SHOCKING Theory: Could Fentanyl Be the Ultimate Cover-Up in Virginia Giuffre’s Case?
SHOCKING Theory: Could Fentanyl Be the Ultimate Cover-Up in Virginia Giuffre’s Case?
SHOCKING Theory: Could Fentanyl Be the Ultimate Cover-Up in Virginia Giuffre’s Case?
Time | Text |
---|---|
When uncertainty strikes, peace of mind is priceless. | |
Dirty Man Underground Safes protects what matters most. | |
Discreetly designed, these safes are where innovation meets reliability, keeping your valuables close yet secure. | |
Be ready for anything. | |
Use code DIRTY10 for 10% off today and take the first step towards safeguarding your future. | |
Dirty Man's Safe. | |
Because protecting your family starts with protecting what you treasure. | |
The storm is coming. | |
Markets are crashing. | |
Banks are closing. | |
When the economy collapses, how will you survive? | |
You need a plan. | |
Cash, gold, bitcoin. | |
Dirty man safes keep your assets hidden underground at a secret location ready for any crisis. | |
Don't wait for disaster to strike. | |
Get your Dirty Man safe today. | |
Use promo code DIRTY10 for 10% off your order. | |
Disaster can strike when least expected. | |
Wildfires, hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes. | |
They can instantly turn your world upside down. | |
Dirty Man underground safes is a safeguard against chaos. | |
Hidden below, your valuables remain protected no matter what. | |
Prepare for the unexpected. | |
Use code DIRTY10 for 10% off and secure peace of mind for you and your family. | |
Dirty man safe. | |
When disaster hits, security isn't optional. | |
What happened in Europe? | |
What happened with the power shutdown in Europe? | |
What was that about? | |
Now before we begin, what happened? | |
What do you know about that? | |
This is Europe. | |
This is a continent. | |
This is not a little like, well, we had a problem here. | |
This is Europe. | |
What do you think happened? | |
I'm dying to know what my dear friends say. | |
What do you think happened? | |
Come on. | |
Come on, all you folks. | |
You're sleuths. | |
You know what's going on here. | |
What do you think happened? | |
What was that all about? | |
What do you think? | |
European darkness. | |
What was this about? | |
Europe. | |
They were freaking out. | |
What do you think this was all about? | |
What? | |
This is the most fascinating subject ever. | |
At 12.35pm local time. | |
A massive blackout struck Spain, Portugal, and parts of France. | |
Just days after Spain's grid operated fully on renewables for the first time during a weekday, France restored power quickly, but it could take a week to restore Spain and Portugal. | |
Trains, Hospitals, airports, traffic lights, grocery stores all collapsed in chaos. | |
People were trapped in elevators. | |
Planes were diverted. | |
Backup generators in hospitals struggled to meet demand. | |
What happened? | |
Portugal's grid operator initially blamed extreme temperature variations and a rare Atmospheric phenomena. | |
What is that? | |
An EMP? | |
Carrington class? | |
What was that? | |
However, Spain's national grid operator, Red Electrica, confirmed the real cause was a very strong oscillation, forcing Spain's grid to disconnect from the broader European system, | |
triggering the collapse. | |
Now, traditional grids, dominated by coal, gas, and nuclear rely, On the physical inertia of spinning turbines to stabilize frequency and absorb shocks. | |
Renewable heavy grids dominated by solar panels and inverters have almost no inertia. | |
Solar panels offer no mechanical resistance. | |
Modern wind turbines are electronically decoupled. | |
Inverter-based systems, though precise, are fragile and collapse when faced with sudden disturbances. | |
This blackout was not random, nor was it unforeseeable. | |
It was the predictable result of prioritizing political ideology over proven energy stability. | |
Now let me ask you a question, my dear friends. | |
Happening here. | |
Do you ever see us irrespective of who the president is? | |
Because as much and as great as this man is, it makes you wonder, wow. | |
Fred Haddad, look at this, gave us 10 Lionel Nation memberships. | |
Thank you, Freddie. | |
You were the best, my friend. | |
The best. | |
The best in the West. | |
Do you think this is possible? | |
Do you think this could ever happen here? | |
You better believe it could happen here. | |
And what did these people do for food? | |
What did they do? | |
Did they have the ability to have solar power? | |
Did they have generators? | |
Of course not. | |
Nobody does. | |
Because nobody thinks this can happen. | |
This isn't some third world country. | |
This is your Portugal, Spain. | |
France at least kicked in. | |
Who controls this? | |
I don't know. | |
So what I talk to you about is, and I have been for years mentioning and talking to you about this idea, this concatenation of problems and the like. | |
Do you know how serious this is? | |
Do you know how critically serious this is? | |
It's unbelievably serious. | |
But that's why you can do something now by listening very carefully. | |
Let me ask you a question. | |
What happens when the trucks stop? | |
Think about this. | |
Trucks. | |
You know, the trucks that bring your food. | |
