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June 27, 2022 - MyronGainesX
04:54:05
The Media DIDN'T Tell You THIS About Breonna Taylor...
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Time Text
And we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed It.
We got a very important yet controversial one today, man.
Let's get right into it, babe.
We're going to talk about the Breonna Taylor shooting and case in general.
We got a lot to talk about.
Debunk a lot of myths.
It's going to be a good one.
Let's get into it.
Move on the gear.
Okay, guys.
I used to be a special agent on Land Screen Investigations.
This is the arrest paper.
Okay, so here is the booking.
Cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.
Those are like two crimes that I'm a very good agent, very strong agent.
I did a lot of big cases.
I've done Title III Intercepts, which is basically listening to phones.
I've written hundreds of affidavits to arrest people.
I've done, I've been the grand jury and testified a million times.
I've done big cases.
I've done.
All right.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to the Fresh of Fit.
No, I'm just kidding.
Welcome to Fed It, guys.
It's been a while since I've been here, man.
As you guys know, I had a hair transplant last week.
So I was kind of down and out.
I got it on last Friday.
I recovered somehow.
I'm surprised.
I thought my face would have been way.
Well, it's still a little bit swollen, but I'm doing okay now.
And yeah, doing a lot better, man.
I'm glad to be here with y'all.
I'm thinking about giving you guys a second Fed episode this week where I'll cover the biggest bank robbery that occurred in U.S. history back, I think it was in 1972 out there in California.
So I was thinking about covering that for y'all.
I'll give y'all a second episode.
Let me know if you guys want that.
And if you do, I'll probably make it happen.
But anyway, any other announcements I'm trying to think here?
Monday, tomorrow we got Brandon Carter for Money Monday.
We had a great week this week, guys.
We did an episode with Robert Kiyosaki, George Gammon, as well as Ken McElroy, three multi-million dollar investors, you know, real estate.
And, you know, George Gammon has commodities, everything else like that.
He has real estate in Columbia as well.
And it was just an awesome show that we did, man.
Probably one of my most favorite shows I've ever done having those three guys on.
I was learning myself alongside what you guys.
So it was great.
And then we had, you know, Steve Will Dewitt was here.
We had McQueen on.
We had Rolo Tomasi.
We did an episode yesterday with Rolo went four hours long, man.
We're going hard for y'all in the paint where we covered Roe v.
Wade, the overturning of that case.
And we broke it down.
You know, we didn't really necessarily take a political side.
You know, we're not like, oh, pro-life or pro-choice.
We weren't really on that type of vibe.
We're more about, hey, this is what happened.
This is why the Supreme Court came to that decision.
And this is what's going to probably happen in the dating world after this.
Okay.
So we were more concerned with the ramifications that's going to come from Roe v.
Wade being overturned, which essentially all it did was say, hey, listen, States, it's up to you guys now.
The feds don't want to deal with it.
It's on you guys.
All right.
So, which leads me to today's episode of Fed It.
So, you know, obviously during that downtime, I had been, you know, consuming a bunch of content trying to figure out what's going to be a good episode to give you guys.
I got some plans.
Me and Christina, we're looking at some stuff that we think you guys are really going to enjoy.
And I'm going to start breaking down documentaries from other crime dramas and breaking it down for y'all where I'll play it.
I'll have my notes ready to go.
And I'll just pause it and kind of add a little bit more.
How do I say this insight as to how things are done?
Because when you watch these crime documentaries, a lot of times, guys, they don't necessarily tell you how they got to a certain point.
So I'm going to be able to connect a lot of dots for you guys and let you know, hey, that's probably bullshit.
They did that for dramatic effect.
Or hey, yeah, that sounds good.
Or that's crazy.
What the fuck?
So I'll be able to kind of add a bit of context to a lot of these things.
And one of those documentaries I'm going to break down is this bank robbery one, which I think is going to be really cool for y'all that we're thinking about doing for you guys.
So, okay, let me read some of these chats real quick before we get into today's episode and break it down for y'all.
So we got Michael, Michael Don PZ goes, great channel, great content.
Appreciate the breakdowns, bro.
Appreciate that greatly, my friend.
We got Michael Kanonis here.
No, you don't like to get into politics, Myron, but what do you think of the FBI feds purging conservatives from their agencies?
I haven't heard about that.
I don't know if I'm educated enough to speak about that at the moment.
I'll have to do some research.
And then we got Darney, 299 super sticker.
Thank you so much.
And anything else here?
Okay, I think we're caught up.
And I already know that I'm going to get quite a bit of hate for doing this topic.
So let's go real quick.
You know, Myron, how did you come up with this topic?
Why are you doing Breonna Taylor all of a sudden?
What's going on here?
So let's go down memory lane real fast.
Let me get some of this water.
Shout out to my guy, Minister Jap.
Minister Jap had made a post on his Instagram.
You know, he's always rallying people up.
He's a little bit more aggressive on things than I am.
But he had talked about Breonna Taylor, how she's not as clean as people may say.
So I was like, really?
What's going on here?
And I had heard about her.
When this shooting happened with her, I was actually still working for the government.
So around the time this happened, I actually had a very big case going on, guys, with the feds I was doing.
And I'm going to give y'all, I'm actually going to start breaking down my cases as well.
I noticed that you guys really like those.
Like when I go back and do the cases that I actually did myself firsthand.
And I will definitely break down this case for you guys that I'm talking about right now.
But back in March of 2020, I had my hands tied up with a fucking international smuggling ring, guys.
It was fucking crazy.
It had ties to Sri Lanka, Canada, the United States, Turks and Caicos, fucking Switzerland.
It was a huge fucking case.
As a matter of fact, I got a director's award, Christina.
Can you get me that director's award from the closet?
I got a director's award for this fucking case, guys, from the director of immigration and customs enforcement, which is, you know, obviously, you know, like I told y'all before, you got immigration customs enforcement, then you got homeland security investigations, then you got ICE deportation and enforcement removal operations.
So it was a huge fucking case.
And that case, actually, I heard from a former colleague that that case is up for an attorney general's award now, you know, and, you know, pretty much I started it, developed it, got it big, arrested a bunch of people.
So I had my hands tied in March of 2020.
So when this shooting happened, I had known about it, but I didn't.
No, it's the glass one.
It's the glass one.
I had known about it, but I didn't know like the details.
So when I saw that post, I was like, hey, let me look a little bit into this.
And then when I started researching, I was like, holy crap, the mainstream media has been misinforming you guys a lot.
So I'm really excited to bring, and this is, this is just so y'all know, this isn't cap or whatever.
Here we go from 2019, you know, immigration customs enforcement director's award, excellence in law enforcement award.
And then here's my government name right there, America.
Go ahead, feel free to, you know, dox me.
I've already been doxed a million times, so it is what it is.
I got nothing to hide.
I've done nothing wrong.
So, you know, obviously no one's perfect, but I'm out here doing a bunch of bullshit.
I just tell the truth and people don't like that.
But anyway, yeah, yeah, I'll read the chats real fast.
Pull them up.
We know you're going to get hate for this.
Myron, it's cool.
We black people need to know the actual truth.
Keep it up, Myron.
Thank you, bro.
I appreciate that.
This isn't about bashing her.
Oh, get the likes up.
Why you not gaming?
Thank you so much, $2.
So, yeah, man, I got actual receipts, guys.
Like, I've actually done cases that do big shit.
There's a bunch of agents that have never done shit in their careers.
And I'm over here getting director's awards and everything.
And if I was still with the agency, I would have an attorney general's award, which is the highest prestigious award that you can get as a law enforcement officer.
It's just that I left the agency before I can bring that case to full fruition.
But anyway, going back to what I was saying, that's why I was tied up in March and I didn't know about this case.
So I did some digging into the case and I found out that this investigation is a lot more extensive than what the mainstream media tells you guys.
And as a matter of fact, I have an example of it here.
I'm going to play you guys a summary from the New York Times.
And it is after, you know, if you watch this video, which I'm going to play for you guys right now, and you, you know, you just take this at face value, you're going to think, holy crap, these police officers are murderers.
This is terrible.
But if you actually start to look at all the evidence that led to this shooting, and then you look at the evidence after the shooting, and you led to all the events that surrounding the shooting with a critical lens, you know, not a feeling lens, a fact-based lens, you're going to realize that there's much more than meets the eye here.
And before I get into this breakdown, I want to make this extremely clear.
This isn't about labeling Brianna as a terrible person or her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, or her ex, you know, what's his name?
Jamarcus Glover, okay, which we're going to talk a lot about him too, aka Chapo.
But this isn't about bashing her or anything like that.
This is about telling the truth and getting it out there and letting you guys come to your own conclusions if you think that the police officers here were guilty.
But the state of Kentucky and the attorney general for the state of Kentucky basically found that all of the officers except for one were not acting unofficially.
They were not charged of any criminal charges.
Their use of force was authorized.
And we're going to go over the facts that led to that finding.
And you guys may come to the same conclusion.
You may not, but we're going to go over the facts here.
We're not going to go over feelings.
So if you're going to sit here and cry and say, oh my God, this is bullshit.
Why aren't you breaking this case down?
This is so fucked up.
Black Lives Matter.
Get the fuck out of here, bro.
Because over here, in case you haven't realized, welcome to FedIT.
Welcome to Fresh and Fit.
We don't fucking cry over here or complain.
We tell the truth.
It is what it is.
Fuck your feelings.
All right.
So if you don't like this shit, go ahead and click off right now because I'm probably going to debunk a bunch of things that may hurt your feelings as to what the mainstream media told you about this case.
All right.
Disclaimer done.
Let's read some of these chats.
Yep.
Shout out to Christina, by the way, helping me in the back.
And I got some scarring here, guys.
I apologize for that.
Oh, right here.
What do we got?
Oh, you want to be in?
Yeah, yeah.
No, no, no.
Pull them up.
I can't see him.
Okay.
Oh, no, yeah, I can't see it.
You got to go up and highlight them.
I'm going to find it again.
Yeah.
So shout out to all you guys in here, by the way.
We got 785 you guys in here.
So please do me a quick favor and like the video.
Mr. Peace Norkle goes 20 bucks with online techniques like OSYNT, which I'm loving, and technologies like cell phone and tower pinging.
Would you say that crimes become easier to solve later in your career?
That award is high-speed stuff, man.
Good job.
Thank you so much, bro.
Yeah, I mean, cases are definitely being easier to solve thanks to the advent of technology, but it's also becoming harder because of the advent of technology, you know?
So like there's a lot of encrypted softwares out there that make it very difficult to be able to, you know, enter, you know, live intercept.
So as technology has gotten better and made it easier for law enforcement, it's also made it hard at the same time.
What kind of car did you drive in as agent?
I had a white G, a white Ford Explorer, man, and it was like new.
It was, it was a nice one.
It was a new one.
And they gave it to me because I was a casemaker, man.
Like, that's one thing.
Like, there's not many things I'm cocky about, guys.
But when it comes to like what I used to do as an agent myself and doing cases and having informants and doing Title III intercepts and really building big fucking conspiracy cases, I am very confident about that shit because not many agents can do it.
When I was on the job myself, people used to tell me, yo, Martin, you need to slow down.
Like, yo, you're making us look bad.
And yo, why do we got to work on a Saturday?
All this shit.
And I'd be like, yo, shut the fuck up and stop crying, bro.
If you don't want to be here, you don't have to be here.
I'll do this shit myself.
So like this, you guys, like, oh my God, Martin, you're so hard working.
Where'd you get this from?
I got it from being a Fed, man.
Like, I really enjoyed what I did.
I enjoyed doing the job.
I enjoyed.
It wasn't necessarily about putting people in jail.
It was about investigating cases, getting to the facts, figuring out what the hell was going on and building big conspiracy cases, which I will give you guys that case that I was talking about earlier.
I'm going to break it down for you.
I just need to get everything together.
And it's still somewhat active.
So I can't talk about everything.
So that's why that's another reason, too, why I'm kind of holding off.
I got to make sure I'm going to only talk about portions that are not active that are already out there.
So, okay.
So let's get into this breakdown now that we got the disclaimers and announcements, everything else out the way.
And then, guys, from this point forward, $20 enough super chats.
I'm going to read only because I really want to make sure that I get through this and we have a good great time.
And yeah.
And oh, yeah, for anyone, by the way, that might say something about me getting fired or anything like that.
I resigned, guys.
I resigned.
I left on my own accord.
I left under good terms.
And the reason why I left is because the YouTube channel started to really take off.
And as you guys know, you can't be like a public figure lit on social media while simultaneously being, you know, especially agent of Homeland Security or with the government in general.
You know, your job is all about acting in a surreptitious manner.
And when you're out there on the fucking internet with 700,000 plus subscribers and a blue check on Instagram, you ain't going to be able to run around incognito, my friends.
So I had to pick one.
So I ended up going with, you know, the entrepreneur route because I had people that were depending on me and needed me.
I'm not going to turn my back on my guys.
You know, even though it was a fantastic career, I was making like 120K per year.
I had my, you know, my pension, all that stuff lined up, great benefits, all that other stuff.
I loved it.
I gave it up, man.
I had to give it up because there were people depending on me.
And quite frankly, I just can't turn my back on guys.
You know, that's really what it came down to.
But, you know, it was a great experience.
And I have zero, zero regrets, man.
And shout out to anyone that works in law enforcement.
I love you guys.
Okay.
So we're going to go ahead and get into this bad boy.
Is there anything else I missed?
No, I think everything's fine.
Oh, in what?
Memphis.
Oh, young Dolph case.
Still needs someone from Memphis.
They're just being, I don't know if you can hear me.
Yeah, you got to talk right into the mic.
You should know this by now.
What are you doing?
I thought that I asked you earlier.
No, they're just being really difficult with the courthouse.
So if anyone's in Memphis that like wants to help out, just DM Fed 1811.
Yeah, I'm Feda 1811 on Instagram.
I'll put the link below for y'all.
Okay, cool.
So let's start again as this bad boy.
So Breonna Taylor, let's give you guys a quick little summary on who she is.
So you guys are kind of aware on what we're going to talk about because some people may not know who this is.
And for my international viewers, you guys may not know, definitely not, because this was kind of something.
So, bam.
All right.
I'm going to pull this.
I'm going to share screen with y'all real fast.
Put this right here.
All right.
Give me one second, guys.
I added a couple new monitors if you guys have been following me on Instagram.
And I'm just making sure I don't mess this up real fast.
It's a new setup for me, too.
All right.
Cool.
Bam.
So here we go.
Breonna Taylor, 26-year-old African-American women, a woman, was fatally shot in her Louisville home in Kentucky apartment on March 13, 2020, when at least seven police officers forced entry into the apartment as part of an investigation into dealing into drug dealing operations.
See, look at that.
Wikipedia is already on the bullshit.
No, they had a valid search warrant signed by a judge.
Okay, so they did not go ahead.
Okay.
Three Louisville Metro Police Department officers, Jonathan Mattingly, Brett Hankinson, and Miles Cosgrove were involved in the shooting.
Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, was inside the apartment with her when the plane clothes officers knocked on the door, then forced entry.
The officers that they then announced, the officer said that they announced themselves as police before forcing entry, but Walker said he did not hear any announcement, thought the officers were intruders, and fired a warning shot at them.
The shot hit Mattingly in the leg, and officers fired 32 shots in return.
So here we go.
We're going to go ahead and show you guys who Breonna Taylor is.
Bam.
And if you guys remember, this she was the one that were saying, say her name, Breonna Taylor.
And this is a photo that they use for her a lot of the time.
But this is her, you know, and rest in peace to her, man.
No one deserves to die.
You know, this was a really unfortunate situation.
And you guys are going to kind of see that she was, how do I say this?
Collateral damage for a much bigger situation.
And then the officers involved, right?
And then Breonna Taylor.
Just so you guys kind of get faces to the names.
So this is the main officer that got shot.
And then this is Henriksen, who ended up getting fired.
And then this is the other guy.
What was his name?
It was, hold on.
Just goddamn.
It was Miles Cosgrove.
Okay.
And then so Brett Hankinson, right, is the guy, is the guy on the left.
Okay.
And then you got Matt Matt.
Is it Killing Lee?
Sorry, Jonathan Mattingly, who's the guy in the middle, Jonathan Mattingly.
And then you got Cosgrove here, right here, here, here, Miles Cosgrove.
All right.
So that's who they are.
Those are the guys that actually fired their weapons on that faithful night, March 13th, 2020.
Okay.
And it's a terrible situation.
But you guys are going to be able to see things in better perspective here in a second once we actually get into the facts of the investigation that led into this situation.
So let's go ahead and pull up this New York Times YouTube video here that I'm going to show you guys.
And some parts of the video are correct.
Other parts are not.
But I'm going to pull this bad boy up for y'all right now.
And what we're going to do is we're going to go ahead and play this video, stop it, and show where they are incorrect in some things.
All right.
All right.
So fair use, fair use.
Let me know, guys, if the sound is good.
We shouldn't be getting any static.
We got new computer upgrades.
Do not walk by yourself.
This is our safe.
Fair use.
And this is after the shooting in Louisville, Kentucky.
For months in Kentucky, residents outraged by the killing of Brianna Taylor.
And keep in mind, guys, this was in March of 2020 when these riots started, which what also happened?
The beer bug.
For the police officers.
a.k.a.
COVID.
Shockers to face charges.
Commonwealth of Kentucky versus Brett Hankinson.
Brett Hankinson was one of the officers.
He was the one that got charged.
He ended up getting charged, guys, for Wonton shooting, which essentially means, you know, reckless disregard for human life because he fired some shots that he shouldn't have fired.
In September, a grand jury.
Which definitely, you know, is the correct charge for what he did.
And you guys are going to see that here in a second.
But he didn't actually, he wasn't one of the people that shot and killed Breonna Taylor.
Investigation and he was not.
Yeah.
So you see, he said it right there himself.
Yeah.
He shot into, he basically shot into an apartment, hit another apartment.
He shot into the apartment, but it ended up going through and hitting another apartment.
but he was not the one that actually fired the fatal shots.
No one has been held accountable.
This is injustice.
And this is the start clock for the next level of our process.
All right.
So we're going to go ahead and get into the actual thing.
What happened in the final minute?
Now, guys, I need you guys to remember, this is not about feelings.
As you can see right now, the New York Times is trying to make it like, hey, you know what I mean?
Let's feel really bad.
Let's kind of make the police officers look bad, whatever it may be.
And they're omitting certain facts from you that are extremely important, which we're going to talk about later.
So Brianna Taylor's life.
A full telling of that story has been impeded because none of the seven police officers who raided her apartment used body cameras, a violation of police policy.
But with incorrect.
When you're an investigator, okay, typically you don't wear body cameras when you're an investigator.
It's uniformed guys that wear body cameras most of the time.
But when you're an investigator doing narcotics investigations or any type of sensitive investigations where identities need to be protected or whatever it may be because you're dealing with informants or whatever, you're not going to wear body cameras, okay?
Special agents don't wear body cameras because they're investigators.
A lot of state investigators don't wear body cameras because they're investigating plain clothes.
They're plain clothes investigators.
So this is incorrect.
And once again, the New York Times reporting a bunch of BS, but let's continue on.
With the recent release of thousands of documents and images collected during three investigations, the Times initiated a fresh examination of the case.
What are they talking about?
They're talking about this, guys, because I went over these documents as well.
And I want you guys to see the difference between having an experienced law enforcement officer break this down for y'all versus a journalist.
A lot of times journalists don't know what the fuck they're talking about.
So as you guys can see here, the PIU, okay, the Public Integrity Unit for the Louisville Metro Police Department, aka LMPD, released all the documents from the Breonna Taylor investigation.
And it just so happens that the New York Times failed to talk about this portion of it, the narcotics case file summary, which we're going to go over in detail.
Okay.
They only wanted to focus on the interviews done with the officers and put it in TEDs and pieces, which you guys are going to see here in a second.
My thing is, if you're going to look at the investigation, you need to look at it from a holistic perspective.
So it's very interesting to me how me and them went through the same exact information, yet they're coming out with this.
And you guys are going to see here in a second to paint it in a certain light.
We used crime scene photos to create a precise model of Taylor's apartment.
We forensically mapped out and retraced the first bullet fired by Taylor's boyfriend and the 32 bullets that police shot in return through windows.
Give me ones in the chat, guys, if the audio is good and you're not getting any static.
Walls and ceilings.
Using interviews officers gave to investigators, we charted their movements as they carried out the raid.
And we so there's Mattingly right there.
Mattingly ended up getting shot during this situation.
Analyzed hours of 911 calls.
We got ones in the chat.
Fuck yeah.
I had to give myself Don Damarco there, guys, because as you guys know, I've been dealing with this fucking static in the sound for weeks and we finally got it fixed and it was a pain in the ass, but we got it done.
A bunch of sleepless nights, but we're good.
grand jury proceedings and footage by the SWAT team that arrived after the shooting.
Members of the grand jury have accused Kentucky's Attorney General, Daniel Cameron, of shielding the officers involved from homicide charges.
Our investigation found that Mattingly and Cosgrove were justified in their use of force.
Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
Sergeant Mattingly may have been justified in returning fire when he's fired upon.
But our new analysis paints a more complicated may have been.
No, he is justified in returning fire after being shot at.
See what I'm talking about when you have these crazy journalists over here saying may have been or whatever.
No, it's he was justified in shooting back.
That's not a me.
It's yes, he is.
Okay.
You're knocking, you're doing a search warrant and someone shoots at you and you get hit in the leg.
Not only did he get hit in the leg, he got hit in the femoral artery, guys, which you can easily bleed out and die from.
All right.
Matter of fact, I think we got a video to show that for y'all real fast.
Okay.
Because it's all sweet, right?
Until people kind of see what happens, all right, in these types of situations where shots are fired.
So let's see here.
I got the video for y'all right here.
Which one is it?
Is it Officer Brennan or Zuckman?
Zumik?
Which one?
This one?
Or is it Sergeant Casey?
Sorry, guys.
I got a bunch of videos here that I'm going to play up for y'all.
Which one?
This one?
Is this one right?
Yeah, 115.
All right.
I think we got the video for y'all right here.
This one ain't?
All right.
So this is the body cam right here.
That's not it.
Then it's this one then.
Nope, that's the dog.
This one?
This one?
No, it ain't this one.
Christina, figure out which one it is.
Which one is it?
All right, go figure it out.
I'm going to continue on here.
Yeah.
Fucking up already.
All right.
So we're going to continue playing the video.
I'll have that for y'all here in a second.
About how this raid was compromised from beginning to end.
I don't know why I didn't tell them.
We'll outline the flawed intelligence and tactical mistakes of a hodgepodge team of officers.
Their failure to properly announce their presence at Taylor's.
The chaos and excessive use of force that ensued.
Okay, there's another hole right below the clock.
And we'll explore the damning analysis of an experienced SWAT commander who was called to the scene after the shooting.
We just got the feeling that night that something really bad happened.
Yeah, I love how they kind of took that out of context because what they're not saying is that there were a bunch of other search warrants going on.
And they're not going to have the manpower to deploy SWAT teams at all different locations that they hit at the same time.
So the reason why the detectives took Breonna Taylor's place is because that was the lowest risk warrant.
Okay, that's why.
The focus of the police investigation on March 13th is not Taylor's apartment, but properties 10 miles away in West Louisville.
Hold on, Metro Police.
Hands behind your back, Bob.
We're executing a search warrant.
Come out.
Where dozens of SWAT and police officers arrest an ex-boyfriend of Taylor's and his associates and seize evidence including drugs.
These officers are wearing their body cameras and they carry out the raid safely and without incident.
What the SWAT team doesn't...
They're wearing their body cameras because it's SWAT.
It's high risk and they're, they're uniformed.
What I want to know is that at this time, a hastily assembled team of narcotics officers is about to raid Taylor's home across town.
So one of the main, this is, so you got 24-24 LEAB, which is being raided.
They suspect her ex-boyfriend keeps cash or drugs there, but their intel is poor.
They don't know she has a new boyfriend and they think she lives alone.
Actually, their intel, which we're going to go over here, guys, is remarkably accurate.
But again, this is them not understanding how drug investigations work.
When seven officers begin the raid at 12.40 a.m., they notice the lights are off, except for the flicker of a TV in a bedroom.
The light on the bedroom, the TV.
I remember seeing it lit up blue when we pulled up.
Suggesting they know where Taylor is.
In less than three minutes, she would be fatally shot.
Inside, Taylor had dozed off while watching a movie with her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker.
Adjacent is the bedroom of Taylor's sister.
And we're going to talk about Kenneth Walker quite a bit here as well, guys.
Don't worry.
Kenneth Walker is someone who is not the most upstanding of citizens, but we'll get to that.
He's not home.
A hallway from the bedrooms leads to a living area and the apartment's entrance is in this breezeway.
The only light is this lamp opposite her door, where now the police begin to stack.
In this reconstruction, we hear the official testimonies given by the two officers.
officers nearest the door mattingly and nobles cosgrove who's providing cover and hoover and hankinson beside them and we'll hear from neighbors and kenneth walker who was interviewed by police right after the shooting when we all got up in line i knocked on the door banged on it just as mattingly begins to knock a man emerges from the apartment directly above he doesn't live there but is picking up his child after finishing work the door right there that's The babysit on these so I can go pick up my little girl.
A squabble with detective Brett Hankin and Suze, and already the team seems on edge.
I remember Brett extending his gun saying, Get so, just to explain to you guys real quick because they're saying they're on edge and everything else like that.
Um, when you guys are about to hit a house, okay, and you're about to do a search warrant, and you're about to do a search warrant for narcotics, all right, and you've been watching a person for a while.
You, your adrenaline, you're at the edge of your seat, your adrenaline is high, you're prepared to get into anything.
So, of course, you're going to be uneasy.
So, when a man comes out, right, late at night and says, Hey, what are y'all doing?
He doesn't know who the fuck that guy is.
He doesn't know if he's a dude that's watching that's going to call the person downstairs and tell him the police are here.
He doesn't know if he has a gun or if he has a weapon, it's dark out, etc.
You already know that this house that you're about to hit is involved in narcotics trafficking.
So, you don't necessarily know what's going on.
You need to be prepared for the worst.
So, when you come in, you're going to stack on the house.
Also, I want you guys to notice that right here, right?
The way that the property is, is you can't properly stack.
Normally, you'd want to stack a couple guys on this side and then a couple guys on this side.
But since they can't do that, you got a couple guys in the back watching all the other doors and then also watching behind them to make sure they're not ambushed.
Okay.
And then you got guys that are about to start doing the knock.
All right.
And as far as the knock goes, we're going to talk about that here in a second as well.
Back in your apartment, get back in your apartment.
Brett was a little bit worked up.
I remember looking at Brett saying, Brett, relax.
Brett, just relax, relax.
The man retreats inside.
So, Mattingly seemed to be the team leader on this operation, by the way.
The police are supposed to be.
And this is the guy that gets Mattingly remember as the guy that got shot, guys.
Conducting a knock and announce raid, but that's not what Mattingly says happens at first.
We didn't announce the first couple because our intent was to give her plenty of time to come to the door.
Inside, Taylor wakes up.
So there's a loud bang at the door.
She hopes that matters.
And let me make this very clear for y'all right now.
They did have a valid warrant, okay, for no knock.
And I'm going to show you guys that right now.
Okay.
It's right here.
If you guys can see, this is a search warrant to all peace officers in the Commonwealth search warrant.
Okay.
Kentucky.
The Afghan was Detective Joshua C. Janes.
Okay.
Louisville Metropolitan Police Department.
As you can see, it goes here, a multifamily two-story apartment.
And this is the address here: 3003 Springfield Drive apartment number four, Louisville, Kentucky.
Okay.
And they got pictures of it because normally when you do a search warrant of a residence, you have to be able to articulate what you're going to search, pictures, et cetera.
Okay.
This is a vehicle that they were watching during the course of their investigation, which we're going to talk about that in a little bit.
And then also, they talk about what they're intending to seize here.
All right.
And they said, if you come down here, right?
They go, they outline the facts, right, of their search warrant.
Again, this is affidavit for search warrant, same exact thing.
All right.
So the affidavit is the portion where they actually outline their facts.
All right.
And as you guys can see here, they're talking about these are the people that are involved in the investigation.
Jamarcus Cordell Glover, who is her boyfriend, aka Chapo, who's the case was centered around, then Adrian Orlandez Walker, and then you got Breonna Taylor.
Okay.
And we're going to talk about how Breonna Taylor was involved with the drug trafficking investigation here soon.
But the main thing I want you guys to take away is Afghanistan requesting a no-knock entry to the premises due to the nature of how these drug traffickers operate.
These drug traffickers have a history of attempting to destroy evidence, have cameras on the location that compromise detectives once an approach to the dwelling is made, and have history of fleeing from law enforcement.
And we're going to talk about how they came to these conclusions.
But as you guys can see, all this is probable cause, okay, as to why they ended up getting a no-knock warrant.
They were requesting it and they ended up getting it what?
Signed 12th day of March, 2020, 1237 p.m.
So the day before they did the raid.
Actually, they got it that day and then that night they hit the house.
Okay.
And you can see the judge signing it right there.
So for anyone that's saying, oh, they didn't even, they didn't even knock or any of that other stuff.
They didn't fucking have to.
Here's the court paperwork right here that shows it to y'all.
The reason why they knocked, guys, is because they said, you know what?
It's late at night.
Let's knock as a courtesy.
Let's try to get her to the front of the door and do this peacefully.
Now, when you work in law enforcement, guys, you always want to de-escalate things.
You always want to have things go as smoothly as possible.
