DeputyDane Morning Show

#DDMS episode 25: Resilience in the Face of Adversity: Embracing Community Support, Seeking Justice, and Reflecting on True Crime Narratives

March 11, 2024 Dane
#DDMS episode 25: Resilience in the Face of Adversity: Embracing Community Support, Seeking Justice, and Reflecting on True Crime Narratives
DeputyDane Morning Show
More Info
DeputyDane Morning Show
#DDMS episode 25: Resilience in the Face of Adversity: Embracing Community Support, Seeking Justice, and Reflecting on True Crime Narratives
Mar 11, 2024
Dane

When life throws a curveball, it's the community around us that anchors our spirit. This episode is a heartfelt journey through the recent challenges I've faced, from the profound loss of my father to the ongoing hurdles in both my professional and personal spheres. I'm opening up about the sheer power of the support I've received, which lights up the darker moments and fuels my resolve to keep pushing forward. Amidst this, I discuss a gripping case that has captured my focus: the relentless pursuit of a sex offender, bringing to light the importance of justice and the impact of advocacy.

Navigating the minefield of law enforcement investigations, we dissect an interrogation fraught with doubt and the perils of tunnel vision. We'll explore how critical it is to balance skepticism with a fair, evidence-based approach, especially when past traumas intertwine with the present. This conversation steers us into examining the profound effect of fictional narratives on real-life cases, questioning the ethics of drawing parallels with stories like "Gone Girl" and their sway over both public perception and judicial outcomes.

Wrapping up, we venture into the captivating world of true crime documentaries, expressing amazement and sometimes horror at their plot twists, including those in "Abducted in Plain Sight." I also don't hold back on my latest thoughts regarding the political landscape, the societal shifts we're witnessing, and the pressing need for a collective effort to foster a brighter future. It's a candid discussion that will touch on both the heart and the intellect, urging all of us to carry a torch of love and positivity through the fog of our current challenges.

Support the Show.

Thank you all for all the support! I couldn't do this without everyone's support! Please have a great week and stay safe! Please check out our Patreon to support us and help us grow! https://www.patreon.com/DEPUTYDANE

DeputyDane Morning Show +
Become a supporter of the show!
Starting at $3/month
Support
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

When life throws a curveball, it's the community around us that anchors our spirit. This episode is a heartfelt journey through the recent challenges I've faced, from the profound loss of my father to the ongoing hurdles in both my professional and personal spheres. I'm opening up about the sheer power of the support I've received, which lights up the darker moments and fuels my resolve to keep pushing forward. Amidst this, I discuss a gripping case that has captured my focus: the relentless pursuit of a sex offender, bringing to light the importance of justice and the impact of advocacy.

Navigating the minefield of law enforcement investigations, we dissect an interrogation fraught with doubt and the perils of tunnel vision. We'll explore how critical it is to balance skepticism with a fair, evidence-based approach, especially when past traumas intertwine with the present. This conversation steers us into examining the profound effect of fictional narratives on real-life cases, questioning the ethics of drawing parallels with stories like "Gone Girl" and their sway over both public perception and judicial outcomes.

Wrapping up, we venture into the captivating world of true crime documentaries, expressing amazement and sometimes horror at their plot twists, including those in "Abducted in Plain Sight." I also don't hold back on my latest thoughts regarding the political landscape, the societal shifts we're witnessing, and the pressing need for a collective effort to foster a brighter future. It's a candid discussion that will touch on both the heart and the intellect, urging all of us to carry a torch of love and positivity through the fog of our current challenges.

Support the Show.

Thank you all for all the support! I couldn't do this without everyone's support! Please have a great week and stay safe! Please check out our Patreon to support us and help us grow! https://www.patreon.com/DEPUTYDANE

Speaker 1:

Warning, warning, warning. This content may be sensitive to some. If you feel the need to leave, it is completely understandable. Content may contain examples of death, suicide, sexual content and other shit. We don't know what we're gonna get into. This is not to offend anyone or upset anyone on purpose. This isn't your typical deputy dane, so listen at your own risk. Sit back and enjoy.

