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00:00:00Musik
00:00:30Musik
00:00:32Musik
00:00:34Musik
00:00:44Musik
00:00:46Musik
00:00:48Ich bin hier mal ein.
00:00:50Der ist ein
00:00:53Der ist ein
00:00:54Der ist ein
00:00:56Der ist ein
00:00:57Das war, der ist ein
00:00:58Das war, der da ist
00:01:00Das war, der da ist
00:01:01Step out und face away
00:01:03Please, don't shoot me, Mr. Alters
00:01:04Please, don't shoot me, man
00:01:06Step out and face away
00:01:07Can you not shoot me, man?
00:01:07I'm not shooting you
00:01:08Step out and face away
00:01:08Okay, okay, okay
00:01:10Please, please, please, man
00:01:13Please, please
00:01:14I didn't know, man
00:01:15Get out of the car
00:01:17I didn't know without you
00:01:18I didn't know anymore
00:01:19Get another home
00:01:20Hey, you come back
00:01:25Stay in the car
00:01:26Stop resisting, man
00:01:32Yes, you are
00:01:34I can't breathe
00:01:42I can't breathe
00:01:47No, no, no
00:01:50No, no, no
00:01:52No, no, no
00:01:54We tried that for two minutes
00:01:55I have decided to do this video
00:02:13I have decided to do this video
00:02:25It has been weighing very heavily on my heart
00:02:27I want to come out and say that I do not support George Floyd and the media depiction of him
00:02:34as a martyr for black America
00:02:35I'm going to explain why and I hope that some of you guys will understand where I'm coming from
00:02:40I want to be clear, this is not a defense for Derek Chauvin
00:02:43I hope Derek Chauvin gets the justice that he deserves to be implemented upon him and that the family of George Floyd deserves justice
00:02:53It was just gut instinct, you know
00:03:01It just felt like we were being told, look over here, look over here
00:03:05And I guess part of my personality is when I feel that way and somebody's going focus only here, only here, only here
00:03:13I want to know, okay, but what about over there?
00:03:16And it wasn't personal, at least not in the beginning, it wasn't personal
00:03:21I would say it certainly wasn't personal until
00:03:26This video was just, it was just so disgusting
00:03:30But I think it's important to understand how easily people can be corrupted into saying this type of disgusting nonsense
00:03:38Candace Owens, that rotten bitch
00:03:41If anybody's going to pretend to get their feelings hurt about what we say about Candace Owens
00:03:45I will laugh and laugh and laugh
00:03:48I don't care what this is, I don't care if you personally kick Candace Owens in her stinky pussy
00:03:55I don't know if it stinks, but I imagine it does
00:03:58Then at that moment, it became personal
00:04:02And I thought, not only am I going to say the truth
00:04:06I am going to scream the truth louder than you can scream the lies
00:04:10I've never been so hurt inside
00:04:14This was the second time he exhibited that behavior
00:04:1723 out of 24 hours in his cell
00:04:19I have been a police officer for almost four decades
00:04:22Until the very breath we're squeezed out of
00:04:24That was the very last time I seen Floyd
00:04:26You sentenced my son
00:04:27You will also be such a sin
00:04:29Every day
00:04:30Every day
00:04:32Justice
00:04:32I mean
00:04:33George Floyd
00:04:34The guy's known best
00:04:39So, who was George Floyd?
00:04:42Outside this grocery store is now home for a memorial
00:04:56We protest peacefully
00:04:57We're kind of just helping each other out and rallying together as a community
00:05:00We need to stay together with each other
00:05:02We're here to serve justice for injustice
00:05:04Say his name
00:05:05George Floyd
00:05:07Say his name
00:05:10George Floyd
00:05:11Breaking news in South Minneapolis
00:05:13The situation has become dangerous
00:05:16Individuals breaching the gate at the third precinct
00:05:20Getting close to blocking the fence
00:05:22Anyone copying that?
00:05:23We are here!
00:05:25All I did!
00:05:26You are more of your people to die!
00:05:29You coward!
00:05:32Third precinct has been compromised
00:05:34There are both the priests to back gate
00:05:36They're taking heavy runs
00:05:37Third precinct is up in flames
00:05:39Minneapolis is waking up to a lot of its buildings on fire
00:05:43We saw chaos just erupt
00:05:45Fires are still burning
00:05:46We are seeing looting throughout the city
00:05:48Greeks are being thrown at police officers
00:05:50We are seeing increasing violence amongst protesters throughout the country
00:05:54Cities are erupting into chaos and violence
00:05:59How long can you be peaceful when your people are dying?
00:06:03We're out here trying to show them that we're angry
00:06:06This is not just about George Floyd
00:06:07It's about everything that's happened in our world
00:06:10For whatever reason it has become fashionable over the last five or six years
00:06:18For us to turn criminals into heroes overnight
00:06:21And it is something that I find to be despicable
00:06:24And it's something that I refuse to stand by any longer
00:06:28And I'm not going to play a part in it
00:06:30No matter how much pressure comes from black liberals and black conservatives
00:06:33As some token of people wanting you to believe that this is the only way you can be black
00:06:38Is you have to say this was wrong
00:06:39And that this, you know, this person was amazing
00:06:41I won't do that
00:06:42Why are we pretending that this criminal should be upheld as a citizen
00:06:47As a martyr in black America
00:06:51A martyr for a fake narrative, by the way
00:06:54People were shocked, right?
00:06:57They had all thrown themselves in emotionally
00:07:00Based on the media narrative
00:07:02And they just sort of thought
00:07:03How could the media not have told us this?
