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Dec. 9, 2024 - MyronGainesX
03:20:03
Former Fed Explains CEO Assassination
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Welcome to Fred Reaction.
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Special agent with homelands investigations, okay, guys.
HSI.
This is what Fed Reacts covers.
Defender Jeffrey Williams, an associate of YSL did commit the felony.
So here's what 6-9 actually got.
This attack shifted the whole US government.
This guy got arrested.
Espionage.
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Trading secrets with the Russian.
John Wayne Gasey, aka the killer clown.
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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 at home.
It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
We're gonna go over his past, the Yangtai, so that we all make sense.
I'm a special agent with Homelands of Investigations, okay?
Okay, guys, HSI.
This is what Fed Reacts covers.
Defender Jeffrey Williams, an associate of YSL did commit the felony.
So here's what 6ix9ine actually got.
This attack shifted the whole US government.
This guy got arrested.
Espionage, okay.
Trading secrets with the Russian Alright, we're back.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to the stream.
Uh bear with me, guys.
Um give me ones.
I think we're live on YouTube and we're okay.
Um are we good on are we good on Rumble?
I think.
Let me double check here.
Give me once if we're good on Rumble.
Yep, Rumble, I think we're straight.
Are we frozen?
Frozen stream.
Is it frozen frozen screen right now?
What the hell?
Alright, let me fix this.
I don't know.
What the hell?
Alright, is that better?
No.
Here I know what I'm gonna do.
CC's not live.
I'm gonna fix CC right now.
Yeah, he's frozen.
Okay.
Hold on.
I'm gonna deactivate, reactivate.
Alright, good.
So that should be fixed.
Boom, you guys should be able to see me fine now.
So we shouldn't be frozen anymore on YouTube.
I don't know what the fuck, man.
OBS has been acting crazy lately, guys.
I don't know what it is.
Bear it with me here.
Um let me fix this right now.
Few ninjas on Castle Club.
Sorry for the delay.
I don't know what the hell.
Hey, hey.
Let me turn that off.
Let me do it again.
Bear with me, Castle Club Ninjas.
I got y'all niggas right now.
Um yeah, guys.
Um, I've been using OBS, and OBS has been acting funny.
I don't know why.
Um, but I am hopefully gonna make this right for you guys here in a second.
Uh so let me see here if we uh get this thing going.
Bear with me, guys.
I don't know why.
I don't know why.
What the fuck?
Hold on, guys.
I think Okay, so we're back here.
And now what the fuck?
Maybe is the start time off.
Oh, that's why.
Because they said, oh my god.
Okay.
So we're gonna just make it 847.
That's why.
Okay.
So guys, bear with me.
I think it's because we had the stream set up for another time.
So that's why that happened.
all right Hmm.
Alright, cool.
We're good now.
My bad, guys.
I think we're good on Castle Club now.
We're live on Castle Club.
I apologize for that.
We should be good now.
Boom.
Alright.
Okay.
Should be good.
Uh let me see here.
Think we should be good.
I don't know why.
We're live on Rumble.
We're live on all the platforms.
All right, cool, we're good.
Bro, it is not easy doing all this button by myself behind the scenes.
I ain't gonna lie to you, oh man.
It is not easy at all.
But we are live on all the platforms.
We're live on X, we're live on uh we're live on X, we're live on Rumble, we're live on YouTube, we're live everywhere.
It's not easy doing all this, but by myself.
So we are good.
Now I'm double check-in.
Alright.
Sorry for the delay, guys.
Alright, Angie, you want to say what's up to the people?
Yeah.
What's up, people?
How are you?
I hope you all follow me on Twitter.
I've been posting interesting stuff there lately.
So yeah, follow me on Twitter.
I saw Angelica with two A's at the end and two.
A number two.
Yeah, that's about it.
That's it.
You know what I have anything else to say?
Oh, so follow Leah and Frank on Instagram.
It's Leah and Frank.
A and D Frank.
I'll share it on.
Let me find it.
That's actually a very interesting Instagram about our dogs.
They have a great life.
So you can be more envious about it.
Just follow us there.
And me on Twitter, Myron on Twitter.
He has a new Twitter.
This is the dog one right here, guys.
Hold on, let me screen share.
This is it right here.
This is the uh the Instagram.
So if you guys want to see what's going on with Frank.
Um it's a very fun Instagram.
It used to be Leas only, but since we got Frank, it's now Frank and Leah.
Or Leah and Frank.
Um shit, that's my dad there.
Um, but yeah, follow me there.
Um we're gonna be in Vegas next week.
Tuesday.
Starting next week.
Tuesday.
This week.
Uh we're gonna do some podcasts there, some stuff, some interviews, exactly.
A lot of interviews, guys.
Yeah, it's gonna be a bunch of days there.
So uh let us know if it's cold.
If it's not, we're backing for a cold weather.
Uh winter is here.
But yeah, guys.
Um, thank you for all your support for the supporters and the haters too, because you guys we got a lot of them, those.
We got a lot of haters, yeah.
But those are the ones that are making us monetize.
So, yeah, thank you guys for following us and for all the support and known support that you actually give us.
I think there's some of them right now in the next chat, which is always comical.
Yeah, they're always they're always hating.
But that's that's that's engagement though.
Yeah, that's engaged, so bring it up.
Bring it up.
Keep it coming.
Keep it coming.
We're here for you guys.
Yeah, that's about it.
Alright, so okay, guys, so today we're gonna be covering the um the CEO assassination.
Um, wild stuff, guys, absolutely wild stuff.
Um let me put this.
Wait, will this not go here?
Alright, okay, whatever.
OBS being OBS.
Alright, um, so yeah, it's always um interesting.
So, uh here we go.
Brian Thompson, CEO of United Healthcare was shot and killed outside an entrance to the New York Hilton Midtown in Manhattan, New York City on December 4th, 2024.
He was in the city to attend an annual investors' meeting for United Health Group, the parent company of Molt of United Healthcare, whose headquarters are in the suburbs of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Authorities believe the attack was not random and are investigating it as an assassination.
Guys, give me ones in the chat, by the way.
If you guys can hear me nice and clear, give me ones.
I uh adjusted my microphone.
Uh shout out to Mo helping me out with that word.
The mic can be a bit further from me and I can still speak to you guys.
So give me ones if the audio is still good.
Um I know you guys are able to hear Angie fine.
Yeah.
Give me ones.
Alright, cool, cool, cool.
All right.
No worries, no worries.
All right.
Um, yeah, and I love how you know it's interesting.
Some of you guys are saying, oh, Myron, you're going soft, blah, blah.
Which one is it?
Am I gay?
Am I going soft?
Do I not like girls?
Which one is it, guys?
Like, pick one.
Yeah, big pick your battle.
Yeah, man.
Um, all right, so anyway, authority uh authorities believe the attack was not random or investigated as an assassination.
The shooting occurred early in the morning, and suspect described as a white man fled the scene as of December 8th, the assailant has not been apprehended.
Thomas has been shot.
Thomas had been CEO since April 2021.
His family reported that he had received threats in the past.
Now, look, guys, let's talk about the insurance uh world real fast.
So in America, in the United States, we don't have universal health care.
And since we don't have universal health care, the healthcare in the United States, a lot of the times is contingent upon relying on insurance companies to fulfill medical bills and obligations.
So in the United States, winds up happening is you pay for insurance, you pay your monthly, and when you go see a doctor, right?
It's covered partially by insurance.
Most of the time it's the majority, depending on your insurance, how good they are.
But the insurance companies, right, they're not in the business to actually help people.
They're in the business to be profitable.
That's what it is.
It's making them money.
And a lot of the times what they do is they don't necessarily um how do I say this?
Adhere to the claims.
What do I mean by this?
They try to get around paying you out.
Let's say you have a surgery, let's say you had a pre-existing condition, and then they find this out, they'll say, oh, well, you know, we did an investigation and we found out that um you don't really qualify because you had a pre-existing condition.
Or this procedure that you're doing isn't covered by insurance, right?
So what ends up happening a lot of the times is people don't get coverage, people don't aren't able to get procedures done, and they get sick, they die.
A lot of terrible things happen, right?
And whether you're a left-wing individual or a right-wing individual, this is really political.
This is just a problem in general in America.
It's a very big problem we have.
I'd say it's one of the biggest issues we have is healthcare in this country.
Um, you know, sometimes people will try to politicize and say that it's a left-wing or right-wing issue.
No, this is a fucking problem no matter what wing uh what wing you subscribe to.
So, with that said, obviously, people that run these companies are gonna be the most liked people because they are responsible for facilitating the insurance business, which is a dirty fucking business.
I've said this before, I'll say it again.
I said this on the X-base, but insurance companies are in the business of not necessarily delivering said service.
It's the only business in America that I could think of where they do everything in their power to not render the service that they're paid for, right?
And as a matter of fact, when it's time for them to render the service that they're paid for, they do everything in their power to not render you that service to save themselves money.
This is why they employ investigators, this is why they employ the fraud departments, that's why they employ actuaries.
They have entire departments dedicated to not getting you paid for your ailments.
So, now that we've kind of set the stage, because I know we have a lot of uh international viewers that watch us, right, that are seeing this from afar, where you might have universal health care or you have um some type of system where you know healthcare isn't really a question like this.
In America, we don't have that, guys.
America is extremely reliant upon insurance companies, and insurance companies kind of dictate whether you're going to get the health care or not.
All right, give me ones in the chat that makes sense.
Explaining the insurance industry in general, because I think that's very important to kind of set the stage as to going into this um this topic.
Also, follow me on X guys, Myron Gaines X, you guys can see it right there.
On X and on Instagram.
I do a bunch of um base tweets on there.
I'm a lot more political on X for obvious reasons.
So check me out over there.
Okay, that makes sense.
Awesome.
Glad I'm glad.
Because we got a lot of international viewers, guys.
I know some of y'all are like, Myra, well, this is basic shit.
I know it's basic shit for us as Americans, but we have a lot of international guys that don't understand how insurance and health care works in the United States.
Uh Meyer Jr. is back and says, Mary, could you debate young Don?
He's actually the only FBA who can actually debate without being immature.
And he said his respects you still.
Yeah, sure.
I mean, I'm gonna do a debate with um Dean Withers uh whenever he's uh ready to not be a coward.
Oh yeah, I saw that.
Yeah, yeah.
Fucking soy boy wants to.
Oh, you guys want me to talk about Assad?
You know, I was debating whether I was gonna talk about that tonight or tomorrow.
Uh yeah, oh man.
Not good for the United States that Assad got toppled, by the way.
Not good at all.
Um okay, on Council Club, we got uh Michakabas says W. Myred, thank you.
Uh HK says, thank you for sir for the entertainment value every day.
Got you.
Uh, where's the CC Discord link?
Myor Niss.
Uh, and then W Mar from Adam Russell.
Uh, Noble can help you guys with that, with the with the stuff.
Yes, guys, I'm live everywhere.
I'm live on Rumble over live on YouTube and live on X. You can watch me any of those three places.
I got my live feature back on X, which is always nice.
Um, okay.
So let's get into we're gonna react to some videos here.
I'm gonna give you guys my professional um take on a lot of this stuff.
But that's what went down, basically, right?
So this guy assassinates him.
This is uh a CC TV footage right here from uh the hit.
Um he shoots him, I think uh two or three times.
But the first video we're gonna react to is let's go ahead and react to He was not Jewish for the one who asked he was Jewish, he was Oh no, he's not, he's not.
The the um yeah, no, he was not.
Brian Thompson.
Brian Thompson, yeah.
He was from Iowa.
Uh Minnesota, I think.
Oh, it says here that's him right here.
Oh, he was born in Iowa, but he's from Minnesota.
Um, Brian Thompson, he uh was an American businessman who served as a chief executive officer, CEO of United Healthcare, the insurance arm of United Health Group from April 2021 until his killing in December 2024, uh Thompson born in Ames, Iowa, and received a bachelor of business administration with a major in accounting at the University of Iowa in 1997.
So let's go, and we got a couple of videos that are gonna react to, but we're gonna go ahead and start first with um the sidebar with uh law and crime.
Um I'll be pausing it to give you guys my um commentary because I got a lot to say on this case.
I talked a lot about it on a Twitter space earlier, but I figured you know what?
We need to do this on Fed Reacts.
Yeah.
And also, guys, as police try to turn it down the if you guys got questions, super chat them in.
If you guys are watching on YouTube, FNF Super Chat.com.
I'll put the link right here for you guys.
If you guys are watching on Rumble, Rumble Ranson In or on Calce Club, uh sending a donation through Cast Club.
Let me uh put the little link real quick for you guys, because I know some of y'all are probably gonna have a bunch of questions on this.
There it is right there, guys.
FF Superchat.com.
It's right above the Fed Reacts.
Um just donate on there and uh we can get you involved in the stream.
Love would love to talk to you guys, answer guys' questions.
Um, because definitely this one is a very, very interesting one.
I'm a man who callously gunned down the CEO of United Healthcare outside of a very popular hotel in the heart of midtown Manhattan.
But as more information and surveillance photos get released, it is only adding to the strangeness of this case.
We're gonna dig into some of the most bizarre details with a retired NYPD detective.
Welcome to the sidebar.
Presented by Law and Crime, Jesse Weber.
Can you increase the volume?
Search for the gunman who targeted the CEO of one of the largest healthcare insurers in the United States continued in New York City today.
And now the investigation is stretching to more parts of the country.
By now, you likely know what happened on Wednesday morning outside of the Hilton Hotel in midtown Manhattan at around 6 45 a.m.
United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was walking towards the Hilton from his hotel across the street, arriving early for an investors' conference that day.
He had come in for the conference from Minnesota, where the healthcare insurer is based, and then surveillance video shows a man in a dark hooded jacket and face mask, step out from behind a car and open fire on Thompson, shooting him multiple times.
NYPD investigators say the video appears to show the shooter clearing what appears to be a jam from the firearm, but continues to shoot.
And we're gonna talk about that.
Um Colin New York did a video on this with the gun.
Um, and we'll watch that too.
Shoot before making his way or his escape, I should say, down an alleyway.
And at some point, the suspect gets on an e-bike, and he goes into Central Park.
And Thompson was rushed to a hospital.
Well, that's crazy.
There's this uh so a lot of questions that I get is yo, was this guy a professional, etc.?
Um, this guy made a lot of fucking mistakes, which we're gonna go into here, guys.
But getting one of those bikes was definitely one of them.
He died.
Which these bikes are tried.
For those of you that are unaware, right?
So uh hubway bikes, um, these bikes that you can rent.
So this started becoming a thing back in like I remember like 2012, right?
I was living in Boston.
I remember they had these hubway bikes where you can rent them, you swipe your card or whatever, and you're able to rent these bikes.
Um, and these are all over the place in metropolitan cities.
Um, and for a lot of you guys that live in the middle of nowhere, you might not be familiar with it.
But basically, you go out to these things.
Um, they have GPS tracking on them.
You can find they can find them wherever they need to be in case they're stolen.
They have the same thing with the scooters.
You basically swipe your card and you're able to use it.
So um, that was a big mistake by this guy.
Friday afternoon, the shooter has not been identified publicly or taken into custody.
But they know who he is, right?
And I predicted this.
When this originally all popped off, I was like, yo, they're gonna have this guy fucking identified within 24 to 48 hours.
And as I expected, they had him identified immediately.
The FBI is involved in this investigation, which I called.
Um the ATF, I guarantee, is also involved in this investigation, which I called, and the reason why is because the silence was used in this firearm.
Um, any time a firearm is used in an investigation, especially something like this, the ATF is more than likely gonna be involved.
What is the ATF?
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Farms, and Explosives.
Their mandate is to investigate crimes that um utilize um firearms and/or explosives.
Um they are the lead agency when it comes to firearms offenses, and they have the ability to look up um when a gun uh when a gun is purchased through something called e-trace, okay?
So anytime a gun is purchased in the United States, there has to be a form filled out.
It's I think it's the 4473 form, ATF.
And um that form, which is a form actually that got um Hunter Biden in trouble and Kodak Black, where they lied on it, um, Hunter Biden saying that he wasn't a drug user, and Kodak Black saying that he wasn't under indictment.
Um's up happening with these forms is it shows where the gun was originally purchased.
They run the serial number and they figure it out.
So the ATF has the capability of doing that, right?
Normally it takes a week, but in a case like this high profile, I wouldn't be surprised if they had all they didn't already, if they don't have the weapon yet, but they're gonna try to find it.
But when they do, and they run that serial number, they're able to figure this stuff out.
So ATF is definitely involved.
FBI is gonna be involved because the individual assassinated the guy.
So let's go ahead and real quick and explain murder.
Um I've explained this before, but I think we got a lot of new viewers here, especially on X that might not understand this.
So let me kind of explain this real fast.
So murder guys is almost always a state exclusive crime, okay?
Um in the United States, we have both federal violations and state violations.
Murder almost always falls under the state's jurisdiction, right?
Premeditated murder, manslaughter, et cetera.
Right.
So the feds come in and take murder when there is uh a trigger of something that creates a federal nexus.
What do I mean by this?
I mean that when there is something that occurs that affects interstate commerce, that affects interstate travel, that maybe utilizes a firearm, maybe it was in the commission of a federal crime.
So I'll give you an example.
I'll give you guys a couple of examples, right?
So Little Dirk right now, as you guys know, he's going through, and I broke down his case as well.
He's going through a murder for hire investigation that's being led by the feds, the FBI namely out of Los Angeles.
Why are the feds taking on a murder fire case?
Well, because to commit the murder for hire, he facilitated the travel, interstate transportation of individuals and conspired with them utilizing phones, credit cards, etc.
hotels, you know, all this other stuff, and that affects interstate commerce for the purposes of murdering someone.
Boom.
Now it's federal, murder for hire, right?
Another example.
Let's say me and Angie rob a bank, right?
With Mo and Chris.
Moe's the getaway driver, Chris is one of the robbers, I'm one of the robbers, Angie, one of the robbers, right?
We go into the fucking thing and we say, hey, give us your fucking money.
Next thing I know, I hear, Angie fucking accidentally shoots someone.
Of course it's me.
And kills them, yeah, the female.
And I'm like, what the fuck?
And then Chris starts stuttering, he gets nervous, and he goes crazy.
And he shoots, right?
And he fucking kills somebody.
We run out of there, terrified with some of the bags of money, Moe's in the car, and we jump in and we fucking drive off, right?
And Frust is back at the house and he's helping us count the money, right?
We eventually all get arrested.
Guess what's gonna happen?
All of us are gonna get hit with murder, right?
And probably a RICO.
Um, because we're an organized criminal uh criminal faction.
A murder was committed during the f or during a federal crime, a bank robbery, guys, is a federal crime, um, investigated exclusively by the FBI typically, um, because banks are for FDI and C FDI FDIC insured.
So we commit a federal crime by committing Bank robbery, and then during the course of the federal crime, we killed someone, right?
Then the last example I give you guys is we talked touched on it briefly as Rico.
So the mafia, when they were committing their crimes, right?
When they're extorting motherfuckers, you know, loan shark and them, uh gambling rings, etc.
Sometimes they would commit acts of violence and or murder to um ensure power, intimidate uh witnesses, intimidate opposition, etc.
So these murders that they committed were for the benefit of Locosa Nostra, aka the Enterprise, which is typically how Rico charges are charged.
They charge the organization.
That will be counted as a murder to be charged federally.
Give me ones in the chat that makes fucking sense.
We're cooking a night, boyos.
Give me ones in the chat, that all makes sense for you.
Now you guys understand the difference between murder charts in the state versus murder charts by the feds.
Give me one of the child that makes sense.
I'm looking at all the chats.
I'm looking at um X, Rumble, YouTube.
Sweet.
Castle Club, awesome, awesome.
Okay.
Right?
Now, now a state example, guys.
Um Ted Bunny runs around and kills a bunch of people.
Premeditated murder, right?
Um, that would be state cases most of the time.
Okay.
Um it wouldn't necessarily be a federal case.
And even if you traveled interstate, right, unless he kidnapped one of the women and took him, took her to another state, then killed her, then that would be the federal nexus.
But if he's just killing a chick in the state, that would not be federal.
Does that make sense, guys?
So serial killer cases are almost always state cases.
All right, cool.
Investigators are reported.
And that is why the FBI is involved because the way that he killed this guy, um, this might have been a conspiracy and it might have been a murder for hire.
So that's why the FBI's evolved.
Also, um, obviously a crime like this is kind of crazy.
Um, and it happened in New York City.
So, you know, the feds are gonna be involved.
I wouldn't be surprised if they didn't create a federal task for uh sorry, uh task force for this particular case.
So to talk about the latest developments and these strange details that are coming out of this case, I want to bring back onto the show retired NYPD detective Dave Sarney.
Uh Dave, so good to see you.
Thanks so much for coming on to talk about this.
So we talked uh on Wednesday after this happened.
Has your analysis.