You don't want to be involved in shootings.
You don't want to be involved in use of forced situations.
You want to go home at night.
Okay.
So when they got to the scene, they know that this is more of a lower risk warrant, which is why they don't put the SWAT team on this house and just the detectives went to this house.
And then on top of that, you got to understand, they don't have enough SWAT for every single house.
They're hitting, I think they hit three different locations simultaneously.
So when you're hitting locations simultaneously, guys.
You especially for drug warrants, you have to hit locations simultaneously.
And the reason why you got to do that is because if you hit one house and then say, all right, cool, let's pack up and do hit the next house.
What's going to happen is they're going to start calling each other and letting each other know, yo, get rid of the drugs.
Get out of here.
The cops are coming.
The cops are coming.
So they can't hit each house one by one.
They have to hit them simultaneously.
And you only have enough SWAT guys for a couple of different residences.
Okay.
So the detectives ended up taking this house because it was the lowest risk.
Okay.
This is Brianna Taylor.
And in the drug investigation, they were able to identify her as the girlfriend of Glover where he was re-upping and getting his product from.
Okay.
So they were like, okay, we can probably hit this one and not have too many issues.
But just, but again, here's the proof.
You guys see it right here in black and white.
They did have a no-knock warrant for the home.
However, when they arrived on the scene, they said, yo, let's knock.
And the thing that's crazy is the fact that they knocked actually is what set everything in motion.
And we're going to talk, see that here in a second.
Please scared her to death.
Me too.
Like, who is that?
Banged on the door, no response.
Banged on it again.
No response.
At that point, we started announcing ourselves.
For the people in the chat that are in their feelings, saying, why are they picking on a female, et cetera, et cetera?
We're going to get into that.
But get out of your feelings.
Understand that we're going off of facts here.
And I'm telling you how police conduct investigations and why the SWAT team wasn't there on this particular address and why the detectives ended up hitting this one.
Okay.
Whether the police announced themselves clearly enough is a critical issue in this story that we'll return to later on.
But again, they didn't have to announce it.
They didn't have to knock on the door.
Of course, you're going to announce who you are, but they didn't have to knock on a door.
They had a no-knock warrant, which is common, actually, guys, for drug investigations.
Because when you knock on a door, it gives them time to flush the drugs down the toilet and or get rid of evidence.
Not knowing who's at the door this lady, Walker grabs his license times gun.
Another knock at the door.
She's like, who is it?
Loud at the top of her words.
No response.
So I'm like, what the heck?
They rushed to get dressed and walk toward the door.
Never even made it like mid-hallway, but as loud as we were screaming to say, who it is, I know whoever would be on the other side of the door could hear us.
Outside, some of the police do hear Taylor.
I can hear somebody inside.
I kept telling John.
I can hear her.
But after knocking and waiting for around 45 seconds, they decided they've given her enough time to respond and rammed the door open.
And I would argue that's almost too much time because the thing is, is that the longer you wait at the door, and again, guys, I'm giving you the law enforcement perspective.
The longer you wait at the door, the longer you're giving the people inside the home to either A, gear up and get weapons and shoot at you, or B, destroy evidence.
Okay.
So they had a no-knock warrant, but they decided to knock anyway, which you're going to see here, what ends up happening because they end up knocking.
The last time I just said, let's just hit it.
And that's when we did the police search warrant.
We'll show here what the police and Walker described seeing next.
After the third hit, it flew open.
And that's when it hit the fans.
As we're coming to the door, the door light comes off the hinges like an explosion.
The officers now make a tactical.
Now, Kenneth Walker said that when he said it came off like an explosion.
...mistake.
Mattingly steps into the doorway and puts himself in what police describe as the fatal funnel, a position vulnerable to gunfire and hard to move from.
I could see down the hallway.
There's the male and a female side by side, shoulder to shoulder.
Almost like they were together.
The apartment is lit only by the breezeway light that's coming from behind Mattingly and the faint glare of the TV in Taylor's bedroom.
You can't see anybody, though.
It was dark.
There was no lights.
Thinking it's an intruder, Walker Ainslow shoots once and hits Mattingly in the thigh.
I feel like I aimed down because I wouldn't, of course, I don't need to kill anybody.
So I just let off one shot.
Mottingly immediately returns fire.
Yet you hit him in the femoral artery, which is literally life-threatening.
You can bleed out within seconds if you get hit in the femoral artery, which is exactly where he got hit.
So that is deadly force.
Okay.
There's a reason why when you're trained in law enforcement, they tell you to shoot center mass to stop the threat because they know when you shoot center mass, you're going to stop the threat.
So saying, hey, I'm going to shoot at the floor or I'm going to just shoot at a leg because I'm not trying to kill anybody.
You can kill somebody down there.
So, this goes to show Kenneth Walker's gross negligence as to how firearm combat actually works.
When you shoot, you shoot to stop the threat, not to like just, oh, I didn't want to hurt anybody or whatever.
That's you can't, you can't separate the two.
This is how it goes, you know.
I got four rounds off, and it was like boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
And all of a sudden, there's a whole lot of shots.
Mattingly fires two more rounds when he falls and takes cover almost at the same time.
Cosgrove moves in and fires, stepping on Mattingly in the process.
He has now also put himself in the fatal funnel.
And although he's shooting, he appears to have no idea what's happening.
I see blinding, vivid, white light and blackness at the same time.
I don't hear any gunfire at all ever.
And I did not have any pain sensation or any recollection that I'm firing.
He continues shooting blindly until he runs out of ammunition, a total of 16 rounds.
If you told me I didn't fire a gun, I'd be, I mean, I'd be like, okay, I believe you in response to Walker's shot.
And here's the thing, too.
Like, they're playing this.
They're not playing the full interview, guys.
They're playing clips of the interview to make us to spin it a certain way.
This is why it's so important to get context.
When you're involved in a firefight, okay, guys, you literally have seconds to respond, life or death.
Let's say you're there in their shoes.
You go to, you're, you're doing a search warrant of a house.
You think it's going to be, you know, hey, it's not going to be this.
We have the lowest risk person here.
It's still dangerous.
We're still amped up or whatever it may be, but let's do this.
You knock the door and then bang, you hear a gunshot, and your guy gets shot in the leg.
Okay.
And they train you in the academy.
They tell you when you get shot in a leg in her femoral artery and you're bleeding to that degree, then you're, you know, you're going to die within seconds.
So your reaction is like, yo, I got to provide cover fire for my guy.
I got to protect him.
So he steps into the line and he shoots as well.
Now, you're returning fire to stop the threat.
And this all happens literally within seconds, guys.
Within seconds.
Okay.
Mattingly and Cosgrove together fire four shots into a chair, cupboards, and a stove in the kitchen.
Two bullets go into the ceiling and pass through the living room in the apartment above, where the man, his two-year-old daughter, and babysitter waited.
Three more shots go into the living room wall to the right.
And the officers fire 13 rounds down the hallway where Taylor and Walker stood.
Also, I want you guys to make a note that both of them came out of the bedroom together.
Okay.
And Taylor was in front of Walker.
All right.
Walker didn't get hit one time, guys.
He didn't get hit one time.
She absorbed all the bullets.
And I think she ended up getting shot about six times.
All right.
So I want you to also make a note of that because something is going to come up during the video that I'm going to play for you guys that's extremely revealing.
Taylor is shot six times.
Huh?
It's not this one, no.
Times on both sides of her body, in the abdomen and chest, her arm and leg, and twice in her foot.
In all, these two officers fire 22 rounds in less than a minute.
An FBI ballistics report.
It was about 12 seconds they were able to fire those shots off.
This is how fast gunfights go, guys.
For anyone that trains with firearms, you know how quickly you can get off 10 rounds.
20 rounds.
30 rounds.
40 rounds.
Found that both of them shot Taylor.
And that one of the 16 rounds Cosgrove fired was the lethal bullet.
We both dropped to the ground, but I just heard her screaming.
Thinking they're under attack, some of the officers flee when they hear a pause in shooting.
There was a little bitty moment of no shots.
I was like, here's the time to go.
And then it all started up again.
We don't know the precise sequence of events, but Detective Hankinson runs to the front.
I can hear the firing as I'm going as I'm making the corner.
I can see that.
Someone said, why is anyone mad at her boyfriend for using her as a human shield?
Someone's onto something right here.
I'm going to tell you, you guys are going to find out here in a second why, because it didn't make sense to me either.
Why is he using his girl as a human shield?
Why is he going out with her with the gun?
Granted, this was her address, but wouldn't you, as a guy, go out to deal with it by yourself?
Like, why would you tell your girl, oh, get in front of me while I have the gun behind you and shoot?
But it's going to make sense here for you guys in a second.
That flashes, the muzzle flashes.
So this is Detective Hankinson now, what he's going to do, which is very, very stupid.
Very bad police procedure here.
And he ended up getting indicted for this, rightfully so.
But the only ones shooting are police.
Even though all the curtains are drawn, Hankinson blindly fires five bullets through the patio windows.
My only option was to return fire, and I did that to the muzzle flashes.
He moves and fires five more rounds through the bedroom window of Taylor's sister, who isn't home.
Two bullets fly over Walker and Taylor, but none hits them.
The bullets that go into the living area pass over Taylor's sofa and kitchen table and smash her clock.
Three penetrate the wall and enter her neighbor's apartment.
So see, his bullish trajectories go this way because he's thinking that the attackers are like over here now at this point.
Because remember, guys, he's seeing the muzzle flash.
Henrikson is down here, right?
He's seeing the muzzle flashes.
He's coming from over here, but it's actually the officer shooting.
So he thinks, holy shit, they're in a full-on gunfight.
He doesn't know whose bullets are whose, right?
So he thinks that the guy, okay, let me take a tactical advantage.
I'm going to shoot in through here, through this window, because the attacker is probably here because he doesn't want to hit crossfire.
Bad move.
Very, very stupid because the shooting was actually coming from here.
This is where the gunshot, the gunfire came from and hit Mattingly in the leg.
So what he did was extremely dumb.
And then he shoots.
It breaks through, hits her clock, and then goes into the next apartment.
Those bullets also smash the kitchen table, hit a wall, and shatter the patio doors at the rear.
A pregnant woman, her son, and partner were home.
Hankinson has been charged with wantonly endangering their lives.
In total, the police fire 32 bullets, penetrating almost every room in Taylor's apartment.
They hit saucepans, cereal boxes, and smash into her shower.
They puncture shoes, shatter cleaning equipment, and land in her sister's clothing.
Her sister was not home on that night, by the way, guys.
Her sister was out somewhere.
It was just her and Kenneth Walker.
Three minutes after police came to search her home, a fatally wounded Taylor is lying on the ground.
I'm just panicking and I'm telling somebody I'm yelling help because she's right here breathing and nobody's coming and I'm just confused and scared.
And I feel the same.
So here's Kenneth Walker right here.
He's being interviewed, guys, by Public Integrity Unit.
This is Amanda, I think Celie, her name is.
And I forget his name, but the reason why I know who she is is because she was the main investigator on this Breonna Taylor shooting.
Anytime there's an officer involved shooting, guys, internal affairs pretty much comes in and takes over the investigation.
So that's why the detectives didn't go into the home.
And we're going to talk about that here in a second.
You guys are going to see what I mean by that.
Right here.
Yeah, and we have this interview as well, which he lies in this video.
You guys are going to, I'm going to play it for you on this interview.
there's a portion of it.
Months later, when Attorney General Daniel Cameron presented the charges against Hankerson and said that Mattingly and Cosgrove's actions were justified, he emphasized that police did properly announce themselves.
Evidence shows that officers both knocked and announced their presence.
They didn't have to knock, though.
Just want to make that extremely clear that they didn't have to knock.
And as a matter of fact, the knocking is what caused the problems.
Because if you guys realize the fact that they knocked and waited there so long gave Kenneth and Brianna time to retrieve the firearm to come to the to walk towards the door and then they had a weapon.
Had they just broken in and went in and yelled police search warrant, police search warrant, police search warrant, they would have probably heard them.
And then on top of that, they wouldn't have had time to go ahead and get their guns.
Anytime you wait at the door after knocking a significant amount of time, you're opening yourself up to quite a bit of liability when it comes to the perpetrators either getting weapons to shoot at you or destroying evidence at the apartment.
But actually, the evidence is far from clear.
In 911 calls immediately after the shooting, Taylor's neighbors don't know police are carrying out a raid.
Please get an ambush.
Again, guys, relax about using her as a shield.
I'm going to explain to you guys why that I don't think that's what happened.
Because I have other evidence here that I'm about to show y'all.
I honestly don't think he was using her as a shield.
You're going to see her in a second.
There's bullet holes all the way through the wall, through our glass.
I have a five-year-old in here, so something needs to be explained to me.
Those were from the gunshots from Henriksen.
And then statements police took afterwards.
None of Taylor's neighbors heard the officers announce.
This apartment's patio door was open.
I mean, I was completely unaware that it was that it was cops.
Two teenagers in this apartment heard a commotion, but didn't hear police announce through their open window, their mom said.
They told me that nothing was said, that they just beat on the door.
I said, so y'all don't know if it was them.
She was like, they didn't say nothing.
Just beat on the door.
And the family who lived directly above Taylor also heard nothing.
Before the gunshots come out, did you hear anything conversations or anything like that?
People talking.
No, no.
So he says no at first.
In their statements and in interviews with the Times, over a dozen neighbors say they did not hear the police.
Attorney General Cameron's assertion rests on the accounts of police officers and a single witness, Aaron Sarpi, the man collecting his daughter that night, and who saw the police when he came outside.
In his first interview with investigators, Sarpi was asked what he heard when he went back inside.
Did you ever hear anyone identify themselves as police?
No, nobody identified themselves.
Months later, he told police his memory was foggy, but that he thought officers did announce.
So he contradicts himself.
And beyond what the police said, this critical grand jury conclusion rested on his entirely inconsistent account.
After the raid, the scene outside is...
All right, so...
So craziness, right?
This is the pandemonium that happens after the shooting.
So this police officer right here is arriving on scene after Mattingly, Jonathan Mattingly, was shot.
I recognize okay, use the Sargon Springfall drive.
We have EMS on the left.
One, David, on Springfield.
Where y'all at?
So this is a gated community, guys, by the way.
This is why you can't really see.
He can't get in, but it's kind of funny what he does here in a second.
It's like, fuck it.
Because he knows that an officer is down.
So he's just going to ram it.
Here, here, quick clock, quick clock.
See, so he sees there's Jonathan Mattingly down on the floor.
That's why he took those measures.
You know, when you know someone is down, you're going to, you know, rush because they didn't have a lot of medical equipment with them at the time.
Just cut them.
Sean a leg, as you guys can see right there.
Remember, you know, guys, viewer discretion is advised.
Cut it with my neck.
Might have to lose this because you get the cloud in.
Here we go.
You okay, John?
John, you okay?
Huh?
Yeah.
See, it's easy for people to sit there and be like, oh, yo, why'd they shoot so many times or whatever it may be?
But let me see you get shot in the fucking leg and not return fire or have your want your partners to shoot back at whoever shot at you.
You know?
And this is what I'm talking about when I say a lot of people don't understand, number one, the dangers that police officers put themselves in.
Number two, they don't understand the basic firearms training that, you know, when you're shot upon, right, you got to take cover to some degree and return fire.
You got to stop the threat.
So this is real life, guys.
Okay.
This is real life.
If he didn't have all these people with him, he would have probably bled out and died.
He's cutting his jeans so that he can get in there and put a tourniquet on his leg.
We've got EMS on standby.
Yeah.
And the fact.
What is that?
Okay, we're going to fast forward that a little bit.
They're here.
John, you're good, buddy.
John, you got this.
Keep talking, John.
John, you're all right.
I'm good.
Hey, we got it closed off.
We got it closed off.
See, and the fact that he's not screaming right now while going through this is crazy, man.
And this is what got this is what guys deal with a lot of times when they do these warrants, man.
This is what officers deal with, getting shot at and everything else like that.
You're okay, man.
All right.
Cover him.
So I think you guys kind of see, got the gist of that.
So So let's continue on with the New York Times.
Chaos.
Officers tend to masterly.
But an ambulance that had been staging nearby is nowhere to be found.
Somebody give me the radio SWAT on it.
They radio the SWAT officers across town.
EMS on the call.
Where's Springfield?
They're requesting armor down there.
We're going to go ahead and take it.
Let's go.
Let's go.
They head for Taylor's address, a spot arrives.
Close to 40 police vehicles are already at the scene.
Around this time, Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, is being arrested.
He's been hit by a bullet.
He's walking backwards.
Now, I have the video for this.
Let's pull that up here right now as well.
Because, like I said before, guys, I have my speculation on what I think potentially happened here.
But I want you guys to kind of get the gist first and then we could then we'll discuss.
So which one is it that he gets arrested in?
Okay, the fetid file.
Give me one second, guys.
I have it right here.
We have a bunch of vids.
I think there's this one.
All right.
Brett, we have a dollar.
So they're ordering him out right now.
Okay, so I'm going to fast forward a little bit just so you guys kind of know what's going on here.
But this is a German Shepherd.
Okay.
And yeah, so we're going to move it at what point we're at?
Sorry, guys, we're getting it so that you guys don't have to watch the entire thing.
Is this it?
Dogging gauges.
Okay.
You're up there with me?
Okay.
You're which one?
Where is it?
Down here, where?
At what time?
Right here?
Okay.
All right.
So we're going to hit play right here, guys.
Nobody.
Tell him we have 11015.
What is it?
I don't know.
I was baking at the door and she said, who is it?
Okay, so that's Kenneth talking right now, guys.
He said, he's explaining, hey, who is it?
So that's his voice right now.
Sounds like he's sobbing.
There's somebody in there dead?
Get to my girlfriend.
It's her house.
Who's shooting at us?
We have to go in if there's somebody.
So the police asked him who was shooting at us.
We're both working.
Where is she at in the apartment?
She's on the trailer in the car.
What kind of gun did she shoot?
It's a nine.
It's the regular nine.
He asked, what kind of gun did she shoot, right?
Did she shoot or you shoot it?
It was her.
She was scared.
It was her.
She was scared.
Guys, I mean, no one talked about this.
Okay.
Now, he's scared, obviously.
He's worried, whatever it may be.
When he's in the interview room, he goes and says, he shot.
And everyone else in the mainstream media is saying that he shot.
But when asked here, hey, who shot?
He's saying she shot.
And that makes a little bit more sense because why would you go out with your girlfriend behind her?
Okay.
And she ends up getting all the bullets.
Yeah.
This is what I'm talking about when I'm saying I'm about to debunk a bunch of stuff here.
Let's rewind that real fast for y'all.
Only I'm fucking Fed It, man.
Do not believe the propaganda, man.
Where is she at in the apartment?
She's on the trailer.
Where is she at in the apartment?
She's on the ground.
It's a nine.
It's the regular nine millimeter.
Did she shoot or you shoot it?
It was her.
She was scared.
It was her.
She was scared.
Now it's starting to make sense why she was in front of him and he was behind her.
But they're not going to talk to y'all about that, are they?
Now, am I saying that she deserved to get killed and shot back the way that she did?
No.
But now it makes sense as to why she was in front of him and got all the bullets shot at her and he didn't get one shot, guys.
He didn't get shot one time.
You saw all the shots that were going down the hallway.
If he was behind her, actually, and he shot his gun like he claims he did, he would have been shot too.
So that's something that I found very interesting.
We don't know now.
I mean, again, I'm not saying that she shot the gun, but that's very telling that he's saying that she shot the gun when he first gets arrested.
And when you're in a high, you know, a high-stress moment like this, you're not going to lie a lot of the times.
You're going to tell the truth because he wants them to go in there and go get her.
Okay?
And when I show you guys Brianna's criminal case, you guys are going to see why it was potentially true that she was the one that shot at the police.
The gun wasn't registered to her.
It was registered to him, Kenny.
And he said that we're working people, which is not true either.
Kenny guys was the drug trafficker that robbed people.
Mainstream media is not going to tell you that either, are they?
They're not going to show you this part of the video.
Nobody.
We're going to interrupt.
I'm not going to do it.
Easy.
Good boy.
Okay.
So, covered that part right there.
Shout out to Christina for helping me find that in the thing.
She did all the body cam footage stuff, guys.
So she knows better than me as to where the time stamps are for them.
Yeah, we could go.
Yeah, we can go ahead to his interview.
Yeah.
So here's the Kenneth Walker interview, guys.
I'm going to pull it up right now.
What's the time stamp on it, Christina?
104.
Okay.
Oh, you mean an hour and four?
It looks like he's asleep.
Okay, so it doesn't let you fast forward.
Give one second, guys.
I'm going to try to see if I can fast forward this shit real fast.
There we go.
Oh, nope.
We'll go back 10 seconds.
So he's crying.
They got him in the interview room now.
You got to do it by the 30 seconds.
So, yeah, I'm just going to go for it.
Sorry, guys.
This media player sucks.
Did you say it here?
No, because the interviewers aren't even there.
Okay.
You both get up, start putting on post.
All right, so let's go back 10 seconds.
All right, so this is the interview, guys, that he did with the, and sorry for that, but here it is right here.
This is the interview he does with the public integrity unit, PIU, okay?
Internal affairs for the LMPD, Louisville Metropolitan Police Department, after the shooting, okay?
So you guys just heard on video where he was like, she shot, she was scared.
Now he's going to say something different.
And I apologize that it's low volume like this, guys, but this is what they gave.
This is kind of them uploading it.
We both get up, start putting on post.
Another knock at the door.
She's like, who is it?
Loud at the top of her lungs.
No response.
So I'm like, what the heck?
So y'all grabbed my gun, which is legal.
Like, I'm licensed to carry everything.
I've never even fired my gun outside of the range.
I'm scared to death.
So she says that there's another knock at the door.
She's yelling at the top of her lungs.
And I am too at this point.
Who is it?
No answer.
No response.
No anything.
So we're like, what the heck?
Broke, just see what I have on.
Grab the nurse saying he's already been on it.
He's hurt.
So we both are just putting on something to go in to the door and see who's knocking the door.
It's late at night.
So when we come out, when we get out of the bed, whatever, like walking towards the door, the door comes off the hinges.
So I just let off one shot.
Like, still can't see who.
So he lets off one shot.
So he's behind her and he lets off the one shot because she goes out first.
We know that for a fact because that's why she got hit shot with all those shots.
If he was in the front, he would have got hit.
Okay.
So it just doesn't make sense.
Or anything.
So now the door is like flying open, one shot, and then all of a sudden there's a whole lot of shots.
And okay.
So contradicts what he said earlier.
Okay.
And then also, let's see here.
I got a couple other videos.
But I think that will keep going here.
Hey, come on.
We need to get moved because there might be a victim in time.
Keep walking backwards.
You're scared.
Right.
Walk back, Ellis.
In this room.
Walk back to me.
Walker had calls 911 and neighbors had heard his pleas for help.
What at 1 a.m.?
Almost 20 minutes after the shooting.
The police still don't know Taylor is critically injured inside.
There's someone in there dead?
You're my girlfriend.
It's her health.
Okay, so I actually have the body cam footage of that girl.
See that woman?
I think it's the woman right there.
Here it is.
They're bringing him back.
What's that, man?
Get down on your knees.
So you got the full thing here.
Put your hands behind your head.
You want a fucking person?
what's going on let's get behind this car for cover What did I do?
Who else is in the apartment?
Nobody.
My girlfriend's dead.
Tell him we have 11015.
Where is he wrestling?
I don't know.
Inside?
There's somebody that is.
I was faking at the door.
She said, who is the idiot?
So this is him right here.
That's Kenneth.
That's one of the officers.
And then this is, I think, the female's body camera.
No, no, we down three times.
Please.
His pockets clear.
There's someone in there dead?
You're our girlfriend.
It's her health.
It was her health.
Who's shooting it up?
We have to go in.
What is this about?
I'm with you if you want to go.
We're both just beggar worker people.
Where is she?
That's not true.
He's a drug trafficker and robs people for money.
And I'm going to show you guys that here in a second.
And Brianna was also a member of a drug trafficking organization, which we're going to get into that here in a second as well.
We're at.
In the hallway.
What kind of gun did she shoot?
It's a nine.
It's a regular nine millimeter.
Did she shoot or you shoot it?
It was her.
You're scared.
I just kicked.
Nobody like.
We're going to let Swatch.
So he's either lying to protect himself, right?
And say that she shot it.
Or, I mean, hey, either way, man, this guy isn't necessarily the most upstanding of citizens.
I'm going to show you guys here in a second.
It's not mine.
I got her.
I'll walk into the night.
What is this?
Walk.
Walk.
We got to get him in the car.
All right.
So they take him into custody, right?
So this is, again, this is the New York Times version.
They don't talk about all this other stuff behind the scenes, but we're going to keep playing their video.
What is this about?
My girlfriend is here.
I don't get.
Keep walking.
As Walker is being let out, Swatch gets ready to secure the apartment.
Hey, there's a kid upstairs.
He's not.
It's a kid upstairs.
Little kid.
What the?
Hey, front door.
See how they clip it, guys?
It makes it look like, yo, the police are crazy.
Like, they put him on the thing and everything.
But what they don't realize is this guy, Kenneth Walker, is a drug trafficker, okay?
Robbing people.
Does a bunch of criminal activity, but they're not going to show y'all that.
So this is the SWAT going into the home now.
Looks like clear.
Go ahead and get EMS in here.
Only now, half an hour after the raid began, does an EMT finally check Taylor?
And later, as two officers stand to card, they take in the scene.
They see Taylor's uniform.
She worked as an emergency room technician in city hospitals.
No, she was fired.
Okay.
She lost her job, guys, because, and we're going to talk about that here in a second, why she got in trouble with her job.
they note the bullet holes outside the SWAT officers debrief and what they've seen Hey, camera's off there, Mike.
Yeah, I'm off.
This is the part one that said anyways.
The SWAT commander who was called to Taylor's home after the raid was later interviewed by investigators.
We just got the feeling that night that something really bad happened.
Dale Massey, a 20-year police veteran, was highly critical.
FYI, they interviewed everybody.
The PIU interviewed every single officer that was on the scene.
Okay.
So this doesn't make it special.
Of course, they're going to try to spin it that way, make it look like that.
But if you look over here, just so you guys, so I can prove to y'all that I'm not capping here.
Here.
Here is the PIU, you know, Public Service Integrity Unit, Special Investigations Division.
Here's a lead person, Amanda Seal.
Okay.
Literally pages upon pages of investigative reporting.
Okay.
Pictures, everything else like that.
And then we get into all the people that they interviewed.
So the first interview with Kenneth Walker, okay, which we showed you guys a portion of that.
Then they go ahead and start interviewing all these officers that were involved.
You can see their pictures there.
These is how you guys know.
Okay.
More officers that were there at the scene.
More officers that were there at the scene.
These are some consent searches that they did.
See, more officers.
Bam.
They pretty much interviewed everyone that was there.
And this is all on their website.
Critical of what unfolded.
He said there was no coordination with SWAT.
We had no idea they were going to be at that part that night.
I would have advised them 100% not to do it.
And that executing another warrant at the same time may have compromised Taylor's safety.
We treat safety very important, right?
So like simultaneous warrants, bad business.
Okay.
That guy doesn't know what the fuck he's talking about.
He really doesn't know what the fuck he's talking about.
And the reason why, and I got to make this clarification for you guys, very, I got to make this extremely clear so people understand.
When you are, and this is how I could tell this guy doesn't do cases either.
So in police departments and law enforcement in general, you got guys that make cases and you got guys that just sit around and don't do cases or you got guys that only do warrants and nothing else.
Not all, but a lot of SWAT guys don't necessarily do their own investigations.
What do I mean by this?
Typically, guys, when you have a big case or you have something where you need search warrants done or you need simultaneous search warrants done or whatever it may be, there's a case officer or a lead detective or a lead investigator or a lead case agent, whatever it may be, right?
That person is responsible for the success of the investigation, okay?
You don't have time when you're the main case agent to sit there and be hitting house after house one by one.
You have to do the thing simultaneously.
And the reason why is because when you do houses simultaneously, you prevent number one, the destruction of evidence, and then number two, the alert of co-conspirators.
Drug trafficking is an inherently dependent crime upon other co-conspirators.
Okay.
You need to depend on other people to facilitate the transportation, manufacture, distribution, and production of drugs.
That's just how it goes.
And this is coming from a guy that did investigations in the drug world at the highest level.
I was seizing thousands of pounds of marijuana, hundreds of kilos of cocaine, methamphetamine, et cetera, dealing with Mexican cartels.
When you do search warrants for drugs, okay, and you have multiple stash houses identified, or you have a stash house identified, but you also have a courier house identified, or you have another location identified where criminal activity is going on in the drug trafficking organization.
You need to hit all the houses up at the same time.
And that is to prevent the detection of law enforcement, the destruction of evidence, and to also promote safety.
Okay.
Because guys are going to flee when you hit it one by one.
So simultaneous search warrants are just the way you got to do things when it's especially in drug trafficking.
Okay.
So, this SWAT guy doesn't know what he's talking about.
And the reason why he doesn't know what he's talking about, and I already know by just him simply saying something like that, is because when you're an investigator, you think that way where I need to go ahead and get all my evidence to get all my targets in custody.
SWAT guys, a lot of the times, don't do cases.
They just do SWAT.
They just do SWAT.
Their specialty is being involved in SWAT.
They're not necessarily involved in the investigative process and they don't need to understand the importance of gathering evidence in an efficient manner and minimizing and mitigating risk when it comes to the destruction of evidence.
