Fetty Wap Is Going To PRISON! Here's WHY...@harlemfetty
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And we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed It.
Today we're going to break down the Fedewap case.
Let's get into it, guys.
Okay, guys.
I...
I used to be a special agent on Light Screen Investigations.
This is the arrest paperwork.
Okay.
So here is the booking.
Cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.
Those are like two crimes that I'm a very good agent, very strong agent.
I did a lot of big cases.
I've done Title III Intercepts, which is basically listening to phones.
I've written hundreds of affidavits to arrest people.
I've done, I've been to grand jury and testified a million times.
I've done big cases.
I've done all right.
And we are back.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to the Fresh and Fit.
Oh, I mean, Fed It podcast.
We got a lot to talk about today, guys.
We're going to talk about the Fetty Wap case, okay?
For some of you guys that don't know, we got a lot to go over.
So I'll just give you guys a quick little, well, quick announcements first before we get into the show.
Number one, thank you guys for being here.
You could be anywhere else in the world, but you're here watching me right now.
I had to push the show back because of the Super Bowl, obviously.
And we're here now, which is great.
So shout out to you, Keem Chillin.
Five bucks.
Super chat.
Thank you so much.
I got some assistants here in the background, by the way, as well.
I may or may not reveal who it is on camera later on, but we'll see.
But so just so you guys know, tomorrow we're going to have Bandman Kevin.
We're going to talk about NFTs tomorrow.
And then we're also going to have some lovely ladies on the podcast.
We're going to move the show probably to around 8 p.m., guys, Eastern Standard Time.
So stay tuned for that.
And yeah, other than that, man, let's pretty much get into this bad boy because we got a lot to cover here.
I don't estimate that this one is going to be as long as the other shows, but there's some things here that we definitely need to talk about.
Christian Warsham, thank you so much.
10 bucks.
Pump for tonight.
Thank you so much, my friend.
This is going to be a good one, by the way, guys.
I'm really excited to do this one.
So a quick little itinerary of what we're going to do here.
We're going to go over who is Fetty Wap.
Number two, we're going to talk about the DOJ press release.
And surprise, surprise, guys, this was a state case before.
It's a federal case.
Nobody told you that, though, huh?
We're going to break that down as well.
Also, I'm going to give you guys a background on how drug trafficking actually works.
As you guys know, I'm going to give you guys a little bit of my background, how I got into how I became an agent and the type of cases I investigated.
And if you guys want, I actually have some old documents from a drug case I actually did back in 2018.
If you guys want me to go over that as well.
And then we're also going to talk about how drug cases are made as far as like informants, electronic surveillance, etc.
And then we're going to talk about the federal indictment, which I have.
And then we're also going to talk about he's released on bond.
And then, of course, I'm going to give my predictions on what I think is going to happen on this investigation.
There's a lot of moving parts, guys.
Federal drug cases are not easy to beat.
They're actually very difficult.
But, you know, we'll see what happens here and go from there.
So, all right, cool.
So let's get right into it, guys.
And we got 400 of you guys in here right now.
So do me a quick favor.
Like the video.
I appreciate it.
I took a bunch of notes for you guys.
We got a great show planned.
So let's get into it.
Okay.
So number one, who is Fetty Wap?
So break it down for y'all right now.
Some of you guys might not know who this guy is.
So here he is.
This is Fetty Wap right here.
Willie Jr.
Maxwell II, born June 7th, 1991.
Better known by a stage name, Fetty Wap, is an American rapper, singer, and songwriter.
He rose to prominence after his debut single, Trap Queen.
You guys know what I'm talking about here?
1738.
Yeah, that one.
That song.
Reached the number two on the U.S. Billboard, Hot 100, in May 2015.
This helped Fetty Wap secure a record deal with 300 Entertainment.
The single was followed up with two top 10 U.S. singles in the U.S., 679, and then featuring Remy Boys and My Way, which if you guys don't remember that song, baby, won't you come my way?
I don't mean to butcher the song, but you guys get the idea, okay?
This guy is a hitmaker.
I mean, I remember from when he came out back in like 2014, like to like 2017, anyone, any major feature had this dude on it, man.
Fetty Wap, very well known for his vocals and singing, and he just does hooks, man.
You know what I'm saying?
He was the T-Pain of the 2014 era.
You know what I'm saying?
He was like the T-Pain for us.
And T-Pain, for you guys that don't know, was like the auto-tune era from like, oh, I want to say from like 2005 to like 2010, like T-Pain was on top.
And then, you know, things started to shift and you got other people that are famous for singing hooks.
And then let's see here.
Both were featured on Feddy Wap's Eponymus.
I probably butchered that debut album released in September 2015 and peaking atop the U.S. Billboard 200 Fetty chart.
So he was born and raised in Patterson, New Jersey, born with glaucoma in both eyes.
Maxwell revealed in a 2015 interview that doctors were unable to save his left eye and instead fitted him with an ocular prosthesis.
He attended Eastside High School before dropping out in order to pursue his music career.
And for some of you guys that are wondering how he got the name Fetty Wap, well, guys, slang in the East Coast in general is: hey, I'm getting that Fetty.
It means money.
And then WAP, he took after Gucci Mane, who goes by the name Gooop, right?
So he named himself Fetty Wap in honor of Gucci Mane.
Gucci Man is a big inspiration to a lot of these newer artists.
But yeah, guys, Patterson, New Jersey is the hood.
That's definitely not a safe place to be.
So we kind of know his background.
You know, Fetty Wap is referred to as music as ignorant RB.
That's actually very true.
What a perfect description of his music.
He combines singing and rapping.
Fetty Wap usually wears the flag of Haiti in honor of his daughter's late grandmother and draws influences from Haitian culture.
In an interview with Civil TV, he said that he fell in love with the culture.
People don't know what Haiti means to me.
On several occasions, Fetty Wap also cited Atlanta-based rapper Gucci Man as a major influence in his music, which is where he got the WAP from, guys, for Goo Op.
And shout out to all my Haitians out there, all the Z's, all the Zoes.
So we know who Fetty Wap is, guys, right?
Like, I mean, this guy, he's famous.
You know, this is him performing in 2015, Patterson, New Jersey, etc.
Okay.
So let's go back here.
Okay, so now, let's see here.
I want to make sure I didn't miss any of these chats.
We got W. Alfonso.
I love this channel.
Five bucks.
Thank you so much.
Isaac Jason Move.
Sheesh, bro.
Was worried you weren't going to be able to live stream, but I'm glad it worked out.
Also, shout out to FNF and Unplugged Fitness.
Thank you so much, bro.
I appreciate that.
And yeah, don't worry, guys.
You know, the only reason I had to push it back was because of the Super Bowl.
I didn't want to make you guys have to pick between the Super Bowl or watching this, so it's okay.
Definitely do Kwame Kilpatrick.
I don't know who that is, but I'll do research.
I know you guys want me to cover quite a few.
I got a whole list of cases that you guys want me to do.
So don't worry.
Patterson, yeah, you better only go there in the daytime.
Yeah, you're right, King Laybacks.
But yeah, I don't personally don't watch sports, guys, but I know you guys do, so I didn't want to do that.
So, as you guys know, back in October, Feddy Wap got hit with some very serious drug charges, okay?
He got arrested at the Rolling Loud Music Festival.
But before we get into how he actually got arrested, let's go over what led to the events of him getting arrested.
Okay, so let me close this tab up.
Okay, so I'm going to share the, I'm going to share a screen with y'all real fast.
You know what?
Maybe I can do.
Okay, don't worry about this.
Ignore this for now.
I'm going to move this over here.
Bang.
Okay, there we go.
So, just so you guys know, I had to do some research here, but I figured out that the Fetty Wap case, the federal case that we have now, was actually a state case first, which is very alarming to me because the fact that it was a state case first and then they decided, you know what, let's take this federal tells me there's a lot of moving parts.
But let's read this press release from the DEA, okay?
Drug Enforcement Administration for all my foreign people out there.
The DEA is in charge of handling domestic drug investigations in the United States.
Okay, they investigate violations of Title 21.
Okay.
So hold on, let me enlarge this a little bit so y'all can see what the hell's going on here.
Hold on.
Enlarge.
Oh, it's control plus duh.
Okay.
Okay.
So multi-agency investigation leads to arrest of five, seizure of 17 kilograms of cocaine, two kilograms of heroin, 4,000 counterfeit oxycodin pills, oxy pills, nine guns, and 1.5 million of drug proceeds.
And this guy's, look at the date, was June 29th, 2020, was a press release.
Okay.
So this is in Long Island, aka Strong Island.
Okay.
USDEA special agent in charge of the New York Division, Ray Donovan, Suffolk County District Attorney Timothy D. Sunny, U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General, Northeast Area Special Agent in Charge, Matthew Madaferi.
God damn, that's a mouthful.
And Suffolk County Police Commissioner Gerald Dean Hart today announced the arrest of five individuals and the seizure of 17 kils of cocaine, 2 kilograms of heroin, and 4,000 oxy pills, more than 1.5 million in cash, and numerous firearms in a takedown of an alleged multi-million dollar cross-country drug distribution network operating in Suffolk County out there in Long Island, aka Strong Island.
This investigative investigation exemplifies how drug traffickers have been impacted by the coronavirus, adopting smuggling methods, transportation routes, and money laundering operations to maintain security and social distancing, said Ray Donovan, special agent in charge of the DA New York Division.
Allegedly, the SOSA organization operation was a major drug supplier for Long Island and the tri-state area.
And by seizing nine guns and millions of dollars worth of elicit narcotics, law enforcement is saving lives.
Okay.
And this is them basically, you know, these are, these are the people giving their statements.
So we'll just skip this because we don't really care about what the, you know, what the postal inspector and everything.
This always happens, guys.
So anytime there's, let me just bring this.
Hold on.
Stop the show.
Anytime there's a big takedown, okay, pretty much the agencies, right?
The prosecutors, et cetera, sometimes if the case is really big, like the director of the agency will show up and they'll do a press release.
They'll do a press conference.
And when they do the press conference, you know, they're all sitting there with the shirt and ties and everything else like that.
And they talk about, oh, yeah, we law enforcement one today.
We got this and blah, blah, blah.
So they give their statements, okay?
Give me ones in the chat if you guys want me to read the statements of the district attorney and the postal inspection person, or if you guys want me to just get right into the facts of the case.
Give me ones in the chat if you guys want me to read their statements.
If not, I'll get right into the facts of the case.
Two, if you want me to get into the facts, one if you want me to read their read their statements.
Ones.
Okay.
Looks like you guys want me to read it.
Okay.
Fair enough.
I will.
Are we getting all ones over there?
Pretty much.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
All ones.
Okay.
All right then.
So let's see here.
Okay.
So this is a DEA special agent in charge that said this.
So here we go.
The magnitude of this drug investigation is enormous.
They were responsible for peddling millions of dollars in narcotics on almost a weekly basis.
District Attorney Sinney said, Not only did this organization continue their illicit operation during the coronavirus pandemic, they also exploiting the limited availability of certain narcotics during the health crisis to generate even greater profits off their sales.
With this takedown, we've put a large-scale drug distribution network out of business and prevented 17 kilos of cocaine, two kilos of heroin, and 4,000 counterfeit oxy pills from reaching the streets of Suffolk County.
This was outstanding work by the members of the office's special narcotics bureau in collaboration with the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Suffolk County Police Department, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and all our law enforcement partners involved in this investigation.
Okay, stop the show.
So I want to make this very clear to you guys right now.
The state is prosecuting this case according to this press release because you got the district attorney.
Okay, guys, remember how I told you guys before there's two different types of ways to get prosecuted.
You got the state and the feds.
So the feds, you got something called assistant United States attorneys or U.S. attorneys.
Okay.
The state has something called district attorney, they got district attorneys or ADA, assistant district attorney, okay?
And the district attorney, Sini, right, this guy basically is the head of all the ADA.
So the district attorney is the leader, and then you got assistant district attorneys underneath him, hence the word assistant before district attorney.
Same thing with the federal prosecutor's office, with the AUSA's office.
It's you got the United States attorney, and then underneath him, you got the what?
Assistant United States attorneys.
So ADA versus AUSA, this is a state case, okay, because the state is there for the press conference, all right?
But you got two federal agencies involved in this case: you got the DEA and you got the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, which this is going to make sense in a second why the U.S. Postal Inspection was involved.
And for some of you guys that are wondering, U.S. Postal Inspection Service are basically criminal investigators that investigate crimes that are used facilitating the U.S. mail.
Okay.
So let's keep going on here.
Hope you guys are enjoying this.
Like the video because I ain't nobody going to give y'all a breakdown of these federal cases like this on the internet because, hell, I used to do these cases.
So, all right.
This is another example of the focus and tenacity of the men and women of this department as they continue their relentless work to protect our residents.
