Speaker | Time | Text |
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All right, you guys, happy Monday. | ||
And let me just start by saying you are not going to believe me. | ||
It's one of those episodes where I have to promise you guys ahead of time that I'm definitely selling the truth. | ||
You can look it up yourselves because you're going to think, how could it be so? | ||
And of course, it's about Brigitte. | ||
And it also involves another man with a very particular skill set, I would say, involving my lawsuit. | ||
And when I tell you what this man is known for, you're just going to pass away. | ||
That's how I felt when I was reading this. | ||
I was like, this is just, I'm done here. | ||
Also, Dan Bongino is in the news. | ||
He is the deputy director of the FBI. | ||
He was trending over the weekend for sending a tweet that essentially was signaling that he saw something in the deep state that has scared him and everyone's wondering what it is. | ||
I have an idea of what it might be. | ||
So let's just go ahead and say the quiet part out loud. | ||
Welcome back to Candace. | ||
unidentified
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Candace. | |
Candace. | ||
I will beanco', bet it's not I will beanco', bet it's not Very quickly, let's start with Dan Bongino, because there have been a lot of people wondering where his voice has been throughout all the Epstein stuff in particular, because back when he was a podcaster, he had a very big podcast, he made it a very big deal. | ||
He's like, we need the Epstein files. | ||
We have to release the Epstein files. | ||
A lot of people are circulating old clips of him and Cash Patel demanding that the files be released. | ||
And suddenly we get this, oh, never mind, whiplash. | ||
Nobody wants the files released. | ||
Everybody move on. | ||
And people are going, wait a minute, Dan Bongino. | ||
We trusted you. | ||
We listened to you. | ||
We listened to your podcast for years. | ||
Why aren't you speaking out? | ||
Suddenly, he gets pulled in to become the deputy director of the FBI and people are wondering if what happens when you join the deep state is that you become a part of its apparatus. | ||
The Ev scene fumble happens and people are waiting. | ||
Crickets, suddenly over the weekend, he rather mysteriously tweeted this. | ||
He tweeted, during my tenure here as the deputy director of the FBI, I have repeatedly relayed to you that things are happening that might not be immediately visible, but they are happening. | ||
The director and I are committed to stamping out public corruption and the political weaponization of both law enforcement and intelligence operations. | ||
It is a priority for us. | ||
But what I have learned in the course of our properly predicated and necessary investigations into these aforementioned matters has shocked me down to my core. | ||
We cannot run a republic like this. | ||
I'll never be the same after learning what I've learned. | ||
We are going to conduct these righteous and proper investigations by the book and in accordance with the law. | ||
We are going to get the answers that we all deserve. | ||
As with any investigation, I cannot predict where it will land, but I can promise you an honest and dignified effort at truth, not my truth or your truth, but the truth. | ||
God bless America and all those who defend her. | ||
Respectfully, Dan. | ||
So what is it that Dan Bongino has learned or Dan Bongino has seen as a part of his investigations that have shocked him to his core? | ||
That it's made him come out and say, I will never be the same again. | ||
Me and my team were debating it, you know, different directions. | ||
They think maybe it has to do with his investigations pertaining into the Russian collusion hoax. | ||
There's some indication of that. | ||
He retweeted an article pertaining to the Russian collusion hoax shortly thereafter. | ||
A 2016 Intel report regarding the Kremlin preferring the GOP over Dems. | ||
And now it says, eh, it's not the truth. | ||
But is that really going to shock him to his core? | ||
If you find out that the deep state lied about Russian collusion, which we already know, is that enough to make you go, I will never be the same after learning this? | ||
No, we know they lie. | ||
We know they lied about Hunter Biden's laptop, right? | ||
A bunch of them signed on and said, it's totally Russia. | ||
It's Russia's fault. | ||
It's always Russia's fault. | ||
Yeah, we get it. | ||
If all else fails, blame Russia. | ||
I am hoping that he's just going to come out and be like, hey, the world is run by sexual deviants. | ||
They're in our government, this government, everybody's government has got them. | ||
Because that's kind of what makes the most sense for me, especially in the context of everything that we're learning about Epstein and this huge cover-up. | ||
Ghelaine Maxwell, what's going on in France? | ||
Brigitte Macronymanu suing Candace Owens because she's getting close to finding out what exactly. | ||
Perhaps at all of it's really connected. | ||
Epstein, Brigitte, Ghelane. | ||
Suddenly the world seems to be dialed into that fact. | ||
And things are reaching a bit of a fever pitch, which brings me to a really crazy story, you guys. | ||
Obviously, we are globally viral. | ||
Everyone's watching the Becoming Brigitte series from here to Tokyo and everywhere in between, trying to figure out what on earth has happened? | ||
What on earth has that woman said in Tennessee that has caused the sitting president of France to sue her all the way in the United States? | ||
What's going on here? | ||
Well, in France, obviously Brigitte is hitting the ground hard or sending people out rather to hit the ground hard and basically try to spin why it is that they're doing this, right? | ||
The French press is obviously Terrified to speak about this issue in any way, right? | ||
This could potentially bring the French Republic to its knees. | ||
And that is what he is communicating in this interview. | ||
He's sitting down with the journalist and it's like, why would you sue this podcast in the United States? | ||
Well, just so you know, he's about to clarify: this is a state issue. | ||
And he comes up with this utterly demented logic as to why it's a state issue. | ||
I'm not going to read his entire back and forth. | ||
You can find it on Xavier Poussard's X, but I'll read you a portion of it because it's quite funny, actually. | ||
