Former Fed Explains Blueface's Attempted Murder Charge. Will He Beat The Case?
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And we are alive.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to FedEx.
Today we're coming to covering the attempted murder case with Blueface guys.
We've got a lot to cover.
Let's get into it.
Okay, guys.
HSI.
The cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug traffic.
No one else has these documents, by the way.
Here's what FedEx covered.
Dr. LaFrail confirm lacerations due to stepping on glass.
Murder investigation.
You don't know.
And he's positioning.
You're Asian council to litigating you.
Racketeering and Rico conspiracy.
Young slime life here and after referred to as YSL to the 6ix9ine.
And then this is Billy Seiko right here.
Now, when they first started, guys, 6ix9ine ran with.
I'm upset.
I'm watching this music video.
You know, I'm Bobbin Mahala.
Hey, this shit lit.
But at the same time, I'm pausing.
Oh boy, who this?
Right?
Well, who's that in the back?
Firearms and violence.
AKA Bush I see pilot it.
You're ordering to stay away from the dick.
This is the one that that's gonna fuck him up because this gun is not tracing.
Well, it happened at the gun range.
Here's your boy 42 Doug right here on the left.
Okay, sex trafficking and sex crimes.
They can effectively link him to paying an underage girl.
And the first bomb went off right here.
Check that out of back.
Second explosion.
Inspired by Al Qaeda.
Two terrorists and brothers, the Zokar, Sarnev, and Tamar Land Sarnev.
And the cartel ships drugs into the country.
As this guy got arrested for um espionage, okay, trading secrets with the Russians for monetary compensation.
The largest corrupt police bust in New Orleans history.
So he was in this bad boy.
We're going to go over his past, the gang time, so that this all makes sense.
We're going to go over his past.
All right, and we're back.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to FedEt Man.
Sorry for the late delay, guys.
Um I was gathering some stuff, and then as usual, the computer crashed all the links, so I had to redo and put everything up as you guys know.
I like to have things very nice and systematically so that you guys are able to, you know, we're able to kind of go on a clear path here.
So quick announce before we get into the show.
Number one, guys, rumble.com slash fresh and fit.
Check us out over there.
We're gonna be starting uh uploading on Rumble tomorrow for the after hour shows, okay?
So uh we'll probably do like half the show or such etc on YouTube and then bring the other half on Rumble.
Don't worry, we're still on YouTube.
We ain't going nowhere.
I've been getting a lot of DMs from you guys as far as like, yo, are you guys gonna leave YouTube?
No, we're still on YouTube.
Um, just a portion of the after hour show.
If you want the full episode, you're gonna have to go on Rumble, which we'll be able to unleash a little bit more because you guys know YouTube likes to suppress a lot of stuff.
Uh second, we're migrating over from Patreon, guys, patreon.com to Fresh Fit.
Now we're moving over to locals, uh, fresh a fit.locals.com, okay.
That's the the new way to get the the content.
We pretty much have everything uploaded there now as well from Patreon, and we go live on there.
So if you guys want exclusive content, can't get anywhere else.
So make sure to check us out over there.
And then let's see here.
Uh I got Christina in the house helping me as well, guys.
Uh, you want to say what's up to the people, real quick, introduce yourself.
Hi, I'm Christina.
Um, if you guys want like case that we want to cover, just contact FedE 1811 on IG.
Boom.
Uh, and we're actually covering this one because we got a lot of requests uh for this case, and it just broke a couple days ago.
I said I said, you know what?
We'll cover this.
Um, but don't worry, guys.
I have a whole list of all the cases that you guys want us to cover.
Young Dolph, etc.
We're actually right now plotting, not plotting, but we're working towards getting the documents for the young Dolph case.
You guys know we're pretty much almost on a year of his uh, you know, passing anniversary.
So I'll make sure I cover that young Dolph case for you guys.
It's just that getting the documents has been extremely difficult.
Anyone we send over there to get the documents, they keep saying, Oh, why do you want these documents?
What's your name?
What's your address?
They ask a bunch of very uh strange questions to be asking for you know, looking for public records.
So we might have to go up there to Memphis and do it ourselves, to be honest with you.
So that one might that's what might end up uh having to happen, because I don't want to you know have people going there for us and being put in certain situations, you know.
They say, hey, I'll still do it, and I'm like, nah, you know, it's fine, dude.
Don't worry about it.
I don't want anything happening to anybody.
Um, but yeah, apparently, and they just had made an arrest on that case.
I think like a one or two weeks ago.
I think two other suspects.
Two other guys that they got so yeah, it's it's like a lot of people just popping up now.
Okay, yeah, one or two other people researched.
But uh, but yeah, we're we're don't worry, we're gonna give you all that case, man.
It's just like I said before.
There's some issues with that.
Um, and then what else here?
So Rumble, yeah, okay, and then obviously, as you guys know, we're on megaphone.
So if you guys want to listen to the pod, make sure to check us out on mega phone.
We're not on anchor anymore.
Uh and let me see here.
Let me hit some of these chats and then we'll get into today's topic.
Uh and I appreciate all the help, guys.
Really all the support.
Uh, we got Ace fresh down a stream earlier and he Frank Castle, the snow bunny for disrespecting you.
She called you retarded and said you can't fight.
Fresh finally learning from you and not tolerant disrespect.
What the hell?
That's funny.
Why would some random girl say that?
Strange.
Uh, okay.
Um, let's see here.
Uh yeah, a lot of a lot of girls uh hate me, but it's funny because you know right here.
Yeah, they'll never say that shit to your face, right?
Uh uh Scar official, two bucks goes, Myron, it's good to see you on the grind.
Keep it up.
Absolutely.
And speaking of which, guys, I'm also going to give you guys the third part and the final episode of the 9-11 series.
Um, we're gonna be covering the third part of uh, as you guys know, I'm breaking down the pot the uh the documentary, the new Pearl Harbor.
It's a five-hour long documentary.
I had to break it up in three different parts uh because it's so long.
And also to, you know, so you guys don't fall asleep.
Um, but I put like really detailed timestamps in there with like every single theory from the conspiracy side, right?
As far as like 9-11 being, you know, but I also covered the official narrative as well.
So I did both.
I don't think anyone else on YouTube has done this.
So I went ahead and I put uh I covered the 9-11 attacks, how the FBI did their investigation, detailed how they identified Al Qaeda systematically in Bin Laden.
Then I covered the CIA tracking Bin Laden down to About About Pakistan.
Then I covered uh what the CEA Team Six did when they uh raided the compound, how they killed him and what they found in his house.
Then now we're on the conspiracy theory side.
Um is because as you guys know, there's two pretty much stories.
There's the official narrative that came out in 2004 from the 9-11 commission, and then there's the conspiracy side from like you know, the new Pearl Harbor, Loose Change, Fahrenheit 911, etc.
So I went ahead and consolidated a lot of those conspiracy theories into one breakdown, and I also have the official side consolidated into multiple breakdowns.
So you guys can go ahead and check that out.
I don't think there's anyone else on YouTube that has that thorough of a breakdown in the entire 9-11 um saga.
And that's why it took me so long to do it, because I knew it was gonna take me multiple episodes to do it, guys.
It's I mean, damn near seven episodes on 9-11 alone.
I created uh a playlist for it.
Uh Hey, Shad Jack, will FedE be on Rumble?
No, Fed it will be here, guys, on YouTube.
So don't worry, you'll be guys.
This stuff is more friendly, right?
This it's just law enforcement, that type of thing.
So uh I don't have to worry about uh going to Rumble for for Fed.
What else?
Uh, unless I'm gonna cover a case that has a lot of violence.
If I got like like really violent stuff that I'm gonna be showing, I might have to do that on Rumble.
So I just thought about that just now.
Scar official goes, Myron, it's good to see you on the Grand Keep It Up.
Nope, read that one already.
Thank you very much, Scar official.
Uh Patty Jack goes, Yo, uh, what's up, Myron?
And fresh helped me through a bad breakup with a single mother of two.
Now I'm processing in for the Illinois State Tripper.
Thank you, my ninja.
Hey, bro, Don DeMarco for you, bro.
You gotta be able to leave.
Don't do most of the things.
These annoying chicks, and I'll tell you guys this.
For a lot of you guys that watch this channel, want to get into law enforcement, you want to be a police officer, you want to be a special agent, you want to be a trooper, whatever it is.
Um, understand, guys, that one of the biggest ways to mess yourself up if you want a career in law enforcement is by getting a domestic violence charge or getting in a fight with your girlfriend, or even having her file a restraining order against you.
Because what you guys don't understand is that even if it's a misdemeanor crime of violence, uh, you are no longer able to carry a gun.
It's the Law and Burg Act.
Okay, I remember when I was an agent myself, uh, every year I had to sign this this Lawton Burg uh waiver, right?
That I I had not not been convicted of a crime of domestic violence under oath, so that you know, when they do the background check, if they see it, you know, you can go ahead and get charged for that.
So, because you can't carry a gun while being uh convicted of a crime of misdemeanor domestic violence or even having a restraining order against you guys.
So if you want to get into this kind of career field law enforcement, especially where you're carrying a gun, you can't be getting uh in trouble with this stupid shit, man.
So any type of problematic women you have in your life, a crazy girlfriend, especially if she's violent or erratic or you know, she could put you in a uh in a bad situation.
Don't fuck with those kinds of girls, man.
You can lose your job, you can lose your clearance, you can lose your your career, your livelihood over some chick that's that's stupid, you know.
When you work in law enforcement, you work in intelligence, you work in anything that's a little bit more sensitive, especially when you're holding a clearance, you have to move a certain way, guys.
You have to have your money on point, make sure your credit score is good.
They do extremely thorough background checks, right?
Especially you have like a top secret or SCI clearance.
Um, and one of the biggest ways to fuck yourself is having a crazy girlfriend or some kind of spouse that could put you in a predicament, man.
So be very, very selective on who you deal with, especially you want to get in that career field, man.
You need the RP in that in that lens.
Uh C Mills goes, Can you cover the Mo case?
MO3.
Uh, I don't know who that is.
Um, can you just if you guys have cases that we want to cover, can you guys contact Beta 8 and 11 so that we can keep track of it?
Yeah, hit a feta 1811 on uh on Instagram, guys, and she'll be able to keep a track.
We got a we do have a list of cases that we are gonna cover for y'all.
A lot of them are serial killer cases, which I have written down.
Um and I'll get back to the ser serial killer cases um after this last 9-11 episode.
So don't worry, guys.
Uh Ian Adams goes, shout out Myers, such an inspiration millions of lost men around the world, keep up with the great content.
Yeah, man, absolutely, bro.
That's what I'm here to do, man.
Uh inspire and help you guys out.
So, all right, cool.
Wait, we have more.
