1-31-24 Bill Cunningham Show - podcast episode cover

1-31-24 Bill Cunningham Show

Jan 31, 20241 hr 35 min
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Episode description

Willie discusses the violence downtown with WLWT's Brian Hamerick, if E. Jean Carroll will ever see a dime of the money awarded to her in her lawsuit against former President Trump with Alex La Puma, and the latest sports in the Stooge Report.

Transcript

Enter it now, Bill cunning in the Great America of Glorious Wednesday afternoon has come. We're better temperatures while you hadn't told by Steve Rowley the Power of nine. And coming up later is Austin Wipuma, a good friend of Brian Hamry, and we're going to break down the Gene Carroll Donald Trump fiasco.

What's going on? I know that last night of the night before you had the specter on MSNBC of Jean Carroll with Rachel Maddow talking about how they're going to spend Donald Trump's eighty three million dollars with fancy trips, drinking fancy wine, eating fancy food, and going on a shopping spree and maybe buying condos all over New York City. So you see how serious the left takes that

issue. But until then, of course, we've had in Cincinnati a couple of terrible incidents in which mobs of young teenagers are beating the crap out of people. And this morning, Dan Carroll and Judge Hartman talked about how was

this done well. Judge Harry Bloom is the administrative chief judge in Hamlet County Juvenile Court, and she's the one a couple of years ago that gave a seventeen year old rapist a book report to do for annally raping a fourteen year old boy, and instead of binding him over to felony court, which should have happened, she didn't do that. She issued a book report and tell

him to write about it and talk about how bad rape is. And I can only imagine what that seventeen year old is doing now, but until then, Brian Hambrick the Power five, Welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And Brian, how are you? Oh good? Thanks again mister Cunningham. Couruse you've been here forever along with Shari Pulolo and John London. Some of

the legends and news. You've covered it all. You know where the bodies are buried all over Hambleton County. It's kind of like the and they show Yellowstone. You take him to the train station down the hill they go. Brian hambric knows every body down there in Wyoming instead of Montana, so kind of give it, give us your perspective. And I know Shari Polo has done some investigation on this too, about the impact. And you said to

me, something off the air is that. Now, when you have a story downtown, which you often do, you go through gymnastics to make sure you're parking the right location, get your head on a swivel, see what's going on, and give me your reaction to what's going on in the mean streets of Cincinnati right now. Well, man, I think it's maybe a

little different than what we've seen. I mean when they talk about crime, and we had the mayor on last night that you know, crime's actually actually down, but it's sort of what kind of crime are we talking about here? Because what we have here or what appear to be random attacks that one appears to be a man walking along sixth Street and all of a sudden, here comes this whole group of about eight people and a full on attack on

this guy. He's got no chance, eight people wailing on him, he goes down, he's call him for help, and they just continue to kick him and beat him. And then a couple days later, and we're not

sure exactly what the relationship of time. They haven't released a lot of information on when these happened, what the proximity, time and space and all that was, but just released and yesterday it was more video of another person that was being beat This looked like a teenager who was maybe near the bus transit system over there. And again, a whole group of people. Once they get him on the ground, they're beating and can he fight him back.

He's trying to do his best, but you can see there's there's too many of them. It's like Hyena's attacking a lion. There's only so much the lion can do, even though he may be more powerful than he given Hyena. When there's ten or twelve of them, it's a lost cause. They get this kid on the ground and he appears to be unconscious by the time they're done kicking him in the head and in the ribs and stomping on his face. It's unbelievable to watch. And again the difference is as difficult as

that only is to watch. What makes it even more I think concerning for people here in town, for businesses and especially in the suburbs, is that this appears to be a random attack. This isn't one drug dealer shooting another, or somebody's got a beef with this group of guys and that group of guys and they're going to get each other. There's a lot of that going along, and you can get caught up in that. That's a concern,

but this seems to be at least it appears to be something different. And this is the kind of crime that really gets people's attention and out in the suburbs, people are very concerned about coming downtown. I can't tell you how many people I have to talk to you is that it is not doing this. This becomes a point where it's not worth it. And you know, Brian Hemric, the city of Cincinnati, especially downtown Government Square, Fountain Square,

that is the heart that beats the Tri State. We have about two point two million citizens who live in the Tri State, which is like about six counties in Kentucky about twelve, in Ohio about three, and Innana two point two million. And of the two point two million, about three hundred thousand live in the city of Cincinnati. So one point nine of two point two do not live do not live in the city of Cincinnati. So if you live in Sharonville or Western Hills. I talked to Sheriff Richard K.

Jones in Butler County. I'm gonna get him on Thursday and Friday. He says, my guys, don't go downtown. I don't go downtown. I don't go to OTR. You talk to Warren County, there's no question Warren County, they're not coming. You live in northern Kentucky. Tony Bender lives there, Rob Sanders lives there. They all tell me the same thing. You tell me that I have so many choices. Whatever's in downtown Cincinnati other

than the Reds, the Bengals and FC. Other than those three, I can get everything that I want without risking my personal safety in my life. And I can't tell you how many parents have told their teenage sons and daughters or young folks, don't go downtown, don't go to Clifton, don't go to UC because there's shootings taking place all over the banks. There's all kind of vicious break ins in Clifton. Cars are being broken into all over the

place, plus personal assaults. And Brian Hemmert when you say crime is down and statistically it is, the problem is city police don't pull over anybody anymore, and that is a pretext to arrest somebody for drugs in the car, guns in the car, warrants out for their arrest, and cops are told don't chase any knuckleheads down alleys anymore. After Steven Road shot Timothy Thomas, the message went out, Look, we'll catch them later. Don't be proactive.

So when proactive police stop, they don't do that anymore. Of course, crime is down because crimes aren't being arrested and prosecuted. That's the that's the answer. Well, what happens, I think for people who live out out in the outlying areas is you kind of have a meter, you know. On that meter it's your Hansle meter, you know, and so you know, first of all, if you're outside, you got to drive downtown. Okay, all right, Well I was just working downtown, but now

I've got to drive downtown. So I'm driving downtown on my spare time. So you're paying that, you're paying for the extra. Now you've got to find a place of park, and that can be a hassle, depend on where you are. So there you go, you got your parking. Now you've got to worry on top of that. We've had all these car break ins, We've had people, you know, so now you got to worry about is your car going to get broken into? Is it going to get

stolen? If you park it in a certain place downtown or anywhere. I mean, because it could be anywhere. And so now you're worrying about that. And now on top of that, it's basically, do I want to buy this lottery ticket for violence? And that's what people are concerned about. Am I buying a lottery ticket for violence? And maybe my time doesn't come up, Maybe you get downtown. Nothing happened. It only happens to a very few people. But so does the lottery. And at some point,

somebody's going to get attacked. Somebody's going to get and I don't want it to be me. You know, I think this is what people are saying. And you know I've heard this. I have heard this from people in Northern Kentuck. I'm the last one. I come downtown. I still come downtown. I may come downtown this weekend. So you know, I'm the last guy on the bandwagon. But I can tell you there are many many people that I know out in Northern Kentucky who are saying, will we go

downtown? The answer is not no, it's hell no, we're not going. And so this is the this is the concern that city council. This is what they have to be concerned about, because the folks out there are helping this city to survive. They're helping the city to thrive, and they're a big part of it. A lot of people live downtown. They say, hey, look, we're used to the you know, whatever kind of concerns there are, we live with them every day, so kind of get

over it. But there are people will say, I don't have to Why will I. I'm going to just stay out here, and so there's no need to to. You know, have folks from It's it's Mason, it's Westchester, it's all all these places outline who have to come in, and you want them to come in, They're now given one more reason to say, do I really want to do that? Yeah? And that's not a position we want to be in as a city. And Brian Hemry, there's

a murder trail happening as we speak. And my good friend James Bogan is one of the criminal defense attorneys in which a fourteen year old boy. When I was fourteen, I was a senior at s I'm sorry, I was an eighth grader at Saint Savior Grade School in Deer Park, and I was concerned about little Penny Cunningham and Penny Ashbrock. I was concerned about about Sandy Gittinger. I was concerned about playing football, basketball and baseball. I wasn't

concerned about shooting someone. Can you tell the American people basically what's happening in that trial before Judge Louver's as I speak, Well, that trial, this is a it's such a convoluted You have five guys, two are all involved in a series of four murders that took place in nineteen days last February. And a lot of people didn't even hear about this because it took police a

while to put it together. And that's the other thing. Look, the police are doing a good job of catching people sometimes you know, in this case, they ran down all of these I mean, this was it was really convoluted, and it's sort of like you know, the Beatles would put out an album and sometimes they have Billy Preston involved and sometimes George wouldn't be there. Sometimes Bringo didn't show up and they but they put the album out.