This is his theory. | ||
He's sitting down with Sophie Nomayer, and she says to him, you make the connection with Candace Owens, who herself is known for being a far-right blogger. | ||
Eric responds, the reality is that the man named Poussard will export his rumors across the Atlantic, and it's Candace Owens who will gather them. | ||
And not only will she gather them, but with unimaginable firepower, she will spread them. | ||
Sophie asks, 7 million subscribers, Eric says, 7 million subscribers. | ||
And what we see, and it's probably a coincidence, is that first of all, she supports Marine Le Pen against the president of the Republic. | ||
She said, I don't understand why the French didn't elect Marine Le Pen. | ||
Whatever. | ||
But above all else, she is close to Marianne Marischell. | ||
Now, for those of you guys who don't know who Marianne Marischel is, Marianne Marischelle is Marine Le Pen. | ||
That's her niece. | ||
Marine Le Pen is the person that Emmanuel Macron ran against for president. | ||
And he is correct. | ||
I think way back when it went down, when he was running, I did say that French should elect the conservative because I'm a conservative. | ||
Anyways, he's now going, oh, her niece, Marianne Marchell. | ||
Candace knows her. | ||
And so Sophie asks him, how do we know? | ||
And Eric replies, because at a right-wing convention that she organized in September of 2019, Marianne Marischel, her account, forgive me, is one of 98 accounts that is followed by Owens. | ||
Mar-Rochelle invited her followers to follow Owens. | ||
And then they make the Charter pilgrimage together after Owens converted to Catholicism. | ||
Sophie's not following him. | ||
He's like, okay, I don't understand. | ||
You're saying that Candace spoke at a random convention in Paris. | ||
Mario Michelle was there. | ||
They follow each other on social media. | ||
And Candace converted to Catholicism. | ||
What does that have to do with anything? | ||
And now he's mentioning the Charter pilgrimage, which is, I did that Catholic pilgrimage. | ||
This is true in France. | ||
This is when he explains. | ||
She says, what do you mean, Eric? | ||
Eric responds, I mean that they know each other very well. | ||
I mean that they see each other, that they are close to each other. | ||
And I believe you see, madame, that there is no such thing as chance in life. | ||
As Paul Eliard said, there are only encounters. | ||
Okay, so he goes on to explain how through the Charter pilgrimage, somehow, because Marianne Michel was apparently also on this pilgrimage. | ||
Now, I did not talk to her. | ||
I did not speak to her. | ||
It was like 26,000 people marching. | ||
And apparently she does it every year. | ||
I did it once after I converted to Catholicism. | ||
And I hadn't seen her or spoken to her or heard of her since 2019 when I met her at that event. | ||
But he's connecting the dots that Russia is somehow involved in funding the end of the French Republic through the Catholic Charter pilgrimage because they want to collapse Emmanuel Macron and install Maureen Le Pen and they want to end the Republic. | ||
Yeah, it's totally demented. | ||
Okay. | ||
But more demented is who this person is himself, okay? | ||
Who Eric Dumonde Moretti is himself. | ||
Because you need to understand, this is not casual, okay? | ||
He is publicly representing that he's working with the U.S. attorneys that are suing me to help this investigation. | ||
And he is not an average lawyer. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Eric DuPont Moretti, this signals that Brigitte is bringing in the big guns. | ||
He is the former justice minister of France. | ||
Okay. | ||
So think of that as like the attorney general of France, handpicked by Brigitte herself. | ||
And when she handpicked him, it caused outrage all throughout France. | ||
And if you want to know why, it's because, like I said at the top of the show, Eric has a unique skill set. | ||
In other words, the cases that Eric takes on as an attorney, the cases that he tends to intervene in, have a common theme. | ||
I'm going to briefly tell you about just a couple of these cases. | ||
You can look him up independently. | ||
I'm not painting a picture here. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
The first one is known as the Manache Affair. | ||
Okay, the Manasche affair. | ||
It refers to a man. | ||
His name is Was Dennis Manasche. | ||
He meets a young woman when he's young as well, teenager. | ||
Her name is Lawrence. | ||
They decide they're going to get married and begin a life together. | ||
They immediately start having some children. | ||
Okay. | ||
Now, Dennis Manasche is a very skilled engineer. | ||
He climbs the ladder at an automobile company and he becomes a senior executive. | ||
Him and Lawrence have five children. | ||
And I'm going to make it very easy for you because I'm going to put together a chart so that you can follow the story. | ||
They have three girls. | ||
Virginie, she's the eldest. | ||
She's born in 1981. | ||
And then they have Betty and they have a daughter named Samantha. | ||
They also have two boys. | ||
Their names are Tony and Dimitri. | ||
You can keep this up, Skylar, as I keep talking just so they can follow this. | ||
Okay, so Lawrence, his wife, apparently, she just loves to spend money. | ||
Okay. | ||
And Dennis is happy to allow her to spend money so long as they come to an understanding together. | ||
And that understanding is she can spend, he won't ask questions so long as she looks the other way while he rapes their daughters. | ||
I'm not kidding. | ||
Okay. | ||
Viewer discretion advised. | ||
Okay. | ||
Listener discretion advised. | ||
This is the agreement that they come to. | ||
And so he begins to do this in earnest to Betty when she's just eight years old. | ||
Virginier witnesses it. | ||
They both go to their mother and their mom just ignores it because this is the agreement. | ||
Betty, okay, that is the younger sister, becomes pregnant from her father three times between the ages of 13 and 18 years old. | ||
And each time they take her to a different hospital because, you know, she's got to get an abortion, but they also want to avoid any suspicion. | ||
They want the hospital to think that she's just like, you know, a girl that sleeps around a lot, teenagers that sleeps around. | ||
