Take a look behind the curtain with a real whistle blower, an American patriot prepared to embrace the uncomfortable truth. Because this program has no time for comforting lies. Here is civil liberties enthusiast, Second Amendment defender, and recovering FBI agent Kyle Seraphin. Hello my friends, welcome to the Kyle Seraphin show for Wednesday, August 30th. And your eyes are not deceiving you. Kyle Serafin is a man of many talents, but shape shifting is not one of them.
I am the real Steve Friend in today for our friend Kyle Serafin who is enjoying some much deserved time at home with the family. Had new baby arrive a few days ago. Had some recent reports and some pictures. Everything is good on the home front for Kyle, but I think he's taking some well deserved time, comforting the wife, comforting the kids. He actually told us yesterday that he took the other class of of characters over to the store to go get their first experience
with trick cereal. So I think Kyle's enjoying his time home and he will be back shortly. In the meantime, I'm here. You're real Steve friend friendly Friday edition a little bit early this week is going to be on Wednesday and I just want to open up with an appeal to you. I get it. I've been a consumer of the news and podcasts and news, radio and television for my entire adult life. I get it. There's a relationship you develop with your host, with your show.
It becomes part of your life. Kyle talks about it with me all the time. People feel like they really know him. He's talking to them, they're working out, they're making dinner, they're driving to work. They hear that voice and you feel like you really know the person. And I know it's just devastating when you don't have that voice, that familiar voice in your ear or on your camera screen when it comes time for the show that has become such a great part of your life.
And I'm going to do my best today. I think I've got some good content to bring to you and I'm not going to be alone. I'm going to be bringing on your friend, my friend GOB actual soon so that he and I can have a great conversation. There he is. And Garrett, are you excited? Now we can we can fill the chair for the time being. I like to compare myself to to missus dash, which is why we've titled the show today. Missus dash hosts Kyle is the the Turkey dinner that everybody
comes to to eat. And then every once in a while you have a little zany zest thrown in on. That's missus Dash, that's me. So today we're going to see if the seasoning is enough to carry the weight for the full one hour stream. I will do my best G OB actual. Can I count on you? Don't hold your breath. Well, well, better question is can we set the bar so low that
we will exceed it? Ryan is on the on the dials, can you queue up video number one for us because I think it's very important to under promise and over deliver. So can we exceed this video? Edit it When can we take some calls Ivan? Whenever we want. Do we? We have calls that are on there now. No calls yet. No calls yet. What number do people call to get on the air oven? Do we have that number? It's right there. No. Do I have the call number in front of me?
Oh, I'm so sorry. That's interesting. Interesting. Do we have any calls yet there, Ivan? No calls. Let's read some more about Scientology. Is Sean Hannity A Scientologist? Alec Baldwin posing the big questions tonight here. Do we have any calls here yet, Ivan? There you have it. That is the great Alec Baldwin pre rust execution. So he has been just crapping the bed, sorry for the language, for
years and years on end. But I mean, in his defense, I, I think that he has a very high belief of his own intellect. And he thinks of this job that that you and I are attempting to do right now is pretty easy. And that he just rolled in unprepared and was going to toss it to the callers. And unfortunately, nobody was interested. Yeah, you know, it's, it's typical. It's what we talked about a lot with our our former FBI colleagues. That hubris, it, it runs deep.
And Alec Baldwin, he couldn't escape it with his faux attempt at hosting either. So let's hope we do a little better than he does. All right, we'll give it our best shot here. We'll give it the old college try. I have queued up some some information that I'd like to have a discussion with you
about. It's something that's sort of been close to my heart, something that I've been working on in over the last 6-8 months with the Center for Renewing America. I think that this is the, the content that I've been trying to bring forward.
It's content that you and I, when we went and testified, tried to flesh out, but unfortunately there was too much childhood activity going on from the Congress people in front of us. They like to argue and and we didn't really get our chance to take our best shot. So I want to queue up the the first link, Ryan, if I could. And this is a top 10 weaponization issues that are within the FBI, something that published last April. And it's a top ten list, sort of keeping in the theme of the FBI
top 10 most wanted. But there are issues in here that I've got got into a little bit more detail, a little bit more granular on than just your your 3 minutes hit on a cable news station. And I'd like to flesh them out with Garrett, at least a few of them to see if he had some anecdotal experience or he wants to contribute. You always want to, you know, look outside what your own purview was. And you and I had two different experiences. We were actually pretty close to
each other at divisions. We, I was in the the Omaha division for the most part. I spent the latter end of my career the FBI in Jacksonville, but the lion's share in Omaha. And Garrett, you were in Kansas City, correct? Correct. Kansas City division. I was down in Wichita, KS for that entire time other than once I made SWAT. I traveled up to Kansas City quite a bit. Yeah. Did you guys train in Kansas City all the time or do you actually go out to other remote locations?
By and large, it was Kansas City. Occasionally we'd go elsewhere. Our range was out in Leavenworth, but yeah, we for the most part it was in in Kansas City and just the surrounding areas. Yeah, I mean, we did. We did our selection for new members jointly with Kansas City team a couple times. And I remember we went down and shot at the Leavenworth range one time and you guys were intense during selection, like your team was way more hardcore than the Omaha team was.
Yeah, yeah. I learned that after I got selected. They talked about how they had done the joint selections with Omaha for I don't know how long, but it sounded like quite a while. And then we did a selection right before I was set to leave and we did that one solo at that Leavenworth range that you've been to. And yeah, the Kansas City's team character certainly is a little more amped up than than Omaha and probably perhaps a handful of other teams out there.
Yeah, I mean, we would come out of these evolutions and once you're on the team, for those who don't know, you know, you go through selection and some teams get really hardcore, it's multiple days and they think of it almost like a Navy SEAL, bud, selection process could be multiple days. I've heard New York is like a week long. Omaha was basically one day. I mean, it was like an 8 hour smoke session where they'd run year round.
