So here's what 6ix9ine actually got here to script.
This attack shifted the whole US government.
This guy got arrested espionage.
Okay, trading secrets with the Russian John Wayne Gacy, aka the killer clown, okay?
One of the most prolific serial killers of all time killed 33 people.
Zodiac killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operated Northern California.
They really get off on getting attention from the media.
Many years, Jeffrey Epstein sexually exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his home.
It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
We're going to go over his past, the Yangtai, so that we all make sense.
We're going to go over his past.
We're going to go over his past.
We're going to go over his past.
We're going to go over his past.
We did one um on IRL where we talked about Trump case extensively.
If you guys watch this channel, you know I've covered the Trump case extensively where I cover the Georgia indictments, the South Florida federal indictment, the Washington, D.C. federal indictment, and then, of course, the New York indictment.
They're talking about him being potentially indicted in Arizona as well and some of these other states that he wanted to get recounts on the votes.
We'll see what happens, I think whatever's going on as far as the stuff with Trump is ridiculous, but you know, that's a whole other thing.
Um what else?
And yeah, guys, we normally film on Sundays and Thursdays.
Um what we're gonna do now is on Thursdays we're gonna live stream.
So we're gonna give you all two live streams a week.
We're gonna give you guys a live stream on Thursday and on Sunday.
Um, you know, just because we're demonetized on YouTube doesn't mean that the grind doesn't stop.
We're live streaming this right now on YouTube and on Rumble.
So if we do get hit with some kind of weird, you know, copyright.
Oh, we don't know what's going on, because you guys know sometimes I'll stream the show and I'll uh play some stuff and react to it, and they'll like stop it abruptly and say, Oh, we're not sure if this is copyrighted, so we're just gonna you know pause the stream.
So we won't have that issue on Rumble.
So you guys can watch us on Rumble or on YouTube, we're dual streaming right now to both platforms.
Um, you have anything for the people that I do the new announcements?
Go ahead.
Um, hi guys.
What's up?
Um yes, I want you to all follow at Fred React on Instagram again.
Also, since we're gonna start live streaming on Thursdays and on Sundays, um, I'm gonna start posting the polls uh a little bit earlier in the week.
So maybe Mondays and Tuesdays, so you guys stay active there because uh I'll be doing it so we have more time to research.
So I kind of wanna um mention some of the cases that are you guys requested this week because I need you to be active voting on the polls since we have a lot of different um cases.
So if you guys vote more in the ones that you you know request the most, it'd be easier, you know, to have like a case ready for Thursday or Sunday.
So um a lot of people have been asking for Myron's cases.
I kind of want to mention that.
Yeah, there's one that I could that I there's like two or three in my mind that I can uh cover.
One of them I think might still be active, so I don't know if I could do it.
Um it was the one that I did right before I left.
But there's one that literally is the reason why I have gray hair.
Um but continue.
Yeah.
But um, can we do them though?
There's one in mind that I can do uh uh in my head.
Um the reason why I've held off on it is because I did that case very closely with uh a friend of mine, and actually matter of fact, you guys probably if you Google Jaime Zapata, right?
Rest in peace, a former special agent highly uh he was um so hymen's about to not to divert to another topic, but he was a special agent that was uh HSI out of Laredo, the same office that I started my career.
The case that I did that I'm talking about, I did it with his best friend.
Oh, okay.
So I did it well I did that case with Jaime's best friend.
So I'm trying to get him to come on.
Oh, okay.
And and I'm trying to get him to come on and and do the thing.
Now here's the thing, I'm gonna keep it a million with y'all.
He's still in the job, he can't show his face.
I'm probably gonna have to put a voice mask on him and everything.
So um so if you know, if I did bring him on, he would it would be remote, and you guys wouldn't see him and you guys would hear a weird distorted voice.
But I can verify that he 100% helped me on that case, and it was crazy.
But that case was one of the biggest cases that hit national news.
Um story short, it was uh human smuggling organization that was using fake border patrol cars to smuggle illegal aliens into the country.
Oh huge national security threat.
Yeah, yeah.
That case literally made me become a man if for one of the most easily one of the most stressful periods of my life.
I'll never forget that.
It was on my sister's birthday, December 11th, 2015.
That I got that phone call and I was like, holy crap, and I didn't sleep for like 72 hours.
That that day, yeah.
Yeah, that was a big one.
But I I have that case very fondly in my memory.
The only reason I'm holding off on uh giving it to you guys is because I want to get my buddy on so that we can talk about it together because he helped me throughout the entire thing.
So um there you go, guys.
Like that's that's why you guys gotta be a little bit patient with these Myron's cases because you know he has to get everything straight.
Another big one I have is is I I'm pretty sure it's still active.
I mean, I could probably cover like my what what I did on it and how we got it.
That's actually the case that got me the director's award.
I showed you guys my director's award uh that I have.
It was uh that case that I did.
And I actually right before I left the agency, I um I made a pretty big arrest and it hit the the Department of Justice news and everything like that.
So um I'll talk about that as well.
So nah man, I I did a but and then I had another one.
I had a really big organized crime case uh on this little town out in the middle of nowhere in Texas where they were smuggling uh crystal methamphetamine and a bunch of drugs and shit.
So I could do them, it's just that it's gonna be extensive.
I don't want to put you out of sleep because I'm really gonna since it's my case, it's my baby, I'll be able to go into the weeds about certain things.
And I gotta find a delicate balance where I can go into the weeds without like disclosing too much.
Uh huh.
You know, the cases are done, so I could talk about them, but it's like Yeah, yeah, okay.
Yeah, I mean, it's so bad that I still remember the main targets, name, date of birth, where he lives.
I remember social security number, like that.
When you get involved in a case like that, and you have like a main guy that you're looking at, I I remember fucking everything.
It's just that I'm trying to figure out how it would go about it.
He's in jail right now, serving a pretty sentence, yeah.
You can see my shiny.
Yeah.
Yeah, I could definitely do it.
It's just that I'm I'm uh trying to figure out how I'll do it in a way where I'm not disclosing too much.
And if you guys really like my cases that much, I did two already on the Fed Reacts channel where I covered two of my own cases.
Um so feel free to check those out if you guys are really interested in that.
Oh, send into Mission I can post it on the code.
Oh, yeah, sure, yeah, yeah.
Cause because you guys ask a lot of the times for cases that I've already covered.
Like y'all asked for like OJ Simpson.
I'm like, we covered that already.
You know, or Brian Cobra.
Yeah, Brian Colberger, you guys asked for.
Um, who else do they ask for all the time that we already did?
Six nine.
Yeah, y'all asked for six nine a lot, and I'm like, I dude, I yo, that 6ix9ine one, no one on the internet did a deeper dive on that case than I did.
That brid that stream was like four hours long.
Yeah, wow.