If you guys want me to bring up the speed to 1.5, let me know.
If not, just put uh 1.25 if you like it the way it is, guys.
It's changed since then.
But what you're looking at now, everything got broken down.
Now we say this you it's the most multi-faceted investigation.
You're talking about we're still looking for him, but we're looking about what he did beforehand.
And that's giving us a lot more detail.
Uh we have items that are up for DNA analysis and for ballistics showcasings, uh, the water bottle.
That's being analyzed.
We're waiting for the results on that.
What you're seeing now is eventually an idea.
So just so you guys know, on the scene, there was a phone, a burner phone, where he made a phone call right before the murder, right?
About 15 minutes prior, 10 to 15 minutes prior.
Then he um had a water bottle that he drank that he purchased at a Starbucks prior, and um there were shell casings there that had the the words uh denied the pose and delay, which um, you know, are typically common of insurance uh industries to make some money, right?
To to delay the process of dispersing money or not dispersing it at all.
The next part of that will be is where is he?
And it looks like you know, we see that he might have left and came from Atlanta for his bus in November.
So now you're gonna probably target.
Okay, bus travel, guys.
Very um, this is kind of an underrated uh methodology as a criminal.
So using buses, guys, is actually fairly um good.
Um, granted, he kind of did this in New York City, which is a very moderated place to be.
But um, using buses is you is used a lot by criminals because um it's a lot harder to track.
Um you can easily get on a bus without real identification.
Um they don't a lot of the times they might not be as sophisticated with camera systems, etc.
So traveling with a bus actually isn't that bad of an idea.
And actually, for drug trafficking guys, it's a huge way to traffic drugs.
Um I remember I had a case against the Lion Kings, and um they would often smuggle cocaine from South Texas, destined for Chicago by utilizing Greyhound buses and putting it on their person because the security is lax, um identification is lax, the camera systems and these bus stations aren't that sophisticated a lot of the times.
So um bus travel is actually very commonly used by crooks.
I was gonna say that I thought in New York, most of the buses have are monitored by cameras.
Yeah, but it seems that he used like a greyhound, which is like an interstate bus.
Oh not this, not the um city transit buses.
Yeah, well, they might by now.
I haven't been on a greyhound in damn near 10 years.
Um, but they're not as um tracked.
Okay.
Like you could get on with a fake ID.
They're not really gonna be like, oh, this doesn't look real.
It's not like the same security as the airport.
Okay.
Down the southern areas of the United States.
And what only that is the announce of the video, which is taking place from Hoyne from the point of the shooting backwards has made a big difference in developing more information.
Because the more information you get by the video, get you to those locations.
You can interview people, they can give you more details as to what they what this shooter said prior to the shooting.
And if you're lucky, we'll find out where he was after the shooting.
So that's what you know, it's too take some time.
And that's the whole thing.
It's not a it's not a show that's older.
Let me ask you this.
So you have this coordination between the N-Bite and NYPD, the Marshall Service, the FBI, who has tremendous resources to use and particularly technical.
Okay, so um Marshall Service, you guys are probably wondering, Mar, why the fuck are the Marshalls involved?
Um the Marshalls guys, their um their expertise is fugitive apprehension.
So the Marshall Service has three main missions fugitive apprehension, court security in the federal courts, and witness protection.
Um the two biggest things that they do though, because witness protection is that isn't that common, is um is court security and apprehension.
So they are probably one of the best agencies at finding fugitives, right?
Now, when I was an agent, right?
I had a very good relationship with the U.S. Marshal Service, and the reason why is because I was arresting people all the time.
Now, when you're doing cases and you're getting arrest warrants for people, it's not as fun as people think it is, right?
So let's go through the process.
I go ahead, I do my investigation, and I go ahead and I go to um I go to a judge and I get an arrest warrant, right?
Now I gotta go fucking find the guy, right?
You gotta do surveillance, you gotta find him.
A lot of times criminals don't like to be at the same place multiple nights in a row.
They're sleeping in different places, they're traveling, etc.
So that could be very time consuming, guys.
You can easily spend weeks finding the guy, betting him down, watching on surveillance, getting a pattern of life, then exit then deciding when you're gonna execute the arrest warrant, right?
So what I would do was anytime I got my arrest warrant, you guys know what I did?
I would delegate that arrest warrant to the United States Marshals, and they would go find them for me, right?
They'd go find them, they'd bet him down, they would do surveillance.
That's what they do.
They don't carry cases, they don't do investigations, they just go find the fucking guy, right?
Once they find him, they call me.
Hey, agent photo, we got your guy.
I wouldn't say that because he's my buddy, his name was Tom.
Was it Tom?
Tomas.
Either way, he would hit me up.
Hey, bro, we found your guy.
Um he's here.
All right, cool.
We're gonna go do a roundup on Wednesday, 6 a.m.
We're gonna pick up 10 other guys for other agencies.
You want to roll with us?
Sure.
I call my supervisor.
Hey, Wednesday morning, I'm gonna be out with the marshals.
Cool.
I'm gonna go pick up my guy with them.
All right, awesome.
Um, just give me a copy of the ops plan.
Sweet.
Right?
Because I I've explained what operations plans are before in the past.
If you guys want me to go through it again, I can, but anyway, I don't want to get too much into weeds here.
Um, so I go out there, we get uh, we, you know, but my guy might be third or fourth on the list, right?
They go get their other guys.
Now it's time to go get my guy.
I'm sitting in the fucking car, they go, they hit the fucking door, they get him, right?
Or sometimes I'd go in with them, depending on how I felt that day.
We go, we get him, they bring them out.
Hey, you wanna you want to talk to him?
Blah blah blah, because obviously the best time to interview the guy is right after he's arrested, right?
So I let the marshals be the bad guys.
They go in, they fuck him up, they get him out.
He's all roughed up and shit.
And then I'm like, hey man, look, you want to talk to me, bro?
Like, look, I know these guys are being assholes to you or whatever.
But I'm the good guy, because I'm not, I didn't do nothing to him, right?
But he doesn't know that I'm the case agent.
I'm the one that got the arrest warrant for him.
Um, and then, and then he'll be like, uh, sometimes it'll be like, oh, fuck you, I don't want to talk, or sometimes like, yeah, you know, well, we'll we'll see.
And then what I'll do is um we'll take them back to the um where the marshals because the marshals process all the prisoners too, guys.
FYI.
That's why I will do this as well.
Because now I don't gotta worry about bringing him to the jail, I don't gotta worry about processing him, I don't gotta worry about shit.
Okay.
So I um so I get him, you know.
Uh I tell my guy from the Marshall Service, because you always want to interview him uh, you know, with another agent.
We put I'm like, hey, dude, I need to interview this guy.
Can you come with me as a witness?
Sure, no problem.
I bring him in, I read him his rights, etc.
I start asking him questions.
Boom, boom, boom.
And then after that's done, the marshals take him.
I don't gotta worry about should I go home.
Now, this is huge because I didn't have to bet him down.
I didn't have to find him.
I didn't have to do hours of surveillance.
I didn't have to fucking look get his family members and figure out where he's at.
I'd have to go into the house to get him.
I'd have to transport him.
And most importantly, I don't have to process him or put him in the jail.
They do all of that shit.
So that is why the marshals are involved in this case.
Give me ones in the chat if that makes sense for y'all ninjas.
I know I'm going in the weeds here and I'm really explaining things for you guys, but I like I said before, I told you guys, nobody is better than me on the fucking internet about this shit because I really did this shit.
I can explain every agency to a fucking T. Because I've worked with them, I know what their strengths are, their weaknesses are, et cetera.
That is why the U.S. Marshal Service is involved in this investigation.
They also have really good technology for betting guys down.
Sweet, makes sense?
Perfect.
If you're gonna put a two in the chat, tell me two and then a why, guys.
I'm here to educate.
If you're gonna put a two, put two and then say why.
That's not how Walker, Texas Ranger used to do it.
Come on, nigga.
Dude, good TV show, bro.
Come on, man.
So uh, yeah.
Okay.
Let's keep going.
Logical resources.
A, what we'll get into this.
How quickly could they get results?
Someone said in the chat too, I'm black.
Back, let's say on DNA testing.
And B, will we the public know?
If there is a manhunt, shouldn't we know as soon as they identify who that DNA belongs to and match it to, let's say it's the suspect uh or the person of interest identified in the middle of the city.
Okay, this is a good question.
So he's gonna ask him, shouldn't they put the name out there once they have him identified?
Photos that they can say, we match the DNA, that's the person.
Should the public know immediately?
When it comes to these type of cases, you know, you want to keep some of the information close to the chest.
And I think with this, you want to see if you could apprehend the once a person is identified, you want to see if you apprehend the individual as fast as possible without notifying.
Once you lose sight of that chance of getting him immediately, then maybe you could release that information about the identification.
Okay, he's spot on about this.
So look, the last thing you want to do is depend on the public.
Why?
Because the public is gonna give you information a lot of times that isn't accurate, they're gonna mislead you, you're gonna have cloud chasers, you're gonna have weirdos.
The zodiac killer, to give you guys an example.
When they put it out, hey, we need help, etc.
Wanted, like 70,000 people came forward and said, I'm the zodiac.
Yeah.
Right?
So you want to really avoid involving the public if you don't need to, right?
Um, when you do involve the public, that typically means that law enforcement is it is kind of hit a sticking point and they can't identify the individual anymore.
In this case, they know who the guy is.
I called this days ago.
That they knew we're gonna find out who this motherfucker was in a few days, right?
They know who he is, and at this point, releasing who he is is going to allow him to know that they know who he is, and he might scare them off, right?
Or um, it might tip their hand.
So they're not gonna notify the public who he is because they know who he is, and they probably more than likely know where he is.
So they know who he is and they probably know where he is.
AK the U.S. Marshall Service, right?
Really good at locating people.
They have technology to do that, right?
Some of it is uh actually sensitive that I can't even tell you guys on air.
But what I will say is they're good at finding people.
That's what they do.
So the fact that they're not releasing this tells me not only do they know who he is, they probably know where he's at as well.
Now, an example of when law enforcement will ask the public for help.
Let's go back in time.
Back in 2013, if you guys remember, Boston Marathon, a bomb went off.
A couple of bombs went off at the finish line on Boylson Street, right there.
And I know this because I was in college at the time myself.
I was um attending Northeastern University, and I was actually writing my thesis paper to get my bachelor's degree, right?
For my graduate degree.
My sorry, my uh undergrad degree.
So, For those that don't remember, the way they um did that case was the bombs went off and nobody knew who the fuck did it because obviously it was a crowded area, nobody knew, and the cops were clueless.
So the FBI courted off all of Boylston Street and were going through.
They figured out that it was pressure cookers, they figured out it was a terrorism attack, etc.
So what they ended up doing was they pulled all the CCTV footage for all the stores in that area on Boylston Street, right?
Which is where was it boy?
Yeah, it's on Boylston.
Yeah.
The Boston Marathon finishes on Boylston.
You covered that card.
Right in front of Marathon Bot Marathon Sports, yes.
And I covered this case in detail, by the way, on Fed Reacts.
If you guys want to go ahead and watch it.
I did a four-hour fucking stream on this, broke it down in crazy detail.
It was one of my favorite streams.
Because I was there when it happened.
When the bombs went off, guys, I was literally writing my fucking paper a couple of blocks away.
And funny enough, the the paper was on the home Department of Homeland Security, and how we had not had a successful terrorist attack.
I kid you guys not.
Little little side tag here.
My thesis paper, I had talked about how the Department of Homeland Security had done a good job of preventing terrorism, which it was created in 2003.
And my argument was there had not been a successful terrorist attack on American soil since 9-11.
I kid you guys not.
I had just finished writing that paragraph, and I get a fucking phone call from my supervisor.
He's like, hey, Myron, where are you at?
And I'm like, uh, I'm writing my paper.
Because I had like uh I had my phone off, guys.
I had my um I had my phone off, I had my blinds closed.
I was like really cramming to write this paper because I had been procrastinating.
I needed to get it get it in within a couple of hours.
So I turned my phone on, right?
And I saw a bunch of missed calls from my supervisor.
So I call him back and I'm like, uh, hey, what's up?
Uh Jason, what's what's going on?
Hey, what are you doing?
And I'm like, oh shit.
Was I supposed to be in the office today?
Right?
Because I was intern at the time.
And um, and he's like, it's like, uh, no, no, are you okay?
I was like, I'm fine.
It was like, a bomb went off at the finish line.
A Boyle Ston.
I was like, what?
Like, I'm like, what the fuck?
Like, uh, you know, like you don't hear, like, I was like, what?
He's like, yeah, are you okay?
And I was like, yeah, I'm fine.
He was like, yeah, two bombs went off.
Um, we're rolling out there.
Um, I know you're writing your paper, come to the office tomorrow.
And I was like, oh shit.
So I turned on the news, and it's fucking pandemonium, right?
Pandemonium.
The city got locked down, everything, right?
Um, but the thing that was crazy was I had written that fucking thing in my paper.
I had to change that shit.
I had to literally change that shit.
Bro, I had to retype the fucking thing out.
It's bad.
I was like, God damn.
So uh, so yeah, bro.
Like, I was pissed because I had like listed like a bunch of um cases that they had stopped the terrorists before the attack happened, right?
Um, and then that shit happened, I was like, God damn, bro.
I was tight, man.
But um, but yeah.
Um, but going back to what I'll say, oh yeah, sorry.
Besides that story of my L. So when that bombing happened, guys, right?
Going to the identification thing with with suspects, when that bombing originally happened, guys, what ended up going down was that no one knew who these guys were.
All they knew was they had some guys with suspicious backpacks walking around.
So what the FBI did was, and then I'll never forget this shit.
They released the guys.
Matter of fact, let's let's go through uh your old video?
No, not that one.
This press release.
I'll give you guys an example of when the police need help and they do a press release.
Uh boom.
I'll never forget this day right here.
I was in the office watching this shit, right?
Um, and this is an example, guys.
So obviously NYP and the FBI is not doing this with this guy because they already know who he is.
But when the F when the police do need help and they don't know who the individuals are, they hold a press conference like this.
And here's an example.
Today we are listing the public's call boy.
Okay, this is Rich Dolores.
Um, I've met this guy before.
He's he was he's the uh special agent in charge of the FBI field office at the time.
And then this guy right here, this is Bruce Folkart.
He is was the special agent in charge of HSI Boston Field Office at the time.
Um this is the top guy, this is for Massachusetts State Police right here.
I think this is the U.S. attorney, and then I don't know who this guy is.
Um, But yeah, all hands were on deck when this shit happened, guys.
Y'all against some insider shit, man.
Like the goddamn video.
Who the fuck else can give you guys this level of detail when it comes to law enforcement background?
I am the top fucking guy when it comes to this shit.
Ain't nobody on YouTube got more experience than me when it comes to this shit.
Cause I actually did this stuff.
I was in Boston and was involved in this case when this shit happened.
...fine the two suspects.
After a very detailed analysis of photo, video, and other evidence...
So fun fact.
Y'all want to know?
Who found this surveillance footage?
It was HSI.
It was Aegis.
My old agency.
Our child pornography group.
One of the agents there.
I won't say his name, but I know who it is.
He was the one that went through the CT2 C C TV footage and found these motherfuckers.
Because all hands were on deck.
And like the thing is that this he was a certified forensic agent.
So he went into the computers and he analyzed all the footage, and he was one of the guys that found these guys that said, yo, who are these fucking guys in the backpacks?
It wasn't the the press conference that the people, the public got to see these pictures for the first time.
Yes.
This is this is the.
It never got leaked.
No.
Oh, no.
These were the first time that the this was the first time that the FBI revealed these photos.
Okay.
Um of these guys.
Because at this point they they knew who they were, but they didn't know who they were, if that makes sense.
Yeah, yeah.
They knew who the individuals were, but they didn't have identified.
So they're hoping that someone can help identify them.
Of course.
So that's why they released it.
And this is an example of when the feds are gonna, or the feds of the police are gonna release the information of a suspect.
So I'm giving you guys kind of the contrast between CEO assassin, they know who it is, versus when they don't know who it is.
We are releasing photos of these two suspects.
They are identified as suspects.
When I say child, a CP group, guys, they investigated child pornography and they would arrest those guys in that group.
So don't worry, guys.
We're we're fine.
I know some of y'all worried, like, oh shit.
But yeah, like the video, guys, um, on on YouTube, please, uh, helps with the algorithm.
And um share it, man.
Share this thing if you guys are enjoying this.
But yes, it was HSI that was critical to identifying um these guys going through the CTV footage.
Cause because when this went down, right?
Just a quick little thing here.
The FBI had a huge command post in the office, right?
And every single agency was working on this shit.
DEA was there, they don't even have fucking terrorism authority.
Fucking postal inspectors, everyone was helping out.
So HSI was a critical component to assisting with this, and our um our child exploitation group, we call them a child porn group, CP group, whatever, they were really helpful and helping go through the footage and find these guys.
Because we're talking about hours upon hours of footage because they took um they were scanning through footage from all the different businesses on Boylston Street.
For some of you guys that don't aren't aware of Boylson Street, we're talking about.
Look, just so you guys get an idea here, Boylston.
How far were you from this street?
Uh like not even a mile.
Really?
Not even a mile, right down the street.
Boylston Street, Boston.
Just to show you guys like what I'm talking about.
Huh?
Then you couldn't hear anything.
Um, no, I couldn't, I didn't hear it, but this is it.
What the fuck?
No, how do I drop the little man here?
Okay, so wait, where the fuck are we?
Bruh, Brookline, nah, man, I'm not trying to be in Brookline.
Oh, it's because it goes so goddamn long.
Okay.
All right.
This is crazy.
That I even okay.
This is North Boston.
Uh Tremont.
Okay.
That's the port for baby village.
No.
No.
Oh, yeah.
Museum of Fine Arts.
Yeah.
Huntington Ave.
This is where I went to school.
All right.
Northeastern is right here, alright?
So Northeastern's here.
Massav.
All right, let's go ahead and drop the man right here.
Here we go.
Okay.
Bro.
Alright, we'll go this way then.
Why can't I go, man?
It's probably blocked.
Bro.
This shit's pissing me off.
Okay.
Where is you have to drop in specifically on the on the street?
Okay, here's the reprow.
Okay, here we go, Boylston Street.
Alright.
Man, W to me for even finding this shit off the dome.
Right here.
Alright, boom.
Alright.
Perfect.
Okay.
So the bomb went off, guys.
All right.
Okay, so here's the fire station.
Alright, so you come down here.
Oh, I used to go to this Trader Joe's.
Oh, what the Bruh.
Nigga.
I used to go to this bar.
It used to be called Leers.
Now it's called Bro.
Alright.
We're on YouTube, so I'm not gonna go much further than that.
Look at that.
What the fuck, man?
It's a queer bar?
Yeah, what the fuck?
It used to be called Lear.
So all the bad chicks used to be there, man.
They turned it to queer.
God damn, man.
Things have changed.
Holy.
Okay.
Uh so the finish line.
Is that where you get arrested?
I never got arrested.
What do you mean?
Wait, where you go like kicked out?
Uh no.
What do you when I got where you got like a fight?
Like no, no.
Oh, you're talking about the time I got jumped.
Yeah.
Um, no, that's not it.
That's not it.
Symphony 8 is what you're talking about.
I could show you there.
Okay, so one of the bombs went off around this area here.
And then the other one I think went off down by Marathon Sports.
Did they get rid of the thing?
They used to keep the finish line here.
Did they fucking what the hell?
Is it further down?
Oh yeah.
Okay, here we go.
Boom.
So here's the finish line.
They kept it, right?
So the other bomb went off in this area here.
Here's Marathon Sports, right?
So as y'all can see, the main point I'm trying to get at here is look at all these goddamn stores.
Right?
All these different businesses here.
They had to scan through hours of uh footage from all these areas.
This highly congested metropolitan downtown area of all these stores.
And then all these people that work, and then this guys, when the marathon happened, like this thing literally, uh, when the marathon was going on, this thing is packed with people.
Packed.
Packed packed.
Of course.
So yeah, and then this is the this is the prudential center.
This is the exit to the prudential center.
Yeah, bring back a lot of good memories.
But yeah, uh, guys, what Angie was talking about was when I got jumped in front of Symphony Hall by six people.
I I've told that story before.
Um, what was that saying, Angie?
How many people die in these bath and bottom?
Uh, I forget.
I think it was like so many people got injured, but I think it has like three or five between three to five deaths.
Three to five deaths.
But but anyway, that's where the bomb went off.
So the reason why I show you guys this is so that you guys could see all the stores they had to get the footage from.
So literally, man, it took hours and hundreds of agents to be able to do this.
And then one of the guys actually got identified here is where they found one of the bombers the first time.
Whisk in front of whiskey whiskies.
Um, let me find it.
This is a bar I used to go to all the time, too, when I was a fucking.