You'd be doing a lot of physical fitness and then they'd throw you into a scenario when you're out of breath and your heart's racing. You know, you'd have to make a good decision and it was just sort of to test your judgement and when what you're capable of doing. And I remember when we teamed up with Kansas City, they were way harsher on the scores then then we were in Omaha. But we were always desperate for bodies. I mean, we're always right at that cut line of do we have
enough people? And, and then I will say this, we, we kind of implemented 1 protocol that I thought was very valuable that I would like to see implemented around. And that was every evolution of the day. One of our teammates would do it with the selectees and the concept was one, that you're going to demonstrate, hey, we do
this too. And two, if nobody was willing to do that activity, then it probably should be scrapped from selection because, you know, it has that tendency to things that, well, I'm going to make it harder next year and then harder the next year. And then eventually it does become like Navy SEAL selection. And at the end of the day, it's a it's a four day a month training, part time SWAT team, not tier one asset. Yeah, for sure.
Like our, the, that last selection we did, it was a lot more ramped up and it was, it was more, it was more like 2 days. And as you know, I'm sure based on what you just said, a lot of the guys on the team, they get there and then they, they come up with it's like the, you know, the the shiny fairy in the corner of the room. It's like, OK, what, what the good idea fairy, you know, and, and all these guys come up with these ideas on how to smoke
these dudes and whatnot. And they're like three guys on the team who could hang. Yeah. And it's it's like, and you're going to put these news through it for two days that that doesn't make any sense. What? Yeah, it's a problem that exists from the FBI didn't make my top ten list though. So let's get into these items and I and I think you and I have hammered the first item on on the list. If you Scroll down and folks, this is at America renewing.com.
This is the Center for Renewing America's website. You can learn all about this organization. They do way more than dump on the FBI, but that is my specialty. That is close to my heart. So that is something that I produce. And if you were to go to americare-doing.com and you look at the issues tab, it is under big government where you will find this in a written format. So if you like to consume your information and through reading, you can.
And there's also some videos that I've discussed before on the Kyle Serafin Show podcast, and that is every Thursday, Thursday, Thursday, Thursday, Thursday, every Thursday at noon, we are dropping a two-minute, 2 1/2 minute video that is covering one of these issues. So it's a little bit more bite size, a little bit more consumable. So if we, if we pull up this, this link here and, and Ryan, could you get video #2 ready? I want to skip over the, the quota system, the IPM integrated
program management. I think I've kind of beat that to death, but I would like to to go to #2 and that involves the FB is National Security branch, which is expanding its role into domestic criminal investigations. Go ahead and run. Since September 11th, the FB is role has evolved from the law enforcement agency that we all sort of know from popular culture and through history to now it's a, a national security almost intelligence driven
agency. And when the terrorist attacks on September 11th happened and our military looked at those threats and addressed those threats, they did a fantastic job. The FBI was also tasked with the national security agenda. And after a few years there was just not the work for them to do. But it's federal government. It's a self looking ice cream cone. They have to justify their existence. And as a result of that, the focus shifted to home grown violent extremism.
And those were first generation Americans, recent immigrants who might share sympathies with outside actors like al Qaeda, al Shabaab, Boko Haram. That well, dried up after a few years. And now the FBI has turned its focus on to domestic violent extremism. President Biden in September 2022 had his speech in front of Independence Hall. Donald Trump and the Magra Republicans represented extremism that threatens the
very foundations. Republic and he identified MAGA Republicans and eventually softened that to be Republicans in general as being anti government extremism and radical ethnic extremism. Parenthetically, white supremacy. It's not a surprise that the FBI's two top priorities for its counterterrorism division are anti government extremism and white supremacy.
As a result of that. And that is a derivative of this creeping national security state that we've had that now has all these enhancements and these tools at their disposal and at their fingertips. You look at Section 7O2 of the FISA system, they're able to get their hands on to Americans personal information and weaponize the lever of power against their perceived threats to the ruling elite. All right, so I laid it out. What's your experience G OB actual? Have you seen this first hand?
Have you heard about it? What can you tell the audience? First hand experience. So I was assigned to the JTTF out of Quantico and it was almost immediate where I was like, you know, there's not a whole lot going on here. Doesn't seem like granted, in short order I did get a case that kept me really busy. You know, I actually, I was thinking about it this morning when I was reading the loop, which if you haven't subscribed, you should subscribe.
But there, there was a story in there about 5:00, defendants who were convicted for violating the FACE Act. And my blood started getting to a boil. Now, I don't know all the details. They didn't have a ton of them in there. It was just more about the conviction. But shortly after I got to Wichita, I got assigned a an abortion extremism case that kept me really busy for about 18 months. It ended up being kind of a nothing burger. It was at first it was a murder
for hire allegation. And I think everybody probably by now knows that based on my faith and what not that I'm I'm pro-life, But that doesn't mean that there aren't some pro-life people out there who may think it's OK to attempt to kill an abortion Dr. or something along those lines. So those things do need to be investigated if they're
legitimate. Now, other than that case and, you know, maybe one or two others that were a little more busy on the JTTF, the vast majority of people on the squad, not a lot to do. And so, you know, like you said in the video, it it's, it's become more of this intelligence gathering agency. And I think that was Hoover's goal, to be honest. And I think after 911 it really
intensified. And you know, you mentioned al Shabaab and some other groups, ISIS, al Qaeda, whatever that that threat still exists, you know, globally to some degree. But now, although all those weapons like seven O 2, they have been turned inward. We, we now know that the FBI has violated their seven O 2 use authority. So they've broken the law. By the way, you know, I know Chris Ray likes to act like it's a policy violation and here's a new virtual Academy. But that's a Fourth Amendment
violation when they do that. And they have done it hundreds of thousands of times, if not more in the past decade or so. Yeah, Yeah, I agree with you. And Ryan, could you get the second news link ready here because I'd like to discuss this And I think it's it's sort of combines the the national security weaponization with the the quota system.
