 The sheriff who spearheaded the investigation, which led to my arrest and subsequent conviction, is now a convicted felon. He was convicted last year. He has four life sentences. Mm, four. The charges include rape, molestation, dating back to the 70s. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. And that's when the devil in the details showed his face. Of course. I think then it was like a matter of, we have a famous person who has been broadcast all over world news that they've shot someone. And we are the ones who have given the information that this is the perpetrator. So they're covering her there behind. We cannot go back and look stupid on the world stage saying that we arrested the wrong guy. So now what we got to do is we have to basically do what is necessary to stick these charges to him, no matter what, because this is bigger than him. This is about our department looking like it knows what it's doing. This is about the public having confidence in our department. Yeah, was it a DA or something that was definitely working on this case? It had to be one DA that was... Yeah, the DA name is Walter Reed at the time. He is now a convicted felon. He just got out of prison like last year. He was released early because of COVID. What was he convicted for? Wiotap fraud, a couple other things. He was shaking different entities down in the area they were paying him. How does that weigh on the cases that he, you know? Well, I think it should weigh heavily, but this is a real, it's a real heavyweight that you would have to be going up against. The sheriff who spearheaded the investigation, which led to my arrest and subsequent conviction, is now a convicted felon. He was convicted last year. He has four life sentences. The charges include rape, molestation, dating back to the 70s, incest, yeah, and the like. Ain't that something? Wow. They should pull up back every single case that all of these people tried. They won't. They won't do it because they know. It would. Open the doors. And it would make their department look. The justice system, not just. But it already making them look a certain way for these people to even get convicted for anything. Well, see, it looks that way momentarily. And they know that the average person attention span is so short, oh, he got messed over, then it's gone. It's not the news no more. It's not the news no more is dead. So the thing is, I don't really blame those individuals as much as I blame us, the public, who entrust these individuals and who have a chance to vote. And we vote for these individuals because they may align for different reasons, multiple reasons. They might be our family. They might be our neighbor. But when we're giving them or we're voting someone in a job with the public trust, that is as important as the district attorney's office, we need to be certain that this person is just. But at the same time, if the information of them not being just isn't out there and they put on that face to make it seem like we can trust them and we don't know that we cannot, how can we vote otherwise if we don't know? Right, and that's a good point. But I would say, and I try to be as politically as correct as I can possibly be, but I'm gonna just be raw. Go ahead. They be knowing these people. Yeah. Bottom line, these people be political allies. It's a good old boy and sister. Yeah, these people be aligned with them in their political views and they don't care about if their views are, I would say, hurtful to people outside of our clique. It doesn't matter. Yeah, he does that. I don't care, I don't like them anyway. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101.