Prosecutors, police, detectives, judges, and lawyers that hide any evidence should be made to serve 10 times whatever sentence is given to the innocent, and forfeit 100% of their estate to the victim.
I disagree. I'd rather know I have something left, which is my dignity and solid standing with God. If you're in prison AND you're riddled with guilt knowing the bad thing you've done, it has to feel almost hopeless. I feel for this guy so much though. It's crazy to think that all these years I've been living, he was in prison for something he didn't do. The justice system needs to get people who put doing the right thing first and "winning" last. There should also be repercussions for anyone who holds back evidence (like 26 years in prison). As Chris Rock says, you can't have bad eggs in certain professions. You can't have a bad pilot, police officer, or prosecutor. The stakes are too high and there needs to be extensive screening and background checks for anyone who gets hired in those positions.
@@scarymoe4113 a million a year. Maybe that make them think twice about doing this. I doubt it because it's not their money but, hey...worth a shot. They should charge the prosecution and judge in these cases too.
I had the privilege of being a juror and I noticed something that struck me as pretty messed up. Some of the other jurors wanted to just speed the process up so they could get out of there and get back to their daily lives not even really considering the negative impact . The head juror said as soon as we sat down in the room "well this is pretty cut and dry he's guilty. " Of course me and a few others called him out but it made me think how many people come into being a juror with the mindset of being inconvenienced therefore not taking it seriously.
I had the exact same experience serving as a juror on an assault trial a few years ago. The man was clearly innocent, and had already spent 9 months in county jail because he couldn't afford bail, but two people on the jury were ready to just snap their fingers and agree with the prosecutors flawed case rather than sit and debate it's merits. It's disheartening to see the holes in our system so clearly exposed, and quite shocking when it's directly in your face, at least the first time. Then it starts becoming sadly repetitive.
From my experience those are the people they want as a juror. They want ignorant people that can be easily swayed for obvious reasons. They do their best to weed out anyone that they might feel will go against their case just based on preconceived ideas. They go through a whole process of interviewing and asking questions to the possible jurors to find out who they want and deem to be the "best". They ask you questions like has anyone in here ever been convicted of a crime. They asked me personally if I judge people by their skin color as the person on trial was black. You are not chosen because you might show sympathy towards another criminal having been through the experience yourself, or if you show any sympathy to others outside your own race. Everyone that actually had their own voice and a strong opinion about a subject was of course not chosen. They literally chose every person that didn't have a strong opinion or showed they really didn't' want to be there. When they choose the jurors they kick you out of the room and you don't even get to understand why people were chosen. I hope it's not like that everywhere but it certainly seemed to be one big charade to me.
To everyone involved in doing what’s right, fair, loving, and just for other people without expecting anything in return you are a beautiful person and an actual hero. Thank you.
Love your channel and wholeheartedly agree, if this was 24 years ago tho that puts the year at 1998 ish and the chances that this man had readily available camera equipment of any form are practically zero :/ proud of you for showing what’s capable today and this message should be common knowledge
I mean you can record police before and as you’re getting arrested but once you’re locked up you can’t record or control anything that happens after. That’s what happened in his case, him recording the police would’ve done nothing.
I feel this man’s pain in my soul, I to was sent to prison for a crime I didn’t commit, I was imprisoned 14 years & 10 months! Even after the conviction was overturned on newly discovered evidence the D.A.’s office refuse to admit a mistake was made, even with the confession of others to the said crime & while out on bail, the case was taken back to trial only this time I was acquitted 🙏🏼 there’s a documentary on DatelineNBC “In the shadow of justice” you can see all the crusaders who gave their all, some their law enforcement career’s to prove my innocence. God bless this man! And God bless everyone who helped me.
@@mikemartin7482 Thank you Mike honestly everyday away from that place is a blessing my biggest blessings were my 3 children, I can never get back what they took from me but I cherish everyday of my freedom🙏🏼
@@energydriver46 Thank you sorry for the delayed reply I was blessed with a new beginning their are so many others whom haven’t been as fortunate as I was 🙏🏼
These stories prove the system is flawed for all people. It's sad how the system has absolutely no compassion and motivation to fix their own wrongdoings
@Fu Duck Do you understand the lengths prosecutors will go to to prove they are right? Their conviction rating is how they get paid, so even if a person is innocent they will at all costs attempt to put them away to simply not take a knock on their rating. He was exonerated for a reason.. It wasn't the activist that let him out, it was overturned by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. Either party could write an appeal, so if you read the DA's side, of course it sounds like he's guilty.
@Fu Duck I don't think he understood your original comment. I also just read the same thing. He may not have been guilty for all the crimes that they charged him for but he was guilty of at least 1. So the issue isn't with guilt or innocence. But the bs padded charges the DA convicted him on. But thats a tail as old as time and still goes on to this day. How u can think u did only 1 thing. But then u get to court and your facing 40 years cuz of legal wording turned that 1 charge into 10, and u get convicted on 4/10 but it turns 3 years into 17. Hence why you can get a double life sentence. Like wtf. 1 life sentence should be enough but no. The DA needs those conviction ratings high so we will charge a man sentenced to life, with 8 other charges that are punishable by only a few years but since he already has life those lesser chargers don't effect anything only the DAs pockets. "Edited for typos"
Problem is that those state officials involved in this man spending a lifetime in jail are not gonna suffer any consequence whatsoever. It's like they are immune to their own mistakes, despite the consequences to innocent people.
The left is trying to change qualified immunity, but the right really likes it as it allows cops to kill people or beat their asses with impunity and the right fetishises authority
yeah, but if they werent immune, then nobody would wanna do the job ever... i mean its the same logic with false rape accusations... i still think if they fuck up this bad or acted in badfaith to prove someone guilty despite significant evidence to the other direction, there should be at the very least, a serious fine.
Imagine being locked up for a day for something you know you didn’t do Let alone 24yrs The prosecutors knew he was innocent but all they wanted was a conviction Prosecutors should be held accountable for wrongful convictions and serve time for their wrong doing
I know Mr. Jones personally. He’s an honorable man and he does real work around criminal justice reform here in New Orleans. It’s really disgusting what the State of Louisiana did to him and his family.
@@MichaelMentessi if you have no empathy for people who suffer, then you are by definition a sociopath. This needs to be normalized, alot of people have 0 empathy, alot of people are sociopaths, thats just the sad truth.
