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Hello and welcome to another episode of I'm not a lawyer, but I am Melanie aka.
I'm not a lawyer, but and I'm joined by my co-host.
Goose Bay.
How y'all doing?
We are not lawyers or legal experts.
But we talk about things on this channel on this podcast.
I have not been tapped into the Corey Corey Corey.
Richards.
What's that look?
Richards.
Richards.
My brain is.
I haven't been tapped in because I've been working on.
It's late, but I've been working on this some other video that I want to be really good.
That's why it's taken forever.
So we're not going to talk about Corey Richards.
So I'm so sorry if you're here for to talk about Corey Richards.
I'm not here to talk about it.
All the best.
To her and her family, I believe she did it and it's just a lot going on over there.
All right, I want to talk about a few things that have happened over the last week, a few random things.
But before I get into that, I got a message that was someone basically asking about.
I forgot what case it was, but they were asking about aggravated, aggravated something.
And it made me think about doing a very quick mini bar that you guys, we haven't done in a long time.
But many people may already know this, but we're going to go over it anyway.
So my question to you, do you know what makes a crime aggravated?
No, I'm aggravated if you disturb my peace.
Hello.
Any type of way.
Okay, but think of like aggravated robbery, aggravated murder.
If you aggravated, if you touch something, if you move something, if you impede on my space, if you.
If my door is locked and you break in, that's aggravated.
So not quite, but I see where you're going.
But if you go along that route, kind of like aggravating like a sore, like you're aggravating a sore.
So it's basically making it worse.
So aggravated is when something is added to aggravated, you've somehow made that crime worse, which also would mean your sentencing is worse.
Like you're going to have a worse sentencing because of you did this with in this way.
So as an example, um, yes.
So aggravated, let's go with like aggravated, uh, burglary, right?
So when you use a fire arm, right?
If you burglarized, I think if you rob people burglarized places.
So if you were to burglarize a plan, I have to think about it like that.
If you were to burger, burglarize a place with a weapon.
So it's like aggravated burglary because you didn't just like break in to take something, but you did so with a fire arm.
You know what I'm saying?
So if you, um, is not armed robbery?
Actually.
Well, I said burglarized.
So armed robbery is robbing someone with a gun.
But if I'm talking about burglary, that would be a, a place place.
Okay.
Right?
And so if you, what was the other one I was going to, um, aggravated assault.
Right. So you're doing it.
The other thing that can make something aggravated is who you do it to.
So pregnant people, children, older people, all of those things could, I'm not saying across the board.
We know that states are different.
Let me say that at the beginning.
States are different.
This doesn't apply across the board.
I'm saying kind of like generally when thinking about someone has been charged with a crime that is aggravated.
It means that their sentencing is, uh, has been made worse because of the way they carried out this crime.
They have done something to make this worse.
Does that make sense?
Are you following?
Yeah.
Okay.
Um, and so the flip side of that is, um, especially when you think about sentence.
And the realm of sentencing specifically, right?
Like if it's aggravated, your sentencing range could be increased because it was aggravated.
Okay.
Now when we watch sentencing hearings, a lot of times you hear the judge ask about any mitigating factor.
So that would be the opposite of aggravated something, a mitigating factor would be something that could decrease the sentencing range for that with something.
So like a consideration.
So for example, if it is, um, you have no criminal history.
It's like a mitigating factor, right?
That's something the judge could consider that could decrease the sentencing range, right?
Aggravated would increase the sentencing range, mitigating would decrease it.
If you, uh, maybe the circumstances itself could cause for it to be decreased.
Maybe, um, if you think about the case, we recently covered with the father and son, if you have some kind of health condition that the judge could take in consideration, that would be mitigating.
So anyway, there's my random mini bar aggravated aggravating and mitigating.
Cause you, you rarely hear somebody being charged with assault. It's always aggravated.
Cause they always got, they always do extra, do extra.
It could be who they're assaulting.
It could be how they assaulted that person if they had a weapon, uh, firearms, I feel like, um, this is, you know, I'm not a lawyer.
Talking, but I feel like many people are committing crimes with guns.
And so there's always typically some kind of enhancement that goes along with that.
