Navigated to True Crime Time For September 4, 2025 | Cold Cases, Dirty Cops & Dumb Criminals - Transcript

True Crime Time For September 4, 2025 | Cold Cases, Dirty Cops & Dumb Criminals

Episode Transcript

[SPEAKER_08]: Hello everybody, welcome to the episode of True Crime Time 4 Thursday, September 4, 2025 and what he or something?

[SPEAKER_08]: Cindy, how are you doing?

[SPEAKER_08]: We're doing it.

[SPEAKER_08]: Bring it to you.

[SPEAKER_08]: Bring it to you.

[SPEAKER_08]: Bring it to you.

[SPEAKER_08]: Be doing.

[SPEAKER_08]: You should have got a TikTok yesterday about hashtag justice for Bradley and hashtag justice for AO.

[SPEAKER_08]: It is No idea that this camera is [SPEAKER_02]: has, I mean, why would people like you all just go silent?

[SPEAKER_02]: They know, hopefully, they know you're not.

[SPEAKER_02]: Because my hands swayed in the knee direction.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, right.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, sway me, my wish, like a really, really wish as it would happen, or they're wishing them to have their, they're like, oh, maybe I don't this time.

[SPEAKER_08]: Maybe you went away.

[SPEAKER_02]: Someone had a door for you to drop anything.

[SPEAKER_02]: It's my, so.

[SPEAKER_02]: Did they?

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: you know, nice.

[SPEAKER_08]: There we go again.

[SPEAKER_08]: Be that's part of doing justice.

[SPEAKER_02]: No, that's what I've been thinking maybe they think now we're going to shut them up.

[SPEAKER_08]: Oh, no, shut that out.

[SPEAKER_08]: This silence is golden and I'll explain everything on the episode which patron of convicts will be getting today.

[SPEAKER_08]: if you didn't get it 12 o'clock 1 a.m.

[SPEAKER_08]: you're going to get it definitely on Thursday.

[SPEAKER_08]: All lifers will get it on one Saturday, okay?

[SPEAKER_08]: Patrona Condnese courses, commercial free, early release, as always.

[SPEAKER_08]: And everyone else has been on Saturday.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it's football season.

[SPEAKER_02]: You can't like drop the good episodes of home football.

[SPEAKER_08]: You got college ball and then if we'll start it yet, it's in a fail starts tomorrow night.

[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

[SPEAKER_08]: Then they have another NFL Friday night.

[SPEAKER_08]: Then they have college games tomorrow and Friday.

[SPEAKER_08]: College games, all they say are Sunday of NFL and my first one in the ball coming up.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, next week.

[SPEAKER_08]: So anyway, the, and all seriousness, the can't even call out the wheels to just turn his sleigh because I had to fire some shots and things were going on.

[SPEAKER_08]: Look.

[SPEAKER_08]: but 12th hour to the ice line phone calls.

[SPEAKER_08]: They all day, all day, tags, messages, all day, every day, everything is being looked upon and soon or then later boots will be on the ground.

[SPEAKER_08]: And that's when we kick it into the whole next year, right?

[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: So anyway, let's get down some true crime time for Thursday, Dallas versus the Eagles tonight.

[SPEAKER_08]: This bread went from seven and a half to eight, Dallas is getting plus eight.

[SPEAKER_02]: I know these two can care less It's a support you and all of your endeavors.

[SPEAKER_07]: This is true.

[SPEAKER_02]: You always have crazy or not None of it ever been crazy.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah None of them have never not been crazy.

[SPEAKER_02]: Well, that's true.

[SPEAKER_02]: Maybe I'm cruising.

[SPEAKER_07]: Mmm.

[SPEAKER_07]: I'm gonna taste that one.

[SPEAKER_02]: Why'd I have to be crazy to stay with you, this little?

[SPEAKER_07]: True that.

[SPEAKER_02]: Anyway, I'm looking for this one particular case, but I'll just start here.

[SPEAKER_02]: We're gonna go immediately across the pond.

[SPEAKER_08]: See, the weeds I had so many, yes, I could have stayed across the pond, let's go to, [SPEAKER_06]: It's time for world-wide crime.

[SPEAKER_02]: This is relatively a short and not sweet.

[SPEAKER_02]: Well, this is relatively a light story.

[SPEAKER_02]: And it's really, I guess, the story of how making one bad decision can change your whole life type of thing.

[SPEAKER_02]: So a few days ago at Cap-Ham, Junction Station in South London, there was a university law student who [SPEAKER_02]: in one of those moments that I was saying, you know, split second decision can change your life.

[SPEAKER_02]: And so he waited on the foot bread, foot bridge.

[SPEAKER_02]: And as he waited, our revenue protection officer, I guess that's what they called the people that come and collect your tickets and stuff like that.

[SPEAKER_02]: From South, the revenue protection officer was from Southwest and Railway.

[SPEAKER_02]: And he approached him.

[SPEAKER_02]: the young man, the law student, didn't have a valid rail ticket.

[SPEAKER_02]: So he was just trying to get on.

[SPEAKER_08]: He's fair jumping.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_02]: So...

[SPEAKER_08]: I mean, come on, man, fuck, this is like a cup of dollars.

[SPEAKER_02]: Exactly, but for some a couple of dollars, I'm in a couple cents as a lot, right?

[SPEAKER_08]: But there's a lot of students in that, but you don't need to fucking ride exactly.

[SPEAKER_08]: It's still breaking along.

[SPEAKER_02]: Exactly.