Okay.
So in this case, what should have been done, and of course, we can all be 2020 hindsight here and Monday morning quarterback is they should have had SWAT hit all the houses at once.
Okay.
However, the issue here is that, like I told y'all before, they knocked on the door, which they shouldn't have done.
All the other residences, I'm pretty sure were no-knock warrants.
Okay.
And that gives SWATS the advantage to get in there.
Bam, police, police, they kick the door in.
Please, please, please, please.
Bam, they feel overwhelmed because you got SWAT guys going in there.
All right.
But it's just that Brianna's house was identified as a stash house.
It wasn't necessarily identified as a trafficking house.
So in their eyes, the probability of a fire being on scene or a bunch of other guys being on scene wasn't going to be as high.
But what they should have done was definitely put SWAT there.
But to say simultaneous search warrants at the same time is bad business is ludicrous.
It tells me that he is not well versed in how drug investigations work.
Period.
All right.
And I can say that with 100% confidence.
you don't know what he's talking about narcotics officers testified that they didn't know taylor had a new boyfriend that her sister lived there or that her two years And again, like I said before, SWAT guys hit houses.
They don't do cases.
Make that very clear for you guys.
They hit houses.
They don't do cases.
They don't put complex cases together.
You call them when you need the houses hit, but they're not the ones investigating the crime, figuring out who's who, identifying targets, identifying where evidence may be, etc.
That's another thing, too.
I want to let y'all know.
They keep saying that they didn't find any evidence in the house.
The reason why they didn't find any evidence in the house, guys, is because the narcotics didn't search the house.
Okay.
The people that ended up searching the house was the PIU, and they did it now because it turned into an internal investigation and a murder investigation.
So that is obviously going to take precedence over a drug investigation.
All right.
When you do a drug search warrant, you're going to have to peel back floorboards.
You're going to have to start knocking shit down because when they hide drugs, they hide it in small compartments or whatever it may be.
Now, in this case, okay, Brianna was a contact of a high-level drug trafficker.
So they were looking more for money, ledgers, etc.
Year old goddaughter regularly stayed.
Massey said the department had a history of poor intelligence gathering.
Back in the day, we would take a lot of detective information and take it as golden.
Not anymore, because so often there's no kids, there's no dogs.
We're told there's kids and dogs.
So we have an exhaustive recount process that we go through.
He said standing in the doorway, the fatal funnel, as Matt and Lee and Cosgrove had, was a tactical mistake.
Is it practical or is it even common for three people to be in what we consider the fatal funnel?
Absolutely not.
No, you would never put yourself in that situation.
And that there's a right way and a wrong way to conduct a raid.
You knock, announce, and give people ample time to leave.
We're not going to rush in to get dope.
We're not going to treat human life more important than any amount of dope.
Right.
And just to be clear.
And again, he's speaking as a SWAT guy.
He's not speaking from an investigator's perspective.
And I want you guys to understand that perspective.
Wherever found the Taylors.
Okay.
And just to be clear, you don't, narcotics didn't end up searching the house.
The people that searched the house, guys, were the internal affairs and the internal affairs went there for a murder investigation.
And also, guys, do me a quick favor, man.
Get us to 1,000 likes.
We only got 800-something likes, and there's 1,800 of you guys in here watching right now.
So do me a favor, get us at least 1,000 likes at the moment.
I know a bunch of people are going to be here hating, but it is what it is.
Someone said, Cat Myron.
No, bro, the narcotics did not search the house.
The people that searched the house was PIU.
And I know that because I have the search warrant right here that PIU was the ones that searched the house.
Once narcotics hit the door and got shot at, okay, done.
Investigation, their drug investigation is now done.
They have to go ahead and clear the scene and let PIU take over because someone was killed, guys.
Now, for all those idiots in the chat that are saying, I'm capping about drugs, the narcotics unit not doing the search warrant.
Here, look, what does this look like, my friends?
And this is why so many people are not aware of how investigations really work.
We're going to scroll up here and I'm going to show you guys a search warrant.
So, this right here are a bunch of search warrants done by Sergeant Amanda Seal.
And you guys could all look at this for yourself.
Okay, she did a bunch of search warrants on phones.
Okay, but she also did one on the residence, which I'm going to find here for you guys here in a second.
Give me one second.
What chat?
Pull it up real fast.
Shout out to my man with the $100 super chat.
Appreciate that, my friend.
It goes, big boss, $100.
Thank you for the fact-based investigation of this case.
It is sad to see she had to pass, but the facts need to be all out there and not what they want society to see so they can paint a narrative to control people's point of view/slash thoughts.
Thank you for all you do.
Fuck the haters.
I appreciate that, my friend.
And all I'm doing is presenting y'all the facts and giving you guys what's going on here.
So here we go.
Affidavit for search warrant, affian Sergeant Omar Lee.
By the way, this guy was the first person that was involved in this case from the public integrity unit.
Okay.
And he basically goes ahead and says, any and all trace evidence, including, but not limited to blood saliva, physiological fluids, and secretions, hair fibers, fingerprints, palm prints, footprints, bucle swabs, shoe prints, photographs, relevant clothing, et cetera, weapons and or farms of any other devices that may be capable of discharging projectile, projectiles, ammunition, bullet casings, and fragments.
What the fuck does that look like to y'all?
It's a murder investigation now.
So narcotics never went in there and searched drugs.
This is what I'm talking about when I say don't believe mainstream media because they don't know what the fuck they're talking about a lot of the times.
The drug unit couldn't search the home because PIU came in and took over.
As soon as they got shot, PIU, okay, aka Internal Affairs, takes precedence.
And here's the search warrant as fucking proof for all the low IQ people that are saying I'm capping when I said that narcotics didn't get to do their search.
PIU came in and took over.
Okay.
Look at this.
They came in and did it on the 13th of March at 2:38, 2.20, 3.28 a.m.
Let's do the math.
We know that the narcotics unit, okay, went to hit the house right around midnight.
Boom, get a shooting.
Things are going crazy.
There's a standoff.
You know, next thing you know, three hours later, you know, PIU shows up on the scene.
Oh, and not to mention, PIU showed up immediately after, and then they wrote this search warrant.
They got this search warrant signed at 3 at 30 in the morning.
You're telling me narcotics would have had time to do their search warrant, then all of a sudden PIU comes in and does theirs?
No.
Drug investigation shut down.
Officer shot.
Potential defendant killed.
Now PIU has to come in and make sure that the shoe was clean.
And it's a murder investigation now.
This is what I'm talking about, bro.
This is the difference between journalists looking at documents versus a seasoned investigator looking at documents.
I know that the narcotics unit couldn't look at the house and find the drugs.
Oh, and by the way, y'all want to know what they also found?
So look at this when they search the house.
Now, Brianna was with Kenneth Walker at the time, right?
But, and there's a lot of documents here, guys, as you guys can see, a lot of stuff that I went through here.
But they were able to find mail in her home from the other guy, Marcus A.K. Chapo, okay, the drug trafficker, Glover.
All right?
So look, she posted bond for him on multiple occasions.
All right.
I'm going to go from the top here just so you guys know what I'm talking about.
Jamarcus Glover, right?
who was the main target of investigation here.
See, and this is the thing that's strange, that New York Times did all this investigating, as they would say.
They went through all the documents, but they're not telling you guys about this, why the police were there in the first place.
Okay?
So here you guys could see, okay, money put, bail bonds, payable ledger card.
Okay.
Here's your guy right here, Marcus Jaglover.
All right.
Here's his case, cases.
Okay.
Here you go.
Breonna Taylor, payable ledger card.
Putting up bond for him.
Get him out.
Right?
More stuff.
Receipt.
And this guy's a known drug trafficker.
Look at her putting more money up, bailing him out.
And they also found a letter from Jamarcus to her in the home.
All right.
So, like I said before, they couldn't search the home, guys, because PIU took over.
His harshest criticism was of Hankinson's blind shots into the apartment.
You have to know, A, what you're shooting at, B, what's in front of it, and B, what's behind it.
There's no other way you can operate.
It was just an egregious act.
All right.
So, I think that's enough for that.
We went through the New York Times thing.
Now, let's get into the real facts.
All right.
Now, warning.
If you're a snowflake, if you really, you know, get offended by the truth or you think I'm an asshole or I'm a little, I'm a police defender or any of this other stuff.
Great.
Go ahead.
Get the fuck out of my chat.
Get the fuck off the channel.
You don't got to watch this stuff.
I'm telling you guys why the police responded the way that they respond.
I'm giving you guys a law enforcement perspective that no one else on YouTube can give you guys.
I'm giving you guys the facts.
Am I saying what they did was right?
No.
But what I am saying is that their response, given the circumstances and the evidence I'm about to present to you guys right now, was 100% justified.
And the reason why I know it's justified, besides me reading it off of my own training experience, was the attorney general for the state of Kentucky did not prosecute the officers.
The Public Integrity Unit did not prosecute the officers.
Let me give you guys a dirty little secret when it comes to law enforcement.
That ain't nobody going to tell you.
There's nothing better than getting police officers and or corrupt special agents or whatever it may be, feds, indicted.
Okay.
Let me say that for y'all one more time.
There is nothing sexier to get you a promotion faster, to get you up the ranks, to hit the news, to get your name all over the place and get that transferred to your favorite city than taking down a corrupt cop, a corrupt agent, a corrupt law enforcement agent in any type of degree.
So my point of that is, I promise you that they were trying to go ahead and get as many of these officers indicted and charged in this investigation as possible.
The reason why they didn't do it is because they couldn't.
Okay.
And the reason why they couldn't is because they were returning fire while conducting a lawful search warrant that was a legit no-knock warrant.
And you guys saw the affidavit for yourself.
Okay.
I'm showing y'all the actual documents.
Okay.
Now we're going to get into what led the officers into going to the home to conduct a search warrant because I had a couple people in the chat right now, low IQ individuals that are saying, why are they picking on her?
She's a woman.
This is fucked up.
The police were bullying Breonna Taylor.
Listen, guys, no one deserves to lose their life.
No one deserves to be shot in their own home.
But what I am going to say is that what I'm about to show you is probably going to shock and offend you if you were, you know, aligning yourself with the whole movement saying that the police officers were evil and whatever it may be.
Breonna Taylor, guys, was involved in criminal activity.
She was a significant member of a drug trafficking organization, and we're going to get into it right now.
So if you're offended or mad, get the fuck out of here.
Seriously, you don't have to watch this stuff.
You really don't.
Because I'm going to just go with facts right now.
No feelings.
With that said, rest in peace to Brianna.
You know, my condolences to her family.
But at the end of the day, what I'm going to show you guys right now will show you why the police were at her front door at 12 o'clock in the morning with a no-knock warrant.
You need to look at how did we get to this place.
I'm about to show y'all right now.
So we're going to go over the narcotics file.
Let's go back to December 3rd, 2016.
LMPD Homicide Unit learned that the vehicle that their most recent victim, Fernandez Bowman, was found in a rental and had been rented by Brianna Taylor with an address of 3,000 3 Springfield Drive, apartment number 4 in Louisville, Kentucky at approximately 530 hours, aka 5:30 in the morning.
Detective White Baker and Weibaker and Jay Speaks went to Brianna's, or no, probably 5.30 p.m., went to Taylor, Ms. Taylor's address to conduct an interview regarding any knowledge she may have that would be relevant to the homicide investigation.
Upon contact with Ms. Taylor, detectives observed a male in the apartment with her identified as Jamarcus Glover, aka Chapo.
This guy right here, guys, where I have his, give me one second, I'm going to pull it up for y'all.
This dude right here.
This is him, Jamarcus Glover.
All right.
And here he is with Brianna.
All right.
Now, this guy was a higher-ranking drug trafficker in the Louisville area.
And we're going to get into what he was doing exactly and how the police ended up at Brianna Taylor's front door at 12 in the morning.
Okay.
But already, she's involved in a murder investigation, guys.
Back in 2016, they were looking at her.
Miss Taylor stated that she did not know the victim and that she found out what had possibly happened from her boyfriend, Jamarcus Glover.
Ms. Taylor stated that she had been dating Jamarcus Glover for approximately three to four months and allowed him to drive her rental car.
Ms. Taylor provided detectives with a contact phone number of such and such.
The same phone number Jamarcus Glover provided on February 14, 2020, when he called LMPD's first division to file a complaint for his vehicle being told, as well as the same phone number that is consistent with the history of jail calls before between Jamarcus Glover and Miss Taylor.
So she rented a vehicle used to kill a man in Louisville, Kentucky.
Okay.
So she was already on the eyes of homicide for a while.
And I'm going to go ahead and play the video for y'all from the news.
But again, the New York Times ain't going to tell you this.
Mainstream media not going to tell you all this, are they?
Enhanced trafficking and controlled substance, first degree, second or greater friends, heroin, convicted felon in possession of a handgun.
Quentin Hall didn't say much as his charges were read in court.
Quentin Hall.
Do I not have a no-contact account?
Why is that so familiar?
Police say Hall shot and killed Fernandez Bowman on South 25th Street in December.
And the car was down on damn street and smashed up against the gas house down there.
Investigators say Bowman was shot multiple times while he was inside his car before hitting a pole and crashing into a house.
My car was like smashed up on the side.
Jermaine Johnson lives on the street where the shooting happened.
He says his car, yeah, man.
So it's crazy stuff, guys.
Crazy, crazy stuff.
Car got swiped by Bowman's after the man was shot.
And this is for Fernandez Bowman, by the way, as well.
Let me find him for y'all.
Hold on.
Sorry, guys.
I got a lot of tabs open here.
Bear with me real fast.
Actually, I'll just play it while you guys.
Hubcap was all toe up.
And I really didn't know much, but I had seen it on the news that somebody got killed down here in front of my house.
Tuesday night, narcotics detectives say they recognized Hall's 2011 Dodge in an arrest report.
They say he was, quote, known to carry firearms and wanted for a fresh homicide.
After they pulled him over, detectives say they found and this is the guy right here, uh, Fernandez Bowman.
This was the victim that they that um that was linked to the to the murder.
Well, the victim of the murder that was in the vehicle that uh Brianna Taylor had rented.
Weed and pills in his pockets.
They say a large amount of meth and heroin were also stashed in the center console, shoved between the driver's seat and console.
Detectives say they found a loaded nine millimeter gun.
Yeah, it helps a little bit.
Deanna Ellis lives down the street from where the December shooting happened.
She says the arrest is a step in the right direction.
Because then you know that somebody's been, you know, somebody's accountable.
So, of course, you know, they were doing their investigation.
They were finding a guy.
Also, Breonna Taylor, she posted a bond for Jamarcus Glover on two different pending cases, which I showed you guys earlier.
Okay.
She put the money up for him.
So this guy is going to be all the evidence that led to the search warrant that they did on her house.
Okay.
And I want you guys to really pay attention into this.
So 2016, they link her to a murder.
Okay.
Then in 2019, they start gathering evidence of her involved in a drug trafficking organization.
And keep in mind, guys, 2016, she was already dealing with this guy, Jamarcus Glover.
All right.
And you're going to see here that she continues to deal with him later on, right?
And she's also dealing with him pretty much at the same time that she's dealing with Kenneth Walker, who Kenneth Walker also remember the guy that allegedly fired the shot at the police officers when he was with her on the day that she died.
He's no nice guy either.
All right.
So, okay.
So we're going to start here.
December 30th, 2019, First Division executed simultaneous search warrants at 2024 Ellie Avenue, 2426 Ellie Avenue, and 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard.
Arrested Adrian Walker, Raishawn La Lee, Dariel Forrest, Jamarcus Glover, and then Dominique Crenshaw.
All right.
And what did they see is they seize five handguns, one stolen, three long guns, 4.9 grams of crack cocaine, 14.4 grams of marijuana, two cell phones, and a sort of drug paraphernalia and surveillance systems.
Hmm.
Hold on one second.
Stop the show.
I showed y'all before that they wanted a no-knock warrant.
Why did they want a no-knock warrant?
Because they had established that this drug trafficking organization utilizes surveillance systems, okay, to protect their drugs.
But wait, there's more.
December 31st, 2019, the place-based investigation unit, okay, PBI team, which is a member of the team, okay, which is the team that basically Mattingly was a part of when they all got shot at, go ahead and selected their first microcell location with the parameters being South 24th Street to South 28th Street and West Broadway to Magazine Street based on an increase in violent crime reported in the area.
Aggravated assaults and narcotics-related offenses.
PBI detectives started to gather research within the designated area, such as calls for service, incident reports, or narcotics-related crime tips.
A lot of the call volume and narcotics-related crime tips led detectives to 2424 Elliott Avenue.
And what I'm going to do for y'all right now is I'm going to pull this address up for you guys: 2424 Elliott Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky.
All right.
Tell me this isn't a trap house if you've ever seen one.
Bam.
There it is.
What do y'all think?
2424, which they rated this one.
And then I think the other one was 2426, which is probably this home right here, right next door, because this one is 2428.
So yeah, this one right here, boarded up house.
Literally right next to each other.
Right?
Let's continue on.
And I mean, look at this area.
It looks pretty rough, doesn't it?
Like, I mean, what do y'all think?
Boarded up homes.
More boarded-up homes.
Fucked up fences.
Raggedy.
Vines growing everywhere.
Doesn't look like the best part of town, does it?
So a lot of call volume and narcotics-related crime tips led detectives to 2424 Elliott Avenue.
Additionally, thorough surf through physical surveillance, detectives observed that vehicle and foot traffic had picked back up at 2024 Elliott Avenue within a couple of days of the first division executing their search warrant.
Okay.
So basically, they did a search warrant and then right back up, the trap is back popping again.
January 2nd, 2020, PBI team had LMPD's technical unit install a poll camera at the intersection of South 24th Street and Ellington Avenue facing west.
Okay, let's go ahead and see where they put this poll camera.
More than likely, it was right.
So let's go ahead and figure out where they put this poll camera.
Now, you guys are probably wondering, yo, Myron, hold on, wait one second.
What the fuck is a poll camera?
A poll camera, guys, is a camera that law enforcement will put up right up on something like this.
Okay.
I've used several of them in my career.
And you use it to watch high drug trafficking areas.
Why do you use a poll camera?
The reason why I use a poll camera, guys, is because you can't sit out on surveillance all day in front of the trap house thinking, oh, I'm going to get these guys as they come in and out.
You can't do that.
They're not going to, you know, conduct their criminal activity.
So you need to be able to watch it from afar.
Okay.
So they set up a poll camera probably right around here so that they could watch what?
This trap house right here, 2024.
Okay.
And I mean, it might not be that poll necessarily, but you guys get the idea.
They set up a poll so that they go watch both of these trap houses that they know are run by who?
Jamarcus Glover.
Who's Jamarcus Glover again?
The guy that is dating that is dating Breonna Taylor.
Okay.
AKA.
His name in the streets was Chapo.
Okay.
And if that doesn't tell you guys, he's a drug driver.
Here he is right here.
Just to put a face tonight, Jamarcus Glover, aka Chapo.
All right.
So they set up a pole camera within an hour of the pole camera being installed.
PBI detectives witness approximately 15 to 20 vehicles go to and from 2024 LEF for a short period of time, which is indicative of narcotics trafficking.
Okay.
At 1752 hours, PBI detectives observed a white 2016 Chevy and Paula pull up in the front of 2024 Elliott Avenue and Jamarcus Glover exited the passenger side of the vehicle.
The vehicle was registered to who?
Breonna Taylor.
Right?
Same address, 3000 Springfield Ave, number four, apartment, Louisville, Kentucky.
Here he is.
Poll camera catching him in fucking 2K.
Jail calls, January 3rd, 2020.
Jamarcus Glover calls Breonna Taylor from booking.
Jay Glover says to B. Taylor, call such and such on Facebook to see where the fuck such and such at.
He's got my fucking money riding around in my motherfucking car and he ain't even where he's supposed to be at.
Breonna Taylor responds, you said who?
Jay Clever responds to her, yeah.
And we don't know the guy's name, but more than likely, that could be an informant, which is why they're blocking out their name.
Breonna Taylor says to Jay Glover, I'll call him.
Why can't I find him on Facebook?
What's his name on here?
Jay Glover says to Breonna Taylor, such and such is his name on Facebook.
Jay Goebler calls Breonna from booking.
Jay Glover says to her, You talked to the guy that he's trying to look for.
She goes, Yeah, I did.
He said he was already back at the trap.
Then I talked to him again just a minute ago to see if you had contacted him.
They wouldn't post bond till one.
Jay Glover says to Breonna Taylor, just be on standby so you could come get me.
Love you.
She goes, love you too.
Jay Glover calls Breonna Taylor from booking again.
I'll come get me some rest in your bed.
Jamarcus, Breonna responds.
Jay Glover goes, What?
You don't want me in your bed?
Breonna goes, I didn't say that.
I haven't really been sleeping right either.
I keep waking up every other hour type shit.
Jay Glover says to B. Taylor, checking on me.
I want you to know I appreciate it.
Taylor goes, when you're around, I stress more because I just always be worried about you.
Not like with you and bitches, but just period with the police, like all kinds of shit.
Jay Glover says, I love you.
And she goes, I love you too.
I mean, guys, I'm not saying she's a bad person, but you guys can see here that she's clearly involved in the criminal organization.
She's over here finding people that owe him money.
She knows what he's involved in.
You know, she's basically like his jailbird, man.
It is important to note that from January 1st, 2016 to January 3rd, 2020, Breonna Taylor's phone number was called 48 times from jail.
Unfortunately, several of the calls are no longer available to listen to.
And when the number is called from booking, it does not provide an inmate's name.
However, once the inmate is booked and assigned to a dormitory, the system is able to track the inmate that is making the call.
In the timeframe referenced below, Jamarcus Glover called Breonna Taylor 26 times from his dormitory and made a male by the name of such and such call Breonna Taylor seven times from his dormitory.
Such and such has a conviction for possession of a controlled substance, cocaine 2016, as well as the history of other felony convictions per court net.
So not only is Jamarcus calling her, but he's also having his drug trafficking body call her as well.
January 9th, 2020.
At this point in the investigation, PBI detectives had conducted physical surveillance and surveillance through the poll camera numerous times on a 2400 block of Elliott Avenue.
Just to remind you guys, this trap house right here, okay, this is Jamarcus Glover, a.k.a.
Breonna Taylor's boyfriends, this dude, main trap house.
So this guy right here, that's his trap house.
Okay.
And they had been watching this thing for months.
And again, keep in mind, guys, Breonna Taylor was already a person of interest in a murder investigation.
Okay.
This is why she got released and or had to resign from her emergency job.
She lost her job for being involved in that murder in 2016, guys.
She loves criminals.
Kenneth Walker, also a criminal, guys.
And I'm going to show you guys some proof of that as well.
Where are we at here?
Okay.
The PBI detective's training experience 24 to 24 Elliott appeared to be a trap house where drugs are sold.
And the suppliers of the narcotics for the trap house were Jamaris Glover and Adrian Walker.
PBI detectives observed through their surveillance that when the narcotics being dealt from 2024 Elliott Avenue were low, minimal pedestrian and vehicle traffic, Jamarcus Glover or Adrian Walker would show up operating a red 2017 Dodge Charger with Kentucky plates and appear to re-up the trap house at 2024 Elliott Avenue.
Both individuals had been observed either entering or exiting 2024 Elliott Avenue or being suspected or dropping suspected narcotics near the sidewalk between the vacant house at 2024, 2425 Elliott Avenue and 2427 Elliott Avenue.
Once they left the area, pedestrian and vehicle traffic resumed to normal.
Okay.
Now keep in mind, guys, everyone in the neighborhood knows that these guys are selling drugs, which is why it was the neighbors.
A lot of them would go ahead and call in and say, yo, these dudes are selling drugs at, you know, 2024 Elliott.
They're dropping drugs at 2425 Elliott.
They're also selling drugs out of 26, 2426 Elliott.
This whole neighborhood, guys, is involved in either the drug trafficking or, you know, snitching on these dudes because they're tired of it.
Because, guys, let me tell y'all what it's like when you live next to a trap house, okay?
Having people drive up to a residence all times of the night, okay?
Arguments, fights, shootings, violence, okay?
Physical altercations.
It fucks it up for everybody because anytime drugs are sold, guys, it's extremely dangerous.
Robberies occur as well.
Because when you know that the trap house is there, well, what's going to happen?
You're going to have crews, like what Kenneth Walker does, by the way, the guy that was with Brianna when she got killed.
They go ahead and rob drug dealers.
OK, once they left the area, pedestrian and vehicle traffic resumed to normal.
So what does that mean?
Anytime Jamarcus Glover or the other guy, Adrian, Jamarcus Glover or Adrian Walker would walk in and make a drop-off or whatever, guess what?
A bunch of cars start coming back to the house, 2424 Elliott.
During the early afternoon hours of January 9th, 2020, PBI detectives observed the red 2017 Dodge Charger, Kentucky Plates leaving 2424 Elliott Avenue.
PBI detectives attempted to follow the vehicle to further the investigation into Jamarcus Glover and Adrian Walker's criminal enterprise.
So they start following this vehicle.
PBI detectives had a difficult time following the vehicle as the operator was conducting heat checks by driving around the same city block twice using evasive maneuvers by making abrupt turns and unsafe lane changes.
Due to the fact that PBI detectives had exhausted all conventional means of surveillance on this vehicle, a search warrant for a GPS tracking device to be installed on the vehicle was applied for and signed.
See attached.
So these guys were trafficking drugs so goddamn much that they started to realize the police are on them.
So what do they do?
They start doing heat runs or aka also known as counter surveillance.
Guys, this is very common with drug traffickers.
I've had guys do counter surveillance on me a million times, which is why I know about using poll cameras.
Pole cameras are a fantastic way to figure out when your guy shows up, re-ups, et cetera.
Okay.
And then at the same time, it allows you the ability to see when they're there so that you can find them.
Now, when you find them a lot of times and you follow them, it's only a matter of time until they're going to start to make your car or start to do burn runs or they're going to start circling shit.
So you can't follow them because you're going to get at some point get compromised.
So what do you have to do?
You got to get a tracker, okay?
Which is what they're talking about here with a GPS tracking device.
All right.
So they went ahead and got a search warrant for a tracking device and was able to put it on your boy Jamarcus Glover's vehicle.
LMPD Tech Unit installed the GPS tracking device on the red 2017 Dodge Charger from January 12th and January 31st, 2020.
The data from the GPS tracking device shows that the vehicle went to 3003 Springfield Drive six times.
January 12th, January 14th, January 16th, January 20th, and January 26, 2020, and January 31st, 2020.
Six times, guys, in one fucking month.
You know what else is located at Springfield?
That's where your girl, Breonna Taylor, lives.
Three, two, three.
So I'm going to show it to y'all real fast.
Like the video, guys, because ain't nobody going to be able to give you guys this kind of insight when it comes to law enforcement and how cases actually work.
All right.
3003 Springfield Drive.
Oh, let's drop the man on here.
Now, as you guys know, remember I showed you guys that body cam footage and he had to break, the police officer had to break this gate.
This is the location right here.
Okay?
It's gated off.
But this is the neighborhood.
Okay.
Looks a little not like the best place to be, but this is it.
Okay?
So here it is.
You can see right here on the map, guys, from the tracking device that he stopped several times here in Springfield.
PBI detectives observed Jamarcus Glover operating the red Dodge Charger, pull up and park in front of 3003 Springfield Drive.
PBI detectives then observed Jamarcus Glover walk directly into apartment number four.
That, guys, is where Breonna Taylor lives.
After a short period of time, Jamaris Glover was observed exiting the apartment with a suspected USPS package in his right hand.
Detective Kelly Goodlett was able to take photographs.
He attached.
Jamarcus Glover then got back into the red 2017 Dodge Charger and drove straight to 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard.
Okay, so let's have some fun here.
Okay.
We're going to go ahead and type in that address.
Or actually, see if we can do directions.
Okay.
It was 26.
Hold on.
What's the address?
It was 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard.
2605 so it's about well driving of course we ain't walking over there About a 21-minute drive.
Okay.
So he went here and then he drove all the way up here.
Okay.
Up north.
All right.
So from Brianna's house up there.
Now, through surveillance, PBI detectives have observed numerous short stays.
Hold on.
Boom.
Okay.
So he drove to 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard.
Through physical surveillance, PBI detectives observed numerous short stays, both pedestrian and vehicle, at 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard, as well as Jamaris Glover and his associates come and go from that location.
PBI detectives believe that 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard was a secondary trap house and their narcotics trafficking organization.
So let's go ahead real fast and no, we're going to go ahead and take a look at this place.
Hold on.
Let's no, fuck.
My bad, guys.
We're going to zoom in and drop the man here and look at this other trap house.
Right here.
Bam.
Okay.
So the second one here.
So this is West Muhammad Ali Boulevard right here.
2605.
This is 2603.
This is it right here.
2605 is the second trap house.
Bam.
All right.
So now the police guys have what?
They've identified two different trap houses.
Wait, because this one was 2603.
Yeah, it's got to be this one.
So yeah, guys.
So they've identified two different drug homes, right?
Shit.
My bad, guys.
Where's this bad boy again?
All right.
And here he is.
There's his charger, which, by the way, this charger was registered to Breonna Taylor, by the way, as well.
Okay.
There's Jamarcus.
He goes in, comes out, UPS package.
February 4th, 2020.
PBI detectives applied for a second GPS tracking device on the red 2017 Dodge Charger because the first warrant was expiring.
See, attached.
Now, what do they mean by that, guys?
So when you do a tracking device, guys, you can get it for about 30 to 60 days.
