Look of Lies, clip
Transcipt
Look of lies
Timothy: Putting it nicely. Alright, so let’s play this next clip and let’s watch Beth Andrews here as she listens to him lie within a 20-minute period. Go ahead and play that, Jacob.
Detective Grant McCall: Well, the entire case revolves around a couple of things. One of them is the church as a whole. We’ve received complaints from people about the church.
Timothy: Okay, hang on a second. Okay, anything you want to say, Jacob, before I dive into this?
Jacob: No, go ahead.
Timothy: Look at his attitude. We’ve received complaints about the church. What is he, the pope of the city of Enumclaw?
Jacob: Yeah.
Timothy: And since when is a church being complained about grounds for any type of making that criminal?
Jacob: Correct. Yeah. How does that translate over to something illegal?
Timothy: It doesn’t. And he’s stating this before Beth Andrews as if this were an important point.
Jacob: Correct. As if this is a valid reason why he did the things that he did.
Timothy: Correct. And so that means all the other churches in Washington State aren’t receiving complaints.
Jacob: Yeah, I know. Exactly.
Timothy: Well, let me put, let me refer to that for you. Probably not. Because 99% of most people, if they called a police station and said, I don’t like the Jehovah’s Witness, or I don’t like the Mormons, or I don’t like the Baptist. What is the average police station going to do?
Jacob: Not our problem, sir.
Timothy: Not our problem. Grow up. Go get a life. Go away. Don’t bug us again. Right?
Jacob: Correct.
Timothy: But not in this case, because the city of Enumclaw, and Detective Grant McCall was a magnet for liars. So, he was willing to receive all of these calls. I mean, when we made a complaint, oh, well, it’s not happening. It’s not our business. We’re not going to deal with it. They certainly pushed us off.
Jacob: Correct.
Timothy: So, then he’s sitting before Beth Andrews here going, “Yeah, I’m going to present my most valuable facts as to why this case of a man falsely accused of a sexual crime is guilty. I’m going to present to you the thing you need to pay attention to, Judge Beth Andrews. And you know what it is? You know what it is, Beth Andrews? Do you know? Do you know? We have received complaints about the church.”
Jacob: Dun, dun, dun.
Timothy: Oh, really? Not, well, what are the complaints? Who made the complaints?
Jacob: I know.
Timothy: That’s not where the complaints deal with. None of that fact. It’s just we receive complaints. And Beth Andrews is going, “Okay, so you’ve received complaints. I get it. They’re evil. They’re bad. I’m going to, you’re a cop. Therefore, you never lie. You never say anything wrong. And we don’t hold you to any accountability. So, okay, fine. You’re free to sit here and use Washington State’s court system to belittle a church because they receive complaints.” Start from the beginning and let’s play it again.
Detective Grant McCall: Well, the entire case revolves around a couple of things. One of them is the church as a whole.
Timothy: Okay. Stop it right there. I covered the second part of the first part. This whole case, you correct me if I’m wrong, Jacob, this whole case, the false accusations toward Malcolm Frazier, the whole case about that accusation revolves around what, Jacob?
Jacob: A couple things. There’re a couple things here.
Timothy: Okay. What are those couple things?
Jacob: Well, I don’t know what the second one, but one, one of them. So, out of the two, there’s two. And one is we have received complaints.
Timothy: Now, back up. Actually, you are technically…
Jacob: Oh, the church as a whole. Oh, that’s true.
Timothy: Correct. You applied logic to the situation.
Jacob: Yeah.
Timothy: I’m looking at his two, and I could be wrong. One would be…
Jacob: Well, his words are two. Yeah.
Timothy: Yeah. It’s the whole church, but that’s not really, that’s a redundant point to the complaint. So really, you only got one. I hear what you’re saying. This is nonsensical.
Jacob: But in his words, yeah, “the church” as a whole. That was his words.
Timothy: To Beth Andrews, sitting right there. You can see her right there in the video.
