Sercret Service Neutralize Invader, US-Iran War, Muslims Praying in Timesquare Spark Outrage... 2026-02-23 05:16
Austin Tucker Martin’s armed assault on Mar-a-Lago—neutralized by at least 20 rounds from Secret Service and deputies—mirrors past lone-wolf cases, often dismissed as isolated acts. The FBI’s probe into his radicalization clashes with CIA’s covert methods, like torture (e.g., Abu Zubaydah post-9/11), which lack prosecutable evidence, leaving only one 9/11-linked suspect, Zacharias Masawi, ever convicted. Meanwhile, U.S.-backed Mexican forces killed CJNG leader El Mencho in a high-stakes operation, sparking fears of cartel-fueled violence as rivals scramble for control, echoing past power vacuums like Escobar’s fall. These events expose tensions between law enforcement and intelligence while reshaping global security dynamics. [Automatically generated summary]
Like, yeah, it's one thing to have your political differences and shit like that.
But once you start getting into niggas like killing politicians or whatever, like that is one of the big things that sets the United States apart from all these other countries.
That's what keeps us from being a banana republic.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
So, you know, whether you like these politicians or not, you got to understand that we are held to a different standard here in the United States.
We're not like these fucking weird-ass banana republic countries where niggas are assassinating world leaders and shit with no consequence.
So, yeah, absolutely.
Law and order.
We need law and order.
Yeah.
You know, so.
So, okay.
Yeah, let's go back to this press release.
This was from this morning.
Two pieces of equipment that he had with him, at which time he put down the gas can, raised the shotgun.
Yeah, yeah, you're done.
At that point in time, the deputy and the two Secret Service agents fired their weapons and neutralized the threat.
Bro, said it politically correct.
He said at that point, you know, they neutralized the threat.
Translation, they switched cheese that motherfucker, bro.
Yeah.
Probably like mag dumped him.
100% mag dumped him.
So he probably got like 20.
He probably got like 20 rounds of 9mm ammo, for being honest.
More than I don't even know.
It was two agents.
It was two agents and a deputy.
So I know, okay.
So most Secret Service agents carry a Glock, probably a 9 mil, right?
Most law enforcement carry 9 mil now because 9 mil and 40 Cal, the debate is done.
They're basically, if you have high-quality 9 mil, it's equivalent to a 40.
40, 40F.
So most law enforcement agencies already switched back to 9mm at this point, right?
Yeah.
Each of them was probably carrying a Glock 7, at least a Glock 19 or a Glock 17.
That's 15.
That's a common service weapon.
Yep.
15.
A 17, I think, actually.
Yeah, or a 17.
The deputy definitely had the 17.
Hey, bro, I'm in Connecticut, so I wouldn't know.
Yeah, Yado got high-capacity mags.
We have 10-round mags maximum.
But yeah, probably each one of them had like 15 rounds in their firearms.
All mag dumped the shit out of him.
And three guys, you know, we're talking about 60, almost 60 bullets altogether, 60 rounds coming down at him.
And they all probably mag dumped him.
And then the sheriff's deputy might have even had a rifle.
A rifle.
I was going to say, well, one of them might have even had a rifle.
Easy.
5-5-6.
Yeah.
Because as soon as they got the news that someone was on the property, somebody probably picked up a rifle.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Well, they probably even just saw him.
I think the people who addressed him or apprehended him were the ones that saw him on the camera initially because they're saying that he only got in like 20 yards.
So I don't even think there was much radioing around.
It was like, yo, who the hell is this nigga?
And they just pulled up and blasted the shit out of him.
It's like, what the fuck?
So it's crazy.
But they've got to figure out that gate system so people can't get in as people are leaving.
That's unacceptable.
I mean, I understand it's difficult to completely contain a compound, but you got to make it work when the president's going to spend a good amount of his time there.
Yeah, I want to see that body care, but I know for a fact that nigga got hit at least.
At least they probably hit him.
He probably got hit with at least 20 rounds.
That's my bet.
If I was a gambler, if I was a DJ gambler, I'll say he got hit with at least 20 rounds.
Hey, you probably, it's probably painless death, nigga.
He probably didn't feel it much.
I mean, niggas probably, he probably felt a couple stings, pinches, and then he was out, you know?
So who knows?
Yeah, here, we'll keep playing.
Give you a picture of the shotgun and the gas can to have with you.
So that's what we know now.
The investigation continues.
The FBI is the lead investigation agency on this case, and we will be assisting them in whatever manner they would like.
And they will be responsible for answering any other questions at an appropriate time.
Normally, it would be like Secret Service does their own investigations, but given the high profileness of this case and the fact that Secret Service is stretched so thin, you know, obviously the FBI is going to run the criminal investigation on it.
But, but there's not, yo, as always, with these guys, like with school shooters or with people that like, you know, get ended up clapped by the police, it's nine out of ten times, this is going to be a shot, open a shut case.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
Nine out of ten times that they'll, you know, this is what the FBI is going to do.
I could get, so this is what they're going to do because this guy was missing.
Can you pull up his picture real quick?
This guy?
They identified him formally earlier today, too.
Yeah, Austin Martin, I believe his full name is here.
I have that on my feet too, but you probably on yours.
But yeah, long story short, this is what the FBI is going to do.
He was reported missing.
FBI is going to go talk to his family.
They're going to ask his family, hey, you know, did he have any erratic, you know, political views or, you know, did he have any type of radicalization?
They're going to talk to his family.
They're going to talk to his friends.
They're going to probably map out what he did.
You know, the 48 to 72 hours prior to him going over to Mar-a-Lago.
They're going to see if he had any other conspirators with him.
Anyone that might have helped him or assisted him, they're going to definitely look through his phone, his phone toll analysis, look at everyone he was in contact with before he did the hit, see if there was anyone that supported him.
And then more than likely, if he acted alone, case is going to be shut, bro.
They'll just open it, talk to everybody, figure out what his motive was, and then close it.
Because most of the time, it's just open shut.
Go ahead.
Yeah, I mean, I don't mean to be stereotypical here, but you see this, bro.
I can't see it on my screen.