So at some point, you have to read it up.
So they went ahead and got a reauthorization on the tracking warrant by a judge.
By the way, are you guys liking this, by the way?
Give me ones in the chat if you guys are enjoying this in-depth breakdown because, like I said before, nobody can really give y'all this kind of sauce on YouTube, period.
No one's going to be able to look at these documents and be able to give you guys the insight.
Give me ones in the chat if you guys are having fun.
If not, give me twos.
That way I'll know I can just end the stream early.
What was that?
Yeah, we need more likes.
Go ahead, Christina.
We need to get more likes.
Yeah, we're like at 2K watching and 1.2K likes.
Guys, get me to 2,000 likes if you can, because I know I got a bunch of haters right now watching me that are probably thinking I'm an asshole or something like that, just for telling y'all the truth about how the police really did this investigation.
Go ahead.
But you're showing the evidence and people are still not taking it in.
Yeah, it is what it is.
My feelings.
You have a super chat.
I have a chat.
Okay.
What does it say?
You go ahead and read it.
Oh, okay.
I knew it.
I freaking knew it both.
See, moment.
It's just like what I sent you on IG, DM, Brianna, because of what most black women have a problem with nowadays, the obsession with pookies and beres.
Did it to herself?
Yeah, I mean, like I said before, man, it kind of sucks that she associated herself with, you know, with such a scumbag.
I'm not going to lie.
Why is that such a common name?
Pookies.
Oh, it's an insider joke.
No, no, no, because I'm dead ass.
Like, I lived next to the projects my whole life.
And there's like everyone's a pookie.
The six guys they call Pookie.
Yeah, that's the way it goes, man.
It's just a project, Pookie and Red Ray, baby.
So, um, I can't.
Okay, so let's see here.
So it goes here.
PBI detectives applied for a second GPS tracking device under red 2017 Dodge Charger because the first warrant was expiring.
See, attached at this point in the investigation, PBI detective has learned that via GPS tracker that the Red 2017 Dodge Charger had made a trip to Biloxi, Mississippi, where Jamarcus Glover once resided and has ties to narcotics trafficking within Mississippi.
Well, there now we know where his re-up gang is.
And just so you guys know, Biloxi, Mississippi, guys, big casino town.
Okay.
Some of you guys might say, where the fuck is that?
So Biloxi, Mississippi.
I'm pulling it up on the map for y'all.
It is a 11-hour drive.
Hot damn.
All right.
All the way there.
And it's on the coast.
And you know why?
Biloxi has a pretty strong drug trafficking nexus.
I'll tell y'all why.
It's right off this interstate highway right here, interstate 10.
Now, from my training experience, guys, knowing how drug trafficking really works, okay, from an international level, drugs, most of the drugs that come into the United States, guys, come in through Mexico.
All right.
And when they come in through Mexico, it's going to be one of these main ports here.
Nueva Laredo, Reynosa, or Maramoros.
Okay.
If it's going to hit the East Coast, a lot of the times.
All right.
If it's going to hit the East Coast, it's probably going to come from this area.
If it's going to go west, it's going to come from, you know, Juarez.
Okay.
Chapo, pretty much back in the day, controlled this area here, and he controlled this whole corridor here and also Chicago.
But if it's going East Coast a lot of the times, it comes from here.
Now, does that mean that, you know, Chapo's people don't also move drugs to New York and everything?
Of course they do.
But I'm going to say there's probably a high likelihood it came from this area here.
Now, with that said, once the drugs make it into the United States, guys, and give me one in the chat if y'all want me to break this down.
If not, we can go back to the Breonna Taylor situation.
Give me a one in the chat if you guys want me to break down how drug trafficking works from an international level.
If not, then we're just going to keep going with this Brianna Taylor stuff.
It's all ones.
Oh, ones.
Oh, give me twos if you guys want me to just keep going.
Give me twos if you guys want me to keep going.
Like with the Breonna Taylor.
I don't have to explain this whole thing here.
We have to do a show on that anyways.
Still ones?
It's ones and twos.
Hold on.
Just give me a second.
Ones, if one of you guys want me to break this down on how the drugs probably got to Biloxi, Mississippi for your boy Marcus Glover.
Jamarcus Glover or two, if you guys want me to keep going.
I can keep going.
It's like both.
It's both.
All right.
We're going to keep going then.
We're going to keep going.
What is it now?
The people pick.
Ones.
I see a lot of them.
I see a lot more ones.
You see a lot more ones?
And I see Choes doing like 14.
All right, then I'll do it.
Then this is what I'll do.
I'll do it quickly.
All right.
Drugs come into the United States.
Once they're safely into the United States, you're going to get on a major highway.
Okay.
In this case, a lot of the time, it's Interstate Highway 35.
Maybe here in McAllen, you're going to take one of these little side roads.
But let's say you come in through Laredo, for example.
This is where I was stationed when I was an agent in Laredo, Texas.
Coming through Interstate 35, you get to where?
San Antonio, Texas.
Okay.
Once you get to San Antonio, Texas, which is an enormous drug hub, one of the biggest drug hubs in the United States.
Okay.
When it comes to Mexican drug trafficking, once you get to San Antonio, guess what is in San Antonio?
You got Interstate 35 and you also got Interstate 10.
35 takes you all the way north.
Interstate 10 takes you all the way from east to west.
Okay.
Interstate 10, guys, goes from Jacksonville all the way to Los Angeles.
Okay.
So San Antonio, once you get there, bam, you start heading east, right?
The next stop is Houston, Texas.
All right.
Houston is also another huge drug hub.
Once you get to Houston, those drugs start to get distributed all across the East Coast.
And Biloxi, guys, is right off of what?
Interstate Highway 10.
So a lot of the times, drug trafficking organizations are going to have themselves situated next to major highways because the dope is going to come in through one of these major highways from Mexican drug trafficking organizations.
Okay.
And then guys that are regional, like your boy Jamarcus Glover here.
Okay.
He probably is probably the biggest drug dealer in his area.
What he does is he comes southbound, comes to Biloxi, re-ups, takes it back to Kentucky.
Okay.
Gets a couple keys, whatever it may be, takes it all the way back to Kentucky.
And he brings it back up here.
Okay.
Now, is he actually stashing all the drugs at Brianna's place?
Probably not, but he's probably stashing a considerable amount there since he's taking packages and bringing in there, probably chopping it up, whatever it may be, and then dropping it off the stash houses.
Because here's the thing you guys got to understand with how drug trafficking works.
You can't keep a lot of drugs at one location where the drugs are actually being sold.
One more time for y'all.
You cannot keep a lot of drugs on location where the drugs are actually being sold.
So the trap house and the stash house are two different things.
So he picks up the drugs in Biloxi, which is on a major drug trafficking corridor highway, drives up north, goes back up to his place in Louisville, Kentucky, leaves the dope at Brianna's house, takes the dope out of Brianna's house, and he needs to re-up his stash houses at 2024 Elliott and or 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard.
Goes there, drops off a couple of ounces, leaves it, and then bam, they start going ahead and making sales again.
And the reason why, again, guys, is because there's a couple reasons for this.
Number one, if you get raided by the police, there's a lower chance that they're going to find the drugs or it's going to be in smaller amounts and you can easier conceal it or most importantly, you can flush it down the fucking toilet, okay?
Which is why cops do no-knock warrants on stash houses all the time.
It's not uncommon, guys, for the police to do no-knock warrants on trap houses because they know that they can flush the drugs down the toilet.
Write this stuff down because ain't nobody else going to break this down for y'all like this.
I've done these types of investigations.
I'm speaking from firsthand fucking experience.
Okay.
And again, I know I sound cocky in this stuff, but when it comes to, you know, investigations and running drug cases or whatever, this is my bread and butter.
So I'm going to talk my shit.
All right.
So anyway, so they go ahead and he drops the drugs off of the smaller places, but he keeps the main stash at Taylor's house, which is why he's able to go there, get a package, break it down, whatever it may be, give it to his dealers or whatever it is at the stash houses.
So if it does get raided, no problem.
All right?
Drug trafficking one-on-one, gentlemen.
All right, so let's keep going here.
So he goes down to Biloxi, Mississippi.
Next, February 6th, 2020.
And remember, guys, this is all probable calls.
They're watching him.
Okay.
PBI detectives submitted a grand jury subpoena for Jamarcus Glover.
And guys, this is the state.
This isn't even the feds.
This is like a lot of great police work that these guys are doing.
I can't even cap.
Like they're doing a lot of work.
They're putting GPS trackers.
They're actually out here on surveillance.
They got poll cameras up.
They're doing physical surveillance, following them around and shit.
They're taking pictures.
Like, this is a pretty extensive drug trafficking investigation.
They're doing grand jury subpoenas.
Okay.
So they go ahead and they do a grand jury subpoena for Jamarcus Glover, Adrian Walker, and this woman.
Okay.
Who is this woman?
It's Jamarcus Glover's child's mother, Chase Bank Records.
Okay.
So they went ahead and got her bank records to see what kind of money she's getting.
Okay.
At approximately 14, 27 hours, PBI detectives observed through the poll camera, Jamarcus Glover operating a black Dodge charger, pull up in front of the 24, 24 Elliott Avenue and go inside the residence.
The vehicle is registered to who?
Breonna Taylor at 3003 Springfield Drive, apartment number four.
PBI detectives observed Breonna Taylor get out of the past her side of the vehicle and look around for a few seconds before she got back into the vehicle.
At approximately 1432 hours.
PBI detectives observed Jamarcus Glover exit 2424 Elliott Avenue and get back into the vehicle, and then the vehicle pulled off eastbound on Elliott Avenue.
Here's pictures.
So they literally see her getting out, look for a second, gets back in, then he gets in the car.
And where are they?
They're at their trap house, 2424 Elliott Drive or Elliott Street, whatever the fuck.
Didn't New York Times tell y'all this?
Huh?
New York Times isn't going to tell you guys this.
Again, I want to make this extremely clear.
Breonna Taylor did not deserve to die.
Definitely not.
But we got to look at the facts and see what led to the police being at her house at midnight with a no-knock fucking warrant.
It is important to note that PBI detectives have observed on the poll camera Breonna Taylor's Black Dodge Charger pull up in front of 2424 Elliott Avenue numerous times at varying hours of the day and night.
Bam, look, they got more evidence.
February 14th, 2020, Valentine's Day, Officer Corey Evans towed the red 2017 Dodge Charger from 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard for a parking violation.
Again, guys, this is trap house number two, 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard, right?
So can you pull that address up?
Pull it up just in case.
Yeah, give me the right here.
2605 West Muhammad.
Oh, you know, actually, no, I have it right here.
Yeah.
So we're going to go ahead just as a reminder, guys, because I want this to be visual for y'all.
I want you guys to see what the hell's going on here so that you guys can actually put because if I just read documents all day, let's be honest, that's boring as fuck.
So I'm trying to keep y'all entertained.
Edutainment, baby, edutainment.
So his car, guys, his red charger is parked here at the second stash house, which I'm going to show y'all right now, right here.
Okay.
Here's the second stash house.
It's parked somewhere in this area and it gets towed.
Okay.
So what does he do?
Jamarcus Glover gave the phone number to contact him, which is registered to Breonna Taylor.
PBI detectives were able to verify through CLEAR, a law enforcement database, that is, and I've used CLEAR before, fantastic database, by the way, that as of February 20th, 2020, Jamarcus Glover used Breonna Taylor's address, 3003 Springfield Drive, number 4, Louisville, Kentucky, as his residence.
Guys, I mean, come on.
February 24th, 2020, PBI detectives received Jamarcus Glover's bank records from Chase Bank.
On these bank statements, Jamaris Glover used 3003 Springfield Drive as his mailing address.
March 13th, 2020, PBI detectives, with the assistance of other criminal and interdiction divisions, CID detectives, and SWAT team executed simultaneous search warrants at 2024 Elliott Avenue, 2425 Elliott Avenue, 2426 Elliott Avenue, and 3003 Springfield Drive.
See attached.
So basically, guys, they went ahead and did a search warrant.
So they didn't even do it on Muhammad Ali Boulevard.
They did them all in that little location there that I showed you guys before.
2424 Elliott.
We're going to pull it up right here.
So they went ahead and did a search warrant on these three.
No, no, no.
That's not what it is.
Fuck.
My bad, guys.
I hate Google Maps sometimes, man.
All right.
So we're back in the trap.
So they did a search warrant right here, 2424, the main stash house.
They did it right here, 26, 24, 26, 24, 26, Elliott.
And then they also did it across the street, which is probably here.
I think this is 2625 Elliott.
Okay, or this one, one of the two.
So they did three search warrants.
Okay.
So the SWAT guys were all concentrated right here in these three locations.
Hit them all at the same time.
All right.
And the reason why they did that is because, like I told y'all before, if they hit, let's say they awkwardly just hit up 2424.
Well, guess what?
Jamarcus Glover controls this stash house too.
He's just going to be like, yo, what the fuck?
Out, dump the drugs.
Okay.
And then this house as well.
Let's see here.
During a search of 2424 LA Avenue, PBI detectives were able to recover a large amount of suspected crack cocaine and suspected fentanyl pills inside a Crown Royal bag in a tree in the backyard of the property that was hidden in order to avoid detection from law enforcement.
K9 Maverick alerted to the bag containing the narcotics.
PBI detectives also located a large amount of U.S. currency, digital scales, and other evidence of narcotics trafficking within the residence.
Pictures were taken of an attempt to destroy suspected cocaine by placing it inside the toilet tank in the residence.
See, guys, this is why the police had no knock warrants because they knew that these guys are sophisticated drug traffickers to an extent.
You know, Jamarcus Glover is not an idiot.
He was keeping small amounts of drugs in various locations so that they can easily dispose of the drugs if they're ever able, if they're ever raided.
Three firearms were recovered from the glove box of a BASE 2001 Crown Victoria, and one firearm was recovered from a gap to the right side of the front porch steps at the vacant house at 2426 Elliott Avenue.
This house right here, this boarded up joint, okay, which is obviously vacant.
This house is what they're talking about.
Jamarcus Glover, Demarius Bowman, Rayshawn Lee, and Alicia Jones were located at 2024 Elliott Avenue at the time.
The search warrants were executed.
PBI detectives were able to seize all of the individual cell phones and execute search warrants on them.
PBI detectives also obtained an LGE bill from inside of 2424 LA Avenue that had Adrian Walker's name on it.
When the search warrant was executed, and remember, Adrian Walker, guys, is your boy El Chapo.
Okay, this guy right here, Jamarcus Glover, once again, his right-hand man.
When a search warrant was executed at 3003 Springfield Drive number four, which Brianna Taylor was listed on, and an officer involved shooting occurred, and as a result, Brianna Taylor was killed.
The president inside the apartment at the time of the search warrant was executed, was executed was Breonna Taylor and Kenneth Walker.
The public integrity unit responded to the scene and took over the investigation.
Hold up.
What?
You guys think I'm just talking shit when I say the shit that I say.
The New York Times isn't going to report that.
They're going to say, oh, well, they went to the house and didn't even find drugs, not knowing the fact that as soon as that shooting happened, PIU or PIU takes over, guys.
The drug unit could no longer do a search.
Now PIU is going to go in there and they're going to do what?
A murder search.
They don't give a fuck about drugs or money anymore.
Now they're going to do is, I need to make sure that this guy, Kenneth Walker, didn't try to kill the police, that the police weren't involved in some to see if the police were involved in some kind of wrongdoing or whatever it may be.
So that is why PIU took over and no drugs or money was found, guys.
However, when PIU did their search, they did find a letter from your boy, this dude, okay, Chapo, aka Jamarcus Glover.
And yes, his nickname in the streets was Chapo, guys.
I'm not trying to be funny here.
His name really was Chapo, okay?
Because he was the main guy.
They found a letter from him to Brianna Taylor in her home.
Okay.
It is important to note that PBI detectives had a signed search warrant for 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard, but due to the OIS and limited resource available, the warrant was unable to be served.
Okay, so there you go.
Because I was wondering why they didn't hit up 2605 Muhammad Ali Boulevard too.
So there you go, guys.
There's your proof right there that they didn't have the manpower.
Like, literally, it's all here for you guys.
Okay.
So SWAT was already stretched out doing three search warrants at one time.
They couldn't do SWAT at the other location as well, at Brianna's place, but they needed to go ahead and do the search warrants so they wouldn't.
So Jamarcus would have notified her and tell her, yo, the feds are not the feds, the police are here.
So they did Brianna's house and they had to scramble a unit to do it.
But hey, man, they got to get the investigation done, right?
Now, what happened was terrible.
No one deserves to die.
But now you guys understand that they were short-staffed.
So that SWAT guy saying, doing simultaneous search warrants is not good.
No, you're a dummy.
That's how you got to do drug investigations.
That's how I know you don't do any types of investigations, that guy.
Ask anyone that does narcotics investigations that you know, whether it's your uncle, friend, cousin, whatever, ask them, is it smart practice to do simultaneous search warrants when you're doing a drug investigation?
And they're going to tell you yes.
Hell, if you look at a regular investigation, whether it's, you know, document benefit fraud, any type of fraud where they're doing some type of shit, anytime there's co-conspirators involved, you need to do simultaneous search warrants, guys.
You need to do simultaneous search warrants because the destruction of evidence or the alert of other people is simultaneous.
Sorry, the alerting of other conspirators the likelihood is extremely high.
Also, guys, do me a favor real quick.
Give me the 1.5K likes.
Like the video.
Subscribe to the channel if I haven't triggered you.
If you're a believer in objective truth and not feelings, subscribe to the channel.
If you're one of those people that began in your feels based on cases that I break down and it makes you feel a certain way when I'm giving y'all objective facts, get the fuck out of here.
I don't care.
I really don't give a shit, man.
I do this channel because I enjoy doing it.
I enjoy reporting the facts.
If it hurts your feelings, get the fuck out of here.
You're a pussy.
I don't give a fuck what you think.
All right.
Jamarcus Glover, jail calls.
Jay Glover calls who?
His baby mama.
And he goes, she says, chop that girl got killed over you.
Remember, guys, his nickname is El Chapo, right?
So she called him Chop.
She's referring to Breonna Taylor.
And this is on March 13, 2020.
Jay Glover says to her, why would you say that shit over me, though?
All my mailing shit, my mailing shit, it ain't got nothing to do at Bree's house.
Okay, because he gets his mail sent to her house.
The baby mom goes, but no, remember, you had that bank statement in that other box and you leave that shit behind for them to hit your house and that.
Putting two and two together.
Come on, Chop, the way you move, period.
So his baby mom is even saying, bro, you moving too sloppy.
So Jamarcus goes, dude told me I just seen you leave your baby mama house.
The girl says, they know where we live at?
Jay Glover says to her, they've been knowing where we live at.
The girl says, the baby mama goes, that's what they find out when they got an investigation on a motherfucker.
They're going to find out everything.
They definitely did.
Jay Glover says to her, at the end of the day, it's all bullshit.
It's some sugar for some spaghetti we ate.
Nigga!
Bro!
It's some sugar for some spaghetti we ate.
What?
Who put sugar on their spaghetti?
I've heard of that, though, but what?
I've heard of that.
Bro, I have not heard that shit ever.
I've heard that, though, but that's like weird.
Yeah, that's crazy.
Hey, can you grab me a monster real quick?
Jake Lover calls his baby mom again from booking.
They know that me and you hadn't been fucking around.
That's probably why they didn't come to my house.
But I feel like Chop, if they know it's my house, oh, this is his girlfriend, his baby mama, by the way.
Sorry.
If they know it's my house, why the fuck wouldn't they have a search warrant?
And again, guys, this is Jamarcus Glover right here.
It's this nigga, aka Pookie.
He goes, they know I was there before.
They would have came in there.
Baby mom says to him, did you tell them it was your baby mama's house?
Well, then why the fuck are you putting me in this motherfucking case, my nigga?
Because you the one that they want.
I don't know how much it's going to take for you to know that you the one they want, Chop.
Yo, that's his baby mom talking to him, by the way.
God damn.
Lord.
The masculinity is strong in this one.
Jay Glover says, aka Chop, I'm hurt.
My name getting called about Bree's death.
This nigga Kenneth Walker in jail.
This nigga got Brie dead.
At the end of the day, it was not my fault.
It's this nigga's fault that that's in here.
The reason why it happened, the nigga is sitting right here.
So Kenneth Walker, guys, gets arrested and gets put in the same jail as him.
And he's saying that it's his fault that Brianna got shot, which I would argue it is his fault.
Because whether she shot the gun or he shot the gun, it's his fault because, yo, bro, someone breaks into the house.
What are you doing?
You're the man.
Let her stay in bed.
Call 911.
And then your dumbass goes out and investigates.
What the fuck?
Which makes me believe, again, this is just my speculation here.
I personally think that he got the gun.
He gave it to her.
She walked out front.
She popped one at them.
And then they started returning fire.
Because it just doesn't make sense that he would have the gun.
She will be in front of him.
He shoots the gun like over her shoulder.
Awkward.
The hell.
And then they just return fire and she's in front of him as like a body, like a body shield.
He didn't get shot once, guys.
So it doesn't add up.
Let's continue on.
Baby mom says to Chapo, okay, did y'all talk or she's or is he still on some defensive shit?
Jake Lover says to her, he said they were beating on the door.
So he talks to him in jail.
Baby mom says to him, yeah, so I would shoot too.
Like, I got a gun up under my bed.
If someone come in my house at 12 o'clock at night, I would shoot too.
I got to protect my kids.
Baby mom says to Glover, you had to stop moving so messy.
You are the one that they want.
God damn.
He probably feels like shit at this point.
Now, Jake Lover calls his baby mom again from his dormitory.
As soon as what's and such answers, the phone, Jake Lover tells her to call this guy.
Call such and such.
The line then goes silent for a bit.
Baby mom comes back on the line and says, chop, he's on there.
Jake Lover says to unknown male, what up?
Kenna just got her killed, nigga.
Sitting in this jail like it's all good, like he's straight, like it ain't his fault.
Baby mom says to Jake Lover, so he the one shooting the gun?
Jake Lover says to her, yeah, he shoots at the police.
They shoot back, Brian the hallway, and she gets killed.
Then gets off the phone.
They search that crown Vic.
You had 20,000 in that crown Vic?
That's his baby mom.
He goes, hell nah, hell nah.
I ain't been in the crown Vic.
She goes, that's where you've been hiding shit.
Where your money at?
So she knows where he stashes his fucking money.
She goes to him, such and such wants to talk to you.
What's his number?
So I could three-way.
Jake Lover says to the baby mom, the line then goes silent for a bit.
So he gives her the phone number.
Jake Lover says to the baby mom, they hit the house last night.
Brie got killed last night.
Such and such says, Jake Lover, I just got off the phone with such and such.
I'm fixing to come back up here, up there.
Jake Lover calls such and such, his baby mom, from his dormitory again.
Everybody's calling because they're saying your baby mama got killed.
Such and such speaks to Jake Lover.
Her baby mom, Brie's mother, and the no limit crew, they basically like the nigga that she was fucking with, got her all caught up.
The no limit, they don't play.
Jake Lover says to such and such, man, I don't care.
The baby mom says to Jake Lover, I know you don't care.
You don't care about shit.
The baby mom again says, motherfuckers putting it to me like it came from you.
Of course I'm going to think that.
And I know that I found mailing shit.
So she's mad at him about him fucking with Brianna.
Jake Lover says to her, me and Brie ain't been around each other in over two months.
I ain't got nothing going on with Brie no more.
Wait, hold up, bro.
What are you, what?
Cap.
We saw on video that they were together like earlier in the year.
Oh, wait, I think there's a video of like an interview.
What her boyfriend says that like he showed up to the house when they were there at night before.
Let me find it.
Okay.
So Jake Lover calls someone else, unknown female, possibly such and such per actor from his dormitory.
Jake Lover says to unknown female referencing the OIS at 3000 Springfield Ave, basically the shooting.
He, Kenneth Walker, said motherfuckers knocked on the door, but he didn't know who it was.
They asked who it is, but don't nobody say nothing.
He said they kicked that door and he balked on them.
Balked on them.
He said they started shooting back and Brie was in the hallway and he caught and she caught bullets.
Scott Barton, Jake Lover's attorney, know Bree.
He know her.
He's been dealing with me and Bree the whole time.
I've been going through this shit.
Jake Lover calls such and such as baby mom again.
So as you guys can see, he's calling his baby mom all over the place.
Oh, my bad, guys.
Let me call it.
Let me switch the camera back.
Yeah, I had on you for a second.
And then let's see here.
Do we have any other chats that we got to read here?
Oh, we just had one, but let me just get it.
We're caught up.
Yeah, go ahead and pull it up real fast.
And thank you guys real quick, man.
Go ahead, man.
We need to get the likes up, guys.
As we wait for the likes to come up, I'm going to go ahead and get you all.
There you go.
Trade all.
Do you want to read it?
Didn't you read it?
Because I got to get something up real fast.
Oh, you're looking.
Just read it because I got to.
Okay.
And then also, get the likes up.
Okay.
I'm just trying to trade all is.
I go to Pookie's Jerry and I Dodge Charlie.
Try to find something for you guys.
Do you get that?
What was that?
I go to Pookie's Jerry and a Dodge Charger popped up.
I Googled the Pookie's Chariot and a Dodge Charger popped up.
That's some funny ass shit, man.
You guys are fucking hilarious.
Oh, this was the gun, by the way, guys, that was used to shoot.
This is Kenneth Walker's gun, by the way, just so y'all know.
And I'm going to show you guys something else as well that I think is very important and relevant here.
Here's the bedroom.
Here's Kenneth Walker's jeans.
Here's the holster where the gun was.
It's a Glock.
Okay.
Oh, here's the mail.
See, look, Jamarca C. Glover, mail matter located in Breonna Taylor's purse.
So if you don't, you know, she has his letter in her purse, guys.
That clearly means that they were still fucking with each other.
All right.
These are all the ballistics pieces.
And then also, I have something that I want to show you guys because Kenneth Walker tried to make himself look like he's an innocent individual when, in reality, guys, he might be one of the worst offenders in here.
And I'm going to show you guys here that in a second.
Attachment A. Okay.
Sorry, guys.
This, as you guys can see, this is extensive.
And I was going through all this earlier.
It's a lot of pages, man.
A lot, a lot of pages.
But hey, man, I love to do the work.
While I find this thing, can you guys do me a quick favor and like the video, please?
Because it really supports.
You guys don't have to donate a dollar.
You know, this isn't about the money for me, which is why I'm telling all these fucking haters or crybabies that, you know, can't understand the truth and want to feel with their feelings and all this other shit.
Get the fuck out of here then, bro.
If you don't want to understand how police procedure works or how use of force works or how the police were actually able to, you know, do their investigation and come to the conclusion that they came to, then get the fuck out of here, bro.
I don't know why you're watching Fed 1811 because I'm going to break it down for y'all.
I'm going to call a spade a spade.
When an officer acts incorrect, I'm going to tell you guys that.
If an officer acts correct, I'm going to also tell you that.
You know what I'm saying?
So I already told y'all that Henriksen, the guy that got indicted for wanton reckless endangerment, I told y'all that he fucked up, you know?
But the other officers that returned fire, they were justified in their use of force, 100%.
100%.
And I stand 10 toes on that.
And if you don't agree, fuck you.
Go suck a dick.
I don't give a fuck what you guys think.
I showed you guys literally graphic footage of what it looks like when you don't return fire.
You know, when you, even if you do return fire, what could happen to you?
You know what I'm saying?
If they had knocked, right?
If they had not knocked, excuse me, they probably, Breonna Taylor will probably be alive to this day if they did not knock and actually executed the warrant the way it was written, which is my critique.
I think they shouldn't have knocked, but you know what?
They wanted to knock to give them more time to get out and they ended up backfiring on them because they ended up getting shot.
And I showed you guys, you can see a part of his leg hanging out right there.
But again, you know, it's easy to be, you know, Monday morning quarterback, like, oh, yeah, I don't know what you're doing.
You guys are fucking pigs, all this other bullshit, whatever.
Hey, man, like, I'm, I will call a spade a spade.
If a police officer acts incorrectly, I will call it.
If a police officer acts correctly, I'm going to call it too.
Might hurt your feelings, but I don't give a fuck what you think.
All right.
So I found what I'm talking about here.
So here we go.
Just to show you guys kind of that your boy Kenneth Walker was not the best individual ever.
They went ahead and did a search warrant on Kenneth Walker's phone.
Okay.
And here's what they found.
On May 21st, 2021, I started reviewing Kenneth Walker's cellular phone data.
And I want to let you guys know, by the way, that Mandy Seal, this woman right here, she's not narcotics.
She's public integrity unit.
These guys' job is to arrest police officers.
They want to put police officers in jail.
So she has no real incentive to protect these narcotics officers, especially when you got half the country rioting and going crazy for this case.
They want to indict these police officers.
Trust me.
There's nothing sexier and going to get you promoted faster in an internal affairs office than arresting your own.
During the review, I found numerous conversations about narcotics trafficking.
In addition to narcotics trafficking, I discovered messages regarding firearms as well as photos of Mr. Walker and Ms. Taylor posing with firearms.
The information was discovered in Mr. Walker's chats and is meant to document his communications.
The following is a summary of the chats.
For more detail, refer to the cellular phone data in the case file.
Chat number 121 between Walker and unknown phone number.
Unknown is buying 11 pills from Walker for $6 each.
Walker arrives at Hooters at 5.05, 46 p.m. in Black Chrysler and 300 and sells pills.
