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Feb. 20, 2024 - Lionel Nation
01:02:44
Fani Willis — Her Arrogance and Incompetence Just Gave Trump A Win
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If Fannie Willis...
If Fannie Willis...
Were Rudy Giuliani...
She would be under the prison, under the jail.
She would be disbarred, defrocked, denuded, debased, dematerialized.
She would be ground into pumice.
There would be no more Fanny Willis.
If Fanny Willis were Rudy Giuliani, So why don't you think that's happened?
Well, first thing you can say is, it's too early.
It's just happened.
It's just happened.
We're not even done with it yet.
Good point.
What do you think is going to happen to her?
Bar review?
No, no, no.
Will she be indicted for lying, for perjury, for official misconduct?
Official misconduct because if any grand jury were to be impaneled and were to look at specifically what she has done, specifically what she has done in the capacity of DA, District Attorney for Fulton County, the Chief Law Enforcement Officer.
If they were to investigate this, they will find that she has misappropriated funds.
This was a criminal conspiracy, especially in view of the latest version, the latest facts as released by this recording from either an ex-worker or somebody who was, I believe, released or dispatched.
Who came to Fannie Willis and told her specifically, look at what's happening right now.
Look at what this one particular person is doing.
And she didn't care.
Because Fannie Willis is above the law.
This is the part that you would talk about double standard.
Perjury?
What do you think is going to happen to Wade?
What do you think is going to happen to Nathan Wade?
Who lied on interrogatories.
Lied.
Let me tell you something.
Listen to me carefully, and I'm going to tell you something most people do not know.
They could have known, but they don't know.
One of the charges that Ghislaine Maxwell was hit with was lying on a deposition, and nobody, but nobody ever is charged with that, but they got her on that.
When the courtroom is a big live fest, when you can say, I'm not going to answer that.
Especially interrogatory, specifically asking, when did you, Mr. Wade, did you have sex?
As you may have had to deal with, the indignity, the indignity of the whole divorce process itself, it's debasing.
And you had to answer those questions.
Many people have to answer.
They have to go through specifics.
And they don't care about, as Wade said, my privacy.
They live in a world that is a combination of ignorance, stupidity, arrogance, and a sense of, if I don't like something, I'm not going to abide by it, by officers of the court.
Do you understand this?
By officers of the court.
And she's going to play the black card, the woman card, the democratic card, the political card.
There's this brave woman going against the MAGA racist, right?
She's going to try everything.
She is so full of it.
She's septic.
And as you go by, and as I'm sitting here, and as I'm listening to people respond, I don't think they really get it.
And the thing that is probably the most un-American of things, let me see if I can say this, the most un-American of things is the double standard.
That's the part that gets me.
If this were anybody else, if this were some hot-headed...
And let me explain something to you.
You and I have to understand that we have been forced to keep our mouths shut for the longest time.
There have been absolute...
Cavalcades, retinues of the most incompetent people ever.
Black, white, there was one, remember this one that John Kennedy was, he said, I'm going to call you comrade.
She was Asian or communist or something.
But we have seen this parade of some of the most either, either Some of the most intellectually unqualified or some of the most, I guess, philosophically bereft people that we've ever seen.
And only in America can some dimwit.
Because let me explain to you something that nobody is ever talking about and we don't talk about in this country.
Fannie Willis is an idiot.
She's an idiot.
Because the arrogance bleeds over into the stupidity.
She doesn't really understand how this thing works.
She doesn't get it.
Who in their right mind ever consulted her on what?
On racketeering?
Now the ex-governor of Georgia said, I'm not going to do this.
I've got miles to feed.
You know what they charge?
You know what they pay a special prosecutor?
You ready for this?
$70 an hour for this headache and torment.
And I don't even know if he has unlimited funds to investigate.
No, no.
I want you to grasp this.
And especially if you really enjoy the...
The whole notion of the intrigue of this.
I want you to grasp it.
I want you to follow what's happening.
This case started off absolutely, positively, just so matter of fact, it wasn't even funny.
It was so matter of fact.
It was a very simple thing.
How is it simple?
Let me tell you.
Imagine this.
Ms. Willis?
Yes?
It has been suggested, Ms. Willis, that you have had or enjoyed an improper relationship with Nathan Wade.
I see.
Now follow me on this one.
If I represented her, let's just assume she calls me And I'm going to say we are going to get to the bottom of this.
What seems to be the issue?
Fannie?
Well, they're alleging that there was some kind of improper...
Okay.
Now, the question that I'm going to ask, and I want you to listen carefully, Fannie.
I want everybody listening to me.
Friends of Trump, enemies of Trump, it doesn't matter.
I want you to listen to me and listen like you've never listened before.
Here is the sole issue, the gravamen, the main issue before us, the one issue.
This is it.
Nothing more, nothing less.