Oh, here it is.
Yeah, Lear.
Okay.
This is this is the bar of Lear.
What the fuck is this shit though?
Whatever.
Let me see, let me see, let me see.
This is where I used to go, Lear.
Oh, okay.
I don't know if it's still open though.
I think they closed it.
So you have a clear bar.
Yeah, but this wasn't that.
It was something else before.
And then you have to Yeah, it was something else before that.
But this is where they identified the guy right here.
Oh my god, it changed to a bank.
Wow.
Okay.
Times have changed.
Okay, so right here, guys, this corner.
This used to be a bar called whiskies, if I'm not mistaken.
Jesus, how do you use it?
Whiskey.
Um, and uh, and this is where they count they caught him coming around this corner here.
The the Tamilin, the other brother.
Right.
So, yeah.
Yep.
Wow.
Man, this thing has changed.
It's Santander Bank now.
Alright.
And suspect two.
Suspects one and two appear to be walking together through the marathon trial.
That's Tamilin.
That was where they found Tamilin's older brother.
On Boyleston Street in the direction of the finish line.
We consider them to be armed and extremely dangerous.
No one should approach them.
No one should attempt to apprehend them except law enforcement.
Where are the white people?
So that's when they did the press conference, and they uh showed the bombers for the first time.
So law enforcement is gonna show the bombers, guys, only when they don't know who they are or they need help.
But when they know who they are, they're gonna keep that close to the chest.
That was the whole purpose of showing you guys that.
Uh the reason being is you don't want to, instead, spook him, spook uh people who may be helping him out in this case.
So in the beginning, you'll probably keep it tight, and then we'll release it.
So I want to get into some more of these details because we now know the police believe that this suspected gunman stayed at a New York hostel at Amsterdam in 103rd, uptown from where the shooting had happened, and detectives were at that hostel on Thursday, and they were doing interviews, they were checking surveillance, and crime stoppers released two new photos of potentially the alleged gunman, maybe just a person of interest, but this person pulling down his face mask and smiling in one of the pictures.
Now, a woman who's Yeah, he's flirting with one of the girls, man.
Dude had to spit his G game, I guess.
Who was working at the desk at the hospital at the hostel, reportedly told NYPD officers that she had been flirting with this man, and that is what led him to apparently lower his mask.
And surveillance captured that, and police hope having shots of his face will help identify him and track his movements.
So, Dave, let me ask you, how important is it that we have this full face shot and B. If this really is the suspected shooter, my gosh, if this is his undoing, flirting with the person in the hospital.
I mean, my gosh, what do you make of that?
Yeah.
Everyone, when the original video came out, it seemed like a very professional type of shooting.
Almost like a professional hit.
As we have announced the detectives in the NYPD and everyone else is as do video and do all this, you're seeing he's not as he's not as a professional.
Um the clothes he wears, the backpack he has is very specific.
It's been I you know, like the bag was identified.
We know where that what kind of bag it is, the price of that bag.
So things have broken down.
The truth's gonna come out.
I mean, that's what it is.
The benefit of that is police always emphasize on uh finding the mistakes and and exploiting those mistakes.
And that mistake of taking that mask down is extremely important.
It helps us possibly with facial recognition, utilizing that ability.
And not only that, we have somebody who's been seen, we've seen that face.
Now, if that is the shooter, someone else has had contact with him prior to the shooting.
And that's what we're looking to do.
We're seeing somebody who'll pull crime stoppers, say, yes, I did speak to that guy, and then we'll be able to be able to interview him and see where it goes from there.
Hey, by the way, before we go any further, I have to thank Morgan and Morgan for sponsoring today's lawn crime YouTube turning a corner on that e-bike that I mentioned.
Now, at first, at a news conference, police said that the suspect was wearing tan clothing.
She appears to be a light-skinned male.
He's wearing a light brown or cream colored jacket, a black face mask, black and white sneakers, and a very distinctive gray backpack.
Yeah, perhaps he misspoke because if you look at the photos from the scene, it's pretty obvious that the gunman is wearing a dark colored jacket.
And the NYPD also didn't clarify what's going on.
And I think it was on different days.
But Top Shea says, Myra, did you know the reason why the American sniper Chris Kyle was killed?
Because they wanted an organized orchestrate team prior to bombing, you rejected he knew too much and they killed him.
Now familiar topshay with that.
Um let's see here.
Is that the one that the movie was based on the same guy?
Maybe.
Um we got here Daiko goes, narrowly dodge becoming a victim in the Boston bombing, was watching at the finish line when a teammate next texted uh 217 to meet him at the mile 23 mark.
Little action can save your life.
Wow, bro, that's crazy.
He was at the Boston Marathon bombing finish line, and they told him to move.
Uh his buddies told him to come meet up, and that's how he got out the way.
Wow.
The Boston bombers, by the way, Myron, and that's from Black Zero, okay.
I know y'all remember that retarded 304 saying release them.
They hot.
Uh Emma May Club says, Vivek has mentioned shutting down FBI dispersed and field agents at the right agency and releasing the administrative periodic niggas.
Would you be interested in working with Doge to help them and their announces of FBI and recommendations to President Trump.
Uh, I mean, sure, I could, but um, Vivek is delusional if he thinks he's gonna actually be able to disband the FBI, he'll never be able to do it.
And that's the problem sometimes with these guys that look, you need someone that has business acumen, I get it, the entrepreneurial mindset, but you also need guys that understand how the government works.
And there's no way that Vivek is ever gonna be able to disband the FBI.
The FBI is a legacy agency, it's been around forever.
It's the um it's the premier federal law enforcement agency.
A lot of their um authorities are critical to uh protecting the security of the United States, so he'll never be able to disband them.
Sorry.
Um and this is coming from a guy that doesn't even like the FBI.
I don't even like the FBI.
I've had a lot of issues with them in the past, but even I understand that there's no way he's gonna disband it.
Um that just sounds good to to normies that don't understand how the government works.
Um the old waterboard from BFD, okay.
Um Mark, you says, since you're going to Vegas, are you gonna go to Las Vegas Mob Museum to finish the tour on the last floor since you didn't get to finish it last time?
Shit, we didn't do it to finish it, did we?
All right, yeah, I guess we will.
Can you head up that lady?
Yeah, we haven't finished it.
Yeah, can you head up that lady tell her we're gonna um do it?
Brown was getting sued for fraud.
I think it was an inside job to see her walking without no security is weird.
True.
When is the next CC premium zoom meeting?
Need your advice.
Hopefully, we just had one literally today, bro.
I literally had a CC premium meeting just today.
I just got off like a 7:30.
Martin, as an ex fan, is it pretty impossible to commit a crime?
Like what happened to the CEO because of all the technology we have now.
I don't recommend why people do things like this because of all the technology we have.
I think it's a crime like this is impossible.
Um what do you think?
Yeah, I mean, I think you can make it happen.
This guy was just a rookie, bro.
He made a lot of mistakes.
So, yeah.
Oh well.
Um, do I contact Noble or will he send it to me?
Contact Noble.
Who nigga Martin?
Okay.
Was distinctive about the wheel.
Wow, uh Frank ate Angie's um headphones.
What do you let me see that?
Oh, wow.
Look at this.
This guy ate her fucking headphones, guys.
Holy.
You have to open the open the image.
Wow.
It is open.
They can see it.
Uh look at this.
This guy really ate her shit.
That's not funny.
Why are you laughing?
You should say something.
About that backpack.
Internet slews have identified it as a backpack made by the company design that costs anywhere from 200 to 300.
Frank, go on your bed.
Police say they had to release photos of the suspect from a man's side of 6th Avenue Starbucks, where he stopped before going to the hotel to wait.
He purchases a bottle of water, he purchases some snacks, and in these photos, my man had to get uh hydrated before the drill.
The suspect has his mask up over most of the lower part of his face.
But this was the first time that we'd actually gotten a glimpse of what the alleged gunman looked like.
Now, we are not sure if the the person in the Starbucks is the same as the hostel.
There are those who say, Dave, that the jackets don't match, the backpacks don't match.
Uh, what do you take away from that?
Is that why we're that we're kind of getting terms like suspect, person of interest?
It's not uh totally clear we have the same individual.
Although some people would say if you look at the photo of the smiling guy versus the guy in the Starbucks, it could be it looks like the same person.
Yeah, that's the thing.
You know, video surveillance and video cameras aren't always great.
You know, you have certain ones that are very uh very fine, some are very grainy.
The shooting is a very grainy photo, wasn't it was a grainy video, so you're very limited in the in the coloring on that.
Uh so that's why you're doing this step-by-step time.
And that's beneficial because you talk about six from the early morning hours in New York, between six and seven o'clock.
Is there gonna be someone who hits that description?
Which, if I'm not mistaken, the Starbucks and the Hilton were not that far from each other a few blocks.
Who does ever comes out of the subway, goes to the Starbucks, walks over to the Hilton, waiting for that person.
That minimizes the chance that this person is misidentified.
But coloring, I remember the first time the description came over, the the uh description of the perk was inaccurate.
And that happens because again, people see what they see, and it's not always it's not always clear to them, especially when it's an eyewitness.
That's why we get multiple eyewitnesses.
We can't always depend on one part of the puzzle.
That's why the detectives are going all the way through, from beginning to end.
And that's what we're looking at.
That's what we always do.
We want to make sure we get the right person.
Do you find it weird that if this is the suspected shooter, that he stopped at a Starbucks?
Was it to fuel up?
Hey, I don't know when I'm gonna have my next meal, let me eat on the go.
But again, what's interesting about that is apparently, allegedly, The police find investigators find this water bottle and a wrapper of the candy bar in this alleyway left behind for forensic testing.
Maybe on his, you know, the one assumption is he.
Yeah, that that that's what made me realize like this guy isn't a professional.
The guy obviously knows how to use a firearm, which we're gonna talk about that a little bit more.
But um phone leaving the phone, the water bottle, absolutely stupid.
Dropped it on his way to go.
But I find that weird to purchase those items, knowing you're going into a store where you could be seen, where you could be on the surveillance tape.
Just a weird little dynamic of this.
You know, that this show is a lack of professionalism by the shooter when you're we're talking about it.
Yeah, big mistakes there.
Who would do this?
You know, it's not normal to want to conduct a shooting like you do and have some and eat and have a drink.
So either he's very confident what he's doing, or he just didn't realize how sloppy that was.
It's just it adds to the to the investigation.
That mistake is very important to this whole investigation as to what he did because not only do you are showcasing's left, but now you have forensic evidence that's left.
So that's beneficial to the police to look at those mistakes.
Yeah, and let me clarify a little bit about the jacket and the backpack.
So the jacket in the backpack that this man is wearing at what appears to be the Starbucks, seems to be the same jacket and backpack at the scene of the crime.
Um, if anybody in the chat knows what this backpack is, it's apparently it's like an expensive backpack, 200 bucks or something like that.
But on Thursday, when you this, it ain't no fucking Jazz Port.
Crime stoppers release photos of who they identified as a person of interest from inside the hostel where this person was staying.
People online pointed out that the appearance is different.
Because in these photos, the man appears to be wearing a green jacket.
It's still a darker color, but not black or dark gray, like it appeared in the security camera shots.
And the jacket in the hospital photo also appears to have these prominent front pockets, while you can't really see anything like that on the darker jacket in the Starbucks shot.
So it's possible it could be the same person, but different jackets.
Could be maybe the lighting is just not accurate, and shots as we were talking about are a bit grainy.
And when it comes to the backpack, the scene of this crime in the Starbucks, and in the getaway shot, the backpack has this gray or lighter colored straps, but in the hostel photos, the straps are black, and we don't know exactly when these surveillance cameras called.
Well, he might have had multiple backpacks because he did leave one of the backpacks at Central Park.
The apparent suspect, but it's just a weird aspect, though.
So you could say, okay, you know, big deal, he's traveling.
Maybe he brought this, or maybe it's a trick of the light, but some people are skeptical that this is maybe not even the same person.
That police might be barking up the wrong tree.
Dave, just to put a bow on that point.
That's why detectives do it.
Go ahead.
How do we know if he's actually his backpack?
Because they only found a jacket in that backpacking central park.
Oh, that's what they found in it?
Yeah, and jacket.
Okay, well, um, I think it's because of camera footage.
Because they saw him with it riding the bike.
And they found the same.
And he had it on when he shot the guy.
So they just find the same backpack in Central Park and the city.
Well, they followed him after the shooting.
Okay.
After the shooting, they saw him go to Central Park.
Okay.
And then he came out without the backpack.
And not look, we're looking for the person that committed the crime.
And that's the whole thing.
We're building, they're building probable cause.
You have a person who conducts a shooting.
The lighting of the surveillance camera is grainy.
So what you're doing is, you and I said this, I said this earlier, there's a pre and post.
The post is looking to see if they could where they could locate him.
The pre is doing victimology and where he was prior to the shooting.
Because we have a time established in that six o'clock hour, in that late six o'clock hour, we know there's a shooting.
Now we want to see is where was he before that shooting?
And the meticulous steps that investigators do.
The the extended video canvases that they do, the uh interviews of people they have been in contact with.
The lighting is one thing, but you know, the way it looks is could it be we're not looking for could it be because it's like it's not what you think, it's what you can prove.
And that's what detectives are doing.
They're looking to prove that the person at the shooting and the hostel are the same person teen is the same as the person do the shooting.
Okay, so I'm gonna ask you about the backpack.
Yeah.
I'm reading here that the backpack that they found at the test that found in Central Park.
It only had like a Tommy Heifiger uh jacket and Monopoly money in it.
Uh that's all they can find.
Tommy Hilfricker jacket monopoly money monopoly money.
Probably sent a message.
It was found in Friday night.
Do you think so?
Monopoly money, yeah.
That probably just sent a message.
That's funny.
I mean, he did leave uh uh wrote he wrote deny, depose and delay in the bullets with Sharpie.
Because there's another interesting new detail about the backpack.
So yeah, he definitely wanted to send a message here.
And YPD now says that they were able to catch this person, this elect shooter on camera, leaving Central Park, but he wasn't wearing the backpack.
And there was this huge search of the park on Thursday, but so far, law enforcement haven't been able to find this bag.
And in addition to figuring out who the guy is, investigators are digging into where he came from.
And as I told them, you know, before I get into that part where he came from, the bag.
Do you find it weird that the bag is missing?
No, because if you are carrying that bag, they could have he could have changed clothes.
There could be something in it.
Uh it's a big park.
It's massive.
So it could go anywhere.
Did he throw into the water?
Did he dump it somewhere undergrass?
Whatever he did.
Maybe he planned this before.
He was here earlier in the month.
Did he already have a place he established to dump that bag?
In other words, bury the bag somewhere.
And also, guys, he got into he got into New York City on or about November 24th, if I'm not mistaken.
He had been there for almost 10 days.
So he got there a while ago, um, doing recon, etc.
When no one's gonna go.
He came from an uh from a he came on a bus that came from Atlanta.
So we don't know if he um came from Atlanta or he came on one of the stops.
Okay.
That passed through.
Which is smart that he did that because you can't really identify it, it'll be harder for them to identify where he got on.
As they continue to do this, you're gonna if they you can continue that grid search to see if you could find the bag, that would be great.
So that's another aspect to this.
You you you mentioned this before, because in addition to figuring out who this guy is, they're also trying to figure out where he came from.
And police told the New York Times that the suspect arrived in New York, as you mentioned, about 10 days before the shooting on November 24th.
The official told the Times that he came on a bus that had originated in Atlanta, although it's on the case.
Hey guys, we got only 474 likes on this.
Can we hit 1,000 guys?
I'm giving you a lot of sauce right now, a lot of details.
Um, even the best consultants on these CNN channels and Fox don't give the kind of details that I give guys.
So, guys, do me a favor, please like the video on YouTube.
Uh, you know, just open up a tab, watch it on YouTube, like the video on YouTube so we can hit the algorithm so we can really like get into this whole true crime thing.
I know this is like my side channel, I'll do this only once a week, but uh yeah.
We're we're we're we got the sauce going.
So let's get to a 1,000 guys, if you don't mind, please.
It's unclear where along the route he actually had boarded, but he was spotted on cameras at the Board Authority bus terminal.
By the way, and as we talk about this, see why it's so rare to have a shooting like an assassination like this in a metropolitan city like Manhattan, like New York City.
My goodness, hammerers are everywhere.
Now, according to what police told the New York Times, the man checks into this hostel on November 24th, he checks out on the 29th, then he checks back in the next day, and the shooting happened early in the morning on December 4th.
Now, law enforcement officials also told CBS News that the man had checked into the hostel using a fake ID with a fake name.
The official said police don't think he was using someone else's ID.
They think it's just a made-up name.
And a source told CNN that it was a New Jersey license.
Dave, what do you take away from that?
IDs could be fake.
You could fake an ID.
So very common.
Very, very common.
I remember when I was in college, Pennsylvania was the most faked ID that everyone had to get into the bars.
Um that's why they've like changed the ID so much um over the past few years is because they're so easy to fake.
If he has a fake ID.
And hostiles, a lot of the times are not gonna be that critical of going through the ID.
They don't really care.
A lot of vagrants go into these hostels in New York City.
So um, not surprised.
This is planned.
So that's the one thing you could see the planning to it, getting here early.
Uh and just so you guys know, using the gun, putting uh coming in ten days prior, um, using a fake ID, taking a greyhound bus, all of this is gonna be used when he's arrested to um to charge him with murder one, premeditated murder.
Okay, all of this stuff is very important to establish um state of mind, and then this was preconceived, right?
So on the state side, we're looking at murder one for sure.
Checking in with a fake ID.
There's a lot of planning into it.
But you're if you're here for an extended period of time, and you you have month, how much cash could you live off of in New York City within that extended time frame?
He paid, apparently he paid the guys.
The name of the YouTube channel is called Fed Reacts.
For some of you guys that are watching um that are watching on X and if you might want to watch it on YouTube.
Like the Fed Reacts on YouTube, Fed Reacts on Rumble.
Like the video on YouTube, guys.
I really appreciate it if you can.
And uh let's get this thing up.
Um cash runs out.
Was there cash in the bag?
We don't really know.
We know he's probably fled to New York.
That's one thing we do.
He's like, but eventually something is gonna happen where a credit card has to be used.
He definitely fled New York, and he had used cash.
You can't have enough cash unless, let's say there's someone assisting, there's someone who's with him on this who's helping him out, given the fact that there was a phone call that was a phone call made by the the shooter prior to the shooting.
So is there someone else involved?
Because if you have cash, you're gonna run out of cash and you have to get a credit card.
That's very important.
The fact that a phone call was made 10 minutes prior to the shooting and it was done on a burner phone.
Let me tell y'all this.
That person, whoever they were called, was more than likely involved in this situation and is involved in the conspiracy.
So now putting my agent hat on, if I had that phone, first thing I would do, it's probably a burner piece of crap.
I would obviously figure out when it was purchased, how it was purchased, and most importantly, I would figure out uh look at that phone and I'll do toll records, right?
So that phone, it's gonna be a you know, a lot of times it's cricket, T-Mobile, uh, ATT, Verizon, whoever the phone service is for that phone, I'm gonna figure out who it is, then I'm gonna serve that person with a subpoena.
Once I serve that subpoena, they're gonna give me all the toll records.
I'm going to look at every single phone number that I contacted this phone.
Once I have all those phone numbers, I'm gonna send subpoenas for those phone numbers and figure out who the subscribers are on those phones.
And then I will be able to identify everyone that he spoke to, if they're using fake names, if they're using uh you know, aliases, that's fine.
We can figure out where those phone calls were made from, and I would go ahead and f uh um do something called a cell site warrant, okay?
Now, uh give me ones if you guys want me to explain this and go into this detail.
Give me twos if you guys want me to just keep going on.
Because I don't want to drive I've noticed that I've been going into kind of tangents here and giving you guys a lot of detail on certain things.
Um, but you guys might not necessarily need all this detail, right?
So give me ones if you guys want me to explain this self-site crap.
If not, twos, then we'll keep cooking here.
We'll keep uh on the breakdown.
Ones if you guys want me to explain the cell site, two if you guys want me to just keep going.
Yeah, I mean y'all niggas are nerds.
All right.
Okay.
A cell site warrant, guys, basically what it is is it's uh you what you would do is you would do a search warrant, okay?
And the that search warrant is for the historical sell site data of that phone.
And what that will do is it'll tell you, right, when you do that warrant, it'll tell you the towers that that phone connected to when it was being used.
And why that's important is it'll give you a location as to where that phone was used.
Okay?
So that will allow you to put someone at a place at a time when a phone call was made.
So if they try to sit there and say, Oh, well, um, I wasn't there, I could literally say, uh, well, no, that's a lie, because this cell phone was utilized at this time on this day when this crime was being occurred uh committed, and we know that you're the subscriber of the phone, or someone um close to you was uh was using the phone, explain that.
So that's why it's so important.
