The Colonel's Corner interview with Lt Col Larry Brock Jr
1:18:05
Transcript
0:00
Hi, everybody. I'm Colonel Roxanne Towner Watkins. I'm here with Lieutenant Colonel Larry Brock. And I saw his name come across on X. And I began looking at his profile and realized we probably had a whole lot in common. And I noticed that he also had been caught up in the January 6th.
0:24
Which you guys know, my neighbors were caught up and just recently got out a couple of days ago. So anybody that we come across that we can give a venue to that was caught up in the hostage taking and what I consider a coup of the U.S. government. I am definitely going to give them the opportunity to come on and be introduced to all of you.
0:50
With that, Lieutenant Colonel Larry Brock, I'm going to go ahead and let you introduce yourself and tell us your story. I'd first like to start off with your Air Force career. All right. Well, you know, I grew up in Dallas, Texas, in that area, and received an appointment to the Air Force Academy. I am the fourth generation American military, like most of us probably are these days, but I'm the first officer. I've been around aviation my entire life.
1:20
My grandfather was in the Army Air Corps in World War II, but then they figured out he was colorblind, so they kicked him out of pilot training. And then my father was in the Navy during Vietnam and wanted to fly, just didn't decide to go to college. So that kind of eliminated that option. So for me, it was an opportunity to go and do something that my grandfather and father had always wanted to do. So I went to the Air Force Academy in 1985, graduated in 1989.
1:46
I was your usual cadet there, you know, typical fighter pilot, got in a little bit of trouble, marched over 100 hours with a rifle. We call ourselves centurions. But almost every fighter pilot from the Air Force Academy was a type of guy that would get in a little trouble there. You know, always tell the truth, always when it counted, do right. But, you know, we'd bend the rules a little bit and sometimes get caught. So I went to pilot training in Del Rio, Texas, had the great fortune of getting highlighted for.
2:15
doing something a little bit stupid out on Lake Amistad right by the wing commander's boat. And so that got me recognized in writing. And then every fighter pilot wanted to fly with me. So during pilot training, I was taught almost exclusively by fighter pilots, which I think was critical in getting me to where I was in the top of my class. And I qualified in the top 10 and I received the A-10, which was just a fantastic airplane.
2:44
My first assignment was overseas at RAF Bentwaters, where I had the good fortune of running into a couple of river rats, specifically a man named Colonel Frank Peck. And he taught me what I needed to do to stay alive, which was basically to fly low and pay attention to what the enemy did. You know, a couple of really good lessons that he said is always think of the enemy as the smartest man alive. And he's dedicating every hour of his life to figuring out a way to kill you.
3:12
If you will do that, you will stay alive in the A-10. So that was some really solid advice from that man. I did not get overseas in time to join Gulf War I, but I played in pretty much everything else except that until I got out of the active reserve in 2007. So a lot of time in Iraq, a lot of time in Turkey, a lot of time flying all over places that nobody really wants to fly.
3:42
Hold on just one second. Are you a river rat? No, I did not fly in Vietnam. So as far as that organization, I should join. I just haven't just because I admire those men so much. So I really should join that. I just haven't yet. And where are you located right now? I am in Dallas-Fort Worth area in a city called Flower Mound, Texas.
4:05
OK, because I know a river rat guy, Deedle Reed, who is from Vegas. His dad was the last active duty wing commander at Stead where they do the air races. Well, where they did the air races. So, yeah, it's a fantastic organization. Absolutely. So from there, I joined the I went to Pope Air Force Base when Arya Feltwater's closed. Now, again, the military was drawing down.
4:32
During 92, 93, during the Clinton era. So made a deal with the devil to where I could continue flying by jumping with the 82nd Airborne Division as a battalion air liaison officer. Now, at the time, the Air Force took a lot of A-10 pilots and put us in Army units as either air liaison officers or battalion air liaison officers. And I'm going to tell you, as much as we hated it and we griped about it, it was great.
5:01
Because when we came out, we could speak fluent Army. You know, all the whoas, all the grunts, we knew what they meant. You know, we could look at Army graphics and decipher what the commander's intent was. And it made me a lot more lethal in the air as an A-10 pilot. You're kind of cutting out just a little bit. Okay, I really don't know what to do with the mic. I've just bought a new mic, but I'm sorry. That's okay. It's much better now. So I have a very...
5:28
dear friend of mine who just got picked up for group command. That is an air, well, they call it like surface warfare. Now they've changed the name in the air force. He's going to Fort hood, um, to, and he is, he was just left. He's at recruiting right now, but he just left Fort Bragg, um, and went on several deployments there. He was at Fort Campbell and he's a, I think an eight, a 2003 Academy grad.
5:55
Okay. I'm just chuckling because you're using the same names that they will be returned to if they're not already. Fort Hood, Fort Bragg. Yeah, I'm not going with the... I don't even know what Fort Hood's called. I know Fort Bragg is Liberty, but whatever. Yeah, whatever. Exactly. It's not going to be called that anymore. So then after Pope Air Force Base, I went to Davis-Monthan as an instructor pilot teaching young kids how to fly the A-10. So that was...
6:25
That was a great time. And then after that, I joined the Air Force Reserve, left the active duty and became a pilot for American Airlines. Really hated. Were you at DM at the time? Did you stay at DM as a reservist? No, I went to New Orleans as a reservist from 1998 through 2007. And I love that unit. It was a really great group of guys. We had really bad leadership for a while, but then that got fixed.
6:55
Squadron turned around. It was on a massive upward vector. And of course, then Katrina hit and we got bracked. So what's the guy's name? Is it Weaver? Johnny Weaver? I don't know him. Okay. So I got assigned as an active duty personnelist to the RE staff at the Pentagon.
7:25
So General Bradley was my boss. Okay. So do you know him? I know the name, but I, of course, don't know him. Yeah, General Bradley was the chief of the Air Force Reserve. He was an A-10 guy at Richard Scabar. And so every A-10 guy, General McIntosh, General Bradley, all of them, he ended up, he was 10th Air Force commander in like, when did I leave? I left the Pentagon in 99.
7:53
So he had already in 2000 moved over to 10th and then he got picked up to be the chief of the Air Force Reserve. And so I met all of the New Orleans guys. I was down there at least three times, TDY. The New Orleans A-10 unit was probably my favorite of all of them.
8:14
We played hard. We flew hard, too. And we were good at what we did. So, again, that was a great time. I do think that I met General Bradley. And that was the Air Force had what was called Project Season, where they would send a new lieutenant back into the reserves. And if anything, it just corrupted us. We're like, we want to be these guys instead of on active duty. But it was a great time. And I believe.
8:38
General Bradley at the time was Lieutenant Colonel Bradley, either the commander of the 303rd or he was in an ops group or a wing position, you know, moving up the chain. Yeah. Yeah. I think he was the ops group commander back there. Yeah. That was a long time ago. Ninety three, you know, back when that was a long time ago. Yes. So, you know, I stayed in the reserves, obviously, from 1998 through 2007 flying.