Uh Myron, did you trigger a girl on the double date?
Yeah, I did.
She got pretty pissed off.
Um, but it dude, it's so obvious.
You could tell when a girl has never been like told in her life like what you're saying is dumb or challenged her views, and she's one of them.
You know, it's amazing to me how uh, you know, mildly attractive girls almost always get triggered by what I say because no one's ever told them to their face.
Like, no, that's not correct.
Uh what else do we got?
Um going, hold on, get one more.
Then we got which serial killer will you cover next?
Keep bringing us uh great content.
Uh I'm thinking maybe either Zodiac or um Samuel Little.
And Samuel Little has the most confirmed kills uh for any serial killer in the United States.
I might I might cover him next.
Uh broke from smoke.
I covered the the big ones though.
I cut oh or BTK.
Uh, but the two biggest ones I I covered so three, actually.
I did Jeffrey Dahmer, Ted Bundy, and John Wayne Gacy.
All those are up right now.
Uh chat, like the damn video.
Yes, broke from smoke.
I appreciate that.
Guys, like the goddamn video.
Anything else?
That's it.
That's it.
All right, we're caught up.
Cool.
So uh guys, we're gonna go ahead and start breaking this down.
Um, as you guys know, today's episode is we're gonna cover um Blueface, okay?
Um and Blueface basically is a rapper.
I'm gonna give you guys a quick little background on him because a lot of you guys may not follow hip hop.
Uh Jonathan Jamal Porter, which keep that in mind, that's his real name, Jonathan Jamal Porter.
Uh, born January 20, 1997, uh, which I think that makes him 25 now at this point.
Uh no, professionally as Blueface is an American rapper.
In 2018, after releasing the music video for a song Respect My Crippin', he became a viral meme due to his off-beat style of rapping.
The following month, he was signed to Cash Money West, the West Coast branch of Birdman's Cash Money Records.
In 2019, a remix of his song Dadiana, featuring Cardi B and YG became his most successful single to date, peaking at number eight on the Billboard Hot 100.
In 2020, he released his debut studio album, Find the Beat.
And um, and here's actually this mugshot is the one that he was recently taking.
Yeah, November 2022.
This is a mugshot that they had when they arrested him in Las Vegas, which we're gonna be covering that.
Um, and yeah, it for some of you guys, you know, he came out with that song, you know, Buzz Down Thatiana.
That one, like I remember that shit was all over the radio a couple of years back.
And also, he has another hit song I put on my Instagram with uh DDG Moonwalking in Calabasas, you know, the whole uh, you know, Rich Nick could take her on a cheap date.
That shit is hilarious.
Um, he's also known, guys, as well, for you know, his relationship with uh Chris Ann, or I can't pronounce her name.
But basically, they're always getting in fights, you know.
Some people say it's stunned publicity, some people say it's real.
Either way, they're always on TMZ fighting each other.
Uh, he had a reality show, which was on a subscription type service called um uh blues club, where he had a bunch of girls living in his uh one of his establishments, could we just call it that?
Uh they were living in bunk beds, they had to get like tattoos of him.
They were all fighting for think of it as like a flavor of love, but like uh a ghetto reversion.
And the girls were always fighting each other, super ratchet, you know, inner pure entertainment.
Uh, but yeah, anyway, it it's it was hilarious.
But the point is the point is is that uh this guy is um no stranger to controversy, definitely no stranger to getting in trouble.
Okay.
And then uh Christina, what were he had a couple of arrests in the past.
Can you tell the people real quick what those arrests were for?
Okay.
So Vicapita says on November 16, 2018, at properly 8 30 p.m. local time, blue face was approached by a man at Chevron gas station who pussy's attempt to bob him.
Blue shape blue face shot at the sex with his car and later arrested and charged with shooting of a corporate vehicle in the state of California.
Um She's really bad on the mic, guys.
Give her a mic.
Yeah, I don't like being on a mic on the club.
Yeah, she can't really talk that way.
She's very shy.
I don't like it.
But so okay, so what attempted murder there?
Yeah, attempted murder.
In LA?
In Cali, yeah.
And then what year?
2018.
2018.
And then I know he had a gun possession charge in 2019.
Yeah, 2009.
No, no.
Yeah, 2019.
Um, gun possession.
And then what voted it was unregistered.
Okay, unregistered gun, which in California is pretty.
And then I know he also got into uh a fight with a bouncer.
A bouncer didn't want to let him into a club, I remember one time because he didn't have his ID with him.
So what happened was so the Bowser didn't want to let him in.
He's like, yo, I'm old enough to get in here.
I'm let me let me in.
And the bouncer said no.
So Blueface Google himself, right?
To the bouncers, like, yo, this is me.
And it says my birthday, let me in.
And the dude said no, because yeah, I wanted an official ID.
So him and uh Blueface and his and his team basically stopped the guy out.
So there's nothing else, honestly, um on Wikipedia.
Okay.
When I try to put it on the search, it's just like the recent stuff.
But I know there's a whole bunch.
All right.
So it's an attempted murder charge uh before from 2018 or shooting at someone.
Then he had uh the bouncer situation.
I don't know if he actually got arrested for that one.
Then he had uh uh un possession of a firearm.
All right.
So and then now we got the attempted murder charges.
So uh now we're gonna move on, guys.
So this was released by the uh last vague.
As you guys know, he got arrested a couple days back in Las Vegas, okay, Las Vegas, Nevada.
And this is on November 15th for immediate release.
Uh detectives arrest suspect in October 8th shooting.
On November 15th at approximately 240 p.m.
LMV LM uh LVM PD, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department.
That's what it stands for.
Um detectives arrested 25 year old Jonathan Porter on charges stemming from a shooting that took place on October 8th, 2022, and the 6300 block of Wendy Road.
Porter was arrested outside of business in the 300 block of Hughes Center Drive.
He'll be booked into the Clark County detention center on warrants for attempted murder with a deadly weapon and discharging a farm in at into an occupied structure.
Peter uh Porter's booking photo will be provided on the LM uh LV MPD's Twitter page when it becomes available.
And this it's this picture right here, guys, is is what they're talking about.
We don't have to go on Twitter to find that.
So let's look at the charges that he's actually looking at right now, guys.
Okay.
So we got attempted murder in Las V uh in Nevada, okay?
And attempted murder in Nevada is when you fail.
Actually, no, let me go ahead and enlarge this.
And pro tip for you guys, it's really uh anytime you want to like look up a law in another state, it's good to look at criminal defense attorney's websites because what it does is it kind of explains the law to you, and then it tells you what you could do in defenses to it.
And the reason why it's structured in that way in an easy way to read is because nine out of ten times when you're researching the law, well, not nine out of ten times, but a lot of the times people research a crime and they'll it's because they you know think that they're gonna get arrested for it or they might want to lawyer up, etc.
So these websites, lawyer websites, typically tend to answer a lot of frequently asked questions pertaining to certain crimes versus going to the official government website that just gives you the raw statute.
You know what I mean?
Because some you know, when you read the law sometimes, it's very it could be ambiguous.
It could, you know, if you're not uh legally sound, you're not might not be able to decipher what the hell is uh being said.
So these attorney websites a lot of the times tend to uh demystify the ambiguity of um the way the laws are written sometimes, okay.
Uh like for example, like in the state of Texas, a lot of you guys, quick little history lesson for y'all going back in time.
And this is what I mean, just to explain you guys how laws can be strange or not interpreted correctly.
In the state of Texas, it's a capital offense to steal a cow.
Yeah, you could get like you could get executed for killing a cow, but the re and the Texas Rangers were originally formulated, right, to combat stealing cows.
And you guys might be laughing, like, what the fuck?
Like, what?
What how's that possible?
But the reason is why it's such a big offense is that back in the day, right?
Especially somewhere like Texas where farming was a thing, that was a man's livelihood if you stole his livestock.
So um the Texas Rangers, a big part of them being formed was to go after people that were stealing cattle, right?
Um, but if you read the actual old Texas statute, you'll be like, what the hell?
This doesn't make sense.
But this is why sometimes reading it from an attorney, a defense attorney's website will be a little bit better to kind of put things in more layman's terms for you.
Okay.
Uh but yes, there is a uh cow snatching statute on the books in Texas, guys.
All right.
Uh and somebody said that did the Texas Rangers go after Bonnie and Clyde.
They did.
They definitely did.
But, and I might do Bonnie and Clyde for y'all as well.
I did a lot of research on them uh before, but I didn't get too much of a request for them, so I never covered the case.
Um, but yeah, yeah.
But the Texas Rangers, a big part of them being formed, guys, was for people stealing cows.
Okay.
Uh Attempted murder in Nevada is when you care when you try and fail to commit murder.
The three main elements of the crime are you intended to kill the victim.
You took a direct step towards carrying out the killing, and the victim did not die.
Okay.
Which you guys are going to see here.
Blueface did hit these three elements in this situation, but he might be able to save himself.
And we're going to talk about that here in a little bit.
Attempted murder is generally a category B felony.
Okay.
So it's not the highest level.
A conviction carries two to 20 years in Nevada State Prison, but if you use poison, the judge can impose a life sentence.
So you guys better not poison anybody in the state of Nevada.
It may be possible to get criminal charge dismissed or reduced through a plea bargain.
The most common arguments for uh fighting attempted homicide allegations include that you acted in lawful self-defense, which I think is what Blueface is going to be able to articulate here.
Uh had no intent to kill and or made no attempt to kill.
In this article, our Las Vegas criminal defense attorneys discuss the following, okay?
Which um, so what is attempted murder?
Uh let's see here, hold on.
See, and they um they answer a bunch of like the frequently asked questions, which is really really good.
Um we're not we're we don't care about poisoning.
Um and then self-defense, lack of intent, lack of attempt, these uh lack of attempt, lack of intent, lack of intent, and then self-defense.
These are the three main defenses for it, which in this case for Blueface, he's probably he's gonna go this way, self-defense, which I have the footage, guys, as to why he shot at this individual.
Okay.
Um, and let's talk about the self-defense one.
Killing a self-defense is legal, Nevada, as long as you reasonably the aggressor is about to kill or seriously injure you or another person.
Example, Jeff is walking down a dark alleyway when a thief holds him up with a gun.
The thief then cocks the gun, and Jeff uses a karate move to wrest the gun away and shoot him in the chest.
The thief survives.
The DA investigates the case and decides not to bring attempt murder charges against Jeff, even though Jeff intended to kill the thief when he shot him.
His action was justifiable because he had good reason to believe that the thief was about to kill or seriously harm him.
Okay.
So that's one of the main defenses against uh attempted murder, which uh blue face was definitely falls under in this situation.
We'll talk about that here in a little bit.
The other charge he got hit with, as you guys know from this press release, is this charge right here.