They go to three different hospitals. | ||
Needless to say, it's not just physical abuse. | ||
The father is also psychologically abusive. | ||
He decides to treat Betty, the one who's been pregnant three times, as like the hoe of the family. | ||
He has a favorite. | ||
Virginie is his favorite. | ||
He prefers her, he can't stand her. | ||
He calls her fat, he calls her ugly. | ||
He threatens her and also her mother repeatedly. | ||
Like there was this incident where he found a cigarette butt, just to give you an idea of like who he is. | ||
He finds a cigarette butt on the ground where they live and he's like, which one of you is smoking? | ||
So he takes them to the woods and just holds like a rifle to their faces. | ||
Betty and the mother, that is, not the Duchess Virginier. | ||
Also, if you're wondering like where are the sons in this story, he actually makes them live in a shed on the property, totally separate. | ||
They're not allowed to be in the main house. | ||
And he does that for two reasons. | ||
One is because he wants to keep the sons in the dark regarding the repeated rapes of the daughters, but also because he's very jealous. | ||
He doesn't want any male competition in the house where he's living with his wife and his daughters. | ||
So he just keeps the sons away annexed down at the shed. | ||
Anyways, fast forward to the year 2000, Betty, the younger sister, is 16. | ||
Virginier is now 21. | ||
And Dennis decides to make Virginier, his daughter, the main woman of the household. | ||
So his wife, Lawrence, let's get that chart up again. | ||
His wife, Lawrence, is now relegated, kind of. | ||
He's like kind of treating her like she's maybe a daughter with Samantha. | ||
But Virginier, he takes her with him everywhere. | ||
Of course, they're not officially married on paper, but she's the woman of the household. | ||
He takes her to work every day at the automobile garage. | ||
She's also especially gifted when it comes to mechanics and engineering. | ||
And about a year later, Virginier, his daughter, falls pregnant with his child. | ||
And since she's the favorite, he lets her keep the child. | ||
So if you're following now, Virginier, his daughter, is about to give birth to his son. | ||
So he's the grandfather and the father of Nicholas, who you're seeing at the bottom here on this chart. | ||
She gives birth to a boy named Nicholas in 2002. | ||
It's going to get crazier. | ||
Betty, the younger sister, then turns 18 and she had tried to run away a few times when she was younger. | ||
You know, this is the sister that he shames. | ||
But by 18, she is able to escape and she rings the alarm publicly. | ||
She files a complaint with the police. | ||
She says, I've been, me and my sister have been repeatedly raped by my father from the time that I was eight years old. | ||
We have been suffering at his hands. | ||
And the driving factor for what drives her into the police's arms is that she was fearful that her sister, the youngest one, Samantha, who at that time is just four years old, is going to suffer the same fate. | ||
So she finds the courage to report this. | ||
She tells the police that her mother, by the way, Lawrence, is complicit and that sometimes her mother would plan these things and partake in them. | ||
I mean, it's really terrible, disgusting stuff. | ||
Okay. | ||
Suffice it to say that Dennis and Lawrence are, of course, arrested, the mother and the father, and they are imprisoned until 2004 when their lawyers are able to secure their release until after the trial and the sentencing. | ||
And guess who gets brought into this legal team? | ||
Okay. | ||
Eric DuPont Moretti, guy who thinks I'm like colluding with Russia and taking instructions while I'm on a pilgrimage. | ||
Now, Dennis is his client. | ||
The father is his client. | ||
Dennis is a bit of a psycho, you might imagine. | ||
Despite being released and given instructions that he has to stay away from his daughter, he violates that because he just wants to be around Virginier. | ||
He's a little obsessed with Virginier, and he immediately begins asserting control over the family again. | ||
Now, if you're Eric, this isn't good for the lawyers unless you come up with something, a way to refashion what is happening in this family, right? | ||
And Eric DuPont, Moretti, is up for the task. | ||
Him and another lawyer that he's working with, Hubert DelaRue, begin to spin everything that's happening as a tale of, wait for it, happy incest. | ||
Yeah, he is known, by the way, this guy, Eric, as an ogre in France, the ogre of France. | ||
Because of this, he spins it as happy incest. | ||
He explains to the daughter that they need to get behind this idea, right? | ||
We're going to sell to the court that you guys are a happily incestuous family. | ||
This is all consensual. | ||
So eventually the parents are sentenced to eight years in prison for their crimes, but Eric Tupon fights for their sentences to be reduced in the appellate courts. | ||
He does this by getting Betty, the sister, to backtrack on her allegations. | ||
She suddenly is telling the appellate court that she was simply jealous of her sister, Virginier. | ||
She retracts her earlier claim of the father having raped her and instead says that her father and her sister, Virginier, were incestuous consensually. | ||
Now, I should also mention that this is all taking place in Amiens. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Sorry, guys. | ||
Amyon. | ||
Yeah, where Macrone was born and raised and where Brigitte Macron was born and raised. | ||
They are the appellate court that is holding this trial that Eric Dumond is trying to convince about happy and sass anyways. | ||
And he's looking at this court and he explains to them, he explains to the court that this is actually a case of extraordinary love. | ||
Extraordinary love. | ||
I'm wondering if this is going to be part of the tactics that are used when Brigitte and Emmanuel come here for their case. | ||
Extraordinary love. | ||
That's what they told me. | ||
We did learn, actually. | ||
They were an extraordinary case. | ||
It was a teacher and the student, and this was so compelling and extraordinary. | ||
Anyways, anyways, let me not get lost here. | ||
It works. | ||
The sentence is then reduced consequentially during the appeal trial in Amien to just five years in prison, three of which he had already, which were suspended, pardon me. | ||