Well, this is sort of way these guys did their killing. There were five of them, and sometimes there were three of them there sometimes there were two of them there. Sometimes they brought in another guy. But the guy that's on trial now is on trial for two of the killings, and he was involved in two different killings, a couple of them were they were basically he put himself out as a contract killer. That's what he wanted to be. So a guy's going to contract him to kill somebody. Then he

sub lets his contract killing to some content. So he takes three guys and they go and they try and kill the first guy, according to prosecutors, and they shoot up everybody because these guys can't hit anything. They killed every well, they shot everybody, and they killed the wrong guy. The guy they were supposed to kill. He lived. Well, now he's really mad and some of his buddies are. And so there's a retaliation against this guy named Godfrey, who's a guy on trial. He gets shot. Well,

now he's super mad because he's been shot. He didn't get the guy killed that was supposed to get killed. It thought were prosecutors laid this out in their opening statements and they could go to the closing arguments today. But and James is going to do that. James Bothan is going to do those closings today, So you know, it's a long and sort of tail and this and in the middle of all that is a fourteen year old who was apparently

trying to put himself out there as a contract killer. He's one of those five guys that was involved in this killing over nineteen days, fourteen and fourteen years old. It's unbelievable. Well, and been just over in Covington. We had a fourteen year old shot by a seventeen year old. We got the eleven year old who was shot down there in the West End. I don't think they ever did figure out who the killer was in that case yet.

I mean, we've had a lot of these young kids, and fourteen seems to be the new you know, seventeen coming of age, coming out and younger and younger. Yeah, coming of age and I'm gonna be a tough guy on campus. Fourteen and seventeen year olds are killing in Covington. The fourteen year old is dead. The seventeen year old I understand is there may have been a shootout like gun smoke. Everyone's got guns, and what's gonna happen in one of these one of these mass marauding gang attacks in downtown

Cincinnati. Somebody's gonna pull out a gun and it might be the victim, but then you're gonna have six or seven around him, also with guns and with steel Toad's shoes, and then all hell's gonna break loose. Now what's gonna go on is gonna be a shootout on Fountain Square or in governments where

with these bus passes. I think it was Channel five pointed out that I think Ted Pirival wants to change the bus system, and that's somehow all if you're at CPS, you have a golden ticket to take a metro anywhere, anytime, any place, but the all headquarter down in Government Square. So the problem is Government Square and the bus ticket is not the behavior of the

person. Explain that system right, well, you know, I mean that's we've we've talked about this in the past, and I know there's the advocates like Mitch Morris and Pastor Mingo, Pastor Kate. You know, those are the guys that are out there every time, you know, there's shooting and somebody gets killed, and these guys are saying, you know what a lot of us said. Look at Scottie Johnson as well as talked about this a

lot this this begins at home. This is where folks are going to have to There has to be a change in the way and then the attitude very young because as we're seeing what happens, these kids are left to their own devices. The folks that want to raise them are the ones that want to raise them into crime. And and they'll take them when they're fourteen, because you know, these these kids are singing and there and there, you know a lot of things in their culture, their songs, their music. Listen

to this rap music. It's all about beating women and shooting cops and and uh and and get money and and and drugs and all this. That's what it's about, the whole central theme. And it glorifies this, this lifestyle of of being a killer and of being you know, a tough guy and all this. But you know the reality of that life is not what is cracked up to be and song and dance, you know, I mean,

the reality is people are getting killed, people are getting maimed. Here you get paralyzed for life and uh and go to jail and all this, you know, but and it's but it's glorified to the point that these young kids

they don't understand that this is not what is cracked up to be. I mean, sounds good when you're listening to a song and you're digging to be to that tune, but it is the reality of living that and and it's it's it's you know, it's a lot like nom people thought, you know, going to war with you, We're going to the glory of war, you know. And then eventually people got the idea war is not what you you know, you don't want to be caught up in there. There's no

glory in it. It's it's it's it's death, it's destruction, it's it's disease, it's it's it's decisions people don't want to make. It's it's it's every awful thing you can think of. And and and I think people finally started getting that message during Vietnam that you know, this is not a thing to be glorified. And I don't think we're I don't think you see people quite as you know, bought into the romanticism of war. But the kids

here haven't got that message yet. It's just as violent. It's it's basically like they're getting drafted into a war and they see the romantic side of it all, the glory of it all, and how tough they might be, and how you know, I might get a big caller, might head of a water cash or whatever. Yeah, that's it. And when you have a traditional system very different. You know, right now in Hamlety County, we're teetering. We could have become Detroit in the next one to five years.

When you have judges like Judge Carrie Bloom in juvenile court who does not believe that young folks should be held penally accountable for their serious criminal misbehavior. If you rape somebody, if you shoot somebody and kick somebody in the head repeatedly and get out on bond immediately. These two kids got a one got a ten thousand dollars bond. Then what she did was dismiss the assault.

She dismissed the cases, the two kids that got out on bond. I was told by a prosecutor that the cases have now been dismissed and that they don't exist anymore. Because of she wants counseling, she wants to know restorative justice, and so the cops. The cops are done. The cops have told me, why do I arrest these jack rabbits running around when when we have a juvenile court system completely broken, and uh, that's what's happening. Well, Brian, we got to run. We got more comments. I

wanted, well, what are you going to cover this afternoon? If anything? Well, there's that other all kinds of things going on here, I think with somebody going down to city Hall where they're talking about this again, I'm going down to I'm on my way down to uh uh Williamstown right now where they had a firefighter. It was involved in a fire down there and it was a flash over. Two firefighters. They had to drag him out of the building. We're on fire. The one guy had third degree burns.

So I'm going down there to check it out, to kind of cover that story. Well, when you go there, you enough to worry about your car getting break. You know, it is rather popular in Detroit. You're breaking the news cars and steal stuff. So I think down there you're eating It's Grand County, you're in good shape, but Hamilton County not so good. All right, Brian, Yeah, go ahead, you did well. You reminded me, you know what, the police bringing these guys back

in. You know, I used to do stand up comedy. I did that. I tell people I got in the news because of two of the similar But but it reminds me of this joke that I had where it's Batman and Robin and they're going and Batman answers the phone. He's I guess, Commissioner, what the Riddler again? But we just cat him last week. Come on, Commissioner, we're doing our job. You know, it's kind of the same thing that same guys are committing the same crimes all the time.

You know, where's the Riddler. Let's catch the Riddler. Get the Riddler now. Yeah, Brian, thank you again for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. Thanks again, mister Cunningham. Brian Hemrick standup comedian. That's the best. He's the best there is. Let's continue with more. My comments are next on news Radio seven hundred WULW WOW twenty twenty three just flew

by. Time gets away from us before I know it. It's time for my annual whole home cleaning from zero res call my friends of the Austin Lapuma. He's a personal injury attorney breaking myers and rule and he's going to talk about the Jean Carroll lawsuits successfully against Donald Trump. What it means on appeal, and the fact that we've played this a few times and I want my

play it some more. That Jeene Carroll shows up with Rachel Meda All and her attorneys and they're laughing and giggling on set live about how they're going to spend the eighty three million dollars that Trump's going to pay her. And they're laughing about new outfits and Louis Vaton purses and buying fancy condos and taking fancy trips to the Mediterranean, and they're laughing and giggling about how they got eighty

three million dollars out of the Donald. By the way, sixty five of the eighty three million was to restore her reputation that had affected her character. Her character, I guess was worth sixty five million dollars. So that's after one o'clock today and also tomorrow we have on Melissa Powers, the county prosecutor

at noon tomorrow. Talked with her last night. She's unavailable today. I think she's wrapping up that murder case involving a fourteen year old and how many County Common Police Court where my friend yours James Bogan represents one of those co defendants, and Bogan is making the closing argument in that case as we speak. And those who are hired killers fourteen fifteen, sixteen, seventeen years old and allegedly, allegedly the fourteen year old killed a couple people to get props

within the gang to show that he's a bad dude. Fourteen years old, fourteen. When I was fourteen, I was an eighth grader is Saint Savior Grade School, caring about little Penny as Brock and Sandy Gittin jur and some others. Jack Monaghan now fourteen year old's and OTR are hired killers. And I wanted to answer some questions that Judge Hartman had this morning with the Great

Dan Carroll about how these things happened in juvenile court. A law enforcement official told me this morning that Judge Carrie Bloom, who's the presiding slash administrative judge and Hamny County of Juvenile Court. Judge Bloom dismissed the assault charges against those two individuals, one of whom had a bond of one thousand dollars and the other one had no bond at all and released and the cops are at the

wits end. I spoke to FOP president, the new Guy Ken Kober, who said that it's extremely harmful to have police go through the arrest process. Do you go through the investigation and then to arrest someone which is very dangerous when they're violent. You can be ten years old and be violent, by the way, or fourteen and you're a hard killer. And then they file

all the charges necessary. It goes in front of a very liberal, progressive judge who believes in restorative justice, Judge Kerry Bloom, and either no bond is given or the whole case is dismissed because the judge has determined that these two individuals on that mass beating on Sixth Street believe they are victims of oppression, white supremacy. They're hungry, they have no family life, they have a previous criminal record, so restorative justice applies. And I thought, okay,

what the hell is restorative justice? Restorative justice is an approach that seeks to get the victims together with the perpetrator and have a little powwow and let the victims tell the perpetrator how bad it was what you did to me, and then the defend that the criminal apologizes to the victim and said, Okay, don't do that anymore, and you're free to go. And it reduces the feelings of anxiety that the criminal might have and the powerlessness that the victim

may feel. So let's have a little power well and see what's going on. It's an alternative to traditional methods of justice. And I thought, Okay, where'd this thing come from? I watched an interview on channel five might have been nine last night in which the head of the Public Defender's Office, of which Judge carry Bloom was a proud member for a year she was a public defender, and she said that that this is the attorney representing many of

