[00:04] Let's get into
[00:07] it. Just What am I doing? What am I
[00:09] doing here? Those are solid though.
[00:11] Those were solid though. And I won't
[00:13] hear anything to the contrary. Okay. I
[00:15] know they were solid. I heard them.
[00:17] Let's get into it. Coach call in here.
[00:19] You guys know what's going on. You saw
[00:21] the title. This is very odd. What's
[00:23] going on? You know, first of all, two
[00:26] things that are odd. this lady,
[00:27] Elizabeth Lane, who is going to be
[00:29] talking, she basically tried to get
[00:31] Tyler Robinson a lawyer. Now, the fact
[00:34] that she wanted to do that makes
[00:37] absolutely
[00:39] no sense. She's an She's an
[00:42] investigator. She's a she's an online
[00:44] person. She followed me like years ago.
[00:47] And she's like a model, but then also a
[00:50] journalist. And she looks like a Bond
[00:52] girl. Like, look at this chick. You see
[00:54] what I mean? like she looks like a Bond
[00:56] lady, you know? She's clearly not from
[01:00] America. Can't really tell where she's
[01:01] from. She's an accent, you know? It's
[01:03] like, is she like a honeypot or
[01:05] something? I don't know. I really don't
[01:07] know. Um, but apparently she wanted to
[01:10] get Tyler Robinson a lawyer and she was
[01:13] met with the oddest amount of resistance
[01:17] from Utah and from his parents. So,
[01:20] we're going to listen to that. And then
[01:21] we're going to get into who his actual
[01:23] lawyer is. And uh yeah, just listen to
[01:27] this. Check it out.
[01:28] >> Threeletter agency dots and connections.
[01:30] And she joins us now. Elizabeth, great
[01:31] to have you on the show.
[01:33] >> Thank you for having me, Clayton. Oh,
[01:35] yes. And it's funny you guys mentioned
[01:36] Gladio, because it's so important to
[01:38] know what happened during oper operation
[01:40] Gladio, because what we are seeing in
[01:42] the United States right now, it's very
[01:44] related to what the CIA Institute
[01:48] actually turned this world to be. So,
[01:51] I'll get to Charlie in a second because
[01:53] I was actually at the hospital where the
[01:54] whole whole thing happened. My producer
[01:56] called me that he got shot. So, the
[01:57] first thing I did was get in a car and
[01:59] drive to the hospital. I knew exactly
[02:01] where they were taking him. Um, like
[02:03] I've done my investigation. I did my
[02:06] investigation while I was on the road
[02:07] and I was texting a person who was
[02:09] getting live updates from the hospital.
[02:11] So, I showed up and the whole scene was
[02:13] just really weird to me. First and
[02:14] foremost, there were very little amount
[02:17] of journalists that really shocked me.
[02:19] like I thought people would be there
[02:21] just trying to get some details and
[02:23] story but that was not the case. There
[02:25] were just some people who followed
[02:26] Charlie's car and they were just praying
[02:28] at the hospital uh you know for Charlie
[02:30] Survivor but obviously he was already
[02:31] dead. Then another weird thing that
[02:33] happened was this whole story about him
[02:36] being on some kind of life support. They
[02:39] even told us that he for a second he had
[02:41] a pools all that obviously is not true.
[02:44] Uh Charlie was dead from the very like
[02:46] as soon as he got shot I would say. And
[02:49] another thing is um I had this strategy
[02:51] that I wanted to um maybe try out. I
[02:53] have a private detective that I work
[02:55] with from New York. He's very
[02:57] experienced. He was there during mafia
[02:59] days in New York, so he knows what he's
[03:01] doing. Um and we got together as a team.
[03:04] I had this strategy. Now I can't talk
[03:06] about this because it didn't work out
[03:07] quite how we wanted it to. Um, I looked
[03:11] at Tyler Robinson's case and I thought,
[03:13] well, why don't I get this guy a lawyer
[03:15] because that at least puts me, you know,
[03:18] near him so I can understand and control
[03:20] the process. Um, and this is times where
[03:23] they couldn't find the guy a lawyer and
[03:25] they were kind of uh scrambling around
[03:27] to to figure out what who was going to
[03:29] be his lawyer.
[03:31] >> So, this lady wanted to control the
[03:33] process.
