The Sevan Podcast - Liz Collin | The Fall of Minneapolis - George Floyd solved

Episode Date: May 4, 2024

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Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:19 Let's go seize the night. That's the powerful backing of American Express. Visit amex.ca slash yamx. Benefits vary by car and other conditions apply. Bam, we're live. Thanks for doing this. Yeah, thanks for having me. Producer of The Fall of Minneapolis.
Starting point is 00:00:40 Correct, right? We're off to a good start? I think you've nailed it uh-oh um i think maybe you're breaking up a little bit is that i suspect that's your connection you froze off to a bad start damn i jinxed us you've completely frozen liz which is odd because your picture is perfect and crystal clear, but it wouldn't be the first time a guest froze. I suspect that's you.
Starting point is 00:01:12 My connection looks solid. If you can hear me, Liz, could you log out and come back in? Guys, for months I've been talking about the fall of Minneapolis and pretty excited to have the producer of the show on. the fall of minneapolis and uh pretty excited to have the producer of the show on the thing with um i watched a bunch of interviews that she's done i let you love her colors i know i like the colors too right let me see let me tell her let me tell her i booted her off i had to boot her off so she could log back in oh no we finally get liz and she's so she could log back in. Oh, no, we finally get Liz and she's broken.
Starting point is 00:01:47 She'll come back on. The picture was so clear. It must have just been a fluke. I came into the office early this morning, into the studio early this morning just because I was so excited. I came in like 10 minutes early to make sure all my notes were tight. And my keyboard wasn't working. So i scrambled for 10 minutes to get my keyboard working let's see if she comes back in i think she will is the fall nice in minneapolis god that's a good question i i am curious uh in her journey of chaos as she sorted through it and
Starting point is 00:02:23 made order and made the movie, the fall of Minneapolis. She made order out of the chaos. If her life has started to like get some sort of normalcy. Aha. Aha. There you are. Sorry. I don't know what's going on.
Starting point is 00:02:38 All when you first came on, your connection was amazing. Now, I guess as long as we can hear you, it's good. Are you having any issues seeing me or am i all broken up like an atari game console no i you you look look good and it's all it's all good so i don't know what the deal is liz i i watched a gang load of your
Starting point is 00:02:57 interviews i watched the uh i watched the movie fall of minneapolis i read the book uh they're lying actually i listened to the audio. They're lying, the media, the left and the death of George Floyd and a long trip from California to Idaho. I listened to the entire audio book. First of all, thank you for making some sense out of the chaos. Oh, thank you. I appreciate it. I know there was a lot of of chaos. And I think a lot of people had questions from the very beginning. And I tried to dissect all of it. Obviously, I had, you know, kind of a personal experience through it all, being married to the union president. But also as a reporter, I was just really bothered at the dangerous and divisive narrative they were pushing from the very beginning that the evidence never supported.
Starting point is 00:03:47 In all the interviews I watched, including the fabulous one you did with Megyn Kelly, and this is not a knock at Megyn Kelly at all, I can tell that the people who are interviewing you are basically using you as a psychologist because this has had such a huge impact on everyone that they're basically they're basically regurgitating to you what they read in your book and saw in your movie. And they're kind of like processing it. And so I'm going to try not to do that because it would be so easy to fall into that hole. So feel free to interrupt or interject wherever you go. Cause I kind of want to hear from you, but I, I know the temptation to be like, I can't believe this happened. I can't believe they didn't give them bullets. They didn't give them rubber bullets.
Starting point is 00:04:32 I can't believe the MRT, the cop, you know, it would be so easy to just regurgitate what you already know. Do you feel that also? Like you're kind of like a shrink helping the people that you process this sometimes? Well, actually it's interesting because I even putting the book together, I just thought, all right, this is going to be sort of my last chapter with with corporate media. I was a part of that for about 20 years and I just really walked away because I was kind of disgusted by all of the information we were withholding from the public, not only on this case, but other things. And I thought, OK, I put this book out there. I'll be able to sleep at night, you know, so be it. And it sort of blew up in a way that I really realized it sort of has become free therapy in a way for me. But just how much this changed lives, you know, all across the country, all across the world, really in the profession of law enforcement, the disrespect
Starting point is 00:05:25 we continue to see to this day, this chaos that was created in the wake of all of this and the lies that started right here in Minneapolis. So selfishly, I've gotten out quite a bit of, you know, I've been able to feel a little bit better also that the truth still matters. So that's helped me sort of keep going through all of this. But yeah, you're right. I mean, everybody has, you know, my cousin, this happened to, or my brother, this happened to, or, you know, my husband went through this. And it also goes to show just how, you know, powerful lies can be and the ripple effect when people go ahead. And maybe they didn't fall for it all
Starting point is 00:06:06 in the beginning, but nobody did anything. So silence really can also be a problem. And here we are nearly four years later, and we're all living the consequences of these lies to this day. The company I work for, CrossFit Inc., international company, having locations on all the continents, fastest growing chain in the history of the planet, faster than Starbucks or Subway, 15,000 gyms in 162 countries. When the George Floyd incident happened, the founder and CEO says, hey, I don't mourn George Floyd's death at all. And that was the beginning of a mob coming after him, and he sold the company and became richer than God. But I mean it worked out good for him. But probably tons of stories like that, right? The second someone spoke up about this incident about a guy having three times the lethal dose of fentanyl in a system, not the first time he's done that, having heart conditions and he dies in an altercation with the police and all of a sudden people, right? I'm guessing you've heard tons of stories of people losing their jobs for talking, speaking up against George Floyd. Absolutely. And what was amazing to
Starting point is 00:07:15 me as a reporter for so long, it seemed nobody wanted to go back and actually talk to the people that were really there, you know, including these, including these officers, including members of the Minneapolis Police Department who were essentially served up to this mob. And, you know, there was 890 cops in Minneapolis at the beginning of May of 2020. There are less than 500 now, but it seemed nobody cared to go back and talk to any of them, you know, and this police department is similar. It's similar to what has happened in other departments across the country, and everyone's less safe in Minneapolis as a result of all of this. And so that was sort of
Starting point is 00:07:56 my point in going, trying to go as close to all of this as possible and gain the trust of those people to allow me to tell their stories. And in the book, I profile a few of these officers who are in the third precinct the night that it's surrendered to the mob, because this is all part of the plan. And I don't think a lot of people knew that in watching the news coverage. The thought was that they would give up the precinct and then this rioting would stop that had dragged on for several days at this point in Minneapolis. As ridiculous as that sounds. And that, of course, did not happen. Instead, the third precinct, you know, if you if you watch the fall of Minneapolis, you see it basically looks the same to this this day just this burnt out shell of a building um that's now barricaded and this uh you know blight and eyesore in in the community uh you know four years later and something that's never happened in u.s history before but again it seemed that no no reporters even even cared
Starting point is 00:08:57 about what took place there a precinct it was like a 1970s movie i remember seeing as a little kid where like a mob attacks a police station the the police in the movie, the police were the good guys. But basically, a mob was basically what happened in Minneapolis is a mob was basically told, hey, you can have this precinct. And of course, the bizarre details, leaving the gates open in the front for the mob to come in and locking the gates in the back so the cops can't get out. Some crazy details that you uncover the buses that were there that were supposed to be there to evacuate the police not there so the police are running on foot uh crazy are you are you proud of are you like is any party like yeah like you get to enjoy i i i've made um uh 10 documentaries five five are all time five in the top 100 best on iTunes.
Starting point is 00:09:47 But mine aren't of anything of social importance. They're just like fun documentaries. And so I got to celebrate it like, yeah, I'm a badass filmmaker. I kicked ass. Does any part of you get to be like celebrate the success of your film? Yeah, I don't know. That's a good question. You know, we've had, I think it's more than 8 million people or 8 million views on the documentary. And that was really part of this too. We wanted to give it out for free, you know,
Starting point is 00:10:15 believing the truth should be free. And we also knew that, you know, putting up a paywall or something would prevent people from watching it. You know, I think what has meant the most to me personally have been the emails and the comments that say, gosh, I just wish that we had this information from the beginning. And these are all sides of the aisle. For some reason, this all turned into a political disaster, like so many things seem to be nowadays. But when people really do have the facts, they can make, you know, decisions for themselves. So why, why is the media, you know, manipulating this message? Why is our government withholding information from us? And those were the themes I really wanted to bring out in all of this, because I would really see that so often on so many stories. So, so that's, that's what's meant the most through all of this for me to be
Starting point is 00:11:03 able to change, to change minds. A lot of people won't admit that, though, however. You know, we live in a world now where you can never admit you're wrong, it seems. But there's also no real celebration because, you know, here we still have four cops. They're in prison. You know, a police department is, you know, it will never recover. And if they do, it will be decades from now. And, you know, what really still keeps me up at night are all these victims left in the wake.
