Sean, you want to be a part of the program this Monday.
Um still questions remain.
Uh how is it only a ten day investigation into cocaine found at the Biden White House?
And we know now the Secret Service not only closed the investigation after ten days, well, we found no DNA and as there's really not much we can do.
John Kirby this weekend telling Fox News Sunday the unsolved case of of cocaine at the Biden White House.
You know, we tried, we did the best we could, but now what do we what have we learned?
Because the Secret Service announces that they closed the investigation into all of this, and a spokesman for the agency telling NBC News it did so without conducting a single interview.
Anyway, John Solomon, editor in chief, investigative reporter, just the news.com, by the way, author of his new hit uh kids book, which shocked me, uh hidden headlines.
Who would have known it was that he had this this creative, you know, uh childlike side of them.
Um I never knew being such a hard hitting reporter.
Congratulations to you, John and uh Greg Jarrett, his book is doing phenomenal.
It's the trial of the century, Amazon.com, Hannity.com bookstores everywhere for both books.
Welcome both of you.
Good to be with you.
Great to be here.
Let's start with the cocaine issue first.
How is it now we learn they didn't they did not interview a single person, and we also know that they have video tape of every single person that went through that entrance into the West Wing.
Why wouldn't they interview every person?
Greg, I'll start with you on the legal side.
They should have, but it uh indicates a whitewash.
It's inconceivable, as you and I discussed earlier, that no fingerprints were on the baggie of Coke.
Uh and we're also supposed to believe that there's no usable or viable uh video evidence, uh nonsense.
Uh you know, the White House has more cameras than than a Hollywood movie studio.
Every inch is covered in surveillance twenty-four seven.
Um there there was a little dispute about that, because I heard Kaylee McEnaney say that they were not cameras everywhere, but there were cameras that captured every single person that went in that entrance.
Yeah, I I think she's correct about that.
But I I think that entrance uh is a red herring.
I think the original site was the library in the east wing just below the family residence.
Why do I say that?
Because that's where the Hazmat team was immediately directed to go when the bag was.
Okay, this is important because they came out with three different locations.
How did that happen, Greg?
Well, I think it's part of a shifting narrative to cover up the truth.
You know, eleven days it do uh it doesn't magically migrate from the east wing all the way to the west wing, which is quite a distance.
You know it, I've been there, you've been there.
Uh and you know, no fingerprints on the storage locker.
Uh what are the odds of that?
Uh, you know, it's beyond suspicious that the Secret Service closed this case so quickly and didn't bother to interview a single individual.
Let's get your take on this topic, John Solomon.
If Donald Trump were president, you really think this would end in ten days and not a single person interviewed?
I doubt it.
Well, not by the not by the history that we have of the first four years of the Trump uh White House where every every scandal, even if it was fake, uh played out for weeks and months uh before it was dropped or before.
Yeah, and in some cases years.
Years, yeah.
In the case of Russia collusion.
Listen, the the the don't ask the questions, don't interview people.
Where did we just see that?
Recently we just saw that testimony come out from the IRS whistleblowers who were told, don't ask about the big guy.
Don't ask about Joe Biden.
You can't interview these people.
If you don't want the if you don't want to find out what's going on, you prevent people from asking or interviewing the witnesses, and that appears to be what went on with the Secret Service.
And we're gonna learn more about the Secret Service later this week.
We hope to put up some video footage later this week that are going to show another security failure by the Secret Service.
Um but uh this is an agency that I think is gonna come under increasing scrutiny as people understand some of the behavior it's been involved in.
All right.
Before we get to your story about Devin Archer, which I think is pretty blockbuster and the fact that Devin Archer has not been able to get back uh his own material evidence that would be probably extremely pertinent in the investigation into Hunter, uh, especially for the committees.
Uh let's talk about what we expect to happen on Wednesday of this week, John Solomon.
Yeah, the uh two F uh the two IRS whistleblowers, Gary Shapley, we know his name, his subordinate, we haven't known his name, but on Wednesday we expect his name to become public, and we're gonna see both men, their faces, their images, and their testimony in an open hearing before Congressman James Comer.
Now, a little breaking news on this.