Suffolk County Police Commissioner Geraldine Hart said, Okay, so she's the head of the Suffolk County Police Department, right?
Which is actually one of the highest paid police departments in the United States, by the way, guys.
New York is not cheap to live in.
By intercepting seven kilos of cocaine, two kilograms of heroin, 4,000 oxy pills, and arresting five people, three of whom are major drug traffickers.
This investigation has significant impact on the drug supply in Suffolk County and will help us stop the spread of narcotics.
I would like to recognize efforts of our narcotics section detectives and the members of the DEA task force, as well as our partners in the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office.
Okay, guys, this is very common in major cities in the United States, whether it's New York City or adjacent cities that are close by or whatever it may be.
This is all over the United States.
Drug task forces, okay?
And what is a drug task force?
A drug task force, guys, is typically either run by The DEA, a HIIDA program, high-intensity drug trafficking area.
That's what HIDA stands for, guys.
And it's basically a federal mandate that gives money to law enforcement agencies that allows them to do drug trafficking investigations.
Okay.
And these drug task force agencies, typically it's made up of federal, state, municipal police, etc.
And they all work together to combat drug trafficking in high drug trafficking areas, aka major cities.
All right.
So DEA task force, this is very common.
That DEA has task forces all over the place.
And I explained to you guys on other episodes what task force officers are.
Okay.
If you guys want me to give that explanation again, we'll stay tuned for the rest of the show.
So when drug trafficking organizations seek to use the Postal Service to further the distribution of narcotics, the U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General will work tirelessly with our law enforcement partners to disrupt the criminal enterprise, said Matthew Madafari Matafari, special agent charge of the U.S. Postal Office of Inspector General, Northeast Area.
Today's announcement is culmination of outstanding work, and I would like to commend the DEA Task Force, the Suffolk County Police Department, and the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office for their tireless efforts in this investigation.
Okay, so we got all the, you know, all the politically correct announcements of, you know, what they're going to say.
Anytime, like I said, anytime there's a big arrest, every agency figurehead is going to show up, make their little statement, and, you know, talk, you know, basically it's them talking their shit like, hey, we got you, motherfuckers, but in a very politically correct way.
So let's get into the investigation, okay?
An investigation was launched in May 2019 by the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office, DEA, and Suffolk County Police Department into alleged drug dealings by James Sosa, 25 of Wading River, Brian Sullivan, 24 of Lake Grove, and their associates.
Keep these names in mind, guys, okay?
James Sosa and Wading and Brian Sullivan.
The alleged drug trafficking ring would purchase narcotics on the west coast of the United States for transportation back to Suffolk County.
It is alleged that members of this drug trafficking ring would utilize various methods to move narcotics and narcotics proceeds, proceeds guys as money over the course of this investigation, often switching these methods to thwart detection by law enforcement.
These methods include cross-country trips and vehicles and airplanes, as well as the use of mail carrier services, aka the USPS, as we discussed earlier.
Pursuant to the investigation, law enforcement officers executed search warrants on June 27th at six locations in connection with the alleged drug distribution ring, including residences in Lake Grove, Wading River, Port Jefferson Station, Coram, Selden, and Brentwood.
Okay, stop the show.
Let me make this extremely clear for you guys, just so you guys know what the fuck is going on here.
Okay.
It goes here.
They executed search warrants on June 27th at six locations in connection with the alleged drug distribution ring.
Okay.
I did drug cases for a long time.
Anytime you get a search warrant to look at a house, nine out of ten times there's an informant involved.
Okay.
I'm going to say that one more time for y'all.
Nine out of ten times you doing a search warrant at a house.
There was an informant or an undercover agent involved to some degree, most likely an informant.
Okay.
Because drug trafficking is a very, hey, this is our type thing.
You're not involved.
You know, let me deal with only a small group of people.
I'm not going to sell drugs to you unless I know who you are.
I'm not going to move drugs for you unless I know who you are, etc.
So the fact that they did these search warrants already tells me I know they got informants involved.
Okay.
And on top of that, I want to make this very clear.
This was a state case first, guys.
Okay.
To get a state search warrant is significantly easier than getting a federal search warrant.
All right.
I'm going to say that one more time for y'all.
Getting a state search warrant is far easier than getting a federal search warrant.
Okay.
So this happens a lot of the times with these task forces.
What they'll do is, if I'm, if I'm, if I'm a DEA special agent, right?
And I'm on a task force with state and locals, et cetera, and I know that this house, we've been looking at this house for a while.
We know that they're selling drugs out of that house.
Maybe we sent an informant or undercover agent in to go and buy drugs.
It's going to be far easier and faster, by the way, for me to have, you know, a detective that works for the state, whether he's, you know, Suffolk County detective or he's a New York State police or NYPD, whatever the hell, it's going to be way easier for him to go ahead and get a search warrant through a state judge versus me going through a federal judge.
Okay.
The state judges, the state judge system is a lot better.
They tend to work more flexible hours.
You can go to a judge's house at night sometimes and get assigned.
Can you do it federally?
Yes, you can, but it needs to be an emergency.
So with drug cases, it's almost always better to work with the state and get state search warrants if you can.
Okay.
So that tells me off rip that I know that they probably did state search warrants on this because they had the ADAs involved.
And ADAs will get you a search warrant back much faster than the feds will.
Okay.
And I'll just be honest with you.
It's easier to get a state search warrant than it is to get a federal one, bro.
I'm just going to keep it a thousand with y'all.
Anytime I needed to hit a house quick, I would always go to my state guy and be like, hey, can you get a search warrant in a couple hours?
Yes, I can.
Because remember, guys, when you're looking at a drug house, they can destroy the evidence immediately.
They might not have dope when you go ahead and want to do a search warrant.
So you need to act quickly.
You know what I'm saying?
When you got information that the house is being used, you need to move fast.
All right.
So I'm willing to bet that they had done operations on each of these six stash houses prior to getting the search warrants, maybe a day or two in between.
Got the search warrants all cut at the same time, hit all six residences at the same time and got this big hit that they got right here, which we're going to go over in a second.
All right.
The search warrants resulted in the seizure of 17 kilos of Coke, two kilos of heroin, approximately $1.5 million in cash, approximately 4,000 oxy pills, nine firearms, and drug paraphernalia consistent with packaging and sales, including kilo presses and cutting agents.
In addition, numerous luxury vehicles used in alleged transport of narcotics have been seized and were forgo forfeiture proceedings, which means they basically seized his assets and now they're going to basically, they're going to take it.
They're going to seize it and forfeit it.
You know, it's been forfeited to the U.S. government now, right?
And you guys probably want some pictures of what was taken.
I got y'all.
Don't worry.
I got the pictures right here.
Your boy's prepared.
Okay.
So here's some of the money that they took.
Okay.
Here's some of the money.
Right.
Here's the pressing stuff that they used to conceal the dope.
And here's a couple of the keys, man.
Oh, Lord.
Not looking good, man.
Not looking good at all.
This is quite a bit of dope, guys.
And I'll tell you guys this.
This is a big hit.
17 kilos of cocaine and two kilos of heroin and $1.5 million of cash.
This is fucking huge.
Okay.
Now, granted, I used to work on the Mexican border, so 17 kilos of cocaine is a joke.
But in the interior, you know, in Long Island, this is a big fucking deal.
All right.
This is a huge seizure.
All right.
So as you guys can see, and also, you know what made it is you guys are probably wondering, Myron, how did you figure out that this was a state case first?
So look, I see here Suffolk County District Attorney's Office.
And I was like, what the fuck?
Why are they involved?
And then also, I used to work with DEA very closely.
If you guys see here, and let me enlarge it for y'all.
So this right here, guys, these evidence bags, these are DEA evidence bags, okay?
Because I can see the seal right here, right?
Like I told y'all, I used to work with the DEA very closely because I used to do drug cases.
So, you know, it would always be, and to be honest with you, it's better to give them the drugs when you work with them because they have like a whole system with drugs because that's what they do.
They do drug cases.
Technically, as, you know, I used to work for HSI.
Could I seize the drugs too?
For sure.
I have Title 21 authority as well.
But it was always better to go with the DEA when it came to seizing drugs because they can lab test it for you.
They have the chemists.
You know what I'm saying?
Drugs is what they do.
DEA is a single authority agency, Title 21, baby, which is drugs in the federal system.
Okay.
So these evidence bags are very familiar.
And that's what had me very confused.
So I was like, did the FBI really do this case?
Because you guys are going to see here in a second.
The FBI gets involved as well, which I have a suspicion of how that happened.
But yeah, so here's the drugs, right?
And yeah, here we go.
Bam.
Heroin, cocaine, et cetera.
So this is no bueno for these guys.
All right, let me minimize this joint.
So let's go back into reading this DEA press release, okay?
So, and hey, yo, guys, like the video.
Give me some ones in the chat if you guys are enjoying this and you guys are learning quite a bit because I'm dropping a lot of knowledge right here that you ain't gonna get anywhere else on the internet.
Give me some ones in the chat if you guys are enjoying this.
Okay.
Because like I said, nobody has this type of knowledge on YouTube.
That's a fact.
Okay.
Glad.
Okay.
Awesome.
Awesome.
I'm glad you guys are enjoying it.
Like the video.
There's 1,300 of you guys in here.
Do me a solid.
You guys don't got to donate any money.
Just like the video.
And it helps a lot with the algorithm, especially since we're going on a little bit later.
Okay.
So law enforcement previously seized one kilo of cocaine earlier in the investigation for a total of 17 kilos of cocaine, two kilos of heroin, and 4,000 oxypils.
The cocaine has an estimated street value of 1.6 million and the heroin has an estimated street value of 520,000.
However, the resale value of the drugs, once they are processed and mixed with cutting agents, is estimated to be more than 4 million.
Okay.
You guys are probably wondering, what the hell?
Yes, guys, cocaine is extremely expensive.
When I was an agent, a kilo of cocaine in Laredo, Texas was worth about $29,000.
Okay.
And then if you were able to get that kilo of cocaine up to Chicago, because so Laredo, Texas, guys, is like pretty much like in the center of Texas.
Okay.
It's right on the Mexican border and it connects to Interstate Highway 35.
Okay.
Interstate 35 pretty much takes you right into San Antonio, Texas.
Once you get into San Antonio, Texas, you got Interstate 10 and you got Interstate, Which goes east to west, and then you got the 410, right?
And if you get on Interstate 10, that could take you to either Los Angeles or to Jacksonville, east to west.
It goes across the entire country.
And then if you take 35 all the way up, I think it takes you to Minneapolis or it takes you somewhere to Indiana.
But you can get off there and go into Chicago, which a lot of the times that's where the drugs were going was some kind of destination city, whether it was going to go to San Antonio, Dallas, it can go to Houston because remember, Interstate 10, once you get to San Antonio, you can head west, no, excuse me, east, and that will take you to Houston.
So, so, what was I going with this?
Oh, so the first the point I'm trying to make is this: the once, okay, so a kilo cocaine in Mexico is about, at the time when I was there, about five to ten thousand, okay, as soon as you cross into the border, it's about twenty nine thousand in Laredo, okay?
Then from there, once you get it past the checkpoint, it goes up in price to about you know $35,000, $40,000.
You get it past the border patrol checkpoints, et cetera.
Then, once you get it to Chicago, it's worth about $50,000, okay?
Same with New York City, same with Atlanta.
These are the main major city hubs, okay?
Houston, Atlanta, New York, Chicago, LA, Phoenix.
These are all huge drug hub cities.
Okay, so it goes exponentially.
And then from there, once you get it to your main destination, what do they do?
They start, they distribute it, and then they cut it down and they mix it with cutting agents, and then you're able to double the money.
So a kilo cocaine that was worth $50,000, now it's worth $100,000, if not more, because you can cut that Coke up, right?
And put cutting agents in it and stretch that money out.
So that's when they say the drugs have been stepped on, et cetera, that's what they mean.
It means it's been used, cutting agents have been used in it to dilute the quality of the drug, but creates more volume of said drug so that they can make more money.
So that's why when I was in Texas, right, in Laredo, Texas, all the drugs I was seasoning was like 99% pure because it was coming right across the border fresh.
All right.
So that's how, and I can go over in detail how drug smuggling works on another episode, guys, because that's its own episode.
But that is typically how drugs work as far as monetary value goes in the United States.
The closer it is to the border, the less it is in value.
The further away from the border it is, the more expensive it becomes, okay?
Especially once you get it past border patrol checkpoints, you want to get off the southwest border.
So, yeah, that's how it goes.
Cool.
So let's continue on here with this.
The individual arrested in connection with the alleged drug trafficking operation are as follows.
James Sosa, 25 Waiting River, two counts of operating as a major trafficker, a Class A felony counts, blah, blah, blah.
This is basically all state charges, guys.
Okay.
And then Brian Sullivan, 24 of Lake Grove, is charged with two counts of operating as a major drug trafficker, A1 felony, right?
