Charlotte's sheriff trashes Iryna's Law in wake of second train stabbing (12-09-2025--Hour2)
The Pete Kaliner ShowDecember 09, 202500:32:1829.62 MB

Charlotte's sheriff trashes Iryna's Law in wake of second train stabbing (12-09-2025--Hour2)

This episode is presented by Create A Video – Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry "Not My Fault" McFadden held a news conference yesterday to complain (again) about the new state law that forces local authorities to get tougher on criminals. Subscribe to the podcast at: https://ThePetePod.com/ All the links to Pete's Prep are free: https://patreon.com/petekalinershow Media Bias Check: GroundNews promo code! Advertising and Booking inquiries: Pete@ThePeteKalinerShow.com Get exclusive content here!: https://thepetekalinershow.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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What's going on? Thank you so much for listening to this podcast. It is heard live every day from nuon to three on WBT Radio in Charlotte. And if you want exclusive content like invitations to events, the weekly live stream, my daily show prep with all the links, become a patron, go to dpetecleanershow dot com. Make sure you hit the subscribe button, get every episode for free, write to your smartphone or tablet, and again, thank you so much for your support. Charlotte Observer reporting a Honduran man accused. Wait whoa wait a minute, a Honduran man. Wouldn't he just be a charlotteman? The guy who was in the country illegally twice deported. Yes, he was from Honduras, But as I understand, you don't identify him as a Honduran man. You identify him by the place he he is currently residing, which is on the streets of the Queen City. So wouldn't he just be a Charlotte man. I mean, that's the standard with like the Maryland man a Branko Garcia, remember that guy, human trafficker MS thirteen member allegedly right, he was a Maryland man, a Maryland dad. So Why are we calling this guy a Honduran man. I'm just asking questions. A Honduran man accused of stabbing another man on Charlotte's light rail on Friday had previously been officially banned from using the train. That's according to the prosecutor in court yesterday. He had been officially banned. And we had a caller at the end of the last hour, Jeff who raised a really important question here, which is how did that happen? Who did he interact with to get himself banned? Was that a cat's thing? Was that one of these private security guards that put him on the ban list? Was there any interaction with cmpd if so? Would not we have discovered that this guy had been deported twice before and was a convicted felon violent crime record. Shouldn't he have been taken into custody at that point? No, no, no, because that's a federal thing. We don't do that kind of federal law enforcement. You see, we are different. We are better than the Orange Hitler's shock troops. We're not customs in border patrol. We are not ice. We are your friendly neighborhood law enforcement, building bridges with the illegal alien community. Right, So we're not to be engaged in any of this stuff. So when you had the interaction, shouldn't you have alerted somebody to the fact that this guy is twice deported middle illegal alien riding the trains causing problems. But no, I guess he just gets put on the official ban list and that's it. And you know he's obviously gonna honor that ban, what with him, you know, crossing into the country three times illegally, so you know he does recognize boundaries as he crosses them. Now, I did get a message here from Anthony on the text line, who says a ban from CATS with no security is like having a sign that says weapons are only allowed by law enforcement, Like a possible criminal is really going to care or abide by it. Yeah, I mean that's the that's the concealed carry angle on this story, because CATS does not allow conceal carry permit holders to carry concealed on the trains. Here's a message from Eric. When somebody is banned from a property, the police department makes a note of it on an official trespass log that they keep in the dispatch computer and it's taed to that individual person. So if any officer encounters them later, the fact they have been trespassed is tied to their name in the system. It's the same process for a government property like cats or a private property like when they ban somebody from target or something when they get caught shoplifting, then the police can automatically charge you with trespassing if you are found on the property. Again, Okay, so that's good to note. So there's a there's a database, criminal database that CMPD has access to, but it doesn't tell me how that how this guy Oscars Solarzano, how he ended up getting into that database as an officially banned and individual who put them in there? I'm assuming it was CATS personnel. But see, this is the problem when you attempt to nullify immigration law, which is what our local politicians have been doing, our local city council, county commissioners, sheriff. They keep making all of these statements. And I've documented this before with the Welcoming America nonprofit, the NGO that funds a bunch of these checklists that cities