Allison Gill and Katie Phang Discuss the Republican Surveillance State
Pamela Jo's menty b, Judge Box-o-Wine's failed weaponization, and protecting the Epstein Survivors.
TRANSCRIPT:
Hey everybody, I’m Alison Gill. Welcome to The Breakdown. Thanks to the Midas Touch Network for hosting this show. Really appreciate them giving me this platform. So I wanted to talk today a little bit about the abject failures of the Department of Justice. And considering how much of a failure this Department of Justice has been and continues to be with their lowest conviction rate in DC that has ever been seen in the history since they’ve been keeping track.
and all of the inability to indict a ham sandwich. Literally, they couldn’t indict sandwich guy. However, when Pam Vondie appeared before the House Judiciary Committee this week, she was awfully cocky for somebody who’s such an abject failure, who keeps getting beat up and beat up and beat up. And it makes me question the intent behind going after Trump’s political enemies, because it doesn’t feel to me like convictions are
the goal. It feels to me like it’s just red meat for the base. It’s just, hey, just say there’s an investigation and let Republicans and I, Republicans in Congress and me do the rest as he had, you know, instructed his attorney general or potential attorney general, Jeffrey Clark, to do when he was trying to overthrow the government back in 2020 and 2021. So I just wanted to kind of bring these things together and wrap them up in a bow.
And so that’s what we’re gonna do on today’s episode of The Breakdown
[FIVE SECOND ANIMATION]
[PAM BONDI’S CONGRESSIONAL MENTAL BREAKDOWN]
All right, hey everybody, welcome. Joining me today to discuss all this is my very good friend, host, Saron Show here on the Midas Touch Network. Please welcome Katie Fang. Hi, Katie, how are you?
Katie Phang (01:45.658)
Well, it’s been yet another run of time. I mean, can’t believe it’s only, what, more or less mid-February 2026, and I can’t find, you know, head or tails of sanity these days. But if there’s anybody with whom I could be not sane, it would be with you. So I’m happy to be here.
Allison Gill (02:04.691)
Yay, a couple of independent journalists whiling out. I’m excited. So what I wanted to talk to you about today was, first of all, Pam Bondi’s performance, because that’s what it was, if I’m being honest, in front of the House Judiciary Committee, headed up by Jim Jordan, who, by the way, also has covered for pedophiles in the past and sexual abusers in the past. So it’s just a whole gang of people providing cover for sex abuse and pedophilia.
getting together to seemingly gang up on Democrats who are the ones providing oversight and asking questions on the Hill. What were your main takeaways from that performance, as I say?
Katie Phang (02:48.94)
Well, I wanted to smack the smug off her face to your well taken point. Remarkably arrogant for somebody who doesn’t have the substance and even the style, right? It’s almost like if you could deliver the boom with some style, maybe you could say, ow or wow, right? But she can’t even do it well. She was stuttering when she sp-
because she had to continuously refer to her notes, but then she wanted to sit there and say something rude about, you know, other lawyers. She couldn’t even pronounce the word lawyer when she was trying to go after Jamie Raskin, constitutional law professor, calling him a loser, liar, lawyer. I mean, I couldn’t even jumble it up. But, you know, it was embarrassing for her. She’s the attorney general of the United States, and...
You know, it’s frustrating to see somebody who has such an important job, Allison, turn around and just shit all over it in one fell swoop. And it’s House Judiciary, because I want to remind people, that is the job of House Judiciary, is to actually have oversight over the Department of Justice. And she’s required to come and answer these questions. But Hank Johnson said it the best. He said she’s Jekyll and Hyde. She has one face for the Republicans. She has another.
for the Democrats, although I will say the carve out on the Republicans was Tom Massey, who she said had Trump derangement syndrome and was a failed politician. Just genuinely a disappointment. And she really does do a disservice not only to lawyers, I’m embarrassed for her as a lawyer, but also to the Department of Justice, which I these days call the Department of Obstruction of Justice.
Allison Gill (04:34.803)
That’s a very good name for it Yeah, and there seems to be no thought Behind her quips so to speak She just has the sort of the same canned responses or she reads out of her burn book that she had in for excuse me multiple burn books that she had In front of her we we heard the Dow is 50,000 a million times We heard I’m not gonna get down in the gutter with these people a million times We heard I mean just over and over kind of the same things. You’re not a real lawyer
Katie Phang (04:47.608)
Yeah, that’s right.