these scoundrels who commit these crimes. The attorney in the PD's office said that incarceration is not the answer. That restorative justice must have to restore the balance between the victim and the defendant, between the hurt person and the person that

calls the pain. So a little pow well together might do that. Organize a meeting between the victim and the offender, and then maybe have a representative of the quote the community there, maybe Reverend Mingo who's well intended, and come up with a game plan that you won't kick the crap out of people and treat heads on sidewalks like soccer balls. You don't want to kick that

person when they're unconscious and kick them. And the person being kicked in the second video appeared to be a fifteen year old black mail that went to the wrong high school and the gangs attacked him from Government Square. And so the idea is that this is the liberalism and the progressivism that's overtaken. So every major city has the same problem. Looking to my left, New York City has this incident where illegal aliens are a pounding of police officers NYPD's finest on

a sidewalk. One or two other cops show up. More illegal immigrants join in and just kick the crap out of the cops, who, of course can't pull out a gun and shoot anybody. God knows if he would shoot, what would happen in your life. So I have a message from a law enforcement official of great prominence who says the following, let me get this straight. Some jackass shoots up Main Street and the city's answer is to punish

parents for failure to properly store guns and blame the guns. Some idiot steals a car, drives through Clifton like he's in NASCAR, speeding excessively, running red lights through busy intersections, finally runs over two us these students in a crosswalk, killing one, and the city's answer, let's fix the crosswalks. One case it was the guns. This case is the crosswalk violence. Spikes at the Banks. This is from a city. This is from an official

law enforcement. By the way, there's been at least eight persons shot in the Banks and many more. The city decides to move planting areas to improve line of sight. What they have to do is change some of the plantings and put up some security cameras. So the problem is security cameras and a little tree. And now, in separate incidents, innocent victims are mercilessly attacked in the middle of the central business district and the city's response says, hey,

we got to move the bus stop. Well, we got to get rid of the golden pass. These kids have too much time in their hame winning for the connecting bus. God forbid, if they want to go home and do some homework. When given free time, you should expect people to put others who are money their own business in the hospital. No one is held accountable or responsible for their actions. It's the gun, it's a plant, it's a camera, it's a crosswalk, it's a bus. The city

has serious problems and it's getting worse. All I can say to that is amen, So what do we do? There has been no city in America that is adopted the restorative justice principles of meetings between victims and perpetrators. There's been no city that sets low or no bonds for violent criminal offenders. There's been no city in America that went that direction and has come back the other way. Say wait a minute, this isn't working. We got major problems

in the last three or four days. I'm aware of city leaders of the business community calling share along the so called city manager and Cincinnati also Vice Mayor Kearney Scottie Johnson, city count Uncil member. He has lucid moments every now and then and have to have paraval in saying this has got to stop. So the solution is we've got to put more cops on the street, which is good. Put more cops on the street. That's not going to stop

the crime. The city of Denver went this way about ten to fifteen years ago, and right now, forty thousand migrants have arrived in Denver. The crime rate is through the roof the city. Schools are overwhelmed, and at this point the hospitals are running deficits of fifty sixty million dollars every six months. They can't afford it. Hospitals and school officials have been able to handle have not been able to handle the influx so far of forty thousand migrants,

with another forty thousand on the way. The City of Portland has declared a state of emergency in the City of Portland and the governor that this is all restorative justice. Liberal Democrats, governor, the County of Leaders, the mayor of Portland. They can't take it anymore. There's poop on the sidewalks everywhere, spent needles, homelessness, fentanyl, break ins. It just goes on and on and on. So the city of Portland is declared an emergency.

Ninety days in the San Francisco when President Hijio Ping of Z showed up from communist Red China, they cleaned up the city for like a week. Now it's going back the other direction with poop and urine and camping out, massive lawlessness, breaking into cars, don't care about getting arrested. They're not arrested. If they are arrested, they're out immediately. Cincinnati is on the path

to that point. It's happened in downtown Cincinnati now. And when I hear the response is, you know what, We got to fix the bus passes. We got to move some of these plantings into banks. We got to put up some more cameras. Let's blame inanimate metal objects like a gun for violence. That's like blaming a car for a DUI. You know, we got too many duys. We got to start eliminating cars. We won't have any duys without cars. That's the mentality of individuals like Judge Carrie Bloom.

How many county juvenile courts. So I looked back in the records and she was there as a judge with Melissa powers. Melissa powers. Our county prosecutors spent I think twelve years in juvenile court. And Carrie Bloom shows up, gets elected, gets fifty six percent of the vote against John Williams, who was a good judge who could separate the whek from the chaff, the good from the bad. And she began talking about restorative justice and meetings between victims

and criminals and letting these scoundrels out on bond. Right now, this afternoon at twelve fifty three pm, they are snickering all over Avondale and Evanston wherever they came from, because they gained the system and got out. Right now, there's a trial going on in which fourteen fifteen sixteen year olds are being

tried from multiple murders, a gang initiation. Right, that's where we are, and I have lost a little bit of hope in this regard because no city has gone this direction, and the citizens wised up and went the opposite direction. Most recently in Chicago, Brandon Johnson was a left wing radical who defeated another Democrat who was liberal. But he wanted to fund the police, he wanted to fund courts, he wanted to lock up criminals because downtown Chicago

now is a mess and it's not coming back anytime soon. Water Tower used to be a fabulous facility on Michigan Avenue in downtown Chicago where Harry carry and I remember Harry Carey would spend time in his joint walking around Michigan Avenue. It was he and Arney. It was wonderful. Now it's destroyed. Is it coming back? The citizens of Chicago had the chance to go a little bit back to the right with a liberal, not a Marxist, and they

picked the Marxist. And in Cincinnati we have well intended fools on city council who don't understand the city's on the brink about to tip over. And if it does, we will be Detroit, Chicago will be Atlanta, Washington, D C. When I talked to Brad Weinstrip, I talked to Rand Paul, their staff cannot walk out at night because they're going to be pummeled in the submission by gangs whom araud around the city looking for victims with cell phones

and cash and jewelry. It's over with. No one's arrested in Washington, d C. Or Atlanta. How about that Cincinnati is there and we've got I have I should have hope, but I don't because not one city has gone this Ricktion. This isn't Charlie Luken's Democrat Party. This isn't John Cranley's Democrat Party. This is the Democratic Party of Judge Kerry Bloom and the Democrat Party of aft have pirival. They're the ones in charge of letting murderers and

rapist out. There was a case a couple of years ago where Judge Kerry Bloom of Juvenile Court gave a rapist a seventeen year old boy who raped a fourteen year old boy Annally a book report to do and we'll not bind them over to be tried as an adult. That's where we are. And guess what, I doubt it's going to get any better. Let's continue. You get what you vote for, you get what you deserve. And the business leaders in Cincinnati have headed up to here with restorative justice up to here,

and they know what's coming. We will go downtown for the Reds games, for the Bengals games, and for FC right. We will do that because you go in and you get out. But everything else downtown we can get in Westchester and Florence, get in Dearborn County, get in Butler County, Warren County, Claremont County. Everything we can get. And when this continues, living downtown is not going to occur. Who lives in downtown to try? Oh you can't can't afford it? Can we go the other direction and

kick these politicians out of office and get normal people in charge. That's the challenge, and mainly it's up to the Democratic Party to say, you know what, got to have a meeting with Judge carry Bloom and say you can't keep doing this letting rapist and attempted murderers out because of white supremacy, restorative justice, social justice, whatever term you want. Hell hold each person accountable

for the criminal behavior that they commit. And at one point Judge Bloom said, you can't trust eyewitness testimony and you can't trust videotape because it could be from a different angle looking for every excuse to hold not accountable vicious criminals committing horrible crimes all over the city of Cincinnati. Let's continue with more. We're going to deal with this the rest of I think the rest of my time on radio, because I don't think it's going to get any better. Twelve

fifty seven your REDS News Radio, seven hundred. You all, so, maybe you were in a car wreck, or you had to deliver a baby on a bus, or maybe you're being poe by aliens on the space ship oouch whatever. If you have missed part of the Getting in Rocky show, all you have to do is listen to the podcast of the show in your iHeartRadio app and catch what you missed. Hey, listen, it's our gift

to you. Kate from bathzar Us here with a frustrating thing. Beck has brought mind a little bit relative to what happened with Donald Trump and Gene Carroll got an eighty three point three million dollar verdict and he already owes her about five million. It's up to I guess eighty eight point three million plus interest by the time it's paid, if it's ever paid, will be well over one hundred million dollars. So, Austin LPUMA, welcome again to the Bill

