The Debrief With MyronGainesX - December 12, 2022


Fed Explains Shanquella Robinson’s Murder Case! Was There A Plot To Kill Her in Mexico?!


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 26 minutes

Words per Minute

192.87871

Word Count

16,742

Sentence Count

787

Misogynist Sentences

42

Hate Speech Sentences

54


Summary

In this episode we cover the Sean keller keller robinson case. We cover the fact vs fiction of the case and the facts behind the fiction. We also cover the history of this case and some of the key players involved in it.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 and we are live what's up guys welcome to fed it today we're gonna be talking about the sean keller
00:00:05.240 robinson case guys we got a lot to cover we're gonna go over fact versus fiction let's get into
00:00:10.020 it man i was a special agent with home landscape investigations okay guys hsi the cases that i did
00:00:17.920 mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking no one else has these documents by the way here's
00:00:24.860 lafredo confirmed lacerations due to stepping on glass murder investigations i'm reaching in his
00:00:34.160 jacket you don't know and he's positioning been on february 13 2019 you're facing two counts of
00:00:39.620 two meditative murder racketeering and rico conspiracies young slime life here and after
00:00:44.420 referred to as ysl the defendants uh six nine and then this is billy seiko right here now when they
00:00:49.660 first started guys six nine ran i'm upset i'm watching this music video you know i'm bobbing
00:00:54.900 my head like hey this shit lit but at the same time i'm pausing oh wait who this right well who's that
00:00:59.800 in the back firearms and violent crime aka bush i see violated you're wanting to stay away from the
00:01:05.920 victims trapper bush i see arrested after shooting at king of diamonds this is the one that that's
00:01:11.480 gonna fuck him up because this gun is not tracing well it happened at the gun range here's your boy
00:01:15.400 42 dug right here on the left okay sex trafficking and sex crimes they can effectively link him to
00:01:21.060 paying an underage girl i'm gonna look like it's the one that right right and the first bomb went off
00:01:25.600 right here suspect two set down in that time on the site of the second explorer inspired by al-qaeda
00:01:31.440 two terrorists brothers the zokar sarnev and tamarland sarnev when the cartel shipped drugs into the
00:01:38.060 country this guy got arrested for um espionage okay trading secrets with the russians for monetary
00:01:43.720 compensation the largest corrupt police bust in new ormond history the days of the police are gone
00:01:50.920 so he was in this bad boy we're gonna go over his past the gang time so that this all makes sense
00:01:56.740 all right and we are live what's up guys welcome uh to fed it man today is a very special episode
00:02:08.520 i've been getting a lot of requests for this one but before i go into it real quick announcements
00:02:15.700 guys number one rumble.com slash fresh and fit as you guys know we are on rumble we're not going
00:02:20.160 anywhere we're still going to stay on youtube however um for some of the after hours well for
00:02:23.900 the after hour streams and then some of the daytime shows anytime things get too crazy we're going to go
00:02:28.000 ahead and transition over to rumble so you guys can go ahead and get like the full unedited content
00:02:31.780 trust me it's a lot better than you guys think i know a couple guys say hey i hate switching over
00:02:35.480 to rumble blah blah blah but you guys got to understand we make the content that we make
00:02:38.900 is not necessarily safe i might have to start doing fed it on rumble as well guys because um
00:02:43.260 there's a lot of serial killer stuff that i have to hold back on right especially those murder cases
00:02:47.760 where it gets violent whatever and uh me reacting to documentaries i have to be very careful about what
00:02:52.700 i put on youtube and what i don't so i might end up doing some of the more grisly serial killer
00:02:57.260 cases on rumble but uh i'll i'll figure that out and i'll give you guys an update but don't worry
00:03:02.640 we're not leaving youtube everything's still going to stay on youtube for the most part when
00:03:05.760 things get crazy i'll probably have to do a transition over to rumble um also look uh fresh
00:03:10.980 fit.locals.com we're no longer our patreon so if you guys want to check us out over there make sure
00:03:15.480 to and then we're on megaphone as far as listening to podcasts but when it comes to fed it i'm still
00:03:20.160 on anchor so you guys can go ahead and check me out on spotify apple all the normal streaming
00:03:24.240 platforms for podcasts i'm there uh the anchor the link is anchor.fm slash fed it 1811 so let me
00:03:31.380 hit some of these chats real quick and then we'll get into today's topic um thank you guys so much
00:03:36.080 for the support i'm doing this one solo today money counter goes five bucks uh if this is live
00:03:41.020 give me a high five sir it is very fucking live high five to you
00:03:45.140 yes this is live this is not a premiere so guys just so you know um the way i have this channel set
00:03:53.280 up is this every sunday is going to be a live stream i'm going to cover a case that you guys request
00:03:59.160 or something that's trending in the news or whatever it may be right sunday is almost always
00:04:03.980 live okay the only time a sunday show is not live is if it gets taken down while i'm midstream okay
00:04:11.040 which happens quite a bit when i do the the serial killer documentary reactions then on thursdays i do
00:04:17.940 a documentary action whether it's a serial killer or whatever it may be those those are pre-recorded
00:04:22.880 though i typically record those after i do the live stream right that's why you guys see me up late
00:04:27.020 in you know in the evening and then i release it on thursday okay so sunday's a live stream
00:04:33.480 thursday is a pre-recorded video breaking down some kind of case okay um whether it's a serial killer
00:04:39.560 or something it's more it's more of a doc it's a documentary reaction on thursdays every single
00:04:43.000 time sometimes sunday's a documentary reaction but for the most part it's a live stream where i hit
00:04:48.060 contemporary events all right uh let's see here um cool and then we got here chris is not here
00:04:55.080 hey myron thank you so much two bucks appreciate that we got fbi in the house hey should y'all be
00:04:59.400 fucking doing some work god damn it right now uh we got uh tiana angela made my first live love the
00:05:05.860 content thank you so much yeah this is a lot different than fresher fit stuff uh have you
00:05:10.020 ever worked with cbp marine interdiction agents yeah bro absolutely uh what do you think of them
00:05:14.580 shout out to fnf gang y'all making this evil world uh better much love yeah guys i work very closely
00:05:19.980 with uh cbp uh marine interdiction agents it's called the office of aaron aaron marine um yeah
00:05:25.440 one of the guys uh that i worked very closely with on one of the cases i'm going to tell you guys about
00:05:30.820 here in a second was a cbp amo agent so um actually one of them was killed rest in peace uh about two
00:05:37.700 weeks ago i think in puerto rico uh okay let's see here anything else that i missed all right cool i think
00:05:43.760 i think okay can you do can you do a doc on the ohio college murder i will um i got so many requests
00:05:50.440 for different cases mr martin thank you for your work great value keep it up one of the most
00:05:53.400 professional creators on youtube thank you so much man i appreciate that um and it's funny too because
00:05:58.600 i started this channel originally off of people doxing me like say oh here's his real name by the
00:06:03.780 way and he worked used to work for the government i tried to keep that stuff secret but someone came out
00:06:08.000 and brought it out so i was like okay you know what i'm just gonna take some you know take the lemons
00:06:11.160 and make some lemonade with it uh and now you guys got a whole other youtube channel that is
00:06:15.860 completely different and fresh with content that you're not going to find anywhere else because
00:06:19.460 i looked everywhere on youtube guys i don't know anyone that's a former law enforcement uh
00:06:24.460 official uh that's doing these types of um cases and or content like i've seen maybe like
00:06:30.140 one former police officer here or there but like they don't have their own youtube channel and i see
00:06:33.800 a lot of attorneys but i don't see any former special agents doing this stuff so i give you guys
00:06:38.380 very deep insight uh into different types of cases because i've done all different types of
00:06:42.120 cases i'm going to talk about my training experience here in a second because i think that's extremely
00:06:44.760 relevant for today's episode uh you think you'll break cases of the cartels from mexico like el
00:06:50.360 chapo gracias amigo yes i will uh but those are going to take a while just like the 9-11 situation
00:06:54.640 when i do big things like that where i'm covering like a big drug trafficker or a very complex case
00:07:00.700 it's going to take multiple episodes that requires a lot of studying guys i spend a lot of time on
00:07:04.600 fed it i spend more time sometimes on fed it than i do for fnf as far as like researching stuff
00:07:08.560 uh hey shanjack are you going to do an update for takeoff case the real killer was just arrested
00:07:12.120 yes i actually put a poll um what people wanted to see and most people wanted this they didn't want
00:07:16.740 to they didn't want the takeoff uh situation um and i think let's see here i think we're caught up
00:07:23.560 here all right cool so uh oh and then last one here 20 bucks uh have you ever worked with cb oh no
00:07:30.820 sorry i read this one all right so okay now guys before i get into this please do me a favor
00:07:35.880 like the video subscribe to the channel let's get this thing to 200k now for today's episode guys i've
00:07:41.800 been getting a lot of requests to cover uh shanquella's shanquella robinson i think i'm
00:07:46.340 pronouncing that correctly if i'm mispronouncing someone in the chat please correct me shanquella
00:07:49.660 shanquella robinson's uh tragic death in mexico okay and uh you know last week when we were doing
00:07:56.020 the night stalker i was getting a bunch of requests i got a bunch of dms on our feta 1811 instagram
00:08:00.200 a lot of you guys been asking for this one i see it's been hitting the news um and there's a lot
00:08:03.960 of misinformation out there i'll be honest with y'all there's a lot of stuff and we're going to
00:08:06.560 go over the rumors we're going to go over what's fact what's fiction um you know i might make a
00:08:10.740 prediction here or there but i'm going to make sure i let you guys know that it's a prediction
00:08:13.440 um and uh i'm kind of going to explain how this whole process works now granted we got an american
00:08:20.600 citizen that died abroad so we we now we're involving um international affairs into this situation so
00:08:26.000 before i get into that i want to give you guys a little bit background on my training experience you guys
00:08:29.740 know uh then i'm qualified to talk about this shit because to be honest with you i've watched a
00:08:33.880 couple of videos from people and quite frankly a lot of people don't know what the hell they're
00:08:37.000 talking about so number one as you guys know i was a former special agent with homeland security
00:08:41.400 investigations here we go i got the proof this is my government name from back in the day okay
00:08:46.260 what my old name placard right and here's an award that i got okay in 2019 for a big case that i did
00:08:55.080 which actually involved okay international uh investigation okay i did a case a big case out
00:09:02.500 of turks and caicos with the canadian royal mounted police and um in that case ended up being very big
00:09:08.680 and it was a very similar situation to this where we extradited a guy from turks and caicos to the
00:09:14.600 united states okay so i had to deal with office of international affairs etc so i am very well aware
00:09:21.080 of what it takes and what is required to do a case that's international okay so let me go ahead and
00:09:27.900 share screen with y'all real fast too because i think it's very important that the person that's
00:09:32.400 giving information is qualified to speak on such situations so here's a case that i worked on guys
00:09:38.460 okay uh canadian national police guilty to human smuggling conspiracy okay and this is a case that i did
00:09:43.660 uh it was a big case where we we investigated a human smuggling organization based out of sri
00:09:49.780 lanka that was moving aliens through the united states into canada i'm not going to go into crazy
00:09:54.000 details on the case but long story short i ended up getting the guy extradited from turks and caicos
00:09:58.740 into united states to face prosecution in the united states all right and a bunch of people dox me right
00:10:03.880 like uh on uh court documents that come back with my name here's the guy right the guy's name you guys
00:10:09.300 can go ahead and read about it on u.s department of justice let me enlarge this real fast this is all
00:10:13.160 public information by the way nothing i'm telling y'all is is classified or anything like that i'll
00:10:16.800 never talk about classified stuff on this channel uh right and as you guys can see here more receipts
00:10:21.720 there is my government name and ruffalo hsi special agent bam right and this was and at the time when i
00:10:27.200 got this guy he was in turks and caicos okay guys so i'm showing you guys this as receipts that i know
00:10:33.720 what the fuck i'm talking about because i've actually done these investigations okay as you guys can see
00:10:37.660 there's press releases on the investigations i've done here's the guy's name right here right this hit the
00:10:42.660 news all over the in the u.s and in canada because this guy was a canadian nationally had been doing
00:10:46.660 this for years and then here's the actual court documents right that i did it and as you can see
00:10:51.640 here i'm especially at home ice cream investigations blah blah blah i go over my training and my experience
00:10:55.820 i'll break down this case for y'all too because this one was very um this one was an extensive case
00:11:00.760 um but either way you know i i wanted to put that out there for you guys to let you guys know
00:11:06.440 that uh it's very important that the person you get the information from knows what they're talking
