Episodes

  • Taser, Taser, Taser! Conducted Energy Weapons: “Less-lethal”? Do they Save Lives and Reduce Civilian Shootings or Facilitate Cardiac Arrest and are Used in a Reckless, Punitive Manner?
    Nov 16 2024

    Welcome to this electric, super-charged, high voltage brand-new episode of
    Light ‘Em Up!

    As season 5 will soon be a rap and in the books, please tell a friend that lives overseas about us!

    We are now actively being downloaded in 115 countries.

    We expose and tell the truth in a world filled with confusion and bold-faced lies.

    We delve into the facts not the fiction about: TASERS —Conducted Energy Devices (CED’s) also referred to as Conducted Energy Weapons (CEW’s): A weapon that is deemed to be “less than lethal” and has been touted as saving lives and reducing civilian shootings, but in reality, carries the heavy baggage of a complicated past that I’ve personally observed being deployed in a punitive, wanton and capricious manner.

    We’ll investigate:

    — how law enforcement is said to deploy this weapon and how they often truly deploy it in reality.

    We’ll examine:

    — several case studies

    — the CEW policy of The Akron Police Department (as one of its officers recently fired a TASER at an alleged person of interest riding a bicycle)

    — the NYPD and its use of the TASER throughout the capital of the world, New York City

    — and peel back all of the critical layers of the onion as to whether these devices can increase the incidence of death from its use.

    Have you ever been tased?

    From reputable law enforcement officers, I’ve been told that you lose control of your bowels and bladder for about a week following being tased.

    The TASER is an acronym for, believe it or not, (Thomas A. Swift’s Electronic Rifle), named after a favorite book of the inventor John Cover who developed the device in the mid 70’s. Cover was a NASA physicist.

    The hand-held device can be used to incapacitate a person by transmitting a 50K volt electric shock delivered through two, small, barbed darts intended to penetrate clothing, puncture the skin and remain attached to the target.

    The darts are connected to the main unit by a thin insulated copper wire and deliver a modulated or controlled electric current designed to disrupt voluntary control of muscles, causing temporary neuromuscular incapacitation (NMI).

    If the heart is a muscle and it is governed by the electrical system of the human body, why couldn’t this device affect the heart muscle? In peer reviewed research in the scholarly journal “Circulation” from The American Heart Association – an article focused on: TASER: Electronic Control Devices Can Cause Cardiac Arrest in Humans.

    In more than 1 instance, it has. The TASER is a branded name which can also be used as a stun gun by pressing it directly against the target’s body, thereby administering an electric shock. Similar to a “cattle prod on steroids”.

    Many in the law enforcement community stand firmly behind the Taser and disagree vehemently that officers are cavalierly using Tasers on people who are passively resisting.

    However, the fact pattern shows instance after instance where officers have deployed this weapon -- even when they face little danger -- as a means to subdue unarmed people or in a punitive nature for those already in police custody.

    You be the judge. Watch this video. Officer Used Stun Gun on a Migrant Holding a Toddler, video shows.

    Tune in to hear ALL of the shocking and electrifying details and mucho, mucho más.

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Protecting Your Constitutional & Civil Rights in a Time While They are Under Assault: Driving While Black in Cleveland, Ohio, Pre-Textual Traffic Stops, Whren v U.S. & Defending Yourself When Cops Become Robbers.
    Oct 26 2024

    Welcome to this brand-new episode of Light ‘Em Up!

    Tell a friend that lives overseas about us! We are now actively being downloaded in 114 countries.

    On this investigative, educational and impactful edition of Light ‘Em Up — we expose and tell the truth in a world filled with confusion and misinformation.

    We delve into the facts not the fiction about: Protecting your Constitutional & Civil Rights and educating you on topics that we’re betting you rarely hear or know much about but should know everything about.

    We drill deep on:

    — Pretextual traffic stops (something we’ve given great attention to here on Light ‘Em Up)

    — Section 1983 lawsuits

    — and as a case study we examine Whren v U.S. (517 US 806 (1996), a landmark Supreme Court decision that relates directly to how law enforcement interacts with the public today.