[03:35] Isn't that an odd thing to say? Guys,
[03:37] this is a serious message. As you can
[03:40] see, I'm not even in uniform. I'm not
[03:42] wearing the signature hat. So, you know,
[03:44] very serious message. 59% of you are not
[03:48] subscribed. Please, guys, hit that
[03:50] subscribe button. We're trying to get to
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[03:57] Please hit the subscribe button. Please
[03:59] hit the notifications. Please hit the
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[04:04] content, if you want to help me move
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[04:15] the like. You got to hit the subscribe.
[04:17] It helps me tremendously. That is all I
[04:20] ask. Let's get back to the episode. She
[04:24] was looking to control the process.
[04:25] She's just a reporter. That's it. She's
[04:28] has a YouTube channel. She does
[04:30] interviews also very little subscribers
[04:34] gets interviews with just Dan Crenshaw,
[04:38] Tucker Carlson, all these big
[04:41] personalities and then when she does the
[04:43] interview it's like a thousand views and
[04:46] I'm like what? Like it none of it makes
[04:49] sense. It's so weird. It's so weird. But
[04:52] she wanted to control the situation. So,
[04:53] so what we're getting is somebody who's
[04:55] not American
[04:56] clearly from where is she from? Where is
[05:00] she from? Hold on. Let me just see this
[05:02] really quick. Elizabeth
[05:05] I mean this is not like I'm not going
[05:06] after her or something but just
[05:08] Elizabeth Lane. Where
[05:10] is she from? Then we'll see if that
[05:14] place is connected to Philadelphia
[05:16] straight up. Uh let's see. Let's see.
[05:19] Elizabeth, who is she? Where is she
[05:21] from?
[05:23] Ah, okay. Anti-western statements
[05:26] seminated on.
[05:29] So, she's an American actress of
[05:32] Georgian origin. Huh.
[05:36] She's So, she's from Georgia. Georgian
[05:39] origin. Uh, she's a TV anchor. She's not
[05:43] even like a full full out reporter.
[05:45] She's a a TV anchor. uh part of pro
[05:49] Kremlin TV outlet.
[05:52] So that's what she was a part of. Uh
[05:55] Elizabeth Lane and Fragments of the
[05:57] Program were actively. So yeah, she Let
[06:01] me just see something. I I got to see I
[06:02] got to see if there's uh are
[06:07] Georgia.
[06:08] Is that what it's called? Georgia.
[06:11] Georgia and Philadelphia.
[06:14] But that's not what I'm typing.
[06:17] connected
[06:19] in any
[06:21] way. I got to check this out because
[06:24] this is just
[06:26] ah yes,
[06:29] Georgia and Philadelphia are connected
[06:32] through diplomatic, commercial, and
[06:34] cultural and military ties. Diplomatic
[06:37] relations were formally established June
[06:40] 1st, 1992. Both countries maintain
[06:43] embassies in each other's capital.
[06:46] Georgia has an embassy in uh Kensington,
[06:50] we'll say, and and a consulate in
[06:55] uh another place in Philadelphia, while
[06:59] Philadelphia has an embassy in
[07:02] uh Tibilis, Tibili. Okay. The
[07:06] relationship is strengthened by
[07:07] historical and cultural links,
[07:09] particularly through Georgian
[07:12] Philadelphiaian community. People who
[07:15] don't know about the Philadelphia thing,
[07:17] they're like, "What the hell is he
[07:19] talking about? There's a place in the
[07:20] Middle East. We don't talk about it. We
[07:23] can't talk about it." And I just call it
[07:25] Philadelphia. Okay. So, that's that's
[07:27] what I'm doing here. Just trying to
[07:28] survive. Uh there are approximately
[07:32] 120,000
[07:34] Georgian Philadelphiaians living in
[07:37] Philadelphia
[07:39] and around 13,000 Georgians with
[07:41] historical ties dating back centuries.
[07:44] That's very um BB has a reference shared
[07:49] history noting that Georgian
[07:53] people have historically served as a
[07:55] human bridge between the two nations.
[07:58] So, they actually have a really good
[07:59] relationship. That is just so completely
[08:03] didn't even plan to bring that up in the
[08:04] episode, but I've always wondered like
[08:07] what is this lady? Like, who is she? Cuz
[08:11] again, when I see somebody I could I I
[08:14] know how it works when you're building
[08:16] up in YouTube land, in social media
[08:19] land. I know how it works. I'm doing it
[08:21] right now. And when you see somebody
[08:23] where their follow, you'd think a Tucker
[08:26] Carlson interview that's going to get
[08:27] you big subscribers, big views, but it
[08:30] did nothing. All of her big interviews
[08:32] do nothing. It's just it's so odd.