00:11:11.960 about um so hold on let me go back here okay uh let me see here let me make sure i didn't miss any
00:11:17.640 chats before we get into it yeah my my government name is weird i know uh love the content like the
00:11:22.420 video chat yes guys do me a favor like the video um and then we got please do jesse smollett maybe i'll
00:11:28.320 do that one uh hey show jack are you going to do an update okay cool i think we're caught up cool
00:11:32.680 all right now that we've established my training my experience right i did i was oh and then last
00:11:37.960 thing here's me at the academy right graduated uh and this is in 2014 okay
00:11:45.500 and then right and then this is my plaque that i got out of texas right when i was an agent in texas
00:11:54.900 from 20 from 2014 to 2018 right laredo texas that's where i started my career and then i um and then i
00:12:02.100 transitioned to the miami field office from 2018 to 2020 and then i resigned in 2020 as you guys
00:12:06.720 know the youtube channel started to take off i kind of had to make a decision of what i was going
00:12:09.980 to do and i ended up uh leaving the government to uh you know pursue entrepreneurship full-time right
00:12:15.980 so you know i left on good terms right you know shout out to the agency i have nothing bad to say
00:12:20.760 it was a fantastic job i think about it every day i miss it um but i show you guys all this
00:12:25.360 right not to like oh look at me i'm so cool it's to show you guys that i'm qualified to speak on
00:12:30.440 this i know how doing an investigation internationally works i know what it's like
00:12:34.180 working with foreign law enforcement partners i know what it's like getting someone brought into
00:12:37.360 united states and or getting someone sent to another country that is wanted for a crime so
00:12:42.560 um i think that's very important to be able to show you guys uh that i had that training experience
00:12:47.560 in my background so okay cool so now we're going to go ahead and play this video here because this
00:12:52.680 video here guys um it's it summarizes it does a really good job of summarizing the um
00:12:59.060 the investigation as a whole okay um let me pull it up real fast and i'm going to stop the video
00:13:05.480 periodically to add in little parts here and there but in general this video does a pretty damn good
00:13:10.140 job of summarizing all the facts and circumstances so let me go ahead and share screen with y'all
00:13:15.100 boom uh well i'm off today just so just chilling finally in a live stream brother got you kevin uh
00:13:21.420 terrell and then natasha bazil 20 bucks thank you so much guys i appreciate the support
00:13:25.320 all right let's get into it heard a cabo with the intention to hurt her and plan her
00:13:29.640 did shanko and the name of the video is called fbi reveals where shankala robinson's death was
00:13:34.020 planned this is a so fucking clickbait because this isn't true and i'm going to explain the fbi's
00:13:37.900 real role in this investigation for you guys okay um i get it they wanted to go ahead and get some
00:13:43.560 clicks or whatever but yeah this is this is so clickbaity it hurts but uh let's get into it
00:13:49.600 well there she is by the way what the fuck this is her right here by the way guys and then this is
00:13:56.960 her and her friends friends really lure her to cabo with the intention to hurt her and plan her death
00:14:02.340 when they were when they got back from the trip with her luggage what did they tell you happened to
00:14:08.440 your daughter that she got sick from drinking it was alcohol that she got sick from drinking it was
00:14:14.160 even though it has been weeks since shankala robinson has passed away the entire internet
00:14:20.340 yeah guys she died on her about october 28 29th she died a long time ago it is still angry and demanding
00:14:28.540 answers and just when we thought there was no way that this case could get any worse the authorities
00:14:34.520 have released some new details and all right so there's her death certificate right so first what do
00:14:38.980 we got here we got friends telling the family that she just had an alcohol situation well
00:14:43.860 here is the um here's the actual death certificate guys all right and we're gonna go ahead let me
00:14:50.000 enlarge this if i can all right and you can see on this death certificate that you got her full name
00:14:56.220 right uh shankala brendan robinson right you have her date of birth uh uh night in 1997 female usa
00:15:04.340 obviously u.s citizen married she's from north carolina um but the big thing here is she got a severe
00:15:10.560 spinal cord injury and atlas luxation which you know pretty much a lot of times and it was uh and
00:15:17.720 this this is within uh 15 minutes of her getting it getting that injury she died okay and this
00:15:23.500 happened in cabo which is this area right here in mexico guys okay this is baja baja california
00:15:30.300 sir okay so so on a grand scheme of things this is where she was she went all the way from north
00:15:36.920 carolina over here came over here and this is where it happened so this incident occurred at a villa
00:15:44.400 in cabo san locos and for some of you guys that don't know this is a huge vacation destination you
00:15:50.440 know people you know go there all the time it's a resource city on the southern tip of mexico's
00:15:55.620 baja california peninsula is known for its beaches water-based activities and nightlife
00:15:59.040 playa el medano is cabo's main beach with uh outdoor restaurants and uh numerous bars
00:16:03.940 past the marina is land lands and promontory a site of playa del armar lovers beach and al arco
00:16:11.180 a natural arcway in the sea cliffs and that's from google so that's where um they were she was found
00:16:17.060 um where she died okay so let's get back into it but as you guys can see the autopsy heavily contradicts
00:16:24.040 what the friend said about her oh she just drank too much which you know guys what were we born
00:16:29.140 yesterday stupid but again these are people that you know aren't of the highest iq i guess
00:16:34.080 so uh yeah let's keep going evidence that suggests her death was not an accident and was in fact
00:16:41.300 planned by her own friends but why did they hate chanquilla that much of course this is speculation
00:16:47.940 i'll show you guys a video later on that uh talks about this potential plot to kill her um but it hasn't
00:16:55.100 been confirmed yet why did they really do it and what is the fbi saying about this tragedy
00:17:01.040 chanquilla robinson's death has thrown the entire community into confusion in the huge funeral weeks
00:17:07.820 following the incident for those who haven't been following the story we're gonna give you a quick
00:17:13.180 breakdown of the case before we get into the latest details chanquilla went with six friends to cabo
00:17:19.600 mexico for a birthday trip for one of their friends they left from north carolina and chanquilla was
00:17:25.000 in perfect health when she left the friends she left with were malik dyer winter donovan elise hyatt
00:17:32.660 dejanay jackson her best friend khalil cook and nazir wiggins now a lot of the misinformation is
00:17:40.420 concerning is around this woman right here dejanay jackson okay guys and we're gonna get into that
00:17:46.200 here in a bit but she's pretty much who people are alleging was the person that was attacking her in
00:17:52.340 the video okay and i'll play that video for y'all as well actually matter of fact you know what here
00:17:56.880 let me show you guys a clip of the video so this is it right here
00:18:02.780 now what i'm about to show you guys is disturbing okay so i'm gonna you know viewer discretion is
00:18:11.100 advised uh this isn't her nude this is her with cold with blurred
00:18:14.680 all right so you can see she's attacking her can you at least fight back someone says can you at
00:18:23.680 least fight back throws her on the floor hits her some more at least fight back something
00:18:29.440 get up
00:18:31.440 viciously beating her
00:18:32.900 again
00:18:37.080 cool look can you at least fight back
00:18:39.340 at least something at least fight back something
00:18:46.660 crazy crazy crazy crazy and they're there you know egging her on like yo fight back fight back
00:18:56.780 which is wild and the other thing too interesting point for y'all is that the mother okay um confirmed
00:19:04.680 that uh shankuela sleeps naked so this may have been an early morning attack right when she you know
00:19:11.260 got out of bed so we don't know exactly but um but that's what the mother said as well that it was
00:19:18.720 potential that this happened uh when she was woken out of her sleep and the guy that's filming it like
00:19:24.320 ridiculous her best friend khalil cook and nazir wiggins but nazir has come forward to claim that he
00:19:32.540 arrived in cabo a day after the rest of the group and that he wasn't there when the events occurred
00:19:38.300 that led to her death according to shankuela's mother khalil called her the day after they landed
00:19:43.960 in cabo to tell her that shankuela had drunk too much and had alcohol poisoning so what
00:19:50.640 stupid she had alcohol poisoning now so obviously the family's like alcohol poisoning that's why
00:19:58.040 she passed away and then when that autopsy came out it switched everything around she wasn't feeling
00:20:03.600 too well he later called back to tell her that medical staff were in their room and were trying
00:20:09.100 to resuscitate shankuela and when she passed away he then told her that the resuscitation attempts
00:20:14.940 had not been successful khalil and the rest of the group decided to cut their holiday trip short
00:20:20.680 and return home to north carolina that's also very suspicious cutting the trip short right and so that
00:20:28.300 tells me also right me putting on my tinfoil hat here for a second right like
00:20:33.840 if the plan was to go there solely to you know commit a murder why would they cut their trip short you
00:20:43.840 know or why would they why would they do it so sloppily you know because when the medical examiners
00:20:48.520 came when they called the paramedics the first time to check on her they said she had drank too much
00:20:52.000 and the police report was taken and they had said that but it wasn't until the autopsy came out that
00:20:56.520 the mexican authorities basically come back came or reopened the investigation and treated it as a
00:21:00.420 homicide or in their case a femicide and the most bizarre thing is that they left shankuela's body in
00:21:06.840 mexico but okay that's not that weird because obviously a crime had taken place and they need
00:21:13.940 to you know do the autopsy they need to notify the family or whatever so it's not like the the friends
00:21:19.200 are gonna have the authority or the ability to bring the body back so they had no choice but to leave the
00:21:24.700 body in mexico so that you know i guess and this this is what i mean when i say a lot of people
00:21:29.120 on youtube aren't necessarily experienced enough to report some of this information
00:21:33.360 so uh yeah i mean but that's very common if you die in a foreign country even if you're a family
00:21:38.980 or loved one you're not going to necessarily get the body back that that government is going to do
00:21:43.120 what they got to do conduct their own independent investigation whether it's a homicide autopsy whatever
00:21:47.240 it may be and then they'll contact the the family and then they'll orchestrate getting the body back to
00:21:54.560 the family not necessarily to friends they took her luggage with them and khalil dropped it off at her
00:22:00.600 parents house in a recent interview her mother revealed that khalil had continued to lie to her
00:22:06.380 when he dropped off her luggage still claiming that she died from alcohol poisoning when they were when
00:22:12.340 they got man still won't tell the truth stop the cap back from the trip with her luggage what did they
00:22:20.040 tell you happen to your daughter that she got sick from drinking it was alcohol that she got sick from
00:22:26.100 drinking it was alcohol now khalil used to hang out with her family a lot so the family knew and trusted
00:22:33.680 him even when he got back from cabo he would come around the family a lot but all this changed when
00:22:40.200 the autopsy result came out uh yep at that point now they know the truth last time you heard from him
00:22:47.820 i haven't heard from him since the autopsy came back oh that's a red flag right there he probably
00:22:56.160 knew something and didn't want he probably knows something is just trying to stay out of it at this
00:23:00.800 point that's about that's been about two weeks ago three weeks ago when autopsy first came back
00:23:05.900 and i haven't heard from him since before we get to the autopsy and how it exposed khalil and the rest of
00:23:12.120 the friend group we need to talk about a police report that claimed that her friends had told
00:23:17.320 medical staff that she had drunk lots of alcohol and that she was found dehydrated this report from
00:23:23.780 the day she died says guests at the resort called for medical help claiming she had drunk a lot of
00:23:28.440 alcohol a doctor again this goes to show you guys uh how stupid these friends are you know because at
00:23:36.380 this point she probably had some serious injuries and they thought oh let's just lie about it and uh
00:23:41.500 we'll be fine like they're not gonna know this is mexico like they don't have the capability to do
00:23:45.620 a thorough investigation oh man they messed up stupid because the mexican authorities have taken
00:23:51.000 this extremely seriously for a multitude of reasons number one it's an american citizen dying on foreign
00:23:57.500 soil so there's obviously going to be some pressure there number two um black twitter that you know
00:24:03.340 african-american community uh the family everyone has been pressing for answers okay they're not they
00:24:09.540 didn't want to let it go and shout out to them for that right uh third there was uh obviously
00:24:14.900 indications of foul play and which contradicts the original story okay you guys wonder like i talked
00:24:23.240 about this in the wine w melly case the reason why they're going after wine w melly so hard is because
00:24:28.020 the story right that him and wine w port wine w uh portland gave the police grossly contradicts
00:24:37.700 the evidence found at the scene oh we got hit by a drive-by and then they see bullet holes on the
00:24:43.140 side of the vehicle whereas when they actually did the bullet trajectory analysis they found out that
00:24:47.880 there was no way that they got hit in a drive-by because the bullets didn't line up with the wound