March 6, 2020.
So right up until the shooting, Walker contacts Unknown and states he has more of the ones they like.
Unknown states they have eight of the other ones left and wants to know if Walker would exchange.
And let me enlarge this for y'all so you can see it better.
Where was I?
Okay, unknown states they have eight of the other ones left and wants to know if Walker would exchange them for four or five of the new pills.
Okay.
And they tell Walker they want five of them tomorrow.
Walker responds back asking if they still want them and they want four pills.
Walker makes a deal with unknown and specifically texted pills and tells them that he is contacting such and such to see how many she wants so he can bring them all together.
Walker rises the pills and asks unknown to come to the front door at 9.06 p.m.
March 1st, 20.
Such and such asked Walker if he had weed, but Walker doesn't have any.
Walker, they have someone who wants 11 of them from him, going to give Walker their old plays.
Walker doesn't have 11 left, but he's going to try to get them.
At 3.48 p.m., Walker told he's getting them and wants to know where to meet.
Sent text.
So as you guys can see, this dude is involved in criminal activity too.
Walker told such and such he has the fire ones if she wants some.
Walker told her, bring seven to her job, Hooters.
He's over here trapping in Hooters.
And then also, I want to direct you guys to this one.
So more drug trafficking, more drug trafficking.
More drug trafficking.
As you guys can see, Callie High Grade, $25 for half a quarter.
More weed pills.
Okay.
And then saying he had smoke, two zips.
He's selling drugs on Facebook Messenger.
iMessage.
This guy is jumping.
Walker asked such and such if he got some bullets.
Walker trying to buy 223 ammo, but Walmart didn't have any.
Ask Walker for 223 ammo.
Okay, so someone asking, asking him for ammunition.
Let's see here.
Which, by the way, just so y'all know, it is illegal to be a drug user and or possessing firearms while committing drug trafficking offense.
That's what Pushaisi got in trouble for, guys.
Okay.
It's called 18 USC 924C.
All right.
Possessing a firearm while committing a drug trafficking offense, guys, has a mandatory minimum of five years fed time.
All right?
Okay.
Let's see here.
So he's talking more about weed, quarter pound.
All right.
Okay.
Okay.
So Breezy, all right.
So this is Brianna.
This is a conversation between Walker and Brianna.
Brianna sends an image of her with an AR-15 strapped across her chest.
What are they talking about?
They're talking about this.
Here she is with the AR-15 on her chest.
This is the gun.
Okay.
And then here she is with him with that AR-15.
partners in crime.
How he coming behind me.
As you guys can see, she loves thugs, you know, which isn't a crime.
But this dude right here is not innocent.
All right.
This guy, Kenneth Walker, is a criminal.
Breonna Taylor, also, guys, I hate to say it, criminal.
All right.
Breezy sent an image of her with an AR-15 strapped across her chest.
Breezy asked Walker to send a picture of his gun so she could show it to a white boy at her work.
Walker stated it was a Springfield St. AR-15 pistol and sent a photo of it.
Breezy and Walker talked about how he would switch the gun out of his name if he sold it.
Walker stated he bought his Glock from a white boy and it wasn't registered to him, but he had a bill of sale.
Yeah, you can't switch.
Guys, by the way, just so you know, you can't take your name off of a gun once you buy it.
Even if you have a bill of sale, they're always going to be able to trace the gun back to you if you were the original purchaser, which is why, in my opinion, I don't think you should ever sell a gun, guys.
Don't ever sell a gun, in my opinion.
It's not a good move.
Like, do you really need the money that bad?
Because let me tell you what's going to happen.
Here's some game for y'all.
If someone commits a murder, okay, let's say I have my Glock and I sell it to Christina.
All right.
She goes ahead and kills someone.
All right.
Maybe they made fun of her for being short or some shit or her inability to get body cam videos correct.
Who knows?
They make fun of her and she's like, hey, fuck you.
She uses my Glock and shoots them.
Okay.
She ditches the gun, hides it in a drain somewhere.
Well, the homicide investigators show up and they find the gun.
They find the gun, get the serial number, and they're going to give that serial number to the ATF.
And they're going to run something called an E-Trace.
Okay?
They're going to trace that gun back.
And guess who's going to come back on that fucking list?
This guy.
Then the next thing you know, those homicide investigators are going to come to me and say, hey, this gun right here, this Glock, we found it.
All right.
Can you grab my Glock for me for some dramatic effect?
Which one?
Oh, shit.
The one in the bathroom.
So, sorry.
I had to remember which one.
So anyway, they go ahead and they're like, this Glock right here.
I'm like, sir, I don't know what you're talking about.
Then they fucking pull out the Glock and like, this one right here.
Right?
Or they show me a picture of it.
All right.
And they're going to ask me questions.
And now I'm in a situation, right?
This is gun right here, Mr. Gaines.
This Glock right here.
We found it.
And it's in your name.
We found the serial number.
Which, by the way, guys, if you ever want to find the serial number of a gun, I'll show you where it is.
Stop screen.
Obviously, you got to make the gun safe.
This is how you got to make it safe.
Bam.
Drop the magazine.
Get the round out.
Make sure it's safe.
Always point it in a safe direction, never at someone else.
Because Christina's over here, by the way, guys.
She's not over there, like you guys think.
Okay, bam.
Safe.
All right, cool.
Serial number, guys, is right here.
I'm going to block out a portion of it so y'all don't.
Bam.
Right?
So y'all see that?
You can see a portion of it, but it's on the top of the slide.
Can y'all see that?
Maybe two.
It's too blurred.
Yeah, like wait.
There you go.
You can see a bit of it.
But there you go.
That's where you get the serial number on a gun.
So when the police find the gun, guys, okay, and it's also on the barrel, too.
And it's etched in there.
So when they find the gun from Christina shooting that guy for making fun of her because she can't get shit right on the body camera stuff, they're going to come to me and they're going to be like, yo, Myra, what the fuck?
Where is this goddamn gun?
Or you bought this gun.
What the fuck is going on?
And then they're going to ask me questions.
So in other words, guys, don't sell your gun.
All right.
That's the moral of the story here.
Don't sell your gun.
Because then you'll end up as a part of an investigation if the person that you were talking to decides to be an idiot or the person you sold the gun to, excuse me, decides to be an idiot.
Of course, you could show your bill of sale and say, hey, I sold it, whatever it may be, to this guy, but why do you want homicide detectives at your house?
Like, seriously, why?
All right.
Let's continue on.
And guys, like the goddamn video.
What are the likes that, by the way, Christina, right now?
I don't want to have to stop the show, guys.
We got 2,000 plus y'all in here.
You guys could be anywhere else in the world, but you're here with me.
So I really appreciate that.
It's about to be fucking midnight in this bitch.
Is it really?
Oh, yeah, it is.
Okay.
So, likes right now, we have what you're on camera.
Yay.
2K watching.
We have 1.6K.
Guys, can you get us a 2,000, please?
Give us a 2,000 fucking likes.
I really appreciate it.
But anyway, let's continue on with this bad boy.
So, where are we?
So he sends the gun of her.
Walker stated he bought his Glock from White Boy.
Okay.
Okay, so this one is a big one right here.
So here's chat: 690 between Walker and a bunch of other people.
Okay, one, two, three, four different individuals, it looks like.
So in 2019, he's talking, they're talking about robbing someone.
Such as said his homie, go to the bangers' guns for them if they didn't have guns or didn't want to take theirs.
Talk about sliding through to see the layout and talk about dude having two dogs.
Walker asked how much bread money there's supposed to be.
Such as said there's at least 25,000, but he's going to watch the guy to see how much he's getting.
Ask if it is an ask if it an easy target, if it's an easy target, or if they need to do homework.
Walker said they needed to do homework regardless.
Such says he does homework on every mission.
Such says asked if they're talking about the this is probably the victim.
I also reviewed photos of Walker's phone and found images with Walker and Brianna with firearms, one of which resembles the one found at the crime scene.
There were also images of narcotics that were sent to individuals he was in communication with regarding transactions.
So these are some of the photos I showed y'all before.
Right here they are with the guns together.
This is actually the Glock that he shot the police at the police with.
Here's that AR.
Here's Brianna with that AR.
Here's more guns, ammunition.
Here's the pills that he was selling.
Here's the marijuana he was selling, which do me a quick favor, Christina.
Search if marijuana is still illegal in the state of Kentucky.
I'm sure it probably is.
So, and then Kenneth Walker also makes jail calls as well.
But I show you guys this to let you guys know that Kenneth Walker is not a saint either.
Okay?
He's a drug trafficker and a jackboy.
All right.
So anyway, let's go back to the narcotics file.
So it says Mirana possession sales remains almost entirely legal in Kentucky.
Illegal?
Yeah, illegal.
So while I'm going to read the whole thing, but yeah.
Okay.
Anything else you want to say?
No, I'm literally still looking at it.
Okay.
So it's illegal in Kentucky.
All right.
So your boy, Jamarcus Glover, again, calls the baby mama and goes, so where your money at?
Where my money at?
Brie had like eight grand.
Okay.
So Jay Glover says to the baby, is he talking to me?
Yeah, he's talking about his baby mom.
Wait, hold on.
Where are we at?
Oh, for two months.
Okay.
Jay Glover says, unknown female referencing, he kicked the door and he balked at them.
Okay, never mind.
Yeah.
So now we're here.
Okay.
We're at what?
1307.
He calls the baby mom.
They're probably going to argue again.
Here we go.
Jay Glover says to her, yeah.
Well, the baby mom says to him, Brie had eight grand of your money.
Jay Glover says, yeah.
Jay Glover says to an unknown male that joined the call, tell cuz Brie got down like 15 grand.
She had eight grand I gave her the other day and she picked up another six grand.
What?
Such and such and Jay Glover are arguing over him not being honest and him having money at other people's house.
Jake Lover says to Kay, why are you doing this?
What do the haters got to say right now?
For everybody in the fucking chat earlier, Myron, you're fucked up for covering this.
Myron, you're an asshole.
One more time for y'all niggas, bro, because I really hate you sensitive pieces of shit, man.
So Jay Glover, Jamarcus Glover, aka known on the streets as Chopo, goes, the baby mom goes, so where your money at?
He goes, where my money at?
Brie had like eight grand.
Brie had eight grand of your money?
Choppo, yeah.
This is a baby mom that he's talking to.
Jay Glover says an unknown male that joined the call, tell cuz Bri got down like 15 grand.
She had eight grand.
I gave her the other day, and she picked up another $6,000.
I fucking hate you snowflake motherfuckers, bro, that come in here and go off of your feels over the reels.
Once again, did Brianna deserve to die?
No.
However, was Brianna a criminal?
Yes.
Was Jay Glover a criminal?
Yes.
Was Kenneth Walker a criminal?
Yes.
These are the cold, hard facts.
I'm not saying criminals deserve to die, but what I am saying is that criminals deserve to go to jail.
All right?
She was a financial career and stash house operator for a sophisticated drug organization that was dealing a significant amount of drugs in the Louisville, Kentucky area.
Based off of my training experience extensively with narcotics investigations, I know for a fact that your boy Jamarcus Glover, this fucking clown right here, this dude was more than likely a high-level area distributor, okay, and supplier of narcotics in the Louisville, Kentucky area.
His travels to Piloxi, coming back up north, moving packages around, etc.
It's very obvious that he used Brianna's name because she had a clean record to do his criminal activities, okay, to conceal his criminal activities, having vehicles registered on her name, having phones under her name, having her pail him out, etc.
Stashing the drugs at her house, okay, the large quantities, of course, with a trusted individual, taking the drugs, dropping it off at stash houses and smaller amounts, going back and forth and re-upping from Brianna's house to the other stash houses, then taking the proceeds of said drugs and having her act as one of his financial couriers.
You're not going to give someone $15,000 that you don't trust.
You're not going to be making $15,000 through drug trafficking unless you're a mid to higher level area distributor.
I don't make the fucking rules.
I just tell y'all the truth.
That's the painful truth.
Let's keep going.
So all you snowflakes, get the fuck out of here, man.
Jake Lover says to an unknown male that joined the call.
Nope, sorry, we read that part.
So the baby mom says, the baby mom and Jake Lover are arguing over him not being honest and him having money at other people's houses, okay, aka Brianna's.
And she goes, why are you doing this?
Because my feelings are hurt.
Jake Lover says, why?
Because the bread was at her house.
Jake Lover says to the baby mom, this is what you got to understand.
Don't take it wrong, but Brie been handling all my money.
She's been handling my money.
She's been handling shit for me.
And cuz it ain't just me.
Baby mom says, but I mean, she should at least tell you where your money is, Chop.
Short for Chopo.
Chapo responds, I can't talk to you on this phone, but I will tell you exactly the reason why.
Well, you said a lot, bunch of other shit, man, you stupid.
And the reason why he doesn't want to say this stuff on the phone is because he doesn't want to implicate Brianna, all right, about all the other criminal activity that she's talking about.
But here's the thing: did the New York Times cover this in our video that we played?
No, they just talked all about how the police showed up at 12 o'clock in the morning.
They had a warrant or something like that.
They shot a bunch of shots.
Then they talk about all the things that led up to this.
Breonna Taylor was a member of a sophisticated drug organization, and she was facilitating a conspiracy.
Such as such says to Jay Glover, a.k.a.
Chapo, she should tell you where your money is when you got money at the house.
I tell you exactly where it is.
So she also holds money for him, which is why she's so offended.
Jake Lover says to the baby mama, it's no problem.
I could walk in that house, Breeze, and go directly to whatever it is.
No problem with it.
Which is exactly why he showed up and was getting packages from her house.
Baby mom and Jake Lover are arguing again.
And she goes, motherfuckers are posting videos of you and all that.
Well, I guess she's right.
Who posts videos of me?
This guy.
And she goes, this bitch, Bree, where she been with you?
Since you ain't been over at my house the same day you post a picture.
I guess she posted a video.
You knew it was because she said, what's up?
She was in bed with you.
You kissing all over her.
This shit is embarrassing.
So obviously the baby mom is jealous as hell.
Pookie's in jail, mad as hell, you know, arguing back and forth with her.
Baby mom says, she already got your money, but she picking up money for such and such, though.
Oh, shit.
Jake Lover says to the baby mama, how much is it for?
She goes to him, $1,000.
Chapo says, everybody shit $1,000.
Question mark?
She goes, nope.
$5,000.
I don't know what this is.
And then $10,000.
Jake Lover says to her, for real?
We'll get them 10% in the morning.
We'll get them 10% in the morning.
We just got to make sure their lawyers show up.
Call such and such on three-way.
The line then goes silent for a bit, comes back on the line and says to Jake Lover, a.k.a.
Chapo, is going straight to voicemail.
Jake Lover calls such and such as baby mom again.
And he says, or she says, it ain't even really about Brie because I already know.
Motherfuckers already gave me the blueprint on everything.
I know she was fucking with you.
You bounce back and forth between these bitches and I'm not doing none of that.
It's messy.
That could have been me, bro.
That's his girl talking to him.
Jake Lover says to her, could have been you because you around a nigga?
She goes, no, because I'm around you.
You bring mess on yourself.
You bringing mess on yourself.
You think a motherfucker trying to criticize you, you bring shit on yourself like the messiness.
It's how you move, how you're so flamboyant.
How you pointing shit out?
I don't even know what I got myself into.
You want me to text your side, bitch?
She got gas to get up there to you.
You act like a motherfucker can't be mad.
I got your daughter and you tell me you got money somewhere else when you're out here risking your life and your freedom every motherfucking day.
Like I could tell Brie and ask Brie to do anything for my daughter.
Damn, she's fucking mad.
Oh, shit.
Jake, what was that, Christina?
No, it was wild.
She wilding, right?
I guess that's the hood for you.
Yeah.
His baby mama on some shit.
But she mad too because she's involved in.
You know why she's so mad, right?
I mean, I get it.
You got to talk to Mike, though.
Why is she so mad?
You know why?
I mean, the whole, it's in her name kind of in a way.
And I get it, but it's like, why are you guys on the phone talking about this?
On a jail phone, too.
That's a funny part.
Like, you're trying to implicate yourself.
Just yeah.
The real reason I think she's mad is because she commits criminal activity with him too.
Yeah.
And she's mad that he has another chick doing that type of shit because not only is he cheating on her, but she's his baby mom.
And on top of that, bringing someone else into the fray that can implicate all of you guys if they get caught is a huge risk.
I think she's also mad about the money.
Yeah, shella mad about the money too.
Like, because she's not holding on to it.
This chick is.
I'll be pissed off too.
Like, what the fuck is this bitch holding this money for when I'm here longer?
Yeah.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
And let me break something down for y'all real quick as far as like drug organizations goes because you guys are probably saying, why is this nigga giving bitches money?
The reason why drug traffickers give girls money, guys, is because women are far less likely to be searched if they're stopped by police.
Simple as that.
If you're driving around with 10, 20 grand of drug money in your vehicle, you're far less likely to have the police call canine or search your vehicle or whatever it may be.
Or if you get caught with the money, you can go ahead and, you know, just, you know, eyelash your way.
Oh my God, no, sorry.
I didn't know.
Oh, I just, you know, you can say some bullshit.
It's my only fans' money.
They're like, okay, we'll let you go.
It's easier to give a woman everything because they don't really get looked at.
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You could just like literally with it.
If you get put over, a female can just do like a fake cry and then, okay.
Yeah.
It's my grandma's money.
She's never got a ticket.
They'll say some shit like that.
What?
I've never got a ticket.
Yeah.
Girls get off.
Like, there's a reason why women serve 66% less time in jail.
Like, they don't fucking get caught.
So that's why Chopo, I mean, look at, like, bro.
If you're a cop and you pull this nigga over, you know what I'm saying?
Like, you think this dude, like, not to be a profile or whatever, but like, and he has a, here's the other thing, too.
Not only, you know, does he, I guess, kind of fit the image, unfortunately, he also has an extensive criminal history.
The police know who he is.
If he gets pulled over, they're going to fucking grill the shit out of him and search all his stuff because they know he's a drug trafficker.
Guys, this dude Choppo right here, this guy, Jamarcus Glover, he's not like some low-level drug trafficker.
He's high up in Louisville, Kentucky.
He's probably dealing in the ounce and or kilogram level of drugs.
Okay.
And when I say ounce, I'm talking about like multiple ounces of like cocaine, crack, all that shit, which is a lot, right?
For a guy that's not on the Mexican border.
I just find this funny.
Yeah, it is funny.
Like you're just having them.
All right.
Yo, give me a one in the chat if you guys are enjoying me reading these jail calls.
If you guys aren't, I'll skip.
I'll start skipping through.
But here's the thing.
If you guys give me real quick, give me ones in the chat.
If you guys want me to keep reading these jail calls, give me a two if you guys want me to just move on from the jail calls.
One, if you want me to keep reading these jail calls, two, if you guys want me to stop.
I think she's stupid.
Yeah, she is.
She's mad because there's another bitch helping.
You have his baby.
You're solid no matter what.
Just she's solid no matter what.
I know he's a pookie guy.
But might as well put all that heat on that other bitch so you're safe.
Fair enough.
Like, I just don't.
All right.
It looks like everyone, well, Agent Fit is just spamming one.
Agent Fit.
Okay.
Okay.
We get it.
You want one, but I got to see what everyone else is saying, bro.
No, there's a lot of ones.
Okay, okay.
Okay.
I don't see no twos.
I see like a little bit of twos, but it's a lot of ones.
Okay.
Yeah, guys, this is all public information, baby.
It's literally out there.
It's out there.
Guys, they put all this out there, which is why I'm laughing at the New York Times.
This is what I'm trying to tell y'all about these fucking mainstream media people, man.
Look, let me show y'all how easy this is.
Let me show y'all.
Okay.
Google, bam.
Right?
We're going to go ahead.
I'm going to enlarge this.
Breonna Taylor case.
Do you want the website on Telegram?
Hold on.
It's how about this?
Breonna Case files.
Oh, look at this.
Breonna Taylor investigation.
LouisvillePolice.org.
Boom.
That's literally all of it right down there.
Here you go.
All the documents, my friends.
New York Times had access to the same shit I am showing you guys right now.
They're literally, they have access to all the same stuff.
And I can tell because of I was looking at as we looked at their video, they're pulling up a bunch of the same stuff I have here.
But why are they choosing to not show you the drug investigation stuff?
Why are they not showing you guys that stuff?
Now, I know the argument could be made.
Yo, but Myron, you're not showing the police interviews and everything else like that.
That's not as relevant because the thing is, is that they're purposely withholding information from y'all.
I'm telling you guys with the police that they fucked up.
I'm telling y'all that they fucked up, but that does not mean that the shooting was not justified.
The shooting was justified.
But how they got to the shooting, yes, they made some mistakes for sure.
Scroll down a little more so they can see all the way, scroll all the way down.
No, click right there.
Click where?
On that little line right there that says videos and interviews.
Oh, this right here?
Yeah.
So if everything, like all the fish, apparently you were lying.
Everything's right there.
We have the interviews.
We have the interviews with all the police, all the agents.
Yeah.
And I want you guys, if you guys are going to want to go ahead and like believe the New York Times and all this other shit, man, do me a favor.
Watch every officer's interview.
Okay.
Watch every officer's interview.
You can't take it out of context and shit like that because you don't know what they're describing, which is why the New York Times, when they did that shit, was not like that's you can't do that.
You know, you got to go off of the totality of the circumstances.
This is how police officers are judged.
And I explained this to you guys before already, how they look at shooting cases.
You know?
So.
But just because this is all out doesn't mean every case is like this.
Yeah.
Just so you guys.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not every case is like this.
The reason why they put this up, guys, is because there was an enormous amount of pressure on the Louisville Police Department to put this out.
So the internal affairs ended up putting all this out.
But what I'm trying to say is that the New York Times are trying to spin it in a way and not give y'all the full picture that this was a legitimate drug trafficking organization that Breonna Taylor was a member of and extremely complicit in.
Okay.
It's no mistake that the police were there at her house at midnight serving a no-knock warrant.
You're not going to serve a no-knock warrant at midnight and get a judge to sign off on it, which I showed y'all that, by the way, okay, without an enormous amount of probable cause.
And that's why we're going through these jail calls.
And I'm showing y'all, this is what the mainstream media isn't going to tell you.
I'm keeping it objective.
I already told y'all that Henriksen fucked up.
I already told you guys that they didn't have enough manpower and they probably should have gotten more people in there and raided the houses properly.
But they didn't have the manpower to do it.
So what are you going to do?
Are you going to hold off your investigation and potentially lose the probable cause that you have and it goes stale?
Or are you going to just hit the house?
You know, this is a very probable situation that ended up just sucking.
Kenneth Walker is an idiot.
He's the one that effectively got his girl killed.
If I'm going to be all the way honest with y'all, like you guys should be mad at Kenneth Walker for being stupid enough to shoot at police.
All right.
Someone said Claudia say car.
What are they saying?
Someone told me to say car.
What, Cad?
Car.
What?
You got to.
I don't want to say it.
That's why.
Someone told me to say car.
Car, okay.
Yeah, that's how she says it.
Okay.
So we're going to continue on here.
So they go ahead and continue and argue about how Jake Lover hasn't been to his daughter in weeks.
And Jake Lover says, it doesn't matter.
I ain't seen Ben at nobody's house.
I've been in the trap.
I just...
This guy.
All right.
We're just going to move on.
So Jake Lover calls an unknown female.
So now he has a third girl that he's talking to as well.
Jake Lover says to unknown female, how much money at your house?
She goes, whatever you put there, I didn't count all of that money.
Jake Lover says, count the rubber bands and tell me how much is there.
Holy fucking shit.
He's not smart.
Huh?
Like, he's just dumb.
This dude is fucking privacy in a jail.
I don't know.
I know it's the crazy thing now.
Like, if you get a good behavior, they give you iPads and you can FaceTime.
In jail?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, yeah, they do.
They do.
Yeah.
But you get like, you're monitored.
Yeah, of course.
Of course.
But it's just like.
This is stupid.
Yeah.
This guy is fucking crazy, bro.
This nigga crazy.
He's like putting himself in.
Oh, man.
All right.
So he goes, count the rubber bands and let me know how much is there.
So he probably has his money denominated by rubber bands.
Unknown female says, okay, I'll call you when I get home.
It's going to be a minute.
And she and Jay Glover says to the unknown female, love you.
She goes, love you too.
So my man got three girls working for him as his money couriers.
I hope he trusts them because he's locked up and they got all his money.
Oh my God.
So Jake Lover calls a guy and says, where are you at?
The dude says, you know the spot, E. He goes, I just watched the news, nigga.
They're trying to act like they had a search warrant for Bree's house too.
Well, sir, they actually did.
Let's see here.
I think they definitely did.
And here it is right here, my friends.
Here is a search warrant right here.
Here's that Mustang that I told y'all about.
Okay.
Oh, this was registered in Mississippi.
Okay.
So my bad, guys.
It was only the charger that was registered to Brianna.
This Mustang was registered in Mississippi, which is where he's from.
My mistake there.
Here's a search warrant right here, guys.
They did have a search warrant for his house.
So I don't know what you're talking about, bro.
They're trying to act like they had a search warrant for Bree's house.
Sir, here it is right here.
And on top of that, it was also, like I showed y'all, a no-knock warrant.
Okay.
No-knock entry on the premises.
Okay.
And they had a valid reason because they know these drug traffickers have an attempting history of attempting to destroy evidence.
We read that already.
They have cameras on a location that compromise detectives.
We read that already.
They see surveillance evidence and they got evidence that they were trying to destroy drugs.
Also, they have cameras on the location that compromise detectives once an approach to the dwelling is made and have a history of fleeing from law enforcement.
Guys.
Don DeMonco.
What the fuck do I need to show y'all that they had all the evidence that they needed for a no-knock warrant?
It was a no-knock warrant.
This is indisputable.
Look, here's a judge's fucking signature.
March 12th, 2020, 1237 p.m.
They hit the house at midnight on March 13th, 12 a.m.
Come on, man.
They did have a search warrant.
And here's the other thing, too.
A lot of these crazy ass people were saying that the police didn't have a search warrant.
They had the wrong address.
They had a knock warrant, but they didn't knock.
Then they changed it back and said that they did knock.
People made allegations that the police just went there and shot into the house and Brianna was asleep.
None of that is true.
It was all a fucking lie.
All a lie.
The New York Times had access to all this information too, but they conveniently did not tell you guys about it.
They had access to it, but they withheld it.
Why?
To paint a certain narrative.
listen man i report the facts no matter how ugly they are such a sister jay glover I know the only thing I could figure out is that they checked that license plate.
They've been putting an investigation on the motherfucker.
Jake Lover says, they check Bree's license plate?
The guy says, that's the only thing I could think of.
A motherfucker pull up on the block in the charger.
That's the only thing I could think of.
Jake Lover says to the guy, who at no haters running their mouth?
That nigga Kenneth didn't have no business doing that shit.
That nigga got Bree killed, nigga.
He goes, and the friend goes to Chop.
Again, remember, your boy, Jake Lover, is having a conversation with one of his people's, all right, on the jail call.
So stupid.
He goes, you got to see like the bigger picture to it, though.
You feel me?
It's more like it than what you're feeling like right now.
Jake Lover says, I know, I know.
She was feeling me.
At the end of the day, everything's stolen from me, though.
I swear I know that.
Jake Lover says to his boy, that man tell me I watched you leave your baby mama's house.
All right, if you watch me leave my baby mama's house, why would you execute a warrant at Bree's house?
Bree got that charger and all this shit.
Bree's paper trail makes sense for everything she got, though.
Jake Lover says, look, so right there, he's admitting that he uses Bree because she's legitimate, right?
She's legitimate, which is very common that drug traffickers do this.
Jake Lover says to his boy, I don't understand how they serve a warrant for Bree's house when nothing ties me to Bree House at all except these bonds.
No, stupid.
Your phone is also registered in her name.
Stupid.
And they also caught you on surveillance at her house before.
Stupid.
And they also caught you and her in her vehicle in front of your drug house.
Stupid.
So that is how they were able to tie you to Brie, my friend.
Oh, not to mention also that you were at her house when homicide investigators went to her house back in 2016.
Stupid.
Anyway, let's continue on.
Bonds and cars in 2016.
It's just ties, though.
Look at the ties since 2016.
Ever since Rambo homicide victim and the camera right there, they see a motherfucker pull up.
Yeah, she, Brie, was out there the top of the week before I went to court.
The friend says to Clover, they didn't even have to see her pull up.
All they had to do is see that license plate.
They done put two and two together.
Then on top of that, they got over there and find money.
No, Brie don't.
Bree don't, Brie don't.
Bro, you know how Brie do.
They didn't find nothing in her house, and that's from Jake Lover.
Again, they didn't find anything in her house because homicide detectives had taken it over.
Well, PIU had taken it over.
His boy says to him, I thought you said they found some money over there.
Jake Lover says, if it was there, it was there.
It was there.
Okay.
They didn't do nothing, though.
That's the problem.
Kenneth said, ain't none of that go on.
Hmm.
What the hell?
So they're obviously worried.
So the friend says to Jake Lover, so they didn't take none of the money.
Jake Lover says, Kenneth said that none of that go on.
He said homicide came straight to the scene and they went to packaging Bree and they left.
Look at that.
So Kenneth and Chapo are in jail talking about, yo, what's going on?
Right?
God, so stupid.
Such and such says this Jake Lover.
He said they didn't announce themselves or something.
Jake Lover says to her, he ain't say, he's saying they wasn't.
He's saying they were just beaten so hard.
She was in the hallway.