Yeah, I'll stop being extra.
Um, let's talk about a few random things, um, that have been going on.
It'll be very random all over the place, but we'll get through it.
Brian Steele joined Dirk's case, his legal team.
That is very interesting news.
If you are unaware, Dirk is already his lead attorney is Drew Finling, who is based in Atlanta.
Brian Steele also based in Atlanta.
These are obviously two massive named attorneys that a lot of people know about.
Um,
and Drew, here's what's interesting.
Drew represented wife and luchi for the wife in Rico.
Brian Steele represented young thug in the YSL Rico.
And the two of them are coming together.
It's not a Rico, but are coming together to represent Dirk in the OTF.
Murder for a higher charge case.
Um, okay.
So that happened this week.
Very interesting.
I am looking forward to obviously I only got to be in Atlanta for the YSL trial for a short period of time, but I am looking forward to see.
And I got to see Brian still obviously when I was in New York for Diddy, but I am looking forward to being able to see a full on trial.
And Brian Steele, not to say he's obviously going to cross every, you know, witness and be the main attorney because that Drew Finling is the main and there's two.
There's a total of four.
Dirk has four attorneys, but I am very much looking forward to being able to watch Brian still in action.
I personally am a person that is a fan of Brian Steele.
I think he's really smart.
I think he clearly knows the law.
I like hearing his arguments.
I like hearing him cite cases and and connect them use case law.
Like I'll never forget in the YSL case where he had some case law in the case law with his damn case.
I said, oh, my gosh.
This man is using his own case.
So I am, I am of, I am a person who enjoys his lawyering and I'm looking forward to watching him in person.
So that's coming up in all as of now, anyway, it's coming up in August, but should be a good time. Well, I mean, good time.
That's not a good word for it.
And it's here. So yes, you'll be in the courtroom.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So that was the first thing.
The next thing we can go about this will be very quick, but this is just legal ish news and the fact that Dwight Howard filed for divorce from his wife.
She previous to that was on the internet made a video had a bag of white stuff in the video.
Yeah, that bag of white stuff, whatever it was, whatever it was.
She had it in her hand.
And then tired time she was speaking.
She was like, you know, wiping on those because she was crying.
And no telling what she does in her hand.
And she might have.
That's her business.
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Right.
That advice.
You talking to me.
Kayak got that right.
What I want to say is.
I went and looked at the documents just because I was curious and like it was all over the news.
But I always am so hesitant to post about look up, be in the people's business.
When it comes to the dissolution of marriage.
When people fall for divorce, I always feel so.
I don't know a way about reading into the details of that.
What do you think about being able to look at people's.
Marriage details and like they're.
Find it out though.
It's.
It's public record.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Yes.
That's why it's whatever.
You don't you think it's fine.
You don't have no feelings about that.
Okay.
Now, if you had to pay to.
I mean, court documents cost money.
Well, when I say pay, you know, three to six dollars, I ain't nothing.
But I mean, that's.
We humans, man.
We.
We are.
Nozy.
You know, you see if you find a phone on the street.
Go away.
You don't go.
If you lock nowadays.
But if it ain't locked, you open the phone and it ain't locked.
You got the first thing you're going to go to is they pictures.
Let me see.
Okay.
Okay.
All right.
Then you're going to go to the social media text messages.
You're going to look through it just to be nozy.
I always feel really weird, especially when kids are involved.
So, uh, Candy Burris and Todd, obviously, are in the middle of a divorce.
I've posted some of those documents in the Patreon.
But I never made a video because I'm always like, and there's kids involved.
So I just am always like, this is a little.
But that's different when you start talking about you.
I mean, most people, I mean, Dwight and then they don't have children together.
But they have kids.
Ain't nobody.
Tiana Taylor, anyone.
Shumpert.
Shumpert.
Yeah.
But when you think about, when you think about divorce, you're just thinking about the couples.
Now, if there's something in there about the children, don't mention the children.
You know, but.
Well, everybody, I think just human nature, you're curious about it.
Why they got a divorce.
Yeah.
And I mean, everybody else reports on it.
Oh, yeah.
If you don't do it, definitely somebody else going to do it.