Which is the New York.
These are all New York statutes.
Okay.
Deshaun Jones, 33 of Pasick, New Jersey, you're charged with operating as a major trafficker, a class A felony, you know.
Anthony Leonardi, 46 of crime, is charged with conspiracy in the second degree.
A Class B felony, Leonardo Leonardi, was arraigned yesterday and was released on supervised release.
Anthony Sinte, Passay, New Jersey, is charged with criminal possession of a control substance in the first degree.
This guy, guys, is a fucking corrections officer.
And you guys are going to see here in a second why I think the feds took this case here in a second.
Myron Jr. dead.
How do you know all this?
Fuck you, bro.
Yeah, some girl said that I got her pregnant.
That's how that started.
Yeah, so they consistently troll me now on that.
Yeah, it's very funny.
But anyway, thank you, Myron Jr.
I can't escape this guy.
So if convicted of the top count, Sosa, Sullivan, and Jones each face a maximum sentence of 25 years to life in prison.
And then this investigation involved numerous investigative techniques, including the use of court-authorized eavesdropping.
Hold on, stop the fucking show.
I don't know what the fuck court-authorized eavesdropping means, but what that tells me is that's probably something called Title III, guys, okay, in the federal system.
What is a Title III?
Well, I'm glad you asked.
I will actually pull it up for you guys right now because I've talked about Title III's many times.
And hold on, Title III.
All right.
So I'm going to pull this up for y'all.
Okay.
So here we go.
I'm going to give it to you guys straight from the Bureau of Justice Assistance with the government site.
Okay.
So a Title III, guys, Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, aka the Wiretap Act, guys.
Okay.
Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, Wiretap Act.
Pretty much 18 USC 2510 to 22 as amended by the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, the Communication Assistance to Law Enforcement, right?
Khalia, anti-terrorism and effective death penalty of 1996, etc.
These statutes are coded 18 USC 2510.
Okay, so 18 USC, you know what, man?
I gotta.
What I'm gonna do for you guys one day, I'm gonna pull up one of my old affidavits I did for a drug case that I did back in the day where I did a wiretap like this.
It is not easy to listen to someone's phone, okay?
Well, Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act, also known as the Wiretap Act, prohibits the unauthorized non-consensual interception of wire oral or electronic communication by government agencies as well as private parties, establishes procedures for obtaining warrants to authorize wiretapping by government officials and regulates the disclosure and use of authorized intercepted communications by investigative and law enforcement officers.
So what I'm willing to bet, guys, is when they say court authorized eavesdropping, this is probably the state's version of Title III, okay?
Because remember, this was a state case first.
Matter of fact, you know what?
Let's Google this bad boy.
Let's investigate this together.
Court authorized, because I've never heard eavesdropping before.
New York.
Let's see here.
Oh, there we go.
Eavesdropping means wiretapping, mechanical overhearing of conversation or the intercepting or accessing electronic communication.
Let me tell you guys something about wiretaps.
If the feds are listening to your phones, it's a fucking rap.
I'm going to say that again.
If the police are listening to your phone, it is a fucking rap, guys.
So this tells me that what that means is that the state, okay, was listening to these guys' phones, which makes perfect sense because the fact that they did six search warrants, okay?
I told you guys already, if they're doing search warrants, that means there's informants involved.
And when there's informants involved, what do you do?
You build the case, okay?
You have the informant make dirty phone calls.
He, you know what?
Fuck.
Before I get into this, let me make sure I have.
Okay, I'm looking through my notes real fast.
Okay, before I break down how drug cases work, we're going to talk, we're going to revisit this, okay?
So put a little pause on this for a second.
I'm going to come back and talk about wiretaps and how drug cases are actually built from the ground up in a second.
But now that we read the state case, right?
Now we know.
So they used eavesdropping.
So these guys were listening to phones, state phones, of course, right?
Excuse me.
They did state affidavits to get wire intercepts.
So they were wiretapping through the state.
Okay.
The search warrants were executed by law enforcement agents from DEA's Long Island District Office, which includes the following agencies: New York State Police, Suffolk County District Attorney Office, Suffolk County Police Department, Suffolk County Sheriff's Office, Nassau County District Attorney, Nassau County Police Department, Nassau County Sheriff's Office, and the Hempstead Police Department.
The Suffolk County Police Department also provided extensive additional resources from their narcotic session, firearm suppression team, emergency services section, and K-9 section to execute these warrants.
Guys, this is why drug task forces work together.
See how they're all working together and leveraging each other's skills and abilities to go ahead and do the case?
Okay.
Because here's the thing with the DEA that people don't know.
Did you guys know that the DEA has maybe like 2,000 or 3,000 agents nationwide?
It's a very small agency, guys.
Most of the DEA's manpower actually comes from task force officers, which I'm going to break down for y'all right now.
We talked about it on other episodes, but okay, you know what?
Give me ones in the chat if you guys want me to explain again what task force officers are, or I'll just get, or give me a two if you guys want me to just keep going on as far as like why task forces work.
So one in the chat, if you guys want me to define what task force officers are, break it down again, or two, you guys want me to just get into how task forces work.
King Life goes five bucks.
If Myron was at court, all you need to hear him say when he was listening to interior phone calls was, I took notes.
Okay, let's see here.
What are we looking like?
More ones or twos?
More ones?
Okay.
All right.
So, all right.
What's a task force officer?
Okay.
Task force officer, guys, aka TFO is someone who is a state or local law enforcement officer nine out of ten times.
Like, let's say in this case, a detective from the Suffolk County or from the Suffolk County Police Department, right?
A detective from that police department.
Well, if he's a task force officer with the DEA, what happens is now he's designated where he can do federal cases and state cases.
So he has authority in both courts.
He can go to a federal judge or he can go to a state judge.
And the reason why these guys are so vital is because they have dual authority.
A DEA special agent cannot prosecute a state case, but a Nassau County Police Department officer can prosecute a state case and he can also prosecute a federal case.
So he has both authorities.
So he carries two different badges.
And how do you become a task force officer?
Well, most of the time, I think with the DEA especially, you go over to Quantico, you go to their academy, you take some federal drug trafficking classes, you can do some training, and then they basically give you a silver DEA badge.
You become a TFO, and then bang, now you're a federal agent, essentially.
You have all the authorities of a DEA special agent.
Okay.
And the other thing, too, why task forces are so big is because the feds pay for the state's overtime.
Okay.
So let's say, you know, you said you got New York State Police here, you got Suffolk County Police Department, et cetera.
All these guys are part of the task force, right?
With the DEA.
Well, when you're out there doing surveillance, it can add up very quickly, right?
You could be spending a lot of money on paying guys overtime to watch a drug house, especially drug cases.
It's a lot of surveillance.
It's a lot of hours.
A lot of manpower is required, right?
So what you're able to do with the feds is the state police, the locals, et cetera, when they work overtime, guess what?
Their department doesn't pay for the overtime.
The feds do.
So what happens is they pay the, you know, they pay their guys the overtime.
Then the feds, most of the time, they'll reimburse the agency.
So all these guys on the task force that are TFOs with DEA, what happens is when they work overtime, they submit their timeshoot as usual to their boss in their home agency.
Then they're paid.
But that money that they're paid, all the overtime that they're paid for for the DEA gets reimbursed by the federal government.
That's why guys love to be on these task forces because the department doesn't pay.
So you're able to basically get someone over as extra manpower.
And it's like an added force.
And they have dual authority.
So it's a win-win for all agencies.
You know what I'm saying?
So that's why task forces are so big.
And as you guys can see, there was quite a bit of assistance here from the state with the fire suppression team, canines, et cetera.
Feds don't have these kind of resources a lot of times, guys.
Okay.
Bro, my dad's cool and y'all like the video.
Thanks, Myron Jr.
And then it says here, the case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Kristen Barnes of the Special Narcotics Bureau.
So it's a state case.
Now, let's fast forward.
And next thing you know, now we got a Fed case.
Okay.
So the case was brought up and made into a federal case, which I didn't realize until I was looking at those pictures like I told y'all before.
Now, let me make sure I have.
Okay, cool.
So let's read the federal case, guys, which has quite a bit of overlap with the state case.
And then I'm going to break down to you guys how these drug cases actually work.
All right.
And like the video, by the way.
All right.
How many likes are we at right now?
Let's see.
And shout out to the mystery person in the back helping me out with the chats.
You want to introduce yourself to the people you want to say hello while I pull this up?
What's up?
Go ahead and say hello.
The mic is right here.
Hi, everyone.
They can see you at the table.
Oh, no, I got you.
They can see you now.
Hold on.
There you go.
Hi, everyone.
You want to say your name?
I'm Denise Monano.
Damn, but don't give them your social security number and shit.
All right.
So anyway, yeah, guys, get the likes up.
God damn it.
Yeah, we only got, we got 1.7K of you guys in here and only 183 likes, guys.
Come on, man.
Get it to at least like 1.5, man.
Not that hard.
I'm giving y'all some heat.
You guys get to see some titties on screen.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, come on, man.
Like the goddamn video.
It's not that hard.
Oh, is her mic is muted?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Hold on.
All right.
Now say hello.
Introduce yourself real fast.
Go ahead.
Hi, everyone.
I'm Denise.
Okay, yeah.
Last time she gave her full name on there and social security number.
Myron Gaines III.
Who is going to solve my real father case?
Yo, you guys are fucking hilarious, man.
But anyway, but like the video, man.
You guys are getting some education, some boobs, everything.
Like the goddamn video.
All right.
So, okay, let's see here.
Let's start with.
Okay.
So we're going to read this press release real quick.
All right.
And you guys are hilarious in here.
The chat is.
You guys.
TT Denise.
That's hilarious.
Do you run the risk of getting in trouble being that you may be giving too much game?
No, I'm not, guys.
This is all public information.
If you watch any crime documentary, this stuff comes up all the time.
So this is all pretty much public knowledge.
It's just that most people don't like, you know, go through the process of like reading all this stuff.
Fetty Wap hustling backwards.
Yeah, bro.
He is hustling backwards.
And we're going to talk about how Fetty Wap gets involved, roped in now.
Because if you guys notice, Fetty Wap was not mentioned on the state case.
Next vid.
Myron Gaines, Fed Time for Child Neglect.
Okay.
Thanks, Myron Jr.
Did, Dad, are you my real father?
Is it really fresh?
Myron Gaines III.
No, you're probably fresh as kid, bro.
You're too dark to be my kid.
So, yo, the trolling is A1.
I love you guys, bro.
Shout out to the chat.
You guys are hilarious.
And then we got Jawless Dora, $1.
Thank you so much.
And then Big Al Myron, make your son a mod already.
All right, I'll make him a mod.
But, bro, you better not be going too crazy in here.
Let me see if I can find him in here.
And then we're going to get into this federal case breakdown.
Freshman CEO Jr.
Yeah, I know, bro.
You guys are hilarious.
Let's see here.
Where is Myron Jr.?
I'm trying to find him here.
Okay.
I'm going to give you, I'm going to give you a wrench, Myron Jr.
Don't disappoint me.
But I need you to comment right now so I can actually do it.
But yeah, y'all are funny, bro.
Real talk.
Okay.
Yeah, he is.
Yeah, people.
The trolling never ends.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like they definitely make fun of me and it's hilarious.
So anyway, it is what it is.
Okay.
So, okay.
So let's read this press release real quick.
I'm going to enlarge it for you guys real fast so we know what the hell is going on here.
All right.
So here we go.
Six individuals indicted for conspiracy to distribute more than 100 kilograms of control substance on Long Island and in New Jersey.
Defendants include a New Jersey correction officer and rap artist Fetty Wap.
That's not good.
Oh, here is a good super chat.
Wynne W. Melly will be found not guilty based on lack of evidence proving beyond a reasonable doubt of him being in the car.
Bortley won't testify.
Bortland won't testify.
Bro, they don't need his testimony.
Like, did you, did you, Harris?
Did you watch my episode on the YW Melly case, bro?
You got to go check that out.
They don't need Bortland's testimony.
And honestly, I'm a little suspicious that he was released on bond.
I'd be very surprised if he didn't testify or take the stand.
Here's the other thing.
Let's say he doesn't take the stand.
The circumstantial evidence against Wynne W. Melly is overwhelming, guys.
They have him in the area with phone data.
It's indisputable, my friend.
Okay.
And the way the from where the gun was shot, there's no way around it.
They definitely know that the shot came from the back driver's side of the vehicle.
It's a wrap, my friend.
It's definitely a rep. So, okay, I got to shine on the other account to give Myron Jr. the thing.
Okay, so let's keep reading this thing.
But yeah, bro, Wynne W. Melly is going to, bro, why do you think they're pressing if they thought they were going to win?
Let me tell you this.