It's it it's basically not necessarily a puzzle pieces that are fitting together, but I think of it more of like everybody's rowing their oars in the same direction here. And it's resulted in an out of control FBI. And this was a a recent public release statement Office of Public Affairs that came and it's entitled Pakistani Dr. sentenced to 18 years in prison for attempting to provide
material support to ISIS. And this came out last Friday and the FBI was putting it out on a social media and touting itself. Let me see what your reaction is on this, Garrett. I'll read this here. It says, according to court documents, Muhammad Masood, age 31, a licensed medical doctor in Pakistan, was formerly employed as a research coordinator at a medical clinic in Rochester, MN.
That's the Mayo Clinic. And he arrived under under a week a work visa between January and March of 2020, right before the the COVID lockdowns. He used an encrypted messaging application to facilitate his travel overseas and join a terrorist organization. That's going to be ISIS. He made multiple statements about his desire to join ISIS, and he pledged his allegiance. Now, who did he pledge it to?
I don't know. Masood also expressed his desire to conduct a lone wolf terrorist attack in the US. So in February, he purchased a plane ticket from Chicago to Jordan, and he was planning to travel to Syria, but because of the shutdowns, he was unable to do that. So then he agreed to fly from Minneapolis to Los Angeles to meet up with an individual who he believed would assist him with travel via cargo ship to deliver him to ISIS territory.
He travelled from Rochester to LAX and upon arrival he was taken into custody by the FB is JTTF in Los Angeles Garrett? Does this have all the classic hallmarks of an FBI entrapment? You know, I wish I could say it sounded like a Jack Carr novel, but in reality, yes, it this is, this is the playbook that the FBI has been using at least since 9:11.
They, I'm guessing just based on what you read, that they got in touch with him with the CHS or an undercover employee and online undercover and they started grooming him for this attack that he otherwise would have done, which is entrapment.
But then they, you know, their argument there is, well, no, just because we offer up the idea to join ISIS or, you know, whatever, whatever horrible crime, fill in the blank with it. And that doesn't mean that we're entrapping them because they agreed to do it. So that shows that they're predisposed to doing it. But as anybody who's lived, I don't know long enough to learn to speak, human nature plays a factor here.
And a lot of these people who fall for these entrapment schemes, they maybe they're a little mentally unstable, maybe they're young, maybe they're an immigrant and they are having a hard time, you know, adjusting to society in America. All sorts of things come into play here. And so in order to make friends or, you know, seem amenable to other people's ideas, they end up on this path to pledging allegiance to ISIS or whoever, and then getting arrested at the
airport by the JTTF. And then those agents get to go back to the office and say, hey, we stopped a real terrorist. When in reality, just like the TSA, they haven't stopped a real terrorist in recent memory. Yeah, I think we're we're speculating a little bit. I mean, look like it could be a righteous case, but it just has all those features that you and I have become more and more familiar with as we look at it
with more skeptical eye. Couple of things here that that just screamed out to me about a problem. He came on a worker's visa. So you in theory he was vetted to come into the United States. So there was a failure there. I want to know if there's any accountability held up there. But it also made me think, did they let him in knowing that he would do this so that they could have this ISIS case?
And, and I think what bolsters that argument is the fact that they brought this charge on him in 2020. It was just sentenced last week in August of 2023, which means fiscal year 2020-2021, 2022-2023. That is 4 fiscal years. The Minneapolis division has an open ISIS investigation where they actually don't have to do any work. They're just waiting on the prosecution to to flesh out the charges on it. And I don't know why it would take that long.
I didn't work the national security sphere for that long. It seems to be a pretty extensive, but I guess, you know, it's not unusual as we've seen with the January 6 years, they just kind of sit idly for years upon end without having their day in court. And I think that that ties to the IPM, the integrated program management quota system, because you're able to check that box, you're able to get that ISIS
case. And and you might have entrapped somebody who was not predisposed to actually carrying out an attack or joining ISIS or maybe you intentionally let him in the borders of our country so that you could check the box on having that case. Right, which, you know, we've talked about that a fair amount too over the these last few months about IPM and stat padding and, and how this all tends to work when you have a look behind the curtain and
think of, think of that. And again, like you said, it's a lot of it is speculative. But if they let this person in just so they could have that ISIS case open, I mean, to me, that either shows, one, how foolish and incompetent you are to allow someone like that into the country, or two, it shows that you knew that they were not an actual threat. But you could pump up your numbers and get that ISIS case open and then leave it open in perpetuity for four years at
least until sentencing happens. And then, you know, close it down with your final, you know, big stat claim of sentencing and whatever other stats you can throw in right at the end. Yeah, I guess they're not going to get the disruption because he's a lone wolf. But they still have the ISIS case, which is is pretty, pretty sexy. They they love to have that ISIS case.
They had that that pressure from my my executive management when I was in Jacksonville Division. I want to move on to the next item on the list before I do. You mentioned Catholic vote, so let's pay some bills here real quick, folks, Catholic vote being one of the the sponsors of the program, Kyle Serif and show it is a fantastic resource. You don't have to be Catholic to enjoy it. You don't have to be Christian to enjoy it. Sign up for the loop from
Catholic vote. And I will say, and I've had this discussion with Kyle and with Garrett. It is one of the most, one of the best aggregators of news that sources that I have and I'm on the news and I'm in in the fight every single day. And I have my regular websites I'd like to visit. The loop has certainly expanded my horizons. I've gotten access to to news that is relevant to my life and into what's going on in the
world and in our country. And it's things that are not covered by some of the more traditional news aggregated websites. I, I certainly have found great, tremendous value to that and they are a very devoted sponsor to the program. So I would encourage everybody to sign up for the loop at Catholic vote. And secondly, Ryan, could you queue up the the Patriot Cooler ad and we can pull up the visual on that.
