in that case.
Starting point is 00:28:10 And I have to remind everybody that Donald Adelson, who is the mother of Wendy and Charlie, she's 75 years old. So wouldn't you know, the prosecutor in this case was asking the jury whether or not they would be okay with convicting a grandma. Let's run that 6A. Can it look like your grandmother? my young people number five can a killer look like a granny I mean
Starting point is 00:28:43 saw you in picture but like anyone that's capable of like you can keep an open mind to the possibility that a grandmother could be a killer well Dave I have a question I have a question Dave
Starting point is 00:29:02 since you're down there, you're a friend, you're in the mix. I heard something. I can be completely wrong. And that's why I want you to educate me. Was she offered a time served deal? There was a rumor recently that the prosecutors offered Donna, time served, meaning you can walk free if you turn on Wendy. If you testify against Wendy, the prosecutors came out right afterwards to say that is not true. But they didn't deny there was a plea offer made. They just said that what you heard is not true. So, no, I don't think they'll let her walk in exchange for giving up Wendy, but by the way, Donna is not giving up Wendy anyways. The thing that Donna cares most about in the world are her grandkids, and she gives up Wendy, well, there goes the mother and the father.
Starting point is 00:29:45 And she's also, in my mind, such a narcissist that she believes she did nothing wrong, just like her son, who also tried to convince the jury by taking the stand and coming up with this ridiculous double extortion scheme, this defense, double extortion, which we can get into. But the jury rejected it outright, and I think that's going to be Donna's fate as well, and I'm looking forward to it. Does Dave Everlaw, do they do criminal defense? Yes, actually do, which is funny because here I am. I've still been a prosecutor for the past. I'm going to say, I have an expression for guys like you. You never left the office. And I tease you because you are a hell of a prosecutor, and it's great that you're not in the office anymore.
Starting point is 00:30:32 But having said that, I, you know, my father, who was my hero and was a prosecutor for many years before he came to his census and started doing criminal defense, he used to say, when they offer you low-term state prison, they basically know their case is not very good. When they offer you county jail, they know they don't have a case. And when they offer you time served, you're factually innocent. So I'll just, I'll leave it to him. You know, I like that theory, but I got to disagree. I don't think Donna Adelson has a prayer of a not guilty. I mean, it's just too. The thing I keep hearkening back to is this is what I don't understand in this case.
Starting point is 00:31:12 Wendy's not indicted nothing. She's just out floating around out there. Why would a granny and her son concoct this plan to stop the children from being with their father without the involvement of the children's, mother. Just to me, I don't understand why are they protecting her if they are? Weren't there wire taps or phones tapped in this case? I know they had some conversations from jail. They had, yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:46 I suspect, call me a cynic, I suspect that there is evidence that if they brought charges against her would end up backfiring on them as, you know, I hate to be the cynic when it comes to prosecutors. I think otherwise, if you're a prosecutor like the ones I deal with great frequency, the way to get a plea out of Donna Edelson was indict or file on both of them, the mother and the daughter, because, you know, the only difference between a prosecutor and a mob boss is that the mob bosses spare the women and children.
Starting point is 00:32:26 In defense of Georgia Kaplan, who you heard in that great voir dire, and who's done a great job in this case. By going one after the next, they've been able to develop new evidence. So, for example, the reason why they've got Donna, I think, is because they have that incredible circumstantial evidence, consciousness of guilt that she was trying to flee on the one-way ticket to a non-extraditable country, Vietnam.
Starting point is 00:32:48 And they even had that video, and that's going to be so damning. And the only reason why they had that was because they first got her son, who was found guilty and then sentenced to life in prison. That is what led Donna to flee. and I suspect when they got Donna's phone because of that arrest, they got other damning evidence that could be used against Wendy.
Starting point is 00:33:06 So if Donna is convicted, I do think Wendy is next. And here's the video of her. She was about to board the plane. She was literally on the skywalk to the airplane when the cops got her because someone told them that she was about to flee and got her just in time. Just in time. And I know we're going to be talking about this case a lot more when the actual trial kicks off. So we're going to pivot again and talk about Brian Coburger.
Starting point is 00:33:34 But this is a little unusual. Brian Coburger has been in prison now, not very, I mean, he's been in jail, but now he's in prison. And he wasn't there very long before he filed a sexual harassment complaint. Now, look, prison is prison. And as one of the victim's sisters, you know, plainly said during his sentencing hearing, you know, don't drop the soap, you know, basically. And here he is complaining that he's getting harassed in prison.
