Is Roy Cooper in the windowless basement? (10-27-2025--Hour1)
The Pete Kaliner ShowOctober 27, 202500:33:0430.32 MB

Is Roy Cooper in the windowless basement? (10-27-2025--Hour1)

This episode is presented by Create A Video – AP Dillon is a reporter for the North State Journal. Read her reporting at NSJonline.com. She publishes a Substack.com newsletter called More To The Story. AP joins me to chat about the evidence that Roy Cooper is following the Chuck Schumer playbook of locking himself in a windowless basement to fundraise, rather than hit the campaign trail. 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.comGet 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 noon 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 vpeteclendershow dot com. Make sure you hit the subscribe button. Get every episode for free right to your smartphone or tablet, And again, thank you so much for your support. We usually do this at two o'clock, but today we're doing it at noon, and that is our weekly chat with ap Dylon. She is a reporter at the North State Journal nsjonline dot com, and she is also the publisher of her More to the Story substack newsletter that you can subscribe to. Ap. How are you today? I'm doing great, Pete? How are you? Case of the Mondays? You know, it's just the way it is doing. Okay, So all right, let's start with a topic that you wanted to hit on when I asked you, Hey, what do you want to talk about today? And you said redistricting and then you said Mark Elias, So yes, crowd favorite. Here law group is U is representing a group of individuals suing over the newly past congressional. Map, the gerrymandered racist maps. Yes, yes they're they're saying that it's diluting the black folk, that it violates the Voting Rights Act. You know, there's two main points to the lawsuit, but it's the Elias Law Group and another outfit here that's in North Carolina. That name is escaping me at the moment they filed it late last week. Is that the it's a Southern Coalition for Social Justice Anita Earls's racket, no common common Cause, common Cause, NC common Cause. Or no, but na a CP of the breach will be suing as well. Yes, Repairs Forward Justice. Yeah, on Saturday. Yes, the usual suspects, basically always the same crowd. H And Mark Elias a fan favorite here at the Pete Calener Show. We love Mark Elias here and I am not at all serious on that. Yeah, this guy has been and he's had his grubby little fingers in every redistricting fight we have had. But for some reason, can never find a Democrat controlled state that jerry manders to ever protect the democracy in It's always here, it's always in red states that redistrict. Yeah, sure, it's. He sued here quite a few times OVERBSINT ballots, over voter ID redistricting maps and the like. He was also former Governor Cooper's lawyer during the twenty sixteen recount, so he was him and his his firm were involved in that. They're also involved with Dan McCready and what was it the NC nine yep, a couple of years back. So you know, he's been to North Carolina. Quite often and cut out bag man for the Russia collusion hoax. Yes, the spildassier. Yes, when he was at Perkins Cooie, I believe Clinton's campaign lawyer, and the payment for the spildossier I believe went through him. Indeed it did so. So that's that. What else we got? The state health plan. This is interesting that there was a US Court of Appeals ruling regarding the North Carolina State Health Plan and there was an exclusion of coverage for trans related treatments, transition related treatments, and this was a case catile versus Fallwell, and so where do we stand now with this case? Well, this case has been going on for a number of years, going all the way back to I believe former Treasurer of Fallwell's first term, after they ruled that sex change in different procedures in the state, the legislature had passed a bill about that, but the state health plan had always had an exclusion for that kind of coverage anyway, and that went back quite a while, I believe, into them, maybe even into the early two thousands, late nineties, so I mean, it's been in place for a long time. But when they got sued over it, that exclusion suddenly was up in the air and they were having to possibly process those kinds of treatments through the state health plan. But the Fourth Circuit ruled that this is going to have to go back to the state court in light of Scremetti, which was a case at the Supreme Court ruled on involving Tennessee where they upheld the ban on those kind of treatments for that state. So in light of that, it got sent back down from the Supreme Court back to the four Circuit. Four Circuit back down, and it's probably going to be upheld, and we're probably going to to be able to maintain that exclusion of that coverage. Right, And the state Treasurer Brad Briner, put out a press statement after the Supreme Court ruling. You've got a quote here that the case has always been about one question. Do the people of North Carolina, through their elected representatives, get to ultimately manage the state health plan or con plaintiffs dictate what procedures we cover, because so this is the health plan that