00:24:52.300 patterns in the on the individuals that is why the death sentence is being put back on melly because
00:24:56.640 they're saying yo this was a premeditated murder same situation here they're saying that she died of
00:25:01.320 alcohol poisoning and she got too drunk but the reality is she was attacked and the spinal injuries are
00:25:06.920 indicative of that so whenever someone lies to the police like that gross lie right and there was
00:25:13.960 actually some uh foul play and someone was killed on it to them that does what makes it premeditated
00:25:21.280 essentially a lot of the times they look at it like that's premeditated murder because you've taken
00:25:25.520 steps to cover up the fact that a crime occurred all right now can they prove it's premeditated a lot
00:25:33.020 of times no but they're going to treat it like it's premeditated which is what's important all right
00:25:36.780 what you know and what you can prove are two different things which is true however they're
00:25:41.400 going to treat it like it's premeditated because the lie was so gross okay and it and it contradicts
00:25:47.300 1000 what they found in the autopsy so mexico has a very strong incentive to go after these people
00:25:53.520 for public relations um a u.s citizen dying and on top of that guys this occurred in a tourist
00:26:00.320 hot spot okay they can't afford to have tourists dying on their soil right in a tourist location
00:26:08.560 it's one thing if you get killed in nuevo laredo right in juarez right these these war-torn narco
00:26:15.400 controlled cities but when you're in a place like cancun tulum cabo bro people they don't want people
00:26:22.180 dying there because that is that entire area is propped up through the tourist industry it's bad for
00:26:28.980 money okay and i'll take it a step further with y'all as well now me uh going back in time right
00:26:34.460 here right go uh i'll take you guys down memory lane it's extremely bad business for cartels to hurt
00:26:43.540 and kidnap and or kill american citizens uh in mexico especially in tourist destinations because what that
00:26:49.540 does is it brings mexico a bunch of u.s attention and guess what happens when they get u.s attention
00:26:54.320 the ports start to become tighter it becomes harder to smuggle in drugs the police get stricter
00:26:59.240 it becomes way more difficult to get business done the entire smuggling business is is held um almost
00:27:06.760 up in the air so they want business to you know operate as usual so anytime someone does something
00:27:13.060 stupid where they're kidnapping american tourists or whatever may be like that it affects the flow
00:27:19.300 of illicit commerce for the cartels okay so sometimes what they'll do is if someone does
00:27:26.200 something and it wasn't like sanctioned by somebody higher up they'll kidnap that dude beat his ass and
00:27:30.260 then throw him over the border to the mexican authorities to get him sorry to the u.s authorities
00:27:33.360 to get him right i've seen this happen before even myself when i when i was an agent in laredo so
00:27:37.960 they're going to do everything in their power a lot of the times to make sure that american like
00:27:43.140 innocent americans typically aren't hurt in mexico now does it still occur of course
00:27:47.640 but you know for people to say oh yo there's nothing that uh that it's extremely dangerous
00:27:52.320 it is but the people that typically get kidnapped and brought to mexico and tortured and beat up or
00:27:56.400 whatever nine out of ten times are criminals okay they're criminals they owed money they lost drugs
00:28:01.760 they snitched etc if they are american citizens they're ripping drugs you know there's a lot of there's
00:28:06.500 a whole part uh when i was in texas there's a whole crew of guys we call them rip crews and what they
00:28:12.420 do is when drugs are smuggled into united states they they're there waiting and they fucking
00:28:17.460 attack the smuggler steal the drugs and you know go track traffic them themselves right because at
00:28:22.500 that point they've done the hard work where they've smuggled it across them the price of the drugs
00:28:25.840 doubles and now they're able to go ahead and distribute it and make a lot of money however
00:28:29.300 when you do that shit what ends up happening is on the mike side or mexican side they're going to
00:28:36.600 find out who these rip crews are and they're going to go ahead and pay people to go ahead to sicario
00:28:40.280 whatever may be to kidnap these motherfuckers bring them back to mexico and that's when they kidnap
00:28:43.660 and beat the shit out of them so when mexican citizens excuse me when american citizens and
00:28:48.340 are kidnapped or attacked or tortured in mexico nine out of ten times it has something to do
00:28:52.500 with the illicit trade okay but when it comes to like tourist locations cabo cancun etc they don't
00:28:59.060 want anything bad happening there because it messes with business okay guys so that's typically how it
00:29:04.560 goes when it comes to violence on the mexican side not saying it doesn't occur guys but it's not as
00:29:10.240 common as people think where an american citizen is going to get kidnapped in mexico just because
00:29:14.600 like typically there's a reason der said she was quote stable but dehydrated adding that the guests
00:29:20.460 refused to bring her to a hospital the police oh yeah and they also when when they do capture one of
00:29:25.920 these rip crew guys all right or an uh or an op or something like that they're going to make sure
00:29:31.280 to record that beating and that murder on camera and distribute it to allow people to let people know
00:29:37.320 don't mess with us okay the losetas for example are notorious for doing this being extremely violent
00:29:42.400 beheading people killing them torturing them on camera uh hanging the body off of bridges with like
00:29:47.420 a note on it like hey if you cross us this is what's going to happen to you etc
00:29:50.820 report said she went into cardiac arrest and was declared dead at 6 p.m according to this her friends
00:30:00.220 had refused to take medical advice to take her to the hospital and this should have raised red flags
00:30:05.780 with the medics that were attending to that situation but from what we know now her friends
00:30:10.820 probably lied to the medics about the alcohol poisoning and the medics didn't probe further
00:30:15.920 in fact before her autopsy results came out the mexican authorities treated it as an accidental death
00:30:22.820 and didn't investigate further but then the autopsy contradicted everything about the police report
00:30:29.620 down to her time of death according to the police report she passed away around 6 p.m but her autopsy
00:30:37.380 refutes this because it lists her time of death as 3 p.m now it's normal to have some time lapse so
00:30:45.540 that's a big discrepancy right there and a manner of death too in determining the time of death but a
00:30:51.500 three-hour difference is just too much and it suggests that the police report might not be completely correct
00:30:58.520 also the autopsy listed her cause of death as severe spinal cord injury and atlanto axial subluxation
00:31:06.520 which is a condition where unstable or excessive movement is present in the first two vertebrae of
00:31:12.760 the neck and it suggested that shanquela had been the victim of physical attack interestingly the autopsy
00:31:20.160 made no mention of alcohol in her system and people have pointed out that if she indeed taken enough
00:31:26.900 alcohol to get alcohol poisoning then it should have shown up on the autopsy this further proved that
00:31:33.820 her friends were lying and were trying to cover up this was confirmed when a video and that right there
00:31:39.860 is gonna always get the authorities you know thinking like okay what's going on here this is more than
00:31:45.040 likely premeditated murder because they're taking active steps to lie and cover up what the hell
00:31:49.740 actually happened to include lying to police officers and uh professional uh you know personnel
00:31:56.260 that showed up on scene to try to resuscitate her and give medical aid so that's a big issue
00:32:00.440 leaked online that shows shanquela getting hit by one of her friends dejanay jackson in the video
00:32:07.700 and that's who they're identifying is the person that was beating her is dejanay jackson which is
00:32:13.040 where some of the misinformation is coming from as well which we'll get into in a second
00:32:16.700 was hitting her repeatedly even though shanquela wasn't fighting back to make things worse the
00:32:23.940 other people in the group were sitting back watching without attempting to intervene or even
00:32:29.260 asking dejanay to stop which is crazy that is wild so that tells me that something was going on prior
00:32:37.140 to this where they're just going to sit back and watch it maybe there was an altercation maybe they
00:32:42.160 said let's fight or maybe they just knew that she was going to go ahead and attack her uh randomly
00:32:46.680 but the fact that none of the friends stepped in is wild to me and there were men there as well
00:32:52.600 and the dude that's holding the camera saying yo fight back blah blah blah like what the hell
00:32:57.080 l friend right there leo could also be heard saying quella can you at least fight back so from what we
00:33:05.860 know the autopsy result shows that she could have easily gotten injured in the fight especially since
00:33:12.040 it was reported that winter donovan also hit shanquela and even slammed her into a wall oh man
00:33:19.400 well as a result of public outcry and indignation as well as shanquela's parents determination to get
00:33:26.360 answers and justice for her shout out to her parents uh you know working so hard to get the truth man
00:33:32.020 um her mom and her dad they've been doing a bunch of interviews trying to figure out what's going on and
00:33:36.120 that's the importance sometimes guys of having good parents when you don't have like a strong family
00:33:42.320 unit a lot of times these cases fall by the wayside you guys want to know something very
00:33:46.360 interesting since i've been doing a lot of research on these serial killer cases a big reason why these
00:33:50.580 serial killers are able to get away with killing these women right especially back in the 70s 80s and
00:33:55.720 90s is because a lot of them didn't have a family unit that went ahead and actually looked for them
00:34:00.000 and figured out hey what's going on here and you know they just went missing and no one cared
00:34:04.300 but when you have a family behind you man they're going to demand answers they're going to push
00:34:08.340 and that puts an enormous amount of pressure on the authorities to do something which is a good
00:34:12.740 thing shout out to parents mexican authorities reopened the investigation into her death and the
00:34:20.840 fbi also got involved in the investigation the mexican police overturned the previous ruling of
00:34:26.940 non-suspicious death and have now ruled it as a femicide for those who don't know what femicide is
00:34:32.840 it is simply the of a woman based on her gender the killing the international killing a woman
00:34:37.920 based on her gender and then also i want to say this too because as you guys can see in this headline
00:34:42.040 right here arrest warrant issued an investigation that the uh shanquilla robinson in mexico we're
00:34:48.180 going to talk about that arrest warrant here in a little bit uh but basically people were
00:34:52.500 alleging oh dejanay jackson they are issuing an arrest warrant for her which is uh that hasn't
00:34:57.300 really been verified but we'll keep going to overturn the previous ruling of non-suspicious
00:35:02.620 death and have now ruled it as a femicide we just know that there's an arrest warrant but we don't
00:35:07.080 know for who all right for those who don't know what femicide is it is simply the of a woman based
00:35:13.100 on her gender the mexican authorities believe that shanquilla was in part because of her gender and this
00:35:19.440 is why they ruled it as a femicide and i know some of you guys are saying like yo what's a femicide
00:35:24.260 this is weird you guys got to remember that other countries have different laws and statutes and
00:35:28.280 things are written differently um so that's why in mexico they have a statute that refers to it as
00:35:34.240 femicide if convicted a person could face up to 60 years in prison this ruling is one reason that it
00:35:44.300 is believed that shanquilla's death was planned and most probably before they even left north carolina at
00:35:50.500 all people pointed out the fact that her friends watching her get beaten up without saying anything
00:35:55.700 is a clear indicator that this could have been a gang up between them things got even more suspicious
00:36:02.260 when another video from the trip leaked online and it shows that the group was clearly planning
00:36:07.880 something without shanquilla's knowledge or involvement all right i have this video by the way guys we'll go
00:36:25.620 ahead and play it right now all right and this is from instagram account uh the neighborhood talk
00:36:32.940 uh thank you what gold said they cruel
00:36:39.580 the one that's like mediocre is in my champions
00:36:46.380 yeah you don't take that long to get naked
00:36:51.820 you don't take that long to get naked hoes where y'all at
00:36:54.700 i don't take that long to get that long to get naked
00:37:02.540 she told me i'm gonna keep it hot you're gonna keep it hot what
00:37:05.180 i don't know how big it's you that i don't know where to this cute club
00:37:09.020 They, when the old said, they creep.
00:37:15.300 The one that's like mediocre is in my chain.
00:37:18.120 I can't remember.
00:37:22.140 Yeah.
00:37:23.180 It don't take that long to get naked.
00:37:25.780 So.
00:37:27.680 It don't take that long to get naked, hoes.
00:37:30.080 Where y'all at?
00:37:31.480 All right.
00:37:32.040 So you guys can hear it.
00:37:33.300 It sounds to me like they're prepping for the fight almost.
00:37:36.200 Like, hey, it doesn't take you guys that long to get naked.
00:37:39.220 Right.
00:37:39.700 And, you know, that might be, you know, because they said, oh, we're going to fight.
00:37:44.440 And, you know, they had some predetermined time that they were going to fight each other.
00:37:47.660 So that is strange.
00:37:49.860 She walked through the hotel looking for them as they plotted in a different room on her.
00:37:53.840 It was a setup.
00:37:54.940 Right.
00:37:55.480 So I'll play it one more time for y'all.
00:37:58.380 Yeah.
00:37:59.300 It don't take that long to get naked.
00:38:03.700 It don't take that long to get naked, hoes.