Question me this.
they thought that he was going to win why are they pushing so hard to get the death penalty removed riddle me that If they were so confident that he was going to win the case, why are they pushing so hard to get the death penalty removed?
Oh, also, let's talk about how he doesn't want his girlfriend and her girlfriend.
Oh, shit.
My bad, guys.
I'm playing this shit on my own sound.
But he does not want his girlfriend or her mom to testify as well, guys.
He's trying to suppress them.
So it's not.
Yeah, man.
It's not going to happen.
He's not going to win, unfortunately, bro.
I'm telling y'all.
The state's case is airtight, bro.
And I wish it wasn't.
I like Wynne W. Melly.
Y'all think I'm a fan of his music.
But when you look at the facts, any jury is going to be like, nah, this is not, this ain't it, man.
And I actually took a vote when I read through the case and I took a vote in the chat and the chat was like, nah, yeah, he's guilty.
So watch that episode in full, bro.
I break it down.
The detectives did a fantastic job.
Not only that, bro, they took his DNA and they took his body measurements.
They're going to recreate the shooting at trial.
Man, y'all crazy, bro.
Anyway, let's keep reading this bad boy.
Okay?
Yeah, I know the chat is undefeated.
Shaquille Ahmed, YouTube will flag Fed It now because of Denise's whoppers.
Oh, maybe.
They might.
Who knows?
I might get flagged for Nudie because Nudity because of her boobs.
I don't know.
What size are those things?
Double D. Double, double.
Here, you got to talk into Mike.
32 double D. Oh, shit.
God damn.
Okay.
The Lord has blessed you.
Natural?
What do you think?
It looks like you got worked on it.
Hold on.
Chat, what do y'all think?
Everyone guess.
Yeah.
It looks like she got.
I think they look natural.
They look natural, right?
Yeah, you had a good doctor.
It's Miami.
It is Miami.
Okay.
How much other things cost you?
$8,000.
That's expensive.
But Aerie Crowds.
Oh, you went to a good doctor?
Yeah, I went to a good doctor.
All right, definitely.
I don't want to die.
All right, fair enough.
You didn't go to Columbia to do it or whatever?
No, I didn't go to Columbia.
All right, fair enough.
Fair enough.
Fair enough.
Okay, well, hey, hey, they did a good job.
I will say that.
Thank you.
Thank you.
All right.
So, anyway, off the boobs and back to the case.
Okay, so we go.
Defendants included a New Jersey correction officer and rap artist Fetty Wap.
Earlier today in federal court and central ISLIP, an indictment was unsealed charging Anthony Cinche, a new New Jersey correction officer, Anthony Leonardi, his brother Robert Leonardi, William Jr.
Maxwell II.
By the way, guys, this is Fetty Wap, okay?
Who is a rap artist, also known as Fetty Wap Brian Sullivan, and Covan Wiggins with conspiring to distribute and possess control substances.
Five of the defendants are also charged with using firearms in connection with the drug trafficking.
This is very important, guys.
So the only person that was not charged with using firearms is Fetty Wap, which is going to save him later on when we talk about this, okay?
Sullivan was arrested on September 30th, 2021, arraigned before United States Magistrate Judge Stephen L. Tissioni, and ordered detained pending trial.
Andrew Leonardi and Sinche were arrested on October 13th, 2021, arraigned before United States Magistrate Judge Annie Y. Shields and ordered detained pending trial.
Robert Leonardi was arrested in Pennsylvania on October 13th, arraigned before United States Magistrate Judge Richard A. Lorette of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and ordered detained pending trial.
Wiggins was arrested on October 27, 2021, arraigned before United States Magistrate Judge Stephen J. Locke and ordered detained pending trial.
Maxwell was arrested yesterday and will be arraigned this afternoon before United States Magistrate Judge Locke.
And they obviously put the press release, guys, the day after Feddy Wap got arrested, so it wouldn't get out.
Okay, he got arrested on October 28th at Rolling Loud, guys.
Okay.
Breon Peace, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, Michael J. Driscoll, Assistant Director in charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, New York Field Office, Timothy D. Ciney, District Attorney for Suffolk County, and Stuart Cameron, acting commissioner of the Suffolk Police Department, announced the charges.
Okay, I remember these names are a little familiar, right?
From the commissioners.
As alleged defendants transported, distributed, and sold more than 100 kilos of deadly and addictive drugs, including heroin and fentanyl on Long Island, deliberately contributing to the opiate epidemic that has devastated our communities and taken too many lives.
United States Attorney Peace.
We will continue to work nonstop with our law enforcement partners to keep our neighborhoods safe from the scourge of dangerous drugs and gun violence.
Mr. Peace, thank the United States Postal Inspection Service for its assistance during the investigation.
The pipeline of our drugs in this investigation ran thousands of miles from the West Coast to the communities here in our area, contributing to the addiction and overdose epidemic we have seen time and time again tear people's lives apart.
The fact that we arrested a chart-topping rap artist and corrections officer as part of the conspiracy illustrates just how vile the drug trade has become.
I want to commend the work of our Long Island Gang Task Force and our law enforcement partners for working day in and day out to get these deadly drugs off our streets, stated FBI assistant director in charge, Driscoll.
Okay, stop the goddamn show.
Guys, you want to know why the feds got involved?
The feds got involved because you got a chart-topping rapper and a corrections officer.
For some of you guys out there that might not know, the FBI's primary investigative program area is terrorism.
However, the second and third programmatic areas that they do are counterintelligence/slash espionage, right?
Domestically, of course.
And third is public corruption.
What the hell is public corruption?
Public corruption, guys, is when someone who has a job of public trust, a clearance, works for the government, state, local, federal, whatever it is, is involved in criminal activity, okay?
Dirty police officers, et cetera, or in this case, a corrections officer.
So I'm willing to bet a big reason why this case went federal, okay, and I'm willing to bet my left testicle on this one, why this case went federal was because you had a big major charge, major rap artist and you had a corrections officer involved.
Okay?
Because here's the thing, guys, you got to understand.
The FBI doesn't do drug cases like that.
All right.
Yeah, I said it.
The FBI does not do drug cases like that, guys.
The main agencies that do drug investigations are DEA and HSI, Homeland Security Investigations.
We by far seize the most drugs in the United States.
And the reason why is because the drugs coming into the United States, HSI typically takes that, which is big quantities, right?
Like 17 kilos of cocaine, bro, that's nothing.
You know what I'm saying?
It's not unnormal to get like 100 kilos of cocaine seized on the border every day.
Thousands of pounds of weed.
You know what I'm saying?
I've seen it with my own two eyes, right?
And then the DE, obviously, is the main drug trafficking, drug anti-drug trafficking agency.
They investigate drugs, right?
So those two agencies between those two do most drug cases, drug cases.
But the fact that the FBI was involved in this, it's because of two reasons.
I told you already.
The FBI clout chasers, number one.
So, Fetty Watt was a very juicy target for them.
And then, number two, they got a public official, aka corrections officer.
That is why this case more than likely went federal.
Okay, so these defendants ran a multi-million dollar bi-coastal drug distribution organization with Suffolk County as their home base, state of district attorney city.
They were wholesale drug dealers who pumped massive quantities of narcotics into our communities.
Oh, another reason why this case went federal?
Fentanyl.
Before I resigned from the U.S. government, guys, there was a huge push to aggressively pursue and prosecute fentanyl cases.
Okay.
So the fact that these guys were also trafficking fentanyl is going to make it federal as well.
So they had three things against them: fentanyl, a chart-topping artist, and public corruption.
All the makings of a sexy federal case, baby.
That's why they took it.
And that's why the state, what probably happened was the state probably dropped their drug charges, right?
Because you can't get charged for the same crime twice by the state and by the feds.
So the state probably dropped their case.
And then the feds came in and did a federal indictment because they're going to serve significantly more time for these charges.
And the case is going to be stronger against them with the feds.
The U.S. Attorney's Office does not lose, guys.
Let me make that very clear.
These defendants ran where we were.
Okay.
They were wholesale drug dealers who pumped massive quantities of narcotics into our communities.
As our investigation revealed, they would frequently use cutting agents to process just one of those kilograms of drugs into as many as four even before it was distributed to lower-level dealers.
God damn.
So remember how I told you guys before?
A kilo of cocaine, once it makes it into the United States, is about $29,000.
And then once you get it to Chicago or New York or whatever, it's about $55,000 to $60,000.
These guys were cutting that kilo of Coke four times before it went to the dope dealers.
So I'm the whole.
Okay.
You know what?
I will, I don't want to get ahead of myself.
I'm going to explain to you guys how drug trafficking works in the United States here in a second.
But let's continue on.
But these guys were cutting the dope up.
Man, these guys are terrible drug dealers.
But anyway, so no, I didn't ban my son, bro.
I gave him a wrench.
Should gave him a wrench.
Anyway, as our investigation, no, I really did give him a wrench.
It's Myron Jr., right?
I could have sworn I gave him a wrench.
Or have him comment again.
All right.
As the investigation revealed, they were frequently used cutting agents.
Oh, okay.
We talked about that.
Thanks to law enforcement efforts, this prolific supply chain has been cut off.
I thank the Eastern District for partnering with my office to prosecute these individuals and hold them accountable.
See?
So the Eastern District of New York took the case over from the state.
This is another example of law enforcement working together to take down a major drug trafficking ring that brought more than 100 kilos of illicit narcotics to Long Island in New Jersey, stated SCPD, Acting Commissioner Cameron, holding these six individuals accountable, most of whom were using firearms to protect their drugs, will have a significant impact on the drug supply in Suffolk County and will help us in our continued effort to combat the opioid epidemic.
Yeah, I will say, I'm here taking notes.
Hilarious, bro.
I will say this, guys.
All right, you got a wrench now, my friend.
I will say this, guys.
The fact that these guys were having this much dope in New Jersey tells me that they're higher up, which I'm going to explain to you guys here in a second how drug trafficking works.
I know you guys want to know, but I want to make sure we get through this.
Okay.
As alleged in the indictment and in court proceedings from approximately June 2019 through June 2020, so they were looking at these guys for a year.
The defendants distributed more than 100 kilos of cocaine, heroin, fentanyl, and crack cocaine across Long Island in New Jersey.
Oh, Lord.
The defendants obtained the narcotics on the West Coast and used the United States Postal Service and drivers within hidden vehicle compartments to transport the controlled substances across the country to Suffolk County where they were stored.
The drugs were then distributed to dealers who sold the control substances on Long Island and in New Jersey.
Five of the defendants also used firearms to protect their drug organization and distribution chain.
Defendants Anthony Leonardi, Robert Leonardi, Sullivan, and Wiggins participated in the purchase and transport of their narcotics from the West Coast to the East Coast, where they were processed, stored, and ultimately resold.
Maxwell, this is Feddy Watt, by the way, guys.
This Feddy Wap, was a kilogram-level redistributor for the trafficking organization in Sintej.
Oh, Lord.
What is a redistributor, guys?
Basically, what that means is he's a middleman that was calling other people saying, yo, I got a couple bricks.
What you want?
I can sell them to you for this, this, this.
Bang.
And he's making deals happen, which here's the thing, guys.
Federally, you can get arrested for drug trafficking and drug trafficking conspiracy without ever seeing or touching the drugs.
I'm going to say that again.
When it comes to the feds, guys, and drug trafficking cases in general, you don't have to touch or see the drugs to be charged with drug trafficking and conspiracy.
All you have to do is be involved in the manufacture, distribution, smuggling, and or Transportation of drugs to some degree, and you can get hit with drug trafficking, guys.
So, Fetty Wap, let's, I'll give you an example.
Let's say me and Tits McGee over here, right, are drug traffickers, all right?
So, I tell her, right, hey, I got um, I got a guy, right?
Let's say Fresh is the kingpin, right?
So, Fresh, uh, aka Dark Man X, right?
He gives he gives me the drugs, right?
And I have them, I got five kilos of Coke, and I go ahead and I tell Miss Miss Tits, hey, hey, I got five, I got five kilos of Coke.
Um, I'll give them to you for 40K a piece, right?
And she's like, All right, let me see if I can find a buyer.
She's she's basically Fetty Wap right now, right?
So I got I Fresh gives me the drugs.
He Fresh imports the drugs from Barbados.
I have the drugs.
Now I call her and tell her that she, that, um, I have five kilos of drugs for her.
She's like, okay, let me find a buyer.
So she finds a buyer, okay?
She says, hey, peanut buttermouth Chris wants three of the drugs, three of the kilos, right?
So what I do is I go ahead and I deliver the drugs to Chris.
But she gives me Chris's information and I make contact with Chris and sell the drugs to Chris.
The feds, however, right, are listening to the phone call.
She never saw the drugs.
She never touched the drugs, but she put me in touch with someone who I was able to sell the drugs to.
She's going to go down for conspiracy.
I'm going to go down for possession with a 10 to distribute.