[SPEAKER_02]: So when a quick thinking moved, the student thought that he was going to like make it all all right.

[SPEAKER_02]: and so he bought a e-ticket from his phone.

[SPEAKER_02]: But when the officer started questioning the timing, because the officer noticed, hey, I'm standing here, the 32A, or PM, and you just bought this at 321.

[SPEAKER_08]: Let me tell you something, I got interrupted.

[SPEAKER_08]: Okay, the sew.

[SPEAKER_08]: Licensing for hunting and all that shit change every year and now they change to where you buy Once a year and whatever date you buy I don't want it used to go from like January 1 January 1 regards whenever you bought it in the year In last year I bought it like the morning like an hour four when in the dove field now mine is up This weekend in this the first weekend of the season.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, but technically [SPEAKER_08]: Don't even have to buy it or actually you can't even buy it until that that year is up to technically I'm gonna get one more dove hunt out of them when last year's ticket But I don't think they game boards ain't coming because they come out.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, and they're gonna check your shit And then you'll be like, oh, you gotta wait with it.

[SPEAKER_02]: No, if I could see I'll change this a long time So it's all, but they're gonna be paying attention to [SPEAKER_08]: Oh, yeah, they check your shit.

[SPEAKER_08]: They check it hard.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: They love the right time tickets.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: They got a pay for shit.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: That's the same light that the so-by-people are whatever is called.

[SPEAKER_08]: I mean, should that all that's just not free?

[SPEAKER_02]: No.

[SPEAKER_02]: So the guy questioned the timing and he pointed out that the ticket was stamped just a minute earlier, which obviously was not long enough for the train to travel from where the kid came from to where he was at that point.

[SPEAKER_02]: Right.

[SPEAKER_02]: So.

[SPEAKER_02]: He tried to, the student tried to explain away the situation, claiming that if his phone was a bit slow causing a delayed purchase, but the officer wasn't convinced and suggested that he should have bought the ticket before boarding the train.

[SPEAKER_02]: So the student was obviously nervous and he began to panic and he asked if there was any way to handle the situation revealing why he was so distressed.

[SPEAKER_02]: He said, I study law and I fear that even the hint of wrongdoing could derail my future.

[SPEAKER_02]: And so he also pleaded, I don't want [SPEAKER_02]: Whatever do you just probably open the company like slam your feet to box knowledge you go But when people get caught and they all of a sudden have this remorse I have no patience for that.

[SPEAKER_02]: You need to have remorse prior to like [SPEAKER_02]: He was only sorry and he was only scared because he got caught.

[SPEAKER_02]: Exactly.

[SPEAKER_02]: He's had he done it before.

[SPEAKER_08]: When the times of us said that, when you're getting the G-S out of bad guys and they're like crying and shedding and like a bitch, you just crying because you got caught.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: You've got to, you're not sorry about anything.

[SPEAKER_02]: No.

[SPEAKER_02]: And then you go back to the same big.

[SPEAKER_08]: be able to hold out that the having dogs in the country is the best alarm system.

[SPEAKER_08]: I don't know, because it was a herd of hogs across the pond.

[SPEAKER_08]: We're going to need to take a part of that.

[SPEAKER_08]: But at nighttime, we have this cat that lives in one of the barns out here and look, don't.

[SPEAKER_08]: Think of bad about it because I can't sleep in this best life, better in hell.

[SPEAKER_02]: Oh yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: Sheesh because it eats all the mice, right?

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_02]: So...

Do they do anything with snakes?

[SPEAKER_08]: I'm not.

[SPEAKER_08]: Okay.

[SPEAKER_08]: The...

Um...

New idea on that one.

[SPEAKER_08]: So...

[SPEAKER_08]: I wish we had a dumb crumbles, but you know, like they don't know, tell us.

[SPEAKER_08]: Some people are just not very intelligent.

[SPEAKER_08]: So we're going out to Texas.

[SPEAKER_08]: And I told you one of my FBI friends told me the one crown they would commit one time and I know they could get away with it as what?

[SPEAKER_08]: A bank robber?

[SPEAKER_08]: Absolutely.

[SPEAKER_08]: So we're going to Texas where there's a bank robber and, you know, there's a guy named Pew, Pew, GAs.

[SPEAKER_08]: He walked in in a fast food with a fast food bag and approached the teller in a bank.

[SPEAKER_08]: All right.

[SPEAKER_08]: He pretended to be making a withdrawal.

[SPEAKER_08]: But as soon as he got up to her one day, he gave her the bag with a note, riddle spell on her as it says, quotation's look.

[SPEAKER_08]: If you don't want to die, then you should do as this note says.

[SPEAKER_08]: This is not a bag of food.

[SPEAKER_08]: This is a bomb, BOM.

[SPEAKER_08]: So just put money in the envelope in the spell and do not make any move till after I have left for 10 minutes minutes to spell it in my TIS So be You tell her did what they should have done because it's not working killed ever [SPEAKER_08]: So he got 800 bucks, right, but not he only got it because the Taylor got all his personal information [SPEAKER_02]: So hi, my idea sir.

[SPEAKER_08]: Right, so let me tell you that what happened, how's the good fact from the beginning, that was trying to skip forward and to get to that part.

[SPEAKER_08]: So situation Texas, Texas, T-HOS unfolded where a bank robber was convinced by bank teller to show two forms of identification before he completed his robbery.

[SPEAKER_08]: And then he got called almost immediately while leaving the bank.

[SPEAKER_08]: All right.