But you're going to do it respectfully.
Like it's not about to be thrown.
Children under the bus.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, anyway, that was interesting.
You best believe if anything happens with us.
Folks are going to look.
Let's see what happened.
Yeah.
I'm a, if something do have me, I'm a, um, what is it?
A tell off.
And I'm going to put it behind a paywall.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I want to hear my story all tonight.
I'm going to put a link.
Going live.
I put a link out there.
Remember.
The paper view.
You're.
I'm about to tell it all.
Um, you're annoying.
Let me get.
We had an objection.
Oh, the other thing.
The other thing that I wanted to briefly mention was the
Sharon.
Sharon.
Because they were mad at me for saying his name wrong.
Sharon Moore.
Um, situation that just basically concluded he still has to be
sentenced.
But he was originally filed.
I mean, I'm charged with a felony.
Um,
And Sharon Moore is the former Michigan head coach who was
fired because he was having a, you know, based on their
laws at the school or their, um,
guidelines.
He was having an inappropriate relationship with his assistant.
And after getting fired because of that relationship,
it is alleged that he was having a, you know,
based on their laws at the school or their, um,
guidelines,
he was having an inappropriate relationship with his assistant.
He was getting fired because of that relationship.
It is alleged that, or it was alleged that he went over to
her house and entered her house illegally and was in there causing
all types of ruckus.
And so he was charged after that and arrested.
And what ended up happening a while ago, I made a video about
a month or so ago, maybe even less during,
they have a hearing and his attorney argues that because
the officer who got the, um,
arrest warrant, right?
The judge has to sign off the way that they got,
they never mentioned that there was this, um,
employee, employer employee relationship between the two of
them, right?
That he was her boss.
And so the reason that mattered is because some of the phone
calls that were used to say he harassed her and was stalking
her when the reality is some of those phone calls could have
been, uh, work-based, work-related.
And so if the judge didn't have that information, you
know, they were saying that's unfair and the whole thing
should be thrown out.
So that was the argument.
I thought it was actually a very interesting argument.
Um, now there was a lot of phone calls that was happening all
types of days and nights.
So I don't know.
But I did think it was an interesting argument.
And the judge clearly did too because he agreed to have a
hearing where they could dig further into who knew what
it was and, you know, why wasn't that told to the judge?
So the hearing was supposed to start.
And instead of starting, um, it's, you know,
learned that there's a plea deal that they have come to a plea
where the prosecutors have, uh, dismissed all of the charges
that they originally charged him with.
And instead gave him two misdemeanors.
Um, and so, I mean, the max he could do is like six months
in jail, but, uh, he also could do nothing.
Uh, it'll be in the judge's discretion.
So the hearing is going to come up.
But watching that, what it made me think about, especially
based on the, um, one of the cases we recently covered,
is again, how much control prosecutors have.
They have so much and remember the case we just covered
where the judge was like, y'all overcharged.
And I'm not saying that they did or did not overcharge
Sharon. I don't know if they did or didn't.
But when you start at felonies and then land, right?
You plea at misdemeanors.
The, you can't help but question about the overcharging.
And how much power prosecutors have.
There's so much conversation about prosecutors like being motivated
politically, um, in the sense that a lot of prosecutors
want to go into the political world.
Like they want to become.
If you think about even Kamala Harris as an example,
she used to be a prosecutor, right?
She was prosecutor in California.
And the way you kind of get your name out there is when you are the person,
when you are the DA, who indicted big cases, big names.
I'm the person who brought this person down.
I'm the person who filed the charges.
And so when you consider all of that, it's just, I don't know,
some of these cases make me think about they have so much power
and it could be motivated by the wrong thing,
instead of like doing what's fair and that sucks.
But then they bring charges on the most fervent things.
Like, uh, what was his name, Afro man?
Yeah, the Afro man.
Yeah. Well, this is, that's a civil case.
But, uh, civil care.
Okay. Okay.
Yeah. Yeah.
Uh, what's her name?
But somebody, look, Karen Reed.
What do you think about Karen Reed?
Karen Reed.
You know,
y'all trying to charge this lady and it's obvious that she did not,
that she's getting.
