2-26-24 Willie with Ken Kober - podcast episode cover

2-26-24 Willie with Ken Kober

Feb 26, 202418 min
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Episode description

After multiple instances of attacks on law enforcement by illegal immigrants, Willie brings on Ken Kober to discuss what can be done to protect police, and control large groups of people.

Transcript

Dark and walk in the glorious Monday afternoon in the Tri State. The weather. If you don't like the weather, just wait twenty four hours. We're going to go from cold to ice to snow to seventy degrees and sixty miles per hour winds and who knows what comes next Tuesday and Wednesday, plus later on we have on from Columbus, Jack Windsor to talk about what's happening in the state's capital. At two o'clock is Leland Viddert of News Nation, who

was on site for the South Carolina primary. And this is being spun by some as a victory for Nicky Haley when she loses her home state by twenty one points, that's a win. If that's a win, I don't want to see a defeat, my god. She's the two term governor of South Carolina and well respected, gets hammered at home by Donald Trump. But until then, Once again, last week, Channel nine ran a story still being investigated about an additional twenty nine year old man who had the crap kicked out

of him in and around Fountain Square and Government Square. And there's great concern from the social activist the Irish Roly crowd that something's got to be done, which is generally higher social activists a lot of money to walk around and do nothing. That's my editorial comment. But Ken Kober is the president of the FOP and he's also walking in the shoes of Dan Hills, Elmer dunnaway in the high heels of Kathy Harold and Ken Coober. Welcome again to the Bill

Cunningham Show. But I read something about a new judge in Hamlety County, and this is indicative of a general problem. It was simply misbehavior by one judge, you kind of let it go. But when it's representing so much about what's happening. Judge Samantha Silverstein, newly elected I think, took office a couple months ago, has enacted some policies and a little birdie whispered in my ear that a lot of the cops are not are quite unhappy with what's

going on. So, first of all, Ken Cober, welcome this Monday afternoon of the Bill Cunningham Show, and tell us your concerns about this new judge. Samantha Silverstein, Hi, Bill, thanks for having me. Yes, yeah, I've immediately got complaints as soon as she took the bench. She decided to an active rule that says cops are not allowed to sit in a jury box, so which has been a practice and is done now in

every other municipal courtroom. But hers if they want to sit in there and wait for their cake to be called, they can sit with the defendants in the gallery, or they can stand out the hallway and wait for their case to be called. Now, I'm going to go back in time because many

don't understand what we're discussing. As far back as I can recall, in the nineteen seventies, in municipal court, there's a jury box to the right or left of the bench, and there's generally eight to twelve seats in there, and it's traditional to have cops in uniform from Springfield Township CPD, Anderson Township, Harrison, whoever it might be, deputy sheriffs, and the cops are there in case their testimony is needed on a preliminary hearing or an emotion

first appearance, whatever it might be. It's good to have the person who arrested the defendant to be present so that the cop can say, you're on and this is what happened, and the cop signs an under oath Haffi day. But this is what the defendant did. And so the reason the cops are in the jury box is because if the cops are out in the hallway, then they interact with defendants and defense counsel and family members. Things can

get heated if they're sitting in this more or less the audience. You're sitting with once again, defendants who have not been arrested yet and or family members. And the gun, the mace is applicable to people to your right and left. It's like theater seating so many a half a century ago or longer. The judge and said, look, police officers in uniform with weapons, you sit in the jury box. And then if I need you to fill in the blanks, you're right there. And so have have you requested a

meeting? And what is the reason that Judge Silverstein, a brand new judge, suddenly said we're not going to do that anymore, breaking presidents of a half a century? Was there a reason? Given? My understanding is that she said, it makes it looks like these cops are on a pedestal, like they have their own place to sit, and she's just not going to allow it. She came out of the Public Defender's office and legal aid, what do your coppers say about that? How is that received? Well,

they're beyond frustrated. And like I said, not only is it a matter of they're not on a pedestal, they're there just because they're supposed to be their off duty. Mind you, granted they're being paid that these are people that have already worked second or third shift, you know, the day before,

the night before. You know, they're now waiting there, and there are certain safety concerns that if they're sitting there with the general public and they decide that they want to try to grab, whether it's their taser, their mace, they're gone. Those are safety concerns that these officers have that are real safety concerns. And it's the only judge in municipal court that has this practice. That's what's really concerning. And so the officers say, this is

dangerous for us, it's dangerous for the public. Have you sign a direct meeting with Judge Samanthus Silverstein or not? So I have myself and another a high ranking command staff officer within the police department reached out to her several times asking to meet just so we could understand her perspective. Maybe there is some kind of rationale that we don't know about that would make sense for this.

I couldn't understand possibly whatever they could be, but you know, just trying to be a decent person, I'm like, you know, let's just see what she has to say. And she's declined to meet with us, said basically, I'm not going to them. So that's kind of where it stands.