Jacob: Yes.
Timothy: Whatever she’s doing there, taking notes, listening, like waiting for it to get over with. I can’t guarantee you what’s going on in her mind at this point. But the church as a whole, right? As we’ve made very, very clear, we have evidence of this was a hate crime instigated by a co-conspirator and Grant McCall. They wanted this accusation to bring down the whole church. King County prosecutors had to know that all the evidence pointed to the crime could not have happened, but they were willing to use that to take down the church. And that’s been made clear all along. All right. So, he’s lying. Any comments before we finish this video?
Jacob: No.
Timothy: Keep going then. Keep playing.
Detective Grant McCall: Church as a whole. We’ve received complaints from people about the church. So, the Sound Doctrine Church really doesn’t have anything to do with the investigation at all. It’s just that some of the spiritual things involved kind of money. The water doesn’t have money for water. But the Sound Doctrine Church has got really nothing to do with these allegations at all.
Jacob: Nothing. And he’s done nothing at all. And it’s nothing, nothing at all. And then it’s quiet. There’s like, it’s like a pause as he looks because that’s the end of his statement. He’s just done.
Timothy: Yeah. And you notice he is an expert liar because if you watch in the beginning, his face is not looking toward the judge.
Jacob: Yes.
Timothy: He’s talking more to the courtroom prior to the jury kind of thing. Right?
Jacob: Well, no, there’s no jury there. This is a misconduct.
Timothy: Okay. Misconduct, yeah.
Jacob: So right now, he’s looking over at Anne, who’s, I don’t know, asking her. Yeah. Asking her questions. She’s the one that gets to ask him questions. And he’s just talking to the entire court. Whoever is there.
Timothy: Well, here’s my, I’m going to rephrase it this way. My valid point. When he turns to lie, he turns and looks at her.
Jacob: Looks at who?
Timothy: He’s looking at the judge.
Jacob: No, he’s not right now. He’s looking to the side.
Timothy: Keep playing. Does he not turn and look at her?
Jacob: No. Well, it just ends. I don’t know what’s. Oh, right there. Right there.
Timothy: He’s looking at her.
Jacob: Yes. Yeah.
Timothy: Okay. So, what’s your favorite phrase, Jacob?
Jacob: I don’t know. What’s my favorite phase?
Timothy: You’re right.
Jacob: Oh, you’re right. Yes. Oh, yeah.
Timothy: Okay.
Jacob: Yes. You are correct. Yes. He’s looking right at the judge. Yes. Okay.
Timothy: Making contact. Making emphasis that this is lie is true.
Jacob: Yeah.
Timothy: It’s classic lying behavior. And again, feel free to correct me at any time. I cannot keep all this straight because I’m not an expert liar. I don’t even try.
Jacob: I don’t know.
Timothy: All right. Have we hammered in? Think about this. This is like full blown on lie.
Jacob: Yes.
Timothy: First, it’s this case has totally to do with the church. 20 minutes later, when that starts getting exposed by the defense attorney, he realizes, hey, this is not looking good. So, then what he does is he slings and says the complete opposite. Correct?
Jacob: Correct.
Timothy: The complete opposite. You have proof right here that he lies about everything. And it all has to do with taking down the church. And it worked. I mean, I have to give him credit. It did work.
Jacob: Yeah.
Timothy: Now, so what Beth Andrews does is she’s really boxing a corner. Clearly, our cameras are in the room. And it’s clear he’s done misconduct. I mean, there was a lot of other things to this aspect. But she whitewashes all the lies. She’ll sit there and go, “Well, I’m pretty confident that he was doing the best that he thought.” And we won’t get into that. We’ve covered that before. So, this all gets whitewashed. But she knows he’s lying. She knows he’s flat out lying. You can see it on her face. Now, I zoomed in and I took some stills of this. And let’s just zoom in and look at her face. You tell me that’s not a face that goes, what am I hearing here?