Speaker 2:

Good morning everybody. Welcome to the deputy dane morning show. I appreciate all of y'all for being here. We got some stuff to get into. I really don't know what we're gonna get into, but we'll get into something.

Speaker 1:

Sit back. Oh oh yep, there's the sirens.

Speaker 2:

I think we're all gonna be detained. Sit back and enjoy the show. Good morning everybody. Welcome to deputy dane morning show. We took a little bit of time off.

Speaker 2:

It's been kind of hectic with everything going on. I've had a lot going on at work, had a lot going on at home. I lost my dad still dealing with that. Two days ago was a month since I lost him. I had to find him. Sorry, I gotta make jokes to get through everything. Either way, it's been a lot going on, trying to get the farm going because spring is on the horizon and then trying to get everything going with the family, getting stuff going with work, getting everything going just in general. But good news is I'm back and here we're here. I know I missed two weeks or a week Hell I don't know. I missed too much. I don't like missing anything because a lot of y'all enjoy this and I appreciate you more than I could ever express and I want to say thank you so much for the continued support everywhere Patreon, tiktok here, youtube, everything that people helped me on Twitch as well, everyone that helps me. You guys helped me with my mental health.

Speaker 2:

It's kind of I'm not going to lie it's been on a little bit on decline since I got the FOIA BS the freedom of information act sent to my agency crying about me doing TikTok, which I found out's a whole bunch of BS, and I'm still having to get attorneys for it and it's just not fun. But at the same time it's kind of taken me down a dark path. I enjoy my lives. I enjoy making people smile, I enjoy making people laugh and to deal with this stuff over and over and over it gets old and all I try to do is start people's day off with a smile, start it off with a laugh, and then I have to deal with naysayers and haters like this and it just drives me nuts. But it is part of it. I'm not going to quit. I need y'all as much as some people say they need me. I get so many positive comments and I message is saying how much I help them get through dark spaces and dark times, and to know that I'm helping somebody is the whole reason I started this whole thing in the first place. I love making people laugh. I love making people smile. It means the world to me and to be able to do that really makes me smile and laugh and internally helps me deep down. So when people take that from me, it bothers me. And then I debate quitting and then I get comments saying oh man, I really need you. And then I have to go. You know what? It's not time to quit. It's time to just buckle down and be the bigger man and show them I don't care about your hatred. I'm still going to be here for other people. So I'm working on it. I'm growing, it's happening. It just got to bear with me.

Speaker 2:

That being said, I've had some big cases come up, some ones. I'm still working. I still have a sex offender I'm still on the hunt for. I'm going to find him and I'm going to put him back in prison. That is my goal. Sorry, if you have sympathy for sex offenders, I have none, zero. If you do anything involving children, I have no sympathy whatsoever for you and your nastiness. So if you mess up, I will do everything within my power to put you in prison and keep you there. So that's what I'm trying to do right now. I've got a turd, a douchebag, a piece of crap that I'm going to find and I will put him in prison. And if you're listening, this is my little fella. I will find you. I have a very particular set of skills. Let's hunt in the nasty Boy. I got problems.

Speaker 2:

We had a lot of fun in the live this morning. We did some battles. I normally don't do battles, but man, what a great time that was. We did some battles with some people where we. There's some two young ladies from India I don't know how old they were, I don't know. They were doing belly dancing. They got real awkward, but it was a lot of fun. We all had a lot of laughs and it was. It was enjoyable, at least for me, and everybody else was having a great time. That being said, my wife and I finally had some time to ourself the other night, but we're both on duty. It's sad that the days that we have together now are we're both on call, so we're in the middle watching a movie. That movie can be ended short by just a call. So we tried to make the time that we can enjoyable for each other, and that's what we did the other night.