And the the reason why I again was 6ix9ine, it was our New York field office that arrested him.
I know the guy, the the the uh whose case it was.
Um because right after they arrested 6ix9ine, I went to New York for an organized um or organized um agent organized crime case.
I had a I had an Asian organized crime case that tied back to Miami.
So I went to New York, I'll never forget January of 2019.
They arrested 6ix9ine in November of 2018, so two to three months prior.
They had just arrested 6ix9ine.
So when I was up there in New York, um, I was there at the El Dorado Task Force.
You can guys look that up.
It's a big financial task force up there out of the New York field office.
Uh I met with some of the uh some of the guys that were involved in that case, because it was our HSI New York gang squad that did the 6ix9ine blood case.
So um that's why I knew whatever.
Did you know that they wanted to actually arrest him like way before?
They actually picked him up.
Or excuse me, they wanted to arrest him way after when he was arrested.
So quick little Give me ones in the chat if y'all want to hear this story.
I don't want to go off topic.
6ix9ine?
Like, give me ones in the chat if you guys want to hear this story.
If you don't, then you know, cool.
Give me a two, and then we'll keep going, we'll keep pushing.
Because I don't want to we're going into a million topics here, and Angie has a she's she's distracting me, goddammit.
Give me ones if y'all want to hear this.
If you don't, then give me twos and we'll go right into the Waco siege.
I just want to like mention these cases because I know you guys have been asking for them a lot, and you spam me with like my rest cases, my own cases, my own cases.
I do send him like some of the scrinches that I take of your guys, if you guys like request, so he can see.
You guys are being Mo, it looks like astounding ones all over.
It looks like it.
Why is it so blurry though?
I guess because he's zooming in.
Yeah, because I was zooming in that.
Okay, okay, zoom out a bit.
All right.
Um, I'll give it to y'all.
So as you guys know, 6ix9ine was wrapped up back in 2018 and arrested by a bunch of other gang members for being a part of the nine trade bloods, right?
Uh they hit him with Rico, etc., all that stuff.
So the reason why they picked him up, guys, when they did, they actually wanted to extend the case out longer and they didn't want to pick 6ix9ine up.
He they didn't want to arrest him in November, but they had to do it because 6ix9ine was planning to go to Connecticut to uh go gamble at the casinos.
Um and the way things work, guys, is so when you work at a field office, right?
Let's say you work in the New York field office, your area of responsibility or your AOR is the uh the area that you can like um that you can operate in without necessarily having to notify anybody.
Now, as a federal agent, technically you have federal authority to investigate anywhere in the United States.
However, there's different offices that have different areas of responsibilities.
So if your case touches another AOR, it's on you to contact that office to say, hey, listen, I'm gonna be doing surveillance in your area, or hey, I need assistance, I'm gonna be in your area, blah, blah, blah, right?
So you want to coordinate with that office that runs that area of responsibility.
So in this case, 6ix9ine was gonna go from New York City to the casinos in Connecticut.
Mo, can you pull up a map if possible here so I can show the people from a visual standpoint?
Which is about two to three hours away, right?
But here's the problem.
That's a whole other AOR.
And they would have had to follow him and then notify the Connecticut field offices, hey, he's gonna be at Mohegan's son or whatever.
Um, and we have a credible threat that they're gonna try to kill him at the casino.
So I know because I was an intern in Connecticut, they only have maybe 20 HSI agents uh in in the state of Connecticut total.
Twenty.
Maybe twenty to thirty, right?
And I'm being because there's a Hartford office, then there's a New Haven office.
I worked out of the New Haven office.
So they don't have more than thirty guys, right?
To cover a guy like 6ix9ine and do surveillance, boom.
Okay.
So the casino guys, Mo, type in um Mohegan Son.
I'm giving y'all some real fucking sauce right now.
This is exclusive stuff that no one else is gonna tell y'all.
Uh type in Mohegan Son M-O-H-E.
Yep, Mohegan's son.
Yep, it's top one.
And then type in New York City.
Uh or directions.
Hit like directions.
Oh direction.
Yeah, like hit directions in New York City, right?
So I'm bow pulls that up.
So he was gonna go from New York City to Mohegan Sun.
Mm-hmm.
And Yep, New York, New York, boom.
How far is it?
And you guys are gonna see right here.
Okay.
So it's uh two hours and thirty-six minutes, 132 miles.
They would have had to follow him throughout that situation to keep eyes on him, and they would have needed to have agents in Connecticut help.
That would have been an extremely labor and sensive surveillance.
And then not only that, guys.
Expensive too, right?
Expensive too, but like the biggest thing is like uh the logistics of following him around in the casino.
Here's other thing.
Um the the the um the where the casinos are, that's tribal ground.
It's not uh tribal, which uh so it's it's basically Native American land.
Oh, okay.
So since it's Native American land, it's I don't want to say sovereign, but it's almost like not the United States kinda.
They have their own tribal police.
Like the United States doesn't have jurisdiction.
They they do.
They do, but like you have to coordinate with the tribal police.
So the tribal police is the law of the land over there.
They have their own police.
Yeah, they have their own police.
Wow.
Yep, and a lot of them are Native Americans.
They have to a lot of times to get on with the tribal police department, you have to have like Native American blood.
But that's a whole other political thing.
But regardless, um, so not only was it logistical nightmare to follow him there, but it was also a logistical nightmare to actually maintain surveillance on him in a fucking casino with a bunch of people there.
Then on top of that, they got credible information that the bloods want to kill him.
So, like, okay, are we gonna take the risk and continue the investigation?
Follow him out there, and they try to kill him in the casino.
And they had warned him too, hey, there's a threat on your life, whatever.
Six nine didn't care.
He wanted to keep doing what he was doing.
So a big reason why they arrested him when they did, because if you guys noticed they arrested him really abruptly, like I think his uh album Dummy Boy was set to release, and he went to jail right before it dropped.
They didn't really intend to do it that way.
They wanted to get him later on when they had more evidence.
But since there was so much threat on his life and such an issue with safety and him being out in public and potential of other people being sh hurt and then coordinating with tribal police, it would have been a nightmare.
So they're like, you know what?
Let's just indict this guy now and get him.
And what ended up happening was since they pulled the trigger and they arrested him uh more for his safety than anything else, that's why they came back with a superseding indictment.
Nine out of ten times, if you see the feds come back with a superseding indictment, that means that they pulled the trigger quickly and they didn't intend to, but they had to do it for some type of circumstance.
Because a superseding indictment is basically a fancy way of saying, like, okay, this is a new and improved indictment with new charges because we've been able to conduct our investigation at our the length that we want at the same at the pace that we originally had wanted.
But in this case, the 6ix9ine didn't want to listen.
He was difficult to to um he was hard-headed, he was trying to go to a casino, is going into another AOR that only had 30 HSI agents.
It would have been labor intensive.