It's a blue screen.
You can't see?
Hang on.
Yeah, it's a blue screen on my screen.
Sharing's paused.
Here you go.
You'll be able to see in a second.
Hang on.
Oh, you're probably.
I can see it on your stream, but I can't see it on mine.
No, you can see it now in your stream.
You should be able to.
Yep, I can see it now.
You're good.
So this is him.
Oh, yeah.
This is all Tucker Mario.
Are we surprised?
Yeah, I mean, bro.
Put him next to Matthew Crooks.
Yo, put a picture of Thomas Crooks right next to that nigga, bro.
And Ryan Roots.
Fit in the stereotype, man.
Yo, man.
Fit in the stereotype, unfortunately, guys.
Come on.
Yo.
Get a picture of Thomas Crooks.
Yeah, put Thomas Crooks, then put Ryan Ralph right after.
And you look all three of these niggas.
It's like, all right, bro.
They could all be family members.
Hold on.
Let me get it full screen.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You might have to stop sharing and then do it again.
Did it pause?
No, it should still be going.
Hit the blue screen again.
Well, I can see your Miami Harold thing, but I can't see the.
Oh, no, no.
I'm pulling up a portrait of this kid right here.
here so that's can you see that uh No, I can't.
I see a blue screen.
Yeah, it might be you have to pull it up first and then you hit share screen after the fact.
Oh, you know what, Harry?
It's because I'm doing or you might have some privacy settings.
Yeah, no, I know why.
I could just play.
I'll put them back to back.
I can't put them side to side because it's doing window capture, not display.
You know what I mean?
So here.
So that's that's Austin Tucker Martin.
So this is the guy who had just attempted, I'm assuming, to try and get this Mr. Gas Can shotgun.
This is Elmer Fudd over here.
This is this is gas can shotgun.
Gas can nigga.
This is Thomas Crooks.
I mean, come on, we can go back here.
Come on, man.
Yo, go back.
Just keep go back and forth.
Like, come on, man.
Yo.
And then we'll get the next one here.
Yeah, Ryan Ralph.
R-O-U-T-H.
Yeah.
Ryan Ralph.
Looks deranged too.
Really, really looks fucking crazy.
Look at this guy.
Oh, man.
Yeah, bro.
So we've got, we've got Mr. Golf Course Killer.
Yep.
This is probably this kid's the smartest, though.
Yeah, he came the close.
This kid came the closest and he was young.
He was super young.
And then, you know, this kid just, I don't know.
He went in GTA style.
This nigga thought he was Trevor or some shit.
Yeah.
He didn't make any, he didn't cover any ground there.
And so, yeah, these are your three high pro.
Go through it one more time.
So we got a gas.
We got Ryan Ralph.
Yep.
Then we got Thomas Crooks.
FBI Offices Scattered00:04:54
And then we got Gasconiga.
And they all look extremely similar.
Unfortunately, it checks out.
Every single time, dude, a white guy.
Crazy white guy, bro.
Crazy left-leaning white guy who's typically, I find at least recently the trend has been young.
They're younger, but Ryan Ralph is a little bit on the older side.
You know, nobody's going to clip this part of us making these fun of these white dudes.
Nobody's going to care.
The Wakanda niggas are going to clip this and say, oh, yo, why are you being racist to white dudes, bro?
But yeah, they got the same look.
Yeah.
It's a deranged fucking leftist white guy.
I mean, hey, look, it's not a secret that anytime there's some sort of public shooting or something extreme like that, it's always somebody who is white or Caucasian.
And so that's not, if I saw a black person or hell, even like an Arab or a brown person go in and do some sort of mass public shooting, I would be really shocked.
Hello.
Well, most things, yeah.
Arabs if they now if they blew up a building, then that makes sense, right?
But every single race has got their stereotypes that follow suit.
Yeah.
And so they've all got their own way of doing you know mass amounts of violence.
And with the white people, they typically like to grab a gun and just do it that way.
Crazy shit.
Crazy shit.
But it's incredible how all three shooters pretty much look the same, bro.
They pretty much look the same.
Nigga, Thomas Crooks and Austin Tucker Martin, whatever the fuck is, they could be brothers.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They look like each other.
Facts.
So this is.
My name is.
Okay.
All right.
They stopped the FBI.
Yeah.
But yeah.
So I mean, I already told y'all what they're going to do.
Like, there's not much the FBI is going to do.
They're going to, like I said, they're going to talk to all of his contacts.
They're going to look at his phone tolls.
They're going to try to identify if there was another co-conspirator.
And that's it.
Okay.
Let's see what.
Okay.
Secret service addresses fatal.
Okay.
Let's see what he's got to say.
Yes.
RIC.
Thank you.
The SAC of the Secret Service.
The spelling is R-A-F-A-E-L.
And last name, Barroso.
B-A.
So the SAC is that special agent in charge.
That's the guy that runs this division.
Thank you.
And then following Special Agent Charge Barros will be the FBI special agent in charge of the Miami field office.
Brett Giles.
And that is B is in boy.
R-E-T-T.
Fun fact for all you guys.
So FBI Miami covers like all of South Florida.
West Palm Beach is like the last county they cover or Palm Beach County.
So there's different.
So the way it works, guys, is there's going to be a main field office and then there's going to be different satellite offices right all across the what's called the AOR air responsibility.
So Miami, FBI Miami, is located.
I think their main building is in fucking, where is it?
It's not on plantation.
It's in Miramar.
It's a very nice building, by the way.
I've been there multiple times.
But FBI Miami is headquartered out of Miramar.
And then they cover everything from like Homestead, which is pretty much the south tip of Florida and Key West all the way up until Palm Beach County.
And then there's satellite offices in between.
So there's a satellite office in Fort Lauderdale.
There's going to be one in West Palm Beach in Palm Beach.
There's going to be one, you know, Homestead, whatever.
So they're going to have what's called rack offices or resident agent in charge offices all across the area.
But the main big field office is out of Miami.
And that's where the special agent in charge sits out of.
And he oversees, you know, the hundreds of agents that are in this AOR.