have to comply with in order to be certified as a welcoming city. And Charlotte checked enough boxes to win this certification. And one of the things that Welcoming America requires is this kind of nullification approach that you're not going to work with immigration officials, right, and that you're going to make public statements to that effect, and you're going to make public statements against anybody that's critics anything like this. That's how you That's one of the things. One of the boxes on the Welcoming America checklist. I went over this last week or two weeks ago. So during Oscar Solarzano's first appearance, a Mecklenburg prosecutor said that the thirty three year old drank a beat box wine cooler. Okay, I am already drawing a whole bunch of conclusions here, but I okay, I've never heard of beat box wine coolers. I have heard of wine coolers, and let's just say there is a certain stigma attached to the wine cooler imbibing if you're a dude. Okay, Anyway, he was chugging down the beat box wine coolers before yelling at and stabbing his victim with an extremely large fixed knife blade aboard Charlotte Area Transit System's blue line. The non fatal stabbing, I mean barely non fatal. The guy who he stabbed, Kenyon Dobe, He's still in the hospital. He's got tubes draining blood out of his lungs. He did post on to social media though, thanking people for the support. He's also got to go fund me to try to raise money to pay for his medical bills. He's trying to raise twenty five thousand dollars. He posted up on to go fund me. I'm the second victim of the Blue Line stabbing. Luckily I survived, but my body has taken plenty of damage. I have a tube running from my chest to a machine pumping blood out of my lungs. Please pray and help me with a better recovery. He's raised somewhere around sixty five hundred dollars. As of the last time I checked the GoFundMe, he's at about sixty five hundred of twenty five thousand. You know who should probably make a donation here? How about our local elected officials and not from the taxpayer funds. I'm not saying that. I'm saying all of you people who have been in charge of policy, all you people that have been, you know, trying to obstruct immigration enforcement. Maybe you guys could throw some cash towards this dude. Call it a form of penance, personal attrition, a contrition, you know, not attrition, but contrition. Maybe just a small indication that, you know what, I recognize that there is a nexus here between my rhetoric and my policies, and my support or opposition to various policies that may have put you in the danger that you faced aboard the light rail line when this maniac was screaming at elderly people, and the twenty four year old Kenyon Dobe stepped in to do what I think most people would want a young, healthy, strong dude to do when there's some maniac threatening the elderly on a train. You know, stories are powerful. 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They are your life told through the eyes of everyone around you and all who came before you, and they will tell others to come who you are. Visit creative video dot com. Regarding the city council approving a three point two million dollars budget for four or advertising for the transit system, that happened last night, Yeah, big pr campaign to make people feel safe when they're writing. Randy says, that's great news for the stabbed individual on the train. There's a billboard coming near you that you can look at, so you won't worry about any of this happening. Again, it's about the perception of safety. Seven oh four number says, what if they put up a sign that said safe space on every single car of the light rail and then everything would be fine, seems easy. That's right, there's no room for violence on this train, and then that'll do it, you know. I think the concern also, and people suggest allowing concealed carry permit holders to conceal carry, the fear there is that then criminals will also conceal carry. If you allow law abiding citizens to conceal carry, that means that criminals will start bringing guns onto the trains and maybe nins because they wouldn't do so otherwise. I think that's the logical concern. As I mentioned, the Mecklenberg County Sheriff Gary not my fault McFadden held a news conference yesterday where he once again reiterated his complaints about Arena's law. Here's the headline from the Charlotte Observer. After another train stabbing, Mecklenburg sheriff says Arena's law won't help. He says, it's just going to put more strain on his jail staff. Now, I went over some of this dumbassary in the first hour, but I did watch the news conference and I did pull some audio clips, so I'm going to share some of the dumassery with you. So he held the news conference years that we started. This is a tragedy in our city, but it is one of the tragedies that has been highlighted all over the US. But it's hard to have those conversations with the other parents who've lost their children just to the same violence that Arena lost her life. What the hell are you talking about that this is harder to talk with other parents of victims because of Arena's murder. Arena Zarotzka's murder. I get a sense I know where he's