You got tribal police that you gotta deal with too.
You don't want to necessarily notify them because now you gotta bring them into the investigation.
It's a whole bunch of bureaucratic crap on the other side, which is a logistical fucking nightmare.
So that is why they pulled the trigger and arrested him when they he did they did.
Let me fires in the chat if y'all enjoyed that story that you guys are never going to get anywhere else on the fucking internet, man.
That's real insight right there.
Question.
You had 6ix9ine here for fresh and fleet, right?
He pulled up.
He he he um he pulled up for academics.
But they you didn't interview him.
No, I talked with him, but I didn't know we did it was academics in him, they did an interview.
Oh, and also about that.
Yeah, and it's funny because I I knew that too, but like I didn't say a word about it.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, I mean the case is done now and it's uh a lot of stuff is public, but that was the big reason why he got uh why they pulled the trigger on him was because he wanted to go to casino and gamble, and that would have put a lot of people in danger when they had credible threats on his life.
This guy men.
So yeah, anyway.
He's done anyways.
Only on Fed Reacts, man, exclusive right there.
Y'all ain't gonna get sauce like that anywhere else.
Uh okay, continuing with the cases that you have been requesting, you guys requested Elisa Lamb.
You know, we know that about that case, and I think it was in California that she uh appeared dead in the tank, water tanks in the hotel.
That's a very interesting case.
Uh We have Luca Magnuda.
He killed a bunch of people.
And he is also, I think it's the guy that was the don't mess with the cats.
Or don't F with the Cats.
Documentary is based on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
People are asking for more GCS reactions.
They don't post.
JCS?
Yeah.
Yeah, they don't.
They haven't posted a long last time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I have no idea.
But that's a good channel.
Yeah, it is a good channel.
Vanessa Gian.
Do you know her?
Who?
It's uh uh I don't know.
It's uh she used to be uh a military girl in the kill she was killed by somebody.
Okay.
I have I haven't researched that one.
Okay, uh the burger chef murderers, that you guys have been asking for that a lot, so I were uh I have it written down.
Did you cover Ariel Castro?
No.
Okay, that's also a highly requested one.
Of course, Ed Kemper.
I always pull pull him, like I always put him in the polls, but he always loses with other cases.
Like he loves to Sound of Freedom, he loves to Chicago Ripper Crew, he loves like you guys need to uh keep voting for him so we can like cover him.
Uh the Menendez Brothers.
Uh the video's done on that.
I just gotta post it.
Yeah, we're gonna post it on Rumble.
Yeah, I'm gonna have to post that one on Rumble only, guys.
Sorry.
Yeah.
YouTube won't won't.
I try to post it on YouTube and they took it down.
Yeah, and the Columbine shooting too.
Yep.
It's gonna be on Columbine as well.
Uh and I got another exclusive for you guys.
Um I think it's called Shadow uh Ghost Stories or Shadow or Something Shadows.
Basically, it was a case um that the FBI did.
It was a 10-year-long investigation into um 10 Russian nationals that were here as spies, and they had been like they got full US identities, etc.
But they were here, they're like basically a sleeper sell of Intel agents.
Yeah, really interesting stuff.
Yeah, CGB stuff.
KGB, yeah.
Well, well, yeah, SVR, but same shit.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
Um they want us to cover Harvey Wednesday.
Who?
Harvey Wednesday.
Oh, Harvey Weinstein.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Well, on YouTube, so y'all already know what that means.
Can I say my joke now?
Yeah.
No, no.
Okay, okay.
Um, Pat Tillman.
And you become racist.
Uh what?
Pat Tellman.
No, it's just I uh well, I said it when we are like exclusively on Rumble.
Pat Tillman uh Pat Tunman's a good one.
Yeah.
Uh the former football player military.
Uh-huh.
Um, I forgot to mention, guys, real quick.
Um, don't worry, it's empty.
Yo, uh, shout out to Girl of Mine, by the way, guys.
Uh, use the fresh fit code if you guys want to get a discount on Girl of Mine products.
Um, Mo, uh, if people want to interact with the show, we forgot to mention.
Drop the Stream Labs chat in there for them.
If you guys want to super chat into the shows, you guys know we're demonetized.
But if you want to super chat into the show, go ahead and drop your um click the link and super chat in your comments or questions or anything else like that.
Doing it right now.
Uh we're gonna put that in there for y'all.
Um so yeah.
Okay, uh, this is a very interesting case, another one, but this is the first time somebody had requested it, and I find it very interesting.
Do you guys know the killdozer case?
No.
Okay.
I just wanted to mention it.
Okay.
But it's a very interesting one.
Um, Barry Seal 2.
And oh, they uh they also asked a lot for the 9-11 videos.
I dropped you guys uh story.
9-11.
He has a playlist.
Bro, we covered 9-11 to death.
Guys, I have an entire playlist dedicated to 9-11 on Fed Reacts, and then on Rumble, we have all of our Ryan Dawson interviews.
Guys, we have easily like all the content I have on 9-11.
I got easily like 20 20 plus hours of content on 9-11, bro.
He's got like 11 videos on that.
Like, yo, dude, I got the I did a video.
No one has covered it more extensively.
I'll tell you what what we got.
We got the official story, we got the unofficial story, we got how the FBI um uh identified um bin Laden, how the CIA found bin Laden.
Oh, I need to post that one too.
Uh literally everything, bro.
Like when it comes to 9-11, I covered it to death.
We even went over the um conspiracies, okay.
Hey man.
And I cannot say my joke.
Same for Rumble.
But yeah, y'all already know what that sound effect means.
Right?
should I say more but I come with that angle as well an angle that no one wants to touch shout out to Ryan Dawson laughing laughing You don't want me to say my joke.
Nah, bad chill.
Okay, so uh alright.
Um yeah, you guys need to research.
But yeah, dude, we did 9-11 to death.
Yeah.
You know, you guys need to check the YouTube channel and check the playlist because you've been requesting cases that Myron had already done.
They also asked for a G G F gate.
So yeah, that's coming.
That's coming.
Um, there is a bunch of there is a bunch of cases that you have been requesting, but that's pretty much it.
Alright.
Yeah.
Okay.
Let's um And and also there is a bunch of people asking for UK case.
I kind of wanted to mention it because it's not that I'm like ignoring you guys.
It's just that okay, Myron's gonna explain why we're not doing UK cases.
I try to stay away from foreign cases, guys, because I'm not that familiar with other countries' laws.
Um and some examples I will, like for example, you guys asked for Vibes Cartel a million times, so I did vibes cartel for y'all.
Um, facts, right?
Bomboka!
But what I'll also but what I will also cover for you guys is we'll cover um The Yorkshire Ripper.
Okay.
I uh that one is one that I actually meant to cover.
Um he's like the new the newer version of um Jack the Ripper.
Okay.