So, and then there's probably going to be a Tampa SAC, an Orlando SAC that also control that part or oversee all the local law appeal offices in that area as well.
But the SAC office is typically the big office has, you know, the most agents, and then there's little satellite offices in between that cover all the other, like, you know, towns and cities in between.
Yep.
All right.
So we can go ahead and S-K-I-L-E-S.
Once those individuals are done speaking, Sheriff Broadshaw, Sheriff Bradshaw will come back up and we call those out the press conference talk about it, right?
Yeah, we saw the sheriff.
I can give you, and I'm allowed to give Sheriff's Office for their quick response in this matter and close collaboration.
Since this area of the shooting was under Secret Service protection at the time, the FBI is assisting the investigation.
Currently, our FBI.
I just have to say, I know he thinks he feels so cool wearing that jacket.
Like big jacket with FBI on it.
Like, bro, we get it.
You know, but response team is processing the scene, collecting evidence, and we'll continue to work the scene for as long as it takes.
One thing I would ask the public is: if you live in the area of the shooting, please check your exterior cameras for last night, early this morning.
If you see anything that looks suspicious or out of place, please contact us at 1-800, call FBI, or contact the West Palm Beach Sheriff's Office.
Thank you.
All right, good morning, everyone.
Check Your Cameras00:10:05
My name is Rafael Borrows.
I'm the special agent in charge of Secret Service, Miami Field Office.
Earlier today, two special agents from the Secret Service and a deputy from the Palm Beach Sheriff's Office were involved in an officer-involved shooting while responding to an armed individual at one of the gates at Mar-a-Lago.
Preliminary information indicates that the individual was armed with a shotgun and a possession of a gasoline canister.
Agents and the deputy discharge their firearms to stop the threat.
At this time, no law enforcement personnel were injured during the incident.
We want to be clear: the president of the United States was not in the state of Florida.
And this remains an active investigation by the FBI.
Thank you.
Okay.
All right.
I think that's good for that.
But did you have any other comments on it?
Nah, man.
I mean, it's going to be open and shut.
It's going to be open and shut.
I think this guy was just, he probably had a death wish, I think.
Like, there's no way that he could have thought going over there was a good idea and thought that it was going to happen.
So what I'm interested to see actually is when they make this investigation.
We can cover the Mexico shit, too, because niggas are in here talking about El Mentro.
And I mentioned him in my thing.
Yo, it's funny because the comment section, we'll finish your thoughts and then we'll retest.
And we'll go over to Mexico and El Mencho.
Yeah, no, I was going to say I'm interested to see the investigation because I want to see if they're going to be able to uncover some sort of ideological rabbit hole that this kid was going down before he did what he did.
And if that's the case, then we'll see a recurring theme from Tyler Robinson.
We'll see that we saw the same thing in Minnesota when that Catholic school got shot up.
And the instance in Canada, actually, that situation was bad as well.
And we see kind of, you know, a pattern there.
And so I want to see if this situation is going to line up with that.
But yeah, I got chats.
Do you want to read yours first?
No, read yours first and then I'll go after.
Okay.
Go ahead.
Hang on.
Let me just read some chats here.
Okay.
So got a chat from the Andrew Tate show.
OSSO slash, thank you, my friend.
213 KillZone says, Rieto slash, you're getting more and more in tune with streaming.
Keep it up and I'll keep sharing your content.
Much love.
Stop muting yourself.
All right.
I appreciate that.
Yeah, the first couple of streams I streamed alone, my shit was muted.
All right, save the audio jokes.
I'm getting better.
Buy Clifton.
Ha, your name's not in full, bro.
Bye Clifton Hall, $10.
Shout out to the both of you wrecking it.
You should be coined as fraternal fright when it comes to exposing the lies.
Thank you so much, my friend.
I really appreciate that.
Hope this helps, Bruda.
This is from the Midnight.
His name's not coming up in full, but the Midnight says, Hope this helps, Bruda.
Are you and Myron going to discuss Mexico's situation?
Remember, Trump recently, we're going to go over it right now.
Riyadh, do you plan to keep the special Way of A entrances like Myron?
He keeps one helping you.
And that's actually from somebody, Riyadh Uraj.
No, man, I can't do that because the platform that I'm on would cook me immediately.
Flaming here on the new dynamic duo, Bad Boys Edition.
Thank you so much.
And then the Andrew Tate show, you guys forgot about the slingshot.
I'm not sure what you're referring to.
Are you talking about Austin having a slingshot as well?
I'm not sure, Trinity.
Thanks for the super chat.
And then I'm all caught up.
Go ahead.
Okay.
So on my end, let me see here.
Crew Dog, thank you for the gift of sub on Rumble.
James B. Seven says, Have you seen this podcast with California Ken explaining the corruption of Jays as well as covering FC files?
Can you at least give it a partial view?
Well, we know that nigga's not going to win now.
Zedrax says, nigga, why to be linked so bad?
Now he's linked to God.
Twinkie Sanders says, will bro respond with a better loadout?
Probably not.
Fitness says, been busy as hell.
Can't watch live a lot of time, but I watch replays when I can.
When's last live going to be up for viewing?
It's always up on OSS.
Frisbee says, if you're on Rumble, Kick, or YouTube, you're a maggot.
Join OSS.
Appreciate that.
Bernie says, subscribe.
Welcome to OSS.
Grizzle Mech says, hey, Martin, you should try first form energy, drinks healthier and full of energy.
Also, were you and your brother able to talk about Tucker and Huckabee interviewed?
No, we'll cover that too.
We'll cover that.
Yeah, at some point.
Pleased to hear that you're better now, Martin W. Brothers.
Appreciate you.
One chest says, Corey Hughes stream.
Here you go.
Okay.
Thank you, OneChest, for putting that link in there.
So there you go.
One chest put the link in there if you guys want to watch on OSS where we talk about the Cookie Monster event, which I could definitely never put on YouTube.
Frisbee says, my friend told me that Frisbee had his them boy slur.
Never heard of that one.
Rewatch yesterday stream on locals.
Yep.
Yo, Marin, your last stream with Lucas has been processing.
Any update with that?
I didn't even know it was processing, but it's up on kick.