Just a short while ago, I confirmed that the committee, the House uh House Oversight Committee, has secured the cooperation of a former FBI agent who can corroborate some of the IRS whistleblowers' uh uh testimony.
So a new witness entering the scene, uh, James Comer is rolling up witnesses one by one to create a complete 360 degree picture of what went on in the Hunter Biden investigation.
Now an FBI agent joining the ranks along with two IRS whistleblowers and providing information to Congress uh by Wednesday, I would expect we would hear what that FBI whistleblower, that FBI witness has told the Congress.
What's your take, Greg Jarrett?
Well, I I think uh there there is a smoking gun document that the Ways and Means Committee obtained but didn't appreciate the full impact and its value, and I hope that becomes part of the focus uh among the whistleblower questioning on Wednesday.
And that that document uh shows that the U.S. attorney in Delaware's office signed off on bringing serious felony charges against Hunter Biden.
Well now John reported on this.
You are you talking about the office of David Weiss?
Yes.
Okay.
And the office of David Weiss signed off on felony charges against Hunter Biden.
His own office did, and then he, as the attorney in the case, the prosecuting attorney in the case, decided to go along with a slap on the wrist plea deal.
That that makes no sense at all whatsoever, and it's beyond any understanding I've ever I have about law enforcement DAs and how they operate.
Yeah, it it smacks a political interference and political favoritism on behalf of the Department of Justice and two other Biden appointed U.S. attorneys in California and Washington, D.C. So I hope that document uh is gone over with the whistleblowers on Wednesday and they can shed some light on how did it go from serious felony charges signed off on by the U.S. attorney,
including the assistant U.S. attorney Leslie Wolfe, uh, and suddenly it's just a couple of misdemeanors for Hunter.
All right.
Uh this is this is your wheelhouse, John Solomon.
You want to you want to take your stab at that question and how that happened?
Well, I think Greg did a brilliant job.
Listen, uh everybody was signed off on going on the big case against Hunter Biden, and all of a sudden there is an about face and everything is dropped and the charges are brought down.
I think one possibility that Congress is looking at right now is whether the two losses that John Durham suffered in the District of Columbia juries in the summer of 2022 was the changing point.
That maybe that scared off the prosecutors from having the courage to bring a case that they had already signed off on months earlier.
Some of the lawmakers I'm talking to say they're getting some indication that that might be a factor, and it's one of the many things that people are going to ask.
Remember, there were two consecutive trials that occurred in the summer and fall last year.
John Durham lost both of them, even though he provided pretty substantial proof that the witnesses, one a lawyer for Hillary Clinton, the other one of the main sources of the bogus Russia uh collusion uh uh dossier, they both got acquitted despite pretty strong evidence from John Durham.
Uh so that'll be one of the questions Congress will be asking in the next few weeks, according to my reporting today.
And that'll work in the reverse way if Donald Trump is charged in in Washington, D.C. or Fulton County, uh, or New Jersey or New York.
I mean, th those are not Republican conservative friendly venues, Greg Jarrett and especially somebody with the last name Trump, I don't I don't see any possibility of even getting a fair trial.
I agree with you.
And uh, you know, it's one of the reasons why uh I'm I'm actually happy to see in the spirit of fairness, uh, that the uh special counsel prosecution that has already been uh rendered in an indictment is down in Florida.
I mean Trump at least has a fair chance from a jury of his peers there.
Yeah, but you're hearing the same rumors I am that they may bring additional charges in New Jersey because they're not confident that that in fact they'll get that conviction down in Florida.
Yeah.
I mean, it's it's sort of like forum shopping, uh where prosecutors uh try to find the the most favorable venue uh where you know they have an advantage with a biased jury.
I mean, uh I mean, is this now our justice system in America?
Is this it?
Yeah, it is, sadly enough.
Uh, you know, i this is one of the reasons why, you know, politically driven prosecution should never be allowed.
Uh because you know, it immediately makes it almost impossible to find uh a fair jury.
And you know, Durham's two failed prosecutions simply prove it.
There's no way uh that either in Northern Virginia or Washington, D.C., either one of those cases could uh could render a guilty verdict because they were so politically toxic.
Quick break more with Greg Jarrett and John Solomon on the other side, and your calls 800-941 Sean, our number if you want to be a part of the program.