Starting point is 00:11:30 And those are victims of carjackings now. You know, those are victims who've left the state of Minnesota. You know, again, I've talked about this, but this domino effect, this ripple effect is unbelievable. But I also hope that leaving this there, and I know this about journalism and news stories, it's kind of the first draft of our history. I hope someday someone will look back and say, you know what? We're not going to do this. We're not going to, you know, let's read this as a manual of what not to do and actually show some leadership, because that's really what this is also is, um, poor leadership that I wanted to highlight in, uh, in Minneapolis and in, in the state of Minnesota.
Starting point is 00:12:15 I have a lot of friends who are police officers, uh, being in the CrossFit scene, seeing it's a, um, it's a, it's a lifestyle practice that a lot of first responders use to basically stay in tip-top shape, right? Eat right, move right, and be in the highest physical condition that your DNA can be in so that you're safe on the job and people are safe around you. So I have a lot of friends who are cops. And right away after the George Floyd incident, I started hearing things like, yeah, we had a call, and there was a black woman there with a box cutter waving around, and we all just drove away. I saw a guy doing Floyd was the moment. Some people want to blame the pandemic. Some people want to blame George COVID. But we know the statistic. It's like 6% of the U.S. population does 51% of the murders, and those are black men.
Starting point is 00:13:21 And obviously we know color is a correlate. It's not a cause. and obviously we know color is a correlate. It's not a cause. And they're killing their own. It's like 96% of the people they kill are other people with melanated skin. I suspect the way the George Floyd thing unfolded has basically led to just the lawless society that's going on in all of these big cities.
Starting point is 00:13:43 I mean, we've even heard the bizarre phenomenon. We had that we had that incident in New York, you may be familiar with where there was video of it. A black man killed a guy sitting on a bus stop with his girlfriend and his girlfriend doesn't want to identify the murderer because she thinks it would be racist. I mean, the impact of George Floyd is like beyond, it's exacerbated racism. And ironically, the people who are the most racist, they stand out because they're the ones who are like their support of George Floyd is what's getting all of these melanated people killed now because the police aren't going into their neighborhoods to want to enforce the laws. Do you do you have that sense, too? I mean, I think it's, like, pivotal. Like, I think it's like, hey, we're living this right now. This is it.
Starting point is 00:14:31 Do you have that sense? Absolutely, Sevin. So in Minneapolis alone, they've recorded the three highest years of homicides ever in history. So this is, you know, historic levels. And the majority of those killed were blacks. And those are the facts. But yet this is, you know, ground zero for Black Lives Matter. I mean, I think the number was, you know, nearly $90 million raised on the back of George Floyd, you know, through Black Lives Matter. However, you know, corporate media has remained silent on where any of that money went. Well, turns out it didn't go to help Black Lives. It's amazing to me that you still have the Black Lives Matter signs out in front of the lakes in Minneapolis,
Starting point is 00:15:15 some of the, you know, more wealthy affluent neighborhoods. You certainly don't see any in North Minneapolis and such where they're begging for the cops to come back. And they never wanted them to go anywhere in the first place, but nobody elevated their voices through all of this. And that's the sad reality in a way that Black lives have never mattered less, especially in Minneapolis. But it seems that nobody wants to tell that story. You have Alex King, who's in the fall of Minneapolis. So keep in mind, Alex King is on the job for just a couple of days. He's the black officer who arrests George Floyd that it seemed no one knew was even there. And we wanted to go ahead and include his story in the documentary. Here's this African-American kid, grew up with dreams of being a cop in
Starting point is 00:16:02 Minneapolis. His mom's a longtime educator there. She adopted several children, just the great, great family in Minneapolis. And he's thrown in prison his second day on the job over, over all of this, this, this rookie officer, but nobody, nobody seemed to care about Alex. And he talks about that. He said, you know, I don't know why I was never included in any of this. But he said, you know, my skin color didn't fit the narrative. So it was it was ignored. I mean, he he also knew. And that's that's the thing. If you if you care about George Floyd through all of this, you really have to look at how he was used. He sort of became a pawn. used. He sort of became a pawn. If you've ever seen The Greatest Lie Ever Sold, it was a documentary The Daily Wire produced when Candace Owens was still there. She delves into a lot of this with Black Lives Matter and goes back to George Floyd's apartment, which isn't even in Minneapolis, keep in mind. He lived in a suburb in St. Louis Park. And she goes back there and says that
Starting point is 00:17:07 lived in a suburb in St. Louis Park. And she goes back there and says that she's interacting with his roommates. And the roommates say that George Floyd's family never even came to retrieve his personal belongings. His car is still there. All of his clothes are still there. It's really quite, really quite sad. eBay, eBay, eBay. Someone can make a fortune. I bet you there would be I bet you that there's I bet you that there's money for that. He it's interesting. He is. I want to play this clip from from Megyn Kelly's. From Megyn Kelly's interview with you, this is this is just absolutely wild coming from. Pains me to say it, our leaders. Okay, here we go. It's say.
Starting point is 00:17:52 In a court of law, you show it. We're going to show a bit of it here. Take a look at spot 19. And that's the director. How do you pronounce the director's name? Dr. J.C.? J.C. Shea. Yep. Shea.
Starting point is 00:18:01 Shea. Okay. J.C. Shea. I'm always afraid to say his name because of the way it's spelled. Okay. Dr. J.C. Shea. Yep. Shea. Shea. OK. J.C. Shea. I'm always afraid to say his name because of the way it's spelled. OK. Dr. J.C. Shea. Shaven is in the courtroom, but America's on trial. Thank you, George Floyd, for sacrificing your life for justice. Thank you, George Floyd. When and let's let's hear a little bit more from our fearless leader. Thank you, George Floyd.
Starting point is 00:18:29 Let's hear a little bit more from our fearless leader. But even Dr. King's assassination did not have the worldwide impact that George Floyd's death did. I know. It's a lot. Trust me. Just, just going through all those clips. I always say the documentary could have been about nine hours because to me, it's unbelievable what a lot of these, uh, again, leaders had to say in the days that followed. I want to, I want to be a super open-minded. Let's say, um, let's say we went to show van. So is it show? How do you pronounce, Let's say we went to Chauvin's house and he had hoods and swastika jackets and shit like that. And he woke up that morning being like, hey, I'm going to kill a guy. I'm going to kill a black man today.
Starting point is 00:19:21 Let's just say that that was the case. How would you still ever prop George Floyd up as a hero? He was arrested for counterfeiting. He put a gun to a pregnant woman's stomach's say I'm a black like social justice warrior. Wouldn't you be so pissed that these white leaders are trying to replace our beloved Dr. King with George Floyd? Like, why would you want your kids to look up to George Floyd in any way? Yeah, it's really hard for me still to even wrap my head around because, you know, you even watch the local news here in Minneapolis. They celebrate when George Floyd has a birthday. You would think, you know, he really has no ties to Minnesota. He'd only been here a few years and was in trouble while he was in Minnesota. That's another lie that was peddled. He was arrested
Starting point is 00:20:23 in 2019, May of 2019. So almost exactly a year before all of this. And if you play the body camera footage from that arrest next to the body camera footage from 2020, they are eerily exactly the same. He's saying the of an undercover drug investigation in 2019 that, again, the Minneapolis police chief lied about. The mayor, the mayor lied about saying that they've never had anything to do with him. I've talked to several police officers who had pulled him over in years past and whatnot. George Floyd was obviously someone who struggled with substance abuse. This is no secret. He spent most of his adult life in and out of prison. And, you know, I've been able to visit Texas in the wake of the documentary. That's actually where he's from. And they don't treat George Floyd the way that, you know, people here in Minnesota do. So it really is crazy to me. And I will say that many people now are just, you know, perhaps quiet on the issue
Starting point is 00:21:27 also after learning what they learned. But if you did bring up his criminal history, my husband did as the union president, just to say, hey, there's more to this story. There's more to this guy's background. He was quickly called. And this was just in a few sentences of a press release. Then you're a racist, obviously. And you're called all of the things, but that's also part of the game plan here to silence people. And I would say in this situation, that's certainly work. Minnesotans, I am one, so I can say this, but we are a little bit more mild mannered and we wait for somebody else to speak up. I don't know if this would have gone the same way, if this would have happened perhaps on the East or West Coast,
Starting point is 00:22:07 just with more domineering personalities. But I do feel that we had the perfect people in the perfect positions for this to play out. We have kind of plants picked. Our leaders here, they're coming from other states. Millions of dollars is poured in for the DFL party, the Democratic Party in Minnesota. And they went ahead and this is a presidential election year. And again, I think the evidence shows that George Floyd was really used more than anything else. His legacy lives on Pornhub. It's true. As soon as I heard that, it was one of the first things I did.