00:07:08So right now I am researching Alvin and Teresa Scott
00:07:13They were George Floyd's last known roommates
00:07:16And we basically just had producers reach out and say
00:07:20Working on documentary pertaining to George Floyd
00:07:23That was kind of the only information that we gave them
00:07:27In the hopes that saying my name would not scare them away
00:07:33At least from what I'm doing, a cursory search
00:07:36There does not seem to be too much coverage on the roommates
00:07:40Some pieces pertaining to how they were feeling during the trial
00:07:44Some international coverage
00:07:46But I definitely don't remember these people being at the forefront
00:07:49And he lived with them for over three years
00:07:53So it'll be really interesting to see what they have to say
00:07:57If they speak to me and don't say them adore my face
00:08:01Fingers crossed
00:08:05Hello, I'm Alvin and I'm George Floyd's previous roommate
00:08:13Prior to his death
00:08:15This is our house
00:08:17And I'll give you a little walk through
00:08:20And tell you a little bit about our relationship
00:08:22Me and Floyd
00:08:23So, okay
00:08:25Well, we still keep his band on the mailbox
00:08:35Just
00:08:36Still gets mail, okay
00:08:38Yeah, and this is us on the 4th of July
00:08:412017
00:08:43And these are our co-workers
00:08:46We both work together at the Conga Lounge
00:08:49In Minneapolis, Minnesota
00:08:51And this Floyd right here
00:08:53They never forget him
00:08:55Because he was a people person
00:08:58He'd socialize
00:08:58And the kids was always looking up
00:09:01Like, wow, the guy's pretty tall
00:09:02Floyd's about 6'7
00:09:04So we can head upstairs
00:09:06And I'll show you where Floyd's room was
00:09:08Eventually we were roommates
00:09:10But when I first moved here
00:09:11It was just me and Floyd
00:09:13And Teresa later on moved in with us
00:09:16And this was his room
00:09:17Much bigger
00:09:18The biggest room in the house
00:09:19And he was a big guy
00:09:20So he always enjoyed
00:09:23And the difference was
00:09:25It was like he had a desk right here
00:09:27And the only thing he always kept right there
00:09:30Was either his Bible
00:09:31And he smoked cigarettes
00:09:34And that was the only thing you'd seen on his desk
00:09:36We had some good moments here
00:09:38It was like we lived together almost
00:09:39I guess it was about 4 1⁄2 years
00:09:42Almost 5 years
00:09:43Him and Teresa often read the Bible together
00:09:47And that was a
00:09:49All of these is what he did
00:09:51Like he got a Proverbs mark right here
00:09:55He used to read this all the time
00:09:56Let me see what else did he read
00:09:58He read Matthews right here
00:10:00And so he used to be in his room
00:10:03And our room was next door
00:10:05And I used to hear him out loud
00:10:07Reading his Bible all the time
00:10:09And I used to be listening to him
00:10:10And I'm like wow he really do be reading that Bible
00:10:13You know
00:10:13The last day I seen Floyd
00:10:16We stood up here on the top of the stairs
00:10:19And this time we prayed longer than we ever did
00:10:23I think we prayed for like
00:10:24About 5 or 8 minutes
00:10:27Usually we'll do a prayer
00:10:28And it's like quick and everything
00:10:30But this day we prayed longer than we ever prayed
00:10:34And I said Floyd I'll see you when you get back
00:10:38Okay
00:10:38He said T I'll be back
00:10:40I said promise me you're coming back
00:10:41He said I promise I'll be back
00:10:43And that was the last time I seen him
00:10:45That was the very last time I seen Floyd
00:10:48That day when we prayed upstairs
00:10:50And I didn't see him no more after that
00:10:53Hello how are you
00:10:58Hi very nice to meet you Alvin
00:10:59Hey Teresa how are you
00:11:01So you guys in many ways
00:11:05Were some of the people that were the closest to him
00:11:08And I don't remember seeing your faces on the news or anybody talking to you
00:11:13So I guess let's just start with that
00:11:15When was the first time you met George
00:11:18Well I first met him in 2017
00:11:23We ended up knowing each other
00:11:26He was in the treatment center
00:11:27And I actually was there too
00:11:30But I was there for the alcohol
00:11:32And he was having problems with the pain pills
00:11:34So when we met we was unaware that this was
00:11:38You know we both was in the same situation
00:11:40So you guys met and you figured out that you were going to the same treatment center
00:11:44And I think did that probably establish an instant connection between you two
00:11:47Yeah because you know during that time you know you talk about a lot of things
00:11:51What led you to where you were
00:11:52And you get an idea of who the persons that are around you
00:11:55You know more one on one
00:11:57And he was real open about you know things he was going through
00:12:02And what he wanted to be
00:12:04And his old dream was to get his life together you know
00:12:08And have a good job
00:12:10And be able to take care of his daughter as well as his family
00:12:13He wants a fresh start and he wants to do better
00:12:16And he happens to run into you
00:12:18And this is a beautiful home
00:12:20The Floyd that I knew in this house was a good person
00:12:23And if he did do something bad he hid it from us
00:12:26You know he didn't do it around us
00:12:29If he did it out there he did it out there
00:12:31That's his business it's not mine
00:12:32Addiction is hard
00:12:34Yes
00:12:34It's full stop hard
00:12:35Right
00:12:36And but you know family is different
00:12:38It's a different part of them
00:12:41And so the struggles that they're maybe facing out on the street
00:12:43Is just not something that they ever want to bring to their doormat you know
00:12:46And that was Floyd
00:12:48I mean if he did have addiction out there
00:12:50He left it in the street
00:12:51He never brought it home
00:12:52You know sometimes a little urge to get something stronger
00:12:56To kill the pain you know took over
00:12:59And I but he he always fought against that
00:13:03He he was talking to me he said T
00:13:05He said uh he said I do whatever the police tells me to do
00:13:10He said because they looking to kill a big brother like me
00:13:14Yeah
00:13:15He said that out of his own words he said
00:13:18Because a big he said a big knee a big ear like me
00:13:22He said they looking to kill a big brother like me and sure enough that's what happened
00:13:26It was kind of scary when that happened
00:13:28Like weeks and stuff later
00:13:30That was one of his fears
00:13:32Yep that was one of his fears
00:13:33That's interesting though because what you're saying is that so that night he just he did whatever he's supposed to you know whatever they told him to do
00:13:38Because he knew that they were intimidated by him because he was so big
00:13:42And I'm sure that officer probably know who he is that ran his lines you know that is in the computer
00:13:47But what about do you think that if he had complied because I'm sure you guys have seen the full tape by now right
00:13:54And it just he must be thinking woulda coulda shoulda if he had had that mentality going into it
00:13:59Let me just do what they're saying and you know because it's just such an escalation when you see the full tape of you know
00:14:05Yeah he's not and maybe because it was he's not feeling too good
00:14:09But yeah and then he's like put me on the you know put me on the ground when he says put me on the ground
00:14:13You ever look at it and go
00:14:24Man I wish that time he had taken just taken his own advice and just been like okay guys take me wherever you want to take me
00:14:30Do you think that a lot of people maybe came out of the woodwork because there was an opportunity
00:14:37You know to grandstand to be on stage to you know a lot of money got thrown around
00:14:43Which I which is part of what i'm exploring in this documentary
00:14:46I mean black lives matter global network came out and said we raised 90 million plus dollars
00:14:51And they did this with his face just his face or saying you had some association with him
00:14:56Could have gotten you know garnered a lot of people money
00:14:59Do you think that people took advantage of him?