9:05
the A-10 down in New Orleans. And then in 2007, I got offered a job. I really did not like working for American, leading a defense company overseas. So I took that and transferred to the inactive reserve where all I did was recruit for the Air Force Academy and Air Force ROTC. Now, that being said, there were some actually really rewarding moments doing that. I got a call one time after the window for recruiting closed at the Air Force Academy. And I was like,
9:34
Hello. And it was like, hey, this is Lieutenant such and such. And I'm calling you and I just sent you an email. I need you to read it. And then I know the answer is no, but I want you to tell me how you're going to turn it into a yes. So it was a senior airman that had they had nominated him for the Air Force Cross. I think it got downgraded one, but who had done just heroic work that wanted to go to the academy. But it was outside of the window. He didn't have the.
10:04
the SAT, he didn't have, you know, the Air Force Academy physical, even though he was deployed in a combat location. So I read the 1732, which was the report from his commander and said, yes, the answer is no, but I'm going to figure out a way to make this yes. So then I called the Air Force Academy when they woke up later that afternoon for me, morning for them, said, hey, I emailed you something. I know the answer is no, but.
10:29
Once you read it, I'm pretty sure you're going to want it to be yes. And the exact same thing happened. It's kind of proof that the chain of command does actually work at times if you use it. Because we got up to a colonel and the colonel's like, yes, the answer is yes. But we've still got to have these squares filled. So now it's how do we get this kid out of the field into Kandahar so he can take an Air Force Academy physical fitness test.
10:55
to take the SAT at Kandahar, which we managed to make happen. So he was just a great kid. He graduated, went to pilot training. So I'd love to tell you he's flying the A-10, but I don't think he got that airplane. That is an amazing story. Yeah, my best friend, Malia Spranger, who graduated in 87 from the Academy.
11:17
She and her husband, Kurt Springer, who also graduated in 87 from the Academy, live here in Tampa. And they were ALOs for a long time, both while they were on active duty at SOCOM and SYNCOM. But then after they retired, they continued to do that for up until, I guess, just recently, they've changed the entire program and they got out of doing it. But all three of their sons went to the Academy as well.
11:45
Well, it is actually becoming hereditary, which is not something we really want. You know, we do want to continue to broaden our reach out as long as the standard is maintained. So, you know, I get it. You know, it's kind of interesting. I look back on my Air Force career with a great sense of joy because I believe I was honestly flying the best airplane in the Air Force for the mission and the wars that were raging at the time. You know, there is nothing better as an A-10 pilot than, you know, hey, we need help.
12:15
You come up on scene, you roll in, you dispatch the enemy, you save the good guys, and then you fly back home. I mean, it just doesn't get anything better than that. I'm often asked, what's the one thing that I value the most or the one decoration that I value the most? And it's not. It's an email that I received from a man that said, because you were there, I get to go home to my wife and daughter. I treasure that email. Nothing is as important to me as that. And so it's just.
12:42
A really great thing to have been an A-10 pilot during this time frame. So my whole career, I was, and obviously you don't know that much about me, but I spent eight years as an aircraft maintenance troop before I got my commission. So I did not ever work on the A-10. I worked on T-38s and KC-135s. But from the very beginning, A-10 was my favorite. I had an oil painting done of an A-10 that hangs out in my,
13:12
other room. But it was my favorite aircraft until I got a ride in this one. I got an F-16 ride for a job that I did. And, you know, I kind of had to... I get it. It's a pretty airplane. You know, I'll give it that.
13:29
We make fun of F-16 pilots all the time, you know, but it is a great multi-role fighter. We're not, you know, we call them the jack of all trades, master of none. And we were the master of one trade, which was close air support. And the mission of the A-10s, well, obviously I was at the Pentagon when the Air Force tried three different times to get rid of them because they weren't fast, they weren't sexy, but they were the, you know,
13:59
They're probably the most important, not probably, they are the most important mission when it comes to survivability, when it comes to protecting our troops. The whole strategic, you know, dropping bombs and stuff like that's all very important for maintaining air superiority. But when it comes to actually protecting, like force protection of the ground pounders and our troops.
14:27
The Air Force troops that are combat support, nothing, nothing beats the A-10. You're absolutely right, ma'am. And thank God for the Army insisting that if the Air Force got rid of the A-10s, then the A-10 budget inside the Air Force budget would have to be transferred to the Army so they could have more attack helicopters. And, you know, that's what saved us in 93, and there have been multiple fights after that. But, you know, I believe that the soldiers on the ground that we've saved,
14:55
have turned into the lieutenants, the majors, the colonels, and now the generals, and they're not going to let the Air Force do away with that airplane. So I was there from 90, I got there in 95, and I left in 99. There were the last two efforts to get rid of the A-10 happened while I was at the Pentagon. You mentioned one of them. There were actually three. The last time it happened, the Congress took
15:24
the money and told the Air Force, if you ever send this back over to us again to get rid of the A-10s, we're not only going to take the money, we will take another aircraft before we take the A-10. So they gave us the authorization back that had been written out of the Air Force's budget of the A-10. They gave us the authorization without the appropriation and told the Air Force, now you go find the money because you're not getting rid of those airplanes. That was the last time.
15:54
The Air Force ever submitted a budget without me. Like I said, you know, sometimes the Air Force is a little bit stubborn about trying to do things. So, yeah. OK, so now we're up to your job over. Were you overseas when you were doing that job? I was a small consulting company that was working underneath General Dynamics for the Royal Saudi Air Force.
16:24
assisting them in their command and control. I will tell you right now that I cooperated with my fellow Air Force attache. And so there were things that I knew that I made sure the U.S. Air Force knew. The only cost of the U.S. military was an occasional 1.75 of Jim Beam Black. You know, so it was pretty cheap. And were you in Saudi at the time? I was in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Yes, ma'am. And what years was that? That was...
16:53
2007 through 2013. So were you there when General Twitchell was there? I wasn't under the military, so probably. But again, I didn't pay attention to anything really that was going on because I was ostensibly just in the inactive reserve reporting through Germany. So Major General Twitchell was the USMITM commander for three years during that period of time while you were there. He's the one that got me the ride in the F-16.
17:22
Well, then I'm sure I probably heard about him, but I generally stayed away from that base because I didn't want the Saudis to think I was spying on them, which I was. That's a good move. Yep. They don't take kindly to that. No, they really don't. It would have been very bad for me had they really known what I was up to. But I mean, they're not worldwide. There was one time I was in a meeting and this guy said, yeah, the command and control frequencies for our UAVs is such and such. And I went, could you repeat that?
17:50
And he did. And I just jotted it down. I'm like, thank you very much. Go back to my office, call the Air Force guy and say, yeah, I need to come have lunch with you. And that was about that. Cool. All right. So now we're up to what time period?
18:12
Well, about 2013, you know, you can only take being in the Middle East for so long. And so I came back and tried to start a helicopter services company with some money that I'd saved up over there. And, you know, I was involved in private equity, you know, trying to get venture capital to support me. And do you remember when oil went from $100 a barrel to $33 a barrel? Yeah. Yeah. Bad timing. But, you know, you pay your money, you take your chances in life. So it did not succeed. So I got a job with Rockwell Collins.