    With a fine-tooth comb, we examine the details as to what exactly is going on in Cleveland, Ohio as the Division of Police, which is currently under DOJ (consent decree) oversight, continues to allegedly cheat, stretch, break and violate the law by intentionally stopping and searching black drivers at much higher rates than white Clevelanders.

    We explore “When cops become robbers”: When law enforcement officers use their badge and authority to “game” the citizenry as they violate the spirit and letter of the law.

    We tell the story of the Tenaha, TX Police Department, whose officers were (allegedly) intentionally using their authority to “shake-down” the good people passing through their city limits. The lead officer directly involved literally expressed the intention of using “the money that they get from thugs “from a newly created drug interdiction program to pay the town’s bills.

    A class action lawsuit asserted that their pretextual traffic enforcement scheme was bogus and was designed solely to enhance the city financially and the defendants personally.

    Especially for you, we have exclusive audio of the Rehnquist High Court as the attorney on behalf of the petitioner (Whren), Lisa Burget Wright, argues their position before the high court on April 17th, 1996.

    Whren vs U.S. says that “a stop or search that is objectively reasonable is not diminished by the fact that the officer’s real reason for making the stop or search has nothing to do with the validating reason”. (Meaning that it is acceptable for an officer to make up a reason to stop you.)

    We explore and define a §1983 lawsuit, which provides an individual the right to sue state government employees and others acting under the color of state law for civil rights violations.

    For your education and empowerment, we explore §242 of Title 18, which makes it a crime for a person acting under color of any law to willfully deprive a person of a right or privilege protected by the Constitution or laws of the U.S., and we provide crucial insights as to what your rights are when you are stopped by law enforcement. And we delve into pretextual traffic stops: What are they, and how they are used against you.

    We also offer a “Know Before You Go” pre-travel safety check-list that will help limit your potential exposure and hopefully reduce the likelihood of being pulled over for any legitimate or pretextual moving traffic violations.

    Finally, we review an in-depth analysis of what more than 17,000 traffic stops in the City of Cleveland has exposed in and among the CDP (Cleveland Division of Police) as it initially appears that they disproportionately pull over Black drivers with much more frequency than white motorists.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • A Broken Tail Light, an Expired License Plate: NOT Capital Crimes! How Cities are Working to Reduce Racial Profiling & Biased Pre-Textual Traffic Stops — Making the All-Too-Common Traffic Stop Safer For All.
    Oct 5 2024

    Welcome back to this brand-new, explosive, visionary, investigative edition of Light 'Em Up.

    We're currently being actively downloaded in 114 countries, globally.
    Thank you for your unwavering, constant support.

    Without fear or favor, we shine the antiseptic light of the truth on any topic that we undertake and report on.

    On this episode we focus on and explore emerging ways of addressing critical issues in the criminal justice system and policing — drilling down on and beginning a focused conversation as to:

    Rethinking how law enforcement is deployed and all too often traffic stop by police.

    Public safety has long been treated as the near-exclusive province of law enforcement agencies.

    Police are tasked with countless challenging and many dangerous duties, including but not limited to:

    — Responding to active crime scenes

    — 911 calls for service (that are made all the more unpredictable by the prevalence of guns on our streets and gun ownership in the U.S.)

    — People who are in the grips of a mental health crisis
    — Domestic violence situations

    The most common 911 calls include: business checks, disturbances, suspicious persons, and complaints.

    Simply put, the police are over-tasked and vastly undertrained to deal with a myriad of complex issues that 21st Century Policing encounters and demands — especially those that center around mental health.

    The risk of being killed while being approached or stopped by law enforcement in the community is 16 times higher for individuals with untreated serious mental illness than for other civilians.

    For the safety of the public and law enforcement officers equally, we have to begin to re-think, re-examine and re-engineer these concepts, whether it be the biased enforcement of traffic laws by police which drive racial disparities in the criminal justice system or topics like we’ve covered in the past such as “DWB” or Driving While Black in America.

    — Police in the U.S. conduct more than 20 million traffic stops per year
    — Some 42% of African Americans say that police have stopped them just because of their race

    — 59% of the U.S. public believes that this practice of racial profiling is widespread

    — 81% disapprove of it — or at least express the concept that they do

    Civilian first responders dedicated to traffic and road safety can better serve communities by resolving traffic and safety issues without the potential for punitive law enforcement action.