And then when one store closes because of a riot or ransomware hit or a hurricane or even manufactured weather. | |
Oh yeah! | |
We've talked about that. | |
What happens when all of a sudden, suddenly, the entire supply chain collapses like dominoes? | |
What happens then? | |
We've seen it happen and it doesn't take much. | |
And that's the thing you've got to think about. | |
A trucker strike, a cyber attack, some EMP, some Carrington class disaster, a city shut down by violence. | |
It only takes one spark for shelves to go empty fast. | |
And when that happens, and when that moment hits, you either have what you need or you don't. | |
And that's why I am telling you, I want you to go to preparewithlionel.com, our trusted friends at MyPatriotSupply. | |
Unbelievable deals right now. | |
You've got to see. | |
Deals on emergency food kits that could save your life and your sanity. | |
Over 2,000 calories per day. | |
For three months of food per person. | |
Shelf stable for 25 years. | |
In any kind of combinations you want. | |
And made to taste like actual meals. | |
Cardboard, not some military MRE. | |
These kits aren't just insurance. | |
They're peace of mind. | |
So go to preparewithlionel.com, secure your kit, secure your future. | |
Preparewithlionel.com, preparewithlionel.com, because when the world breaks down, to prepare, don't panic. | |
I want to talk to you about something about Virginia Jouffre. | |
Now, I love to ask you this question because one of the things I love about you more than anything else is the way you will just... | |
You have very, very... | |
Many, many strong theories and strong ideas in terms of what happened. | |
You have a lot of ideas as to what happened. | |
Who was responsible for Virginia Jouffre? | |
Well, how do you know what happened? | |
I don't know. | |
Is anybody talking about it? | |
No. | |
It's the weirdest thing I've ever seen. | |
Like I told you the other day, and like I repeatedly tell you, for reasons that I will never understand, they just don't seem to care. | |
And we have a three-day, maybe, maybe sort of, I guess, time period when we pay attention and then we forget the whole thing. | |
Now let me bring something to your attention. | |
And as you know, my friends, we always talk about Cui, Cui or Cui, CUI Bono, who benefits, or Cui Prodest, same thing. | |
Who benefits from something? | |
Who would have done better had she died before or after? | |
This is a question. | |
Have we ever seen anything? | |
Say what? | |
She was talking about things she was planning to do, renovating her house. | |
She was doing all this stuff. | |
About three years ago, she got maybe about 15 mils. | |
It's hard to say specifically how this thing was structured or whatever. | |
So the question you've got to ask is a very simple question. | |
How do you figure out who gets what and when and why and how? | |
How does this work? | |
What are the questions that you would want to know? | |
That doesn't mean that somebody's guilty, but it makes you think, uh-huh, this is a very interesting thing. | |
Well, let me bring you up to speed on one little fact, one little tidbit, which I think you might find interesting. | |
I think you might find it interesting. | |
In fact, I know you'll find it interesting. | |
Why? | |
Because I'm telling you, you will. | |
Because Virginia Giuffre died before her divorce was finalized, as far as we know, as far as I believe, and don't forget, this is Australian law, or I don't know who's who, but let's just assume that everybody pretty much follows the same rules. | |
Because she died before her divorce was finalized, her husband remains her sole legal spouse at the time of death. | |
Makes sense. | |
I don't care about being separated or any of that stuff. | |
They are not divorced. | |
Under standard principles of intestate succession, this is without a will, absent a valid and updated will, excluding him, and even that's a difficult time, he would inherit the majority, | |
if not the entirety, of her estate. | |
You can almost look at this by statute. | |
Intestate is when you die without a will. | |
And the law, statutes, will provide succession, who gets what. | |
Normally, it goes automatically to the spouse. | |
Now, the settlement might have been, I don't know, 15 to 16 million, as hard to say, from Prince Andy. | |
Had the divorce been finalized before her death, had they not been husband and wife, he would have had no legal claim to her assets except as provided for by the divorce decree. | |
The timing of her death prior to divorce critically preserves his spousal inheritance rights, creating substantial financial implications Benefiting the surviving husband. | |
Isn't that interesting? | |
Now let's see how good your investigative beliefs are. | |
What do you think? | |
Fishman says, do you think there is active Congress members that were on the Epstein list? | |
If so, why aren't they in prison? | |
Okay. | |
Let me answer that question. | |
Fishman, what do you mean on the Epstein list? | |
Now, I'm going to need your help here, and we keep doing this, and I keep saying this, and I understand because you're a good, good man. | |
What do you mean by the list? | |
What does that mean? | |
A list of what? | |