Speaker 2:

So we watched the documentary and it's called American Nightmare. I believe that's what it's called. Hold on one second, let me. Let me double check just before I butcher it. It's new on Netflix. I think I feel like an old person. I'm like that's such new on Netflix that Netflix. It's probably been on there for a year, I don't know. Hold on one second, all right. Yeah, it's called American Nightmare. It's on Netflix. What it says is it came out, or well, what it happened around the same time the movie Gone Girl came out.

Speaker 2:

Now in law enforcement, a lot of times you deal with these cases and you can get a tunnel vision. And if you get tunnel vision, you don't focus on the things that need to be focused on. And it's very, very obvious in this case. If you haven't watched this Netflix documentary yet, don't listen to this podcast if you plan on watching it, because it breaks down a lot of stuff and it's mind blowing to me how bad some of these law enforcement officers were, how bad they were to the point where, okay, so in interrogation interviews you're talking to people, so let's break down the story.

Speaker 2:

Story is boyfriend's asleep with girlfriend. Someone breaks in with light shining in their face and tell him, and they give him a cocktail to put him to sleep. They take off with girlfriend. Boyfriend is still at the house tied up somehow, gets untied in the morning, calls law enforcement and he's got a camera on him too. There's a camera in the room watching him and he thinks that if I do anything, this guy told me he's gonna kill my girlfriend or do whatever. So girlfriend gets kidnapped, boyfriend's sitting there.

Speaker 2:

Story sounds very fishy, okay. First of all, he says we're sleeping, we're having, we've been arguing about some stuff the night before, I've been talking to my ex. She doesn't like him. So then it turns into that. Then it turns into oh my God, someone broke into the house. There's no forced entry. So someone got into the house somehow, ended up giving him Nyquell and Diazepam and then knocks him out and gives it to the girlfriend as well, ties him up and tells him there's a camera on you, and at the same time he puts a blindfold which is swimming goggles that are taped over. All of it sounds very far fetched and, to be honest, I'd be like, okay, something's not adding up, and now your girlfriend's missing, but you have no forced entry. All this stuff's going on. So I'm gonna look at him maybe as a suspect. Now they take him in this night and they go. Why did it take so long? Well, I've already told you I was tied up. I've got a camera on me. Well then, well, you know, let's just listen to what they say.

Speaker 3:

Be honest with you. I'm gonna be completely square with you. Your story's very elaborate and in some ways far fetched in my mind. I trust me, I know. Listen, listen, I'm here to find the truth. I'm a puzzle maker and I put a lot of puzzles together. I don't think she was kidnapped from your home. What do you think? I think something bad happened in your house and I think I happened to be getting hurt. No, oh no.

Speaker 2:

So now we're right here where this detective's going okay, your story's far fetched. I can understand that You're telling him hey, your story's far fetched. I'm not really catching on on everything. Something's not adding up and I think you're lying to me. Now, if you've had a person stay up for hours upon hours and then you don't believe him, I understand you kind of go well, I don't really believe you, but you still need to keep that as, yes, he's a suspect, but I need to break this down. Okay, you don't need to just automatically jump into your piece of shit. So let's hear what else happens People hitting at people for $20,000.

Speaker 3:

I don't know. I know I bet, and they're wearing. Did they swim in wearing their wet suits? I mean, come on, man, it doesn't make any freaking sense. So now I get out my puzzle piece and I start figuring out. Okay, how do.

Speaker 2:

I make it so you look like a monster.

Speaker 3:

So how do I make this puzzle?

Speaker 2:

look like you are a monster, you already had it in your mind, dude.

Speaker 3:

Blankets are missing. Yes, why do you take the blanket and come for off the bed as the frog man? Why do you do that?

Speaker 2:

As the frog man. I don't understand that.

Speaker 3:

The body. I'm saying the third unit. So it's obvious to me whatever happened happened in that bedroom. Maybe she overdoses? Are you playing with prescription drugs from work? No, it's okay if you are.

Speaker 2:

Now, both of them are physical therapists. They are physical therapists.

Speaker 3:

They are like oh shit, what am I going to do? I can see that happening too. That thing happened. There's blood in your house. There's blood. Yeah, I don't know if it's hers or not, yet I'm going to presume it's hers.