Fresh is going to go down for smuggling.
And then Chris is going to go down for possession with a 10 to distribute, right?
That's a very crude example, but you guys get the idea.
So she's going to get involved in the drug trafficking case simply by answering the phone and facilitating the deal, even though she never saw, touched, or actually moved the drugs anywhere.
That is how drug cases go, guys.
All right.
So, cool.
Let's see here.
Can't believe Fetty didn't see these charges coming.
Yeah, I know, bro.
Hey, man.
The trap queen, bro.
Buy one, BB.
I'll get one free.
Thank you so much.
You guys are laughing at Tits McGee.
Is Ethereum smart to buy right now?
Yes, I think it is.
I think it's below 3,000, if I'm not mistaken.
Which is a good time to buy, my friends.
Let's see if I missed any other chats here.
And then we got Big Al.
Myron, did you accidentally ban your son?
No, I did not.
We talked about that.
I'm here taking notes.
Thank you, Myron Jr.
You will become a stand-up individual later on in life.
Harris, okay.
Your video was good.
The state hasn't offered Melly a plea deal, though.
I just think his defense is going to make the state's case look dumb.
No, my friend.
No, my friend.
Listen, bro.
They never want to go to trial, bro.
They probably told him, hey, plead guilty.
And he said no.
Plead guilty to murder two or murder three.
But he probably said no because I'm going to get life in prison or I'm going to do 20 or 30 years.
I'm not doing it.
Trust me.
They gave him a plea deal, bro.
He just didn't accept it.
I promise you they gave him a plea deal.
He's been in jail for years.
He's been in jail since like 2018.
You know, one to three, five bucks.
What up, Myron?
Showing some love.
FNF gang, a la Verga.
Hey, shout out to my Mexicans out there.
¿Quión da way?
Chingal.
Can you be my mommy Dennis?
I cannot be here.
Oh, they want you to be the mom.
Can you be the mom?
No.
Okay, I guess not.
What are you?
Are you Cuban?
What are you exactly?
I'm Nicaraguan and Peruvian.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
So you're not, so you're not Mexican?
No.
Okay.
What's the term when you like, you know, Dominicans, they say que lo que, you know, Cuba's, hey, pabo.
You know, Mexicans, hey, que oh no, wait, what do Peruvians say to each other?
What?
Like, what is this, a Drake concert?
No, it's like, what's up?
Okay.
And then what, what do you, what about what, what do, uh, that's what Peruvians say?
And then what do I like some, yeah.
Okay, and then what's, and then you, what do Nicaraguans say?
You got talking to Mike.
What?
Hola.
They just say hola.
They don't say, they don't have like a cool what's up?
No, not really.
I don't think so.
Or like, I don't think so.
No, actually.
Okay.
They say a la verga a lot, too.
Oh, they do?
I thought that was Mexicans that only said that.
That's very unique as well.
Nicaraguan say that a lot of Nicaraguans say Verga a lot.
Oh, okay.
Learn something new every day.
What does a la Verga mean?
Like oh shit, right?
I've never actually heard Mexicans use Vedga.
I've heard only Nicaraguans and Argentinis and people from I've never heard Mexicans.
Okay.
No, they say it all the time.
A la Vergao.
Pinche way.
Yeah, Pinche Way, yeah.
They say that all the time, too.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
Learn something new every day.
A Spanish lesson here.
Oh, man.
The chat.
You guys are hilarious.
So he was a, so he, so now you guys know how being a redistributor works, right?
So just like with the example I gave you here, she would be the redistributor.
She will get hit with the drugs too.
And then Sintaj, this is the corrections officer, by the way, guys.
Transported kilograms of cocaine from Long Island to New Jersey.
Okay, so he was the driver, the transporter.
And this is typically how drug organizations work, which we're going to talk about here in a second.
So search warrant executed during the investigation resulted in the discovery recovery of approximately 1.5 million of cash, 16 kilograms of cocaine, 2 kilograms of heroin, numerous fentanyl pills, 2 millimeter handguns, a rifle, a .45 caliber pistol, a .4 caliber pistol, and ammunition.
The charges and indictment are allegations, and the defendants are presumed innocent until, unless and until proven guilty.
If convicted, the defendants face a maximum of life imprisonment.
Oh, God.
The government's case is being handled by the offices of Long Island Criminal Division, Assistant United States Attorney Christopher C. Cafrone, Andrew P. Wenzel, and Special Assistant United States Attorney Jacob T. Kubritz are in charge of the prosecution.
This also has me concerned.
Special Assistant United States Attorney.
So that's something called the Salsa, guys, which means he came from somewhere else.
He's not a part of that office.
So they got in some hired power to do this case.
And here's the defendants right here, guys, right?
And here's the indictment here, which I already have ready to go for you guys.
But let's talk about drug cases and why we need to be concerned here.
Okay.
So there's a couple things here that are alarming.
As you guys can see, they mention here search warrants were executed during the investigation, resulted in a recovery of approximately 1.5 million dollars, 16 kilos of cocaine, two kilos of heroin, numerous fentanyl pills, two nine millimeter handguns, a rifle, a .45 caliber pistol, and 40 and ammunition, right?
And I don't know if you guys remember, but they said earlier that it was 17 kilos, but they're using 16 kilos for this press release.
Because remember, one kilo came from prior to the search warrants.
This is why this is problematic for the defendants.
We know now because we read the DEA press release that they had court-authorized eavesdropping, which we did some Google and we found out what eavesdropping means they were listening to phone lines and or text messages.
So when you do a drug case, guys, typically every big drug case has a couple of factors involved.
It has informants, it has electronic surveillance, it has undercovers, it has controlled deliveries, and it has surveillance, regular surveillance.
So let's break down each one.
What is an informant?
An informant is someone who gets information, right, and provides it to law enforcement, typically for the promise, not the promise, but typically for a reduced sentence or, right, as a cooperative defendant, or for monetary payment, right?
Then you got electronic surveillance.
What's electronic surveillance?
Electronic surveillance is when you listen to phones, you do search warrants and look at phones.
You see, you do pen registers where you listen, where you look at who they're calling and who they're contacting.
You're doing subpoenas, you're figuring out who owns which phone, et cetera.
All these things, right?
You're intercepting text messages.
Then you got hardcore surveillance where you're basically sitting there watching them do drug deals.
You're watching a stash house.
You're watching people come in and out of a certain house.
You know it's a dope house, right?
Then you got controlled deliveries.
Why am I mentioning controlled deliveries?
Well, the reason why I'm mentioning controlled deliveries is because the U.S. Postal Inspection Service was involved in this.
Now, as you guys know, I don't know why people still do this, but people still smuggle drugs through the mail like idiots.
Okay.
And I don't know why they do it, but they still do it.
Stupid.
As soon as you move drugs through the mail, it becomes federal.
And what happens a lot of times is you'll try to mail drugs to someone.
So let's go into a dream road real quick.
Let's say Fresh mailed me some drugs from Barbados.
Okay.
And it gets to the USPS office.
And they, right?
What they do is they comes into the USPS sworting center, right?
They run the canines on it and they find that there's drugs in it, right?
And it has my address there.
Okay.
So they're like, they open it up, they find that there's drugs in there and they see that it's supposed to go to me.
Now, what are they going to do?
They're like, okay, let's further the investigation.
They're going to get investigators involved.
They're going to call the postal inspection service.
The postal inspectors are going to show up.
And postal inspectors think of them as special agents that deal with the U.S. mail.
They're going to deliver the package from Barbados that was supposed to come to me.
Right?
It comes to me.
I open it up.
And next thing you know, it's fucking mayhem.
And I'm going to jail.
Right?
Then they catch me and they're like, hey, where are these drugs supposed to go?
Well, I was going to send them to Tits McGee over here.
I was going to give them to her.
Oh, really?
Yeah, man.
Look, she's calling me right now.
She's expecting the drugs, right?
So I decide to cooperate with the cops.
And they're like, all right, cool.
She's calling you right now.
She wants the drugs.
Cool.
We're going to deliver it to her too.
I decide to cooperate.
You know what I'm saying?
Maybe I sign an agreement, whatever the fuck it is.
And then I go and I deliver the drugs to her house, right?
The box of drugs from Barbados.
Then, next thing you know, they arrest her too, right?
And then, next thing you know, now, but since I got, since I decided to cooperate, I'm going to get less time than her because she's higher up on the totem pool because the drugs were supposed to go to her.
Then, let's say she decides to cooperate and she's like, oh, I was going to deliver it to, you know, to fucking, I don't know, Tampa.
Oh, okay, cool.
And then we can keep leaffrogging it up.
You guys see what I'm saying?
Because the further you get up the totem pool, typically the higher up you're going.
And then Fresh is going to get implicated as well because he was the one that imported the drugs in.
But this is how drug investigations work.
That's how controlled delivery works.
All right.
So, like I said before, they executed a bunch of search warrants, right?
And I know for a fact, for you to get a search warrant, you need to do something called a, you got to, you got to buy drugs a lot of the times.
Or you could be listening to phones.
Now, this is what I personally think.
This is all speculation.
I don't know for sure, but here's the thing.
They did six search warrants.
During the search warrants, guys, they seized 16 kilos of Coke, two kilos of heroin, and $1.5 million in cash.
What do you think happened?
I think this is what happened.
They were listening to the phones.
They were intercepting the text messages.
They knew exactly what was located at where.
They were able to draft the search warrants based off of the telephonic intercepts.
And they were able to hit the houses at the same time simultaneously and get all this evidence at once.
It is no fucking coincidence that they were able to seize 16 keys of Coke, $1.5 million, all these guns, two kilos of heroin, and a bunch of fentanyl and oxy pills.
Okay?
We know that they were listening to phones.
So we know for a fact, since they were listening to phones, they probably knew where all the stuff was located based on the conversations between the individuals.
That's how they were able to implicate your boy Fetty Wap, the corrections officer, and all these other guys.
Okay?
Because here's the thing.
On the federal press release, they're not saying here that there were intercepts involved.
But with the state one that we just looked at with the DEA, they said that there were court-authorized eavesdropping, which means there were state wires listening to phones and text messages.
That's how they were able to get the search warrants.
That's how they knew that all the dope and the money was involved.
It was there at the same time.
And they were able to get these seizures and put all these guys down.
And I am willing to bet on that first round when they arrested everybody, someone snitched and got Fetty Wap lined up.
That's what I personally think happened.
Because remember, they didn't get Fetty Wap on the state case.
They came back and got him on the Fed case.
All right.
So that's very important to know that distinction, which I haven't seen anyone else mention that on YouTube, that it was a state case first, then it turned into a federal case.
And when it turned into a federal case, they included Fetty Wap and another guy in the charges.
Okay?
That's extremely significant.
And they didn't mention that the case had wiretaps, guys.
When there's wiretaps, it's a wrap.
Because let me tell you guys something about wiretaps.
You need a lot of evidence, okay, to be able to listen to someone's phone.
As a matter of fact, you need more evidence to listen to someone's phone than to arrest them.
Yeah, I didn't stutter.
You need more evidence to listen to someone's phone than to arrest them.
And the reason why is because when you listen to someone's phone, it's extremely invasive of their Fourth Amendment right.
Okay.
Right to, you know, unreasonable search and seizure without a warrant.
Okay.
Because remember, when they're listening to your phone, they're not just listening to your conversations.
They're listening to everyone else's conversations that you're talking to that have a reasonable expectation of privacy, aka REP. So the higher standard that you think that you have reasonable expectation of privacy, the more evidence you need to be able to get a search warrant of said premises.
So what's at the top of the list?
Typically, a search warrant of a home.
That's where you expect to have the most reasonable expectation of privacy, correct?
So you need a lot of facts to be able to search a home.
Same thing with phones.
You have a reasonable expectation of privacy when you're talking and texting on the phone.
Hell, if I told half you guys right now, yo, let me see your girl's phone, she will go crazy.
Nah, you ain't looking at this.
So human beings in general have a really high expectation of privacy in their phones and in the conversations that they have on said phones.
So therefore, you need a lot of evidence to listen to telephones, okay?
So the fact that they had this with wire intercept search warrants, et cetera, it's a wrap, my friends.
And the feds mentioned it in here that search warrants are executed, et cetera.
And we know that these search warrants were done on the backs of electronic surveillance and more than likely informants.
Any drug case I know, guys, 99% of the time has informants involved because the unfortunate thing about drug cases, guys, is that many hands need to be involved to make drug trafficking work.
Now, I know you guys are probably wondering, well, Myron, how do drugs actually come into the United States and how do they work?
It's okay.
I got you.
I'll explain right now.
Typically, guys, most of the drugs that come into you that are in the United States are imported into the United States through Mexico.
Okay.
Cocaine, heroin, et cetera, methamphetamine, you know, especially, you know, not this bullshit shaking bake that they have here that the Nazis make.