Cunningham Show. And first of all, Austin, how can someone this is a Tony Bender question. How can someone who allegedly committed an assault which she says was not a rape, and she also has said Gene Carroll has said in the in the past that rape is not necessarily a bad thing. That's Gen Carroll talking, not me or you. But how's it possible that some event took place at some point in the nineteen nineties unspecified, and that you

can sue like more than a quarter of a century later. How's that possible. Yeah, Well, first, Willie, you always leave me nearly at a loss for words with keeping me humble. Appreciate you having me in the quick plug. I love it here that themar been here for years and thrilled to be reaching out as partner. With that said, only doing personal injury. As you know, this is directly in the Bailey Wick. Now truth

be told to all the listeners. Can I post on my website I've obtained a ninety million dollar vertic cumuatively, No, but one day hope to let you know, and you'll be the first to hear. Putting that aside. To answer your question, here's how this works, because it's important we start from step one, and the way our justice system works is criminal versus civil, and it's a huge discussion. I have especial in cases involving intentional acts

assault, rape, battery. These get tossed around a lot. In the civil world. There's a huge difference because we hear Perry Mason, we watch law and order. It's not beyond a reasonable doubt. In civil cases there's a much less burden. It's a fancy term that I got rid of. It's called preponderance of the evidence. All that means is the weight of a feather fifty one forty nine, Okay, the ever so slightest tilt of the

scales. And what you can do to prove that, especially in a state like New York where there's no statute of limitations for sexual assault claims, is whether it's nineteen ninety two or twenty twenty two, if you get in there and you're able to present it to nine strangers in the case of New York that say this happened to me, I have a several other witnesses, and they believe it. Based on credibility. This can happen whether you're the former

president or Tony Bender. This can happen to you, all right, as far as Tony Bender's got a big smile on his face, he doesn't do that stuff. But nonetheless, well, in this case, Geene Carroll said at one point she said she had a certain dress on that was not manufactured or created. To a year or two after the event, she cannot say what she was wearing. There were no witnesses to the assault. She didn't go to the police, there was no there was no record of it occurring

at all. The department store has video cameras. There was no video cameras either one of the two even being there, and she couldn't give a date. She gave a place, but not a time, and that changed over the years from nineteen ninety four to nineteen ninety five to nineteen ninety six too. I'm not sure how it happened, where it happened, et cetera. How can someone presents such a flimsy piece of evidence when there was no witnesses,

no physical evidence. She seemingly lied, repeat about the circumstances, and all of a sudden, the person it's Donald I'm sure if this was someone like Tony Bender, they wouldn't have sued him anyway. But Donald Trump is collectible and he's unpopular. So how is it possible in an injury case you're gonna have so little objective evidence or proof and you get almost ninety million dollars? How's that possible? Sure? First, let me just make it clear

to every single listener, Tony Bender is a stand up guy. I think the world of I don't want speaking of defamation. Jesus, Tony, don't get any ideas, no putting that aside. Here's what I can tell you, Because a always excellent and having these dialogue. But I would counter that with the following. First and foremost, it's the exact point I made about the ultimate we call them fact finders. The jury has exclusive control of fact finding. That is why I love jury trout. It's the great equalizer.

Okay, eight people in my cases in Ohio come in from different backgrounds, from different beliefs, from varying ideology, and we present evidence. Speaking of evidence, let me address that. Yes, absolutely this is true. Whether it happened thirty forty years ago or three or four years ago, those memories can certainly be blurred with that said DAYA says credibility. So, Willie,

you mentioned some discrepancies with Jeene's testimony. However, when you put that up against what the former president said, and I quote one really jarring moment that would have made me panic, as his attorney was in the room where there's picture shown of him and hurt next to one another, and he says,

I've never met this woman. When you're able to portray that and say, hey, in the totality, look at the wholesale lies again, it hinges on credibility, and it's the weight of a feather so when we talk about flimsy evidence, this was the nineties, of course, but ultimately this is why I've had bad results. Let me be clear, I defer to the

jury. I don't love when I lose, no one does. But you know what, that's our justice system, and if they've reviewed it and said this is it, I defer to them because that's their job and that's their civil absolute duty. And on the photo there was a photo with Donald and gen Carrol. But at that point the Donald said, I've had millions of pictures taken and she was standing there on my left. But he said he

never met her. The photograph said he did. But in this eighty three point three million, A part of this was defamation, you know what I'm saying, defamation, not necessarily the assault. Explain how you can pay somebody eighty three million dollars for a defamation of a character when Jean Carroll seemingly didn't tell the truth for a long time about what happened, but her character has

been damaged to the tune of eighty three million dollars. Hell, my character is defamed all the time, and I don't get paid eighty three million dollars. How come she gets paid eighty three million when her character, her character is defamed. Listen, I'm sure Tony's still smiling thinking, I'm much sure he to try to cut a check for you man, with how much we're

railing against him. But this is what happened. And I'm thrilled you brought this up because it's a common conversation and bear with me, quick indulgence. It is kind of frustrating when these headlines come out there with this massive verdict, all these numbers because rightfully so you know, think about the McDonald's coffee gal right not to mitigate what she went through. But then I have a lot of calls say, Austin, this is what it's worth, YadA,

YadA. A lawsuit is not a lottery ticket. And a truism that I tell every single one, even with something like this and you're gonna get fall is that I've never had a client wrongfull death, maimed, whatever it is that says, oh yeah, I would go through that all again. And the biggest reason why is because of the Zoo. People just want to be left alone generally. But here's the deal with something like defamation. A New

York is fundamentally different in what they can award and what they assess. Ohio has something called damages caps. I do want the listeners to know that I wholesale object to these things because I only do plaintiff work. But the legislature has decided, hey, you can never get more than two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for pain and suffering apps. In some crazy factors. New York

is different. And here's why. When you defamed someone and they found they did, it doesn't become just trying to make someone whole, try to make up compensation wise for the harm they suffered. It becomes punitive. We have a whole other area of law, Willy called punitive damages. Explain, explain how punitive is different than compensatory. Sure, and you know what, this is why I'm not a big Latin boy. Okay, you know me. You know I'm Cecilian. But I didn't take any of that stuff. Right.

We love Latin in the law, but luckily in this one it's in the word. It's punishment. Punitive. We want to punish someone that's rare in the civil field normally, and the breakdown was it's still pretty extreme. Eighteen point three million of that verdict was for the damage to reputation, for her destruction of potentiarning capacity, those things we think of in terms of economic

harm and even mental anguish. The sixty five million, a huge sunk of that sheddar was to try to punish this person a lot of those factors about his conduct during trial, about statements made, all those things as well as as well come into that because you want to deter someone that quite frankly, has not demonstrated any ability to keep thy mouth shut. Yeah, Donald Trump at times can be his own worst enemy. And the defaming her character.

I'm not sure her character is worth sixty five million dollars. But nonetheless, explain I listen to some lawyers talk about the collectibility. Of course that Donald is collectible. His financial statements indicat he has five hundred million dollars in cash, so he is collectible. And the problem is, these lawyers pointed out, she's likely never to get the eighty three point three million. Explain why that is true or false? Well, Jeane Carroll and Rachel Maddow ever going

to shopping spree and bike condos all over New York? Is she ever going to see the eighty three point three million. Unlikely, massively unlikely. You know, there's a lot of think pieces out there. One thing that they unify with anyone that has the fortune of doing civil law. And that's why I said be wary of a headline. There are a million ways to use

the system to one's game. And the biggest thing that mister Trump will do immediately, I think it already happened within four or five days, is appeal. There's there's another I'm latin time, Latin time. We're doing a lot of that today. Often a judge will do something, even on the stand or on appeal, and it's called remitted her. That's just a fancy word for saying, reduce it because it's just so disproportionate to the hall. That's

one thing. Another thing is whether there was an error in the jury instructions, the condict from the judge, whatever it is. You better believe that it's such an unpleasant thing because you you get it. You know, I come in, I got my massive verdict. Let's go, let's go off and buy a yach No, no, no, no no. If you think you're gonna get that amount a you're wrong, more than likely be you're gonna be held up on appeals for at least a calendar year, if not

more so. Just trap in, folks, that is not going to be cut from the check book of Donald Trump. That's one thing I feel pretty certain. In Austin Lopuma, I would imagine a remittererer in which they filed emotion to reduce the verdict. I don't know whose character by itself damage to one's character. When you're seventy years old and your wine dined in pocket line all over New York City doing TV appearances and she's laughing and smiling, sixty

five million dollars standalone just for damage to her character and reputation. Hell, in New York, reputation has been enhanced, has not been reduced. Couldn't a judge cut this in half sometime next week of the week after a judge could That's one thing too. They got the robe. You should see. You know, I'm not a quiet person, but when they got the robe, I keep my mouth shut, which mister Trumps attorney could have benefited from

at times as well. Yeah, sure a judge could. But when you counter that to what happened, and really I'm speculating this is what it's about. But I think what really did him in was not just the statements, she's the whack jobs, not my type, all that type of stuff. What he showed that past week, too, was no reverence for the law. What happened a law order. It's not just him. A lot of

people do this and get rightfully upset when they're in trial. But if you're demonstrating that you don't have any ability to just follow the norms of being in a court, storming off commedy, immediately posting whatever, it's gonna be hard for to cry crocodile tears and have any judge, no matter what their affiliation is, go yeah, I'm gonna touch this Juri's award from them. And I appreciate judges, even what's against me, that say these fact finders did

their job. I'm letting it stand, even when I say, please help me. Well, we'll see what happens. But Donald Trump at times can be his own worst enemy. And this has nothing to do whether the southern border should be shut down or whether we're in a fiscal crisis, wars all over the world, that all these other ancillary issues send messages out to the voting public about Donald Trump, that he's uncontrollable, he'll do whatever he wants