Because it puts the phone in an area with reasonable certainty at a point in time.
Very important with murder investigations, very important with crimes where location um is important if you're trying to destroy um a suspect's alibi, um, very, very important.
So it's called a sell site um historical.
There's many different terms for it, but uh historical cell site warrant is is uh is what we used to call it.
But but that has different terms, but that's basically what it does.
Somewhere along the line, it's hard to say off the grid.
How do you say off the grid?
He had cash, but now he's gone.
Where did that where is he and who could be with?
Who could be with it this time?
That's what I want to get into now.
So there's a bunch of other aspects to this.
Do you think he had help?
Um proficient shooter, uh planned ideas.
It's hard to continue that without some sort of assistance or some sort of yeah, he's definitely a profession shooter.
He took a uh um obviously a uh a proper stance when he shot.
Um he didn't really miss.
Uh he it looked like he hit all the shots.
So um the guy knows how to fire a gun, and then the way he was um racking the gun, uh he is this guy definitely has some uh firearm experience.
Sort of uh help in a sense to kind of because usually people when they involve themselves in these type in types of shootings, and the showcasing's there with with deny the fund on that, creating an ideology or creating an anger.
Someone sometimes has to support that.
Someone doesn't really always go off by themselves, okay, you know, a lone gunman.
Something had it get him to the point where saying, today's the day.
I'm gonna do this.
He planned this, oh, this would be playing a long time.
Guys, let's get the likes up.
We only got 600 likes.
We got 1400 watching, man.
Let's get to uh 1,000 likes, guys.
Let's hit 1,000.
Comes here, he sits in front of the, he's in front of the around the hotel area.
Well, let me if I if I may, let me just jump in.
The reason I ask you that more than just helping with the ideology of this, he knows exactly where Thompson is going to be at precisely that time.
Now, unless he knew he was gonna be a speaker at the investors conference, how did he know that he was gonna show up early at that time?
And and it Makes me wonder, could he have found this information out on his own?
Or did he have inside information?
And again, we're speculating, we don't know, but it's a question.
I think it's a fair question to ask.
We always have to speculate because you know we have to see is because that's the thing.
That day, if he's here this long, he's you know, the victim is here a day.
He doesn't do anything until this moment.
And it's and I have to always ask this question is I always ask why now?
Why is this moment the time he does it?
Because he knew the scheduling.
You know, the call the conference is eight o'clock in the morning.
He's there at six.
He knows how he knows he's going to be there alone, no one else.
That's something either he was being told, or he's followed him before he followed him in there and waited.
And these are gonna be good questions.
Obviously, when you got the suspect in custody, this is when you're gonna ask these questions as to like, hey, how did you know this?
Did you uh did you follow him before?
Do you understand his schedule?
Do you know about the guy?
Do you know that he likes to be at places very um early?
Um that is actually you it's interesting because it's very obvious that this killer did his homework in certain regards, but then he fucked up in other regards, right?
Like he was careful and did things meticulously on one end, but then he made some really gross errors on other ends.
So it's really strange, but uh yeah.
That's definitely something you that you know, when you got this suspect in custody, you're gonna want to ask.
That day to get him by himself.
So that's what you have to look at.
And I want you to keep that in mind because they have recovered, investigators never covered a cell phone or a cell phone uh that might have been.
And guys, this came out like a day or two ago.
There's new info that just came out from CNN stuff, and we're gonna be reacting to that as well.
Belong to the suspect and reporting from C. By the time the stream is over, we're gonna be the most up to date on fucking YouTube on this shit.
All right, we and with the best info.
TBS says they have footage of this person, this suspect, talking on the cell phone at 6 30 a.m.
So what is that, 15 minutes before the shooting?
Now, could he be just having a regular conversation?
Or no, definitely was probably spot speaking to a co-conspirator, because the fact that he left a phone there means that he was confident to leave it there.
He was using a burner phone.
The person he called probably was also using a burner phone, but it's a great point of um, you know, beginning uh cell phone analysis for sure.
Could he be speaking with somebody about how like I explained before with you guys with the uh cell-site data, etc.?
Yeah, that's the that's the the the million dollar question as far as that conversation on the phone.
And that phone is pertinent to find out who was called, what the numbers were called.
And detectives are doing, or you know, that phone is getting opened up.
See, just like I told you guys, you're gonna look at every single phone number that this phone contacted, and you're gonna subpoena each of those phones, and then I would do cell-site warrants on every single one of those phone numbers and figure out where all those phones were located.
Because even if you don't have the subscriber, let's say the subscriber comes out back to a fake ass name.
Fine, it doesn't matter.
What's important is you will be able to know where they called from when that phone call was made.
That's super fucking important.
They're gonna do different forensics on that on that phone.
But that's a question you have to look at.
This is not, is this a solo gunman that talks to someone on the phone?
Is that a girlfriend?
Is it a family member?
Is it a loved one?
Or is it someone on the other vine who And I'm gonna do a I'm gonna do a Fed reacts for you guys and probably a Twitter space where I just talk about how police exploit telephones.
There's so many different ways to exploit telephones that I can't even that I gotta go through a dual whole episode for you guys on this, right?
And this is someone that's written, by the way, I've actually written a T3 out for David.
Right?
Dumb the monko.
99% of these law enforcement guys that are on these fucking talk shows have never done a title three in their fucking life as the actual affian.
I've done it as the affian.
I was the guy that wrote the fucking warrant.
I sent it out to OEO, I dealt with Department of Justice, uh, brought it to a district judge, all this shit.
So there's no one on YouTube that could talk about cell phones to the degree that I do.
Nobody.
Right?
And I say that with so much confidence because most agents don't do title threes because it's so fucking hard.
It's so difficult to do one.
Right?
And for those that are wondering what a title three is a Title III intercept, guys is a wiretap.
Okay?
So it's one thing to work on a wiretap.
Cool, it worked on a wiretap.
Motherfucker, were he the affian?
I thought so.
Shut up.
So we will do an episode where I talk about how law enforcement exploits telephones for you guys.
All right, I'll do that in the future.
That's a whole other episode though.
Guys, 700 likes, let's hit 1000.
We'll keep cooking on this thing.
When it comes to this stuff, guys, I'm very arrogant because because I did this stuff.
You know, I'm very humble about other stuff, but when it comes to law enforcement doing criminal investigations, how cases are done, drugs, human smuggling, firearms, all this shit.
This is my fucking wheelhouse.
I spent the over a decade doing this shit at a very high level when I was on the Southwest border.
I was very passionate about it.
So that's why I speak with such passion about this shit.
Because I used to really do this and I really love it.
So I could talk about this shit for hours.
Right.
That's why I started this fucking channel.
Was because um I was like, yo, you know what?
I'm not a law enforcement anymore, but maybe I could teach guys and give you guys insight that other commentators can't give y'all.
So that's why I do what I do.
So yeah, like the video, let's keep going.
Is telling him this is what's going on.
Yeah.
That's the question you have to ask.
And going back, you know, the surveillance video shows a suspect walking out of the midtown subway station at around 6.15 a.m. on that Wednesday.
This is a half hour before the shooting.
As we mentioned, he stops at the Starbucks, ran by PD says again he paid with cash.
Um, and aside from you know, later talking the cell phone, investigators have also said they have collected some sort of evidence that could provide DNA.
They haven't said exactly where it's from, what it's from.
Um, if that's the case, A, how quickly can they, you know, analyze that DNA, and you know, is that gonna be a clear-cut match to who they're looking for?
This is the thing about DNA.
DNA is very good, it's a very uh accurate way of identifying someone, but they have to be in this in the in the system in order to be able to identify.
That's a very important aspect to it.
And what do you mean by in the system?
So um a couple a couple years back, there was like mandated where everyone that's arrested federally needs to be have their DNA pulled.
What they do is they just swab their their mouth.
Um so it's possible that if he's been arrested before and he's been processed, especially in the federal system, that they're gonna have DNA in there.
Because we'll have DNA, we may have a DNA match from location to location, but a DNA hit is where you have a person identified.
So the one thing is is his DNA uh available and accessible?
Does the uh law enforcement have a sample of his DNA prior?
There are ways of also analyzing it.
This familiar DNA and nuclear DNA as you we the science has gotten better.
But we have to make sure when we get that DNA, we we have something because you know, we have a definitive person, but we may not have an absolute hit.
In other words, we have the DNA and it belongs to Mr. X or Mr. Y or Mrs. X or Mrs. Y. There's also this other bizarre twist in the case because police in Minnesota, they were called out to two homes that were owned by the Thompson family the same day as the shooting, and they were called out for a bomb threat.
Now, police say that the family was unfortunately a victim of swatting.
According to the Minnesota Star Tribune, the police have got a report of a bomb targeting the two houses at around 7 p.m. on Wednesday, and Brian Thompson had owned one of the homes, his wife Paulette.
Yeah, so his wife is in Minnesota.
Thompson had owned the other.
They were only about a half mile apart from each other in Maple Grove, Minnesota.
This is outside of Minneapolis.
And according to a statement from police, no devices or suspicious items were located during the investigation.
The case is considered an active investigation, recently graduated, and the New York Post reported that after that bomb threat, there is now a security guard hosted outside of Paulette's home.
These are the questions.
Yeah, so obviously talking to his family is gonna be important, guys.
Like, you know, the guy is someone that is gonna be disliked in the insurance world.
So talking to family members is gonna be very important.
Hey, do you know anyone that would wanted to kill him?
Do you have any other letters?
Do you have any of the emails, etc.?
Um, all the threats that were made, they're gonna obviously go back and look at those as well.
Um said or stated to you to your husband.
Because he had been his wife had been swatted multiple times.
Hoping any time someone has an information, they're gonna be forthcoming with that information.
You know, husband, wife, you know, they're separated.
I don't know the situation between them personally, but the reality is detectives don't really concern about all the the noise out there.
We're trying to investigate this case and get to a special conclusion, which is the apprehension.
What kind of threats?
How do you know they were threats?
Where were these threats documented?
Was it a phone call?
Was it uh an email?
What was done?
If these are the threats you're saying that are mentioned.
And the question then goes is you know, if there were threats, did your did he, did your husband think these threats are viable, and apparently it doesn't seem to be because he didn't have security with them at that time.
Can I ask you about that?
Can I ask you about that?
So CNN reported that United Health Group, which is the pain company, they are supported by in-house security teams, but there was no team with Brian Thompson that day.
I I don't quite get that.
Well, that would be we're talking about in house, meaning that would have to be do they travel with their with their uh upper management?
That's a question because that's also an exp an added expenditure that they do.
Uh if these security guards that they have in Minnesota, can they are they licensed to carry in New York State?
That's another athlete.
Yeah, he didn't have security with him either.
So he must have felt safe.
So uh this is from 10 hours ago from um from Fox.
So let's go ahead and um What the fuck?
Why is this shit?
Refers to page.
I don't know why it's acting crazy.
What the hell?
All right.
Chair bear with me here.
I don't know what the hell's going on.
We continue to follow a major story that has bripped the nation.
I wanted to share this post from the New York police department.
So here's some photos of him.
Below are our photos of a person.
And let's go ahead.
I'll pull this up on Twitter for you guys as well.
Sharing new photos of a person of interest wanted in questioning surrounding the homicide that happened in Midtown Manhattan on December 4th.
The gunman who killed the CEO of the largest...
So here we go.
Here's the actual tweet.
A guy to free on ninjas right here.
This comes from NYPD knows uh news.
Uh posted this 21 hours ago.
They got it pinned, which obviously, you know, it's very important for them.
Um below our photos of a person of interest wants it for question regarding the midtown Manhattan homicide on December 4th.
The full investigator report of the NYPD are continuing.
We are asking for the public's help.
If you have any information about this case, call the NYPD Crime Stoppers at 1800 577 tips.
Additionally, you could DM NYPD Teps on X or on Instagram.
This reward of up to 10,000 for information leading to an arrest and conviction.
Okay, and they're putting out these photos as well.
Again, I think they know who he is.
And I think they probably know where he is, but why not get extra help, right?
So this is what the NYPD put out.
And if I'm not mistaken, I think the FBI probably also has also probably put something out here.
Uh let's see here.
Yep, look, boom.
So the FBI also $50,000.
I told y'all niggas they're involved.
The FBI offers reward of up to $50,000 for information leading to the arrest conviction of the individual responsible for the shooting, death of a man in midtown Manhattan, New York, on the morning of December 4th.
Um I think this is probably their poster.
Yep.
So boom.
So they got the pictures here.
Right?
My man got the mask on.
Which in New York is not weird to wear a mask still.
Anywhere else, you would think, what the fuck.
So yeah.
But again, this is 24 hours ago, or to almost a day ago.
U.S. Health Insurer likely left Liam gave $15 with a slash.
Thank you.
Um, Roger Show says, Hey Mario, thanks for the wake-up call, CC Premium.
I'll come back to update you in a month on my penis journey.
Absolutely, man.
Don't want y'all being fat.
Um, also, guys, we are only at 750 likes, despite the fact that we got 1400 y'all ninjas in here.
Guys, like the video so we keep cooking, all right?
Like the video on YouTube, please.
Left New York City on a bus soon after the ambush that really has shaken corporate America.
So, this is a new photo of the person of interest.
And just so you know, the mayor of New York said that he they they know who he is.
They just don't want to release it yet.
So they know who the guy is.
I think at this point, they're getting tips in to figure out maybe where he's at.
But I do think that they have an idea of where he's at.
They're probably interviewing his family right now as we speak.
They issued that uh just a short time ago.
So I did want to share that with you.
Meanwhile, uh, this is uh some surveillance photos of that person of interest.
Hey, Big Gucci Soldier Mike, fuck you, bro.
Oh, stop crying for likes.
Shut the fuck up, you bitch ass nigga.
You're getting free content, you fucking pussy.
The only thing I ask is that you like the video, you fucking broke in.
You're over here talking shit watching my shit for fucking free.
And I tell you to like the damn video, your dumbass want to say some stupid shit like that.
Fuck you.
Niggas like you are the reason why I say like the video, because you idiots don't want to like the video, and I gotta stop the video all the time to say like the goddamn video.
So fuck off.
Like the shit, dumbass.
Idia on YouTube.
What's his dumbass name?
Big Gucci Soldier Mike.
Shut the fuck up.
As police are still searching for the suspect.
Uh, this is five days after the shooting of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Police still not knowing the gunman's name or how y'all watch someone's video and not like them.
That's so weird to me.
I'll never understand you dumbass niggas that watch my shit.
You ain't even black, bruh.
Why are you here then, nigga?
Get the fuck out of here.
Why are you watching the Fed talking about fucking criminal cases?
Fucking weirdos, man.
Whereabouts or neither a moment.
And then another loser anonymous with a bunch of S's.
Don't even show his face, pussy.
For the killing.
That's according to the chief of detectives, Joseph Kenny telling reporters earlier.
Uh investigators were looking at whether the shooter may have possibly been a disgruntled employee or client of the insurer.
The FBI announcing on Friday that it was offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction.
Meanwhile, video of the gunman fleeing Wednesday shooting showed him riding a bicycle into Central Park and later taking a taxi to a bus terminal that offers commuter service to New Jersey and Greyhound routes to Philadelphia, Boston, and Washington, DC.
Investigators also on Friday recovering a backpack in Central Park that may have been worn by the gunman during the shooting.
That's according to police.
This was after a massive Yeah, facts.
We got some Annes and Reach fans in here, because I'll tell you this, Anus Reach can't teach y'all nothing about how crime works or any of that shit, bro.
Fucking losers.
Sweep to find that backpack in Central Park.
Uh to speak more on this, I do want to bring in Kenneth Valentine, who is a retired special agent in charge with the Secret Service and author of the Bro, Secret Service don't do fucking criminal investigations like this, bro.
Hey, let's listen to his commentary anyway.
It's fine.
But Secret Service does protection.
They don't do criminal investigations at all.
But cheating.
Barely.
Barely barely.
Death.
Kenneth, we do appreciate you taking the time to join us here on Live Now from Fox.
My man muted.
Absolutely.
Yes, yes.
Talk about the murder of a CEO senseless in my mind that that this couldn't have been because I believe it should have been prevented.
And you were saying that it should have been prevented.
And why do you think that is?
There's been a lot of speculation and concern over the fact that the CEO did not have a security detail surrounding.
Okay, he's gonna talk more about the security angle.
All right.
And just so you guys know, let's talk about the Secret Service real quick.
What are the Secret Service main mission?
The Secret Service main mission, guys, is protection of the president, his immediate family members, um, foreign dignitaries uh when they come in and visit.
Um I've done Secret Service details.
They also do financial crime, um, and uh counterfeit currency.
That's actually the main reason why the Secret Service was created was to investigate uh counter for currency.
They don't really do murder investigations really, um, or national security or anything like that, but I think he's gonna commentate more from the position of um personal security, why think I should have had maybe a detail with him.
But uh we'll get we'll go ahead and add in anything that he might miss.
And Secret Service now is actually within the Department of Homeland Security, um, with Homeland Security investigations.
And the reason why I know why how Secret Service works so well is because I've done Secret Service details.
Um, anytime they have a UN meeting or um it's an election year, they heavily rely on HSI agents um to augment their secret Secret Service details.
But what really stands out to you about this ongoing search, this case.
Yeah.
Well, the Liam asked Myron, how many people have you locked up?
Hundreds, if not thousands, bro.
Um, Roger says, hey Mike, thanks for the wake-up conversation.
No, that man said says, What's up, bro?
I scheduled my first tattoo removal session for the 17th, working on my resume and my appointment on Twick application on Wednesday.
I appreciate your advice on Thursday calling show, bro.
Absolutely, that man said got you.
Um Will Sabek says, FY, I know some guys from my unit responded to the scene about an hour at the actual shooting.
No one's taking the shooting serious until they found out who the victim was.
Literally, one of the biggest crime problems in NYC is law enforcer dragged their feet on everything until someone lights a fire under their ass, or the case slash event starts catching major immediate attention.
Absolutely.
They always do.
You know, CEOs are assets to their company.
They're they're groomed, they're hired, they're vetted, and so they have a price tag on their head, according to the company, as as one of the company's main, if not most expensive, assets.
Uh, if you look at him as a one-off and and to think that this asset was walking down the street by himself, completely vulnerable, uh, With no steps taken to limit his exposure uh to to mitigate some of that vulnerability that this top asset of the company uh experienced is is kind of beyond me.
I I can't believe that they did not uh have the foresight to to at least try to add some steps in there that would thwart this that would mitigate that risk in some way.
And you know, I I I wrote in the book, I talked about protection a lot.
It's not strictly a book about executive protection, it's more uh storytelling and and uh advice, but I do talk about the need for protection and and not just from violence, you know.
This this CEO was exposed to not only specific violence but just random violence, but it goes beyond that to reputational risk.
CEOs um, you know, their reputation sinks, so does the stock price of a company.
And so when we talk about assets and and value to the company, I'm very surprised that that there was not some attempt to mitigate the reputational risk.
Um, you know, like much like uh Billy Graham.
This is funny, someone said I thought NYA laws uh gun laws would um prevent this.
Well, that's the problem, guys.
New York laws, uh, you know, when you when you um pro put in gun laws, it only stops the law-abiding citizens.
It doesn't stop the criminals.
The criminals are gonna do what they're gonna do, right?
So gun laws only really impact um private innocent citizens.
Graham did back in the day.
Billy Graham wouldn't go to a hotel room without staff, and maybe if he had a security detail going into that hotel room ahead of time, making sure that not only is is it safe, but that it is free from, you know, maybe a photographer with uh, you know, with a uh a hooker or something that you know where they would try to capture him in a compromise situation.
This CEO is walking down the sidewalk, obviously it was it was knowable that he was gonna be there.
Uh this guy knew about what time he was going to be there, and he had no uh security, no assets in place to prevent what could have been preventable.
So let's talk about what police know right now.
They haven't uh identified uh the suspect, and now they're looking for this person of interest that we have been seeing photos of.
Uh they have retrieved a backpack.
They're trying to, you know, take a look uh at some other evidence uh for the DNA.
But when it comes to a case as high profile as this, uh are you surprised by the developments and the speed at which the developments are happening?
Did you expect to know more or are police intentionally being a little reticent about everything?
Good question.
I I suspect that they do know the identity of the shooter.
I don't have any special inside knowledge about that, but with the They definitely know who the shooter is, 100% they do.
Um the mayor even uh mayor of New York mentioned this.
I think so.
Yeah, the mayor of New York said they know who he is.
With the quality of the photos that have been shown, uh they're trying to find them probably.
He left New York City.
Okay.
So they have to rely now on other agencies in the feds to find them, which is probably why they brought the Marshalls in too.
Suspect that plenty of people have identified He can't be that if you have identified him, it can be that difficult to find.
Well, I mean, he probably anticipated that he was gonna have to go on a run after this.
So um he might have things in place to hide himself.