00:15:03It's like they they uh
00:15:05They use it as uh what you say a way of funding whatever they
00:15:11Motivation was and then like uh and sometimes when i went to the george floyd memorial
00:15:17It was different individuals going around there saying don't donations for this for floyd for this and yeah
00:15:23You didn't know where they was coming from you you got a little metal box
00:15:27And i don't know who you are where is this going
00:15:30You know to meet with the president and the vice president and for them to show their concern to our family
00:15:42And uh for them to actually give an ear to our concerns and how we feel on the situation
00:15:48You know i have a priest because that's what he would want me to do
00:15:58I ain't never met a sister i ain't never met a brother
00:16:02None of them ever came here to employ been living in this house we've been in this house going on six years am i right
00:16:08Yeah but for the four years no he just they never wanted his stuff i mean i would think that if my son
00:16:15Come and look and see where the man lived at they never came to see
00:16:20Where floyd lived they never came to get none of his stuff
00:16:25Nothing that was my oldest brother i love him i'm never going to get my brother back
00:16:30I would like to just like say one day if this meet his daughter because it's like yes that's an extension of him
00:16:38And i just to be proud to just see one time
00:16:40Well not his daughter now we can he we found out he got more
00:16:43Well they found out that that wasn't true
00:16:46So you mean three kids came that ain't his just one i think they did a dna check and then the boy is not his and the other girl
00:16:53Are you serious rumors i don't know
00:16:56That's we gotta leave that to maury i don't do that i don't do paternity
00:17:00Do you know that's maury's that's maury's that's not what we do here
00:17:07That was a good one that was a good one
00:17:09You guys thank you so much it was what a pleasure to sit here and talk to you guys it was just absolutely amazing
00:17:30You imagine how absolutely traumatized that child was and then you think to yourself
00:17:53Just a few years later and um you will have children that are wearing his shirt
00:18:01Referring to him as a hero as some as some sort of savior right
00:18:07That's wrong it's not right at all and
00:18:10And it was this case that i couldn't stay quiet on and i had to make that video
00:18:17In 1998 he spent 10 months in prison for theft with a firearm in 2002 he spent eight months in prison for a cocaine offense
00:18:262004 just two years later he spent another 10 months in prison for a cocaine offense
00:18:32By the way i am not saying that if you have a record you don't deserve a second chance
00:18:36i do draw the line when it comes to second third fourth fifth sixth seventh eighth and ninth and ninth chances
00:18:42Two things can be true at once
00:18:44You can both say that george floyd didn't deserve to die
00:18:49No matter how you believe he died nobody deserves to die
00:18:53in my opinion
00:18:54and you can also say that objectively this person that did die was not a saint
00:19:02this person was not an angel
00:19:05okay so my producer just sent me
00:19:08a link and a minute mark for george floyd's 2019 arrest which i haven't seen
00:19:14so i'm about to watch it for the first time
00:19:17okay this is super interesting because
00:19:38he's saying mama again and obviously i know that throughout the trial his girlfriend
00:19:45uh testified that he calls her mama and the media made such a big deal saying that
00:19:51when he died he cried out for his mama and they clearly misinterpreted that because
00:19:56this is a 2019 arrest he's once again saying i want mama so that seems pretty clear that he's talking about
00:20:04his girlfriend and he's not crying out for his mother which was a nice victim narrative you and floyd
00:20:11mr floyd excuse me i'm assuming like most couples had pet names for each other yeah and what were
00:20:18you saved in his phone as mama
00:20:25what's crazy in the retrospect is to realize that everybody reacted nobody knew who george floyd was
00:20:34but also nobody knew who derek chauvin was
00:20:51literally nothing like
00:20:54i mean my heart breaks for her obviously like hearing like she's obviously just devastated
00:21:00but she's being told by his lawyer to say absolutely nothing so she's not going to come on camera
00:21:05she's not going to participate he's not going to come on camera participate because they have a pending
00:21:09appeal and my frustration and what i expressed to her is i'm just like so your strategy for the appeal
00:21:15is the same thing that your strategy was during the entire trial silence allow the media to tell the
00:21:20story i i said to her i literally said i said this might be the only opportunity that you guys have
00:21:26right you've already lost in the court of public opinion so how is it going to hurt you he's lost
00:21:31right how is it going to hurt you to allow his voice to be heard and to tell the story from his side
00:21:37nothing like the lawyer is running the show and i'm and to be honest i think it's the worst
00:21:41strategy there's just no way he's going to win in the court of public opinion by saying nothing you
00:21:45know like super frustrating but that's a dead end so i can't imagine raising up a child and loving a
00:21:54child and knowing who he is and watching the media in virtually minutes be able to strip that person
00:22:02of their identity and to create a new identity for them i felt her pain i did i just i felt her pain and
00:22:09i felt that the only thing we could offer to do was to expand on who derek chauvin actually was
00:22:19was people were were taking a picture a not even a picture a still from a video and saying
00:22:29satan this is this is your satan people were taking a a storyline that was given to them
00:22:37from the media and saying here it is george floyd he's your hero that's it that's the story the end
00:22:44it's insane you know derek chauvin i do i was a minneapolis police officer for 31 years is it the
00:22:59same derek chauvin that the media has introduced the world to not at all derek is quiet somewhat quirky
00:23:08not a big guy very dependable shows up to work every day derek is the kind of guy that you want
00:23:16to show up on your calls with you he's very level-headed derek when i first supervised derek
00:23:25i was a sergeant and i was running a unit for homeland security derek got assigned onto my unit
00:23:30and at the time he was living with his mom which i thought was admirable that he wanted to help take
00:23:35care of his mom derek is a quiet thoughtful honorable and self selfless man he has a big heart and he
00:23:48always has put others before his own he was kind of a guy that was a little more of a loner
00:23:57you know some probably would have considered him socially awkward you described him as quirky and and
00:24:02somebody else kind of described him in that same way what do you mean by that kind of quiet introverted
00:24:08sometimes he wears his like his uniform pants a little high on his boots um just that way you
00:24:14know maybe not the quarterback of the football not the quarterback of the football okay did he ever have
00:24:18any issues with other police officers was there ever any any signs that he was particularly violent or
00:24:24had issues with people because of their skin color no never no that is not the derek i knew
00:24:30and i i don't believe what people are saying it's made up it's not true when you sentence my son
00:24:44you will also be sentencing me plus the fact that when he is released
00:24:52his father and i most likely will not be here
00:24:56where is derek today derek is at oak park heights prison he sits in the cell for 23 out of 24 hours a
00:25:06day he does not have any uh reading materials no tv no computer no nothing he just sits in the cell
00:25:14and and that's it you sit and look at the four walls in your cell every single day what was your
00:25:21initial reaction when you saw that video in terms of looking up and seeing hey that's that's derek
00:25:27chauvin i know that guy he's somebody that would be hard to read for most people
00:25:32but but nice guy so when you looked up at his face you didn't see a monster you just saw
00:25:39derek looking as derek has always looked and the media perhaps reading into it they
00:25:47they read into something that was not there that is not the derek that i knew all of our department was
00:25:53painted with that same brush which is unfair and it's it's a lot of false narratives because we have
00:26:00a good department and we heard earlier that he is spending 23 hours a day in solitary confinement
00:26:07do you ever think about his mental state every day
00:26:12you don't wish that on anybody there's an incredible amount of stress in the job alone
00:26:23more or less if somebody dies in your custody that's about the worst thing that you can go
00:26:27through as a person and a police officer
00:26:33george floyd was a semi-regular customer he'd come around
00:26:36uh not so often but he was someone we'd we'd recognize and he'd come here maybe to pay his