My whenever you have time, can you cover what's going on in Mexico?
Lawrence Reshort, Mexican drug leader El Mencho was killed in a military operation.
Now the cartels are just acting like typical people making the whole city a war zone.
Yeah, I'm not surprised.
All right, let's go ahead.
I made a tweet about this.
If you want to go to it on my ex Riyadh, if you could pull it up, some bitch ass niggas in the chat said, oh, look, let me find a way to make this about me.
Bro, niggas are stupid.
Like, and it's always some anons on fucking YouTube.
Like, the point isn't to show that, let me make this about me.
It's to show that this guy was such a fucking prolific drug trafficker that I had, I was investigating people that were involved in his drug traffic organization.
But of course, low IQ people don't get this shit.
It's crazy.
So I think it's this one right now.
Twitter is filled with retards, bro.
Like, it's absolutely incredible how retarded niggas are.
So, okay.
So I commented, right?
I said, crazy to think.
I had a big Osenof Drunkenstrazi case affiliate with this guy back in 2015, 2018 when I was a federal HSI, right?
Small world.
Of course, look at this dumbass nigga says, and he's an anon.
How can I make this about me?
Like, okay, buddy.
Like, okay.
And then other people said, let's see, Mexican niggas watching the news.
Mencho dead.
This lose says, Mitch, get in there and make this about you.
Yeah.
That was the craziest way to say, look at me.
See, yo, niggas are haters, bro.
And this is David A. Looks like remote.
Nigga died delivering clavicular cocaine.
Yeah.
All right, bro.
What the fuck?
Nigga out here, celebrated death.
And then, and then you didn't do anything with this investigation.
It still killed Peretta.
You should have saved him.
What?
People type before they think.
Yeah, bro.
It's very obvious.
People type without thinking and they post without reading.
Yeah.
I've noticed that at reading super chats, and I love you guys, but sometimes somebody will send me a super chat and I'm almost having a stroke trying to read and comprehend what they're saying.
And so this guy probably didn't read this back.
But yeah, I mean, everybody's crying.
And then, hold on, keep going, keep going.
Because a lot of other people are like, yo, talk about it.
So some people didn't know.
And then some were like, you know, talk, talk about this or whatever on the show.
I saw a couple people saying like, yo, break it down or whatever.
So, and the other thing, too, is like a lot of these like Twitter niggas don't know that I live stream.
Like, I'm not just a fucking Twitter user.
Yeah.
Right.
Because the problem with a lot of people that are big on Twitter is like Twitter is the only platform.
So that's all they're on.
But niggas don't realize like I do a fucking true crime show every Sunday.
So it's like, you know, I mean, like, this is literally one of my specialties.
So, all right.
So back in like 2015, I could kind of take you guys through this.
Back in 2015, I had a very big crystal meth case, right?
Where basically I had this drug traffic organization affiliated that was here in America, here in South Texas, or not here in South Texas, but back then when I was living in Laredo, based out of South Texas, that was importing in like 99% pure crystal methetamine.
Now, for those of you that don't know how many crystal methodamine is manufactured, the key ingredients to make it, if you guys have ever seen Breaking Bad, are heavily regulated in the United States.
So it's very hard to make pure or high-level crystal methetamine in the United States.
The only place that you can get it really, where it's, you know, you're scoring like into the 80s and 90% percentile for purity of crystal meth is from Mexico.
And they call it ice, right?
It looks like it looks like shards of glass, right?
The really good stuff.
So let me see if I could pull up a picture for y'all, bro.
Hold on.
I got to give y'all niggas some real value here.
I might have an old picture here somewhere.
But yeah, so like when I was doing that case, the Jalisco people kind of were in a were working alongside the Zethas to facilitate.
Okay, so this is what it looks like, guys.
The lighting is bad, but that's what it looks like.
Right.
So it looks like white stones and it's very potent.
And the reason why this meth did so well, the Mexican meth, is because they could break it down and sell it and make quite a bit of money.
Right.
When I was on a job, I think a kilo of meth back then was somewhere between $10,000 and $20,000 per kilo, 2.2 pounds.
So the Zethas working alongside these guys to bring in this meth.
So that's how I ended up linking El Mencho's organization with the Zethas.
Now, granted, this was like 10 years ago, right?
Obviously, I think nowadays it's like a whole other cartel that runs Nueva Laredo because that was exactly, that was what was across the border from Laredo.
I think now it's called the Cartel Del Noroste, who are some younger guys.
But the long story short is, is that when it comes to drug traffic, when it comes to these sophisticated drug traffic organizations, a lot of the times they're linked because you got a source, you got a source supply, you got regional distributors, et cetera.
So a lot of these guys work with each other, whether knowingly or unknowingly, in a compartmentalized or non-compartmentalized fashion.
Because obviously the drug trade is a very expansive trade and there's many different hands in the process.
CIA And Waterboarding00:15:20
Okay.
You got the people that domestically make it.
You got the people that package it.
You got the people that drive it up to the border.
You got the people that, you know, that crossing it to the border.
You got the people that, once they're crossing it to the board, they're dropping it off at a dope house somewhere.
You got a regional guy who's going to receive a lot of the drugs, and he's going to distribute it to his people.
So it's a very expansive network.
This is why when you look at, you know, whenever they do big takedowns, drug takedowns, you know, 10, 20, 30, 40 people are getting picked up at the same time because everyone is typically assigned some type of role in the organization to actually properly facilitate the distribution networks and everything else like that.
So at OSIDEF, what OSIDF was before, it stands for Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force.
It was initiated by the Department of Justice to combat organized crime that is fueled by drug trafficking.
I don't know if they still have the OSIDF, but what it would do is if you got your case approved for OCDF, you would get what's called an OSIDF case number, and you would get a significant amount of resources and aid for your case to be able to run it more efficiently, equipment, more overtime, et cetera.
Now, the thing that people don't recognize sometimes is that running a lot of these big conspiracy cases is extremely expensive.
We're talking about paying state local guys overtime to do surveillance.
We're talking about getting wiretaps.
We're talking about doing phone ping warrants, right?