What does a list mean? | |
Fishman, let's say you're on that list. | |
On a list. | |
On the massage list. | |
The massage list. | |
What does that mean? | |
Flight log? | |
What does that mean? | |
Ethel Kennedy was on the flight log. | |
Ethel Kennedy was there. | |
State your name for the microphone. | |
What is this? | |
This is the massage log. | |
And? | |
What is it? | |
Are massages against the law? | |
I don't know. | |
And I'm not saying it's you, but I told you today, forget the list, forget the black book. | |
What does it mean? | |
First of all, we have to authenticate it in court. | |
You have to explain, well, what is this? | |
I want to introduce, oh, whoa, whoa, whoa, objection, objection, proper predicate. | |
What is it? | |
What is it? | |
Who? | |
Who are you going to bring to authenticate this? | |
Let's say we're going to go. | |
Are you going to bring Ghislaine back? | |
What if she says, I'm taking the fifth. | |
I don't know if you can take the fifth. | |
We went to prison. | |
Or they grant her immunity or whatever it is. | |
And they say, what do you have here? | |
Okay, let me see here. | |
Let me see what you got here. | |
Here's the thing. | |
Let me see. | |
Let me look. | |
Okay. | |
Yep. | |
Yeah, that's the flight list. | |
How do you know it's a flight list? | |
Well, it says flight list. | |
Is this in Epstein's handwriting? | |
No, he's not writing the flight list. | |
Well, what does this list tell you? | |
What does it tell you? | |
Well, it's got Bill Clinton. | |
Yeah, Bill Clinton was there. | |
Mr. Clinton, was that you? | |
Yeah, I was there. | |
I was sitting next to Ethel Kennedy at the time. | |
Bobby was there. | |
Everybody was there. | |
There were people who could go down the list. | |
His manse here in New York was a veritable who's who, a veritable and an endless stream of notables. | |
What do you think we should do about it? | |
So Fish, I'm telling you, what do you mean the list? | |
What does the list tell you? | |
Now if you said, what about the tapes or the recordings? | |
That's a good one. | |
Or the testimony of the girls. | |
Who? | |
Who, what, where, when, and how? | |
Yeah, that's very, very true. | |
Very good question. | |
But let me go with it. | |
So what? | |
I have a very, very simple idea of when there is an uh-oh, uh-oh, we're in... | |
This is my favorite with Diddy. | |
I would love... | |
I'm serious. | |
Irrespective of how involved he was. | |
Oh, the whole music thing from the day of Clyde. | |
Who? | |
Oh, good. | |
Take It Down. | |
Excellent. | |
Wow. | |
Take It Down Act. | |
This is what Mrs. L and her notables, but led by her. | |
The Take It Down Act is... | |
This is when you see something or you have a minor who has some type of activity on... | |
They have 48 hours to remove it. | |
That's excellent. | |
So President Trump will stand... | |
Good, good, good, good, good, good, good. | |
He's making tremendous headway. | |
By the way, let me just not get off this, but the Democrats are so incredibly... | |
But let me go back to this. | |
This is very interesting. | |
This is very, very, very, very interesting. | |
The question that I have is simply this. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, the jury, I want you to find what? | |
I want you to find Bill Clinton guilty of what? | |
I want you to find Senator whoever guilty of what? | |
His name appeared on the list. | |
What does that mean? | |
I don't know exactly, but his name appeared on the list. | |
And because his name appeared on the list, what? | |
Now I'm going to ask you, and I want everyone here to answer my question. | |
Listen to me very, very carefully. | |
What would you find Bill Clinton guilty of? | |
His name is on the list. | |
He said, I've been there. | |
There were hundreds of people throughout time, throughout everything. | |
We told you this. | |
We have been on lists, whatever. | |
I mean, what are you saying? | |
What are you saying? | |
But you were on a list. | |
I know I was on a list. | |
But Fishman said, get Fishman over here. | |
What is he saying? | |
But your name's on the list. | |
I didn't do anything. | |
Don't you understand? | |
We want to put you... | |
Fishman wants to put you in prison. | |
Why? | |
Because your name was on the list! | |
You're going to put Ethel Kennedy? | |
She's passed away, bless her heart, but... | |
What are you talking about? | |
It doesn't matter. | |
I'm telling you, it's the list. | |
The list means you're guilty. | |
Why would you be on the list of the... | |
What are you talking about? | |
What does this list mean? | |
And the black book. | |
What about it? | |
What if a black book says... | |
Bill Clinton likes, I'm just, I'm just, let's be hypothetical. | |
There's a book, Bill Clinton likes, whatever. | |
And you can pick a very young age. | |
What does that mean? | |
What does that mean? | |
What does the book mean? | |
What does the list mean? | |
What does that mean? | |
Nothing! | |
Now if somebody came in, Virginia Giuffre, by the way, why did she not? | |
I guess she, Ghislaine Maxwell, is she the only person? | |
There are many, many people who came forward and said, we went to the DOJ and we were victimized, but they said they weren't interested. | |
This is a story. | |