00:38:06.100 Where y'all at?
00:38:09.020 She told me I'm going to keep it hot.
00:38:16.200 You're going to keep it hot.
00:38:17.100 What?
00:38:17.940 I'm going to keep it hot.
00:38:18.740 I have to keep it hot.
00:38:19.580 I don't know where to this crew is.
00:38:21.240 They, when the old said, they croup.
00:38:24.020 The one that's, like, mediocre is in my chains.
00:38:30.240 I hate them.
00:38:34.320 Yeah.
00:38:35.240 It don't take that long to get naked.
00:38:37.100 Very, very strange.
00:38:37.960 Very, very strange, as you guys can see.
00:38:40.900 You know, obviously, we don't have the full context, right, of what the hell they were talking about.
00:38:46.760 But, hey, it doesn't take that long to get naked.
00:38:49.120 That's a little strange, right?
00:38:50.240 Because we know that Shanquala was naked when she was attacked.
00:38:56.120 So, and, you know, that could be for a multitude of reasons.
00:38:58.820 Hey, we're going to fight naked, so I know that you can't grab my clothes or anything like that.
00:39:01.840 You know, that might be a reason.
00:39:03.300 But we can only speculate.
00:39:04.320 We don't know the truth.
00:39:08.420 And let me go ahead and hit some of these chats real fast.
00:39:11.120 Okay.
00:39:11.440 We got, thank you guys so much for the support.
00:39:13.640 I really appreciate it.
00:39:14.520 And we'll keep going here with the video.
00:39:18.640 And then we're also going to go into the rumors.
00:39:21.140 Another major reason why I don't dabble in the dark.
00:39:23.180 Stay in the light, fellas.
00:39:24.200 Frankie Baltimore, this fucking guy.
00:39:29.240 You guys got no chill.
00:39:30.800 This shit is hilarious, though.
00:39:33.920 Pino Chet's helicopter tours.
00:39:35.480 Free helicopter rides for all Ninja Watchers.
00:39:37.180 There you go.
00:39:37.900 Like the goddamn video.
00:39:38.720 Stop being Ninja Watchers.
00:39:39.600 We got almost 2,000 y'all in here, by the way, guys.
00:39:42.080 You guys could be anywhere else in the world, but you're here with me.
00:39:43.720 So, like the video, please.
00:39:44.900 Subscribe to the channel if you haven't already.
00:39:47.000 You're not going to get breakdowns like this from someone that used to work in federal law enforcement or anywhere else.
00:39:51.780 A wise man once said, women watch murder mysteries just to relax.
00:39:54.640 Do you predict more women will gravitate towards this channel soon since they like this type of content?
00:39:59.300 Yeah.
00:39:59.880 Yeah.
00:40:00.120 I think a lot of people like crime narratives and stuff like that.
00:40:03.560 You guys really love the serial killer stuff.
00:40:05.820 Can you do ex-football player Steve McNair murder?
00:40:08.460 I can.
00:40:09.680 Damn, Steve McNair.
00:40:10.500 That was way back in the day.
00:40:11.380 Mine is the motivation in motion.
00:40:13.360 That's why Real Men Watch Big Up.
00:40:14.700 To you, bruh, bruh.
00:40:15.460 Thank you so much, man.
00:40:16.200 I appreciate that, my friend.
00:40:17.440 I just try to give you all a diversified content, man.
00:40:20.080 And then I think...
00:40:21.560 Cool.
00:40:21.880 I'm caught up.
00:40:22.820 All right.
00:40:23.080 Let's get back to the video, guys.
00:40:25.260 Thank you so much for the support.
00:40:26.200 Don't forget to like the video.
00:40:26.940 A lot of red flags for a lot of people because the group was clearly trying to make sure that
00:40:34.240 Shanquilla couldn't find them and they didn't want her to hear what they had been talking
00:40:38.340 about.
00:40:39.160 Also...
00:40:39.800 Well, that girl did yell.
00:40:42.160 It doesn't take that long getting naked, hoes.
00:40:44.380 So, you never know.
00:40:46.420 People pointed out that it was shady that they left Mexico so soon after her death.
00:40:51.220 It is believed that the trip could have been an excuse to hurt her in another country, then
00:40:55.980 hurry back to the United States to avoid facing justice in another country.
00:41:00.180 The fact that they left so quickly and left her body in Mexico after only a few hours fueled
00:41:06.640 public opinion that the friends know more than they are saying.
00:41:10.580 People have called out the entire friend group for allegedly planning the entire thing,
00:41:15.500 saying things like,
00:41:17.040 So all of these people involved in Shanquilla Robinson's murder need to be arrested and
00:41:21.640 put away for life.
00:41:22.860 If that doesn't happen, not going to be good.
00:41:26.020 It was a planned attack.
00:41:27.540 People have lost all of their morals.
00:41:30.180 And the more I think about the Shanquilla Robinson assaults, the angrier I get.
00:41:35.740 They planned this entire thing.
00:41:38.020 They intentionally planned the trip to Mexico to kill her.
00:41:41.020 They intentionally caught her at her most vulnerable.
00:41:43.860 And they intentionally recorded it to embarrass her.
00:41:46.960 Pre-meditated.
00:41:48.380 Now, we can't say that for sure.
00:41:51.300 Right, guys?
00:41:52.160 We don't know if they went there with the intention to kill her.
00:41:54.720 And then, you know, they actually enacted upon it or they got there.
00:41:58.740 Everything was good.
00:41:59.520 Then they got into an argument, decided, oh, I want to fight this chick.
00:42:02.800 And then they fought her.
00:42:03.720 And then they concealed it after the fact because they didn't think that they were going to kill
00:42:06.640 her.
00:42:06.880 She beat her up so bad she didn't even realize.
00:42:08.640 We don't know exactly what happened.
00:42:11.820 We really don't.
00:42:12.720 Right?
00:42:12.860 Obviously, we can speculate.
00:42:13.800 You can put on a tinfoil hat to say it was a grand conspiracy.
00:42:16.120 They brought her there just to kill her.
00:42:17.140 But, you know, that seems like a little bit of a far-fetched way to commit a murder.
00:42:22.620 There's ways to do it much cleaner than taking her to an international resort in Mexico to
00:42:27.580 commit a crime, especially a crime that egregious.
00:42:31.060 But, you know, I get it.
00:42:31.880 Like, obviously, there's a lot of outrage here.
00:42:33.260 And it's worthy of the outrage.
00:42:35.100 Like, this is ridiculous.
00:42:35.800 Like, she got beat up in front of a bunch of her friends.
00:42:39.760 And instead of them raising a hand to help her, they recorded it and said, fight back!
00:42:43.620 Fight back!
00:42:44.260 Like, some schoolyard children.
00:42:45.540 Like, this is wild.
00:42:46.760 You know?
00:42:49.980 Let's get back to the video.
00:42:50.860 And now, in recent development, the authorities have seemingly confirmed that her death was
00:42:56.740 premeditated.
00:42:58.020 In fact, Mexican authorities have confirmed that they have issued an arrest warrant for one
00:43:02.840 of her friends who they believe was the main aggressor.
00:43:06.020 They released a statement saying...
00:43:08.340 All right.
00:43:08.620 So, this is kind of where the misinformation comes from.
00:43:11.080 And we'll go back to this video.
00:43:12.840 But right here, okay, this article from this website, blackenterprise.com, okay, as I drink
00:43:21.260 my watermelon monster, by the way, guys.
00:43:25.760 My favorite flavor.
00:43:27.920 Are we canceled yet?
00:43:29.840 All right.
00:43:30.420 We're still on.
00:43:30.920 All right.
00:43:31.100 Cool.
00:43:31.280 So, you never know nowadays, making those kinds of jokes.
00:43:34.060 Dejanay Jackson arrested for the beating death of Shanquilla Robinson, awaits extradition
00:43:37.960 to Mexico.
00:43:38.840 All right.
00:43:39.380 So, the person who is allegedly responsible for the beating death of an American in Mexico
00:43:44.900 has been apprehended and is awaiting extradition back to the country the crime occurred in.
00:43:50.760 What?
00:43:51.200 What?
00:43:51.860 Okay?
00:43:53.380 What the fuck?
00:43:54.120 So, when I heard this news, I was like, okay, let me read a little bit more.
00:43:56.720 And let me enlarge it for y'all real fast.
00:43:59.320 Get this ad out the way.
00:44:02.280 Okay.
00:44:04.820 All right.
00:44:05.240 And it goes here.
00:44:06.180 According to Metropoli, law enforcement officials have arrested Dejanay Jackson, a friend of the
00:44:10.900 murder victim, Shanquilla Robinson, who died after being seen in a viral video being beaten
00:44:16.420 by someone who she was with on a birthday excursion.
00:44:19.320 The suspect was arrested by Interpol agents on November 28th.
00:44:25.100 A Mexican judge had issued an arrest warrant for Robinson, charging her with a crime of
00:44:28.600 femicide.
00:44:29.400 Now, hold up one second.
00:44:30.680 As soon as I saw here, Interpol agents, I was like, yeah, what the?
00:44:36.580 Stop the cow.
00:44:37.480 Like, there's no such thing as Interpol agents.
00:44:39.780 Stop the cow.
00:44:40.480 Now, here's what Interpol really is, guys.
00:44:44.180 Okay.
00:44:45.420 And I have Interpol, guys.
00:44:48.680 All right.
00:44:48.880 It's an international criminal police organization.
00:44:51.560 It's the world's largest international police organization with 194 member countries.
00:44:55.500 Found in 1923, its mission is to facilitate the exchange of police information and promote
00:45:00.020 cooperation and assistance between law enforcement authorities of its member countries.
00:45:05.140 Interpol doesn't have its own law enforcement officers.
00:45:12.780 It has law enforcement officers from other jurisdictions, countries, agencies that sit under one house
00:45:19.740 working together to facilitate the exchange of information and to conduct law enforcement
00:45:24.720 activities together.
00:45:26.080 How do I know this?
00:45:26.920 Well, a couple of reasons.
00:45:27.660 Number one, I just read it for y'all.
00:45:28.780 And then number two, I've actually worked with Interpol.
00:45:30.680 God damn it.
00:45:31.180 God damn it.
00:45:34.060 Okay.
00:45:34.580 That's why in the beginning of the podcast, I wanted to make sure I showed you guys that
00:45:37.660 I did a case that involved international parties.
00:45:39.900 I did a case with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the CBSA, Turks and Caicos Police.
00:45:45.160 I had the Swedes involved.
00:45:47.640 That case was an all-encompassing case all over the world because I had targets all over
00:45:52.400 the place.
00:45:53.120 So I know what Interpol actually does from my training experience and also from knowing
00:45:58.520 what's obviously what I just read for y'all, right?
00:46:02.680 I gave you guys the boiled down, easier version to digest.
00:46:06.200 But Interpol does not have its own law enforcement people.
00:46:09.360 All Interpol does, guys, is it's just a, think of it as it's a house where you got different
00:46:15.900 agencies, right?
00:46:17.020 Law enforcement agencies, not intelligence agencies, law enforcement agencies working together
00:46:21.160 to facilitate law enforcement stuff.
00:46:23.660 So I'll give you an example.
00:46:24.580 I had a guy, right, that I was looking at that was committing some money laundering activities
00:46:29.740 in, I think it was Sweden or Norway, right?
00:46:34.140 And he was associated with one of my other targets.
00:46:37.780 So I reached out to my attache, right, or my international counterpart in that country.
00:46:44.140 He, right, knew someone over at Interpol and he reached out to him to get some other information
00:46:49.600 from the host country.
00:46:52.280 And I got a police report from that country thanks to Interpol facilitating that.
00:46:56.620 What it does is it connects different agencies together so they can exchange information and
00:47:01.180 or work together to arrest people.
00:47:03.680 So if someone has like a red notice or whatever it may be, which is like, think of it as like
00:47:06.560 kind of like a provincial arrest warrant to pick somebody up in another country, Interpol
00:47:10.580 helps facilitate all that, okay?
00:47:12.460 It's simply just a medium to connect agencies, but it does not have its own law enforcement
00:47:18.120 officials, okay, like that are Interpol agents, all right?
00:47:22.860 So cool.
00:47:23.740 So that's number one.
00:47:24.960 Let's keep reading through.
00:47:28.340 The incident took place in October while the group of friends was staying in a luxury villa
00:47:31.420 at Cabo Villas Complex located in San Jose del Cabo.
00:47:34.600 Based on a report by CBS News, Robinson, a 25-year-old woman from North Carolina, had embarked on
00:47:38.500 a birthday trip with several friends and died after being beaten in an act that was captured
00:47:41.900 on a mobile phone.