How did her alleged impropriety, sexual, romantic, amorous, professional, whatever, how did that in any way act as a departure?
To the extent that it denied President Trump of due process or any of the other defendants.
What did it do to interfere with his ability to enjoy a fair trial?
That's the issue.
Shall I say it again?
Did you get this?
Did you hear what I'm saying?
Everybody listen to me.
You can listen to all, and I've heard so many people, I love listening to the shows, and I love hearing everybody weigh in, and I'm not going to mention names because it's fun.
It's fun.
But I have a very, I think, a very specific, a very kind of a, dare I say, I'm even going to say more of a lawyerly look at it.
My question is simply this.
What do you think, how does this effect, affect President Trump?
How?
How?
Are you just telling me that?
Well, any prosecutor who would dare debauch her office and sully the reputation of the Fulton County District Attorney should not be allowed to.
Do you believe that?
Is that what you're saying?
Is that what you think?
Maybe that's what you think.
No.
Let's assume Fannie Willis were to be driving and getting a DUI, and she's charged and arrested.
Should Fannie Willis be taken off the case against President Trump?
Why?
Should she step down from office?
No.
She has her right, her own due process.
How does this affect anything?
The interesting thing was said at first, that there might have been a situation.
In which Fannie may have either elongated, prolonged, embellished, exaggerated, expanded the case so as to I don't know what.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I don't know how this works.
Maybe.
I don't know.
That's the first case.
So the very first thing I would have said was, let's do this.
As an officer of the court, Ms. Willis says she would stipulate under oath that yes, she had a romantic, sexual, amorous, debauched, concupiscent, scabrous, licentious, lascivious relationship with one Mr. Wade.
It is over now.
I don't know about his capacity working the case.
That's up to me, Your Honor.
That's up to me, Fannie Willis.
If I keep somebody on, keep somebody off, I can hire an ex-husband if I think for whatever reason it would benefit my office.
I can hire, maybe there's a...
Unless there's some statute.
But the question is, what does it do to the case?
Now, somebody could have argued that maybe there might have been a motion to recuse Judge McAfee.
Maybe.
Because they used to work together.
I mean, that might be something.
That might be something.
Remember there are other defendants.
Harrison Floyd, the former head of Black Voices for Trump, one of the original 19 defendants.
Remember that one?
There are other people as well.
Keep in mind how this thing...
By the way, Ashley Merchant, the lawyer for Mr. Roman, she works with her husband, John Merchant.
Well, they're working together.
It doesn't matter.
Does it mean anything?
So what?
What I'm trying to say is this thing started initially.
And it's one of those things.
Oh, by the way, Trevyan Kuti, a Chicago publicist, black woman, one of the 19 defendants.
This was a veritable melange.
Of pro-Trump activists.
So, I mean, it's not just what you think it is.
So let me go back to what I was saying.
It's a very, very simple thing.
Very, very, very simple.
Your Honor, at the time, I submit to you that Ms. Willis had an affair, or whatever it is, and it's over with.
That's it.
I volunteer nothing.
I don't go into detail.
I only ask and present that which is required.
I will never lie in a row, but I'm not going to volunteer stuff.
I'm not going to fill in the blanks.
No particular reason.
None.
I'm not going to be duplicitous.
I'm not going to mislead the court.
I'm not going to do any of that stuff.
Because I'm an officer of the court.
I mean, I represent somebody, but I'm not going to lie.
Just to help somebody out.
There are things that I can do.
I can make it very difficult for the other side.
I can make it...
There's something I do not have to let you know of.
It depends.
As a prosecutor, I have a lot.
I have a duty called Brady Evidence.
Brady against Maryland.
This is where I have to...
If I find there is information, data, evidence, which tends to exclude Sculpate you.
Get you off the hook.
Help you.
I have to let you know.
I have to let you know if there are witnesses I'm going to call who have criminal records.
I got a lot to show you.
If I'm the prosecutor, I've got more to show you than you as a defense lawyer.
You don't have to tell me everything.
You don't even have to testify.
But there can be no lying.
There can be no lying.
And when I submit to you, dear, great, A noble friend.
This could have been done.
They could have maybe...
You could have had a little bit of a hearing.
I think the judge could have narrowed this down.
Fannie Willis could have taken this.
State your name for the record, please.
Fannie Willis.
I'm the district attorney for Fulton County, Georgia.
That's the way they call it DeKalb County.
Not DeKalb.
D-E capital K-A-L-B.
It's pronounced DeKalb.
DeKalb County.
Alright.
That's like when in Florida, Lafayette County is called Lafayette.
Here in New York, Houston Street is called Houston.
We just have different ways of seeing things around here.
Around these parts.
Ms. Willis, did you have any further?
Yes.
Thank you very much.
Your witness.
Anything else?
We would like to call Nathan Wait, why?
We just told you.
You might want to find out.
Did you do anything?