And this is the OG sponsor of the Kyle Seraphin show, Patriot Coolers. We have a running joke whenever somebody who's who criticizes Kyle or any one of the members of the suspendables, they always like to say, I've supported you since the beginning. So it's become sort of a laugh line to us whenever we see that. But is the case with Patriot Cooler, they have supported Kyle since I'm getting the first sponsor he ever had and then they make a fantastic product.
It kept Ryan nice and cool in his visit to the border. Why don't you go ahead and run that, Pull that up there, Ryan. Here in Lagula, Texas, out here tracking illegal aliens that are crossing the border. Behind us is the Rio Grande. Over there it's 105° out. Sweating my ass off. Couldn't be hotter honestly. Backpack, gear, you name it. The only way I'm staying hydrated is thanks to Kyle
Seraphin and Patriot coolers. These 32 ounce American Pride Patriot Tumblr has kept my drinks ice cold this entire trip. You won't find a better guy or a better company that supports American Patriots, that supports our values, that's willing to go above and beyond to make sure that the brave men and women, the whistleblowers that are coming forward have a source of income. They donate to veterans. They do it all.
They sponsor the Kyle's Hair Food podcast and that's a company that I want to be around. That's the company I want to support. Visit patriotcoolers.com/kyle's fan and get 10% off the latest Patriot Coolers. Tumblers. Coolers. Probably got some sweet merch, coffee mugs, coffee cups, you name it. Grab yourself some, grab your friends and family. Some support the show. Yeah, my name's Ryan Mehta. Catch you guys in the next one. Well done, Ryan.
We were talking before the show about, you know, is that heat a dry heat? And he said it's a hot heat. And the Patriot cooler got him through that. So let's let's move on though on this list from from this list of weaponization, this top ten list again available at America renewing.com under the under the issues tab, Big government. You can watch videos for it or actually read it.
And if you queue up video #3 Ryan, This is going to involve the FBI is weaponizing process crimes and reinterpreting laws to initiate pretextual prosecutions in order to persecute political enemies. Go ahead and roll it. In federal law enforcement, you have process crimes that are normally derivative of a legitimate investigation. So let's say that there's a bank robbery. The FBI is investigating it. They have their suspect while they're interviewing him, he lies to them.
And that brings in an entirely new felony charge where you're lacking candor with a federal agent. If you don't launch an investigation on the premise of he may have lied to a federal agent, there's normally an underlying righteous investigation going on. Well, the FBI is now contriving reasons to contact their perceived enemies politically and as a result of that has spun up investigations against them. Can you look to no greater
example than General Mike Flynn? Now director James Comedy has publicly stated that in the early days of the Trump administration he sent 2 agents to speak to Mike Flynn. The premise of it was the Russia collusion case which has been sort of exposed as a hoax. Even high-ranking administrators within the FBI mentioned that. What is the point of our conversation with Mike Flynn and in written format said is it to get him to lie so we can charge him with a crime or get him
fired? That is a perfect example of the FBI weaponizing a process crime to go after somebody who they perceived to be problematic. Reinterpreting laws is a problem that has been beefed up recently and you see the most recent obstruction of or impeding a official proceeding that we see with so many of these January 6 subjects. That is a law that was drafted in the aftermath of the Enron
scandal. It was part of the Sarbanes-Oxley Acts, and it was drafted with the intention of stopping accountants from shredding documents that were going to be used to prosecute the Enron executives. It was essentially an evidence tampering law that was put in place. Well, that law is now being reinterpreted and applied to hundreds of people who walked to the Capitol, did not commit any acts of violence or vandalism, but it's a way to charge them with a felony as opposed to a
misdemeanor. And interestingly enough, that same law has been reinterpreted yet again to charge Donald Trump for his involvement with having classified material at Mara Lago. All right, immediate reactions to that Garrett. There's so much there, and as an agent, I used the threat of 18 USC 1001 numerous times because it's a good way to try and ensure that the person you're speaking to is going to be honest with you.
I've never have charged it, never one time, even when there were times where it's like, OK, I already told this guy he's going to be obstructing us if he lies. And then he says something that you know is a lie because you did a thorough investigation. And then you hit him with that. And you say, well, I know you're lying. And here's the the proof. And you know, one case I'm thinking I was showing him still shots of security camera
footage. And then it was all right, I don't want to talk to you anymore. And it's like, OK, you still don't charge it. And then you use the example of Michael Flynn, it's probably one of the quintessential examples out there because I think it was a napkin that the the FBI agent used. And I forget who it was, but they wrote, you know, are we trying to actually do a righteous investigation here or are we just trying to to get him essentially?
And you know, thankfully some of Michael Flynn's attorneys, the Banal Law Group are some of my attorneys. So I'm quite familiar with that. I think back in March they filed suit against the DOJ suing civilly on behalf of General Flynn. And for for those of you out there who like to sleuth the Internet, if you can find, it's easy to find, but their their complaint, it's, it's, it's a fantastic primer on what was happening during those years because sometimes we forget the details.
But then furthermore, I am now also on the receiving end of being accused of processed crimes like that. As you know, Steve, as you've talked about before, you know our friend, Representative New York D Dan Goldman, and he knows better or should because he was in AUSA prior to buying his seat. 10 years, man 10 years in the Southern District of New York. Yeah.
So he you would think he would know better when he says that me mistaking my attorney fees being paid for by a foundation with them actually being pro bono, he knows that that's not actually obstruction. Your mistake was it not not labeling it as being as as generous as it actually was. Right. It's like, OK, I mean that go, I guess if if you're going to charge me and arrest me for that, I mean go ahead, I suppose, but.
Yeah, I mean well. And I've, I've pushed back and I said the Republicans owe you a perjury or some sort of 1001, which is again, lying lacking candor with a federal agent, some sort of lying to the federal authority, referral to the DOJ, which you know, it's in the hands of a Democratic apparatchik being in the Merrick Garland, the general or Lisa Monaco, who's more likely just pulling all the strings.