Discharging a firearm at slash into an occupied structure, okay?
And a lot of states have this statute, guys.
Um this is kind of like a catch-all, right?
For people that are, you know, negligently discharging firearms, et cetera.
But uh NRS 2028 is a Nevada gun law that prohibits maliciously firing a gun into a building or vehicle.
Let me enlarge this for y'all, okay.
Uh discharge your firearm at an occupied building or vehicle is a category B felony carrying one to ten years in prison and/or up to $5,000 fine.
But if the building or vehicle was abandoned, then shooting a gun at it is a misdemeanor carrying up to six months in jail and or up to $1,000.
So in other words, if you shoot at an abandoned, you know, crackhouse or something like that, and no one's in there, yeah, it could be a misdemeanor.
Versus if you shoot like uh like blue face in this situation, he shot at a dude that was driving away.
And I'm gonna show you guys that footage here in a little bit.
Uh, that could be conscrewed as malicious firing a gun into a building or a vehicle.
Okay, and this is the actual statute here.
A person maliciously discharged the firearm at or into any house, room, apartment, tenement, shop, warehouse, store, mill, barn, stable, outhouse, or other building, tent, vessel, aircraft, vehicle, vehicle trailer, semi-trailer, or house trailer, railroad locomotive, car or tender, if it has been abandoned, is uh guilty of a misdemeanor.
But if it is occupied, is guilty of a category B felony and shall be imprisoned punished by imprisonment in the state of uh in the state prison for a minimum term of not less than one year and a maximum term of not more than 10 years or by fine of not more than 5,000 or by both fine and imprisonment.
Okay.
So that's the actual um statute.
And as you guys can see, statutes can be fairly um long-winded.
All right.
Um, but then part two is whenever a firearm is so discharged at or into any vessel, aircraft, vehicle, vehicle, trailer, semi-trailer, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, right?
Or tender in motion or at rest, and it cannot within reasonably reasonable certainty be ascertained in what county the crime was committed.
The offender may be arrested and tried in any county through which the vessel aircraft vehicle, vehicle trailer, et cetera, um, happened.
And the reason why they say that, guys, is because Nevada's a very big state.
In big states that have a lot of rural areas, um, there's different counties, right?
And since it could be, you know, the person could flee or whatever may be, this is kind of a catch-all um thing added to the statute so that they can prosecute the individual wherever he is, okay?
And this is very common in big states like Nevada that have a lot of unincorporated land, okay?
Because a lot of Nevada is desert.
All right.
So now, uh, and we already got 1100 plus y'all in here, guys.
So do me a quick favor.
Go ahead and like the video, please.
Uh, we're gonna go ahead and hit one of the press releases uh that was actually a news channel eight in Nevada, uh, when the arrests first broke out.
The rapper Blueface arrested for attempted murder by Metro today.
He was taken into custody at Lolo's chicken and waffles at the Hughes Center near Flamingo.
Now, a warrant was out for his arrest due to a shooting that occurred back in early October, reportedly in the 6300 block of Windy Lane.
Now, the LA Natives' real name, Jonathan Jamal Porter, has been now booked into the Clark County detention center.
He has a hearing set for tomorrow at 8 a.m.
My bad.
And then this is where they actually I'll show you guys here in a second where they arrested him.
Uh so this is the TMZ footage, okay?
And I this is when I first found out that he got arrested.
And this is the location where it was, okay.
This is Lolo's chicken and waffles.
This is the actual plaza right here.
Okay.
Um, if you go there now, and I don't know why it's all blacked out like this, but this is this is the place right here.
But this is an older photo from I think like 2021.
But this is where they picked him up, this area right here.
And you guys are gonna see it in the footage.
Uh, but this is right here in Las Vegas.
All right.
Uh bear with me one second.
All right.
Here's a TMZ footage.
Fair use, god damn it, because I know TMZ likes to hit people with uh, you know, oh uh content ID bullshit.
That's blue face, the undercover cops just pulled up on him, bro.
They got him.
Okay, so he's surrounded here by a couple of police officers.
One, two, three, you can see a fourth there in the flannel.
I don't know what the f okay.
So this right here, guys.
I remember when I first saw this footage, I was like, well, hold on one second.
Looking at this badge right here, this is how I knew this was a bigger situation than it was.
This looks like an FBI badge, okay.
Um the FBI guys typically have their gold badges, which I'll show you a quick picture.
Um, I'll show you guys what a real FBI badge looks like.
It's it's it's one of the most fake badges of all time.
Um it's a very old and classic badge.
Those it's not like as fancy as like these newer agencies, but this is what it looks like.
Right?
This is it right here.
It's gold, very simple.
It's been around since like the 20s, that way, right?
When uh Hoover originally instituted the FBI.
And when you look at it, right, in person, it's very small, okay, compared to other agencies.
It's extremely small.
So normally, right, if we're gonna go look at like let's say um Las Vegas Metro PD badge, right?
Let's see here.
This is what their badge looks like.
You guys can see all the stars, and this is very common with uh you know PD's and or sheriff's departments to have the uh the triangles there.
But looking at this, right?
So let's let's compare.
You got this right here.
This is this badge right here, and then you can see this.
It's obviously the lighting is a little off, but that look to me looks like a bureau badge.
And I'm gonna go into this a little bit more with um with a video that I have to show y'all.
But when I saw that, it made me pique my interest because I'm like, why why are the feds involved in a state charge?
As you guys know, right?
We just went over it.
These are these two charges they're hitting him with discharging into a local uh uh a vehicle and attempted murder.
These are state charges.
So why the hell are the feds involved?
We're gonna get the answer to that question later on.
Well, that's going on.
That's blue face right there.
And Cray Sean.
And there's this girl over there filming.
Uh, I'm counting now four guys.
So what they're doing right now, guys, this is called the search incident to arrest, right?
Anytime you arrest someone, especially someone like Blueface, who is a confirmed gang member with the Crips, okay, out of Los Angeles, and you know, he's known to carry firearms, they're gonna approach him in a much more aggressive fashion.
Okay, and I'm gonna show you guys a takedown video prior to this.
But after everyone is arrested, the first thing they're gonna do is always search you for weapons, contraband, anything that's gonna stick or poke them.
Okay, I remember myself when I would arrest someone, hey, uh, I'm gonna pat you down.
Do you have anything that could stick, poke, or hurt me?
And you know, typically they'll say, Oh no, and then you find a gun in their fucking pocket.
But But uh, this is you know, common police procedure here.
And this guy's job here is to make sure the press and the media or whoever is there, people that are recording onlookers, they don't get too close to these guys while they're searching him because obviously they're more concerned with finding anything on him, right?
And they gotta focus on that versus all these people coming in and trying to get involved.
So he's he's like the watch out guy.
They just got his ass enthusiasm down.
Now they're getting the fuck out of there.
He's on his phone, right?
The guy you guys saw a second ago, he's on his phone.
He's probably telling him, Yo, we got him in custody and we're getting the hell out of here.
Fuck out.
Hey, yo, chill out.
Everybody relax.
Please relax.
What is he doing?
What did he do?
But what did he do?
The police and when people do stupid shit like that, what does he do?
But people say feel as though the police are obligated to answer their questions.
They're not, you know what I mean?
Especially if it's an active investigation, they can literally tell you to go pound sand.
You know, and this is actually, guys, when you're infecting an arrest like this, this is one of the most compromising situations, especially when you're arresting someone in public.
People can come in, especially when it's like a celebrity or someone like that you're taking down that people know they're they're more likely to pull out their phones to try to get footage.
This is one of the most dangerous um positions for you as a law enforcement officer because you don't know if you got a crazy fan that's gonna come up and try to uh attack you or shoot uh you know, stab you, whatever the hell it is because you're dealing with the suspect.
No, he does not.
You can hear the handcuffs clicking.
What did he do, man?
Come on, like let's just talk to him.
He really was gonna run away.
Like, come on, man.
Hey, hey, yo, y'all, y'all didn't hear the and this is very common, right?
People a lot of the times they think, Oh, yo, why'd you guys go so hard?
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
You guys gotta understand, right?
That when you work in law enforcement, right?
A lot of these crooks, they're not reasonable people.
They're not gonna sit there and be like, oh, really?
You got a warrant for my arrest?
You know what, man, all right.
You know, uh, I was in the middle of doing some shit, but you know what, dude?
It's fine.
Uh okay, here you go.
Here's my wrist.
Just uh take me to jail.
Um, how long do you think I take until I'll be out?
No, man, like people are gonna run, they're gonna try to fight back, you know.
And especially when you're executing a higher risk warrant like this, someone for attempted murder, whatever that you know is a documented gang member, you're gonna have to go in with a certain type of presence and a certain type of force to immediately negate any type of um counterattack.
Okay, so the com the public, right?
People don't understand that police have to operate a certain way when they deal with certain types of individuals to uh mitigate any type of uh danger to themselves and obviously to the public.
You know, worst thing you could do is come in soft, like, hey, we gotta take you in.
No, fuck that, I ain't going.
And then he runs, then you're chasing after him in public, then he pulls out a gun, starts shooting at y'all or something like that.
Not saying blue face would do that, but this is shit.
This is what happens when you come in soft.
Okay.
So you gotta be quick, get it, get the fuck out of there.
Let's get back to the footage.
Come on, that's just the same dispensary that's not a good one.
Nah, nah, that's what I'm saying.
No, that's not that's not the right way, bro.
Like, come on.
Yeah, so you can hear them say, yo, let's get out of here because they're they they already know that picking them up in public like this is gonna be a huge situation.
Christina, make sure to highlight the super chats.
I'm just looking at the case.
All right.
And guys, the the um Clark County um the Clark County uh uh like uh website, right, to get look up cases.
It's been down like all day today.
So Christina's trying to get in there right now and get some stuff, but we've been trying to get this information all goddamn day, and it's been a pain.
Uh seems goes, MO3 is a Dallas uh Dallas Texas rapper that got gunned down on highway in broad daylight.
Yes, you know, I think uh trap law ross covered a part of that.
And then as you can see how they're getting the hell out of here, one, two, three, four, five guys.
What's going on, guys?
He's always here.
Yeah, they're getting the hell out of here.
They talk about he has a warrant.
I know that.
That's ridiculous.
And if they got a warrant, there's no negotiating people.
So yeah, they're getting him out of there.
Hey, brother.
It's uh it's a team of plain clothes detectives, and it looks like one.
I see that looks like an FBI agent to me from the badge.
It definitely wasn't a metro uh PD one.
So this is another angle of the takedown, guys.
And uh you guys can see they went in really hot on this one, which is why this guy onlooker was so pissed.
So here he is in front of the Lolo Chickens with his girl.