[SPEAKER_08]: Regardless what the current administration would like you to believe about crime and specific cities, the truth is crime tends to be random.

[SPEAKER_08]: And the best way to deal with it is to have personal and risky jobs ready for anything, just like I used to travel a country and train the people and jewelry stores.

[SPEAKER_08]: But the bank tailor at a Wells Fargo in Dallas was one of those highly trained individuals who handled the bank robbery perfectly.

[SPEAKER_08]: These days, when a rat man enters a building, he easily ends in a shootout, so one could be forgiven for simply cooperating with everything or over demands.

[SPEAKER_08]: But this is according to CBS that they report that when a man named Nathan Wayne P.

walked into a bank trying to rob it, just as quietly as he could, from one specific tailor, tell her, [SPEAKER_08]: The teller stalled him about pretending there was draw required a wait time He yes, sir.

[SPEAKER_08]: Okay.

[SPEAKER_08]: You can write me hold on one second.

[SPEAKER_08]: I got to give it a certain amount of minutes.

[SPEAKER_08]: I say as pew ate it the teller The teller then asked for his ID and we all for the bank debit card the teller's like That's that's good.

[SPEAKER_08]: I really need a second for my day.

[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, yeah, I love it [SPEAKER_08]: the end to everyone's prize.

[SPEAKER_08]: There are smart guy, Pew handed over his Texas State identification car.

[SPEAKER_08]: So anyway, what a dumb ass.

[SPEAKER_08]: He eventually got caught and was sentenced to 102 months behind bars running concurrently with two 25 years sentences for previous properties he had done.

[SPEAKER_08]: right and in a press release from the U.S.

[SPEAKER_08]: Department of Justice, Lawrence details that instead were made clear, Pew was apparently much worse than a goofy person who didn't understand how odd these were.

[SPEAKER_08]: I could tell he walked into the fast food bag and the prostiteler who is our hero.

[SPEAKER_08]: Then he pretended to make withdrawal, but soon as he got to her window, he handed over that bag and I'd register all the spelling errors, and he got the 800 bucks, but as he made his way out, he saw a cop entering.

[SPEAKER_08]: and he tried to grab a woman carrying her toddler as a hostage.

[SPEAKER_08]: Pew, tried to put her on a chokehold, but police quickly intervene in a rest of him.

[SPEAKER_08]: They are horned as my new, thank for public service announcements that they just say you need.

[SPEAKER_08]: That's the pin is minor in the sword and that the cops will describe a situation and said and when he went to put her in the chokehold, take her as a hostage for their baby, we intervened which means they'd be too shit out of.

[SPEAKER_08]: Well, of course, the same as someone as a robber doesn't always play out so smoothly.

[SPEAKER_08]: You mean that maybe black Panther, like a superhero maybe?

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, so the director Ryan Kougler.

[SPEAKER_08]: once had a very awkward run-in with Atlanta police because he tried to discreetly withdraw his money using a knife.

[SPEAKER_08]: Considering how well his films performed the box office, many were outraged, how that situation was handled.

[SPEAKER_08]: There's anyone who doesn't need to rob a bank.

[SPEAKER_08]: It's Ryan Cooper, right?

[SPEAKER_08]: These kids got amazed.

[SPEAKER_08]: So he went in and I guess the bank teller, he's like, I give me, you know, $50,000 cash.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: Here's my dees and I hid in the alarm thinking it's for off.

[SPEAKER_07]: And that's good.

[SPEAKER_07]: Look, that's sad.

[SPEAKER_08]: But let's go back to Mr.

P.

[SPEAKER_08]: He's going to be in the T.

House Department of Corrections for a very long time with plenty of hours to reflect on how handing over your state ID during the robbery isn't the smartest move, right?

[SPEAKER_08]: Thank you, Mr.

Pew, for not making me start out, but a dead baby or something this morning.

[SPEAKER_08]: I'm sure I'm sure we'll get to that.

[SPEAKER_02]: I don't know when you became so soft.

[SPEAKER_02]: It's like in the last time.

[SPEAKER_08]: I don't know sitting here with you.

[SPEAKER_02]: Oh.

[SPEAKER_08]: It's ausmises.

[SPEAKER_02]: It is ausmises.

[SPEAKER_02]: Well, I got it.

[SPEAKER_02]: I guess this is kind of soft because I've got a cold case.

[SPEAKER_02]: That has been a good case of beer.

[SPEAKER_02]: I think gosh, should I have gotten beer yesterday too?

[SPEAKER_07]: You should always get a bear.

[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, I didn't go into a store like, well, I guess I did go into a store like that.

[SPEAKER_02]: All right.

[SPEAKER_02]: Well, so in early August of this year, there were two friends.

[SPEAKER_02]: One was Brody Locke from Watkins, Minnesota.

[SPEAKER_02]: And they were fishing on the Mississippi River near Sartel.

[SPEAKER_07]: Okay.

[SPEAKER_02]: And while one friend rode in a walleye, is it a walleye or a walleye?

[SPEAKER_02]: Well, uh, walleye.

[SPEAKER_02]: Very good eat fish.

[SPEAKER_02]: Locke, which is Brody, turned his sonar device on and suddenly noticed something unexpected underneath the water.

[SPEAKER_02]: And it was a submerged, 1960s era, Buick Sedan.

[SPEAKER_02]: What is this?

[SPEAKER_02]: It wasn't a rock or a lot.

[SPEAKER_02]: It was unmistakably.

[SPEAKER_02]: They pulled it out.