00:26:43phone bill or get phone services so anytime a customer brings a counterfeit bill you see we
00:26:47have plenty of them we tell them hey this is counterfeit if the customer insists then we call
00:26:52the police and then the police has to ask them where they got it from and that really hasn't ever
00:26:55happened and my experience here whenever we tell a customer customer that bill is counterfeit
00:27:01they immediately um leave because they don't want to be involved with it just from our experience
00:27:07yeah there's there's some good ones but a lot of times we know right away that they're fake just
00:27:10because of the way they have the color disfiguration or the way they feel the way they look so usually
00:27:17we don't call the police on counterfeit money because when we tell the customer that it's fake they accept
00:27:23the fact and just leave when he came in the store um he was with a friend of his uh the friend of his
00:27:29was uh paying for some electronics repair and all of the money he had was counterfeit because we knew
00:27:36the person we told him hey we're not going to call the police just take this money back and don't bring
00:27:40it back here again and then a few minutes later george floyd made a purchase in the tobacco shop
00:27:47with a counterfeit bill and the employee then called the police they arrived about 45 minutes later and
00:27:55found george floyd in his car and that's when they approached him
00:28:03hey man stay in the car let me see your other hand i'm sorry i'm sorry dr ron martinelli forensic
00:28:09criminologist and certified medical investigator and police practices expert let me just preface
00:28:16this you know i have no dog in the fight here all right we classically get a lot of officer involved
00:28:21shootings and in custody deaths but we we take them from all sides so my my advocacy is for facts and
00:28:27evidence not for people or entities so if the officers are doing what they're supposed to be
00:28:32doing as they were trained to do it i'm going to tell you if they're not i'm also going to tell you that
00:28:37what was your assessment of the police behavior in seeing the full video and seeing how things played
00:28:43out they make contact with mr floyd and that is totally appropriate because they're investigating
00:28:50a third parsons report of criminality not moving put your hands behind your back then
00:28:57i'm not gonna do nothing stop resisting man stand up please please man stand up why you
00:29:06doing me like this stand off come on we're trying to get out of the street here so you don't get hit
00:29:11by a car so for the officers what they have to do is they have to begin an investigation to ask him
00:29:18probative questions seeking more evidence to determine whether a crime has occurred all right
00:29:26what's your name george we're here because it sounds like you gave a fake bill to the individuals in there
00:29:31yeah so once they put the handcuffs on mr floyd mr floyd should have known albeit he's under the
00:29:39influence of drugs that he must obey the officer's directions orders and commands he cannot resist
00:29:50arrest i hear you but you are going to face this door right now listen up stop i don't leave me man
00:29:55please don't do take a seat i'm going in no you're not and so when mr floyd gets in a car and and he
00:30:03claims that he's claustrophobic right claustrophobic is exactly what he said
00:30:11i'm just claustrophobic that's it i think if i was an officer i'd be saying wait a minute you showed
00:30:16up in a car you wouldn't get in a car if you thought you were claustrophobic the officers placed him in a
00:30:22position that's referred to as the maximum restraint position in other words he's prone stomach down on the
00:30:29the ground ladies and gentlemen of the jury good morning we plan to prove to you beyond a reasonable
00:30:38doubt that mr chauvin was anything other than innocent on may 25th of 2020 mr derrick chauvin
00:30:46used excessive and unreasonable force upon the body of mr george floyd until the very breath no
00:30:57ladies and gentlemen until the very life were squeezed out of him
00:31:08you would agree chief that from the perspective of miss frazier's camera it appears that officer
00:31:17chauvin's knee is on the neck of mr floyd yes would you agree that from the perspective of
00:31:25officer king's body camera it appears that officer chauvin's knee was more on mr floyd's shoulder
00:31:32blade um yes they had to have the jury believe that it was a neck restraint it was the knee on the neck it
00:31:45was asphyxiation that killed george floyd however there was a ton of evidence
00:31:53that george floyd consumed a toxic lethal cocktail of fentanyl and methamphetamine
00:32:06did it appear that mr floyd said i ate too many drugs yes it did let's put it in perspective three
00:32:13grains of fentanyl on the head of a lead pencil enough to kill you enough to kill me and so they had to
00:32:22continuously inculcate the public to believe that derek chauvin intentionally premeditatedly murdered george floyd
00:32:36and drugs had absolutely nothing to do with it as as lindsay and the toxicologists presented that awful
00:32:44testimony do you recall describing the level of fentanyl as a fatal level of fentanyl i recall
00:32:53describing it in other circumstances it would be a fatal level yes in other circumstances had mr floyd
00:33:00been home alone in his locked residence with no evidence of trauma and the only autopsy finding
00:33:06was that fentanyl level then yes i would certify his death is due to fentanyl toxicity
00:33:11the autopsy is generally broken down by number one how the body is presented
00:33:31and you know what his height and weight is and then it goes through the neurological system uh exterior
00:33:38trauma interior trauma but i go right to the cardiovascular system and there i look at the
00:33:44heart weight how much does the heart weigh and then i take a look for key words i compare the heart weight
00:33:53to the height and weight of the individual to what the toxicology report says
00:34:00and i look for certain words or evidence of something called cardiomegaly cardiomegaly means an enlarged heart
00:34:08and if a person has cardiomegaly their chances of sudden cardiac arrest rise by 150 times not 150 percent
00:34:20150 times that is significant and then we have the whole issue of the police encounter
00:34:29and the basal metabolic rate rising think about him being agitated chaotic excited and his heart is
00:34:37pumping pumping pumping there is zero empirical forensic evidence medical evidence
00:34:45of any biological mechanism physiological mechanism that would have interfered with george floyd's ability
00:34:55to get sufficient oxygenated blood up into the brain there's zero evidence of that there was a another
00:35:03passenger in the vehicle and that passenger was mr floyd's drug dealer however he did not end up uh
00:35:11uh providing helpful testimony because of his own criminal liability okay and why would you not answer
00:35:18those i'm fearful of criminal charges going forward i have open charges that's not settled yet of my
00:35:28personal stuff so basically you are invoking your fifth amendment right against compelled self-incrimination
00:35:34yes sir
00:35:48there was some evidence that came out of chewed up pills that were found on the floor of the police car
00:35:55it's very unclear to me why that evidence was not obtained earlier and presented to the jury but i think if
00:36:02the jury had seen the entire picture not only of mr floyd's drug dependency his multiple prior brushes
00:36:10with law enforcement but his physical characteristics at the time of the incident and his ultimate death
00:36:18absent the interaction with the police he could easily have died with the amount of drugs in his system
00:36:24with no knee on his neck or on his shoulder and so to me that would have suggested if i were on that jury
00:36:31reasonable doubt but our system is such that a jury gets to decide that now there were other factors
00:36:37i think that polluted the jury's ultimate ruling you know ultimately the jury reached its conclusion
00:36:43i'm praying the verdict is the right verdict which is i think it's overwhelming in my view we've got to
00:36:49get more confrontational make sure that they they know that we need business i want to see the charge
00:36:55of the arresting officer take place we are not talking about a split second decision that was
00:37:02made incorrectly i can't see coming to a different answer there thank you real quickly have you seen
00:37:08the body camera footage yourself no i have not yet the verdict is in in the case that has riveted the
00:37:14nation the trial of derek chauvin the former minneapolis police officer was found guilty today
00:37:21of killing george floyd last may i just want to thank the prosecutors i just want to thank god the dna
00:37:28everybody amen amen hallelujah hallelujah and i hope every killer cop is watching and paying attention
00:37:37because today the black lives matter movement serve notice on you