to do, doesn't respect the law. I can hear the LIFTUS liberals right now saying all that stuff. And this was only occurring, in my view because it's Donald Trump. If this was a regular person, it never would have transpired. And they even changed the statute from four years to unlimited. And that's allowed a whole bunch of these claims in the eighties and nineties to be filed against rock stars and politicians with lots of money, and to prove

these things decades later is almost impossible. But when you have an unpopular character in New York City whose law by New Yorkers sitting there, and he acts as Donald Trump acts in court, it gives license to the jury to really, uh hire politically and financially to take his head off. And that's what they did. Eighty three point three million, and of that, sixty five million of the eighty three point three is for damage to her reputation. I

can't imagine anyone's reputation being worth sixty five million dollars. Anthony Lapuma, Austin Lapuma, if somebody wanted to damage your character, would you accept sixty five million dollars in recompense. The answer is, Austin, you do that in a heartbeat, give me sixty five If that's an offer, Willy, let's talk out, you know, once we get off the horn. Let's let's let's let's really tough shot. Let's talk defame me please, all right,

we got to run. But freaking myers En rule Austin Lapuma once again, personal injury attorney. Thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show, and my friend will do it again. Thank you very much. All right, will you take care of it? Take amazing? All right, let's contenue. If his name was Donald Jones, none of this would be happening. At times, the Trumpster is his own worst enemy. And I'm sure, as lawyers said, shut the hell up, labor alone, pay her five

and that's it. No, Now, it's eighty three point three plus interest plus bond, set all that kind of stuff. We'll see what happens. Let's continue with more. Bill Cunningham News Radio seven hundred WLW. When employers like I heard and Kroger choose Delta Dental of Ohio employees access the nation's largest election of individually contracted Dennis and get the care they need as form of the disease called geographic atrophy or GA. His struggle with vision laws made me want

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Com? Skyline Cony's for lunch. Count me in? Feel it good? It's Skyline time. Uh, mister Zuckerberg, you and the coms before us. I know you don't mean it to be so, but you have blood on your hands. You have a product. You have a product that's killing people. Oh hello, quiet, and I'm broadcasting once again. Don't don't blame the person using Facebook right. Blame Facebook right. Don't blame the person

kicking the crap out of someone's We had like a soccer ball. Blame the bus pass, right, don't blame and on the banks the behavior of the perpetrators. We don't have enough cameras. You're gonna move some of the plantings to have line of sight. Or that guy walking across the street downtown the other night. And what about those two policemen New York City policemen we just saw on Fox getting attacked by migrants and what was the bond? Zero?

So on camera we're watching this during this extended break. Kicked in the head, kicked in uniform? Yeah, NYPD? Yeah, migrants, you know what I say. Here's Smith and Wesson, say hi to Smith and right, but what happened is they and then a whole crew shows up to arrest them, and the judge, I think it was Judge Carrie Bloom released the migrants on How does that happen? No bond for for almost killing in uniform? NYPD? What if I go downtown right now and start beating the you

know what out of a policeman? Where am I going to go? Am I gonna go back home tonight? No bond? Yeah? Where are you going? I'm going right out in Butler County? Yeah, yoh oh, oh, you got to be shootout in hamlet Jones, Sheriff Jones. I talked to him. You heard my conversation with him. He said, what we could do is have city council appoint me the chief of police in the city of Cincinnati for six months. He said, I will clean it up,

Bengo. But the problem is, it isn't Fiji. It's restorative justice. Judges like Judge Carrie Bloom, who thinks if you put the victim in the same room with the criminals, that can work out their problems and justice is restored. What's his crime kicking somebody there? What's his crime kicking them in the head like a soccer ball. Let's just do more talking. We got to talk some more, well, he the student supporters of service of

your local temph Star Heating and air conditioning dealers tap Star quality. You could feel a beautiful Southwest Ohio called Better Choice Heating and Cooling at five one, three, eight, six, eight thirty three eighty eight. But sere live

now in a screwed up society, that's for sure. Let me ask you this, go ahead, would you go walking around downtown Cincinnati or downtown Middletown, I do a walking around Middletown. Yeah, what what if the same thing happened in Butler or Warren or Boone County that happened here, people would be concerned. The two guys who were arrested Latout on bond right charges have been dismissed by Judge Carrie Bloom because restorative justice. They've agreed to get into

counseling. So you don't kick the crap out of Parkle anymore. Yeah, that'll work. You get the government you deserve, going to put them in a room and say, hey, don't do this anymore. Yeah, that'll work. Bengals director or player personnel will he had Duke Tovid, another team official, are at the Senior Bowl and mobile Alabama scouting out that college talent. Tobin was asked whether or not the team will franchise tag t Higgins. I say yes, and he wouldn't say yay or nay, And he would

say that Jamar Chase possibly for a contract extension. It all depends on how big a piece of pie the pie he gets, what kind of pie? Or do you want not gonna sit on her hands? Thank you? That's him right there. Miami beat Ken State last night, Dayton rolls over George Washington, Georgia Tech upset number three North Carolina. South Carolina beat fifth grade at Tennessee. No, you missed a big game. I get a call last night from Tony Pike. Yeah, Reading is playing at Deer Park.

Uh oh, he says to me in the friendly confines. Yes, okay, it's in Deer Park. Which is that should be an automatic correct? Right? I don't know much if they don't go undefeate it on the go watch the games. Okay, we've lost some games anyway. He says, how many points do you want? I'm thinking, do I need points at Deer Park against Reading? Yeah? They never lose there, So I give you five? Okay, five points? I said, you got it. He calls me and says deer Park lost by fifteen. He demanded recompense,

so I went and got hot Sundays recompense. I got recompense. Is that like that justice stuff that you were just talking about? Restorative justice? You gotta restore justice, bar J. Yeah, I got punishing call it RJ, right J. Yeah, Yeah, you got you got. You can't punish the criminal, get the victim. How about a couple of years ago a seventeen year old annually raped a fifteen year old boy. Judge Carrie Bloom had him write a book report. What was his credit annual rape of a

child? What was his credit rape of a child? Guess what? Judge Bloom said? Go you're free college basketball tonight, Willie, there's Big twelve action with the Cincinnati Bearcats on the road against West Virginia. Please continue six thirty right, six thirty on seven hundred wlwe Big East battle at Centas Center tonight. Saint John's and Rick Patino in town as the Red Storm stand up? Where is it? I think somebody stole it? UH Xavier and Musketeers

at at six fifty five KRC the Homer Ron Wilson UH SEC. Florida takes on number ten Kentucky at eight on ESPN fifteen thirty Providence against number one yukon tonight. Let's see what else is oh NFL news? Back to the NFL. How about this is Seattle Seahawks. What have named Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator Mike McDonald as their new head coach to succeed Pete Carroll? Is he a singer? So? At thirty six, mister McDonald becomes the youngest head coach

in the National Football League. What a full beliefs? Yeah? What? What? What? What? He was in the h what band? Mike? What a full beliefs? Listen? His own deal wouldn't Yeah? Well he was. Yeah he's not. So he's now going to coach the Seahawks. Yeah, how about that? What about Carol? What's he gonna do? Uh? Probably? I think he's like an advisor. What about Belichick? Maybe they don't want him, he doesn't fit. I don't know, he's running out of spot and fit. He's not going to go to the

Washington Commanders. They still they stink. And then the Carolina Panthers. Who wants that gig? That's gonna take years. That's gonna take years to figure that out. What about the Kansas City Chiefs? All depends on what happens a couple of weeks with Andy Reid. What if he wins it all again and says, you know what, see, you wouldn't want to be I'm out. What if Bill Belichick in Kansas City? He look good in red? No, he doesn't look good in anymore. So if that happens,

just keep it on. Jerry Jones says, you know he could he I could work with him in Dallas. What's that say for Mike McCarthy, Well, he's got one more year if he if he doesn't win, you know what you're talking about pressure. He's got to win at all. But I mean if he does, they'll probably run him out of town in Dallas. And Belichick says he might be going on TV. Belichick on TV? And

what about Boomer? What about Boomer? This one and a couple of his CBS NFL Today cohorts being accosted, accosted by a drunken Ravens fan in an Amtrak train station Number seven almost got involved, Yes he did. Now he'd be out on bond and no, he'd get a high bond to stay in correct. But these scoundrels. How about NYPD cops beaten on camera? Not migrants from Honduras? No bond? Yeah, what's your I'm officer Smith and that's officer with It Wesson. Meet us. But you don't have time.

Have you seen? They're right? I must say my friend Chris Smitherman saying, well, I pulled out Smith and West and the problem is I don't have enough to right, you're getting the you're getting the crap just walking down the street and whammo. It's like a bunch of hyenas on a on a proud kpe buffalo. Don't have much time to do anything that's correct. You need you need uh maybe Arnold Swarzenegger, we need the terminator walk around.