@@MichaelMentessi also a sad one the other way around. its just empathy were asking for, not to fix their problems because in this society we cant. If empathy is too much for people then this world is truely in a sad pit, which i already think it is for other reasons. Idk what you mean with by automatically? I mean no. Are you indicating that empathy needs to be taught or something, you either have empathy or you dont, simple really. It can be anything and anyone, doesnt have to be other races. People dont have empathy for their own kind, let alone other races.
@@MichaelMentessi youre right, im the same person. Sadly im not very optimistic, maybe if we had more brain power in the world like Jordan Peterson said when arguing Global warming. Us arguing about global warming is not gonna fix it, us having more brain power might and those who have the brain power need to be in charge. Same goes for this man, reality is often disappointing. Its just the way human nature is, we werent made to be peaceful and have empathy for others. But as time goes on you would like to think that we would strife for the better change. I think there are alot of good people out there, its just that the bad people are in power and most likely will forever. The good people are so divided and wont stand together, politics and especially the pandemic are causes of this. So you ask yourself all these questions and it comes down to that we really do live in a sad world, Jordan Peterson says the same thing practically. We live in hard world, life is suffering.
"People cheat, they move golf balls, don't look at Jaime" That reminded me of Norm MacDonald constantly throwing Adam Eget under the bus for no reason lol. RIP Norm
If an engineer is wrong and people die, he gets black listed and can never find another job again When a doctor is wrong and misdiagnoses someone, he can get sued and his medical liscence taken away When a judge is wrong and sends an innocent man to prison for 25 years, absolutely no consequences. This man deserves to sue the ever living hell out of the judge
Podcasts like this are why Joe is so important. My view on the death penalty has shifted so dramatically, just from having listened to this conversation. There is obviously an attack on Joe in the media right now, which is attempting to do all they can to discredit everything that he does. Do not let people shame you for listening and taking pieces of these conversations and using them to be better informed. Because of this conversation, I now have a view that without a fair and justified judicial system, they do not deserve the right to just sentence someone to death.
Look up a documentary called "Fear of the number 13", and I promise it will make you a better person, and it's all about a guy who was on death row for over 20 year's
They say approximately 10-17% of the inmates on death row are innocent. When you read the list of the inmates names which has hundreds of people on it, it gives you a chill knowing at the bare minimum 10 of those people are innocent. That’s why I’m against the death penalty now
Yea, that creeps me out. Just think; the one thing we have in common with anyone wrongfully on death row is that they didn’t do it. That is enough for me to now be against it.
I'm 28 years old, I have experienced so much and seen so much, I can't imagine spending nearly the entire time I've been alive so far wrongfully incarcerated and nobody believing me when I know I'm not guilty.
Mr. Jones was released.. imagine ALL the others that are currently incarcerated or have been put to death. Prosecutors, judges, lawyers, and police that pad their career stats with the lives of the innocent is an absolute shame. When these people are caught destroying lives they're allowed to "step down" or "retire" and aren't forced to face the music. I think they should be forced to serve the exact same amount of time the innocent served in general population none of this "protective custody" bullshit.
The criminal justice system,all of it,is 100% unconstitutional. Government policing society is called authoritarianism. We the people are supoose to be self governing. Where Government has zero authority over the people. In this system Government has complete authority over everyone. And it has given itself that authority "legally". Yet its all unconstitutional but everyone is too ignorant to know the facts to know
I’m not saying it’s impossible to prove but the problem is trying to prove whether or not they KNEW the person was innocent. Of course incompetence isn’t an excuse to get out of all repercussions but if you can prove that they knew the person was innocent then it seems fair to have them serve the same sentence otherwise you cannot do that.
like Kamala Harris. she should be serving the sentences she refused to overturn, and even sat on evidence to prevent an innocent man from being released. she's a disgusting human being. lock her up.
There is no comment section on spotify, is there? I just came here to give mad props to Mr. Robert Jones, he is an inspiration, what an incredible story. I can't even put my feelings into words, it's so tragic, yet so beautiful.
Man how can something like this even happen, this guy got locked up for a quarter of his lifetime for something he didn't even do. One of my worst nightmares tbh
@@thisguy7227 At the very very least lose their Job, because they obviously aren't fit for it. Edit: it's pretty ridiculous how I went down to only losing their job for taking away 24 years of an innocent mans life, but we all know that the DA won't be held accountable either way...
Friend's father was a federal judge. I asked the judge if there were any cases where he felt that the person who was convicted was actually innocent. He stated that there were cases where he felt the person who had been convicted was likely innocent. Then, I asked him what he could do when he was convinced that there was a miscarriage of justice, and how he felt being part of a system which put people he felt were innocent into prison. He told me that things were out of his hands. He viewed it not as his personal failure, but as a failure in the system. The legal system doesn't really care if innocent people go to jail. It's there to make sure the rules were followed, and as long as it looks like the rules were followed, the system is fine with the idea of innocent people serving life sentences or being executed.
With all respect I feel your friend's father is full of bs. How are things going to be "out of his hands" being a federal judge? People's life and future are literally on their hands! Things are out of their hands the moment they step into corruption (The system)
@@FoxinTaiwan As a servant of the system, it is "out of his hands". He just views himself as a cog within the justice system. Any sort of change is not going to come through him, clearly. It has to come from elsewhere. I am a big fan of Taiwan outside of Taipei.
It's nice to see him laugh. I've been locked up. I know that feeling that has him just staring down at the table in deep thought. I didn't do as long as he did obviously, but I still fear that it will never leave me.
Well, I’m sure he knew about most things happening on the outside, it’s not as isolated as people believe, but yeah, he was probably astonished when he was thrown all these new things after being released.
We give out welfare checks to people who do nothing for a lifetime. And I think it's a real problem. It wouldn't bother me if the gov't paid this guy for life for this mistake.
It's a nice change to see more popular awareness of topics like this that the corrupt justice system sweeps under the rug. Thanks for taking the time Joe.
The state should pay this man $1,000,000 for every year he spent in prison tax free. That won't bring back the 24 years he lost, but it would definitely allow him to enjoy what years he has left. And to those of you who say you would wrongfully go to prison just for a payday, you're talking out your ass. There's no such thing as "easy time". Besides, there would be failsafes in place to avoid payout scams. Also, going after judge and lawyer salaries and pensions won't exclude "taxpayers" since employers and employees pay into those. What is avoidable is illegal procedure and wrongful imprisonment by having the massive monetary penalty in place. FYI...36 states including D.C. have laws on the books that offer compensation for exonerees, according to the Innocence Project. The federal standard to compensate those who are wrongfully convicted is a minimum of $50,000 per year of incarceration, plus an additional amount for each year spent on death row.