Blueface has been charged with attempted murder with the use of a deadly weapon and discharging a firearm into an occupied structure.
Capture the 25-year-old rapper.
So there he is, right there, right?
Being thrown against the wall and pinched.
And then bam, the detective comes in and just grabs him.
The video also showed Krishan Rock with Blueface at the time and Yeah, so they will do it one more time for y'all.
So he comes, he's sitting there on his phone with his girl.
There she is.
Here he is.
Uh looks like a brown velore suit.
And the detective comes in, bam, just grabs him.
The ground by a group of undercover officers while being handcuffed.
The video also showed Krishna Rock with Blueface at the time.
And they grab him and they get out of there right immediately.
So this is him in court, guys.
And we're actually gonna play a part of the um of the court appearance, the initial appearance, because I think that's very important, and you guys are gonna learn a lot from me playing that.
They already got 1400 y'all in here right now, by the way.
So like the video for me real quick.
Um we have any other chats.
Yes.
All right.
Uh channel deserves some more recognition.
Like the vid chat.
Appreciate that, Lord uh RJ Five.
Appreciate that.
Two bucks.
Uh anything else?
And I'll unless this while we pull up.
A rapper who goes by Can you do an episode on Cointel Pro?
Uh, I think I don't know what that is, but if there's enough people asking for it, I will.
I'll look that up.
I don't know if that's too.
So here he is in court, guys.
He's doing his initial appearance.
Okay, whenever you're arrested in the United States, guys, you have 24 to 72 hours typically, depending on where you are, to get brought in front of a judge to have your charges read in front of you.
A rapper who goes by the name of Blueface appeared in court this morning.
Police arrested Jonathan Jamal Porter yesterday at Lolos Chicken and Waffles at the Hughes Center near Flamingo.
A warrant was out for his arrest following a shooting that happened last month near Las Vegas Boulevard and Sunset.
Porter's bail was set for $50,000.
He is due back in court in January.
I think it's January 24th to be exact.
Um, and I think you made Bonnie's out now.
Fifty thousand bucks is nothing, guys.
Um, and he's he it was a cash assurity bond, which means uh he's only got to come up with about 10%.
You know, he's famous rapper rapper, even if it was 50k, I'm sure he would have been able to get that money and get out regardless.
But yeah, he probably only had to come up with um five thousand dollars to be able to get out.
So here's a footage in question, guys.
Uh, that they're actually going after him for and uh let me show y'all on screen real quick.
So here he is.
This is from our enemies over at the shade room.
So here's Blueface right here.
Okay, in the white hoodie.
This is in Las Vegas.
And it looks like his girl.
Let me see if I can enlarge this for y'all real quick.
He's over there.
There's a couple of his homies outside of a strip club.
There was an argument prior.
Right.
And you can see he's still back over here.
See a pickup truck pull up here in a second.
Pickup truck pulls up, and one of Blueface's homies rushes towards the pickup truck.
The guy runs, and then bam, you can see right there, there's a little flicker of light.
That's blue face shooting at the vehicle.
So here he is again with a couple of his friends, and then one of his friends ran up on the truck.
So y'all saw the full footage.
Let's play it again from this side with a little bit of commentary.
Obtained and released footage of the alleged shooting stemming from the So here's the pickup truck right here, as you guys could see.
Here's a friend running up on it.
And then he pulls off, he goes to the left a little bit, and it looks like there's an individual here, right?
That might be a part of his entourage.
The clip person is out there, gets out the way.
And then bam, you can see this light right here.
That's the gun going off.
Shoots into the vehicle.
Face on the street outside a Vegas nightclub when a white pickup truck drives by.
He then pulls out his gun and fires multiple shots in the driver's direction, who swerves across the road while trying to dodge the bullets.
TMT sources said that the victim of the shooting was previously in the club earlier in the night and was involved in a fight with Blueface's crew, although the rapper himself reportedly wasn't part of the brawl.
Blueface is facing charges of felony attempted murder with the use of a weapon and discharging a gun into a vehicle.
Blueface was arrested outside of Lolo's chicken and waffles in Sin City on Tuesday.
The rapper's on again off again girlfriend Krayshawn Rock was also present and looked on confused as a reported six to eight officers detained Blueface.
Krishan Rock posted a video of her with Blueface just hours prior to the arrest as they shared a kiss in the clip.
This was three hours before they took you.
And this is his girlfriend that he's always arguing with.
She has uh blue face's like face tattooed on her neck and like a missing tooth.
Me.
Jesus got us, no weapon formed against us, shall prosper.
I'm your rock forever.
Christian Rockton sent to her Instagram stories to reaffirm her loyalty to Blueface, who she is confident will be freed while changing her Instagram profile picture to the rapper's mugshot.
What's that VR is our girl rock?
I'm checking in with the fans, the love, whatever.
Holy stop playing with me.
Everybody keeps saying it's the finally.
What the f is you talking about, girl?
Stop playing.
Never left me when I went in.
What?
I'm going to court tomorrow.
All that matters.
He coming home.
I don't know what y'all talking about.
But tune in on our documentary on TV show.
Is this where we I'll start?
And don't be surprised when I get another change on my face.
Never tat on my face.
What?
What's her?
God damn.
All right.
She aggregates me.
Yeah, I can only take so much of that.
Uh well, she see it does seem down.
I'll give her that.
But goddamn, my IQ points just went down there a little bit.
She was on the show.
That's what that's how they met.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, she yeah, she was on uh the Blue Face Club.
So yeah.
Um, well, let's go back.
Let's look at that.
Let's analyze that real quick.
So again, maybe we can play this a little bit slower here.
Okay.
Right.
So the car pulls up.
It is the alleged shooting stemming from the October 8th, Austin.
So the guy runs up and the car pulls off, right?
Because at this point, it looks like he's surrounded.
Then he pulls off, and then bam, you can see the gun go off.
And his friend is there.
His friend almost got clipped.
That's the guy that ran up on it.
And then he chases back after the car.
Right.
So, and actually the person that snitched on him, guys.
Let me stop sharing screen real quick.
Uh, Christina, can you pull some of these chats while I get this up?
I think I found some stuff.
You did?
Okay.
But after the yeah, all right.
So this is the guy, by the way, guys.
Pull this up for y'all right now.
That actually that snitched on uh on your boy.
Here, let me just share a screen with the actually.
No, I'll just pull it right here.
This guy right here.
Conic Tay.
This is on October 8th, 2022.
And this is this is his uh Twitter right here.
It's Tay underscore dummy goes.
I got jumped and was shot last night by Blueface outside the strip club.
Well, he went ahead and uh I think he probably gave a statement to the police, and uh everyone is calling him a rat on his Twitter, which is hilarious.
Um, but yeah, he posted that at 32 p.m.
Um on 108 2022 because remember, this happened in the late night evening hours earlier in that day, probably around midnight, 2 a.m., some shit like that.
So later on in the afternoon, he goes, I got jumped and was shot last night.
I think he ended up getting uh hit by one of the bullets grazed somewhere, nothing life um threatening, but he did get hit.
Okay.
So okay.
So now, guys, we're gonna go ahead and play uh his court appearance.
All right, so this is him at his initial appearance.
I'm gonna break down this break this down for y'all because there's gonna be some jargon in here that you may or may not recognize.
Uh but okay, we got Lord RJ Five goes channel.
No, read that one, Christina.
Uh nope, read that one too.
Stupid.
Sorry, I'm like literally looking at the blue face.
Okay, focus on the show.
Don't worry about that other stuff.
I think I found it though, so I'll show you something.
All right.
Uh let's see here.
Um we don't y'all shouldn't invite Chris after hours would be a classic.
Nah, man.
That'd be easy fan cast.
That would be, yeah, nah, bro.
Nah.
Uh uh, would you ever do would you ever do an episode on Juice World and his girl trafficking 70 pounds of weed on their private jet before Feds met him at the airport and he died?
Uh I've gotten a couple requests for Juice World.
Um, I might.
I might.
It's not up on the top of the list.
I'm not gonna lie to y'all.
Um, especially since someone passed away during it, right?
So okay, I think we're caught up now.
All right.
So let's go ahead and break this down, guys.
This is his initial appearance in court after being arrested for attempted murder and discharging a firearm into a vehicle.
We need a custody calendar.
Jonathan Porter 22CR 049567.
Is your name?
Jonathan Jamal Porter.
Yeah.
Mr. Court of the State has filed a criminal complaint charging you with attempt murder with use of deadly weapons, discharging firearm at or into occupied structure or vehicle.
These are two felony offenses.
Did you receive a copy of that criminal complaint this morning?
I see the counsel here.
All right.
So criminal complaint, guys, if you've been watching Feder for a while, a criminal complaint typically is an affidavit, right?
That's filed in support of an arrest warrant, okay?
And that is called basically a criminal complaint.
Okay.
So more than likely winded up happening was a detective assigned to, you know, Las Vegas Metro police department, or you know, maybe a task force officer, whatever it may be, because it looked like there was a task force that went and picked him up, which is why you saw the feds there.
We're gonna get into more detail on that here in a second.
Uh, wrote up an affidavit stating the facts, you know, of what happened, right?
This the typically the affidavit is gonna include witness statements, uh, investigative steps, surveillance, telephone uh cell phone analysis and/or toll records, etc.
All the probable calls as to why they think a suspect committed a crime is gonna be in that affidavit.
That affidavit, right, is then signed by the detective, given to the judge, judge signs it, and then you go ahead and get an arrest warrant from the clerk.
Okay.
So when you're arrested, like uh Blueface was, he's gonna get a copy of the criminal complaint filed against him and all the other documents as well through a process called discovery, which is where the prosecution shares all the evidence and information against the defendant through the process of discovery.
And more than likely what happened is he has a complaint and he has uh a bunch of the evidence that's against him, or the police are in the process, aka and the prosecutor, right, are in the process of giving him and his defense team all the discovery so that he can adequately prepare his defense uh should he decide to go to trial.
Okay.
So, but this is just an initial appearance.
He's not gonna say I pleaded guilty or any of that other stuff.
Because uh according to law, when you're arrested within 24 to 74 72 hours, you the police are mandated to bring you in front of a judge so that you can hear the charges against you and know what you're being charged with, and then get you a bond.
All right.
So that's what this hearing is.
He's not gonna enter in any type of plea or anything like that.
That is an arraignment.
That is the main difference between initial appearance and an arraignment.
An arraignment is pretty much identical.
They read you the charges.
Uh, at that point, you've probably been indicted because it's typically a week or two after uh you've been arrested andor charged, and then that's where you actually enter in a plea.
But an initial appearance is just FaceTime with the judge, knowing what's going on, getting the initial document uh given to you, and then getting a bond if you qualify for one.
Let's keep going.
Next different counsel.
Thank you, I can see the ball down getting payment.
