tv Documentary RT December 3, 2021 9:30pm-10:01pm EST
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the a year and he just like, i don't know, it's tough on the text messaging, all of his friends smoked. we also don't even to all of this. so she could have and like he wants to read and, and, but he didn't understand that you have a over here in weber's behavior from the video is very concerning. but before i talk about that, go back the day before. mm. where officer webber went to, andrew sat next dorm room and that was the 1st threat that was made to
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andrew. the threat being, you're in trouble. you're going to be charged with felonies. we have you on video and audio recordings selling marijuana to 2 different confidential informants. if you don't work with me, you're going to prison for 40 years. whoever said you can come to the law enforcement center and meet with me tomorrow. and you can work with me and all, help make some of this go away and make the punishment a lot less. but you can't tell anybody. you can't tell your parents. you can't tell your roommate. you can't tell your friends. you can't talk to an attorney. you just need to come and talk to me and for this to work. nobody can know about this. actually the back of 40 years of prison, 40 years. and obviously you're probably not you for years was
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a good possibly that you are your person time. if you know all is asserting his authority and giving andrew false information for the amount of marijuana that andrew sold to the 2 different confidential informants. there is no way that he would have gone to prison for that that i'm out. but most likely with that at that level of the crime, you're looking at probation, maybe some community service. i can't imagine one niandra was thinking in his situation, sitting with this guy who he thought was probably just going to be just on like a slap on the wrist meeting like a don't let us catch you screwing up again. and then all of a sudden this guy's like, yeah, you got to work with us or you're going to face 40 years will cross your whole life . if we have to like blue
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it was one of the 1st times i've actually seen the footage of it happening and watched it happen and able to see the body language and the reactions that take place between the individuals. and once you learn more of the background, you can understand why someone who had never really been in trouble and was only 20 and trying to get through college would be scared to death. last for years, new is used by is from either you or you have to were wire, you have to live marijuana from individuals and the non and upon how you and so forth. you know, a lot of this can go away, or you andro was under intense pressure and he was terrified of the consequences. most of the time they're looking for more than pot or key by using other marijuana . and, and i think the contact intensify and then i think they gave him deadlines. you
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have to do more in just 2 people to get the, you know, all the logo, i think labor. it was a bowie. and i think that his actions caused the death of andrew static, you know, when you check in, you can call the text message works just fine. we're sending andrew a boy, he's still a boy. i mean, he is a legal to have a beer in our state and you're going to send him after these drug lords. no, to me, that was the worst part about all this news from november of 2013 until may of 2014. there were 3 buys that andrew did under the direction of officer webber. ah
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ah, after those 3 buys levers still wanted one more. now that would have been sometime in early 2014 noon. ah ah, and billy there was very little communication from january to april. ah, a had to wait on him. there are some research projects that have been done that talk about the psychology that goes along with becoming a confidential informant. and the pressures that are emotionally put on someone
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that once an individual is approached and brought in to that situation, it will change them forever in i don't know what was going on in andrew's mind. i just know that what he was probably being asked to do was to dive deeper. find someone else in the down trade with you want to get all the charges. well, you've got to give me somebody data. you ah, there was a point around april 15th, that there was no more communication and that's a real red flag in there were no red flags name, nothing. that's what's making this so difficult for us is law enforcement?
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no red flag, nothing. why wasn't jason webber in contact with vander sac every day? why didn't he know where he was at all times? and if, if andrew was not responding to officer webber, why didn't he bring a man bring the charges for them because he wasn't doing what he'd been asked for. this situation that go on from november of 2013 to may of 2014 is problematic. certain amount, if you want me to start and try to get what you normally get, i want to know who jason, whatever worked for because somebody empowered him to lie to andrew. somebody empowered him to basically playoff andrew's worst fears. and that was simply tonight's point of view topic. what is shameka,
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and are they to blame for the death of andrew sac? earlier this week, tammy, static andrews, mom blamed at some go for her son's death. maslanka just to be clear, stands for the south east malta county agency, narcotics task force. essentially. they could be perceived as a local drug and force agency down in richland county. some co operate as their own entity with their own board of directors and their own oversight. investigators have permission to be on the campus, but they don't have to notify the school about who they may be investigating. ah, one thing that we found really odd is that one of the sergeants at the campus police station was on the board of some come. this review listed all the one drug task force board member and d as c as police sergeant steve helga said sergeant hogan san was on the same comport. yeah. yeah.