    Racial profiling is a significant policing and social problem. We all witnessed how fast the police incident with Miami Dolphins star wide receiver Tyreek Hill escalated quickly from the body worn camera of the officer on scene.

    To mitigate the risk of harm to both the police and the public, many municipalities have tasked unarmed, non-law enforcement responders to address nonviolent social and medical issues such as mental health crises or have narrowed the scope of police discretion and duties in traffic enforcement.

    How many times have we seen in the past where a citizen is pulled over for a minor traffic infraction and it has escalated into a deadly encounter?

    — An expired registration
    — A crack in a windshield
    — Littering

    It happens every day, don’t be fooled!

    Click here to see the list of the top jurisdictions that have first responder programs across the U.S.

    Tune in for ALL the explosive details and follow our sponsors Newsly & Feedspot.

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    54 mins
  • The Senseless Killing of Michael Jones, Another Black Man, by the Akron, OH Police Department: Poor Tactical Police Procedures, Reasonable, Articulable Suspicion (RAS) & Officer Induced Jeopardy.
    Sep 14 2024

    Welcome back to this brand-new, investigative, in-depth, exposé exclusively featured on Light 'Em Up.

    We're actively being downloaded in 114 countries, globally.
    Thank you for your unwavering, support.

    Without fear or favor, we shine the antiseptic light of the truth on any topic that we undertake and report on.

    Tonight, we examine the officer involved shooting of Michael Jones — by our very own Akron Police Department in the early morning hours of August 17th outside of a Duke and Duchess gas station, in Akron, Ohio. The 15 second unnecessary struggle took Jones' life and re-opened deep wounds between the people and the police in Akron.

    Jones, a 54-year-old black man, was shot at point blank range and killed by an APD Officer during an altercation inside a U-Haul Rental Truck.

    In a Light 'Em Up Exclusive Visual Investigation we've analyzed the body worn camera (BWC) of the officer involved shooting — frame by frame, meticulously we've rolled back the footage of the fatal traffic stop to examine the causes and consequences of the "officer created jeopardy" in this specific case.

    With Miami Dolphins Wide Receiver Tyreek Hill in the news for being dragged out of his car in Miami Gardens, FL — this fact pattern put the issue of excessive force and officer created jeopardy at the forefront of countless discussions.

    Our learning objectives for this intense episode — which may very well save your life or that of a loved one — will be to drill down on:

    — The fact-pattern in the killing of Michael Jones
    — Reasonable, Articulable, Suspicion (RAS)
    — and introduce to you the concept of "Officer Induced Jeopardy".

    In the realm of criminal law and law enforcement, the term Reasonable, Articulable, Suspicion holds significant importance. It serves as a critical legal standard that determines whether law enforcement officers have sufficient grounds to justify various actions, such as: stopping individuals, conducting searches or making detentions. If you are under arrest, you must be told of the charge you are in custody for and immediately read your Miranda rights.

    Understanding RAS is crucial for both law enforcement officials and individuals to ensure a balanced approach to justice.

    To help you better to understand we'll delve into the:
    — Concept of RAS
    — Its legal significance
    — and its impact on various aspect of law enforcement practices.

    As case studies we'll discuss 2 cases regarding the concept of "Officer Induced or Officer Created Jeopardy".

    "Officer Induced Jeopardy" involves situations in which police officers unwisely put themselves in danger and then use deadly force to protect themselves. It can include the actions of officers who, without sound justification, willingly fail to take advantage of available tactical concepts like distance, cover and concealment, willingly abandon tactically advantageous positions by moving into disadvantaged positions without justification — or act precipitously on their own without waiting for available assistance from backup.

    Grave tactical errors such as:

    — walking into the path of a moving car
    — reaching into the window
    — jumping onto a moving vehicle
    — then using lethal force to defend against the danger — as appears to have been the case in the killing of Michael Jones.

    We'll interrogate the "final frame" approach found in Graham v Connor where the U.S. Supreme Court says, "courts should not second guess the "split second" judgements officers make in the heat of the moment".

    Vehicle stops happen more than 50K times a day on average across America — by far the most common interaction between the police and the public, which disproportionately impacts drivers of color.

    We want to hear from you!