[SPEAKER_02]: A car.

[SPEAKER_02]: And later Lock described it as pure coincidence.

[SPEAKER_02]: It was 100% luck.

[SPEAKER_02]: If my buddy wouldn't have caught that while I We wouldn't have floated by and never known it was there.

[SPEAKER_02]: Those are his statement.

[SPEAKER_02]: The next day, Lock returned with his family to confirm the sighting, then contacted police.

[SPEAKER_02]: So, on August 13, the Stern's County Sheriff's Office, Dive Team, and a toe-incrue retrieved the vehicle from about 20 feet underwater.

[SPEAKER_02]: In a series of surprising discoveries followed, [SPEAKER_02]: in Savah, and inside the severely deteriorated sediment filled card would have happened.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_02]: Well, just like I would have thought that that jar in yesterday's story would have had sediment and debris all over it.

[SPEAKER_02]: I don't know how that woman found it, but anyway.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.

[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, it was severely deteriorated sediment filled.

[SPEAKER_02]: So, using the cars then, investigators identified it as...

The vehicle identification number.

[SPEAKER_02]: A 1963 metallic blue, public electra, belonging to Roy George Ben.

[SPEAKER_02]: Who at the time in 1963 was a 59-year-old businessman from Salk Rapids.

[SPEAKER_02]: Ben had disappeared, in September of 1967.

[SPEAKER_02]: It was last seen exiting King's supper club with a large sum of cash and never heard from again.

[SPEAKER_02]: Law enforcement believes the remains are likely bins, though they've sent the remains to Midwest medical examiner's office for formal ID and the calls of death determination.

[SPEAKER_02]: Detectives from Benton County, who have jurisdiction over this area, or overbins disappearance, have already notified Ben's remaining family, and Sheriff Troy Heck expressed relief that the Describe discovery may finally bring long-awaited closure, even though traditional ID methods may be less effective after so many years underwater.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, I'm sure they have us dinner records.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: Even I can't get DNA.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: How about that?

[SPEAKER_08]: Good deal.

[SPEAKER_08]: Love to see any co-case.

[SPEAKER_08]: Solid DNA.

[SPEAKER_08]: Then I'll have a murder.

[SPEAKER_08]: I mean, probably.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, it could be that Skull is still intact, put a bullet hole in or whatever, but they'll be more on that, and that's why I never give up how you like Miss Barber, [SPEAKER_03]: And let's say did a breaking bad in the bathtub?

[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, yes, something like that.

[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, I'm just, all right.

[SPEAKER_08]: Well, this next story is a bit disturbing for me in the only because it was kind of like one of my heroes.

[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yep, so they've had two movies made about him in more importantly.

[SPEAKER_08]: Russell, who was the chief of all of any for all the years, who is the longest running law enforcement officer in in the state of Louisiana at at one point for a pass, the he who [SPEAKER_08]: He's the schedule when I was at an uniform control of nights.

[SPEAKER_08]: He was scheduled his shift so it's nice because he knew I would never call him out.

[SPEAKER_08]: But if I had to call him out and he cared his little revolver, and they were full of requests and anything else, he...

If I had to call him out, somebody was going to jail, period.

[SPEAKER_08]: And if I had to call him out, he used a machine or something like that.

[SPEAKER_05]: But he also had...

[SPEAKER_08]: a big, long stick that carved out like an oak tree or some shit, um, and it was signed by Cher Beepford Pusser.

[SPEAKER_08]: Did you hear that?

[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know idea.

[SPEAKER_08]: He's the became famous for the movie's walk-in tall.

[SPEAKER_08]: Okay, and he was like a giant of a man who came back to this Tennessee town after his military service and The the that a lot of moonshine prostitution gammons wants to like that and You know, he knew the people we grew up with them.

[SPEAKER_08]: But they they almost killed him one night Yeah, and they like they beat him with an inch of his life and like put him in a hospital for all the time He said and he got out just like fucking I'm running for sure [SPEAKER_08]: any day, but he had to fight all the corruption.

[SPEAKER_08]: But he was known for carrying that big stick because he was like six foot seven and whatever.

[SPEAKER_08]: He would just beat the shit out of people.

[SPEAKER_08]: Right?

[SPEAKER_08]: That was his way for justice.

[SPEAKER_08]: And very, very famous.

[SPEAKER_08]: Probably probably the most famous long force in all of us are that you never heard of unless you watch some movies.

[SPEAKER_08]: But [SPEAKER_08]: Now, we're going to Memphis, Tennessee.

[SPEAKER_08]: Oh, there's a lot of bad shit haven't had the toned light.

[SPEAKER_08]: They were so constant battle.

[SPEAKER_08]: He's fighting the forces at B.

And we'll see if I can play this article for your heart.

[SPEAKER_08]: And now I'll tell y'all about it.

[SPEAKER_04]: There's almost 60 years later, Pauline Mullins was shot and killed in 1967.

[SPEAKER_04]: The case in West Tennessee was never solved.

[SPEAKER_04]: She was the wife of McNairi County Sheriff Beaufort Pusser, a Tennessee legend.

[SPEAKER_04]: Her case was recently reopened and TBI says there are new details poking a hole in Pusser's account of all these events.

[SPEAKER_04]: Griffin, Dave and Ray takes a new look through the information.

[SPEAKER_00]: The death of Pauline Mullins' Pusser has always been a mystery.

[SPEAKER_00]: 60 years later, we still had no answers.

[SPEAKER_00]: That was until 2022, when there was a push against TBI to reopen the case.