Dennis Benochet had this suspended. | ||
His wife gets one more year than he does, which is kind of crazy, but that's because Eric DuPont-Moretti also worked on this idea that really the wife is the one we should really Be mad at because she wanted this relationship to take place. | ||
It's her story. | ||
It's because Virginier, her sister, begged her to, and her sister begged her to, because it was the only way that she was going to get custody of her son back. | ||
Yeah, throughout all of this, they took Nicholas, the son, and Eric and the lawyers are saying, well, I want to see your son again. | ||
Virginier is going to Betty and Betty is like, please, I mean, and she's like, please, Betty, just change, change your testimony. | ||
I just want my son. | ||
I love my son. | ||
And so Betty agrees to do it. | ||
She acquiesces. | ||
This is going to be according to her own testimony later. | ||
Years later, Betty writes a book called It Wasn't Love, where she recounts specifically how Eric DuPont was a special kind of demon. | ||
I'm paraphrasing here, but like, yeah, he's the one that helped to craft this narrative of consensual incest. | ||
It was him. | ||
And she is outraged by the fact that he is now going to become the justice minister of France. | ||
Now, if you're wondering about what happens thereafter to Virginier, it turns out that Eric maybe had it wrong. | ||
The incest was actually not that happy. | ||
The story ends quite tragically. | ||
After being allowed to return to Virginier, thanks to the Amiens, appellate courts, Dennis is being judicially monitored, and Virginier reports that she is fearful and terrified of her father, fearful that he has it within him to kill her. | ||
Fast forward to works up the courage to leave her father with her son, Nicholas. | ||
She escapes and Nicholas is her motivation. | ||
He's older now. | ||
She does this through a private organization that helps people that are impoverished plan their escapes. | ||
Thereafter, her employer, somebody that she works at the garage with, decides to help out. | ||
His name is Federic Piard, and he houses her and her son. | ||
Dennis, throughout this, is hunting Virginier, right? | ||
Because he loves her. | ||
He loves his daughter. | ||
If that's what we're calling love. | ||
And on October 7th, 2014, after following her to Federic's garage, he first shoots Federic dead. | ||
Then he shoots his daughter, Virginier, dead. | ||
And then he turns the gun on himself. | ||
Federic Piard obviously dies. | ||
Dennis Monashé miraculously survives. | ||
It's a botched suicide tempt, but then he is disabled. | ||
Years later, he appears at the new trial, now this time for a double murder. | ||
He's in a wheelchair. | ||
He's speaking through a type pad. | ||
I mean, how's that for happy incest? | ||
But you do have to imagine Betty's surprise when she learns years later that that lawyer, who she felt had really masterminded this whole happy incest thing in Amiens, was selected by a couple from Amiens, no less, to become the minister of justice for the entire country of France. | ||
And not only that, but while he's a minister of justice of France, similarly, Emmanuel Macron, remember when Emmanuel Macron gave that Legion of Honor award to Patrick Buy, the person who worked on Brigitte's face? | ||
Well, he also gives a Legion of Honor award to, and we have a picture here, Hubert DelaRue. | ||
There's the Minister of France buckling it onto him, putting it onto him, the lawyer who worked alongside Moretti to come up with the happy incest. | ||
He gets one too. | ||
Everybody gets a Legion of Honor. | ||
Everybody that gets a Legion of Honor that's doing good stuff for, I guess, the aims of the Macrones. | ||
Now, again, like if you are a person, you might be thinking, oh, the list could just be one case. | ||
That's what defense attorneys are supposed to do. | ||
unidentified
|
No, you're like way off. | |
Okay. | ||
It's never that when it comes to Emmanuel and Brigitte. | ||
It's always a pattern that's emerging. | ||
And certainly for Eric, he has a very unique skill set. | ||
He's interested in a very unique set of circumstances, incest, pedophilia. | ||
And I'm going to tell you another crazy story when we get back just from me mentioning our sponsors. | ||
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Okay. | ||
By the way, what's really funny about this, starting this episode, is that someone in the chat, definitely one of like Brigitte's minions, Brigitte's dragons, was like, you're going to talk about the Outreach case. | ||
I hadn't even gotten to that case, actually, because there's just so many to choose from. | ||
But now we're going to talk about the Outreach case. | ||
They're like, no, you can't. | ||
It doesn't matter what lawyers defend. | ||
Oh, but it's also interesting, isn't it? | ||
It's all so interesting. | ||
I got to tell you, one of the things that really stands out to me about the Montasche affair, and you can go look into this yourself, Dennis Montasche Affair, is the familiar locations. | ||
Amien, the birthplace of the Macrones, Brigitte and Emmanuel. | ||
Then there's Pas de Calais, which he moves out to, which is like an hour away. | ||
Now, if Pas de Calais is sounding familiar to you, it's been, you know, it's because that's where Emmanuel Macron, when we get into his biography, he almost ran for political office there. | ||
That's where he begins his career. | ||
But also where Brigitte begins her career as a press secretary of the Chamber of Commerce before then radically deciding to become a teacher. | ||
Then she teaches Emmanuel. | ||
It's all very convoluted. | ||
They're just in the same place all the time. | ||
Well, there was another case that took place in Pas du Calais. | ||
And I think this one, we're just going to go ahead here and pull up the Wikipedia, not get too, too much into the weeds here. | ||
But yes, the Outreaux case refers to a criminal case of pedophilia, which took place between 1997 and 2000 in Outreaux. | ||
And again, that's Pas du Calais. | ||
And it tells us here, it was a long investigation, which revealed an extensive pedophile network. | ||
Around 40 adults had pedophilia because it was also incest. | ||
And it tells us that the trial took place in 2004, a criminal trial court in Pas du Calais, where 12 children were recognized to be victims of rape, sexual assault, corruption, minors, and pimping. | ||