state employees and retirees. That they are on. And yeah, like you said, the exclusion of these procedures and quote unquote treatments has been around for dar near thirty years, and it was only when they got sued that right, there was a lower court Loretta Biggs, I believe, was the judge that said, no, no, you can't do that. You have to allow for this stuff. And I don't know if anything has been funded in the interim before we got this ruling down, but I agree with you it seems like the guidance from the US Supreme Court in this scremmittic case is probably going to allow North Carolina to continue exempting or prohibiting these procedures. Yeah. Yeah, it was specifically Tennessee. It was their law. There was banning gender transition treatments for teams, like puberty blockers, hormon therapies. I do believe that there were certain surgeries covered under their unless they were considered medically necessary. It was similar to the one here in North Carolina. Yeah, all right, so let's talk basement strategy. This was hilarious. And so you you cite National Review, which they are paying attention to this race. I have noticed National Review has had several stories about my good friend Ray aka Roy Cooper and the Senate race. They're paying attention to it, and they detected. A a tactic, shall we say that the social media accounts for Roy has been employing what's the strategy? He's recycling old photos and like they're new. I'm a social media he's putting up photos of himself doing things in the past with certain people and you know, making you know, just a generic statement, you know, political statement on you know, the issue of the day kind of thing. I think they had a couple of examples in the article about a New Year's photo that was used in a hardworking people across North Carolina making an economy economy strong kind of post for Labor Day, for Labor Day. Yeah, he was. Using something from New Year's the year prior. Same thing with a healthcare one he used September in a September post he accused DC Republicans of cutting medicaid, but he had used a Pope photo that was first posted online in December twenty twenty three. You know, so, I don't know if the Cooper camp knew this was coming out or not, but they dropped four photos from the current North Carolina State Fair where Cooper apparently attended. And there's a very curiative video of his little trip to the fair and what he saw and did there. So we got proof of life. So there's recent proof of life of Roy Cooper actually out on a campaign trail stop instead of using year plus old photos of him at completely unrelated events like photos with a veteran that were used for some other event that was from May twenty twenty four, but it was posted this summer. There was another one May twenty twenty four for Teacher Appreciation Week. Yeah, so interesting. And you also write here in your piece add more to the story on your subs deck that there is a NC governor Flicker account. I guess that's a Flicker is some sort of a photo platform or something. When he first came into office, he was using Flicker. It's a photo sharing service kind of thing, and he had stockpiled a whole bunch of photos in there, and I know there was a lot more in there than there is currently right now. It's like they cleaned it out or something, because there's very few in there. And there's a separate Flicker account that was set up as NC Underscore Governor and that used to have a lot of photos from press briefings from the pandemic, but now it's only got photos from his swearing it. So wait a minute, So all those photos, all the free media that he got during the pandemic and the summer of our fiery but mostly peaceful rioting, that somehow or another, all those photos are no longer. There used to be a number of those in that account, and I remember looking at it several times in the past during that but some of those, however, are preserved. The Department of Health and Human Services and a Department of Emergency Management both had similar accounts, and whenever they were doing press conferences there and Mandy Cohen was there or you know, the the emergency management people were there, they had taken photos from each press briefing and put them in there. And those photo albums still do exist, and there was overlap between those photos and the ones that were in the Flicker account. At one point, but not anymore for government. He doesn't have the min aire anymore under his own, you know. And I don't know whether that was something that got cleaned out after the pandemic. I don't know how recent that was. It had been a while since I went to look at them. I'm sure we should read nothing into the idea that it is kind of beneficial to remove all of those photos and try to try to, you know, separate him from the COVID response and pandemic emergency declarations or. People are pretty split down that one. A lot of people think that he did just fine and his measures weren't strict enough, and other people don't believe that he was in his right to you know, closed churches and separate families and nursing homes and keep his state wide emergency going for eight hundred and eighty eight