All right, so there's his defense counsel right there.
We've had the opportunity to get the fence that's right now in the table.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I'll I'll I'll go ahead and take over.
Um, that with Mr. Uh Porter, he was in Los Angeles.
We asked that these little reality set.
Um obviously allegations um in this case are of the nature that they only set in the ordinary course.
We ask that that happen.
Um, we also agree to know contact with the victim in this case.
All right, so this is all boilerplate stuff right here.
Uh we asked that we get a bond.
He's not gonna have contact with the victim, blah, blah, blah.
This is typically what they're gonna say to kind of allow their client to get a bond.
Now, from from this lady, I ain't gonna lie, she doesn't seem that prepared.
So this might be a public defender or someone that was literally just retained by a blue face and his team.
Um, which you know is common because you know, you don't have that much time.
You get arrested, and then you know, within 24 hours, you're brought in front of a judge.
You might not have the time to secure private counsel, right?
So just from I don't know, she's a bit disheveled here.
Uh, but either way, she clearly just got the documents given to her before she had to read up on it real quick and prepare for the initial appearance.
But luckily for blue face and his team, and the initial appearance doesn't really mean anything.
It's just you're getting face-down with the judge, you're officially being entered into the system, and your case begins now.
That's what an initial appearance does.
It sets off the judicial process.
Again, I'm not sure if it is a public defender, but it doesn't seem like she's 100% prepared.
So it could be just because you know, if he does have a lawyer, might be out of LA or whatever.
A guy like this probably has a lawyer on retainer, but they might only practice in California.
They might not be available and/or barred in Nevada.
So they had to probably get someone quickly.
But he obviously has the funds, right?
To get his own lawyer.
Or this is someone that was quickly hired, uh, that's a private attorney.
But like I said before, when you get a case like this, it's thrown on your desk, and you got to show up to court.
So it's a herd defense.
initial appearances a lot of the times most attorneys are not prepared for all the way i hear the state's position on custody status and then i'll hear further representations from defense Of course, the NPR the defendant is a moderate risk to be spend um it looks like he does not have ties to the so this is the prosecutor right here, guys.
So she's making a case as to why he might be a danger to the community.
Typically, guys, when you're trying to get a bond, they're gonna look at a couple of things.
But the big thing is are you a flight risk and are you a danger to community?
Those are the two main elements that the court needs to establish uh before a bond is set.
So um someone like him that has some money, he's a celebrity, obviously he has the means to flee, but at the same time, that could also say, yo, he's gonna want to, he's he's gonna want to see this through because he's a celebrity has a lot to lose.
So it could be a double-edged sword in that situation, right?
Because he has the means to leave, but at the same time, he doesn't have a lot to lose.
So she says he's a moderate flight risk.
Let's keep going.
What else she says?
Community he lives um in California.
Let's rewind up a little bit.
It looks like it does not have to have ties to the community he lives um in California.
Um of course the NPR, the defendant is a moderate risk to be spend okay, moderate risk to offend.
Um it looks like it does not have when you have ties to the community he lives um in California.
He also has a bench warrant issued out of good springs in case 20 and CG 0061.
So she mentioned that he has a bench warrant.
What that basically means is he probably didn't show up to uh a court hearing and a bench warrant was uh immediately uh uh sent out.
And what that basically a bench warrant guys typically is uh cut anytime you don't show up to court, it's an automatic arrest warrant for you.
So not only did they have it for the attempted murder, but they also had a bench warrant on him as well.
Obviously, that's not going to be highly prioritized because now show them to court, eh?
It is what it is negligible.
So he has a misdemeanor conviction as well.
The defendant um during the course of an argument will have a gun and shoots at a uh a vehicle that's actually driving away.
So based upon the nature of the charges in this case, uh defending's lack of the ties to this community and uh the point of the issue on this point's items because the press can fail $5,000.
Right, that's it.
I do see that he's also all right.
So they want to say she asked for a $75,000 bond as a prosecutor.
Also in custody on a 2020 uh good springs, no registration uh bench warrant pending benchmark return on that stuff and counsel.
So your honor, obviously that's a traffic and it's a registration offense, so that that you can deal with um through the good.
So it's a bullshit thing.
That's why it's not that big of a deal.
They're not prioritizing like that.
That's why they probably didn't, you know, expend any resources to go get him for not showing up to court for that registration violation.
I I I mean, obviously he's entitled to bail on that, right?
And uh I don't necessarily think that the $75,000 bail is is inappropriate.
I think 50 would also be appropriate.
He does live in Los Angeles, he's willing to agree that he could only come to Las Vegas for the purposes of resolving these court this court hearing in this case.
So if the court wants to set that condition, that is fine.
Um, but otherwise, I I submit to the court.
I think 50,000 is equally appropriate.
Okay, thank you.
Um I have to take it into uh consideration a number of factors here.
Um there does appear to be an indication of twice.
Uh that was mentioned in the arrest in the arrest uh the request for an arrest warrant.
Um he was arrested on an outstanding warrant or on a on a much less serious case and is likely to be released at the age of 25.
He appears to have a minimal history, if any, looks like uh an arrest in 2016 and a misdemeanor conviction.
It looks like he's got a number of people.
So that's a big thing, guys.
The fact that he doesn't have any felony convictions.
Um even though he's been arrested and or potentially charged or had some situations in the past, he's never actually been convicted of anything that serious, which plays a big role into him being able to get a bond.
If he had you know another felony conviction, especially something for a violent offense, they'd be like, uh, you know what, let's hold this guy.
So this actually all works in blue face's favor.
Uh supporting him in the courtroom today, including I've been told a fiance and some friends and some uh business assumptions.
Thank you.
Um I I am going to set bail in this case based on the nature of the charges, the allegations are quite serious and could have been much worse.
Uh 50,000 is a reasonable amount of bail.
Bail will be setting amount of 50,000 cash insurance.
All right, so bam, there you go.
50,000 cash assurity.
If it was cash, then he would have had to come up with the 50k himself.
But luckily, since the surety, that means he could hire a bail's bondsman.
You know, he puts up the uh he puts up 10%, and then the bail bondsman puts up the other 90, right?
So in this case it would be he only got to put up 5k, then they put up the other 45,000.
Likely that Mr. Porter is going to make that bail amount upon his release, he is ordered to comply with standard conditions of release.
He's ordered to stay away from and have no contact with Contavious trailer, the alleged victim of this case.
So there you go.
There's the victim, Catavius trailer, right, is the victim in this case, or Octavia's trailer is well, you know, let's rewind it a second.
So let's see, we're at five forty.
Scontavious trailer, the scontavia's trailer, contavious trailer, it looks like the alleged victim of this case.
Obviously, that shouldn't be a problem.
Um, Mr. Porter, your advice and guy, guys, it's not um, you know, this is a public hearing, so yeah, of course the name's gonna come out at some point.
And you will be advised in writing that if you violate that order through any means, including third parties or any other means, uh, that would likely revoke your release, or there could be other penalties.
You must stay out of trouble.
That's a condition of anyone's release.
Of course, stay in contact with your attorneys, and of course, make the necessary court appearances that they advise you to make.
If you fail to comply, a warrant for your arrest could issue you would face extradition back to the state of Nevada from California or wherever else you may be found.
You understand everything, Mr. Porter?
Yes, right up.
Uh counsel based on my ruling here today.
How would you like to proceed?
Would so set the matter for preliminary hearing.
In the ordinary course, okay, thank you.
We'll set the matter for preliminary hearing in your dinner course.
All right, a preliminary hearing, guys, is basically so the next step here.
So after the initial appearance, right?
And I remember I could tell y'all a lot of stories about this, but I'll leave it to one.
Um, so after the initial appearance, right?
Now he's officially in the system, the judicial process has started, right?
So now he has the ability to, you know, ask for a speedy trial.
Um, you know, he can you know just bide the time, it's a state case, so it's probably gonna take a while.
And the next step now is to do a preliminary hang.
And a preliminary hearing, guys, is where it's on the state to establish probable cause, okay.
So in the United States, in order for an arrest to be affected, it's gotta be uh you have to get it meet a certain threshold, and that threshold is probable cause, like he probably did it, okay?
And that's a very, I guess simple way to describe it.
But that's what probable cause essentially is, right?
So since they filed a criminal complaint to get him arrested, and they didn't indict him, that means that Jonathan, aka blue face is entitled to something called a preliminary hearing.
And that the preliminary hearing, it's on the state to establish that there was actually enough probable cause to arrest Blueface in the first place.
Now, if you're indicted, this you don't get a preliminary hearing, okay?
Because if you've been indicted by a grand jury, that's stronger than simply a criminal complaint.
There's two main ways to arrest someone.
You can get him indicted by a grand jury, or you could file a criminal complaint.
Though the criminal complaint is faster, okay, and it allows you to get the person to custody immediately because all you have to do is write up an affidavit, get a signed by a judge, and get arrest warrant.
The negative is The person is entitled to a probable cause hearing because since the nature of the rest was so quick, right?
They need to make sure that you actually had enough PC and it was uh how do I say this?
It was worthy of an arrest.
Nine out of ten times it is, right?
But it's just something that since you, you know, we're able to get it faster, it allows the defense another situation to be able to challenge the probable cause.
However, if you're indicted by a grand jury, okay, and a grand jury is when they convene a bunch of your peers, bring them into a room, you know, the defend the the agent and or a detective or and the prosecutor go in there and they explain the case to the to the grand jury, and then they you know choose to indict with a true bill or to not indict.
If you're indicted by a grand jury, then you're not afforded this probable cause hearing, aka a preliminary hearing.
So the next hearing, he's gonna show up.
The detectives are gonna have to come in that are assigned the case, and they're gonna have to establish an outline.
This is why we arrested uh blue face, and they're gonna put him on the stand, they're gonna put him under oath, they're gonna uh have them ask questions, etc.
And that's where Blueface's counsel can go ahead and start to grill the detectives on hey, do you really have probable cause?
Now, in this situation, we clearly say see Blueface on video shooting at the vehicle.
So the police are gonna have uh, you know, a good amount of evidence to say, yo, we have at least probable cause.
So I would not be surprised if Blueface and his legal team waived their preliminary hearing, right?
And just went on straight to get the discovery and fight the case and go through a self-defense charge.
Okay.
That's what I think is more than likely gonna happen because you got the guy in damn near 1080p, right?
Walking out the club, shooting at the truck.
It's you know, indisputable at this point that it was him.
Uh, they probably have witness statements, etc.
as well.
We would have to look at the affidavit to see it.
But for them to execute an arrest on someone of this caliber, et cetera, they're gonna have their ducks in a row.
All right.
So more than likely that preliminary hearing is gonna be null and void, it's gonna be waived, and they're gonna go straight into uh just going into the defense case.