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That's why we started normally a podcast for people who are over the hysteria and just want clarity.
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All right, we continue now with investigative reporter, editor-in-chief, justthenews.com, John Solomon.
Also, Fox News legal analyst, Greg Jarrett, is with us.
You know, John, look at three cases.
We followed them extensively.
Joe Biden bragging on tape, uh leveraging a billion taxpayer dollars to get a prosecutor in Ukraine fired.
He got it done within six hours.
Son of a bee, they did it.
And his his son Hunter, who admits on GMA has no experience in Ukraine, energy oil at all, you know, gets to continue to rake in massive sums of money.
No experience at all.
He'd learn in the uh in the Durham report, three hundred what however many pages, uh, that Operation Crossfire Hurricane that went on for two and a half, whatever years, you know, never should have been open.
Here's the reasons why uh those Pfizer warrants, Pfizer courts were lied to.
Nobody gets held accountable or responsible.
Or that Christopher Steele's dossier, they couldn't corroborate a single single thing that was in there, even after they've offered a bribe him with a a million dollars plus uh if he could corroborate it.
You know, then we have WhatsApp messages with Hunter.
I'm sitting here next to my father, and we don't like the way you're acting, blah, blah, blah.
And then lo and behold, less than a week later, five million dollars into the Biden family coffers.
Nothing happens.
Why?
Well, listen, because the scales of justice are no longer balanced.
I think that that is a concern that you hear from people on the left and the right and uh legal experts, whether it is jury nullification due to political bias or uh but who on the left is complaining about I don't hear people on the left are the ones that are getting favorable treatment.
Alan Dershowitz is perhaps one of the icons of of liberalism in America.
He he sees it for what it is, John uh Turley, I claim that GW University, another I I think you've listed the whole group.
That's it.
Can you name any more?
Well, I'm digging.
I I'm still digging for more.
We might find more, but there's at least two.
Okay, you got two.
You got me there.
But you but but there's the it if the system is working one way.
I mean, it's sad.
I mean, uh and and then you saw Christopher Ray last week.
Yeah.
I mean, he didn't seem to have a care in the world not answering a single question.
It was so frustrating to the lawmakers sitting there that you saw an FBI director that wasn't willing to legitimately address legitimate concerns that are now clearly documented.
He didn't even seem to know how many Americans' phone records had improperly uh been searched in violation of the similarities.
You would think something that big that the uh FISA court put out that the FBI director would know, and he just cavillarly said, I don't know.
Uh he doesn't seem to be engaged.
And I think that frustration uh is going to boil over in the form of penalty this fall.
There's going to be a budget battle.
I suspect the FBI will be a lot lighter in the wallet come the end of the year.
Would they be able to specifically legally, you know, not only defund this new building that they want that is bigger, you know, twice as big as the Pentagon, Greg Jarrett, but would they specifically be able to defund monies or directly uh earmark monies to be taken away from leadership in the FBI?
Oh, sure they could.
They I mean they can pass a law that uh, you know, deprives the FBI of uh a certain amount of money and uh spent on certain programs, uh, especially their counterintelligence surveillance programs, which have been, you know, according to the inspector general, the FISA court uh, you know, as well as a federal court judge, uh, have been egregiously abused.
Sure, they could shut those programs down.
Uh any of you, either one of you heard from Robert Hurr, the the special counsel, uh pointed to look into the issue of Joe Biden and top secret classified documents, because we hear about the other special counsel every second, every minute, every hour of every day, because he's looking into Donald Trump, and of course, 37 charges already brought, and it looks like more coming any moment.
He is uh missing in action.
And isn't it interesting that the special counsel investigating Trump has been leaking uh like a sieve, and yet uh nothing but silence from Robert Hurst suggests to me another cover-up, another whitewash.
Anything you've heard, John?
I haven't heard anything.
No, it's been very quiet there.
No evidence of a grand jury, at least not yet.
I know there was some interaction with the lawyer in Boston who took some of Joe Biden's uh documents north last year.
But that's really been about it.
Not much briefings to Congress.
Uh we'll have to wait and see.
But I've been uh with a stethoscope to the ground, I have not been able to hear any sounds.
