Amber Heard & Johnny Depp Lawsuit w/ Former Fed & @LegalMindset!
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And we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed 1811.
Your boy Myron Gaines here with Andrew from Legal Mindset, guys.
Sorry for the delay.
But we got a great show for you guys.
Let's get into it, baby.
Move over to Disney.
Okay, guys.
I used to be a special agent on my investigation.
This is the arrest paper.
Okay.
So here is the booking.
Um cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.
Those are like two crimes that I'm very good agent, very strong agent.
I did a lot of big cases.
I've done title three intercepts, which is basically listening to phones.
I've written hundreds of affidavits to arrest people.
I've done uh I've been a grand jury testified a million times.
I've done big cases.
Uh I've done and we are back.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to the fresh event.
Just kidding.
Welcome to Fed 1811.
Uh here with your boy Andrew Esquire, man from Legal Mindset.
Guys, stop for the delay, guys.
Um, I had some so I made some upgrades on our computer and uh it was was not reading them too well, and I had some sound issues and audio issues and everything else like that.
So I was able to fix it.
We got things going right now, but um, yeah, we just want to make sure that nothing messes up.
Because as you guys know, when you go live, there's not really much you can do if things start to mess up.
So I figured, hey, I'd rather push it back and be able to get y'all a decent show, right?
We're gonna go for about 60 minutes here or so um make sure nothing messes up and then uh you know, give you guys a fire.
But um, so anyway, real quick, I'm here with Andrew, man.
You guys might not know who Andrew is.
So Andrew, you guys should know me.
I'm the only guy, the only person who Myron does in studio Fed at 1911 with, which is fucking which is fucking great.
I love coming in here talking with Myron.
Obviously, I'm Andrew, legal mindset.
I'm an attorney, a Florida attorney who normally is living hanging out in Seoul, South Korea.
Um, I'm here from Miami, Florida.
I'm from the 305.
I've known Myron for a long time.
We've done night game together, but I also know his life as a federal uh law enforcement officer.
Uh, I'm aware of a lot of the activities he was getting into.
So I know he's a great guy to talk to when it comes to criminal charges.
So when we're gonna be talking about locking people up, especially lock it up, crazy 304s like Amber Heard.
Yes, uh, he is the person I talked to about that.
Yes.
Um, so um, and I'm happy to have you here, man.
It's always a great discussion with you.
This is gonna be a high IQ conversation.
Um, so Andrew, uh, can you give the people a little bit of your background as far as like your legal experience, what kind of law you practice so they know?
Yeah, so um I've practiced uh uh in a lot of different areas, but mainly uh corporate finance real estate.
So I represented large corporations.
I represented one point Universal Studios, my firm representative Universal Studios in Orlando.
Uh I've done a lot of development work up there with uh different housing, commercial projects, hotels in Central Florida.
I've also represented large corporations, some of which will go unnamed.
I still practice law, but I do it all remotely because I use COVID as an opportunity, not as an excuse to bitch and wine, which is something I hope all of you got to do.
Um, but essentially I've had a lot of background in the corporate world, the general world, general counsel world, but I've also had practice in the uh criminal uh sphere during my time in law school.
My first my one L summer, my first law law school summer.
I spent that testing out the criminal side, not for me.
The second time I tried a little bit of civil, not for me.
Ended up doing uh more in-house finance, but I fucking love it.
My channel is legal mindset.
I cover uh trials or anything that's legal news in the United States.
And when I want to know about something very specifically, I bring on specialists.
I bring on people who know what they're talking about specifically, because as a generalist, as a guy who was in-house who's the quarterback, I know sometimes I have to rely on people who know specifically about what they're talking about.
And I know that Myron specifically knows about crimes.
This guy, of all the people I know, can cite the federal code.
Uh more more than anybody.
I mean I have no idea.
Literally, we're sitting here talking about perjury, and the guy just rattles it off.
He's sitting over here, he's not looking at anything.
He just rattles it off.
Myron, what's the US C site for perjury?
It's 18 USC 1001.
False statement.
Motherfucker, I don't even know that shit.
I'm a lawyer.
Like, I should I should go after retake the bar.
Like, what's going on here?
Yeah, it's it's um it's great because the thing I like about federal laws that it's it's it's universal.
It's it's you know, you gotta it's 1818 code USC is basically the criminal code, and I'm able to cite a bunch of different 18 USC codes that I charge when I was an agent myself because you have to memorize it because you're like, all right, you before you even call the prosecutor, the AUSA, federal prosecutor, right?
You have to know, hey, this is what I think we can get them on.
This is the the elements, this is what I think we got him on this.
And sometimes you say some AUSAs are pussy, so you gotta like be able to be articulate like yo, this is why we should prosecute this because I have this, I have this, and I have that, and he's he's not gonna fight.
And I got a snitch, blah blah blah, whatever.
So knowing the laws definitely helps you as an agent as well.
So because you know, not all AUSAs are aggressive, some of them they're they're risk-averse AUSAs, right?
They don't want to lose, they want to win, they want to win.
They have like a 90% win rate for a reason.
So um, you know, with the Fed, there's a reason why when the feds come, it's it's a wrap for you because the AUSAs, if they're indicting, they they're ready to go to trial.
Um, so with this one, so you guys know Amber Heard, right?
Yes, Amber Heard, guys.
If you guys don't know about this, where the fuck have you been?
Have you been living under a rock, right?
But we gotta give a little bit of background, right?
So let's give a little bit of background.
We're gonna go down memory lane real quick.
Okay.
All right.
Yeah, so uh give the people a little bit of a background, I guess, on who Amber Earrate is, Johnny Depp, and how this thing even started.
So, I mean, there was well, there was once this movie called Pirates of the Caribbean, and it sold a fucking shit ton of seriously, though, guys.
One of the highest grossing uh film franchises ever, ever, ever.
Market the kids, you gonna make money.
Right.
So you've got Johnny Depp.
He's in this crazy good series, is making tons of bank, he's doing tons of other movies.
Um, I believe he started at that point the rum diaries, which was when he met uh a little lady uh named Amber Heard.
And Amber Heard, now she looks a little different than she looks right now.
She had that good uh cocaine body going, you know, that that you know, very, very unnaturally slim look.
I think of uh Carrie Fisher from Empire Strikes Back and that uh metal bikini.
I mean, she's got that you know, super slim, but still has the big boobs subtle sort of look going for her.
So he falls for that crazy pussy, gets snatched up by it.
Um they end up having a very very crazy rocky relationship.
Um, there's one point at which she tries to get him to sign a prenup, she says no, no, no, no, no.
Tries to get a sign of post-nup.
There's a huge fight over that.
Um, she tries to get into his will.
Uh, luckily, he did not do that.
Yep.
Thank God.
Luckily for his fucking life.
Yep.
But uh, but he ends up um, he ends up eventually divorcing her after several incidences of domestic abuse.
Now, when they end up um before they end up getting divorced, though, Amber Heard on around the same time his mother dies, and on the premiere of Alice through the looking glass, files for a temporary restraining order, right?
So she files for this.
That's the official document, guys.
Because we're gonna get into crimes here today.
It's about crimes.
So she files an official document saying with the court, Johnny Depp abused me, and she shows up with some weak ass picture looking like she put some blush on her, you know, her cheek or something like that, saying, Oh, I'm bruised.
She showed up with a black guy, guys.
Pretty much shut up with what she calls a black guy, yeah.
And uh, and which which came to be found out later on in the trial.
And shout out to you, C10 Bucks.
Hey, Martin should have Ed Calderon on to discuss Mexico drug cartels used to work for the feds on the Mexican side, as I understand it would definitely make a good show for Fed 1811.
Thank you so much.
Um, and then you could just click one of any of the other ones.
Uh click one of those things, Holly, and then and then say take it off.
And no, I'm not gonna put her on camera.
I know that's what you guys want, but uh, she's uh thirsty, yeah.
Uh thirsty's helping out Chris ain't in the back, so guys get cut her some cut cut her some slack.
Uh she's uh she's uh she's um helping us out here on the show.
But going back to what I was saying with um with Amber Heard, yes, and we found out during the course of the trial that she actually went ahead and put fake makeup on injury makers, yes, yeah, to make it look like she got beat up.
Yes, and she went to the judge.
Yes, and by the way, if you guys want a good rundown, I did two fet uh fresh and fit episodes, so you can watch either one of those.
Um, you'll get a great rundown of the entire case.
So make sure to check that out.
Yeah, I know that most of you guys are subscribed, so that that's one thing, but you know, she was faking her injuries, yeah.
Um, and and she did it was key because when you um show up, guys, and you're injured, and you say, Hey, I need a temporary restraining order right now, right?
They're gonna give it to you immediately.
Right, there's a she's not stupid.
There's a reason why she went there with a uh injury on her face, so you can say it's imminent, I'm in danger.
I need this restraining order now.
And like most things, it was ex parte, which means that the other opposing party is not there.
So essentially, you know, she walked in herself.
Johnny not being there, right?
No counsel, no ability to say shit, you know, and said, Hey, I'm you know, I'm in danger.
You know, this person is a danger to me.
They've hit me, give me a TRO.
She got the TRO.
So this trended and it nuked his career.
So that career we're talking about pirates was just sailing along, and all of a sudden that shit sunk like the flying Dutchman.
Yep, right.
That thing was in 2016.
Exactly.
Not only that, she called TMZ, and this all came out of trial.
She called TMZ, let them know whether it was her or someone on her team, hey, I'm gonna be at this courthouse at this time.
I'm gonna be on this side.
I'm gonna stand in this area so you guys can get pictures, and that's how TMZ was able to show up on scene, get pictures, and it kind of illustrate this uh narrative that Johnny Depp beat the crap out of her when come to find out she had used makeup makeup cream essentially, a bruise kit to make herself look like she had been attacked so that she can go ahead and go into court and because guys here's the thing.
Normally when you want to do a restraining order, you need to be able to prove your case.
Exactly.
Okay, but the fact that she was able to go in there with an injury, she was like, Oh, I need it right now.
And guys, I don't think you understand that in the how how injurious it can be to you if you have a restraining order put against you.
You can't buy a gun if you're a police officer or a public servant that's immediately gonna be used against you.
You can lose your job for having a restraining order against you if you're a public servant, guys.
So this is very serious stuff if someone files restraining order.
And then the scary part is it's ex parts.
As Andrew explained to you guys before, Johnny can't even defend himself.
She went to the judge herself, said something, and he can't even defend himself.
Bam, restraining order filed.
She has a black eye, and she faked it.
And uh, that's a big deal.
And King Life here, two bucks.
Amber got the RO on Dev's daughter's uh B Day.
Yeah, yeah, that that's that's fucked up.
So I mean it's it's a whole situation where she was saying and she was trying to pretend that hey, I'm just doing this for Johnny.
I'm trying to help Johnny.
Yeah.
Stop the cap.
Yeah, 100%.
I was waiting for the sound effect.
I knew he had it.
I got you.
I like look over.
I'm like, he's got a sound effect with us.
But it's his daughter's birthday.
It's you know, his mom just died.
Alistair Looking Glass came out, so it's hijacking off all of the news cycle, getting it out there.
The and the important thing was it caused him to lose several movie contracts, including uh the next Pirates sequel.
Shout out to Dorca.
You mentioned something really good in the chat.
We forgot to mention this, Andrew.
We should have put this on our notes.
She could be held liable for blackmailing extortion.
That's true.
You can add that to the list.
We can add that to the list as well.
Yeah, let's talk about that.
Let's talk about that.
Do you want to hit that one now or after?
Uh, let's hit it.
Let's hit it.
Let's hit it once I finish this recap.
So go ahead.
Real quick.
So the important thing is missed the sequel, right?
So he's out of the sequel.
That gave him eligibility because there's now damages to file for defamation.
Now, he filed for defamation against a newspaper, a British periodical, The Sun, um, a couple years ago.