00:37:51there's a viciousness there's almost a blood thirst when one of these cases comes around
00:37:57and nobody looks back nobody asks any questions nobody says sorry
00:38:01it's just you are being sacrificed so we can build this temple of black lives matter
00:38:08and there are so many individuals who deserve to have their story told
00:38:22so liz i want to start with you so being an anchor and and having that position how did you juggle
00:38:28being married as well to a police officer in terms of covering stories well i went to our management
00:38:33right away before i even went on a date with bob as a matter of fact to tell them uh that i was
00:38:39thinking about going on a date uh with this with this person at the time and i said ethically i don't
00:38:44feel comfortable uh covering police union issues uh and that was something that management was was
00:38:51totally fine with so you mentioned that you were getting threats on twitter and i'm assuming that's
00:38:56where it began can you talk a little about what those threats were i think they started immediately
00:39:01within i think hours of the actual incident they they said that bob croll and liz collin will be
00:39:07dead by the time the year ends they came to the station where i worked and held a protest uh during
00:39:13the six o'clock news demanding that i be fired um being married to a police officer yeah i i'm i'm seeing
00:39:21this story from so many different uh lenses uh as a wife as a journalist but as a mom i think it's where
00:39:29it it's where it hit me the hardest i can imagine early days i'm calling friends hey can you take
00:39:37anthony we have another death threat or my parents are watching him for a few days he doesn't know what's
00:39:42going on i mean you can't even explain this stuff to adults nonetheless a seven-year-old child and he
00:39:48happened to see a little clip of the news um in the in the early days and said wait a minute so the
00:39:55police made a mistake and they're stealing stuff from target in his little mind he knew that this
00:40:01did not make sense this isn't okay so this was a black lives matter organized protest a hundred people
00:40:07were there um and we were out of town after that happened i sent an email to our newsroom and i said
00:40:16this seems newsworthy there was a state rep candidate there that was beating me in effigy they made
00:40:22pinatas of bob and i dressed as klansmen whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa slow down here you're telling
00:40:28me that they made pinatas of you in effigy and they beat them with bats john thompson did with a stick
00:40:36in our driveway this is the man running to be a state representative in minnesota in your driveway
00:40:40overwhelmingly elected i mean it was horrendous absolutely awful and i got in trouble for
00:40:55pitching that as a story we had reporters tweeting their um alliance with black lives matter using that
00:41:02hashtag after this movement talking about it's okay to align yourself with this group and supporting black
00:41:06lives matter and that was fine but i was no longer wanted there and that was pretty clear what was
00:41:11the process of making these i mean if you've ever been so angry you want to make a pinata that's where
00:41:16i'm at just just absolutely them that's where i'm at so when did you make the decision to leave
00:41:23uh my contract was up in january of this last year and i had been blackballed in the market it if i can
00:41:30interject it it it just they were successful in destroying her career because she had a wonderful
00:41:36career trajectory going she's a small town winning to minnesota local she was a local favorite she
00:41:43was the primary fill-in for the two main anchors she had a weekend anchor the ratings that they had
00:41:49were huge everybody loved her and then all of a sudden this twist so i watched it destroy her and
00:41:55destroy her career something that she's very good at and a lot a lot better quite frankly than some of
00:42:00her competitors or her replacements my name is fraser ross and i own retail stores in los angeles california
00:42:17during the george floyd protests that swept the nation what happened we were looted for over four
00:42:25four hundred thousand dollars worth of merchandise wow it's really it was a disaster you then went
00:42:30online and what did you observe that you thought was out of the ordinary chrissy teagan had posted on
00:42:38her instagram you know i'll help the protesters get out of jail then she said well let me up it to
00:42:52another hundred thousand now when you have approximately 30 million followers at the time
00:42:58you can start a movement and people say oh well she's going to bail me out and everything and then
00:43:02you know you've got celebrities like jennifer gardener giving four hearts to that post well they all live
00:43:06in gated communities and it's not their stuff being destroyed and you had just been looted yeah i went
00:43:11online and posted an instagram of the store being looted and i tagged thanks chrissy she wrote under this
00:43:17post well like anyone's really shopped there for 10 years so her instinct after seeing that your store
00:43:23had been actually looted yeah her response is well no one shops at your store anyway so she was not
00:43:28sympathetic to the victim in this circumstance not not one bit but jen atkins was actually worse
00:43:34jen atkins she's a friend of chrissy teagan you've tagged her in his post because you sell her products
00:43:40she comments on this post as well right basically saying use the shampoo to clean up the graffiti and my
00:43:47looting cream comes out in october so they're having fun they're they're mocking the looting
00:43:51you should be in federal prison if you're inciting violence with that many people following you
00:44:03so dana decides to jump in and call you and kitson a racist store because you were upset right that
00:44:11your store was looted this made you a racist right right so this was quite literally
00:44:17blaming the victim then what happened she sends a dm saying well before we get on the phone
00:44:22you're going to have to apologize to chrissy teagan and then i'll take down the post dana omari from
00:44:28her instagram account wrote exactly this you need to make a formal public apology for blaming a woman of
00:44:34color she's referring to chrissy teagan for your store being looted and chrissy needs to be named in this
00:44:41apology you should mention it was insensitive to place the blame on a single person and that the
00:44:46true cause of the riots is the mishandling of police brutality toward george floyd and the black
00:44:52community as a whole you should also say that while you are devastated by the looting of your store
00:44:58you recognize it comes from a place of privilege to be concerned about replaceable items when others
00:45:04are protesting for their rights to live if you apologize i will happily remove all posts concerning
00:45:11your store how does that sound so this blogger just to recap has essentially jumped in on behalf of
00:45:19chrissy teagan right so we got on the phone for 53 minutes and most of the conversation was you need
00:45:24to apologize to chrissy teagan i said i'm not apologizing to her there's no reason to apologize
00:45:29to chrissy teagan but what are you looking for are you looking for money i was worried that how
00:45:34aggressive they were and the looting was still approaching and my main store the value in that
00:45:40store is much greater than the store that got looted right so because she's publicly posted your store
00:45:45right as being owned by a race right right concern that they're going to come loot you some more
00:45:49who was the check written out to act blue to act blue right which is blm black lives matter so she
00:45:55was basically saying if you make a donation to black lives matter i'll take down the post okay
00:46:02and then after she got out the conversation with me she texts me from a phone number and if you don't
00:46:07make the donation i'm going to repost this i'm going to make another post an unfortunate post that won't be
00:46:11good so let me ask you a question um chrissy teagan jen adkin a blogger in which they both follow
00:46:23why do you think they felt the need to get involved on such a level and to be so supportive of
00:46:29the looting well i think they had there was a you know a side that they felt that they
00:46:33it would help them become relevant and heroes and everything did dana mention anything to you
00:46:38about chrissy teagan and her having a relationship yes she said chrissy teagan thanked me for what she
00:46:42did wow yeah so she thanked the blogger yes for calling you a racist yes and i guess having an
00:46:50outrage mob descend on you online yes
00:47:05you
00:47:20my name is charles and i grew up in kenya how long have you lived in minneapolis i came to
00:47:28minneapolis in may of 1997 so it's been 27 years 27 years what was this city before the george floyd
00:47:38riots well it was just a typical midwestern city with rogue crime and hard-working people and we just
00:47:49lived here and enjoyed life together yeah and then things took a bit of a turn and this is