@C E Nah. Wouldn't happen. There would be too many failsafes in place then to avoid that. Besides, would you do even one year in a prison just for a million dollars? Not me. Fuck that!
The state shouldn’t pay that because the state gets their money from tax payers and it’s not the tax payers fault. Law enforcement officers, lawyers and judges should have to carry malpractice insurance just like Drs do. So they are personally on the hook for their mistakes o lol Ike this one.
@C E Sorry. Jail is NOT prison. Two weeks is not a year or more. You meet a lot of idiots who should reevaluate their priorities in life and stop screwing up.
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” - MLK Jr.
It’s great you keep these clips up bc it’s much easier, user friendly to use UA-cam. Although I watch and listen on Spotify, it’s not an ease of use platform. Ijs.
These cops and people in involved knew he was innocent pending certain evidence and withheld it. Fuck immunity this is a straight up crime 😤. 24 years is basically a quarter century. 98 folks that's when he went in. Imagine if that was you?
It's a shame. How many has this happened to? I'm glad he's still young enough to have a life in front of him. My prayers for your life to be overwhelmed with joy, love and success 🙌
@@Hambone-rj6mb what they're driving at in the video, and I agree with them, is that even when presented with this evidence, the prosecutor would likely still argue that the man was guilty, and furthermore that it's a flaw in the justice system or a technicality that he's free. Most of these people are win-at-all cost, never-take-an-L type of people. I've seen it a lot over the years. Lawyers typically get a bad rap because some believe their morals are compromised as they fight for people they know are guilty of a crime, but I never see what's talked about in this video. It needs more attention.
Make a law in his name that prosucutes Judge'$ DA$ AND Police officer$ and anyone else under any oath who break's the law. Especially when it takes someone's freedom away for any amount of time. JONES LAW
STFU. Who is "they". And he's still alive, telling his story and message. Clout chasers 🤦♀️. Great way to take away from what he is doing now. You suck.
@@simonbaribeau4853 I'm the one with issues? The video was released minutes ago and here these vultures come with that garbage. Bet they don't even watch the whole video. It's gross, especially when it's a relatable issue. These are the same dummies that stick a black fist in their profiles along with all the other virtue signaling 😂
Sad. I remember his story. Always think of situations like his when Im having it rough. Things can always be worse. Hopefully he was able to get some of his life back.
How was this guys name even in the conversation though? If he did not even know the actual criminal and the owner of the car how did his name just randomly pop up in this case??
I’m a lawyer, I’m a young lawyer who stopped practicing. It became apparent that for some the truth and justice is not what they are looking for. One story sticks with me. Long story short someone was in court for driving without a valid license. Come to find out this person had a license and there was a mistake, admitted. Instead of just dismissing the case the ADA asked for a guilty plea with a small fine. It was like a wtf moment. Humans are looking for wins. Wins to advance. It’s unfortunate
I'd love to hear more about what made you leave law.. there was an ex criminal defense attorney who became a stand-up comedian who was on the podcast and said the same thing as you did.
The idea of being locked up for 24 years for something I didn't do makes me want to throw up. That's 24 years this guy didn't have a family, live a life, have a career, say goodbye to dying relatives. What the hell kept him going I hope I never understand.
You can absolutely see that prison stuck with this guy the way his eyes are always moving. He seems very nervous its sad. Its also nice to see joes body language change when he started talking about how they implicated him. He went from chill joe to pissed joe but kept his cool for this poor man
My heart goes out to this poor man. He clearly wasn't knowledgeable to help himself and was preyed upon by a system looking for a sucker. It's gross... Throw the prosecution in jail.
Most of these stories happen to predominantly black men. No one ever suffers consequences for ruining these men’d lives. Everyone is quiet when it doesn’t effect them
I cannot even begin to imagine what kind of hell that man has been through. To be wrongfully convicted like that and spend 24 years behind bars is crazy. I am 36, I could imagine that most of my life would have been spent in prison. Wow....
Robert Jones is an amazing person. The light he shines on the justice system can't be unseen. What a powerful podcast. And still, people will try and slander the JRE. Imagine that
@@wkazxm probably still a better and less judgmental person than you. Someone’s past mistakes or actions don’t define who they are today, or who they are inside.
I did 2 years as an innocent man and it damn near broke me, so I can only imagine the trauma this man endured throughout those 24 years…. Then and even now
This is great. Joe always compliments Kim Kardashian for her work on inmate legislation but things like this are just as important for helping reach people and change minds. Joe Rogan is one of the rare ones that just keeps getting better
Thank you Joe, I've been saying the same thing about quotas from the day I found out. If they succeed in stopping crime, they are then forced to invent it.
In the beginning of the explanation you could kind of see a grin on his face as if to say “I’m finally free of some thing people accused me and thought I did” really interesting to see him smile and grin while explaining the red flags in the prosecutors story
Man I can't imagine being in jail for that length of time, being completely controlled then getting out and being able to do what you want. Shit must be mind bending.
Prosecutors, police, detectives, judges, and lawyers that hide any evidence should be made to serve 10 times whatever sentence is given to the innocent, and forfeit 100% of their estate to the victim.
ua-cam.com/video/-JEdz9QwnCo/v-deo.html...
Yeah but that's called consequences and they don't wanna do that.
They're protected by the law though. That's why they get away with that.
That’s why tyrants have qualified immunity.
They have qualified immunity lol
Imagine coming out of prison after 24 years and then finding out the Fear Factor guy is the new Larry King and he wants to interview you.
Well Fear Factor wasn't out. yet upon his conviction but I think News Radio was
Gay polarity
The fact Fear Factor didn’t even exist when he went to prison shows how scarily long his sentence actually was, crazy
💀💀
Fear is not a factor for you!
This is one of many reasons why Joe Rogan's podcast is valuable to society
Shut up
@@ontxrt4709 Wtf bro is your problem troll mker
The fact that things like this can happen and the government basically gets to go “oops!” Is so damn disturbing to me. This could happen to ANY of us.
@Aubrey Lucy nice try copycat
A Lot of people refuse to understand that.
It’s not a perfect system but the best imaginable and citizens doing their civil duties and audits is the only way to keep check.
@@mfmfyt What ?! GTFOH
Fuck the government .
The only thing worse than being in jail, is being innocent in jail.