days. I mean, he kept kids mask longer than most countries, in the most most of the states. I think there were only three states that were masked longer than us, and it was like New York, California, and one other one, so, you know, and that was also the time in twenty twenty when we were all locked down and we weren't allowed out of our house, but we had, you know, social justice protests, they were allowed out, and you know. Yeah, wineries fine, yeah, wineries and breweries were allowed to open, but bars were not. He got sued over that in the racetrack lawsuit. Yeah, that's still going on. The bars lawsuit. That's still going on. Yeah. Yeah, his d lasted a long time. The yeah, the emergency declaration. But so this is I also detect in your headline here a bit of a callback to a previous election cycle twenty twenty when Cal Cunningham, the man who would pose in front of a grill while proclaiming to make barbecue. He during that primary, before cal Cunningham was the nominee, there was this story that popped about Jeff Jackson aka Baby Jesus, who was thinking about running for the US Senate seat, and he was going to do a one hundred county tour as part of that effort, and Chuck Schumer told him, no, you're not doing that. You're gonna go raise money, You're gonna dial for dollars, and he said, we're gonna stuff you in a windowless basement, is what Jeff Jackson said. And so do you think that that is the strategy that we are seeing now from Roy Cooper because of the use of these old photos that he's not actually out and about. He may be stuck in a windowless basement himself. Well, you know, and that was a strategy during COVID for President Biden as well. I mean, he never made any appearances. He was always doing zooms out of his basement or out of his house. And I would think that maybe, you know, in this part of the race right now, at this point, that maybe he's running on that because he's got more NIGG recognition at this point and so he doesn't feel he needs to get out there. That kind of makes sense. I think that when twenty twenty six hits, if he continues with that, it's going to become pretty obvious and he's going to start to get questions. But he's going to get a lot of money. Well he's raised more money than Watley so far. But yeah, it's very we're over a year out, still true. Yeah, all right, ap Dylan, you can read her work add more to the story. That's her sub stack. More to the story, and you can also read her work at North State Journal NSJ online. Thanks AP, we appreciate you all right, take care. 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 aniversary, a honeymoon, maybe you want to plan a memorable proposal, or get family and friends together for a big old reunion, Cabins of Asheville has the ideal spot for you where you can reconnect with your loved ones and the things that truly matter. Nestled within the breath taking fourteen thousand acres of the Pisga National Forest, their cabins offer a serene escape in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Centrally located between Ashville and the entrance of the Great Smoky Mountain National Park. 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I did not get you anything in celebration of this, but this has been one of the campaign efforts to connect Roy Cooper to the soft on crime policies of his administration when he was governor and when he was Attorney general. It will help to sort of tarnish that image that he has cultivated as you know, a tough on crime kind of Democrat and so we'll see what the mug shots are today. Lord knows, Charlotte could probably just keep them in high cottoness whole for the whole election season. You know, stories are powerful. They help us make sense of things, to understand experiences. Stories connect us to the people of our past while transcending generations. They help us process the meaning of life, and our stories are told through images and videos. Preserve your stories with Creative Video started in nineteen ninety seven and Minhill, North Carolina. 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Who would you think that would be. I kind of gave it away when I said, not really a member of Congress. It's Eleanor Holmes Norton, she of the profoundly terrible parallel parking abilities the But no, well yeah, yeah, well there was actually I don't even think it was parallel parking. It was like a pull in spot. Remember there was like video somebody shot video out of the office building showing her trying to park her Preus. I think it was. And it was one of those diagonal slots. Where you just kind of you're supposed to, you know, just pull in headfirst, you know, And she like was all over the place, crossing like I don't know, seven different parking spaces, which was quite the feat actually for a small car like the Prius. But she is a non voting representative for the District of Columbia, so she's not really a congress person. She's a delegate, Okay. She apparently was scammed in her own home by a bunch of people who showed up and said that they were part of an HVAC service cleaning crew or something. Said they were going to clean out her HVAC system and then her fireplace, and