He's running around slaying chicks in the 70s and 80s, I think.
So yeah, we'll we'll cover that one for you guys.
But I try to stay away from foreign cases unless like it's like overwhelmingly being demanded like that.
Canadian serial killer, we're gonna cover him.
Paul Bernardo.
Yeah.
Was that him?
Yeah.
That that was killing chicks with her his wife.
Damn.
No, who's the Ted Bundy?
Who's the Canadian Ted Bundy?
Not Kemper.
It wasn't Robert Kalinski.
There's another guy.
No, we're not covering.
I have not read it.
I don't remember.
But yeah.
Someone in the chat's gonna put it.
Yeah, I hear killing chicks, bro.
Yeah, they always are.
Yeah, Ceral Killer Sub BR says facts are some of the biggest massages, man.
Yo, uh, so um anyway, yeah, guys.
If you want to donate to the show and get involved and uh send in a super chat, we do have a super chat button.
Click that streamlabs like send your donation.
That Robert, there we go.
Boom.
Send in your super chat, and uh we'll go ahead and read it.
Um but we gotta we got a documentary to cover.
Uh um oh, okay, yeah, let's hit some of these rants and then we'll get into uh we're gonna talk about the Waco siege finally.
Um sorry guys, we just like to make sorry for the uh delay in announcements.
But you guys enjoy this stuff, man.
You're here to run with us on a Thursday night.
Me, Angie, uh Mo is in the back hanging out.
So uh yeah, man, shout out to Mo.
Uh so let's let's go ahead.
We got world's coolest nerd goes just for being late and no mic audio at the beginning.
Put on the do-rag for your atonement, W Fabric Fit.
That's world's coolest nerd.
Thank you.
I appreciate that, bro.
This is a hood, eh?
Well, Myron doesn't want to wear the dragon.
You guys will never see it.
Uh bro, work on being punctual.
Amor Del Napoli.
Could you cover the Nagretta or Camora?
What?
And Angie, can you can you Google those two?
I think that's Italian uh gangs, if I'm not mistaken.
Yeah, I think he's they also ask for like the the cartels.
Yeah, that's coming.
Guys, Mexican cartels are coming, but understand when I do the Mexican cartels, it's gonna be like the mafia.
I'm gonna have to do a multi-part series.
You know, as you guys know, we spent like what, a month covering Locosa Nostra.
Um, so when I do Chapo and I do uh Pablo and I do all these people, be prepared.
It's gonna be at least two weeks of content just on them.
So that's why when I whenever I or 9-11, same thing.
I spent like two months on 9-11.
So whenever it's like big, big stuff like that, I always uh try to go extensively.
Okay, Mo is going crazy with this stream uh deck thing.
Yeah, yo, because he said 9-11, so you know what you're saying.
Okay, so then Greta is a prominent Italian mafia.
Um That's what I figured.
Based in Calabria in Italia, and the Camora is uh Italian Secret Society of Criminals.
Yeah, that's that's what I figured during the 19th century.
Uh we did touch on that.
Those those names sounded familiar when we are covered in America and Italian Mafia.
I love watching the show.
I literally binge watch all shows in like a week.
Mad respect for you guys on FNF.
Y'all have changed my mind on how men think and actually help my relationship.
Shout out to you, Tori.
Thank you.
That's great.
Um we got uh Marshall Ford goes, Ruby Ridge happened just a few months before Waco.
Since then, both events have essentially been intertwined with each other.
Will you cover the Ruby Ridge Siege one day?
What up, Angie?
Hi.
Uh yeah, that's also highly requested.
Uh it's on the list.
On the list.
Uh yeah, she she guys she she'd be looking at your DMs, guys.
Uh Vlon the DL goes, finally, we can hear Mo laughing and talking.
Let's go, Mo.
Love you, G. Alright.
You.
Yeah, uh Mo laughs the most whenever we I mean, it's got to a point now where it's just like we just gotta hit a sound effect and just keep going.
You know what I mean?
But you guys know what time it is when I hit that.
Um boys is watching.
Uh all right.
So uh so we're gonna cover the Waco siege today, guys.
This has been requested for the better part of a year.
Um, and this is probably one of the biggest blunders by the ATF.
Uh but yeah, let's go ahead and uh pull up the Wikipedia real quick on this.
ATF?
Uh no, pull it up uh Waco Siege, please.
Wake up Siege.
Yeah, then we'll get into a documentary, then we'll cover ATF and FBI and all that other stuff after the fact.
All right.
All right.
So the Waco Siege, also known as the Waco Massacre, was a siege by US federal government and Texas state law enforcement officials of a compound belonging to the religious cult known as the branch divinians between February 28th and April 19th, 1993.
The branch civilians led by David Cresh were headquartered at Mount Carmel Center Ranch in the community of Axtel, Texas, 13 miles northeast of Waco.
Suspecting the group of stockpiling legal weapons, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, ATF, obtained a search warrant for the compound and arrest warrants for Koresh and several of the group's members.
Okay.
So as you guys know, um actually, no, we can go into ATF real quick so that this makes sense.
So guys, ATF right here is the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives, right?
And these guys, um, one of my best friends actually is ATF agent when I was working on the job back on the border.
So I know very I know dude.
The ATF and the DEA, I worked so close with them.
I know what their forms are, I know what their policies are and their standards, it's it's literally hilarious.
Um yeah, yeah, because when you work with other agencies a lot, like you get to figure out what their policies and procedures are because every agency is different, and like you know what they can do versus what you can do, and you kind of leverage that to your ability.
I'll give you an example.
So, like ATF has something called, wow, we're really about to get into the weeds now.
Give me ones in the chat if y'all want me to really go into this.
Give me twos if you guys want me to just keep going with the Waco Siege.
Give me ones if you guys want me to actually go into this, uh, or give me twos if you guys want to just keep going with the siege.
Let's see what the chat says.
Yeah, once.
Once?
No, I'm just gonna, yeah, once, apparently.
Department of Justice donated two dollars.
Thank you so much, my friend.
Sounds like Department of Justice, you cheap bastards.
No, thank you, man.
Uh, but um, okay, so once.
All right.
So I'll give you guys an example.
So whenever I used to do um operations, right?
Like, well, let's say we had uh a confidential informant and we got a call, like, hey, uh bad guys in town, we want to buy some drugs, we want to buy some guns.
ATF was really good at this.
They would have something called POE money, right?
Purchase of evidence funds, and they would have it right there in the office.
They'd have a safe and they'd have a couple thousand dollars for you know, buy bus or whatever it may be that was always available to them.
Versus HSI, if I want a POE money, I gotta write a fucking memo.
I gotta send it up like three chains of people, I gotta, you know, uh talk to managers to get the money.
It's a pain.
It's gonna take me like I wouldn't be able to get in 24 hours.
It'd take me a few days, right?
But ATF, they have that money right there.