Katie Phang (05:02.254)
How dare you come after the greatest president of all time? I thought, for a second there, I thought it was Nutlick that was there and not Pam Bondi, but no, I was wrong.
Allison Gill (05:12.531)
That’s a good name for Lutnick, who also was embarrassed on the hill this week too when he was caught lying about visiting Epstein Island with his kids and his response was, I brought all my kids with me when I left. Like what?
Katie Phang (05:20.814)
Mm-hmm.
Katie Phang (05:28.91)
Like that was supposed to be the winning response. You’re right, actually. They don’t really, they’re not very good at the zingers, are they? They’re not very good at the retorts. They’re not very thoughtful about the zingers. They’re really not, they’re only soundbites, Allison, because they’re just so egregiously bad. It’s not because they’re good.
Allison Gill (05:44.123)
[JURIES STOP TRUMP’S WEAPONIZATION OF JUSTICE]
Right, and this carries over, this inability to have second and third level thought carries over into the actual weaponization of the Department of Obstruction of Justice, as you call it, in going after Trump’s political enemies. We have seen failure upon failure upon failure, and it’s not just Trump’s political enemies, but it’s also protesters who are protesting and observing ICE. I guess you could call Trump’s political enemies, he calls us domestic terrorists for exercising
Katie Phang (06:12.396)
But Bondi refuses to release the list. She refuses to release the list of, domestic terrorists.
Allison Gill (06:18.515)
Of course, because there isn’t one. But there is a list of Epstein co-conspirators that was on her desk last February that she still refuses to release. But here’s some information. Fiscal year 2016, right? Our fiscal years in the government go from September to September. And in 2016, that’s the most recent year where we have figures from the Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics.
DOJ sought federal charges against about 70,000 felony defendants, 69,451 to be exact. And in only six cases did a grand jury return a no bill, a vote of no bill, which means they didn’t get a majority of 12 or more jurors on the grand jury. And a grand jury, what’s made up of 18 to 23 citizens.
Katie Phang (06:56.63)
Okay, okay.
Allison Gill (07:13.395)
and they need to get 12 votes to get a true bill, which means you’re gonna indict somebody through a federal grand jury. And they only had six votes of no bill in 2016 out of those 70,000.
Katie Phang (07:27.672)
Pretty impressive. That’s pretty, pretty impressive win rate right there.
Allison Gill (07:32.175)
Right. And so when we talk about you can indict a ham sandwich, what we’re talking about is seasoned career veteran prosecutors who go in, they don’t have any defense attorneys, they just present their one side of the case to a group of federal grand jurors. And because of the federal rules of criminal procedure, a good prosecutor will not go into a federal grand jury if they don’t believe they can convict, obtain, and maintain
a conviction beyond a reasonable doubt. You only need probable cause in that grand jury room, but you have to go in thinking you have you have it beyond a reasonable doubt because that’s those are the rules. They don’t do that anymore. And so they’re coming back with an insane amount of of no build indictments where the where the grand jury fails to get 12 votes. So can you talk a little bit like sort of educate us about why it’s generally
easy if you go in with a good case, it’s pretty easy to get a true bill because there’s no other side in that room, right? It’s just the prosecutors and what they think.
Katie Phang (08:35.47)
No, no. And what’s remarkable is that you can introduce hearsay. So so normally you’re not allowed to use statements made outside of court.
right, for the truth of the matter that’s being asserted within those statements. But in a grand jury proceeding, you can plop one agent down in front of your grand jurors, and they can just go through a litany and just reel off a litany of evidence and statements from other witnesses, et cetera. You could literally present an entire case through just one agent.