00:47:56something different would you say well what we saw was like a venting of anger it was complete opposite
00:48:05of minnesota nice and uh we saw anger mayhem looting destruction of property
00:48:12burning of police prisons and it was completely foreign to me
00:48:17i'm used to something like this in third world countries but not in america and quite honestly not
00:48:24in minnesota not in minnesota this is um something that i think i've never seen before in any city
00:48:32that i've lived in at least it says you are now entering the free state of george floyd what does
00:48:39that mean it means this is an autonomous zone and it operates outside the laws of united states
00:48:51and anything that happens here is run by a community and they do whatever they want
00:48:58they do whatever they want how is that allowed in the united states the city of minneapolis
00:49:07has been negotiating negotiating negotiating with whom with the community wow so the city is being held
00:49:16hostage by the community that is running the autonomous zone do i have that understood that's
00:49:23correct wow so we are now entering a state where really anything goes right really sort of anything
00:49:33goes right well i i think anything goes here we've seen death we've seen a man shot right in front of
00:49:42us we've seen a woman who was pregnant shot right in front of us and right here
00:49:49we had a huge bus like a school bus and it was a clinic it was a medical clinic and the number one
00:49:57thing they were treating during the time of the riots was gunshot woods right here as i'm looking around
00:50:05there's so many um empty shops on the block things that are boarded up how does that make you feel to
00:50:11see that is is there ever going to be life again on this street well i feel like there has been a tremendous loss
00:50:20of of the way of life here has changed the economy the destruction of businesses most of the businesses
00:50:30here that were destroyed had the insurance would not be able to cover that right and so it's a hard
00:50:37thing for people to rebuild themselves especially after what they went through it almost seems like
00:50:43a vigil was being kept here well this is pretty much the body oh wow john ford this is where he lay dead
00:50:56and breathed his last right here right and so the idea is that no one should enter this is sort
00:51:02of a sacred place is that correct yeah you can see this pretty much a holy ground right now you're a
00:51:10pastor so i just wanted to ask you how does it make you feel right knowing obviously who george floyd
00:51:17was and how he lived his life to see that this has been transformed into a holy ground you know as if
00:51:24this is where jesus christ took his last breath well we have better people to follow
00:51:35of course jesus christ dr martin luther king jr who have lived their lives and epitomized what we would
00:51:44like to emulate right right and how does it make you feel when you hear leaders you know saying that
00:51:51the death of george floyd is more significant than martin luther king it's outrageous
00:52:03i guess i would have assumed when black lives matter announced that they raised 90 over 90 million
00:52:09dollars who knows how much over um on the back of the george floyd riots and the sprees where is that money
00:52:22i don't know it's not here
00:52:27everything looks worse than it was is it possible that black america was sort of used as a front
00:52:34and the emotions that black america was feeling was used as a front and this money went probably maybe
00:52:40not to black people at all anywhere in the world so many elements of people who took advantage of the
00:52:47death of george floyd to stop the emotions for political gain for financial gain and to propagate
00:52:54division because some of these organizations that raise money they can only get money if they
00:53:02they propagate hatred and division they are not helping the community they are helping themselves
00:53:18but um
00:53:31where have you seen that money money impacted throughout the city
00:53:36democratic politics i mean that's we shared this place right
00:53:40So Black Lives Matter released their 990 IRS violence.
00:54:10And of course, I wanted to jump right into it and find out exactly what happened to the approximate $80 million that was raised by them between July 1st of 2020 and June 30th, 2021.
00:54:24Okay, Bhavik, so during the George Floyd death and the aftermath, you were in Silicon Valley. Is that correct?
00:54:32Yeah, I was running a biotech company, actually, and I was CEO at the time. That's right.
00:54:36What was the corporate reaction in Silicon Valley?
00:54:38There was a pledge of allegiance to one cause, to turn this man, who had died in a tragic death, no doubt, into some type of new modern messiah figure.
00:54:48And I thought that the religious quality of every company bending the knee was a bit odd.
00:54:53And I was actually pretty keen on making sure that I didn't lie to my employees, that I didn't tell them something that I didn't believe about this.
00:54:59I sent an employee all email and I said, look, I understand there's racial riots across the country or there's unrest across the country.
00:55:06I hope everybody's safe. Let us know if you need us to support you.
00:55:09That was about it. And I remembered the reaction that I got, that somehow that failed to meet the moment because I didn't recite the same ritual incantation that every other CEO was pledging allegiance to across the country.
00:55:22A corporate statement made by the same PR firm that effectively ended in Black Lives Matter.
00:55:27Yeah, absolutely. And we've been sort of investigating throughout this documentary, where did the money go that was given to Black Lives Matter?
00:55:32We never even really got a full answer of how much money was given.
00:55:35I often say that BLM now stands for buy lavish mansions because that's what the BLM movement does.
00:55:40You actually saw in recent weeks there was a person who was effectively working for BLM that personally purchased a mansion.
00:55:46And she pays $3 million for it within days.
00:55:50Like I think it's 48 hours later, flips that to the BLM organization who pays nearly $6 million for that same house, booking a personal profit to the person who actually bought it.
00:56:00So that's a self-dealing transaction that enriches personally somebody who's working for Black Lives Matter.
00:56:06Why is BLM buying big lavish mansions in the first place?
00:56:10When their donors were understandably outraged by the luxurious purchase, Patrisse Cullors came forth and also admitted that she hired both her mother and her brother to work at the property.
00:56:22What sort of work, you ask?
00:56:23Well, Patrisse Cullors' brother, Paul Cullors, is a graffiti artist by trade.
00:56:29That's what he's done his entire life.
00:56:31He's done graffiti.
00:56:32Patrisse instead hired her brother to do security for her.
00:56:37She paid Paul $840,000.
00:56:42That's almost a million dollars in just one year to her graffiti artist brother, his newly established security firm.
00:56:50Now, that makes her a great sister, but perhaps she's an even better baby mama because Patrisse also gave funding from Black Lives Matter to take care of the man who fathered her son.
00:57:01His name is Damon Turner, and he received $970,000 from BLM to his company, Trap Heals LLC, which purportedly provided live production and media.
00:57:15So that makes Patrisse a great sister, a wonderful baby mama, and also, by the way, she's a fun mom because one of the events that Patrisse organized at her BLM mansion was for her young son's birthday party.
00:57:29Nothing says taking on police brutality quite like hosting a birthday party for your young son in a Los Angeles mansion paid for by donors to the cause.
00:57:39Patrisse likes parties, by the way, because she also threw a party there to celebrate the inauguration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.
00:57:48And, yeah, that's somewhat suspicious because what do Democrats have to do with Black Lives Matter?
00:57:55I think I'll just leave that question open-ended.
00:57:57Also suspicious is the fact that Black Lives Matter designated a whopping $8 million to an out-of-country grant.
00:58:08What?
00:58:08I thought this charity was about addressing police brutality in the United States.
00:58:13Apparently, to do that, you need to send $8 million to Toronto, Canada, to an organization named M4BJ.
00:58:21They purchased a $6.3 million, 10,000-square-foot downtown property in Toronto.
00:58:29And I should also mention that M4BJ is run by Patrisse's wife, Janiah Khan, because it is.
00:58:36She is the co-founder, believe it or not.
00:58:38And here's where it gets really interesting.
00:58:43Janiah Khan is gender non-conforming.
00:58:47These terms can be quite sensitive, so let me just use photos to illustrate my point.
00:58:50Janiah used to look like this, and now she looks like this.
00:58:55Now, that information would be entirely irrelevant if it wasn't for the way that Patrisse Cullors saw it fit to spend the rest of Black Lives Matter's money.