00:47:44.340 Oh, God, get out of here.
00:47:45.560 That's out of the wooza.
00:47:49.480 Initially, Robinson's family was told by her traveling companions that she had passed away
00:47:52.860 from alcohol poisoning.
00:47:53.980 When the autopsy came back, they said it didn't have anything to do with the alcohol, Salamandra
00:47:57.560 Robinson, Robinson's mother, told Queen City News.
00:47:59.980 They said that she had a broken neck and her spine in the back was cracked.
00:48:03.660 She had been beaten.
00:48:04.780 And I'll tell you guys this.
00:48:06.320 Oh, sorry.
00:48:07.300 Let me put the article back up for y'all.
00:48:09.760 My bad.
00:48:10.100 Let me tell y'all this.
00:48:12.660 For you to go ahead and get this type of injury, you were not just beaten.
00:48:17.940 You were severely beaten, potentially even with an object.
00:48:22.160 Okay?
00:48:23.400 The actual beating was seen in the video that went viral during the filming of the video.
00:48:26.680 No one intervened as Robbins was being assaulted.
00:48:29.400 A male voice is heard saying to her, can you at least fight back?
00:48:32.480 Let's give that guy a big...
00:48:38.100 for not helping out.
00:48:40.100 After the video clip was posted to social media, questions emerged about why none of
00:48:43.660 Robbins' friends tried to stop their altercation.
00:48:45.900 Yeah, disgusting.
00:48:47.380 So, like I said before, this right here threw me off when they said the suspect was arrested
00:48:53.920 by Interpol, ages on November 28th.
00:48:56.840 Now, let me tell you guys, because no one, for some odd reason, no one covered that, any
00:49:01.500 of this stuff.
00:49:02.740 Whenever you want to go ahead, right?
00:49:04.400 Now we know what Interpol is, right?
00:49:05.640 Interpol is just an intermediary to facilitate the exchange of law information between different
00:49:09.460 agencies, right?
00:49:10.640 That's what Interpol is.
00:49:11.660 Now let's talk about an MLAT.
00:49:13.440 Okay?
00:49:14.240 And yo, like the goddamn video right now.
00:49:16.020 Because no one, I've looked at everything, no one talked at all about MLATs, which tells
00:49:24.280 me, once again, this is the importance of talking to someone that actually knows what
00:49:29.480 the hell they're talking about when it comes to doing criminal investigations at a high
00:49:33.000 level with international players involved.
00:49:35.260 You can't do anything without an MLAT, okay, guys?
00:49:39.240 And an MLAT is an agreement between two or more countries for the purpose of gathering
00:49:42.940 and exchanging information in an effort to enforce public or criminal laws.
00:49:46.300 The mutual legal assistance request is commonly used to formally interrogate a suspect in a
00:49:50.780 criminal case when the suspect resides in a foreign country.
00:49:54.380 Now, okay, when it comes to MLATs, guys, and doing investigations that, you know, cover different
00:50:00.120 countries and borders and everything else like that, the MLAT is heavily contingent upon the
00:50:06.160 country that you're working with.
00:50:08.220 One more time.
00:50:09.420 The MLAT, the efficiency of the MLAT, the speed at which it works at, the ease at which
00:50:14.660 it works at, is heavily contingent upon the country that you're working with.
00:50:20.100 I'll give you guys an example.
00:50:21.980 When I was doing my case in Turks and Caicos, right, working with the Canadians and the Turks
00:50:26.440 and Caicos Royal Police, it was very simple because we were working the investigation together.
00:50:32.020 We were sharing information.
00:50:33.720 I was giving them reports.
00:50:35.040 They were giving me reports.
00:50:36.300 We were working together as partners.
00:50:37.900 So the movement of information was very simple, very easy, okay?
00:50:42.800 They were read in.
00:50:43.380 Everything was good, right?
00:50:44.460 Obviously, I didn't share any classified information with them because that's a whole
00:50:47.540 other game.
00:50:48.820 Anything that was classified, my other co-case agent dealt with that.
00:50:52.700 I didn't touch any of the classified stuff.
00:50:53.980 And there's a reason for that, which I can go into in another episode if you guys want,
00:50:57.300 about handling classified information, why it's actually a waste of time and you shouldn't
00:51:00.860 bother doing it.
00:51:02.220 But in general, I worked very closely with them.
00:51:05.500 So this whole MLAT process was extremely simple because I had already had a working
00:51:09.540 relationship with them.
00:51:10.500 And Turks and Caicos in Canada are friendly countries.
00:51:12.980 And then on top of that, we had agreed at the beginning of the case that the United States
00:51:16.580 was going to be the main prosecution venue because in Canada, it's very difficult to
00:51:20.800 build a strong prosecution case.
00:51:22.880 They need a lot of evidence.
00:51:23.980 And, you know, Canada tends to be a little bit liberal.
00:51:26.860 And Turks and Caicos, their case was going to be difficult to prove because they didn't
00:51:31.340 have necessarily all the resources required to prosecute this case to the fullest extent
00:51:36.100 of the law.
00:51:36.920 You know what I mean?
00:51:37.240 It's a small police force.
00:51:38.400 It's a small island.
00:51:39.440 So the United States, right?
00:51:40.720 We took lead in the investigation and they were fantastic law enforcement partners helping
00:51:45.060 me do everything.
00:51:46.000 That's a perfect situation.
00:51:47.380 However, let's say you're working with a country like fucking China, okay?
00:51:53.800 And again, once again, I don't want to toot my own horn, but I had done an organized crime
00:51:57.920 case on Chinese triads, okay?
00:52:00.200 Where we had a guy that was moving a lot of money between the United States and China.
00:52:05.880 He had an entire smuggling organization based on moving Chinese migrants slash aliens into
00:52:12.940 the United States, through the Bahamas, etc.
00:52:14.520 And when I needed information from China, and I reached out to my counterpart out there
00:52:20.740 in China, because we do have an office there.
00:52:22.100 Actually, one of my good friends is going there very soon.
00:52:25.480 They couldn't give me shit.
00:52:26.960 They're basically like, nope.
00:52:28.800 Nah, we're not going to give you anything on this fucking guy.
00:52:31.860 And our hands are tied.
00:52:33.220 You can't do much, right?
00:52:33.960 You can ask the Chinese police, right?
00:52:37.260 For information or whatever.
00:52:38.560 But they're not really friendly about sharing information, guys.
00:52:41.780 All right?
00:52:42.020 So, Russia, very similar.
00:52:44.800 It's difficult to get Russian police reports or get any type of Russian, you know, information.
00:52:49.860 Because, quite frankly, guys, they're adversaries.
00:52:53.060 And in today's day and age, we might not even be in Russia anymore after this whole Ukraine
00:52:58.300 situation, okay?
00:52:59.740 But the point I'm trying to make is that when you're doing MLATs and you're working with
00:53:04.120 certain countries, some countries are much easier to work with than others, all right?
00:53:08.260 Now, let's talk about Mexico.
00:53:10.160 Mexico is fairly easy to work with depending on the situation, all right?
00:53:15.020 When we want, you know, large-scale narco traffickers, you know, Mexico tries to fight a little
00:53:20.800 bit, right?
00:53:21.200 Like, it was a pain in the ass to get Pablo El Chapo to us.
00:53:25.880 It wasn't until he broke out multiple times that the Mexican authorities finally decided,
00:53:29.360 all right, we'll give this guy to the United States because we can't control this shit no
00:53:31.760 more.
00:53:32.480 But in general, I would say Mexico is a fairly friendly country when it comes to complying
00:53:38.140 with MLAT requests.
00:53:40.100 Again, mutual legal assistance treaties, okay?
00:53:43.220 But MLATs are heavily contingent upon the country for which you're trying to get some type
00:53:48.120 of assistance in.
00:53:49.100 All right?
00:53:49.320 Now, now that we've established that an MLAT needs to be in the process, and I also want
00:53:53.320 to let you guys know that this is a multi-varied legal situation that's going on anytime you
00:53:59.200 start to deal with international fugitives, international criminal investigations, whatever.
00:54:03.740 There's three, there's two, well, there's two main agencies that are working in unison along
00:54:08.860 with the investigating agency.
00:54:10.040 Now, the investigating agency is the agency that is doing the case.
00:54:15.260 So in this case, it's the FBI.
00:54:16.780 The FBI went ahead and opened up a case, a criminal investigation into this situation.
00:54:22.600 Why?
00:54:23.060 The reason why they opened it, guys, is because they need to be able to document all investigative
00:54:27.340 efforts done on this investigation based on what?
00:54:31.360 Based on the Mexicans' request, okay?
00:54:34.240 So since an arrest warrant was issued through Mexico, now the FBI has to open up a parallel
00:54:41.100 investigation on their side.
00:54:43.040 They're going to work with the Mexican authorities to facilitate getting whoever's responsible,
00:54:49.120 whoever the arrest warrant is for, to Mexico.
00:54:52.540 All right?
00:54:53.260 That's why the FBI opened up their case.
00:54:54.960 They didn't open their case to do their own independent investigation.
00:54:58.700 All right?
00:54:58.920 Because to be candid with you guys, they don't really have jurisdiction to investigate a crime
00:55:03.700 that occurred outside of the United States.
00:55:06.300 Now, are there situations that we do?
00:55:08.160 Yes.
00:55:08.980 But when it comes to, like, a murder like this, it's a toss-up.
00:55:13.960 It's a toss-up.
00:55:14.800 I think, from what I'm reading, what I'm seeing, more than likely, the Mexican authorities are
00:55:20.820 the lead agency in this investigation, and the FBI is simply assisting, okay?
00:55:25.980 Because the crime occurred in Mexico.
00:55:28.060 Clearly, the Mexican authorities are very serious about this.
00:55:30.260 The fact that they were able to get an arrest warrant back so quickly, they've been following
00:55:33.200 up on leads, et cetera, which is contrary, typically, to how Mexican authorities do their investigations.
00:55:38.920 I'll tell you this, because I work with Mexican police as well, they don't typically move that
00:55:43.000 fast.
00:55:43.700 So the fact that they've been able to secure arrest warrants and do all this stuff fairly
00:55:47.160 quickly is very surprising to me.
00:55:49.240 But I'm not, well, it's not the norm.
00:55:52.040 But I'm not surprised because, again, like I said before, these circumstances, special circumstances,
00:55:56.460 American citizen, enormous pressure on social media to conduct an investigation, the fact
00:56:00.320 that the friends lied, the fact that the autopsy heavily contradicts what they told them, all
00:56:04.140 these factors are aggravating circumstances to make the Mexico say, okay, we're stepping
00:56:09.080 up, we're taking lead on this investigation, we got an arrest warrant for her, bam.
00:56:12.260 Now the FBI knows it's serious, they have to open up an investigation here in the United
00:56:15.980 States so that they can assist Mexico in going ahead and getting this woman over to them,
00:56:22.900 okay, so you got the investigating agency, right?
00:56:27.180 So in this case, it's the FBI.
00:56:28.420 The FBI is under the Department of Justice.
00:56:30.740 Then you got the State Department, which a lot of people didn't talk about this as well.
00:56:35.280 The State Department, guys, is the face of the United States abroad, okay?
00:56:40.200 So the Office of Legal Advisor or Law Enforcement Intelligence is responsible for providing legal
00:56:47.540 advice to the Department of International Law Enforcement Matters and managing the department's
00:56:51.140 responsibilities in cases of international extradition, all right?
00:56:54.800 And then this webpage gives you information.
00:56:56.780 But basically, this paragraph right here is what you guys need to know.
00:57:00.200 Oh, my bad.
00:57:00.760 Let me enlarge this for y'all.
00:57:02.000 Sorry, guys.
00:57:08.760 All right.
00:57:10.160 The Secretary of State is the U.S. official responsible for determining whether to surrender
00:57:15.080 a fugitive to a requesting state.
00:57:17.060 Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3186 and 3188, the Secretary or his designee makes this determination
00:57:24.020 after a U.S. magistrate or district judge transmitted to the department a certification
00:57:29.340 of extradition, finding that the fugitive extradition would be lawful under the pertinent
00:57:33.640 extradition treaty and applicable U.S. law, okay?
00:57:38.060 In determining whether a fugitive should be extradited, the Secretary may consider issues
00:57:41.640 properly raised before the extradition court or a habeas corpus court, as well as any
00:57:46.560 humanitarian or other considerations for or against surrender, including whether surrender
00:57:50.540 may violate the United States' obligations under the Convention Against Torture.