18:42
And I was at first selling electronic warfare equipment, which I knew very little about that arena. But I do know how to lead men. And then they transferred me to ground fire. So that was perfect, you know, because I could obviously talk that all day long. And then I got recruited by a headhunter away from them to work for CAE selling business jet simulator time. So I did that. And then I got the itch to fly again.
19:10
And so I went to work for L3 overseas. So I was a civilian working for L3, flying a U.S. Air Force aircraft with a military guy on board as well as two other L3 employees. So we were doing reconnaissance work for the U.S. Air Force overseas. And so I did that from 2017 through 2020.
19:35
I was at Al-Assad Air Base when the Iranians sent theater ballistic missiles down on the base. There were 12 strikes in our area. And I will tell you that there are absolutely zero atheists in our group inside that bunker because you'd hear incoming, incoming, our father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. So, yeah, I mean, it's it was kind of eerie for me because I will tell you, you know, as an A-10 pilot, I had been shot at before in Afghanistan. But, you know, you don't really.
20:04
Either notice it during the daytime where you're concentrating on putting iron on target, so you just kind of ignore it, and then you go back and kill whatever's shooting at you. But as a guy just sitting on the ground waiting for a theater ballistic missile to hit, I'd done everything I could. I was inside a bunker. I had body armor and a helmet on, but if that missile hit, it's just your day. So I was very thankful to make it through that night, and I was very happy.
20:32
Yeah, that's got to be a completely different feeling from being above watching and being the firepower to being on the other end of that. Absolutely. So I went to work for a company called Hillwood Airways, and I was a 737 captain, and we were flying missions for the State Department all around the world moving goods.
21:00
I did that until the fateful day of January the 6th, 2021. And then I resigned from that company under duress and in order to protect Hillwood Airways on the 9th of January of 2021. They were going to fire me given the maelstrom and the disinformation about the January 6th event that was coming out of the media at that time.
21:29
So tell us how you got there that day. Tell us how what was your involvement? What made you go? Where did you go? Tell us all about that. All right. So the president asked us to come and peacefully protest. And, you know, I don't care what people say. You will never convince me. I'm absolutely certain I'm right.
21:51
And I will stick to this to my dying day. And if we had a real investigation into it, it would prove that I was right. But the 2020 election was stolen from the American people. There is no doubt in my mind that the deep state selected a president, Joe Biden, and did what they needed to do to put him in office because they feared a second Trump term, as they should, because watch what happens this time. So I didn't go there half-cocked. I read through Attorney General Ken Paxton's state of Texas, you know,
22:22
case that went to the Supreme Court and John Roberts, to his everlasting shame, decided not to hear it. I had listened to witness testimony in front of the Pennsylvania legislature as well as the Michigan legislature. I had looked at mathematicians saying it was statistically impossible. I had read affidavits from witnesses saying that they had brought in mail trucks full of ballots. All these things that the left say didn't happen that we know now happened. And just looking at it,
22:51
If you were to go through, which I did, from 1960 until now, this last election, the biggest delta in gap or in increase in votes was only 13 million, and that was from 1988 to 1992. Well, in the Biden election, it was 23 million more people voted than in 2016. That's just not going to happen. Correct. So, again, we know it was stolen. So I was convinced that that's what had happened. So I went.
23:19
And listen to the president. Now, what I thought was going to happen is Vice President Pence was going to send the vote back to the states, which he was allowed to do at the time. And you'll hear a lot of media people saying, oh, he wasn't allowed to do that. Well, if he wasn't, then why did you change the law to make it to where he couldn't do it now? So we know he could do it. But he chose not to do that. And I'd really, really like to know why. I would like to see him called in front of Congress.
23:47
to testify to that, but I don't think, honestly, we'd ever get the truth out of Vice President Pence on that one. All right, failing that, I knew President Trump could also declare those states to be in a state of insurrection. The Constitution is very clear that the state legislatures have the authority, sole authority, not the Secretary of State in those states, to alter the voting process. And yet the Secretary of States in the key battleground states had altered the voting process to enable...
24:14
the mail ballot fraud that went on in support of the Democratic Party. So I went there and listened to the president. I was at the ellipse. I got up at six thinking that that would get me through security and time to get close to the president. No, not even close. You needed to probably be in line by about 3 a.m. to get close. So I was standing in the crowd. I would estimate, honestly, and again, I have zero crowd experience estimates.
24:42
Let's just be honest about that. But everybody has said 500,000 to a million. So I'm going to go with the low number of 500,000. Now, the Dems will tell you a different number, but it was packed the entire ellipse all the way past the Washington Monument. So, you know, and that was a pretty wide group of people. So because it was so cold and then the mayor of D.C. had not put out adequate facilities, I needed to deviate out of my way when it came time to go to the Capitol.
25:12
So I deviated pretty significantly to get to a sandwich shop, which was the only thing that was open because most of D.C. was closed, fearing riots or whatever. So I went there, and then by the time that I got to the Capitol, all the orange ski fencing had been pulled away by a man that was never indicted, never even looked for. And then the Ray Epps breach team had done its job, and both barriers of bike racks had been removed.
25:42
And so I literally walked straight up the steps of the Capitol up to the upper northwest door. Now, the upper northwest door, anybody that tells you they went in that door and tells you that they saw no violence, they're probably telling you the truth. The violence was on the east side as well as the southwest side. And then the way it set up, you couldn't see it from where I was because of the rise in the hills, et cetera.
26:07
I walked right by four riot policemen and into the Capitol through open doors. They never said a word to me. Now, previously, and I didn't know this at the time, two people had broken in and kicked those doors open, but I had no evidence of that. Now, there were rioters that were going into the windows to the side, but I'm in a crowd of people. I didn't see people going through the windows. When you go into a stadium, the next time for any sporting event,
26:35
Once you're through the ticket counter or showing your ticket, then tell me who was on your left and right. You just don't notice it. So walked through there and then walked into the Capitol. Followed the crowd. You know, all these quote chants of hang Mike Pence. I never heard anything. The only thing I heard was USA and our house, our house. Those were the only chants I heard that day. I never saw the gallows that were built, by the way.
27:01
Funny that the FBI has never even looked for those people that that put up a gallows. I mean, a gallows. You would think that would be significant enough for them to to find if people were really trying to do it. And the reason they're not looking is those people work for the FBI. I'm convinced there's some data. I agree. We spent two weeks looking for the guy who put a rope in a NASCAR garage that turned out to be not a rope. Exactly. So, again, it just.
27:29
That and the J-5 pipe bombers will be the threads that we pull that will start to unravel the entirety of this entrapment operation. And oh, how the lawsuits are going to roll after that. All right. So went into the Capitol, you know, walked around for a bit, went into Great Rotunda, took some selfies, eventually went down a set of stairs. There was a group that was confronting a couple of officers.
27:57
I walked around that group, and then I had the misfortune of stepping on a set of zip ties and then a second set of zip ties. I picked them both up. Now, my thought process at the time was, I'll just grab these. That way nobody else can do anything bad with them. I had no idea where they came from. They were literally just laying on the floor. And for those that don't believe me, go to LarryBrockJr.com. It's on the website, Patriot Pilot Speaks, and you can see it with your own eyes.