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Murdered in Cold Blood Over a Pot of Water: The Tragic Case of Sonya Massey. A Focused Exam of the Expanding Plague of "Wandering/Roaming Cops". Is it Safe Anymore for Individuals of Color to Call the Police for Help?
    Aug 24 2024

    Welcome to this incendiary, probing, brand-new installment of Light ‘Em Up.

    We’re currently being actively downloaded in 1⃣1⃣3⃣ countries globally! Thank you, for your constant support!

    In this intensive episode we’ll investigate and unpack the cold-blooded killing of Sonya Massey — a 36-year-old mother of two and resident of Springfield, Illinois. Ms. Massey was concerned for her safety and called law enforcement to her home for protection.

    Sonya Massey, was fatally shot in the head by the now terminated and criminally charged former Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Sean Grayson in her own kitchen over a pot of water that was heating on the stove.

    Today, with all the tangible evidence from a multitude of past deadly incidents with law enforcement — the argument could be made that it no longer seems safe for individuals of color and/or anyone who may be “spiraling downward” in the grips of a mental health crisis to call law enforcement for any assistance.

    When a person is stuck in the unrelenting grip of a mental health crisis and they are rapidly spiraling downward — they need help, compassion, empathy and understanding. They don’t need to be shot in the face and killed.

    Law enforcement simply is not trained to properly handle such emergencies. A crystal-clear example of this was what happened to Daniel Prude in Rochester, NY.

    Far too often the fact pattern turns out to be identical to the last senseless killing.

    The officer dispatched to the call shows up on the scene:

    — terrified (having little direct exposure to those who don’t look identical to him)
    — short on time
    — short on patience
    — and far too often short on the requisite racial sensitivity for the communities they are charged with protecting and serving
    — short on the requisite “humanity” one needs to see people who need help as people, not as constant and potential threats

    Many aspects of this case are perverted. This case serves as a textbook example of “officer induced jeopardy”.

    As we press deeper, farther and wider we’ll uncover the ever-expanding and troublesome issue of “Wandering/Roaming Cops”.

    Wandering/Roaming Cops are law-enforcement officers fired by one department — sometimes for very serious misconduct, who then shortly thereafter find work in another agency.

    A perfect example of this would be Timothy Loehman, who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland, Ohio.

    The defendant, Former Deputy Sheriff Sean Grayson, had not one, but two previous DUI convictions and a history of personnel problems, but was still hired by the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office.

    Through an extensive number of exclusive Freedom of Information Act Requests (FOIA) we’ve obtained the:

    💥 direct audio of Sonya Massey’s mother, (Donna Massey) calling 9-1-1 emergency dispatch providing the dispatcher with advanced notice about her daughter’s mental state.

    💥 the last extensive communication from Sonya Massey as she called 9-1-1 emergency dispatch to notify them of a “prowler” at or nearby her home.

    💥 the troubling, gruesome, audio from the body worn camera video in the kitchen where Ms. Massey was fatefully gunned down.

    💥 Finally, Light ‘Em Up was extremely fortunate to receive a sound bite from the Governor of Illinois, the Honorable J.B. Pritzker — specifically on the Massey tragedy.

    Don’t move a muscle. Tune in to hear the shocking, sickening facts of this case.

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • The Radicalization Process: From "Normal" to "Violent Extremist", Being Humiliated, Losing One's Sense of Significance, & Othered. Motivated by Propaganda, Stripped of the Ability to Peacefully Pursue Purpose in a World Built on Exposing Your Devaluation
    Aug 3 2024

    Welcome back to Light ‘Em Up!

    Directly from your support, we are actively being downloaded in 1⃣1⃣3⃣ countries! Thank you so much!

    There is so much trouble in this world. The threat vectors are endless.

    This riveting, in-depth episode turned out to be one of our more educational, intensive and acclaimed episodes among our 80+ binge-worthy catalogue of work, now spanning 5 seasons.

    With this new episode, we delve into the vast, intricate and complex process of radicalization – specifically, radicalization that leads to violence or violent radicalization (VR).

    Radicalization is defined as: The process of supporting or engaging in activities deemed by others as in violation of important societal norms such as the killing of innocent civilians.

    VR is a significant and growing threat domestically and worldwide.