Starting point is 00:22:52 Guilty as charged. I went straight to Pornhub and typed in George Floyd, and there he is making his first feature film debut. And then this film. And then all the other media that's out there. He was fired from jobs here. This is all things that, again, the corporate media in town would never even touch. He was a so-called security guard at a rehab center, but was fired after bringing basically a patient home with him.
Starting point is 00:23:28 And the list goes on and on of things was it a female patient liz did he have sex with her from from what we've you know what we've been told so so he he's a predator an opportunist is is the profile well and i think that again even if you look at the 2019 arrest, he obviously had many interactions. This was very rehearsed with what he was doing with law enforcement. Instead, you know, I'm talking about George Floyd being used, this whole, I can't breathe mantra. You know, he's saying this before Derek Chauvin even arrives on scene. He's talking about his health in this 2019 arrest in a very similar way. It was, you know, this was sort of part of his MO about his mom recently passing away. You know, it was this was the first time, you know, that the cops responded.
Starting point is 00:24:17 And here's the thing about Derek Chauvin. He wasn't even scheduled to work that day, Memorial Day, but he just called in, as he often did, to see if they needed extra help, and they did. And he was also someone who partnered with minority officers the majority of his career, never with any issues. But it is amazing the power of the media, how they can go ahead and paint this all as, you know, he's even, as you said, you know, a racist and whatnot, despite the fact that racism never even comes up in his trial. There's no evidence of any of that in his, his past and whatnot. So truly remarkable that it was able to be, to be sold that way to the public.
Starting point is 00:25:02 Wad Zombie. I, I, I don't see it on Pornhub. Keep looking. Maybe I, maybe I sourced it wrong, but I definitely, I remember typing in George Floyd porn and you will find it. You will find it. Try not to watch more than a few seconds.
Starting point is 00:25:17 It's porn's bad for you. So, so they say, wow, this is, this is a whole new level on this chat. I didn't have the comments up until now. Hi, everybody.
Starting point is 00:25:28 This is great. You probably don't want to have them up. It's a wild crew. We meet here every morning at 7 a.m. This is the funnest place on the internet. So the George Floyd incident happened. It's funny. I didn't even think about this until I'm seeing you and I told you the story about what happened to CrossFit Inc. And it being sold around the George Floyd incident happened. It's funny. I didn't even think about this until I'm seeing you, and I told you the story about what happened to CrossFit Inc. and it being sold around the George Floyd incident and my boss saying it doesn't honor Floyd.
Starting point is 00:25:51 And then eventually I was fired also as part of being the toxic culture, and boy, I guess it would be kind of easy to tie it to that incident. I guess it would be kind of easy to tie it to that incident. When you talk about his previous arrest, if I recall right, in those previous arrests, he also would use the line, I can't breathe. And he also swallowed narcotics at the scene. And if I recall right, I saw in the report that the doctor actually told George, hey, dude, if you keep doing that, you're going to have a heart attack. If every time you get pulled over, you swallow. Is that accurate? Am I remembering that right? Yeah, absolutely. You know, talking about talking about his M.O., clearly he has something in his his mouth. And in 2022, not only that, but the vehicle that George Floyd is pulled out of. Now, keep in mind, you know, he says he's claustrophobic. This is another line he has. And he's, you know,
Starting point is 00:26:51 pulled out of this sort of cramped car. And this is why he says he won't go into the back of a squad car. And if you really watch, and this is, you know, another point I want to make too, this is the very first time that Minneapolis police withhold body camera footage from the public. Well, don't you think there's probably a reason for that? Because there was more to this than this viral Facebook video that public was allowed to see. So they put, they put the, the FBI's called in within just a few hours of this case and they locked this video down. This has never happened before. There's a reason, right? The taxpayers put the bill for these body cameras. This is supposed to increase transparency. We know the lines by now, how this all works, but then why keep this body camera footage from the public for
Starting point is 00:27:36 so long? Instead, they released it about two and a half months later. And that is only if you're a reporter or somebody who can go to the courthouse in the course of a couple of days and watch it yourself. They don't publicly distribute this until it's hooked up nearly a year later to Derek Chauvin's court file. So that's also something I think people should be upset about that. You see many agencies now, and even before this too, where they would go frame by frame with the public as to what's happening and some of these critical incidents or deaths and whatnot. But that didn't happen here. And I think that would have also changed a lot of this, that these riots didn't have to happen. There was more to this story. It didn't have to happen. There was more to this story.
Starting point is 00:28:32 But instead, they only wanted to fan the flames and, you know, pour gasoline all over this, to be quite honest. And again, throw the match on it all in Minneapolis. I want to show this first contact with George. I want to ask you a question real quick. Is the simple psychological profile that people saw something happening to George Floyd and because he was a large black man that they – that other black people were like – they started identifying it with it as them, and the critical thinking skills went out the door, and it just became an emotional response. Is it that simple? Is it just like a – is it just pop psychology? Is it that simple? Like, hey, you saw this, and all of a sudden you start imagining it being you. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:29:17 It's like the same thing when you go see the movie Free Willy, right? And you start crying because the whale is having some problems. Is it just like that? and you start crying because the whale's having some problems? Is it just like that? They saw this and they're like, shit, that's me getting held down by the cops. And they just throw all critical thinking out the door. And then they have this emotional response and then they act on it. They kind of go to sleep unconscious and act on it for three years.
Starting point is 00:29:38 Yeah, I think there's certainly something to that. This is a generation, especially to, I think, I don't mean to sound like an old lady here, but it's definitely feelings over facts. The people, you know, that I worked with and whatnot, it was nobody cared about journalism. They just wanted to, you know, push activism in the wake of all of this. And I would be like, well, hey, what about this point? Or, hey, that's not true. Or, hey, they're lying, which is why I named the book that. Even again, you have the chief and the mayor saying, this is something we've never seen before that Derek Chauvin is doing. We don't recognize this at all. And I just went online to the Minneapolis Police Training Manual. It's an online document that's been there forever.
Starting point is 00:30:23 And I said, wait a minute, there's like two pages that are just mysteriously gone from the manual that were very obvious um they just like can you literally see it uh liz where it's like page 51 page 53 or page 54 and you're like where's 52 and 53 it's like that they just skip skip and then they come they come back online in a few weeks and i'm thinking as a news, holy cow, this is kind of a bombshell. Are we going to even like report this? The fact that there's this MRT thing. And if you look at the, you know, the video, it kind of matches what they're doing. Not only that, but in the body camera footage, if the public were allowed to have seen it,
Starting point is 00:30:57 they talk about the MRT. The officers are talking about it. But instead, the narrative was controlled by these, you know, weak leaders, these liars, in my opinion, and nobody pushed back even when, you know, they had the evidence really right in front of them. So I think there's a lot to that, you know, and also people are rushed to judgment nowadays. That is definitely how it works with this, you know, TikTok and Facebook and everybody just wants a headline. But sometimes it's hard in, you know, these police interactions. And also the media loves to push this kind of stuff. You know, you've seen it again and again
Starting point is 00:31:35 before this and after this also, where there's, you know, almost absent of fact in a lot of this, there's almost absent of fact in a lot of this, or you have to read seven paragraphs down to actually try to get some context as to what really went on. I'm going to show the footage that Megyn Kelly showed on her show of the initial contact, but is this an accurate description of what happened? He was saying, I can't breathe, same thing he said in previous arrests, and then they pulled him out of the car, and then when they got him on the ground, uh, that took 36 seconds or 36 seconds after they got him on the ground, uh, they called, uh, the ambulance. And, um, what if they would have, why did they pull him out of the car? What if they would have just left him in there? Well, that's the thing. You had these two, officers who, in reality, are treating George Floyd very nicely.