10 of the 17 accused adults are then sentenced to prison. | ||
But then there was this appeal trial that took place. | ||
And six of the 10 accused adults were acquitted, right? | ||
Four of them not even having appealed, it says, four having not even appealed, and yet they were acquitted. | ||
Who could have done that? | ||
Guys, it's Eric again, this guy. | ||
Oh, my Eric. | ||
Eric again. | ||
Not only did he get some of these adults acquitted, he also then did the most press. | ||
They tried to like make these documentaries to make it seem like, oh, they were all, you know, yeah, some of the parents were guilty of doing these things to their children. | ||
But, you know, the other ones really were just swept up in all of it. | ||
If you scroll down, by the way, Skylar, to this Wikipedia section, go to the child victim's viewpoint. | ||
Because I want to read that when you get down there. | ||
And it's like, I know it's pretty long. | ||
There's a lot happening. | ||
Here we go. | ||
The child victims viewpoint here. | ||
It says, with the 2023 release of a television series about the case on France 2, one of the victims, a child of the main family of the case named Jonathan Daly, Jonathan DeLay, pardon, called for a boycott. | ||
He alleged that the series constituted media manipulation by presenting adults as being the first victims of this affair. | ||
The series does not show that certain children, including Jonathan DeLay, remain convinced that some of the acquitted were in fact guilty. | ||
He goes on to read that during the hearing, the behavior of Eric DuPont Moretti, lawyer for the Uchreux acquitted, and later the French justice minister, is also called into question. | ||
According to a rumor that reappeared during the France 2 series, he terrorized a seven-year-old girl who, out of fear, urinated on herself. | ||
Now, I'm going to let you know that his name is familiar because it's also in Becoming Brigitte, the book written by Xavier Poussard. | ||
And he tells the case about what Eric DuPont-Moretti did as we talk about this orbit that just is around the Macrones. | ||
And actually, Eric DuPont-Moretti was denounced virulently by psychiatrists for his methods. | ||
So what happened was they got all these adults, they were guilty, and then he went in to question the children, right? | ||
And yeah, an expert psychiatrist named Gerard Lopez during a hearing at the National Assembly said this. | ||
He said, quote, you know that Mr. DuPont Moretti questioned a seven-year-old child in Saint-O-Mer for six hours. | ||
He questioned a seven-year-old child for six hours, and he found that child's testimony to be inconsistent. | ||
This is what changed the Outreaux trial. | ||
Remember that this was a case in which all of the children were recognized to be victims, all of them, 12 out of 12. | ||
So you see, a guy like DuPont Moretti should not be tolerated. | ||
I'm an expert and he does not scare me. | ||
I've been an expert on the assize of courts for 30 years. | ||
But imagine a kid, imagine little delay who's been through horrors with this bear, Eric Moretti, yelling at him and the president saying nothing at all. | ||
End quote. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like I said, you can go through all of the cases that he decides to intervene on and the arguments that he makes and how he makes them and how he gets to that and how he gets these sentences reduced and gets people off. | ||
Now, in case you're like, Cannes, this is kind of weird. | ||
Like, you know, they're pedophilia, incest. | ||
Well, at least we can say about Eric Moretti is none of these cases involve transgenderism. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
Of course, there's cases that involve transgenderism. | ||
Right now, there's one going on. | ||
You can look this up. | ||
It's involving this Korean kid, Joachim Son Forget, Forgé. | ||
Joachim Son-Fourget. | ||
Well, that's his old name. | ||
Now his name is her name is Ava Forgé. | ||
Long story short, I'm not going to get in details here. | ||
This is a Korean boy who's adopted by a Frenchman named Bernard Forgé. | ||
And his adopted father right now is being accused of raping and sexually assaulting minors. | ||
Now, why is that relevant? | ||
Because Joaquim, when he was Joaquim, was working with Macron. | ||
He's got pictures with Alexander Benella. | ||
He was considered like, I guess in the context of America, we would call it like 30 under 30, this genius Korean kid, who was very much involved in the campaign, had a huge political future. | ||
Well, now he's Ava, and these are allegations. | ||
We're not going to get too deep in it, but he's calling out Eric Moretti. | ||
He's calling out a network of people that he says know some stuff, know about stuff that's happening in France. | ||
So what are we to make of all of this? | ||
What are we to make of the fact that it just seems too impossible of a task for the Macron's to find someone to represent them, to be around them, to fund them into office that does not have a story or defending a story, a person that involves these themes? | ||
I feel like they're laughing at us. | ||
I feel like this is like kinky for them. | ||
Like this is like an exhibitionist sport. | ||
Like they want to get caught. | ||
They just want to see how far they can push the envelope. | ||
Why would you then make this guy the justice minister? | ||
Is there nobody else available in France? | ||
And yeah, people rioted because of his track record here. | ||
But now you're involving him again in this case in America. | ||
And you have the audacity. | ||
You have the audacity to put in your filing against me. | ||
How dare she imply that our network, the syndicate, what is the exact verbiage scholar? | ||
Oh, Owen supported these claims of violence and criminality with statements that the Macrones are surrounded by criminals, pedophiles, an extraordinary syndicate. | ||
Yeah, I would say the people that surround you are extraordinary. | ||
You can't even pick out a carpet. | ||
The person who designed the carpets getting swept up into a pedophile scandal. | ||
Oh, my, I didn't know. | ||
Oh, Marci Beauclaud. | ||
I don't know what's going on. | ||
I just didn't know. | ||
I had no idea. | ||
It's just everyone around us. | ||
It's not us. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Everyone around us is involved with these themes. | ||