And that is a really important thing, right? Because when you go to trial, you can’t get all of that evidence in through one person. You have to abide by the rules of evidence, which means you may have to tee up a case where you have to have multiple witnesses. And gosh, maybe you don’t end up having that critical witness and that one piece of evidence doesn’t come in and that may result in you not getting a conviction, right? So the thing about the, here’s some inside baseball I’ll share with you, because I’ve served as a state prosecutor and
as a federal prosecutor. So here’s the thing. You know, we used to always grumble as state prosecutors, because some of our cases, the feds would swoop in and take them away from us. And we used to always say, of course they take the ones, because those are the layup cases, right? They’re like the no brainers. It’s like possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, right? I mean, it’s things like that that the feds would come in and take from us. And we used to always complain about that. But then we’d also kind of bitch and moan and say, must be nice to be a federal prosecutor, because the rules
of discovery or such that the other side doesn’t really see anything until the very end, until they go to trial, right? And the feds have such an amazing win rate at trial because to what you said, you’re not going to go and seek an indictment unless you are about 99.9 % certain you’re getting that thing across the finish line. That one-tenth of uncertainty is because there’s like an act of war or something, right, or an act of God that day. I mean, that’s really how people view federal prosecutions, which is why when you see somebody going to
Katie Phang (10:39.184)
in a federal case, in a federal criminal case, there’s some shit going on there. It’s either they really, you know, have a death wish or, you know, they genuinely think that they can litigate themselves out of this. But realistically, the feds usually go in with the deck stacked so strongly in their favor, Allison, that you really should not be going to trial against the federal government. So when you look at it from the grand jury perspective...
Allison Gill (11:04.967)
No.
Katie Phang (11:07.778)
The fact that you can’t get a majority of that grand jury to be able to come back with a true bill on either one or several charges is a really bad sign. It’s either you, and are we going to do a carve out for Lindsay Halligan who lies to grand juries? Because I feel like she gets her own conversation in and of itself. But you’re either lying to the grand jury to get your grand jury indictment returned, but really,
Maybe you don’t have the experience to know how to do it. Maybe, I don’t, it’s just remarkable to me that you’re not able to get a grand jury to be convinced by you because the standard is lower. It’s probable cause. It’s not even beyond and to the exclusion of every reasonable doubt. It’s let me park somebody in front of you and, you know, hopefully they’re not, the grand jurors aren’t asleep and even then they’ll probably just sign off on it out of peer pressure. I have no idea, but like, look, they’re not doing it in these cases.
Allison Gill (11:59.429)
Yeah, and this came out in the immunity arguments when Donald Trump was trying to and successfully got immunity from the Supreme Court. I think it was Justice Sotomayor or maybe Justice Jackson who was like, we don’t need immunity for presidents. We already have a bunch of guardrails to make sure there’s no rogue prosecutions in our system. We start with a federal grand jury, then we start with pretrial motions to dismiss, then we have other pretrial motions, then we have motions in eliminate to decide what evidence can be.
Katie Phang (12:19.777)
And we’ll see.
Uh-huh.
Allison Gill (12:26.931)
allowed in under the rules of evidence. Then we have a trial, then we have a judge, then we have a petit jury, the trial jury. And then we have the appeals process. Like we have all these steps. And that due process is proving very difficult for Pamela Jo, as you call her. Because before Pam, for example, DC, they had a 0.5 % dismissal rate over a 10-year period. That’s before Pamela Jo. After Pamela Jo,
Katie Phang (12:54.296)
That’s crazy.
Allison Gill (12:56.423)
This is a pretty insane statistic. 21 % dismissal rate from the DC US Attorney’s Office.
Katie Phang (13:03.062)
Well, it’s, but listen, don’t just give flowers to Pammy Jo with the bad hair. You know, box of wine, Gin Impiro is the DC United States attorney now. So she gets to stake her claim of no pride on that number as well.
Allison Gill (13:18.311)
Yeah, and then keeping all of that in mind, Katie, we have found out from Ryan Reilly over at NBC, who’s written a great book about January 6th and Sedition Hunters, and he just does some really great reporting on justice over there for that network. He has reported, and multiple sources have said, that not only did they fail to get a majority, 12 grand jurors, to vote for a true bill in the case against
Katie Phang (13:28.845)
Mm-hmm.
Allison Gill (13:46.211)
Mark Kelly and the other five members of Congress for making that video saying don’t follow illegal orders. Not only did they not get a majority, they got shut out. There were zero grand jurors that voted for a true bill. even Steve Vladeck, who’s a very even tempered fellow, right, was like,
Katie Phang (13:49.87)
Melissa, Slotkin, yeah, Jason Crowe, yeah, all of them, uh-huh.