28:24
I tell everyone all the time, you can look with your own eyes or you can believe the media lies. At this point, I'm done. I'm done trying to convince people because if they don't want to hear the truth, they're just not going to hear it. So after I picked those up, I walked up a set of stairs down a hallway. And when I came out, I saw a man in black chasing a man in a coat and tie.
28:49
And another guy right in front of me started to chase the man in the coat and tie. And I grabbed him and stopped him, said, no, we don't do that. And then I got in between the man in black and the man in the coat and tie. Now, it turns out the man in the coat and tie was undercover officer Nairobi Timberlake, who testified in my trial that I protected him and his partner. So that.
29:14
That really happened. I walked around the corner. Now, here's the one thing I wish I hadn't done. I grabbed a set of keys and tried to open a door. When the door didn't open, I set the keys back down on the desk and walked away from it. Didn't kick it. Didn't try to force the door. You can say, well, why were you trying to open a locked door? I really just wanted to see what was behind it. But that's wrong. I shouldn't have done that. All right. And then I walked downstairs and I saw a man that was in the sitting in Vice President. Hold on just a second. Your microphones.
29:44
chopping you up again. All right. I'm sorry about that. I walked downstairs and saw a man sitting in the Senate in Vice President Pence's chair. And I walked onto the floor of the Senate and told the man to get out of Vice President Pence's chair that it didn't belong to him. It belonged to the vice president. And then, you know, there were some people that were talking about trashing the place. I told him not to do that. There was a man that wanted to steal something out of Senator Romney's desk.
30:12
I talked him into just taking a picture of it. I picked some papers up off the floor and sat them back on Senator Sinema's desk. So that's pretty much it. Then when I left the Senate, I found an officer that was extremely tall. I'm six foot three and he dwarfed me. He was in right here and I said, hey, I'd like to leave. Can you tell me where to go to get out? And he goes, I'll walk with you. So he and I walked down the hall, talked just as you and I would walk down the hallway anywhere talking.
30:41
And then he took me behind a line of officers, and I moved through the line of officers around to on the video. It's the left in the video, but it was my right. And I had seen a man confronting the officers that were shirtless. So I put my arms around the man and say, hey, no, let's not do this. Let's leave. Now, again, Colonel, all of this is on videotape. All of it can be seen with your own eyes. The judge saw all of this, and yet he still convicted me.
31:10
The things I was convicted of, and we'll get to the trial in just a second, were the felony 1512C2, which is obstruction in Congress, and then the host of misdemeanors that everybody got, entering a restricted area, parading and picketing, disorderly conduct, and then there's a couple of others like being on the floor of the Senate or, I mean, on the floor of Congress unauthorized. So, again, what you have is lateral overcharging by the Department of Justice. It should have been a simple trespass charge.
31:40
especially given my conduct that day. But it wasn't. So now I came home on the 7th, and I was very happy to make it home because when I saw the news that night, I knew how bad it was going to be. I went and saw my son because I'm divorced, and Thursday night was my night to see him. And that's one of the last few times I've been allowed to see him because I'm an activist Democratic judge here in Texas that believed the narrative that I was a violent J6 insurrectionist.
32:10
So, on the 8th, I took my weapons and I gave them to someone saying, you know, this is going to be bad and I'm not going to allow the FBI to confiscate them and lay them out like I'm some, you know, gun nut. I'm your usual Texan. You know, I have less than 10 weapons and a host of ammunition. But, you know, that's just basic. I'm going to call it good ownership and being a Texan here.
32:38
I'm glad I did that because, you know, that way I didn't have to fight with the FBI to get my weapons back or, you know. So on that February, they came into my apartment. Now, I had started receiving death threats on Thursday night. So I left my apartment and went over to my father's house because I lived in a first floor apartment and I didn't want to take any chances. And my father lived inside a gated community. So hold on. Right before you your your house is raided.
33:08
You get death threats? Yeah, I started getting death threats from the American left on Thursday night. They had identified me somehow, and Ronan Farrow of The New Yorker put out an article where I got called a white supremacist and a whole bunch of other things. Now, it's a funny story now. It wasn't funny at the time. A woman that I had previously dated came over to be with me. She's like, you need somebody to stay with you. She happened to be from Nigeria.
33:35
So she is literally on my couch reading the article in The New Yorker. She looks up at me and says, I didn't know you were a white supremacist. I said, I didn't know that either. So, again, it just that's what the media did is they tarred all of us as racist. Now, you and I know from being in the military, I believe honestly that we are in a post racial America. I will judge you solely by the content of your character, not the color of your skin. And I'm tired of the left trying to pull us back into that swamp that we've all grown out of.
34:04
Or at least hopefully we have. When I hear somebody being a racist, I tell them you're an idiot. Because honestly, that's the way I look at it. All right, so the FBI came and took my computers. They have my desktop Mac that I have. They have an Airbook. They have a cell phone. They have a Kindle that I had. They have my ski jacket.
34:26
and my hacking boots, and I want it all back. So if you're an FBI agent watching this, I'm going to file felony theft charges on you in about three days if you don't call me to give me my stuff back. In the state of Texas, that way you face a real jury. All right, now, I got a call from the FBI on Sunday the 10th. Now, they told me initially that they just wanted to talk to me, and that made me happy because I was thinking,
34:54
I didn't really do anything other than walk in the building, so I might be facing a trespassing charge, but they just want to talk. That's great. Well, as usual with this FBI, it was all a bunch of lies. So I was taking my friend back, and my attorney called me and said, hey, they just issued a warrant for your arrest. So we had already made arrangements to meet with them at Grapevine City Hall. Grapevine was the town I lived in at the time.
35:21
which happened to have a jail, which is why they specified that location. And I turned myself in an hour early. Now, why did I do that? Because I knew the FBI would try and make a show arrest and which is what they did because at four 30, the media was there. How do you do that? Because you'd been arrested at three 30, which is a legitimate question. My nieces came to pick up my car. So again,
35:45
The FBI is nothing but a propaganda tool for the Democratic Party, and you will not convince me of other. Now, maybe Kash Patel can restore the organization, but honestly, I would just prefer it be completely disbanded other than its databases be available for local police. So I spent the night in jail in Grapevine, and the next day I was arraigned in front of a U.S. magistrate. It's a very humbling experience to hear those words, the United States of America versus Larry Brock.
36:14
It's actually quite disgusting now that we're in hindsight. So at the time, they had only charged me with misdemeanors. And then I was sent to Parker County Jail where I was kept in isolation for four days, only allowed out once. And I believe that was solely to give me the opportunity to kill myself because there was a 13-gallon trash bag in a gym with no trash cans and nothing else in there except that.
36:44
I declined that opportunity because I'm not selfish and I love my parents and my children. So I went. And on the 14th, the U.S. attorney spun a web of lies. His name is Jay Weimer. And then the FBI agent, Agent John Moore, lied on the stand saying that I had brought the flex cuffs to the Capitol. Now, they had already seen that video by then. How do I know that? Because they took stills from the video that they provided.