Prison
I disagree. I'd rather know I have something left, which is my dignity and solid standing with God. If you're in prison AND you're riddled with guilt knowing the bad thing you've done, it has to feel almost hopeless.
I feel for this guy so much though. It's crazy to think that all these years I've been living, he was in prison for something he didn't do. The justice system needs to get people who put doing the right thing first and "winning" last. There should also be repercussions for anyone who holds back evidence (like 26 years in prison).
As Chris Rock says, you can't have bad eggs in certain professions. You can't have a bad pilot, police officer, or prosecutor. The stakes are too high and there needs to be extensive screening and background checks for anyone who gets hired in those positions.
@@matthewsisti4382 I've been saying that for years
@@matthewsisti4382 how do you screen for potential behaviors that may, or may not arise though?
@@matthewsisti4382 if you have an answer, we would all be very happy to know...
Edit: wow, just wow. Can't deny it, I am ashamed of what I just wrote.
No amount of money can fix all those years missed, but he does deserve 5 million for the pain and suffering
I say give 24 million. Match those years he was in prison but yea I agree as well.
give him 5 million in bitcoin
@@scarymoe4113 a million a year. Maybe that make them think twice about doing this. I doubt it because it's not their money but, hey...worth a shot. They should charge the prosecution and judge in these cases too.
100 mill can
@@Forseenlife if they take it out of the cops pension pool
I feel so bad for this man, so many years of his life are just gone.
cuz he’s black
Me too.
@@nba2kshooter702 no this happens to all races.
@@omensoffate okay dont make this an all lives matter thing again
Having been wrongfully persecuted myself, it's the worst feeling in the world. I can't imagine being confined for that long.
I had the privilege of being a juror and I noticed something that struck me as pretty messed up. Some of the other jurors wanted to just speed the process up so they could get out of there and get back to their daily lives not even really considering the negative impact . The head juror said as soon as we sat down in the room "well this is pretty cut and dry he's guilty. " Of course me and a few others called him out but it made me think how many people come into being a juror with the mindset of being inconvenienced therefore not taking it seriously.
I had the exact same experience serving as a juror on an assault trial a few years ago. The man was clearly innocent, and had already spent 9 months in county jail because he couldn't afford bail, but two people on the jury were ready to just snap their fingers and agree with the prosecutors flawed case rather than sit and debate it's merits. It's disheartening to see the holes in our system so clearly exposed, and quite shocking when it's directly in your face, at least the first time. Then it starts becoming sadly repetitive.
@@kingcoopa6689 I wonder how many people faced this issue and had no idea that the problem exists
@@garsux6065 too many, but I doubt that's a study we'll see in our lifetimes
Was he guilty?
From my experience those are the people they want as a juror. They want ignorant people that can be easily swayed for obvious reasons. They do their best to weed out anyone that they might feel will go against their case just based on preconceived ideas. They go through a whole process of interviewing and asking questions to the possible jurors to find out who they want and deem to be the "best". They ask you questions like has anyone in here ever been convicted of a crime. They asked me personally if I judge people by their skin color as the person on trial was black. You are not chosen because you might show sympathy towards another criminal having been through the experience yourself, or if you show any sympathy to others outside your own race. Everyone that actually had their own voice and a strong opinion about a subject was of course not chosen. They literally chose every person that didn't have a strong opinion or showed they really didn't' want to be there. When they choose the jurors they kick you out of the room and you don't even get to understand why people were chosen. I hope it's not like that everywhere but it certainly seemed to be one big charade to me.
I love this lawyer. I’ve seen him on the podcast before talking about other cases he’s worked on. An absolute hero. God bless him.
Seems in love with himself..
ua-cam.com/video/loi-h3CToPE/v-deo.html
Prison Fights - Knocked Out Over A Smart Mouth
😂 😆
you're right. unequivocally true dude
Two scoops
Despite his politics
To everyone involved in doing what’s right, fair, loving, and just for other people without expecting anything in return you are a beautiful person and an actual hero. Thank you.
Gh
Beautiful comment my friend. Take care out there.
Thank you
👌
Its tough sometimes. So many people need help. We all can do a little something now an then
This is why you always record the police
Love your channel and wholeheartedly agree, if this was 24 years ago tho that puts the year at 1998 ish and the chances that this man had readily available camera equipment of any form are practically zero :/ proud of you for showing what’s capable today and this message should be common knowledge
Times are a lot different now a days. If it happened today it would of been different I hope ...
I mean you can record police before and as you’re getting arrested but once you’re locked up you can’t record or control anything that happens after. That’s what happened in his case, him recording the police would’ve done nothing.
I feel this man’s pain in my soul, I to was sent to prison for a crime I didn’t commit, I was imprisoned 14 years & 10 months! Even after the conviction was overturned on newly discovered evidence the D.A.’s office refuse to admit a mistake was made, even with the confession of others to the said crime & while out on bail, the case was taken back to trial only this time I was acquitted 🙏🏼 there’s a documentary on DatelineNBC “In the shadow of justice” you can see all the crusaders who gave their all, some their law enforcement career’s to prove my innocence. God bless this man! And God bless everyone who helped me.
Ego’s are a bitch brotha, sorry you had to deal with that.
I hope your life after prison is blessed beyond imagination!
@@mikemartin7482 Thank you Mike honestly everyday away from that place is a blessing my biggest blessings were my 3 children, I can never get back what they took from me but I cherish everyday of my freedom🙏🏼
@@energydriver46 Thank you sorry for the delayed reply I was blessed with a new beginning their are so many others whom haven’t been as fortunate as I was 🙏🏼
These stories prove the system is flawed for all people. It's sad how the system has absolutely no compassion and motivation to fix their own wrongdoings
I haven't even been alive for 24 years, yet this man spent that amount of time in prison for crimes he did not commit.
Same thing I thought I’m only 22
That’s insane. I’ve been alive 20. Can’t imagine spending all 20 years and then 4 more in a prison.
@Fu Duck Do you understand the lengths prosecutors will go to to prove they are right? Their conviction rating is how they get paid, so even if a person is innocent they will at all costs attempt to put them away to simply not take a knock on their rating. He was exonerated for a reason.. It wasn't the activist that let him out, it was overturned by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. Either party could write an appeal, so if you read the DA's side, of course it sounds like he's guilty.
@@OfLastingThunder if he was innocent, then why did he take the plea deal?