going with this, Like he's trying to say that this story is getting a disproportionate amount of coverage for reasons. I'm not really sure which reasons, but let's let him finish. And we believe that the only reason that this caught national attention is because it was caught on video and it was displayed across the United States, and our local politicians at that time saw it was a political agenda or they could highlight her as a refugee and not an immigrant, and this is why they created IRENA's Law. Yeah, I'm still not clear on what the hell he's trying to say there now. To be sure, the story went viral when the video of the murder was released, and it was released because media outlets like the Charlotte Observer went to court to try to get them to release the video and they were forced to release it. It's public information. And then once that video clip was released and people saw the interaction that this girl had no interaction with her attacker. She got on the train, she sat down, and the guy just stands up and murders her for no reason. It was horrific, it was shocking, and yes, publication of the video did give the story the reach that it got, and the shocking nature of it coupled with a very important part here, coupled with the catch and release turnstile court system. That's what gave the story more power to prompt a change in the law. It didn't have anything to do with her being an immigrant from Ukraine, a refugee and not an immigrant. See again the conflation. She was a legal immigrant. She was here legally she was, and yes, that was part of the story. Was the fact that she fled a literal war zone, literally fled a war only to be murdered in a city that does a catch and release turnstile form of quote justice. That's what made all the more egregious. But note he's conflating refugee and immigrant, not illegal, right, he doesn't say illegal immigrant, because that's what this story is now about. This story, coming three and a half months after Arena Zarutzka's murder, this story now features an illegal alien with a long criminal history who was deported two previous times and who committed this act on the same train in the same city. Also a mere what two weeks after Customs and Border Patrol did its big operation in Charlotte, prompting leftists to act like children throwing a tantrum. And by the way, I think I mentioned this yesterday, but do you think that maybe alerting all of the criminal illegal aliens that CBP was operating and where they were operating and taking pictures and videos of them during their operations, do you think that maybe this alien, maybe he was aware of where ICE was operating or CBP was operating, and maybe he steered clear of those areas, like maybe y'all helped him avoid arrest and deportation. Let's talk about that accountability, shall we. Here's a great idea. How about making an escape to a really special and secluded getaway in western North Carolina? Just a quick drive up the mountain and Cabins of Asheville is your connection. Whether you're celebrating an anniversary, a honeymoon, maybe you want to plan a memorable proposal, or get family and friends together for a big old reunion. Cabins of Ashville has the ideal spot for you where you can reconnect with your loved ones and the things that truly matter. 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Many of us have been outraged over the murders of innocent people, regardless of their nationality, race, or gender. This guy McFadden is completely out of touch with the way normal, caring, concerned people think. Yeah, yeah, some of us have been talking about the catch and release turnstile court system that Mecklenburg County has been running for decades. We've been talking about this for decades. I covered it when I was a reporter twenty five years ago, So this is this is not new. The passage of Arena's law took effect on December first. At the press conference yesterday at the Sheriff's office, Major Robert Abbey, who oversees the arrest processing center, said he expects to see an increase in delays in the processing center. He said, the overcrowding then is going to make it more dangerous for people that are brought in and they're told to wait there. They have to wait for processing. So that's going to be more dangerous because you've got people in there that have beefs with each other or whatever. You got a bunch of criminals going to criminal each other, you know. But also for staff as well. We've actually noticed the increase since September after the event. Looking at the trend lines of how many people will we call booked is when they come through the entire process and they actually get dressed in and taken upstairs to the detention center. That's called being booked. A lot of them before would get released by the magistrate. We expect the mattresses not to release a lot of people due to the law changes. Right, We're not gonna this was before the law change. But six since the incident of September, we've noticed about compared to last year, about a ten percent increase every single month since September of more people actually being booked and sent upstairs. So we're already seeing that that trend increasing since September and the law