Katie Phang (13:59.598)
They got goose-egged. They got goose-egged, yeah.
Allison Gill (14:11.148)
You know, we don’t keep the votes like on file so I can go look, but I don’t think this has ever happened. I don’t think that they’ve ever been shut out at a grand in a grand jury room before.
Katie Phang (14:21.354)
What a resounding slap in the face. And yet, can we look at the flip side? What a resounding win for democracy. This is the rule of law. This is democracy in real time.
Allison Gill (14:30.451)
you
Katie Phang (14:34.766)
that we are witnessing. There is a reason why there are processes, norms and institutions that are in place, but more specifically the institutions, right? These are the things that are supposed to be there, but this is not the first time, and it’s funny because I just had this conversation, Allison, with somebody today.
After Don Lemon walked out of his arraignment, gave a brief kind of, he gave some brief statements to the public and to the media. And one thing, one line he said that really stood out was this, the process is the punishment.
And in this instance, I think it’s amazing that we’re having this conversation, Allison, because I don’t think this DOJ actually cares about the laws themselves. I don’t think they care about public safety, and I don’t think they really care about the definition of what justice is. I think the process is the punishment. to make somebody be so stressed about going through this process, Having to hire lawyers, having to have to deal with the trauma and the anxiety of a criminal investigator
by the federal government, I think is the point. I don’t even think that they care if they actually got that grand jury returned, although I think it would have been monumental considering what was at stake here. But I do think that they know that they’re exacting a pound of flesh by just making them go through this process. And then if they secure an indictment, that’s the cherry on the sundae for them.
Allison Gill (16:03.475)
Yeah, and it was monumental in that they were able to get an indictment against Don Lemon and three other black journalists in that it’s a commerce clause case. We don’t have to get into that. I understand that it’s also a First Amendment case, but still constitutional rights at stake. But also, you know, they got the indictment initially for Comey. got the indictment initially for Letitia James.
Those ended up being dismissed and then they went back again and again to try to get another grand jury to indict Letitia James, for example, failed, failed multiple times. And I’m wondering whether Box of wine is gonna go and try to get a different grand jury to indict Mark Kelly and et al, all of the other members of Congress. And to be clear,
We still don’t know if all six of those members of Congress who participated in that video were targeted in that particular grand jury indictment or even what the charges were. So I’m just sort of saying Mark Kelly at all because we know Mark Kelly was part of that. But to have that zero vote, like you said, is a giant, huge slap in the face. And it’s happened so often, a couple of things about Representative Jasmine Crockett. First of all,
Katie Phang (17:02.27)
Mm-hmm. Yeah, that’s true. Mm-hmm.
Allison Gill (17:25.107)
in the Pam Bondi testimony this week. She has rewritten the playbook on how to question members of Trump’s cabinet. You don’t ask them questions, because they’re not going to answer them. You just make your point for five minutes, force the Republicans to use their time to give her to answer the questions, and then just shout out clap backs as needed, because the rules of decorum in these hearings have just completely gone out the window.
Katie Phang (17:37.624)
Yeah, that’s frustrating.
Katie Phang (17:50.818)
Jasmine Crockett knows how to deliver the burn, by the way. think Pam Bondi and others could be taking notes on how to actually deliver the burn, but go on.
Allison Gill (17:54.747)
She does. She does.
Allison Gill (18:01.511)
But she also had this amazing moment with the first Jack Smith testimony, the one that took place behind closed doors, former special counsel Jack Smith, who prosecuted Donald Trump, both cases, classified documents in January 6th, where she asked him, have you ever had to go back to a grand jury three times? Here, I have the clip, watch the clip.
[KANAI SENT THE JACK SMITH CLIP IN YOUR EMAIL]
Katie Phang (18:07.662)
stores.
Katie Phang (18:22.721)
awesome.
Allison Gill (18:25.307)
So yeah, he’s like, never. Like, just totally even-keeled. Poker face. So something I think that’s probably in my eyes, one of the bigger stories to come out of this Pam Bondi hearing is that burn book. And not just necessarily like Moskowitz who called her out on it and said, flip to your best one and give me your best shot and I’ll give you a score because it’s the Olympics.