I mean, hell, he might be he he could easily be in Canada or Mexico by now.
OK.
...identified this young man already, and the police do know his name.
And there might be a variety of reasons for withholding that at this time, maybe to continue his course of cockiness in his adventure here and maybe cause him to be less careful going So maybe they're withholding that at this time, but I I certainly hope that it's just a matter of time before he is uh located, uh captured and and then interviewed.
Yes, and and given that, and I did want to share with our viewers just one of the uh latest photos that the uh NYPD uh shared with us, and this was taken from uh a taxi cab.
This is another photo from the person of interest.
But you were saying, I mean, we're talking about New York City.
There are hundreds of surveillance cameras at every every angle, uh, you know, and and one would think, as they mentioned, that they are getting hundreds of tips, but you might imagine that they Would be perhaps a little further along in the investigation that they are uh letting on uh to the public.
You know, what are you keeping a very close eye on when it comes to the next steps when it comes to additional development?
I think the only reason they're releasing these additional footage, uh sorry, these additional pictures is so that because here's the thing.
So look a lot of the hard work is done.
They know who he is, they know who his family is, they know where he's from, they know probably his background, etc.
They probably don't want to release it to the press, right?
No, they released already these pictures.
So I think the reason why they released these pictures is so if someone calls in and says, Oh, I know that guy, it's XYZ, and they know who he is, well, then now they could take that witness seriously and talk to him.
Because here's the beauty.
If you're doing a case like Zodiac Killer, right, where you don't know who the shooter is, you're just looking for help from the public, you you don't really know too much.
You kind of know some things that like you didn't release the press on purpose, maybe like the way the murder the murder was done, all this shit.
But you start to vet a lot of people when they come in with information.
But the more details you have, right?
And the more information you know, like you know who the guy is, know where he's from, you know his family, etc.
The more you can screen out time wasters.
So they're putting these pictures out more than likely, not necessarily to identify the guy, but so that they can kind of maybe figure out a motive, figure out associates, figure out things about him that they might not have known.
So let's say the guy's name is Tom, right?
He looks like an Italian or an Arab.
Let's say Tom uh Tom Soprano, right?
Tony Soprano, let's say Tony Soprano, one of my favorite shows, right?
Let's say the guy's name is Tony Soprano.
If people call in and say, Oh, I think that's my cousin uh Cliff click.
They don't care.
Oh, that's my my friend Tom click.
We don't care.
Oh, yo, that's Tony Soprano.
Oh, really?
Okay, tell us about Tony.
How old is he?
Um, he's 35.
And then they look, yep, he's 35.
Oh, okay.
What else can you tell them?
Uh he lives in this area, blah, blah.
Oh, look it up.
Oh, yeah, yeah, he does live in the area.
Okay, we're gonna send out some detectives to talk to you.
Boom.
Because that's actually a good lead, right?
Versus all these idiots call in thinking it's their cousin or their neighbor that's the fucking CEO killer.
It's not.
So that's why they're putting out this information.
They're putting limited information out there to um gauge the quality of the people that call in to provide information.
Does that make sense?
Chad, give me ones in the chat if that makes sense.
And like Goddamn video, because y'all ain't gonna get sauce like this anywhere else.
Dom.
We got 911 fucking viewers, uh, sorry, 911 likes, got 1500, almost 3,000 y'all ninjas in here watching this thing.
Um, actually, more than that, because uh a bunch of you guys are watching on X. We got 12,000 uh views already on X. So, guys, like the goddamn video.
But now you guys see why law enforcer puts out shit like this, even when they know who the individual is, is to weed out the weirdos versus the example I gave you with the Boston Marathon bombers, they're at the mercy of the people.
Because at that point, they didn't know who they were, they didn't know their names, they didn't know anything because it was just random CC TV footage.
Yeah.
You know, they I know that they were searching uh Central Park Lake there looking for uh specifically for the weapon uh that is gonna help in this investigation.
Uh number one, knowing that he does not still retain that weapon, uh, doesn't mean that he doesn't have additional weapons, but at least he doesn't have that one.
Um and I think a direction of travel is gonna be interesting.
There was some speculation that he was bound for Atlanta.
Don't know what led them to believe that.
Maybe it was the the bus that he he got on to.
Um if he stayed on that bus, that'll give them good direction.
And then some confirmation, additional surveillance footage uh that that shows that they're on the right track, that that direction is accurate, that uh, you know, if we could come up with some uh proof that he's in Atlanta, then you know, the news titans, the net uh gets smaller, and and it will be within hours or days of uh closing in and actually catching this guy.
And also I I want to ask you from your expertise.
Uh, you know, uh the police were sharing with the public that they found some shell casings with the words uh delay, deny, defend on them.
Uh and uh it relates to the title of a book, um, talking about uh the insurance business and the Yeah, definitely uh he's going down for murder one just off of that alone, FYI guys.
Putting the the stuff in the bullet, uh put writing the stuff on the bullets and putting it after a book that target talks about the insurance thing, he's going down for murder one just off of that alone.
Companies we're not even talking about the recon, taking a bus, using the mask, using the silence or none of that shit.
That's gonna put him for murder one off of that alone, bro.
Uh you know, on that level, with the psyche behind individuals who who uh are behind these acts.
Does it seem as though this person wants to get caught?
I mean, they just left some of these clues there.
You know, uh to me it it's smacks of cockiness.
You know, he he left those shell casings with markings on them.
Um certainly he didn't leave also his fingerprints on those, but then he stuffed the money, uh uh, you know, monopoly money into the backpack, knowing that that that backpack would certainly be found.
So there is an air of of cockiness with this young man, and and hopefully that also leads to mistakes that And he wants the attention, that's for sure.
He would make along the way.
I know they have you know, they've got the burner phone, they've got a uh water bottle that he they believe he used.
They now have the backpack with possible forensic evidence uh there that where they could get DNA or maybe even a fingerprint.
Uh we know the taxi that he took.
We know that he get went into the bus station.
So uh he he's leaving a trail.
Um, you know, whether it it specifically leads to him quickly or not, is up in the air.
Uh certainly all will be useful if we get to the point of having a trial.
And so all of that evidence will be logged and and used to convict him if we get the chance to to prosecute him.
Well, if they I'll tell you this, uh when they catch him, he's cooked.
Bro, he's he's could there is no uh if he goes to trial, he's he's gonna get cooked.
So timeline-wise, every case is very unique and it's all dependent on on a number of factors.
But given the fact that we're now in day five and police are still searching for uh the person of interest in these photos wanting to talk to him.
Uh does that surprise you at all that that it's now gone into five days, or or do you expect that it will go for quite some time.
Well, I I would say that I am a little surprised that it's gone this long.
I was certainly hoping that day four would be the day, and now I'm hopeful that day five would be the day, but I don't think it's in indication of a of a poor investigation or anything like that.
I I know NYPD, I've worked with them.
They're they're looking for him.
That's why it's taken a well.
They either A are still looking for him or B found him but are um have eyes on him, making sure it's it's 100% him.
I've worked with the FBI, uh they are some of the best of the best.
And and so I know that they are doing a great job of tracking this guy.
It's it's just a lot harder than you think.
And and so with uh, you know, with with our tendency toward attention deficit disorder, and I I know I've been one of those checking my phone constantly to see if if the news is out that he's been caught.
I think we have an expectation for this to be wrapped up very quickly, but the the process of gathering the evidence, analyzing the evidence, that that takes time.
And so we we like our popcorn microwaved, but uh this is gonna be a slow cook, and and hopefully he will make a mistake that will quickly lead us to to his full identity and his location.
Kenneth, as uh the the police and investigators are continuing uh to do the legwork on their end.
Anything in particular that you are keeping a very close eye on also another thing I will say this, guys, in my uh uh professional opinion here, the longer it takes, the more I'm thinking he might have fled the country.
That's also something that's very important to understand.
Um, because I'm certain that they have him identified.
At this point, they've probably already talked to his family members.
Um I know they've already went to the hostel.
So if this goes beyond a week, there is a good chance that he might have fled the country.
And once they flee the country, obviously things become a bit more different.
Now we're talking about um geopolitical and diplomatic implications.
We're talking about where did he flee?
Did he go to Canada?
Did he go to Mexico?
Every country has different timelines on dealing with fugitives, guys.
Um, and that changes things significantly because now you're gonna really have to rely up on your federal partners to help you get this guy.
So uh that's also something that's it that um should be accounted for as well.
The longer this takes, the the higher the likelihood he might have left the country.
Well, the his whatever he is.
Depends on which country has him.
Okay.
If he's in Russia, cooked.
But if he's in uh Mexico or Canada, we'll probably be able to get him.
But there are some countries in South America that won't actually die.
I think Ecuador is one of them.
So I wouldn't be surprised if he isn't on his way to uh out outside of the country and trying to get somewhere where they won't extract.
I mean, he could be staying in the United States too, but uh he's gotta have a little bit of common sense to realize that um killing someone of this magnitude in Manhattan in New York City uh would bring uh ridiculous amount of law enforcement attention.
His propensity to travel is interesting to me.
Uh he traveled to New York City.
He went days in advance to to set this up to plan how he was gonna do this, and so he used uh possibly trains and buses, taxis, he's used a bicycle.
So this guy likes to be on the move.
He shows uh uh proclivity for uh for getting around, he's not probably hold down unless he's found that place where he feels like he can be safe.
So I would look for him to continue to be on the move and and certainly the the surveillance, uh the prevalence of surveillance cameras and facial recognition is gonna help uh locate him, track him, and and bring him to justice.
Well, Kenneth, we appreciate you taking the time to join us here on live now from Fox News.
All right.
Now let's go ahead and to CNN now.
The gun used by the suspected shooter.
Police revealing just moments ago that they are looking into the possibility as you look here, that the assassin used right there, let's pause it, that gun in his hand as a veterinarian gun.
That's a larger firearm.
It's used on farms and ranches.
Police are also revealing they're talking to Brian Thompson's family as well as people he worked with and local law enforcement in Minnesota.
They're saying so far they don't have any indications that the killing had anything to do with his personal life.
Back with me now.
Guys, we're at 964 likes.
We got uh 1500 plus young ninjas in here closing in on sixteen hundred.
Guys, all I ask, like the video and gotta donate a dollar to the show.
Like the video.
That's all I ask.
Open up a tab, like it on YouTube so that we can go ahead and hit the algorithm nice and hard, because I'm giving the best analysis on this fucking case on YouTube by far.
All right, I'm telling you how this I am the best.
So like the goddamn video.
Former Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis and former NYPD detective David Sarney.
Okay, uh obviously, you know, this Oh, this if I'm not mistaken, this is a police commissioner during the uh Boston Marathon bombing, guys.
He lost some weight.
And that's the detective with the bad haircut from the uh for that was commenting on lawn crimes.
Let's see what they gotta say.
At this point, moving very quickly here on this Friday night.
Ed, can I just start with you?
This gun, and we were freeze-framing it there.
Um, you know, we've heard about it, um, that that there were a couple of jams, right, that might have had to do with the silence.
And we'll be talking about the jams here in a second.
Uh we'll react to Colin's video.
So far, but now this new reporting, uh, a larger sort of rifle used to put down animals on farms.
What what sort of what would that actually reveal about this killer that he would have had such a gun?
Oh, you're in there.
There certainly have been a number of theories as to why that uh that gun had to be cocked so many times.
Uh and and frankly, this is uh a valid explanation for it.
If this is a specialized weapon that's used on a farm, uh it wouldn't, it wouldn't need to be uh automatically uh able to fire after each round.
It would be something that you could uh do a single shot with.
And it appears as though that's what's happening here.
Now that would lead one to believe that there may be some nexus to rural areas of the country, and this is either someone who's been aggrieved by the insurance company or maybe even an activist that is making a statement uh about uh business.
Right.
So um, you know, it David, this is obviously new information, but can I just ask you your your instinct on how hard it would be to obtain something like this?
And I I I guess to say the obvious I don't want to say a normal person, because we're not talking about a normal person, but it isn't obviously the first, second or even third or even fifteenth kind of thing you'd think of in terms of gun, right?
It is very specific, right?
Definitely very specific.
And accessibility is always deals with firearms.
And that's why when this video came out, everybody was already making perceptions.
And the benefit of this is with when when you start researching this and start doing the work and find out more nuances about this firearm.
We thought it was jammed as uh former commissioner said.
Uh this is an unusual Type of firearm to bring, but it comes back to accessibility.
Someone had access to this.
Did the shooter have it?
Did he obtain access from someone else?
Did he steal the gun from a location?
And there is some slight proficiency in utilizing the firearm.
So is he the one that owned that gun?
Because that gun is, you know, usually when it comes to firearms, uh, the gun usually floats from place to place, person to person.
Usually when it comes to the legal firearm, this might be something that he possessed, or he obtained possession of it from someone else.
Uh John obviously, a lot of new developments today.
The idea, first of all, on this gun is interesting.
The idea there could be a And this video, guys, came out uh one day ago, so recent.
And then we'll look at some other stuff as well.
And we'll like I said, we'll watch we'll we'll walk down every single recent video and break it down and see where the where we are.
And guys, uh, we're at 1,000 likes, shout out to you guys.
Thank you guys so much.
Let's say 1100 next.
Or a gun that veterinary veterinarians use.
Yeah, um, what Chief Kenny is talking about is after this assassination, you know, the NYPD went to its firearms experts and said, What is this gun with this enormous silencer?
And they examined it closely.
It's a blurry shot, but they also looked at the way he was manipulating the weapon, and they said, you know, that looks like the BNT VP9.
Now shit.
Okay.
Yeah, uh, they definitely had ATF there helping.
Um obviously NYPD's gonna have an enormous amount of resources when it comes to identifying guns, but the ATF was also involved in this investigation with helping out as well.
Um and trust me, guys, uh in the law force world, we got a lot of gun nuts that uh, you know, know guns and can look even on a grainy, shitty CT TV um footage, be able to identify it.
As you see, it has this large extended silencer that's that is screwed onto a threaded rather short barrel.
Um but the way the gun works is you fire it with that trigger, and then it doesn't automatically load the next round.
Uh-huh.
You have to pull back on the rear of that slide and then let it go to eject one round and feed the next in.
If we look at that video tape taken during the actual shooting, you see him fire the gun, he's pulling back, firing the gun.
So it's not necessarily that it jammed per se.
Right.
So that's the the question.
And here's the investigative conundrum, which is he's manipulating that gun that appears to be this, you know, kind of assassin's weapon, but they also found shell casings on the ground, but they also found live rounds.
So the question is, was he familiar enough with the working of the weapon?
Did he it does look like in the second, I mean, there's if we re-rack it, he Yeah, and you can see like he's literally like he knows that the gun's gonna like not get into um batteries.
So he just like boom, and he like is like shoot, boom, shoot, boom.
So he knew.
And then you can see him rack it a few times, so he probably wanted all the shells to be expelled so they can show, you know, obviously what he wanted to deny delay, all that crap.
He fires, he he does it, he fires uh I mean he like there, and then he fires, and then it he seems to like tap it two or three times.
Right.
So either he's undergoing a malfunction.
Well, uh the other thing too, just so you guys know, and firearms training, what they always teach you to uh uh tap and rack.
So if your gun jams, right, you uh you you uh they teach you uh tap, right, with with the magazine, and then rack.
Tap rack.
That's what they always teach you.
That that deal that handles most firearms issues, right?
So they teach you.
Well, I got my gun here.
I don't know if I could put it up on YouTube and show y'all.
Hmm.
Yeah, well, you guys get it.
You guys understand.
But yeah, tap, rack.
They teach you that in all firearms training whenever the gun comes out.
So you can see I'm doing that.
So the guy's obviously trained with a pistol.
Um, because he doesn't know how that weapon works.
Or I mean it's a blurry shot.
It may be another weapon, even a ghost gun with a large suppressor or silencer.
What do you mean?
Uh like he meant to be a big thing.
He doesn't even he doesn't even tap, he just rocks it.
The drill tap rack ready to cycle another round in there, or he got overzealous and he cycled two rounds there instead of just pulling it.
All right, so this guy, uh former FBI, that's talking to Scott Curtis.
Back and letting one round cycle into the chamber.
But there's a there's a weird cultural thing here.
I mean, you wouldn't be committing a professional murder with a veterinarian uh a veterinary's gun, but um this gun is based on the design of something called the well rod.
And even going back to the British and the Allied forces in World War II in the 1940s, the well rod was the assassin's weapon.
It uh when you fire it with that suppressor, you get a sound like a book hitting a table in a library.
And the idea why a vet would have that is so that it doesn't disturb, I guess, other animals.
Exactly.
It's practically silent.
It's uh it's a it's a significant round.
It's a nine millimeter round.
Um and it's it's it's meant for close up killing.
It's meant for vets to kill an animal by shooting it in the head or or somewhere, you know, that's gonna be fatal, but it would work the exact same way on humans very effectively and extraordinarily quietly.
Juliet, if if he's going, I mean, if he commits this murder, gets on the bike, goes through Central Park, goes up to you know, into the 80s on the west side, hops in a cab, goes to the bus station.
I assume those are all things he became to the city.
There's not a lot of people who aren't from the city would even know about that bus station up by the George Washington Bridge.
And I don't know if that's one of the things in the 10 days of reconnaissance that while he was in the city that he learned about, but there can't have been at that time in the morning.
So these are different areas, right?
So you got here, Central Park, so SCNR taxing w uh West 86th Street in Columbus Ave, seen bike out of the Central Park 77th Street, location hotel, the Hilton Hotel, um location of discovered backpack uh in Central Park, and then uh center drive entrance, and then scene answering uh bus station uh up in Broadway.
Morning, that many buses going to places from that bus terminal by the George Washington Bridge.
I mean, I don't know how uh how busy that that terminal is, but it's got it's gotta be less busy than Port Authority.
Right, and it it is.
And uh but what we do know from this activity is he planned his exit and probably his exit from the city almost as carefully as he planned the assassination.
So this is someone who's thinking of the full circle.
This is not a mass shooting, it's not a suicide.
It's uh it is it is someone who wanted to get out and thought through it in all those actions that you just said, not once as he stopped, not once as he surveys, not once do we see his face.
So I have been writing and saying, you know, that whatever we think this is, this is someone you know the the police are doing one thing and they are bumping up against his anticip his his the anticipation he had that they would do exactly that.
And he is uh he is playing not playing it's sort of like a cow cat and mouse now.
The surveillance has not been as fruitful as we wish.
Uh the even the face uh that we see is not is apparently not showing this lady's a national security analyst, not law enforcement FYI.
A match.
He he kind of knows how to cover himself.
And so in some ways, this surveillance state, which exists in the city, it's a dense city, he's got lots of cameras.
Uh it in some ways he was surveying it and knew how to get around it.
How much does him leaving the city, if in fact that's what he did?
We know he got into the bus station.
We don't know no video of him leaving.
How much does that complicate the law enforcement manhunt?
Well, now it's completely expanded tenfold here in where I don't watch FY, I don't watch this video before I uh before I brought it to you guys.
So what I call I called it, right?
It's obviously they're gonna have to rely on the federal partners a lot more now that it's out of the out of um the uh the city.
Uh he probably left the state as well.
So um that's where the marshals are uh gonna be important for this.
He could be, and he's had how many days now advance on law enforcement there to, you know, work himself out of the New York City city area.
Obviously, it was it would be easier to try to corral him within the city because there are all these choke points, right, with bridges and tunnels and the way out there through bus train plane.
And you know, I figured he was gonna come in and go out by bus because there's less scrutiny there with not having to provide identification, no screening of bags there.
Um, with a weapon.
Right.
If he's bringing the weapon in here, um, then he can do that obviously a lot easier on guys like the video.
Let's hit 1.1K.
Got 1600 on edges watching.
I'd like to finish the video with 1500, but like the video, guys.
On bus and potentially on a train, but not on a plane, obviously.
The you know, John, we we've been talking about how how why wasn't the bag found uh in the last couple of days, Central Park, you know, if he was only in that park for 15 minutes, we know generally where he entered and where he exited, there's a limited route you can you can travel.
Um would I know they're being very careful and and Sherman's reporting there you use an excavator and they got the surrounding material as well in case he spit or there's any DNA in on the ground, but would somebody have immediately looked inside the bag?
I mean, with a tie back suit and you know, just to see is the gun there?
Their instructions were if you find it, freeze the location, do not touch it, wait for the detectives, wait for the crime scene unit, and let them package this up because this is one of these things where even touching it or going through it with rubber gloves, you can smudge prints, move DNA, uh contaminate it with your own material.
When they go to trial, they want to be able to testify this was all done with perfect procedure in terms of trying to preserve that evidence and then extract that evidence.
You know, we know it's oh interesting, though he wanted to escape, but he also wanted to leave behind bullets that have these words written on them.
That's exactly right.
And he is he is the the master of uh of sort of wanting to be seen but not wanting to be found.