Now he fought that in the British courts.
He ultimately ended up losing.
We're not going to go into that.
I'm not a British uh solicitor because their system has two types of lawyers, barristers and solicitors.
I'm not a solicitor.
Solicitors are the courtroom lawyers over there in the UK.
What's a barrister?
A barrister is like a non-courtroom lawyer, essentially.
That's a gross oversimplification, but essentially they have like courtroom lawyers and non-courtroom lawyers.
Well, so what would the non-courtroom lawyer do?
Like a transactional attorney, more like me.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
So I would be litigated.
Yeah, no, don't litigate.
They don't litigate at all.
Versus somebody who's in the courtroom the entire time.
That's the solicitor.
Okay.
So uh a prosecutor would be a uh courtroom lawyer in this case because they're litigating all the time.
Yes.
Versus someone that's in corporate law that's doing more of the transaction paperwork, you know, or they're doing something else with the negotiating.
That would be more embarrassing.
But um, once again, I'm not a UK lawyer.
Point of the matter is so their system is different.
They don't use juries in that case.
It was a judge, Judge Nichols.
Oh now, this judge, a lot of people, even UK people have sent me uh information that this judge should have recused himself.
He was a little too close to the sun.
He had too many connections to the sun and too many connections to the devson.
No, the the periodical in the UK is called The Sun.
Oh, oh, the the sun.
Okay, yes, yes, yes, yes.
He had too many connections to that newspaper.
You know what?
I know what that newspaper is because we went viral on there for saying the thing about single moms.
Yeah, like I know it.
We went viral on the sun, actually, and I got a bunch of hate from the the angry British women.
So there was too much.
There was there was a lot of corruption, there's a lot of crossover, and that judge actually ended up retiring after that case.
AK probably a forced uh resignation or some shit.
Yes, yes.
It's like he retired, so they didn't make him retire.
Yeah, so very sketchy ass case, very sketchy ass case.
As part of that case, and we'll get to this later, but she said Amber Heard testified that she donated the money, donated the money she got from the divorce settlement.
That she had no detection test determined that was a lie.
We're going to get to that one.
We're going to get that one.
And then all of a sudden this year in Virginia, in Fairfax County, Virginia, we have the defamation case.
Now, we're not doing a defamation recap, but all I'll say is it was a crazy case.
It was an insane case.
If you need to watch footage of it, you can check it out on Andrew's channel.
I did probably some of the best breakdowns on that fucking case.
And the only and the only red pill breakdown, just to say right now, that's why you watch his version.
That's not pulling the cap.
But yes, I've got the footage on that.
We've done breakdowns on this channel.
If you want to get in that point of matter is Amber Heard lost.
She got destroyed.
Her credibility was completely shot.
I'll be in a year.
Five bucks.
Isn't there a law for false allegations?
Yes, of course there is.
We'll cover that.
Don't worry.
We're going to get to that, guys.
Don't worry.
So she lost.
She didn't win one of her counterclaims involving statements of the lawyer.
So essentially, Johnny had won 10 million.
There's a counterclaim for two.
You put that together.
Amber Heard owes Johnny Depp.
$8 million.
actually it's 8.35 because there's some punitive damages uh included so she wants some money too right well she technically so he won ten million dollars plus a five million dollars in punitive damages the five million dollars got reduced because there's a punitive damage cap after Exxon Valdez um all the states went around with tort reform yes um you think about the hot coffee that's another incident where there was tort reform yeah so they capped that at 350 thousand dollars okay so the five million went to 350 that's the state law yep 10 million virginia so
won 10 million she counter claimed for two but they deduct that so it's a net you know okay so net it's eight in johnny's favor yeah so yeah she won money yeah she basically got money taken off but it's an offset yeah it's an offset so she so she was able to prove defamation on her side to a degree as well exactly but i mean not not actually by it not by johnny really by his his um his attorney but the finding the jury had to find out he was acting as his agent in that statement it's very sketchy frankly almost all of us
lawyers we feel like if that went to appeal if she actually appeals that counterclaim will be thrown out because this should have been attorney it really was attorney client privilege it should have never gone to the jury it was really an issue where it it was impossible to prove that johnny depp directed the guy to make those statements it was really weird um because almost everything that the the former attorney adam wellman said was attorney client privilege anything is between attorney and client of course you can't bring that up of course and there was an objection to
attorney client privilege and when you do that in a case when you object to attorney client privilege the jury is not even allowed to consider what was said like as fact or consider the question or consider or not whether or not the guy um did or did not answer it whether that he's trying to be hide something or be evasive or you know attorney client privilege guys in the United States is protected to a significant degree I mean like let's say I okay let's let's go in a scenario real quick so that so the audience can understand.
I run a bank and I killed three people okay and I get arrested by the fucking FBI a couple days later right open up and then they over and then I retain Andrew as my attorney right and then I go ahead and I tell Andrew in the courtroom all right Andrew I murk those motherfuckers motherfucking I told him to give me the goddamn money and they didn't want to do it.
And then I just, you know what I'm saying?
But that, me and that's attorney-client privilege conversation.
Sort of, yeah.
Because there is, if you tell them that you're lying, you do have certain duties to like, if you say, like straight up, if you said I killed them.
Yeah.
Like there is a duty of like honesty at some point.
But like if you give me some story where it's like pretty clear you did.
Yeah, I'd be like, I was defending myself.
Right, right, right, right.
I was defending myself.
It was self-defense.
It was self-defense, Andrew, whatever.
I can defend you on that.
I can work with that.
I can work with self-defense.
The point is, is that the government, right, can't really use those statements against me because that's attorney-client privilege.
And as a matter of fact, like if you're wiretapping someone's phone, and I remember this because I used to listen to bad guys'phones.
If he's on the phone with his attorney, you have to hang up.
You can't listen anymore because attorney-client privilege.
It's privileged information.
You can't fuck with that whatsoever between a client and his attorney, unless the attorneys involve the criminal activity themselves.
But to be honest, that's rare and few between.
Yeah, it's very, it's few and far between.
So in a civil case, it's protected as well.
Right.
And if you tell me your reasoning, right, and this is the whole point, if Myron was to say, hey, I did this for X, Y, Z reason, you know, to feel...
feed my family or to you know because I wanted so to buy some coke or something like that that's attorney client privilege.
So Johnny's reason and what he was talking to his attorney about that's none of the court's business they have no ability to go back and look at that they shouldn't have an ability to look at that and it's highly protected we don't want people to pierce that attorney client relationship.
So it was very weird.
It was the oddest set of circumstances.
Uh, frankly, as a lawyer, I was very concerned that like that charge went through.
I know it could get thrown out, and look at the end of the day, justice for Johnny.
Johnny got the money, right?
But it was pretty concerning.
That being said, we now have to, because we have a decision.
And Amber Heard was found liable on all three counts of defamation.
Yes.
So both um so essentially the jury said they believe, they believe that Johnny Depp was defamed for any type of abuse.
Because in Virginia, even if they found that Johnny Depp had verbally abused Amber, that would have been enough to say there was some abuse.
And there were three chart three counts of defamation.
Two of them were for just more general abuse, more generalized domestic abuse.
One was for sexual abuse.
So they said that Amber lied about the sexual abuse, and she lied about any other forms of domestic abuse, which is huge.
That is huge, which is massive.
So we now have facts where we're saying, hey, Amber lied about domestic abuse.
Amber lied about sexual abuse.
Shouldn't this be criminal?
We had Juicy Smallette.
Remember Juicy?
Yeah.
Juicy, if you recall, said that he was in sub, he was in a going to subway in Chicago in the hood.
And in the middle of the hood in Chicago.
Apparently, a bunch of niggas in white hoods showed up.
Hey, come here, black boy.
No, it was it was they yelled, this is MAGA country in the middle of Chicago at 2 a.m.
Like, could you imagine?
MAGA country.
Come here.
Black boy!
Woo!
And then some fucking start being the shit out of him.
And they and they were like that.
And apparently they're like, one of them had a news.
They'll say they had a noose or something.
It was ridiculous.
The police investigated this.
They spent thousands of hours, thousands of hours of police time.
Like literally hundreds of thousands of dollars of police time.
And they investigated was like this motherfucker's a lying piece of shit.
Yeah.
My detective test determined that was a lie.
And then EP signature, I pledge a million dollars that you said that's bro.
Oh, we're gonna get to that.
Don't you be pledging up in here?
The Vikings have the most playoff losses.
Five bucks.
Uh black pill for me is some sucker is gonna marry these non-deserving women.
That's facts.
And then uh Kool-Aid Man, 10 bucks isn't a Esquire assigned to the city.
We don't illegal underbeating.
We don't use it as a sign of ability.
Cool Aid man in the chat and then George O'Cal Bible pledge for energy.
All right.
Sorry, go on.
So yeah, so apparently he's getting beat up by my back ass.
So they found out he's a fucking liar.
They uh took him to trial, they found him guilty, right?
Of falsifying police documents, right?
Falsifying police reports, yeah, which is a crime.
Yes, right.
So uh there's obviously local laws, right?
Uh, what would the federal law be for falsifying a uh law enforcement document?
Yeah, so um so lying, so typically false statements is is it's a it's a catch-all charges.
18 USC 1001 guys, which is false statements or um, you know, saying things that you should or lying to federal investigators, which is a very that's what they got Martha Stewart on.
You know, it's a it's a very easy charge to prove do the it's broad, it's very broad.
Um, do the feds charge it often?
Uh fairly often, depending on who the person is, you know what I mean.
If like if someone is on some bush or whatever, it's a it's a way to get someone.
You get a lot of political people on this as well.
Um back when uh back in like 2003, there was a CIA officer.
I think her name was Plummer Plummet or some shit like that.
And she uh and this um this guy who was, I think, one of the on the Dick Cheney's uh team, right?
Uh had disclosed that this woman worked for the CIA and he lied to the FBI about it.
So the FBI came back and went after him for for basically lying to federal agents, which is typically 18 USC and the same as a woman.
I think that's a big difference between state and federal, and this is important because this is not a necessarily a federal case.
I mean, uh there's there's potential.
I mean, I guess some of the issues could be potentially federal, but um the the issue is that local law enforcement doesn't as often enforce it as perjury, but specifically or falsifying documents, they don't come after it as often.
Yeah, I think the Chicago case was rare.
Remember with the Justice Millette case, uh there was a whole lot of fuckery there.
Yeah, there was Obama appointees that were like, We're not gonna, we're not gonna go through with this.
They dropped the charges at one point, they had appointed special prosecutor.
I mean, it was a whole shit show to go through this with national news.
It was a hate crime.
Anytime you involve race, it's going to be more sensitive.
So law enforcement kind of has a duty act to make something happen.
So the fact that he lied and he was able to leverage all these resources to go ahead and investigate a crime that never actually happened is pretty egregious, man.
And, you know, he's doing some jail time for it.
Rightfully so.
Like, what the fuck, man?
So he tried to start a race war.
This is trying to start a gender war.
Right.
You're getting Amber up in here.
And remember, Amber was the gender violence, gender violence representative for the ACLU.
She was.
Yes.
She was out there making statements about, you know, gender violence in the world, violence against women, et cetera, et cetera.
So she was holding herself out there as somebody who would face her.
Yes.
Who would face this type of abuse, which is ridiculous.
Yeah.
So she was the one actually being him up.
That's what we found out at the trial.
So it's like the question is afterwards, shouldn't this be illegal?
Everyone asks.
It's like, this should is not right.
Right.
This is I mean, just fundamentally from like a moral standpoint.
Yeah.
We're like there needs to be consequences for people coming in our society and just fucking lying.
And here's the thing, guys.
We've outlined all the crimes that Amber Heard potentially committed and could be charged with.
Okay.
Yeah.
You want to go through those?
Yes.
Let's go through it.