[08:35] Anyway, she does particularly have links
[08:39] to Philadelphia. Just saying. And she
[08:41] wanted to control the situation. So, uh,
[08:44] let's jump over here. and I started
[08:47] approaching different firms in Utah
[08:50] trying to get him a lawyer for Proono.
[08:53] Um, so I walked up to one, I'm not going
[08:56] to name the firm itself, but one of the
[08:58] most reputable firms in Utah because I
[09:00] live here and I asked them if they were
[09:02] willing to represent Tyler Robinson u
[09:05] for proono, you know, case and I was
[09:09] extremely surprised what I got from
[09:11] them. First and foremost, they were
[09:12] like, "Yes, we're absolutely on this
[09:14] because we don't believe that what
[09:16] happened to Charlie Cork was um remotely
[09:20] a case of just a single, you know, crazy
[09:22] kid going up and shooting the guy in the
[09:24] neck like we don't believe that. So, we
[09:26] are more than willing to represent him
[09:28] proono." So, I was like, "Great." So, we
[09:30] started the process and what happened is
[09:33] we realized that we h we needed lawyers
[09:36] who are actually certified with death
[09:38] penalty. So, their certifications didn't
[09:39] live up to that. But there's another
[09:41] interesting thing. When we when I did
[09:44] find a lawyer that was certified to
[09:47] represent Tyler Robinson, obviously I
[09:50] needed a consent from Robinson's family
[09:52] and or Robinson himself because he's
[09:54] actually not a minor. He can consent
[09:56] himself. And ironically, we were unable
[10:00] to get in touch with the parents and the
[10:03] only sources that got close to the
[10:05] parents, they kept telling us that they
[10:07] don't need a proono lawyer. In fact,
[10:08] they don't care if we have a bed as
[10:10] lawyer for Tyler Robinson. And that
[10:13] really shocked me because I don't know
[10:14] if my son was, you know, on a trial and
[10:18] possibly charged with, you know, a
[10:20] murder that could get him executed in
[10:23] prison, I would probably want a really
[10:25] good lawyer for my son, you know, as as
[10:27] a family member. So,
[10:28] >> it's very very weird that that's the
[10:30] reaction she got from the parents that
[10:32] they don't care if you have a better
[10:34] lawyer. You know it. But then you have
[10:37] to think what are we saying when we say
[10:39] that it is weird. Nobody can nobody can
[10:42] doubt that. Like why why would you say
[10:44] ah whatever public defender who cares?
[10:46] You're that mad at your son. Maybe maybe
[10:49] you're that angry at your son.
[10:52] But then you put on your tin foil speedo
[10:54] and it's like are they in on it? Is that
[10:57] the type of thing that we're seeing
[10:58] right now? Like how deep does the rabbit
[11:01] hole go in Utah? Right. Apparently that
[11:05] uh LDS church is a known recruitment
[11:09] place for the agency
[11:13] and agencies in general. That's a known
[11:15] recruiting place. That's where George
[11:17] Zinn was a a member. He was a member of
[11:19] that church and he has all sorts of
[11:22] weird ties to all sorts of weird
[11:23] government things. So, it's just it's
[11:25] very interesting to think like is that
[11:29] how far we're going to say that the
[11:31] parents are involved or the parents are
[11:34] are are making sure that some random
[11:38] lady can't offer up a good lawyer, a
[11:41] very good vetted lawyer who's going to
[11:43] work pro bono to make sure that their
[11:45] son doesn't, you know, pass away. Uh,
[11:51] I mean, what what other conclusion can
[11:53] you come to?
[11:55] Why would you why else would you do
[11:58] that? Someone in the comments, give me a
[11:59] different give me a different reasoning
[12:02] as to why they would do that. I can't
[12:04] think of a single thing that makes sense
[12:07] to why they would say, "No, we don't
[12:10] care if you have a lawyer. We'll just
[12:12] let him just hang out to dry. See what
[12:14] he comes up with." I don't know. How
[12:17] could you be that mad at your kid?
[12:21] >> That was a very big
[12:22] >> Wait, can you clarify? Can you clarify
[12:24] something? The the family was telling
[12:26] you this, his parents or an
[12:27] intermediary?