Did you violate any rules?
No?
Mr. Wade, do you have any...
Yes?
Nathan's got some problems.
Nathan's got some problems.
Nathan's got a divorce where he's got problems over here.
That's not Fanny's problem.
Nathan, good luck to you, my friend.
You know, you may...
I may have an internal problem.
I may have to ask you to leave because you may have some problems you may have that may prevent you from being effective in this, but it doesn't affect me.
I'm still going to prosecute the case.
There's nothing that I did.
I didn't break the law.
And there's nothing against the law that says you can't have sex with people.
I don't believe.
Put it this way.
There may be a law.
In terms of Georgia's civil service, there may be something that would prevent her from doing this, but there is nothing that would affect President Trump's ability to have a fair trial.
What does this have to do with anything?
Nothing.
And it could have been over.
It could have been over and done with.
Simple.
It's that simple.
It would have been done.
You wouldn't have had to have these other characters.
You wouldn't have had to have Terrence Bradley.
Oh my God!
Do you know what this thing happened?
Let's take Mr. Wade.
Mr. Wade now is the poster child for impotence, for penile dysfunction, for prostate, whatever it is.
Doesn't have any lead in the pencil, I guess.
He's a man who apparently considers he's a man of sartorial splendor.
I like his selection.
May not be technically appropriate for a courtroom.
I prefer more dark colors, but that's me.
Then there's this other guy, the guy with the bun.
Remember that guy?
I don't know.
There was a bunch of actors years ago.
One guy had a bun.
I don't even know what that was.
Anyway, he's kind of out.
He's a tangential collateral witness.
But there's Wade.
Wade's thinking, oh God.
Wade went from in the middle of a divorce with his wife.
Now we know about that.
Then he has to say, well, you know, she cuckolded me.
She put the horns on me.
In 2015, the tarros.
She put the horns on me.
Like the Hartford stag.
I look like a...
And, you know, the cornuto.
Anyway.
So I don't believe that our marriage was still intact because in my definition of a marriage, you cannot be married to somebody who has, in fact, sullied the marital bonds.
By straying, and therefore, when I testified under oath in an interrogatory that I had not had sex during my marriage since I did not have a marriage, I therefore say, and that is total and complete bullshit!
Bullshit!
Huh?
So now you have to deal with the defense lawyer, and the wife says, oh, this is getting good.
Oh, I don't know what kind of money he's got, but the wife is just, oh, this is great.
So now he's hiding assets, which was some representation of him hiding assets.
I'm not sure about that one.
He's lying as far as this.
And then this man who has no lead in the pencil, apparently, this man who is just, I mean, he's saying, who doesn't know anything.
They keep saying he doesn't know anything.
He was doing parking tickets or whatever.
I don't know.
Then what happened was, He goes on a date.
Now listen to this.
This is my favorite.
This is my favorite one, ladies and gentlemen of the jury.
This is my favorite.
This is my favorite story of them all.
But before we do our favorite story of them all, I want you to listen to this important word from our dear sponsor.
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And absolutely the best.
So Mr. Wade, we find out about his sexual dysfunction, his erectility diminution, and a variety of other problems.
And then, here's the best part.
They go on a trip.
Ladies, tell me how many times this has happened to you.
All right, let's go on a trip.
Let's say Fanny goes, all right, Wade, did you...
She calls him Wade, probably.
Did you get the tickets to Aruba or wherever the hell it was?
Yeah.
How much did you pay for that?
Did you put that on your office account?
You're going to run this through as an expense?
Okay.
Whatever.
Look, that's up to you.
What am I going to say?
How much was that?
$1,500?
Here you go.
Here we go.
There's $100 bills.
Franklin's.
All of them.
There you go.
What about that?
Meals?
How much do you pay a meal?
What about a grand?
Two grand?
And we go that.
And then we got parking.
And then did you tip him?
Good.
Here's a couple other bucks for you.
Here we go.
That should do it.
Because I've got stacks of money.
I've got stacks of cash in my safe that I have.
You understand what I'm saying?
I've got piles of cash.
And I'm going to pay you back.
You're not even paying for this.
I'm paying.
I paid you.
It's my treat.
I paid you.
I took care of it.
I'm reimbursing it.
Why?
Because you're my bitch.
You understand what I'm saying?
You're my boy toy.
You're my botana, is what it is.
You're my whatever.
I bought you.
I own you.
I own you as a boss.
I owe you this.
And you were the only man who, of course, now everybody knows about this.
You were not, and I picked up the tab for everything.
You didn't pay for anything.
And now that I don't need you, beat it.
Go back to your wife, and here's the best part.
He's still married to her.
Let me say this again.
Did you get that in the back?
He's still married to her.
Can you believe this?
It's the most incredible story there is.
It just...
All of this...
Let me say this again.
All of this would not have even been made available.
Nobody would have even known about this.
