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The speaker tells a story about their aunt who was catcalled by a man and later kidnapped and raped by him and his accomplices. The perpetrators were caught but released due to their money. Some of them faced karma like disability and accidents. The speaker also mentions human trafficking and shares a story about people seeing their deceased daughter's spirit asking for a ride home. So it's about my tía, my mom's sister. She had just turned 15, and all she wanted to do, oh no, she was walking with my mom and my other tía, and some guy basically rolled up on the side and he put down the window and he was like, he was like catcalling her, my tía, and she kind of like, what do you call it? He was like, oh no, I don't want to be with you or anything. Also, that guy, he had a lot of money and he was like, I don't know, he was kind of like a narco, trying to get at my tía, and she said no, so he kind of got pissed, but he let it slide, right? But then later, like a few days later, she went to like a club, and he was there, and he asked her to dance, and she said no, but he kind of forced her to, and then he took her outside and, oh, he kidnapped her, and then he took her to like a, yeah, he took her, like a la forza, and then he took her to like a ranch, yeah, like a ranch. Huh? In Mexico. And he, there was like more guys there, well, yeah, and they all had guns, and they were all like, they all abused her, they raped her, and like, it was like eight guys, I think. Yeah, they all raped her and abused her, they like, burned her with like cigarettes, and like, they cut her and slit her and all that. They left her on like, really beat up, like he couldn't even recognize her, and, well, just because, I think because, just because she said no, like, it's like, he was that type of guy to do whatever he wanted, and like, because she said no, yeah, so that was like kind of his payback. He, they, they got caught, but they got, he had a lot of money, so they freed him, but yeah, they found her, she was still alive when they found her, but she died like a few, like, minutes after. Like, my grandpa found her. Yeah, she died. It's only sad, I don't know. It's, so they just dumped her, like, kind of like in the middle of the woods, like, it was just like anywhere, like, they already had like, spent like weeks trying to look for him, and they kind of had an idea it was him, but, yeah. So, yeah. And they found them, but. They dumped her. Yeah, I guess they dumped her, I don't know, I don't know, but they just like kind of left her there. She was 15. Yeah. She had just turned 15. No. No. No. I, I, that's the first thing I said, I was like, it's my tia, she had just turned 15. What? Why are you laughing? Oh, man. Anyway. But, yeah, they, they found, they arrested the guys, but since, like, they make a lot of money, they freed them, like, nothing, but they got their karma, well, most of them. My mom says that she saw one of them, like, here in California, in a wheelchair, and he couldn't even, like, talk or move or nothing, and, like, he was with his daughters, and my mom recognized him, but she didn't say nothing, and I was like. Yeah, he had, like, a whole family and everything, but he was, like, disabled, like, he couldn't talk, basically, just, like, in a wheelchair like this, nothing. One of them, he got in a really bad car crash, and he burned, like, burned his leg, and, like, basically, they all got their karma, like, really bad. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Like, human trafficking? Wait, what? Oh, yeah. Wait, who did they do that to? To your mom? Oh, my God. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, my God. Oh. So. So, yeah, because he, we recognized the van, and they called the cops and stuff, so later on, we found out, and that was before we knew that they were actually trafficking humans. Oh, yeah. So later on, we found out that that's what they were doing. Oh, my God. So it was kind of like a warning with the jewelry. Yeah. Human trafficking. That's scary. That's pretty scary. I thought that was pretty scary. So, Ethan, come on, share with us, if you wanted to talk about kidnapping. Do you have a story for us? Oh, no, I just like it. No, I mean, no, not like it, like. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah, very. Okay. Oh, you know what's also crazy? What? That, um, like, oh, shit. That's, like, my grandma says that some guys pull up to the house asking, like, oh, your daughter forgot this at my car, like, last night. But, but she's been dead, and, like, um, I guess, like, they see her, like, in a, in a certain corner, like, asking for a ride home, and, like, they take her home, but it's not, like, it's just her spirit. Yeah, in Mexico. Yeah. Like, basically, um, like, a guy's driving by, and, like, they see him, like, yeah, like, standing there asking for a ride, like, home. They take her home, and supposedly she forgets, like, her sweater or something, so they go back the next day, and, like, oh, like, um, like, I came to drop off your daughter last night, like, she forgot this or something, to my grandma. But. Yeah. But, like, but she's been dead, so. It's just, like, I don't know, like, I don't know. It's trippy. No. Wait, I don't get it. Yeah, it's, it's happened multiple times. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.