00:57:54.460 The Secretary will also consider any written materials submitted by the fugitive, his or
00:57:59.760 her counsel, or other interested parties.
00:58:01.600 So I like how they put this little part here.
00:58:03.540 All right.
00:58:03.700 Let me translate this for y'all.
00:58:04.780 Um, uh, so the Secretary may consider issues properly raised before the extradition court
00:58:12.180 or a habeas court, as well as any humanitarian or other consideration for or against surrender,
00:58:17.140 including whether surrender may violate the United States' obligations under the Convention
00:58:22.480 Against Torture.
00:58:24.080 Translation, if, uh, we're not giving away any of our spies to you guys, because if they
00:58:30.300 give away a spy, they already know that that person's going to get tortured.
00:58:32.780 So they're not giving, they're not giving spies away unless it's like some kind of high
00:58:35.760 profile exchange, but in general, it's not accepted.
00:58:39.020 All right.
00:58:39.720 But yes, the U.S. Department of State is a critical component to, um, getting someone
00:58:45.800 extradited.
00:58:46.320 You need to work with them.
00:58:47.300 So now, right.
00:58:48.900 So we talked about what an MLAT is, right.
00:58:51.120 Mutually, uh, mutual legal, sorry, mutual legal assistance treaty.
00:58:55.900 Right.
00:58:57.020 Now we talked about the extradition process involving the U.S. Department of State.
00:59:00.760 Now we got to talk about the Office of International Affairs.
00:59:03.840 Anytime, uh, someone has to face some type of criminal investigation, right.
00:59:09.000 The United States Attorney's Office, AKA the federal prosecutors.
00:59:11.960 All right.
00:59:12.800 They're going to be involved in this situation and they have something called OIA.
00:59:16.900 Okay.
00:59:17.120 And I dealt with these guys quite a bit when I was doing my Turks and Caicos case.
00:59:21.260 All right.
00:59:21.780 Work with the Canadians.
00:59:22.520 The Office of International Affairs, OIA, returns fugitives to face justice, transfer
00:59:26.700 sentence persons to serve their sentences in their home countries, and obtains essential
00:59:30.320 evidence for criminal investigations and prosecutions worldwide by working with domestic
00:59:34.240 partners and foreign counterparts to facilitate the cooperation necessary to enforce the law,
00:59:38.320 advance public safety, and achieve justice.
00:59:40.820 Okay.
00:59:41.460 So here, which I think is important, uh, extradition and removal of fugitives.
00:59:46.960 OIA plays a central role in apprehending and returning fugitives to justice so they may be
00:59:50.340 held accountable for their crimes using all legal tools at its disposal, um, extradition,
00:59:55.060 deportation, and other lawful measures.
00:59:56.500 OIA works with domestic and foreign partners to extradite or lawfully remove criminals sought
01:00:00.400 for prosecution in the United States or abroad for a variety of offenses, including violent
01:00:05.380 crime.
01:00:06.160 Okay.
01:00:07.820 So, um, and this is all the different things that they do.
01:00:11.700 Right.
01:00:12.180 And then here we go.
01:00:13.000 International relations and treaty matters.
01:00:15.960 On matters affecting DOJ's international law enforcement mission, OIA attorneys negotiate and
01:00:19.720 provide expert counsel regarding treaties and other agreements.
01:00:22.320 OIA attorneys also represent DOJ and a multitude of multilateral fora, fora, where they formulate
01:00:28.380 law enforcement strategies to promote the U S government's law enforcement interests.
01:00:32.500 Okay.
01:00:33.520 Now we're going to go ahead and look at the statute, right?
01:00:35.720 Cause we talked about the statute with the U S department of state.
01:00:39.360 Okay.
01:00:41.160 Um, with surrendering a fugitive to a requesting state pursuant to 18 USC, 3186 and 3188.
01:00:47.560 For today's purposes, with the Shanquilla Robinson case, we're going to talk about 3184.
01:00:52.760 All right.
01:00:54.160 Um, and that is whenever there is a treaty or convention for extradition between United
01:00:58.560 States, let me enlarge this for y'all real fast.
01:01:00.540 Between the United States and any foreign government or in cases, uh, arising under 3181B, any justice
01:01:08.560 or judge of the United States or any magistrate judge authorized so to do by a court of the
01:01:12.940 United States or any judge of a court of record of general jurisdiction of any state may apply
01:01:18.160 complaint made under oath charging any person found within this jurisdiction with having committed
01:01:22.640 within the jurisdiction of any such foreign government, any of the crimes provided for
01:01:26.620 by such treaty or convention.
01:01:28.140 See, of course now it's very long winded like that guys, because they got to cover every
01:01:31.420 single scenario, right?
01:01:32.700 Or provider under section 31B, uh, issue is warrant for the apprehension of the person.
01:01:38.820 So charged that he may be brought before such justice judge or magistrate judge to the end
01:01:42.900 that the evidence of criminality may be heard and considered.
01:01:45.640 Okay.
01:01:45.980 What the hell was that in English?
01:01:47.500 Basically, if there's a treaty in place, all this basically means if there's a treaty in
01:01:50.960 place, depending on a multitude of different factors.
01:01:52.780 The United States can remove someone to a foreign country, right?
01:01:58.120 Or extradite them to that foreign country to face justice for a crime they committed
01:02:01.740 abroad.
01:02:02.720 All right.
01:02:03.500 They just, they just need to make sure that they get certain things in place.
01:02:06.400 All right.
01:02:06.600 You need the treaty in place, a judge being involved, et cetera.
01:02:09.860 Such complaint may be filed before and such a warrant may be issued by a judge or magistrate
01:02:13.360 judge of the United States district court for the district of Columbia.
01:02:15.660 If the whereabouts within the United States of the person charged are not known, or if there
01:02:19.480 is a reason to believe the person will shortly enter the United States.
01:02:22.000 If on such hearing, he deems the evidence sufficient to sustain charge under the provision of the
01:02:26.820 proper treaty or convention or under section 31b, he shall certify the same together with
01:02:30.880 a copy of all the testimony taken before him to the secretary of state, which we discussed
01:02:34.640 earlier, that a warrant may issue upon the requisition of the proper authorities of such
01:02:38.740 foreign government for the surrender of such person, according to the stipulations of
01:02:42.020 the treaty or convention.
01:02:43.040 And he shall issue his warrant for the commitment of the person so charged to the proper jail there
01:02:48.800 to remain until such surrender shall be made.
01:02:52.000 Okay, so what the hell does this all mean in English?
01:02:55.320 I will translate that for y'all here in a second, but let me go ahead and make sure I didn't
01:02:59.620 miss anyone as far as chats.
01:03:01.320 Yo guys, like the video because I just broke down for y'all how this process actually works.
01:03:08.880 And now that you guys understand, I'm going to go ahead and distill it for you guys and
01:03:11.760 summarize it.
01:03:13.300 Houston has landed.
01:03:14.460 Thank you for explaining fit.
01:03:15.420 Thank you so much, man.
01:03:16.220 I appreciate it.
01:03:16.660 That's what I'm here for, man.
01:03:17.460 Help y'all out because there's a lot of confusion with this.
01:03:20.100 Just started watching your channel.
01:03:21.020 Thank you for all the entertainment.
01:03:21.920 Got you, my friend.
01:03:23.700 Edutainment.
01:03:24.360 There's 2,000 y'all in here, by the way, almost.
01:03:26.200 So guys, like the video.
01:03:27.180 Even if she fought back, she wasn't going to beat the Transformer.
01:03:31.060 You guys are fucking clowns, man.
01:03:32.920 And then we got here.
01:03:33.660 Zeus goes, am I blocked on the FNF channel?
01:03:35.720 Not to my knowledge.
01:03:37.120 I don't block anybody.
01:03:38.040 Sephiroth702.
01:03:41.920 Love the videos.
01:03:42.480 If you want an insane story, do an episode of the Chicago Ripper Crew.
01:03:45.620 Maybe.
01:03:46.140 I've never gotten a request for that one.
01:03:49.140 Okay.
01:03:49.380 I think we're caught up here.
01:03:50.700 And then last one.
01:03:51.240 Can you break down the DC Sniper's case?
01:03:52.680 Yes.
01:03:52.900 I'm already working on that one.
01:03:53.980 I've already started doing research on that investigation for y'all.
01:03:57.420 So, okay.
01:03:59.540 Let's recap real quick because I just spoke a bunch of jargon to y'all that you guys
01:04:04.360 might not know what the hell is going on.
01:04:05.660 So, let me just summarize this off.
01:04:12.660 So, anytime you're doing an investigation that incorporates international counterparts
01:04:17.100 or you have someone that's wanted, right, whether it's them going to the United States
01:04:21.860 or vice versa, you need to involve something called an MLAT, Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty,
01:04:27.900 right?
01:04:28.540 An MLAT's got to be filed first, right, from that country to the United States or the other
01:04:33.320 way around.
01:04:33.700 If we need something from another country, we file an MLAT, right?
01:04:36.660 And that basically asks them to do some type of law enforcement function for the other
01:04:40.920 country.
01:04:41.260 In this case, it's to get someone arrested and brought back to Mexico to face charges
01:04:45.620 of femicide, aka homicide in the United States, right?
01:04:48.360 Now, in order for that to happen, a couple things have to happen.
01:04:51.160 Number one, that MLAT's got to be filed.
01:04:52.820 Number two, the United States Attorney's Office has got to be involved, aka federal prosecutors,
01:04:56.640 not to be confused with the ADA or Assistant District Attorney.
01:04:58.880 It's an AUSA, and the AUSA's office, what falls under the Department of Justice, and
01:05:04.220 within the Department of Justice, there's something called OIA, aka the Office of International
01:05:09.680 Affairs.
01:05:10.500 They're the ones responsible for facilitating all of this communication with the foreign
01:05:15.660 government to make this happen.
01:05:17.880 And then on top of that, you got the investigating agency, which in this case is the FBI, right?
01:05:23.180 And then you also have the State Department, which is the bridge under which all of this
01:05:27.660 will be facilitated, because the State Department is the face of the United States internationally.
01:05:32.420 And so State Department facilitates it, Office of International Affairs gets the documents
01:05:37.240 ready to facilitate it, and then the investigating agency prepares the documents for the OIA to
01:05:42.460 go ahead and facilitate it.
01:05:44.540 Does that make sense, guys?
01:05:45.240 One more time.
01:05:46.140 Do a lot at y'all there.
01:05:47.220 Do a lot at y'all there.
01:06:17.220 Gathering the facts, working with the actual Mexican law enforcement, gathering the facts
01:06:20.720 together, and then giving it to OIA to go ahead and make everything work nice and dandy.
01:06:29.380 And that, my friends, is how investigations are done on an international level, working
01:06:34.420 together.
01:06:35.320 You got State Department, OIA, which is under the Department of Justice, and then you got
01:06:40.040 the investigating agency.
01:06:41.280 In this case, it's the FBI, but you can switch them out, put DEA there, put Homeland Security
01:06:45.020 there, put Secret Service there.
01:06:46.680 It doesn't matter which investigating agency it is, but you're going to need OIA, and you're
01:06:50.240 going to need the State Department to facilitate the paperwork and the documents to make everything
01:06:56.540 official by way of an MLAT.
01:06:59.540 Okay, guys?
01:07:00.180 Like the video, because y'all ain't going to get sauce like that anywhere else.
01:07:03.740 And this is coming from a guy that has actually done this.
01:07:05.960 And also, we'll go over real quick what a provisional arrest is, okay?
01:07:13.300 So, a provisional arrest, guys, is appropriate when the country making the demand for extradition
01:07:17.640 believes that there is a risk.
01:07:18.820 The fugitive will flee.
01:07:20.040 Request for provisional arrest must be handled quickly for the United States to fulfill its
01:07:23.120 treaty obligations.
01:07:23.840 After receiving a request for provisional arrest, the Office of International Affairs, now that
01:07:27.860 we know who they are, contacts the prosecutor in the district where the fugitive is located.
01:07:30.940 The OIA provides information about the name, identity, and whereabouts of the fugitive, the
01:07:34.420 crime with which he or she has been charged, the foreign warrant issued for the fugitive's
01:07:40.040 arrest, and the demand for provisional arrest.
01:07:42.000 Okay.
01:07:42.560 So, also, I want to say that there's been rumors, right, from other outlets that Dejanay Jackson
01:07:49.820 was the person that the arrest warrant was issued for and that she was arrested in Connecticut.
01:07:55.340 Now, this is my opinion based on my training, my experience.
01:08:00.520 This is not necessarily, I can't say that this is 1,000% fact, but if she was arrested
01:08:06.440 in Connecticut, I find it strange that there is absolutely no media coverage on it whatsoever.