then they charged her just under four thousand, four hundred dollars, which I have never had a fireplace cleaning service. Now to be I've. Never had a like an old school fireplace, so I don't know what that would cost. I have had HVAC systems, but again, never had one cleaned. Well, no, I'd take it back. I think I did have one cleaned a long time ago, but it was part of like a service package or something. But even that was not forty four hundred dollars. That's like a hole that. Like, you can get an air conditioner installed for that kind of price, a brand new one, I mean, not like top of the line, but still. An internal police report obtained by News four in Washington, DC details how suspects were able to enter her home access her credit card before somebody whom her office called a house manager and friend, was able to put a stop to it. In the DC police report, they described Norton, who is eighty eight years old, as having quote the early stages of dementia and said Norton has a caretaker with power of attorney. Her office pushed back against that claim at the time the group arrived. The report said that again this is what the cops wrote up, that the caretaker slash power of attorney was not at the residence. That report does not name the caretaker or power of attorney, but says that individual called police And in case you're not aware, power of attorney is like what you sign over or a court takes from you, gives to some other person that they can then act on your behalf because you are not mentally capable of signing a contract, making really any decision of a legal bearing right. That individual who hang on let mean. This is from the NBC Washington website. Jacqueline Pelt is her name, Jacqueline. She reported the crime. She is a longtime friend and supporter of Norton's and she was listed also as Norton's campaign treasurer. She apparently saw the HVAC workers on a security camera after Norton had called her and advised Norton to tell them to leave. Pelt then went to Norton's home and realized that the credit card had been charged. They then flagged down a DC cop as well as a US Capitol Police officer, who also went to the home to investigate Norton's credit card and driver's license number could potentially be compromised. According to the report, no arrests were made, but they're treating the crime as felony fraud. In a statement to News four, Norton's office says, quote, the congresswoman employs a house manager who oversees all maintenance services, so she initially assumed that her staff had arranged the visit and provided her credit card for payment. Upon notifying her house manage, who reviewed the ring doorbell footage and confirmed that no such appointment had been scheduled, the incident was immediately reported to the police. Later in the same statement, Norton's office said, quote, Congresswoman Norton does not have a caretaker. A longtime employee and friends serves as the house manager, residing at a separate address. A spokesperson for Norton confirmed that Pelt had notified the police, but says she is not Norton's caretaker. That spokesperson would not say whether Pelt has power of attorney or not. So I'm reading this story and maybe it's my years of training as a local reporter which puts the prompt into my brain almost immediately, is which is what is the local angle to the story? How do you localize this story? And for people of a certain age, you may recall a former Mecklenburg County commissioner named Ella Scarborough. I know I'm dating myself here, but I am old enough to remember when way back in twenty twenty two, Ella Scarborough passed away after a long period of absence on the county commission where nobody knew her whereabouts, and she was supposedly joining these county commissioner meetings by zoom, but she was never on camera, and sometimes it sounded like somebody else was casting votes for her because she was in. Decline. Her health was in decline. I believe she also had some form of dementia at the time, and this was all covered upasically by local Democrats, county commissioners, county staff. Everybody was like giving her this shield because they didn't want her to lose her health. Benefits, and so we had somebody on County Commission that was not functioning and somebody else who was not elected casting votes in her stead. I'm not saying that Eleanor Norton is Eleanor Holmes. Norton is casting votes. I don't think she actually can even cast votes because she's just a delegate. But that's what I remembered again long time ago twenty twenty through twenty twenty two time frame. The field commissioner's report says the HVAC workers had tried to solicit Norton two previous times, once in August, once in September, and they were told to leave both times. So what is going on here? That sounds to me an awful lot like she's gotten targeted, like for some reason for I don't know why. It could be though that in the previous visits to the house when they have spoken to her, they thought this is a woman that is an easy mark. She's elderly, she doesn't seem completely all there, and so we can take advantage of this because she's not in charge of the maintenance of the