Fishman says, wait a minute, Fishman says, reworded question. | |
If there's evidence of sex with minors, why aren't they locked up? | |
Well, what do you mean by evidence? | |
Where's the evidence? | |
Okay. | |
There's no evidence if the Biden Department of Justice doesn't do anything with it. | |
Now, there might have been civil cases, there might have been some private... | |
But if the Biden administration doesn't... | |
I would venture to say that the number of underage is probably less than you think. | |
Less than you think. | |
And a lot of people are saying, I'm not interested in this. | |
And what are you supposed to say? | |
What are you supposed to say? | |
What? | |
State your name for the record. | |
So and so. | |
How old are you now? | |
38? | |
40? | |
I don't know. | |
Were you underage? | |
Yes. | |
When? | |
How old were you? | |
I was whatever. | |
And who was it? | |
Bill Clinton. | |
Or Bill Gates. | |
Pick hypothetically. | |
Pick anybody you want. | |
How many years ago? | |
Years ago. | |
Anybody see this? | |
Anybody know this? | |
So it's your word? | |
Bill Glenn says, I don't know what you're talking about. | |
It never happened. | |
I don't even know who she is. | |
How are you going to prove that? | |
Now, unless you're going to corroborate it? | |
Did you report it? | |
Did you go to anybody? | |
Did you see anything? | |
How old were you then? | |
This was how many years ago? | |
Same thing with Diddy. | |
I'm sorry, but there's something about this particular type of case where the prosecutors, by doing nothing, can really screw things up. | |
Big time. | |
Big time. | |
By waiting. | |
Oh, I want to see this. | |
And the Diddy Gaze, oh, that's my favorite. | |
When was this? | |
2000? | |
25 years ago, maybe? | |
Or 20 years ago? | |
How old do you know? | |
Wait until somebody, and please, please forgive me for this, somebody, dare I say, kind of lumbers up to the stand. | |
And she is... | |
And say, how old were you? | |
Well, I was a kid then. | |
You were a kid then? | |
Yes, I was. | |
And what happened? | |
Well, I went to this party. | |
Anybody force you to go to the party? | |
No. | |
Anybody pull you into a van? | |
No. | |
In fact, you had to get in there yourself, didn't you? | |
Right. | |
You snuck in. | |
You wanted to go in. | |
Not that that matters. | |
Not that that makes a difference. | |
So nobody grabbed you. | |
Nobody slipped something in your drink and you were there. | |
Now, once you're there, can you tell me what Mr. Combs did? | |
Or other people? | |
What did he do 25 years ago? | |
Did you go to the hospital? | |
Did you go to the police? | |
So 25 years ago? | |
And what did he do? | |
What? | |
And what this Cassie tape has to do with anything? | |
I have no idea. | |
They're going to try to do to him what they did to Weinstein. | |
You know how tough it is to prove a case? | |
You know how tough? | |
Now, E. Jean Carroll, people say, well, she's crazy, whatever. | |
Really? | |
Well, she was there, and she said, I was there, and he did this. | |
And he did this. | |
He did this. | |
Trump did this. | |
It was me. | |
I was there. | |
This is what happened. | |
There was a friend of hers, the woman who wrote the yuppie book, I forget her name, but she wrote the yuppie handbook or whatever, and she said, you know, it's funny, at that very time she said that happened, she called me up. | |
Now, if somebody can do that and say, you know, it's weird, at the time that, going back to the Epstein case, at the time that happened, this person She called me and said something to the effect of, | |
yes, she said that she had been involved in, I don't know, whatever the particular instance was or problem, that she called me at the time. | |
There was a doctor who recalls, yes, I remember we're going to waive patient and doctor. | |
You can kind of corroborate it. | |
Maybe she had an STD. | |
Anything. | |
Something. | |
But you want a list? | |
You want a book? | |
You want a flight? | |
What does that mean? | |
And you're going to say, who is this? | |
Now this is a tough one. | |
This is a tough one. | |
This is a tough one. | |
And I want you to listen to me carefully. | |
What if people don't like these girls? | |
We don't like them. | |
What if people listen to their story and say, I don't think these... | |
I don't... | |
You were a what? | |
A masseuse? | |
How old were you? | |
Yeah, okay. | |
Where were your parents? | |
What happened? | |
Did you... | |
And I know this doesn't matter, and I know this doesn't... | |
But there's something about the circumstances that people... | |
Let me give you an example. | |
Let me give you a terrible example. | |
Listen to what I'm saying. | |
Ideologically and actually, it makes no difference. | |
But let me give you an example. | |
Can you see a difference from a jury reacting differently to, let's say, and you've got to be careful with these words, because unlike AM radio, where you can say whatever you want other than F-bombs, you can say, we have to talk around and use these circuitous references to things that we know. | |
Two situations. | |
First situation. | |
Young girl. | |
Student. | |
Pulled, culled, seduced, groomed, whatever, by her teacher. | |
A male teacher. | |