All right, John Solomon, Greg Jarrett, thank you both.
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Um a lot of people, you know, have been speculating on the economy, what's going to happen, what's going to happen, what's going to happen, recession, no recession, some recession, maybe a recession.
Okay, put that aside for just a second here.
So what is gonna happen soon is gonna be devastating for millions and millions of Americans.
And and the reason is, and most people don't know this, several pandemic era safety net programs, they're all coming to an end at roughly the same time this fall.
Now that means scores of Americans are gonna start facing, you know, bigger bills, they're gonna have to pay back their student loans again, and and child care credits and monies they were getting, and health care and food credits they were getting, uh, which will only deepen the impact of years of Biden inflation.
And the real issue here is that these policies have been a lifeline in some cases for family families in the pandemic, but you know, this is going to be a massive hit no matter how hard Joe Biden tries to say Bidonomics, Biden Bidenomics has been a disaster.
You know, ten thousand dollars on average inflation per household in America because of Bidenomics, because of Biden economic and energy policies.
You know, we're still a buck, buck and a half more per gallon of per gasoline than Donald Trump.
Yes, never got to three dollars a gallon under Donald Trump.
You know, the most pro-union president in history, by the way, seeing strikes in Hollywood and and elsewhere and losing support of the unions because of his obsession with electric cars.
Anyway, you know, Biden was took to Twitter earlier today to tout his economic policies and the impact Bidenomics is having on workers' wages and his self-praise was short lived.
However, as the Twitter checkers said it contains factual errors.
Right now, real wages for American uh workers is higher than it was before the pandemic, with lower wage workers seeing the largest gains the president writes.
Well, I don't think he wrote anything on Twitter, but putting that aside.
Uh and now we're finding out that entire statement is false.
It's just not true.
If you compare it to March fifteenth of twenty twenty and where we are today, no real wages adjusted for inflation are down.
But you know, why let facts get in the way of a good Biden lie like that?
All right, let's get to our busy oh, before we get to that, too.
I want to let me go to um let me play for you.
And this is Susan Page on Liberal Joe, morning Joe this morning.
USA is she's the Washington Bureau chief of USA Today, you know, saying that uh it's kind of hard for Biden to convince voters the economy's working when people are having trouble paying their bills.
Yeah, uh two-thirds of America, almost two-thirds of America, are living paycheck to paycheck.
The average American has fifty-four thousand dollars in credit card debt.
Linda, uh, do you know people in credit card debt?
I do.
Have you ever been there?
Of course.
Yeah, it's hell.
And credit card debt interest rates are it's like the worst debt, and they're people are using credit cards for bare necessities.
They're not using it because they're living beyond their means.
But anyway, here's using it because Joe Biden took away all their opportunity to do anything with their lives because it's terrible.
But go ahead, we'll hear what she has to say.
You know, here's the dilemma for the White House.
So they clearly need to do a better sales job, especially in talking about things like the strong job market, the fact that inflation eats.
We had good inflation numbers at the end of last week.
But a sales job only goes so far when you're talking about the economy because that's something Americans live with every day of their lives in their own families.
It's hard to convince people things are going well if they're having trouble meeting their bills.
Uh if they're having uh trouble keeping their kids in college or uh paying the rent.
Yeah, and that's that's you know, nearly two-thirds of the country, sixty plus percent of the country is living that way.
Paycheck to paycheck.
Uh, Dan in Michigan.
Dan, how are you?
Hope you had a great weekend.
Glad you called.
Hey, Sean, how are you today?
I'm good, sir.
What's on your mind today?
Well, I really called about the uh the White House cocaine scandal.
Um I hear everybody talk about it like it's some kind of cover up, and I've I've got a little bit of a different theory on it.
And that's really the you know, the way it all came down, um they had to shut down the White House, and then they had to bring out the story about what they found, but then all of a sudden it just shut down and it was just um just went quiet, and everybody's talking like it's a cover up.
Well, one of the thoughts, my thought at least is you know, it's kind of uh Secret Service protocol not to talk about their protectees.
So I'm wondering if this is just protocol that we're running up against and not some kind of cover up.
It's a cover up.
How do you end an investigation ten days investigating cocaine in the White House?