So if you're working with them, hey, I got an informant that could do this deal, blah, blah, blah.
Um, we just structured a deal to buy some farms for three thousand dollars.
I'd call my buddy up, he'd be like, cool.
I got I got the POE money here, let's go out.
Boom.
We're just out.
I he just um uh he gives my informant the money, he signs some paperwork, we do the operation.
Good to go.
We don't gotta worry about you know getting all this stuff.
So ATF is really good about like getting out there and getting stuff done, right?
Okay.
Um versus like HSI, we're a bit more bureaucratic when it comes to that.
But on other hands, right?
HSI, we had a lot of resources.
So, like, if they didn't have money to fund an operation or they didn't have the manpower, right?
Because there's only like I think there was only five agents in uh the Laredo office, and they would need help with many with uh with surveillance and shit.
I could go ahead and get easily 10-20 guys.
Why would that re be so little um agents?
There's not many.
ATF only has like about a thousand agents in the country.
There's not many.
So uh fun little fact for you guys.
Why?
ATF and DEA, I'll tell you right now, ATF and DEA guys have very few special agents.
Most of their staff actually comes from something called task force officers, TFOs.
Okay, and what a TFO is is uh is it's a basically a state or local law enforcement officer that's deputized to enforce federal law.
So for example, when I was in Laredo, right?
ATF they had like three to five special agents, but they had like 10 TFOs.
They're from Laredo Police Department, Webb County Sheriff's Office, uh Texas Department of Public Safety, and these guys had their state authority, but they also had ATF credentials, so they were able to enforce federal law as well.
So they could both do both.
Okay.
Right.
So and that's really useful because if you can't get a guy in a federal charge, they could go ahead and take a state if they want.
They could go and present it to an ADA, right?
So they can do both.
Um so since ATF didn't have that much manpower, if they need a help with surveillance, I'd be able to get us 20 guys easy, right?
Versus if we needed to do an operation quickly, they had the months to be able to do it because the funds to do it, and they didn't need to go through management.
So these are just like some nuanced things where working with other agencies can help you out.
So that's one thing I really liked about ATF.
They're like what I would call a street agency because they're doing a lot of dope deals, they're buying guns all the time, they're on the street because they're dealing with violent criminals.
So they need expedient um funds to be able to make deals happen.
Also, another thing that they can do, they could sign up an informant in 24 hours.
HSI, I gotta do all this bullshit, I gotta fingerprint them and a signature exemplars and all this other stuff.
You said you said that they also can do like raids.
The DEA is very like good at putting like microphones and stuff and like rating phones and stuff.
You said it in the Yes, yeah.
So um, so the DEA, what they do really well, and I could do an all a man.
I could do a whole episode with you guys and tell you guys the strengths and weaknesses of each agency because I've worked with all of them so extensively.
The strength of the DEA is they are absolutely the best at exploiting telephones.
When it comes to writing up a title three and listening to your phone and but tapping your shit, they're the best at it by far.
They can get a T3 up in a week, which is unheard of with other agencies because it takes such a uh such a ridiculous amount of resources to write up the affidavit, send it up to Department of Justice, OEO, have it signed, then uh you know, bring it back, give it to a district judge.
It takes a lot, guys, to listen to someone's phone.
So DEA is the best at it by far.
Um because they have an infrastructure, they have deals with these phone companies where they're able to go ahead and get like toll records like that.
So uh here's another example.
When I was HSI, right, and I want to um get uh I will subpoena someone's phone information.
Let's say I'm looking at a credit.
Damn, are we really gonna go down this road?
All right, give me one to the chat if y'all want me to actually talk about this exploiting phones.
If not, then we'll go to the Waco seach because I don't really want to get in the weeds here.
I will give you guys the sauce if you guys want it, but I don't want to like totally and don't worry, timestamps will be up later.
But give me ones if you guys want to actually hear this, give me twos if you don't.
If you guys want me to break down like exploiting phones and how the DEA does it and all the stuff.
We should react to a breaking bad episode so you can explain all these stuff.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'll I'll watch it.
I'll I'll watch that stuff and I'll I could tell you what's like realistic and what's not.
Oh, we should do that, absolutely.
I love breaking bad.
Yeah, it's one of my top.
I'm the one who knocks.
Oh, yeah, I am the one who knocks.
Yeah, okay, they want to hear it.
Okay.
So the DA is really good at exploiting phones.
I'll give you guys an example, right?
So when I was agent myself, right?
Let's say I would do a drug deal, right?
And and I'd send my informant in there.
So it this is how we would do it.
So I'd be working with the ATF and DEA.
I'd get the money from ATF, I'd give it to my informant.
He will go do the deal.
When he did the deal, we identify who that subject is that he talked to, right?
I would send a phone subpoena.
It would take me a week to get the toll records back.
But DEA, they get it back in like a fucking hour.
They take that phone number because they have a very good relationship with all the phone companies, they have like a contract, they go ahead and get that bad guy's phone number that they did the deal with within an hour, they got that guy identified, and they have all his tolls, and they saw everyone else that he talked to.
Well, it will take you a week.
Well, it'll take me a week.
So that is the beauty of working with other agencies because you're able to leverage everyone's strengths and weaknesses.
Yeah.
So DEA is fantastic at exploiting phones, getting toll records back, doing toll analysis, because that's what they do, right?
ATF, fantastic at getting money quickly to make deals happen on the street, right?
HSI, we're kind of all over the place where we could do many different things and we have resources.
Um, and then the FBI, what the FBI does really well, is they just have money.
They they have money.
You know what I mean?
So um if you need manpower, you need resources, etc., uh they they have that.
Where's that money coming from?
Like what why did they have that money?
Uh because they're using it.
Because they're the lead federal agency in the in the United States.
So the number one, they're the biggest, uh, they're the biggest federal law enforcement agency.
Oh, okay.
So they have they have um they get the most funding, etc.
And then their mission requires a lot of money because they do counterterrorism, right?
If if you want to talk about it's a counterterrorism case, that money's endless.
They can, if it's a counterterrorism case, they get they could do whatever they need to do.
So translation, that's like the government spoiled child.
Absolutely.
Yes.
Yes, the FBI uh Gets what they want a lot of the times.
So um, so that's kind of an example, guys, of working with different agencies and doing stuff.
So, like, that's why me, I always had a very good relationship with DEA.
I had a very good relationship with ATF.
And with working with them, I was able to do our cases, and we were able to leverage every agency's strengths while minimizing our weaknesses.
Versus if I had just done it myself, it would suck, bro.
I'm doing phone toll, I'm trying to do phone toll analysis.
I can't get the records back quickly.
But if I had my DEA guy go and send a subpoena to T Mobile, he's getting those records back in an hour.
We can have that motherfucker identified, and not only do we have that guy identified, now we know everyone else that he talked to because when they were doing the drug deal, I would look at the times when the drug deals were being done on the that other guy's phone and see who he was talking to.