Speaker 3:

But I'm going to presume it's hers, I'm going to presume that she wasn't alive and kicking when she left the house. I don't know. Maybe, hell, maybe you call Andrea's name out in sex and she got pissed and you carted her ass out of there and you dripped her blood going down the stairs. I did not do that. Yeah, you did. They did not come into your house and kidnap her and take her for ransom.

Speaker 2:

So you can tell that, oh, colonel Mustard here, his name's Lieutenant Mustard or something, detective Mustard Fuck, I don't know. Either way, I don't like Mustard, so I don't really like him. So he comes out pretty much automatically saying, no, you did this, you did this. And it's like whoa, hold on a second dude you got to give him let's. I mean, don't be wrong, I'm going to be like hey, blah, blah, blah, I'm going to look into you a little bit, but jumping straight into it that you're a piece of shit. You killed your girl without even knowing the full story. Now, don't be wrong, the story is very far-fetched, very far-fetched. As we were watching the documentary, my wife and I were like no way, this dude's lying. But I'm not going to sit here and jump to that conclusions and tell them you did it and only be stuck on that one track mind. So through this whole investigation, that's what they did. They kept it on a one track thing that's saying hey, we know you're lying, he's lying, and blah, blah, blah. Well then they talked to the girlfriend's mother or fiance's mother. They talked to fiance's mother, girlfriend, I don't know. Either way. They talked to her mother and they asked her has she ever been molested or anything. And the mom says, well, yes, I come to think of it, she was molested as a child.

Speaker 2:

Old detective douche here turns into well, some women like that thrill and want to relive that thrill. Excuse me, do what. This woman was molested as a child and she wants to relive that thrill, okay. So then he tells the mom well, maybe she got kidnapped on purpose to relive the thrill of being raped. Hold on, dude. So now you've already blamed boyfriend. And tell him boyfriend, you know he did it, he killed her. Then that doesn't work out. You tell the mom that maybe she got kidnapped on purpose because she wanted to relive the thrill of being raped. So this Colonel Douchebag over here is telling him all this.

Speaker 2:

Well, so long story short, a couple days later a girlfriend gets dropped off and in the process she tells him hey, this really happened and I was raped. Then they don't believe her. They say this is right, when gone girl, when, like what happened in the story fit like gone girl. So these, this law enforcement agency, said they were reliving gone girl. So she's reliving rape, she's reliving gone girl. And they got stuck on this. And you can't be stuck on these mindsets, you can't get stuck on. Yes, it was gone, girl, to a T and that's what they did. They said oh, this is gone, girl, these people are lying. And then they get on national news. Law enforcement gets on national news and just says that there are a bunch of liars. They wasted resources. Their POS is these people start getting hate letters, hate mail. Now take, take in mind. Okay, so let's just break it down, if it is true.

Speaker 2:

So woman gets kidnapped and raped. Boyfriend is living with the. Oh my God, I let this happen. She got kidnapped and where is she? And he went to law enforcement looking for help. Instead, he became the main suspect in it, which I understand to an extent. But you have to keep an open mind. You can't get a one track mind unless you have physical evidence saying, yes, this piece of shit did it, or he is leading clues. Now he is still coming off of his own concoction of waking up from all the drugs that he was given and his fiance, girlfriend, is missing. Holy crap. No, don't get wrong, he kept a level head the whole time. So I was like maybe this dude did it. He's very chill about this. I'd be losing my shit, very chill.

Speaker 2:

So girl gets kidnapped, taken away and raped and she was so she was thrown into a trunk, taken to a place, raped several times and then released. And then the first thing law enforcement does gets on national news and say they wasted resources and they are a bunch of liars Like what? That's freaking, mind blowing to me. So then, as they're calling them liars, somebody reaches out anonymously and says she's not lying, I did it and actually shows pictures and blah, blah, blah of everything. So Colonel douchebag here is stuck on that.