If you want to track somebody, that costs a lot of money that the agency has to pay T-Mobile or ATFT to be able to ping someone's phone, right?
That all costs money.
So doing a wiretap cost you can easily cost, for 30 days can easily cost you somewhere between $50,000 to $100,000, right?
So what OSIDF did was if your case was significant enough and you can link it, right?
And this is the key part here.
And you can link it to what's called an RPOT or CPOT, which basically means like a direct source from an international supplier.
That was one of the key situations that would get you your case approved for OSIDEF.
And that's how I was able to link my organization alongside this guy or his people way back in the day.
And we got the case approved for OSDF and we got the funding and it was a really big case.
I know drug trafficking cases have changed a little bit since I was last on the job, but that's typically how it goes.
I don't know if anyone has questions on there, but that's how I came across this guy, if that makes sense.
And didn't Trump set out $15 million for this guy or something like that?
And he put a bounty on it or something in regards to leading to information that could help arrest him.
Yeah.
So like this administration did something interesting, which other administrations have never done.
They designated these organizations as like terrorist organizations.
And when you designate them terrorist organizations, now you got like the full power of the intelligence agencies and the military at your disposal.
Because now it went from, you know, Juan is just a drug trafficker to now Juan is damn near al-Qaeda, right?
And that's why they're able to do these kinetic strikes, these lethal kinetic strikes on these drug traffickers, is because they designated these drug traffic organizations basically as like, as terrorists.
So basically now they're looked at as enemy combatants is how they're looked at.
So that's why they're able to do these do these strikes.
And then the other thing too, right?
When I was doing the job, you could utilize, there's something called SOD Special Operations Division.
And this is all unclassified shit, but you were able to utilize SOD, right, as an agent to do a criminal case.
Now, some of the things that you would get from SOD, you couldn't necessarily use in your investigations, but you could parallel reconstruct, right?
So I'll explain what I mean by this.
Let's say you utilize the support services of SOD, right?
And this is clearly just a hypothetical, right?
And you come across a phone number that you had not come across before, right?
And you identify somebody.
Well, you can go ahead now that you've been able to figure out who this individual was via SOD.
You can do what's called a parallel reconstruction, which means now that you have that number and that individual, you can go ahead and subpoena that number, get the information on that number, right, through traditional means, and you're good because you got that information via parallel reconstruction, and now you don't have to disclose the nature of the census or the confidential or classified information that you might have got that pointing in that direction.
So, in other words, you can use restricted information to help point you in the right direction to go through other means, right?
You know, what I call normie light means to get a number or get some information.
So, you utilize a service that might be classified, that points you to a direction.
Then you could go ahead and go about getting that legally through subpoenas, search warrants, etc.
And you were, but this was very limited back then because drug traffickers weren't considered enemy combatants.
So, you have to be very careful of how you went about getting this information, right?
Now, that they're full-on terrorists, you know, you could do FISA's, you can do all this shit.
Free game.
They're free game now.
So, like, it's made for the investigator, it's made things a lot easier because before you had to be creative of how you use that type of information in your criminal case, because criminal cases and Intel don't mix well.
It's like water and oil.
So, I always laugh when people talk about CIA and FBI.
It's like, no, bro, they're two completely different agencies with different missions.
The CIA's job is to collect intelligence by any means necessary.
That means they operate in the block.
They operate, well, they mostly operate in the block.
They don't operate in the light.
When it comes to law enforcement, you have to operate in the light because what ends up happening is if you arrest someone and you want to prosecute them, all the evidence that you gather throughout that investigation is going to have to come to the light if they go to trial.
So, this is why they have significantly different missions.
Now, the FBI is an intel agency too, but they're focused more on domestic intelligence and they're also focused on securing prosecutions.
Whereas the CIA doesn't give a fuck about securing prosecutions, they just want to collect intelligence and waterboard niggas and do what they need to do to gather information by any means necessary.
Internationally, too.
Internationally, they have a presence way outside of the U.S., whereas the FBI is more so particularly focused inside of the U.S. or at least Central America and our borders.
I'll give you a perfect example.
So, there's a famous FBI agent.
His name is Ali Sufan.
Can you Google him real first for me?
Anyone that studies 9-11 or pays a significant amount of time to 9-11 knows that this guy, Ali Sufan, was like one of the main agents that was involved in this case.
I think he's Lebanese, if I'm not mistaken, fluent Arab speaker, FBI agent, very famous.
And he was involved.
I think he ran the, oh my God, the bombing, I think in like 1999 or 2000.
Here he is right here, Ali Sufan.
Okay, yeah, Lebanese American.
Yeah, he was a former FBI agent.
And then he got involved with 9-11 because he investigated the where the fuck is the USS.
Type in USS.
I forget the USS bombing that he had covered.
It was like in the late 90s or some shit like that.
Yes, USS Cole.
There we go.
Bam.
So the USS Cole, right?
He was the lead, see, boom, he was the lead investigator.
So he was a case agent on the coal bombing, right?
And the coal bombing, as you guys know, was linked back to Osama, right?
So that's kind of how he got looped in.
Now, and if you watch any 9-11 documentary, they'll talk about this.
During the 9-11 investigation, right?
And which is why 9-11, a big reason why 9-11 happened, was because the FBI and CIA weren't sharing information on top of all the other shit, right?
We also know who was involved.
But for the purpose of this conversation, we'll leave out them boys.
We'll just focus strictly on the FBI and CIA dynamics with 9-11.
So during the course of this investigation, right?
9-11 was a perfect example of two different agencies with different mission sets trying to work together to combat a criminal organization.
So, on one side, you had the FBI, right, wanting to gather evidence, put that evidence together for a criminal investigation.
On the other hand, the CIA was involved, was interested in waterboarding niggas getting as much information that they can to identify other people to basically neutralize them, right?
So, the problem here is that for a criminal investigation, you can't use evidence derived from torture.
You know, if you go to an AUSA or a prosecutor and say, oh, yeah, we got this information on this terrorist, but I was there with the CIA, we were waterboarding this nigga.
Bro, the AUSA is going to walk out the room.