So, okay.
Obviously, the first one, which will come to anybody's mind is perjury.
Right.
Everyone's like, okay, it's got to be perjury, falsifying documents.
And we can define what perjury is.
Right.
So what is perjury, Myron?
Perjury, basically, guys, is lying under oath.
When you go in court, guys, what they're going to do is they're going to tell you, raise your right hand.
Do you swear everything you say is correct and true to the best of your knowledge to help you God?
Yes, I do.
Bam.
Now you're under oath.
And when they ask you questions, you must tell the truth or tell the truth to the best of your knowledge.
But if they're able to figure out that you're willingly either lying and or admitting material facts, you can be charged for that, which is perjury and or also false statements.
Because a lot of times when federal agents ask you questions, they might put you under oath or whatever it may be.
And if you lie as well.
you know you can get hit with one thousand one so yeah it's basically uh lying perjury is specific typically to being under oath especially and that's a state charge so in um in this case specifically with perjury or in falsifying documents when she went to file for that restraining order she had to make a statement yes under oath yes that I was abused by this person and now we've found out that that was a fucking lie.
Stupid so right there and she had police officers coming over to her house right uh previously she had police officers coming over to her house they were like looking around she had called based on a domestic violence call they found no evidence of anything body cam footage didn't show shit um they gave her a business card you know walked out so you've got all this evidence so you've got a potential in California because this was filed in California for them to come after Amber Heard for perjury.
Yeah.
Now and then specific instance it is California so we have to say like politics of California it's a whole other world world not not looking great.
Also she did lie about on under oath she did lie about the stair incident.
And I bring that up because you know if you're watching the trial and you saw Kate Moss come in with such a juxtaposition Kate Moss who you know has it together has her shit together is 10 years older than um Amber Heard but looks way better um is not a fucking complete unlikable bitch.
But oh yeah on the stand is like night and day.
Yeah.
But she said that she was afraid of her sister getting pushed down the stairs by Johnny Depp.
Yes.
There was testimony of several witnesses.
That's not how that lined up.
That's just one example of, hey, this is an example of her lying under oath.
Yeah.
Now people testified that Johnny Depp pushed her down the stairs.
Was going to push her sister down the stairs.
Excuse me.
Was going to push her sister down the stairs.
And she fucked up because what she did, what she said, and she alleged that Kate Moss had also been pushed down the stairs, which Johnny Depp's team was like, oh, yeah, we fucking got this fucking girl.
We got this bitch.
Because now.
can bring Kate Moss in as a character witness to rebut that claim that she made by bringing in another person's name and making an allegation and Kate Moss comes in and is able to actually clear Johnny.
So the very person she thought that was gonna make her case stronger that Johnny Depp is a violent abuser etc actually came in and cleared his name and said no he's never done that stuff and uh he never pushed me down which made her look really bad.
Super bad yes and so she looked bad on that people say okay is that potentially a perjury well I mean that's one one example.
Now, generally, I will say this, guys, as a general rule, especially on the state level.
Yeah.
People lying in court, especially the criminal defendants or civil defendants, they typically aren't gone after for perjury, right?
Just because they go in and they give a statement.
Plus you're low kim.
Yeah.
Well, and you're stupid.
That's stupid.
And that's the next level, next level idiocy.
Yeah.
But typically, if you did that, then almost every single case we'd be hitting somebody with a perjury charge.
Yeah.
Right.
And the courts are already flooded with litigation.
So I would just be like, okay, we're gonna have to charge everybody who loses the court case with perjury.
Yeah.
Right.
It's gonna it's gonna flood the court.
So and they don't do that much time for perjury, guys.
Maybe not for that.
However, however, this case is international.
Oh, yes.
Here we go.
So for perjury, there's two other countries that are seriously thinking about perjury.
Uh number one is the U the United Kingdom.
We'll start with the United Kingdom.
So over in Jolly Old England for that case, remember how we said Amber Heard said she wasn't interested in money, and she donated all of it.
She donated all of that money.
She gave it away to the ACLU in the children's hospital of Los Angeles.
Well, turns out that was a lie.
Stop the cap.
So she actually didn't give any money to those charities.
She gave uh the actually the only people who gave were Elon, who sent for her hard.
Yes, gave 500k, I believe, to them, and Johnny, who gave money as prescribed required by the court.
Yeah, she hasn't given shit of her own money, not a fucking dime.
Yep.
So that was very central to the case.
So the UK is investigating whether or not to go after her for perjury to open that up, go after her for perjury.
They said they're seriously considering that.
So that is that is an actual criminal charge.
As they should now, let me let me bring up one thing because it's international.
Um Myron, have you ever dealt with extradition?
Yes.
Okay, so how common would you say extradition is?
So um and uh before I answer this, Rob Burns, real quick, five bucks.
Check out Tim McBride, the saltwater uh cowboy who used to smuggle tons of Mary Jane through the backwaters of Florida back in the late 70s to late 80s.
Thank you so much, man.
I appreciate that.
I'll check that out.
That trade does five bucks, better see all address to Simpleton Michael B. Jordan SMH.
Yeah, bro.
He fucked up by trying to wipe up Lori Harvey.
As soon as we're as soon as fucking uh future said, tell Steve, I don't want her.
Like, you don't you shouldn't want her either, bro.
So um with extradition guys, so it depends on the country where the fugitive is, right?
So if he's in a country that doesn't necessarily respect and or adhere to extradition, you're not gonna get your guy.
Yeah, so um, so like for example, look at uh someone like Snowden.
He's wanted, he's been indicted.
Uh in the North, I think the North District of Virginia, yeah, um, for a whole bunch of shit, trees and bunch of shit.
And if they ever get him here, he's probably going to get to the Ruskies right now are not going to turn that guy over.
He's been sitting pretty in Moscow.
I think his girlfriend even went over there.
They're never turning him over.
Yeah, they're that's a big fuck you to America.
Like you can chill in in Moscow and like he's not gonna have any problems.
He's never gonna get extradited.
So, like same thing with the oligarchs, right?
Because some of those oligarchs, the Russian oligarchs, they've like charged them with certain crimes.
Yes, they're not getting extradited.
Like, why would you ever do that?
Yeah, so that's not how Venezuela.
So, like if you go to certain countries and you're wanted by the United States, they're not necessarily gonna extradite you.
The UK will extradite them.
Well, hold on though, hold on though.
Here's my here's my point.
That typically, yes, yeah, but here's my other point is that recently there's been uh some bad blood with UK because of Assange.
Remember Julian Assange, WikiLeaks?
They did not uh they did not extradite him from Britain to the United States because they said that our system is fundamentally uh like unsafe, unfair, and that they're afraid for him in our prison system because it's unusually cruel.
Is he a British citizen?
No, he's not British, no, they're not turning him over.
Yeah, he's a crime, yeah.
Yep.
Oh shit.
Yeah, they didn't want to turn him over because we uh we have a system.
Julian Assange, you know about Julian Assange?
Yeah, yeah.
I just gotta look at the citizenship real quick.
Yeah, you can check a citizenship real quick.
But um, that bigs up because if it's a U.S. citizen a lot of the time, but the point of the matter is is that it wasn't it's not just Assange, there were other cases, but the the British precedent has been they really don't like our system, they think our prison system is really uh fucked up.
He's Australian.
Uh oh makes sense now.
Close enough, yeah.
Uh piss off all the uh it's like what the fuck actually, you know, it's funny.
Uh I actually usually am doing morning shows now because I'm over in Korea, so I do uh shows that are in morning uh EST, but they're PM over there.
So I have a huge like Aussie UK and uh shots off you love you guys, though.
No, I love it because they're holding out on that prison island, man.
They're sticking back.
You guys are really going through it over there, bro.
Holy shit.
Way worse.
Holy shit.
But um you can't do it.
Gotta say, like some of these fetid topics, enjoying the details.
Thanks.
Gotcha, bro.
We give you guys a lot of education here.
Thanks.
I'm glad you're covering this.
That's from Mubbroad rather.
Okay, so go ahead.
So we're you were talking about it so soon might not actually they might not actually extra.
Here's the other thing, too.
She could just avoid the UK, you know, and it's probably a uh a minor enough charge.
It's not super important.
Um so but wouldn't it be we'd be giving her over to oh okay, but what we why would we give a US citizen over there when they don't want to give us their fucking scott?
It's like it's like let's have some trades here, right?
If we're gonna give you Amber Heard, like who the fuck are you gonna give us?
Like, give us somebody, right?
Let's have some exchange, let's get this going again.
Stop saying we're like unethical, right?
If you're gonna if you're gonna be able to do that, even though a paper he's probably has way more value than way more value.
I mean, way more value, but you know, look, it and then the whole Julian Assange thing there's a separate that that is a whole separate topic of whether or not we should go that's all that's a fucking road.
I don't even want to go down right now.
Now you're getting into national security and Julian Assange's a whole national security, like and how I feel about uh all those laws, because some of those laws uh need to be need to be repealed.
But that that's the Patriot Act and everything, yeah.
The Patriot Act, you can have a deep talk about it.
That's a separate that's another that's a whole thing we should do.
We should do something.
We should we should do that talk with 9-11.
Yeah, because people have been asking me forever to break down 9 11.
I keep telling them guys, that's gonna be we could do that.
Yeah, because that's I I yeah, I'm I'm a fan of sunsetting a lot of that shit.
But anyways, um point of the matter is it happened.
It should have gone away by now.
Like the justification was Osama, and that motherfucker's in the ocean right now.
So, like, you know what I mean?
Yeah, but anyways, we'll give you guys a 9-11 episode because they've been asking me that for a while, Andrew.
And I think between the two of us, they would really enjoy us doing the the breaking the 9-11, the Patriot Act, uh NSA collecting phone numbers, all that shit.
Yeah, you gotta wear the Osama beard, though.
Uh get one somewhere else.
I'll do my Bush impression.
Yeah, there we go.
Um, all right, so fuck.
All right, so so that that's the issue there in the UK.
There's also perjury in uh Australia.
So uh if you didn't know, key to this trial are two teacup Yorkes named Boo and Pistol.
And Boo and Pistol, a lot of stuff.
We're gonna we're gonna get into the don't worry, we're gonna get into the Amber Turd stuff.
But one of the big issues was those teacup Yorkis were brought into Australia without the proper paperwork permission.
Australia is really, really a stickler on animals because you know they kind of have a fragile ecosystem, uh, you know, where they have all those marsupials and shit, and just like one foreign animal gotta protect the koalas, man.
Yes, gotta protect the koalas and can't go to the syphilis, the syphilis ridden koalas.
Yeah.
Oh yeah, all koalas have syphilis almost, except for there's like one or two sanctuaries that have like no syphilis koals, but almost every koala has syphilis.
Yeah, my fucking koalas.
No, no, it's not about I'm thinking in my head, like, is that how humans got syphilis from Snowflake?
No, they didn't fuck a koala, my remote.
No, that's not what happened.
Okay, I hope not.
That's a crime, by the way.
That's crime.
That should be crime.
Do not fuck a koala.
Guys, don't bank.
Do not fuck the koala.
Don't do that shit.
All right.
All right.
Uh FBL lie uh allegedly leaking James O'Keefe attorney client, a correspondence of the NYT.
How do you get it?
That was that was insane.
I mean, that the what they didn't have done with Project Veritas in terms of like trying to get them is is pretty crazy.
And it's because Tragic Veritas, frankly, has been doing the Lord's work of exposing these people and their bullshit.
They exposed the New York Times, they exposed Pfizer, their Pfizer stuff was I didn't want to talk about it on YouTube.
I feel like I don't want to get the channel you did still.
But um, you know, talking about that Pfizer stuff right now.
I'm saying uh ladies and gentlemen, how are your hearts?
You know, that's all I'm gonna say right now.
Yeah, man.
If you want to jab yourself, monarchist one name iron peak broke up with Shakira, which proves your points on how new puss is better.