Katie Phang (18:29.87)
Poker face? No.
Allison Gill (18:50.739)
[GOVERNMENT SPIES ON DEMOCRATS IN EPSTEIN MATTER]
But the fact that there was a Reuters snapped a photo of a page of that burn book that was a list of representative Jayapal’s search terms where, you know, DOJ provided four computers for 435 members of Congress, 535 if you count the Senate, to sit down and search the unredacted Epstein files, the three million they’ve released, not the six million that exist. And they were actually without permission from these members of Congress
recording or saving their search histories, putting them in Pam Bondi’s burn book, at least for Jayapal, we’re not sure if they did this for all of the members because we only saw that one photo. But in the face of the Republicans, we’ll talk about Jack Smith again, all the questions the Republicans had for Jack Smith had nothing to do with protecting the American people.
Katie Phang (19:29.998)
I’m sure they did it for all of the Democratic members, I bet.
Allison Gill (19:43.923)
but protecting their own toll records to make sure that they, if they’re committing crimes, that the government can’t come in and get their toll records. And toll records, again, just phone numbers, who you called, when you called, not the content of the call, not the content of the text messages, just the toll records. And they were very, very upset about this. And that’s kind of all they talked about, they worried about themselves. Lindsey Graham wanted to shut down the government in order to get his amendment back in so that he could sue, the senators could sue for a million dollars.
Katie Phang (19:56.59)
That’s right.
Katie Phang (20:10.734)
Yeah, make money off of it.
Allison Gill (20:13.831)
But so in the face of all of that, to have the Department of Justice then turn around and spy on Democrats blatantly without their permission, because Jack Smith had permission. Jack Smith did it legally when he got those toll records, is another just huge glaring hypocrisy from one Department of Justice to another Department of Justice. And I wanted you to talk a little bit about
the implications of this legally or otherwise, because some might say, well, those were government DOJ computers. Well, the senators who’s got the toll records, Jack Smith’s got the toll records for were government issued phones. These are all government issued devices. Talk a little bit about potential. think, I don’t know if it’s got legal implications, but it certainly is gonna have political implications.
Katie Phang (21:07.278)
Well, yeah, I mean, if you think about it, they pretty much tracked the digital footprints of members of Congress that were utilizing the terminals that were provided by the Department of Justice. I can’t speak intelligently, I think, at this time about the potential legal exposure that could exist. But I will say this. Putting aside the impropriety of it, that it is...
hypocritical for the Republicans to lose their minds over the toll record issue vis-à-vis Jack Smith’s investigation, which I just want to underscore his explanation because it is the reality. Donald Trump is the one who made them.
the targets of a toll record subpoena. Donald Trump is the one who called them. You know, that is the person who they should be directing their ire if they have, they’re so chapped about this idea that the telephone numbers and the dates and times have been exposed, which I’m not quite sure how those are incriminating unless, I don’t know, maybe you were doing something wrong.
But the reaction that the fact that the Department of Justice under under Bondi was tracking these members of Congress when they were looking in these terminals to look at the Epstein files, Allison signifies to me consciousness of guilt, meaning they want to know what the Democrats are looking at, not because they think it’s going to expose the Democrats for being sick fucks, which we know the Republicans are, but it’s because they’re
Allison Gill (22:29.587)
Right.
Katie Phang (22:42.288)
They’re worried that the Democrats have caught on to a particular bait stamp document or a perhaps search term or a particular person within what we’ve seen in these three million files. And also remember, as Ro Khanna and others have said, the FBI did those redactions that you and I have talked about in March of last year, and then they turned over those redacted documents to the DOJ. The DOJ didn’t tell them, go back and unscrub the documents that you’ve done. They just took them as is.
So when they sat down in front of those terminals, Allison, they were able to click on a button and it unredacted what the DOJ had redacted, but it couldn’t redact what the FBI had done. So that’s what they meant by they said that there were double redactions when they went to sit down and look and they still weren’t able to look below what the FBI had done. But getting back to this issue, I would actually want to know why. Not so much because I think it’s just hypocritical and I think it’s just kind of skeevy and sketchy to do it.
think it shows that they know that there’s something there. Something that implicates Trump and others in a way that they don’t want the Democrats to find. Because what better evidence to know what’s going on in the brain of your political opponent than be able to look at their digital footprints in their search.