has only been in place for about a week. Well, now let's apply some logic to this situation, shall we. I know, I know, but it's I kind of like to do this, all right, So after the incident, he keeps calling it the incident, it is the murder of Arena Zarutzka. After that murder and then the you know, international coverage that the story got, he said they started seeing an uptick in the number of people being held. Why he attributes it to the magistrates because the magistrates now are worried. They're worried that because he and he says in that clip, he says, where they would have just turned people loose immediately, now they weren't doing that so much. So that was even before Arena's law went into effect. They started seeing the impact the public pressure, the outrage influenced the way magistrates were ruling. So logic would dictate then that this was in their discretion and now they're taking a bit of a harder line on crime. Right. But it raises the obvious question that I think this is David Hodges. I couldn't I couldn't tell, but I think it sounds like him from WBTV who asks the obvious question. Since the mental health aspect of the law hasn't taken effect, it won't take effect until next year, and my usual of essentially what would cause somebody to stay booked as opposed to where they were before. Is what's causing the biggest jail inflo infuts of people simply magistrates afraid of releasing. The wrong people. Is it magistrates afraid of releasing the wrong people? That's the obvious question. Is that what you're seeing the increase due to? That's what Robert Abbey just said. Major Abby just said. And someone just tell me if that's the case, I don't think that we can Well, I'm going to say, I don't think we can just put it on the mat. And we're not going to just put it on the mats. It's a system. It's a system. It's a system that they are here. We have people in crisis. We don't understand that. We have people been waiting to go to trial for a number of reasons. Mental health is a part of it. Poverty is a part of it. People don't have the resources to actually bond their loved ones out and places don't have to go. People are released from Mecenburg. People are released from prison every week and brought Tomcinburgh County. A couple of days ago, I met a gentleman on the sidewalk and he needed a place to go being out of prison after one year, we set him to our resource center that give him all the things that we could possibly give. But he is still homeless inside of Macinburg County. Is he going to commit a crime that likelihood? Yes? Why? Poverty, food, nutrition, and housing, so he may do things just to feel comfortable, and he will come inside our detention center and then again it becomes a poverty issue where nobody can bond him out and he remains here. Those are the things that data may not show all the time. What the hell are you talking about? The question was about whether or not the increase in the arrest processing center that you have seen that Major Abby just said was increasing like ten percent each month since the murder of Arena Zarutzka. And the question is is that because magistrates are now taking a harder line, are they afraid of releasing a violent criminal and having something like this happen again. And the obvious answer is, of course yes, obviously yes, magistrates are worried that if they release the people as they have been doing, they're going to end up being tied to a case of another violent crime. And McFadden then steps in, well, we don't want to throw it all on the magistrates. It has to do with poverty. And then he starts waxing about this story about a prisoner who got released and now he's homeless whatever, like that's got nothing to do with the increase of ten percent at arrest processing. But it's a window into his mindset. He's talking about poverty, that's the cause of incarceration. It's poverty, when in fact, it's crime that drives up poverty. All right, if you're listening to this show, you know I try to keep up with all sorts of current events, and I know you do too, And you've probably heard me say get your news from multiple sources. Why well, because it's how you detect media bias, which is why I've been so impressed with ground News. It's an app and it's a website and it combines news from around the world in one place so you can compare coverage and verify information. You could check it out at check dot ground, dot news slash pete. I put the link in the podcast description too. I started using ground News a few months ago and more recently chose to work with them as an affiliate because it lets me see clearly how stories get covered and by whom. The blind spot feature shows you which stories get ignored by the left and the right. See for yourself. Check dot Ground, dot News slash pete. Subscribe through that link and you'll get fifteen percent off any subscription. I use the Vantage plan to get unlimited access to every feature. Your subscription then not only helps my podcast, but it also supports Ground News as they make the media landscape more transparent. Mecklinburg County Sheriff Gary not my fault, McFadden, because nothing is ever his fault. He's held a news conference yesterday to further