I mean, people still think.
But yeah, there's so much power that they have and so much money
that they can choose to throw at that.
Remember the week two trials for Karen Reed, who?
And they were calling in big dogs to come do this.
They had proctor who was trash.
And you still.
Move forward with this.
You get Hank.
Hank, you think.
As the special prosecutor to come and prosecute it for you.
And you know what?
They never, I don't know about you all.
But.
I didn't hear about prosecutors or even this occupation in high school.
I didn't know it was even a thing.
Yeah.
You know, they don't.
I don't know about y'all.
But that I didn't hear about this.
We should definitely become prosecutors.
And you wouldn't have all this bias going on.
But.
Yeah.
Prosecutors.
That's that's way too much power.
For them.
And then imagine if the prosecutors isn't co-host with the judge.
You done for.
Yeah.
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So even in thinking about Aaron Spencer, who won his.
Who is the Republican nominee for sheriff in Lone Oak?
Arkansas.
He won his election.
So I was saying, and I said in the video, he still has to go against the Democratic nominee.
But then somebody from that county commented on my video and they were like,
I don't know if you know, but there is no Democratic nominee.
I said, really?
That's what they said.
I haven't confirmed that's just what somebody said.
That's they said there is no Democratic nominee.
He won, girl.
He can win.
I mean, obviously it will, it will have to be official in November like after they need the general election.
However, that's what they're saying is that he's basically running on a pose.
So he wins.
I don't know what else he stands on.
You know, yeah, behind the fact that he protected his child.
That's why he has my vote.
I don't know what else he stands on.
So hopefully nothing crazy come out about him.
Yeah.
But I stand behind him.
Hello.
So anyway, that is very.
Hey, he still has his trial to do eventually if that happens because now he got a new judge and the judge decided to absolutely.
That's what I'm saying.
That's absolutely.
To me, he did what he had to do.
If he is to be convicted, he won't be able to be sheriff.
If he is, if he were convicted, apparently, apparently you can.
You can't be sheriff, but you can't be president as a fellow.
How is about safe?
This is America.
This dude is about to be shared.
He's about to be shared for real.
Donald Trump is our president.
This man is about to be shared.
Without a doubt.
I am waiting to see the update for so he got the new.
That's what I was going to say.
He has the new judge.
But as I read even more, and I had heard rumblings of this, but as I read even more in the air and Spencer file.
I read a document that made clear in a way that I had not seen previously in that case where his attorneys were really saying that there was a cover up by the judge.
It was a little.
It was low key tea.
What they said.
Okay.
So there was.
It was never really clear who is the judge that gave.
Fosler the bond.
And.
They air and Spencer's team said.
The judge.
And it's true.
When you go on Fosler's case, the judge assigned to Fosler's case is the same judge that was over air and Spencer's case.
That's the same.
That's the same.
For name is Barbara.
Elmore.
So even right now, even though, you know, Fosler's case is gone because he's dead now, but the judge assigned is Barbara Elmore.
And.
Aaron Spencer's team had asked a number of times they wanted to see who was the judge that signed off on the bond.
They wanted the details and.
Or like a year.
They're not able to get the document.
They're at one point.
They're like, there is no document.
That's what they're told by the clerk.
There is no bond.
And they're like, that doesn't even.
How did he get bond?
If there is no document, that doesn't make sense.
So they're asking and asking and asking and asking doesn't get anything.
So then.
When.
The air and Spencer's team appeal to the Supreme Court at the beginning of the case because the judge was being crazy.
And the Supreme Court stepped in and they were like, all right now, judge, relax.
All of us after Supreme Court, you know, starts looking.
All of a sudden.
The clerk is like, oh, I had to get approval, but I think we got a document for you.
So they give them this.
A ledged bond document.
That was for Fosler.
The.
There's no case number on it.
It is so faint.
You can't see anything.
The judges.
I don't even remember if there it either was a judge's name.
That was very faint and hard to see.
Or it wasn't signed at all.
I think it was a different judge's name.
That was very faint.
And so here's the thing about document court documents, right?
They get filed.
And so usually anything you see a court document.