Bam, now I'm starting to web out and figure out who they're going to.
Because I would look at the phone tolls uh of uh when a crime was occurring and see who he was in contact with.
Whoever he was in contact with while we were watching them on surveillance and they were committing criminal activity, are other conspirators.
Yeah.
Well, it's important it's important to mention too that Myra has said Fuck the video!
Oh my god.
Oh, sorry.
Like the video, guys.
Y'all are not gonna get insight like that anywhere else on the internet.
I was actually out here on these streets.
I was really out here doing this, man.
Y'all are not gonna get this level of detail anywhere on the internet, bro.
Sorry.
You saw that scarebo.
Um was that what I forgot what I was saying?
Okay.
It's important to mention that this one Myron is saying that working with other agencies is very rare because other agencies, he has said it before, are very competitive.
So they don't want to work with each other because they want to take the credit all the time.
Yeah, yeah.
It it's it's uh yeah, it can definitely be like that.
And it it really comes down to uh having good relationships, knowing uh good guys.
Um the guys I worked with at um ATF and DEA were really cool guys, so it wasn't an issue.
But yeah, I mean uh I was one of the few guys that worked like uh like Laredo HSI and Laredo DEA hate each other.
I was one of the few guys that got along with them.
It was bad, dude.
It was bad.
I can't imagine there were no women in those offices.
Yeah, no, there was actually one uh uh there was one uh one female DEA agent, she was like Colombian.
I I remember her, but that's about it.
Okay, that's why you were sweet everything.
Nah.
No, she wasn't Colombians old.
Yeah.
She I don't mind a little bit.
Oh, right.
Uh but yeah, man.
You don't want to date chicks in law enforcement, man.
They they're terrible.
But uh it can be masculine, right?
Yeah, way too masculine.
Uh so okay, what else do we got here?
So um so yeah, this is uh, yeah, so that's the ATF, right?
So the ATF is domestic law enforcement agency within the United States Department of Justice.
Responsibilities include the investigation prevention of federal offenses involving the unlawful use manufacturing and possession of firearms and explosives, acts of arson and bombings.
So, guys, ATF man, their main mission is 100% firearms, right?
They do explosions and stuff like that too, and bombs, but that's gonna be they're gonna that's gonna go to the FBI nine out of ten times if there's a bombing.
Um and they also do an illegal trafficking and tax evasion of alcohol and tobacco products.
Um, yeah, they do cigarette smuggling too, guys.
Um they rarely do it, but um, we actually did a really cool case on the Hezbollah.
There was a Hezbollah cell out of North Carolina.
I want you guys to really go watch that.
Um, it was a really cool cigarette smuggling case that ended up turning into a terrorism case.
Um, but yeah, that's what the ATF does, guys.
All right.
Very interesting.
Um, you know, if you buy a gun in the in the in the United States, you're gonna have to fill out um oh my god, I forget the form name, but you have to fill out an ATF form, right, saying that you're not a felon, etc.
That's where Kodak fucked up.
Kodak filled up filled out an ATF form saying that he wasn't a felon and he wasn't under indictment when he was.
1001 false statements, and that's how we got arrested for lying on an ATF form.
Ah that's yeah.
So that's what ended up getting him jammed up.
Nine out of ten times if you get arrested for being a felon of possession at a uh in a firearm as a f uh federally, it's gonna be the ATF that arrests you.
I think it was boozy, it was ATF that picked up boozy, it was ATF that got TI with the with the weapons stuff.
So if it's a gun violation, guys, nine out of ten times is gonna be ATF that does it.
Is that mean Lil Wayne too?
Little Wayne get hit with ATF.
There was a gun charge.
Oh so he got hit with the state though.
And there's a federal one.
So but it ended up being state because he went to Rikers.
Ah, you go to Rikers, it's it's um it's a state case.
Okay.
Wow.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, you guys will see why the ATF took the L in this case.
Yeah, they yeah, that was they've done it, they've done a couple L's.
They did Operation Fast and Furious too, which is another thing we gotta cover for y'all.
Oh, yeah, they they've been requesting for that one.
Yeah, Fast and Fierce.
Yeah.
Well, Jaime, the agent I told you about, he got killed with a gun from the Fast and Furious.
Oh the gun that killed him, the machine gun that killed him, literally was traced back to a firearm that was taken from Texas and was a part of Operation Can we cover Kaime Zapata?
We will.
I'm trying to bring my uh my buddy on for that one.
Oh, right, but you said you said.
Because he knew him personally.
Yeah.
Uh he was a good guy, guys.
He was very well liked.
I that you know, um, normally you know, people have uh if you have bad rep, people will tell you the guy was an asshole.
But he had a fantastic reputation.
Like, and no one spoke poorly of him.
He was a really good guy.
So I never met him, but uh the fact he got along with all the guys I get along with, you you already know, you know what I'm saying?
So uh all right, so um let's go ahead and uh he was really a hard worker.
That's what he was known for.
Matter of fact, funny story.
Really funny story.
Scary story.
Scary and funny at the same time.
So my mentor, right, was a guy, I'm not gonna say his full name, but his name was Fred.
I'll just say Fred.
Right?
If he's watching this, he knows exactly who he is.
My my first supervisor when I landed on the radar was Fred.
Fucking fantastic guy.
Taught me everything.
What he supported me at everything I did.
I was the human smoking group, but I was doing a drug investigation.
He was totally cool with me doing that, right?
Taught me it taught me so much.
He was the one that was supposed to go to Mexico and do that detail that Jaime died on.
My old supervisor, my mentor.
He was the one that was supposed to go down there and do that uh tour.
And last second, I think uh Fred had some obligations with his family.
Uh and Jaiman volunteered and said, No, bro, I'll go for you because they were good friends.
And he ended up dying.
Crazy.
Small world, right?
It should have been my supervisor.
You know, my mentor.
A situation just like that happened to my dad.
Just like that.
He had his birthday, and he had to transport some stuff to another uh state, and because he had his birthday, he asked one of his buddies, and he got killed and in the road.
It's wild.
But yeah, rest of peace to him is about to condolences to his family.
You know, he passed away, oh man, I think like 20 uh February of like 2011 or 2012.
Uh, but we'll cover that case for you guys.
I just want to go ahead and see if I can get my buddy on that that knew him personally so you guys can get better insight.
Because I never knew him personally.
He passed away before I became on his agent.
I was an intern when he passed away.
So um, but yeah, man, it was it was bad.
It was bad.
But I think all the people that uh that killed him were found and arrested.
Like they went on a huge manhunt to find those guys.
Even the narcos um turned those guys over.
Because they knew that the American government wanted them so bad, and it's bad for business, bro.
Killing federal agents is a bad, bad for business.
Yeah.