trash Arena's Law, named after Arena Zarutska, the Ukrainian refugee murdered on the Charlotte light rail line about almost four months ago. Another stabbing occurred Friday, but McFadden last week went before the County Commissioners. We played that audio. He was talking about all the unfunded mandates and all of this, and we've been pointing out there is actually another jail that's mothball in Mecklinburg County, and he's complaining that he doesn't have the bedspace, he doesn't have enough jail space for all of the people now that they're going to have to hold for a longer period of time. Yet they're you know, these are decisions that the Mecklenburg Border County Commissioners, completely Democrat controlled, and the Democrat sheriff. These are decisions they made to close the jail North, to scrap the plans for the jail annex construction. Right, these are their choices. It's also the choice of Mecklenburg voters that keep putting not my fault McFadden back into office. Now. Voters will have an opportunity to vote him out this coming election twenty twenty six. Don't know if they will. I will attempt to vote in the Democrat primary again to specifically vote against him, because the people who have left his employee over the last seven years or eight years almost they have described somebody who is completely unfit to run that office. And every time I play these audio clips that I've been doing it now for five years, it just reinforces that he's unfit for the office. Constantly deflecting, blaming other people, other systems, politicians, everybody is to blame for whatever failures that exist at the Sheriff's office. The lack of bedspace is a direct result of intentional decisions that were made by McFadden and county officials. That's who is to blame. Okay, Now, the guy who stabbed this fella on the light rail on Friday does not appear to have ever been in the Mecklamerg jail, so there's no finger McFadden's fingerprints are not on this case. But and he scheduled this news conference, I'm sure before the guy was stabbed, and he did a and so I think the purpose was to show local media through the arrest processing center. But this is obviously a media campaign that McFadden is waging in order to cry poor so he can try to get funding out of the state to beef up his staffing and to commit more resources to Mecklinburg County Jail, even though Mecklinberg County Commissioners have not funded it even to the point of government facilities or parks and rec budgets. It's a lower priority for Mecklinberg County commissioners and it has been for probably close to twenty years. McFadden went on to say at this press conference that the longer people stay in the jail, the more inmates and families will be in crisis. People are going to stay longer. And when people stay longer, they become agitated, and we become agitated, their families become agitated, and then they call us with more demands, and then that call has to be received by one of my staff in the middle of another crisis. And so you have to think about this. This is a facility that have sixteen hundred people who have been in a crisis, and they're probably going to remain in that crisis because they are here and their family into a crisis. Holidays bring crisis. Also, note the way he thinks of his residence at the jail. It's not their fault. They're in crisis. That's why they murdered that person allegedly. Right, this is a mindset. This hooks into the suicidal empathy. Right, I feel so much for you, And people wonder sometimes, like when I say suicidal empathy, what am I talking about? It's a term. I think it was coined by Gad Sad. That's his name. He's a he's from Lebanon. He's a what is it something hmmmm, anthropological psychologist or something like that. And he equates it to for example, when you have a when a culture elevates a certain principle or characteristic above all others. And the example he used was honor in specifically the Japanese culture. Right, and if you did something that brought dishonor or shame to your cell or your family, then you would kill yourself, right, people would commit hari kari. And that's what happens when you elevate a certain principle or trait above all others in a society that you are literally willing to die for that trait, for that principle. And the same then would apply here to empathy. And when you elevate empathy to such a high level, then you are willing to die commit suicide for that trait. And he argues that's what we're seeing at a societal level in the West. And I would submit this is another example of it what McFadden is articulating. I'llbe it very poorly, but that's the same thing. It's that these people aren't really to blame. They were in crisis, so we need to feel bad for them, even if it means we get stabbed on the train. All right, that'll do it for this episode. Thank you so much for listening. I could not do the show without your support and the support of the businesses that advertise on the podcast, so if you'd like, please support them and tell them you heard it here. You can also become a patron at my Patreon page or go to thepetecleanershow dot com. Again, thank you so much for listening, and don't break anything while I'm gone.