01:08:12.780 Typically, when a case is this high profile, right, and people are putting pressure on the
01:08:18.100 FBI to investigate because we know her parents are mad.
01:08:20.120 They're not happy.
01:08:20.680 They're saying, hey, the FBI is not doing anything about this.
01:08:24.000 Here, I think is this article right here?
01:08:26.420 Yeah.
01:08:26.880 Mom of slain tourist, Shaquilla.
01:08:28.500 I'll show you guys real fast.
01:08:30.380 Shaquilla Robinson blasts FBI for lack of progress, right?
01:08:33.680 And this was December 2nd.
01:08:35.040 This was recently, right?
01:08:36.440 So, anytime the Bureau has an enormous amount of pressure on them to make an arrest or have
01:08:42.680 something happen, they're one of the best media-trained agencies in the world, okay?
01:08:48.060 There's a reason why they're a household name.
01:08:50.400 There's no way that someone that might be involved in an international murder that has
01:08:56.100 this much news coverage would get arrested and it wouldn't get leaked somehow by some
01:09:00.160 investigative reporter or something.
01:09:02.280 So, I find it odd that if she was arrested, no one knows about it.
01:09:06.820 Or they're reporting that she was, but it's being kept under wraps somehow, right?
01:09:10.320 Now, I know some people are saying, oh, well, you know, you got to understand what Mexican
01:09:13.300 law, it's illegal for people to talk about an arrest after, when, during an active investigation,
01:09:22.160 they don't have the same laws in the United States, you know, like in the U.S., you might
01:09:24.800 arrest someone and they do a big-ass press conference.
01:09:26.640 In Mexico, they can't do that because of the cartel problem and they don't want witnesses
01:09:30.320 getting killed, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:09:31.420 I understand that, but at the end of the day, she's getting arrested on U.S. soil and there's
01:09:37.620 an enormous amount of pressure on the FBI to make an arrest and to get something done
01:09:42.060 here.
01:09:42.480 So, I find it strange that someone like this, such a high-profile case, would get arrested
01:09:49.000 and there's no formal media coverage on it anywhere.
01:09:53.640 I haven't seen anything official out of Connecticut, the United States Department of Justice, nothing.
01:09:59.060 All right?
01:10:00.240 So, was she really arrested in Connecticut?
01:10:02.960 I don't know, but I will tell you that it's strange that I haven't heard anything about
01:10:06.500 it because you can't keep something like that a secret.
01:10:08.560 Some investigative reporter is going to find out, bro.
01:10:10.680 Somebody.
01:10:11.440 Okay?
01:10:13.980 What else here?
01:10:15.560 And then, yeah.
01:10:20.140 Cool.
01:10:20.800 So, okay, let me hit some of these chats real fast, guys.
01:10:24.120 I like the video.
01:10:24.780 We got 2,000 of y'all in here, by the way.
01:10:26.360 You guys could be anywhere else, but you're here with me.
01:10:28.640 I hope you guys are enjoying this breakdown.
01:10:30.280 I'm going into excruciating detail here, guys, but I really want you guys to understand,
01:10:34.120 and I understand that this is a very cumbersome process.
01:10:37.480 This is why so many people don't like doing international investigations because it's a
01:10:41.120 lot of red tape, man.
01:10:42.060 It's a pain in the ass.
01:10:43.420 It takes months, if not years, to get MLATS through, depending on the relationship of the
01:10:48.100 country, and it isn't easy.
01:10:51.060 All right, here.
01:10:51.820 Let me pull up some of these chats real fast.
01:10:55.260 All right.
01:10:55.720 And I'll open it up for questioning here, guys.
01:10:59.440 So, if you got questions, go ahead and super chat them in, and I'll answer them, and then
01:11:02.940 we'll close this bad boy up.
01:11:05.540 Let's see here.
01:11:10.000 I'm just refreshing the page.
01:11:11.560 Thank you guys so much for the support, man.
01:11:13.280 And don't forget to like the video.
01:11:14.860 All right.
01:11:15.160 Okay.
01:11:17.260 Five bucks from Sephiroth702 goes, the first crime was actually committed by their parents
01:11:21.400 for these ratchet names.
01:11:23.820 Bro.
01:11:25.720 Love the content, Myron.
01:11:26.740 If possible, can you do a breakdown of Griselda Blanco?
01:11:30.000 That fed episode would be one of the best and is still fitting since the majority takes
01:11:33.020 place in Miami.
01:11:33.740 Yes, I can.
01:11:35.300 Griselda Blanco, if you guys are wondering, is an OG narco trafficker right around.
01:11:41.220 She was like Pablo Escobar's like mentor, pretty much.
01:11:45.200 We got here.
01:11:46.140 Can you break down the DC snipers?
01:11:47.440 Yes, I will.
01:11:48.580 Thank you for explaining.
01:11:49.780 Let's see here.
01:11:52.000 I'm just making sure I didn't miss anything here, guys.
01:11:54.120 And I appreciate all the chats as well.
01:11:55.720 So, I think I caught, I got everything here.
01:12:07.820 All right.
01:12:08.800 I think.
01:12:11.060 Give me one second, guys.
01:12:13.840 Yeah.
01:12:14.240 All right.
01:12:15.000 Now, okay.
01:12:15.960 I caught it with the older chats.
01:12:17.400 Okay.
01:12:17.640 Favorite Eminem album.
01:12:20.420 The Eminem show or the Slim Shady LP?
01:12:22.180 Uh, or no, no, the Martian Matters LP.
01:12:26.740 I'm sorry.
01:12:27.460 Uh, the other Zeus is an imposter.
01:12:28.940 Join the Discord so we can battle it out.
01:12:30.420 Okay.
01:12:30.940 Fair enough.
01:12:31.520 Y'all can fight to the death.
01:12:33.540 Um, let's see here.
01:12:42.320 Hmm.
01:12:44.500 Yeah.
01:12:45.040 So, okay.
01:12:45.760 So, what's my final thoughts on this situation?
01:12:48.320 Cause I drink my watermelon.
01:12:53.880 Um, what I anticipate that's going to happen, guys, is the Mexican authorities are going to continue to obviously do their investigation.
01:13:01.200 They're obviously working at a very fast pace.
01:13:03.900 The fact that they're able to get an arrest warrant this quickly and go through the entire process and reach out to the United States.
01:13:08.820 Because I guarantee right now, an MLAT has more than likely been already filed, right?
01:13:14.600 And, uh, the U.S. Attorney's Office, OIA, is working very closely with the FBI to go ahead and facilitate the exchange of this person that they want arrested.
01:13:23.880 Now, um, I wouldn't be surprised if the FBI wasn't watching, um, that person that wants to, um, that the Mexican authorities want, as well as potentially keeping an eye on the other individuals that went to Cabo.
01:13:36.200 They're probably going to interview them as well.
01:13:38.040 If not, what will happen is the Mexican authorities will come to the United States, interview them, you know, with the help of the FBI.
01:13:45.520 The FBI will basically call them in and the Mexican authorities will be there doing the interviews and the FBI agents will sit in, right, as an American law enforcement.
01:13:51.020 And they'll let the Mexicans go ahead and gather their, gather their, uh, their information for their investigation.
01:13:56.700 And then who knows, my other arrest warrants might go ahead and get, um, get filed.
01:14:01.900 But as far as this person coming, uh, getting arrested and everything else like that, that is why the FBI opened up their case because the Mexicans filed something official on their end, filed an MLAT.
01:14:10.780 Now the FBI has no choice.
01:14:12.060 They have to go ahead and open up an investigation.
01:14:14.000 Office of international affairs is involved.
01:14:16.440 They probably received the MLAT and now, uh, they're just getting all the documentation, getting the approvals, getting the signatures, getting the blessings from the higher ups at OIA to go ahead to get everything cleared, bring it to a judge, get this woman arrested or this individual arrested.
01:14:32.300 Who knows?
01:14:32.620 We don't know if it's the Jay Jackson or one of the other people that were involved that the Mexicans are looking for.
01:14:37.380 Remember it, they never actually formally named who's on the arrest warrant.
01:14:41.060 They just said that they have an arrest warrant.
01:14:42.640 Um, and then we'll see what happens from there.
01:14:47.260 Uh, phosphorus.
01:14:48.640 Wow.
01:14:48.820 There's daddy is streaming.
01:14:49.680 Finally.
01:14:49.980 Okay.
01:14:50.780 Uh, Natasha Bazil goes, shouldn't there be an arrest work record September of justice website, federal bureau of prison?
01:14:56.680 No.
01:14:57.080 The reason why you're not going to find an arrest record for the federal bureau of prisons or the September of justice website is because this is an international arrest and she is not being arrested for a U S federal crime.
01:15:06.600 Okay.
01:15:07.040 At least at this point, she's being arrested by the Mexicans, which is also another reason to why, um, the FBI is not lead on this investigation.
01:15:14.040 Now, can you arrest an individual that committed a crime outside of the United States?
01:15:19.280 Absolutely.
01:15:19.720 You can.
01:15:19.960 And I will actually cover a case on this on Hezbollah, uh, very soon.
01:15:24.100 I'm going to do, go ahead and do a documentary reaction for y'all on that, where they meant arrest an individual, uh, that actually, no, it was the hijacking of Egypt air, right?
01:15:34.940 Uh, back in like, I think the eighties or the nineties.
01:15:36.980 And that was one of the first cases where they were able to charge someone for a crime that occurred outside the United States against us citizens.
01:15:43.220 But in general, right.
01:15:45.500 But that was terrorism.
01:15:46.320 That's why the FBI wanted it.
01:15:47.280 That's what gave them the jurisdiction of murder like this.
01:15:49.720 The Mexican authorities are going to take this all day more than likely.
01:15:52.140 And the FBI is the assistant agency.
01:15:54.140 So since they're the assisting agency, they're not necessarily going to drop American charges for her, which is why you won't see her in the federal bureau of prisons.
01:16:01.120 Okay.
01:16:02.560 Good question.
01:16:05.500 Uh, let's see here.
01:16:06.520 Any other questions guys before I, uh, before I close this thing up, this one was a short and sweet one because we don't have all the information, right?
01:16:16.540 There's, there's rumors out there and everything else like that, that the woman was arrested in Connecticut, they're going to bring her back to Mexico or whatever.
01:16:22.100 But I find it very difficult to believe with no press put out there, right?
01:16:27.620 Especially with a high profile case like this.
01:16:29.860 There's no way that a reporter wouldn't be able to get their hands on this and figure out that she was arrested in Connecticut.
01:16:36.980 Um, let's see here.
01:16:39.140 Anything else?
01:16:42.260 And they say we don't dabble in the dark.
01:16:44.900 Shout out to.
01:16:46.540 Um, shout out to FBI in the chat.
01:16:53.860 Someone said, uh, talk about, um, talk about takeoff situation too.
01:17:00.860 I mean, all I know about the takeoff situation is they found the shooter.
01:17:03.520 They got the shooter.
01:17:04.620 Um, he's arrested for, I think his name is DJ Pat.
01:17:08.780 He's right.
01:17:09.340 He got arrested for murder.
01:17:10.300 And then the guy cam that I talked to y'all about on the last episode I did where they, he was brandishing a gun.
01:17:14.820 They arrested him for law, unlawful possession of a firearm because he's a felon.
01:17:19.620 Would she go to Mexican prison?
01:17:20.720 Yes.
01:17:21.480 Yes.
01:17:21.680 She would go to Mexican prison if, if, uh, if she's, uh, arrested, uh, tried and convicted.
01:17:27.480 So if they do get charged in Mexico, will they be serving time in Mexico?
01:17:30.200 Yes.
01:17:30.680 Mr.
01:17:30.920 Uzi.
01:17:31.140 Yep.
01:17:31.340 Absolutely.
01:17:31.680 Um, the United States is in an assistance role in this investigation.
01:17:35.620 The Mexican government are the ones that are leading the investigation and any type of case guys, there's always a lead agency.
01:17:41.560 The lead agency is the one that's responsible for drafting up the arrest warrants, the affidavits, getting the evidence, et cetera.
01:17:47.000 And then the assisting agency basically helps you facilitate it.
01:17:50.200 So for example, these Mexican authorities want to come to United States and more than, more than likely, I wouldn't be surprised if these Mexican authorities don't want to come to United States and interview all six of those people that were there in Cabo for them to do that.
01:18:00.620 They need to get the approvals, you know, through OIA, through the MLAT, et cetera.
01:18:04.300 They travel to United States.