Well, what if it was anthrax as I've been saying?
What if it was laced with fentanyl?
I mean, uh I there are examples of police officers that have handled fentanyl and and in somehow ingest some of the powder and dust.
Remember the the equivalent of three grains of salt.
Think how small that is of fentanyl, that'll kill anybody listening to this program, and then some.
So they ingest small amounts just handling it in the course of their police work or their uh law enforcement work, and next thing they know is is they're flat on their back, and and they have a uh a fellow officer saving them with Narcamp.
I mean, think about that in the White House, but we'd give up after ten days and not interview a single person.
Oh, I I agree, absolutely.
But again, wouldn't that explain why it would suddenly just be shut down is if they were just running up against the topic they can't discuss.
Well, I I don't even think it's a topic they can't discuss.
They they they are giving aid and comfort and they're aiding and a betting in a Biden cover-up.
I'm sorry, but this this you cannot in good conscience say that this was a thorough investigation.
You know, okay, January 6th, we had a January 6th committee.
We have like a thousand people that have been pursued and prosecutor and tapes poured over again and again.
What happened to all those people rioting in the summer of 2020, telting bricks, rocks, bottles, Molotov cocktails of police officers.
Why didn't we use the video tape to prosecute them?
Or the people burning down businesses, billions of dollars worth of businesses, or burning down police precincts, uh, or the you know, the people responsible for the death of you know a couple of dozen Americans.
Why didn't we go after them too?
Amazing, right?
How selective it is.
Oh, absolutely agreed.
But again, you know, when you're when your protocol says something and you're part of the part of the Secret Service, I mean, that's what you're gonna do.
So not saying Well, I I I I honestly have nothing but respect for the Secret Service.
I've met these guys.
I have met them.
I've I've gotten to know some of them.
They're great people, the ones I've met.
And I'm telling you, I I've talked to a few of them.
They're not happy about this at all.
And they feel like we do it.
So they they say that's total BS is a cover up.
These they know a cover up, they can sense it, they smell it, they know it, it's real.
Well, there's also another possibility on this is that they showed as much as they could.
So in other words, they exposed that it was cocaine instead of just sliding it under the rug right then and there.
They could have just they just could have said it was a false warning or come up with another story.
It could be them actually showing something without actually breaking their protocol.
But not getting to the bottom of it, not interviewing a single person.
Um I'm sorry, that's just unacceptable.
You know, if they if the drugs were found in my house, I'm sorry, I doubt they'd they'd give up without interviewing a single person.
Mr. Hannity, uh, we're not gonna ask you or anybody in your household any questions.
Well, I don't have anyone in my household.
My kid, I'm an empty nester.
You know, Linda's laughing.
Live alone.
Well, I mean, listen, you took you long enough to get there, right?
Jeez.
It's listen, and the short list.
Yeah, exactly.
But pretty short list, me.
Uh or maybe maybe sweet baby James.
We'll go after him.
Um or James from TV.
That that that's about the short list.
You know, I do have occasional visitors.
If it happened on a visitor day, we we'd have to, you know, use the the surveillance footage and find them.
God forbid Linda came over, she'd Be the top suspect.
Listen, I'm gonna tell you right now, everybody knows I don't touch the white stuff, okay?
Tito's I'm not I can't plead innocence.
Everybody knows Tito's and Tonic is my favorite thing.
You know, if I have a minute, I'm gonna have a couple.
But at the end of the day, I promise you, you or James or Blair or somebody's gonna wrap me out that it was me.
And that's the biggest problem I have with this whole dang thing is there's not one Secret Service agent that's willing to put it all on the line and say, and by the way, it was it's more important, it's bigger than all of us, and not a one of them has done it.
It is so scary as a parent to know that kids can be stupid, and they try these drugs and they die.
This is this is a big big dramatic shift in in terms of the drug battle in this country, which by the way, the first thing I would do is secure the border, but you know, why why bicker over something that that common sensical?
Dan, we appreciate it, man.
Thank you.
Uh Warren, Idaho, next, Sean Hannity show.
What's up, Warren?
How are you?
Good, Sean.
It's always a pleasure to talk to you, sir.
My pleasure.
Uh how do you think Gavin Newsom on his trip to Idaho went over?