Starting point is 00:32:29 Very nicely, I think. Yes. They're listening to everything. Every request he's making, they basically accommodate. And that is also a conversation just about how policing has changed here a bit. You know, my husband, who's a little bit older, I, you know, I kind of asked what would they have done? Well, they would throw them in the back of the squad car and just rush them to the, to the hospital. Instead you have, they're fighting with George Floyd and he's saying he's, you know,
Starting point is 00:32:58 and they're saying the role. When you say fight, when you say fight, they're trying to accommodate him and then he becomes combative. They're like, they're trying to accommodate him. Right. And then he becomes combative. They're like, they're taking him out of the car, which he should have felt some reprieve, right? Right. He asks actually himself to be laid on the ground. That's in the body camera footage as well. And also, you know, George Floyd is the one himself that starts with the lies.
Starting point is 00:33:21 Talking, you know, they're asking, what'd you take, man? What are you on? Nothing. I have nothing. You know, cause they, they sense that something's off, but again, these, these officers haven't really been on the street for that, that long to, to recognize, you know, different things. And you, and you, again, you call for the ambulance 36 seconds after he is on the ground. That was left out of the narrative. Nobody knew that. And then the, after a couple of minutes passed, they're wondering where the heck is the ambulance? You have a very problematic EMS response that also is not part of this original narrative that the public has sold. And so then you have Tu Tao, who's facing the crowd. That's the officer, correct?
Starting point is 00:34:01 That's the officer, correct? Yeah. To tell the officer who is facing the crowd, he then calls for an ambulance again to try to get them there and step up the response. So they recognize something is going on with this guy. But per policy, per policy, this MRT situation, it says right there in black and white, you know, remain uh with the the subject until ems response and and and again nobody talks about how you know the the fire rig which had the the person there who would be treating uh george floyd went to the wrong um address and you show all of that in the movie by the way for those you who you're going to be blown away when you see the fire engine and the the medical services uh show up at the wrong place.
Starting point is 00:34:46 All of that's in the movie. It's bizarre. Yeah, it really is. And again, there was just more to this whole thing. And the way it was spliced and diced and sold is still to this day, I think, criminal in my opinion. And nobody has been held accountable. And then, you know, after we put the documentary out there, it's nine days later that Chauvin himself is stabbed in prison at this federal facility where he's been with no incidents at all. And he's stabbed by a former FBI informant. So there's just a lot that I think, you know, people need to wake up to what's going on.
Starting point is 00:35:27 And, you know, I am encouraged that I think more and more people have these last few years. That is, God, there's so much to say here. I want to show just the audience, just to give them something to nibble on. I want to show them, this is, and if I say anything that's out of, needs correcting, please correct it. But this is the footage that was withheld and this is the original contact with george floyd now just imagine this you're a police officer you've been called to a scene uh and uh he was called uh the store clerk called because he was using counterfeit
Starting point is 00:36:01 money right that's right yep he. He had a counterfeit 20. Okay, here we go. Which by the way, to me seems like a huge crime already being that we all work for our money and money is, uh, we've agreed as a society that money is human energy, right? If you steal money, if you're counterfeiting money, you're basically stealing human energy. So, so here we go. I see your hands. Hey man. Stay in the car. Let me see your other hand. human energy so so here we go so uh you're a cop and you're asking to see a guy's hands and he won't show you his hands but this cop also has to get home to his his wife and his kids and all that shit too well and he no no you go ahead i was just gonna say and in 2019 he won't show his
Starting point is 00:36:53 hands either and what is he doing uh he's you know hiding drugs uh putting drugs elsewhere that's you know what what we know now there is one really bizarre thing about this that I want to ask you about too that I haven't heard anyone talk about. Here we go. So there are two other people in the car, right? Someone in the passenger seat and someone in the back seat. That's right. What did we do? Put your hand up there.
Starting point is 00:37:19 Put your fucking hand up there. Jesus Christ. Keep your fucking hands on the wheel. So he's been told a half dozen times to give an order and he's not obeyed at all. So to me, this is already resisting. Like, if this was me or you, we would have already had our hands on the wheel,
Starting point is 00:37:36 right? Keys sitting on the dash like our parents taught us, right? Okay. I got shot. Keep your fucking hands on the wheel. Yes, sir. I'm sorry. Man, I got shot the same way as I's not true that is not true he'd never been shot by by law enforcement i say let me see your hands you put your fucking hands up you got him step out of the vehicle and step away from me, all right?
Starting point is 00:38:06 Step out and face away. Step out and face away. Now we're over a dozen commands with no listening. I'm not going to shoot you. Step out and face away. I'm going to get out of here, man. Please don't shoot me, man. So is there a cop over talking to the passenger now?
Starting point is 00:38:23 That's the part I don't understand how kind of free willy nilly the passengers are. And the second we see the passenger get out and I'm like, shouldn't the passenger, like if I'm the passenger, I'm scared shitless, right? That this guy is going to get us all shot. is Maurice Hall is his name. It's now documented that he was essentially George Floyd's drug dealer. But yet he was allowed to catch a bus and end up several states away because he left the scene. He recently was sentenced for a separate case, but basically it was granted immunity in George Floyd's case. But he was recently sentenced, I think, to 15 years in prison for something else here in Minnesota. So it's truly amazing. But you do have Alex King, who's carrying on a conversation with Maurice Hall on the other side of the car. Shawanda Hill is the name of the woman who's in the backseat of that car. This is wild. Do you know what he went to jail for, what he was 15 years sentenced for
Starting point is 00:39:27 was this maurice hall character yeah it was uh some sort of um i believe it was a rape case or a sexual assault or something along those lines yeah oh just lost my mom man another lie i just lost my mom yeah that was uh well his his mom had died nearly two years before, but that's also a line he used in the 2019 arrest as well. Do you feel like you know George? Liz? You know, I even say this with the book and the documentary. This was never really about, this is why I say I do have some empathy because I think that he was used in all of this.
Starting point is 00:40:27 You know, what does it say also that nobody even cares about him to go collect his, you know, personal belongings at all? You know, all his pictures were still in his. And this was two years after after the incident. So there's plenty of time to do all of that. And he had no communication with his his family, this daughter, you know, that was that was also part of all the main networks in the wake of all of this. You know, so obviously I'm a person who's empathetic to everyone. It's kind of my role as a reporter. But I just don't really understand how he became the martyr that he was made to be. A hero.
Starting point is 00:41:03 He's being held up as a hero he's being held up as a hero it was crazy to hear megan kelly told you the story about her daughter who's in the fourth grade and how they presented george floyd as a hero to her daughter and her classmates even in the fourth grade that story was wild yeah it it was and there's so many like that i mean in minnesota uh governor walls who actually won a re-election in the wake of all of this. That was my, one of my goals with the book was to try to get this out before the election, which I did. But then the Attorney General, Keith Ellison and Keith Ellison, or Tim Walz also won re-election. But again, the book and such was not covered. Why would it be? Because it went against everything that everybody fell in line for. But Walls went ahead and asked that all
Starting point is 00:41:53 students, you know, this is K through 12 in public schools in Minnesota, take about nine minutes of silence for George Floyd. That did not go over very well. I think many people recognized early on they didn't want their kids, you know, bowing their heads in silence to pray for George Floyd. But that was something that was pushed upon them after all of this. The name of the book is Liz Collin, Their Line, The Media of the Left, and the Death of George Floyd. Look at that. 1,015 five-star reviews. This is such a great audio book, by the way. You will enjoy it. As crazy as it sounds, it was fun listening to it. You will not believe the details of corruption. It's like mafia shit.
Starting point is 00:42:36 From the governor to the district attorney to the attorney general of the state to the police chief. One of the things in there, I'm all over the place but fuck it whatever one of the things in there is the police chief uh was a police officer who refused to carry a gun because it was against his i guess his religion or his principles and he was at a bank robbery one time this is the police chief who was the police chief during the George Floyd incident? What was that guy's name? Rolando? Yeah, Madera Arredondo. Arredondo. This guy was at a bank robbery and he snuck out the back. I'm just like, when you tell that story in the book, I'm like.