Starting point is 00:34:06 Mark, take this one. What do you think? Does he have a shot of getting moved for sexual harassment? He's obviously not listening to his lawyer's advice, wouldn't you say? I mean, there's a, this is not a way I sometimes tell clients this, there's not a winning strategy. I'll leave it at that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:26 And they always, Dave, I mean, we know people, he's starting. early. He's going to be in prison for the rest of his natural life. My prediction is he's going to die in prison obviously and it won't be of old age. He's not going to do well there. But you know, we see prisoners all the time. They write these weird motions on the toilet paper and they try to file them and they usually go nowhere. What do you think about this one? This guy's trash. You know, you see him with his red hands in the video. We saw of him behind bars that surreptitious this video and that's because he washes his hands like a hundred times a day to the point where he irritates his hands he's got like OCD for this stuff so he's all in the cleanliness that
Starting point is 00:35:06 doesn't jive well in a prison setting I mean here's a guy who's going to complain perhaps at meal time because the fish isn't fresh he is going to complain to the warden but every little thing which actually I sort of like because I do think he got off easy I thought that he should have faced a death penalty if he doesn't face a death penalty then who does who deserves it then So, yeah, in that sense, I'm not going to shed any tears for this sociopath, want to be serial killer. Yeah, me neither. But just as an homage to the victim's family, can we just run SOT 9 because it's a classic? Quick message from our youngest daughter, which I probably wanted to say,
Starting point is 00:35:45 you may have received A's in high school and college, but you're going to be getting big D's in prison. Thank you. People are clapping. That was amazing. You know what? I'm glad she sounded off the way she did. And I don't blame her one bit. And all right.
Starting point is 00:36:13 So let's move on to our next case, which is, it doesn't involve murder, so that's good. Kevin Costner, though. Kevin Costner has filed a motion to dismiss in a case that was. filed against him. And again, now this one smacks of the recent Blake Lively versus Baldoni. Like, there's a problem on set apparently. Mark may know a whole more about this than I do. But Kevin Koster's filed a motion to dismiss because someone filed a motion against him for having a sexually charged rape scene that was sprung upon her during the filming of a movie. Mark. take this one away well the the i don't know about this i have so many issues with this i'm not so sure
Starting point is 00:37:05 i buy how how this is being kind of spun so to speak and by the way at its core all of this is about spinning and something that happens quite a bit so i count me in the doubtful camp you know it's weird dave because we're still the the case against Valdoni and Blake Leibney in the back and forth that they have was the first time I really heard of, A, an intimacy coordinator, didn't know that that was a thing, but apparently it is. But also, you know, when you are an actor, an actress, and you sign your lucrative contract, in this case it was a stunt woman, and her name is Devin LaBella. She was a stunt woman for Ella Hunt on set of this movie. Don't you know, like you read the scripts, you know what's going on, you sign on the, the, dotted line. Why do you then get to complain for doing your job? Well, she's maintaining that the
Starting point is 00:38:05 actor went too far, not costing her, but whoever was filming that rape scene with her. And it wasn't even a scene that was on camera. This was in preparation for the pre-scene, I guess. It gets a little confusing. But I'm with Mark on this one. See, we can agree on something here today. I'm a little, I'm a little skeptical because these movies have these paid intimacy coordinators. They're there for a reason to prevent something like this from happening, to be the witness in case there is an allegation, and to stop something like this from happening. So the fact that she is now raising it, as she said,
Starting point is 00:38:41 he said, with no evidence other than her own words, and apparently Kevin Costner is coming up with photos and documentation that shows otherwise, yeah, I'm not so sure that she's going to win on this one. And just to make it clear, although we're a true crime show, this is not a criminal trial. This is a charge and allegation of tort for a civil court, not criminal. What do you think real quickly? I've known Kevin Costner for countless years. In fact, he used to live around the corner.
Starting point is 00:39:12 Just from a personal standpoint, makes zero sense. So I'm just going to give my own personal view here. Real quick, Mark, what do you think, though, about the, text messages that she sent, Devin LaBella sent after she rapped, you know, had a wonderful time, thanks for the experience. How much weight do you think they'll hold?
Starting point is 00:39:33 Look, I, having just watched the Diddy trial, I will tell you that you can always after the fact invent, you know, my therapist told me this, my, my girlfriends told me this, my boyfriend's told me
Starting point is 00:39:48 this, but when you have to face your real time, text messages. There's something really compelling about that. And what, you just came to a realization and somebody just rocked my world and all of a sudden, what I thought then was great, isn't great anymore. I just think people have kind of moved past that as of late. Yeah. You know, believe the words, right? Believe the words. Exactly. Believe the evidence. Yeah, exactly. So we're going to take, take another quick break, but when we come back, it's really my favorite story of the day.