So they they don't want that.
They want to be able to, you know, get around the borders and everything.
So that's what ended up happening.
But yeah, my mentor was the one that was supposed to actually go on that trip and he and he uh last second Jaime volunteered for him.
Alright, uh let's go ahead and um go into the documentary that we have for y'all.
And guys, I hope you guys are enjoying the stream.
Um, like I said before, uh go ahead and click the um the Streamlabs link if you guys want to go ahead and get involved in the super chat into the show.
Um we got uh Department of Justice said two dollars DOJ in the house, went off to fix myself.
Now I'm better than ever.
Let's get this shit going.
Thank you, my friend.
All right, so uh quick question real quick.
Do you uh would you say that the ATF has been taking L's or take it has taken L's because it's they'll the government spoiled child, like because they have such uh position.
No, they're like the red-headed stepchild ATF.
What do you mean?
So the FBI gets by far the most um funding, the most support.
Yeah, exactly.
They're the they're the the spoiled child.
Okay.
ATF is like the redheaded stepchild that's like necessary.
Oh, okay.
Because they control firearms regulations.
So that and that that's a big reason why they they probably won't get disbanded.
People keep saying, oh, this band ATF.
It's never happening.
Like, I know like like Vivek Ramaswamy, by the way, right?
Mm-hmm.
He's running for president right now.
One of the things that he's campaigning under is saying, I'm gonna get I'm gonna um I'm gonna um disassemble the FBI.
Bro, it's never happening.
It's absolutely never happening.
Like the FBI's mission is way too important for him to be able to um discontinue them.
Yeah, they literally investigate the like the number one crime, they investigate terrorism.
They're the lead agency on terrorism.
Like, um, if I I because I remember I had a case and there was a terrorism nexus, I had to notify the FBI.
I had to do it.
You can you cannot do a terrorism investigation without them being involved.
Can't do it.
Espionage, FBI.
Public corruption, you can do it kind of, but the FBI's got to be involved.
So the the most serious crimes, especially with terrorism, they go to the bureau.
So they're not going anywhere.
They've been around since the 30s.
Hoover uh, you know, brought them out, they ain't going nowhere.
So when people say, Oh, we're gonna get rid of the FBI.
What I think they should do is get rid of like some of their um bureaucratic management that make things political, but as far as like getting rid of the bureau themselves itself, it's never happening.
That's interesting.
You know, and and and the thing is, like a lot of FBI agents are really cool.
It's uh it's the higher guys, the brass that are the assholes.
But the guys that are doing the cases and chilling, like bro, like they don't give like they're they're doing their cases, they're doing their thing, they're they're you know I mean, like a good friend of mine's FBI agent.
I talked to him not too long ago.
Uh, you know, cool guy, man, chill as fuck.
Nigerian dude.
Like he's like, you know, he's just chilling, doing his thing.
Okay.
So uh interesting.
Very interesting.
You know, so uh anyway.
Where where are we at here?
Which one?
Yeah.
Uh yeah, let's go to the let's go to the thing.
Which um 24 hours, yeah.
Most law enforcement are really down earth and chill, man.
It's the management and the guys at the higher levels that do all the bullshit.
They fucked up.
Yeah, okay.
No, not this one, another one.
24 hours.
Yep.
Is this it?
20, yeah.
Uh 24 hours, is this it?
That's what's I can't see because that you got you gotta take me off screen.
Yeah, one second, one second.
Sorry, guys, bear with us here.
Yeah, yeah, that one.
Yep, this one.
That one.
Yep.
Go ahead and enlarge it and let's uh let's run through the documentary and give some commentary.
Hey guys, do me a favor, we got 940 watching on YouTube right now.
Um, can you guys like the video and on Rumble?
If you guys are watching this on Rumble, we got another, I think 600 plus y'all watching on Rumble.
Um, if you guys don't mind, just like the video on Rumble as well.
And on YouTube.
Open up a tab and watch it on YouTube as well.
All right, let's go ahead.
April 18th, 1993.
David Koresh is the most notorious religious leader in the United States.
When Christ reveals himself, he's gonna be according to the book.
To his followers, he's a modern-day messiah.
He gave me every reason to keep believing.
Many feel he's been handpicked by God.
If he said the sky is green, they were gonna believe it.
I think David Kresh 100% believed that he was a prophet.
But to the authorities, he's a dangerous criminal.
This guy is a liar and a fraud, and he took sexual advantage of children.
He said it was his duty to have 21 children by virgins.
And soon he will leave them and the rest of his flock to their very own Armageddon.
We had no idea what we were in for.
This is the last 24 hours in the life of David Koresh.
Also, honorable mention here, guys.
Pause.
I want to tell you guys that Netflix actually came out with a really good documentary on this.
It's a three-part documentary.
I was contemplating playing it for you guys, but you know how YouTube is.
Potentially could have played it on Rumble, but it would have been like three hours plus.
So um, so if you guys really are interested in the Waco siege, watch that documentary.
It's pretty good.
Uh three parts on Netflix.
Let's keep going.
Waco, Texas.
April 18th, 1993.
12 30 p.m.
David Caresh, the leader of a doomsday cult known as the Branch Davidians, is barricaded in a religious center a hundred miles south of Dallas.
He's been seriously wounded in a shootout with law enforcement.
And in just 24 hours, he'll be dead.
Outside, more than 700 armed federal agents have surrounded the area.
You saw multiple law enforcement agencies, emergency equipment, uh, federal agencies, buses, uh, SWAT teams, civilians.
It had every element of humanity and law enforcement that you could possibly see.
Koresh and 83 of his most loyal followers, including 21 children, have been held up here at their Mount Carmel compound for the last 50 days.
We expected that it one by one we'd eventually all come out.
We're kind of waiting on God through, you know, to convey through David as to what we would have do.
I was very encouraged to continue on because um he gave me every reason to keep believing.
Employing more than 14 negotiators, the FBI work around the clock to persuade Koresh and his followers to surrender.
Leading those negotiations is Byron Sage.
David was a master of deception and a master of delay.
I guess he felt the longer he delayed, the more exposure he had on the world stage.
I mean, think about it.
By this time he had been on the front page of nearly every news magazine in the United States.
Um, can you pause it real quick, Mo?
Um, you guys are gonna see uh like a resemblance between this guy and Charles Manson.
If you remember I mentioned it in the Charles Manson case that they have certain similarities because they are very good at nurturing people with their beliefs and stuff.
He's very manipulative, so yeah.
Yeah, the quote these cult leaders, you guys are gonna notice all have a very similar traits.
They're all very charismatic, they all think that they're like damn near godly.
So um, and we did an episode on the um Manson stuff Manson as well, guys.
So if you guys want to go back and watch that one, that's on the playlist.
I will take it like a step further and say that these guys like Charles Manson on Devil Time.
Yeah.
Well, actually, you know what?
