Former NYPD inspector Paul Mauro joins Fox Across America With Jimmy Failla to explain why it should not be taking this long to get some answers on the cocaine found in the White House earlier this month.

“The bottom line is it’s all traceable. And so they should be able to say to themselves, okay, it was not there on the video Friday afternoon. It is there on the video Sunday. Pull every video between Friday and Sunday. Pull the logs of everybody who was in that building, pull all the personnel who were working in the building that day. Anybody who works for the government has no expectation of privacy in their government phone. They’ll all have them. You take those phones, you do the positioning data, you see who was in that particular area. The positioning data can be accurate within 6 to 8 feet. That’s just Google Maps. So you do that, you’re going to get who was in that area. You start to narrow the universe and at the same time, you’re doing the interviews, you’re looking through the phones, obviously, and you’re matching it up to the video and you should really be able to narrow it down. And then not to be too sort of spooky about it, but you’re going to do the baggy itself for prints and DNA it. Yes, DNA it, get the DNA. It doesn’t matter if it’s not on file. Now you have the exemplar and tell the people who work there, well, we’re going to we’re going to swab you for DNA. You work in the White House. We want a voluntary swab out of you. Anybody who says no, I’m sorry, they go to the top of the list.”

Listen to the podcast to hear what else he had to say to Jimmy!