Allison Gill (23:58.257)
Yeah, that was my thought too. Certainly knowing the search terms doesn’t help the survivors one bit. It helps.
Katie Phang (24:05.487)
None of it does. How about Bondi not turning around and apologizing to the survivors? That doesn’t help the survivors either.
Allison Gill (24:11.441)
Right. Like if my ex-husband got a hold of my phone and I could know what text messages he saw, then I would know how to defend myself against what. Now, I’ve never done anything wrong. that’s just a scenario. I am perfect. So but that’s the thing, right? Because that is what immediately went to my mind. Why do they want to know what these search terms were? But I will tell you what. Now, from now on, any time a Republican in any hearing brings up their damned toll records,
Katie Phang (24:19.598)
100%. Yeah.
Allison Gill (24:41.491)
I would just expect an immediate clap back on, excuse me, you did this. In fact, think I might write, Jack Smith has a law firm now, I think I might write him a letter saying, if you’re asked this again, just maybe bring that up. And if you’re asked if you ever coordinated with Biden on any of the...
Katie Phang (24:52.046)
Yeah.
Allison Gill (25:01.203)
any of the investigations just be like, you mean like, if did Joe Biden call me and the DNI after we searched Mar-a-Lago like Trump did like that? No, we’ve never done anything like that.
Katie Phang (25:13.492)
Or did we call Trump after we seized the original ballots and voter rolls in Fulton County? Maybe that’s what we did, too. I don’t know what was that all about.
Allison Gill (25:19.73)
That’s what I mean.
Allison Gill (25:24.339)
Yeah, so anyway, that’s the kind of thing that Jasmine Crockett style of questioning during a committee hearing that I would like to see going forward.
Katie Phang (25:35.542)
[POLITICAL APPOINTEES REPLACE CAREER PROSECUTORS]
out quickly allison and i just wanted to did it occurred to me while while we were talking you know the the the lack of winning on the part of the dvd right now maybe part of a bigger scheme the fact that they have been hemorrhaging federal prosecutors i think is a sign of a lot of things all of which are bad boat boats poorly for this administration and the state dvd but it also gives us some plausible deniability doesn’t not if you have inexperienced prosecutors for example let’s talk about
about the, seditious six, which is how Donald Trump has labeled those six Democratic lawmakers that did that, don’t have to obey a legal orders video, that was the indictment that they were seeking to get in D.C. that was wholesale rejected and goose-egged. The federal prosecutors that they used were not the line prosecutors. Jeanne Pirro brought in a guy that worked with her in the DA’s office in upstate New York, who now does photography for dance photography. Stephen Vander Velden. And then she also brought in a guy
Allison Gill (26:30.557)
Vander Velden.
Katie Phang (26:35.376)
who was the chief of staff to James Comer, because, you know, the apples are not falling far from trees. He had like a stint for like a year as a federal prosecutor. The Vandervelding guy had never been a federal prosecutor in his career. So when you use people like that, or you use the Lindsay Halligan’s and others, right, to people to go do this, and they don’t get the wins, they don’t get the grand juries to return the indictments, again, maybe the process is the punishment, one, the stress, the trauma, the anxiety, the expense, but also,
So you could look at these inexperienced prosecutors and say, they were shitty prosecutors. They went and they did it, and they weren’t able to do it. And you could try again and make a run at it again, Allison. But I feel like... I feel like I always am disgusted, and I sneer at the stupidity and the incompetence, but then I always have to do a self-check. Because I feel like I cannot underestimate what they do.
I always feel like they are, especially this second term, this regime’s 2.0, I feel like they’re a little bit savvier. Steve Vladek and I talked about this. Some of the arguments that are being asserted, some of the strategy of only appealing certain things so they get in front of the Fifth Circuit, for example, versus other appeals that may not make it in front of friendlier judges, they’re being a lot more strategic this time around than they were before. And so I always wanna...
Allison Gill (27:41.107)
Mm-hmm.
Allison Gill (27:55.411)
Yeah.