    VR can be understood as “an individual or collective process whereby normal practices of dialogue, compromise, and tolerance between groups/individuals with diverging interests are abandoned and one or more groups/individuals engage in violent actions to reach a specific (political, social, religious) goal”.

    In a context of increased social polarization, Violent Radicalization is affecting both majorities and minorities, targeting different forms of “otherness”:

    — racial
    — ethnic
    — religious
    — political and
    — gender-related as well.

    This process is influenced by a myriad of inner-connected push factors.

    𝐖𝐢𝐭𝐡 𝐭𝐡𝐢𝐬 𝐞𝐩𝐢𝐬𝐨𝐝𝐞 𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐥𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐧𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐨𝐛𝐣𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐯𝐞𝐬 𝐬𝐡𝐚𝐥𝐥 𝐛𝐞:

    We’ll examine and define: Radicalization.

    💥 Drill down into some of the pathways towards becoming radicalized.

    💥 Ask why does an individual turn to violence as a means of achieving his or her desired goals?

    💥 Discuss some of the strategies to attempt to prevent radicalization.

    💥 We’ll expound on the concept of “othering”.

    💥 Providing background and context to help you better understand the concept of radicalization.

    💥 In a world built upon and bent on exposing your devaluation, we’ll examine how the process of socialization can lead to the use of violence.

    💥 Interrogate how does the quest for personal significance constitute a major motivational and driving force that may push individuals towards radicalization and violent extremism.

    💥We’ll present empirical evidence consistent with our premise and discuss its implications for policies of preventing radicalization and in the hope of deradicalizing an individual or individuals.

    Fact: 4 U.S. Presidents have been killed by gunfire. Political violence is nothing new in the U.S., or globally. This is a problem that isn’t going away any time soon.

    You’ll be out of breath after you tune in to hear ALL of the explosive details as we investigate those things that are done in the darkness. We expose them by shining the antiseptic bright light of the truth upon them.

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    55 mins
  • If the West Carroll Parrish Sheriff's Department Has Nothing to Hide, Why'd They Lawyer Up? A Sister's Relentless Quest to Get at the Truth in the Sudden, Unexplained Death of Crystal McCrory Jones in Oak Grove, Louisiana
    Jul 13 2024

    Welcome to this brand new, fact-revealing episode of Light ‘Em Up.
    We're actively being downloaded in 113 countries! Thank you!

    As promised, we’d be there when there was any update of significance in the 2023 case of the mysterious death of Crystal McCrory Jones in Oak Grove, Louisiana.

    We're very fortunate again to speak with Jana Guyewski Latigar (Crystal's sister).

    The fact pattern shows:
    💥 Within 1 hour and 45 minutes, the cause of death was ruled a suicide.
    💥 Two days prior to her death — the Ring Doorbell Camera was cut off.
    💥 Crystal’s husband Tony Jones at one time was employed by the “investigating” agency (W. Carroll Parish Sheriff’s Office).
    💥 Law enforcement supervision allowed a friend of the deceased woman’s husband to “investigate” the case.
    💥 Argument has been proffered that Tony changed his story multiple times as to his whereabouts on the day Crystal died.
    💥 Shortly after his wife’s death, Tony vigorously tried to collect on a $63K group life insurance policy.

    In early May, our guest, Jana, traveled to our nation’s capital to advocate on behalf of her deceased sister and others who have suffered a similar tragedy.

    The purpose of the trip was to discuss and examine the inconsistencies in the Homicide Victims Family Rights Act of 2021 (sponsor Rep. Eric Swalwell D-CA) and to bring awareness to how the Act does nothing for families who wish to seek a new set of eyes on their loved ones’ investigations that are ruled an accident, undetermined or suicide.

    This bill establishes a framework for immediate family members of a murder victim under federal law to request a review of the victim's case file if the crime was committed more than 3 years prior, the murder was investigated by a federal law enforcement entity, all probative investigative leads have been exhausted, and no likely perpetrator has been identified.

    Law enforcement can argue whatever it wishes — working to save face doesn’t take any criminals off the streets.

    Members of the Oak Grove community have expressed (some more quietly than others) that this case is tremendously sad and tragic on multiple levels.
    It's a case plagued with far more questions than answers — because the authorities who should be actively seeking the answers are not.