There's a stamp that says filed and it has the date.
There's no date on there on this document.
And so there.
And then it's no detail.
It's no details.
It's so bizarre.
I looked at it so many times because I was like, what am I looking at?
I kept reading.
I said, oh, y'all see what I see that this is clearly said.
Yes.
So they're lying to themselves.
The judge.
I'm just saying the justice system.
Oh, yeah.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So they meant Aaron's Winters team mentions this in their latest appeal
to the Supreme Court when they asked for the judge to be dismissed.
They included that like just a little background on what happened.
And so anyway,
I think that's really the same thing as the judge.
The same thing as the judge.
The same thing as the judge.
The same thing as the judge.
The same thing as the judge.
The same thing was she was not the judge that signed off.
I think that is.
Question.
You know, a question.
I don't think that that's.
I think that's.
You know, to be determined.
But regardless.
What that would mean.
Think about the conflict of that.
The conflict of this same judge now presiding over the case of that.
That would be crazy.
If you're watching versus listening.
I just put up the document.
You see how faint it is.
It is so faint.
It is so faint.
So mind you.
Like I said, there's usually a stamp at the very top on the right.
Usually you're like in the middle.
That says filed.
And it'll say the date to say that like this isn't some document.
Somebody made it at the house.
But like it has been entered into the system.
And here's when it was entered.
That's not on this document.
It does say versus Michael Fosler has his date of birth.
And it has race and sex.
And it says on this date.
July 12, 2024.
But then everything else.
You can't even see the date time.
Very faint.
There's the amount right because we know it was like 150,000.
The user fee that says zero dollars.
Defendant is hiring private counsel.
Defendant shall have now no contact because we do remember that.
It is so ordered.
And then there's the name.
So there was a judge name.
Something Smith or something.
And there's no case number anywhere.
There's no like.
It just it.
This is what Aaron Spencer's attorneys got.
This is the document they got.
And they were like this.
Don't even.
Who y'all fooling?
After a year of being told that one doesn't exist.
And then this is what you get.
So anyway.
Very weird.
Very, very weird.
All right.
Let me go to.
We got one objection.
I want to play.
And then we will get out of here.
It's a quick episode.
We've been given really long one.
So it's okay to have a short one ever now and again.
Let me give y'all.
I'm tripping on the fact that the.
Justice system is lying to itself.
It's corrupt.
It's corrupt.
But we as the people.
We're going to be trying to believe these folks.
Like.
Come on, man.
They do they do themselves like this.
You know they doing us dirty.
The regular civilians out here.
Yeah, yeah.
Come on.
Okay.
And we'll technology now.
Man, they can mimic documents for sure.
Oh.
You screw, but if you if you out there in that criminal world.
But you.
Hope for you.
Hey Greg came out.
I want to object to Greg's statement last week regarding these guns being the reasoning behind these shootings, especially as it relates to the two cases you covered the one with the 14 year old
shot as well as the young lady being shot and both of those cases these two individuals cannot accept that the relationship had ended.
I think this goes more so to emotional maturity and emotional regulation and it just speaks to their age right because both of them are in adolescence.
I think neither were over 25 and is speaks to how they are
completely incapable of regulating those emotions to the point so that they are acting out in these ways.
This 19 year old decided to just shoot this 14 year old that this young lady was just with.
He doesn't even know if they actually had a relationship as well as this young lady is just coming up following this man to AutoZone, you know, starting a scene, causing a scene.
I've been a young lady before and I know how it goes.
I've done a few things back in my day.
I won't discriminate myself, but it all goes back to more so emotional regulation because if it wasn't a gun, it could have been a knife.
And if they wanted to get it done, they could have gotten it done honestly.
As young people, you all have to absolutely learn how to regulate your emotions and understand that it's not that deep sometimes majority of the time, it's not that deep.
I agree with her.
It's about maturity, but I also object to her saying it's not guns because if they didn't have the weapon, it wouldn't have been.
If weapons weren't as easy to get, they won't be, you know, you wouldn't have all these shootings that you have.
But I mean, I don't know how you controlled it because you can buy a gun off Amazon bullets off Amazon.