It happens, bro.
Um but anyway, uh, so okay, so we're talking about the kid, the dogs, right?
So then when they brought him in, Amber Turd said, Hey, it was an accident, because she's the one who brought him in, by the way.
So she said it was an accident.
I didn't mean to bring them in.
Uh, you know, and she's like, I'm so sorry.
And she signed a statement saying it was a mistake.
She's sorry, they paid about a thousand dollar fine.
Um she she didn't declare it properly to customs.
Yes, but because she's gone out and it's kind of seems like based on her statements in this trial and her other statements that she intentionally brought them in, that this was something she know it she knew was wrong, and she did it anyways.
It's possible To reopen that it's possible to get an Australian perjury charge.
Um, and they're thinking about it in Australia right now, uh, related to the dogs, right?
So you've got UK, you've got dogs.
Um sorry, I'm laughing at Greg MC.
It says, Andrew, how the hell do you know that about koalas?
Um yeah, that is a strange listen.
Uh I was in Australia before the lockdown.
Uh that's probably the last time I'll go there until they fucking change to a non-common government.
But um, but yeah, I was in Australia before the lockdown.
So I went to Lone Pine Koala Umservatory.
Uh in Brisbane, you guys in Brizzy.
You you guys are kind of stuck out there in Australia, bro.
Bro, and you guys got people like uh what's what's that talk show that I was on?
Uh the really woke one.
I don't know.
They chewed you out.
Like, and I came on after that, immediately after that.
Yeah, and you guys were like still yelling at them.
It was hilarious.
Or they were yelling at us because they're triggered.
Well, and then they were trying to call you to get you back afterwards.
Like they're like, Yeah, you're my witness.
Baby, come back.
And I'm like, Are you fucking serious?
These guys are trying to apologize.
Nope.
Yeah, well, they need the clout, bro.
Exactly.
We we got their dumb ass's views.
So we so we got perjury, that's the perjury statements, right?
We got those uh so you so she might get charged in UK for lying.
Yes, and then she also may get charged in the U in Australia for lying.
For for lying uh to customs.
Now let's stick in Australia real quick.
So during this trial, the narrative, which was proven in the in the uh US trial in Virginia, was that Amber Heard took a handle of vodka and threw it at Johnny Depp.
Oh shit.
And when it hit his he impacted his finger, his fingers on the side of the table, sort of like my finger extra's middle finger, right?
Just like this, right?
Yeah, off the side of the table.
And the glass cut off the tip of his finger from the handle.
So he lost the tip of his finger and had to have it restored, had to have that that finger restored.
So um that is a crime.
And in the United States, we would usually say assault with a weapon, yeah, right?
A deadly weapon, because I mean you're using a weapon and in uh uh handle of vodka that's thrown, could be a deadly weapon.
Yeah, but in Australia, and I learned this through talking with a um a Australian lawyer, uh Jahan.
Um, it there's a law in Australia called glassing.
That was easy.
And I had not heard about this, but glassing is when you engage in any sort of attack with a glass object, mainly a bottle.
And we're talking about so you know, you break the butt, you break the beer bottle, you know, you've got the the beer bottle stabby stab.
Apparently, there must have been like some kind of like bottle revolution in Australia where they decided to make this thing a fucking law.
Yeah, they're breaking the bottle.
Hey, mate, let's fucking do this.
Yeah, and they're just getting the fight for bottles.
Yeah, you got a knife.
This is a knife.
I got you.
Let's do this.
Yeah, so uh, so that shit is a serious crime there.
And here's another thing about Australia.
In America, we have something called statutes of limitation.
That means that there's a certain time limit.
The time, the clock is ticking from when the the crime happened to when you have to file.
That's so you don't get shit like what happened with fucking Bill Cosby, where it's like like a hundred years later, like people are filing these charges.
Or Brett Kavanaugh.
Oh, god damn.
Brett Kavanaugh, like fucking 50 years later, all of a sudden when he when he's applying to be a Supreme Court Justice, that's just comes out of nowhere.
That's when you decide to find the crime.
Yeah.
Are you are you kidding me right now?
Yeah, of course, like so.
That's when you decide to come out.
Zero proof, zero anything.
So, anyway, stat there's no statute of limitations in Australia.
So you can file charges whenever.
So this might be an issue if this was in America because the statute might have run by now.
It's 2022.
A lot of the stuff happened in 2016, 2015, 2014.
So you know what's the lifespan of a kangaroo?
It's gotta be high for them to be.
I am not a kangaroo specialist.
I don't you know about koalas, so I don't know.
That's that's a totally different animal.
Totally different animal.
I know, but I figured it's totally different animal.
They probably have a you know, lifetime uh, you know, statute limitations because it's like, bro, I want to go charge this koala.
That kicked me.
The statute lasts as long as a koala.
Yeah, as long as it's a koala.
He gave me syphilis.
I'm coming back.
Trisha Garren T five bucks.
Uh hi guys, uh, here, new here, British veteran and DV survivor found you through legal mindset.
Team Johnny, great channel.
Hey Trish, welcome to the show.
Welcome, welcome.
Welcome.
Uh CJ Miller, uh, 10 bucks.
Unfortunately, cases like this happens a lot, average guys get financially driven.
Yeah, that's true.
I will say the one thing about the Johnny Depp trial is they don't um they don't have they they do not have most regular guys, regular Joes do not have the funds that Johnny Depp has.
Yeah, so that's why this case was so important to number one expose the craziness here to destroy the narrative, Hashtag believe all women.
Yes.
Which is fucking insane.
Yeah.
Right.
It's it's absolutely nuts.
And people were still trying to hold this up, still trying to hold up this this verdict as misogynistic.
I'm gonna talk about that with my good boy Roland Tomasi tomorrow at 7 p.m. on my channel.
Yes.
Um the misogyny.
The articles this weekend have all been about uh misogy misogyny.
And by the way, thank you for the the super chat.
Oh Amanda Joe's own uh a hundred bucks.
Oh my god, legal mindset and fed it in one place, yes, and guys, every time Andrew's stateside, we're gonna do these clubs for you guys because I know you guys really fucking enjoy these things.
Even though, even though the most hate comments I get on my channel are when I do fucking class with fresh and fit, I still will do it no matter what, because fuck what people say, fuck what people think.
I've been I've been working with uh I I know Myron since before he was you know big way before and you know he's a I I know him personally, so I'm always gonna be coming on the channel.
Like, I'm not gonna be a little bitch about it.
Um, so I'll be here.
And I love doing Fed it because it's different content and it's more legal content.
Yeah, so we have we're not here talking about dating and womanizing, we're talking about womanizing legal.
Although it's kind of funny because that ends up working its way into a lot of these scenarios, it always does.
It always does, it always does, man.
It always does.
But uh, but no, people love the content, man.
Uh, between the two of us, it's two different perspectives.
And honestly, yo, you're not gonna get this shit anywhere else on fucking YouTube.
You're not gonna have a Fed and a lawyer sitting at a table breaking it down for y'all with actual professional experience to have done the fucking job.
You're not right.
This doesn't happen.
Doesn't happen.
So um, we were at uh Australia we got classing.
Right, so classing.
So this is a charge, so essentially an attack with a with a bottle.
He she could be charged with that because of the vodka bottle was glass, and she attacked Johnny with it.
So it's possible to get her for that.
That's a possible criminal charge.
And I've heard people say they're uh very, very, very interested in going after that in Australia.
So we will see whether they do get her for that.
Because that glassing occurred in Australia when she threw it at him, correct?
Yes, yes, okay.
Now so we so quick little recap.
She uh, so what she could be charged with is lying for the Yorkies in Australia, uh lying about the bottle tossing, uh well, because of because she tossed the bottle is excuse me, no, for glassing for throwing the bottle at Johnny and then uh in the UK for lying under oath while she was at the pledge.
Remember, testimony was in the UK that I gave the money, but in the US, she said, Oh, well, I mean pledge and donation the same way, and pledge pledge means oh, I just promise to give you money.
But she literally had to say in in the US court that pledge, yeah, it means a promise, but I don't have to keep the promise.
What?
So I can reneg on that.
What the fuck?
That that's literally what she said in the court.
She's like, I don't I she's like, my understanding is I don't have to ever have to give that.
And she says, Oh, pledge and donate to me.
When Johnny's lawyer closing arguments, right?
When she started pressing it.
No, no, it was yeah, cross-examination.
Yeah, yeah, cross-demonation.
So it it they fucking nailed and Camille Vasquez, this spicy little Latina from LA, uh, fucking roasted, roasted Amber.
She was so salty about it.
What you're gonna show your shotware?
No, uh, do not date, do not, oh sorry, do not long-term date lawyers, female lawyers, uh, smash and and dash.
That's my opinion as a lawyer.
That's my legal advice.
That's uh legal advice, smash and dash, ladies and gentlemen.
Smash and dash.
All right, fantastic, right here from legal mindset.
That being said, no, I know a lot of hot female lawyers.
I'm definitely smash, but I will dash ejaculate and evacuate and evacuate.
Yes, okay, fair enough, my friend.
But uh, but that being said, um, yeah.
And cancelled cancelled fantastic.
Uh, and all female lawyers that wanted to stream with me, done.
Um, no, they will, anyways, because I love it.
They need it.
Um, because no one else is saying it, man.
No one else is saying it.
Um, listen.
So uh this of the facts though, facts though.
Uh lawyers are more likely to date their paralegals and secretaries than they are to date other female uh female lawyers.
That this is uh straight out of tell them you're gonna tell them the painful truth, huh?
Yeah, um, so anyways, point of the matter is here is that um you got me fucking distracted that Camille destroyed her on stand and said pledge.
Because they're ruining every female lawyer's like fucking ambition to marry a fellow lawyer, bro.
He's just destroying it.
Sorry, man.
I'm I'm real it's facts of our feelings, man.
It's fact of our feelings.
People want to hear this.
You want it, you want to get married to a lawyer.
Misogynistic.
You're better, you're better off being a bottle girl getting married to a lawyer than you are being a lawyer and getting in with another lawyer.
Wait, are you implying men date down?
You fucking asshole.
What are you talking about?
Let me explain hypergrammy to you, Myron.
Um who's supposed to be the dating expert here?
All right.
So uh anyways, fucking all right.
So the point of the matter is pledge and donation, not the same shit, right?
So Camille got that.
Are you okay, Myron?
No, I'm good.
This is just fucking comedy.
Masogony.
Yeah, misogyny.
Real talk.
I'm disturbed.
Oh dang you.
All right, good.
So funds of donation are not the same shit.
She got that out.
It was clear the jury literally like gasped at when they when she tried to make that.
They all were like, I mean, because we had people in the courtroom, other fellow lawyers that were talking to us reporting it.
And when they came out and said that and tried to say that um, you know, pledge and donation were the same thing.
Everybody is like, yo, yeah, like this bitch.
Yo, like, are you fucking kidding me right now?
Stupid.
So that's a UK lie.
That's a fuck.
That's a UK lie.
She lied to the judge.
The judge believed that she had already given the money.
Yeah.
And that was part of the material part of the city.
Yeah, the cuck judge, Nichols is his name, Nichols.
Yeah.
Um, so Nichols must have got some nickels from the sun.
He got more than some nickels.
Um, so so that's one over there.
Now we gotta turn back to the thing that everybody loves.
Cause uh, and also I have a merch store, it's in my uh descriptions of my videos.
Uh, if you go back to my channel, look at it.
Um, that I sell a little bit of merch that's uh branded Amber Turd.
So let's talk about the Amber Turd.
Okay.
So Myron, if you were to go uh run into my bedroom and you were to take a shit on bed.
Okay, I would do that.
Yes.
Uh is there a crime you could be charged for for that?
I think there is.
Yes.
Okay, you can come up with one.
I mean, there's two piths.