Had Numbnuts Fanny just...
Stipulated?
Just said, we're going to make sure that we just stipulate to this.
Yes.
Okay.
Bring all the counsel in.
Quiet.
Have any problem with this?
What is your counsel?
Why is it that you believe that Ms. Willis' office has to be disqualified?
Can you tell me this?
Why?
Because of an improper relationship that she had pursuant to, let's say, Georgia civil service laws or office policy or she said she wouldn't be dating anybody.
How many people even announced that?
Because, you know, she's just so enticing.
With her backwards dress, she's got to make a statement about this because she can't keep her mouth shut, which is a joke somewhere else, but she just can't keep her mouth shut.
All of this.
All of this.
Everything about her, she ruined her career.
She also subjected herself perhaps to violating election laws by claiming, well, I took the cash out.
You know, she's like this.
Did you see the way she sits?
Just like, I mean, she has such utter, incomprehensible contempt for the court, for the rule of law, for her role as a DA.
The part I have never, ever, ever.
Bruce Cutler was arrogant.
Gotti's attorney never showed this.
Never showed this contempt for the judge.
Defendants, yes, but a DA?
Never.
I'm trying to go through.
People who might have been a bit, shall we say, a bit much.
The great Johnny Cochran.
I'm trying to think of names that you might know.
Jerry Spence.
Oh, he was wonderful.
When he did those long, very polite.
Vincent Bugliosi.
That's a long story right there.
Because that Manson story is so dirty.
It's so rotten.
What they did to Manson.
We'll talk about that later.
I don't know anybody.
I've never seen this before.
Never.
Never.
Even some of the wildest...
Maybe the Chicago 7, but those are the defendants who were...
What was it?
Bobby Seale, who was chained, I believe, by the judge, but not Bill Kunstler.
He didn't do that.
He didn't act like that.
Nobody's done this.
Nobody acts like this.
Let me just say this again.
What you're seeing is something nobody's ever seen.
From a lawyer, from a district attorney.
And it shows you there is another planet, another stratum, another place of entitlement.
And this dumbass didn't know what hoarding was.
She thought there was something else.
I guess she mistook it for whoring.
Perhaps for me that was a joke.
She didn't know what a continent was.
She's an idiot.
A low class.
Low rent, arrogant, arrogant, entitled, rude, contumacious, brazen, boorish, churlish.
Every time I see her, I just say, what is she going to say now?
And I told you this the other day, dear heavenly...
Whoever runs this show, if there is any way, if there is any way that this case, and let me tell you something, the judge has to cut her loose.
The judge has to cut her loose.
He has to do that.
There is no way, there is no way that this judge could possibly, possibly.
That's why he's sitting back saying, go ahead.
Go ahead and talk.
Go ahead.
When judges do that, you're screwed.
Would you like to say anything else?
Yeah, anything more?
Please, go ahead.
Anything more?
I'm going to give you everything in the world.
Albania Hernandez says, Adultery is a crime in Georgia, a misdemeanor.
You know, that's a very, very interesting thing.
But Albania, and thank you very much for your kindness.
It is only a crime regarding the person who was married.
I do not believe it is a crime regarding the person who is having sex who is not married.
And if this were ever, ever to be litigated in Florida, We had a statute.
It was a misdemeanor.
It was called cohabitation.
Cohabitation.
Living together.
What does living together mean?
What about if you have a roommate?
It was like they don't even, but they just, and there's nothing worse than a law that you do not endorse or that you do not follow.
Scrubber says, better to be thought of by a fool by keeping your mouth shut than to open it and remove all doubt.
Indeed.
Who is that, Mark Twain or somebody?
Yes, one of the best advices ever.
Remember, all of this, all of this could have been just absolutely.
Do you remember the case of General Petraeus?
Who remembers General Petraeus?
And General Petraeus, his butaneda, Was...
Broadwell?
Paula was a Broadwell.
Paula Broadwell.
Oh, yes!
Paula Broadwell, the biographer.
Remember this?
Oh, yes.
And it was the University of Denver.
God, I remember this one.
University of Denver.
General Petraeus!
Oh, my God!
And there was a time, it was 2020, I think she was during, oh here we go, yes, and there was Petraeus, and he had his, remember he had his, he was actually a very good general.
Very, very, very good general.
McChrystal was also a good general.
Generals are a different category.
Generals are from another Another planet.
But there he was.
He's got the stars.
He's got the Screaming Eagles.
He's got his CIB.
He had fruit salad up the air.
And he's got the ribbons.
And there was Eisenhower.
He had marksmanship.
He's got ribbons.
But he wore a little ice jacket.
That's when they were cool.
They didn't wear that.
Even, believe it or not, even Patton.
Didn't wear all of that crap as much as he could.
He had the, you know, the pistol.
Oh, but it was in Denver.
Yes, remember this.