01:18:05.500 They meet with FBI agents, FBI agents, go ahead and go get those six people.
01:18:09.380 And they bring, and they bring them in front of the Mexican authorities.
01:18:11.740 They sit in on the interviews and let the Mexican authorities conduct their, their investigation, ask their questions.
01:18:16.500 Okay.
01:18:16.960 Maybe facilitate it with a translator or whatever, because Mexican authorities don't have jurisdiction in the United States.
01:18:23.140 However, they're still conducting an investigation and the FBI will facilitate that.
01:18:27.600 So I'll give you guys an example on my side.
01:18:29.260 When I went to Turks and Caicos to do my case, obviously I couldn't go there with my gun or anything like that because I'm, I don't have law enforcement power in Turks and Caicos.
01:18:37.440 However, I was working with the Turks and Caicos police.
01:18:40.500 So when I got there, basically I was able to do everything I needed to do with them helping me out and facilitating everything.
01:18:47.000 They were the ones that brought me to prisoners.
01:18:48.260 I interviewed the prisoners, you know, after, you know, I would take the witness statements, everything else like that.
01:18:52.900 I basically did everything the same.
01:18:54.080 It's just that Turks and Caicos was there with me every step of the way, because it is their country.
01:18:58.000 It would be the same exact situation with the Mexican authorities coming to the United States.
01:19:01.760 They travel here.
01:19:03.060 The FBI, who's an investigating agency on the U.S. side, the parallel agency, they will facilitate it.
01:19:08.040 They do their interviews.
01:19:08.900 They get them whatever they need.
01:19:10.180 And then they go back to their country, prepare the evidence and write up their reports.
01:19:14.260 And then they add to their criminal investigation.
01:19:19.360 Can you cover the Idaho murders?
01:19:21.440 I don't know which ones you're talking about in particular, but let me know.
01:19:24.520 Can you do the case on Michael Myers' daddy?
01:19:27.240 I don't know who Michael Myers' daddy is.
01:19:29.680 After the Mexican authorities charged to convict the offenders after they served their prison sentence, can they still be charged in the United States?
01:19:36.300 I doubt it.
01:19:37.420 And the reason why is because of something called double jeopardy.
01:19:40.080 Anytime you're convicted of a crime, right, typically they're not going to want to charge you for that crime again.
01:19:46.840 Now, it's debatable because they could say, oh, well, that crime occurred in another country, and it's a different crime.
01:19:52.380 Technically, it's femicide.
01:19:53.520 It's not homicide.
01:19:54.900 So, you know, there are nuances there where they could be charged.
01:19:58.320 But then you've got to ask yourself who's going to charge it, which agency is going to take lead in that investigation.
01:20:02.780 Does that agency want to go ahead and waste the time and resources to put her in jail when she's going to get 50 years in Mexico?
01:20:08.060 So, you know, because like they said before, this carries quite a penalty over there in Mexico.
01:20:11.940 So it might not be worth the U.S.'s time to pursue a criminal investigation because she might spend a lot of time in Mexico.
01:20:17.380 OK, and I hate to say it like this, but law enforcement, guys, has to prioritize.
01:20:22.640 And the U.S. attorney's office, right, the prosecutors, they have to allot their time to the cases that are the most sexy, that are going to get the most time, that are worth the resources.
01:20:29.180 Because you can't prosecute everyone for every single crime.
01:20:32.100 It would be impossible.
01:20:35.540 So, yeah, we read that one.
01:20:37.460 We should go to Mexican prison.
01:20:38.660 We got answered that one.
01:20:40.600 Let's see here.
01:20:41.200 Anything else?
01:20:44.120 We got here.
01:20:45.860 Appreciate the stream.
01:20:46.620 I'm going to go ahead and watch The Railroad Killer now to get caught up.
01:20:48.520 Yes, guys, I dropped the episode the other day on The Railroad Killer, which I'll show you guys real fast here.
01:20:55.280 For some of you guys that like these serial killer breakdowns, the serial killer, and I'll share my screen with y'all real quick.
01:21:03.160 All right.
01:21:04.040 This episode right here, FedExplains Railroad Killer case.
01:21:06.920 I dropped that a couple of days ago on Thursday.
01:21:09.280 I reacted to the FBI Files episode.
01:21:11.200 This guy basically was running around in Texas, getting off on trains and sneaking into people's houses, killing them, eating their fruit, and then staring at their driver's licenses.
01:21:20.540 Yeah, I know.
01:21:21.240 What?
01:21:21.420 But, yeah, and in it, I got, you know, detailed timestamps and everything else like that.
01:21:25.720 I break down everything as far as, like, how we committed the crimes, that, you know, the agencies involved, how they caught them, everything like that.
01:21:33.380 So, you know, I always put timestamps in all my videos.
01:21:35.680 So make sure to go ahead and check it out, guys.
01:21:37.240 I spent quite a bit of time on these documentaries for you guys.
01:21:40.180 I know you guys really enjoy them.
01:21:41.600 And then I made a whole playlist for y'all on serial killers, you sick bastards.
01:21:45.900 Jeffrey Dahmer, John Wayne Gacy, the killer clown, Ted Bundy, of course, the Night Stalker, who's probably one of the most disturbing ones.
01:21:53.260 And then we got the Unabomber, who this was the biggest, the most expensive FBI case to date, I think, prior to 9-11 was the Unabomber.
01:22:01.100 So, and I'm going to do more serial killers for you guys in the future.
01:22:03.840 And then I got the whole complete 9-11 breakdown where 1993 World Trade Center bombing, 9-11, the official narrative how the FBI caught, identified Al Qaeda and Bin Laden.
01:22:13.840 Then who Bin Laden was, how the CIA found them.
01:22:15.980 And then I go into the three conspiracy episodes.
01:22:18.460 I'm trying to get the other episode back up for you guys on what they found in Bin Laden's compound.
01:22:22.700 YouTube took it down because there's some haters.
01:22:24.500 But I'm going to go ahead and get it back up for y'all.
01:22:26.360 But this was actually like an eight-part series here on 9-11.
01:22:29.840 The official and the unofficial narratives.
01:22:31.860 No one else has this extensive of breakdown 9-11 on both sides.
01:22:35.040 I was completely, you know, I did it from an unbiased perspective.
01:22:37.680 I covered both sides, the conspiracy and the official narrative.
01:22:41.200 But yeah, man.
01:22:41.660 And then you got the podcast clips, crime documentary breakdowns, and obviously the live streams, which were on one live right now.
01:22:47.660 But yeah, all that stuff is out there for y'all.
01:22:51.640 Let's see here.
01:22:52.320 Anything else?
01:22:53.280 Okay.
01:22:54.040 No questions.
01:22:54.560 Just want to show support.
01:22:55.320 Thanks for all you do.
01:22:55.920 Stop drinking Monster, though, bro.
01:22:57.160 I work where those are made.
01:22:58.340 Protect yourself.
01:22:59.580 Amen.
01:23:00.140 I'll live.
01:23:00.540 Don't worry, bro.
01:23:01.680 A lot of y'all out here eating ass.
01:23:03.240 Worried about me drinking Monsters.
01:23:05.320 You guys watched the last episode.
01:23:06.620 You guys know exactly what I'm talking about.
01:23:09.380 Wrap your favorite M verse.
01:23:10.900 We want to hear some bars.
01:23:16.740 I can't think of...
01:23:17.620 Oh, probably his verse on Renegade with Jay-Z.
01:23:20.200 That's one of his best verses.
01:23:22.600 He made Jay-Z look actually pretty bad on that one.
01:23:25.120 Renegade.
01:23:25.520 Go ahead and check it out.
01:23:26.280 Listen to that song.
01:23:27.120 Eminem and Jay-Z.
01:23:28.620 Renegade.
01:23:29.020 Off the Blueprint.
01:23:31.660 I think back in like 2001.
01:23:34.020 Let's see here.
01:23:35.840 Okay.
01:23:36.140 Railroad Killer.
01:23:36.740 We talked about that one.
01:23:38.300 Okay.
01:23:39.360 Louis Rage.
01:23:40.120 Thank you so much.
01:23:40.820 Appreciate that.
01:23:41.480 And we got here.
01:23:45.120 Benny Mac.
01:23:45.920 Four college students murdered.
01:23:46.860 Open case in Idaho right now.
01:23:48.160 Oh, you're talking about the murder from last week.
01:23:50.340 Okay.
01:23:50.600 Okay.
01:23:50.780 Okay.
01:23:51.100 I know what you're talking about.
01:23:52.580 I know what you're talking about now.
01:23:54.620 And guys, just do me a quick favor here.
01:23:56.160 Let me see what the likes are at.
01:23:57.200 Oh.
01:23:57.300 The likes are at 1k.
01:23:59.140 Guys, can you guys get me to 1,800 likes?
01:24:01.800 Because it helps a lot with the algorithm.
01:24:03.360 Helps boost this video up so more people can find it.
01:24:05.820 A lot of my videos on Fedit for some odd reason get demonetized because they're haters or I get a yellow check, which not necessarily I care about the money.
01:24:13.240 It's just that when you get a green check, right, where it's fully monetized, they push it more in the algorithm.
01:24:18.040 YouTube or jerk offs like that, where if it's not a full green check, they don't push it as much because they can't sell as many ads to it.
01:24:24.500 So like the video pushing the algorithm so more people can see it.
01:24:28.800 And yeah, I think this is probably one of the more thorough breakdowns of this investigation because I'm telling you guys the inner workings of how international cases work.
01:24:36.100 I gave you guys a little bit of speculation, but I'm trying to keep it very factual here.
01:24:39.620 And to be quite honest with you, we don't have enough facts to be able to make.
01:24:43.240 Make the most informed decision.
01:24:44.560 I know that there's a reporter out there and out in Mexico giving some rumors and stuff like that.
01:24:49.320 But I we can't independently verify what he's saying.
01:24:52.420 You know, he's saying, oh, I have an insider at the prosecutor's office in Mexico.
01:24:56.800 You know, the Mexican media guys isn't as you know, you guys think American media is bad.
01:25:01.940 Mexican media could be even worse.
01:25:06.380 Let's see here.
01:25:09.220 All right, cool.
01:25:10.320 I think we're caught up, guys.
01:25:11.800 Like the video.
01:25:13.240 I'll catch you guys tomorrow on on Fresh and Fit Money Monday, 7 p.m.
01:25:19.120 as usual.
01:25:20.160 And yeah, man, love you.
01:25:21.500 Thank you guys so much for the for the support.
01:25:23.860 Like the video on your way out.
01:25:25.120 Share this with a friend.
01:25:26.400 And, you know, I hope rest in peace to Shanquilla Robinson.
01:25:29.300 And I hope they find the people that are responsible and they're prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, because what they did was fucking foul and unacceptable behavior.
01:25:37.220 You know, to beat up on a woman that's defenseless, not even fighting back, record it.
01:25:41.640 Right.
01:25:41.960 And so all fight back and think it's like some kind of game is ridiculous.
01:25:46.060 And they deserve to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
01:25:49.180 And I'll tell you this.
01:25:49.660 Mexican prison is not fun.
01:25:51.160 It's not fun at all, man.
01:25:52.260 So over they catching they catch that person.
01:25:55.880 And yeah, guys, take it easy.
01:25:58.460 Rest in peace to Shanquilla Robinson.
01:26:00.100 And I'll catch you guys tomorrow.
01:26:00.940 7 p.m.
01:26:01.380 For Fresh and Fit.
01:26:02.340 Peace.
01:26:02.600 I was a special agent with Homeland Security Investigations.
01:26:07.320 Okay, guys.
01:26:07.840 HSI.
01:26:08.440 The cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.
01:26:13.880 No one else has these documents, by the way.
01:26:16.100 Here's what Fed it covered.
01:26:17.840 Dr. Lafredo confirmed lacerations due to stepping on glass.
01:26:24.000 Murder investigations.
01:26:24.960 You see him reaching in his jacket.
01:26:26.120 You don't know.
01:26:27.300 And he's positioning.
01:26:27.960 Been on February 13, 2019.
01:26:29.640 You're facing two counts of two meditative murders.
01:26:32.600 Cracketeering and Rico conspiracies.
01:26:34.520 Young Slime Life here and after referred to as YSL.
01:26:37.200 This is 6ix9ine.
01:26:38.800 And then this is Billy Seiko right here.
01:26:40.640 Now, when they first started, guys, 6ix9ine ran.
01:26:43.240 I'm a Fed.
01:26:43.760 I'm watching this music video.
01:26:45.520 You know, I'm bobbing my head like, hey, this shit lit.
01:26:47.640 But at the same time.