Ooh, that's a good one. | |
For a prosecutor, ooh, that's a good one. | |
Young girl. | |
Went to choir practice. | |
Impressionable. | |
Innocent. | |
By this guy. | |
Ooh, that'll be a plea. | |
That won't go to trial. | |
There's no way they're going to go to trial on that one. | |
Second case, same girl in a brothel. | |
Same girl who goes with a bunch of friends, kind of, they were picked up, they say years ago, Ghislaine Maxwell would go to the kind of like the dark part of Palm Beach, you know, not the dark, but I mean the poorer sections or whatever it is, | |
and pick up girls who are impressionable. | |
And basically, not put a gun to their head, but offer them things, and then other girls would themselves recruit. | |
And they'd be put up. | |
And this is a girl who basically was on, she could leave anytime she wanted. | |
Let's say that was suggested. | |
I'm not saying it's right at all. | |
You see the difference between the two? | |
She could have left? | |
Yeah. | |
She could have left? | |
Well, she was a child. | |
Yeah, but I mean, she could have left? | |
Yeah, yeah. | |
In fact, The evidence would show that for purposes of what they were doing, which was extortion, to get these people doing really freaky things on tape or video or recording, the girls had to have been in a position where they wouldn't have freaked out this guy. | |
If you're some Bill Clinton, hypothetically, there's some girl shaking and... | |
You're going to think, whoa, whoa, wait a minute, hold it, hold it, hold it. | |
No, no, no, no, no, no, no. | |
This is weird. | |
I don't need this. | |
I don't, you know what I mean, unless he's a freak or something. | |
So it would be, it would behoove them to have girls who would want to do this, even though they're underage. | |
Do you see what I'm saying? | |
It makes juries look at things like, where were her parents? | |
Why did you do this? | |
What did you want? | |
Did you, does it make it? | |
See, one of the hardest things in the world, It's a notion of age. | |
Let me ask you something. | |
Did any of you folks, any of you men, ever in the course of your life, maybe not now, maybe later, ever, ever meet somebody and date a woman that you thought was, | |
I don't know, did you ever look at her driver's license? | |
Seriously, did any of you ever look at You probably didn't have to. | |
Somebody's got kids or somebody's in college or somebody's working. | |
You know what I mean? | |
A lot of the circumstantial stuff. | |
Well, let's assume you met somebody in a bar. | |
Let's assume. | |
Did you ask for their driver's license? | |
No. | |
You had to, though. | |
You would have had no excuse whatsoever. | |
None. | |
You would have had no excuse. | |
Had anything going wrong. | |
And if she had showed you a fake... | |
Birth certificate or a fake driver's license or a fake whatever. | |
It wouldn't have made any difference. | |
Strict liability. | |
Liability without fault. | |
How many people do that? | |
Could you say that? | |
No. | |
No, of course not. | |
Of course not. | |
I know this is a weird subject, but other than the obvious, if there's a toddler or something, you're going to say, what is this? | |
What is this? | |
But there does come a point where if somebody says 18, there's a range. | |
Especially kids today, and I'm going to say this, with hormones in food, recombinant DNA, growth hormones, there are kids walking around, there are kids looking as though they are much older than they are today. | |
Now I'm not, again, I'm not saying this This is okay. | |
Under the law, it makes no difference. | |
So the jury's going to sit there, and there's a difference. | |
There's a difference. | |
Not that the jury, if the jury would ever get to that point, they would have this idea like, I don't like this kid. | |
I don't like her. | |
She's setting people up. | |
She's tramping people. | |
It's against the law. | |
I know it's against the law, but I don't like her. | |
I don't like anything about this case. | |
I don't like what's going on. | |
Who looks at... | |
I have never... | |
Maybe, maybe recently. | |
Maybe, maybe I looked at my wife's driver's license. | |
Maybe. | |
I mean, just going on a trip or something. | |
I don't look... | |
I don't... | |
You should see our driver's license photos. | |
We both went one morning. | |
Oh, my God. | |
Oh, my God. | |
I didn't even recognize her. | |
Make the Dream Great Again says, if they ask you, would you be a special prosecutor? | |
It depends. | |
Not really. | |
I mean, I've got to win this thing. | |
I've got to win this thing. | |
But if there was a level of corroboration, you betcha. | |
Oh, yeah. | |
Because what are you going to do? | |
How do you prove something now? | |
Let's say we've got somebody who... | |
Bill Gates. | |
Again, I'm just picking a name. | |
Not that he's... | |
I'm accusing anybody of anything. | |
How would you prove the case now? | |
With a book? | |
No. | |
What am I going to do? | |
I've got to prove it. | |
Now imagine this. | |
Doctor, did you? | |
Yes. | |
I was a treating physician at St. Barnabas Hospital. | |
Here's the record. | |
She came into the emergency room. | |
She had physical trauma. | |
She took this. | |
We filed the police report and went to the DOJ. | |