And what's going on? | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I mean, yeah, sure. | ||
He was 14. | ||
Now we're saying 15. | ||
And the law, for lawsuit's sake, when you guys were first running, you said 17. | ||
Then it went down to 16. | ||
Now we're at 15. | ||
I think with this lawsuit, we're going to get you to 14 because that's the truth. | ||
Yeah, sure, sure, Candace. | ||
Yeah, whatever. | ||
He was on stage. | ||
He was so beautiful. | ||
This boy was so intelligent. | ||
Yes, I fell for this boy who happened to be 14 and it's weird, whatever. | ||
But no, me? | ||
No. | ||
There's nothing weird about me. | ||
Nothing weird about my wig. | ||
That's what they're doing right now. | ||
And it just feels like a form of exhibition. | ||
It feels disturbing and it's got to be. | ||
Like it must like the attention. | ||
I was asking myself this question. | ||
I was going, okay, you get away with it, right? | ||
You're a teacher. | ||
You Mac on your student. | ||
You're so disgusting that his parents move him away. | ||
You admit that in a lawsuit. | ||
Why would you admit it in a lawsuit, right? | ||
You get away with it. | ||
You marry this kid who becomes an adult and you marry him at this weird ceremony, which we haven't even covered that. | ||
We'll have to get that in our series two, in our second season of this. | ||
Why then aspire to become the first lady? | ||
Like, what's that? | ||
That's what I mean when I say it's like there's something about this that has to be kicky for them. | ||
Because if you got away with it, wouldn't you just like disappear and be like, yay, I got my student? | ||
No, they're like, nope, got to be the first lady. | ||
And I need to be worshipped. | ||
And now I need to sue. | ||
And I need to be so funny when I sue that I have Eric Moretti doing the rounds being like, this is ridiculous. | ||
Even though he like literally involved himself in cases where it wasn't even a question. | ||
It's like, yeah, no, this actually was pedophilia. | ||
This absolutely was happening. | ||
And it's in the same region that Macron and Brigitte grew up and started their careers, but nothing to see here. | ||
Candace is deranged, unhinged. | ||
No, it's this, there's nothing to see here. | ||
I don't know. | ||
What do you guys think? | ||
I think it's, I don't know. | ||
I just think we're pulling out a thread and a lot's about to be revealed. | ||
And maybe Macrone wants it to be. | ||
Like maybe Emmanuel Macron wants it to be. | ||
Maybe like there's something masochistic about it for him and he wants it to be revealed. | ||
He wants people to know. | ||
Like he's like, I don't know. | ||
We're going to see though, obviously, because I am positively thrilled about this lawsuit. | ||
And I do want to say this to Claire Locke, Tom Claire doing the rounds on CNN. | ||
Is the money worth it? | ||
I got to ask that question. | ||
I think it's fair to ask that question. | ||
Like I don't personally, like, look, I'm looking at everybody sideways in France that's involved with this couple. | ||
I'm not looking at Tom Claire sideways. | ||
I know what this is. | ||
You're American. | ||
This is about the cash for you, right? | ||
You're making a lot of money doing, but at a certain level, is it worth it? | ||
You know, like if I'm a lawyer, there has to be cases that I say I'm not going to get involved in. | ||
And when you look into this story, and I know you have watched every minute of this series, and I know that you are aware of how many people just keep oopsie falling into pedophilia scandals that are surrounded by the Macron's. | ||
And I know that you are aware of how old Macron was, despite what she's telling you. | ||
Is it worth it, Claren Locke, to have this be your legacy for a little bit of money? | ||
Because it's going to be your legacy. | ||
This is, we're going big here, right? | ||
I'm not backing down from this. | ||
You know, I'm not going to back down from this. | ||
How do you look at your kids at night? | ||
What are you protecting? | ||
What are you fighting? | ||
I just wish people didn't have this attachment to money. | ||
And I guess it's because I don't. | ||
Like I would rather literally die than defend a network like this. | ||
I would rather die than take phone calls as Eric suggests that he said he's working with the legal team in the U.S. He's aiding their investigation. | ||
I would rather die than take a phone call from Eric personally. | ||
Like we are, like I said, go through his Wikipedia. | ||
Go look at all the cases he involves himself in. | ||
Who is this guy? | ||
Who is this guy? | ||
And why is Brigitte selecting him to get involved in this case? | ||
You ask yourself that question. | ||
We don't know the answers. | ||
All we can do is ask questions. | ||
All they can do is try to shut us up. | ||
Anyways, it seems like he is very much trying to move the goalposts now. | ||
He's out there and people are tagging me like, oh, Macron says that France is going to recognize the Palestinian state. | ||
Oh, oh, look at me. | ||
Yeah, right, guys. | ||
Come on. | ||
Now that you're seeing all these people do this 180 that are Saying we're going to recognize Palestine as a state. | ||
First and foremost, Macron was pulled up through the ranks by the Rothschild's family. | ||
The Rothschild's family created the state of Israel. | ||
Macron has absolutely no power to do anything that the Rothschilds do not want done. | ||
Okay, he is not recognizing Palestine as a state. | ||
He is signaling that, well, you know what? | ||
Netanyahu's almost done. | ||
That's what's happening. | ||
So people are pretending that they staked a moral position in this at the very end of this thing, pretending like they're committed to peace and that they're going to do the right thing to change the conversation. | ||
No, okay. | ||
If you have not figured this out yet, Macron is not in control of anything. | ||
I mean, when Trump was asked about Macron even saying he's going to recognize a Palestinian state, Trump accurately said he has no power. | ||
He has no power. | ||
He's never had power in his entire life. | ||
Okay. | ||
He just hasn't. | ||
And so do not take that as a sign that he's doing the right thing or that anybody who's talking about, oh, we need to have peace in Palestine and this needs to come to an end. | ||
It means that Netanyahu is almost done with his ethnic cleansing and they're just trying to save face. | ||