She wrote, all in the education of General Petraeus.
And she talked at the time.
Married with two children, brought to her 40s, a self-described soccer mom.
And do you remember, do you remember when she said, And at the time, there was a time in Libya, when they were saying, why did those Libyans, why in Benghazi, why did they attack the, what was his name, the Ambassador Stevens or whatever?
Anyway, why did they do it?
Why did these crazed Libyans do it?
And the answer was, There was a, it was being used, it was alleged to have been used, as a torture site.
Kind of a black site, you know.
And that the people who came in, it was a rescue.
It was a rescue!
You understand what I'm saying?
It was a rescue.
So, this was a problem because this was in direct violation of Obama's rule.
There will be no CIA rendition and torture, and that's what it was.
And how do we know that?
Paula Broadwell.
Because when they were doing the horizontal mambo, he was doing some pillow talk, and that, guess what?
Even the great Petraeus.
You idiot!
Idiot!
This is the thing which nobody understands.
If you were Petraeus, and you had the propensity, you should tell somebody around you, Captain, yes.
I give you an order.
If you see me enter into a hotel room with a woman, not my wife, I want you to shoot me.
I give you permission to shoot me.
Because I've clearly lost my mind.
And you can shoot me.
This is the thing I don't understand.
Look, I swear to you, sometimes I think to myself, I'm never, ever, ever going to judge somebody's infidelity.
I'm never going to question yours because I don't know what your life is.
I don't know what you're going through.
I don't know your own particular idiosyncrasies.
I don't know what you were thinking at that time.
So far be it from me to bring this stuff up.
But I will tell you this.
And the thing which is the most important, which is so critical, I have to tell you, is this idea that when you do something and you throw away your career, When you know that you're in a system that is so unforgiving, fraternizing, well, this is not somebody below you, but I just, I don't understand.
So Petraeus did the same thing.
And they were going to bust his ass to drop him down to, I don't know what, maybe Lieutenant General.
Who knows?
So what I'm trying to tell you right now is I don't even think there's necessarily anything wrong that she did in terms of disqualifying.
Because let me go ask you again.
What does it matter?
She violated it?
Okay, so what?
What if she got a GUI?
So what?
So what?
What if she's charged with petty theft?
You're worried?
If I'm Donald Trump, I may want her.
Keep her.
She's an idiot.
Unless they're going to dismiss the case.
Look, the reason why this is good for Trump is because anything that interrupts the flow of this in yours is a benefit.
Anything.
Anything at all.
But if he's smart, he'll probably say, let her go.
Let her go.
I mean, this is terrific.
Now, she's not going to be trying the case.
Somebody else will.
Just like Letitia James didn't try that case in front of Judge Engeron, somebody else did.
Actually, Judge Ingram tried the case for.
Stand by for a second, dear friend.
I hope you're getting what I'm saying.
I hope you are saying, you are listening to what I'm saying, because what I am telling you right now is so bloody good, it's not even funny.
And speaking of something that's not funny, listen to this important word.
Let's talk about a very serious subject, emergency food.
That's right, emergency food.
I know, I know.
At first blush, it's difficult for most people to think about something that they just take for granted, ever-reaching emergency status.
We're used to stores always being open.
Delivery is always made.
No supply chain disasters.
No ransomware catastrophes.
None of that stuff.
Nothing shutting down our gas stations, right?
No trucking strikes.
No war.
No protests from farmers.
Nothing catastrophic in terms of weather.
Nope, that can't happen to us.
Uh-uh.
And I understand it's a defense mechanism that we have because the idea of ever not being able to eat or locate food is seemingly incomprehensible.
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I want to go back, if you will, to something a little bit interesting.
I was doing a little bit of reading in this.
I think you might kind of find this interesting about our old friend David Petraeus.
General Petraeus.
This one particular piece.
And this is cited from the Denver Post.
In 20...
When was this?
In 20...
I guess...
2012?
Maybe 2012?
During a Q&A question, about 35 minutes into the Denver University talk, Paul Broderwell answered a question about the September 11th attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi.
In which Chris Stevens, the ambassador, and two other Americans were killed.
Quote, the CIA annex had actually taken Libyan militia members prisoner, and we think that the attack was an effort to get those prisoners back.
It is still being vetted.
On Monday, the CIA denied those claims.
President Barack Obama issued an executive order in January of 2009, stripping the CIA of its authority to take prisoners, which means the CIA can no longer operate secret jails, as it had done under the administration of George W. Bush.
CIA spokesman Preston Golson said, any suggestion that the agency is still in the detention business is uninformed and baseless.
Gotcha.
And with that, Petraeus almost said bye-bye to his career.
Think about that one.
There's nothing worse than lies.
Here's a lie for you.
Want to hear a good one?
Want to hear a good lie?
This is my favorite.
This is one that I tell people about all the time, and there it was.