Is he going over well in Idaho?
No, it did not go over well in Idaho.
We don't have much uh use for Gavin Newsom up here.
How do you feel about these counties in Oregon that want to defect and be part of Idaho and not Oregon?
Is are people in Idaho open to that?
You know, discussions I've had with people, as long as they can keep their politics away and not try and well, we want to be part of Idaho, but we want oh, we want the systems in place that California has now.
In other words, leave, but but I think one of the major reasons they want to leave Oregon is because it's so wacky left wing.
Yeah, it's insane.
I mean, it's insanity when they don't know which bathrooms to use, and I mean, just look at how bad Portland is now with the drug use on the streets and trash.
I mean, it's San Francisco, same.
I mean Seattle, same thing, it's everywhere.
Yep.
Yeah.
Spokane, we should keep Spokane.
We're we're across the border from Spokane, and they want to defect too, I think.
Uh, can't say I blame them.
Anyway, what else is on your mind?
You know, I've I just all the gaffes that you play with Biden, and I'm in your camp as far as his cognitive decline.
You know, I've worked around geriatrics my whole career, and the anger that he shows to his staff behind the scenes in those snaps, that is right down the line with that degenerative mind.
They start to lose their filter when you get older, and doesn't mean he needs to be an assisted living, but he's not running the country.
Uh no, he's not running the country.
There's uh I uh the by confidence level of him being able to run it a zero, and we saw it last week.
Now, how many of you saw did you see Joe Biden nibbling on that little girl?
Did you see how and by and this is on top of not showing up to dinner with other NATO allies, every other leader.
Uh this is him having one gaff after another.
This is after King Charles had to guide him away from you know where he was wandering off to, and and Zelinski having to help him off the stage uh on top of every verbal gaff that took place last week.
I mean, did you see the nibbling before he left Finland?
Did he nibbling on this little girl and like looking like he was gonna kiss her and like the girls were coiling like disgusted and creeped out?
That whole thing is the the the child's parents, complete morons standing there video taping, laughing, smiling.
I am sorry.
I don't care if you are the president or who you are, you are a stranger to that child.
You do not go up.
Not only do you not put your hands on that child, you do not put your mouth on that child up and down its back.
It is perverse and disgusting.
He is repulsive.
And I tell you what, those parents should be ashamed of themselves.
Getting worse.
I I just thought it is getting worse.
It creeped me out.
It just, oh well, we're gonna run it in slow mo tonight.
I I had my stat, I said I want the slowest motion that you could possibly put together, and we'll put it in slow mo tonight, all right?
And yet he can't name his own seventh grandchild.
You're gonna go up to this stranger and motorboat or back, but he doesn't know who his little I mean his own grandchild is.
Give me a break.
Guess who's down in Arkansas and gonna report for us tonight?
Our friend Sarah Carter is down there and will report on the seventh grandchild now that Maureen Dowd and USA Today have discovered, oh, he actually has seven grandchildren.
Maybe you should acknowledge that child.
Anyway, appreciate it.
We have a minute left.
We're going to give it to Max in North Carolina.
Max, this minute is all yours.
Make great use of it.
Thanks, Sean.
Longtime listener, first time caller.
Hey, so I just want to touch on this bill that is being introduced up in Congress to protect farmlands.
I'm going to talk to Texas Congress, someone who's introduced it.
But the issue I have with this bill is that it only – the only real blockade that it has is that it puts up an excise tax of 60 percent, which, yeah, I mean, it's going to be cost prohibitive.
But my question is, instead of trying to reinvent the wheel, why not just amend 18-USC-1851, which is what we already have in place to protect our natural resources like coal?
From allowing other hostile agents or foreign countries from owning it.
I mean Well, I was shocked to find out where they have a water shortage in uh in Arizona that that Saudi Arabia won't even let them measure how much water they they are taking in a deal that they made, you know, going back a number of years.
That's insane to me.
I don't know why we allow the communist Chinese to buy thousands and thousands of Lakers uh acres of ranch land and farmland or land near military installations.
You know, when when I say we could be a really dumb country, we can be really dumb.
And and what I'm saying and the answers, the solutions are pretty basic, fundamental, common sense, not hard.