[12:28] >> We could couldn't even get to the
[12:30] family. Clayton, that's another strange
[12:32] thing that we can discuss. Like we I
[12:33] couldn't even get to them. So then my
[12:36] best approach uh in this situation as my
[12:38] detective told me to reach out to local
[12:41] firm in Utah and get their help to
[12:44] somehow get the consent because as a
[12:46] lawyer you can't solicit clients, right?
[12:47] So it's illegal. So you can't just like
[12:50] announce yourself that I'm going to
[12:51] represent Tyler Robinson. So I started
[12:54] doing that. So I got into this process
[12:56] and I asked my local lawyer firm, hey,
[12:58] what's the best way to go around here?
[13:00] like we need help to get the lawyer from
[13:02] New York who is certified to represent
[13:05] Tyler to get on the case. So he said
[13:08] what whatever you do Elizabeth do not
[13:10] get in touch with the firms in Utah that
[13:12] are the most powerful because they are
[13:14] in on it with the state. No matter what
[13:16] happens they will take the the the side
[13:18] of the state. I did not listen to him
[13:20] and I ended up calling one of the
[13:22] biggest firms in Utah just for you know
[13:25] just to ask for an advice like what what
[13:27] is the situation here? What can we do?
[13:29] So what I got from there, Clayton and
[13:32] Natalie, like we'll shock you. First and
[13:34] foremost, they started screaming on the
[13:36] phone. And I was like, why do you even
[13:38] care? Like you don't have a dog in this
[13:40] fight. Why are you so rude on the phone?
[13:42] So then I said, listen, there is a
[13:45] lawyer who's qualified and he's actually
[13:48] very famous in New York wants to
[13:50] represent this kid. All I need is a
[13:51] consent from Tyler Robinson to do so.
[13:54] And we think that you can help to this.
[13:57] I got a very rude response that only
[14:00] scores is allowed to represent Tyler,
[14:03] sorry, is allowed to find a
[14:05] representation for Tyler Robinson. Well,
[14:08] let me tell you who scores is. So,
[14:10] ScorIS is a guy who's running as a state
[14:12] prosecutor. So, here's the problem with
[14:14] that. State prosecutor cannot be
[14:18] responsible to find a lawyer for a
[14:20] defendant. That's illegal,
[14:22] >> right? That they will be they're
[14:24] choosing their own opponent. Yeah,
[14:26] that's what it seems.
[14:27] >> And this is something that I've been
[14:29] I've been wondering about because it
[14:30] seems like an openandshut case for any
[14:33] defense attorney because the government
[14:35] has presented such a crap case. Unless
[14:38] his attorney is a shill.
[14:41] >> Yeah. And that's the thing. Is his
[14:44] attorney a shill? This is his attorney.
[14:46] Well, this is where he grew up.
[14:48] Washington County, Utah. I didn't know
[14:49] that. But this is his attorney, right?
[14:52] She's she's a public defender. Katherine
[14:55] Nester, right? Katherine Nester is she's
[14:59] very very accomplished. So, when I'm
[15:02] reading about Katherine, I mean, she has
[15:04] all sorts of 30 years experience, more
[15:07] than 60 jury trials, both uh federal and
[15:11] state, specializing in high profile
[15:14] complex cases such as capital murder,
[15:16] homicide, complex fraud, civil rights
[15:19] violations, employment discrimination.
[15:22] She previously served on the board of
[15:24] federal public defenders both in Salt
[15:27] Lake City and in San Diego. For over a
[15:30] decade, Nester received an uh a national
[15:33] uh recognition, including being named
[15:37] Mississippi Trial Lawyer of the Year and
[15:39] receiving Federal Bar Distinguished
[15:42] Service Award.
[15:44] Now, she's also a member of the
[15:47] prestigious legal organizations like the
[15:49] College American College of Trial
[15:51] Lawyers and the American Board of
[15:53] Criminal Lawyers. Now, here's the thing.
[15:55] When you hear all of those uh amazing
[15:58] accolades that she has, you think, "Wow,
[16:00] he got a great lawyer." But did he?
[16:03] Because he seems like he just got
[16:05] somebody who's really in the system.
[16:08] Now, going back to what Elizabeth said,
[16:11] she uh she was talking about how her
[16:14] friend said, "Don't because they're
[16:16] going to side. The biggest firms are
[16:17] going to side with the state all day."