The prosecutor is going to walk out the room and say, I don't want to, yo, get out the building.
Like, I don't even want to talk to you, right?
So, like, basically, you're doing black ops shit.
So, and even the prosecutor knowing that this went down is a problem, right?
It's an ethical issue for them.
So, this is an example of what I mean when I say, you know, the balance of bringing a case to prosecutorial fruition versus collecting intelligence, the two a lot of the times don't align because what it takes to build a strong criminal investigation for prosecution is directly antithetical to the CIA's methodologies of gathering intelligence for the purposes of clandestine operations or activities.
So, Ali Sufan talks about this in detail: how he'd be in a lot of these interviews, him and other FBI agents, because it would be like a CIA officer and an FBI agent.
The FBI just trying to build a criminal case.
The CIA officer is trying to gather information, and they had to leave the room a lot of the times, or they would not be able to be involved in interviews because the CIA would be waterboarding these guys.
There's a dude named, what was his name?
Was it Abu Abeda?
Not Abu Abeda.
Oh, I know what you're talking about.
Let me go with Eye Patch.
Type in, I'll give you guys, I'll tell you guys exactly what I'm talking about when I talk about this, too.
It's not Abu Zabeda.
Abu Zubeda, yep.
Can we show a picture of him real quick?
When I show the picture, you guys are going to know what I'm talking about.
So, this guy, Abu Zubeda, who my brother's going to bring on screen right now, this was one of the key guys during the investigation that the CIA was able to capture.
He almost died when he was involved in a shootout with them.
And the CIA tortured the fuck out of this guy.
I think he's still probably in Guantanamo Bay.
Yep, there he is.
Yeah, I can see him on your screen.
Yep.
And this was one of the main guys that the FBI and the CIA was extremely interested in.
But the FBI had to leave interviews multiple times because they were torturing this dude and they couldn't use any of it for prosecution.
And to this day, there's only one person that was successfully tried or convicted with a link to 9-11.
And it was a guy named, I think, Marquise is a French national, Zarawi.
Can you type in French National 9-11?
I'm fucking impressed that I even remember a lot of this shit.
Zarkawi or some shit like that.
Let's see.
But this is one of the key informants that created big issues between the FBI and the CIA because the CIA was waterboarding this guy, and the FBI couldn't use a lot of the information that the CIA got for their criminal case.
Zarkawi, Zarkawa was his name.
There we go.
I think something Zarkawi.
If you type in French National 9-11, he's going to come right up.
And he has a Wikipedia page as well.
He was the only person that was successfully tried for 9-11 in America and U.S. history.
Oh, yeah, we've got Abu Mosab.
Let me see.
Al-Zarqawi.
I think this is, is this your guy here?
No, not him.
No.
Type in 9-11, French National.
Yeah, let's see.
Let me see if I could look at it on my side.
Zacharias Massawi.
There we go.
Zacharias Masawi.
Z-A-C-A-R-I-A-S.
And then pull him up.
Masawi.
Yep.
M-O-U.
Got him.
You got him?
Yeah, he's like a bald nigga.
You should.
There you go.
Boom.
There he is.
So, okay.
So let's recap all this.
So, and I'm using 9-11, guys, because 9-11 is like the perfect example of how intelligence and law enforcement are like water and oil, the two don't mix.
So on one end, you got the FBI running an investigation, going after Al-Qaeda, trying to identify suspects, trying to present a case for prosecution.
Then on the other hand, you got the CIA identifying these guys and trying to disrupt and dismantle the network via, you know, clandestine activities, black operations, et cetera.
So the two, though, are completely oppose each other because what you need to put together for a criminal case is going to be completely antithetical a lot of the times, or you won't be able to go as hard as what the CIA does to collect information.
So Abu Zubeda was one of the main people that provided information during the 9-11 investigation that the FBI multiple times had to walk out the room when he was being interrogated because he was being tortured while he was being interrogated.
And we all know that a lot of confessions from torture are not legitimate, right?
They literally lie or say anything to just stop the pain.
And from a prosecutorial standpoint, no AUSA will ever use something that's garnered via torture, let alone even want to be in the same room as you if you admit that as the FBI agent, that you were there as they were tortured niggas.
Like that you, that would put you in trouble as well.
And this is why almost everything the CIA does with their with their detainees is classified for that very reason, right?
We just got declassified documents not too long ago about what enhanced interrogation techniques is now, right?
And it took like a decade plus for us to fucking be able to see it after the war on terror, right?
So that's a perfect example of what I mean when I say law enforcement intelligence agencies are two different worlds.
And this is why Trump making these drug cartels, terrorist organizations, kind of makes it a bit easier for law enforcement to work with intel services to get information.
And so would you say this is, because Trump has been catching a lot of flack, honestly, for me as well, would you say that this is a, you know, a W for Trump in this sense?
Mexican Marines' Powerful Response00:06:43
Because he did put a lot of pressure on the Mexican government and Mexican security forces and their intel services to go ahead and not only take this guy out, but other guys as well that run these drug king pins.
Yeah, I mean, I've never seen a president do it.
You know, he really is going hard on drugs.
Yeah, I mean, I would say in general, it is a W because the problem with Mexico is like they're just insanely corrupt.
Yeah.
You know, we could pull up El Mento, too, if you want, on Wikipedia, just so people know who it is.
Mr. Rams with the three gifted, thank you very much.
But chat, give me ones.
Does that all make sense for you guys?
Give me ones in the chat if that makes sense.
I covered a lot there.
And sometimes as someone that like understands this, I might miss certain details here or there.
But if you guys got questions, send your questions.
And I do enjoy teaching you guys about this stuff, but sometimes I might explain it in a manner that's a little bit hard to understand sometimes.
Because for me, it's like second nature.
Yeah, that's him.
So he died literally yesterday or earlier today, or yesterday, sorry.
Basically, he was the top leader of the Jalisco New Generation CJ, CJNG, an organized crime group based in Jalisco.
He was the most wanted person in Mexico and one of the most wanted in the United States at the time of his death.
The U.S. government and the Mexican government were offering rewards of up to 15 million for information leading to his arrest.