Something somewhere. | |
Somewhere. | |
Where you could say, okay. | |
You know, that works. | |
Let me tell you something. | |
What I would also do if I prosecuted, I would say, I want you to listen to this. | |
Do you see these people? | |
There's no way I could put this into evidence, but let me just tell you. | |
Mrs. L in particular, and she has, because it's her expertise, and it's debilitating. | |
But she has been in cases where there are people And parents and adults who had terrible things happen to them as children, they never forgot. | |
It doesn't go away. | |
So this may have been 35 years ago, but to them, it was like yesterday. | |
Now, proving it is a different story. | |
Beyond a reasonable doubt, that's up to the jury. | |
But these things are not forgotten. | |
These things don't go away. | |
It's not like, you know, you kind of put it behind you. | |
Oh, no, no, no, no. | |
It'll affect you for the rest of your life. | |
It just does. | |
So that's why you've got to explain to people, this doesn't get better with time. | |
It's not like, well, you know. | |
No, no, this is indelibly seared into your brain. | |
But the question that President Trump has to do, or maybe through Pam Bondi, is to have all these women that say, I went to... | |
If it's true, I went to the DOJ. | |
I remember the FBI. | |
I went. | |
I talked. | |
I answered these questions. | |
I went through all this stuff and nothing happened. | |
Nothing. | |
Nothing. | |
And by the way, remember, we're talking about a guy who was most probably an agent. | |
For intelligence agencies, not one in particular, where he was an agent, a proxy, acting at the behest of foreign or domestic intelligence agencies trying to gain information to be used later on as extortion or leverage or what have you. | |
So not only do we have to go after Epstein, but the people I keep asking you. | |
Who killed him? | |
And who'd he work for? | |
That's what I want to know. | |
Not the book! | |
I don't care about the book. | |
Here's your book. | |
Here's your book. | |
Take it. | |
Take it. | |
Here, I'll make copies of the book. | |
What's the book going to do? | |
What is this? | |
We keep saying this book like it means it. | |
It doesn't mean anything. | |
I don't know what the book means. | |
I don't care about that. | |
Oh, give me evidentiary. | |
Oh, I'll kill that. | |
Through authentication. | |
I'll never get past. | |
Can you authenticate it? | |
Is this a true and accurate depiction of whatever? | |
I don't know. | |
What is it? | |
I don't know what this is. | |
Well, it says it's a... | |
No, forget the book. | |
I don't want to hear about the book anymore. | |
Book. | |
Black book. | |
Flight logs. | |
Who cares? | |
It's not it. | |
I wish Bill Clinton would say, yeah, here's a picture of us. | |
Here we are on Epstein line. | |
Look, here I am with Ethel Kennedy. | |
Here's Mr. Rogers. | |
Here's... | |
Captain Kangaroo. | |
Here's Mr. It was wonderful. | |
Mother Teresa. | |
We're all sitting around. | |
Oh, yeah. | |
I got more pictures. | |
Would you like more pictures? | |
Here's Stephen Hawking and this and that. | |
We're all there. | |
Everybody's there. | |
Look at all the kids. | |
Look at all the wives. | |
Look at all the families. | |
You want people to testify? | |
I'm so-and-so. | |
We had a wonderful time. | |
Did you see any? | |
No. | |
How about people who work there? | |
How about people who say, did you see anything? | |
I never saw anything once. | |
And I'm the groundskeeper. | |
I'm there. | |
I lived in this place all the time. | |
I never saw anything. | |
Never! | |
Let me give some doubt. | |
Let me just make the jury say, I don't like this case, and I just, I just, I hate this. | |
I want this to go away. | |
Doubt, doubt, doubt, doubt, doubt. | |
I would have known something. | |
I would have known. | |
I was ahead of security. | |
And I don't want to be in the position, see, the reason is I don't like these cases, and the reason why is I got to feel good about it. | |
I wouldn't feel good. | |
Taking some girl, saying, well, why didn't you call the police? | |
That's not my thing. | |
I'm not interested in that. | |
A lot of people don't. | |
There are more people right now watching me as we speak. | |
Women in particular, who during the course of their life, they had something weird happen to them. | |
They didn't call the police. | |
I mean, it may have been bad. | |
Maybe not. | |
I don't know. | |
There are people who've seen UFOs who don't call the police. | |
You don't call the police. | |
You don't want to do that. | |
What was the show we saw with a woman? | |
Remember she told the story a million times and then they were doing the test and the it was so brutal. | |
What was that we saw? | |
Remember recently the girls who was asked the questions over and over and over and then they would do the rape test and it was something it was probably one of the worst depictions because it was men asking her because the evidence has to be seized Then. | |
You want this then. | |
This is before showering. | |
And what's the first thing people want to do? | |
They want to forget this. | |
They don't want to keep evidence. | |
Unlike Monica Lewinsky, who saves a dress, which was the weirdest. | |