I'm talking about that real crystal methamphetamine.
They call it ice.
Okay.
It looks like glass.
All right.
Typically, it's imported from Mexico into the United States.
Sometimes it's brought into the United States by boat from Columbia, et cetera, as well.
Okay.
So you got maritime smuggling and you got land border smuggling.
Most of the drugs that come in the United States, remember, guys, cocaine cannot be made in the United States.
Okay.
It's made from coca leaves, which is international.
So it's brought to the United States through South Texas, through Southern California, through whatever.
And then once it's smuggled into the United States, typically it needs to be brought to a stash house immediately.
Once it's brought into the stash house, those drugs need to get off the border ASAP.
Why?
Well, the reason why, guys, is because the drugs need to get moved to the next leg in the chain.
Okay.
So they can be distributed in the United States.
So I'll give you an example of how it would work out where I was in Laredo.
Okay.
So drugs come into the United States.
They're smuggled in, whether through a vehicle when they go through the bridge or smuggled in across the river with a coyote, whatever it is.
It's brought in.
Once it's brought into the United States, it's immediately moved into a stash house.
Once it's at that stash house, they're trying, the next goal is to get it past the Border Patrol.
Okay.
And just so you guys know, Border Patrol has authority, right?
Because the United States, guys, the functional border equivalent, right, is 29 miles from the United States border.
All that's considered the functional equivalent of the border, essentially, right?
So the smugglers know I need to get it off the southwest border.
I got border patrol here.
I got homeland security investigations.
I got FBI, DEA, everyone and their mom investigates drug trafficking, guys.
The sheriff's offices, et cetera, in the south.
So they got to get it past the border patrol.
Once they get it past border patrol and law enforcement on southern border, they're pretty much good.
They need to get it to a major city.
Now, for us, when I was in Laredo, I knew the next major city was San Antonio, two miles, two hours north on Interstate 35.
Once it gets to San Antonio, aka a major city, you have many different highways that come through.
Okay.
You got Interstate 35, which takes you north, and then you got Interstate 10, which cuts through San Antonio, which takes you east to west.
In the United States, guys, remember, even numbers are east to west.
Odd numbers are north to south.
Again, even numbers are east to west.
Odd numbers are north to south.
For example, interstate 95, which goes right through Miami into New York City.
Odd number, right?
But if you look at Interstate 10 from Jacksonville all the way to Los Angeles, that's an even number.
It goes east to west.
All right.
So once it gets to San Antonio, they pretty much made it because San Antonio has many different highways that goes through it.
Okay.
So you can either go east to east to Atlanta, or sorry, east to Houston, and then take it to Atlanta, which is another big drug hub, or you can go west, take it to Phoenix, take it to Los Angeles, et cetera.
But most of the time, most of the drugs that came into Laredo went east.
They went towards Atlanta, which then would go into the Carolinas, then go into New York.
Okay.
Or it would go north into the Midwest, Chicago, Minneapolis, et cetera.
Okay.
Dallas, Dallas, Austin, because all those cities are also on Interstate 35.
So the goal, once you get the drugs into the United States, is get it to a major city from that major city.
You're able to split up.
Typically, it's a big load.
When the drugs come into the United States from the southwest border, guys, it's 20, 50, 60, 70, sometimes 100 kilos.
And everybody owns a part of that package.
Sometimes it's one drug trafficker, maybe it's two drug traffickers, maybe it's three drug traffickers that own parts of those drugs.
Okay.
And then once it gets to the major city, it's distributed to the people that need it.
And then from there, you've got your wholesaler in the major city who distributes it on lower levels to everyone else.
Okay.
Now, once that wholesale guy distributes it to other people, that's when you start getting it to your street dealers, et cetera.
And then that's when they start cutting it down or whatever, if that wholesale supplier himself doesn't cut it down himself, which he may do as well.
But, you know, the negative is when you cut down the drugs, the quality of the drugs, you're not going to have as good of a product, right?
So it's a very delicate balance where you're trying to maximize profit while simultaneously also having the best product, right?
So let's bring it back to this case now that we have a general overview of how drug trafficking works in the United States, right?
These guys were bringing their drugs in from the West Coast, okay?
They were going all the way, which I guarantee was probably Southern California, because like I said before, typically the closer to the Mexican border the drugs are, the higher quality they are.
So if you get drugs in Phoenix versus getting drugs in Chicago, nine out of 10 times, that cocaine in Phoenix is going to be more pure because it's going to be closer to the Mexican border, aka closer to the source.
All right.
So the fact that they were getting their drugs from the West Coast tells me they were probably getting it from San Diego, Los Angeles, et cetera.
They were probably getting it from some drug trafficking organization out west.
And they would go get it and then drive it all the way back.
And they were mailing it as well, which is why the U.S. Postal Inspection Service was involved.
And I guarantee you, the reason why USPIS was so involved was because they probably had a seizure through the mail, did a controlled delivery, delivered it to some idiot, and someone flipped and snitched.
Guaranteed.
Okay?
Damn, I'm giving y'all a lot of sauce right now.
Ain't nobody breaking this down for y'all.
Like the goddamn video right now.
You got anything to say about this?
No.
I've learned a lot, though.
Okay.
All right.
You have anything you want to say to the people?
Hi, everyone.
Like this video.
That's all I have to say.
All right.
Cool.
Yeah, like the video, guys.
If anything, like the video for the boobs.
They were expensive.
They were.
Yeah, most of the time the going rate I've seen for boobs is what, like...
Like 5,000.
Yeah, $3,000 to $5,000 is what I've normally seen.
So you paid a little bit more, but you got a good doctor.
It's not that bad.
It's like $2,000 more for a really good doctor.
I trusted him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You can't really be cheap when it comes to your body.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
If you're going to get a boob job or a nose job or anything, you might as well go to the best person.
Yeah, I also did it under the muscle.
So that's why it's a little more.
Do it under the muscle?
Yeah, you could do it either over the muscle or under the muscle.
I did under the muscle, so it's more expensive when you do it under the muscle.
Oh, shit.
So I think that's the price for under the muscle, if I'm not mistaken.
God damn.
Okay.
Okay.
We're learning about Fetty Wab and Fetty Tits.
Okay.
One day we need to talk about surgeries.
Surgeries.
Okay, maybe we'll do a show on that end eventually.
Yeah.
I can help you with that.
Like the goddamn video.
Y'all are not getting this kind of sauce anywhere else.
You guys are learning about federal drug crimes and you're learning how to get your tits done under the muscle.
Under the muscle.
Under the muscle.
Way better.
Does it mess with your ability to do chest presses and push-ups?
Not at all.
Nothing.
So you can still do push-ups, no problem.
Yeah, nothing.
I have never had not one issue.
I feel like I was born with them.
Born this way.
I was born this way.
Okay.
All right, Lady Gaga.
All right.
And she has the leopard print jacket, too.
Yes, I do.
So, yeah, guys, like the video.
So now that we have a general overview of how drug trafficking works, the fact that they were bringing their drugs all the way from the West Coast over tells me that these guys were big time.
All right.
Typically, guys, 17 kilos of cocaine domestically in the United States, like somewhere in Long Island, tells me that those were probably some of the biggest drug traffickers in that region, guys, because 17 kilos of Coke is significant for being in the United States.
Obviously, being on the Southwest border, that's a joke.
That's like another day in office.
But in Long Island, that's a big fucking deal.
All right?
So, channel idea.
Breast and tit with Denise.
Okay.
That's not a bad idea.
I'll read some of these chats real quick before we get into the indictment.
Okay.
They got Jamal Lewis like that.
He was in the NFL.
Yes, they did.
He's an idiot.
I don't know why.
Yeah, he was making money with the NFL.
When are you doing the Stephen Avery case?
I don't know who Stephen Avery is, but I will look it up.
Can you look that up for me real fast, Stephen Avery?
Here, you got two screens right there.
There's another one on the MacBook right there.
Yeah, yeah.
Let's see here.
Buy one BBL.
Okay, I read that one already.
Okay, I think I'm caught up on the super chats.
All right.
So now that we know what this is, let's see here.
Let's go over.
So, real quick, I'm going to teach you guys real fast how to look up a case in the feds.
Okay.
So I know that it's the Eastern District of New York, right?
PACER.
So I'm going to go ahead and remember, just type in a district and then type in PACER after.
That's the easiest way to do it.
And then it's going to say pacer.uscourts.gov, right?
Then I'm going to go log into CMF ECF and then bam, Eastern District of New York, go in here, right?
You got to make an account with Pacer to look it up, right?
So here's my FreshFit account.
Bang, I'm in there.
Nice.
Right?
So, since this was here before, but normally you won't see that, right?
So what you do is, I know that his last name is, goddammit, what was it again?
It was Fetty Wap, his real name.
It was.
God damn it.
Sorry, guys.
It was.
Oh, yeah.
William Jr.
Maxwell II.
Yeah, William.
Yeah.
Okay.
It's actually Willie, I think, is whatever.
Let's see here.
All right.
So, Maxwell.
William.
Right?
And then this is how you're going to find it, guys.
So you hit run query, and then bang.
This is how you find a case.
Right.
So here he is, defendant.
Go docker report.
Run report.
Oh, wait.
Hold on.
Is this the wrong one?
Oh, god damn it.
Yeah, that's the wrong one.
Sorry, guys.
I'll give myself a fucking wrong on that one.
Hold on.
Give me one sec, guys.
While I do this.
All right.
So, no, it's Willie is his first name.
Why did they put Willie?
Yeah.
So.
So, so, all right.
See, even even DOJ had it wrong.
So, here's his real, his real first name, guys, is actually Willie.
It's not, it's not Will Yum.
I don't know why they put that.
But yeah, his government is Willie.
Don't ask me, don't ask me why.
But this is him, Maxwell II, right?
Willie Jr.
Bang, here he is.
Here's a criminal case.
And always go with the USA versus whatever, USA versus Leonardi, because then it shows all the defendants.
And then you're going to hit go docker report, right?
Then you're going to hit run report, and then bang.
That's how you find the case, my friends.
All right, right there.
Oh, shit.
Oh, shit.
So here's the defendant, right?
Here's the first one, Anthony Leonardi, right?
Here's a 21 USCA 46841.
Remember, guys, Title 21 is drugs, right?
Title 21 of the United States Code always has to do with controlled substances.
And then here's your boy, Willie Jr.
Maxwell II, also known as Fetty Wap, right?
21 USCA41.
But here's a good thing with him.
He does not have the gun offense like these other guys.
These other guys got here, 18 USC 924C, which for some of you guys that remember, okay, who got hit with that also?
Push IC, right?
That's why Push Ice is going to do quite a bit of time.
So here's the indictment right here, right?
Which don't worry, I already did the work and got it for you guys ready to go here.
And it is right here.
Here's the indictment, guys.
All right.
So, and just so you guys know, an indictment is a formal charge by the United States government.
So, Eastern District of New York, right?
September 29th, they were indicted.
Anthony Leonardi, Robert Leonardi, Willie Jr., Maxwell, also known as Feddy Wap, Brian Sullivan, Anthony Sintej, and Kavanaugh Kavon Wiggins, also known as KV.
And remember, guys, Anthony Sintage is the corrections officer, right?
So, this is only a two-count indictment, but these charges are extremely serious.
All right, count one: conspiracy to distribute and possess controlled substances.
All right.
Can you pass me some water, by the way?
So, it goes here: number one, in or about and between June 2019 and June 2020, both dates being approximate and inclusive within the Eastern District of New York and elsewhere, the defendant Anthony Leonardi, Robert Leonardi, Willie Jr., Maxwell Jr., also known as Fetty Wap,
Brian Sullivan, Anthony Sintage, and Kavon Wiggins, also known as KV, together with others, did knowingly and intentionally conspire to distribute and possess with intended distribute control substances, which offense involved a substance containing heroin, a Schedule I control substance, a substance containing N, Felonyl, N, propan.
Okay, whatever.
Also, note fentanyl, a Schedule II control substance, a substance containing cocaine, schedule two controlled substance, a substance containing cocaine base, a schedule two controlled substance, contrary to Title 21, United States Code 841A1, guys, which is possession.
841A1 is possession with intent to distribute, typically.
All right, thank you.
The amount of heroin, fentanyl, cocaine, and cocaine base involved in the conspiracy attributable to Anthony Leonardi, Robert Leonardi, Sullivan, and Wiggins, as a result of their own conduct and the conduct of other conspirators reasonably foreseeable to them, was one kilogram or more of a substance containing heroin, 400 grams or more of a substance containing fentanyl.
Oh, damn, 400 grams.
Yeah, these guys are fucking.
I didn't even know that.
Five kilograms or more of a substance containing cocaine and 280 grams or more of a substance containing cocaine base.
