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Kash's Corner

Kash’s Corner: Jan. 6 Detainees Facing Unfair Treatment in Detention, Including Solitary Confinement

Kash's Corner

Kash Patel

Government, News, Politics

4.8627 Ratings

🗓️ 10 November 2021

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“Solitary confinement is supposed to be for the most violent offenders,” says Kash Patel. As a former public defender, Kash explains why he sees a double standard of justice when it comes to the Jan. 6 detainees.


And why are thousands of hours of video footage of the Jan. 6 Capitol breach being denied to the defendants and their attorneys?



Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Well, hello everyone back to Cash's Corner with Cash Patel.

0:15.7

Hey, Jan, I'm excited to be back and also excited to feature our new shoutouts to our fans at the end of the show.

0:22.9

So hopefully people will stay tuned for that as well.

0:25.1

It's an interesting date that we're filming today.

0:27.6

It's July 6th.

0:29.6

That's six months to the day from January 6th.

0:33.3

And indeed, we're going to talk a little bit about January 6th.

0:36.6

So there's about 500 people that have been charged.

0:39.3

And from what I understand, 50 of them are actually in pre-trial detention as we speak.

0:46.3

And, you know, there's been, I think, interviews with parents of some that are actually spending time in solitary confinement.

0:55.0

So let's just explore this whole issue.

0:58.0

How does this work?

0:59.0

There's people that have been in detention for the better part of six months,

1:05.0

almost, potentially.

1:06.0

Having been a public defender and a former terrorism prosecutor, I've literally argued over 1,000 bond hearings

1:13.8

before state and federal judges. So basically what happens is, is after there's an arrest of an

1:19.6

individual for any crime, they go before a judge. They have to go before a judge because it's the law

1:25.8

to see if they should be held in jail

1:28.4

until their next trial date or if they should be released on bond. But the law requires two

1:34.4

factor analysis. One is the person arrested a danger to himself for the community, and two,

1:40.9

is that person a flight risk. But there's a lot of evidence that both the prosecutor

1:45.6

and the defense attorney get to put on at a bail hearing, bond hearing for the judge to make

...

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