And no one wants to save face more than Emo Marcron, who has embarked on a fight over here in the U.S. That is not going to end well for him or his husband. | ||
That's the reality of things. | ||
Anyways, I want to get into some of your comments here. | ||
Oh, we are almost at 80,000 people watching live. | ||
What do you think? | ||
Does it just keep happening by accident? | ||
Could it be that everyone around you is kind of involved in this thing? | ||
But you just are surprised every time. | ||
Could it be that you handpicked Eric and it's just because he's a fantastic lawyer? | ||
I just want to see what you guys think. | ||
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All right, guys, here's the thing. | ||
People in the comments are like, they do call him Eric the ogre. | ||
I'm not, I'm not kidding. | ||
He does look like an ogre. | ||
You're probably going to sue me for saying that. | ||
But that's defamation. | ||
I'm not an ogre. | ||
I just do ogre-like things. | ||
Here is the thing, Eric. | ||
I know you're watching. | ||
You said you were going to investigate me, but I investigated you first. | ||
You won't find any of that in my past. | ||
As you drum out this ridiculous theory, what? | ||
I got to like mile 37 of the pilgrimage and then like Putin popped out. | ||
It's like, you ready for your instructions, Candace? | ||
This is Orthodox, Catholic pilgrimage. | ||
The Orthodox are giving us instructions. | ||
What are you doing? | ||
What are you doing? | ||
Circling the wagons. | ||
You guys are so crazy or completely deranged. | ||
I'm interested in this. | ||
I'm interested. | ||
I want to know what the heck is going on in Paris. | ||
What has been going on probably since the French Revolution, if we're being honest. | ||
It's so gross. | ||
And I think all of you are sick, really. | ||
That's my opinion. | ||
I know you don't understand this beast that is America where we can just say that. | ||
When I can say, you sicken me, where I can say, you're all a bunch of perverts. | ||
You too, Eric. | ||
I believe you are a pervert. | ||
Pervert, Eric. | ||
Ooh, what are you going to do? | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
No. | ||
What are you going to do next? | ||
Sue me some more. | ||
Sue me harder. | ||
Put together 200 pages of really, the whole thing is just out of context statements that I've said. | ||
It's not even, they don't even put a full statement. | ||
Like nowhere is there a full sentence. | ||
It's just like a couple of words. | ||
And then they kind of make up their own sentence. | ||
I'm looking forward to this. | ||
I want to talk to you about your interest in these specific cases that you take on that all happen to be in very familiar towns and departments of France. | ||
Anyways, let's get into some of your guys' comments. | ||
First and foremost, we have Lovey W. Lovey W writes, I was in, and thank you, Lovey W. That is a huge amount of money that you just gave us. | ||
That's very kind of you. | ||
I was in different areas of France a month ago. | ||
90% of local people I ask think that Brigitte was born a man. | ||
They call her Jean Bribri. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
They hate me because I made the case bigger. | ||
But let's not forget they're not suing Xavier Poussard. | ||
And my series is based on Xavier Poussard's reporting. | ||
And the reason is because this filing was just meant to be PR. | ||
They were trying to stop the thing by putting together a ridiculous filing, accusing me of all sorts of things I didn't do, all because I just told the truth about their past. | ||
Like I just told you the truth about Eric. | ||
What's he going to do? | ||
Like you can look this up on Wikipedia. | ||
I'm sorry that that's the cases that he's interested in. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
He's carved out a very particular niche. | ||
Rose Keysiel, by the way, also thank you. | ||
That is a huge donation. | ||
God bless you and may the truth continue to come to light. | ||
Christ is king. | ||
Indeed, Christ is king. | ||
And if you are a liar, you must hate his kingship because it represents truth. | ||
Will Wallace writes, I'm also a sponsor. | ||
I'm going to sponsor you right into winning this case. | ||
We have to let the world know not to mess with Americans, especially our women and children. | ||
Thank you guys. | ||
And we have seen this just definitely an uptick in donations. | ||
People that are like, take our money, want to help you fight this case. | ||
You know, I always want to be, if I ever come to you and I say, I'm putting up a GoFundMe and I need the money, I want to make sure I really need the money, you know. | ||
And right now, we're obviously looking and shopping with lawyers. | ||
We do not really need the money at this moment. | ||
It's very early on, but I know that the process is supposed to be the pain, that they want to drag this out. | ||
I can't see them wanting to make it to discovery. | ||
I just don't see that happening. | ||
I think they'll fake kill Brigitte first. | ||
Like, they'll be like, oh, Brigitte passed away from stress because of what Candace did. | ||
Oh, nobody can talk about her being a man anymore because Brigitte's gone. | ||
You know, this is terrible. | ||
That's what I, I would, I'm more likely that that would be the conclusion. | ||
I feel like that's way more likely than them going through discovery. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Maybe I'm wrong. | ||
I don't know, but that's my instinct anyways. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, obviously supporting us, signing up on the website, all of those things, it's how you can support us. | ||
And also, I want to feel like I'm giving you something back. | ||
So that's why I say go to CandaceOwens.com so we can join the book club if you want to join the book club. | ||
It is amazing. | ||
We're beginning the Assault on Truth next week. | ||
But for those of you guys that give, I'm just incredibly blessed and grateful to all of you guys for recognizing the fight. | ||
Tim Morgan writes, to help with legal fees. | ||
Love you, Candace. | ||
20 bucks. | ||
Thank you, Tim. | ||
Sabream Steve writes, I hope you legally kick Brigitte right in his phantom balls. | ||
I actually don't, in my honest opinion, I don't know, but he's had his balls removed because of that notorious bathing suit picture. | ||