37:13
to us. And I was only walking up that staircase one time. And so they knew from that video to go back to where they could have seen that I picked them up. But the narrative they wanted to spin was that we were there to kidnap legislators and we were there to kidnap Vice President Pence. So again, you have the media, you know, the deep state and its media symbiote spreading their web of lies out. And I got caught in it. So, however,
37:43
The judge, based off my service record and the fact that I only had misdemeanors, rather than keeping me in jail, which is what the terrorist Department of Justice wanted, let me go home and be on house arrest. Now, that's not a great bargain. I mean, for the next seven months, I was on strict house arrest. Could only go someplace to work, which I had to learn a new job while I was on house arrest and then get permission to go out and start learning it some more, which I did. And then, you know, so religious services.
38:13
or work was really the only time that I was allowed out or medical care. So I eventually faced trial, went to trial in DC in November of 22. Where was the judge at that gave you house arrest? In Texas. That was at Magistrate, Texas. So if I faced a judge in DC, I would have been thrown in the gulag. There's no question. And again, that is a reflection on how poor the DC judges are, how committed they are to the narrative. And honestly,
38:43
They need to be investigated and brought up on criminal charges, 18 U.S.C. 241, 242. And I believe they actually fit the statute for domestic terrorism, 2331.5. So beside the point, so I go to trial. And the only thing of note in the trial, there's a couple of things, was that they actually entered a phrase from the Declaration of Independence into evidence against me. So in Washington, D.C., in front of the Great Seal of the United States, an American judge.
39:12
is entering into evidence against an American military officer, him quoting the Declaration of Independence. My lawyer looked at me and said, can you believe this? And I'm like, no. And of course, it's, you know, whenever any form of government becomes destructive to those ends, it is their right, it is their duty to alter or abolish it. So again, something that is a founding document of the United States. So the other thing of note is my attorney asked him, well, what did...
39:39
Colonel Brock do that was disorderly. He obeyed the police every time we saw him. And that's where the raindrop theory that was unique to the J6 case got adopted. They said, because I was a part of a crowd where rioters had been disorderly, I was therefore guilty. So mass guilt is absolutely anathema to the American system of justice. And, you know, I have always maintained that a man's.
40:07
purest measure of his intentions are his actions. And on that day, I walked through open doors. I protected police twice. I calmed the rioters down. You know, if you want to call them that, I call them protesters. You know, I kept things safe. I don't know what I did to merit a felony conviction, but sure enough, I was found guilty. I was sentenced in March of 2023, and I had to report to the Springfield, Missouri federal prison in May. Now,
40:37
Something that's not real known or well known is Chris Ray had designated us as domestic terrorists. And because he did that, I had my pilot's licenses revoked. We were not allowed to go to camps. We had to go to a low prison. So that's them increasing our punishment from what a normal felon would get. So you have people that had dealt heroin.
41:04
that were in camps and yet j6ers that had walked inside the building had to go to a low because of the quote public safety threat that we posed so i will tell you that my time in the prison was pretty unnotable uh with a few exceptions um you know i got lucky in that i was in prison in a red state the guards were mega guards my website had out there all my actions and
41:30
Pretty much all of them watched it at one point or another and told me you shouldn't be in here. But I did have five people inside that prison that had it in for me. Now, Pam Hemphill, J6 granny, who's recently again got her second 15 minutes of fame for turning down President Trump's pardon. In June of 23.
41:53
turned on President Trump and got herself on CNN and said, you know, he motivated us to do this and it was an insurrection and all this other nonsense. And so as the senior ranking officer, I felt it was my job to put out some guidance. Now, a lot of people take exception to this, and I appreciate and understand that. But I'm telling you, I view myself as a political prisoner of an illegitimate and criminal government.
42:19
I view myself as being bound by the code of conduct under these circumstances. I fully respect my fellow military officers and enlisted personnel's difference of opinion on that. But I'm sorry, I'm going to err on the side of caution. And I'm telling you, I was a political prisoner. So I sent out guidance. I mean, you and I both know the fourth article of the code of conduct. If I am senior, I will take command. The fifth article, I will make no oral or written statements disloyal to my.
42:47
country and its allies so again those are things that should guide a military officer even in prison so i put out guidance that went throughout the j6 network into the other prisons that said hey honor the rules of the gulag that you've been unjustly imprisoned in take your time to get an education if you can do not make any oral or written statements disloyal to president trump or to
43:11
the United States and have faith that the American people will deliver you from this unjust incarceration. For that, an activist guard by the name of Ray Getman threw me in the hole for 127 days. So I was in isolation 127 days. I promise, ma'am. Under what? Because I was trying to start a prison gang by saying that we were all part of the Fifth Allied PPOW wing, Political Prisoner of War wing. And because I had issued guidance.
43:40
to these people I was communicating with other prisoners. So that's specifically forbidden. Now, again, he's making a mountain out of a molehill, and they kept me far beyond normal disciplinary means. Why? Probably because they were told to do it by D.C. Now, I can't prove that he was lying yet, but if I was to be given a badge, I would certainly be able to dig and look, and I'm pretty sure I'd be able to find it. So it was him and his co-conspirators, and that's Alicia DiOrio,
44:12
Officer Tim Conifer and then the captain, Justin Leonowitz. So those people I want to specifically look at and see what their email said and what they were told to do by Washington, D.C. They tried to transfer me to a prison where actual Al Qaeda members are held, including. I'm not making this up, ma'am. Wait, wait a minute.
44:34
Are you fucking kidding me? An A-10 pilot who's dropped bombs on Al Qaeda and they want to put you in the same fucking prison with them? Absolutely. It's called the Communications Management Unit in Terre Haute, Indiana. They tried to transfer me there twice and were denied. Oh, my God. Those bastards. Absolutely. All right. So they were eventually I got out after 127 days and.
45:02
I will tell you that my uncle wrote a letter to BOP, Bureau of Prisons Director Collette Peters, that basically said this is tantamount to a death sentence for just the reasons you noted. If you put a decorated military officer that had fought and killed al Qaeda amongst al Qaeda, what do you think is going to happen? So it gets even better. So in February.
45:27
A law came into effect that said if you had zero prior offenses, which I didn't, that you were entitled to a sentence reduction. In March, I won an appeal saying that I had been over sentenced. So my judge acted immediately, right, to let me out. Oh, no, no. He just kept me in. He just chose to do nothing because he could, which kept me in. So then Fisher was argued in front of the Supreme Court and everybody knew. Go ahead. You were breaking up again. Go ahead.
45:56
All right, so Fisher, the 1512 C2 felony that I was convicted of, was argued in front of the Supreme Court, and eventually the Supreme Court narrowed the scope. But that decision did not come out until June. But the judge left me in prison. He chose to do nothing. That way I would suffer. Now, I told you they tried to transfer me to al-Qaeda, right? So what do you think happened when an al-Qaeda terrorist named Abid Nasir, you can Google him,
46:24
came to Springfield. They put him sleeping six feet away from me. They kept him there for five days until their own guards raised so much hell with them that they moved him away from me. Now, how do you know that? Was he in a separate cell? No, it wasn't a cell. It was a big barracks Bay area. And he was literally sleeping six feet from me. So they actually brought an Al Qaeda terrorist to sleep next to a retired Lieutenant Colonel.