I mean, if that's not pathological, I don't know what is. | |
I don't want to deal with this. | |
I don't want to ask someone, why didn't you do this? | |
I don't know why. | |
It's me. | |
Because I was a kid and I was afraid and I'm up against the scariest people in the world. | |
And I'm on an island or I'm in this place. | |
I could have disappeared. | |
Who would have known it? | |
A lot of things can go happening. | |
Look at Obama. | |
Their chef was killed. | |
What, three feet of water? | |
Come on! | |
That ain't my stuff. | |
I'm not into that. | |
You know what? | |
I'm not going to sit here. | |
But what I'm saying is things are pretty tough. | |
Let's say I go to your house. | |
Tonight. | |
And I said, let me tell you something, you son of a bitch, and I pulled a gun out on you. | |
And you go, oh my God! | |
And I put the gun away, or I get rid of it. | |
You call the police. | |
What are you going to do? | |
You pull the gun on me. | |
It's an aggravated assault. | |
In some particular cases, with a firearm, it's a three-year minimum mandatory. | |
Ooh! | |
Prove it. | |
Any cameras? | |
No. | |
I didn't pull a gun on anybody. | |
Yes, he did. | |
I did not. | |
Prove it. | |
It happened. | |
Help me recap, who would you prosecute? | |
Oh, people who hurt kids. | |
People who would hurt, where I can prove it. | |
See, there's no such thing as a little kid who has to explain anything. | |
Anything. | |
This one is a different story. | |
Kids aren't going to settle. | |
A lot of these girls say, let me tell you something to them. | |
Listen to what I'm telling you. | |
And this is something you don't want to hear. | |
There's a lot of women, and this is the saddest part of them. | |
One of the saddest parts. | |
When you are treated as chattel your entire life, when you are commodified and merchandised and you are basically treated like chattel. | |
You, and this is important, you are distorted. | |
And the only way sometimes that some girls think that the only wealth they have or value is that of an object. | |
And consequently, they will be objectified. | |
And they will allow, they will lose their soul in this. | |
It's very, very simple. | |
They will lose their soul. | |
And the only way they can deal with men or people is basically to sell themselves. | |
It ruins them. | |
And when you meet them, some, some are not the nicest of people because their innocence, their childhood, their youth, it's all been destroyed. | |
And they want to get back at people. | |
They want to get back. | |
Oh, you did that to me? | |
Remember Eileen Wuornos? | |
Eileen Wuornos was probably one of the most interesting cases. | |
She herself, she was one of the few Quote serial killers, but I don't think she was a serial killer. | |
I mean, yeah, she was, but she was so abused, and she fought back. | |
Big time. | |
Big time. | |
Do you blame her? | |
Well, there's no excuse for this, but I understand what happened. | |
I understand. | |
I really do. | |
It's so... | |
Think of what that does to you. | |
Think of what that does. | |
People have been in captivity. | |
People who have lost their souls. | |
It's a very tough thing. | |
I want to mention our good friend, Virginia Jouffre. | |
Don't be surprised if there's fentanyl. | |
Let me write a story. | |
In my story, I'm not saying this is true, but in my story, it's about a man who realizes very soon The axe is going to fall from a woman who is acting a little strange and he has the kids and he's trying to build up this case about whether she's a lunatic or not. | |
I'm just saying, not her, in my book. | |
And she comes into a settlement, kind of like Virginia's Euphrates. | |
And this guy realizes, wait a minute, he sees what's happening. | |
There is a rehabilitation of her. | |
She's going to go back out onto the... | |
Forefront, or the hustings, so to speak, the speech circuit. | |
She's going to be, you know, maybe she'll be lauded, loved, and I'm going to look like a schmuck. | |
And once that divorce is final, once that settlement, I'm not going to get anything, because I don't know if there was a prenup, I don't know what, again, assuming in my situation, the country happens to be... | |
Australia. | |
Just for no particular reason. | |
I don't know what distribution laws are. | |
I have no idea. | |
Do you know how easy it would be to have somebody go bye-bye? | |
Another fentanyl case? | |
And what? | |
She was in a lot of pain. | |
She went into a lot of physical pain. | |
In my book, mind you. | |
Be very easy. | |
Slip pumping in. | |
All of a sudden, boop! | |
There she goes. | |
Oh! | |
Another fentanyl death. | |
One of the many were almost, well, it was bound to happen. | |
Plus, she was kind of crazy. | |
She was a little loopy, a little crazy. | |
And then they started demonizing her. | |
And that money, in my book now, never, never was into the distribution chain that would happen at divorce. | |
Or before divorce. | |
Because that money is technically kind of there, so to speak. | |
Who knows? | |
But nobody's saying a word. | |
And the reaction is for, they could be screaming left and right there, but the reactions are incredible. | |
And I feel so sorry for her. | |
Because nobody's talking for her. | |