Destruction of property, destruction of property, vandalism, right?
So, yeah, it's vandalism.
So, taking a shit in someone's bed is for sure vandalism, maybe harassment, too, actually, as well.
Because that turd was proved to be bigger than a teacup Yorkie.
That was a a human size shit.
She alleged it was it was a teacup Yorkie, a dog, a dog, the teacup Yorkie, buddy.
This is a teacup Yorkie's thing is like the thing is like this big.
The pool is like this big, you know.
So it was it was established to be human feces.
It was not possible.
It was not possible to come from a dog.
So she tried to blame it on poor boo and pistol, these poor dogs.
Um, and clearly human, so that could be another charge there.
Yeah, um, you know, it's a misdemeanor, but hey, it's a criminal charge, still a criminal charge.
Yeah, and mind you, she already has a uh her criminal record was sealed, but she did have a drunk driving charge uh back in the day in Texas, yes.
And an assault in Seattle.
Yes, her and her lesbian girlfriend fought each other in 2009.
I think they were married at that point.
Um, but whatever.
It does they basically turn they're in the Seattle Air.
Can you imagine?
Like fucking, you're at the Seattle Airport, and then you just fucking street fire in the motherfucker, and then just like and then they just start fighting.
Oh she originally tried to accuse the officers of misogyny.
Of course.
Um, but it turns out one of the officers was a lesbian.
So it didn't work out very well.
Um, but yes, that was brought up in the trial, too, because she said she was squeaky clean because she said she'd never done anything like that.
And it turns out, yes, she in fact had done something like that.
Um, so she's basically she's prone to violence as well.
She's trying to claim, oh, I've I've never done anything else.
Lesbian, lesbian um relationships are uh per capita per capita.
Remember, so this is this is you know, there aren't as many lesbian relationships as straight relationships.
As much as everyone wants you to believe, especially during Pride Month, get your rainbow stickers online at Fresh and Fit now.
I don't know.
But they want you to believe that there are as many LG actually fuck, they want you to believe there's more LGBTQ relationships than straight relationships, but uh no, that's still a minority statistically, yeah, right?
But if you take that and you make it per capita, lesbian relationships are far more violent, yes, than any other class of relationships.
They are by far like head and shoulders above every other uh relationship, I guess, combination you want to use when it comes to physical violence and beating the shit out of each other.
And actually, the lowest is gay dudes.
Yes, there's a reason why they call me happy.
Men don't want to fuck with other men because we know we can hurt each other, like it's like yeah, men understand that it's it's uh what do they call it?
Mutual destruction.
Yes, right?
When you have nuclear weapons, like you know that if I said my nuclear weapons, they're gonna send their nuclear weapons and we're gonna die.
Men kind of operate and understand that, but women don't know that because uh with women, like they're violent.
It's gonna sound sound fucked up.
Well, no, they're violence is is pussy violence, bro.
It's not real.
Also, they don't feel like they don't feel like there's any consequence for the violence.
Like, they're not gonna get in trouble, they're not gonna go anywhere, like the police aren't gonna stop them.
I mean, some guys might start whacking off to it like because they're getting turned off by it.
But like you know, they're not gonna they're not going to actually uh they're not nothing's gonna happen.
Yeah, it's it's so so like yeah, and we know this from a fact.
This isn't even me talking shit.
Women serve 66% less time for the same exact crimes that is what it is.
So yeah, you know, if a woman commits an act of violence, she's far less likely to do the same amount of jail time.
So men inherently understand that not only are we capable of greater levels of violence and greater injury, that we're gonna do more time.
So with women, it's like when they fight each other, it's like uh whatever, fuck it.
Let's let's fight each other.
And yeah, women by far are bigger perpetrators of violence than mainstream society will tell you.
Right.
So that was another uh crime that uh our girl who committed.
Now, I think someone brought up extortion and blackmail.
Yes.
So remember, uh, Amber Hurt said, Because I love you, baby, because I love you, I'm gonna record everything we're doing.
Uh I'll record whatever you're drunk, right?
And I'm not fucking sure at Myron, I'm still not sure of.
Like I'm not sure how these uh videos, some of these videos got in because there's something called dual party consent, two party consent.
So that means that both parties have to consent to a recording.
Yeah, so like if I come on a podcast, you know, and I have to be like, all right, I consent, you consent.
Right now, there's implied consent.
So, like, obviously a podcast, like you're if you're agreeing to come on, you know it's gonna be filmed, like you're like surreptitiously recording a private conversation.
If I was just to have my phone sitting up here and be recording Myron and myself talking, I usually can't use that as evidence, right?
Um, without his consent.
Yeah, I don't know how they got that in.
I'm not fucking sure how they got that in.
I know they had to record some stuff for their marriage counseling, and and maybe they've mutually agreed to allow it in.
I don't, I don't know.
But the point of the matter is is that there's a lot of recording that Amber did of Johnny.
Now Johnny had some recordings, some audio recordings of Amber as well.
Yeah, but Amber did far more recording and taking pictures of Johnny.
Uh, there was that picture of him with the ice cream that's melted, a picture of her passed out in the Bahamas.
These were all entered into evidence during the trial.
If you watch the trial, you can see those videos.
Yeah, um, in the one marijuana, the marijuana, the bags of marijuana, yeah, which I mean it's marijuana.
I mean, it's the fucking America, like, come on.
Yeah, yeah, it's California too.
So it's even word, like nobody cares.
No one cares.
Like, so uh, but using those those photos and trying to say, hey, you're a man, nobody's gonna believe you.
Which she did say, she said you're a man, no one's gonna believe you.
I've got these photos of the studies, I will ruin you.
Yeah, what's the what's the definition?
What at least for federal law?
What's the definition of like extortion or blackmail?
So essentially what she did was she real quick, Monarch is one 10 bucks.
I was at the gym looking at the mirror, remembering that being fat is unacceptable.
Wishing my shirt said that it was very motivating and refreshing.
I hope to you make a workout shirt or shirt with that to say.
I will uh I will make a shirt with that.
Thank you so much, Monarch is one.
Um, so yeah, I mean, extortion is basically um, you know, telling someone under the threat of violence or some kind of crazy public humiliation that might tarnish them that you need to comply with some sort of command uh demand.
So um, in this situation, guys, going back to the situation where we talked about where she went to the courthouse.
Long story short, before she went to the courthouse, right, and got that um that restraining order, right?
Uh against Johnny with the with the with the with the paint on face to make it look like she got beat up.
Yeah, she had contacted him, told him, Hey, I need you to pay me money.
Yes, give me a couple of pen houses, yes, yes.
Give me a Range Rover, give give me uh uh an allowance.
Basically, she wanted him to uh basically become her sugar daddy for for life.
Not good enough for Milon.
So you had to get uh so she had to get it from Johnny.
So uh so Johnny didn't respond, rightfully so.
Yes, and she tried to extort him, and when she said you oh, you're not gonna uh comply, she went to the judge, filed this thing.
Next thing you know, she's on T cover of TMZ with a black guy saying that Johnny beat her up.
And um and and it came out that she had basically contacted him prior to going to the courthouse and contacting T T M Z that she wanted these things, which is I mean, fuck, bro.
Like if from a federal standpoint, can't she be charged?
Well, here's the thing when it comes to federal lot of times.
Does it affect interstate commerce?
Right, right.
It depends on how she contacted him.
Right.
Did she contact him via mail?
Uh she contact him via phone.
Phone exactly.
Yeah, you got it.
That's uh that's the thing, guys.
Remember, we talk about this all the time.
Motherfucking fraud feds are gonna get you for wire fraud, right?
You want to watch out, they get you a goddamn wire fraud.
You pick up your phone, like you just pick up your phone, you do do anything on your phone.
Uh they got you.
You're using the interstate commerce because you're using a phone.
It we need to update that.
I think it's 18 USC 1343.
Let me see if I'm right here.
I I'm actually a fan legally of like nuking the commerce clause because like that gives the federal government way too much power, but that's a separate that's a separate fucking thing.
Yeah, exactly.
You want to it is 1343.
Of course, the Fed thinks that's great.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like well, the so here's the thing.
So there's a couple charges, and I'll break it down for y'all.
There's a couple charges, guys, that the feds use as like easy catch-all charges.
Right.
Wire fraud is one of them.
False statements is one of them.
That's crazy.
You know, um uh felon of possession, another one.
Right, you know, or nine 18 USC 922G, unlawful acts when someone has a firearm and they're one of the nine prohibited people.
So these are charges that the feds use a lot of the time to come after people.
Um interstate transportation of stolen property.
That's another common one that they use.
Um, uh, what else?
Um like a weapon of mass destruction, right?
Like I think they hit that yeah, there's a lot like the the definition of mass destruction is very broad.
It's very it's not like nuke.
You would think that's like mass are it's it's way broader than that.
Like um, when when they got the Boston Marathon bombers, yeah, people don't know.
Like what they um they they charge them with something called a criminal complaint.
And a lot of times when the feds charge you with a criminal complaint, that means they're gonna indict you, and then when they indict you, they're going to indict you on more charges.
Which is a criminal complaint, guys.
Let's say I'm an agent, right?
I write up a little affidavit, I give it to a judge, and a lot of the times with the criminal complaint, you're just trying to get the guy in jail.
You're trying to get some kind of legal paperwork on him.
So a criminal complaint is the very the fastest way to get someone into the federal judicial system.
So I write a criminal complaint, I bring it to a judge.
I could go there at two o'clock in the morning, whatever it is, swear to it, it's true and correct, sign it, bam, I get an arrest warrant, I go pick the guy up.
And typically you're gonna use the chart, the least charge, the easiest charge that you can prove to go ahead and get him on a criminal complaint.
Once I get him arrested, now I have about depending on what district you are you're you're in, you have about 10 to 14 days to indict.
And that means we got to convene a grand jury.
I go in there, I present my case, blah, blah, blah.
And that's when the AUSA will start to tack on the more complex charges on or they'll hit him with the same charge that I hit him on the criminal complaint, and then they'll come back and do what you what is called the superseding indictment.
Right.
So but um, but like what that's what they're doing.
So they're able to get you're able to get what you know if exactly essentially you could start this claim against Amber Herb with like wire frame or wire fraud or false.
There you go.
False statement.
It's in one to get her in jail and then you and then you start with uh the um you know bribery or so like with Sonar Zoca uh uh Zokar, right?
Sorry, yeah.
Sorinev, yeah, excuse me.
Uh so Zokar Sarnav.
Yeah, um the sort uh so he was in custody, right?
Because he had got fucked up.
The one that the one that girls thought was hot.
Yeah, yes, and they put him on Rolling Stone, yeah.
That fucking guy.
And I was actually in Boston when that happened.
So he was injured.
They called him in Watertown, and I broke this case down, guys.
Feel free to go check it out.
They called him a water town, he got shot up or whatever maybe.
So he wasn't he was in in the hospital.
So they're like, yo, we're not gonna take no chances.
There was a big manheld, whatever.
So they filed a criminal complaint on him with I think it was uh use of mass uh weapon of mass destruction, whatever, and then they ended up you know, do uh getting him arrested, and then they came back with an indictment with all the other stuff causing death, etc.
Which is why he's serving life now.
Um, but that's typically how the feds will do it.
So they can come in on uh on a wire fraud, right?
Because she probably um used the mail system, whatever it is, yes, yes.
Whether you use the mail system, email, all that shit, guys.
Wire fraud is very easy to do.
She had to.
I don't know.
I think she could be next to the murder for hire.
Uh also I I did a murder for hire case one time.
They use a cell phone to set the deal up.
Federal now.
Yeah, federal.
Yeah.
So it's possible to make it federal.
Um, is there a statute of limitations on that?
Um typically five years.
Yeah, we're pushing it right now.
Yes, it typically five years.
Push it on that.
So it might be a little bit difficult on that side.