Starting point is 00:43:21 Because he refused to carry a gun. And then from there he was promoted up the ranks until he became chief. It's so, uh, it, it, it's kind of what you hear about it. It's a, it's a, it's a, it's a boys club. It's a good old boys club. Well, and that's, that's, what's interesting too. Um, you know, again, this is all about race and whatnot. You have the police chief who is, who is black, uh, who'd been in that position for, for years and makes this all about race. And I don't know. I don't know what book you go to and you decide, you know what I'm going to do?
Starting point is 00:43:50 I'm going to throw my entire department under the bus. This seems like this is really going to go well. And, you know, that's why everybody's listening to him in the days that followed going, what is he doing? And then they're questioning, why are we doing this for people who are lying about what we do each and every day? You know, what kind of message does does that send? Talk about weak and poor leadership. So, you know, and then they're worried so much about the the officers looking militaristic. He's not letting them wear helmets and vests in the early days of the riots, which is just completely insane. And instead, you know, coddling these these rioters, you know, or these peaceful protesters. You know, I was in working still at WCCO at the time and we couldn't use the term riots.
Starting point is 00:44:37 You had to talk about them as protests. We prefer the term peaceful protests, despite, you know, infernos burning behind reporters as they were doing live shots for the five or six o'clock news. And, you know, and I'd never really seen that on that scale before, where we were fine with manipulating language. You know, we were given a directive in the days that followed that half of the people we interviewed from then on, on the news, had to be non-white or from a protected class. And that was the mandate from the top. So I'm saying, okay, so we're fine implementing racism. That's what this is. I've never in my 20 years as a reporter looked at someone's skin color before I decide whether or not to interview them. This is crazy, but they set a quota that that's what we had to do after George Floyd. $760 million of damage done. To put that
Starting point is 00:45:33 in context, on January 6th, there was only $30 million in damage done to the Capitol building. There was no fire at the Capitol building. The protesters there did not have firearms. These protests were littered with firearms. Loads of people were killed. Shitloads of buildings were burned down. They gave up a precinct. on YouTube live. And, uh, though all of those cops they're dealing with, uh, you know, some of the softest and weakest people in society. I mean, these kids are all still maxed up, masked up. They're all scared. They're all, you know, 20 pounds overweight there. And all those cops are in riot gear and yet the cops in Minneapolis weren't allowed to use right here because it would be offensive or it would incite violence it's absolutely bizarre i want to go back to um derrick are you friend would you consider derrick chauvin uh chauvin a friend um would you have thanksgiving dinner with him i mean now that you've made the movie oh you know absolutely this is i didn't know him at all um and i talked to him you know
Starting point is 00:46:42 for the first time um just reaching out saying you know i'm putting this book together do you want to tell your sorry real quick liz was the book before the movie or the movie before the book the book was the the book was before the the movie yeah the book was october of 2022 and then we just put out the uh documentary in uh november of 2023 so um and we wanted to put the documentary out right before Thanksgiving to try to ruin as many holidays as possible. You know, family fights and whatnot, we encourage such conversations, but, but yeah, absolutely. This is a guy, you know, who'd been on the police department for nearly 20 years. And I've gotten to know all of these officers in a way through all this, never knew any of them
Starting point is 00:47:25 before. But, and I think that Derek really thought in the, in the early days, okay, well, some, I, you know, he's not watching the news or paying attention to, you know, they're kind of just in flight mode, trying to find a place for safety and whatnot. But I think he thought, okay, well, somebody's going to tell the truth about this. Or, you know, he didn't even know there was a lot of things in the book and in the documentary that he wasn't even aware of involving his case. So that's really remarkable to me as well, that how kind of uninformed he was. And I think he thought, well, this is what I was doing. I was following training. Somebody is going to just tell the truth. And he, you know, obviously felt, and all these officers do feel so
Starting point is 00:48:08 betrayed by their police chief, by the head of training. You know, the, and it's interesting, Thomas Lane, his story, he's the really tall officer who'd only been on the job for a few days also. He wanted so badly, he's a military vet, and he wanted so badly to be a Minneapolis police officer. He told me that, you know, he was a white male. So he was passed over a few times because that's how hiring worked in Minneapolis. But he continued and he volunteered at a Somali day camp for several years and was just sort of this, you know, beloved guy. And the police chief himself went out for coffee with Thomas Lane and got to know him. And so finally he's hired. And then just a few days later, he throws Thomas Lane under the bus and throws him in prison.
Starting point is 00:48:58 It's, again, I think these people needed to be exposed for what they really are. I don't know how a lot of them sleep at night, to be quite honest, that they feel good about these lives and what the city has turned into. You know, you talked about the damage, the dollar amount, but it's 1,500 businesses in total that were either damaged or destroyed. So few have really, you know, rebuilt. Reopened. Yeah. Yeah. And even in downtown Minneapolis alone, they lost, I think it's 1,400 businesses between 2000 and 2022. But of course, they try to sell it as it's all about COVID or, you know, the pandemic closing these businesses down. Absolutely not. I mean, Minneapolis has not come back like other, you know, cities have in the wake of the pandemic. And why is it? Well, it's because of crime and there's no cops left anymore.
Starting point is 00:49:53 Were the other three officers didn't have trials, right? They were, for some reason, they decided, hey, we're not doing this. Well, they went ahead and they looked at what happened in Chauvin's trial, which, you know, I try to dedicate quite a bit in the book, even more than the documentary about not so much what the jury is allowed to see, but what they're not allowed to see in Chauvin's trial. So they took a look at this trial and they're saying, all right, we're not going to get a fair jury here. We're going to be convicted. And they faced even longer in prison. Not only that, but Judge Cahill said that, you know, if you go ahead and sort of put us through this, they could, you know, tack on this court tax where their families could have been forced to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars if they went through with the trial. And they were they ended up being found guilty anyway. So it was kind of this, well, we'll go ahead and plead, you know, to try to acquiesce to the mob, basically. Absolutely. So you have, I mean, all of these guys will be lifelong felons when they, when they get
Starting point is 00:50:51 out and even to Tao, I know we talked about him and I recently interviewed him. That story is up on alpha news or also the fall of minneapolis.com where we continue to follow the case. And, you know, there are many updates that we try to put out there, um, for people, uh, to, to follow, but he talks about, you know, in his sentencing, um, after he, he pled judge Cahill was upset that, that Tutau was, um, not remorseful and he was quoting Bible verses and he tacked on another year, uh, to his sentence as a result of that. Judge was quoting Bible verses. sentence as a result of that. The judge was quoting Bible verses? Tutau was quoting Bible verses. The judge was very upset by that.
Starting point is 00:51:30 And he tacked on another year. So he was given nearly five years in prison. What was the judge's name? Judge Peter Cahill is his name. Is he still sitting in the same courtroom? He is, yeah. He's still in Hennepin County. And we tried to highlight some of sitting in the, in the same courtroom? Uh, he is. Yeah. He's still, um, and we tried to highlight some of that in the documentary as well. Many people have been
Starting point is 00:51:49 given promotions. Nobody's lost their job or anything. In fact, yeah, you, you get promoted, you get a promotion, you get promoted. That's kind of how it has worked. Uh, you guys got it. The book, there's so much more in the book. If you like the movie, you have to listen to the book. book there's so much more in the book if you like the movie you have to listen to the book you will really enjoy the book it's not i i i'm not sending you somewhere to be depressed or anything to it it it rolls out um the audiobook like like um you can even pretend like it's fiction it just rolls out like a really good story but but when you're done it'll make you never want to get involved with the court system ever. It is it is bizarre. There was a there was a student being interviewed yesterday at UCLA campus. And two students, a boy and a girl, and they were saying how disappointed they were that the cops weren't protecting the protesters.
Starting point is 00:52:46 and uh so so just imagine these people get together and they get hundreds of people get together and they're occupying ucla campus illegally and uh they are you know the potential for disaster and hostility is is there and they're upset because they don't feel like the police are protecting them at night when they're sleeping the the irony is is that in the same interview that megan kelly does with you and and uh dr jc shea and this is this is a huge point too dr jc shea points out the psychological implications of watching a police station fall and what that does to the psyche of humanity. And it's a really under. It's way bigger than people think. It's for anyone who is paying attention. It's massive.
Starting point is 00:53:31 It's like you finally have this kind of this reality. Like wow. I really am personally responsible. And personally accountable for everything. There's no one coming to save you. And I can't imagine living in Minneapolis just knowing how. I mean, it's just absolutely corrupt. It's as corrupt as corrupt as corrupt can be. It's when he said that on Megyn Kelly, I was like, oh, I've been trying to articulate that now for three years.