The amount of cocaine involved in the conspiracy attributable to Maxwell 2 and Sintej as a result of their own conduct and the conduct of other conspirators reasonable, foreseeable to them, was five kilograms or more of a substance containing cocaine.
All right.
And these are the violations.
Count two, use of a fireman connection with the drug trafficking crime.
Remember, guys, this is what Pushaisi got hit with as well because he robbed those guys for the weed.
Remember?
Interval between June 19th and June 2020, both dates being approximately inclusive, within the Eastern District of New York.
The defendants, Anthony Leonardi, Robert Leonardi, Brian Sullivan, Anthony Sintej, and Carvan Wiggins, also known as KV, together with others, did knowingly and intentionally use and carry one or more firearms during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime to wit the crime charge account one and did knowingly and intentionally possess said firearms in furtherance of said drug trafficking crime and there we go true bill which guys a true bill means that uh like i told you guys before an agent goes in he talks about his case the grand jury hears the case it's typically like somewhere between 12 to 15 grand jurors in there
He gives the case, and then they decide if they're going to indict it, a.k.a.
a true bill, and this one got a true bill.
The four persons signed it, and then this is the AUSA that signed it, which they have redacted, and then this shit is all crooked.
But basically, this is the superseding indictment.
I guess this is a true bill document that they use.
And, yeah, I mean, very simple indictment, guys.
But, yeah, two-count indictment, but these are very serious charges.
Um, so, bam.
Okay, so I'm just looking here real quick because I have the sentencing guidelines here.
So, all right, so how much time are these guys actually looking at?
Well, they're going to be looking at quite a bit of time because here's the problem with 924C.
This charge right here, guys, count two, use of firearms in connection with a drug trafficking crime, that's a mandatory minimum of five years, and it runs consecutive.
It cannot run concurrently.
So, when it runs concurrently, guys, let's say I get, let's say me and Ms. Tits, right, we go rob a bank, right, but I, you know, I, you know, I robbed a bank, and she's with me, right, and we both have guns.
But she forgot that she had, I don't know, a kilo of coke in between those boobs, right?
And she gets caught robbing the bank with me.
Well, now, they're going to, we both, and we both get sentenced to 10 years in prison for robbing the bank, right?
We both get, you know, a fake Bonnie and Clyde or whatever, right?
We both get 10 years in prison.
Here's the thing.
So, she had a kilo of cocaine in her boobs, right, while she was robbing the said bank.
She is also going to get hit with 18 U.S.C.
924C, which you guys see here.
And that is going to run consecutive to the 10 years that she does for the bank robbery.
So, she's going to have to do 15 years.
Now, normally, with a lot of crimes, they might say, oh, no, it runs consecutive, which means it runs at the same time.
So, she would just do the 10 years and be done.
But with 924C, guys, it cannot run concurrently.
It's got to run consecutively.
So, she does the 10 years for the bank robbery.
Now, she's got to do another five for the 924C.
That is why this charge is so bad.
You know what I'm saying?
So, that's what you get for getting your boobs bigger and putting them in between.
What are your thoughts on that?
My thoughts is that I think that I wouldn't be able to get away with hiding anything in my boobs.
You don't think so?
No, I don't think so.
They're hard to hide.
You could definitely fit a kilo in between those, though.
I don't think so.
I think you can.
They push them up too much.
All right, maybe half a key.
Half.
Maybe half a key.
So, yeah.
So, she would do 15 years and I would do only 10.
so uh why would a rapper sell drugs i don't know bro yeah and i watched the dj academics interview he was making 100k a day for a long time guys so yeah So, and then here's a document here.
This is discovery.
Basically, you know, that the government is going to give all their documents over.
You know, for and discovery, guys, is basically when the government gives the evidence to the defendants so that they can look at the evidence against them and then, you know, basically be able to defend the case, right?
So, this is just a formal document to FediWap that they're going to give the government's discovery in accordance with Rule 16 of the federal rules of criminal procedure.
Item Bates numbered 001 through 847, 951 through 1494, and WM.
These are basically like probably the way to index the evidence.
I also enclose an index of the discovery.
The index will not be filed electronically.
The government also requests reciprocal discovery from the defendant.
Oh, and then also, this is kind of important right here: Brady material.
So, the government is not aware of any exculpatory material regarding the defendant.
The government understands and will comply with its continuing obligation to produce exculpatory evidence material as defined by Brady versus Maryland 373 and its progeny.
Okay, so guys, what does Brady material mean?
Basically, if I come across evidence that might exonerate or might exonerate the defense, I must disclose it over as a federal prosecutor or law enforcement officer.
I must.
Otherwise, the case could get thrown out.
I could get prosecuted.
It could be really bad.
So, let's go back to that bank robbery situation that we talked about before.
Let's rewind.
Let's say me and Denise robbed the bank again, right?
But they find out that she only had the cocaine in her boobs because I threatened her that I would kill her if she didn't put it there, right?
It wasn't of her own free will that she was in possession of the cocaine.
I forced it.
Well, that needs to be disclosed to her defense attorney, okay?
Because now they have a viable defense to the possession of a drug, possession of cocaine.
And on top of that, they also have a viable defense to the 924C because remember, she was in possession of drugs while committing while committing while in possession of a firearm, right?
Drug trafficking offense because she's in possession of the drugs while holding a firearm.
But now that they found out that I threatened her and said, Hey, you better hold these goddamn drugs, goddammit, or else it's a wrap for you.
Well, now her defense, right, can use that to say, Hey, she was coerced.
She was not in possession of it of her own free will.
Like, she, it's Brady material, okay?
Does that make sense, guys?
Because, how do I say this?
It's to her benefit, it's to her defense, okay?
To so that needs to be, that needs to be brought out in court.
So, the federal prosecutor has to disclose that to her defense attorney.
That makes sense.
All right, cool.
Hopefully, I this is making sense, guys.
Is it making sense?
Uh, do you point at things with your lips, Nika?
No, I do not, bro.
Uh, let's see here.
Any other chats that I might have missed now that we know what Brady material is?
I want to see your outlook on Stephen Avery case guilty.
I will look it up.
Um, and then we got Ariel Bibilonia.
Why would a rapper?
Yeah, I don't know, bro.
Very, very dumb.
He was making a lot of money, too.
Like I told you, he was making like 100K a day for a while.
He was talking about on the academics interview.
Actually, pretty good interview.
Uh, Stephen Avery making a murder on Netflix innocent.
Oh, making a murder.
Okay, I remember that one, dude.
That's a state case, bro.
That's a pain in the ass doing state cases for the love of boobies.
Okay, and that's from Sheldon Ross.
Thank you so much.
But Bakey Anigary, is it true most Molly is fake/slash supercut also?
Yes, it definitely could happen.
Definitely, yeah.
A lot of Molly is fake.
Breast and tits with Denise.
Okay.
Please read the super chats you missed.
I will.
Don't worry.
Let's see here if I missed anything else.
Denise pointed them all up on for y'all.
Okay.
So, all right, let's see what else here.
All right.
So.
Oh, wait.
You already read that.
Yeah.
So let's see here.
I was going to show you guys because they're saying on this case, so let's okay.
So I'm going to pull this up to you guys, right?
So let's look at, let's look at this because there's two things here.
So in the press release, they're saying that it was 100 kilos of Coke.
But looking at the indictment, it seems like it's only 5 kilos or more.
So let me look at this real quick.
I'm going to pull this up for y'all and we're going to compare this and we're going to go over what Fetty Wap is looking at, okay?
As far as time goes.
And then also I have something very revealing to show you guys as well.
That's very interesting.
All right.
So, and remember, guys, when you look up a federal case, always go to the DOJ press release.
That's going to always typically give you the best information.
All right.
So, so more than 100 kilograms.
So, look, in the press release, they're saying to distribute more than 100 kilograms of control substance on Long Island and in New Jersey.
Okay, so it doesn't say, though, if it was cocaine.
Oh, okay.
Now it says here, distributed more than 100 kilograms of cocaine hero.
Okay, so this is all together, all the drugs, which is very important to know.
Okay, so but in the indictment, right, the indictment count one, they're saying here five kilograms or more of a substance containing cocaine and 280 grams containing a cocaine base.
Um, yeah, so you know what?
Let's go on the lower end here.
Okay, so what I got here, guys, is the United States Sentencing Commission, right?
Let's let's start doing the numbers here and see how much time our boy Fetty Wap is looking at.
So, and this is just for the cocaine, by the way.
So, we got here, hmm, all right, level 38.
So, we're gonna have to go down quite a bit.
And the way sentencing works, guys, is by um, is by is by um, by levels, right?
The higher the level, the more you're the more you're gonna be in trouble, my friends.
Um, so let's go down here quite a bit, okay?
So, we got um, and we're looking at drug offenses here, okay?
So, we got um, okay, level eight.
We need we're looking at cocaine, okay, less than 50 grams of cocaine.
No, no, what is this?
Is this a street level shit, man?
Nobody cares about 50 grams of cocaine.
All right, so we're living at um okay, 300, nope, nope, nope, we don't care.
500 grams, no, we need to we need to get into kilos here, okay.
So, okay, so we're getting close.
So, we got here uh, 3.5 kilograms, but less than 5 kilograms.
Nope, it's gonna be probably at least 5 kilograms.
Okay, so he's looking at level 30, guys, is what it looks like to me.
Like, let's go back and look in the indictment, right?
So, the indictment, guys, right, is okay, and Wiggins, as a result of their own conduct, so five kilograms or more of a substance containing cocaine.
So, they were basically so because you got to read these indictments very closely, guys, to figure it out because when it comes to sentencing, sentencing, guys, when it comes to drugs, it's all off of the quantity.
So, that's why I'm being very accurate about this so we can actually have a real picture.
So, it goes here: one kilogram or more of a substance containing heroin.
Okay, so we'll talk about it.
We'll look at the heroin charges in a second, and then five kilograms or more of a substance containing cocaine.
Okay, so let's pull out those sentencing guidelines again.
Where is it?
Um, okay, bam, here it is.
Okay, so we're looking at level 30 here, all right, level 30.
So, at least five kilo, five kilograms, but less than 15 kilograms.
Okay, so level 30 for the cocaine.
Now, let's look at the heroin.
They got him for one kilo of heroin, right?
Let's look at that again.
Uh, okay, one kilogram or more of a substance containing heroin.
So, let's look at it, okay, level 28, 700.
Nope, it's actually probably gonna be level 20.
Oh, okay, so he got one kilogram, but okay, then let's okay, so he's at a level 30 for cocaine and level 30 for heroin, okay?
Oh, man, this is not looking good.
All right, so now let's look at the sentencing table: 30.
oh lord he's looking at 97 to 121 months 97 months is about eight years and 120 21 months 120 months is 10 years so 10 years So, we're looking at 10 years and one month, guys, that he's looking at right now for this.
And mind you, he has heroin and cocaine, all right?
So, I don't know if they're going to try to run it concurrently for him or if it's going to be consecutive.
So, that's not good because he has two different types of drugs.
And then, on top of that, guys, remember, the purity of the drug also matters.
So, he might get even more time based on the purity of the drugs.
Now, just so you guys know, when it comes to the feds, 80% or more is considered pure, which means you get substantially more time.
All right.
So, yeah, this is not looking good whatsoever.
Okay, so that's how much time we're looking at for our boy Fetty Wap, okay, guys.
He's looking at somewhere between eight to ten years.
Okay, and let's see here.
I highlighted this level 34.
If they do, in fact, prove that he was distributing 100 kilos or more, he's looking at 151 to 188 months, 151 divided by 12.
That's 12 and a half years.
And then 188 divided by 12 is 15 years.
So we might not be hearing anything about coming back my way, bro.
He's going to be going, prison, won't you come my way?
Okay, that was a, I'm going to give myself, that was a dub on that one.
My singing skills are not that good.
Now, guys, I want to tell you something about the feds and how the feds don't lose, guys, number one.
Number two, this was obviously a higher level drug trafficking organization.
These guys are dealing with bricks.
These guys aren't just dealing with little grams and shit like that.
These guys were doing a sophisticated drug organization where they're using transportation, interstate, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, using it.
Sorry, they're using the U.S. Postal Service.
You got correction officers driving drugs.
They're interstate between New Jersey and Long Island in New York and New Jersey distributing drugs, and they're bringing their drugs in from California.
This is a sophisticated organization.
There's no way there weren't informants and undercovers, and they were listening to phones.
Guys, it is not looking good for Feddy Wap, bro.
It is a wrap for him.
And here's the other thing, too.
I think Fetty Wap kind of understands what's going on here.
So check this out.
He made this very cryptic Instagram post on his Instagram.
As you guys can see, Feddy Wap 1738, right?
With the blue check.
So that's how you know it's him.
This was posted on, what day was this posted on?
I think it was on November, like, shit.
When the hell was it?
12 weeks ago.
So it was posted sometime in November.
It was after he got arrested.
But here you guys can go.