Katie Phang (27:58.502)
to say, we can celebrate our wins for democracy, but it may not just be because they’re dumb. It could just be because this is part of kind of how they want this to roll out.
Allison Gill (28:10.739)
Yeah, and if part of your revenge is to dismantle and destroy the Department of Justice, then this is one way to go about it, to get everybody to quit, to get all the career prosecutors to quit. It also endangers us, real crimes, because of everyone quitting the Department of Justice and the sheer number of habeas petitions from, say, Operation Metro Surge. run into now the fact that these career prosecutors
Katie Phang (28:19.374)
the good ones to go.
Katie Phang (28:29.72)
God.
Allison Gill (28:35.781)
are gone, the ones that have to go to trial to prosecute the murderer of the Hortmans, the ones that have to go to trial to prosecute the fraud ring, that giant fraud ring in Minnesota.
Katie Phang (28:44.824)
Which ironically was the whole bullshit basis for this surge of immigration enforcement agents to quote, combat the fraud that they had been suddenly discovered, even though it had been competently prosecuted and investigated for years. And of course the irony doesn’t escape me that that federal prosecutor, Joe Thompson, who resigned in protest because he didn’t want to investigate Renee Nicole Good’s wife.
Allison Gill (28:49.255)
Right.
Allison Gill (28:58.727)
Mm-hmm.
Katie Phang (29:09.824)
and that he did want to have a joint cooperation investigation with state and local authorities into her murder, he’s now on Don Lemon’s defense team.
Allison Gill (29:19.079)
Yeah, yeah, and so, know, and then we have a feckless Congress as well. They’re investigating Bad Bunny, but not the murders of Alex Pratt and Renee Good, for example.
Katie Phang (29:31.264)
or the co-conspirators that are clearly identified in the Epstein files, at least the ones that have not been redacted.
Allison Gill (29:38.483)
Yeah, agreed. Well, thank you so much for joining me. Everybody, can catch Katie Fang here on the Midas Touch Network. She’s got her YouTube channel. You definitely want to make sure that you watch everything she puts out. The interviews that you do are so in depth and they’re so good. They’re granular. I’m so glad that you’re an independent media person now because you can get into the details and you can get feisty too, which I also appreciate.
So make sure to check out Katie’s show here on the Minus Touch Network. And do you have any other final thoughts before we get out of here today on the breakdown?
Katie Phang (30:10.667)
You know what? I-I-I-I... There’s been a lot that we’ve been going through since this year has started, Allison, but I do want to say again, there’s still the kind of flip side to these things. These are still wins, right? I want to always point these out. You know, the failure for them to obtain an indictment against six Democratic lawmakers is a win. It’s definitely not something that we should look at and think is... It’s a sign of where they’re heading and how they’re thinking, and then prosecuting people like independent journalists and trying to go after political enemies.
But the fact that juries are returning not guilty verdicts, grand juries are not returning indictments, judges are entering injunctions, judges are throwing out stuff, judges are, you know, putting pressure on these federal agents. I mean, there are still those wins there, so that’s just it. I just want to remind people we still have our wins, and we’re still logging them and clocking them, and that’s what really counts.
Allison Gill (31:02.279)
Yeah, well said. And there are wins for the people. A lot of folks watching this say, I’m not a lawyer, I’m not a judge, how do I participate in the justice system? Don’t ignore your jury summons. Don’t ask to put it off. Get on that jury, get on that grand jury, get on that petit jury, and be part of this process. Because there is so much power in the jury, in that jury box, whether it’s a federal grand jury or petit jury, and it is ours. It’s ours.
Katie Phang (31:13.421)
Right.
Katie Phang (31:28.546)
Love it. True.
Allison Gill (31:30.791)
All right, thank you so much. Thanks everybody for watching. Thank you, Katie Fang. I am Alison Gill. I’ll be back next week on The Breakdown.
[CREDITS]





Great one! And loved I think it was Balint who called her secretary and Pammy Jo says no I'm AG and Balint says oh, I couldn't tell! I do think Balint mean secretary from the secretary pool, not the Cabinet!
Love you both. I am a social worker always wondering how I can make a difference. Thanks for that last reminder! It’s lonely out here.