[16:19] And then instead, the state pretty much
[16:22] supplies
[16:24] his defender.
[16:26] And this woman, public defenders are
[16:28] terrible in general. Just terrible.
[16:29] Terrible. I've never been in any legal
[16:31] trouble, but all my friends that have,
[16:33] they're they're very upset if it has to
[16:36] come down to a public defender because
[16:38] it's like you're going to jail. That's
[16:39] it. This is like it's just bad. They're
[16:41] never good. They're always overworked.
[16:42] They're underpaid. It's just it's
[16:44] terrible. Uh and they usually don't
[16:46] really care about representing you cuz
[16:48] they're not like in a firm. They're not
[16:50] partner. They're not It's just they're
[16:51] just done, you know? It's like a a
[16:53] doctor who's too laxed. You're just
[16:55] like, "Ah, I don't know what's going to
[16:56] happen right now, you know?" and they
[16:58] don't care if you live or die kind of
[17:00] thing. And that's kind of what Tyler's
[17:02] facing right now. So, it's just it's she
[17:05] seems good, but she's also, you know,
[17:07] what I would call a company man. You
[17:10] know, that's what she's like. She's a
[17:11] company man. She is very much in the the
[17:15] meshing of of the federal government of
[17:19] Utah. She's very well known. And if
[17:22] something needs to happen in a case,
[17:25] tinfoil speedo completely. If something
[17:29] needs to happen, she would be the person
[17:31] to pull it off. Again, she has all of
[17:34] these accolades yet is a public
[17:36] defender.
[17:38] Why? That that you know what that
[17:40] reminds me of? back when um the
[17:44] president's now president was being
[17:45] prosecuted and someone left the the the
[17:49] DOJ and they went and took this weird
[17:52] position with Alvin Bragg where it was
[17:55] like such a downgrade position but then
[17:57] just after they they do that all of a
[18:00] sudden now they're they're in this case
[18:02] where they're prosecuting the now
[18:04] sitting president. It it's the exact
[18:06] same type of thing. Why does she have
[18:08] this type of job of a public defender?
[18:12] She could be at a law firm. Easy. You
[18:15] show them all of this. This is
[18:16] everything I've done. I know case law
[18:18] inside and out. This is my specialty.
[18:21] She could be brought on. She even has
[18:23] the making to be a partner herself. But
[18:25] yet, she got appointed as a public
[18:27] prosecutor. Now, public defender. Sorry.
[18:31] The thing is, when you really look at
[18:33] it, I'm saying public defender because
[18:35] that's what she is. But really, she's
[18:38] been appointed by the people who are
[18:40] against Tyler. Now, I'm not saying
[18:42] Tyler's innocent. I'm not going down
[18:44] that road or anything like that. I don't
[18:45] know. I don't know. But I am here to
[18:48] call out the weirdness and that that is
[18:51] very very weird. Let's jump back in,
[18:54] hear the rest of what she has to say.
[18:56] >> Yes. So, what I know is that Scordies is
[18:59] running as a state prosecutor. He's
[19:01] running. Everyone can look it up. It's
[19:03] on his website. So, it's it's not quite
[19:06] illegal for him to find a lawyer for
[19:08] Tyler, but it would be illegal if he was
[19:10] a state prosecutor. But what it is
[19:12] though is highly unethical.
[19:15] So, to to have scores looking for, you
[19:19] know, a lawyer for a defendant who's
[19:21] running for a state prosecutor, this is
[19:22] like very unethical. So, let's start
[19:24] from here. And of course, like then I,
[19:26] you know, ran into multiple other
[19:28] different weird situations that will
[19:30] take us like far if I go into the
[19:32] details, but my conclusion about this
[19:35] case is that Tyler Robinson had nothing
[19:37] to do with Charlie Kirk's killing at
[19:39] all. And I can go into more details of
[19:42] how the whole thing went down and why is
[19:44] it that the security that's supposed to
[19:47] be trained so well if something happens
[19:50] to your, you know, protectee like
[19:52] Charlie like the first thing you're
[19:54] going to do with when you have a neck
[19:55] wound is cover the wound and put the
[19:58] pressure on the wound. Even like my
[20:00] young relatives who are like 15year-old,
[20:03] they know it. So, how is this that the
[20:07] security uh unit security detail of
[20:09] Charlie didn't know that? And if they
[20:11] did know that, then you can play the the
[20:13] whole clip. Why is that? And none of
[20:15] them are doing this because when when
[20:16] they carried Charlie to the car, none of
[20:18] them had any blood on their hands. So,
[20:20] if they actually tried to cover the
[20:23] wound properly and tried to save Charlie
[20:25] in one way or another,
[20:28] it would be there, don't you think?