Do you remember the time when they supposedly dispatched, when they whacked?
Osama bin Laden, or Osama, UBL.
Do you remember that?
Of course you do.
Of course you do.
It was in all the papers.
And there was this one particular scene where they were in the situation room.
Do you remember that?
Of course you do.
And there was Hillary like this.
She was smelling her hand, or looking shocked, or pretending to look in shock.
I don't know.
And there were these people you didn't know.
There was Joe Biden.
No, was Biden?
Biden was there?
And Obama had on a little jacket.
He was like in the back.
He did not take the position.
You would have never guessed he was a president by virtue of how he was sitting.
And they were watching this.
And there was a picture of them watching this.
The dispatch.
It was a lady.
The room was packed.
And there they were.
Watching the architect of 9-11 being dispatched, being shot to death, being mowed down by America's finest, SEAL Team 6, 789, Delta Force, Ninjas, whatever the hell they were.
Remember that one?
Remember that?
Yes, you do.
Of course you do.
And it was Hillary Clinton.
What is this?
What is that?
She was smelling her hand the whole time, looking shocked, you know.
Until Leon Panetta said, you know, The helmet cam went down and we were watching nothing.
What?
We were watching nothing.
It was a blackout.
Wait a minute.
That room where she was smelling her hand?
Yeah, nothing.
All bullshit.
You were lied to.
I hate lies.
I hate lies.
And I hate stupid lies.
I hate stupid lies.
I hate lies that insult my intelligence.
I hate lies that serve no purpose.
Do you know people who lie for no reason?
I know people who make stuff up for no reason.
Do you know people like this?
I do.
I mean, stuff is not even important.
Stuff that's not even...
It's like, why did you say that?
You didn't have to say that.
They don't know the truth.
They don't know it.
This is kind of like a pathology.
What Fannie Willis is, is you don't understand.
I can do whatever in the hell I want.
And you don't have any right to ask me because I'm Fannie Willis.
F you.
You got that?
And anything you ask me, I'm going to make it up.
I'm going to make it up.
Yeah, I was over there because I had threats.
Yeah, that's it.
I was subletting that apartment because I was being threatened.
Yeah, that's it.
That's the ticket.
I was...
50 years old, celebrating my birthday by myself.
It was a terrible time.
I was with it way before the problems set in.
How about the father?
Well, you know, my father, Mr. Floyd, he was home.
He stayed.
I had to leave because they were threatening me.
You left the house to your father?
Yes.
You mean to tell me you had...
You had the Kali Cartel and God knows what, the Zetas and all these other people, motorcycle gangs, coming after you, wanting to kill you, and you didn't say to your father, you are not staying at home.
I'm leaving.
I'm the DA.
They don't know I'm gone.
They might think I'm still there.
They could kill you.
That never came up to nobody.
Well, why didn't your father leave?
Well, you know, he was worried about COVID.
There was no COVID.
Well, he knew.
Because he's traveled.
He's Pythonic.
He can augur the future.
He's Vatic.
He can read the entrails of the beast.
He's able to portend the future.
He's a brilliant, brilliant man.
He, in essence, says Fanny is not strong, but very low self-esteem.
You know, it's funny you say that.
And I'm glad you said that.
When you meet people in life, and I know what I'm talking about, the image that is presented is oftentimes the opposite of that which is internalized.
People, why do you think, do you have people who brag?
Oh, I know this.
Oh, I know Donald Trump.
Oh, I go to Mar-a-Lago all the time.
I hear that.
I know people.
Oh, I go to...
Why do you want to go to Mar-a-Lago?
Oh, I go all the time.
When you go to Mar-a-Lago, you don't see Donald Trump.
He's not talking to you.
He's over there.
Well, it doesn't matter.
I'm going to Mar-a-Lago.
And I know Donald and I are like this.
Oh, I know him.
Oh, I know.
That's my good friend.
I know him.
The wannabes.
Why are you doing that?
Why are you lying?
Because I have no self-esteem?
I have no self-esteem.
And people will show the opposite.
I still, and I see this, we were at an event the other night, so help me God.
Mrs. L and I love to take pictures of ourselves.
Sometimes we're like a brand, because we take pictures for ourselves.
We really don't post a lot.
But if you're kind of in the business, you do.
We were at this event, and this woman the whole night, Everywhere she went.
Everywhere she went.
I got these friends of mine who went to go see Billy Joel.
How much is a Billy Joel ticket?
I don't know about anybody, but people pay about two.
Some people that we know.
Well, some people that we know, a group of people, paid $2,000 for a ticket.
Why?
To see Billy Joel.
Why?
Okay, fine.
It's your money.
You can do whatever you want with it.
But you realize going is not fun unless you tell everybody.
See, then you say, I went to Billy Joel.
And I went, oh, okay.
Well, there you go.
So what happens is, this is somebody who has no self-esteem.