And this gets to, you know, what we've all been talking about, this sort of the creation of a cult around him, the him becoming a sort of folk hero for people who don't like their health insurance companies.
I think it's disgusting, but nonetheless, the fact that he seems to come from nowhere and go nowhere.
The NYPD is now at day three, almost day four, you know, and and nowhere closer, uh, is part of the.
Well, you know, uh I like I said, I I think they got they got this guy 100%.
Um now it's just a matter of um finding him.
They know who he is, which is half the battle.
So um also, uh, real quick, let me read some chats here.
We got um check out Grantham's video on YouTube.
He breaks his theory down on the weapon use that's from money.
Uh Martin, do you believe professional hitman exists?
They do.
Um just not used as often as you guys think.
Um if you don't believe uh as times change with the digital world, the higher professional man can have fake IDs, credit card, skin masks, etc.
I understand this guy looks like an amateur behiding and plain sound works more often than not.
Yeah, there's been some people saying that a lot of these mistakes he they think is purposeful.
If this guy gets caught and goes to trial, if his story was he killed the CEO because they denied treatment that led to uh a lot of people dying.
Would the jury not convict him since no one really cares for those corporate types?
What are thoughts on something like that?
That's not gonna matter.
That's not gonna matter, guys.
Where's the Discord?
Do I find it?
That's uh my erroneous message noble.
If you have fled to a country like Mexico or Canada, do they have to comply and give the shooter back to US for extradition?
More than likely they will.
There, they're uh we we have agreements with them.
Where do I get access for CC Premium Zoom call?
I'm already on C C Premium.
Hopefully, next time I'll be able to talk to you, need your advice.
Yeah, Machaka, uh, you got it.
We probably drop it in Castle Club that we're gonna do it, but then we actually put the Lincoln Castle Club premium.
Of what he's able to manipulate.
So I think he is using technology media, these hints of the bullets, the the coy smile while flirting, but not enough to know who he is.
All of that is shows someone who who I think is sophisticated, at least in in media and and this came out I think today, a few hours ago.
Retired former NYPD commander says Lai on Manhunt for United Healthcare stupid ads.
All right.
Well, while this dumbass ad plays, all right, cool.
Well, as I I have stated this before that he's not a professional, but he is calculated.
All right, he um obviously planned this out to a very uh good degree as well.
He uh planned his escape route, he planned everything prior to it.
I don't know if they have the exact number of days that keeps changing of how many days he he was actually here.
But the fact that he left the bullets and the words he did put on there, he used the word depose instead of uh delay.
He didn't he didn't use delay, he used the pose.
Who knows if this has anything to do with the civil suit that they may have uh instituted from somebody and it didn't go well?
We don't know what it is.
It could be just you know, uh a red herring that he's throwing out there right now to throw people off for the real reason as to why he did this.
I'm still not convinced that this is somebody who just happened to be uh, you know, upon him on that morning.
I think he had intimate knowledge of where Mr. Thompson would be at that hour.
Now, how did he get that knowledge is the is the uh is the big uh million dollar question right now.
You know, how did he know to be there at a quarter to seven in the morning?
So the fact that he was over there for a little bit at the uh one Again, and this goes to show like kind of like the halfway thing, like meticulous in some ends, but like sloppy in some others.
Witness who heard the shot said that man was there and they saw them there.
They saw him there, then that that says a lot.
But he's leaving these clues, he's discarding it, he planned it from the beginning.
I'm going to go through the park, I'll get rid of the clothes.
I I saw the bag, I felt that it was overloaded with clothing or something shoved in there.
Maybe they'll find something that etched those words into the uh into the uh rounds, the spent rounds, as well as the live rounds that they recovered.
I said, you know, maybe that's the uh thing that they may find.
Maybe they found something at the hostel.
But people have to be patient.
These things just don't come one, two, three.
I mean, it looks like that on TV.
All right, when the fact is, oh, look at him, he's going through the park.
But this is days later that they're finding this out Through the videos.
He did this in a matter of, you know, like an hour, you know, and he's gone.
He planned his escape.
He's gone while they're still retrieving all these videos.
So there's a lot of second guessing going on, but the MYPD is doing a bang-up job with this.
They reached out to the feds, and rightfully so.
The feds have uh you know more advanced uh, or I'd say a broader facial recognition system.
So it's it's coming into you know, the pieces are coming together right now.
You know, with with a lot of criminals, there's a you know, this uh air of arrogance about them that they they feel that they're smarter than the police, they're smarter than everybody, they want to commit the perfect crime, but they're doing things to let them know that it is me.
I mean, him showing his face.
He hadn't Yeah, uh definitely want that attention, man.
And he showed his face.
Maybe it was just for that flirtatious moment that they discussed.
But I even said I said that that's somebody I would like to speak to because she actually had conversation with them, the clerk at the hostel.
You know, and my big thing when I was running the Brooklyn robbery squad, we would pay attention to things, you know, details like the verbiage used, but by uh by a perpetrator, you know, somebody that would say something and say it over and over in the in the robbery patterns we had, and that was important.
So maybe he has an accent, maybe he said something or used the word.
Yeah, that is very important, and they're gonna absolutely talk to everyone that spoke to him because that will help them.
Remember how I told you guys the cell site data with the phones?
They'll be able to track who the other people were that spoke to them and see where they're from.
More than likely, they're gonna be people that know each other, right?
Um, so that is gonna be important to see what part of the country is from, and it'll confirm other pieces of information they have.
A specific word that makes a difference, but every piece of information is crucial.
So the detectives know this, and they're the best detectives in the world.
And I don't say it because I was with them.
I say it because I wholeheartedly believe this.
All right, that they know what they're doing.
They have great direction from good bosses, and they're going in the direction that they're not getting tunnel vision by any means.
They're looking in every direction, they're taking every tip seriously, and I'm sure there are tips coming in because somebody, this man's face is on a nationwide platform right now through all the media, and somebody has got to recognize this individual.
Yeah.
And he has to know that.
He has to know that he left those clues.
And I think it's gonna be when he does get caught, he's gonna make it his moment in the sun.
All right.
So let's go ahead and look at some of the other news on this thing.
Bruh.
Close these other tabs out.
Close these other tabs.
Six minutes ago.
Let's look at it.
Just upload.
Sorry, guys, I don't know why it's only playing out the right hand side of these news stations suck.
It was almost ball game over.
Experts say new evidence could be key to finding the suspect in United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson's murder.
Surveillance video shows the face of a man.
Police say is wanted for questioning.
They say this is from a hostel where he pulled down his mask and smiled at a female employee.
I think we're lucky that we have a lot of surveillance.
Obviously, we want more.
And if anybody has any more information or surveillance, we want them to come forward.
Experts say law enforcement can use evidence to piece together a timeline that eventually could lead to an arrest.
For instance, police now believe the suspect took a greyhound bus to New York that originated in Atlanta.
NYPD and the FBI have a great ability to pull together video surveillance and and piece it together.
This is a former FBI agent.
from her badge here.
Moment by moment by moment and follow somebody through any camera available.
And it's not just video evidence.
Authorities say they think the suspect dropped a burner phone and a water bottle, an official says has a smudged fingerprint.
Investigators say they've got this nigga.
Found the words depose.
You see the blood there.
And delay written on a shell casing and live round at the scene.
A popular insurance industry phrase is delay, deny, defend.
The moment an identity is fully established, things move very quickly towards arrest.
I may be Kylie reporting.
All right.
Let's see what else we got.
It is now day five of the eight minutes ago.
For the gunman who killed United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in New York City.
And YPD releasing new photos of the suspect this weekend in hopes of someone recognizing him.
Fox Science Leon Purvis joins us live outside of UHC headquarters.
Leon, the mayor says he's confident investigators are getting closer.
Exactly.
Randy Kelsey.
Investigators believe they're close to knowing who the suspect is.
And tonight we have new photos, and they're pretty clear.
They show him getting into a taxi cab and in the backseat of the cab.
Now this man hunt stretches well beyond New York City five days after the shooting death of Brian Thompson.
New photos released by NYPD of the man suspected of killing United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
It shows him getting inside of a taxi.
New York City mayor Eric Adams is confident the suspect will be brought in soon.
The net is tightening, and uh we gotta bring this person to justice.
Right now, authorities will not say if they know the identity of the suspect.
We do not want to see, guys.
One burning question: how did the gunman make his way through New York City with so many surveillance cameras and not be caught or identified after five days?
This is one of the most dense areas in the city.
It's often where a lot of corporate functions are held.
Here's what we know so far.
Police say the suspect got on a Greyhound bus in Atlanta on November 27th to New York City.
He then used a fake New Jersey ID to check into a hostel before the shooting.
Officials released these photos of the suspect while he was in the lobby of the hostel.
After the shooting, investigators found a backpack in Central Park.
New York media outlets are reporting it contained a jacket and monopoly money.
Authorities found a burner phone in an alley after the shooting, and they're looking to see if it's connected to him.
How can someone just walk out of New York City?
Well, the fact that there are so many cameras and that there are so many people means you can just blend into the crowd.
Investigators also say they found three shellcasings with the words deny, depose, and defend, which are popular phrases to criticize the health care insurance industry.
Over the weekend, NYPD dive team searched Central Park looking.
Yeah, they weren't looking for the gun for the murder weapon.
During they still haven't found it, which is uh, you know, obviously uh very important to the situation.
The search investigators also found a discarded water bottle and a protein bar wrapper, which they are testing for DNA.
The FBI is offering $50,000 for information that could lead to an arrest.
And 10,000 for NYPD.
Arrest NYPD is offering 10,000 dollars.
Live Minitaka tonight.
Leon Purvis, Fox 9.
All right, so let's go ahead and uh look.
Let's see.
18 minutes ago.
This is from Fox Dallas.
It is now day five of the hunt for the gunman who killed United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in New York City.
NYPD releasing new photos of the suspect this week.
Here's the timeline to talk about one of the major stories that we have been following for you.
The manhunt in the uh unidentified gunman approached United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson has now reached its fifth day.
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Hey, we all remember what happened early Wednesday morning in New York.
We have a free version on Castle Club, and we also have a paid version.
Paid version gets all the content.
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The suspect opened fire outside the New York Hilton midtown in Manhattan, Manhattan, and then vanished into the streets of the Big Apple, prompting a large-scale manhunt.
And we've seen new images, we've seen new video, but we have not been able to locate the suspect.
That is what is uh New York City Police are saying.
They did come up with a uh timeline here of the shooting.
And I want to kind of go through that for you right here on live now from Fox.
Kind of gives you a detail of the map to uh what what we all know.
So uh uh number one there on the screen at 6 44 in the morning.
The victim is walking alone towards the New York Hilton midtown after exiting his hotel across the street.
And then number two of a moment there, the shooter who is lying in wait alongside the building fires at him.
Then number three.
Hold on, let's see if we can get us some better quality for you, Nunjas.
Three, the dying in wait across the street.
The New York shooting obscene new video, but we have not been able to locate the suspect.
That is what is uh New York City police are saying they did come up with a uh timeline here of the shooting, and I want to kind of go through that for you right here on live now from box kind of gives you a detail of the map to uh what what we all know.
So uh uh number one there on the screen at 6 44 in the morning, the victim is walking alone towards the New York Hilton midtown.
I'm gonna get myself out of the way, guys, so you can actually see this.
Boom.
all right pound after exiting his hotel across the street and then number two a moment there The shooter who is lying in wait alongside the building fires at him.
Then number three, the shooter then runs to an alleyway there across the street between 54th Street and 55th Street.
Then once at uh West 55th Street, the shooter continues to walk on Sixth Avenue where he gets onto a bike.
The shooter rides north on Sixth Avenue towards Central Park, and then at 6 48, the shooter rides the bike to center drive there.
And uh then we all know uh what was happening in next.
Uh the suspect uh goes to uh Central Park, was able to drop a backpack there, inside that backpack containing monopoly money.
So once again, uh trying to put some peg on the face of the police and the investigators as we are all talking about this manhunt now entering uh the fifth day.
They believe that the suspect sometime in that morning hour, then went on a bus, and we do not know where that person then went next.
Obviously, uh they are continuing to try to look really at every uh possible angle here of the videos that they are getting, but still need the help from uh the public there, as well as anybody that might know something about this shooting that uh really scared so many New Yorkers and really across the country there.
So uh we'll definitely be keeping an eye on this major here story for you.
Earlier today, scuba divers were also um with the New York police department were seen scouring a lake inside Central Park as the manhunt for the killer of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson continued.
Uh divers were searching for evidence inside the lake throughout the morning.
The lake is near where officials found and if they got a diving team out, you know shit is serious, bro.
Found a backpack linked to the suspect images and video.
Divers typically only come out for homicide cases.
...show divers signaling to one another as the search continued there.
So still a lot of moving parts right here, and it feels...
Now, here's a guy in interview with a guy that actually stayed at the same hostel as him, bro.
Check this guy's out.
Check this out, guys.
And Omar Jimenez is out front live in New York City.
He is in front of the hotel where Brian Thompson was shot and killed.
The Hilton there uh in midtown Manhattan.
And Omar, what is the latest that you are learning tonight?
Well, for starters, this is the second day where we don't know where this suspect is.
We don't know who this suspect is at this point.
And some of the latest video that we're seeing, some of it you just alluded to there, shows the shooter, the latest in the day that we see this shooter after the shooting, which is only about 15 minutes or so after the shooting seen on the upper west side here.
But for for perspective, that's about 30 blocks from where I'm standing.
And with a route that could take you through Central Park, which of course, as we know, is where law enforcement searched, and of course, where he is seen on camera exiting.
All of this as the New York Police Department is putting out new images tied to this investigation that they believe the public can help with.
New images tonight of what the NYPD is calling a person of interest wanted for questioning.
Sources say these photos showing this person unmasked and smiling come from an upper Manhattan hostel where investigators believe the shooter may have stayed before the Wednesday morning murder of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Another clue as investigators try to piece together the shooter's identity.
So we're on the right path, and we believe we're going to.
That's the mayor that got indicted, who I think is probably going to get a pardon from Trump.
He's actually going hard on the immigration.
He told him to cancel him, so you know he wants that part in.
Uh but he'd probably have to actually go through the trial and get convicted and everything else like that to get the pardon.
Uh, which by the way, guys, um, need you guys do me a quick favor.
Like the video if you're guys are watching right now.
We got a 1600 plus U ninjas on uh well, maybe yeah, almost 1600, you guys watching on YouTube right now, another almost 1500 on Rumble.
We got almost 3,000 ninjas in here.
Um, and then we got another couple thousand watching on X. I see we got uh twelve, fifteen K views.
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Was it?
Do you read the checks?
Uh I did read on Rumble or Rumble, yeah.
Uh yeah, I could read some of those.
Okay, Car Thief caught me sleeping literally.
I caught his ass on camera wearing a mask and carrying a flashlight.
Zen Man 2.0, lucky nigga.
Okay.
Umble on Twitter or on uh Instagram, guys.
Uh let me see here.
You said Rumble I had some shots.
Let's see here.
Myron, do you have a shot did you have a shootout?
No, I did not, Liam.
Thank God.
Almost came close to it a few times, but no.
Uh apprehend this first.
Police conducted a search at the hostel.
Like the video, let's get 1500 likes, guys.
And one law enforcement official tells CNN the shooter stayed in a room with two other men.
Investigators continuing to ask the public for help and offering a reward for information of up to $10,000.
And they continue tracing the movements of the gunman before and after the targeted killing.
What we do know is an extremely well organized, highly planned, sophisticated attack.
Uh, from everything we've seen so far.
On the day of the shooting, surveillance video appears to show the suspected gunman exiting the 57th Street subway around 6.15 a.m.
Minutes later, pictures show him at a Starbucks where sources tell CNN he bought a water and two power bars, just two blocks from the shooting site.
Then, at 6.29 a.m., surveillance video from a nearby garage shows the suspected shooter walking down the street while on the phone, just minutes before he carries out the killing of Thompson at 6.47.
The gunman then makes a quick getaway, and this new video appears to show a person dressed in a similar way just ten minutes later on an e-bike twenty-five blocks north of where the murder happened.
Investigators also found a phone and a water bottle near the scene of the shooting.
A law enforcement official tells CNN a fingerprint was also lifted from the bottle, but it was smudged.
Also still unknown, the motive.
But there are potential clues.
Sources say a shell casing and live round found at the crime scene were etched with the words delay and depose, a possible reference to the phrase delay, deny, defend, which is the way some lawyers have described the tactics insurers use to avoid paying claims.
That would of course point in the direction that this person was somehow uh well was certainly personally invested in this murder.
Now we mentioned that route fleeing north of here toward Central Park as we spoke about law enforcement searched Central Park for the backpack that was seen worn by the shooter in this shooting.
Did not find the backpack and no indication of what may have been inside.
He doesn't know where the biggest thing is.
And then on the hostel as well, law enforcement stories.
What was that?
He wasn't wearing gloves, right?
He wasn't wearing what?
Gloves.
Uh no.
it didn't look like it.
I was telling CNN that this person used a fake New Jersey ID to check in, which at this point was days before the shooting.
And here outside the Hilton Hotel, Life goes on, people walking by as if nothing happened.
But of course, for law enforcement, the priority is not just where this person went, who this person is.
Absolutely.
Omar, thank you very much.
All right.
So I have this video queued up for you guys.
He was staying in the same hostel on the same floor where police believe the shooter, the suspected shooter stayed.
And Mate 1.1k likes, guys.
Guys, like the video, let's say 1500.
So 1500 likes.
I I I really appreciate your time.
I mean, what a bizarre situation you find yourself in.
I know you're visiting from Brazil, uh, you've been staying in the hostel, you've met some people there.
Um can we just start with some of the photos you took on the fourth floor of the hostel where where you were staying, where um the the where police say he was staying.
Can you tell us anything about that?
What it's like in there, what those halls look like.
All right, so um the hotel, uh the hostel is actually uh really crowded.
There are a lot of people there, so they divide like New York City real fast, okay?
This is very important.
So look in New York City, I've lived there, spent a good amount of time there.
I was actually born there as well.
People go to New York City because it is the dream.
Okay, they go to New York City, they want to live there, they want to be able to say that they live in New York City, knows all this shit.
And reality is a lot of people that are there are just trying to make it.
They don't have the resources, the money to really live there like that.
So what ends up happening is people stay in hostels, they stay in shitty apartments, they stay in terrible areas, there will be have a million roommates.
It's very expensive to live in New York City, extremely expensive.
And then it gets really cold, a lot of crime, etc.
Very dirty.
So, um, though what you guys are gonna see here, you're gonna be like, what the fuck?
Why are all these people in hostel?
Hostels, um, hotels, uh crowd apartments, roommates, all this shit.
It is very fucking common in New York City for people to do this.
People will dilute the quality of their life to live in New York City.
I don't know what it is, but it's people do this shit.
They'll eat ramen noodles every day, go, you know, drink dirty ass water.
Like, people will do this shit to live in New York City, bro.
I'll never understand it.
As someone has been there many times, I call the scum city all the time.
I make fun of it.
I think it's one of the worst cities in America, alongside Los Angeles.
Um but you know, it is what it is.
Uh there's no novelty there for me.
So uh just understand, guys, that a lot of people do this shit.
Another thing also that's important is in New York City since there's so many people, no one gives a fuck.
You can be having a heart attack, oh shit, and fall down.
Niggas will walk over you and go doing what they're doing.
Nobody cares, right?
Um it's people are mean, people don't give a fuck, it's dirty.
People live right on top of each other, hostels are a thing.
People pay a bunch of money to live in shitty ass apartments with 20 roommates.
It's what it is.
People go broke and live a shitty quality of life to live in New York City.
Okay.
So I want you to kind of understand that before listening to this guy.
You got a lot of immigrants in there, you got a lot of people that are broke, whatever, trying to figure shit out.
Roof to I think four to ten people.
But in the 10 people in one room.
Yeah, see, there you go.
Yeah, four to ten or twelve, four to twelve four to twelve, yeah.
Um the hallway uh is just simple, it's just the doors that goes to the rooms, the uh shared rooms.
Um that's it, that that's pretty simple how the how the hallways look.
So it would it would seem from what you're saying that if if if he was staying on that floor, as I believe he was, and he would have had other people in the room.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Okay, so so now you've been staying there for about a week.
Yeah.
Um, and you're talking about these rooms that you got four to twelve people in a room.
So from what you're saying, he would have had other people in the room.
Yeah.
How hard would it have been to as you see it to even do something like to have a gun in there or something like that?
I mean, it would be that hard, like if you put on like his luggage or something, um, because there's no metal detector, there's nothing like that.
So I think just go inside, and it would be all good.
Like, so we could have had something like that.
In terms of seeing him, do you recall seeing now?
You've seen his picture out there, and you talk about the hostel being so crowded.
Do you recall seeing anybody that looked like him?
Yeah, I I didn't recall anyone looking like that.