[20:29] >> Yeah. Well, they're too busy. Well, one
[20:30] of them was too busy with his meta his
[20:32] meta glasses filming the situation. So,
[20:34] >> right,
[20:36] >> he's talking about Dan Flood. Dan Flood
[20:38] actually pressed the the camera thing.
[20:40] Now, he could have been stopping his
[20:42] camera with those meta glasses or he
[20:44] could have been starting it up. You
[20:45] can't really tell. I would think he's
[20:47] stopping it. That would make the most
[20:50] sense to me. Uh especially if per se
[20:54] there is a situation where you're seeing
[20:56] multiple guards, security guards, and
[20:58] none of them are getting any blood on
[20:59] their hands. Because if you had that
[21:01] footage and then the FBI has that
[21:03] footage, they might just go, "What the
[21:05] hell's going on here?" Right? Or if they
[21:07] just got into if it just got online
[21:09] somehow, people would be like, "What on
[21:11] earth?" And then those guys would
[21:13] hopefully get locked up. I mean,
[21:16] honestly, but aside from that, just all
[21:18] the weirdness with the prosecution, it
[21:21] seems like with, again, I've said this
[21:23] before, JFK level weirdness when it
[21:26] comes to to Charlie and the situation,
[21:30] but then also to Tyler, everything's
[21:32] very shadowy, right? She she approaches
[21:36] with a lawyer. This a a Hail Mary move
[21:39] that nobody would do. You never expect
[21:41] that. That didn't happen for Luigi. That
[21:43] you don't see that where somebody who's
[21:45] a reporter is just like, "Hey, I can get
[21:47] you a lawyer. I know a guy. He's great."
[21:49] That doesn't happen. But when it does,
[21:52] all of a sudden, you can't get a hold of
[21:54] the parents. You can't.
[21:58] Nobody actually wants you to actually
[22:00] get him this lawyer. And it seems like
[22:02] it's because that lawyer is from the
[22:04] outside. that lawyer, some New York guy
[22:07] who's like, "Oh, I'm gonna I'm gonna get
[22:09] this guy off or I'm g I'm I'm gonna make
[22:11] sure this guy doesn't die." You know,
[22:13] like, "I'm I'm let let me at this. I
[22:15] know what to do here." They don't want
[22:17] someone like that. They want someone
[22:20] who's going to go along with what they
[22:21] have going on. But the question is, why?
[22:24] Why does Utah just hate Tyler? Is that
[22:28] what it is? Well, that wouldn't make any
[22:29] sense. He hasn't really done anything.
[22:32] Yeah, I don't mean like, you know,
[22:34] towards the incident, but you know, just
[22:36] before everything. He was just a regular
[22:38] guy. He's just a kid, you know, young
[22:40] man, whatever. So, why would they want
[22:44] him like this? Cuz it seems like now
[22:46] they want him. And they're not they're
[22:48] they're not letting another lawyer get
[22:50] through. They're making sure their own
[22:53] pitbull of sorts is what gets through
[22:55] and is representing him. It seems like
[22:59] again very shadowy and like he's just
[23:01] getting sold down the river kind of
[23:02] thing. Very very weird stuff. And again,
[23:06] very odd. I mean, this Elizabeth lady is
[23:09] just very, very odd. I mean, again, go
[23:12] look her up. Elizabeth Lane. Go look her
[23:14] up. It's when you look at what she does.
[23:17] Don't look on X. Look on Instagram and
[23:20] YouTube and you'll be like, "Oh, this is
[23:22] very Who is this person?" And then she's
[23:24] on Redacted and then she's played on
[23:27] Candace's show. Say, who are you? Who
[23:29] are you?