Because at this point, there's no there's if you're gonna use a self-defense case, there's no point to go ahead and try to challenge the probable cause because it's clearly him.
All right.
Yeah, I can read some chat.
We'll finish this and then I'll read some chats.
Then I got a thing that we're gonna break down.
Okay.
January 24th.
January 24th.
93.
All right.
Okay, cool.
Let's go ahead and uh let's go ahead to this guy, uh, Clubhouse Streets.
I'll like his video for having that initial appearance on on uh YouTube.
Uh so next we're gonna go ahead and uh go off a law and crime network.
Uh and they kind of break down the case and they bring on a police detective uh and he gives a little bit more insights to the situation, which I think is going to be really interesting for you guys to see.
Um, let me hit some of these chats real quick before I do.
Um, let's see here.
Shout out to all you guys, by the way, supporting Seeker of Truth, five bucks.
I appreciate that.
Super sticker.
Also, can you guys do me a favor and um go ahead and hold on?
Do me a favor and like the video, man.
I got I see that we got uh 1600 plus you guys in here watching right now.
You guys could be anywhere else on a Sunday, but you guys are here with me.
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You don't have to donate a dollar to the stream.
I do this podcast because I do enjoy it, brings back good memories.
Uh let's see here.
What else do we got?
Uh shout out to all the members as well.
Uh for Fed it.
Uh, we got Art Artie Kuno goes, hey Myron, can you do Chris Brown and Reary case?
Uh I might, you know, down the line, that's not really been asked for.
Uh, I did, I actually did read the um the affidavit in support of the arrest warrant for Chris Brown, though, on that domestic violence case.
And I will say this, uh Rihanna beat the crap out of Chris Brown as well.
You know, not to say that, you know, not to justify what Chris Brown did, but it was definitely a two-part fight on both parties.
Uh, but you know, this is where you got to be a man to be able to walk away, guys.
You know, fight women.
Uh, can you do any of the Gucci May cases?
Uh I could.
I could.
I know he got hit with uh with a he did get hit with I think a felony possession charge down the road uh later on.
Haitian Jack, uh nope, okay.
I think we're caught up.
Cool.
So let's go ahead and break down this video here, guys from uh Law and Crime Network.
Shout out to them.
Don't like the video.
Did you do this?
Yeah, I read that one.
Content.
Uh have some more money, John Hancock.
Appreciate that.
Thank you, my friend.
Thank you for donating.
Uh, your content has helped help me uh unlearn a lot of the lie society tells us about men and women.
Thank you, man.
Got you repent and obey Jesus.
Yeah, man, I'm transforming Sims to Pimps.
All right, let's run the clip.
So we wanted to get a little bit more perspective on how this might have gone Down, and I'm joined by a very special guest, Ashton Pack, who for 23 years served as a Nevada law enforcement officer.
And Ashton was a strike team leader during the October 1st attack in Las Vegas in 2017.
And Ashton joins us right now.
Ashton, thanks so much for coming on.
Thank you so much for having me.
I want to talk about this arrest and strike guys, typically that's an acronym for some type of specialized unit that would be SWAT.
Yes, because obviously there's so much we don't know, but when you look at it, you had plainclothes officers, it's seemingly the middle of the day.
I think they said there was six to eight officers in unmarked cars.
It seems like an undercover operation.
Do you get that kind of impression?
I mean, what were your initial impressions looking how this went down?
Well, after having done some research on this arrest, I'm pretty confident that that's probably one of our task force uh units that are operating here in the Las Vegas Valley.
More than likely, that's the criminal apprehension team.
That team's comprised of FBI agents, U.S. Marshals, and of course detectives from the Las Vegas Metro Police Department and all the surroundings.
All right, so you guys are probably wondering what the hell is a task force.
A task force guys typically is a group of law enforcement officers that work alongside each other, leveraging each other's skill sets, uh, different types of strengths, etc., to work together in unison to combat crime.
What do I mean by I can give you guys an example, right?
So you got the joint terrorism task force, right?
Uh aka the JTTF.
This is uh an FBI-led task force that is tasked with combating terrorism in the United States, okay?
And typically you'll have the FBI, it's run at it out of an FBI field office.
You got guys from Homeland Security there, you got guys from DEA, ATF, Department of State, local and state police officers, etc.
Everyone is there working together to combat terrorism and/or prevent terrorist attacks.
Why?
Well, uh, let's say you got a guy, uh, a known or suspected terrorist, right?
That might be, let's say he has uh he has a green card, right?
But he lied on his application to get the said green card and it's marriage fraud.
Well, the FBI doesn't really have access to immigration type documents.
So they're gonna bring in uh HSI agent, someone like me back when I was uh involved when I was an agent, and HSI agents have immigration authority.
Well, we're able to go ahead and look at that person's alien file, right?
See, go through all the documents that he actually signed and be like, oh, okay, yeah, he did commit fraud here.
Um, this girl isn't really married to him, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And you can kind of go in and go after that guy from an immigration angle, right?
And, you know, get him, get his green card taken away or whatever, and get him deported back to his country versus trying to prove a material support charge for terrorism, which is much harder to prove.
So you can go ahead and get rid of that guy and disrupt that criminal organization or that criminal activity simply from an immigration angle, because the FBI has limited Title VIII authority, okay.
And Title Eight guys at immigration.
So uh that's an example.
Or let's say, uh, you know, where they're able to leverage another agency's power and unique uh authorities to combat terrorism, right?
And that's why JTTFs are so powerful, right?
Let's say you catch, you know, you're doing an investigation and someone uh, you know, is a munitions dealer and he sells a lot of guns or he's involved in you know potential terrorist activity as well as having guns or whatever.
Well, you're gonna bring the ATF on board, right?
Because you already have them on the JTTF to go ahead and run those guns for you because that's what they do.
They pretty much any gun that's bought purchased in the United States is gonna go into the e-tray system.
So this is you know, or if you need someone traffic stopped, right?
Let's say you got someone who's a criminal or you you suspect is involved in uh having ties to some terrorist organization.
Of course, I'm using the JTTF as an example here, and you want to have him identified and someone else that's in the vehicle.
Well, an FBI agent can't do a traffic stop.
Well, he what does he got to do?
He's got to leverage a staying local partner.
So you have a detective on the team, he has a couple squad guys that he knows that are patrol.
Hey, we're established the surveillance on this guy.
I need you to go ahead and do a traffic stop on him, right?
Obviously, I d get your own probable cause.
Let's say they got a broken tail light or whatever, stop them.
Uh, ID the driver, ID the other individual in the vehicle and make it look like a routine traffic stop, and then let them go on their way.
Bam, you take that information back.
Now you've identified both subjects that are uh, you know, traveling together and you know who they are, which all uh lets you enhance the investigation.
But this is the power of working in task forces, leveraging other agencies and their unique powers and authorities that you might not have.
State locals can do things that feds can't, and vice versa.
Okay.
So that's why task forces are so popular.
So in this situation, right, I gave you all the JTTF example, a criminal apprehension team, very common in major cities where you're gonna have, right?
Maybe a uh a fugitive task force, maybe you're with the marshals have one, or you're gonna have uh a team of guys that specialize in going after violent individuals, right?
That are wanted.
And a lot of these task forces have Fed, state, tribal, um, municipal police departments all working together to find the individual.
All right.
So that was why when I saw that guy's badge, I was like, that guy's that that guy might be FBI.
So that's when I was like, what this is in this is unique.
This is clearly a task force.
And this guy, when I saw this interview, he confirmed it that they do have FBI on that criminal apprehension task force, which is more than likely what the team that was responsible for picking up Blueface.
Let's continue on cities that are uh with here within the Las Vegas Valley known as Clark County.
So I'm pretty confident to think that those uh those cops they operate in a I I hate to say undercover, but a definitely a plain clothes capacity.
But yes, they are they are very hate to say undercover, and I agree with him is because they're not actually doing undercover activity, guys.
There's a big difference between um being plain clothes and being undercover.
Let me just make this distinction for you guys real fast.
Because this is a very telltale sign that people don't understand how law enforcement works.
So I'm gonna break it down for y'all.
All right.
When you're undercover, what that means is you're actively engaging with criminals to further some kind of investigation.
You're meeting with them, you're talking with them on the phone, you're purchasing maybe drugs or guns or and you're you're conducting criminal activity on your own as an undercover with the crooks.
That is undercover.
All right, you're actually involved in the criminal activity and or communicating with criminals.
Plain clothes, however, is you're wearing regular clothes and you're an investigator and you're conducting an investigation.
Okay.
So the two are not the same at all.
But a lot of people confuse it, like, oh, they're wearing plain clothes, so that must mean they're undercover.
No, they're investigators.
And investigators, 99% of the time are always plain clothes.
So, you know, you take a DEA agent, FBI agent, me when I was an HSI agent, whatever.
I didn't go to work every day, guys wearing a uniform.
Obviously, you wear suit when you go to court or whatever, but when I was an agent myself, guys, I wore jeans and uh jeans and a t-shirt every day, right?
It's sneakers.
Uh, you know, maybe some sparries here or there, but like I was wearing very, very casual, guys, you know, or a hoodie like this.
You wear regular clothes because you might be out on surveillance, you might be talking to informants, etc.
You don't want to give off the vibe that you're a cop when you're out and about doing things, right?
So um, so I want to make that distinction very clear between being a plain clothes investigator, right, which is what special agents and a detectives are, versus actually being undercover.
Uh let's get back to the video.
Able to kind of covertly switch between yes, guys.
I used to wear sperries when I was on a job.
I'm from Connecticut.
Hey guys, do me a favor, like the video real quick.
We got 1600 plus y'all watching.
So like the video, get me up to uh 1500 likes, guys.
I'd really appreciate that.
And so I could stop asking for goddamn likes.
It's I hate doing it.
So just like the video.
If they have to go and make an arrest, and that team, they really hunt only wanted fugitives, active, you know, active assailants that we absolutely have to get off the street in real time.
The the most violent of people are are kind of covered by that team.
Is that because of the charges here?
Or is that also you think because of the celebrity nature of this?
Uh, I feel like that that might add a sensitivity to it as well.
I I'm gonna lean towards the violent nature of these charges that have been leveled against this rapper.
He um obviously, you know, what we what in law enforcement we know is a shooter, someone who's willing to engage people with a firearm, uh, a propensity for violence, those are the kinds of people that those like the criminal apprehension team or any kind of fugitive task force are gonna actively go out and try to take into custody once any warrants uh are approved by judges and are active in the system.
And the other thing too that he didn't mention, which he might have not known, is uh Blueface is an active, you know, verified gang member.
So um any time you're uh a gang member, whatever, that also adds a heightened level of um security that the that the law enforcement officers are going to take to go ahead and make sure that they affect the rest.