As far as the second and third shift. When I spent my years there, there are cops that are getting off at seven am, and they've been up for many times twenty four hours, and they're off duty in a sense because they're on duty, but they get paid overtime when they work past forty hours. And I've seen these cops kind of shuffle in and sit in the jury box so they can relax a little bit. And they also provide security for the courtroom because if the cops are outside in the hallway, if

something happens inside the courtroom. I've had it happen more than once. We're an officer in uniform sprung to duty because of the way the defendant was behaving, and there's not like armed bailiff in the municipal court anymore, so the cops are like there to provide security. And then it also to have a police officer, having just worked an eight to twelve hour shift, stand outside in the hallway waiting for the case to be called, meandering around. It's

just disrespectful to the police. And do you think, Ken Cober, this is a bigger problem by certain judges and Samantha Silverstein, I know almost all of them. She's brand new. She moved to our community about seven or eight years ago, and she came through legal aid and she beat Kirk Kissinger, who was I think a fine judge who understood the role of law enforcement.

Is there something larger, because if that's the signal, sense the police officers, who are the thin blue line between democracy and anarchy, they ought to get a little special place, they ought to be to sit down and jerry box away from the defendants they've just arrested. Is there any sense this is symptomatic of a larger problem. Well, sure it is. It just shows you the disrespect that's going on within law enforcement. You know that they

don't care. We're worried about the defendant and what the defendant might think more than we are the officer, and all I'm asking is to be equal. They are innocent until they're proven guilty. However, there are certain circumstances where an officer should be given a little bit of treatment that would be maybe a little bit better than the public, only because they've got weapons scrafted their shoulder to their waste, and we don't want anybody to try to be attacking these

officers. I don't think that's too much to ask, and clearly all the other municipal court judges don't feel it's too much to ask either, because that's a common practice. She is the only one that is doing this, and this is a young female, brand new judge who wants to implement kind of the theory he's had and been taught in law school and by Legal Aid and

by the Public Defender's Office about certain criminal justice issue at ken Cober. Do you have a sense the things have metastasized the last month with the two attacks downtown of a mob of teenagers, and then also Channel nine had a story Wednesday of last week that another twenty nine year old was jumped. I understand from Channel nine that thing is still under investigation, but you've been around a long time as a police officer, how would you describe the respect given to

law enforcement by members of the community. That's different now than it was ten or twenty years ago. There's much less respect than there ever was. I mean, just treating somebody with common decency is something that just doesn't occur anymore when you're talking citizen to citizens, So it's only spilling over into law enforcement.

And they've been nothing but emboldened and empowered by what we've seen in national politics local politics, where the disrespect for law enforcement's okay, and that is something that absolutely has to change. Can you give us some a police perspective. I see these well intended social activists like Iris Roli at Government Square during these bus transfers, acting as if, okay, we're down here, we're keeping an eye on things, and in reality, that's a band aid on

a cancerous tumor. Do you have some resolution or something to Is it the bus pass system? Should we not have dozens of dozens and dozens of teenagers out of the public school system transferring downtown? Is there some placebo that could be used here or is there a deeper problem? Well? Sure, let me first start by saying, you having these social activists downtown, it does

appear to be helping somewhat, but it's something that's just not sustainable. They're not going to be able to be there every day, every minute of every hour making sure that these kids are doing what they're supposed to be doing. So in the interim, it is a it's helping alleviate a little bit of the problem. The problem is the moment that they leave is the moment that these bad actors are the ones that are going to continue to convent these crimes.

So they have to look at the root of what is being caused, why are these things occurring? And the first thing is, and you hit on it is allowing kids from all fifty two neighborhoods to come down in a central location where they really don't like each other to begin with. It gives them a venue to fight. Yeah, and that's all it does. And you have kids from the East Side that don't like kids from the West Side, and oh, well, we'll see them down there tomorrow after school or

today before school and then we'll just fight then. So they've got to find a solution to moving these kids about around the city and understand that there are a lot of kids that come down there every day that don't do wrong. It's the same forty fifty sixty seventy kids out of five hundred that are the problem. And that's what they need to figure out, is how do we address these fifty sixty kids. Do you identify them and maybe you take their

privileges away to come downtown. Yeah, because if they don't have a bus pass, they're not going to be putting money in a machine to get on a metro bus. They'll stay in their neighborhood. And if they're going to come down and commit these crimes, maybe they should be staying in their neighborhood where they won't be subjected to the other kids that are just trying to go

to school and get an education. Ken kober I can say this, you can't the face of crime and Cincinnati is largely a black male face between the ages of fifteen and thirty years old, and that group represents a tremendous amount of crime committed. But the great majority eighty ninety ninety five percent of those kids from Tafft to Ache and the Western Hills or as good as my son or as good as your son. They're good people. They simply want to

get on with their life and stay out of trouble. And so the face of crime and Cincinnati is largely a young black male face. But the great majority of young black males have nothing to do with crime. In fact, they're the victims of crime. They're the ones who want the law to be enforced. But somehow those lines are blurred, and that if a racist through