Nobody cares about her. | |
Nobody's thinking about her. | |
Nobody, she's just nothing. | |
One of those, another one, even in death, victimized. | |
There's somebody who's about to refab or refurbish or Redo their home. | |
Is that somebody who normally is assigned? | |
And by the way, her, that social media post was years ago. | |
But still. | |
Still. | |
There was more evidence, more concern over the condition of Gene Hackman's house and his dog and his wife with the hantavirus. | |
And rodent droppings, and the caretaker, and inside the house, and the toxicology reports, and the shocking, it was 95, he had atherosclerosis, a regular, come on, he's an old man, he lived pretty good. | |
Anyway, it's just, there was nothing, absolutely just wall-to-wall interest in what happened. | |
But as we said before, as I said on ABC, Marilyn Monroe and others, | |
every form of every form of of suicide is almost presumed, well, they must have been crazy. | |
Must have been crazy. | |
It's the easiest thing. | |
If you can get past that one, somebody who's a little loopy, somebody who's kind of crazy, somebody, you know what I mean? | |
A lot of stuff can happen. | |
And after all, Marilyn Monroe, oh, come on. | |
You know what I'm saying? | |
This is the stuff which is so interesting. | |
But because we're not there, because we're not there, this is the point that I want to say. | |
We don't know all the stuff that's going on. | |
You know, I told you before, and there's a story which Mrs. Ellen and I know about. | |
Dorothy Kilgallen was one of the best cases that just, it didn't rise to that level of interest. | |
But that is a great case. | |
A woman who was about to lower the boom on the Kennedy. | |
So, in any event, dear, dear, dear, dear friend. | |
Look at this, we've got a friend. | |
Look at this. | |
From the UK, bless your heart. | |
Isn't that great? | |
Look at the San Simeons here. | |
You know what I'm going to do? | |
Very quickly, before we leave, because I've got to wrap this up, let's do a quick roll call. | |
Where's everybody from? | |
But just give me the name of a city and a state. | |
Not your address. | |
But give me a city and a state, or if you're elsewhere, don't say Ohio. | |
Tell me Barnsworth, Ohio. | |
Pendleton, Prairie, Utah. | |
A name of a place. | |
I love that. | |
I love the names. | |
Not... | |
And somebody's going to do it. | |
Look at this. | |
Fairbanks, Alaska, Winston-Salem, Brooklyn, Boston, Siobhan. | |
Now, by the way, Siobhan, you must... | |
When you had Siobhan, Siobhan, it's a great Irish name. | |
I knew a lot of Siobhan's. | |
I knew this one who was this tough waitress one time. | |
Virginia's death reminds me of the woman on the subway who was a torch and nobody cares who she was. | |
Yes! | |
Remember the woman who they set her on fire? | |
Yes! | |
How about the person who was on the subway recently and he was, you know, in any event, Ozark, Missouri, South America. | |
Now, I told you, evolving woman, South America is not going to do it. | |
Pembroke, Ontario, Canada. | |
Centerville, Iowa. | |
Look at this. | |
Roscoe, Illinois. | |
Lionel, we love your walkabouts. | |
Yes! | |
Yes! | |
And we did... | |
Last night on Times Square, we're going to do it again. | |
It was so bad. | |
I'm getting a little stick. | |
One of those things I can use, which I swore I never do, but I've got to do more of these. | |
Anyway, thank you for that. | |
I love that walkabout. | |
Portland, Oregon. | |
Montreal. | |
Swanville, Maine. | |
Yes! | |
Now that's the name I like. | |
Siobhan, yes. | |
Thank you for the correct pronunciation. | |
I appreciate it. | |
Love your show. | |
Your fave Southie. | |
Oh! | |
Whoa! | |
You're a Southie. | |
I like that. | |
Those are great. | |
You know, that's what's-his-name's country. | |
That's Whitey Bulger country. | |
We got Southies, and Boston is such a great place. | |
And by the way, the prototypical Bostonian accent, Boston-Southy accent, is almost Australian. | |
By the way, you say car, and pack, and shack, and I'm not trying to mock them, in any event. | |
Another good one is Roshin. | |
It's another great name. | |
There's so many great Irish names. | |
Alright, my friends, thank you so much to all of it, to Fishman, to Cobb. | |
Oh, Cobb says wandering. | |
Oh, wandering, yes. | |
Wandering. | |
When some will ask Pam Bonney about specifics regarding the evidence recovery from the Epstein properties, it's insane. | |
No one asks him on it. | |
Why? | |
Stupid. | |
I've always asked about what was the disposition of his properties. | |
Johnny Mazza Spaz, make the dream great again. | |
Thank you. | |
Dick from Chi-Town. | |
Pilgrim Media, we love you, my man. | |
My man. | |
Fishman, thank you. | |
Freddie Hubbard. | |
Freddie Hubbard. | |
Freddie Haddad. | |
Freddie Hubbard's a great trumpet player. | |
All right, my friends. | |
Have a great and glorious night. | |
We'll see you manana, as usual. | |
Until then, remember these words. | |
The monkey's dead. | |
The show's over. | |
Sue you. | |
Oh, oh! | |
By the way, Mrs. L's got a great video. | |
Go see her video on this meta-AI case. | |
It'll blow your mind. | |
Go to Lens Warriors. | |
But don't forget, the monkey's dead. | |
The show's over. | |
Sue you. |