[SPEAKER_00]: 2023, they received a tip about a possible murder weapon.

[SPEAKER_00]: In 2024, they did an autopsy, and now in 2025, we finally have some type of answers.

[SPEAKER_01]: Meaning more likely than not.

[SPEAKER_01]: that would allow us, if he were a laugh today, to present an indictment to the McNair County grand jury for their consideration, against to be for Pussard, for the murder of his wife, Pauline.

[SPEAKER_00]: Before the bombshell announcement, let's rewind to 1967.

[SPEAKER_00]: Pauline went with her husband, Beauford, on a late night call, and they were on their way when they were apparently ambushed.

[SPEAKER_00]: Pauline was shot and killed, Beauford was shot in the face, at least that's what he said.

[SPEAKER_00]: Mark Davidson District Attorney for the 25th to initial district said there were problems in his statement.

[SPEAKER_01]: The case file reveals inconsistencies and viewfinder statements.

[SPEAKER_01]: to law enforcement and others about Pauline's murder, including physical, medical, forensic, ballistic, and reenactment evidence that contradicts his version of Evian.

[SPEAKER_00]: According to TBI, the evidence shows Pauline was actually shot outside the car and her body was moved in, and the gunshot wounded a pusher space, most likely self-inflicted.

[SPEAKER_00]: Pauline's brother Griffin said the news did not come as a shock.

[SPEAKER_07]: but I knew they'd down the risk problems in her marriage.

[SPEAKER_07]: Dip out my mouth now, what I knew then.

[SPEAKER_07]: She would never went back to Tennessee.

[SPEAKER_07]: That she would have been right here with me.

[SPEAKER_00]: The case for all of the investigation will be made public TV.

[SPEAKER_00]: I said it will be available in the next couple of days.

[SPEAKER_08]: So, the deal being so sacred, deal being as that was one of the things it did.

[SPEAKER_08]: the in the maybe is like the bad guys are coming back after him.

[SPEAKER_08]: They ran down the car and shot the car shot her through the car shot him and he got out of the shot back out of whatever.

[SPEAKER_08]: But the most famous low man intensity TBI is Tennessee Bureau of Investigations like the state police and now they're saying that he killed her.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: But I, I mean, they got the evidence to got and and if they believe that they could take it to a grand jury and get a dive and take them to trial, then I guess they got what they got.

[SPEAKER_07]: You know what I mean?

[SPEAKER_02]: The only thing she doing on a call with him.

[SPEAKER_08]: that that that that we never in the maybe the yeah, but in the maybe it was it was like they really been a restaurant or something and he got a call while she was in the car but the I mean you're right I wouldn't take you on a call but there was different time back in the sixties and but anyway the the bad idea that he shot and killed his wife and then shot himself I mean because it's fucked up his face [SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, I mean, like, you know, that's what will be there and dragged back in the Corbyl.

[SPEAKER_08]: I don't know.

[SPEAKER_08]: Who knows what happened, but how about that shout out, Cole case?

[SPEAKER_08]: Hey, you know what?

[SPEAKER_08]: that manifests in Tennessee of burning pairs.

[SPEAKER_08]: If you're a dirty cop, you're a dirty cop.

[SPEAKER_08]: I've always said I hate dirty cops.

[SPEAKER_08]: And it's bleakly, but I hate dirty cops.

[SPEAKER_08]: I would like to believe it.

[SPEAKER_08]: Walk and tall, sheriff, beef, pus, or a piece of earth.

[SPEAKER_08]: Didn't they know what they're doing, you know?

[SPEAKER_08]: I wish they would take that, you know, this is like the men and those brothers, or Scott Peterson.

[SPEAKER_08]: And if it wasn't famous, then it never looked at it.

[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: I wish they would get a brown pair and do the job.

[SPEAKER_08]: It should have been done over there.

[SPEAKER_02]: Well, let's fix that.

[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, it's good.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, but they have all the resources, the TBI and the local sheriff's office and the DAs and everything.

[SPEAKER_08]: It's getting Bradley and A.

Ever getting done, also the main you're getting done to doubt about that.

[SPEAKER_08]: Just takes a little longer.

[SPEAKER_08]: But that's okay.

[SPEAKER_08]: They'll be in a wine before it's time.

[SPEAKER_08]: Honestly, you've got to know I don't drink wine.

[SPEAKER_08]: Unless it's muskidine or blueberry, homemade wine.

[SPEAKER_08]: I don't mean wine.

[SPEAKER_08]: I can't.

[SPEAKER_08]: All places we've been that we always try different flights and whatever.

[SPEAKER_08]: I mean, I'd like to up my palate, right?

[SPEAKER_08]: And be a wine connoisseur.

[SPEAKER_08]: I still like to shit.

[SPEAKER_02]: I don't.

[SPEAKER_08]: I don't mind about a grace on your mind.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_07]: It's got to be sweet for me there.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_07]: Sweet me.

[SPEAKER_07]: Look at this.

[SPEAKER_07]: I think how you sweet me.

[SPEAKER_07]: Why are you being so defensive?

[SPEAKER_07]: I give us no.

[SPEAKER_02]: Well, all done and dark comes to light.

[SPEAKER_02]: So, yeah, their time is ticking.

[SPEAKER_02]: I believe your time is.

[SPEAKER_08]: Well, I know it is.

[SPEAKER_08]: And then I hope a bunch of them of our time is taken over there too.

[SPEAKER_02]: But yeah, people that think you don't even know they're on the radar or on the radar.