Jake Lover says, in the hallway, nigga.
Friend goes, that's just so sad, bro.
Jake Lover says to his boy, you think I hurt, nigga?
You know I don't give a fuck about nothing but them.
Nothing but Brie.
Nothing but, I think that's the baby mom.
Nothing but inaudible.
Them my only three.
I don't do shit for nobody else out here, bro.
His boy goes, I told inaudible, from what I understand, they wasn't fucking with each other.
When y'all get her Brie phone, when y'all get Brie phone, y'all need to go on her phone and get that number and see that chop.
Your number was blocked.
Oh, shit.
Jake Lover says to his boy, yeah, we, him and Brie, had texts that day.
Though, big dog, that's the thing.
We text that day, nigga, on my life.
She texts me and asks me when this stuff coming in for my car.
I'm sending everything to her.
We're on good terms to where she makes sure she gets her shit.
She done started fucking with Kenneth, so I'm playing the player.
She's going to get tired of this shit because she always do.
I let her do her thing.
I can show my phone.
I ain't been talking to her at all, but she texted yesterday out of the blue when this stuff coming in.
I was like, I don't know.
I'm going to let you know, but they done took the money.
I sent the tracking information to her.
Then she told me I had a hoodie and shit come in.
She told me that shit.
Come in, nigga, on everything.
Bro, what did we discover earlier, guys?
We discovered that your boy, okay, this guy right here, Jake Lover, here's the conspiracy.
This is what they do.
So this guy right here, Jake Lover, a.k.a.
Chapo, this is what he does.
We're going to go ahead and do the drug trafficking conspiracy right now with y'all.
Okay?
This is how it works.
We got Springfield Drive, right?
We got Brianna's house.
Then we got, we'll say 2024 Elliott.
So this is how the conspiracy goes.
The drugs are mailed to Brianna.
Okay?
Here.
Then he shows up, picks up the drugs, right?
as seen on surveillance footage up here.
Oh, my bad.
I'm going up too far.
Sorry, guys.
Okay.
So here he is.
Okay.
This is him showing up in his red 2017, you know, charger or whatever.
Okay.
He goes in, and you guys can see here, I'm going to enlarge it, right here.
Looks like he's carrying a package, right?
This little area I'm highlighting right here for y'all, right?
So he goes in.
This is Brianna's house back here.
This is apartment four, comes out, has a package.
So he grabs a package and then drives it up to 24, uh, takes the 20-minute drive and drives it right here.
So 2424 Elliott, the trap house that we talked about before, right?
This area.
Once he drops the drugs off, the police literally witness and see more cars coming to the location because the house has been re-upped.
Now that the house is re-upped, all right, he goes and re-ups to other houses as well.
2626, 2526, you know, all these places or 2425 and then 2426.
This house right next door.
All right.
Here's the main trap house again.
Here's the other one.
These two homes right here.
And then this one across the street.
He drops the dope off, right?
So the drugs get mailed to Brianna.
He picks it up, drives it to his trap house, and does this periodically, which is why she lets him just show up whenever he wants.
So she goes ahead, right?
Because she's getting paid during all of this, of course.
It's not like she's doing this shit for free.
She asks him, when's another shipment coming in?
And we can see that in this jail call right here.
all right where were we someone's right Right here.
And she asks him.
I think some people are shocked that you can mail drugs.
You can.
It's like...
Absolutely.
You can mail drugs.
It's insane.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
You can mail drugs.
And I'm going to break that.
If you guys want me to break down how drugs are mailed, give me a one in the chat.
If you guys don't want me to explain it, give me a two in the chat.
Give me a one in the chat.
If you guys want me to explain how drugs are mailed, give me a two in the chat if you guys don't want me to.
I'd be happy to break it down for y'all.
But it's crazy, too, how they do it.
Also, guys, do me a quick favor.
like the goddamn video what are they saying It's all ones.
I'm just giving it a second because you know how like.
Yeah, it's all ones.
So as you guys can see here, I can show my phone.
I haven't been talking to her at all, but she texts every day out of the blue when this stuff coming in.
I was like, I don't know.
I'm going to let you know.
But they done took the money.
I sent the tracking information to her.
Then she told me I had a hoodie and shit that came in.
She told me that shit come in, nigga, on everything.
So what are they talking about, guys?
They're talking about the drugs coming in that he can go pick up in a UPS package or USPS package or whatever it may be.
Now, how do you mail drugs?
Well, guys, the way that you're going to mail drugs is it depends on where it's coming from.
A lot of the times people mail drugs on average from the West Coast over to the East Coast because the West, you know, more liberal states tend to have more lax drug laws.
So especially like California, very common they mail like marijuana and stuff like that in the mail.
But it happens all the time, guys.
And you got to understand that before the digital age, everything used to get mailed, whether it was child pornography, contraband, drugs, everything else like that, it will get mailed.
That's where the postal inspection service comes in.
The postal inspection service guys are basically postal inspectors that are, they're technically on paper, they're 1811.
So they have the same duties as a special agent, okay?
And these are the guys that investigate that stuff through the U.S. Mail.
And I'll show y'all real fast, give you a quick little lesson on postal inspectors.
Okay.
Here they are.
And postal inspectors, they're not as big as they used to be, guys.
They used to be much bigger, but now they've shrunk quite a bit because postal inspection, and they actually have their own police academy in Maryland.
But this is them right here, guys.
But people don't use the mail as much anymore.
But they used to be really big back in the 90s when everyone was shipping stuff.
But yeah, man, it's very common to ship drugs through the mail.
Here you go.
This is their badge.
This is what they look like.
They're criminal investigators themselves.
They have their own academy in Baltimore.
In 2008, the U.S. postal inspection had 2,288 full-time personnel with the authority to make arrests and carry firearms on duty.
This represented a 23.1% drop over the previous years.
I would argue nowadays, bro, I remember a couple years back, they had about a thousand postal inspectors, so they have even less now because, like I said, people aren't like using the mail as much to do shit.
What people would have laughed, what's going on?
You're teaching everybody how to be a criminal.
Oh, am I after you just said, like, there's less postal workers now?
Like, really?
I mean, that's common information, though.
Like, you can look that shit.
I hope you feel like a lot of people.
I've never seen it.
Yeah, I just want to say that.
And they, and they, a lot of the times they wrap the wrap the drugs in the mail with, um, and also, drugs also come in a lot of times, a lot of times through the mail guys from China.
That's another thing.
And they're typically drubbed in like some kind of scent masking agent.
So narcotics dogs can't catch them.
Well, go ahead, Christine.
Anyways, is they like, say it's like, it's weed, right?
You get a vacuum sealed, you, they vacuum seal it up.
That's one way to do it, too.
And then they wrap it up, they triple wrap it up, and then you can just literally, yep, you can mail it because the fact that it's just going to go, you have to mail it a certain way, though.
You can't.
Well, you out here.
No, it's just, I see.
I've heard.
You've heard?
I've heard.
Let me find out.
I've heard.
Christine, part of the Boston, the Boston Tea Party drug gang.
All right.
So Jay Glover says, whatever.
She, Brie, gonna turn her back on me because she loved that nigga, Kenneth Walker.
That nigga did this shit.
At the end of the day, if I would have been at that house, Brie would be alive, bro.
I don't shoot at no police.
So he is smart enough to know that you don't do that shit.
Jay Glover calls such and such and said his baby mom from his dormitory and goes, and they're arguing.
You had Brie's car on Valentine's Day.
We weren't together.
You don't care about nothing but the money.
Oh my God.
Yo, I ain't gonna lie.
I feel sorry for this dude, bro.
I legitimately feel sorry for Chapo, man.
He's fucking his, his, you know, one of his girls is, you know, is deceased now.
His baby mama is calling him, bitching about dumb shit.
His man is like over here, like, trying suspecting that there might be some issues going on.
He can't find his money.
His other girl doesn't know how much money is at her house.
He's got to tell her, count the bands.
Yo, he's going through a lot of stress right now.
But here's the thing.
That's his farth though, because the fact that he left money at this girl's house.
You didn't count the money.
You didn't write it on your phone.
No, he counted it by the bands.
Yeah, but that's like, but now he's asking her, like, how he doesn't even know how much.
It's like he forgot.
You didn't write it down.
She'd be taking half the bands.
I'm like, oh, you only have this much.
But technically, he had like a way more.
Yeah.
Yeah, that could, that could happen.
But now he's locked up.
So he's not coming out.
So what's going to happen?
She's going to delete her number, change her address, delete everything, take the money be out.
That's definitely possible.
Definitely, definitely possible.
I mean, yo, but he's going through it, man.
This dude, my man got crazy stress right now.
So she's arguing him.
But again, this proves, though, what does this prove, guys?
This coincides with what PBI detectives observed on the poll camera on February 13th, 2020.
So his girl actually implicated him and Brianna even further.
Bro, what the baby mom pet pissed?
Yo, she didn't even mean to do it, but she, but maybe she did, man.
She called in on a recorded line saying that stupid shit.
Jamarcus Glover pulled up in front of 2024 Elliott driving a Black Dodge Charger registered to Brianna Taylor.
When Jamarcus went inside the residence, Brianna Taylor was observed getting out of the passenger seat for a few seconds and then got back inside the vehicle.
What did she do?
She did the whole, let me make sure that ain't nobody looking at us as he goes ahead and drops these fucking drugs off.
Man.
No one's that stupid.
So Brianna Taylor not only is involved in the conspiracy with providing a vehicle, providing a stash house, holding his money, she's also a lookout for the organization as well.
Guys, again, let me make this crystal clear.
Breonna Taylor did not deserve to die.
However, she was an important member of this drug trafficking organization.
And you guys could tell from these jail calls alone that she has a significant role.
She was holding tens of thousands of dollars for this guy, Choppo, at a time.
Also, like, I feel like we have a lot of like shows that are not comprehending that we're saying that she's literally, she was helping money laundering and dealing drugs.
Like, we're not saying she was bad, a person.
Like, she was a criminal.
Yeah.
Yes.
But I'm saying, as in, like, Vienna, how you know how all the posters went?
Oh my god, like say her name, she was innocent.
She was this.
She had a whole nother dark side, and we're just saying the dark side.
Yeah, I mean, I mean, let's say the name, let's say the name of the guy that got killed in her rental vehicle, but nobody gives a shit about that, right?
That's what I'm trying to say.
Like, the media wants to go ahead and paint a certain picture, and they're not going to have the same energy for the victims of the crimes.
And it also didn't really come at a good time.
Yeah, yeah, he came at a really bad time.
Yeah, because if it was, if it was any other time, and no one would pay.
And then George Floyd happened like two months later.
Yeah.
You know, and that's why this story kind of died out because the George Floyd joint happened two years later, two months later, and everyone went crazy.
So Taylor was observed getting out of the passenger seat for a few seconds, then got back inside the vehicle.
So Jay Glover calls his baby mom again.
They got Brie's address all on your stuff when I was bonding you out.
That's your address.
Here she goes calling him again to fucking argue, guys.
Yo, what the fuck is wrong with this chick?
She's doing that on purpose.
Oh, shit.
That sounds like a bad thing.
She's doing crazy.
She's doing what she's doing.
Yo, she's a fucking bitch, this baby mom, bro.
So she goes, so Jake Lover says, Brie had me on a bond already.
She had my bond from old cases, not that 2018 shit, that old shit.
She did that bond when such and such was in jail.
I don't know how her address all on my paper on all my paperwork.
They got that address a long time ago in 2016 when I was just staying with her.
Then they watched, and she says, to him, the baby mom says, they're watching you.
You have to stop thinking about yourself.
You're acting like you're from Kentucky.
This is not where you're from.
You're the main target.
Who are you trying to be?
Scarface?
Oh, oh, shit.
Oh, shit.
She's saying a bunch of police ass shit, bro.
I'm telling you.
She knows that she's man.
Think about it, right?
She might be an informant herself saying all this shit.
No, but think about it.
She could be like an angry baby mama.
Like angry baby mamas.
And if you're at, if you feel that, that spiteful, because I've seen it before.
Yeah.
You're locked up right now.
So she's going to make you feel so much like shit to the point where you're going to only have to rely on her and realize that all these other bitches ain't shit.
And she's going to do everything to probably like you.
She's going to keep you in there.
She's, she's a fucking.
I've seen crazy baby mamas.
They're like, she's fucking pissed.
Anyway, let's continue on.
So the baby mom says to Jay Glover, aka chop on reference is talking about Brianna Taylor's family.
They don't think your baby daddy got nothing to do with it.
He's cool or whatever.
They just really angry at the police and they're going to get Kenny out tomorrow.
Oh shit.
So Jay Glover says, How are you going to bond that man out of jail?
This shit happened because of this nigga.
He fired shots at the police.
So the baby mom again starts arguing with Jay Glover over what if the police would have run in her house last night and he wasn't going to be there.
She had their daughter.
Jay Glover cuts off and says, Brie, Brie.
So the nigga fucks off, fucks up and calls her.
Oh shit.
Oh shit.
He probably did that shit by mistake.
So he cuts her off and says, Bri, Brie.
And she says to Jake Lover, I'm Kiara.
I'm Kiera.
They're just both stupid at this point.
Yo, what are the likes at, yo?
I feel it.
Jake Lover says to the baby mom, this is why I keep all this shit away from my house.
I don't bring no police to my house.
So we're at 2K like 2K views.
So we're going to skip these other guys, but now we got all of we got Glover's phone calls, bro, which is hilarious.
Fucking comedy.
All right.
So these are his co-conspirators, by the way, guys.
These conversations are funny, though.
Yeah.
No, these conversations are funny, guys.
And I, and I think you guys should definitely check them out.
You know, because they implicate Brianna more in the drug trafficking organization.
She knew who these people were.
So, okay.
So on April 2nd, guys, PBI detectives executed a search warrant on Jamaris Glover, Rayshawn Lee, Alicia Jones, and Demarcus Bowman's cell phones that were seized on March 13th, 2020.
So that's the day that Brianna was killed.
Remember, guys, they were all caught at the first stash house 2024, 2424 Elliott.
Okay.
Jamarcus Glover's cell phone and evidence of narcotics trafficking, as well as an association with Breonna Taylor.
Okay.
Screenshot of an ATT bill paid with her name on it.
Rashan Lee's cell phone had evidence of narcotics trafficking from 2424 Elliott Avenue text messages.
On April 4th, 2022, 22nd, 2020, PBI detected executed a search warrant and an order to vacate at 2424 Elliott Avenue.
See attached shortly before the warrant was executed.
Jamarcus Glover, Rayshawn Lee, and Demarius Bowman were all seen leaving the residence in their respective vehicles.
So this is after they got arrested.
When the warrant was executed, Anthony Taylor, too, was inside and the residents and attempted to flee out the back of the residence.
Mr. Taylor was apprehended in an alley behind the residence.
Search of the residence yielded another significant amount of suspected crack cocaine, a large bag of MDMA, marijuana, and assorted drug paraphernalia indicative of narcotics trafficking.
Before PBI detectives were done searching the residents, other detectives within CID were able to apprehend Demarius Bowman and Rayshawn Lee and bring them back to 2424 Elliott.
Demarius Bowman was apprehended, leaving 2605 West Muhammad Ali Boulevard.
All these guys are drug trafficking people in the organization with your boy El Chapo.
Rayshawn Lee was apprehended on the lot of Dinos.
Anthony Taylor II, Demarius Brown, and Rayshawn Lee were all arrested and charged accordingly.
Jamarcus Glover, a.k.
Chapo, this is Breonna Taylor's boyfriend, was arrested the following day on April 23rd, 2020 in the same vehicle that was seen leaving 2024 or sorry, 2424 Elliott in and charged accordingly.
PBI detectives were able to seize all the individual cell phones and execute search warrants on all of them with the census of Louisville Metro codes and regulations.
2424 Elliott was officially vacated and boarded up.
Jamarcus Glover, more jail phone calls.
Let's see here.
Okay, we can read this.
This is the end here.
So he goes on April 24th, 2020, after he gets arrested.
He goes and calls his baby mama again and says to Jay Glover, Scott, Scott Barton, Jay Glover's attorney, said $500 for him and $500 for you to get out.
I got to come back up there at one o'clock.
I was going to an audible 500, but I was on the phone with such and such and redacted, told me not to because you and him got some type of relationship and you would take care of it or something.
Jay Glover says to the baby mom, text Scott and tell him I'm going to get him the money.
Baby mom says to Jay Glover, he, Scott Barton, said you need to stay off the streets.
They really want you bad because they made a mistake and killed that girl.
They are going to constantly keep messing with you.
I'm sure Jamarcus knows that by now.
These charges they threw on him, he needs to really stay out of the way.
Jamarcus goes, They literally trying to snatch a nigga up, though, because they did this shit to Bri and shit.
I'm knowing where they were trying to go with it when they said something about the message, though.
Kiara, you know, I don't text at all.
Kiera's his baby mom's name, by the way, guys.
When they were saying something about the message like this, the 424 number, I just got that number.
I probably ain't had that number but a month.
So before Brie ain't been on that phone over no month.
How you know they're talking about the 424 number?
Oh shit.
Choppo says to her, shit, that's the only number they got that me and Bree talking on.
Oh, what the fuck?
This guy is fucking stupid.
They don't know that number.
They don't know the number that me and Bree were talking on.
They only got like a month of text messages or something.
I swear it ain't nothing silly.
I ain't talking to y'all about no drugs and shit.
Sergeant says, says to Jake Lover, maybe you just was like, come pick up this money.
Oh, this baby mom might have been working, bro.
I'm starting to think she's a snitch.
Jake Lover says to her, they fuck with me for no reason, though.
Baby mom says, that's what he, Scott, said.
They're so angry they killed that girl.
They're going to go.
They're going to get Jamarcus.
The baby mom says, I have been asking you all week.
I want to ride.
I just want to get out the house because I'm in the house all day.
Yo, what the fuck?
Yo, this chick, man.
Oh, shit.
I'm starting to think this girl was cooperating with the police.
Jake Lover says to her, This is why I don't like, I don't have you with me, though, because like they're going to get to doing shit like they did with Bree.
As soon as they seen something about my bank statement, her address, they literally went to her house.
Baby mom says to Jake Lover, they got to be watching you because they hadn't run in my house yet.
Yeah, probably because you're a fucking informant, bitch.
Oh, shit.
Oh, shit.
Jay Glover says to her, they took my car.
They got that bank statement out the armrest.
Boom.
It got Bri's address on there.
They see that Brie got that new car.
She's living through her job, though.
She's not living off nothing else.
That shit that I put in the bank, it'd be phone bill money.
Shit, I'll order shit offline.
Yeah, okay, bro.
Then the baby mom says, They did their research or whatever.
They probably got that girl's car records.
They probably got a whole lot.
So it might be something that you might miss.
He goes, I'm telling you everything I got going on.
Baby mom says, you lie like crazy.
Man.
That just makes no sense.
Yeah.
Breonna Taylor's family civil attorney, Sam Aglar, stated in an article published by the Courier Journal that Miss Taylor and Glover had dated two years ago and maintained a passive relationship.
See below hyperlink.
All right.
And then Breonna Taylor's family civil attorney, Sam Agler, stated in an article published by ABC News that Ms. Taylor was still friendly and she accepted packages for him at her house.
See the hyperlink below.
Yeah.
Packages, guys.
Packages.
Okay, but they're not going to tell you.
Okay, you know what?
Let's see what ABC News says about the packages.
Let's see if they could truly be unbiased.
So, yeah.
Let's go ahead.
Breonna Taylor, Kentucky MT, allegedly killed by police, executing a search warrant.
So, okay, so what we're going to do here is we're going to go ahead and do a control F for package.
Taylor was accused of accepting USPS packages for an ex-boyfriend who police were investigating as an alleged drug trafficker and used their address according to the warrant.
The lawsuit filed in Jefferson District Court on April 27th by attorneys Sam Aglar and Lanita Baker seek damages for battery, wrongful death, excessive force, negligence, and gross negligence.
Crossgrove, Hank, Hankinson, and Manningly are as defendants.
Remember, this is Manningly right here on the left.
This is Hankinson.
This is the guy that actually got charged, and this is Cosgrove.
So these two were cleared.
He was not cleared.
He ended up getting indicted.
So are you telling me that they only have packages?
Okay.
Aguilar said Taylor was still friendly and she accepted packages for him at her house.
Aguilar is Sam Aguilar is the attorney for Taylor.
So see how they're kind of glossing over it, guys, and not really going into detail and all the proof that the police had that she actually was accepting drug packages as proved by the affidavit that we read, as well as all the evidence.
Because he goes to her house, he picks up a package, he goes to the trap house, drops off said package, and the next thing you know, trap house, cars start coming in immediately.
Okay?
So it's no doubt about it that he goes to her house to re-up, but she just accepts packages for him.
Hey, this is what I'm talking to y'all about when I say the mainstream media doesn't report the truth.
They only report, you know, the comfortable truth.
All right.
They only tell y'all some of the stuff.
Okay.
And look, they're painting her in a certain light as a victim.
You know, they're showing these pictures.
And, you know, again, like, I'm not saying anyone deserves to die, but understand that they're putting these pictures up to kind of pay the image.
Okay.
They're not showing y'all the surveillance footage of her looking out for your boy Choppo when he's in the house dealing drugs.
Okay.
Look, let's see what she has to say here.
This reporting fighting the coronavirus at the play Kentucky woman shot and killed by police is demanding answers, filing a wrongful death lawsuit against three officers.
Breonna Taylor's family claiming officers blindly fired more than 20 shots into her apartment two months ago.
On March 13th, three officers entered Taylor's apartment while she and her boyfriend Kenneth walk I would say one officer shot blindly into the house.
The other two knew what they were shooting at, which is why they hit target or were sleeping.
The officers were executing a search warrant as part of a drug investigation.
Police claim Taylor's ex-boyfriend was shipping drugs to her apartment to avoid detection.
This is not a woman who that is a fact.
She was accepting drug packages for him.
Would sacrifice her as shown in the investigation I just showed you guys.
Life and her family morals and values to sell drugs on the street.
Louisville police.
That's a lie.
We proved that already that she was heavily involved in the drug trafficking organization.
Being a lookout, accepting money, stashing drugs for him, okay?
Receiving drugs for him so that he can go ahead and drop those, drop the dope off at the trap houses and they go ahead and they start picking up again.
At this point, guys, there's an enormous amount of proof that she was involved in the organization to a significant level.
She was holding tens of thousands of dollars for this guy.
No one is going to hold that kind of money in an organization unless they're trusted.
Period.
Say the night of Taylor's death, the officers knocked several times and announced their presence before entering.
And when they did, they were met by gunfire from Walker, a licensed gun owner.
Defense attorneys for Walker say he fired it.
All right, let me address this real quick.
Michael Black or Michael Butko's dude, bad, evil people involved in the wrong things deserve to be killed, meaning with no knock warrants.
Ellie has the right to kill documents because they are marked as bad, right?
Bro, are you fucking stupid?
It amazes me.
And here's the thing.
I made sure to highlight this thing because these are the type of people that are just low IQ individuals.
Nowhere did we say she deserved to die.
Nowhere did we say a no-knock warrant means you can go ahead and shoot someone.
Like people are literally fucking dumb.
A no-knock warrant, okay?
Let me say this real quick to make this fucking clear for everybody because dumb people annoy me.
A no-knock warrant is typically issued when the chances of the destruction of evidence or safety, right?
Lack of safety or high danger situations are visibly apparent with facts.
I read to you guys all the facts and the probable cause, the surveillance, the poll cameras, etc.
I read you guys all the probable causes to establish that this is a sophisticated drug organization that is using surveillance cameras, that's hiding drugs in certain areas, that's destroying evidence, et cetera.
So, and they have guns in the house in a lot of this raids.
Did you not receive when I was reading what I was reading earlier with the probable cause that when they hit these stash houses, there were drugs on the residences?
So, no, a no-knock warrant is not to go and shoot the people that are inside, you fucking dummy.
It's to be able to allow you to enter the home without necessarily alerting the suspects inside so that you have a tactical advantage.
You don't get the evidence destroyed and you're able to go in, yell, police, police, police, search warrant, police, police, police, search warrant.
And anyone that you encounter, you're able to quickly deal with them, you know, hopefully use the least force required to subdue them.
Okay.
But it gives you a tactical advantage from a safety perspective and also from a preservation of evidence.
I just showed you guys three times a signed warrant from a judge that authorized a no-knock warrant.
A no-knock warrant does not mean that you can go ahead and kill the suspects inside, you fucking retard.
It means that you have the ability to go into the home without announcing yourself and putting yourself in a precarious situation.
As you guys saw when he knocked on the door, what happened?
He got shot in his fucking leg and the femoral artery and he ended up almost bleeding out.
If he didn't have the people there with him applying tourniquets and everything else, he would have probably died.
And I showed you guys the graphic video earlier to get it into your fucking mind.
This is what happens when police officers serve search warrants all the time, getting shot at and everything else.
It's just that it doesn't hit the news all the time like this case.
All right?
So it does not mean that they have the right to kill someone just because they're committing criminal activities.
But what I will say is that a police officer was shot during the execution of the search warrant.
They fired back and Brianna got killed.
It sucks, but they were justified in their use of force.
Let me see you get shot at and not shoot back, you fucking dummy.
Damn.
Resist the slave mind, guys.
Resist the slave mind.
Get out of your fucking feelings.
I've said it a million times on this podcast.
Brianna did not deserve to die.
She did not deserve to be in that situation.
However, she put herself in that situation by being involved with a high-level drug trafficker and a fucking criminal bedside with her that had a gun that was out here selling drugs and robbing people.
Those are the people that she associated herself with.
All right?
We got to have some accountability here.
No one deserves to die.
However, if you're committing criminal activity, this is the life that you signed up for.
Get the fuck out of here with your emotional bullshit, man.
Seriously, this is crazy.
This is why, like, that mindset, that victim mindset is why so many people are mediocre in the United States, period.
Why we have so many fat people, why you have so many broke people, why you have so many people that are fucking dumb because they don't analyze the facts.
They literally blindly believe whatever the news tells them.
The news ain't telling y'all what I just showed y'all.
I come with facts.
She was a member of a drug trafficking organization and she was a fucking criminal.
Fuck you.
That's the truth.
Fuck you and your feelings.
If you don't like it, get the fuck out of here, bro.
I'm not doing this podcast to appease social justice warriors.
I'm not.
I refuse to lie and cover up the truth for your feelings.
I refuse.
Go suck a fucking dick.
All right.
I'm not doing this podcast for the money.
I'm doing this shit for the fucking truth.
Real talk, man.
You fucking softies.
In self-defense, claiming police did not announce themselves.
They say Walker thought the officers were breaking in.
They did not identify themselves and that they were in plain clothes.
And now the Commonwealth Attorney's Office is calling for Kentucky's Attorney General to appoint a special prosecutor.
It has been more than two months with no statement from the public to the public regarding this incident.
We call for an independent investigation into her death.
Kentucky's governor calls the case troubling.
He's asking state officials to review the findings.
See, and they're using this photo here, right, to kind of like create like an error that she's innocent or whatever.
But again, guys, she lost this job because they found a dead body in her car.
Findings of the police investigation.
Walker shot one officer in the leg and has been charged with first-degree assault and attempted murder of a police officer.
Taylor's family says she was on the front lines fighting the coronavirus at the time of her death.
They were concerned about her getting sick, not shot.
Yeah, I mean, it's amazing to me how like a lot of guys in here are like on some female shit.
I say facts and then they come in and say some stupid shit like, so are you saying no-knock warrants means the police can go in and just shoot people because they're committing crime?
What the fuck?
No one said that.
Like, bro, this is what I'm talking about when I say like, this is clown world.
Clown world, bro.
Clown world.
All right, cool.
So let's see here.
Is there anything else that I let me look at my notes here?
What are we at for the likes, by the way?
We got 1,900 of y'all in here, man.
Can we guys help me get to 2K?
Because I know there's a bunch of you probably that just came in later on.
So.
Wait, so 1.9?
Yeah.
For any of you guys that didn't like the video, do me a solid and go ahead and like the video real quick.
Because I know there's a bunch of guys in here that might have not hit like yet.
Okay, so I showed the warrant.
So, okay, so quick little summary, right?
All right.
So we talked about Brianna Taylor and her tragic death, right?
How she was pretty much shot and killed in her home on March 13, 2020.
Obviously, you know, we looked over the New York Times breakdown of the shooting, how they were saying that the police officers, you know, shot blindly.
They didn't know what they were doing.
You know, they just scrapped together a team or whatever.
And then, you know, I went ahead and showed you guys all the legal documents as to why the police were there, why they were conducting the investigation, why they did, you know, the warrant late at night like that.
Why they shouldn't have knocked.
If they had knocked, Brianna would probably be alive today because they wouldn't have given time for Kenneth Walker's dumbass to grab a gun against the police.
Now, I'm going to go ahead and play a clip for you guys real quick.
All right.
From Matt from Jonathan Manningly, okay?
He was on the Timcast podcast.
Shout out to our guy Tim from Timcast, Tim Pool.
And he gave his side of the story.
And I want you guys to just check it out and let me know what y'all think.
He's going to go over.
I'm going to play a portion of this video over before.
All right.
So here he is.
This is the same story he gave to the internal affairs investigators as well.
Fair use.
Make sure, you know, like the video.
Support my guy.
What channel?
Okay, this is a better channel.
Yeah, subscribe to TimCast.
We've been on this podcast a few times.
All right.
We fucking back, baby.
Don't do more.
Go.
They can't stop us, man.
They cannot stop us.