Starting point is 00:53:59 What it means to watch a police station fall. I mean, it's the end of it's the end. Even the bad guys don't like that. You know what I mean? Everyone wants to know the rules. There are no rules. It's fucking Mad Max. Yeah, it's a, it's a great point. And you know, it's interesting, Dr. JC Shea, we kind of just came together on a whim. He sort of knew someone and then we, you know, I knew someone and I knew I needed help with the book for, for an editor. And he, he came at this, he sort of knew someone and then we, you know, I knew someone and I knew I needed help with the book for an editor. And he came at this, he's a former police officer himself. You know, he'd been a cop for a few years and brought that insight. And he lives states away from where I am. And, you know, it's interesting how, you know, we were able to sort of tackle this together. But absolutely, not only sending a message in Minneapolis, you know, but all across the world.
Starting point is 00:54:56 And, you know, I focus on this a lot now with my reporting. Alpha News is an independent group that I report for here in the cities. Alpha News is an independent group that I report for here in the cities. But, you know, there's been now it's nine first responders that have lost their lives in the last 10 months from this area. Unreal. This war on law enforcement. Say that again. Say that again. We have nine. Eight of them are police officers. One was a fire medic that have died that on in the line of duty. What's the timeline on that? What's the timeline on that?
Starting point is 00:55:31 In this area, in the matter of 10 months, it's that's never happened in history before. It's it's absolutely heartbreaking. So this is all happening at a time. This is all happening at a time also when you have a new Hennepin County attorney who has since been reelected, who's even more left of where Mike Freeman was, who was part of this case. By more left, you're saying not trying criminals. Letting criminals go. Exactly. She is now charged. Exactly. Exactly. She is now charged. Exactly. She's now charged a Minnesota state trooper. So one would think that,
Starting point is 00:56:30 okay, maybe we've learned from, you know, our mistakes here, but, but no, in fact, so many have just, and I will say that not even so many, it's, it's getting fewer and fewer every day. But you, for this trooper Londrigan is his name, trooper Ryan Londrigan, there were 400 people that showed up at the courthouse just on Monday to support this officer. That wasn't happening, obviously, with this George Floyd situation, but so many people are just absolutely sick of what's gone on. And so not only in Trooper Londergren's case, you have four now signed declarations to say, you know what, this guy followed his training. And their use of force expert, they decided they couldn't use because he came back and said, this trooper followed his training. There's not a crime here. But yet she's still continuing to charge.
Starting point is 00:57:08 You know, there are these charges against him for murder. It's unbelievable how tax dollars are being spent, especially in Hennepin County here in Minnesota. There were there were three prosecutors who were offered the George Floyd case who turned it down basically saying that there was no case there they pushed forward and what you're saying with this Lundgren case is that there's no one who wants to prosecute it but since she's insisting they prosecute the cop they've gone outside fucking nuts
Starting point is 00:57:36 man hey I know you a limited time I want there's a couple things I'd love to try to get in here that 27 they received the who received the, who received the $27 million? The county of whatever county that is that Minneapolis is in, they paid $27 million to George Floyd's family. Who got that money?
Starting point is 00:57:57 Who do I write to try to get some money from? Who should I send an email to? Well, there's a lot of blank check writing in Minneapolis for sure. $27 million came from the city of Minneapolis to George Floyd's family Well, there's a lot of blank check writing in Minneapolis for sure. $27 million came from the city of Minneapolis to George Floyd's family as part of the settlement. And something also that's usually never highlighted is the fact that Keith Ellison, the attorney general who led the prosecution against Derek Chauvin, his son is the one who helped to broker that deal. Wow. So, Allison's son, who sits on the Minneapolis City Council, helped to broker that deal between the city and George Floyd's family.
Starting point is 00:58:33 So, it's crazy. Who got that money? Did, like, his mom's dead. Does he have kids? Who got the check? Did one family member get the check, or did they split it up? What happened? I'm not exactly sure how it all, mean, the day that the you know, this was awarded because it was, you know, this it was very bizarre to me, like a press conference in a way, like a big check moment kind of thing. Crazy during jury selection and Derek Chauvin's trial.
Starting point is 00:58:59 So that's important to point out. But because he's guilty, right. It implicates that he's guilty. Yes, of course. Yes. to point out uh but because it implicates that he's guilty right it implicates that he's guilty yes um what a great reality show that would be i don't mean to be a dick but um i can only imagine how it's just screwed that family up all that money it must be just crazy to be uh what i assume is just absolutely dirt poor and then all of a sudden be a millionaire has anyone ever talked about making a reality show with them or is there any coverage on what they did with the money did they leave the state did they do we know how they divided the money well they nobody nobody ever lived here
Starting point is 00:59:33 in minnesota besides george floyd so they're certainly not here um i do i do know that but there there's been very little um since all of that that i that i've seen i believe they're based in in texas and in a couple other states as well i'd be so curious if they're like driving lamborghinis and in just like what god i really want to see that someone should cover that that would be so great um uh how are you on time i know i know you said you had an hour can i get a couple more questions oh yeah yep i got a time for i just have a you know the news meeting then the news is starting up here in minneapolis as you've heard i have a lot cover, but yes, I can answer a couple more questions.
Starting point is 01:00:07 No problem. Okay. Let me, this is, this is, uh, let me, let me do this cause I really want to plug you, but then I want to go back to some other things. Tell me about alpha news, how you ended up there and are you enjoying it? Yeah, no, it's a, it's great to, um, work with like-minded people, I guess. I guess for a long time, I thought that I was crazy. You know, like, do I live on Mars for having these thoughts or something?
Starting point is 01:00:31 But I'm like, wait a minute. There are other people like me. We like to say, you know, we're uncensored and unafraid. That's our slogan, which I also like. Because I think there's a lot of lazy reporting, to be quite honest, nowadays. And a lot of groupthink. But you know, there are different topics that we would never tackle on the evening news that we're able to on on alpha news. But we're just a little startup that started a few years ago. We have hundreds of 1000s of people, though, that see our stuff now every day, we consistently break more stories in Minnesota than anybody else because I think that goes to show,
Starting point is 01:01:07 you know, there's a lot of, as I said, groupthink and everybody else kind of is representing. It's this, you know, if you watch the news, it's the same story told the same way, you know, in the same order. And then, hey, there's weather and sports. But there's, you know, so much more going on.
Starting point is 01:01:23 And I just don't think that the local news really does a very good job informing the public. And you know who I kind of, I follow this account. I love this account. I think everyone should follow it. It kind of reminds me of Rebel News. Yeah, that's, well, that's a high compliment. Thanks. But they were, you know, more of, there's a lot of kind of newspaper reporters at Alpha News, but I came to them and I just said, hey, could I do some videos for you guys? And you don't need a big fancy television station nowadays in downtown Minneapolis to do this. And you can still get your message out. So it's been great. It's been a great, great move for
Starting point is 01:02:06 me. And it's also a place where they, they care about the truth because I thought for a long time that nobody seemed to anymore. Um, when I was, um, uh, when I was going through what I went through, I had a really good support around me. And, um, uh, although I felt like I just had a bunch of shit, like thrown on me, like manure and that i was underneath it and now three years later i'm like i can't even believe it i'm like the biggest fruit tree on the farm i cannot believe how happy and are you sensing that too now that you've come out the other side are you like yeah like like you were and a ton of people have told me this thank you for the podcast and having the podcast through the pandemic because i thought i was crazy and and i would watch this podcast and be like oh shit I'm not crazy it really is only 82 year
Starting point is 01:02:49 olds who are dying with four or more comorbidities oh my god uh I am I racist if I because I don't think that George Floyd um because I don't think Derek Chauvin I should have gone to jail and people start questioning themselves because they're the all of the media I guess the term is gaslighting them do you feel like you've come out the other side and you're like, damn, this Collins is shit. I did it. Are you there?
Starting point is 01:03:10 Are you there yet? I wish I had your confidence. I mean, you are amazing. I mean, I see you every day in my feed. I follow you so closely. Oh,
Starting point is 01:03:18 thank you. I mean, yeah, you're, you're, I think you're just an incredible role model. Oh, that,
Starting point is 01:03:23 that, that means a lot. Actually, it's funny because we just, we had a generous donor come forward to Alpha News that said, hey, I want to help you guys advertise the fall of Minneapolis. We don't have a budget for that, which has been amazing that this many people have even been able to watch it. Obviously, it helped with some high profile guests reaching out to do some publicity and whatnot.