46:55
Yes. And the officers that did that are Officer Alicia DiIorio in collusion with Captain Justin Leonowitz. And it fits Justin Leonowitz's pattern, because if you were to dig into his history, which I did, he was at USP Thompson when that was shut down after inmates were killed. An example, they put a Jewish inmate in with two skinheads and the two skinheads beat the Jewish inmate to death. So, again, that's his background.
47:20
He was actually indicted and then they dropped the indictment or dropped the charges on him. So let's fast forward a little bit. Eventually, I got out on June the 4th and I put together a three minute video and a speech in my service dress, which I am allowed to do because I did not mention any political party, did not mention any presidential candidate by name. I just talked about the degradation of our judicial system and what had happened to me.
47:50
I was actually I ran what I was going to do through a couple of retired U.S. Air Force colonels who gave me guidance to make sure that I stayed within the guidelines of the military being apolitical. Because even though I'm retired, you know, I didn't want to cross the lines or bring disrepute on my service. So that video went absolutely viral on X. It's pinned to my tweet.
48:14
or to my Twitter profile, at Larry Brock Jr., and it has, I think, 1.9 million views just on my site. You know, it's got plenty of others in other places. So I went to a halfway house for a month, and then I was under home arrest for two months. Now, here's the really interesting thing. The judge wanted to actually re-sentence me after Fisher was overturned a mere eight days before I had actually served my entire sentence.
48:42
And so we made the argument just to wait. And the government wanted to do that because they agreed that my felony conviction should be vacated under the current rules. But they wanted the opportunity to try me again if Kamala Harris won, which I'm going to be honest with you. I'm really thankful they did. And I'll tell you why here in just a second. So about a week before January 20th, obviously, President Trump won the election.
49:11
I was not allowed to travel anywhere. I was still on probation, but I had served my full two-year sentence. And so the judge made the decision to vacate the sentence, and I couldn't figure out why he did that. I still can't. So on January the 20th, I received a pardon. Now, I was technically pending resentencing. On the Tuesday after I was pardoned,
49:38
The DOJ sent a letter to my lawyer saying we would like to dismiss the suit priming on the 1512 C2 felony and the misdemeanors. I queried my attorney and said. You blanked out again. Yeah, you did too. Sorry. I queried my attorney and he said that they were dismissing everything. So on Thursday, the judge signed off on the dismissal with prejudice. Now, a lot of people don't know this.
50:09
But until you are finally sentenced, you are not actually convicted. So because they dropped everything with prejudice, all of my charges are gone as if it never happened. So I was pardoned, but technically I don't require a pardon because all of the charges were dropped. So I've asked my lawyer about that. We're looking into it because it's really kind of a gray area.
50:40
Their own greed, their attempt to have me and Greg Rosen of the Capitol Siege Section in the Washington, D.C. Department of Justice U.S. Attorney's Office told my attorney, I want him to go through life as a convicted felon. So his own greed in trying to preserve the felony led to everything being dismissed. Oh, my gosh. Holy crap. So I spent two years in prison.
51:12
for charges that were ultimately dismissed. And I cannot figure out for the life of me how a judge can find me guilty in a bench trial and then almost two years later drop all charges with prejudice. What was the judge's name? It was John D. Bates. Was he just responding to where the wind blows? I truly do not understand it. And I honestly think...
51:40
that these judges should face criminal charges. I believe there's conspiracy against rights. Now, again, I believe a special counsel should be brought by Congress, by the House, to look into both January 6th and the corruption inside the Department of Justice in how they prosecuted January 6th cases. Because I believe if we could get access and an investigative team to dig into the emails of these judges, we would find ex parte communications with the Department of Justice.
52:10
either through them directly or through their clerks. I believe we would also find collusion from the FBI. There are a whole host of things that the FBI did that are improper, to include lying on the stand in my case. So, I mean, I'm really hopeful that we'll do that, but I don't want the House and the Senate doing that. I want them about the American people's business and to move President Trump's agenda forward.
52:37
But I believe that we have to lance the bubble on the lie that is January 6th. We have to lance this boil and we have to get to the truth. And the best way to do that is through a special prosecutor, even though I hate them and they almost amount to nothing. Always, you know, maybe this time will be different. So a couple of things. As I when I went to Air War College, my area was Vietnam.
53:09
That was kind of my area of expertise. I don't know if you know how that works, but they sign you, well, you get to pick your area. And because I came in right after the Vietnam War in 79, I'd done a lot of reading. I'm a big reader, did a lot of research. And so that was kind of the area that I wanted to specialize in. And I actually went on a trip to Vietnam. All of my year-long worth of research was focused on that.
53:37
I know quite a bit about the Phoenix program that was set up by the CIA and implemented after 9-11. The Phoenix program came to the United States with the formation of the, what do they call them? There's cells, centers, fusion centers.
54:04
The fusion centers of the FEMA are the exact parallel to the area regional cells that were set up in Vietnam. The restriction of travel, the ID checks, the destruction of villages and moving people into. So all of those things are playing out here with the smart city. We're on a much slower timeline because we all have guns.
54:31
But they are implementing the Phoenix program here. And January 6th was very much. And we're going to find not only were the FBI involved, you're going to find the CIA was very much involved. And they actually imported Ukrainians, one of which was stopped in San Francisco on his way out of the country. So many of those people that were in that crowd.
54:58
And that goes back to the question I asked you before we came on camera. Operation Gladio has these terror cells that the CIA deploys all over the world to instigate shit just like they did on January 6th. And so I believe you're absolutely right. It was a coup that involved the American people as proxies for them to create.
55:27
a disturbance to then use it against President Trump to do the last impeachment, which basically was a soft coup. And it was meant to stain him and not allow him to ever be president again. And that is a coup. I'm sorry. That's what it is. Absolutely. And I think once that comes out, we really need to take action against politicians that did it. You know who I'm referring to, Nancy Pelosi, Mitch McConnell. These people are culpable. Now, we know
55:57
Let me back off of that. They've admitted that there are 26 confidential human sources, which means there's probably two or three times that. That's just the FBI's confidential human sources. Notice they didn't include the communications or the name. So, again, we need to get into all of that and we need to look those up. You talked about CIA involvement. I will also tell you I believe there were DOD operatives there as well because of the military signaling that was involved. Did you know that a signal or a signal?
56:24
Signal flare went off over the Capitol. Did you know that yellow smoke immediately preceded the second breach? I didn't know that until I saw this on the War on Truth because I wasn't there at the time. And then you can see red smoke pop, which is the battlefield code for to egress the area. And you see four men in front of Ray Epps, four men behind Ray Epps, rapidly egressing the Capitol area as soon as that red smoke popped. This was a military.
56:51
type of organization or plan either by the cia the fbi or some type of dod operatives so we we've got to get to the truth of this you know there are three cameras that are pointed directly at the arrow area where the gallows were erected why haven't they ever been released they let those gallows be built inside the fencing with capital policemen there and it was never once mentioned over the radios why
57:18
And then theoretically, this pipe bomb was within 20 feet of the vice president elect. And yet a Secret Service dog didn't alert. No, no. This this was definitely a setup. We definitely have to dig into the truth. One hundred percent. I the most dumbfounding thing I've heard. And again, my neighbors right across the lake here, three of their kids were January 6th.