And he didn't recall because no one gives a fuck in New York.
People are saying that he always using the mask.
So even if I saw him, I I wouldn't recognize him because he was always wearing the mask.
Right.
And and and obviously as you were there those few days.
Um you talk about the situation, there's no security, there's no um lots of people coming and going.
There's like basic security.
Yeah, yeah, there's a security, like uh you can't go inside without a card, so we have to check him to go inside.
But like uh gun control doesn't have any.
So yeah.
That that kind of security is not right.
That's how he was able to probably sneak that gun in.
It is actually very weird now, at least here in Florida, to see people with uh wearing uh a face mask.
But in New York, it's very common.
Like there's still people that think that cover well, I I guess cover is still very real in New York.
It when I went in 2021, it was still like a very locked down place, like every place was like closed and stuff.
So I guess there is a lot of people there that are still wearing a face mask, and it's still very common.
But in here you want to see people wearing face masks like as often.
That's actually very weird to see people wearing face masks.
I will say it's often just old people that are like traumatized because of COVID.
So it's actually weird that this guy didn't pick up on this guy because he has he was wearing uh a face mask.
Well, actually, you know what that's I mentioned this lightly before, but I might as well say it now.
Um guys in New York it's filled with liberals and weirdos.
So um if you see people wearing masks in New York, like it's kinda common, unfortunately.
Like there's a lot of whack jobs that are gonna be wearing masks in 2024, even though we know about this camp.
Um in Florida, you make fun of them, and New York, it's like normal.
So him being able to walk around with like one of these masks on in 2024, um, wouldn't raise that much suspicion.
Versus if I did something like this in Miami with a mask on, people will be like, Yeah, that yeah, the people will look at me a little bit more weird.
Like if you see someone with a face mask now in Miami, people will look at you like bro, you're a weirdo.
But in New York, it's not you're not a weirdo.
So he gets in a cab with a mask on, or he's doing all this shit with a mask on, he's walking around the host hostel with a mask on, nobody's really gonna say anything.
Because New York is full of weirdos.
Um and I'm so that's important to mention as well.
And I'm saying this because I I went there literally like a month ago, and I still saw people wear mask.
And it was like a common thing there.
Like uh, you will see random people just wearing masks.
In here, it's I I get chuck every time I see somebody wearing a mask because it's usually like an old prison.
Like in in airports or like very like public place places, there is people wearing a mask, and it's okay because okay, there is people traumatized because of the COVID.
But to see a lot of people wearing masks is kind of weird.
Yeah, New York only weird.
Liberal cities you'll see it.
Yeah, like New York and stuff.
But Miami, we're more based.
So yeah, you look at some of the mask, like, what the fuck won't you, bro?
Yeah, it's weird.
But when you pay, you can pay credit, cash, yeah.
Yeah, whatever.
Yeah.
Any way you want to pay.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, I mean it is it is it is really fascinating.
That's probably why he picked it.
So many people there.
He that uh he could use a fake ID, paying cash, where a mask and no one's gonna really ask him anything.
But also important as you say that he would have probably had a lot of other people in the room.
Yeah.
Where he was sleeping.
I think he his room.
Probably like had four to six people, but I'm not sure because I I didn't get to come in there.
It was locked.
But the day that I arrived, uh oh yeah, and detectives already went there and interviewed everybody that was in the room FY.
Uh cops there, people saw him.
People saw uh the cops there outside the room.
Um but yeah, uh everyone that was inside the room just went to another room.
Uh I don't know who these people were, like.
All right.
Uh let's now go to um this.
So you guys, I want you guys to pick.
Do you guys want it?
We got two videos here.
We got either the Colin New York one or the debunking one.
Uh his video came out two days ago talking about the gun, and then this one is more recent.
Yeah, which one do y'all want?
Grantham or Calion.
What do y'all want?
Reason one.
Let's see what you guys want.
So the ninja say.
Good reason.
Good reason.
The most recent one.
All right.
Now before I play it though.
Um I want you guys, we need to hit.
What do we got here?
We're 1.2.
Let's get to 1.3 ninjas.
Let's get to 1.3.
Okay, likes.
Just like the video.
Um, yeah, most of y'all are saying thumb.
All right.
We'll see you all soon.
We'll see you all soon.
So right here we have a Glock with a functioning suppressor.
Now, just recently, a few days ago, the United Healthcare CEO was assassinated using a suppressed firearm.
The question is, exactly what did he use?
Why was he cycling the weapon?
What occurred?
There are a ton of myths going around that maybe are from people who don't know shit about guns.
My name is Michael Jones, former Air Force Special Warfare guy, shooter all around.
We of course we have with us Jeremy.
Jeremy, what is your background?
A cyber simulative Luis Jimenez says, What do you think about Syria war and Assad being in Russia?
Uh definitely got some takes on that.
I don't know if I'm gonna cover it tonight, maybe on a night train or tomorrow.
I'm not sure.
But uh let's get through this first chat.
Warfare veteran.
So I play video games.
That's it.
Today we're gonna be busting this.
We're gonna be talking about history.
We're gonna be doing what we do best on Grantham, and that is being autistic.
So there is a lot of conjecture going around.
We're precisely what happened over what weapon you use.
We know that the uh NYPD is saying it was a BNT station six, which is a nine millimeter wellrod copy, which is a single shot suppressor that uses wipes.
We'll talk more about that later.
Uh that's what CNN was saying.
But there's a lot that we're seeing from the video that might disprove a lot of what's being said online, or even from what the NYPD is saying.
So we're gonna be going over four different theories over what we believe is probably most likely.
We're gonna be picking our favorite ones that we think are most likely, and we're gonna be showing based off of our firearm knowledge, which is at this point fairly extensive, what is most likely and uh trying to show you guys the truth here.
A lot of non-truths, wouldn't you say, Jeremy?
I'd say so.
A lot of guesswork at this point.
A lot of guesswork.
We do a lot of shooting and suppressors, so let's go ahead and let's talk about it.
So right here we have kind of three main examples of pistols and suppressors that you would see.
But before we get into it, let's take a look at the shooting itself and let's break it down.
So here's what we know.
The United Healthcare CEO was walking by are you know, if there's anything that America loves, it's an outlaw.
Isn't that right?
For this reason that for that we're seeing a lot of praise for this man.
We're not condoning anything.
I'll tell you this.
Yeah, uh Twitter was going crazy.
They were like, Yeah, yeah, we we love this.
Like, they were happy that they killed this guy.
Um There's a bunch of people praising him.
Yeah, there's a bunch of people praising him.
And that's why I opened up this podcast excusing the issues with insurance in America and why so many people have issues with the insurance industry and how it's a very dirty business.
And honestly, it's a very evil business.
Um, so with that said, I'm not gonna celebrate this man's death.
Um, I think it's terrible anytime someone dies.
However, um, I'm also not gonna be green behind the ears and not uh and naive as to why this individual targeted this guy because of the industry uh of the insurance uh insurance industry's um problems with you know letting people die, not giving them coverage, um, being in the business of profiting versus saving lives.
And that's what it is, man.
Like I said before I explained it earlier, it's the only business where um they're not really too concerned with your life with you um with delivering the service.
As a matter of fact, they do everything in their power to ensure they don't deliver the service they're supposed to deliver.
So you know there was people that made this is not uncommon for them to get death threats.
What are you gonna say?
No, the next day there was people that made shirts with the photo of the shooting, and he said the l the lady and the post.
Yeah, yeah, because he that's what you put in the bullets.
Yeah.
Yeah, but I wouldn't be surprised.
Yeah, shirts came out the next day.
Yeah.
Yeah, this guy's gonna get praise.
I mean, what when the day comes when he's arrested, and if he decides to go to trial, there's gonna be hundreds of people watching, there's gonna be people there cheering for him, there's gonna be women that want to have sex with him.
There's gonna be he's gonna be a celebrity.
He's gonna be like a fucking rock star the day they catch this guy.
Um, you know, he's gonna get a Lot of public uh praise for doing this.
Um, because what he's probably gonna do, I anticipate, is that he's going to go ahead and try to um say that I wanted to bring awareness to an issue in the United States, which which is true.
That there's a serious fucking insurance problem in America for all my international viewers.
Um healthcare in America, our system is broken, it's very reliant upon greedy, profitable insurance industry, uh the insurance industry, where they're not really too concerned with helping people, rather they want to improve their margins.
And to improve said margins, it's on not actually delivering the healthcare uh from the claims.
They are saying that America has a love affair with people who are Robinhood like in many ways, stealing from the rich and giving to the poor.
Not saying that's what happened, but that's life.
So first thing that happens, CEO walks by, or man walks out, he brings the weapon up, he fires.
The weapon does not cycle, which is what leads many people to believe that it is a single shot weapon.
Despite that, we do see a lot of gas ejection from the gas port.
At that point, he cycles the weapon, he kind of rides it forward a little bit.
This man seems to have, I would say, killed before, but probably not as well practiced on a firearm.
He cycles it, he brings it up, he has a misfire of some type, he then fully cycles it, fires again.
He then steps up while cycling yeah, and it's crazy because the guy was right there looking at him, like it just goes, Oh shit, he just ran.
And the weapon, if you notice, he then taps the back, which could be both weapons.
We'll talk about that, and then he seems a deliberate killing blow at which point he leaves.
So there's a lot that goes on in that assassination, and let's talk about how these different.
And that was also interesting, like what he could have just walked up to him and just shot him one time back in the back of the head and been done.
So I did think it was a little weird that he saw him and just said, you know, took a stance and started shooting.
Um, maybe he got excited, maybe he got nervous.
Obviously, you're about to commit a fucking crazy crime in broad uh broad daylight.
Um, you know, in the early morning hours in the mate in the biggest city, one of the most populated cities in the world.
But um theories could fit into that.
The first one we're gonna take.
Yeah, yeah, very mafia-like.
We're at 1.2k likes, so 1600 watching guys, almost 3k watch in total, um, on YouTube and Rumble, we got like a probably another 15k on on uh or 16k views on on X. Guys, like the video, please on YouTube, please.
Let's hit uh 1500 likes.
Uh it's going to be theory one with the official theory is which is that a B and T station six nine millimeter was used.
Now, the BNT station six is a uh fairly I think unique weapon.
I don't think many people are gonna be buying this weapon, and but there's several reasons for this.
It is a copy of the wellrod, which was a World War II design.
It's very quiet.
However, it is a it'd be a very curious weapon to use as a professional hit weapon, or do you just use this as a hit weapon?
One, it falls under the NFA, which means if you bought it, it's going to be easily trackable, which means it's likely not going to be used.
And it's very unique.
So it's a single shot.
So if I want to look at it, so NFA, uh, I think that stands for the National Firearm Act.
Uh uh.
Okay, boom.
Including okay, National Futures Association.
No, hold on.
Yeah, National Firearms Act.
There we go.
So yeah, um, was originally enacted in 1934, similar to the current NFA, the original act impose on tax and marking.
Basically, when you purchase the gun, it's gonna be tracked, right?
More than likely through the form, the ATF form, I think 4473.
And this is the ATF's website, by the way, guys.
Um 4473.
So, yeah, this right here, firearms transaction record.
Which is how they got Hunter Biden's son and Kodak Black, as I explained earlier.
Load it.
Once I have the magazine in, this is probably why many people believe that this is what he used.
You have to twist the back, pull it back, push it forward, and then lock into place.
Now, here's what's very interesting about the weapon.
Rather than using traditional baffles, which are essentially going to catch the gases of going through, but those are straight holes.
The BNT station six uses wipes.
These are essentially rubber caps that the bullet passes through.
And those wipes actually slow down the round and take it from supersonic to subsonic, which makes it very quiet, which you can hear right here.
That is a ridiculously quiet gun.
After you fired it, you then need to rotate, pull it out, and then you can load it again.
So very quiet.
But it seems unlikely to be used for several reasons.
Uh I don't know if it's a nine mil or twenty-two.
What's the type of bullet that they get?
I probably I'm assuming nine mil.
Okay.
Or 22.
NFA.
Two, if you notice in the videos, when he's actually cycling the weapon, he does not appear to be twisting and pulling and then recycling it.
Yeah, he appears to just be cycling the slide itself.
So I think it's somewhat unlikely that he's gonna be using this.
Now, if we take a look at the front right here, these wipes, as you can see right there, it's a very unique design.
It costs a lot because wipes only last a certain number of rounds.
After that, they're they're done.
And they don't really last that many rounds.
So this is very unlikely that he used the BNT station six.
With that being said, we will try to recreate the scene to show you what it would have looked like had Jazz A9MIL.
they use at the B&T Station 6.
So it doesn't make sense to me because on that one shot, if you remember, he loads and then he taps the back.
This is something that you typically do to a semi-automatic to see the slide all the way forward.
With this design, how it logs.
Which I was explaining to you guys the tap and rack with like a Glock.
Rotated to lock forward, that wouldn't be something that you'd do to it.
Or any handgun for that matter, that's a semi-automatic.
So I find it unlikely, but it's a possibility.
So I would say theory number one that he used a BNT station six.
I see probably the least likely of any theory that we have so far.
And being that it's NYPD that suggested this, I think that makes sense.
Theories number two, three, and four revolve around a functioning or semi-functioning semi-automatic weapon.
In this case, we have Glock, one of the most ubiquitous semi-automatic handguns out there.
Yeah, most common for sure.
And when it comes to suppressors, any of your normal suppressors are gonna run pretty well.
This one is some CGS, and it's going to run on pretty much any epistle put you put it on.
Now, suppressors on pistols are a little bit temperamental, and there's a reason for that.
With a suppressor on any type of tilt lock gun or any type of browning action, you have to unlock the barrel.
So because you have so much weight on the barrel, these have what's called a booster or you guys okay with the 1.25 speed, by the way.
I mean, I'm understanding what he's saying, because I uh I obviously understand firearms, but chat.
I know some of you guys might not.
So you guys want regular speed or uh 1.25.
Put put in the chat what y'all need just won.
This is democracy over here.
While we do that, I'll read some of these chats.
New York had a look-alike contest for the shooter.
It's crazy.
I'm sure they did.
Yeah, they did.
Do you think those mistakes were intentional so police would waste their time looking for those hints and he'd give he'd have time to get away to a different country.
Jay-Z name just got dropped in the Diddy Law, so they accused him of graping a 13-year-old.
You should look into it.
Okay.
Um some niggas are saying one to 1.25, 1.5, 2x.
Okay, it's fine.
All right, cool, cool, cool.
Just want to make sure it's not too fast.
Because obviously he's going uh uh he talks fast and it's moving fast, and he's talking about something that's pretty detailed.
By the way, guys, we're only 1.2k likes.
Niggas, let's get to 1.5 goddamn it.
Like the goddamn video.
Like the video on YouTube, god damn it.
All right, let's hit 1500 likes on this bitch.
A Nielsen device on the suppressor.
It's essentially a spring that's compressed and runs in the opposite direction.
So you can see it right here.
See, I can pull that out.
You have a big old spring right there.
So when I'm firing this weapon, that's going to cycle.
But if you don't have a Nielsen device, that pistol is not going to cycle, and you'll need to manually cycle the weapon each shot, which brings us to some of our first points that we're gonna be making.
So right here, we've taken apart one of our suppressors, and you can see the Nielsen device right here.
It's essentially just a piston that's going to counteroperate and make sure that the barrel can run.
Without this Nielsen device, this will not function.
So the second theory is gonna be that he used some type of home-built suppressor that did not have a Nielsen device.
That way he had to cycle the weapon manually between shots.
Let's take a look at what that would have looked like.
Now, all of our suppressors, even without Nielsen devices, are running fine.
They shouldn't Angie.
Do I have my book?
Um the assassin book.
I have a book uh here.
I'll show you.
But they're just lightweight and they're made well.
This is not typical of what you see.
So we'll have to kind of manually do this.
We'll be checking out some live rounds.
Let's see if that would look like.
So as you can see there, he would have had to manually cycle between rounds, and the rounds wouldn't have ejected.
I think this makes the most sense in terms of what is capable of any type of suppressor that you're gonna be buying requires that that'd go through NFA with National Firearms Act, which means it has to be center of the ATF.
There's a lot of paperwork when it comes to the suppressor.
I think it's unlikely he would have used a registered suppressor.
And you gotta pay taxes on it, guys.
If you're gonna get a suppressor, you can get it, but it's tracked.
Yeah, a lot of paperwork, and you gotta pay tax on it.
So, just so you guys know, this book, which I talked about in detail.
Okay, where the hell did it go?
Hold on, chat.
Hold on, let me pull it.
Hand I had here.
All right, this book right here, chat.
Um Hitman.
A technical manual for independent contractors, Hitman.
Um, is a book written under the suit pseudonym Rex Farrell and published um by Paladin Press in 1983.
Paladin Press owner uh Peter Lund claimed in an interview of 60 minutes that the book started Life as a Detailed Crime novel ran by Florida Housewife, etc.
The point is, guys, is this book talks about how to actually assassinate someone and in the book they talk about um how to make a suppressor in this book and I did a whole episode on this on Fed Reacts, which I'll find it for you guys as we continue to play this, but um, where a guy actually used this book to commit an assassination, okay, and the FBI actually found this book and used it as a piece of evidence against him after that case.
The um after that investigation, the book was banned.
You can't get it anymore.
I actually have a copy.
Um, but uh I'm going to find it for you guys of the episode that I did on it.
Um I said that's why I asked Angie if she could find it.
Um building your own suppressor.
You can't stop people from having power tools.
Seems a lot more likely.
He likely wouldn't have had a booster, which means he would have had to have manually cycled it.
When he fired the weapon, the thing that I find interesting is it looks like he did kind of expect it to malfunction in some way or to not cycle because he did go up the cycle.
Oh, you found it?
Oh shit, here we go.
Shout out to Angie for finding it.
Don Demarco for Angie.
So here's the book, guys.
Dom Demonko.
Right?
Um, this is the book right here.
Hit man.
Uh a technical manual for independent contractors.
I've had this book now for a while.
Um, and I got it after reading, um, after doing the case.
Um, this this case, which I'm trying to find on Fed Reacts for y'all ninjas.
Um Fed Reacts Hitman.
I'm trying to find it.
Uh thank you for finding it.
Yeah.
I'm trying to find it.
Where the hell?
Because I did a whole video on this shit.
On what?
Um, on this on this case.
Because a dude actually used this book to actually commit a murder, and FBI arrested him back in the 90s.
Really?
Yeah.
Wow.
What here is his book?
Uh, it's old.
I think he did it in the 90s or the early 2000s.
Trying to find it for y'all missed.
83.
Holy.
Yeah.
And in the book, guys, just so y'all know, right?
So there's like different things.
Getting the job done right, right?
There's um letters in the back.
Homework and surveillance.
There's a whole chapter on that.
Okay.
Uh, there is the weapon that you need to use if you're gonna do it, right?
Which is a um your finished product, useful, durable, inexpensive, and easily disposed of, right?
Which is basically like a makeshift rifle that fires a 22 with a homemade silencer.
Right?
And he goes into how to actually create the silencer, guys, in this book.
Right?
Homemade Silencer.
Which, if you're making a homemade silencer, is it legal to make something like that?
Like a book like that.
Uh, a book, I don't think so, because maybe freedom of speech.
But like, look, guys, he goes into all this detail right here on this shit.
I'm really glad you found this book.
Thank you, Angie.
Um, yeah, look, a whole chapter.
The disposable silencer.
Right.
Now y'all see.
Now I think you guys are starting to see why this book is fucking banned.
Um, it is banned.
Yeah, it goes into equipment, right?
Weapons, ammunitions, accessories, weapons.
And the thing is, right?
Notice.
Like the goddamn video.
I'm giving you a lot of stuff right now.
God damn.
Dom Demonko Monko.
So there was a lawsuit, guys, right?
A triple murder in Montgomery County, a man who you use the book as a guy, James Perry, who had been imprisoned for a violent crime, was caught, convicted, and received three death sentences, three death sentences for this.
Um, hold on.
Let me fucking Fed Reacts.
Let me type in, try Matt.
Was the name?
Matt.
James Fedry.
James Perry.
Let me see if I can find it.
You gonna delete it?
No, I didn't delete it.
It's it's here somewhere.
I'm just trying to find it here.
You know what?
Maybe Infamous serial killer cases.
Let me try under high profile cases.
But yeah, this case.
Oh, my bad, guys.
Right here.
So Montgomery County.
So the lawsuit.
And that's what got the book like banned everywhere, pretty much.
Was uh was that.
I don't know.
I'm looking for the thing for you guys.
Because I think you guys will really enjoy it.
Um, I think.
Man, I've covered so many.
Like, look at all these goddamn cases right here on the on the channel, guys.
Um can see all this right here.
Um that was before me.
So yeah, yeah, it was a while ago.
Um security organized crime.
See, now now I gotta find it.
Alright, let's see here.