@Fu Duck I don't think he understood your original comment. I also just read the same thing. He may not have been guilty for all the crimes that they charged him for but he was guilty of at least 1. So the issue isn't with guilt or innocence. But the bs padded charges the DA convicted him on. But thats a tail as old as time and still goes on to this day. How u can think u did only 1 thing. But then u get to court and your facing 40 years cuz of legal wording turned that 1 charge into 10, and u get convicted on 4/10 but it turns 3 years into 17. Hence why you can get a double life sentence. Like wtf. 1 life sentence should be enough but no. The DA needs those conviction ratings high so we will charge a man sentenced to life, with 8 other charges that are punishable by only a few years but since he already has life those lesser chargers don't effect anything only the DAs pockets.
"Edited for typos"
Problem is that those state officials involved in this man spending a lifetime in jail are not gonna suffer any consequence whatsoever. It's like they are immune to their own mistakes, despite the consequences to innocent people.
Yeah it’s called qualified immunity.
The left is trying to change qualified immunity, but the right really likes it as it allows cops to kill people or beat their asses with impunity and the right fetishises authority
yeah, but if they werent immune, then nobody would wanna do the job ever... i mean its the same logic with false rape accusations... i still think if they fuck up this bad or acted in badfaith to prove someone guilty despite significant evidence to the other direction, there should be at the very least, a serious fine.
@@josephhertzberg2734 jesus dude, whats wrong with you.
@@adamvifrye2690 yeah, that was a little harsh and overstated. Sorry I'm a little salty this afternoon.
You get the gist of it though.
This is one very very strong man, big respect Mr. Jones
Very impressed he doesn't hold hate in his heart for his wrongdoing.
Imagine being locked up for a day for something you know you didn’t do
Let alone 24yrs
The prosecutors knew he was innocent but all they wanted was a conviction
Prosecutors should be held accountable for wrongful convictions and serve time for their wrong doing
I know Mr. Jones personally. He’s an honorable man and he does real work around criminal justice reform here in New Orleans. It’s really disgusting what the State of Louisiana did to him and his family.
Death penalty is very important
We need to have it
@@francescoschettino5726 I’d love to hear why you think it’s so important?
@@francescoschettino5726 Why is the death penalty so important and why must we have it?
He was a drug dealer with a slew of other violent charges. He is not an honorable man, jfc.
@@wkazxm he was a victim of his environment, be grateful you never missed a meal or had to worry about how you were gonna get your next.
"When you lose your empathy for people... that's when you become technically, a sociopath."
Genius.
I hope this is sarcastic. It's literally a tautology.
@@MichaelMentessi if you have no empathy for people who suffer, then you are by definition a sociopath.
This needs to be normalized, alot of people have 0 empathy, alot of people are sociopaths, thats just the sad truth.
ua-cam.com/video/Iw0sBFOztyg/v-deo.html
⬆️Have you seen the video
Dropping ACID in Prison
@@MichaelMentessi also a sad one the other way around.
its just empathy were asking for, not to fix their problems because in this society we cant.
If empathy is too much for people then this world is truely in a sad pit, which i already think it is for other reasons.
Idk what you mean with by automatically? I mean no. Are you indicating that empathy needs to be taught or something, you either have empathy or you dont, simple really.
It can be anything and anyone, doesnt have to be other races.
People dont have empathy for their own kind, let alone other races.
@@MichaelMentessi youre right, im the same person.
Sadly im not very optimistic, maybe if we had more brain power in the world like Jordan Peterson said when arguing Global warming.
Us arguing about global warming is not gonna fix it, us having more brain power might and those who have the brain power need to be in charge.
Same goes for this man, reality is often disappointing.
Its just the way human nature is, we werent made to be peaceful and have empathy for others.
But as time goes on you would like to think that we would strife for the better change.
I think there are alot of good people out there, its just that the bad people are in power and most likely will forever.
The good people are so divided and wont stand together, politics and especially the pandemic are causes of this.
So you ask yourself all these questions and it comes down to that we really do live in a sad world, Jordan Peterson says the same thing practically. We live in hard world, life is suffering.
Thanks for speaking up
"People cheat, they move golf balls, don't look at Jaime"
That reminded me of Norm MacDonald constantly throwing Adam Eget under the bus for no reason lol. RIP Norm
If an engineer is wrong and people die, he gets black listed and can never find another job again
When a doctor is wrong and misdiagnoses someone, he can get sued and his medical liscence taken away
When a judge is wrong and sends an innocent man to prison for 25 years, absolutely no consequences. This man deserves to sue the ever living hell out of the judge
The judge didn’t send him to jail the Jury did
@@charliem303 the judge is the one who decides which evidence can be used. They are the head hancho in the court room.
@UCxIRtZw2fvDjpMWY-VDt1JA the prosecutor was the sh1t head
Humanity
@@charliem303 I think you don't fully understand how court works
Podcasts like this are why Joe is so important. My view on the death penalty has shifted so dramatically, just from having listened to this conversation. There is obviously an attack on Joe in the media right now, which is attempting to do all they can to discredit everything that he does. Do not let people shame you for listening and taking pieces of these conversations and using them to be better informed. Because of this conversation, I now have a view that without a fair and justified judicial system, they do not deserve the right to just sentence someone to death.
Look up a documentary called "Fear of the number 13", and I promise it will make you a better person, and it's all about a guy who was on death row for over 20 year's
They say approximately 10-17% of the inmates on death row are innocent. When you read the list of the inmates names which has hundreds of people on it, it gives you a chill knowing at the bare minimum 10 of those people are innocent. That’s why I’m against the death penalty now
Yea, that creeps me out. Just think; the one thing we have in common with anyone wrongfully on death row is that they didn’t do it. That is enough for me to now be against it.
Nigga this should be common sense how flat was your view of the world before this interview?
kim kardashian did it first
I'm 28 years old, I have experienced so much and seen so much, I can't imagine spending nearly the entire time I've been alive so far wrongfully incarcerated and nobody believing me when I know I'm not guilty.
That was one of the most inspiring guests ever on JRE.
"But when you lose your empathy for people, you become technically a sociopath." - Robert Jones
So true..
People don't deserve empathy. They don't deserve it.
@@Rosemary-oe3zy weirdo
Nothing wrong with being a Sociopath.
I enjoy it. :)
@@Rosemary-oe3zy maybe ur ppl not mine lmao
@@user-bk6vq3xm1t what you mean your people? What does that mean? You don't even know me.
With podcasts like this, Mr Joseph Rogan is making a huge difference to the collective consciousness of our little planet.