So nothing's going to go there. But they owe you that referral for somebody like Christopher Wray, who's now been provably lied to Congress on multiple occasions, or an Elvis Chan who's lied about the the FBI messing around with Twitter. I think the examples are rampant here. Now let me ask you this. Have have you ever considered walking into AUS as office and saying, hey, I think I got 1001 charge? Can we can we run with that? Never, never, never, never. I mean, nobody in their right
mind would do that. But like you said in that video, it's it's become weaponized and that's exactly what it is. Yeah, I think the crimes are and from both aspects of it. So the the 1001 charge is the if everything falls through and we we that the drugs got flushed down the toilet and then the witnesses are in the wind and we can't find them at the very last, we have to put this guy in jail for everything that he's
done. It's the, what they did to puts it the mafia guy, you know, it's a tax evasion. It's it's the, the, the fall safe that we are going to charge him with lying. So this is, this is the way that we're going to and it's a low grade felony. So you can get people to plead guilty to a misdemeanor if, if necessary, but it's a fall back. And then you combine that with the, the other side of it being the obstruction of an official proceeding that we've seen with all these hundreds of people.
January 6th, again, it's a felony and people are getting charged with misdemeanor trespass or parading, whatever the the federal statutes were. And they were attacking this obstruction of official proceeding on top of that, because that was enticing them to plead guilty to the misdemeanors. Otherwise they would face the felony and that would be guaranteeing time behind bars.
Right. You know, some troll on Twitter yesterday was ask Kyle and you I might have even been included in there too, but I think he was more directing that Kyle. It was like simple question, simple answer. What do you think about January 6th? And it wasn't even what do you think it was? What are your feelings? It's like, you know, this has nothing to do with feelings, but let's think about January 6th
for a minute. Anyone who's worked in law enforcement should know that there were people based on just public information, not let alone the video and what not that we got to see as agents when we were, you know, covering these leads. Anyone with a rational brain can look at that and say there are people here who should be charged with felonies. They're battering police officers, they're breaking windows to enter, etcetera.
You know, there there was enough of that going on that would keep agents across the country somewhat busy and and going after true perpetrators that ought to be charged. And then there are countless people who are standing behind the velvet rope because they showed up two hours later and there was no fracas going on. And now they're like, oh, people are going in and I guess I'll go in too.
Are we really going to devote and dedicate the full-fledged power of the FBI, the world's most powerful law enforcement agency, to that? The answer should be no, but we know the answer has been yes, which which just goes to show even more how politicized it is. And I know people will say, ah, well, you're just a mega Trump hack Cash Patel J6 supporter. And it's like none of that could be further from the truth.
But if you just think about it from a rational, reasonable law enforcement perspective, both things were happening. Yet we're, we're, we're throwing the book at every single person who was involved and trying to weed them out as much as we can. When in your, in your case, you could have been going after child porn possessors and people who were doing horrific crimes like that. But no, we're going to go after the grandma standing behind the velvet rope.
It doesn't make any sense. Yeah, and I think the entire incident, I think Kyle's compared to the the great Horse Shack test. And unfortunately, too many people have to kick a side. It's, you know, either it was all good or it was all evil. And I think we have to be certainly as investigators, you have to have the ability to hold more than one thought in your mind at the same time.
And and you can say that somebody committed a crime and they can still be entitled to their due process rights and their civil rights. And then that doesn't change that fact in this country, which was one of my concerns. I mean, look, we had a guy who was accused of a felony, probably was a righteous investigation. But when he says to you, I will cooperate and then you don't talk to him for a year and a half and instead elect 18 months
later to send SWAT to his house. That sounds a lot like Waco and Ruby Ridge to me, where you're setting yourself up to have a fall where you're going to have a risk to that person's safety, the the personnel safety. It's easily foreseeable. You know, you're not taking a big leap intellectually on that and I and I think that that that's been too often the case with so many of these January 6 cases. And I and I think that also it's not perfect.
It's a very messy situation Anytime you were dealing with actually millions of people all engaging in independent actions at one location there. There's nothing that's again back to the puzzle. It doesn't all fit perfectly. There's not Doctor evil behind the scenes, you know, with the cat who's paying, who's trying to set up all these, these, these Trump voters to, to go to prison. And then I don't think that the the Proud Boys were going to
overthrow the government. I, I, I tried to itemize some of my broad strokes of it and then see if if you agree or if you have some additions to throw in there. I think that there were people that engage in violence. I think that there were professional provocateurs that were there who were dressed in the the MAGA gear, but they were in fact trying to make them look bad and, and, and, and undercut
what their efforts were. I think that there were informants that it infiltrated organizations and that as we discussed and then we can discuss later on this list if we get have time to get to it. The informant protocols are broken and they will push groups of individuals to do things that are not predisposed to do. I think that the groups like the Proud Boys or the Oath Keepers or these other organizations that have been painted as these domestic terror groups that were
trying to overthrow America and seize our democracy at tip 2, Special Agent in Charge Sherry Young.
So the Jacksonville field office, I think they went there after being frustrated for about a year in 2020 of sitting and watching Antifa and BLM tear up our cities and seeing these avocado toast kids that we'll see later on in this program, a video of. And they said, I'm going to go there and give them the butt whipping that their daddy never gave them, which is why they had the the the body armor and the
helmets and no weapons. But they just were prepared to get into a fistfight, which, you know, you shouldn't intend to ever get into a fistfight, but I think you can wrap your head around that as a testosterone driven male. And then lastly, and this is I think the largest component that nobody's talked about. When was the last time that you saw a miracle on 34th St. Probably last Christmas. Oh, man, Oh, you got little little girls.
OK, the scene in the courtroom when they walk through with all the letters from Santa Claus. Kids, make sure you write Santa Claus this year, by the way, to prove that Santa Claus is real. I think that there was an element of that amongst large groups of the crowd that they're going to walk through the people's house, which is supposed to be the people's house. We're going to redress our grievances and express ourselves to these Congress people.