Starting point is 00:40:26 And we're going to be talking about the story about the assistant attorney general out of Rhode Island that was arrested for trespassing and then some. When we come back, don't go away. There are so many stories in the news where corporate media outlets are trying to control the narrative and spin you in one direction or the other. This is why I want to tell you about the ground news app. other platforms amplifying or suppressing certain narratives to shape your worldview, they are an independent platform pulling in perspectives from across the political spectrum to show you what's really behind the coverage. They help expose media bias and they allow you to compare coverage. I know you're worried about immigration, the economy, simply finding the truth missing from
Starting point is 00:41:13 social media feeds, it can be a real challenge. And ground news aimed to help you. Right now, you get 40% off their vantage plan. That's five. bucks per month when you go to groundnews.com slash Megan. That's g-r-o-u-und-d-news.com slash Megan. Ground news helps you think freely. Check it out. Up now. I'm an AG. You guys have heard about this story. An assistant AG from the great state of Rhode Island was arrested for trespassing. Now we've got to kind of figure out what happened behind the scenes here. But people. Before we do that, let's just roll the best video of the day.
Starting point is 00:41:59 I want you to turn it off. The protocol is that you turn it off. The citizen request is to turn it off. So they want you guys to leave? Yes, we're out. Let's just leave. Let's just make it easy, okay? We're not.
Starting point is 00:42:12 I am. Okay. That's not the point. Can you look at me? We'll talk over here, okay. Your protocol is. Can we all talk? Can we all talk?
Starting point is 00:42:20 We'll talk over here. They want to leave. Your protocol is. Can we talk? You guys just want them out? Do you want them trespass? Anything we can do. Trust pass?
Starting point is 00:42:28 Yeah. I just need to. Presspast, get a minute. Please. Can you relax? I ask you to turn off the body cam. You have to turn it off. And that's your protocol.
Starting point is 00:42:35 She's a fucking lawyer, so she knows. Well, that's a . . . So that's not true. So we got to go. No. It is. That's law. I'm an A.J.
Starting point is 00:42:44 I'm an A.J. I'm an A.J. Good for you. I don't give me a . . Let's go. We're going. We're leaving. We're leaving. I'm quick.
Starting point is 00:42:51 Please don't put your hands on us. Can you get your children out of your, like, I don't know why. I'm sorry, what? What's a person like, so, all right, are you right? No, no, no, no. Don't, don't, don't. You're just being to 10. I'm in 18.
Starting point is 00:43:04 I'm in 18. I'm in 18. What do you, what are you? What are you? What are you probably cost of the team before? You're being to 10 because you're not leaving. You have. You relaxed.
Starting point is 00:43:18 Sir, sir. Sir, she's not doing anything wrong. A.G. I'm an A.G. She's an A.G. Buddy, you're going to regret this. You're going to regret it. I'm an A. Oh. I'm sorry. It's not really funny, but I just... It is funny. Come on. It is funny. I'm an A.G. I'm going to start going around going. I'm an O.G. I'm an O.G.
Starting point is 00:43:46 I'm an O.G. But you know what I love about this, and I have a year. I love Rhode Island, by the way. I've many friends there. I've spent time there. I've got a Rhode Island bar lawyer in my office. And I'm now thinking that if she leaves the AG's office, I want her to head my Rhode Island office because she looks like she's a lot of fun.
Starting point is 00:44:08 Mark. I don't know that many prosecutors. You know, back when I was drinking, this is somebody I would have liked to spend some time with. I'm so glad you mentioned that because I actually think she's going to be fired from the AG's office, and I think she probably should be. And here's the reason why.
Starting point is 00:44:26 Look, you're going to go out and get drunk, I get it. But what happened inside that restaurant that made the restaurant call the police and press charges for trespassing? Like, what could have possibly happened in there? And when she told the cop, you're going to regret this, that's where I think she drew a line. Dave. Dave, you're going to hire her when she gets hired from the AG's office? Please.
Starting point is 00:44:49 Let me tell you this. First, I don't know if she ever made it into the restaurant. Not sure yet. She just might have been commiserating outside. But bottom line is this. She's not an AG. She is not an AG. Because I worked for the AG. You're an assistant attorney general if you work for the AG. She's a special assistant attorney general. She should have said I'm an S-A-A-G. That would have been actually accurate. In fact, she's not a prosecutor. Can you imagine at that blood alcohol level, her having to say I'm a special assistant? A.J. That would have been a field sobriety testing of itself. I mean, the one thing she is not is the boss. You have to get elected. I know because I ran for A.G. In Florida and lost to a woman named Pam Bondi, you've heard of her. And never once did I ever say, I'm in AG? No, no, you have to win the election first. So she didn't win the election. And this woman is not a prosecutor also in court. She is an appellate prosecutor, meaning she does the appeals. She doesn't actually see trial court judges. It's a paper pusher. What is that?