    They’ve shared that due to what they’ve described as the "impotent, bungled investigatory management process and the apparent piss-poor procedures, policies and practices in place within the West Carroll Parish Sheriff’s Department (from the outset), there still has been no resolution, nor any modicum of justice for the victim, family or anyone — nor do they feel there will ever be any resolution or justice meted out". This case breaks their hearts.

    A death investigation is supposed to answer lingering questions, not generate more uncertainty.

    No matter who you are or what you do in life, if your spouse is dead in your home under any circumstances you can expect to be considered a suspect. That never happened for Crystal’s husband in this case. Why?

    Who cancelled the Ring Doorbell Camera contract and why?

    Was this coincidence or evidence of pre-planning, conspiracy or an attempt to cover the tracks of a murder?

    Who approved a former colleague of the husband to catch this case?
    Why the rush to judgement? What was the hurry?
    Optics matter! The truth matters!

    Seriously? — there aren’t a ton of suspects in sleepy little Oak Grove, Louisiana.
    Is a murderer walking the streets freely?

    Join us as Jana delivers her deeply heart-felt, powerful remarks that she graciously delivered in Washington, DC.

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    43 mins
  • The dark multi-billion-dollar underworld of Sports Betting and its Criminality: Are Major League Sports in Bed with Sports Betting Services to the Detriment of Their Own Players and Their Sport(s) as a Whole?
    Jun 22 2024

    Welcome back to this exclusive, probing, fact-finding, comprehensive investigative edition of Light ‘Em Up …

    We are currently being actively downloaded in 1⃣1⃣ 3⃣ countries, globally.

    We shine the antiseptic light of the truth on the multi-billion-dollar world of sports betting and the criminality that far too often surrounds these actions.

    Actions that most recently have encircled and swallowed more victims from ALL of the Major Sports Leagues:

    ⚾ Major League Baseball,

    🏀 The National Basketball Association,

    🏒 The National Hockey League,

    🏈 The National Football League … and beyond.

    We’ll dig into the crimes investigated by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the probe centered around Major League Baseball’s mega super star Shohei Ohtani of Japan and The Los Angeles Dodgers and his former interpreter Ippei Mizuhara, now a convicted felon.

    And we’ll probe into the most recent lifetime ban of the San Diego Padres infielder, the Venezuelan Tucupita Marcano, as the 24-year-old was found to have bet on and against his former team.

    These and many other scandals have sent shockwaves throughout the major league sporting community and raised questions about the integrity of the sports and have started to create a negative perception that the games are not “on the level”.

    The U.S. Sports betting industry set a record with nearly $11 billion in 2023 revenue.
    This huge year represented 44.5% year-over-year increase from 2022, which previously held the record.

    According to the American Gaming Association, 38 states and D.C. have legalized sports betting.

    Only Utah and Hawaii have completely banned all forms of gambling.

    We explore and investigate:

    ♦ The Chicago White Sox (dubbed the Black Sox due to the scandal) of Major League Baseball and the plan to fix the 1919 World Series.

    ♦ Jontay Porter (in the NBA),

    ♦ Tucupita Marcano (Venezuelan Infielder of The San Diego Padres in Major League Baseball),

    And we report on Major League Baseball Rule 21 which states: “Any player, umpire or club or league official or employee, who shall bet any sum whatsoever upon any baseball game in connection with which the bettor has a duty to perform, shall be declared permanently ineligible.”

    We probe into the signs and symptoms of a gambling problem and the behaviors that stem from “chasing your bets”. If you or someone you know may have issues with compulsive gambling 1-800 GAMBLER can provide educational resources and help to try to curb these harmful activities.

    Gambling takes many forms, but it’s always about taking chances. There’s typically money or other possessions on the line, and whether it’s the lottery, slots, or cards – winning or losing is always random.

    Problem gambling – or gambling addiction – involves the compulsion to take chances that are capable of damaging personal, family, or vocational pursuits. Unfortunately, the loved ones of the gambler are often affected as much as the gambler. It’s estimated that between 4 and 6 million Americans can be considered as having a gambling problem.

    For each of these, there is a family who is also suffering. Don’t suffer! Get help!

    Tune in for ALL the explosive details and follow our sponsors Newsly & Feedspot here:

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    55 mins