Basil Beshkov writes, let them eat fromage. | ||
Contraband, Zyra writes, they're trying to flex, but no poker face, keep going. | ||
Will writes, a lot of trolls in here. | ||
Can't be that many people asleep on Cannes. | ||
Must be Macron bots. | ||
Yeah, in the live chat, they were like, how dare you discuss what Eric Moretti is bravely defending? | ||
Don't even think about it. | ||
It would be so wrong of you to discuss it. | ||
Hey, you investigate me. | ||
I'm going to investigate you right back. | ||
I like investigations. | ||
What did he expect? | ||
Come on. | ||
Just doing. | ||
Come on. | ||
Lou Casley writes, I noticed my husband, who often shakes his head at my conspiracy theories, is engrossed in my copy of Becoming Brigitte. | ||
You are truly changing minds one truth at a time. | ||
Guys, I always say this, but I'm grateful, but this was the courage of Natasha Ray, Amandine Roy, and of course, this work that was done by Xavier Poussard in presenting this trove of evidence, years of his life they dedicated. | ||
Xavier Poussard and I, you know, we're like friends now. | ||
When that theory dropped about Putin's instructions and the charter pilgrimage, we laughed so hard. | ||
I said, this can't be real. | ||
And I had a call with him this morning. | ||
And, you know, we are, we're not done here. | ||
In fact, this is just only making me more interested. | ||
And now the whole world's paying attention. | ||
And I don't want to let the whole world down in the same way that you didn't want to let, you know, Dennis down. | ||
Pervert. | ||
The Gen Z coppice writes, God bless you, Cannes Fear, Tenacity. | ||
It's commendable. | ||
People are watching from Nigeria. | ||
Love that. | ||
West African countries such as Burkina Faso have been battling French media and their propaganda. | ||
Thank you, Africa. | ||
You guys are always looking at it. | ||
You guys have been actually watching the show. | ||
You guys have been standing for a while. | ||
I got to get out there. | ||
I got to do an African tour. | ||
But yeah, there is a lot that is being uncovered here. | ||
Anwar writes, Macron just recognized the Palestinian state. | ||
They obviously did this to distract from your reporting. | ||
Just tell Macron that you'll lay off of his husband if they force a ceasefire and aid in Gaza. | ||
It won't matter. | ||
Like I said, I think that this was all planned. | ||
What's happening in Gaza? | ||
The plan is close to being over. | ||
We have obviously Netanyahu on camera saying we need to give her, we need to hit them so hard that the Palestinians can't go home. | ||
And that's what they've done. | ||
And so now they're all going to pretend, in Trump included, that, oh, well, now it's about, we're going to establish peace after we've already ethnically cleansed the region. | ||
And essentially, it looks like a controlled demolition happened here. | ||
Now we're going to say we've, you know, we're ready to move on and we're going to move in Israelis and turn it into a beach town. | ||
And let me just say this. | ||
It is incumbent upon us to teach our children what happened there. | ||
It is incumbent upon us to not allow the media, not allow their textbooks to try to delude them to thinking that what happened in Palestine is because of October 7th. | ||
We were not going to let the memory of the hundreds of thousands of people that are missing in Palestine be forgotten. | ||
This is now like a word of mouth thing. | ||
And any person that decides to vacation at that eventual beach town that Israel will be controlling, the venom that we should direct towards an individual, they will be the filth of our society. | ||
A person that is invested, that visits, that posts a photo of them chilling at a beach in Gaza that is now controlled by Israel. | ||
They deserve our venom into perpetuity. | ||
Like I am disgusted thinking about that eventual predicament that we know is coming. | ||
And we are the ones that are going to be in control and looking at those individuals like they are the absolute filth of our society because they are. | ||
unidentified
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They are. | |
That's the reality. | ||
Lastly, moderator Marzie writes, Brigitte reminds me of Jill Biden. | ||
Jill Biden and Kamala Harris. | ||
She craves power and control over the masses. | ||
It's scary narcissism that puts people's lives in danger. | ||
Yeah, particularly Macron's. | ||
We're going to have to sell free Emmanuel gear because I don't think that was the first time that he got whooped by Brigitte in his life. | ||
And we are still investigating. | ||
By the way, I want to say this to you guys. | ||
If you live in France and you know something and you would like to share it, you can email us tips at cannisowens.com. | ||
Maybe your granddad went to school. | ||
Your grandpa, your grandfather, grandmother went to school and has a yearbook lying around. | ||
Maybe you know someone from Amian who knows something and you want to share a photo. | ||
Maybe you've got a background. | ||
Could it be Brigitte? | ||
You've seen Jean-Michel Tragneau. | ||
Maybe you served in the military with Jean-Michel Tragneau, who has a military file. | ||
Maybe you were in Algeria when they were doing whatever they do in Algeria, according to Andre Guide. | ||
Nothing good happens there. | ||
Self-admitted pederast, who Macron is apparently a fan of, included him in the portrait, his book, in his presidential portrait. | ||
Because again, they're laughing at us. | ||
It's like an exhibitionist sport. | ||
But yeah, send us any tips at candaceowens.com. | ||
Wow, this person just gave $200 and didn't even put their name, just E-V-A, said, thank you. | ||
We will not move an inch. | ||
We are with you. | ||
Thank you guys so much. | ||
Lastly, Mehdi writes, Candace, I'm a Moroccan living in France. | ||
I love Western values, freedom of individualism. | ||
You're an awesome force for good. | ||
You have it right. | ||
Please stick to your values. | ||
Oh, I will. | ||
Don't forget my values cannot be swayed, not by a moment, not by money, and certainly not by a lawsuit. | ||
Thank you, Meddy, again, because you just gave 70,000 quid. | ||
I mean, $70,000, $70, I was going to say. | ||
70 pounds. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
All right, you guys, that is what I have for you today. |