[23:31] I don't know. I don't know, man. That
[23:34] That's me. Listen, Tinfoil Speedo in all
[23:36] day. I'm waiting and I can see it
[23:38] already formulating. I've talked I
[23:40] talked about this like a year and a
[23:42] half, two years ago where I was like
[23:44] even three years ago. Anniversary of the
[23:46] podcast was actually just a few days ago
[23:48] on October 10th. So yeah, three years
[23:50] ago pretty much I talked about this
[23:53] where I said there will be people the
[23:56] mainstream media because I was I was
[23:58] parsing out the mainstream media a whole
[24:00] lot. I was dissecting what they were
[24:01] saying and and bringing people the truth
[24:03] through there and factchecking the
[24:06] mainstream media kind of thing. I was
[24:09] like, they are so bought and paid for
[24:12] that and it's so obvious now that
[24:14] whoever is pulling those strings is
[24:17] going to move on to YouTubers and
[24:20] Instagram influencers and Tik Tok
[24:22] influencers and they're going to start
[24:24] paying those people to do exactly what
[24:27] the mainstream media is doing. And I'm
[24:29] always on the lookout for it. I think
[24:31] there's a few I mean I think some of
[24:34] them you can see they're raising their
[24:35] head. There's there's a few out there
[24:37] already that I think are just basically
[24:40] Anderson Cooper with a different hat on,
[24:43] maybe a different colored skin, you
[24:46] know, that I that's what I think
[24:48] honestly. Honestly, but again, to this
[24:50] whole weirdness of the prosecution, it
[24:53] seems like they really don't want any
[24:56] outside influence whatsoever at all. Who
[25:00] could be prompting that to happen? It
[25:03] could be it could be the president being
[25:05] like, "Hey, that's my friend. My son was
[25:08] just with this guy. My son's always with
[25:11] this guy." You know, Charlie was like,
[25:13] uh, Eric Trump, not Eric Trump, Don Don
[25:16] Jr.'s like bagman at one point. You know
[25:19] that when he was real young, like he's
[25:22] been he's been around the Trumps for a
[25:24] long long time. So maybe he looked at it
[25:26] like, "Hey, make sure that this happens.
[25:28] I don't have time for this. This guy did
[25:30] it. I want this guy to get the highest
[25:31] punishment possible. That could be a
[25:33] thing. You know, if it's not Trump, if
[25:36] it's not the president himself, it could
[25:38] easily be one of his kids, right? I
[25:41] don't know. You know, one of the kids
[25:42] that loved him, loved Charlie.
[25:45] Who could it be? Who's reaching down and
[25:47] making sure that no outside influence
[25:49] gets it? And is it is it something
[25:51] that's sincere or is it something that's
[25:56] a little more sinister? Is there
[25:58] something going on? Now, Candace,
[26:01] Candace is talking about this being a
[26:03] military hit.
[26:04] Uh, now when she says that, you know,
[26:07] you say military hit.
[26:10] I think I think she's saying that
[26:12] because it's the wording just feels
[26:15] weird. It's it's kind of just, you know,
[26:18] agency type of things. You know, people
[26:21] in the background, the the shadowy
[26:23] figures of the world.
[26:26] That's what I think it was. I don't
[26:27] think it was like just straight up
[26:30] straight up military. Maybe somebody
[26:31] with that type of experience, but I
[26:34] don't know. I don't know. It just it all
[26:36] seems so weird. Again, JFK level. We
[26:39] have we have a potential pathy. We have
[26:42] possibly two shooters. We have a magic
[26:45] bullet. We have a man who could have
[26:50] been president. We have a whole nation
[26:53] that is just in an uproar about the
[26:54] whole thing. It is just JFK level
[26:57] weirdness to a tea. But uh you guys let
[27:00] me know what you think about this whole
[27:01] attorney thing because I I think that's
[27:03] more telling than people are willing to
[27:06] say. I think that's very telling that
[27:10] somebody comes and says, "I'll represent
[27:12] him. I'm good at this." And they go,
[27:14] "No, get out of here. How dare you? How
[27:16] dare you? Get out of here. We'll handle
[27:18] it as a state." And then they call in
[27:21] their own person.
[27:23] Man, that kid's going down the river. I
[27:26] think I think either he gets off and it
[27:28] looks crazy if he gets off. Terrible. If
[27:32] he gets off, which he won't. He can't.
[27:34] He can't. With the what the FBI has
[27:36] looked into, what they've said already,
[27:38] they can't afford for this guy to get
[27:41] off. But if he does, that's crazy. And
[27:44] if not, he gets the highest punishment.
[27:46] I I don't see it being life without
[27:48] parole. I don't see that happening. Not
[27:51] for someone like this. Anyways guys,
[27:53] just wanted to bring that to you.
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