00:59:04Ready for some BLM pride?
00:59:06Well, according to their IRS form, $200,000 went to the Transgender Justice Funding Project.
00:59:14Another $200,000 went to the Transgender United Fund.
00:59:18Another $200,000 went to the Transgendered Law Center.
00:59:23Another $200,000 went to Black Transgendered Media.
00:59:28Another $200,000 went to the Transgendered Variant and Intersex Justice Project.
00:59:34Another $200,000 went to the Transgendered District.
00:59:39By the way, if you're wondering what that is, it's purportedly going to be the All-Transgendered District.
00:59:45And I guess that's really, really important for Black America advancement in society, I guess, or whatever.
00:59:52Another $200,000 went to the St. James Infirmary.
00:59:58That organization, by the way, is for, according to their website, it's run by sex workers and is for them.
01:00:04Specifically, escorts, BDSM workers, strippers, peep show workers, phone sex operators, and webcam performers.
01:00:12It was actually the St. James Infirmary that created the Transgendered District.
01:00:18So that's just an organization within another organization, which, by the way, you see a lot of when you go through these documents.
01:00:25So yeah, going to be apparently great big things involving sex workers and the future for Black America.
01:00:32In continuation, the Center for Halstead received $200,000 from Black Lives Matter.
01:00:39They are Chicago's community center dedicated to securing the health and well-being of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered, and queer people of Chicago.
01:00:50Similarly, we have the Audre Lorde Project, which received $200,000.
01:00:54And according to their website, they are a lesbian, gay, bisexual, two-spirit, trans, and gender non-conforming people of color community organizing center.
01:01:06Another $400,000 went to Transgender Advocates Knowledgeable Empowering, or TAKE, as it's known for short.
01:01:16The founder of that organization is a transgendered individual by the name of Derenicia Duncan-Boyd.
01:01:23Derenicia is also the executive director of the Transgendered United Fund, which I mentioned earlier, which secured $200,000.
01:01:31So a total $600,000 of BLM money went to a transgendered woman named Derenicia Boyd, who is operating two charities.
01:01:42I found that piece to be very interesting.
01:01:46Here is Derenicia describing in a 2020 interview how they were able to use that money that was received from the organization to purchase more real estate.
01:01:56We're opening up a new resource center here, and the resource center is almost three times as big as our last space that we was in.
01:02:06So we have lots of space and lots of rooms for our clients to come in and enjoy.
01:02:12I noticed that real estate seems to be a common theme amongst these transgendered organizations.
01:02:19Remember, there's the first ever transgender district, and there are also a couple of houses that are named on their IRS documents.
01:02:26For example, an additional $200,000 was given to the House of Tulip.
01:02:32According to their website, the House of Tulip provides zero-barrier housing to trans and gender non-conforming people.
01:02:39But the one that really stood out as the most nonsensical is the $200,000 that went to the Griffin-Gracy Retreat and Educational Center, known as House of Gigi for short.
01:02:53According to that website, they provide services and resources that positively impact the lives, history, and visibility of transgender, gender-questioning, and gender-non-conforming persons.
01:03:05They admit that they purchased a property in Little Rock, Arkansas, back in 2019, and that property was supposed to serve as an oasis and a retreat for transgendered person.
01:03:16But they admit, also on the website, that they actually never held such a retreat, first because their founder had a stroke and was recovering, and then it was COVID-19, so they still couldn't host a retreat.
01:03:30And despite having never hosted a retreat at this amazing oasis property that they purchased, in 2021, they announced that they purchased a second property next door to the first one.
01:03:41So, yeah. Now, all of the organizations that I just mentioned, none of them, not one, is up to date on filing a tax return with the IRS, which is required for charities.
01:03:56Because charities, remember, they don't pay taxes.
01:03:58In other words, I'm not able to tell you how any of these transgendered organizations spent the money that BLM poured into their organizations during the 2020 and 2021 tax year.
01:04:10If you continue to look through BLM IRS docs, you'll notice that they gave millions of dollars to various Black Lives Matter organizations throughout America, or at least at first glance, it appears that they did.
01:04:23A closer look, you'll see that they actually dispersed that funding to organizations that were in care of Black Lives Matter.
01:04:32This means that actually another organization is accepting the donation on behalf of BLM.
01:04:37So I decided to investigate that further, and I noticed a really bizarre pattern.
01:04:43A lot of those organizations train activists.
01:04:47They train the youth to become activists in their communities.
01:04:51One organization even goes as far as bragging on their website about their history of getting arrested, protesting.
01:04:59And they offer courses on various techniques, like bird-dogging.
01:05:04That's a technique that's used to confront politicians.
01:05:07I thought to myself, it's interesting because I kept hearing over and over again while filming this documentary that people felt as though the protesters that arrived throughout these cities weren't actually from the cities that they arrived in.
01:05:18They didn't know where they had come from.
01:05:20I don't know, buses.
01:05:20There was this idea that buses were showing up filled with protesters.
01:05:24It's a fair question then.
01:05:26Is it plausible that Patrice was giving money to groups that were creating protesters or training activists, rather?
01:05:34I mean, why else would Patrice give millions of dollars to so many trained activists?
01:05:39I wanted to investigate that piece a little further, and so I made some phone calls.
01:05:43So I want to call some of these groups today, pretend that I want to give money to the organization, and see what I can find out about what they do.
01:05:53I get the feeling that none of these multi-million dollar organizations are going to pick up the phone.
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01:06:32Oh, hello, this is me.
01:06:33I am the co-coordinator of development and communications.
01:06:37is the boots on the ground place, the place where the seeds are sown for the movement to continue to grow.
01:06:43How are you guys involved actively, not just in, oh, you know, we want, like, to know how you are actually active?
01:06:49Yes, we are trainers, we are healers, we are artists, we are creators.
01:06:55But most importantly, we are on the front line, we are fighting for freedom of assembly through education.
01:07:01Oh, yeah, but this is, this is great.
01:07:03Obviously, we were, like I said, we gave millions and millions of dollars after the horrific killing of George Floyd.
01:07:10If, if we give your organization a million dollars and, and something like that happens, right, how are you getting involved?
01:07:19In the past, we have provided movement support and accompaniment on the front line at protests.
01:07:24We have supported bail funds.
01:07:26We have supported pop-up workshops.
01:07:29We are not only keeping people prepared by preparing their minds for the movement,
01:07:34but we're also putting them in community with spiritual workers and with other educators on the ground during those, those protest efforts.
01:07:41Along with the, made a significant gift for this specific purpose of, of bailing out protesters during the 2020 uprising.
01:07:51That's so wonderful.
01:07:51So, one of our economics and governance organizers who works for, was actually arrested in Kentucky as part of a, a protest.
01:08:00And we have been standing with her throughout that work and been showing up for court gates and packing the court and, and offering her legal support.
01:08:08So, that's what we want to see. That's what we're looking for. Yeah.
01:08:12Thanks so much for your time. I hope you have a good day.
01:08:14You too. Thank you so much.
01:08:20Training activists, making sure that people's minds are poisoned and that they know that they're supported through bailing out.
01:08:30We will bail you out. We've got the money to bail you out.
01:08:32And that's kind of what this is all about. The investigation continues.