So, but yeah, I think she does raise a good point though.
I mean, some adults can't regulate themselves.
However, the reality is that children don't have the ability to experience even right to be able to like understand situations the way that they should be at times.
And so, I mean, I can't remember being young and think if everything feels like the end of the world, like, oh my gosh, this is the worst thing ever.
And if that is the feeling that you have, you could feel like this is the, this is the answer to this problem, this gun that I have.
So, I do, I mean, it's a.
What age can you get guns 18?
I mean, legally, I'm not, I know what you can do.
You can do a lot of things.
I mean, like, what is the age?
I believe it's 18.
I've been watching this Colt gray case calling gray case.
And I think it's 18.
Oh, depends on the state.
Okay.
Is anywhere younger than 18.
The idea that an 18 year old can legally have a firearm actually to the point she's making is low key scary.
Because your decision making skills are not even fully developed.
They're dumb.
They're dumb.
So being able to have a rifle at 18 is crazy low key when you think about it.
They're just too immature to understand they can't even like process long term effects.
You know what I'm saying?
Like they don't even have the ability to think long term.
They're short term thinkers.
Federal law requires 21.
Requires you to be 21 to purchase a handgun.
So you want to get a shot at 18 for a long gun rifles shot.
Why would 18 be younger?
Because they think you're hunting.
Yeah.
Rifles and shotguns aren't like semi automatic.
They're not.
You're not shooting shotguns and rifles don't hold 32 rounds at one time.
Usually now they might put a drum on it or something.
But Colt gray had a rifle.
Yeah.
their rifle is wow you got it. It's too many. Okay. Yeah, but a handgun you can. But aren't
those more high powered? They are, but they're not shooting. Okay, understood. Now, I'm
gonna say this. That young as a with a gun, if you're holding the gun, it does change, it
changes the person's attitude, right? So if you ever watch these shootings where there's a crowd
of people shooting, that person with the gun is usually sitting up looking. The one that's going
to fire back, they're not running, they're not hiding. It's because they have a weapon. Your weapon
gives you that liquid courage. That's what that weapon is doing. If we didn't have it,
your whole demeanor will be different. And whenever you have a weapon, you get bolder. So
if weapons were regulated properly, this stuff wouldn't happen. And you have adults. People
in the 40s and 50s shooting each other too. Well, that's, I agree. That's why it's like adults don't
even have the ability to regulate their emotions. And they can, you know, react in poor ways as well.
But to the point she was making, this is the part that I would agree with is that
thinking about children. Oh, yeah. Children whose
mental capacity, like they don't even have the ability to process or think long term,
which is why we have the conversation about if, you know, they should, why the Supreme Court,
you know, has this caution about sentencing children to life in prison because
of their mental capacity. And so if that isn't understanding that we have even down from the
Supreme Court, the idea that they can legally own and possess firearms. But then on the flip side,
still say, yeah, but they can't, they don't have the ability to understand what those firearms can
do long term, but they can have them. That actually is kind of crazy. You think about it, but
all right, I don't want to turn into a, a gun law conversation because a lot of people feel a
lot of different ways about guns and laws. And I don't have the time. So everybody be safe.
There's, there's no, there's no, there's cash 22 with this situation because people are different.
Different maturity levels, different ways of thinking, you got kids killing their parents because
they took their video games away. So I mean, you can't, you wouldn't even imagine that ever
happening, but it happens. Somebody also missed a good point that we have the military. You can
join the military and have access to firearms as well. They'll teach you how to use them. So,
I mean, there's a lot of nuances to the conversation. I am not trying to address them. Believe me,
I'm not, I just think that, that part of her objection was, it was in my opinion, a good point.
All right, that's it. We are a little all over the place. Kids don't mix at all.
Amen to that. A little all over the place, but I'm working on a few things. So we may have a
little more focus next week. I appreciate y'all being here. Appreciate y'all. Appreciate y'all
tuning in until the next time. Make sure you follow me. I'm not a lawyer, but on our platforms.
Okay, bye. Oh, do yours. I'm going to find you.
Hello, ALZB Wow, IG. Court is adjourned.
I'm Not A Lawyer But: The Debrief