Its Jose
Its joh'w
Only to the people who watch it. A lot of people don't have the attention span to listen to a conversation for over ten minutes sad but true
@@HenryLifts22 but what is the solution
He’s gonna do amazing things before his life is over. I wish I had his ambition
Much Love 🔥🔥🔥
Mr. Jones was released.. imagine ALL the others that are currently incarcerated or have been put to death. Prosecutors, judges, lawyers, and police that pad their career stats with the lives of the innocent is an absolute shame. When these people are caught destroying lives they're allowed to "step down" or "retire" and aren't forced to face the music. I think they should be forced to serve the exact same amount of time the innocent served in general population none of this "protective custody" bullshit.
The criminal justice system,all of it,is 100% unconstitutional. Government policing society is called authoritarianism. We the people are supoose to be self governing. Where Government has zero authority over the people. In this system Government has complete authority over everyone. And it has given itself that authority "legally". Yet its all unconstitutional but everyone is too ignorant to know the facts to know
Well said
I’m not saying it’s impossible to prove but the problem is trying to prove whether or not they KNEW the person was innocent. Of course incompetence isn’t an excuse to get out of all repercussions but if you can prove that they knew the person was innocent then it seems fair to have them serve the same sentence otherwise you cannot do that.
Black people at just 13% of the population are 47% of exonerations. Black people get accused of crimes they didn’t commit at a ridiculous rate.
like Kamala Harris. she should be serving the sentences she refused to overturn, and even sat on evidence to prevent an innocent man from being released. she's a disgusting human being. lock her up.
His laugh when joe cracked on about astrology was lovely
Fuck yeah I watched it thrice
Heartwarming lol
That's the laugh of a guilty person
Time stamp?
@@nostalgiaman6816 10:30 into the clip…
This my brother 😭😭😭😍😍glad he is home our mother stood alive until he was release God is awesome 😍😍😍
Wow so beautiful! So happy for you & your family 💐
Thank you for sharing your story man. I’m so sorry that you had to go through these horrific lies !❤️🇨🇦
There is no comment section on spotify, is there? I just came here to give mad props to Mr. Robert Jones, he is an inspiration, what an incredible story. I can't even put my feelings into words, it's so tragic, yet so beautiful.
Man how can something like this even happen, this guy got locked up for a quarter of his lifetime for something he didn't even do. One of my worst nightmares tbh
The DA should go to prison over this.
@@thisguy7227 At the very very least lose their Job, because they obviously aren't fit for it.
Edit: it's pretty ridiculous how I went down to only losing their job for taking away 24 years of an innocent mans life, but we all know that the DA won't be held accountable either way...
It's the only thing I fear, tbh.
I can't remember the name of the other death row story on this podcast but you really need to check it out. Bald white guy. The story is insane.
@@tycobb162 lol no dude it doesn't which is why this is so terrible
Friend's father was a federal judge. I asked the judge if there were any cases where he felt that the person who was convicted was actually innocent. He stated that there were cases where he felt the person who had been convicted was likely innocent. Then, I asked him what he could do when he was convinced that there was a miscarriage of justice, and how he felt being part of a system which put people he felt were innocent into prison.
He told me that things were out of his hands. He viewed it not as his personal failure, but as a failure in the system.
The legal system doesn't really care if innocent people go to jail. It's there to make sure the rules were followed, and as long as it looks like the rules were followed, the system is fine with the idea of innocent people serving life sentences or being executed.
With all respect I feel your friend's father is full of bs. How are things going to be "out of his hands" being a federal judge? People's life and future are literally on their hands!
Things are out of their hands the moment they step into corruption (The system)
@@FoxinTaiwan As a servant of the system, it is "out of his hands". He just views himself as a cog within the justice system. Any sort of change is not going to come through him, clearly. It has to come from elsewhere.
I am a big fan of Taiwan outside of Taipei.
Bro....this country is past the point a being f**ed ✌️😂
@@FoxinTaiwan A Judge can't determine guilt only A Jury can. The problem is how the prosecutors have rigged the system in their favor
I don't think it's perfect but it's pretty damn good.
It's nice to see him laugh.
I've been locked up.
I know that feeling that has him just staring down at the table in deep thought.
I didn't do as long as he did obviously, but I still fear that it will never leave me.
That astrology joke from Joe was low key but hilarious. Then the guest laughs oh man I lost it
This guy missed the whole internet revolution. He basically must be feeling like he's in the future now.
Well, I’m sure he knew about most things happening on the outside, it’s not as isolated as people believe, but yeah, he was probably astonished when he was thrown all these new things after being released.
🔷 SERCH ADITYA RATHORE-HE ALSO MAKES INFORMATIVE LIKE JOE ROGAN
But he is in the future now for real.
@@tomastoth2053 True. He’s in the distant past as well
If this guy didn't get a gigantic settlement someone needs to set up a donation page for this man. Heartbreaking
GAGAGAGAGAGA!!! I want to cut my toenails... NEVER! I am the feet UA-camr. Thanks for being a fan, dear allt
Be that someone.
I agree this guy will never get those years back in his life. This is awful
LookUp theVideo
“Prison Fights - Knocked Out Over A Smart Mouth”
It’s hilarious! 😂 😆
yes. 110% spot on.
That’s so sad, hurts to see someone have to go through this.
I really miss the full episodes on UA-cam!
The guy is still healthy and alive ..... he is a legend for godsakes
ua-cam.com/video/GLXeKZvQvtk/v-deo.html Unbelievable Whistleblower..all Exposed
Legend how ? He hasnt done anything at all. That term gets thrown around like nothing
@@bobbyrobbyn1838 he survived 24 years in prison while innocent. still looking healthy.
We give out welfare checks to people who do nothing for a lifetime. And I think it's a real problem.
It wouldn't bother me if the gov't paid this guy for life for this mistake.
@@littlelarry2912 thats right. this guy is a real victim. those prosecutors in the 80s and 90s were the biggest scumbags.
24 years of his life. He deserves 24 million.
2.8 billion
He deserves 24 decillion
Whatsoever the number, the message is the same...he had expected more.
@@TheLordLogic He deserves 0 dollars
@@hxd9321 youre right. He deserves his time back but we all know that's not happening
That last line is so true but made me laugh for some reason 😂
It's a nice change to see more popular awareness of topics like this that the corrupt justice system sweeps under the rug. Thanks for taking the time Joe.
The state should pay this man $1,000,000 for every year he spent in prison tax free. That won't bring back the 24 years he lost, but it would definitely allow him to enjoy what years he has left.