01:08:38Now, the organization that received the biggest grant from Black Lives Matter, according to their filing,
01:08:50is an organization called Living Through Giving Foundation.
01:08:54The Living Through Giving Foundation, per their mission statement, strives to connect people through organized acts of love.
01:09:01They run a program called hashtag lunch bag. This program allegedly brings people together to create bagged lunches, in which they write handwritten love notes.
01:09:11And then they distribute the bagged lunches to local communities.
01:09:13That sounds nice, right? I thought so too.
01:09:16I thought to myself, I want to attend one of these events.
01:09:20But when I went to their website, there were no upcoming events.
01:09:24And when I went to the website to explore past events and learn more about the original givers, I was met with a coming soon page.
01:09:32So I wondered, who is the executive director of this organization that accepted $2.3 million from Black Lives Matter Global Foundation?
01:09:40Of course, when I went to the IRS website, they also had neglected to file an up-to-date return.
01:09:46But there was a name, at least.
01:09:47And that name was A.J. Relin, listed as the executive director.
01:09:51A.J. owns three coffee shops in California.
01:09:55You'd have to imagine my surprise, though, when I found an article about his coffee shop opening in 2019.
01:10:01And buried within the piece was a picture of none other than Patrisse Cullors sitting there with her friends having coffee in 2019.
01:10:11Meaning Patrisse Cullors had a relationship with A.J. Relin that predates the George Floyd protests.
01:10:17So exactly why did she transfer BLM money to her old friend A.J. via his charity that is nothing more than really a splash page with no upcoming events?
01:10:28Is she a part owner of those coffee shops?
01:10:30Is she an investor?
01:10:32I will leave that as the $2.3 million question.
01:10:36What I can say for certain is that you don't just send your non-Black friend $2.3 million just because.
01:10:43Perhaps most hilariously, you'll recall that the founders of Black Lives Matter pride themselves on being abolitionists.
01:10:50They want to abolish the old systems of white supremacy.
01:10:53The systems which keep Black America away from garnering our true generational wealth and financial freedom in this horrible country.
01:11:02Which makes it somewhat odd that they invested $32 million into the stock market.
01:11:08Wall Street.
01:11:09What a great way to abolish the system of white supremacy.
01:11:13Invest in stocks.
01:11:14I think that the IRS stocks in the end lead to more questions than they do answers.
01:11:20And if you were an individual who gave to this organization, a well-meaning individual who gave because you thought it was going to help Black America, then you should get answers to those questions.
01:11:31So we are headed to Laurel Canyon.
01:11:39We've yet to see any Black people in this neighborhood.
01:11:41There were a ton of cyclists coming through.
01:11:44Not that that's an issue, but it just seems a bit strange because the Black Lives Matter messaging, of course, has been that Black people cannot be safe in white spaces.
01:11:53So it's an unusual decision to buy a home in a neighborhood that doesn't have any Black faces and is surrounded by what we've been told are violent white people that don't want to see Black Americans become better.
01:12:09So hopefully, as we are heading now to the House, we'll be able to speak to somebody on the property.
01:12:15Is this a creative space for Black Americans?
01:12:18Why did we purchase this property with the money that was raised on the faces of so many dead Black people?
01:12:26I'm assuming it's going to be a welcoming environment.
01:12:29We'll see.
01:12:31So there's definitely somebody home.
01:12:33Hello.
01:12:36I was just looking to speak to whoever is at this property.
01:12:40Sir?
01:12:42Hello?
01:12:45I don't know if he's going to get someone.
01:12:48I see a very cute German Shepherd, it looks like.
01:12:51This morning, I woke up to Candace Owens being outside of my house with a news crew.
01:12:58Looks to be maybe in his mid-40s.
01:13:01White male, black hat, and he is...
01:13:05Whoever he spoke to on the phone has instructed...
01:13:07Has instructed him to record us, which is strange because we just want to talk.
01:13:12And what I see in the driveway are two cars and a sign that says you are exactly where you are supposed to be.
01:13:22She was demanding that I come outside.
01:13:30Hi.
01:13:31Hello.
01:13:34Hi, you're welcome to record.
01:13:35I just want to talk.
01:13:36Are you instructed not to speak to anybody?
01:13:38We're not trying to harass you.
01:13:39We'll gladly leave.
01:13:40We're just wondering if we can speak to anybody.
01:13:42Sorry, what was that?
01:13:47Okay, I just thought this was a house where Black Lives Matter.
01:13:50It's unacceptable and it's dangerous that anybody, any stranger, come outside of my house.
01:13:58You're just trying to figure out if this house is actually being used for Black people in a creative space at all.
01:14:03And it doesn't seem that way.
01:14:05What happened this morning is not safety.
01:14:08It's not what I deserve.
01:14:12It's not what any of us deserve.
01:14:14I can't see how this purchase helped Black lives anywhere in America.
01:14:18I can't even find a Black life on the property.
01:14:22The dog's not even Black.
01:14:24So, what's that?
01:14:25And so, they're literally trying to destroy us.
01:14:30They're trying to destroy me.
01:14:32They're trying to destroy the movement.
01:14:35And I really, I just need us to be stronger.
01:14:38Thank you, sir.
01:14:39Have a great day.
01:14:47What could be more emblematic of Black Lives Matter than that?
01:14:51Playing the victim to the public.
01:14:53Hoping that you can get sympathy and perhaps that sympathy will transform into dollars.
01:14:59And of course, after we exposed that lie, she subsequently wipes her Instagram and says that she needs a mental break and needs to re-evaluate stuff.
01:15:09And what I'm hoping is that by the end of this, they'll wipe the entire organization and charity, you know, because it is not what it seems.
01:15:20The real story is a story is a story of addiction.
01:15:24That's it.
01:15:25That's actually a story that could have brought people together globally.
01:15:29This was a man that was high on drugs and went into a store with counterfeit bills.
01:15:36He sat in a car with his dealer.
01:15:40Obviously, they had drugs on them.
01:15:42Drugs were found on them.
01:15:44And I believe that in his final moments, when the police arrived, he ingested a lethal amount of drugs.
01:15:50And unfortunately, the paramedics and the medical attention that this person would have needed in the immediate never happened, never transpired.
01:16:03And it is a story of a man who overdosed in the end.
01:16:07The media is your enemy.
01:16:23That is what I will say.
01:16:24And I believe that from the bottom of my heart after examining every corner of this case.
01:16:31The media scared the jury.
01:16:33The media scared even politicians.
01:16:37And to agreeing in lockstep.
01:16:39There is no other way to examine the media but to recognize that they were the enemy.
01:16:43And they're not going to stop being the enemy.
01:16:46People were deluded and people were lied to.
01:16:49And people should be angry.
01:16:50People should be rightfully angry that they acted the part of a marketing agency for what, in my opinion, is a complete fraud.
01:17:02A fraudulent organization that uses black emotion and black pain to extort dollars from white America.
01:17:11That's what happened.
01:17:12You were all lied to.
01:17:13That's the truth.
01:17:14You were all lied to.
01:17:27You were all lied to.
01:17:28Untertitelung des ZDF, 2020
01:17:58Untertitelung des ZDF, 2020
01:18:28Untertitelung des ZDF, 2020

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