I wanted to answer this one from Nick.
Unless they can prove it's a conspiracy.
Then they can go ahead.
If it's a conspiracy, they could prove that she had been doing this bullshit for a bit, then she they it sends a couple of things.
If they could show that she's been doing this to Simps for like the last 10 years, like she's fucking trying to extort Elon over his seed right now.
Because that's one of the theories, the crazy theories here is it like is that uh she's trying to uh that the baby batter that uh was gonna go into her surrogate because she had a surrogate and she had a kid.
Yes, you know, that that was uh Elon.
And so you know, there's some Elon extortion going there, like, oh I'm gonna I'm gonna spermjack you, Elon.
Yeah, I mean, if they're able to show like a trend of like her just like uh extorting multiple men or whatever, maybe for financial resources, whatever.
Daddy Elon did not testify.
Why did not daddy why did Daddy Elon not testify?
What did Mollusk he was called uh depth called the mollusking?
That's how they get so on these gang cases.
That's how they get these uh these these mafia guys on crimes that they committed 10, 20 years ago, because they're able to establish that it's racketeering activity and it's been going on for a long period of time.
That's how you beat the statute of limitations.
That's a good uh uh with with conspiracy, especially if there's an organization involved, whatever.
Yeah, so racketeering is another way to fight it.
This is a good question from Nick.
So do you think Amber will file an appeal and try to drag this out?
If so, do you think it will help or harm her?
Okay, here's the thing, Nick.
So filing appeal, and I talked about this the other day, but I'll say it again.
Um, you actually have to put up real money in Virginia.
You actually have to post uh a bond in escrow.
Um, so you've got to put money in escrow essentially to appeal.
So she's got to put part of that, you know, at least part of that eight million dollars up.
So she can't just uh she can't just do this with funny money, she can't just do this with with no money.
And also those lawyers for the appeals, they cost a lot of money.
They've got to get a full transcript of the court hearings, they gotta review it, they've got to bring it up.
And if she does that, by the way, if she does that, Nick, she can uh Johnny can also challenge the counterclaim.
So there's two million dollars that went in her favor and ten million dollars that went in Johnny's favor.
So net is eight.
But once again, Johnny gets to challenge that on appeal.
So imagine if she appeals it and she loses her attempt, but Johnny's charge gets thrown out.
Now her charge is her uh liability just went up to 10 million.
Crazy.
Bam.
So it might not even be worth it.
Yeah, I don't know about who's blue Jasmine.
So she wants to be a little bit more than a lot of people Jasmine Amir Ali.
That's he's from Saudi Arabia.
Um Blue Jasmine was a chick that went viral last year for basically she broke up with her boyfriend.
He said he's she still he still has to pay her bills.
What a fucking sip.
All right, yeah.
Um then um anything else here?
Uh that's all one down.
The chat's okay, yeah.
Super secrets and stuff.
Okay, and then Michael Meestro, thank you so much.
You know, shout out to Holly in the back uh helping out.
May I give you a Don DeMarco?
Doesn't Amber needs to post eight mil bond to appeal.
She needs to post an eight mil bond.
So she's gonna she may not have to put up all of it, but she may have to put up at least a portion of that bond, right?
So just like if you're posting uh bond for you know getting out of jail, yeah.
For that bank robbery, yeah.
You typically have to post like part of that at least in in hard money.
Um, two percent typically.
Yeah, 10%.
So 10% of eight mil is still a fucking lot of money.
It's not like zero.
Yeah, eight hundred, what, eight hundred?
No, eight hundred K. Sorry.
Yeah, yeah.
So, like, that's not fucking a joke.
Like 800,000 is a lot of money.
She has gonna she'll have to go on.
And remember, remember this bitch drinks 20K in wine uh a month.
That's her wine bill.
Yeah, you're shaking your head, yeah.
20k wine bill a month.
What?
And Johnny's the one with the substance abuse problem.
What the fuck?
She drinks 20,000 a month.
Like what does she fucking start?
I mean 20K.
Bro, like what the fuck though?
Like holy shit.
Michael Meet Struck, FNF for artist working channel, pause.
Thank you so much, bro.
Appreciate that.
Um, yeah, that is crazy.
And then what other crime do we have here?
Uh, I know this one.
I mean, that's a lot of crimes.
Yeah, so okay, so a lot of crimes, guys.
Stupid.
Oh, my bad.
Rewind the case.
That was dumb.
Um, okay, so guys, so uh for so first we gave you all the background on what happened, you know, how what the case was.
Basically, it was a defamation civil case, guys.
It's not a criminal case, just so you guys know the Johnny Depp, Amber Heard case is civil, which means it's not criminal.
He's suing her for defamation, which is basically destroying his name, and he was he lost a lot of money.
He lost uh uh, you know, he's suing her for 50 million dollars.
Okay.
Um, he ended up winning the case, but during the case, guys, a lot of facts came out that showed that Amber Heard was lying.
Okay.
Uh yeah, and by the way, so I want to I'm gonna do this one real quick.
So, yeah, Virginia doesn't net it out, but I mean, once again, it's gonna be net into your bank account, right?
So even if you're wiring over two million as you wire over uh 10.35, right?
If that's happening, if that's happening contemporaneously, yeah, right.
I mean, but once again, the question is does she have any money at all?
Uh I I think she's fucking judgment proof.
And here's the thing, they're not gonna make her wire the the that is not gonna go down.
He's not gonna send her two million and she's gonna send zero, right?
That's gotta happen contemporaneously.
So that's the issue.
I think she's I think she's judgment proof, frankly.
Yeah, um uh yeah, does you think she judgment proof?
Uh yeah, and judgment proof is a term we use for people that are broke as shit.
Uh so uh in the legal world, when people don't have fucking money, then we call them judgment proof.
That means like, you know, they're not coming for you and your your, you know, your PlayStation 5, like that's your only, you know, uh, you know, if you owe a million dollars, they're not gonna come repo your you know, PS PS3 uh that you got hanging on there, you know, and that's all you got.
Like we actually have only when you have assets real money and assets, hard assets that they can take from you.
Amber Heard really doesn't have hard assets.
Um, she you know allegedly has a house, but who knows?
I think it's in a trust, not even in her name directly.
Um so who knows that with the case?
Who knows?
Well, who knows about control of that trust?
It might not even be you know her herself, right?
It might be some sort of other entity.
Who knows?
You do, man.
Yeah.
Um, okay.
So we talked about you know the background of the case.
So she basically lost the trial.
She lost the the defamation trial, so she's liable for eight million dollars now.
Yes.
Um, she During the course of the trial was proven that she had lied in a couple of different situations.
The first lie, guys, was she claimed that she pledged or she was going to pay uh money, seven million dollars to be exact to uh a charity donation, and she never did.
Uh and she could she said this under oath in the United Kingdom, aka the UK, right?
Which you know, they also have um laws against lying, aka perjury, perjury, right?
They're all common, we're all commonwealth countries, and even civil law countries have laws against perjury.
Yeah, so that was the first law.
Uh first thing that she got in trouble for.
Second was in Australia, she basically brought her Yorkie in.
Um two Yorkes, three to two European.
Yeah, claiming that she uh that she didn't know I'm uh Australian custom laws, and oh, I didn't know, and all this other shit, but there's some evidence to show that she did know.
She knew um, so she basically lied to customs officers, which would probably be a federal Australian offense.
Yes, and then um also she um she assaulted Johnny with by throwing a bottle of vodka a handle of vodka handle of vodka at his hand, which severed his hand, and there is a crime in Australia called glassing, yeah.
Which don't ask me how they have a law called glassing, but it is a crime where a bottle is used glass and a glass and glasses used, glasses used as a weapon as a weapon, yeah.
So it's essentially assault with a deadly weapon, but in Australia, so you know, everything's a little different down under.
Yeah, down under, and there's no statute of limitations, no statute of limitations in Australia.
And and so, and then the next is um she uh lied about getting pushed down the stairs.
Yeah, she lied about the stairs incident.
Um, and she lied about a lot of stuff during the trial, guys, but that's one that stands out.
Yeah, I just I say, hey, she lied under oath about that, right?
Anytime you lie under oath, included whether it's in trial or out of trial, whether it's you're filing a police document, you can technically be brought brought to court for that.
Now, is it likely?
Uh no, but is it possible?
Sure, it's possible.
It's uh it's it's possible for her to be brought uh in on perjury for anything she said in court.
Especially, and here's the thing, guys.
Normally, when when uh perjury isn't that big of a deal, but when you lie and that you have that much publication on you and it the the case is this big, I would be surprised if there isn't an enormous amount of pressure on the law enforcement officers in these jurisdictions where these crimes occurred to not do something.
So let me say one thing real quick.
So in LA, there's actually a filing by Adam Waldman, who's Johnny's former attorney.
He actually filed a uh request for them to investigate um both Amber Heard and and uh Rocky Pennington, Raquel Pennington for uh perjury related to a lot of these allegations.
Um, so that's in LA, they're investigating it right now.
So that's actually uh that's actually pending.
And Patty Jackson goes five bucks.
Uh yo, Myron, can we get a PPP loan video?
You think the government going to come after the little fish?
My friend, I got you right now.
So I did a video.
Shout out to you know, recipes of pop snow, but his gang members from the woo actually did a whole PPP loan scam of like 20 million dollars.
I broke it down.
They made a rap song saying unemployment got us working a lot, and they use those lyrics against them to fucking uh to get to get them uh indicted for uh uh federally by the department of labor because they committed a bunch of mail fraud.
You guys want to see a mail fraud case?
Go check that one out.
Uh so but I have that video type in woo uh fraud, and I have a whole video where I broke it down and all that other shit.
Wayne 20 bucks heard her's public humiliation is a good down payment on the settlement.
There you go.
That's true.
Um, so we talked about getting glassed.
We talked about oh, shitting on the bed, shitting the bed.
That's you know, misdemeanor, probably uh harassment, vandalism, um, you know, the construction of public jobs structural property, not public property.
Private property, yeah.
Um public property would be much different.
Yeah, it'd be yeah.
Uh that'd be smearing the turd everywhere outside.
But um that's that's definitely a thing.
You know, you can't just shit in someone's bed and get away with it, right?
That's definitely a crime.
Um extortion, extortion and blackmail, right?
And then potential wire fraud.
We even got wire fraud in there.
Yeah, because she used a phone.
Yeah, and I think that I honestly I think uh of of all these crimes, what do you think?
She's trying to demand money too.
So and last one, lying to lying about the um the bruising on the face getting paid.
Yes, lying with the TRO.
She lied to to get the TRL.
Because you have to lie, guys.
When you f sign legal documents nine out of ten times, it always says there I certify under penalty of perjury.
Uh that the true is correct, and to the best of my knowledge.
Nine out of ten times.
Okay, any government document, guys.
Or if it's a federal document, it's gonna say uh penalty of perjury of one thousand one.
If it's uh state, it's gonna say penalty of perjury, whatever.
You're basically signing something under oath.
So when she signed that that um that document, like, oh my god, Johnny abused me, blah, blah, blah.
She basically signed her own death warrant that she lied.
I like someone say female perjures lied.
Well, this the whole point of this case is that uh it shouldn't matter whether you're male or female.
Uh lying is not okay, and abuse is not okay.
That that's really the point that should come out of this trial.
And I think a lot of people have taken that.
And the funny thing is, too, is That you know, I think a lot of people, I mean, Myron's in like the very specific sphere, he's in the red pill sphere, but I'm in the lawyer sphere, and a lot of times, like my audience, a lot of fucking normies, and a lot of people that uh, you know, are just realizing that the mainstream media is lying about this shit and that they've been lying about this shit, and they're trying to spin people, they're trying to indoctrinate them, and they're they're saying, Hey, I watched the trial, it's televised.
I saw it with my own eyes.
I saw what was going down in the courtroom.