The funny thing too is that people often forget Manson actually never killed anybody himself.
Yeah.
He just he just got a bunch of chicks to do it for him.
Yeah, exactly.
Like he never actually killed anyone himself, guys.
The dude was uh a petty criminal that stole vehicles uh at best, but he never actually killed anyone himself.
And was very good at like, you know.
And they just released one of his uh one of the girls.
Yeah, yeah, I remember.
I remember.
Yeah, she made bow in California.
Uh David Courage liked the mu like music a lot.
He wanted to be a rock star.
Charles Manson, too.
So they can have like, you know, they you'll see.
Well, yeah, they were both aspiring musicians.
Yeah.
Yep.
So all right.
Let's uh let's keep going.
And for the FBI.
The intense media screen.
Uh make sure it's an 80 people for the people on the YouTube thing, and then also put the subtitles.
Bear with us here, guys.
We gotta try to make sure we get y'all the best experience.
Yeah, the best quality.
You good.
Some people notice that the last videos were in 720.
Yeah, we're good now, though.
They're in 1080p.
Okay.
We went back and fixed that.
So the average amount of time of a hostage barricade situation in the United States is about six to eight hours.
Hours.
The whole thing was just totally unprecedented.
Authorities view Koresh as a glorified con man who's brainwashed his followers.
One of those who followed him was Dana Okamoto.
He was really good at talking around things in using semantics to get you off track and into where he wanted to go.
Negotiating with the Davidians is not like negotiating with the local dope dealer or cop killer.
Because David and the other people in charge want to talk about the Bible.
And the FBI is not trained to talk about the Bible.
David Koresh believes that this standoff with authorities was prophesied long ago in the Bible.
David's predecessors.
And David too.
The scariest thing you go up against, guys, are people that you know think that they're acting on the you know, behalf of God.
Because then they're committed.
They're really committed, man.
So um, and they don't see anything wrong with what they're doing.
And in this case, that's how he felt.
So yeah.
Uh I do want to I do want to cite the Bible.
There in Matthews 24, 428, do mention uh Jesus said that there'll be more like me saying that they're the Christ, and this guy was definitely doing it.
Moe's going crazy with them.
That soundboard.
You're giving me scare bumps.
Okay, let's keep going.
Believe that the army of Babylon, believed to be an army of unbelievers, would attack them.
Now the so-called army of Babylon prepares to break the stalemate.
And according to Caresh is about to set off an apocalyptic prophecy.
A prophecy that David Koresh has been preaching for the last eight years as the leader of the branch Davidian cult.
An off shoots of the Seventh-day Adventists.
The Davidians' whole belief system centers on the literal interpretation of the book of Revelation.
And no one could interpret the word of God.
Quite like Caresh.
Mo, are you religious.
What to tell us how to explain it?
Can you explain the book of Revelations?
Um, I'm not that uh although I just know it explains it's the final book in the Bible.
Uh-huh.
That or Angie, Angie, you you went to church a lot.
Yeah, it's a it's a final book of the Bible that basically is predicting what is the what's the world gonna come to in the future.
Okay.
Okay.
Fair enough.
Explain it to us.
Okay.
Oh, it's called Revelation in English.
Okay, my bad.
Well, what do you call it in Spanish?
Uh Apocalypsis.
Oh that's what they call it in Spanish.
Yeah.
In Creole, we say Apocalypse.
Okay.
Are you familiar with it too?
Or no?
In Creole is called Um we say Apocalypse.
Ah, okay.
So it's basically the last, if I'm not mistaken, like the last book of the Bible um basically explains what the future is gonna hold.
Yeah.
Okay.
So David Crush, I guess, was with his hit his the branch dividians were heavily invested in in the red book of Revelations.
Yeah.
Okay.
And and it and also it looks like I'm looking at the YouTube stream, it just went unavailable.
So really?
Yeah.
Fantastic.
What?
Yeah.
No, the YouTube stream.
Oh, yes, a stream unavailable.
Uh knew that was gonna come.
Yeah.
That's fine.
Just give it a second and it'll it'll come back.
Well what we can do is uh we can just migrate it over to Rumble if we need to.
Let me look over on Rumble, see what's going on over there.
Uh I think we're still live on Rumble though, no problem.
I I predicted this might happen.
Yeah, we're still live on Rumble.
Yeah, we're still live on Rumble.
Yeah, YouTube being lame.
Yeah, what can you do, right?
I mean, I mean we love you YouTube.
We love you very much.
Why why they took it down?
Yeah, no, no, no, keep it keep it like this.
Let's wait until the YouTube stream comes back, and I'm gonna tell everybody.
Can you drop the Rumble uh link in there for the people?
Yes.
Mo.
We'll take this thing over to Rumble.
So it's gonna come back on YouTube.
The only thing is you just have to uh what you have to do is you just have to wait a little bit.
So drop the link in there for them on Rumble.
Yes.
Let me give them the link.
Bear with us here, guys.
So, real quick to say here uh the book of Revelation is a prophetic warning that is in line with the old testament with images of cosmic beast, plagues, and the writer and the writer with a sword coming out of his mouth mouth.
So these images are meant to capture our attention and paint a picture of God's victory over the cosmic powers of darkness.
The book of relations is meant to inspire patent endurance and faithful allegiance to Jesus by showing us a new city and a new haven.
Heaven, sorry, an earth.
So to give you guys an idea.
Looks like we're back on YouTube.
Alright, we're back on YouTube.
Hold on, don't play the stream yet.
Uh so alright, yeah, for all the YouTube people that are back.
Um don't worry, on the replay, this is gonna show.
It's just that what YouTube does, I knew this is gonna happen.
Anytime you like um react to stuff and they think that it could be potentially copyright, yeah, they'll just turn the stream off out of safety.
Like they'll just do it, they'll just do it.
And then even if it ends up not being anything, they do it out of uh caution.
So it is what it is.
But Mo can try to speed it up a little bit, like to to add like a little bit of speed.
I don't think it'll do anything.
You think so?
Nah, it won't do anything.
Because what'll end up happening is they're gonna so that part that was cut out from YouTube, they're gonna actually put it back on.
They're gonna put it back on.
So I think the best thing to do is just probably move it over to Rumble.
And then um everybody come on over to Rumble right now.
We're we'll pin the chat in there, and we could pull the Rumble chat up because it's gonna be a little bit more crazy.
Yeah, and we could give y'all what y'all want.
Hell, we could actually probably even play the Netflix version on Rumble.
Well, you wanna play though?
It's three episodes.
No, no, no.
I would play, I think the first episode covers most of what you need to.
They don't they just don't cover the um how they negotiated it.
But that's fine.
We can keep it.
We can play this.
We could play parts from the we could play parts from the Netflix one if we need to.
Okay.
Um we can also play the video that I sent, uh the the vice video, remember?