Because a lot of people are like, yo, why'd they grab him like that, bro?
Come on, man, that's so fucked up.
Well, the fact that he shot at someone, the charges are attempted murder, and he's a verified gang member, right?
With the Crips, well, they're gonna go in a little bit different than if it was like, you know, arresting someone for you know, fucking embezzlement from uh from a white collar in a white-collar crime sense, right?
Any type of um individual that's involved in gang activity or there's weapons involved, etc., they're going to go in with a certain level of force to make sure that not only that they apprehend individual, but that the individual's safe, they're safe, and the general public is safe.
And the other thing too, remember, guys, they arrested him in public.
Last thing they want is a shootout to occur.
All right, because they know clearly this guy carries a gun with him when he's in Las Vegas, hence why he shot at the other individual and they got these charges in the first place.
So they don't know if he has a gun on him or not.
So they're gonna go in and grab him quick so that he doesn't have the chance.
Not saying that blue face will shoot on him, but this is how you have to move when you work in law enforcement and you're dealing with gang members.
Hey guys, Sean Sticks Larkin here from on patrol.
Yeah, we don't care about your book, bro.
Let's move back forward.
EMZ was able to obtain it.
Where you actually see the officers and members of this team literally grabbing him out of the middle of nowhere, pushing him to the ground, onlookers come by, they're confused as to what what's happening.
They and all the officers said is he there was a warrant out for his arrest.
The way they actually apprehended him, that aggressive nature, uh, is that typical?
Is that usually how it's done in these kinds of cases?
Yes, absolutely.
When you're dealing with someone who has that propensity for violence, someone who's willing to engage uh un you know, we we have to assume untrained, unarmed individuals that were shot at in this attempted murder case, uh, even if they're rival gang members or or rival criminals.
Law enforcement has to take that a kind of assertive borderline aggressive stance when dealing with people who have that propensity for violence.
And so, yeah, that that surprise, that that surprise of I don't want to say violence, but that that quick action that tends to take any uh counter away from them trying, you know, if the suspect is going to try to launch some kind of a counter assault or try to escape, these officers are gonna want to get in there, these agents and and detectives, they want to make it quick, uh, you know, and over.
They they want this to be completely over and that subject in custody so that the rest of the public can go about their day, that that business can continue to operate, so that that the law enforcement officers can get that person out of the area and booked into jail so he can go and as you guys can see, like when we saw the footage ourselves, like you know, they got him the hell out of there immediately.
You know, they they were like, all right, let's get him out of here.
You guys heard it when when uh when people started like recording, like, oh, blue face, why y'all picking him up like that?
That's why they got the hell out of there so quick.
I mean, the whole interaction guys probably lasted a few minutes, right?
They probably spent more time cuffing them than anything else.
Go and appear before a judge.
Yeah, why do you think they did it in the middle of the day outside of this Lolos chicken and waffles?
I mean, again, the the uh blue face and his girlfriend, uh Chris Sean Rock were literally sitting on these benches looking at their phones, and then out of nowhere is when the team comes in.
Is it literally you want to get somebody when they least expect it?
Is it maybe there's less danger if something's happening in the middle of the day?
Because I'm also thinking maybe you do it in the middle of the night at a certain part when there's less people around because you don't want to create a situation where it creates a danger to anybody in the outside or a business.
Why why do you think they did it at that time at that moment?
And you know, that right there, stupid, um, you know, typical civilian type question to say, why not get him at midnight or whatever?
Let's see what the uh this guy responds, and then I'll add to whatever he says.
But yeah, just go at midnight, bro.
Probably for the simple fact that they received information that he was gonna be there.
Uh sometimes I think we watch these shows and we watch movies where we have some, you know, amazing command center that operates 24-7 with like a 007 Q. Uh, yeah, the answer to that.
Nope.
That has all the information at the tip of a finger, you know, at the at the Google search.
It doesn't operate like that in the real world of law enforcement.
So if one of the agents, one of the detectives on the task force received information from a source or an informant that the subject was located at a at a business and he was outside waiting for a table, law enforcement has to make decisions in real time.
And I I agree with their, you know, get that guy in custody as quickly as possible.
Use the uh use that the benefit of surprise to take him into custody.
His brain was probably still trying to figure out what was happening by the time the handcuffs are already on, that takes away any opportunity for him to escape or for him to launch, like I said, a counterassault against law enforcement.
Uh I don't think the law enforcement officers always love the location.
You know, if we could pick it our way, it'd be in the middle of the desert surrounded by a SWAT team, but we don't have that luxury all the time.
So if the Cops got the information that he's on a bench right now and they literally rally a team within 10, 15 minutes, they pull up and he's sitting on a bench.
One of the one of the bosses on that team made a command decision and say, hey, let's get him into custody now, make it quick, make it over, and let's get him to jail.
Yeah, this is all right.
Another reason too, and I want to add to that is that um the other reason why you don't want to pick a guy up late at night, guys, is because when you get an arrest warrant and you want to execute a lot of the times, especially for a search warrant, they'll ask you, is this like any time of day type warrant or whatever it may be?
And you have to have real-time information, like AK with surveillance that he's at the house and executing an arrest warrant late at night like that, eh, it might not be the best move because you don't know if he's up, it's dark, etc.
This is why typically if they're gonna go hit a house, they do it in the morning hours when they know for a fact he's gonna be uh asleep, and you it it's when the confinements, right, of uh of a typical arrest warrant, right or a search warrant, typically from 6 a.m. to about 10 p.m.
So that's one thing, and uh why you want to get him, you know, at certain times.
And the other thing too, like let's just be honest here.
I'm willing to bet more than likely they had him under surveillance, right?
They knew he was in town, and they're like, All right, we can get him here.
He's with his girl, he's not with his entourage.
Let's get him right here, right now, get this shit done.
Maybe they had source information, but I'm willing to bet that they had him under surveillance for a period of time.
For them to have that many guys to go ahead and do the arrest, they're watching him, right?
And they were just looking for the but most opportune time to make the arrest happen where they can mitigate risk.
And in that situation, you know, it seemed to be that's where it was.
Uh, guys, like the video.
Do you want to chat?
Uh, yeah, what do we got?
Pull them up real fast.
Uh, we got uh SAS L goes, um, hey Myron, a big fan of you calling these girls out.
I think I think uh you have done enough to not engage uh enough to not engage with a lot of these girls.
Please do not go back and forth with them, please.
They not worth it.
Um, I mean, that's what y'all want to see though, man.
That's what you guys want to see is me uh debate bimbles and show you guys how uh delusional they are.
It's wild how being a young man and having a confidence is a breath of fresh air for most young women.
Uh thanks for life advice, Myron.
Yeah, cool, bro.
Uh, what else we got here?
Well, facing men over 15 years or more in prison, what percent tell on each other is the no snitching all cap.
Yeah, bro, people be be telling all the time, bro.
They'd be telling all the time.
But in this case, I don't think like well, blue face, they're charging him with the shootings since he was actual shooter.
So, you know, it looks like he's gonna have to just take this one on the chin.
Uh, what else do we got here?
Uh yeah, and people snitch for way less than that, guys.
All right.
Let's go back to the video.
Seven.
Although that didn't that didn't have a great outcome either, but you yeah, what I'm trying to say.
Um, so what do you think was happening behind the scenes, right?
We know that there was this incident that happened, I believe October 8th of this year.
Uh, what do you think was happening behind the scenes of the investigation between October and now?
I'll give everybody an idea.
So in the days after this alleged shooting, Blueface he posted a clip from a music video for his song Better Days Two, Pain in the Ghetto, and he posted on his Instagram page, and the music video actually shows him in jail garb, this orange jumpsuit.
And the clip opens with the lyrics one suspect, two victims, hurt all three of the kids, four or five shots.
All it took to get him 40 years.
Now, I don't know really what that means.
I don't know if it has any relation to what actually happened.
Oh man, this is what this is why a YSL is in Jane jail right now.
But something was going on behind the scenes between when this shooting happened to now.
Walk us through what you think might have been happening.
Well, upon the initial crime that occurred, we're going to obviously have, you know, patrol officers would have responded, lock that scene down, and then detectives would come out and begin the investigation.
Once the investigation probably revealed that uh, you know, this gentleman has deep affiliations to street gangs, criminal street gangs.
More than likely that investigation switched over to a a gang uh investigation with uh again potential gang enhancement, uh, or at least to have gang investigators, those subject matter experts provide context, whatever detective unit decided to work that case.
And so once the Yeah, this is very common, guys.
A lot of law enforcement um agencies have gang groups, right?
So, like when I was working for HSI Homeland Security, we had a whole group that just was dedicated to doing gangs, whether it was MS-13, bloods, Crips, et cetera.
Um uh, you know, FBI has a gang task force, DEA has one, HSI has one, ATF has one.
Like everybody has gang task force, same locals do.
So um, this is one of the worst signs to be gang gang, as you would guys would say.
And I've done many videos on this as to why you should never partake in the gang life if you want to be a criminal.
So for all you guys out there that want to live life on the other side, don't join a gang because everyone and their mom investigates uh gangs and drug trafficking.
So uh and there's a bunch of states that have and the feds too have enhancements based on just you being in a gang.
All right.
So if you commit a burglary, right, that's one thing, but if you commit a burglary and you're a gang member, well, they could come back and use that against you in a racketeering case, right?
And that's what they did with some members of um uh YSL.
If you guys go back and look at that Georgia um indictment, uh that episode that I did on my uh on my channel on YSL, a lot of those charges, right?
They went back and got them again for the same charges for maybe drug trafficking or gun possession, whatever under the Rico statute because they were committing those crimes and they were gang members, man.
So being in a gang is never a good move.
The case is investigated once the investigator uh checks all the boxes, goes through all the the um investigative steps and process that they have to go through to build a case against this suspect.
And once probable cause probably was established fairly quickly, probable cause sometimes is it's a great standard to have.
Obviously, you have to have that to make an arrest, but we want maybe a little bit more to take to a prosecutor that we can show proof beyond that reasonable doubt so that that violent action is that person is held accountable for that violent criminal act.
And so I think probably in the in the month that has transposed about those this this month, you've had the investigation where it has been run to ground, all the stones have been unturned, all the questions have been answered, all the briefs have been sent up to the executive staff of law enforcement uh across Las Vegas here in the southern Nevada area.
And once that uh that warrant is active, once the judge approves it, it is gonna be then handed over to that task force, that fugitive task force.
And those are the men and women solely responsible for going out and getting the violent people in custody because the detectives continue to work on other cases that are happening uh between now and between the time that crime occurred and and now there's been dozens of more uh incidents here that the that an investigator is gonna have to cover.