house. So if we show up and say we're here to do this cleaning, she's just gonna let us do it, and she's gonna. Give us the money or maybe state actor. Right, because they didn't steal anything from the house, which is kind of odd for like a theft ring to not steal anything except her credit card number? You know, did they do anything else while they were there? I got questions, 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 can 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. So the delegate from Washington, DC to the US House, Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, not a voting member of the US House. She's eighty eight years old. She was victimized by some scammers who gained entry into her house the other day posing as h VAC cleaners and fireplace cleaner, and then they somehow got her credit card, you know, to pay for the service that they actually did not do, and they ran up a charge of like forty four hundred dollars. Police were called after Holmes apparently called her her house manager, the person who takes care of this house that she lives in. She has somebody that manages all of the affairs for her home, and that woman's name is Jacqueline Pelt. She apparently called Pelt. Pelt looked at the ring doorbell camera and said, no, these aren't legit called the cops. They called the cops. Cops showed up, they. Filed a report, and in the police report, the cops say Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, eighty eight years old, black woman, suffers early stages of dementia. That's what they. Said in the report. And Norton's office is very upset about this, okay, saying the medical diagnosis included in the police report was based on an assumption that the reporting officer was unqualified to make. Okay, maybe, but do you need qualifications to identify that somebody may be in the early stages of dementia? And honestly, law enforcement officers do have experience dealing with people who have early onset dementia and other dementias. How do I know this Well, I have been in media for almost three decades now, and law enforcement is almost on a daily basis sending out notifications to the media looking for help in getting the word out that somebody has wandered off. Right. You see the reports all the time, you get the silver alerts on your phone. I mean, if you're you know, a good person. I'm just kidding. I think it just comes. It just comes, whether you're a good person or not. Like everybody gets them, So you get these alerts and so law enforcement is out there looking for the people, and then you know, we'll get notification, thank you very much for your help, the person has been located. Okay, well what does that mean. It means that law enforcement usually has found the person and now they are talking to that person. And they do this again on an almost daily basis. So not every cop obviously, but you know, for our there's always somebody that's gone missing and then has found law enforcement is talking to that individual. So they actually do have some experience talking to people who are suffering from dementia. And this is not a mockery of Miss Norton. Again, like I have been a supporter of the Alzheimer's Association for thirty years. I just got done with one of our walks to raise a bunch of money. Thank you everybody who donated as well. It's an awful disease. Dementia is terrible, but it's also disqualifying to be an elected official if you cannot remember things precisely. For this reason, because this cleaning crew scammers. They could have been just criminals, but they also could have been something else, and we're not too sure what they might have been up to. They only took her credit card number and maybe her driver's license number, but we don't know if that's all their intents were, Like, they could have also planted bugs. I don't know if. She's got somebody asked about security clearances. I don't know if she has anything like that. But to compromise somebody who's a member of the body, that's a pretty big deal. So I don't agree with her office saying that the medical diagnosis was based on an assumption the reporting officer was unqualified to make. Well, I don't know what that assumption was. What's the assumption the officer was operating under. They don't tell me. Now. Maybe there was some assumption the officer made that is not accurate. More than likely it was in the conversation he was having with Norton. The spokesperson declined to say whether she has had any diagnosis. Hmm. If you're gonna come out and say that the cop made an assumption that he shouldn't have made, he's not qualified to make that assumption or make that diagnosis, or not qualify to say what he said in the report, I would think it's incumbent upon you. Then to say no, she has not had any diagnosis of dementia, but when asked does she have a diagnosis of dementia, you won't say. Well, that kind of tells me that she does. 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 too and tell them you heard it here. You can also become a patron at my Patreon page or go to thepetekallanershow dot com. Again, thank you so much for listening, and don't break anything while I'm gone.