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ah, they should not have had that conflict of interest. a 3rd party should have been investigating what was going on if they knew who andrew was and what he was doing, they shouldn't have been investigating that. talk to me. i started in august and there why and why when i talked with him, then we had a reporter. he just went to the college, walked in and tried talking to him, and he got the door slammed in his face and told to turn his camera off. mm. her daughter law review, jacqueline sar, do shoddy investigated, work was terrible, but again, it goes back to the factor. why are they letting some come sirs onto their campus?
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not knowing what they're doing. oh, it's all money driven. the reason that some co exists is due to money from the federal government. they're dealing and small level crimes like marijuana buys, because it helps their numbers, the more arrests that they can make. the more charges that they can show, the more money they're going to get to keep going. so it's almost like a commissioned sales job at that point. asthma. my little brother was actually going to andy s yes at the same time as andrew and lived in the same dorm at the same time, there is no drug problem and why pretend it's fabricated. i would say that is that they're targeting people that they dow are going to have a little bit a pot here and there, the numbers that they use, it's mostly marijuana live it's misdemeanor level. it tells you that
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they've bastardize the war on drugs and federal funding for their own benefit. as a preface, a federal funding, that's what the purpose of these standards is to investigate is to dean this male big organizations, dangerous organizations. philip chillers, real job. and i the andrew, sad exodus room with oh, is your media a reflection of reality in the world transformed what will make you feel safer? isolation for community. are you going the right way?
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or are you being led to some with direct? what is true war his way in the world corrupted? you need to descend a join us in the depths or remain in the shallows. there is no pinnacle of evolution. everything's flat. a bacterium is a product to 4000000000 years of evolution. it's in a specific environment so away. so in that sense, when we on the left, the survivors are then to vote along a long process you. so as in to the springs at yellowstone, we will not do very well. if i turn, we'll do much better. since you were told it
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was bad for your eyes and your post. yeah. that it would stop you from having real friends and finding a girlfriend. but what they fail to mention is that you can make thousands of dollars every weekend by simply playing video getting a stacy been a couple of them because i always wanted the solution to was sure it's a little under a georgia resume with much for to do up is no phone of course to make video games a high paying job. you have to be gifted and quick with it. hang on to a spike, to parents, to listening people to listening bottom in this sounds a webpage bentley up in the else produced. miss savage? yeah. glove voice when you mouse told me another dealer, i don't you mean i was at middle school? are you guy of the owner without that vehicle? it will still be stuck with these odd to do i also use
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this is the videotape deposition of steve helga since taken was the plaintiff in the matter of john and tammy said x versus jason webber at all. raise your hand on the side of the testimony, are about to give me the truth and i think that i do say your name, steven feldman. morning officer webber. morning. we've never met prior to have with the family. wanted to bring a lawsuit against anyone that was responsible for the disappearance and death of andrew. where does the funding count for so there are 2 different grafts. are they provided with the statistical information that you put together as to the number of cases you're in? so i'm not at the time of the, the, the grant application of the statistics, common quarterly reports that go on, i burn j, graft federal website. and those are reported court. we were able to bring
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a lawsuit against jason weber for his involvement with some cut. the law suit is alleging negligence. so essentially, the, this handling of andrew as a confidential informant. also, we have alleged fraud and defeat. in other words, they misled andrew in to getting involved in his role as confidential informant, which we believe led to as deaf. mm. are there any other specific courses you can point me to that you've been? are professors, you've been trained on strictly confidential form? so now i have no one point your permanent ones that part of the program i saw on the board? yes. so for the time, the savage what this thing you are still
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a board member of some yes. we were privy to cases that were operating but not who was doing was such as the sea ice or there'd be a line across the sheep that would say in dfcs, in a case and what the drug was that they were working on. but that was, it was a number system we didn't know, people were neither the agent nor the she so up until essentially 2016, the state college of science was involved in the task force. correct. when the federal were you informed of controlled by as being performed on campus for which andrew sat, it was a target good day that he went missing or that night
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when we 1st made aware of that. and so it was acting as a confidential informant at that point. right. with that moment to pin prior to that on march 10, 2014 we sent the andrew text that said, are you still alive, though? remember that phil? did you have any concerns about him? i i didn't though he hadn't been contact me or i haven't heard from him for a while. i didn't have any concerns. i just asked, you know, just a peer to speech. april 17th, 2014. you gave a deadline of may 1 to complete another by correct why the may 1st deadline on because at that point he was on the question that he's going to be graduating from school and he will be leaving the walk in area and it would be difficult for him to
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complete what he needs to complete traveling back and forth. he's going to go, there was may 1. what andrew i missing i believe. so i know who steve allison as was he involved in the anders cedric handling. so he would have never participated on our deals. was he aware that the consent search was taking place? i, i honestly, i don't recall out um, sometimes we um, you know, if we only leisure different jurisdictions, sometimes we will notify you know, the sheriff of cheap lease or, you know, if it's like apples steve, typically these individuals, oh, don't want to know what we're doing and stuff and, and steve's a big one for that. he's never really wanting to know what we're do on our campus. what is the extent of the relation ship between santa and campus police now?