This is somebody who has to impress you because there's something there.
So going back to Fannie Willis, I believe...
That there's something in particular about her that you're absolutely right.
But she also, frankly, is this.
She is this.
And listen to me very carefully.
I'm not saying to you that she is a psychopath.
That's a term of art and it's overused.
You've seen that the Indian doctor, right?
She talks about narcissists.
That's all.
She's got like 8 million people watching her.
And it's the same thing all the time.
Narcissist.
All right already.
I hear a narcissist talking about narcissists all the time.
Anyway.
But one of the things about a psychopath, and I want you to listen carefully.
Listen carefully.
This is the real McCoy.
Not a sociopath, maybe, but a psychopath.
Psychopath, you are hardwired this way.
You can't help this.
The head and the heart are not connected.
What do I mean by that?
They don't fear getting caught.
They might, they think about it, but it doesn't scare them.
There's no heart thumping.
Oh my god, I can't say that.
I can't lie.
Oh, they can lie.
It's not connected.
They understand it.
Yeah, I could get caught.
That's right.
Psychopaths have no appreciation for consequence.
They're different.
Serial killers are not necessarily psychopaths.
They worry.
They fear.
It's that excitement.
That's why they do it.
It's that head and heart is connected.
Some psychopaths don't even have that.
They don't have that.
They're very interesting.
Sometimes they're great in terms of being heroes.
I'm hit!
I'll get them!
You'll be hit.
There's no like, oh my god, you're right.
If I go out there, there's a machine gun fire.
I may not make it.
Oh my god.
Head wants to do it.
Heart is reacting.
Psychopath.
Want me to go get him?
I'll get him.
You know, you'll be a hero.
Oh, that's good.
Yeah, you're right about that.
Okay.
It's all head.
It's head.
Not heart.
Head.
Psychopath, by the way.
One of the most interesting cases.
I think it was Hare who said that.
There was a man whose dog died.
And he was crushed.
And somebody said, isn't it true that because he cried over the death of his dog that he wasn't a psychopath because only a psychopath would feel something?
He says, no.
He's crying over the fact that he lost a possession.
He didn't care about the dog.
It's like if you scratch his car or something.
It's him.
It's different.
There's something that's different.
But when I see this Fannie Willis, there's a part of her that's as close as you can get.
She doesn't seem to care about the rules.
She doesn't care.
She knows that you can't say that the cash in your vault is from campaign fund.
What are you doing?
She doesn't care.
It's like the head and the heart.
I don't care.
Nothing scares me.
They told her, we've invoked the rule of sequestration.
You've got to go out.
You can't be listening.
I'm going to come in.
What are you doing here?
I want to clarify some things.
What he said.
How do you know what he said?
Oh, well, whatever.
She doesn't care.
She does not care.
And her thing is, how dare you?
How dare you?
She got, who was it?
Anna Cross?
They were talking about the, and I couldn't tell, you know, it's not good when you can't tell who the lawyers are representing.
That's not good when you're saying, is she representing?
Anna Cross.
We had a guy years ago, we called him Dr. Well, and we used him, the state used him.
Four, this is terrible, he was this Cuban guy, a doctor, and his Englishman, but he was a psychiatrist, as Ricky Ricardo would say.
And at a Baker Act, an involuntary commitment hearing, you might say, for example, a doctor, did you feel that Mr. Johnson was incompetent?
Well, do you feel that he was not incompetent?
Well, do you think maybe he might, would he benefit from Medicaid?
Well, do you think he might not benefit?
Well, whose witness is he?
I don't know.
That's Dr. Well.
He never answered the question.
Any side could bill him.
You never knew anything.
She doesn't realize this.
Uh-uh.
And I always think that you always go into court saying, I know what I have to avoid.
I've got to avoid this.
And the best way to have avoided this is to stipulate way back when, when this thing started.
Am I doing this?
Do you understand this?
Do you love this story?
I do.
Because just when I think, okay, I think I've covered everything about it.
No.
No, I see something more.
Don't you love?
Fanny Willis.
You know who I would love to interview?
Fanny Willis.
What do you think I would do in an interview?
What do you think I would do?
In an interview.
How would you interview her?
To make it good now.
Not to get to the bottom.
What would be the best interview for Fanny Willis?
What would it be?
Oh, you'd be watching it?
Oh, you'd be watching it?
Everybody would be watching it.
What would you do?
Slight interrogation?
No!
I'd talk to her hand.
Very good.
Just let her talk.
Okay, close.
The story has a bounty to see Fannie Willis is an enigma.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Very, very simple.
Give her some shea-shea liquor.
That is close.
Close.
Close.
Not the view.
The view would actually hurt her more than anything else.
But I would love to sit there and say something to the effect of I just have to say something to you.
How dare they confuse you with the criminal defendant and criminal defendants who were on trial.
For racketeering.