And they're realizing these people are lying about it.
So they're coming to people who are telling the truth about it.
People like my channel, other channels, um, and they're realizing, hey, we we want good analysis.
So 700 700 horses, this is a great question.
I've I've heard this question before, which is in regards question for Andrew.
In regards to Amber being judgment proof, if she doesn't have the assets to repossess, can't the judge garnish wages?
Yes and no.
Here's the thing though.
Uh, you know, what what she's an actress, assuming she doesn't transition to OnlyFans, right?
Um, which is definitely something that may happen.
Um, let's say you're an actress.
The way those payments are are dealt with, it's not like a normal wage.
Like, you know, if you're going out there and you're got a little briefcase and you're going to work at a nine to five, yeah.
It's not like wage garnishment, it's more like a one-time um distribution or a take.
It's sort of like garnishing a bank account, right?
They got to go in there and get permission to get it, and they get like kind of one bite of the apple.
Um, so it's possible they could garnish her her uh movie funds.
Um, she might try for chapter seven, try for uh personal bankruptcy.
But here's the thing here's the fun thing, which I I talked about on my channel.
Um, I've looked it up in the bankruptcy code, and you do not get to discharge uh judgments that involve malice.
Hey, because this was a defamation trial involving two public figures, it's required you have to uh in order to recover against the public figure for defamation, you have to prove the other person acted with actual malice with so because it was proven at the trial that she acted with bad intent, she can't discharge that bitch, she's on the hook.
Give me a hell yeah.
Yeah, guys, because when you when you get sued, uh when you sue someone and you're a public figure, you have to go another level beyond to prove that prove defamation because as a public figure, you lose a little bit of your autonomy.
You're putting this out there.
I mean, you can't whine and cry about somebody, you know, leaving nasty comments on YouTube, you know.
Yeah, you can't.
I mean, it's just what it is, you know.
You know, being a public figure versus being a um, which obviously Johnny Depp is an A-less celebrated.
He's the definite definition of a public figure.
So he doesn't enjoy the same protections that a private citizen would uh would have with uh defamation.
Patty Jackson two bucks, why didn't she just plead the because she can't shut her mouth, but that's number one.
But number two is because it's a defamation case.
I mean, number one, it's my like red pill opinion, but number two, uh, is it's a defamation case.
So you kind of have to get the he said she said, and remember, she was the only person, the only witness.
Let me be very fucking clear.
The only witness that testified to her allegations of sexual abuse, she did not have a medical report, she did not have a police report.
None of her friends tested to the sexual abuse.
Nobody else even knew about it, except for Amber Heard.
So she had to testify to get out, otherwise she would lose like per se.
Yeah, um, she also had certain allegations that only she made.
And I look, I think she would have been better off not testifying, but she had to.
Yeah, she had to.
She had to.
And she is the crazy type of person that needed to get up there and rebut everything Johnny said.
So everything that happened to Johnny, no, she said, yeah.
Um, everything that Johnny the habit of Johnny happened to her twice as bad.
Yeah.
And now also, guys, keep in mind that the Fifth Amendment, which the Fifth Amendment guys is basically the right to stay silent and not have to not to incriminate yourself.
Right.
Uh, that's pretty much you.
You can invoke that in a criminal case.
Like, I mean, in a civil case, I mean, you can you just choose not to testify.
Yeah, you could choose not to testify, but like in a case like this where it's it's civil where the case is contingent upon her testimony because she needs to be able to, she's the only person that could testify to the things that she's talking about because the hearsay's not environment allowed in a in a trial, which hearsays when someone else makes a statement on your behalf.
No, it's got to be you.
You actually have to testify.
So um, yeah, bro.
She can't really extend that Fifth Amendment privilege like that.
Uh but yeah, and she's and she's a fucking crazy narcissist.
Well, she's she's a lying, crazy narcissistic how yeah.
Tragic mouse.
I just hope JD doesn't forgive her debt.
No, no, I don't uh no, he's not the there's no fucking way.
There, I mean, you could see in JD he is committed to this.
He knows that she is a crazy uh this trial, he probably went negative crazy girl.
I I guarantee you, he probably went negative doing all this shit on the feast and everything.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
Because remember he's attorneys and everything.
He went to trial in the UK and in the and in the US.
Yeah.
So even if he gets this money, I think he's still at an L. But frankly, the win for Johnny is his relationship is his reputation.
Damn, yeah.
And being able to talk to his children and tell his children, I'm not a fucking sexual criminal here.
I'm not a sexual predator.
Yeah, I'm not a harasser.
I'm not a violent person.
You know, he's he's having to live with that.
And now finally he's cleared.
Finally, the world knows this is bullshit.
Uh Amber Heard is a lying bitch.
And uh and uh the the true justice is not the money, it's that Johnny Jepp has his life back, and Amber Heard gets fucking wrecked.
Yep.
No, that that that is 100% guys.
Do me a favor.
We only got like 1,000 fucking likes right now.
Go ahead and like the goddamn video.
Um so uh we're gonna get ready to wrap up here, guys, in a second.
So go ahead and get your questions in if you do have them.
Um we'll do a short quick QA, answer any questions that might come in.
I think we showed all the chats.
Uh I think we got most of them, yeah.
I think uh it's pretty good.
I mean we showed everything, right?
Usually takes me forever to get through super chats, yeah.
The uh especially with Amber Heard.
Yeah, that's a total whatever they say.
It is uh it is a hot topic.
Um yeah, man.
I mean, uh, so what do you think?
Uh so I gave I think the extortion is the worst crime here.
What do you think is the worst crime that she that she potentially might be facing with?
I mean, other than glassing, I think that's funny.
But um, you know, and I'm not an Australian lawyer, I'm not a British, you know, lawyer.
Uh so that those aside, I mean, I think that that perjury, we should.
Here's my point.
I think we should take perjury more seriously.
And I think we should be we should be hitting people that lie about crimes, especially crimes of this scale that have this magnitude that is impact the the people that were damaged by this, the real people that were victims are the real victims of domestic violence and sexual violence.
They those people are damaged by Amber's false claims.
Facts.
Amber saying that she was sexually abused with no proof whatsoever.
It demeans people that were really abused that had true abuse.
And so I think to me, she should be hit for lying.
And to me, she should be hit for that.
To morally, I think as a culture, in terms of also justice in general, the rule of law, I think she should be hit for lying.
I think this is a case where look, yes, it doesn't happen often.
It doesn't happen often.
But in cases like Jesse Smallette, in this case, Amber Heard, I think they should be held up and held to account so that other people do not follow their footsteps.
And also, so it shuts down this this narrative of just simply believing all women, even if they're lying.
And there were outlets that said that.
Like, even if she's imperfect, even if she's not telling the truth partially, uh, we should side with her.
It's crazy.
I mean, Vice, Vogue, and Vox, the three Vs, uh, really, really, really bad.
Um, um, there were also there were also it was also from the root.
There was an article that this is a tragedy for black women.
I thought that was hilarious.
Yeah, it had nothing to do.
Like, they always try to find a protected class.
This is what the left does when they take an L. They can't take an L, so they're gonna go ahead and take a victim.
Might say G Men N C five bucks with simultaneous criminal and civil cases.
You could take the fifth in civil, right?
You can, but it's again.
You could choose, but it's gonna hurt your, it's gonna hurt you to it.
Yes, probably more than likely if you're the one being super.
I pledge to donate 100.
Thank you, Neil.
I appreciate that.
Band 10 bucks.
What about ACLU lost it against JD to pay legal fees?
Okay, yeah.
It was actually uh 86k, now 186k.
I don't think.
But the point of this matter, there was uh motions back and forth.
Actually, it's the motions are really boring because it's just like okay, ACLU wants all this money for lawyer time to get documents.
So you typically have to pay for um, you typically have to pay for uh documents.
So if I request somebody to produce documents, so I say, okay, um, I'm requesting Walt's ice cream shop to produce all the business records for the last year.
So I'm requesting these records from Waltz ice cream shop, right?
And if he's got to put you know a bunch of work into getting these records to me, I gotta pay him for that work.
He's not working for free, right?
He can't just get records for free.
That's not right.
That's not just.
However, those costs have to be reasonable.
And you have to get you know, people who are who can do that job cheaply to do the work.
You don't hire the most expensive fucking people to do the work of making copies, right?
So if I was working at a law firm, they don't hire me as an attorney to make copies.
The secretary can make the copies, right?
And she bills at a lower rate than I bill.
Like when I was at a law firm, I was billing out even as an associate.
I was building out in the 300s for 300 an hour-ish, right?
So you don't pay somebody 300 an hour to make copies, right?
You can pay somebody fucking $15 an hour to make copies.
It's just making copies.
So the point is the ACLU submitted this.
Yeah, they ACLU definitely has interns too.
So they submitted this massive bill for 86K and said, hey Johnny, this is what we needed to do.
And so they turned around and said, uh-uh, uh-uh.
We just asked you to produce documents.
Your ass hired the most expensive fucking people out there, right, to do this work.
Yeah.
You hired, like, top-tier attorneys and associates, all this sort of shit.
You didn't have to do it.
You were claiming privilege on everything, even though we didn't even ask for it.
We didn't even want it.
You were being unnecessarily obstructionist.
Yeah.
So we'll pay you $1,000.
That's what I said.
That's the cost you should have spent.
Regardless of whether you spent it or not, you were unreasonable to spend.
Even if you really did spend $86,000, that's not reasonable.
So that's where that's at.
I think it's a good claim.
I think they have a good defense.
I don't think they're going to end up paying $86,000.
I do think they'll pay some.
something um obviously uh ultimately this is gonna would come out of Mr. Hurt uh Mr. Hurd Mrs Hurd's uh you know money because uh there's the recovery there but for now it's against Johnny because Johnny requested the documents so uh black ispant there should be a crime to not go to to not go to the police before shout out to my girl Alina in um I believe in uh Dubai right yeah that's uh the Durham's right so legal mindset yes thank you so much appreciate the okay and then we got uh uh and up v 100 bucks I always wanted to pledge
million but only pay 100 usd thank you under a private trust in the name of their account property records seen by the ny post can hiding assets be ceased well there's there's so when you're looking at assets you can look at whether or not it's just a mere um we call it like a like a puppet entity or like essentially it's an alter ego alter ego that's the phrase so whether the entity is just an alter ego of the
individual.
worry guys I'll fix the camera okay there we go so if that's just an alter ego of Amber Heard then yes they could recover even if it's the name of the accountant even if it's in a trust but there's certain mechanisms certain reasons why you might put it in somebody else's name that's why you hear the rappers being like a put it in my mama's name right because you're trying to protect those assets you're trying to keep those assets out of potential judgment recovery out of potential damages.
So, yeah, it's possible.
It's possible to keep that out there.
I see Neo asking, will Elon simp for Amber and pay her legal fees?
Well, I don't think Daddy Elon and Amber are in good terms anymore.
I mean, they were riding a high after that three-way with Cara Devigne.
But after that happened, I just don't think that Daddy Elon is going to come in and simp some more for Amber.