Speaker 2:

Now, in another area of California, another detective Picks up the case of another case and says I found these goggles and there's blonde hair Attached to it. This detective could have gone oh, has nothing to do with my case, could have been like Colonel mustard hair and was a douchebag and said, oh, nothing to do about it. This is, oh mustard's, a prime example of why people hate law enforcement and I'm toon a tee. And then this whole agency Made them look like pieces of shit, even though they went through some of the most traumatic times of their life, and they put them on national news that they are liars, they are this, they're that. And this other detective in another agency deals with a case and they're trying to find the dude who did it and then end up Tracking it back to this case years ago With the blonde hair, and we're able to match blonde hair with her now. This detective in another agency Took the time. Let's let me play clip from her.

Speaker 5:

When we get back to the station, I'm thinking how and where do I begin searching for a victim with blonde hair?

Speaker 2:

So listen to that, I'm think. How and when do I find a victim to search for with blonde hair? Now, this detective has nothing to do with the area that this had happened and really didn't pay attention to the news that this had happened. So this detective does what a detective should do. Okay, there's more to this case. How can I make sure this piece of shit gets put in prison for good? Not? Oh, colonel mustard, it goes. Oh, that's it. I know what happened. This is all it's gonna happen. So let's listen to a little bit more answer.

Speaker 5:

But I am like the annoying ex-girlfriend that never goes away. So I continue to call them and call them. Finally, I get transferred to a Detective and he says the case was turned over to the FBI so we're no longer investigating it. You might want to call them? Okay, give me the phone number. So he gives me the phone number.

Speaker 2:

So how do you call a Police department and they don't answer. She calls and calls, and calls and if you listen to what she says, she says I'm like an annoying ex-girlfriend and I will keep calling. How freaking awesome is that this detective could have said oh well, shit, this tied up as a loss. But no, she calls and calls, and calls and calls until she finally gets a hold of detective and he says contact to the FBI. So she contacts the FBI, deals with the FBI.

Speaker 5:

They pretty much kind of blow her off and then To the FBI agent, david Sezma, and I hang up the phone like okay, that was useless. And I call David Sezma and I tell him we have a suspect in custody, very similar to the suspect that was involved in the kidnapping of Denise Huskins. You guys deemed it a hoax. He snapped back and said we never called it a hoax.

Speaker 5:

Yes, I did I said well, anyways, I have this person in custody that you may be interested in speaking to because the cases are so similar. And he said okay, well, send me all the information that you have and we'll look at it. And I thought that's it. I was so disappointed.

Speaker 2:

See, and that's how that's. It's mind-blowing, this detectives putting all this extra effort in to find it and then just to get told I just send it over, we'll look at it, and that really happens. There's a lot of times I send stuff over to the FBI and they're like, yeah, we'll look at it and never hear anything, never goes anywhere. But this detective was bound and determined and never gave up to the point where they were able to link the case together. And it's hard to explain. You have to watch the whole thing. It's freaking amazing. But what it did is it opened my eyes. Okay, that I need to make sure I better myself as well. I'm not perfect and I understand mustard is not perfect and that agency is not perfect, but we owe citizens and everybody what they deserve. They deserve to make sure that everything is handled the way it should be handled and that we're doing everything to our best ability and not getting stuck on a mindset that, oh, we already know what happened. These people end up meeting her, the detective, later and they called her their hero and that is freaking deep. That is freaking deep because they could that detective could have gave up, but instead ended up shutting everything down in their life and just trying to find out. To better this. They prove that the media and everybody calling these people a liar and ruining their life when they didn't really know. And then they got proved that they weren't lying how awesome is that. Then they turned around and sued the PD for $2.5 million. Fucking, love it, love it. But the thing that's mind blowing to me is mustard that year that this all happened, received officer of the year for their agency. He's called someone a liar, told a girl that she deserved to be raped because or not deserved that she wanted to be raped again. And then when she comes in and talks to them, they call her her a liar and they come to find out the detective or the FBI agent is actually used to date the boyfriend's ex that she was the girlfriend was mad. It's a love triangle Weird deal. He should have never been on that case. He's got conflict or interest on that case but he's on that case.