All right, we had the your phone or is that my phone?
My bad.
My bad, guys.
Yeah, guys, we're back.
Sorry about that, guys.
I really apologize.
I don't know what the fuck happened.
Ryder just crapped out.
Maybe it's because we're going late at night and they typically do resets at the end of the month like this.
But anyway, let's go ahead and listen to Jonathan Mattingly, who was there and he got shot.
For you guys that missed it, we broke down the Breonna Taylor case.
We went over a bunch of stuff that the New York Times did not go over and ABC News and all these mainstream media outlets trying to make it look like that Breonna Taylor was innocent and not involved in any type of criminal activity and that the police picked the wrong person and they were picking on her and they did all this other stuff.
You know, yeah, that's not the truth.
You know, like I said before, no one deserves to die.
However, we have to acknowledge the uncomfortable truth with all the proof that I just showed y'all guys over the past three hours plus that Breonna Taylor was in fact involved in a drug trafficking organization to a significant amount to include facilitating murder with rent,
you know, being involved with the rental vehicle that was used in the murder in 2016, hanging out with a guy named Jamarcus Glover, aka Chapo, who was a high-level drug distributor in the Louisville, Kentucky area, holding significant amounts of U.S. currency for him, holding drugs for him, doing lookouts with him, helping him facilitate his drug organization, putting out bond for him.
So there's no way around it.
She was a significant contributor to the organization.
So let's go ahead and play this video here.
We'll play just the story, like his experience.
So I'm going to go ahead and share screen with y'all real fast.
Hey, guys, like the goddamn video because it took me a while to prepare for this goddamn thing.
I'm over here with my half my head cut open during after the transplant, getting this stuff ready.
Shout out to my guy, Tim Cass.
This is the video that I'm talking about.
Officer Involved tells the true story of the Breonna Taylor incident.
We're going to give a book about it, but you can just tell us what happened and we'll go from there.
Yeah, I'll give you the 5,000 view story of it.
So that night, we were asked to help.
Do you know the date specifically?
Yeah.
So March 12th is when the briefing was.
We didn't breach the door until March 13th, which is Friday night, full moon.
I came out from the briefing and I had two flat tires.
It started pouring down rain.
I got soaking wet while I was moving my stuff from one car to the other.
So everything was just kind of one of those nights.
What was the briefing?
It was for, so we had two separate briefings.
SWAT did their briefing because they were executing the warrants down Elliott.
The guys who were assisting them that were going to do the searches were at our brief along with us.
All the houses that we were doing were on the board.
They showed above it.
Fortunately, I took a picture.
It showed above it.
No knock, no knock, no knock.
It got to ours.
It said knock and announce.
So they had changed it.
They were all signed as no-knocks.
So technically, we served a no-knock warrant, but it was not served as a no-knock.
It was signed by a judge.
Which is true.
As you guys saw, I showed you guys that it was a no-knock warrant.
And to be honest, you know, me Monday morning quarterback in it, you know, they should have just not knocked and went in there and said, police, please, please.
Knocking is what fucked them up.
It gave Kenneth Walker's dumbass the time to grab a gun and shoot him in the leg.
But once it did not fit the parameters of a no-knock, we didn't serve it as a no-knock.
We did the thing we're supposed to do.
We corrected it and didn't do it.
So the only reason it was served, it was written as a no-knock is because Jamarcus Glover's history, he had five, I believe it was five felony pending cases for guns and drugs.
He had ran from the police.
And these were active cases, not including the ones he had already been charged with and pled guilty to previously for Mississippi and Louisville.
And so once they realized they had a ping on his phone and a tracker on his car, they knew he would not be on Springfield.
So they said, we're not doing that one as a no-knock because it didn't justify being a no-knock.
He wasn't there.
Springfield is where Brianna lived, by the way, guys, because remember, when he said a ping on him, they were tracking his phone.
Okay, a ping is law enforcement jargon for tracking his phone.
So they knew where he was.
All right.
And they said, we think it's only Brianna Taylor at the house.
We don't think there's any kids, no dogs, nobody else there with her.
Okay, cool.
They've been watching this house for a while.
So I had assumed that their intelligence was good on the house, that it was just going to be Brianna Taylor.
They said she's a heavyset black female.
Give her time to come to the door.
Give her more time than usual.
Because normally it's about 10 seconds.
You're banging on the door, police search warrant.
If you don't hear anything, then you go ahead and hit it.
So this one, when we went, we showed up and we gave it 45 seconds to a minute.
It was, I think, six different cadences of knocking on the door and yelling police search warrant.
The first two were just regular knocks, hoping she would just come to the door, be quiet.
The neighbors wouldn't know.
After she didn't come, started banging an open hand really loud, yelling police search warrant.
The neighbor upstairs heard us, came out, argued with our guys.
They kept trying to go inside.
He didn't want to go back inside.
So finally he did.
We hit the door.
Once the door opened, I could see from right to left in the living room.
So he's standing.
He's standing in the doorway.
And remember, guys, I showed y'all how the doorway was set up before with the floor plan, which, okay, hold on real fast.
Just so you guys kind of get an idea of what he's talking about here.
Okay.
We can put a visual to it.
Okay.
Sorry, Dad, but yeah, YouTube.
Okay.
It's Brianna.
Go ahead and take the only thing the New York Times did well on this thing was they were able to put a pretty good diagram there.
So y'all know what the house looked like.
God damn it.
Okay.
So here's the house, right?
Here's the layout of the house.
And Mattingly, right?
So they come up.
And retraced the first bullet fired by Taylor's boyfriend and the 32 bullets that police shot in return through window.
And we analyzed hours of 911.
Okay.
They talk about all the stuff they analyzed, but they didn't put anything that didn't fit a certain narrative to give the police officers a voice as well.
I mean, I gave both sides.
I gave Priyalla, you know, obviously I was talking about how Henriksen 100% fucked up in his practice.
You know, should have gotten indicted.
But I also gave the perspective that Breonna Taylor wasn't necessarily innocent, guys.
Notice the lights are off.
Except for three minutes, Taylor's sister, but she's not home.
So here's the frame of the house.
So Mattingly is right around here.
Okay.
And I was on the left of the door jam.
And Mike, the guy who did the ram, was on the right because you never stay in the fatal funnel in case somebody shoots through the door.
So once the door came over, I scanned right to left.
Everybody at this point's yelling, police search warrant, police search warrant.
Which is common training.
You kick the door open.
You don't just go right in.
You're like, hey, you're scanning the area, right?
From right to left.
Right.
So I'll show y'all.
Let me see here.
If I can do this right now.
I might give y'all some Feda exclusive right now.
Okay.
No, I think I'm going to teach them how to clear a corner real fast.
So.
You want to do it over there?
Yeah, let me see here.
Give me a one in the chat.
If y'all want me to show you guys how to clear a goddamn house, I'm fucking Fed It right now.
Give me a one in the fucking chat.
Two of you guys want me to just keep going with this thing.
Give me a one if you guys want me to show you guys how to do it.
I just got to figure out a camera angle that I can do it at.
It's all one.
Everybody wants to see you do this.
Okay.
So I'm trying to think here how I can do this in the studio so that let me turn the lights on.
This might take a second.
Okay.
Let me let me play this for a bit while I kind of figure out how I'm going to do this for y'all.
All right.
A hallway from the bedrooms leads to a living area.
And the apartment's entrance is in this breezeway.
The only way when I turned the corner, I had to step right in the doorway just to see down this hall.
And as soon as I did, there was an ambient light coming out from the TV down the hall.
We had lights on our guns.
As soon as I turned the corner, I saw two people overlapping each other.
It was like a big blob, but with a tall head and a short head.
And they were both down in this hallways only.
Maybe.
Do what?
Yeah, yeah, no, it's yeah, I'm thinking in my head how I'm going to do it.
No, because I'm going to need a mic.
Well, you know, I think I know how to do it.
No, that's fine.
All right.
Three, four feet wide at the most.
So very narrow hallway because it had an inset where Kenneth was standing that goes into the next bedroom.
And that's Brianna's boyfriend?
Yes.
It's her boyfriend at this time.
And so as soon as my eyes got to Kenneth, I never even got all the way to Brianna, even though there were like, it was basically one person, but I never got to her face.
As soon as I got to where Kenneth was, I could see the gun because the flashlight.
All I saw was the metal tip of the gun.
My brain was like, oh, and boom, it was over.
He shot.
He shot first.
Yes, he shot.
I felt it hit my leg.
I returned fire.
I got four rounds off.
Yeah.
Was the first shot fired?
It hit you?
Yes.
So, so you open the door, Kenneth, what's you know his last name?
Walker.
Walker fires one round, striking you in the leg.
Right.
And then the other officers return fire?
Correct.
I fired four.
I got offline is what it's called.
So boom, boom, boom, boom, real quick, four shots, got behind the door frame, came around, shot two more.
At that time, I felt my leg, realized there was a ton of blood.
And I've seen, you know, countless gunshot victims over 21 years.
And a normal leg shot that doesn't hit an artery is it doesn't bleed much.
I mean, you might have a trickle of blood down your leg.
That's it.
Well, this one, as soon as I put my hand on my thigh.
And y'all, and y'all know I showed you guys the video earlier of all the blood that was coming when he got shot.
Okay.
Oh, my bad.
Christina.
Wait, no, y'all see me now, right?
Okay.
I can see you.
Okay.
Looking at you now.
I could feel just a glob, and I was like, oh, man.
And I announced at the door.
I mean, everything happens so quick.
So I got six rounds off in probably less than two seconds.
I mean, it's how quick this whole exchange happens.
It's over before you even realize what's going on.
Training kicks in and you just react.
So I remember yelling, it hit my femoral artery.
And I sat down on my bottom because I thought I can't, I'm going to pump the blood out.
That's what I was thinking in my head.
And as I did that, Miles stepped up and was shooting already.
And I thought, I can't stay here.
I'm going to get shot by crossfire.
So I jump up and I hobble out and I fall between the cars.
And my lieutenant comes up and they start working on me.
I'm like, dude, I need a tourniquet.
Get me a tourniquet.
And they finally got one, got it on, and got the bleeding stopped.
But at that time, you got to, people say, well, why did why was there so many shots fired?
12 Seconds in the Dark, the book, the title comes from the time that door came open until it was silent from no gunshots.
The chaos stopped.
And that was about 10 to 12 seconds from what we've tried to reenact it and see.
And so much happened, so much chaos, so many things go through your mind in that 12 seconds that and guys, here's the thing.
I'll tell you guys from my training experience, like getting 12 shots off.
Anyone that is well-versed with firearms knows that you can easily get 12 shots off, no problem.
Like, or you can get the, sorry, in 12 seconds, you can get off literally between all those officers, hundreds of shots off, you know?
And this is him, guys.
This is him when he gets shot.
This is the police showing up on the scene again, right?
You can see he gets out.
Oh, my bad.
He shows up on scene, and you can see all the fucking blood.
Look at all the blood right there.
Take my fucking life.
Take this.
Take this.
John, I'll call.
You know what I'm saying?
This is the dark.
This is the dark side of law enforcement, guys.
And I want y'all to see this again.
For all the clowns out there that think, oh, yeah, no, man, it's just sugar.
Yo, yo, you can just shy, get shot, and not shoot back, bro.
It's cool, man.
You know what I'm saying?
But you find it funny how a lot of the pigs.
Monday morning quarterbacks, huh?
I find it funny, like a lot of people call cops pigs.
Yeah.
But then around, like right now is a time where the police, like everybody's applying to become the police academy.
And you literally see like everyone, you know, they'll always talk trash.
Yeah, and then they'll want to, they'll want to do something in the field or whatever.
Here's the thing.
Like I said, it's easy to Monday morning quarterback and be like, yo, you shouldn't shot.
Yo, y'all shot back excessive.
I want you to get shot in the femoral artery and tell me you're not going to shoot back, bro.
Just get up.
John, just give me your phone and keep it unlocked and I'll call her here in a minute.
Okay.
I want to see you bleeding out like this and it's okay.
They're here.
Look, hand full of blood.
John, you're all right.
We got it closed off.
We got their both gone.
I think that's his wallet, which got shot.
They got a bullet shot through it.
And he's there.
You know, there he is right there.
You can see the fucking pain.
You're good, buddy.
And they're trying to clot it up as quickly as possible because the bleeding is excessive.
And you can easily die, guys, from this.
You know?
And again, this is just a little reminder for y'all that New York, the New York Times ain't going to show you this.
They're not.
This is not to say that, you know, Brianna should die, but you got to understand that we don't know who shot the gun.
We know also that her dumbass boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, whatever his name is, he alleged that she shot the gun.
She shot it.
We're going to leave this plan.
I don't see.
So if it was him or her, he doesn't know.
They're in the dark.
He just sees a silhouette.
He sees a gunshot, bam, hit in the leg, right?
What are you going to do?
You're going to fucking shoot back like crazy.
Like, oh, shit.
It's life or death.
All right.
It's an unfortunate situation.
It really is.
You're right, man.
You got right in the thigh.
I don't know if it came out.
Say that.
Straight in.
Oh, hello.
It's just amazing how much damage can be done in that small amount of time and how much aftermath damage the city, the country, the nation from 12 seconds.
And it's just, it's, it's sad.
So you get out of there.
You say you collapse between two cars.
About how, what was the distance between the door and where you ended up on the ground with getting medical attention?
So I'll try to give you a visual of it.
If you're looking at an apartment complex and they have the inside where the stairs go up to the top, you've got that little foyer area, which is maybe, I don't know, 12 feet deep and 10 feet wide.
That's where we were at.
This is ground floor, right?
Ground floor.
And so I was all the way on the inside.
So I hobbled out of there, then a sidewalk, a curb, and then the length of a car.
So I went down between the cars, butt scooted to the edge of the cars.
And that's when my lieutenant grabbed my vest and pulled me out and got to work.
But the thing about Kenneth Walker, you know, he keeps saying he didn't know it was the police.
First, they said nobody knocked and announced.
Then he comes back later and goes, yeah, we heard him knocking.
We heard him banging.
And I thought it was her ex-boyfriend is what he said.
So if you thought, but then he said he thought somebody was doing a home invasion.
If you thought that, why would you have your girlfriend?
They got up, got dressed, he retrieved a gun.
Why would you tell your girlfriend, come in the hall with me?
And that right there, and I think I know why.
I think I know why, but let's keep going.
I'd imagine if he thought it was her boyfriend, you know what I mean?
Like they genuinely.
But if you're that scared for your life that you're willing to shoot, wouldn't you have her call 911?
Stay in here and call 911.
Get him over here.
I mean, you know, it's a tough question about whether or not somebody wants to call the police, a situation that's about to get hot, whether they're even thinking about it, how someone reacts.
I mean, you know, you're talking about 12 seconds.
They hear a big bang.
It's about 45 seconds.
I can't assume these people would react the same way I would.
I can't assume they trust cops, you know, to come and resolve the problem.
But more importantly, I mean, it's even fair to say, but why would you go out with your girl out in there, which is strange, right?
And she's in front of you and you're behind her.
Who's shooting at us?
We have to go in if there's somebody.
What is this about?
We don't who was shooting at us?
And he goes, what is this about?
And this is him right here in the corner, by the way, guys.
He's propped up against the car.
That's Kenneth Walker talking.
We're both going people.
We're both working people.
I just proved to you guys that he ain't no working person.
He is a criminal that robs people and sells drugs.
So they asked her, where's she at?
He's like, yo, she's in the hallway.
What kind of gun did she shoot?
It's a nine.
It's the regular nine millimeter.
So we asked her, what kind of gun did she shoot?
He goes, it's a nine.
It's a regular nine millimeter.
She shoot or you shoot it.
It was her.
She was scared.
All right.
So he clarifies who shoots.
He says, who was shooting?
You or her?
And he goes, it was her.
She was scared.
It was her.
Where is she at in the apartment?
She's on the grill in the hallway.
What kind of gun did she shoot?
It's a nine.
It's the regular nine millimeter.
Did she shoot or you shoot it?
It was her.
She's scared.
And there you go, guys, is what happened.
When you're in a scared position like that and you're trying to get help to your girl who's in a situation where she might bleed out or whatever, you're more than likely going to be honest with the people that can potentially save her.
Okay?
This is a high-stress situation.
You're going to more than likely you're going to be honest.
So now it makes sense why she was with him in the hallway.
Okay?
Because I thought it was strange too.
Why would you have your girl in front of you?
Why would you even have in a position?
Like if a guy's break into the house, you tell your girl, go hide in the closet.
Yeah.
Go somewhere else away.
But again, once again, I did not see mainstream media report this anywhere.
Nowhere.
It was only with me watching the fucking footage with Christina.
I didn't know about it until watching it.
You know, that we found this, that he actually admits that, yo, it was her that shot.
Again, regardless, whether he's shot or she's shot, he's still an idiot and he's responsible for the situation.
Well, he's supposed to be a man.
The man's supposed to go out first.
Yeah.
That's what my dad taught me.
That's strange.
Like, I find it extremely weird that it's your gun, but you're having her walk in front with you.
And then you're like, you're behind her.
Like, what the hell?
Like, it would make more sense, probably more than likely that she took the gun and she shot.
Yeah.
Because why would she be there?
Why the fuck would she be there?
Strange.
Especially if they were scared.
Why would you put your girl in a dangerous situation like that?
She has honestly, she has a man's mentality.
Yeah, I mean, she got the gun at first.
He should have got the gun first and got up.
Yeah, no, she got up with a gun and went to the hallway.
Like, I got this.
Maybe, yeah.
Maybe.
It's weird.
Like, it just, regardless, you know, we don't know for sure.
We can speculate, but it makes sense why she would be on the front and or even in that situation in the first place.
Because if she didn't shoot, why is she there, bro?
Why is she there?
Like, Ken is a sucker for that one.
You know?
They're not going to call the cops because they might be involved in illicit dealings or something.
And so this is street justice.
That's probably more the case.
So when they downloaded his phone after the fact, they found text messages in there with him and other guys.
You know, there's pictures of him with his gun, which no big deal.
Everybody can have a gun.
But they had it also with a bag of like pills that were probably fentanyl pills because they were the same little blue pills, weed, whatever.
Nobody cares about weed.
And so, but he was selling.
There's text messages in there, him selling all this stuff to different people.
That's irrelevant.
The one that stuck out was the one where these other guys said, hey, do you want to hit this lick with us?
He said, well, how much is it worth?
And they said, 20 grand.
He was like, that's fine, but I always do my homework first.
Meaning he sets up, watches people, see how they react.
And again, this guy didn't have a job.
He ain't lying.
I showed y'all the text messages of him talking with his guys, conspiring to rob someone.
He was getting ready to start.
One day it was UPS.
The next day it was postal.
I don't know which one it was, but he was getting ready to start a job.
That's always the case.
Getting ready to get my life together.
And so a lot of times what these drug dealers will do, they'll rob other drug dealers.
That's just common practice.
They won't report it to the police because what are you going to say?
They stole my drugs and money.
But the way they do it is they'll go up and they'll bang on a door and yell police.
And when that door gets open, they've got a gun in and they rob them.
That happens all the time.
You think that's what he thought was happening?
I don't know if that was his MO of previous cases that he had done.
So he thought, uh-oh, it's coming back on me.
Yeah.
I don't know.
It's hard to say because he's lied so many times.
We don't know the truth.
There's the simple general circumstance, nuance excluded, that I've mentioned in the past, that if you're a law-abiding citizen armed legally and someone kicks your door in and you don't know it's the police, you have a right to defend yourself from a proceeding home invasion.
I agree.
Absolutely.
There have been many stories I've seen read about, or a couple at least, where plain clothes cops are serving a no-knock warrant or something, and then they get shot and the person ends up going to prison or whatever.
And I'm like, dude.
I think that's horrible.
But when you say plain clothes, let me correct this because this was a big sticking point in ours too, because we were in what's called plain clothes.
However, we had tactical vests on that said police across the front.
He's not lying.
I showed you all the body camp footage.
You did see it right there when he was on the ground getting worked on with the shot that he had a clearly marked vest.
We had our badges on.
You know, seven white dudes going to a black guy's house.
It's just not the norm that's going to go rob a drug dealer.
It's just not, it doesn't happen.
Let's go ahead.
I was going to say, let's talk.
Let's let's let's let's move forward with the story a little bit and talk about the lies.
So the big narrative that comes out is that Brandon Taylor was sleeping in her bed and you guys just basically shot into the house willy-nilly, killing her while she slept.
You know, the big stop the cap.
Big thing.
We came in in the middle of the night, didn't knock, didn't announce, and killed her in her sleep.
So she was sleeping.
And I'm sure you guys heard that narrative as well, man, that they basically that they killed her in her sleep.
They just randomly shot into the house and everything else like that.
And I just showed y'all the proof.
That was not the case.
That's not what happened.
Before we got there.
But Ben Crump's the one that kept pushing this.
She was asleep in her bed thing, sleep over, over, over.
He came out initially and said they even had the wrong house.
They weren't even supposed to be there.
And I'm going, oh my God, we've got the search warrant, but our city refused to put it out.
Well, hold on.
City was scared to put out the search warrant, guys.
I showed it to y'all.
Address was right.
It was a no-knock warrant.
We went through the facts of the affidavit, the same facts that I read to you guys in that narcotics investigation.
They had more than enough probable cause to search that goddamn house for Breonna Taylor.
They had the boyfriend going in there, getting drugs out, going to one of his known stash houses.
After leaving the stash house, a bunch of people start coming in there.
Come on, man.
I'm like, just show them the address, the name on it.
It's all you got to do.
You know, this doesn't hurt the investigation one bit.
You mentioned before that.
But they didn't want to do that.
And you know why they didn't want to do that?
Because they were scared of getting publicly hated on even more.
Guys, anytime a police department gets involved in a shooting, especially of an African-American individual, and there's this presumption that the person was innocent, they did nothing wrong, the police department is going to withhold everything until they finish their investigation.
Also, they don't want to put that search warrant out because it would have validified what the police officers were saying.
And for you to put anything out that validifies what police officers are saying in the middle of a shooting will make you look very bad and it's not good press.
Okay.
So that's why they didn't release it, even though it proved that the mainstream media was lying, saying that they shot into the house, that they didn't have a warrant, that they didn't, that they hit the wrong address.
They didn't put it out.
Okay.
That website I showed y'all with all those files, it was recently put out, guys.
This shooting happened in 2020.
They didn't put all this stuff out until years later.
They were gentrifying the area?
Yes.
Something was going on with that.
What was that about?
So down on Elliott, which is where Glover was at, where SWAT did the no-knocks, for years they had been buying up these properties.
What they do.
And I told y'all about Elliot, where this draft house was.
They would go in and they would condemn them, buy them from the homeowners for a buck a piece.
And so the city had taken the majority of that block.
In 2000, I believe it was 18, they had the University of Kentucky's engineering department or architectural department draw up plans for this new vitalized area.
And it looked nice.
And you do want areas like that to be revitalized, but you've got to do it the right way.
You can't just go in and bully people out of their houses and basically steal it as the government.
I don't agree with that.
So what they did was they sent a map out through their email and it had the houses they already had marked off and it showed the houses they needed to still get.
So in January, they started this new unit up called PBI, Place-Based Investigations.
They got it from Cincinnati.
And what this was supposed to do is go after your most violent or your most troublesome areas to clean up those neighborhoods.
Because even in these poor neighborhoods, 80% of the people are great people.
They really are.
And you guys saw that, that they had a bunch of complaints about these houses.
Okay.
And the area that he's talking about, guys, just as a quick little remainder for y'all so you don't get confused, this area is what he's talking about, where they serve these search warrants.
Okay.
These areas, this area is what they're trying to gentrify.
As you guys can see, there's a bunch of boarded homes.
Now, me as a real estate investor as well, I can tell y'all because I wear many hats, not just the law enforcement one.
This area is ripe for gentrification because look at all these homes.
They're boarded up, fucked up, whatever it may be.
But you can easily come in, fix these houses, run them out, get the neighborhood cleaned up.
Okay.
So what he's saying makes sense from a real estate perspective.
They're just stuck in an area that they can't get out of.
And I think the government resources could be used so much different to get these people on their feet and out.
For instance, and this is off topic of this, but this is just my little rant on this kind of stuff.
Because when you keep these people entrapped like this and enslaved with all the government assistance and their inability to get out, then it causes these problems to compound.
And these guys are looking for ways out by selling drugs or robbing people or doing whatever they have to do to survive.
I mean, it does become survival of the fittest in some of these areas.
If you go in these areas at night, it's like a third world country.
I mean, you wouldn't believe it.
And that's the problem with most of the citizens.
They don't live in those areas.
So they don't know what it's like when you go after dark and there's gunshots and there's fights.
And there's, I mean, it's just another world sometimes with these, like, uh, with these bad neighborhoods, man, when you serve warrants at night.
You go, oh my goodness, this wasn't like this two hours ago.
You know, when the sun was up, it's just Mr. Stewart, 20 bucks.
Thanks for reporting the facts.
I appreciate that, my friend, greatly.
It's different.
But I think they could go in and say you're on Section 8 or assistance.
Instead of just constantly giving you money, why don't they or I mean, these women get trapped.
Okay, here's your assistance, but if you make X amount of money, we're taking that assistance away.
Why don't you let them succeed in their careers for five years and then slowly taper off the assistance while they're achieving this so they can get out of this environment?
Right, I agree.
I mean, then in the end, no, bro, we got to keep giving out them handouts.
What are you talking about?
Government saving money because you're not keeping these people on your payroll for their entire life, and you're helping the community by getting them out and getting them established.
And then, all right, uh, we make big moves asking why not serve the warrants in the daytime.
So, let me tell y'all something when it comes to search warrants or arrest warrants or whatever it may be, they're either going to get you early as hell in the morning, or sometimes they, uh, situations like this, they'll have nighttime warrants.
But most of the time, at least with the feds, they're going to get you at like six o'clock in the morning.
And the reason why is they want to catch you when you're when you're in bed, probably when you're not awake.
And the reason why is because they want to get that technical advantage.
Simple 15, 20 years from now when they're having kids and their kids are having kids, you've got a totally different it's like turning the pond over every year, you know, and you get you get new stuff.
But on this case, the gentrification, he was they were they came in and a guy from uh the mayor's office came in every single week and met with this unit and all the bosses, all the assistant chiefs would come in, and they would come in, they would talk about what they needed to do to secure the rest of this.
What were you doing?
They would go and work right on the whiteboard.
I was never involved in those meetings, didn't care, didn't want to be.
I had my own job, um, but they were there every single week.
And when this all so they're meeting with the mayor and everything like that about cleaning up this part of town, okay.
Let's keep listening.
Came down, the mayor was like, Well, I don't know why they were there, I have no idea.
And when that came up, the gentrification, he was like, I didn't know anything about that.
And but his name's on the emails, yeah.
He knew this was a guy from his office conducting these meetings.
His woman that he ended up having an affair with, allegedly, was the project manager for this thing.
So there's a lot of things that are going on.
This sounds holy fucking shit, man.
So quick summary of what he just said.
Essentially, they're trying to gentrify this area right here, which is why they were trying to clean up the streets.
OK.
Because drug trafficking, guys, fucks up real estate prices.
Okay, the quickest way to make your home property go down is have gang activity, drug trafficking, fights, shootings, criminal, just violence in general.
That's the fastest way to get real estate prices down.
So, they're trying to clean up the city.
So, what they could get investors to move in, buy property up, put better tenants in there, city makes more money, higher, um, higher, um, um, uh, higher taxes, etc.
It always comes back to the money, baby.
Guys, remember, you got to look at things from an objective standpoint, resist the slave mind, okay.
It was like what actually happened with the story is dirtier and bigger than people realize.
And shout out to Tim Cast for having the balls to bring this fucking guy on his podcast and letting him say his piece because I know for a fact he probably had a bunch of crybabies in his chat too, just like I have tonight at a way bigger level.
I mean, when you mentioned that, I'm like, this sounds like there's probably real estate developers involved who go to the city and say we want to turn a profit.
So, he says, We're going to clean up this neighborhood.
You got it.
Well, it's funny, he uses a certain friend.
Um, I won't say his name, but he uses a certain friend.
They already redeveloped one into the town that was a real bad end of town.
It's called Nulu now, and it's they brought in restaurants, and it's neat.
You know, it's kind of a yuppie area.
Um, but the same developer got all those bids, all those contracts, and he was the one that was going to get these.
So, there's a lot of under-the-table deals going on.
And unfortunately, the police are always used as the pawns, like we were talking about earlier with the uh with the vaccine stuff mandates enforcing that.
Yep.
If I can use the police who have the authority as my pawns to go do it, then I can look back and go, man, it wasn't me, it was the cops.
These cops just need to say, I'm not going to 100%.
They do, yes, they do.
And that's what kind of sucks with working for the locals, guys.
When, and this is thing, there's something that I really enjoyed about working for the feds.
When you work for a local police department, you work for a sheriff, you work for even sometimes the state police, it becomes annoying.
And the reason why it becomes annoying is because there's a lot of political agendas a lot of the times with you doing your job.
Okay.
So if you work for the sheriff's office, for example, well, the sheriff is the ultimate law enforcement authority in that county and you work for him.
That's why they call it a sheriff's deputy.
When you're a sheriff's deputy, you enforce the law under the sheriff, right?
Under the power given to you through the sheriff.
So, and a lot of sheriff's departments in the United States, the sheriff has ultimate authority, so he could fire you for anything.
Like there's, you know, he could fire you for almost anything, get you in trouble.
And they want to get re-elected.