We need security forces downtown to walk around for people. So the problem is not enough cops. The problem in the behavior. The problem is not enough cops. The problem is we have five hundred to one thousand gang bangers and clowns who need to be locked up in the city, and the black community

would be much safer with a thousand out. Yeah, but they always vote down another jail, right, you don't want to do that number Side Leaves and Sean Donovan right there, and so we need another jail the go I'll say this. We have competent police, right, we have a competent sheriff. We have good suburban departments that are that are getting the job done. Yes, right, Yes, However, we have judges at the end of the day that will not prosecute criminals because they want to give them second,

third, fourth, and fifth chances. They want to restore justice, justice is restored when they're locked up for a violent offenses, and I'll restore something. Judge bloom City is it's just one another step in a long series of steps where they embarrassed themselves. I think it's an outrage that the city council acted the way they acted. That was fifteen years ago. What would Sile say today? Well, please, there would be no problems downtown if he

was still around. None. I have to keep going away. They're going I don't know what's saying happen in our city. That was prophetic, Thank you? You know what prophetic means. Yeah, alright, please continue. What about this NASCAR guy killing a dog, Old Chip Ganassi. I guess the dog ran out in front of him. He ran over the dog in the infield at Daytona accidentally, and the dog belong Lucky. The dog belonged

to one of his drivers. What is Gonnassy say about running over? He apologized and gave like a million dollars to this, uh you know, this fund for dogs. What about what one apt Michael Andretti got turned down by F one Cadillac. Cadillac said they F one is so good. They said no to Cadillac. I don't know. That's a They're a mess over there, Cadillac or F one F one. I don't know what to tell you.

I got a text here from Sterling. Oh but now what we can't we locked them up on a barge in the middle of the hot So Sterling and Donna went the criminals like on a bar, like a floating jail. Yeah, and then there's a concept and sink it. I don't know what to say, but I like Sterling and I like Donna. I know you told me you don't like them at all, but I didn't see them. Well, I listen. I listened to everything. I'm sure you do. I like Sterling and I like Donna. Okay, there's a song, remember

Donna, the song you call that? No, that was way before my time. That was right around the Turtles? Wasn't it for the Turtles? And do wop? Right now? You are you much a rap fan? Because rap is talking about the herding of cops and raping of women. I'm just worried about you know what Tata's going to do in a couple of weeks. Will she make it? Well? She endorsed Joe Biden and Trash and

sink Magma Trump Mega Mega, What about that one. I don't know, it's going to be very interesting, No, Dave says no. He says, he's our political correspondent. It's pretty good, all right, segm man, get me out of the Stude's report, please, will hee and honor of a nice day finally here in the tri State. Maybe we'll see the sun tomorrow. There comes the Sun by George Harrison. That's a good song. We leave you with the immortal words of the stud grip or. President

Mice also want to open the US Constitution once in awhile. If he did, he'd find a thing called the First Amendment and what it says and beginning he says, the right of the people peaceably to assemble and to petition their government for redress a grievances. Huh eh, peaceably peaceably a symbol. Yeah, I'm not sure what we're seeing on major city streets are very peaceable? I don't think so. Shall I say peaceful? Wwe action out there.

I gotta get the I get the pro wrestlers in downtown Cincinnati. How about that one? Bring Rome and Reins and the bloodline in here, and you want to made it up and five, Clean it Up Right segment, Thanks you. Brock Lesler to walk around, well, yeah, was he involved in that Vince McMahon deal. Yeah, Mancho Bam says, yeah, he's not with us anymore, nor is Elizabeth. But we got brock Lesner and Vinnie McMahon possibly doing improper acts resulting in millions of dollars bing go segment.

Thank you, Yes, sir, Let's continue one fifty six Home of Year Bangals and Home of Karen Craft of the Reds on News Radio seven hundred w eld Wow twenty twenty three. Just flew by. But I'm sure you're ready for keyword on our website. Cran that's cran. Enter it now. I bring a thousand oughts made you. I'll break a thousand more. Baby be by and through. I want to be up with the baby gol. I'm in and half that. I'm bad at the boone, bad of the bone,

bad of the bowl. No, Jack Premler, there's an update you have on this stolen child? Give us a live update. Yeah. I think we've got a couple of breaking things going on right now. First, I think the FED is keeping interest rates the same. I don't think the I think that there that's just now coming out. Uh, we'll get some details on that coming up. On a local level, we just talked in the two o'clock news about a two year old child who was in a car

that was stolen from a Good Samaritan hospital. Uh. The car, the person driving the car was I guess doing some door dash deliveries and somebody I guess jumped in it and drove away with this kid. That was at about twelve thirty. We just got an update a few moments ago that the child has been found approximately one thirty. The child and stolen vehicle relocated. Child

was safely located by law enforcement, uninjured. Ongoing investigation. We will get more from police as things go on, like if there's a suspect in custody or not. But again, the good news is, you know, people must have stepped up and they found this stolen car with a little kid inside. That it might have been a bit of surprise for the person who thought they could have a bit of a joy ride. The said, so does the door dash operator driver had a child on the back seat or front seat

or somewhere somewhere, and somebody jumped in to steal the car. And they didn't, hopefully know there was a child there, and so away you go and they found what about the perpetrator. I don't know anything about a suspect yet. I would imagine that Cincinnati Police will be sending us more here in

a little bit. They do call it an ongoing investigation. The brief statement that we got from police does not say anything about an arrest being made, so either presumably the information on that is pending, or they may still be looking. I would imagine if the person stole the car and didn't realize there was a child's side, it might just be time to put that car into park and slowly walk away. I don't mind taking the vehicle, but I

got the kid, I got kidnapped. That I don't need that. So hopefully that's what occurred, and call somebody say there's a kid in the backseat. But we don't know all the facts at this point, but stand down. The kid's been located. The perpetrator is unknown at this point. At this point, Yeah, good news, is kid's okay? Always glad about that. Nicest to be able to say that occasionally, Yeah, crumbley, thank you, thank you. And also in the news there was someone bringing

up the idea. Jill Schiller, who's the county treasurer. You might have heard the news saying well, if your property evaluation is too great, that there's something you can do, call the Treasurer's office. They'll give you, like what three years to pay a five payments extra or whatever. There's another

way of doing it. For those who weren't listening yesterday, I had on an appraiser from Hamilton County or rick Hamilton, and the procedure is somewhat simple, and I would assume you have the time to do that if you're talking about a property tax bill that's skyrocketed. What occurs is the border Revision, and yours truly represented two of my friends down there. I thought it was more of a formal proceeding, but it is not formal at all. It's

informal and what you do is go to the County Auditor's website. Go to the website and you can download the form Border Revision. It's a fancy name, but it's three people who sit there in the little office beginning in May until August. And what you do is fill out the form as to what you think your property is worth. You have until March thirty first to do it. And the best thing to do you just can't walk into this hearing

they're fifteen minutes each and just start babbling because that's interesting. But the best thing to do is spend three hundred bucks and getting an appraisal done by a professional licensed and then you take the appraisal win you into the hearing which will be between May and August, and you can say, look, here's the appraisal that Rick Hamilton Appraisals First has determined actually what my house is worth in the market. And the magical date is not now, it's not even last

year. The magical date is the last six months of twenty twenty two, so it's as of one one twenty three, which is what thirteen months ago. So I would anticipate that the next month or two, I'm sorry, next year or two, there's going to be more you may have to pay if you don't stop it. Uh. And what you do then is hire an appraiser and uh spend three hundred bucks or so and have your house appraised.

And the appraisal will involved activity inside your home, so the appraiser comes to your house much like you're refinancing, hopefully through McKinley mortgage or elsewhere. And you have an appraise done, and you walk into the house and the appraiser spends ten minutes inside and then he goes outside. You can say, hey, look, my house isn't worth what the house across the streets sold for because of one, two, three. Then the appraiser develops the form.

It's several pages long. Then you walk in with the appraisal to these three civilians who sit there, and the first thing they say is what do you got? You hand them the appraisal. You should take four copies with you, one for you and one for each of the appraisal, each of the hearing officers. And then the odds of you winning are pretty good. Because they're going to have thousands of these appeals, they want to move them

along quickly. So if your house is appraised at three hundred and fifty thousand and you think it's worth three ten, the appraisal can indicate it's worth three ten. And then they do not have an appraisal of your house done by a professional real estate appraiser from the inside out. They determine the value of your home from ten thous and feet looking down. Okay, that house sold

for this, Therefore that house is worth the same thing. The odds of you went winning are pretty good, and you can save some serious money.

And then in another three years when another appraisal is done by the state of Ohio required Joe, Joe Schiller is not responsible for this, nor is the county auditor responsible for this, and so just be proactive instead of complaining about it, instead of saying that Joe Schiller, the county treasurer, you know what, why don't we I'll pay it out over the next two or three

years. Why don't you get it lowered? And then that forms the basis for three years from now, when next time it's up, you can say, look, it's at this point and they're more than willing. These are civilians, they're not judges. There are three civilians that are sitting there. And when someone shows up with a professional appraisal of your particular house, particularized to your street, was inside and the other problems with your house, the

odds of you winning or eighty ninety percent. It happens all the time. So I know you're unhappy about it. Almost everyone is. But it's required by state government. And if you go to the go to the Hamilety County Auditor's website and just look around a little bit, it says Border Revision Appeal.