Starting point is 00:45:50 A paper pusher. I have a lot of respect for my appellate prosecutors in my old office. But this perhaps is why she did not understand the rules on body cams that it's okay. And in fact, they have to keep their body camera on in a situation like this unless the victim says turned it off. Unless there's a domestic violence situation. So this one was wrong on the law, wrong on her title, a complete embarrassment to our entire profession. And yes, I know, Mark, I just slipped and said our entire profession because I still still. do believe I'm there. Oh, my God. I was going to say you can't, you got to leave the office at some point.
Starting point is 00:46:23 But by the way, when she leaves the office, she looks like a whole lot of fun. So I'm here for you. Well, I guess she will be happy to know. What is her name, by the way? Does anybody know her name? Let's give her a shout out. She's the greatest. Yes, thank you. Devin Flanagan. I'm glad she's going to probably be sending you a resume because, you know, she's going to need to, I think, very soon. She's not an AG. She's an AGG-D-G-D-W-I. That's aggravated DWI. If she's not a 0.15, I'll eat my shoe in Macy's window. She really embarrassed herself there. And since we're on this, I would like to, if you don't mind, let me kick off closing argument segment of the show with one of my own, which directly relates to this horrific embarrassment that we all just witnessed,
Starting point is 00:47:16 if you don't mind, guys. And I want to say this to every young lawyer who is awaiting the bar, who just passed the bar, who's finally become a lawyer. And I know that she was practicing for seven years, but let me harken back. When you take the bar, pass the bar, and get your ticket to practice law and take that ticket and you put it up on your wall in a nice $350 frame because your parents are all proud of you, I want you to remember one thing, you don't know shit about shit at that point. Law school does not teach you how to be a lawyer. Lawyering teaches you how to be a lawyer. And if you want to be a great
Starting point is 00:48:00 lawyer, you need to be a good person. What does that mean? That means you have to be a good person, whether you are at the grocery store, pumping gas, watching your kids soccer game. You are a lawyer all of those times, not just when you're in the office. And certainly, you're a lawyer, even when you're at a bar, slamming back some cosmopolitans and talking down to the police officers. That is no way to make your name or your way in our profession. Be a good person. You work on being a great lawyer. That's the only way to do it. It's not a nine to five. That is my rant on that. And I believe, Dave, You got something you want to rant about? Yes, let's get back to the Adelson case.
Starting point is 00:48:48 Now, I said I'd talk about this alleged extortion plot. That's going to be her defense. She's going to say that the reason why her money got in the hands of the hitman was because the hitman then were trying to extort her son and thus her into paying them. Now, there are so many issues with that. Number one, first off, the money that was handed over to the hitman was washed, literally washed. It was moldy and wet because somehow, in her mind, mind, this amateur crook, she believed that money laundering should be taken literally.
Starting point is 00:49:20 Okay, another reason why this is so ridiculous is that when the undercover officer went up to her and it was recorded, it's called the bump, when they bumped into her and they tried to get money out of her. And that's when it all put everything in motion. They recorded Donna's immediate phone call. It was to her son, not to police. It was to her son saying this involves the two of us. And then they talked in code, and they used the term TV to describe the murder. And so here's the big question. Now, she supposedly was scared of the extorters who were from the Latin Kings. Mark Garagos, have you ever heard of the Aladdin Kings engaging in wiretaps?
Starting point is 00:49:56 Is that something they're good at? Let me tell you, the Latin Kings may be proficient in a lot of things. Undercover surveillance is not one of them. Do I have to respond to this, or can I do a rant on a different subject? You can do a rant on anything. thing you want, you're Mark Garagos. Well, you know, the rant all do today is really about the presumption of innocence, even though we do these things and we love to go into the true crime down the true crime
Starting point is 00:50:25 well, I always, I think that you've got to just set back and say, let me hear more and let me know more before we jump to the conclusions. I'm the first guy who loves a good conspiracy. I'm the first guy who tries to tie all the dots together. But my fear sometimes when I'm trolling or being trolled on X is that sometimes people go down a rabbit hole and make these connections that really have no basis in reality. And so I'd just say every once in a while, take a little reality check, if you will. And I'll end with, I'm an OG, not an AG. And I love being on with you, too. and the feelings mutual that was great you guys i want to i want to thank everybody for joining us
Starting point is 00:51:17 today at mk true crime and don't forget to tell us what you think of the show or if you have any stories you want us to cover if you just want if you just want to chat you can email us at mk true crime at devilmaycaremedia.com the next show drops wednesday see you then guys

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