I'm gonna find this thing.
Because I I want you guys to actually like look at this case.
I've obviously after, not now.
You don't remember what year you made it?
It was like 2022.
Yeah, 2022, 2021.
Something like that.
Wait, hold on.
What the hell?
Okay, it's gotta be here.
So it's somewhere in this area.
Uh Jodi Arias, I remember that shit.
No, it's before before.
Before.
Yeah, because you helped me with that one.
Yeah.
What the hell?
I did way more cases than this.
I don't know why it's only c alright.
I'm gonna find it on the side for y'all ninjas, man.
I'm I'm gonna find it for y'all.
I'm gonna find it for y'all.
Either way, let's keep let's keep uh cooking.
But yeah, this is the book, guys.
Banned everywhere.
Um, but really interesting book goes into all this stuff.
So, and I wanted to show you guys that that a um makeshift silencer is not something completely out of the norm.
When he fired and it didn't cycle, he kind of rode the slide forward.
What that means is that when he was loading it, he didn't let it just go back on its own power.
When you want to load around in, you're supposed to just pull it all the way to the rear, release it.
He kind of rides it, which then causes that malfunction.
So then he cycles again and he gets it to run.
And after you cycles that one, you notice he taps the back of the slide.
This is likely because the weapon wasn't going fully into battery.
If you notice, kind of be at that back position.
So to get it to seat fully forward, you could tap the back to make sure it's fully in that it will fire.
So I say Timu suppressor, pretty high on the list of theories that actually make sense.
Jeremy, what do you think?
I think that's the most probable.
The the odds that he was registered with an NFA item and murdered somebody with it is basically non-existent.
Yeah, that would he would be an idiot to do that.
What if crimes committed the NFA?
Absolute idiot if he did that.
Items are so low, and honestly, even if they were more than zero or at this point one, to be honest, don't forget on a button, right?
The next thing that I think makes a lot of sense would be subsonic rounds.
So your typical nine millimeter is going above the speed of sounding speed of sound being 1100 feet per second.
Do you say a subsonic round that's going below 1100 feet per second?
Which varies depending on your height and atmospherics and stuff.
I think makes sense.
Now, here's the thing.
I doubt this man would have gone and bought specialty ammo that's easily trackable unless he maybe is not that good of an assassin.
But what's actually quite easy to do is if you remove the slug, you pour out some of the grainage.
If you're able to weigh that, it's fairly easy to reduce the amount of power coming out of the round, which could also not cycle the weapon if you didn't have enough powder with the subsonic ammunition that he was running.
To show you the difference.
When you're firing, a suppressor does a really good job of keeping sound down.
But when a round breaks a sound barrier, it breaks a sound barrier, and that is very loud.
So we have a supersonic round that will be followed by a subsonic round.
That was our super.
Here's our son.
You can see it's a lot quieter.
This does make some sense to me that perhaps he had subsonic rounds.
Let's go ahead and take a look at what that would have looked like.
Now, these are very well-made subsonic rounds from G9.
They're gonna function.
Let's see what that would have looked like.
Alright, I found it.
God damn, this shit is shadow banned to hell.
Alright, here's the video.
I was looking for it.
Chat.
This bad book.
This banned book right here uh led to murder for hire.
Right?
I did this uh two years ago.
October 11, 2000, uh 2022.
God damn.
So uh, so yeah, guys, this is it right here.
I'll drop the link for you guys if you guys want to watch this.
It's a really interesting um case, guys.
So I'll drop the link in there for you, ninjas if you want to watch it.
Save it in your in your thing.
It's uh I really enjoyed doing this.
This was uh this was a good one, man.
This was a good one.
Because what I do is I actually watch the FBI Files episode and I react to it.
Because there was a whole FBI files episode on this on this case.
Um, and it was really uh it was good.
See how react to the documentary.
And that's where the noise was coming from.
And then I give breakdown and uh other stuff.
So go check it out, guys.
It really good episode, one of my favorites that I did.
Um so yeah, anyway.
He run.
Subsonics, it would have functioned right, Jeremy.
Right.
Of course, that didn't happen.
But subsonics make sense.
The gun wouldn't have functioned had he done them not well.
So this theory, I would say probably the second best theory that we have.
A single hand loading press just to put it in single rounds is like $20 online, so it really wouldn't be hard to take the slug out, empty a little bit of the powder, press it right back on there.
Well you have a tracking.
You learned all that from Call of Duty.
Theory number four, he just didn't have a good suppressor.
So pistol suppressors are basically a rude gold bird type mechanism.
You have a need a lot of things to go right in order for the pistol to cycle.
Pistol suppressors, especially older ones, are fairly notorious for not cycling well.
So had he had a pistol suppressor that just didn't run well, the weapon would have been choking up.
Hey guys, I'm dropping off the link for that video on the chat.
Uh I put it in two.
Okay.
You can put it again.
That's fine.
So they can find it.
Yeah, they see it.
Yeah.
Okay.
And those shots.
I would say this.
Also, guys, join Castle Club for free.
Link is pinned in and uh on Rumble and on YouTube chats.
So uh check it out.
This is also a pretty dang good theory, and this will put it at we'll put it at the third best theory that we have.
So we're gonna take our worst pistol suppressor.
We're gonna see if we can get this thing to malfunction.
Now, theory four, also very possible.
So, older suppressors really best way to say it.
Older suppressors don't usually run well.
I think my gem pep can be throwing gem tech under the buttons.
And if you guys look at the footage, it's as if he almost knew that it's almost as if he knew that the gun was gonna jam, because you guys can see he shoots and then he just goes right into it right away.
Like normally, you shoot, people pull the trigger a few times, then they realize holy shit, what the hell it's not working.
Then they do the tap and rack.
But for him, he shoots and then he shoots, and then like he it's like as if he knows that the gun is gonna um not put into not to come into battery properly.
So um he might have trained with it beforehand.
Um he might have already known this was gonna happen, but the the speed at which he um racks the gun after every shot um tells me that he he probably had foreknowledge that the gun wasn't gonna operate properly.
Uh that thing never ran.
I mean, if the guy's gonna travel from fucking Atlanta to New York, come 10 days early, recon, etc.
I'm assuming he would have trained with that gun beforehand.
Modern suppressors do, so there's a possibility that he just used a old, not good suppressor that just wasn't running.
In which case, it could have been that the gun was simply malfunctioning.
Now, right here we have our suppressor, and uh we're gonna go ahead and run.
And it could be because the gun and the suppressor weren't tracked, right?
And he didn't have to like it was a it was you know easy to dispose of.
Maybe he got it from somewhere where it wouldn't have been a bit been able to be tracked.
So there's a bunch of reasons why he might have opted to use uh less than optimal firearm to commit this crime.
Also, guys, like the video 1.3k, let's hit 1.5.
Run a full magazine through it, and uh we'll see if it malfunctions.
It's a pistol suppressor, there's a high probability, but we'll see.
I want for your healthcare.
You know what?
They just make pistol cans so so good right now.
So, you know, I guess maybe if you knew something about guns, he would have possibly used that, or maybe it made a lot more sense to use a TMU suppressor.
We'll say this one as the third most likely thing that occurred was that use a not functioning suppressor.
Motherfucker.
Oh shit, see what he's doing.
Another one, you know what?
This one too, buddy.
Right here, we have a blistic gelatin's dumbing.
We're gonna show you the approximate damage that you're gonna see from nine millimeters to the back.
Um, these do a pretty good job of simulating the human body, but it's not a real body.
That's illegal.
So we we use this.
We start with the supersonic round, then we'll use a subsonic round to show you the difference in damage.
Yep, we got the first shot through the back.
You can see the entrance right there.
And in fact, even with the supersonic round, it did not exit, as you can see right here.
It got stuck right in the body, did not go anywhere.
This is pretty typical when a round hits the bone for it to not go completely through.
Let's go ahead and let's change the trajectory a little bit, get it a little more to the right.
See if we can get exit right next.
We have subsonic G9.
Okay, and now you can see the entrance right there, and then uh the exit.
As you can see, nine millimeter isn't a terribly energetic round.
Um, it's gonna do enough to kill you.
Exit right there, crush all the button on the way out.
And then uh as near as we can tell, there was uh some type of contact shot, so we'll do a contact shot next.
I guess so.
Next, uh, that's probably the that was the final round they did, like a coup de gras on the back of the beat's head.
So it's good to grab what we say.
Yeah.
So can a nine millimeter and uh contact shot to the back of the dome.
Fuck you.
Jeez, why'd you have to say something?
Oh, sorry.
No, no, that's fine.
I just didn't know it's violent.
Where did it go?
Went through the back of the head.
It went into the back of the head.
It's like wanting to.
I think I don't think it exited.
Well, so like in the video games, right?
Back in the day, suppressors used to lower the damage, and now they like increase the damage.
Maybe.
But does it is a real question.
We'll find out.
It's moving slower, it's the same weight, physics-wise.
The will to live gone.
So 150.
These guys love this, man.
These gun guys love this shit.
Yeah, they love this shit, man.
Ingrained supersonic ammo, back of the head.
Nice.
That looks good on the face.
Look at this face.
Oh, okay.
Oh, it's just a little nose bleed.
So we've talked about a lot of theories today.
We've gone over an interesting piece of history that has occurred, which was an assassination that occurred of a CEO right here in the United States.
Now, whenever one of these historical events occurs, it's important on Grantham that we take a look at it from a firearms enthusiast perspective to be able to shed some light over what's most likely to occurred.
I would say the most likely scenario is what we talked about in theory two.
More than likely, he had a home-built suppressor that did not have a Nielsen device, slash a booster.
Therefore, the weapon wasn't able to do it.
Which home built, we already talked about this, this book right here.
And I'm sure there's plenty of books out there, but this is one of the most famous ones that talks about how to um build a home suppress uh build a suppressor homemade.
Um equipment goes into all this stuff, guys.
This book.
If it's banned, how did you get to get it?
I had to spend this book cost me like 70 to 100 bucks if I remember.
I had to get it off like a random site.
You can't get this thing anywhere.
It's fucking banned.
Wow.
Well, the cycle, unless he manually cycles.
And if you do find it's more expensive.
That would be our conjecture.
Jeremy, do you tend to agree with this?
I completely agree.
It seems extremely unlikely that he would have had an NFA item.
It's really easy to manufacture on your own with a little bit of crime mixed in.
And clearly it's a lot of the Urida completely.
Uh I I've looked through it.
I skimmed through it.
There's certain parts in a book that they use as evidence as well.
I looked at a lot of the crime.
And clearly it's illegal in New York, so he can't have it there.
Right.
Murders legal, suppressors are illegal.
No, it's stupid.
Here's the thing.
From what we could tell, it was a home built suppressor.
That would be my conjecture.
And on top of that, we really do need to note that NFA items really account for almost less than zero any type of crime that occurs.
So one thing I had highlighted here was this is in uh equipment.
You can see there, I highlighted it, and I'll read it for you guys.
Well, actually, let me just bring it on main cam.
Boom.
Go back.
There.
Using a rat tail file, alter the gun barrel, the shell chamber, and uh the loading ramp, the firing pin, and the ejector pin.
Sorry, because I'm reading it for my OB OBS, that's why it's a little thing.
And they go in.
They actually show you this shit.
How to do it.
I'm trying to see if I have anything else here that was like highlighted.
I showed you guys earlier the gun that they suggest use, the silencer, etc.
They're probably gonna use this as a push.
This is my soapbox.
If they try to use this as push banging suppressors, that's dumb as fuck.
Suppressors are a constitutional right.
Firearms are a constitutional right.
Don't let them use this to try to take away your rights.
Guys, thank you, so I'm talking about.
Yeah, facts.
Seriously.
And they always do.
Uh like the video, guys, by the way.
1700 y'all ninjas in here.
Like the video.
Let's hit 1500 likes on YouTube, so this thing gets pushed up.
Because I'm not only giving you guys, I'm giving you guys the case, the criminal perspective, the investigative perspective.
Now we're going into the firearm perspective.
All right.
After watching historical events, we'll always make it.
All right, since I love y'all niggas, we'll go ahead and do the Colin Noor video as well.
Oh!
Now, before I say anything else, let me make one thing clear.
I do not in any way condone the actions of the shooter in this incident.
What happened to the United Healthcare?
Yeah, I knew yeah, you gotta give that disclaimer.
Because everyone on the internet is like jumping up and down for this guy getting killed.
And I discussed with you guys before the top of the show, um, the insurance business and how uh it would lead some people to uh dislike CEOs of said business.
CEO was tragic, and nothing I say in this video is meant to excuse or downplay that.
My goal here is to answer a technical question that's been floating around since the footage came out.
Why was the shooter's gun malfunctioning the way that it did?
That's it.
So let's talk about it.
Now, based on a video, it looks like the shooter was using a Glock setup similar to this.
As you can see here, with a suppressor attached.
Now, if you've seen the footage, you'll notice that after the first shot, the gun fails to cycle properly.
And obviously, guys, the loss of life, you know, always is terrible.
You know, I mean, I'm I don't wish that upon anybody.
I mean, I think it sucks that this guy had a family, it's got a wife.
Um, you know, I mean, it just it's it's unfortunate.
But this is what happens sometimes, man, when you're involved in certain businesses, you know, people wanna hurt you, man.
I mean, hell, even me, man.
Like you guys see, there's haters on me for my political views.
Oh, my, we're gonna come and find you, blah, blah.
Like, there's sick people out there, man, that want to go ahead and um affect damage and hurt individuals they dislike.
Um, I'm assuming this guy probably had someone maybe close to him get wrong through insurance or something like that.
So, um, you know, violence is never the answer, but for a lot of people, it's their only answer, unfortunately.
Properly, forcing the shooter to manually rack the slide to chamber another round.
This pattern repeated throughout the incident.
The question is, why?
Well, it boils down to one critical error in his setup.
He didn't use a booster.
For those of you who aren't familiar with a booster, a booster is a component that goes inside of the suppressor to counteract the weight it adds to the front of the gun.
Without a booster, the suppressor's weight prevents the gun slide from cycling fully, which means it can't eject the spent casing or load a new round.
In short, without a booster, the gun essentially becomes a single shot firearm.
And from what I can tell in this video, the shooter suppressor was directly threaded onto the barrel with no booster installed, which caused the malfunctions you see in the video.
Here's what this looks like in action.
When I use a suppressor with a booster, the gun works perfectly fine.
I can fire multiple rounds and the slide cycles every time without issue.
Now watch what happens when I use the same suppressor but remove the booster.
The gun fires the first shot, but after that, I have to manually rack the slide to chamber the next round.
This is exactly what was happening in the video.
If you look closely at the footage, you can see the shooter fire a shot, pull the trigger again, and nothing happens.
He then racks the slide, fires another shot, and then repeats the process.
It's clear he wasn't expecting this malfunction, which suggests he didn't.
I don't know.
I I I I'll have to disagree with him on that one.
I do think he was expecting the malfunction.
That's why you can see him quickly rack the gun after every shot.
It's as if he knew that that setup was gonna fuck up every time.
...and test the suppressor before using it.
This is a textbook example of how improper gear setup can lead to malfunctions even in high-stress situations.
Yeah, facts.
I mean, this is why you always gotta make sure your gun is clean, it's always good to go.
Like, yeah, bro.
I mean, you would think with something like this, but I'm assuming since he knew he was gonna commit a crime, that that's the gear he had, maybe he had some kind of special setup where it wasn't being tracked, serial numbers are scratched off, whatever, so he had to use that weapon and use that setup.
Um, because I can't think of another reason why he would put himself in a bad position like this to use a gun that clearly isn't a hundred percent on point.
Um, but that's what I'm thinking is he literally had that shit set up in that fashion because there was something where if that gun was ever to be found, it'd be a lot harder for them to trace it back to him.
That's what I'm thinking.
Or had so it had some kind of um homemade's setup on it.
Which um yeah, situations.
Yeah, we're at 1.3k likes, ninjas.
1700 plus the honors in here.
Like the goddamn video.
Let's hit 1800.
Now, let's let's well, eighteen hundred live viewers, let's say 1500 likes.
By the way, guys, follow me on X or Instagram, Myron Gaines X on both.
You guys like my political views, um, where I'm very controversial on there.
I'm obviously a lot cleaner here on YouTube.
Myron Gaines X on uh uh Twitter, a KX, and Myron Gaines X on Instagram, where um, you know, I post a lot of reels.
X I just tweet.
Um a little a lot of my geopolitical takes on there on X. So uh yeah.
Yeah, absolutely clear.
Understanding the mechanics of this malfunction doesn't excuse the actions of the shooter.
What they did was reprehensible.
But my purpose here is to simply provide a technical explanation for those wondering why the firearm didn't function as expected.
This situation serves as a reminder, though.
Check your gear, check stuff you make sure it works.
And you know, this actually correlates to conceal carry too.
Because a lot of y'all just grab a gun, put ammo in it, rack around in it, and then go out the door.
And you might be surprised one day if you have to use that gun that it won't cycle either because it doesn't like that ammo.
But that's for another video that I'm gonna do.
With that said, let me know your thoughts in the comment section.
Have you ever experienced a similar situation or malfunction with a suppressor?
I'm pretty sure most of the gun guys that follow me already knew this.
But this is for those people who really don't understand how suppressors work on handguns like that.
So tell me what you think.
Leave a comment in the comment section.
Oh, and I almost forgot.
It's Christmas season, baby.
And as a result of that, I'm gonna give you guys a gift.
Right now, shop top Mr. ColeonTwar.com.
Beautiful in this KTO protecting hearing which I did residents.
Make sure you did one thing's for certain and two things are for sure.
Damn, have the video's ads.
Okay.
Um yeah, uh, let's see here.
What else?
So uh HK says warning this video contains graphic content and discuss the recent incident involving a shooting, viewer discretion is wise.
Appreciate that, my friend.
Um yeah, so I think that covers most of the case, guys.
Unless you guys have anything else that you guys want me to do.
Um you guys want to react want me to play here.
Um, as uh pertaining to this shooting at least.
I know you guys are saying Diddy and Jay-Z and all this other shit, but I'm focusing on like this actual thing first.
So about this, I'll tell y'all then just this.
If we hit 1600 likes, uh fire up a night train for you guys, and I'll cover the Assad um regime topple, and we'll cover this Jay-Z crap.
Give me 1600 likes in the next two minutes.
Y'all got two minutes, because I'll be honest with you guys, I'm tired.
I woke up at like five in the morning.
So if you guys really want this shit, you guys want me to do a fire up another stream, I'll do it on Fresh of Fit and on X and everywhere else.
I'll cover the Assad stuff, and I'll cover the Jay-Z stuff.
Give me the 1600 likes, and I'll do it.
And I'll go live at uh what time is it right now?
It's 11 50.
I'll go live at like 12 30.
I just gotta eat real quick and shit.
I'll pound another energy, uh, pound energy drink, and then we'll uh we'll do this thing.
So, 1600 likes.
You guys got I'm gonna turn the timer on.
And what I'll do is I'll go ahead and give you guys the uh the YouTube video, help you ninjas out.
You know what I'd read the chats?
I read them already.
I read them already.
Here is the YouTube link.
Here is YouTube link.
Uh and I'll drop it on X2.
So I'm gonna start the timer now.
So here we go.
Two minutes.
We hit 1600 likes on YouTube, and we'll do this thing.
Y'all can see the timer right now.
All right.
So we're at 1.5.
If we get 1.7, we get 1.7.
Because I'll be honest with you, I'm tired.
I was gonna go to sleep.
But for you ninjas, obviously we got some big news with the Assad regime being toppled.
And we got uh some shit going on with um the whole Diddy thing.
So we'll cover those.
So like the video.
Also, join the email list.
Guys, join the fucking email list.
Join the email list.
Link is at the uh in the description.
Join Castle Club for absolutely free.
We're at one minute fifteen.
We got 40 seconds to go.
I only see 1.5k likes.
We need 1.6 ninjas.
1.6.
You got 30 seconds to go, chat.
20 seconds to go now.
Twenty seconds.
Frank.
Oh, we hit 1.6.
Alright.
We had it.
We did hit it.
So uh I guess I'll owe you guys a second stream.
So um, yeah.
So what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna go ahead and end this, eat real quick, guys, and I'll be back at uh it's 11.52 right now.
It's 1152.
So I will be back at uh 12.30.
1230, 1240.
Alright, so I'll make another event here.
Uh just gonna eat some, get an energy drink, and then we'll do a night train for you guys.
Hope you guys enjoyed the stream.
I'll be back.
Love y'all ninjas.
We're gonna cover Assad and the Jay-Z situation.
Oh yeah, follow Fred React on Instagram, follow Leon Frank on Instagram and follow Maron on X, Myron Gaines X, and follow me on X2.
So Angelica, which way is at the end too.
Number two.
There you go.
Cool.
We'll see you guys um back here in about 40 minutes.
I'll make the event now.
Love you guys.
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