[SPEAKER_07]: But yeah, yep, yep, yep.

[SPEAKER_02]: Okay, we are going to go, I just want to stay worldwide.

[SPEAKER_06]: Okay, well, it's time for worldwide crime.

[SPEAKER_02]: trying to get a grip on this just that doesn't seem like it's going to flow very well.

[SPEAKER_02]: But the March of 2003, the Crown Prosecution Service began investigating a message posted on a pedophile focused forum.

[SPEAKER_02]: And this message read, I live in UK have two daughters aged four and nine, available for suck and play.

[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, God.

[SPEAKER_02]: The technicalities and possible link to a man named Lester Sharp, who was then working as a medical receptionist, made him a prime suspect.

[SPEAKER_02]: computers from his workplace were seized for forensic examination, which revealed child images.

[SPEAKER_02]: So despite the images on his computer, shark was not interviewed until September of 2005.

[SPEAKER_02]: And at that point, he claimed to have, he had little recollection of assessing or responding to the post, and he acted shocked and disgusted at the content that they were showing him during the interview.

[SPEAKER_02]: So no charges were filed at that time, and the investigation was dropped.

[SPEAKER_02]: But let's fast forward to February of 2022.

[SPEAKER_02]: And Sharpe was again implicated in a national investigation.

[SPEAKER_02]: Right.

[SPEAKER_02]: And authorities connected a Skype account used to upload to category A, Child Abuse, a child abuse images to him.

[SPEAKER_02]: And this prompted renewed scrutiny over his past behavior.

[SPEAKER_02]: So, on a break from work, investigators called Sharpe inside a locked room at a Kensington Hotel.

[SPEAKER_05]: Mm-hmm.

[SPEAKER_02]: And disturbingly, he had a live stream of sexual abuse involving a child.

[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, fuck him.

[SPEAKER_02]: Open on his phone.

[SPEAKER_02]: And his trousers and underwear had been removed, [SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, that's it.

[SPEAKER_02]: Justice came swiftly, so in 2025, the South Work Count Crown Court judge Michael Humpmire sentence sharp, describing him as a married father who had twice escaped prosecution for similar, similar abuse related behavior and sharp received a minimal.

[SPEAKER_02]: eight years and three months in prison followed by four years one license post release so I guess like probation post release that's not enough he's gotten away with it for twenty something years that even going to do twenty years of time got away with it was smart and you know [SPEAKER_08]: I'm glad they got him at least he got eight years that it's better and nothing and better and sought their right for babies.

[SPEAKER_08]: Right?

[SPEAKER_03]: Yep.

[SPEAKER_08]: So, well, how about a two for?

[SPEAKER_06]: It's time the war world like crime.

[SPEAKER_07]: No, I'm pretty sure if I was going to commit a crime on an airplane, I'd want to do like in America or anyone.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, I mean, right when you get eight years, eight years, four, four, uh, fucking right babies.

[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: And here, lots of times, you get easy shit.

[SPEAKER_08]: Well, we're going to get a salty Arabia in, and I know it wasn't.

[SPEAKER_08]: Imagine they don't play.

[SPEAKER_08]: Right.

[SPEAKER_08]: I mean, they, like, cut off your hands.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: I was still in there.

[SPEAKER_08]: I don't think they should watch it.

[SPEAKER_08]: I [SPEAKER_08]: the Saudi Arabia have the death penalty.

[SPEAKER_08]: So yes, Saudi Arabia has infrequently used the death penalty.

[SPEAKER_08]: The number executions has very year by year, but it's frequently been among the highest in the world.

[SPEAKER_08]: It's based off of Shara's Islamic law.

[SPEAKER_08]: It can be imposed for various crimes under three categories.

[SPEAKER_08]: who died, which is mandatory punishments for specific crimes, which can include adultery, soldemy, and the past to see what is the focus of the APO STA S5, then there's another category key sus, retaliatory punishments for a murder victim's family, can demand the death, penalty, or accept blood, money, as compensation, interestingly, and to zero, a genetic category offense is where judges have wide discretionary power to impose punishment, [SPEAKER_08]: Well, I would have passed this announcement as long, but it said murder rate, terrorism, drugs, but I would have passed it.

[SPEAKER_08]: I'm a six-shot.

[SPEAKER_08]: It was crap.

[SPEAKER_08]: Sorcery, blasphemy, wage and war.

[SPEAKER_08]: Okay.

[SPEAKER_08]: So what?

[SPEAKER_08]: It wouldn't have been applied in this case, but pretty good case.

[SPEAKER_08]: That's actually a Heathrow thing on the right way to be the only thing I've got to shut up there.

[SPEAKER_08]: Do you get some air plane and they're getting ready to take off?

[SPEAKER_08]: And he decides he doesn't want to be on the air plane anymore.

[SPEAKER_08]: So he's a pasture and he punches a crew member and tries to open the cabin door.

[SPEAKER_08]: Literally they're texting down the runway.

[SPEAKER_00]: Right.

[SPEAKER_08]: emergency services rushed to the Boeing 787, which had landed from Jeddah, shortly before one PM went Thursday according to the sign of the newspaper.

[SPEAKER_08]: They aircraft right sharply on tax, tax away to terminal 4 after the incident, which called made the copolets call for urgent assistance.

[SPEAKER_08]: Stairs were placed against the jet, and officials boarded the flight SB119, which was carrying passengers from Saudi Arabia.