Since they want to get re-elected, they're going to go ahead and use the police department to go after certain types of crimes that are going to be sexy, that are going to draw the news, that are going to clean up the streets, that are going to have immediate return.
If you guys look at the YSL case, I talked about this in detail.
Go check that video out.
The reason why they went after YSL so hard, Young Thug, Gunna, all these guys is because they had a new attorney, right?
Attorney General for Atlanta in that area, right?
A new attorney comes in, boss.
Hey, what's the best way to get my name out there as soon as I get in here?
Let's clean up the streets.
Let's arrest some famous rappers.
Bam.
They go ahead and they start taking down these people, seizing guns off the street because it's sexy to put that stuff on the news and say, yo, we're cleaning up the streets.
Look at what we did.
Look at this.
So, so with police chiefs and everything like that, it's not as bureaucratic because with police chiefs, it's not an elected position.
However, the police chief has to deal with the mayor.
The mayor is the one that's an elective person, and that is the police chief's boss.
So, even though the police chief has a secure job a lot of the time, sometimes it's elected, sometimes it's not, but a lot of the time it's kind of a secure lifetime gig.
He still works for the fucking mayor.
So, the mayor is going to, how do I say this?
The mayor is still going to acknowledge and or want the police department to focus on certain types of things based on what their agenda is on getting elected and/or revenue for the city.
Money makes the world go around, guys.
It's one of the dirty sides of politics and law enforcement in general.
The beauty is that with the feds, you didn't have to, I didn't have to deal with as much bureaucracy on that end as far as like we need to get elected and all this other bullshit.
With the feds, it's less pronounced.
Okay.
But when you're at the state and local level, this is the bullshit that you deal with.
Well, I want to carry on the story, though.
So, so, so here you are now.
You wake up in the hospital.
Uh, uh, Grant Taylor has died.
Uh, did Kenneth get injured in any way?
No.
So, you, you're, what happens?
You pass out on Kenneth Walker didn't get hit with one gunshot with all those gunshots going in.
What does that tell you?
On the ground?
No, I stayed alert, conscious the whole time.
And I told people, and I've told people because I've went around and talked to some people about critical incidents.
And you're not required by law to give a statement right away because in critical incidents, a lot of people, if you wait a few days, some things you start remembering stuff that you've, you know, for your own protection, you blocked out.
And, but for some reason, when I woke up, it was like it was burned into my brain.
And I say, I wish I would have at least, if I didn't give my official statement, I wish I would have recorded it that day because it hadn't changed one bit.
I mean, everything I said then, I said now.
The only things I forgot, I forgot I had put a ball cap on that night because I got rained on and I'm real conscious about my hair.
So I threw a hat on because it was all messed up.
So I forgot about that.
But other than that, it was like it was burned in me.
Yeah, and his ball cap they had as evidence.
It was in a crime scene photos.
So, but I waited 12 days to give a statement because I was in the hospital and recovering on pain meds and all that.
And so that became an issue because they were like, oh, it's a cover-up.
Why do you wait so long to give a statement?
I'm like, oh my gosh.
You know, this is my statement.
It hasn't changed.
Every interview is the same.
But so what did you ask me on that particularly?
No, just what happens next.
So you're injured.
You stay up all night.
You're in the hospital.
I'm wondering, you know, what happens when you realize this was turning into a national story?
There were like, was it riots are starting up or the news is picking it up?
So one of the first things I asked my wife, I was like, man, was anybody hurt?
Because I didn't know.
I didn't know if anybody had been shot in the apartment.
Because, you know, I was busy trying to tend to myself and stay alive.
And they told me, yeah, it was a female.
And I was like, crap, because I knew when I came there, the taller one was probably a guy.
I couldn't pick him out, but you kind of knew you could kind of tell body types.
And I was like, man, because every cop's biggest fear is, or at least mine.
I can't speak for everybody.
My biggest fear in this career has always been, I don't want to accidentally shoot or kill the wrong person.
I mean, that's just a thought that you're constantly playing.
Some of you guys that are wondering, this is uh Kenneth Walker right here.
Um, this is my here.
So it was actually him in this picture.
See, I fucking, he looked just like the other dude, Gold Teeth, of course, Kenneth Walker.
And then the other guy, like I told y'all before, was Jamarcus.
So, yeah.
So, these are the two guys.
This is Jamarcus Glover right here.
And then this is the other guy right here.
So, Jamarcus Glover.
All right.
There's a Pookie.
And then this is Ray Ray, Kenneth Walker.
Pookie.
Ray Ray.
Pookie.
Ray Ray.
I think that's him again right here, too.
Yeah, I think that's Kenneth Walker.
And that's your boy, Jamarcus Glover, the main target of the investigation, aka El Tropo.
That was his nickname in the streets.
There's been other times I could have been involved in shootings where people pulled guns or I've been shot at in another warrant and didn't return fire because I couldn't see through what I was shooting at.
And because the fear is always, I only want to do the right thing.
I don't want to overstep these boundaries and in this position, take somebody's life because it's a pretty heavy burden.
And when that happened, no one wants to get involved in a shooting, guys.
As much as people say that shit, like no, no officer or agent wants to get in a shooting, bro.
I'm telling y'all, it's a fucking, like, it's, it's, it's, you don't want to be involved.
You know, you, you, you, obviously you're trained to use your weapon.
You're prepared to use your weapon, but no one goes in saying like, oh, yeah, I want to get in a shooting, bro.
Like, because you're going to be, there's going to be a level of scrutiny put on you that is going to be terrible.
You know what I'm saying?
It's one of them.
It's one of the suckiest things.
Now, are those weirdos out there that are going to be like, oh, yeah, I want to shoot somebody?
Of course, you're always going to have weirdos out there.
But I would argue most guys that go in for work just want to do their shift and go home, bro.
They don't want to get involved in no fucking shooting.
You're going to have your weirdos there, right, that are into that shit.
But a lot of them, man, are not.
Trust me.
And I was like, oh, my goodness.
Because after Ferguson, everything, every cop shooting that comes out now, we go, were they black or white?
You know, not was it a good shoot or bad shoot, which should be all that matters.
Color.
Facts.
That's the truth, man.
Like, yo, we live in a world now where when there's a police shooting, instead of saying, was it a good shoot or not a good shoot?
It's were they, were they white or black?
Was the victim white or black?
And if the victim was black, oh, Lord, they already know there's going to be a bunch of marching, a bunch of riots, you know.
It's going to be, it's going to be crazy, bro.
And it's scary that we live in this world where we don't even look at the facts anymore.
We look at, yo, what was the race of the person that was shot?
We don't care about the facts of the case.
We care about more the race of the person that was shot and killed.
And that's what the mainstream media does.
They go ahead and take a story and run with it.
Why?
Because the New York Times, ABC, CNN, all these fucking Clown World reporters, their job is to get the numbers.
And they know if they go ahead and win in the court of public appeal, aka a piece to the market.
Let, you know, let them know, yeah, Black Lives Matter.
And, you know, this was wrong and this was terrible.
And Breonna Taylor was a saint.
And her guy, Kenneth Walker, was a good man and all this other stuff.
They know if they go with that narrative, what's going to happen?
They're going to get more views.
They're going to get more publicity.
And what does that lead to?
More fucking money.
Okay.
This podcast right now that I'm doing, I'm not getting that many super chats, which is fine.
This video, probably going to get demonetized to a degree or get limited.
That's fine.
This video is probably going to get a good amount of dislikes.
Might not get pushed in the algorithm as much.
That's fine.
But I would rather get less views, get less likes, get less money, and tell y'all the fucking truth than lie to you guys in the face and say, yo, she was 100% a victim here.
She wasn't a criminal.
She was an angel and a saint.
Kenneth Walker was a good man.
And Jamarcus Glover, aka El Chapo, did nothing wrong.
No, fuck that.
Fuck that.
I'm not scared of getting canceled.
That's the difference between me and NBC News.
And quite frankly, I'm not scared of fucking hecklers in the chat that say some dumb shit about, yo, bro, yo, you shouldn't do this stream.
Yo, stay out of this topic, man.
It's going to give you heat, whatever.
Go suck a fucking dick.
If I was scared of getting canceled, I would have been changing my content a long time ago.
But I don't care.
This is the Fed of 1811.
I'll report facts over here.
I don't report no fucking feelings, bro.
That's the fucking truth.
All right.
Should not play any relevance to it, but it does.
So, ever since Michael Brown, that's the question: were they black or white?
Well, I knew Brianna was black because I'd seen her picture prior to this.
And so, I was like, My goodness, you know, this is this ain't going to be good.
I just kind of knew it.
And however, COVID, the nation shut down on March 13th.
Also, that's when everything shut down.
President was on every day, our governor was on every day.
So, it kind of got pushed down.
And I think that's what our mayor and our police chief counted on.
Oh, okay.
Well, if this is the big story, we can just this will go away.
Something else will come up.
And then, Ahmad Aubrey happened, and Ben Crump was hired on Ahmad Aubrey.
Well, then after that, one of the attorneys on Breonna Taylor's case for her mother knew Ben Crump.
She had worked with him on a case.
So, she called him and said, Hey, can you help us on this one?
So, he came into town, and then things had already been, there had already been lies or misconceptions, and part of that was the police department's fault because they didn't share any information with Breonna Taylor's family either.
So, I understand their frustration, I get it.
Um, but then once he got on, it was a whole new animal, man.
It was because he already had the national spotlight from Ahmad Aubrey.
So, then now Breonna Taylor's there, and so I could feel the tension in the city starting to creep up.
You could and guys, you don't want to ever be like this dude, Kariga Russell.
I don't know if he was a good man, but I know he squeezed on the ass.
Oh, no, Myron, that's your truth.
Bro, anytime someone says some stupid shit about your truth, my truth, whatever the fuck, no, you dummy, stupid, there's one objective truth, okay?
Your interpretation of the truth, however, is subjective to you.
That's your subjective opinion on the truth, but it does not change the fact that the truth is objective.
Fuck your feelings, okay?
Kenneth Walker was a drug trafficker and a criminal that robs people, shown on his own text messages with video and tech and uh other evidence.
Okay, he was possessing firearms while being a drug trafficker, all right, violating several different types of crimes and robbing people.
So, no, he was a crook.
That's a fact.
You might not like me saying that and say, That's my truth, but on his own phone, we saw the evidence with our own two eyes.
So, idiots like you are part of the problem that say stupid shit like your truth.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Feel it.
And I started reaching out to people.
I even reached out to our uh city council president who used to be a police officer, he was my training officer in the academy.
And I said, Man, I texted him, I've still got it on my phone.
I was like, Here's all the lies they're saying, and I listed it as pages of text.
And I said, Here's what really happened.
And I told exactly what I've told you guys.
And I said, The mayor won't say it.
What can we do?
And he said, Yeah, the mayor's refusing to say this stuff.
I'll hold a press conference Monday and get it out.
Never happened.
Thanks for checking out this segment from the Tim Castle.
Another uncomfortable truth: the Vikings have the most playoff losses.
Here's some truth: blacks die mostly by blacks.
Where's the anger in that?
Hey, man, you're gonna piss some people off by talking like that, bro.
But yeah, man, I mean, black men kill each other way more than police officers kill black men.
But no, I don't see no angry BLM marches about that.
Okay, I don't see none of that.
And I've said it before, I'm gonna say it again.
Black Lives Matter is a terrorist organization.
Facts.
Y'all don't believe me?
Here we go.
Let's have some fun with this bad boy.
We're gonna Google FBI definition terrorism.
Let's see here.
Terrorism definitions.
All right.
We got domestic, where's domestic terrorism?
All right.
Domestic terrorism.
Violent criminal acts committed by individuals and/or groups to further ideological goals stemming from domestic influences, such as those of political, religious, social, racial, or environmental nature.
One more time.
Criminal acts committed by individuals and/or groups to further ideological goals stemming from domestic influences, such as those of political, religious, social, racial, or environmental nature.
Last I checked in Louisville, Kentucky, with the George Floyd riots, etc.
All BLM did was breaking, looting, and maiming.
That's what fucking Black Lives Matter really stands for.
It's a terrorist organization.
Excuse me.
Period.
By FBI definition, it is a domestic terrorist organization.
I don't make the rules.
I just report them.
That's what they do.
They destroyed the city of Minneapolis.
Absolutely destroyed it.
Antifa, also a domestic terrorist organization.
Okay?
I'll call the Ku Klux Klan, the Aryan Brotherhood, fucking, you know, Antifa, Black Lives Matter, whatever it may be.
I don't give a fuck what your skin color is.
If you destroy property, you hurt people, you commit crimes of violence or some type of intimidation to go ahead and further some political agenda, you're a fucking terrorist.
I don't give a fuck what your skin color is.
And I'm not scared to call black people terrorists.
That's the fucking difference.
Y'all have no problems calling Muhammads and all these other dudes terrorists.
I guarantee you, if we had a dude named Ahmed blowing up fucking restaurants and all this other shit, saying, yo, this is fucked up.
You guys are out here doing all this shit to my race of people.
It would be called terrorism.
But yet, when these guys blow up and destroy Minneapolis and Portland, Oregon, and all these other places, nobody bats an eye.
Nobody calls them domestic terrorists.
Listen, man.
Like I said before, I don't make the rules.
I just report them.
Black Lives Matter literally fits this definition word for word, which is why a bunch of them actually got caught for wire fraud and money laundering as well.
Siphoning off funds from donators and using it to buy extravagant things for a lifestyle.
Hey, man, it is what it is.
I report the truth.
Fuck your feelings.
Fuck your race.
Fuck what you think.
I report the truth regardless of what you look like, regardless of your skin color, regardless of how you feel.
Even if it makes me look bad, I'm telling the truth.
And this is coming from a dude that is Muslim, black, Arab, everything.
I've fit a bunch of different stereotypes, but I'm not crying about it.
I'm not going to use my skin color as a crux for some type of bullshit.
No, man.
Hell no.
Hell no.
Not going to do it.
So that's what those guys do.
And this dude Kariga is still in here.
Bro, I don't know why you're still in here if you're so offended by my content, man.
It makes no sense to me.
You're in here at what, fucking 1.
Damn near 2 a.m. in the morning.
You know what I'm saying?
Watching me.
Fucking crazy, bro.
Anyway.
Anyway, thanks for the support.
You're a fan, just unknowingly.
But yeah, man, no rant coming, guys.
It's just that it just amazes me how we refuse to acknowledge and take accountability for our own mistakes and blame everything on the man, blame everything on the police, everything else like that.
So summary, okay?
We'll bring this thing to closing.
We've been going for four and a half hours, man.
Hope you guys enjoyed the show.
Like the fucking video if you're here, because I know I'm going to get a lot of hate for this one.
Summary of the case.
Basically, police officers did a drug investigation.
We're able to identify a guy named Jamarcus Glover, a.k.a.
El Chapo, all right?
As a high-level drug trafficking, pretty much like ringleader almost, okay?
Getting drugs shipped to him, going to Biloxi, down to go get the dope, whatever it may be.
And they were able to identify him through the course of investigation for several years, right?
And what happened was during the course of their investigation, they were able to identify Breonna Taylor as a member of his drug trafficking organization facilitating the movement of funds and storage of funds, the movement of drugs, et cetera.
And here he is, by the way, as well, guys.
This is your boy.
This is El Chapo.
Okay.
Just so we could put a picture to the name.
Involved in his drug trafficking organization.
2016, they were able to figure out that she rented a vehicle that was linked to a murder.
Jamarcus Glover was at the house when the detective showed up back in 2016.
So the police had their eye on her back then.
And then she ended up losing her job, right?
This job right here, to be exact, okay, from her association with this individual.
All right.
Fast forward to 2020, right?
After a couple years of being with Jamarcus and helping him with his drug traffic organization, she's linked up with this fucking guy, Kenneth Walker.
Okay.
And Kenneth Walker is also a drug trafficker and robbing people for money.
Okay.
As shown through his text messages and phone calls, et cetera.
And we know already from Jamarcus, you know, extensive surveillance on him.
He was running three trap houses that the police were able to identify in the Louisville, Kentucky area.
And Brianna was helping both of these individuals and hang in with both of them.
And both of these guys are criminals.
All right.
So when the police showed up at 12 o'clock in the morning to serve a no-knock warrant, which was legally obtained through a judge, okay, on probable cause through a multi-year investigation.
Unfortunately, a shot was fired.
We don't know if it was from Kenneth Walker or from Brianna.
At first, Kenneth Walker said it was him that sorry, he said it was Breonna Taylor that shot.
Then he changed his story and said that he shot.
So we don't really know who the shooter is.
We just know that they both came out into the hallway and a shot was fired.
One of the detectives was hit in the leg.
They returned fire and they killed Brianna who was in front of Kenneth.
Tragic situation.
Terrible.
But the use of force was justified as shown through the Attorney General of Kentucky.
One of the officers, Henriksen, is an idiot, and he went out and he started shooting blindly into the apartment, you know, unjustly.
And he ended up getting indicted for it.
Well, Wonton endangerment, which was a rifle charge, because I'm looking at this subjectively.
You know, he fucked up.
He deserved to be indicted and lose his job because you never shoot randomly into a place if you don't know where your bullets are going and what's beyond that.
Okay.
At least the officers that were shooting at Brianna and Kenneth knew what they were shooting at because they saw the bullet come at them, hit a member, and then at that point, it's a gunfight.
All right.
So this all happened, guys, within 12 seconds.
So anyway, that's what happened.
That's the summary of the case, guys.
Mainstream media isn't going to show y'all that.
I showed you guys the case files.
I showed you guys the stuff that they don't want to show you, even though they had it, which is the scary part.
They had this information yet.
They chose not to show it to y'all.
And yeah, what are the facts?
Breonna Taylor was a criminal.
Kenneth Walker was a criminal.
Jamarcus Glover, aka Chapo, was a criminal.
It's just terrible that they, you know, that Brianna had to get wrapped up in these guys' stupidity and pay the ultimate price.
No one deserves to die.
All right.
I guess I'll open it up real quick for questions.
If anyone has, I'll do a quick little Q ⁇ A here.
If I don't have any questions, I'm just going to go ahead and go to sleep and let the hate messages come in.
Oh, man.
I hope you guys enjoyed the show, man.
I really do hope you guys enjoyed the show.
This took weeks of preparation, by the way, getting all this stuff together for y'all and having the timeline kind of set up.
Let's see here.
I'm looking right now.
W, best live on YouTube.
Myron, what would he benefit from saying he's the one that shot the gun?
What would he benefit?
I don't know.
I mean, either way, it's an L, bro.
Real talk, if I'm going to be honest with you, it's an L regardless.
Whether he shot the gun or not, he's like, if he let her shoot or he shot, it was L regardless.
When did you get your hair done?
I went, got a transplant last week.
So I'm waiting for, basically, I got a cut in my head, guys, and I got like a scar and shit and then got the hairs implanted back in.
it's going to take like four to six months for you guys to really like see it, see it.
But, but yeah, I can't wait to get my, who's your hair plug guy.
It's not a hair plug, guys, Mr. Stewart.
It was an actual legit hair transplant.
If y'all look, I got like a scar all along my head here, right?
All along the back of it.
And I'll spin real quick.
I thought right there.
So, so yeah, they cut like a strip of your head, and then they cut a strip of your head, and then they pull out the hair follicles from it, and then they basically implant them in the spots that you're weak at.
So that's what happened.
Let's see here.
Anything else?
Myron Pimpenhard.
Hey, man, we working hard for y'all, baby.
That week off made me say, damn, I got to go extra hard for you guys.
Let's see here.
Myron 2024, swollen face and all, yeah, bro.
My face is swollen as fuck, man.
It's way better.
Yeah, it was way worse, man.
Guys, my eye was like fucking fucking close.
Don't worry, though.
I took pictures of everything, and I'm going to be, I'm going to make sure that I like document everything for y'all, and I'll make a video on it.
So Cynthia Ramarin's guard does it?
Okay.
I thought you look like the girl that helped operate on me, Cynthia.
I thought it was you for a second.
I was about to say, oh, shout out to you.
Hey, Myron, this is off topic.
does the new supreme court ruling on your gun laws affect the k-flock case um it's not going to affect it too much because the the ruling if i'm not mistaken i gotta if it's what i'm thinking about when it comes to like magazine capacity um it doesn't it's not retroactive it's only going to be moving forward so if you got high capacity magazines it shouldn't affect you natasha holiday uh five bucks super sticker thank you so much myron who you want for president of 2024 desantis uh i hope trump runs it bro I hope Trump runs.
And I know that's going to be controversial, but I don't give a fuck.
On this channel, I just say what's on my mind.
I don't care, bro.
Like I said, this channel isn't about making money.
It's about reporting the truth for you guys.
That's what this channel is about.
So, you know, people can go ahead and take their opinions on me and say whatever they want, but I don't go fuck.
Let's see here.
I get my feelings out of it, bro.
Like, I don't care about what Trump might have said in the past.
And, oh, my God, he said, grab girls by the pussy.
I don't give a fuck about that shit.
I give a fuck about, yo, was the economy better or worse when Trump was in office?
It was fucking better.
And that's a fact than it is right now.
All right.
Your boy Biden ain't doing too well.
I'll tell you that.
You know?
Next stream, guys, I might do another stream next week.
I might do Tuesday or Wednesday or Thursday because I might give you all another stream.
I have an idea of what I'm going to do.
I'm going to react to a YouTube channel that does.
It's a television documentary series.
Terry Green, 20 bucks.
The chat has no clue what it's like to be in a shootout.
I promise y'all will forget any training and primal instincts kick in, which is live or die.
Can you elaborate, Myron, to help these sheltered motherfuckers understand?
They'll never understand, bro.
Which is why, like, I've gotten to a point now where I make content for high IQ individuals, bro.
Like, dummies, all I'm going to do is ridicule you on air and let you know that you're fucking dumb and then kind of like explain it.
But I don't expect you to understand because what I've realized, bro, is that most people are fucking stupid.
And we just got it.
We just got to call a spade a spade nowadays.
Most people are fucking stupid.
Most people live in the slave mind and most people are not capable of independent thought.
They have to go with what the mainstream media says.
They have to go with what their friends say.
They have to go with what their parents say.
They have to go what everybody else says.
They can't go against the grain and go against what people think because they're scared of what?
Confrontation.
But I don't give a fuck.
I have no problem.
Bring the smoke.
I hope like a weirdo would walk up on me and try to talk some shit or whatever.
Okay, man.
Cool.
This is Florida.
You know?
Stand your ground, bro.
I wish somebody would, bro.
Yo, Myron, fuck you, bro.
I saw your episode, man.
You an asshole.
You fucking.
All right, try me, bro.
I'll Zimmerman you, motherfucker.
I don't care.
Look at this.
Have you ever had a Mike's cannoli?
Mike's cannoli?
Yeah.
Who's that?
Because you went to Boston.
I don't know.
This is great, Live, Myron.
Thank you, Christina.
Oh, you, Mike Cannoli, and Regina's Pizza, the hard work.
All right, I appreciate it.
Have you ever had one?
I've never had Regina Pizza.
Regina's pizza is overrated.
Go to Single Place, MJP.
But Mike's Cannoli, like Mike's Pastry?
I've never, I've never been there.
What?
Yeah, I've never been there, man.
It's the best.
Is it?
It's like if you're from Boston, you go to Mike's Pastry.
You have to go.
Okay.
Regina's.
All right.
I don't really like pastry.
I like pizza, though.
I'll eat pizza every now and then.
Not Regina's.
Let's see here.
so you just had to clear a room he wasn't gonna get away with that They really want me to do it.
Do you guys do the balcony?
I would have to do it through the balcony.
It's a thing.
All right.
How many likes are we at?
If y'all could get me up, I don't even care about a super chat.
Like I told you guys, it's not about the money for me.
You know, I genuinely enjoy giving you guys this content.
This channel is kind of like a side hobby for me.
I really enjoy it.
It takes up a lot of my time, though.
I ain't gonna lie.
If I get 2.5k likes, I'll show y'all how to clear a room.
Yeah, it's 2.2 right now.
300 more likes.
And I know there's 300 of you guys in here that are choosing to be ninja watchers.
know that for a fact now they said yo myron you say what you want on the other channel soon Nah, nah, nah.
I take it a little bit easier on Fresh of Fit.
Freshly shaky.
Natasha Bizzogo Zimmerman you?
Uh.
Go ahead and you can look that one up.
Bucko Boy, $2.
i'll zimmerman you no i'm and i'm not even like you know obviously that's a little it's a joke whatever Ha ha ha.
But like, real talk, man, people will be on some bullshit, man.
They think they can just try you, whatever it may be.
It's like, cool, man.
You guys suck shit on the internet, but it's like, okay.
I'm 10 toes down.
I have my opinions.
I have my views.
I report facts.
I tell the truth.
A lot of people don't like it.
I'm not going to fucking bend to your women, give y'all the social justice warrior, you know, narrative that makes you feel good.
I'm going to tell you guys the truth.
All right.
I'm going to be objective about it.
I was very objective about this case.
I gave y'all the facts.
I gave y'all the truth about what the police did, what they did good, what they did bad.
I gave y'all the ugly.
I told y'all that Breonna Taylor was, you know, definitely didn't deserve to die, but she was a criminal.
That's a fact.
My bout to be the next Florida man.
You know, she was a she was a criminal.
You know what I'm saying?
Uh, okay, let's see here.
I think we're good here.
Did we get 24, 2,500?
The truth is never pretty.
Appreciate you bringing the truth, bro.
Yeah, I appreciate it.
Yeah, man.
Absolutely, bro.
And I report the truth regardless, man.
Here's the thing: I didn't see nobody, right?
It's not like a bunch of people were saying, yo, man, you're racist, bro.
You covered the Jeffrey Epstein case and you made him look like a really bad individual.
No, I told the truth about Jeffrey Epstein.
He was a child toucher and was a piece of shit.
I went and talked about Ghelain Maxwell.
Why do people not complain when I, you know, do videos on Caucasian people or Hispanic people?
I'll wait.
Why not?
I don't know the answer.
But when I cover anything that has to do with the black community, it's like, oh, well, you're not even one of us.
You're not really black.
Really?
Okay, cool, man.
Whatever y'all say.
Can you show more on different gun safety videos?
Yes, guys.
I will be doing gun videos for y'all on this channel.
Don't worry.
I'm going to do some range work with you guys.
I'm going to show you guys how to shoot.
I'll probably do some of those videos for you guys as well because I've been getting an enormous amount of gun videos on there for y'all.
I feel like there's like an open-range gun range where you can like show them.
There's one here in Miami, but it sucks.
They make you use their guns and their guns are garbage.
Yeah, but one in Winwood.
I feel like I've seen some.
I've seen some.
It's like it's an outside range, though.
Yeah, if anybody here has a range in South Florida, hit me up.
DM me unplug fit, unplug fit or fed it.
And then when I, I'll probably in a few weeks, I'll be like, you guys are going to catch me at the range of more.
You'll see me there.
I'll be shooting and shit like that.
I'll be, I'm going to be training way more often.
So y'all let me know.
Relaxing.
Tie-tie goes because you're racist.
Okay.
Yes.
I am racist against myself, sir.
Yes.
I am racist against my own people.
Yes.
Cool.
See, the thing is, is that I've been racially profiled and shit too, bro.
It's just that I don't like cry about that shit.
So don't you get it kind of worse, though?
Yeah.
Your whole name and everything.
Bro, I get profiled by the police out on the streets and I get profiled by TSA.
The fuck.
And it's even how you look like my brother grew all his hair and his beard because he like did some shave November.
Yeah.
And they thought he was Muslim.
No, really?
They thought it was Muhammad.
They literally took him to the room.
They would not allow him to paint nothing.
Like it was so bad.
Oh, man.
Okay.
Rockstar Money 80, five bucks.
Can you make more vids like this?
Used to believe the left and BLM, but now opening my eyes and seeing reality for what it is.
Yeah, bro.
Just, yo, just make, listen, man.
Just make your be make your own deductions and opinions based on the facts.
Okay.
Like, look at all the facts.
You know what I'm saying?
Don't be like some of these crybabies in here.
All right.
Like this guy, Groovemaster, clearly can't take a joke.
Said all that heat you dropped this stream, and the only takeaway will be this, and their only takeaway will be the Zimmerman comment.
It's only oh, well, not Groovemaster.
Sorry, not you, Groove, but like other people.
You know, they can't take a joke.
It is what it is, bro.
It's still only 2.3.
2.3.
Okay.
I guess I'm not clearing the room.
All right, guys.
Maybe on the next episode if we get the likes there.
But anyway, guys, with that said, love you guys.
I'm going to be back.
Hopefully, I'm thinking either Tuesday or Thursday when we're not doing Fresh and Fit.
I'll give you guys a bonus episode of Fed It because I didn't get a chance to give it to y'all.
But I gave you guys a five-hour podcast just now, man.
So I'll see.
If I have the energy for it, I'll definitely go ahead and give y'all another one.
But yeah, goddamn, almost five hours, man.
I love y'all.
I'll catch you guys Monday, tomorrow with Brandon Carter.
We're going to do Money Monday, 7 p.m.
Don't forget to like the video.
Share this with a friend, guys.
Hope you guys enjoyed the truth.
Love y'all.
Rest in peace to Breonna Taylor.
My condolences to her family, but we got to acknowledge the truth, man, which is she was a criminal and she was involved in a drug trafficking organization to a significant degree.
All right.
Jamarcus Glover and Kenneth Walker are both criminals as well.
It is what it is, guys.
I don't make the rules.
I just tell, I just report the facts, baby.
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