So once the case is is is kind of run the ground, probable cause exists, a warrant is active in the system, approved by a judge, then the fugitive task force or some kind of criminal apprehension team will go out and look for that suspect.
Lots of uh lots of work I'm sure happening across uh any kind of state lines, maybe investigators from Southern California, you know, maybe contacted.
There there could be all kinds of connections to Southern California, uh, because of the gang connection here.
And so at a minimum, just for that situation.
For some of you guys that are wondering, Las Vegas does have a lot of gang ties because Vegas is only about three hours from LA, guys.
Um, it's a very common because I okay.
This is a little bit my personal experience with being a Los Angeles, etc.
Los Angeles nightlife is is not that great, guys, right?
And in Los Angeles is kind of whack because everything closes at like one thirty, you know, unless you have house parties or whatever.
So a lot of the times, like for people from LA, like a vacation for them or like going like to a cooler place, a lot of times is Vegas because only three hours away.
It's a short flight and or drive.
So Vegas has a lot of gang ties, a lot of people that used to live in LA.
As you guys know, there's a massive migration of people from uh California to Nevada in general, because Nevada has way more appealing living situations with taxes, cheaper housing, etc.
Um, and I've talked about you know, Nevada and Las Vegas real estate on other fresh of fit podcasts, if you guys want to check it out.
But um, it's not uncommon for people to go back and forth between the two.
So um, you know, I wouldn't be surprised if Las Vegas doesn't have a big gang task force um as well as Los Angeles.
You know, Southern California gangs that obviously have an impact here in Southern Nevada.
Those are all being taken into account as the case is progressing.
We know that he was booked into the Clark County detention center.
Can you tell us what that institution is, what we should be expecting for him during his time there, and what should happen in the next few weeks?
Sure, Clark County Detention Center is uh the main central jail here in southern Nevada.
It is uh overseen and ran by the Las Vegas Metro Police Department, where the uh the elected sheriff is in charge of all of it.
Uh he will obviously make appearance before a judge.
They'll have a a seventy-two hour probable cause hearing.
You'll have yep, that's the initial appearance I was telling you guys about before within twenty-four to seventy-two hours, it's it's uh, you know, that's your legal right to be brought in front of a judge after you're arrested.
Have a potential opportunity to make bail unless a judge uh decides that the bail is either gonna be so high or there won't be any bail afforded based on the violence of the uh the actions accused in the in the criminal complaint.
Ashton Pack, thank you so much for taking the time to break this.
Bam.
So uh so there, you know, there's a little bit more insight there from another law enforcement officer.
Uh so here's my prediction on what I think is gonna happen.
What's more than likely gonna happen, guys, is uh he's gonna obviously fight this as a self-defense case.
Um going from the footage, and I'll play it for you guys one more time here.
Uh I think he has a good self-defense stance personally.
Um, because what he's gonna be able to articulate is that him and his friends, right?
He shot the gun to defend his friend.
The thing that's gonna hurt him though, is that his friend, right, went ahead and charged at the vehicle.
Let's go ahead and play that clip real quick.
Thank you.
Okay.
So here's the truck.
And you can see the guy, right?
Because blue face is like right in this vicinity here.
You can see looks like a female.
I think that's him right here.
And this guy starts charging, right?
Bam, he runs at it, boom, and then this guy sways to the left instead of going straight, which is kind of weird that he did that, right?
So you could imply, yo, he was trying to run somebody over.
Bam, and then you can see boom, blue face shoots.
All right, at the vehicle.
So he could articulate self-defense.
Now, the only thing though, typically, is that when you articulate self-defense, you can't necessarily be the R the aggressor.
Okay.
When you're the aggressor, it kind of defeats the purpose.
But in this situation, since he wasn't necessarily the aggressor, right?
He just kind of responded to the situation.
That might help him.
But uh, but yeah, what I foresee is happening is his next court appearance.
I think they said it's January 24th, it's supposed to be a preliminary hearing.
More than likely he's gonna waive that because it's more than evident that he was the person in the footage that actually shot the gun.
So the police have more than enough probable cause.
What he's gonna fight is that I did what I did in self-defense.
I'm not doubting what y'all are saying.
I'm just saying the reason why I did what I did was to defend myself and my friend who was in the range of fire of getting hit with a vehicle because a gun, uh uh a car, guys, can be conscrew, it can be um, it could be articulated that a vehicle is a deadly weapon, right?
Because it can run you over, etc.
This is why if you charge at a police officer with a car, they're gonna start shooting at you, bro.
You know, because they can articulate uh that they're in fear for their life.
That's protect themselves or other people, and they can shoot into the vehicle and kill you and more than likely get off on it.
Okay.
Uh all right, let's see here.
Uh yeah.
Broke from smoke.
They do have a standard ground law, it might help.
Yeah, I mean, uh, you know, most states have a uh, you know, self-defense clause.
So in this situation, you might be able to articulate that.
And I think that's also a big part of why he only got a 50k bond.
Uh Ivan Leal goes, can you please do the Las Vegas shooter?
Yes, I have been getting requests for him as well.
That was a mass shooter case.
So yeah, we could do that.
Um what else we got, Christina?
Uh or ODR goes, just want to say you're a great narrator, and God bless the lovely next to you.
Uh, make sure you like, comment, and sub uh up.
GRT POW.
Thank you very much, man.
I appreciate that.
Um guys, yeah, do me a favor.
Can you guys like the video?
Well, I think we're at 1,000 likes right now, but there's 1600 of y'all watching.
So we should easily have like 1500 likes, goddammit.
Um, double date was hilarious.
Expose that 304 Iranian.
Yeah, bro.
Yeah, she was.
And what they're referring to, guys, is we did a stream on Fresh's channel yesterday uh with Sneeko, and they were doing a double day, and I kind of came in.
And I ain't gonna lie, I didn't know that they were like just hanging out and chilling or whatever.
So I kind of came in like, you know, with uh like yo, like, you know, I'm gonna be a little bit more real, or I'm just gonna be I'm gonna disrupt this this this double date.
But they were, you know, they were being a little bit nicer.
And that, you know, that is what it is.
They gotta run the game.
You know, everyone has their own their own game, but me, I didn't give a shit.
I was like, fuck it.
Uh, because you know, I can only tolerate Bimbo flapping too much.
Um yapping.
Hey Marl, what do you think about rappers arguing for not using lyrics in video cases?
Um Here's the thing.
Your freedom of speech is protected to a certain point.
As you guys know, in the United States, we enjoy the First Amendment freedom of speech, right?
And the problem with that is that is that you get freedom of speech to a certain level, right?
If you incite a riot, obviously, your freedom of speech is not gonna is not gonna be protected.
But if you're you know, if you say things in your music or whatever, and the police are able to independently show that those lyrics are true, well, yeah, they could be used against you, you know.
Uh and a perfect example of this was uh in the YSL case, uh why uh in the song uh with um Young Doug and uh uh Juice World, right?
Uh um Young Doug makes a comment about I shoot at his mommy's house.
That's why they no longer mention me.
They use that lyric back against Young Doug because what they were able to do was able to pin the fact that someone shot at YFN Luci's mom's house.
And they actually use that in the Rico indictment against him.
Okay.
Uh so lyrics are protected to a certain extent until the police are able to match up the lyrics with events that actually occurred.
All right.
So if you're a rapper, don't actually talk about crimes that occurred.
Make it fictional, all right, guys.
Um and Ferni Moore goes, them ninjas be in the precinct dropping mixtapes.
Yeah, they do, bro.
Like the video, guys.
We got 1,000 plus y'all in here.
Uh, what do we have here?
Stained youth, five bucks goes request.
Would you consider doing the Nicholas Makowitz Alpha Dog 2006 case?
Never got that request before.
Christina, write that down.
If it's interesting, we'll do it.
Do they have a say on your ground law in my help?
Oh no, red down from before.
Can you um actually put a cases?
Can you guys just contact 1811 on I Fred 1811?
Shoot her a DM so she can write it down.
Uh what else do we got here?
Uh whole bunch of scoring on.
Uh here, I'll scroll up.
Uh, has someone tried to run you over or shoot at and you you shot at them?
No, never.
Uh Obey Jesus.
Um, luckily, when you're the feds, bro, you kinda know what's going on, so you're able to kind of get in there ahead of time.
Because like the feds have the luxury of like investigating you for a long period of time.
So when they do the arrest warrant, they do the search or whatever, they've been watching you, they know what color your underwear is damn near.
So um that's why feds rarely get in shootings because they've been investigating you for a while and they hit you in the at the most opportune time.
That's it.
Uh that's it.
Cool.
All right, guys.
Uh, this was a more shorter and sweeter episode of Fed It Man.
Um I'm gonna go ahead and end it here.
Uh tune in to Fresh of Fit tomorrow, guys, at uh 7 p.m.
We're gonna have a money Monday for y'all, and obviously after hours as usual.
Um, Christina, you got anything you want to tell the people.
Um yeah, honestly, just contact at 1811 on IG and just send audio requests there.
Cool.
Guys, don't like to don't forget to like the video on your way out.
Love y'all.
I hope you guys enjoyed that episode.
Timestamps are gonna be up very soon.
And uh yeah, I I predict Blueface is gonna beat this thing, probably on a self-defense uh situation, and you know, this case might take a while.
He's probably gonna drag it on.
He's out on on bail, and state cases almost always take forever.
So uh yeah, I think he's I think he's in a decent position compared to other rappers that might be in situations like this.
So other than that, guys, love y'all.
Like the video.
Catch you guys next time.
Peace.
I'm a special agent with homeland investigations, okay, guys.
HSI.
The cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug traffic.
No one else has these documents, by the way.
Here's what FedEx cover.
Dr. Lafredo confirmed lacerations due to stepping on glass.
Murder investigation.
You don't know and he's positioning.
You're facing two counts of the team.
Racketeering and Rico conspiracy.
Young slime life here and after referred to as YSL to the 6ix9ine.
And then this is Billy Seiko right here.
Now, when they first started, guys, 6ix9ine Randle.
I'm a fed, I'm watching this music video.
You know, I'm bobbing my highlight.
Hey, this shit lit.
But at the same time, I'm pausing.
Oh, wait, who this?
Right?
Well, who's that in the back?
Firearms and violence.
AKA Bush I see violated.
They're wondering to stay away from the dick.
This is the one that that's gonna fuck him up because this gun is not tracing.
Well, it happened at the gun range.
Here's your boy 42 Doug right here on the left.
Okay, sex trafficking and sex crimes.
They can effectively link him to paying an underage girl.
I'm gonna go back 50 right and the first bomb went off right here.
Perfect check down at the site of the second explosion fired by Al-Qaeda.
Two terrorists, brothers, the Zokar, Sarnev, and Tamar landed.