Jacob: Yes.
Timothy: Now, you correct me wrong. But that looks either one or two things. She’s got some illness or something.
Jacob: No, she doesn’t have an illness.
Timothy: Okay. She’s like, “I can’t believe what I’m hearing.”
Jacob: Yeah. This guy is crazy.
Timothy: Yeah. Loony. But then she still whitewashes it.
Jacob: I know. Yeah.
Timothy: I think. Isn’t there another couple of zooms? Keep going in there. It’s just kind of maybe not.
Jacob: This is the big. Yeah. Oh, this is very clear. It’ll be big on the screen.
Timothy: It just goes downhill from there. I mean, if you’re going to whitewash this kind of bad character of a cop, there’s no way you’re going to get a fair trial.
Jacob: No.
Timothy: You’re not even going to get. And when I say fair trial, that’s a long way from an honest trial.
Jacob: Yeah, exactly. Well, that’s. Yeah. An honest trial is impossible. Impossible. It’s impossible.
Timothy: They won’t allow it. The very laws are the way they twist them and things they leave out. It’s just not feasible. Just so happened in this particular trial. It got sharply into focus because we didn’t bow down to all their corruption. All right, Jacob. Any other thoughts on that? I don’t want to leave that too quick because people, again, I’m repeating. I’m trying to slow down here. Think about what you’re hearing and seeing and what McCall is getting by with. If Beth Andrews and then later, Judge Lori K. Smith are letting this man with these kinds of lies and corruption, we just looked at a couple to falsely accuse somebody else and take down a whole church and drive them from the city of Enumclaw. Do people just need to wake up to just how much corruption is going on? It’s all. It’s unfathomable. It really is.
Jacob: It is.
Timothy: Jacob, let’s play the next section and let’s get rolling.
Clip: The following Seattle King County prosecutors violated every right and fundamental rule of law are: Prosecutor Mark Larson, Prosecutor Lisa Johnson, Prosecutor Nicole Weston, Prosecutor Rich Anderson, Prosecutor Jason Simmons. The following Washington State judges foundationally destroyed rules of investigations and realities of logic are as follows: Chief Judge Beth M. Andrews, Chief Judge Lori K. Smith. Isaiah 59:4, “No one calls for justice, no one pleads his case with integrity; they rely on empty arguments and speak lies. They conceive trouble and give birth to evil.” The Consider podcast. Examining today’s wisdom, folly and madness. www.archive.consider.info.
Recap Court Corrupts
The prosecution of Malcolm Fraser, Defendant, Case No. 12-1-01886-0 KNT, was never about justice—it was about executing a premeditated attack on a religious community through abusive legal manipulations. Enumclaw Detective Grant McCall, King County Prosecutors, Judge Lori K Smith and Judge Beth M. Andrus used an impossible-to-commit crime by Malcolm Fraser to frame-up and destroy Sound Doctrine Church or Timothy Williams. The organized hate crime allowed Washington State’s anti-Christian mindset to demolish the rule of law as criminal activities went into full power-play mode.
The evidence is overwhelming, an innocent man sits in prison while a corrupt cop is free.
Washington State Supreme Court committing right rape, King County Prosecutor: Prosecutor Mark Larson, Prosecutor Lisa Johnson, Prosecutor Nicole Weston, Prosecutor Rich Anderson and Prosecutor Jason Simmons. Judge Beth M. Andrus, Judge Lori K. Smith, Prosecutor Leesa Manion, King County Prosecutors Office, City of Enumclaw.
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The Consider Podcast aims to convey opinions rooted in God’s holiness. Any discussions about justice or injustice should not be construed as legal advice or a call for action. There is no political agenda present. We do not provide individual moral guidance. Ultimately, each person is accountable to God and others for their actions or lack thereof. The sole focus of The Consider Podcast is the importance of surrendering to a life of repentance in accordance with the full gospel.
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