[SPEAKER_08]: Now, Pitches published by the Sun magazine shed at least four fire engines, six police cars, and several ambulances at the scene.

[SPEAKER_08]: A mail pasture is gotten to an argument with a crew member, paused in and attempted to open one other door.

[SPEAKER_08]: I mean, you think this is going to end well for you.

[SPEAKER_08]: So the source told the newspaper, it was chaos on board and very frightened for the families.

[SPEAKER_08]: The plane had wheels down, but a passenger was so agitated and struck out at the crew because he wanted to get off there and then.

[SPEAKER_08]: Well, police confirmed the man had been arrested on suspicion of a danger in an aircraft.

[SPEAKER_08]: And flight records show the salty plane.

[SPEAKER_08]: had left Jada 38 minutes late and arrived in London after a journey of just six hours.

[SPEAKER_07]: At least when it's already right now, he won't be killed for it.

[SPEAKER_03]: No.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm going to get a little slap on the wrist.

[SPEAKER_07]: The...

I don't know.

[SPEAKER_07]: Where are the men nowadays?

[SPEAKER_08]: The punch that they should have had them on the floor just pound in his ass.

[SPEAKER_02]: What if he had successfully opened the door?

[SPEAKER_08]: What is something to do with the fucking plane of the road one?

[SPEAKER_08]: I know, that's what I'm talking about.

[SPEAKER_08]: I guess, I guess if he's successfully opened the door, he was successfully fills ass out on the concrete.

[SPEAKER_02]: Well, successfully had.

[SPEAKER_08]: It's not like it's a, I mean, you look out the plane one day when they're, when you're bored, and it's not like it's Buffy.

[SPEAKER_08]: It's probably 15 feet, right?

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I would think so.

[SPEAKER_08]: At least, yeah, roll and crack that skull.

[SPEAKER_08]: I don't know.

[SPEAKER_08]: Plains, trains, automobiles, and the, [SPEAKER_07]: So, I don't know, the, um, I'm gonna do this one more quickly.

[SPEAKER_08]: Okay, we're gonna go to the land and then your favorite place in the world, which is?

[SPEAKER_02]: Good, gee.

[SPEAKER_07]: Nice.

[SPEAKER_08]: That's the, that's the, and Atlanta.

[SPEAKER_02]: That's all I like.

[SPEAKER_08]: No, that's free of the matter is your favorite place on all [SPEAKER_02]: No, that's my least favorite.

[SPEAKER_08]: So a woman walks up in the Walmart with a gift cards and three separate bills cash money.

[SPEAKER_07]: probably would have been okay.

[SPEAKER_08]: Probably some of the cashiers might have used these bills except when they had to go get the money back.

[SPEAKER_08]: Probably because you're not saying all the war, more war employees are bad, but some of them just don't give a fuck, right?

[SPEAKER_08]: You can give them the money, and they'll just type it in the button, I got $100 bill, I'll tell you how much change to give them.

[SPEAKER_07]: Absolutely.

[SPEAKER_08]: Well, the problem with these three bills is each of them were for a million dollars a piece.

[SPEAKER_02]: How my gosh, please tell me they did not take this.

[SPEAKER_08]: Say, back in 2004, we'll wait back.

[SPEAKER_08]: NBC reported that a woman named Elise Regina Pike racked up $1675 bill at the National Retail [SPEAKER_08]: She first tried to pay using the gift cards.

[SPEAKER_08]: But when that wouldn't do, she just pulled out a $1 million bill.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: Right.

[SPEAKER_08]: Of course, the bill was counterfeit.

[SPEAKER_08]: And most people could probably do these that no such bill exists.

[SPEAKER_08]: But after Pipe was arrested, she insisted that the bill was real.

[SPEAKER_02]: I mean it in.

[SPEAKER_02]: Real faith.

[SPEAKER_08]: And questions of authenticity was not possible since you can't keep up with the U.S.

[SPEAKER_08]: Treasury.

[SPEAKER_08]: What?

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, that's what she said.

[SPEAKER_08]: Well, she might have predicted what 20 to 25 and the future is said to look like.

[SPEAKER_08]: Pike's gift cards only held a total of $2.32.

[SPEAKER_08]: This good, she had a million dollar bill.

[SPEAKER_02]: $3 million.

[SPEAKER_02]: $3 million.

[SPEAKER_08]: but it also raises a question of whether she's genuine.

[SPEAKER_08]: I only expected the Walmart cashier to hand her chains from a $1 million bill in cash.

[SPEAKER_08]: And apparently, Pike got the fake from her strange husband who is a collector.

[SPEAKER_08]: Pike was the assistant.

[SPEAKER_08]: She was never actually trying to pass off the bill as real, but reports from NBC say she did.

[SPEAKER_08]: And in fact, she asked for change.

[SPEAKER_02]: What was she trying to pass it off as if she's trying to pay with it?

[SPEAKER_08]: The, like, you might kind of got away with it, and so I was just playing and said, but you asked for change.

[SPEAKER_02]: Literally.

[SPEAKER_08]: And it more and more has more cameras than anybody else in it.

[SPEAKER_08]: And back then.

[SPEAKER_08]: So, there's never been a $1 million bill printed in the U.S.

[SPEAKER_08]: Whoops.

[SPEAKER_08]: A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A [SPEAKER_02]: at $5,000, maybe $1,000.

[SPEAKER_08]: The highest enomination ever printed was the $100,000 or night issue between 1934 and 1935.

[SPEAKER_08]: Which poor, or the picture of, of no idea Donald Trump is who I'm named after.