And to those of you who say you would wrongfully go to prison just for a payday, you're talking out your ass. There's no such thing as "easy time". Besides, there would be failsafes in place to avoid payout scams.
Also, going after judge and lawyer salaries and pensions won't exclude "taxpayers" since employers and employees pay into those.
What is avoidable is illegal procedure and wrongful imprisonment by having the massive monetary penalty in place.
FYI...36 states including D.C. have laws on the books that offer compensation for exonerees, according to the Innocence Project. The federal standard to compensate those who are wrongfully convicted is a minimum of $50,000 per year of incarceration, plus an additional amount for each year spent on death row.
Amen 🙏
Forget about the Lost years. The only ones you can enjoy are the ones in front of you. But I agree. He shouldn't have to ever work a day in his life.
@C E Nah. Wouldn't happen. There would be too many failsafes in place then to avoid that. Besides, would you do even one year in a prison just for a million dollars? Not me. Fuck that!
The state shouldn’t pay that because the state gets their money from tax payers and it’s not the tax payers fault. Law enforcement officers, lawyers and judges should have to carry malpractice insurance just like Drs do. So they are personally on the hook for their mistakes o lol Ike this one.
@C E Sorry. Jail is NOT prison. Two weeks is not a year or more. You meet a lot of idiots who should reevaluate their priorities in life and stop screwing up.
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” - MLK Jr.
⬜ SERCH ADITYA RATHORE-HE ALSO MAKES INFORMATIVE LIKE JOE ROGAN
I couldn’t even begin to imagine the amount of frustration and rage that this man felt. How he lived through this is next level.
Not gonna lie this episode is gonna make me download spotify now joe is just to good
Perhaps that judge/jury owes this man a fee.
The biggest problem is that they don't do that.
ua-cam.com/video/GLXeKZvQvtk/v-deo.html Unbelievable Whistleblower..all Exposed
It’s great you keep these clips up bc it’s much easier, user friendly to use UA-cam. Although I watch and listen on Spotify, it’s not an ease of use platform. Ijs.
Roberts dead on it about the empathy. Great show again.
I hope joe never stops his podcast. These voices need to be heard.
Thanks for having this guy on Joe.
Heart-breaking stuff. I hope he finds peace and has 2x the fun and love he would have had otherwise.
Hopefully he at least gets paid for this and doesn't have to work so he can enjoy the rest of his life in peace.
These cops and people in involved knew he was innocent pending certain evidence and withheld it. Fuck immunity this is a straight up crime 😤. 24 years is basically a quarter century. 98 folks that's when he went in. Imagine if that was you?
"How dare you bring up astrology" 😂😂😂 I was thinking the same thing
It's a shame. How many has this happened to? I'm glad he's still young enough to have a life in front of him. My prayers for your life to be overwhelmed with joy, love and success 🙌
Unless he gets help, it may be hard to find success. You have no idea what that kind of time does to a person and their mind.
Imagine being a prosecutor and finding out years later you destroyed an innocent person’s life
I doubt the prosecutor gave a shit
Finding out?
They knew it when they did it ! 🤬
@@drehardin no I mean like in general. This one obviously knew he was innocent
They probably knew that going in.
@@Hambone-rj6mb what they're driving at in the video, and I agree with them, is that even when presented with this evidence, the prosecutor would likely still argue that the man was guilty, and furthermore that it's a flaw in the justice system or a technicality that he's free. Most of these people are win-at-all cost, never-take-an-L type of people. I've seen it a lot over the years. Lawyers typically get a bad rap because some believe their morals are compromised as they fight for people they know are guilty of a crime, but I never see what's talked about in this video. It needs more attention.
This guy needs something cheerful for the rest of his life. I don't even know what could it be. Just make him happy everyone.
LookUp theVideo
“Prison Fights - Knocked Out Over A Smart Mouth”
It’s hilarious! 😂 😆
You can't make someone be happy.
@@nicolemathews9303 I like how unrelated your post is to the original post, it completely threw me off guard which also made it hilarious.
Make a law in his name that prosucutes Judge'$ DA$ AND Police officer$ and anyone else under any oath who break's the law. Especially when it takes someone's freedom away for any amount of time.
JONES LAW
I am so sorry this happened 😢 💔 No justice,No peace!!!!
Nailed it at the end.. word up my brother
They stole this mans life away from him
ua-cam.com/video/-JEdz9QwnCo/v-deo.html...
STFU. Who is "they". And he's still alive, telling his story and message. Clout chasers 🤦♀️. Great way to take away from what he is doing now. You suck.
@@artiew8718 you have issues man
ua-cam.com/video/GLXeKZvQvtk/v-deo.html Unbelievable Whistleblower..all Exposed
@@simonbaribeau4853 I'm the one with issues? The video was released minutes ago and here these vultures come with that garbage. Bet they don't even watch the whole video. It's gross, especially when it's a relatable issue. These are the same dummies that stick a black fist in their profiles along with all the other virtue signaling 😂
Sad. I remember his story. Always think of situations like his when Im having it rough. Things can always be worse. Hopefully he was able to get some of his life back.
ua-cam.com/video/Iw0sBFOztyg/v-deo.html
⬆️Have you seen the video
Dropping ACID in Prison
How was this guys name even in the conversation though? If he did not even know the actual criminal and the owner of the car how did his name just randomly pop up in this case??
@@bendover2865 cause it's bs
@@aarongonzalez4458 how is Joe not asking this question though?
@@bendover2865 it was an anonymous tip were you not listening
I wish the full interview was on UA-cam
The really scary part is that this can happen to absolutely anyone. Sorry you went through that. Peace and God bless you brother. 🙏
Really? Anyone? I thought I was seeing a pattern..
Damm, almost opened Spotify on this one, almost
Respect
You still acting like Rogan ain’t doing big numbers. Be salty and get lost.
@@piccolo5346 Who's acting like what?
What kind of message are you trying to send by boycotting spotify...? How is youtube any better?
Here’s the cookie you’re looking for 🍪
I knew a dude in prison in Illinois, Matt Sopron locked up for 20 years after being framed by cops, released in 2018.
ua-cam.com/video/IduBpxngYp4/v-deo.html
⬆️⬆️this is the Worst Prison Tattoo EVER!
Cops are w**kers set me up with some drugs aswell and I’m in Ireland but I know many a story like that here 😏
Illinois is the worst state ever
@@disasterdaddy6471 The 13% doing wonders to lower their own population in Chicago.