57:50
So I've been following this fairly closely the entire time. She's been a childhood friend of mine forever. I have never heard anyone with your story. The fact that they put an Al Qaeda terrorist next to you is the single most disturbing thing that I have ever heard.
58:17
I completely agree. I mean, I went and complained immediately, but there's only so much you can do. I mean, nobody else could believe it either. You know, the other prisoners were joking with me. Did you sleep with one eye open and your flashlight or your reading light shining on him? Yeah, kind of. You know, I mean, what else am I supposed to do? I would not have closed my eyes. Well, I didn't pretty much, you know, for those few days, but that's all I could do.
58:45
you know, is going to complain. And like I said, their own guards made them move him. But again, the mere fact that he was there and, you know, the officers that we need to talk to, you know, I really need, we need adequate or real law enforcement to go in that prison and pull these people aside and dig into them. It's Captain Justin Leonowitz, Officer Alicia DiOrio. You know, I know exactly who we need to go and talk to, you know, and.
59:13
It's there. I guarantee you those communications are there. We just have to dig into them and find them. And I actually believe that their own people will rat them out as soon as we start actually putting federal pressure on them, which I intend to do. It's only been since Thursday that all of these charges were dropped. So, I mean, the things on my to-do list are huge. I need to talk to the Texas Attorney General and see if I can levy state charges.
59:42
against these people for depriving me of civil rights. I have interviews with defamation lawyers that are coming up. There's a lot of things that I need to talk about in terms of how CNN, the New York Times, and the Washington Post covered me, as well as local news stations. I was debanked by both Charles Schwab and First Convenience Bank. And so Charles Schwab debanked me before I was ever guilty of anything. So I intend to sue them as well.
1:00:11
I want my licenses back. You know, now that is it Kirstie Noem is DHS secretary or Kirstie Noem. I always get this backwards. I think it's Kirstie. Anyway, Kirstie Noem. OK, so now that she's in charge, I need to find out or, you know, as soon as we get a real FAA administrator in there, a new one, then I'm going to try and get my licenses back. And then I need to see if I can get my old job back. So if you have no charges, how could they not give you your license back?
1:00:38
Well, remember, your licenses are issued at the pleasure of the government. You're absolutely right. Well, I mean, I don't think I even told you this, but they also put us on the quiet skies list. The same thing that they did to Tulsi Gabbard, designated as terrorists. And so it really like I will not fly because it is a four to five hour process to get through security. And I have no guarantee I'm even going to make the flight. It's it's that painful.
1:01:05
And, you know, it's just another example of how the Biden administration did everything they could to make our lives miserable. I'm just I'm blown away here. I'm very rarely ever speechless. I'm blown away here. I mean, it is it is a crazy story when you look at it and what they've done, you know. And that's why when Jay Sixers talk about the need for restorative justice.
1:01:31
You know, it honestly has to has to happen. You know, we are actively pursuing and putting together a class action lawsuit against the Biden DOJ. You know, unfortunately, it's going to be against the Department of Justice. And people justifiably say, you know, why should we pay for what they did? Well, you had no problem really with them when they were persecuting us. So, you know, we need some type of system to make sure every license is restored. We're wiped from every database.
1:02:00
All of our lives are restored. I'll be honest with you, ma'am. I lost a $200,000 a year job because of their charges. If they had just said that people were inside the Capitol and shouldn't have been, then I might have been able to keep my job, especially when the truth came out that I was actually trying to protect officers inside there and were trying to keep people for being respectful and doing the right thing. I think I would not have lost my job.
1:02:29
So I'm going to go and ask for it back. It's up to my employer whether or not they let me have it. I will tell you, I am now very politically motivated. I know you've been in my space. I host a space on X from 11 to 12 every day where I talk politics. And specifically, I try and get rid of disinformation and misinformation from the left. And I try and advance the conservative cause with people. And that's what I'm going to do. I'm also actively exploring running for state government.
1:02:56
in texas i encourage everybody now i'm no longer a participant i'm sorry let me back up i'm no longer a an observer of the american republic i'm an active participant and i'm doing everything i can to dig into my local republican party to support my politicians my agenda and move the ball forward for the american people in my own little area because that's how it all gets started
1:03:23
And isn't that kind of the interesting thing? Because this is one of the like the top level observations that I've made in my research of Operation Gladio is all of these coups that we created all over the world. And there's millions of dead people as a result of installing all of these fascist dictators. What it did is radicalize the people in these countries.
1:03:53
in opposition to the United States. We didn't win hearts and minds like it was. And you just described on the opposite side that the process of trying to come after people, just like we have done overseas, radicalizes you to be more active in defending those freedoms that you almost, well, you lost.
1:04:21
for years. But you almost lost forever because of a felony conviction to never be able to have a firearm, to never be able to be part of. Yeah. So it does, in fact, do the exact opposite of what they I don't think you almost get the impression that they think they can break our will.
1:04:46
I think they absolutely thought that. I think they thought they could break President Trump's will, but boy, they're getting it with both barrels now. We just have to get Kash Patel over the line. We have to get Tulsi over the line. And then I think we're going to start seeing things come out. I truly believe, as you probably do, that once the truth really comes out about what happened with John F. Kennedy, people are going to start taking a really jaundiced eye. And if it comes out that they also killed Martin Luther King,
1:05:14
It's going to be dramatic changes to how the CIA is allowed to operate inside the United States. It's truly terrifying to think of Kamala Harris being the president with AI supporting her agenda. I mean, honestly, it would have been exactly like 1984 had we lost this election. We were on the edge of an abyss, and the American people wisely chose to move back from that abyss.
1:05:43
and move the pendulum back towards individual liberties. That's the other thing that I'll tell you that I'm most disappointed in. I always believed that our court system would protect and preserve individual liberty. That is completely not true. We need very systemic court reforms. We need to monitor our judges. We need to be able to do something about judges that are unwilling to protect individual liberties. We cannot have Congress being bogged down with impeaching.
1:06:12
all 19 of these justices. There has to be some other system to do it. But again, that's what the constitution requires to get rid of these people. But, you know, they all merit it based off of their lack of, I'm going to call it attention to detail for lack of a better term, but they just did not preserve individual liberties. They let the government trample our first, fourth, fifth, and sixth amendment rights. And just, it was obviously disgusting.
1:06:41
You're being way too nice. Those judges were political activists. They were not acting as a judge. As a matter of fact, I would go one further. I think having the D.C. courts is unconstitutional. There is absolutely no ground to stand on to have those courts in D.C.
1:07:11
The way, again, the way you compromise, I mean, it's the same thing with the FISA court. The entire thing is broke. The investigation into it was released. They did absolutely nothing proper as far as getting all of the background information on the warrants, the FISA warrants that was given against the Trump campaign.
1:07:37
Every single one of those folders were empty. They did not no due diligence. And every single one of them went through the FISA court, which was basically made up of the D.C. court. So in every case, the D.C. court is a bunch of political hacks that are part of this mafia that has been installed in Washington, D.C. to destroy America. Absolutely.
1:08:04
And, you know, I sometimes wonder why we can't just structure them out. Just in the next bill, eliminate the D.C. Circuit. Yes, absolutely. From a financial savings standpoint. And there's no reason we couldn't do that. And I hope that they do. Screw the financial savings. It's unconstitutional. I'm completely on board. You know, I absolutely agree with you. It's just President Trump has his work cut out in front of him to get this deep state to heal.