somebody who's race, will think that young black males commit crimes. Well, the great majority of young black males have no desire to commit any crime. They're the victims of it and they want it stopped. And if we could separate from our society about three to four or two percent of young black males who repeatedly commit crime, life would be a whole lot better. And nobody

can say that because you can't use a racial element. But having spent years and years in the criminal justice system, go to room A and just watch the age and the race of those who show up as identified by their victims, and it's a black male face. It's rare to have someone other than

that commit serious crime. And the issue is this, There was a time about ten years ago when the inquiry put the face of every person killed in the city of Cincinnati, and one hundred percent of the faces were black, and that was deemed to be racist and racial and wrong, and the Inquire's never done it since. Because the great majority of black folks want the same level of law enforcement that you and I want, and the great majority want

that. They don't like living hiding behind the locked doors and not able to go out at night. That's a problem. But those who commit crime, the small percentage, the small number of young black males who commit crime, neil to be dealt with harshly to send a message this behavior is unacceptable. And what part of my little diet tribe there do you agree with or disagree

with? You're absolutely correct. I mean, the ninety percent of the people, ninety five percent of the people in this city don't go commit crimes, right, And it's equally as high as the amount of people that don't want crimes being committed. But a lot of these problems all come down, and it all starts at the same things in this young kid's house. Because the kid that at five or six years old, is screaming, throwing temper tangents

at the grocery store that isn't getting corrected. Is the same kid that at ten, eleven and twelve years old is now running to Kroger and you want a bag of chips and you know, and some pop. And then by the time they're fourteen and fifteen, they're stealing guns, but the cars downtown

and now they're shooting each other. It all starts at the home. And I don't think anybody, regardless of race, regardless of where you live in this country, regardless of your political feelings, no one is going to disagree that these problems all start within your home. That's what needs to be ultimately addressed in order to get something to change here in the society that we're living in. It must be culturally unacceptable to have children out of wedlock, culturally

unacceptable to commit crime, culturally unacceptable to fantasize about criminal misbehavior. It's got to be culturally unacceptable to be a bad dude. It's got to be more acceptable to have the kid that gets high grades, that's the kid that you

admire, and not the one who beat someone else up. But the government square bus stop and to go back thirty to forty to fifty years and say the problem began when fathers were paid not to be in the home, and fathers need to sit on sons more than mothers need to sit on daughters for some reason. The face of crime about ninety percent or more committed by males of whatever racial category. Males commit more, great more crime than females.

And young men need stern fathers who love them dearly and want to be with that person and correct them when they do things wrong. And at the end of the day when it doesn't work out that way, we need a juvenile court judge, and we need judges the municipal court and elsewhere all over the tri state to come down like a ton of bricks on young folks in the beginning when they commit crime so it doesn't metastasize, and not to give no

bonds and no sentencing. And what's happening is happening in every major city. Ken Cobra or the FOP, we understand every city in America has exactly the same problem. Now Here, it's not as bad yet as Detroit and Cleveland and Atlanta and Washington, d C. And Baltimore. But unless we have judges that respect law enforcement and separate the good from the bad and correct those

individuals through incarceration. We're going to have the same argument years from today, and it's not about race because the great majority of black folks have nothing to do with crime. But when wrongdoers are identified, they must be held accountable for their misbehavior and ken Kober. Lastly, in the good old days, there was one thousand, two thousand people showing up to take the police test at Duke Energy Center. Your friend Dan Hills told me about six months ago,

a year ago, we need more cops. If we would pay cops in Cincinnati to start one hundred thousand dollars to start, and then from there you move on up the ladder from there, wouldn't it be much easier to get cops instead of spending money on street cars for hundreds of millions of dollars. Would you agree that if we paid people more money, more would take the test and we'd have better law enforcement. Well, sure, there's no doubt. I mean you look at UPS and sat Ex and some of these

other places that are paying those salaries to start. If the city wants to do that, that would certainly go a long way. And we are just beginning contract negotiations so now would be a good time for the city to decide what kind of department and what kind of safety do they want to have in this city. As we go through this negotiation process, it's going to be interesting to see where their priorities truly lie, Ken Cober, thank you.

But Judge Shamantha Silverstein is part of the problem, not part of the solution. Much like Judge Carrie Bloom who controls juvenal Court. They got to do their jobs. It begins with the respecting law enforcement who every day put their

life on the line. The thin blue line between democracy and anarchy are cops and to show them this disrespect, to make the courtroom more dangerous, is not what a judge should do. Ken Cober, once again, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show, and Ken, we'll do it again. Thank you very much, Thanks and thanks for having me. Let's continue with more. Yeah, the face of crime in Cincinnati as a young black male fan, but the great majority of young black males have nothing to do

with crime. Let's continue. Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred WLW. What's holding you back from learning the language you've always wanted to know? Too hard, takes too long, not with Babbel. Babbel's lessons take just fifteen minutes a day. Fifteen minutes

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