Wait, she'll say, that's right.
How dare they put you on trial and throw lie after lie after lie.
Now she's uncorked.
Now she says, oh, she's found a friend, right?
I'll tell her everything she wants to hear.
Everything.
Keep it going.
Your family, your friends.
Here's your father.
You have to bear your soul.
You're a human being.
You're a proud woman and you have to ask for permission to do what?
For your own personal life?
You're fine.
And just, just, just when she would think that I was her long lost friend and just Before she would think that I have so perfectly described and explicated and portrayed her particular plot or plight, I should say.
I'll then turn to her and say, are you kidding me?
Do you think that I believe anything I've said?
Do you think that I really believe this?
I thought you were smarter than that.
You've got to be out of your mind.
You must think we're stupid and you must think we're stupid now to believe this.
And you're insulting me if you think for one minute that I believe anything I've said.
You've been had fatty.
You've been outsmarted.
Because I took your incredible Arrogance, stupidity, pulled it in, set the trap, let you go crazy, eat the scenery, as we say in Broadway, and then say, gotcha.
It was all nonsense.
Because you just showed us that you are indeed as insane and arrogant and deluded as we thought you were.
Ladies and gentlemen, Lori Cuck says, be her fan club.
Oh, I would do it in a heartbeat.
So-lutely.
Club Shay Shay?
Oh, God, dear God.
And you know, Chappelle.
Chappelle is just ready.
Yeah, gotcha's right, Laurie.
Gotcha.
Chappelle is waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting.
I mean, this, this, I mean, he is saying, and the hardest part about it is that it's so obvious.
That the joke is in the subtlety.
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I am sorry when I tell you I love this.
I love this more than you will ever know.
I thoroughly love this.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
I love this.
I love the whole story.
I love the whole subject.
I love all of it.
I love it more than anything because it just keeps on giving.
She's got to know.
She has got to be able to maintain some kind of composure at this point.
She has got to realize that she's being made a fool of.
No, no, no.
This is almost part of the psychopathy.
This is almost, oddly enough, this is part of the sheer and unmitigated lunacy.
That we are seeing.
It absolutely destroys me.
How I love this.
Ladies and gentlemen, you have been so wonderful.
Let me just tell you two things.
First, Stan the man says, I love it more than you.
No, no, no, Stan.
Don't even insult me with that one, my friend.
First, let me just say to my dear friends, Lori Cuck, what can I say?
He, in essence, thank you.
Scrubber, thank you.
Albania Hernandez, thank you.
By the way, Pat Kelpie.
Pat Kelpie started off early today.
Thank you, Pat.
I don't know if you're still with us, but thank you for your kindness.
And also, Key in Essence, thank you.
You are a new member, and I thank you again for this.
Let me also say that you have been wonderful, and you have been terrific, and I cannot tell you.
I cannot advise you enough to follow Mrs. L right now.
This is her YouTube channel at Lynn's Warriors.
She was doing interviews.
She works this thing 24-7.
She is spreading the word.
Spreading the word.
Spreading the word.
To stop child predation and human trafficking.
There is simply nobody like her.
Nobody.
That's why I married her.
That's why I married her.
Married up.
Yeah, buddy.
Please follow her on X, as we say, X, X. Used to be called Twitter.
I still call it Twitter.
Please follow her as well.
She is without peer.
And let me also tell you that I appreciate you.
Thank you.
I love this.
I love sharing with you.
I love the fact that you allow me into your home and into your heart and into your mind and into your brain and into your heart and allow me just to dissect and break this thing down.
I love it.
Let me leave you with this.
The smartest man in the world is a person I pay homage to every now and then.
It's the man who decided on a coffee machine, Keurig in particular, where he has this little light that says, descale.
To make you buy the descaling stuff.
It's an idiot light, but it's the most fantastic thing, and I just want to meet that man.
You are a genius.
It's like somebody who has instructions on shampoo.
Wet hair, apply, rinse.
Thank you.
Thank you for this.
Thank you.
All right, dear friends, we will see you tomorrow morning.
At 8 a.m., thank you for your kindness.
Thank you for your perspicacity.
Thank you for everything that you have done and have attempted to do.
I mean that sincerely.
I want you to know that you're my friend.
You're my family.
I feel like when I, at night, it's always like, let me see what the gang's doing.
And you never let me down.
You let me into your heart and let me into your head.
And I'm telling you, that means more to me than you can imagine.
And I mean that.
And this is a hand fart for you.
That's a good one, isn't it?
It's almost like a mosquito.
First is harder.
And then this one, I know this is immature.
That's the bad one.
That's the one you don't want to hear.
Especially point blank.
You know what I mean?
Okay, dear friends.
Thank you so much.
Have a great and glorious day.
See you tomorrow morning at 8 a.m.
Don't forget, the monkey's dead.
The show's over.
Sue you.
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