1:08:32
When we start firing people, we will actually get some forward progress on that. But, you know, we haven't really done that yet. We've got some people on paid leave. But, you know, when I start seeing these people that abrogated our rights in leg irons and handcuffs with a belly chain like my parents saw me, then I'll know that we're getting serious about returning justice to our land. So wait a minute. You went to turn yourself in and they still put you in leg irons?
1:09:02
Yeah, my parents saw that, yes, to transfer me to the Parker County Jail and for arraignment. And then when I was finally let out, you know, in that hearing on the 14th where the DOJ wanted me to stay in, my parents saw me in an orange jumpsuit, you know, with leg irons and a belly chain and handcuffs. Those bastards. That's exactly what they are. And they need to be brought to justice. So I want to read you a couple of comments. Kathy Smith says, this man's a saint.
1:09:31
She also said literally feel sick about the treatment of this patriot. May God bless him generously and his family eternally. Just a farmer said we definitely need to get to the bottom of this and justice needs to be metered out. Don says everyone in D.C. needs to be cleaned out. They need an enema in the worst and the most. Definitely. Absolutely. Every one of them gone.
1:09:58
God bless you, Lieutenant Colonel Brock. Thank you. God bless you, sir. So everybody. Yeah, this was a coup d'etat utilizing narrative scripts and techniques from Gladio and Phoenix. That's one of my followers, obviously. Extreme MAGA. Yeah, I just I'm I'm literally blown away by your story, Larry.
1:10:24
Well, tell everyone I said thank you. I'm doing what I can. Again, just because bad men and women inside of our government act poorly doesn't mean that the system's not right. I still believe in our country. I still believe in our Constitution. We just have to restore what they have tried to take away from us in terms of individual liberties. Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
1:10:50
I would love to have you back. I want to talk to you. I, I have had this, let me figure out the way to say this. Most of the people, and I think you're ideally suited for this actually based on your, most of my friends are too hot headed to be able to have a conversation that I want to have, but it really needs to be.
1:11:23
with someone with operational experience to talk about some of the Operation Gladio aspects of things that I've uncovered that because you've been deployed in operational, you've looked, you know, dead on at some of the seriousness of these operations. I would love to be able to have a couple of shows with you that kind of
1:11:53
maybe one in Latin America and one in Asia, that would kind of go over some of the details of the CIA operations and probably ones that most mirror what happened on January 6th. And there's a couple of them, like what happened in Chile in the lead up to the election there, where they basically tried repeatedly to overthrow, to stop Allende.
1:12:21
from becoming president and then eventually murdering him after he did become president and kind of walk through some of those things with your experience living all over the world or deploying all over the world. And especially some of the interesting aspects that a lot of people probably didn't catch about some of the flights that you talked after you were, after you retired, I think would be,
1:12:50
very helpful from that perspective to get your feedback on those. Yes, ma'am. I'd be happy to join you again. Okay. Awesome. So we'll, we'll get together and set that up and I'll kind of give the the overview and then ask you what from an operational perspective.
1:13:15
You know, I'm going to ask you to kind of put yourself in the operator, which, of course, unfortunately, is the CIA in this situation and have you kind of walk through the other side of that, because I think it would give the audience a much different, a much better perspective of.
1:13:35
And also be able to translate some of what has happened outside the United States to show the parallels, especially since you've lived one of them, with what is actually happening here, because that, to me, is the most disturbing part of all of this. If you go back and you look at the soft coups that happened on Trump, both with Russiagate, the leaked Ukrainian phone call, all of those had a CIA.
1:14:03
agent or asset at the heart of every one of them. You know, Gina Haskell over in the London station when they were setting Papadopoulos up and all that all happened in London. And she was the station chief in London when it was happening. And then you go to the Ukrainian phone call and you have that dumbass army Lieutenant Colonel dipshit Vindman.
1:14:29
And Eric Chiaramella, who was McMaster's aide. And Eric has already been identified as a CIA. He's literally employed by the CIA. Yeah. And so I just think it would be a great tag team to be able to look through some of those things and get your perspective on them. Yes, ma'am. Awesome. All right. So let's see if we got any last ones. Bridget is one of my.
1:14:59
helpers. And she's like, oh, that would be so awesome with bombshells going off. All right. So yeah, everybody seems to think that's a great idea. So thank you again for your time, for being here. God bless you. My heart breaks for you, your family, your mom and dad, especially when you talk about, and I'm a first generation military person. Nobody in my family had ever been in the military.
1:15:27
I know the traditional just from my friends like John Reed and Malia. Her dad was a Navy dentist and his dad. And, you know, it goes back and I understand those generational families in the military and what patriotism and all of that stuff means to them. And it had to break your parents heart to know what they.
1:15:52
They obviously raised an amazing patriot. And to see the country that they served, that their parents had served, that they then passed on to their son and have that same country treat their son that way had to be devastating for them. It was, ma'am. But, you know, again, all thanks to the American people. You know, our faith is being restored. You know, we've got a president that's doing exactly what he said he was going to do.
1:16:19
And, again, I caution everyone, you know, bad people did this. The system's good. Our country's better than anything else in the world. It's still worth fighting for. Absolutely. Yes, it was very tough for them, but, you know, they love this country, same as me. So, you know, again, we're walking on cloud nine right now because as of last Thursday, I'm not convicted of anything. So how could we be unhappy? God bless you.
1:16:49
Yeah. Okay. So we're going to go ahead and sign off here. Thank you guys all for being here and listening. Please go follow Larry on X. Are you on True Social as well, Larry? I am, ma'am, but I don't do much with that, but I'm about to start. So yes, X is my primary source. And what's your handle on True Social? True Social is the same as on X, at Larry Brock Jr.
1:17:19
Okay, so yeah, everybody go follow him. And you said, how often do you do your 11? I know I've caught a couple of them, but I didn't realize you did them every day. So 11 to 12? 11 to 12 Central Standard Time. So high noon Eastern Standard Time, Monday through Friday for one hour. Monday through Friday. Okay, so all of you guys that catch me at four o'clock Monday through Friday, you need to catch Larry. 11 Central Time.
1:17:47
12 Eastern time, Monday through Friday for an hour. Yeah. Awesome. So make sure you guys add that to your schedule. And again, thank you so much for being here. I really appreciate it. Yes, ma'am. You have a wonderful night. You too. Bye-bye. Bye.
Entities here
Donald Trump5January 6 Capitol attack5Operation Gladio4Phoenix Program3Vietnam3United States2London1Alexander Vindman1Federal Emergency Management Agency1Pete Hegseth1Parker County Jail1John F. Kennedy1San Francisco1Salvador Allende1Chile1Martin Luther King Jr.1Gina Haspel1Eric Ciaramella1
Claims made here
Phoenix Program front_for
Federal Emergency Management Agency host_asserted
▶ 54:04
“The fusion centers of the FEMA are the exact parallel to the area regional cells that were set up in Vietnam. The restriction of travel, the ID checks, the destruction of villages and moving people in…”