Yeah, bro, this guy was linked with so many different criminal organizations and Mexico drug traffic organizations.
And I actually have a video here if we want to just run over it really quickly too.
Yeah, let's do it.
And these guys used to make a bunch of meth.
That's how I knew who this guy was, was because the Zetas that I was looking at, drug traffic organization I was looking at, they were basically getting a lot of their high-quality methamphetamine from this dude and that organization.
That's how I got linked up with them.
Yeah.
And so it seems like there's some sort of ripple effect across the country.
I'm not sure, but let's go ahead.
It began with the chaos that is unfolding in Mexico after the killing of the country's most powerful cartel leader.
Thanks for joining us for this special edition of the NBC4 News.
I'm Kathy Varro.
I'm Jonathan Gonzalez.
The Mexican army killed the leader of the Jalisco New Generation cartel.
You're looking at him here in the Mesco Ruben and El Segura Cervantes, also known as.
I guarantee you guys that the Mexican army only was able to find and kill him, probably with U.S. intelligence services helping them.
Yeah.
It's also because of how desperate the United States government is to have this guy killed, putting $15 million on his.
So guaranteed, the Mexican army found him and was able to neutralize him based off of U.S. intelligence agencies sharing information.
And that's something else also that prior to these organizations being labeled as drug terrorist organizations, we would not share that information with the foreign government.
But since they're now terrorists, we can.
Opens up things that makes things a bit smoother to share information.
Let me keep playing it, though.
It happened in Tapalpa, Jalisco, about a two-hour drive southwest of Guadalajara.
Jalisco, the base for the cartel, which is known for trafficking huge quantities of fentanyl and other drugs into the United States.
El Mencho was wounded in an operation to capture him and die from his injuries while he was being flown to Mexico City.
And we are getting new video of the response from the cartel.
Violent classes, cars being set on fire, blocking streets.
So pause.
I want you guys to notice that.
Notice how they said the Mexican military had to stop him.
So for those that are unaware, in Mexico, the corruption is so bad and the cartels are so powerful, the police can't do shit.
So nine out of ten times, when these narcos are, you know, need to get apprehended or whatever by the government, it's got to be the Mexican Marines and the Mexican military that goes after them because these guys are so powerful.
They're running around typically in armored cars, right?
They're running, they're having like full-on details, like presidential damn near details, right?
They're extremely sophisticated and powerful in Mexico and they move like the fucking president.
Okay.
I'll never forget.
I told you guys the story before, but I'll quickly go over it.
There was a guy that I was talking to who was a who was what's known as a Sicario or a bodyguard as well, hitman, for a high-ranking member of the Zetas.
And he basically wanted to come forward and provide information to the feds in exchange for being able to come to the United States and bring his family over because he basically got tired of the bullshit.
But a long story short is this dude got paid to play diversion anytime his boss was getting shot at.
So Back in like 2014, 2015, there was a war going on between the Mexican Marines and the Losetas.
And what would happen is, in order for the high-ranking guys of the Zetas to be able to, you know, move in a somewhat safe manner, they would have a motorcade of a bunch of Tahos driving together in tandem.
And the reason for this was obviously so the Marines wouldn't know where the main guy was sitting.
So whenever the Mexican Marines would try to ambush them or attack the motorcade, this dude's job that I was talking to would get out the car, provide cover fire, and his job was to ensure that the boss was able to escape.
And he would shoot and create diversion for them to do it.
And the craziest part of this story is he would get paid a bonus for every body part he brought back to his boss.
So after he killed, you know, multiple Mexican Marines, he'd walk over to the body, cut a piece of their body off, right, to signify that he had killed this many people.
And for every body part he brought back, he was paid a bonus from the boss.
That just goes to show how fucking crazy these motherfuckers are.
And he told me this story.
The thing that was the most disturbing about this story was when he was telling me this story, it was just nonchalant.
It was like him talking about being at the office and working.
Like he didn't stutter.
He didn't like, you know, say anything.
It's like, yeah, man.
So yeah, I would basically get a bonus.
You know, I had to kill them, whatever else.
Tough sometimes, you know, but you know, it was okay.
I got it done.
You know, I got a, I got a couple of times where I got paid pretty well.
But that was his job.
They're driving in their motorcade.
Mexican Marines start shooting at them.
His job, pull over to the side, get out, provide cover fire with some fucking assault rifle, fully automatic assault rifle.
Boss gets away.
Every person he kills, he walks over after the mayhem is done, cuts a body part off, brings it back to the boss, gets a bonus, bro.
It's crazy shit, man.
That's crazy.
Crazy, crazy shit.
That's crazy.
But that's how powerful they are on in Mexico, where it takes the Mexican military to fight these guys because these guys have military-grade weapons as well.
Mexican Military vs. Narcoterrorists00:05:15
Yeah.
And armored cars and all that shit.
So anyway, we keep going.
Morrow in several states and the State Department has issued a shelter-in-place warning for U.S. citizens.
We have live team coverage of the response: what this means for the cartel's presence in Mexico, and also the impact to Americans.
Let's start with NBC Force Macy Jenkins.
She has the latest right now on the first word from the White House.
Lines of burning cars and plumes of smoke billowing over Puerto Vallarta in the Mexican state of Jalisco Sunday morning after the capture and killing of cartel leader Nemesio Ruben Oseguera Cervante, known as El Mencho.
This operation is one of the greatest operations in the history of drug trafficking.
The Jalisco New Generation Cartel, known as CJNG, is reportedly one of the main suppliers of cocaine to the U.S. and earns billions from the production of fentanyl and methamphetamines.
Mike B. Hill, former DEA Director of International Operations, says El Mencho's capture is just as significant as the captures of El Chapo Guzman and the killing of Pablo Escobar.
Demonstrating the efficiency and the willingness to confront drug trafficking by the Claudia Scheinbaum administration.
In 2024, the U.S. State Department announced a reward of up to $15 million for any information leading to El Mencho's arrest.
Since President Trump took office, President Scheinbaum has been under pressure to prove her strength and ability to crack down on international drug operations.
This means a great victory, and I would assume that it's going to diminish the amount of synthetic drugs, especially like benthanol coming into the United States.