Because President Trump brought a lot of people to the political fold who were very novice at it and very naive. I think not really come to the conclusion that you and I haven't so much of. Like, it's just this game.
Nobody's really going to do anything, but they thought walking through the Capitol will demonstrate to these people the magnitude of the support behind Donald Trump and the questions behind the outcome of 2020 election and the Congress people will be floored like the judge in that case, a Miracle on 34th St. was and will be then driven to actually to an audit of the election. Yeah, you know, hat tipped you for another fantastic analogy. I love those.
I don't know how you come up with them, but. You're metaphorically speaking by Steve friend. That'll be that'll be my next big hit. But yeah, I, I mean, I think that's a good point because who hasn't done something out of anger that they regret? Who hasn't said something out of malice or spite that they regret to? I mean, most of the time we do it to a loved one, which which is an interesting rabbit hole to
jump into. But in this case, yeah, you had all these people who thought I'm going to show them. I'm going to show whoever they are, Congress, the left, the swamp, whatever, whatever they whoever they are, we're going to we're going to show them what? That we mean business. OK, that was dumb, but they did it. It happened. And I think you're right.
They thought, OK, we're going to be taken seriously, but what they've failed to realize, and it's something I have probably realized a lot more in the last year, especially with testifying and all of that. They don't nobody cares. They're not they, they're not going to take you seriously. They're it's just, it's a game, like you said, it's a game. It's a game to the the political class, those in Congress, and it's all about to them moving the pieces around the
checkerboard and. US, you know, lay people and us peasants, we think that it all matters a lot more than it does. And honestly, it should matter a lot more than than it does to most people. But we have for decades now, I think we have fallen away from what this nation was founded on and how it is supposed to be buying for the people and it truly is buying for the elites now. And I, I just don't think a lot of people on January 6th or a lot of people today have come to that realization.
And it's a sad one to come to. But for me at least, that that's that's the truthful position to land on. It is, I think we both landed there and unfortunately or fortunately, we we found each other and we've been able to commiserate together and, and talk about these issues and try to push them out to the public as much as we can on this fledgling podcast whenever Kyle let's us come on as guests. And then today getting get in the rain, getting to sit in
Captain Kirk's seat. So let's let's move on to the item number 4. Again, this is America renewing.com. This is a list of weaponization items that are within the FBI. If you go to the website inside of the issues tab, the government, you can watch the videos attached to it and also read and share it around as much
as you can. This is going to be issue for Ryan. This video for and it involves the FBI's intelligence analysis capability increasingly dictating its operations and it's turning the FBI into an intelligence agency with a law enforcement capability. Go ahead and run it. We recently saw an intelligence analyst out of the Richmond field office draft this report pertaining to radical traditional Catholics.
Now, if you read that report, it's a grievance list against individuals who prefer the Latin Mass hold a view that is pro-life, pro traditional marriage, pro border sovereignty. And if you pull back from that, it was not only sourced improperly, where they only used left-leaning sources such as the Southern Poverty Law Center, The Atlantic, salon.com, but it targeted those individuals for infiltration, to recruit sources.
And they wanted to recruit people to inform on their fellow parishioners for holding views that are shared by a large swaths of the American population. And the overriding theory behind that report was these people could become radicalized against the government. So that's a thermal exhaust port that Kyle was able to bring out a few months back with the radical traditional Catholic memo from the Richmond field office.
It is the memo, the Intelligence Report that Christopher Wray lied about when he said it was completely isolated and within the Richmond division has now been exposed that elements and personnel from Los Angeles and Portland were involved in that as well. So again, where's that perjury referral Judiciary Committee? I think we, we need to have that, that brought up, but I think it's, it's a larger issue.
And I, I've kind of come on this, this idea from that report and I've, you know, I've read through it and I know you have as well. The word in there and in, in the full disclaimer, the, the entire report needs to be tossed into the dustbin of history. It's abhorrent and disgusting. The word that disturbs me most is opportunity. And they said that the Catholic parishes are an opportunity.
Well, an opportunity for what? Well, in that case it's an opportunity to recruit parishioners to inform on their fellow parishioners and give us information about them becoming radicalized, anti government extremists. So the FBI is always looking for opportunities. That's not in keeping with traditional law enforcement. Law enforcement's goal is to keep crime down.
But because of the integrated program management quota system, where it turns that on its head, you're incentivized to hit the stats, drive the stats up. So you're always looking for opportunities. In this case, it was an opportunity for a confidential human source with the Pakistani doctor from the Mayo Clinic. That was an opportunity for a domestic terrorist case, especially an ISIS case, which is very valuable and very hard to get now. And there's always looking for an opportunity.
Look at the military of the the Michigan case and Gretchen Whitmer, The Wolverine watchman. That was an opportunity for domestic violent extremist case. The FBI is always looking for opportunities. Your thoughts? Always, always looking for opportunities. I I agree. Another case that many probably don't know about that is a another great example of this. It was decided by the Supreme Court in 2020. It's called Tanzan verse Tan beer.
I know of this case because my very first SSA is named in the case. When she was an agent in New York, she was working on the JTTFII. Don't remember exactly what aspect of JTTF, if it was CI or IT or whatever it was, but her and her squad mates started approaching members of the greater Islamic community and trying to turn them into CHSS. And they threatened them with all sorts of things that they cannot threaten people with. Like we're going to put you on a watch list.