Starting point is 01:03:42 But we then went and bought a billboard in downtown Minneapolis. We thought that'd be fun to advertise the fall of Minneapolis. And holy cow, we've upset a lot of people. So that's been good ex-fodder these last couple of days. But I would say the majority of people have been very supportive and they fight back against the trolls and whatnot. But yeah, I mean, I am in a better place. You know, as a reporter, I always kind of hope for, as cliche as it is, some sort of happy ending. And that hasn't happened yet.
Starting point is 01:04:17 But we'll continue to follow these stories. And I think that there's a lot of apologizing that needs to happen and a lot of people who need to just say, you know what, I got this wrong. People that actually mattered in all of this. But I don't know if that will happen. Is this the billboard right here, the fall of Minneapolis? Oh, you got it. Yeah. Yeah. I tried to make it bigger. I couldn't.
Starting point is 01:04:41 Yeah. Wow. That's awesome. We took it right there. We were looking right around George Floyd Square, but they didn't have any good billboard space. That's 38th and Chicago, Minneapolis. This is right in downtown Minneapolis. You're having a great hair day there, too. Good job. Yeah, this is kind of a little early for me. So it takes me a while to get my hair figured out here. Seven. So, yeah. Derek Chauvin in jail gets stabbed 22 times. When do you hear that news and does that break your heart? Like, are you like, do you go into full panic? Do you start, do you cry?
Starting point is 01:05:15 Oh, absolutely. It was completely awful. What's, what's crazy too is it was the attorney general, the guy who put him in prison, keep in mind, that gets the first word on his condition, not even Derek Chauvin's family. So they didn't even know anything. So it was just awful. And we've been able to talk to Derek since and about the attack and whatnot, but he's sort of left alone in this law library for the first time, that he is left alone. So the whole thing is very suspect and suspicious.
Starting point is 01:05:48 He's working on his case, making copies at the time it happens. And this guy comes up who he didn't know. He'd only been in that unit, it sounds like, for a few weeks before all this. So he mysteriously is moved to this area. And he's behind him and starts stabbing him, tried to kill him. I mean, he's admitted. 22 times, right?
Starting point is 01:06:10 Yeah. Yeah. And he's stabbed all over. And Derek, his condition, you know, isn't the best. He even struggles to walk now, you know, months, months later, had some nerve damage from all of this. And more than that, too, he's been moved to this medical unit in the facility before he would be able to work every day and go outside and whatnot. He'd kind of been described as this model prisoner to his family. But now he's sort of kept
Starting point is 01:06:37 away from everyone and doesn't have access to his materials or his computer like he used to. But meanwhile, this is a story we recently did on Alpha News. The person responsible for stabbing him has access to his materials and his computer. So and is not in solitary confinement or anything. The actual person who who tried to kill him. This is nuts. I can't. So he was stabbed 22 times. How close did he get to dying? Sounds close. Yeah, I mean, there was a guard that came up to basically help to, you know, hold pressure over his wounds.
Starting point is 01:07:14 And if that wouldn't have happened, he would have bled out as, you know, graphic as that sounds. And he lost consciousness a couple times on the way to the the hospital so no it's very very serious um was he stabbed in the neck he was yep oh my god um will he get out will derrick get out what does this does this eventually does he eventually get out i mean before he has a 22 year sentence, right? Yeah, right. So he is currently well, just to just to back up a bit, the U.S. Supreme Court, it was shortly after the documentary as well. They said, you know, they're not going to take the case. And his attorneys had had went ahead and argued for a change of venue that there was no reason that he should have been tried in Minneapolis. So the U.S. Supreme Court says no. After the Minnesota State Supreme Court says no,
Starting point is 01:08:10 you know, he's not getting a new trial. The U.S. Supreme Court says, nope, he's not getting a new trial. So I know that Chauvin is working on a new appeal with a new attorney. So something should be happening there. But I don't know. I mean, after, you know, kind of tracking this so closely, I'm not sure I have much faith in our legal system and justice system, which is supposed to be the best in the world, right? That's what we're led to believe. But it truly is so corrupt and controlled by the elites. I think Tu Tao himself is the one who said that. And I think we've definitely seen that in this case. Does anybody have the courage to take this on again? It's really a long road ahead.
Starting point is 01:08:55 By the way, once you're an FBI informant, you're always an FBI informant. You're never a former FBI informant. It's kind of like getting any vaccines. Once you get a vaccine, your immune system is permanently changed for the rest of your life. You don't it's not like alcohol where you're drunk today and not drunk tomorrow. It doesn't doesn't work like that. God, insane that he was stabbed. I can't even believe that's real. When I've been sending the movie to a lot of people. And the restraint that Derek Chauvin used was called MRT, Maximum Restraint Technique. And those were the two pages that you mentioned earlier in the training manual that were removed. Correct?
Starting point is 01:09:45 Someone sent me a text this morning and said, hey, people are pushing back saying that in the manual, it also says that the technique should only have been used for 30 seconds. Is there any truth to that? No, it's interesting. There's been a couple of these people who write that they've debunked the documentary and whatnot, which is actually amazing. They have this much time and they haven't done one single interview or talked to anyone actually involved in the case at all. So it's amazing they have so much to say. But no, the policy itself specifically states about waiting for an ambulance to arrive. And what's happening in this moment, and you can, again, see in the video and talk to the officers who were there is that they recognize something is wrong with him medically. Um, but if you talk to them, they think that he's passing out and that's not uncommon. Um, they think, you know, something's
Starting point is 01:10:37 going on with this guy and he's, he's, I mean, we've all seen anyone who has eyes and walks around the city, sees people passing out on Trank every day. I can go downtown to Santa Cruz and see it right now. And there's a reason they wouldn't then take the handcuffs off because people can pop back up. And, you know, he had been resisting and whatnot. And they had no idea the ambulance would take as long. So there's all of these factors playing a role in all of this. Did they think he was dying? You know, certainly, certainly not.
Starting point is 01:11:04 And, you know, and I've asked that, you know, same, same question. It's, you know, obviously a question that, that needs to be, that needs to be asked. But they, they went ahead and they didn't even put the hobble on George Floyd, which is also, you know, part of this maximal restraint technique because they recognize something is going on with him medically. So they're also kind of like downgrading force would be a way to put it, to not hobble George Floyd. They're talking about that in the conversation that they decide not to. They're not going to hobble him,
Starting point is 01:11:35 which is what they would have done in normal circumstances. And what is the hobble? I'm trying to look it up. Basically just a device that would connect his hands to his legs. Oh, okay. I see it here. Okay. And they don't end up doing that. So then it looks almost like this is the hobble. They don't do this to him for people who are having trouble picturing it.
Starting point is 01:12:00 They used to call it like the hog tie. Obviously they don't call that use that term that would be inappropriate to call it that well and what's interesting too this mrt i mean it had been a part of training since about the 90s um i could find it as that that's why all of these officers and i've heard from so many people even people members of the fbi who have said we knew what this was. This was, this is MRT. Like this is a very standard, I'm not, I'm not a cop. Um, but a lot of people knew that, you know, so many of these guys were lying on the stand. So there, so there is no truth to that, that MRT should only be used for, uh, 30 seconds. That that's not the manual. No, that's not in the... Basically, spelled out in the manual
Starting point is 01:12:46 is hold until EMS arrives. Unbelievable. Hey, thank you so much. If there's ever anything I can do for you, I'll be watching closely. I'm a huge fan. I pull up your posts on a regular basis here on the podcast. Thanks
Starting point is 01:13:02 for what you're doing at Alpha News, and it's great to meet you. And congratulations on the movie. Thanks for what you're doing at alpha news. And it's great to meet you and congratulations on the movie fan is weird. As it sounds fantastic movie, great accomplishment just from the filmmaker's perspective. Good job. I really appreciate that. Thank you so much for the support and you have a great audience. It's just kind of fun to watch the chat.
Starting point is 01:13:17 I must say. Yeah, it's, it's, it's a wild place. Hey, let me ask you this one thing. When,
Starting point is 01:13:21 when I invited you on and you, I'm guessing you, you vetted me. Were you like, what the fuck does this guy want to do with me? This is a fitness podcast. Well, I was going to say, I, you know, I'm I was kind of jealous of many of the people you've had on. I mean, I certainly work out, but this is a whole nother level on this show. So I thought there'd be some sort of challenge or something like that. But I'm glad we just kept it in the in the lane that I'm familiar with.