Speaker 2:

If you haven't watched American Nightmare, watch it. It's freaking three-part series and it's intriguing the whole way through. So my wife watched that. We watched that the other night. I kind of gave you a synapsis of it and what it really did to me is like I said.

Speaker 2:

It kind of reminds that I need to listen to everybody's story a little bit more. Now I understand I get the weird random tweakers, are like my neighbor's sending radio waves into my house and it's making me. It's just confukeling in my head and I can't handle it anymore. I need you to go to my neighbor's house and tell them to stop sending radio waves. I can't handle the radio waves. They're making me think of very bad thing that yeah, that's different. We're not listening to that. That's a whole netherball game of craziness. But it open eyes that I need to just listen a little bit more, be more intense, just listen, just make sure I've got it down to a tee and don't judge to straight go to the judgment. You know I need to it. Just I think it's going to make me a better officer watching these things Between that documentary and my wife and I have also been watching the raft or something on Discovery and that's just a bunch of people they put on a raft and it's just a whole bunch of cutthroat.

Speaker 2:

It's a lot of drama man. That's rough watching that. But another documentary that we watched on Netflix a couple of years ago was Abducted in Plain Side. I didn't watch that. That one's wild. That's a wild, wild ride, very wild.

Speaker 2:

I don't want to give too much out. That's what I like. I feel like I'm giving way too much out, but there's one point holy hell that, like a dad of a little girl that this guy was molesting, he ends up having sex with the dude as well. Like, hold on, this dude has molested your daughter and he is such a con artist he got you to have sex with him as well. Holy shit, what kind of world we're in. So again documentaries to watch. Abducted in Plain Side, that's about the molesting of a whole family, pretty much.

Speaker 2:

And then American Nightmare about the Gone Girl case, which is crazy to me. I need to just break down the whole case just so we can break down step by step of everything, because it's just, it's absurd the amount of stuff that goes down. Wow, just wild. And this stuff happens and it can happen near you. It can happen anywhere. These murders can happen anywhere. These rapists can happen anywhere. No matter how rural you think you are, it can happen. And there's so many of these cases. It's just like man, you got to be ready. You got to be prepared for the craziness in this world, because, boy, it is a crazy, crazy world, very weird.

Speaker 2:

You know, we had the State of the Union address the other day. I didn't even watch it. I can't watch that dude, I can't. I mean just some of his stuff, like. I'm not the biggest Trump supporter, I don't think Trump is perfect, but, holy Jesus, at least he knows his name. And if people are dead or alive around him and he doesn't, we told Trump you better American and people cheer. I'm like, how do you cheer for that? You don't even know what he said. He doesn't know what he said. How do you cheer for that? But, like some of the stuff he said, I've watched some highlights of the State of the Union address and, oh my God.

Speaker 4:

The state the obvious All Americans deserve the freedom to be safe, and America is safer today than when I took office. Year before I took office, murder rates went up, 30%, 30%. They went up the biggest increase in history. It was then through my American Rescue Plan, which every American voted against, I remember. So that is a father of a.

Speaker 2:

US Marine that lost their life in the pulling out of Afghanistan. This father was escorted out. There was so much booing, there was so much hatred and cheering and all this stuff, but this father who had lost his child, a US Marine in Afghanistan as we pulled out in a coward act. I've never been to Afghanistan. I love our men and women that served in the country to serve our country, so I it's hard for me to say, yeah, you're an A, we should have been there, but the what we did was terrible for that. The families of our military men and women. We failed them and this father was in there expressing how he felt that we had failed them and he's exquired it out. Absolutely mind-blowing. There are so much going on in that. It's mind-blowing just to listen to this dude lie and Barely speak and how many people booed him.

Speaker 2:

I don't watch these things. I don't like politics at all. I don't watch stay the unit addresses stuff and then all this stuff. But I watched some highlights of it and just to see just the wildness of it of so many people booing them and and everything and it's wild and that's who's in office. It's crazy to me. And then we're spending half of our country's budget, trying to block Trump from running again.