[SPEAKER_07]: Would Joe Wilson?

[SPEAKER_08]: Yep, President Woodrow Wilson.

[SPEAKER_08]: That note, however, was never available to the public.

[SPEAKER_08]: The $1 million bill is purely a modern novelty, usually print it as a prop for the content.

[SPEAKER_08]: The idea that someone might think it's real would be unthinkable.

[SPEAKER_08]: But we live in a society where hot to eat convinced people to invest.

[SPEAKER_08]: their life savings in mean coins.

[SPEAKER_08]: So anything is truly possible.

[SPEAKER_08]: And anyway, Hakturi has since come forward to claim she was also a victim.

[SPEAKER_08]: This is she had no idea why the people who got hurry into the crypto business were planning in the long line, but they were planning.

[SPEAKER_08]: Meanwhile, [SPEAKER_08]: And I read the rest of us, the rest should get so bad and I guess we don't talk about it.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I figured it was going.

[SPEAKER_08]: But wait, I'll skip over some of it.

[SPEAKER_08]: But you'd hope the average citizen would at least know what the highest of dollar denomination actually is, but I didn't.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, there's the yet there's still another do you know sir, there's still not a name now.

[SPEAKER_08]: If there's still another hey how am I recruit or target my name is my background of us may have been submitted.

[SPEAKER_08]: Somebody told us to hire me also like this.

[SPEAKER_08]: I'm quit.

[SPEAKER_08]: Okay, let's get anyway back to it.

[SPEAKER_08]: you'd hope the average citizen would at least know what the highest dollar dollar donation.

[SPEAKER_08]: Okay, yet there's still another case.

[SPEAKER_08]: The Daily Mail reported that a 53-year-old man named Michael Fuller also tries to use the nithical $1 million note at another Walmart.

[SPEAKER_08]: He attempted about $476 worth of goods, including a microwave and an oven, [SPEAKER_08]: Well, of course, the police were called, and he was promptly arrested.

[SPEAKER_08]: So, but pop culture is long played, but the fantasy of Stumbling on a bank error or finding a name never released in public that actually is true.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: The, um, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh [SPEAKER_08]: might not even be out of the question.

[SPEAKER_08]: After all, people pay millions for a banana duct tape toe all.

[SPEAKER_03]: And what?

[SPEAKER_08]: You don't know about that?

[SPEAKER_03]: No.

[SPEAKER_08]: Well, maybe.

[SPEAKER_08]: But, but, but, and a duct tape toe all.

[SPEAKER_03]: Why don't you just tell me?

[SPEAKER_07]: I'm going to tell you.

[SPEAKER_08]: It became worth $2.6 billion.

[SPEAKER_08]: So in New York, you can walk in any supermarket and you can generally buy a banana for less than a buck.

[SPEAKER_08]: But a banana duct tape till wall had sold for six point two billion at an auction of the Southern's Bees in New York.

[SPEAKER_08]: The yellow banana fix to the white wall was silver duct tape, this work entitled Comedian by the Italian artist, Marizoui, Catalan.

[SPEAKER_08]: and at first they beat in 2019 as an addition, the three freaks at the art base of Miami Beach Fair were became a much discussed cessation.

[SPEAKER_02]: Say, you might say the fresh banana do they have to keep reduck taping it?

[SPEAKER_08]: Well, was it a prank?

[SPEAKER_08]: A commentary on the state of the art of the world.

[SPEAKER_08]: Another artist took the banana off the wall and ate it.

[SPEAKER_08]: A backup banana was brought in.

[SPEAKER_08]: comedian was withdrawn from view.

[SPEAKER_08]: The three additions of it have sold from between 120,000 and 150,000.

[SPEAKER_08]: Five years later, someone has now paid more than 40 times that higher price at the so's be auctioned or more accurately, they've just purchased this ticket off the [SPEAKER_08]: to duct tape or but answer all the call it to me because of an ant is right.

[SPEAKER_08]: How much do you six point to me?

[SPEAKER_02]: Okay, we'll we've got.

[SPEAKER_08]: That's a crime.

[SPEAKER_02]: We've been ant is in the house right now.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah, but I have the rights that they does it.

[SPEAKER_08]: We can't we can't do it but get sued.

[SPEAKER_02]: Can I do lemons?

[SPEAKER_02]: I've got lemons.

[SPEAKER_08]: I'm pretty sure you can do whatever you want to.

[SPEAKER_02]: Got some despair and some onions can we just duct tape [SPEAKER_07]: I don't know.

[SPEAKER_07]: What if you dropped them up, were brought perfect?

[SPEAKER_07]: Right?

[SPEAKER_07]: Perfect.

[SPEAKER_08]: That would get all kinds of collectors.

[SPEAKER_08]: So I mean, I'm 30s out there at the show.

[SPEAKER_08]: Hashtag just for Bradley Straysson.

[SPEAKER_08]: There's no doubt that counterfeit money is involved, and he's just talking about counterfeit.

[SPEAKER_08]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_08]: But as you said, done in darkness, we'll come to the light.

[SPEAKER_08]: Oh, the dark.

[SPEAKER_08]: We will get them.

[SPEAKER_08]: We'll get them.

[SPEAKER_08]: We went three RLRC tip.

[SPEAKER_08]: You have anything else?

[SPEAKER_02]: Yep.

[SPEAKER_08]: Nor do I.

And I am Woody Everton.

[SPEAKER_02]: Cindy Everton.

[SPEAKER_08]: How are you later, peace?

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