We're not going to let your you leave the country or we're not going to let you back into the country and all sorts of stuff like that. But it gets worse because these people said, I don't want to do that. I don't want to work against my community. I don't want to work against people who believe the same way I believe. I just want you to leave me alone. Well, her and her squad mates,
they didn't leave them alone. They did put them on terrorist watch lists and they did harass them to the point of, you know, some of them losing jobs and all sorts of stuff. Like if you dive in this case, it's heart wrenching. And we're seeing that again now with this, this Catholic document. It was it's all about that opportunity and different sects of religions. The government in this country has forgotten that we have a First Amendment that we can worship whoever we want or no
one if we want. I mean, you all should turn your life to Jesus Christ and recognize that he's your Lord and Savior. But in this country, you're free to talk like I just talked about whatever God or or faith, God or no God, that you want. But the FBI has said no. We're going to use it as an opportunity to drum up terrorism, domestic terrorism, you name it. Yeah, I mean, I mean, I think the FBI itself sort of views itself as almost a religious entity where you have the cult
of the director. He's he, he is the he's the leader of this this organization. And you have to express fealty to it. I mean, that's why I had these, these moments where my had meetings with my executive management where they were like just floored that I could possibly think that I had an oath of office not above my duty to the FBI. And it's, it's very disturbing when you're in that room.
It's I almost had that sense of the, I cannot remember the life of me that, that movie where they, they start chanting one of us, one of us, one of us. And it was, it was almost, you know, just, they had that, that sensation and they just wanted me to, they, they really thought I was going to be like, you know what, you're right, I'm one of you and I will go back to work right now. But you know, the the toothpaste was not out of the tube with that, with somebody like me at
that point. How old do you think the intelligence branch is in the FBI? Man as an actual branch. Yeah, as an official branch. I'm going to take a stab at it and say that that was spawned out of 911, but it could. Go, that's a good guess. It's a good guess. It's actually younger than that 2014 brainchild of James Comedy. Wow.
So for any argument for continuing to fund this, this FBI as it currently stands, which I think any reasonable objective analysis of the American people are not getting $11 billion worth of value for the expenditure that it's giving to the FBI. But oh, we can't, we can't possibly operate as a country without the FBI as its presently constituted with this intelligence branch.
It's less than 10 years old. And I think it's also worth noting that it creates dozens of these senior executive service positions and they're they should be limited because they're often populated by people who have checked the box enough to promote, but they just are not good at or even proficient enough at the promotion process to get the the
sexier job. So they kind of like put them into the land of Misfit toys and intelligence, like our friend Jennifer Moore, who came back from the land of Misfit toys to ascend to executive assistant director of human resource. Yeah. And then she signed the security clearance death warrant for all of us. And miraculously, I don't know if we've told the the audience this before, but she was deposed on June 2nd and then she retired on June 3rd. Is that suspicious to anybody?
Seems suspicious to me. Yeah, and they found a nice landing spot for herself over at General Electric. I'm sure she's making some Boco Boco pay right now more than her, her salary and her bonus structure was within the within the FBI. So, you know, definitely well done, good and faithful servant of the regime.
And Speaking of that, and we can pivot away here in the final minutes off of this list, I think anybody who wants to to go in and we can talk about in the future, some more parts of it. I think they're they're worth what going into. I'd like to get carrots perspective on it. But just talking about Jennifer Moore, I'd like to do 2 palate cleanses to send everybody off on their hump day. One is going to be a just a question from me and the other
is going to be a final video. So first question, are you familiar with the game Kiss, kill, or Marry? Yeah, I am. Right, well, so just just to prevent any sort of censorship or accusations of violence, secure division, I know you were watching the Kyle Seraphin show. We're going to slightly change this game to kiss, jail or marry. OK. And for those of you who don't know, I'm going to name three names and Garrett will be responsible for what he would do
to each one of them. He would either give them a kiss, put them in jail or marry them. So prepare yourself G OB actual for this list. Christopher Wray, Jennifer Moore, Nicole Parker. Oh man. Let's see here. I've thought this through. You want to give, I can give you my analysis. No, no, no, I'm going to. I'm going to go into a cold. Oh, man, OK, I'm going to, I'm going to kiss Chris. I'm going to jail Jen, and I'm going to marry Nicole Parker. OK, reasons, Reasons Anyone you
want to go into or is it just? I Jen Moore has a special place in my heart for what she's done to all of us. And so she can go to jail for that. And then Chris Ray, you know what I can give? I can give him a kiss. I can look past his misdeeds and incompetence and, and give him some love and a whisper in his ear that I think he needs to turn his life to Christ. On my way out. And then Nicole Parker to marry because I'm thinking longevity long term.
I think I could get past some of the, oh, how, how, how would I, how would I phrase this? Some of her grasps at the spotlight. And I think, I think we could make it work long term. OK, I like it. I respect it. I have put way more thought into this than any human should. And let me give you what my rationale is for what I've done to send Ryan. Let me let me get to your thoughts too. Should I get approval or not? This is metaphorically speaking, of course. Security division.
You cannot marry Jennifer Moore because you either wind up dead or in jail for child porn, as both of her prior husbands are.
So that's off the board, right? So I'm going to marry Christopher Wray. And the reason that I'm going to marry Christopher Wray is he is a government bachelor who lives apart from you in Washington DC. You can live in a sweet Atlanta mansion, live the life of the guy who earned $9 million and just be like a stay at home husband and not have to fulfil your husbandly responsibilities with any sort of regularity. So I think that that's the way you got to go on that one.
Right, I like it all right. So and then and you got to you got to jail Jennifer Moore. I mean, obviously she's she's ruined countless lives and has landed in this spot of luxury for herself and demonstrate herself to just be a flat and evil person. And and I guess he then you leaves you with kissing Nikki Parker, who's been affectionately referred to as FBI Barbie. And I don't do that with any sense of satisfaction or
pleasure. It's just to mess up her $200 makeup that she got for her photo op in front of the cameras at the arrest operation that she had no involvement with. I like it. I mean, we we landed relatively I. Mean I'm, I'm kind of disappointed. I devoted, you know, hours of my life of analysis. I mean, like, you know, it's been, it's been well documented that Steve friend is a long distance runner. So like 2 hours a day. I mean, there, there were runs that was just devoted to this
question. I mean, that'll get you through those long runs as you play out every single scenario. I I have a question now, though, for the security division. Who's watching? Are they still going to try and claim that you're homophobic or that this show is homophobic? Because, I mean, you admitted you would marry Christopher Wray? Not that there's a problem with that, to quote the great Seinfeld, correct. That is. That is an excellent point.
