Kayal and Company
Politics returns with Jonathan Turley defending Amy Coney Barrett and Sean making the case that Supreme Court justices rule on law, not loyalty to the president who appointed them. The crew also gets into birthright citizenship, the 14th Amendment, mail ballots after Election Day, Europe, immigration, and demographic fears. The hour ends with a horrific Michigan case involving the death of seven-year-old Casper O’Brien, a side conversation about mukbang videos, a woods brawl clip, and another push for first-responder family donations. The final cut-sheet run, starting with Precious Bland, the Miami mother found not guilty by reason of insanity after the bathtub death of her 15-month-old daughter. The crew reacts to the COVID psychosis defense, the court ruling, and Bland saying she wants to rebuild her life. Sean, Anna, and Greg argue that a finding of insanity should still mean long-term confinement when a child is dead. Three is the fatal Florida alligator attack involving Brittany Clark in the Econlockhatchee River. The crew plays portions of the 911 call, reacts to the caller trying to explain that Clark’s arms are badly injured, and criticizes the dispatcher’s line of questioning during the emergency. The story turns into a broader warning about Florida rivers, gator territory, and why nobody should assume open water there is harmless. The final stretch covers a San Diego man filing a $35 million claim after tripping over the metal base of a removed parking meter and suffering severe injuries. The crew debates whether it is a real liability case or just a terrible accident, focusing on exposed hardware, cones, sidewalk hazards, and what any reasonable person should notice. Phil then closes the show with July 2 music history, including Tesla’s Five Man Acoustical Jam, before the crew signs off.
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