I think he's moved on to new Poonani, and I think he's on to the next.
uh and then uh what else do we got here i think we're guys we're caught up here we're caught up guys get me at least a 3 000 likes man because i didn't want to stop the show to get the likes up but just help your boy out because uh they're coming for me on on black twitter and world star right now because i made some comments yeah i basically said that a lot of people have a victim mindset a lot of minorities have a victim mindset oh shit they're gonna come for you that one and the man and you're gonna come for them and they're saying that we're a systematic racism all these other stupid ass social buzzwords it's like no bro you're a fucking loser because your own decisions dude like stop crying about
this shit because if we want to go ahead and say victims well bro guess what they treated me like a black guy they treated me like an arab and they treat me like a muslim i have every excuse to be a fucking cry baby too especially after 9 11 when they were fucking treating me like shit my family like shit and i was able to figure it out so what's your fucking excuse parents came here in the 1980s couldn't even speak english dad again robbed in brooklyn all that shit grew up poor and i figured it out you're telling me you were born here in the united states and you dealt with a little bit of adversity and you can't fucking figure it out fuck out of here bro no no well my room you're not really black you're not a foundational black american like what are you talking what the
fuck are you talking what now we're gonna i need you to show me a certificate that your great-grandfather was a slave in 1891 well that's the whole issue with reparations in in california so they're actually like they're actually so california if you guys know that actually seriously thinking about reparations uh but uh but they they got done who do we pay yeah like how do we determine exactly like there's no way to there's no way to do that and people get mad either way people get mad if you you award it uh to Everyone who checks
the, you know, the black box in the census data
data or if you check if you give it to people who are just descendants of slaves and can prove that because it's very difficult because people want to make their own subjective uh definitions on what makes you black right oh my you're not black because you speak your family speaks Arabic what the fuck does that have to do with anything like it's everything it like it you know it's allegedly the language you speak dictates your race next episode 911 has any have any of you guys seen my brother he's black as fuck he's darker than wall bro Is that possible?
Yeah.
Dude, he's black as shit.
The wall?
Bro, he's like my yeah, he's like wall skin color, bro.
Wow.
And his hair has the waves, all that shit.
You don't say black either?
I heard someone brought it up here.
It's a joke.
If you get this in it, so I heard somebody, I saw somebody say, so then white people would get it.
Because that's actually a controversy.
So if it's descendants of slaves, uh there's gonna be a lot of white people recovering.
Oh, they're gonna be mad about that.
Real mad about that.
They're gonna be real mad about that.
Real mad about that.
Anyways, uh, I enjoy talking about this.
It's a great topic.
I've been coming overheard.
I've got maybe I'm gonna do one more uh episode of tomorrow on my channel with Roll Tomasi.
We're gonna talk about the fallout, the misogyny that's coming out of this.
Yeah, uh, hashtag believe all women, uh, the death of that.
Uh which real quick, uh, before we close this bad boy out, give us your prediction on on what you think.
Well, you know, I'll go first and you go second.
Yeah, yeah, go ahead.
So, what I think was is this was a win for everybody, not just men, uh, not just false you uh falsely accused.
I think this was a win for women too, because what's gonna happen now is that women are gonna the women that are actually legit are gonna come forward.
The false accusers are gonna, you know, chill.
And I think that you know, believe all women was a dangerous precedent.
I said this back fucking two years ago.
Never should have been a thing.
It should never been a thing.
Because when you say believe all women, what you're basically doing is you're inferring that um number one, that women are morally superior and they can't lie, yes, and they're not human beings, which goes against the feminist narrative, which is we're supposed to be equal, correct?
Right.
And to be equal to a man, you need to be able to do that.
Also, it's also saying, well, they're superior, but also inferior, because if they can't lie, like isn't lying advantageous in certain circumstances?
So you're saying women have the are incapable of lying, so they they can't do something that men can do.
Well, I thought that we're all supposed to be equally capable of doing everything, right?
And the craziness with the college campuses, like nowadays, like if two people hook up on college campuses, they've been drinking alcohol, uh, they both but neither party can consent.
So now it's a race of who can go to who can go to the comment board and uh come uh uh report the other first and they get in trouble.
Right.
So it's like what's going on here?
Like, are are we gonna say women are adults that are capable of making their own decisions?
Or are you gonna sit here and say that they're that they're children and can't make their own decision?
Well, what's going on happening here?
Let's not lie, we know who's gets to the conduct board first because it's not guys going to the conduct board being like I smashed, you know, like it's where it's one guy actually did do it.
Shout out to Tim Cass.
They talked about it.
I'm not saying yeah, I'm not saying it never happens, I'm saying it's rare.
But here's the thing he went because he knew she was gonna go.
Yeah, right, right, right.
You ran to them first.
And when this mutually assured destruction system comes around when we know, like, okay, this is XY is gonna happen, and the tables are turned, then it starts to get investigated.
Then people are like, Oh, oh shit, okay, we gotta we gotta fix this issue.
Uh Kona Kyle Five Bucks, if the justice system gave out five years to JS and Amber H, would it prevent a lot of lying moving forward?
I think it would, man.
It would have, I wish I wish Juicy was still in jail instead of getting out for one day.
There needs to be reform 100% where false allegations, whether it's grape, sexual assault, uh any type of crime, anything it needs to be punished.
Yeah, uh 700 horsepower 500 bucks, uh five bucks, sorry.
So simply putting assets in a family's number name or a separate LLC is enough to shit.
I did not say that.
I did not say that.
In fact, I said the opposite, 700 horses.
I said if they find that it's your alter ego, it in fact will not help it.
So if you're putting it in a family member's name or a separate LLC, and it's you're using it as an alter ego for your person, and there's a judgment against you that will not necessarily protect it.
Now, I'm not saying that and it isn't helpful, right?
I'm not saying that you shouldn't do that to shield, for example, your business assets from your personal assets.
That actually is a smart move if you deform an LC for business assets.
However, it if you're gonna if you're gonna get recovered against and you're hiding your stuff in an LLC, that's not gonna save it.
Al Dane Campbell, will they change the laws for that false allegations?
I hope they do.
I hope they do that.
Yeah, we should push for that.
This case was a step in the right direction, man.
I think it was a win for everybody, and most importantly, it was a win for the real victims.
Because I'm this is gonna be a controversial take, but I'm gonna say it anyway.
No, no, here's mine with a controversial take.
Rape culture is a fucking myth.
It is a myth.
And I and I the and I did a whole podcast on this uh on Fresh and Fit.
Go ahead and search it.
We did it with Rolo Tomasi.
It is a myth, guys.
Let me tell y'all, son, that the a lot of the statistics that they use is one in five women on college campuses a victim of whatever.
Like, let's just think about that from a common sense standpoint.
Would you send your daughter to college if there was uh 20% chance that that's ridiculous?
One in five is actually getting assaulted on a college campus.
I would never send my daughter, but people say this shit because it sounds great on paper.
But the reality is when you peel back the layer and see Where that study came from.
It comes from faulty um, you know, um questionnaires.
Right, right.
Where you're asking a girl, how did you feel when it happened?
Did it actually happen?
How did you feel?
Yeah, how did that's the scary thing?
How did you feel?
Do you regret it?
Yeah, do you regret it?
And it's like, well, yeah, that's a lot of it is what is stuff you regret, right?
But that doesn't mean you didn't consent to it just because you regret it.
That's a there's a huge difference between regret and consent.
And that's and that's the clown world that we're getting into, guys.
When you get into this world, it's extremely ambiguous, whatever.
So when we talk about um sexual assault rape culture, et cetera, it does not exist in the United States.
And we proved this in defend definitively because we use the just uh uh the um Bureau of Justice Statistics to show that it's actually far less prevalent that they want it than they want to tell you because a lot of these studies that say, Oh no, we're ripping a grape culture, all this other shit.
They use um stat stats that are not accurate, and they use a bunch of stupid questions.
Like one of the questions, guys, was did you have a drink with someone before you guys hooked up?
And if they answered yes, that was considered as a tally for one in the sexual assault calendar.
So if you if so if you were with your wife, you guys have a glass of wine, and then you guys smash, you technically, according to some of these studies, graped your wife.
Yeah, that's ridiculous.
That's ridiculous.
That used to be an era where you couldn't legally grape your wife, but that's a whole that's a whole other thing.
That's a whole different era.
But that's that that's that's the studies that a lot of these crazy feminists are citing, guys.
But go check that episode out if you guys want.
But yes, it is a myth.
Um, but uh Andrew, what's your take on on uh this on the what you on the um the outcome of this and the future?
I I really think this has been great for opening people's eyes for red pilling people on the reality on the reality of what's going on, the reality of the fact that men are scared to reach out.
I've had so many men reach out to me and say, Thank you, thank you, thank you for covering this.
Thank you for getting out the hashtag hashtag men too.
Hey, thank you for showing that men can be the victims of abuse too.
Thank you for outing women like Amber Heard, people like Amber Heard, because there's men and women who act like Amber Heard, but especially I think women, uh, it's it's something that other women are discovering.
They're saying, Oh my god, I never knew there were women like this.
I never knew there were people like this.
I'm like, yes, this is what we're fucking terrified of because you bring a person like this in your life and they are a nuclear bomb.
They destroy you financially, physically, emotionally, mentally, they just destroy your friends, your family, everything.
So I think that is the great lesson here.
And if only a couple of you out there can keep the amber turds out of your life, uh, that is a fucking victory.
That is a massive victory.
Uh, make sure that you get rid of those people, be on the watch for them.
They're the ones who are gonna throw it at you so strong in the beginning, right?
Uh, you know, if it's uh if it's uh a girl, she's gonna throw that crazy pussy at you.
If it's a guy, maybe he's got that golden uh that golden ding dong, right?
You know, they're gonna hit you in the beginning, they're gonna they're gonna come at you strong, but they're gonna flip, they're gonna turn on you.
Watch for that.
Uh, be very, very, very, very, very cautious of that.
Um, it's uh it's very dangerous.
And that's I think that is more important than even the legal consequences here.
Facts.
Uh Holly, you have anything you want to say?
No.
Okay.
Okay.
Uh so uh and then Patty Jackson here goes five bucks.
If people consider Nipsey Hustle Black, Myron, you go, bro.
Well, you're welcome to the cookout.
Thank you, my ninja.
I appreciate that greatly, man.
Um key with a great work, Myre.
Thank you so much, Dolph Face TV.
Shout out to you, my friend.
Um, and we're gonna do a Takashi 69 breakdown, guys.
She's actually helped me out with that.
We're gonna do that probably in a week or two.
Uh, because I know you guys want me to break down that Rico case uh that him and the bloods got, so we're we're working on that for y'all.
And I'm also working on Young Dolph as well.
Awesome.
But other than that, man, Andrew, where can people find you?
You can find me at legal mindsets on YouTube at the legal mindset on Twitter at legal mindset, right?
Not some not the not legal mindset because some host stole that from me on Twitter, but I'm out the 28k on Twitter.
So follow me there.
Esquire International on Instagram.
Yes, uh, ESQ I R E International.
And I'm gonna put all the links in the description for you guys.
Follow me, motherfuckers.
Also, you can join my private community, legal mindset.locals.com.
Um, that is like a Patreon, but it's not woke.
So I can say where the fuck I want to say on that.
They don't cancel me.
It's uh, you know, pretty much I was talking about the the COF.
I was talking about the election stuff.
I'm talking about anything up there.
There's yeah, exactly.
They don't it they don't censor you, so I can talk about all those unsensor.
That's automatic.
It's on my legal mindset.locals.com.
Only there do we have completely uncucked conversations.
So check that out.
Go check it out, guys.
Go support him.
Um time stance will be up, guys.
Go check me out, as you guys know on Fresh and Fit.
Also Unplugged Fit is my Instagram.
And uh yeah, this was a great discussion, man.
Thank you for coming so much, Andrew.
My pleasure.
I'll be back.
Yeah, he will be back, guys.
We'll maybe we'll do 9-11 for y'all.
Patriot Act 911 in the future.
I'm gonna do that one.
I think that's fun.
We can always do that one.
That's a great one.
We will do maybe we'll do that one.
That will take a little bit longer.
That'll be a three hour podcast.
I'll be honest.
For sure.
At least that's gonna be a long one.
It's like a fucking part part one, part two.
Yeah.
So uh other than that, guys, yo, like the video on your way on your way out, guys.
Um appreciate it.
We love you guys.
Uh, we'll catch you back here tomorrow.
We're gonna have Miguel from dollar cost crypto for fresh and fit.
And other than that, yeah, man, uh yeah, we'll catch you guys.
And you can hit end broadcast right there, Holly O Top.