Imagine the amount of men in jail for no reason right now
Each day we struggle, preserve, and most important don't loose your love and impathy. Stay honest with yourself.
This is heartbreaking and enraging!
“Prison Fights - Knocked Out Over A Smart Mouth”
It’s hilarious! 😂 😆
“It’s not about how hard you can hit, its about how hard you can get hit, and keep moving forward”
-John Stamos
I believe that line was in rocky.
@@SuperSaiyan3Domon ..Yes Rocky Balboa I believe, a speech to his son! Good call! Great speech too..
“Prison Fights - Knocked Out Over A Smart Mouth”
It’s hilarious! 😂 😆
pretty sure demolition man said that
@@SuperSaiyan3Domon yeah but this guy lived it
I’m a lawyer, I’m a young lawyer who stopped practicing. It became apparent that for some the truth and justice is not what they are looking for.
One story sticks with me. Long story short someone was in court for driving without a valid license. Come to find out this person had a license and there was a mistake, admitted. Instead of just dismissing the case the ADA asked for a guilty plea with a small fine. It was like a wtf moment.
Humans are looking for wins. Wins to advance. It’s unfortunate
Alot of lawyers don't care about justice, they just care about how many "successes" they have in their resume.
I'd love to hear more about what made you leave law.. there was an ex criminal defense attorney who became a stand-up comedian who was on the podcast and said the same thing as you did.
@@Ye4rZero If that kind of thing was relatively common, I wouldn't need another reason.
cant even begine to imagine.... just absolutely unacceptable
Hope he finds peace and stays healthy. Trauma from something like that won’t go away.
ua-cam.com/video/GZ7IJ9vzZ58/v-deo.html
⬆️Have you seen the video
Prison Fights- Shanked Over Soap
🔪 🧼
this is absolutely accurate
The guy is chill AF. Listened to the whole podcast and he doesn’t sound bitter about it.
He sounds like someone who found his purpose.
This man inspires me. His story breaks my heart makes me angry and happy all the same time.
⬆️⬆️ Have you seen the video
Prison Stories - I had a Pet Pigeon in Prison
🔳 SERCH ADITYA RATHORE-HE ALSO MAKES INFORMATIVE LIKE JOE ROGAN
Already setting up for one of Joes Classic Interviews and guest.
Robert loved the astrology joke of Joe's. He was busting a gut laughing at that shit. lol
anyone reading this, i wish you success, fulfillment, wealth, and a life with no regrets
"Our inability to be flexible in our reasoning". So true. When I notice that in myself, a bigger picture emerges.
Lmfaoo that “how dare you bring up astrology” was lowkey hilarious
that " how dare you bring up astrology" sent me to the roof LOL
The idea of being locked up for 24 years for something I didn't do makes me want to throw up. That's 24 years this guy didn't have a family, live a life, have a career, say goodbye to dying relatives. What the hell kept him going I hope I never understand.
Simply gross. And ppl need to be in prison for doing this to another human being
When your white you can do no wrong
It’s insane, I’m not too keen on the legal system but I’m assuming nothing will happen to those involved.
@@cookintesticles8881 thats stupid. I had to pay $45k for lawyer for something stupid. So it has zero to do with race. You sound uneducated
Bro ended that clip with a bang, damn
You can absolutely see that prison stuck with this guy the way his eyes are always moving. He seems very nervous its sad. Its also nice to see joes body language change when he started talking about how they implicated him. He went from chill joe to pissed joe but kept his cool for this poor man
My heart goes out to this poor man. He clearly wasn't knowledgeable to help himself and was preyed upon by a system looking for a sucker. It's gross... Throw the prosecution in jail.
Right he's clearly very slow and it tears me up watching him trying to even use words proper for explaining himself. Very sad
@@BengalBuckeye Robert is not slow at all.
@@BengalBuckeye Hey. You would be a little slow as well, coming out of prison after 24 years.
Most of these stories happen to predominantly black men. No one ever suffers consequences for ruining these men’d lives. Everyone is quiet when it doesn’t effect them
“Prison Fights - Knocked Out Over A Smart Mouth”
It’s hilarious! 😂 😆
I cannot even begin to imagine what kind of hell that man has been through. To be wrongfully convicted like that and spend 24 years behind bars is crazy. I am 36, I could imagine that most of my life would have been spent in prison. Wow....
I almost lost it when he said he was a Taurus 😂😂😂.
Great conversation besides that!
@11:00 one of my old favorites "It's easier to con a man than convince him he's been conned"
Robert Jones is an amazing person. The light he shines on the justice system can't be unseen. What a powerful podcast. And still, people will try and slander the JRE. Imagine that
thank you
He was a drug dealer with a slew of other violent charges, he is not an amazing person.
Nah I still reckon he did it . He looks guilty to me ……..
@@wkazxm probably still a better and less judgmental person than you. Someone’s past mistakes or actions don’t define who they are today, or who they are inside.
@@BasedinReality1984 Compelling argument you make...
I could not imagine being innocently imprisoned. Geez man. Actual hell on earth. I hope the rest of your years are just pure heaven like dude. 🙏🏼
Joe Rogan, you are a star for hosting shows like this. I love you, brother.
This man deserve a easy good life for real. Bless you man.
People should go to jail for wrong accusations. Period.
Truth
ua-cam.com/video/GLXeKZvQvtk/v-deo.html Unbelievable Whistleblower..all Exposed
I did 2 years as an innocent man and it damn near broke me, so I can only imagine the trauma this man endured throughout those 24 years…. Then and even now
Hope you came out the other end okay. Also your music playlist is poppin. Prove everyone wrong n stunt on all them.
What happened?
“innocent” yeah right.
@@vicpicksinvesting5380 animal rooter 🦒 🦔 🦓
This is great. Joe always compliments Kim Kardashian for her work on inmate legislation but things like this are just as important for helping reach people and change minds. Joe Rogan is one of the rare ones that just keeps getting better
Thank you Joe, I've been saying the same thing about quotas from the day I found out. If they succeed in stopping crime, they are then forced to invent it.
This is just proof that most of the problems we think we have are really so minute in comparison to the problems that some people are facing
In the beginning of the explanation you could kind of see a grin on his face as if to say “I’m finally free of some thing people accused me and thought I did” really interesting to see him smile and grin while explaining the red flags in the prosecutors story
Man I can't imagine being in jail for that length of time, being completely controlled then getting out and being able to do what you want. Shit must be mind bending.