Speaker 2:

I don't think Trump's perfect. I don't think Trump's amazing, but I'll tell you, I could afford gas. I could afford groceries. I Wasn't hated on as a cop just because I'm a cop. It's a wild time. Do I think it's perfect? No, does he say too much on Twitter and stuff? Yes, I mean, but that's who he is, it's his personality. But he's not sniffing children. He's not going hey, come over here. He's not doing that. He's not defending his son. That's a coke addict. But either way, I mean is what it is. I don't do politics. I don't really like either one. Trump's alright in my book, but I'm not going. Oh man, he's gonna be the best thing for us, but I Think at least I want to know he knows where he's at. Yeah, he might tell him grabbing by the pussy and butt shit. I mean how my guys are not think I'm just kidding, just kidding. Um, he says wild things. He says wild things to get wild reactions. It's gonna happen. But what he says I normally believe. And again, I could afford gas. I could afford to eat.

Speaker 2:

We have people now making more money than they've ever made in their entire life and can't afford to live. Crazy, more money than they've ever made in their life. And they're struggling more now than they ever did back when they were had a job making mediocre money but they could still afford to live. It's a freaking crazy time we're in Crazy. It's just getting crazier. I don't know, crime rates are through the roof. Even though they say crime rates are lower, the defund movement set crime rates through the roof. I Don't know. I don't know what can change it. But I tell you right now, if the way, keep going on the path we're going, it's gonna be a bad, bad world. But we'll change the subject. I try not to go too far down.

Speaker 2:

The We'd last episode was a conspiracy theory. See one one. I'll go down that road, that whole road again. Things are happening on the farm. Farms doing great. We got baby piglets, we've got fences going up, we've got Potatoes about to go in, just a lot of stuff. That's fun, and I get to do it with my son and my daughter's now walking, so that's awesome. She gets to go out and play. I just have to be a little bit more cautious of her because she'll get into everything. She has no fear. Harbor had fear Blakely has none. None, harbor wants you to be around him when he's playing. Blakely gives two shits, doesn't care she, she just goes and does her and it doesn't matter about the rest. So, oh, crazy, crazy times, crazy times. But man, I don't even know.

Speaker 2:

This episode wasn't the longest. I really am working on finding guests and talking to guests and really getting this going again. I just had so much going on in my life and then, with everything going on, I've got some big cases going on. I've got deputies need therapy from this case. I got a lot still going on. So bear with me, the episodes will get longer again. We'll have a lot of fun again.

Speaker 2:

The everything's growing. My twitch is growing back. I'm starting to get into twitch a little bit now that the babies are getting a little bit on their own. I'm trying to get my studio built just a whole lot of stuff going on, but it's gonna grow. We're gonna continue to grow and and do big things. I'm excited and you guys helped me do this and I couldn't do without you guys and I know I said all the time, but it's true, I couldn't. So, that being said, guys, thank you so much for the continued support. On patreon, twitch, youtube, tick, tock, everywhere on here. I'm wherever you're listening to your podcast. I appreciate you guys so much and We'll continue to grow, I believe. I hope I hope we will, I don't know. Either way, we'll figure it out.

Speaker 2:

Much loved everybody. Guys, let's make this a good week and everybody, please, please, stay safe. Check out those documentaries if you want something to watch. That just by oh, that was pretty intense. I'll tell you the watching mostly dangerous one. That's not very fun. We watch that on that HBO. That's a whole another one. I'm just like what the hell? I want to spend an hour and so watching this. But oh well, everybody guys, or every everybody, everybody guys, sorry, I gotta go pee, I'm not gonna lie. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm doing my little tink, not tinkle dance. Everybody, have a wonderful, wonderful week. Spread the love and positivity. Don't let the trolls get you down, guys, and let's make it a great, great week and everybody, please, please, stay safe.

True Crime Podcast and Personal Updates
Law Enforcement Missteps in Investigation
Current Events and Personal Reflections
Spread Love and Positivity