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no, justin. i don't know if they're even working on the campus or not anymore. they could be and i wouldn't have any idea at all if you had known that andrew, cedric, or any other student at the school of science was acting as a confidential informant or where the target of a buy from a confidential informant. would you have done anything different towards that student who not for this month or mm in. mm
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want them to tell me exactly what they were doing with andrew up until that point, if theory, if they had him under so much pressure that he actually did commit suicide. i want, i want to know, i want to know what they were doing with them. the truth, unlike the truth ah, campus, police asked me if i had a gun missing and they thought that andrew might had one. and so that he, i checked my guns and yep, there was a pistol missing from them, from the garage. ah,
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he ran through my mind. can't say that didn't ah, sure him to do it without leaving a note or something. letting us a singer by to us. i do not believe that her 2nd mm . the question that we may never have truthfully answered. mm. and the only person that might know what really happened is officer webber doing it. why not? okay, and then now the thing is, was he being asked by something more the marijuana was he being asked to go to people that he didn't really know and never interacted with to buy whether was pot or something else. bmw,
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i take it, he wasn't, i'm selling hot. i wouldn't think that that would lead to a bullet. but whatever it was, i think that he went met up with somebody bigger and better than anybody. and he had expected, heard that trapped to not do scared and he ended up in error. i have a lot of people who talk to me about my involvement, static family. and though then the people that support the static family don't really care whether he was murdered or whether he took his own life. i know that's a bad thing to say, but they don't really care because what they care about is that he was put in a position where it's one of those 2 thanks. what happened in the end, the narrative that got us to the end, we should never have happened. so while i believe that andrew was murdered,
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i don't think it should take away from the fact that if in fact he did commit suicide and that was not anything that andrew did without somebody pushing him towards lou, we adore having those guys around was like and i value the fact that they had that much respect to come in and spend time with us because we get to watch them grow. we're not sure really what to do with the farm where we wanted to keep it in the name. by that sc can be pretty hard to do. now i was expanding at the time of and her staff is just was renting some more past year and i was going to expand my heard building it up for for his future and stuff. and after his death, i've basically just lost all my ambition to don't have any will anymore.
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i me ah, join me every thursday on the alex salmon show. when i was speaking to guess in the world, the politics sport, business, i'm show business. i'll see you then. me. the postal service delivers a $155000000000.00 pieces of mail every year. approximately 40 percent of the world's mail right now the us postal service is in the fight of its life. is reduction bad financial shape? now facing default. the postal service is a cash cow, and there was a way to pull money out of the postal service to put into the federal budget. there
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was a mandate that you're bringing a $100000.00, new revenue every month. the nature of privatization in the us postal service is very much hidden from public view. it's privatization from the inside out. why that's a big business in money. it's not about the public and given them the service that they deserve. it's not about quality train workers. it's about with this in their interest for some financial pundents to see the value of the currency lose value because they can gain traction on social media, saying it's somehow a good thing, but not everybody is an undertaker. not everyone is a grave. robert, you know, some people are actually out there trying to be productive and productive lives and of course, that philosophy of, oh,
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all familiar with the world you live in abolish slavery long ago. ah, the asylum seekers may have to wait months at the bell rings border to get processed. if a new plan from brussels gets at the go ahead rights groups say the move throws way . the rule book nursing unions around the globe call for uncovered vaccine patents to be lifted. blaming production restrictions for deaths in the developing world. and the constrain will be followed by others if we cannot act and it's all countries in at here to think of vaccinations, trafficking, and then with cancer catastrophe,
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