Starting point is 01:13:45 Awesome. Okay. Well, hey, thanks for doing it. And I hope our paths run into each other again. I have Chauvin and you in my Google alerts. And I hope there's an evolution I can have you back on and we can talk about brighter days for the crew. All right. Have a great day.
Starting point is 01:14:03 Thank you so much. And thank you, everybody, for listening. Have a great day, Salvin. Thanks for having me on. All right. Have a great day. Thank you so much. And thank you everybody for, for, for listening. Have a great day. Seven. Thanks for having me. All right. Ciao. This Collins. Wow.
Starting point is 01:14:13 Listen, you jackasses. Some of you are like, I feel, where's his computer? Where's his computer? I feel bad that he, I feel bad that he has to work out to get his TV set.
Starting point is 01:14:25 Sabre. Morning, isn't someone already sending a MacBook? You don't worry about what I'm sending him. Stay in your goddamn lane. Thank you, Real Kevin. John Young's a goofy bastard and should have to work. Listen. I do propaganda and promotion the least you get John Young
Starting point is 01:14:52 is getting a new computer yeah the other day I made an impulse buy he was on the show and the shit was breaking up does he have a tracking number for it how about fuck you I'm gonna go to I'm gonna I'm gonna call Apple right now and and because you guys said that and stop shipment have it sent to my house douche canoes i hate that shit when you guys fucking butt in on fucking shit like that
Starting point is 01:15:16 mind your own fucking business call apple now i went to i went to greg's house last night um and we were hanging out and we were talking about that question that someone asked about him having polio and he said some really interesting shit about it he basically said imagine being friends with someone who's black for five years and then one day being like, how come you never talk about what about being black? And then he went on to say that there's there's people out there that have an image of themselves and they try to live up to that image. And when he said that, that hit home so hard. And I'm like, so you don't have the image of yourself as being the guy with polio. He goes, no, it's not even in my top 20. It's like I'm not trying to be that guy.
Starting point is 01:16:10 Like that's not the image I'm doing. And I thought, oh, that's so interesting. We knew – like he's not trying to be that guy. That's not part of the image he's trying to give off, right? And we all know those people. When I was a dirty hippie, there were two groups of hippies. There were those of us who were just like, you know, just stoners and, and, you know, eating out of dumpsters and getting our clothes from the free box. And then there were the kids who were putting like mud and egg in their hair to make
Starting point is 01:16:38 their dreadlocks instead of it just forming naturally from not showering. Or there, there are kids who cut the holes in their pants and then sewed the patches in so that they look like hippies and those are people that had an image of themselves and then were like trying to live up to that image and it just made me realize all the people out there that um they haven't they're trapped that's like all the then when i watch was watching the protesters yesterday that's what they are like the vast majority of them they're trying to live to the image they want to be the college student who's like protesting they don't even know why they're just trying to it's their image that they're trying to build instead of just operating off
Starting point is 01:17:21 of logic it's fascinating fascinating fascinating Fascinating, fascinating, fascinating. Those are people who are like in the matrix. If you're lucky, at some point in your youth, like 18 to 25, you do some soul searching and you realize, oh shit, I'm not really, I'm like nothing. I can be anything. I'm not really Seval Matosian. That's just the name that was given to me that I'm trying to hold that shit together now. And some of you, as your shit unravels
Starting point is 01:17:53 and it gets too intense for you and you realize that you're just nothing, you run to the Bible. And I understand. It's not a bad place to run. And you start reading and memorizing the Bible as fast as you can to shore up the holes as the light of uncertainty penetrates your being. Because the thought of operating without order from the outside scares the shit out of you. I get it.
Starting point is 01:18:24 It is scary. So so that's that that was cool having liz collins on i can't tell you how fucking excited i was usually i just fucking roll into my office with my coffee thinking i'm cool as shit turn on my computer and just um oh sorry jetted ice nelson i don't run anywhere sorry my bad be more sensitive to my comments um uh I was so excited I was so excited I got here 10 minutes early thank god I got here 10 minutes early. Thank God I got here 10 minutes early because my keyboard wasn't working. I hate it when that shit happens. Like my mouse is,
Starting point is 01:19:11 I have all these OCD things I do around, um, the show. Like I'm always charging my mouth, mouse, charging my keyboard. Like, I think that the fact that my phone is always fucked up on my Bluetooth is,
Starting point is 01:19:26 um, is like, I'm supposed to learn something from that. I don't know what the universe talking to me. Thanks guys. I was pretty, I'm pretty, uh,
Starting point is 01:19:37 great interview. Seven on Denise Moore. Thanks. I was pretty happy with it. I didn't, it definitely did not want to fuck it up, but I also want it to be myself. I wanted to make sure that like all of her all the interviews i've seen of her are stuffy as shit
Starting point is 01:19:50 and i didn't want to do that one with her and she was great she was man she was amazing she was great i'm telling you if you see on her other interviews with her the people don't let her talk because they're so excited to share with her then the the and process with her all the shit they learned from her so usually she's just chilling and that alpha news man what a great instagram account i wanted to ask her about james o'keefe if she knows james i bet you they'd be buddies did you guys see james o'keefe what happened with him in the cia yesterday what a great instagram account that is oh pedro just got a pair of born primitives that's cool
Starting point is 01:20:51 That's cool. It's funny how many people like in my in my immediate circle, like my close friends. Got born primitive shoes. wouldn't it be fun to sit in a room with uh with like 500 liberals and and watch that movie um the fall of minneapolis like they'd be watching the screen but you'd be watching them all right um we are 10 minutes away i'm gonna go refill my coffee we are 10 minutes oh i should askousa to fire up the Instagram. Let me see if I can. Or maybe Will.
Starting point is 01:21:30 Can somebody fire up the Instagram and tell people about the release of the Robin workout.
Starting point is 01:21:47 I can't even see my phone with my glasses on. Oh, oh, and Vindicate is sponsoring the Kill Taylor show. That's awesome this week. That is so cool. Okay. Um, so in nine minutes, uh, we'll be back on another, uh, on another, I don't know what you call it, another show. And it's going to be the release of the Robin workout. If you're not familiar with that, I'll tell you all about the Robin workout and its relationship to the Batman workout. It's arew hiller special from hiller fit and um uh sarah cox from ca peptides
Starting point is 01:22:29 was uh kind enough to offer to buy john a tv set and then we thought we would just make it like a whole party and have him do the robin workout oh the robin workouts posted oh awesome awesome awesome awesome awesome awesome. Let me see. Where is it? Instagram? Is it on the Real Savant podcast? The Real. And this week on Kill Taylor, Tyson Bajan will be there.
Starting point is 01:23:00 Oh, my God. They make such good. Have you seen this post? Wow. They do such good work on the Real Savvant podcast instagram who does that that must be will branstetter or patrick rios see you on saturday at 10 a.m pacific standard time for the week two of kill taylor look at that francisco gomez brandon smith kyle heroes like real heroes uh nine minutes on this channel yeah on on the sebon podcast but but on a different
Starting point is 01:23:33 i could get a link for you but i'm not doing that where's the workout posted anyway oh is it on hillers is it on hillers uh i have to go make coffee i don't have time for this shit andrew hill andrew has 41 000 followers my god oh shit there it is wow wow there it is uh john young crossfit uh attempts to complete robin live if he's successful to get a new tv oh my apologies sabir He gets the TV anyway. He's going to get the TV anyway. I apologize. Three rounds for time.
Starting point is 01:24:13 One squat snatch. 245. Three overhead squats, 245. Five strict parallel handstand pushups. Seven Wuhan press at 245. How many? Oh oh three rounds do you guys know what the wuhan press is you guys are gonna trip when you see the wuhan press it's crazy i saw that guy goob do it i'd never seen it before the guy who just fucks people on um instagram anyway okay, deadlift hip thrust bench press. Yeah. It's,
Starting point is 01:24:45 it's like how a Jedediah Snelson has to work out. So it's a, it's, it's paying homage to the adaptive class, I guess. You gotta, you gotta do a deadlift from the seated position. All right.
Starting point is 01:25:02 Great show. Uh, see you guys in, uh, six minutes. Love you guys. Uh, bye-bye.

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