So I, I guess you could be a homosexual who incites violence unless you're in Covenant Christian School in, in Tennessee, but you certainly are not homophobic. So excellent point GOB actual. And we want to pivot to our last video here. This is again, close to my heart. It's going to be close to Garrett's heart. We were we actually did the real law enforcement. This is a video from the protest in Nevada that was preventing traffic from reaching the.
Was it the Burning Man ceremony? Ryan, can you queue up video #5 This is what real police work looks like, unlike the FBI, which is law enforcement cosplay. Let's go ahead and run it. Did anyone get that? Yeah. She was she was just standing here. What the? There you have it, father of four small children. I assume that you were accustomed to the the child that just plants himself on the floor of the supermarket and start screaming and crying like an out
of control toddler. Fortunately, these people are old enough to drive out now. I, I would like to contrast this with what we talked about with the arrests that went on with the street side preachers like in Wisconsin. And I think that it's worth noting because like, it's funny, that guy could rolls out. I had to, I had to find a different video. The, the one that's unedited and has no, no bleeps in it. I want to keep it family
friendly. But he comes out with his shorts on and his tactical boots because it's Nevada and burning hot. But it's like such a dad move and he's screaming like, get on the ground. I'm like, that's, that's what I'll compare right there. But it's important to note that like if the street preacher had been obstructing traffic, I would expect no different treatment. It's not anything ideological.
It's the way the, the actual behavior of the people there where they're putting their beliefs in front of people. And if you want to do that, it's civil disobedience. There are consequences for that, you know, and there's there's the, the piper needs to be paid. And this guy was not afraid to be accused of being overly aggressive and he was very professional with them and, and, and was arresting them. They could scream how they were being hurt.
But it was pretty clear to me at least just watching the arrest they had the handcuffing techniques were were pretty, pretty standard. Yeah, I agree. You know, it's you watched that. I love how one of those protesters said, did anybody get that? Yeah, you record. You're recording yourself breaking the law. You cannot block a road in any part of the United States that I'm aware of. So those officers acted how they ought to have acted because you
were breaking the law. Now, if you were standing on the side of the road off off on the shoulder with your signs and protesting or on a street corner somewhere, or even if you went and got a permit to do it in front of City Hall, go ahead, go and do that all you want. But you cannot block a road. And we saw that in 2020 as well with Antifa and BLM as well. And usually nothing was done about it. So in this case, it's good to see that he went through and said, no, you this, this is done.
This is over. That's what law enforcement is supposed to do when people are violating the law. And so and then when she, when the one is screaming, he's hurting me, he's hurting me. Yeah. Standard, standard handcuffing techniques is what it looked like. And then on top of it, when you are passively resisting, so like the child screaming in the middle of the supermarket, you lift that child up and you stick them in the cart or you carry them out of the store or
whatever. Same as in this case when you're just sitting there like I'm not moving, I'm protesting. Well, then I am authorized to use a little bit of force to take you into custody. And then when you start with resistive tension and pulling away, now you are resisting. And so now I'm justified and authorized to use even more force, where in this case they didn't even use that much force. They put her face down on the ground and took her into custody. I mean, that's standard stuff.
Standard stuff. And that's when you get to drop the line of these handcuffs are new, they'll loosen up, Don't worry. All right, yeah. So there you have it, folks. I appreciate everybody's time and attention today. Again, I get it. You're used to hearing Kyle's voice. He will be returning very shortly. And I I hope that we provided some some insight and some laughter here before we leave. Garrett, why don't you put out your your social so people know where to follow you?
Yeah, GOB actual pretty much anywhere truth, Twitter and Instagram and then my my sub stack last line.substack.com. And then if you're if you're interested in merch, which I'm working on that we've had a handful of orders come in, it's the Dash suspendables.com. And just a heads up for Labor Day weekend starting Friday, I implemented a little crash sale, so 10% off if you use the code labor, all capitals LABOR at checkout. So the Dash suspendables.com if
you're interested in that. Great job, Garrett, that's how you celebrate a communist holiday like Labor Day. Excellent folks. You can follow Ryan Ryan once you get him throwing out your information. I'm not familiar enough as Kyle is. You can follow me on Ryan, Madam Media and don't forget to give a big shout out to everybody who has went out of their way to leave us a five star review. I wasn't sure if you're going to get to this Steve. If you were, you want to give
him a shout out. Yeah, absolutely. Good catch by you. So five star review folks, make sure you like the smash button, give five star reviews. It helps the show, it helps it get to more ears. I think that the content we're presenting is unique. It gives an insider account of a lot of this. And then Kyle is he operates at a whole another level. And if you were following along, you are operating a whole another level. And we appreciate you. We love the relationship that we have with you.
So here is is 1 from last week. It's interviews you won't hear anywhere else. Kyle's long form interviews are top notch. He's willing to interview people mainstream media won't touch. He asked insightful questions and provides a platform of for people to tell their story as it is without any spin or agenda. And that's from Brian one O 2 or Britain. Britain 1:02. Thank you very much for for leaving that review.
I'd like to count myself as somebody that the mainstream media won't touch from our friendly Fridays. You can follow me, everybody at Real Steve Friend on Twitter, at Real under score Steve Friend on true social. Again, the book is still out there, true blue, my journey from beat cop to suspended FBI whistle blower. And I encourage everybody. The information we talked about today is at the Center for Renewing America's website, americarenewing.com. You can learn about everything
that is going on there. Have a fantastic day. God bless you all. And thank you. Thanks for listening to the Kyle Seraphin Show, streamed live weekdays on rumble.com/kyle Serafin. Follow Kyle on Twitter, True Social and Instagram at Kyle Serafin.