You can appeal your decision. You do not need an attorney. I know Chris Finney may not be happy about this, nor Kurt Hartman may not be happy about this, but you don't need an attorney and spend thousands of dollars when you can get an appraisal done for maybe three hundred and then you win your case. So there's many appraisers in town. I often use Rick Hamilton, and it's called Appraisals First, who's been doing it for more than

twenty years and he's done literally thousands of these. And his phone number is five to one three six nine eight eighty seventy eight eighty seventy Rick Hamilton Appraisals First, and they'll set up a time. You have until March thirty first to to file the quote appeal, which is simple form to fill out. Do not curse the darkness, why didn't you light a candle? So there it is again phone number six nine eight eighty seventy six nine eight eighty seventy

Rick Hamilton and save some money. No guarantees in life, you get guarantees from Midas muffler and that's it. This is it's an easy proceeding. Been there myself informal and the homeowner. If you have an appraise appraisal done properly, you generally win because the county doesn't have that. They have just a ten thousand foot looking down and that's why you normally win. Rick Hamilton,

all right, he was my guest a day or two ago. Secondly, it's important and I'm willing to fight like a warrior poet for the city of sincinn for Hamleton County in northern Kentucky's where I was raised, where I was born family smurling Or and Ellesmere, generally raised in Deer Park and elsewhere. And I love this community and I love the fact that for a long time

crime was severely punished. The message was sent out, if you're going to commit a crime, do not commit it in Hamlton County or anywhere else in the tri state because or serious. What's occurred is that as time is dissipated, a large number of individuals like Judge Kerry Bloom, came out of a restorative justice system of college and law school, and they're now in their forties

and fifties and sixties. Terms of the society and the education system of which they came through, it would be impossible to go to many major colleges and or law schools and come out as a conservative. You come out as a hard driven, not liberal, progressive Marxist, and you come out of law school today thinking I want to go in the public defender's office and I want to sue everybody because of all the injustice. What a terrible place the United

States of America is, especially the court system. So to an extent, the judge carry blooms of this world are victims of the colleges and law schools of which they came out, garbage in, garbage out. And we used to have a system with Judge Sylvia CV. Hendon and Judge Schwartz and Judge John Williams and Judge Melissa Powers. Melissa Powers, the county prosecutors spent twelve

years in juvenile court, and they separated the week from the champion. If you're stealing a bag of chips from Walmart, that's different than treating somebody's head

on the sidewalk. Like a soccer ball. The assault charges against those two derelics who beat the crap out of that guy on Sixth Street have now been dropped because the two defendants or vicious criminals have agreed to participate in restorative justice, which means you get the victim together with the perpetrator, have a little powwow, Let the victims tell the perpetrator how much their behavior has cost them in pain and suffering and embarrassment. Then the criminal apologizes to the victim,

and then the case is dismissed. Go and send no more. If it's the potato chip deal, okay, that's fine. But when you commit felonious assault causing serious physical harm and or attempted murder, restorative justice meetings they don't apply anymore. Basically, we have to separate the five hundred to seven hundred vicious criminals in the city of Cincinnati from society for a long period of time.

Now, when you listen to the head of the Public Defender's Office in Hamlin County Juvenile Justice Provision, she gave an interview in which she said, we don't want to do that anymore. We want restorative justice. The locking someone else doesn't work. It makes them worse when they come out today. Right now. James Bogan, my friend. Both he and I were trained

by Judge Leslie Isaiah Gaines of Gains and Gains Attorneys at Law. He represents one of the it's either the fourteen year old or the sixteen year old who were hired assassins paid fifteen hundred dollars to kill other drug dealers in town and they killed the wrong one and then that drug dealing group came after the other drug dealing group and murders took place. Cost fifteen hundred dollars. Sometimes the case is sublet to others. Well, I'll take five hundred, you take

one thousand. See that guy over there at the government Square, that guy with the red hat on and the whites, that's the guy you're going to kill, And away they go. Do those people do those individuals deserve a second chance, a third chance, a fourth chance. No. There are certain categories of crime, rape and murder and felonious assault that when you engage in that behavior, guess what, you're going to prison. For a long time, we had a system in Hamley County where that transpire. That's what

happened. Judge Sylvia cb Hendon, Judge Williams, Judge Powers had no difficulty. Benjamin Schwartz Grossman. They could separate the good from the bad and say, I'm sorry, you've done something here which is well beyond the pale. We're shipping you're ass to adult court. Good luck away you go. That doesn't happen anymore. We have a juvenile court system where they want to keep

these juveniles and work out the difficulties through various diversion programs. So there's few, if any referrals anymore from juvenile court of those under the age of eighteen to Hamlina County Common Police Court to be tried as adults, because when you do an adult crime, you do adult time. Even Reverend Mingo said that last night, who goes to all of these terrible events, There are certain offenses you commit in the community which you must be punished and punished. Now,

that's not the attitude in juvenile court today. The attitude is restorative justice, white supremacy, white privilege, social justice and all the rest looking for excuses that cause the behavior. So if you correct the excuses, the behavior will stop. And it isn't working anywhere. I'm looking at my left right now on Fox News. I doubt this will be on the National News tonight. But there is some fracas on the Madison Avenue in seventh and the NYPD

shows up with two cops. There was about fourteen to sixteen migrants. One thing led to another and ID was requested. They didn't want to provide it. Migrant didn't. They start beating up in uniform two n WHITEPD officers, kicking the crap out of these two cops. They're hitting their panic button. More cops show up, more cops show up. They finally stopped. The officers are injured, beaten, kicked in the head, in the groin.

And guess what this afternoon now two twenty five, the seven or eight individuals arrested on video are now out on no bond. They went into court, the judges said, well, no bond and release them back to Hodoras or

Nicaragua, and the officers are in the emergency room. What if the same thing happened today in Hamilton County Judge Kerry Bloom Hamilton County and Juvenile Court would either give no bond, a makeable bond, or dismiss the charges out of hand because we've got to get these parties together to find out exactly what's going on. We got to find out and once we get to the root cause of the crime, we can correct future behavior. Locking someone up only makes

things worse. That's the mentality in a sense. These judges, Wendy Cross is another one in common Place court. They are victims of the college and laws themselves that they came out of. They were taught this, and once they get to power, powerful positions where they are now, they implement social justice and uh restorative justice and no one goes to jail. Sowed in the seeds of these decisions is the destruction of American society. It's got to stop,

and I will fight like a warrior poet. Let's continue. Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred w LW. For most of us, there are no guarantees. Quiet I'm broadcasting. I'll say before we quiz the rock on his support for lawlessness. Yeah, he's a big advocate of downtown. I question he's behind all these liberal justices. He's with her. He's going to be mister Downtown cineraty pretty sick. So what about Brian Combs and his wife. Well, well, I tell you what today is a special day.

Me here. Val Combs, the wife of news man Brian super Combs, being recognized today during Catholic Schools Week for forty forty years of service at mcnick High School. The former Miss Vassalo and the current missus Combs started at rock And High at nineteen eighty three as an English and religion teacher. She currently serves as an intervention specialist. So Valcomb's congratulations on the forty years of service at the home of the Rockets. You are our citizen of the day.

Brock. Where were you forty years ago? Let's see, I was probably hanging out of your house in Dent. I was four years old the drive in in nineteen eighty four, probably conceived of the Dent Drive and I would imagine absolutely, I've been there many times with those hot girls. Yeah, you didn't even know where Dani idea where it is? Thank you. Now I've explained where Dn is to you. It's in between like Bridgetown, mac Harrison Avenue, Mofford Heights and White Oak. Right, I've heard of all

those. Right, Well, Dent's kind of right in the middle. The epicenter if you will. I went to price Vale Chili on Saturday. I needed my Google Maps to meet somebody there. It was a wonderful place. Have you been to Price Val? What do you think you find? Price Hill needed a map? Well, I'm sorry, I'm kind of an eastsider, but nonetheless, Dent is the key every time. Usually, every time you have to come to the west Side, you text me, I gotta

go over here. I don't. I get to Google Map and I have to follow, and they take a left, take a right, take a left. When I go east of seventy five, I'm os will be in Timbo. To just go downtown. Take seventy four on out, get off at North Bend, and then you can access most of the west side there. If not, go one more exit to Hamilton Bolt excuse me, and the rest of it's right there. It's all right there, Bolts right up the street, right down the street, right there on here you go on

Harrison Dent, right up the road. I have hope in a sense, but not really you have hope for Hamlin County. No, because well, I'm not gonna quit. I'm not gonna get I'm not either. But you have fifty American cities that have gone one direction with white supremacy, white privilege, restorative justice, social justice. How many of those fifty come back the other way and said, you know what, Portland now is the state of

emergence. So you're asking how many cities have gone that direction and then come back and said, you know what, we're not going to defund the police. We're actually going to overfund the police. We're going to bring them all back in. We're going to bring schools lawfulness. We're going to bring in a sheriff that is the real deal. Is going to lock people up. We're going to our citizenry is going to elect judges that are going to lock them up, lock them up. How many time has that happened? You're

asking zero? Zero? So can Hambleton County, the City of Cincinnati recognize that we're on the wrong path? Too many shootings? Now? The big call, well, the big domino there is Melissa Powers. If she doesn't get voted in, by the way, she is gonna be on our show at three o'clock today. Good. If she does not get voted in, then all help breaks loose, because than it already is going to look at

the way when you look at downtown Cincinnati. I consider almost these judges to be victims themselves of colleges and law schools that have put in their minds these racist, nasty ideas about American in general, that the whole system needs to be destroyed and reimagined. So these think the academia needs to be destroyed and reimagined. Now imagine coming through Harvard. Did you see Harvard and some of these these Ivy League schools any Semitism. They can't do it. They can't

do it. Why would you send your kid to a college these days to the tune of sixty seventy eighty thousand dollars a year, ninety thousand dollars a year to be indoctrinated with that sort of stuff. Where that goes on, it happens, and we can't. Well, colleges are going downhill. I mean I think we can stop it. That the fund ain't going to be there. I don't. I don't think we can. And it's about the problem is the bus passes. The problem is the plantings on the banks need

to have better site lines. We need more cameras. You know what I'm saying. If some one uses a gun improperly, we got to go after the gun or the person that allowed the gun to be used. It's always everything except the person who did it right. And so we argue about bus