El Mencho had previously migrated to the U.S., where he served nearly three years in prison after he was convicted of conspiracy to distribute heroin by the U.S. District Court in Northern California.
He returned to Mexico, later creating the CJNG in 2007, a cartel known for its aggressive attacks on the military.
This was the one guys I'm pretty sure that was designated as a terrorist group along with the others.
A bunch of them.
Yep.
With steel plates, with machine guns mounted on the roofs.
And they have operated with impunity for over a decade.
The Mexican Department of Defense says El Mencho was killed in Sunday's efforts to capture him in Tapalpa Jalisco, about 70 miles southwest of the state's capital and Mexico's second largest city, Guadalajara.
Six more were killed and two were arrested in the operation.
Three members of the armed forces were wounded.
So it was a carefully planned operation based on intelligence, primarily that the Mexican government had developed.
And it was a combined effort by ground troops and then also using aerial resources in the form of armed helicopters.
The death of the drug lord set off several hours of roadblocks in Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajara, a common tactic used by cartels to block military operations.
But President Sheinbaum writing on social media, we must remain informed and calm.
In the vast majority of the national territory, activities are proceeding with complete normality.
Looking ahead, Hill says, It's not enough to take out a leader.
You have to destroy the infrastructure.
And this is where the hard work is really going to begin.
That was our Macy Jenkins reporting.
Now, the White House did confirm in a statement that the U.S. government provided intelligence for this operation.
That's crazy.
I knew it.
Told you.
I called it.
That's crazy.
I did not see this.
And I did not see this thing before.
We didn't watch any of this, guys.
The Mexican military for a successful operation.
That statement goes on to say, quote, President Trump has been very clear the United States will ensure narcoterrorists sending deadly drugs to our homeland are forced to face the wrath of justice they have long deserved.
Vindicated real time with that, huh?
Yeah.
And so I wanted to ask you, since this is kind of a subject.
I just shit on those haters on X because niggas were talking about, oh, make this about me.
I'm like, bro, I run a fucking true crime show.
We talk about this to stupid motherfuckers.
And that's what I'm trying to rescue.
Hate Twitter.
You're kind of a subject matter expert in this regard.
So do you think that this will cause a negative ripple effect across Mexico?
Do you think this power vacuum will kind of create some issues?
I mean, it's probably too skewed and difficult to tell now, but do you find this is actually beneficial long term?
The thing is, is that the drug trade is never going to go anywhere because it's too lucrative, right?
And, you know, all that's going to happen from this point is, you know, the opposition are going to fight for the power vacuum.
Times Square Conflicts00:04:06
The guys that were underneath him are going to fight, and the strongest one is going to just take over.
A lot of the times, these organizations aren't as organized when it comes to leader secession.
They might have something kind of informal put there or even formally, but do they always adhere to it?
Probably not.
Because once the person dies and there's all the havoc and stuff like that, a lot of guys want to, you know, take over and get that power.
So, yeah, I anticipate a whole bunch of regional conflicts all over the place with people trying to get power.
Very rarely is there like a, you know, a smooth transition from one boss to the next one, especially when they're killed like this abruptly.
Yeah.
When they're killed like this abruptly, you know, it makes it even more volatile.
So because not only was, you know, the U.S. giving intelligence, they probably had it in a source that was close to him.
You know, so that's also something that happened.
No one saw it coming at all.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Very interesting.
So that creates a lot of issues for them.
Here, I've got just a few chats here, and then we can segue to the Times Square topic.
Yep.
I'm going to go over the Muslims praying in Times Square.
Yep, yep, yep.
Let's read mine, then you could read yours.
Okay, so Ken Rose with the $5.
Thank you so much, my friend.
Mr.36123 with 20 says, like, share, and subscribe.
OSS in this motherfucker.
Keep it up.
Keep up the good work.
Keep killing it.
Thank you so much, my friend.
I really appreciate that.
Mateo says, when are you going to Miami for After Hours?
$5.
Thank you so much.
Soon.
Am I going to tell you guys at some point in the future?
It'll happen.
It'll probably be a very funny show.
IC7785, $5.
Thanks for doing an analysis in El Mencho.
Can you also unpack Red Pill Clip 1 Gen Z Girl versus Vietnam vets?
King clip by King Jester.
Can't link on chat.
Thanks.
Okay.
I can put that in the queue in a moment.
Three Digletts, $100.
Thank you so much, my friend.
Huge super chat from you.
Your brother is my GOAT, sir.
Thank you so much.
I appreciate him, man.
Dude's my goat too in some way.
Louis Herrera, that's El Perata, the guy in red.
He diselmencho.
Okay.
You were probably referring to something that we were seeing on screen at that time.
But okay, that's it.
Thank you so much, Rediglitz.
I really appreciate the huge super chat.
Go ahead, bro.
Yeah, no, no, no.
I'm going to, what I'm going to do is I'm going to, guys, I'm going to kill all the other streams.
I'm going to go to kick only.
So, guys, do me a favor.
Or you guys can go to my brother's stream.
So, kick.com slash MarinGainsX.
If you guys want to stay on JTube, you can go to my brother's channel.
It's Read Report.
I'll drop the link there.
So, I'll put either MarionGainsX.com.
Wait, hold on.
Kick.com slash Marion GainesX.
Or let me put my brother's link here.
If you guys want to stay on JTube, you can do that too.
Whichever one you guys want.
Did that all make sense, though, with the whole intel versus law enforcement shit?
That was good.
Okay.
That was very good.
Cool.
Are you asking me or asking chat?
I was asking you, too.
That was good.
Well, that's kind of your subject matter, right?
You're an expert.
You worked on the border.
And so a lot of that stuff were things that you were kind of working with hand in hand.
So it makes sense that you have a good analysis on it.
Yeah, I appreciate that.
Educated me on a lot of things.
So guys, I'm going to end all the streams except for kick right now.
So guys, come on over.
We're going to cover the Times Square stuff.
Can you pull it up on screen real quick?
Yeah.
Pull it up on screen.
Yeah, guys, we're going to go into the Times Square stuff right now.