Patty, it's this person, it's that person. Fair they had a bad go at it, and we five hundred to Melissa told me last night when I talked with her briefly, she said, if I could take five hundred people off the streets of Cincinnati, crime would go down by seventy percent. Jude Diners would always tell us the same you said about about six to eight hundred people, if I could get rid of them, I think he'd always

say, like ninety percent of crime would go away. Poof. Right now, there's closing arguments to being made right now in Judge Loeubers's courtroom by James Bogan on a fourteen year old who was paid fifteen hundred dollars to kill two people, and he screwed it up and shot the wrong person. So the other gang then came after the fourteen year old's gang to shoot some of them,

and as a consequence, four people are dead. But a fourteen year old was found over by Melissa Powers when she was in juvenile court if that same thing happened today, Judge Carrie Bloom would not ship that because of restorative just as the enemy. Yes, and what's gonna change? She got fifty six percent of the vote the last time she ran. She'll probably gets sixty percent of the vote next time. It doesn't stop. You gotta So what

can you or I? I asked this question yesterday and we were talking about that topic with Tanya, or what can you or I or anybody do about a situation like a group of kids running up and beating the living crap out of somebody kicking them in the head when're what do we do about it? And Cober told me yesterday fop, Yeah, that's the tip of the iceberg. It happens all the time. But it's not on video. If it's not on video, it doesn't get to five nine twelve nine two. We

don't see it, we don't talk. It's on video. This is on video, which is unusual. Most crimes aren't. And there's not a reduction in crime, right you hear have to have Pierrival saying you know the crime rates are down. No, it's not. It's down because cops are told don't pull anybody over because if you pull somebody over, you might have a warrant for their arrest. They got drugs on them, they got an legal gun on disability, and they don't want to deal with that, and don't

chase anybody. If somebody takes two steps away from a cop in Cincinnati, they're good to go. CoP's not going to chase somebody. So why is the crime down? They've decriminalized crime. We're not going to report it. But how many people actually know that? Or stooges and say, oh, well, see a reporter. The mayor said crimes down, So I believe it. Well, crime isn't down, but arrest are down because police, if you were a cop right now had chase some kid down an alley,

would you go after you? Probably would segment Would you go after them? Probably not because it's too many. We'll catch them later. Then they commit more crimes that are not reported. Seven of the top ten American cities will not report crimes to the FBI. Statistics what bad press, right? But what does f tab pirval do When Cincinnati becomes Detroit in a couple of years and there's no shops, there's no businesses, there's no nothing down there.

What's his excuse going to be We go downtown to watch the Reds, watch the Bengals, tql FC, and then get out because look at the storefronts that are absent downtown right now. And if you talk to people from Harrison and say you want to go downtown, no, no, because you get everything in. You get everything except the sports teams sports team, yes, everything else, Sike, what do you have in Butler County? You can go and enjoy Westchester, Mason, Warren County, everything, everything every right

there except the sports park. Yeah. They think if you take away the bus pass, improve the line of sight, put up some more cameras, suddenly crime is going to go down. The answer, yeah, oh absolutely, the same thing. They always bring it up. We need more you know, basketball leagues and all that that statistically shows nothing never happens with that. So what do you know. I use the example in Chicago and Brandon Johnson was running He's a he's a Marxist his self, professor Marxist who was

part of the teachers union that controls the city. He ran against a liberal guy who wanted to provide more money for the police and clean up downtown. Brandon Johnson got sixty two percent of the vote. The voter said, we need more of Lori Lightfoot, also known as Beetlejuice. We need more of her policies. Put beetlejuice in back. And I'm thinking, okay, right now, you can't go downtown in Chicago. You go to the Cubs, White Sox. They're complaining about the crime, and Jerry Reinsdorf is saying,

I got to get out of here. So the only logical way this transforms itself is for a city to be absolutely an utterly run into the ground, or there's nobody who lives there, there's no businesses, there's no nothing everybody. Then people have to either cease to exist or move somewhere else, and then later on somebody comes back in and rebuilds a city. Portland today declared

a ninety day state of emergency. The poop, the urine, the homelessness, the break ins, the lack of business that rapes, the robberies. Ninety days. Liberal Democrats have said enough is enough. Ninety days, we're going to try to clean up Portland. That's where Cincinnati is right now, and let's see what happens. Are they going to clean it up. No, of course, not no. Again. It has to totally and early fail and then maybe hopefully someday when everything is dust more or less, somebody

comes to old California and rebuilds everything. Oakland terrible, right, every major city is. And they have the answer, which is more cops paid, more money, more ships, common sense, judges, jails, lock them up. That's the air. You're dealing with reality. And these folks like the deal in idealism, which is restorative dealings. And about this, what

about that white supremacy? That's what we take it. Sig, Can you quickly give me some sports Willy the future reporters of prob service, Every local tame Star heating and air conditioning dealers, tamestar quality you could feel in northern Kentucky. Call Johnson Heating and Cooling get eight five, nine, four, seven, two sixty fifty one. Talk to Chris Smitherming about what to do.

Other men's got the answer. Plenty of college basketball tonight, Cincinnati Bearcats at West Virginia at six thirty, Saint John's and Xavier at six on fifty five KRC Florida and Kentucky at eight on ESPN fifteen thirty e COHL Hockey Tonight or Beloved Cyclones are downtown against Wheeling. Seattle Seahawks planned to hire Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator Mike Mike McDonald. What a football way head coach, the same DC that did not envelop a game plan that stops Travis Kelsey. He has

thirteen catches or eleven catches or whatever was. He's not as coach. He's going to succeed Pete Carroll. How's that possible? He was thinking about Taylor Swift. In fact, is Rock There's a reason two hundred more homes or building Harrison. People are leaving and going out to the hinterlands, and you should welcome those refugees. Yeah, welcome. Harrison used to be the hinter lands, and now because of Doug Abrams, Ray Akra and others, they

won't be Abrams. Is bad for Harrison. Put it that way, those are going to happen to Harrison. So you keep those refugees out trying to find a home that they're'll be bust in and not be have their heads treated like soccer balls. Bring them all in, just saying people are just gonna keep moving out further and further and further. They'll be in Leon at some

point. Just keep moving. But Oakland, Detroit, Buffalo, Washington, d c. Aportman and uh Winstrip told me the staff and the Congress have been told don't leave your place at nighte don't go out because you're going to be targeted for all kinds of street crimes. Don't leave for the staffers on Capitol Hill have been the victim of a crime in the past two years. You can't, you can't leave. And that's okay. Move to Harrison the new house, new house, new housing. I want to go to Harrison

Housing Housing. We need more rock. Thank you, thank you, Judge, the most of powers of excuse me. She's fired up, believe me, But she doesn't win. Does Justice Joe then come back and rule again with an iron grip. No, he doesn't come back. We're gonna be able to abdicate the Supreme Court and say I'm coming back. He's done his duty, He's done all that he can do. I'm just saying restorative justice will dominate Hamilton County. It's all goes a white supremacy and white privilege.

You understand that, of course, of course, Okay, and you need to be beaten and have your head treated like a soccer ball. After all, you know you are white with red hair. That's even worse. You know what I'm saying. I believe I'm moving to Harrison one of those new homes segment. God bless does those abrams We need more, need more, need some Abrams tanks. That's exactly what we need, Abrams tanks downtown.

We need social justice segment. I thought it was restorative justice r J r J. We need some RJ. So get me out of the student's report. Will he and utter of a ya overcast day here into tri State? Maybe we'll see the sun by July. According to Jennifer Ketchmark, there comes the son George Harrison's style. We leave you with the immortal words of the stud report. The manager doesn't run this damn city. And I'm even gonna go so far and say the mayor doesn't run this damn city. That's Chris

Netherman. But who does a lot of sense? The criminals can't get elected now after Piraval says the problem or the bus passes the golden ticket, that's the problem. Okay, you solve that and all the crime stop. But he said on five last night, the city is safe because they don't arrest anybody, and when they do arrest them, they're out immediately. Why wouldn't he come out and blame the real problem, which is bad or absent parenting.

That is the problem, That is the solution to probably ninety percent of our that stigmatizes his political base and votes. You can't do that, okay, I dare you say those things? Don't you believe in? Restorative US is brilliant segment. Please continue for all I got. We gotta go on seven tomorrow. W L. Dows Mercedes Benz of

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