Loyalty can be both a great trait and a deadly one.
Choose wisely with who you stand with, but never change what you stand for.
Never bend, never fold, head up like a nosebleed.
I'm on borrow.
Hashtag I'm on borrowed time.
If it ain't life, it ain't forever.
I'll be back better, wiser, and smarter.
Guys, he knows he's going in.
He knows it.
To me, it sounds like he's like, fuck it.
I'm going to take the L. I'm going to go to prison.
I'm going to do my time.
I'm going to plead guilty.
I'm going to try to, you know, get.
And remember, guys, this is, oh, did I mention, by the way, hold on, wait, wait, wait.
Look, this, guys, just so you know, this is assuming he has, this is no, this is at a one or zero with no criminal history.
He's looking at 10, eight to eight to 10 years.
Okay.
He has other cases on him right now.
I think he has one for DUI and one for assault.
So he might get a criminal history bump over here where he might do 108 to 135 months.
You know what I'm saying?
So it's not looking good, guys.
He's looking at a substantial amount of time.
We looked at the sentencing guidelines.
We looked at the indictment.
We looked at what he's looking at.
The feds are involved, so I already know they're not going to lose.
They had electronic surveillance.
They were listening to phones.
Guys, they did six search warrants.
It's not looking good, guys.
All right.
Yeah.
So let's see here.
All right.
I guess I'll open it up for Q ⁇ A at this point.
What I foresee happening, actually, you know what?
My prediction, he's going to plead guilty.
If he's smart, he's going to cooperate because this organization is big.
You know what I'm saying?
So assuming he is in the position that they say he is where he's a kilogram redistributor, he needs to give up all the guys that he puts on with the drugs because he's clearly been doing this for a while.
So in other words, if Miss Denise, aka Tits McGee, is the one making the deals and everything like that, like, hey, I got this guy here.
I got this guy there, bad, she's Fetty Wap.
She needs to give up all her contacts that she gives the drugs to.
Because remember, guys, I guarantee you, Fetty Wap doesn't actually touch the drugs.
He just probably knows people in the streets because remember, he used to be involved with drug trafficking himself before the music.
He probably knows people in the streets that he would hook up with the drugs.
He needs to give all those guys up because each of those guys that he's dealing with, that he's giving them kilos, those guys are regional type suppliers.
A kilo of drugs, guys, is a lot.
It's about two and a half.
It's 2.2 pounds.
You know what I'm saying?
One kilo is about 2.2 pounds.
So if you cut that up the way these guys are doing, times four, et cetera, you could stretch that out and you could serve a whole area.
You know what I'm saying?
So for him to get some time off, he's going to have to accept responsibility, number one.
He's going to have to give up those other people and cooperate, man.
Now, if he doesn't want to cooperate, that's fine.
To me, I don't think he's going to tell.
To be honest with you, I don't think he's going to tell.
And he's probably looking at doing the eight years because I know his criminal history isn't too bad.
And what his defense attorney is probably going to do is going to try to say, hey, he had a minimal role.
He only facilitated, he was a middleman.
He just helped people get the drugs.
He never touched the drugs.
He never actually distributed it.
He just plugged people in with other people.
That's it.
That's all he did.
That's what his defense attorney is going to say.
He's going to say he has a minimal role, which will help him get less time.
But what I predict is there's no way around it.
They got him dead to rights.
They got $1.5 million in cash.
Let me show you guys these pictures again, man.
God damn.
It is not good.
Let me, where is it?
Okay.
I'll show you guys these pictures again.
It's so they got him because, like I told y'all before, bro, the feds don't have to prove that you don't have to prove that you touched the drugs or you were like, you know, they don't have to prove any of that.
All they got to do is prove that you're involved in a criminal activity.
You don't have to ever touch the drugs, man.
Conspiracy is for real, guys.
All you need for conspiracy.
Let me make this very clear for you guys.
For the feds, conspiracy, all you need is an agreement between one or more, between two or more people and an overt act.
Okay?
So, and here's the dope, right?
And here's the secret.
They use this to make the secret compartments probably in vehicles and shit, right?
And here's the money.
So for conspiracy, I'm going to use me and Ms. Tits again.
Okay.
So me and her, we decide we're going to be drug dealers.
All right.
So I get the drugs from Fresh in Barbados.
I get the drugs.
Right.
And then I conspire with her to distribute said drugs, but she never touches them.
All she does is find me buyers.
Okay.
So she makes a phone call and finds a buyer for me.
So we made an agreement to sell drugs together.
And then she does the overt act of calling buyers.
That is considered an overt act in the eyes of the U.S. government, guys.
So now I'm going to go down for possession with intent to distribute.
And she's going to go down for conspiracy because we both agreed to drug traffic together.
And she committed an overt act, even though she was never in touch with she never touched the drugs.
But since she was involved in the conspiracy and made it happen through an overt act, done.
It's fucking next thing you know, jail time.
And that's all it takes, guys.
And that's why federal drug cases are so hard to beat.
Okay, especially conspiracy.
That's how they take these down, these guys down on conspiracy things all the time.
So, all right, cool.
So let's open it up for QA.
Oh, yeah, and then Fresh would get arrested in Barbados.
The AV network guy, five bucks.
If you disclose whoever worked with him, wouldn't that put him or his family in jeopardy based on the drugs organization influence and power?
It could.
It could, which is probably why he ain't going to tell.
You know what I'm saying?
It definitely could.
But honestly, I don't think he's going to tell.
Gongu Roach, five bucks.
Fetty was never involved with drugs before the rap game.
That's cap.
His CEO was heavy in the game.
The CEO has me temporarily running the label RGF.
Okay.
If you say so, man.
Let's see.
What else do we have here?
And we got Bio and BBL Gail and Free.
Question.
Since this was clearly, this was a clearly run organization.
Why didn't they get hit with racketeering?
Or is that just for organized gangs?
Good fucking question.
The reason why they didn't get hit with racketeering, guys, is because they weren't an organized gang.
Okay.
Remember, for you to do a racketeering case, you need to establish that it's a highly sophisticated gang that operates together for the betterment of said gang.
So that is why they did not charge this as a RICO case because they're not a clearly defined criminal organization.
If anything, these guys are operating how most drug trafficking organizations do, which is a lot of the time, guys, most drug trafficking organizations operate like this.
And what that means is they're compartmentalized.
So Fetty Wap might not even know his defendant, his co-defendants, guys.
He might not even know them.
He might have never met them, you know, which is why snitching is so prevalent in drug cases.
The reason why snitching is so prevalent in drug cases is because you don't know who the fuck the other guys are in the organization.
And they do that on purpose.
So if one guy gets caught, he can't necessarily, he doesn't have all the information to snitch on everyone else.
Typically, it's guys higher up on a total poll that have more information.
But the drivers, the mules, the guys that are like the wholesale distributor, et cetera, they don't really know each other like that.
You might know one or two people in the organization, but you don't know everybody.
You know what I'm saying?
So this is how most drug organizations actually operate, where it's like a layer of separation or a layer, there's a layer of layer of separation between different factions of the drug trafficking organization.
That is why they didn't prosecute this as a racketeering case.
I read that one.
That was a good question from our boy Buy One BBL, Gail and Free.
Hope you guys learned a lot on this one, bro.
I dropped a lot of sauce on this one on how drug cases work, etc.
Kubo Dennis, Denise, Cuando Vamos.
I don't know what that means.
Albar.
What does that mean?
When are we going to the bar?
Oh, okay.
When are you going to borrow him?
Never.
He's a baby.
Yeah, you're too young, bro.
I'm not.
I'm not a pedophile.
The A.V. Network guy.
Great info, Myron.
Many gems.
Thank you very much, sir.
We got here Isaac J. Smooth.
Can you do a freeway Ricky case potentially?
If it's federal, I can.
I could do a state one too, but state cases suck, guys.
That was for Denise Nicaragua.
It's what they do.
Oh, the lip thing when they point with their lip.
That's true.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
Fair enough.
Let's see here.
And then we got what else do we got here?
Do we have any other chats?
Do you point at things?
Oh, okay.
That was that.
That was from before, right?
I had a feeling he was talking about that, but I wasn't sure.
Okay, I'm going to pull up the super chats here.
Tell the people about yourself or something.
I don't know.
While I pull this up.
Okay, well, I'm Denise.
You were on the show a while ago, right?
I was.
I was on the, what was it called?
It's the late night show, right?
After hours.
The after hours.
I was there.
I'm 29 years old.
Thanks.
Old as hell, bro.
Yeah, yeah, but wise.
Fine as wine.
And I'm an administrator at Dr. Finlay Medical Center, a medical office in Hialeah Gardens.
Oh, shit.
Hialeah.
Yeah.
But hey, we got the job done there.
There's free STD testing there, just so everybody knows.
Free HIV testing.
Yeah.
Oh, you can get COVID vaccines there if you need to.
Okay.
So.
All right.
I think I got the super chats set up here.
Okay.
So let's see here.
We got that was a test.
Well done, Denise.
Two bucks from Myron Jr.
Okay, so you're not going to go to jail.
You will not have the FBI after you for pedophilia.
Okay, what was your major in college and how long?
This is from Nate Carr Reviews.
I majored in criminal justice, guys, and I went to college at Northeastern University, graduated in 2013 with a bachelor's in criminal justice.
While I was there, I was an intern for Homeland Security Investigations.
That's how I got the job.
Then I resigned from the agency in 2020.
Burning Wool, five bucks all the way from Grey Brand.
Can you explain the history of RICO law?
It seems to be created to combat New York Mafia 1970s.
How does it shape law enforcement before and after?
Okay, I will give you guys a quick little history lesson on RICO.
RICO, guys, was created in the 1970s to go after the mafia because the reason why was because it was very difficult for them to go after sophisticated criminal organizations and they could not get people to cooperate against higher-ups in the organization because they weren't facing that much time.
If I'm only going to go get pinched, right, as they would say, I'm only going to get pinched for five months.
I don't care.
I'll do it a time.
You know, they don't care.
Like, forget about it.
I'll just go to jail, right?
But if I'm going to get pinched for life, right, I'm my snitch.
And what they were able to do with the racketeering laws was now you're able to charge the higher ups in the organization that are ordering the hits.
Okay?
So, and everyone involved in the chain.
So if you're able to charge the organization as a whole for a crime, now you can actually start doing some damage.
So that's what the FBI and the U.S. Attorney's Office did in the 1970s to go after the mafia to break into them was to get people to cooperate and snitch.
The RICO laws were critical in that.
AV Network guy, if he discloses whoever worked with him, wouldn't that put him?
Oh, read that one before.
Thank you, AV Network guy.
I'm looking through the chats real quick, guys.
Oh, it looks like I got most of the chats, guys, because I'm looking through here.
Steven Avery making a murder on Netflix.
I remember watching that, guys.
I will see, man.
But that's a state case, guys.
The state cases suck.
Peanut butter, Aaron Chris.
Did someone say peanut butter?
$2.
Thank you so much.
Myron Jr., I had a nice nanny.
Yo, she was bad.
Managua?
Managua.
What does that mean?
City of Nicaragua.
Okay.
It's the capital.
It's a capital?
Okay.
Let's see here.
And I'm looking through, guys, making sure I don't miss any of these chats.
Give me some ones in the chat if you guys really enjoyed today's episode, man.
I think this one was better than the Hush Puppy one.
Keem Chillin, let's go.
Pump for tonight.
Definitely do Kwame Kilpatrick.
That's five books from J Read313.
Isaac J. Smooth.
Sheesh Bro was worried you weren't going to.
Okay, I read that one.
I love this channel from W. Alfonso.
Did you see that one?
Which one?
Can you read it for me?
Hold on, what?
Freeway.
Ricky was definitely federal, dabbled with the CIA.
That's why I asked Snowfall.
The series was based on him.
Okay.
I could do that.
Oh, $2.
Buy one, BBO.
Get one free.
I'm a well-known Miami doctor with Groupon deals.
I'm good.
Thanks.
Are you looking for a BB?
No, you're not.
Okay.
No, I don't like that look.
Samuel Silver, five bucks.
Anyone who doesn't like fake D Ds is either lying or hasn't been with them before.
Also, wrench.
Oh, Sam.
Yeah.
Sam, comment something right now so I can give you a wrench.
Comment something right now, and I got you.
Oh, you guys want Epstein?
I will give you Epstein as well, guys.
Don't worry.
The reason why I haven't done Epstein, guys, is because Aisha is supposed to help me with that case.
She actually helped me with writing that outline.
So I don't want to do it without her here because that one is going to be very extensive.
That one.
So, okay, there we go, Sam.
I'm going to give you a wrench right now, my friend.
Why won't it?
Let me go.
I'm going to give you that wrench right now.
Okay, boom.
You got the wrench, bro.
Okay.
I think I'm caught up on super chats, guys.
I'll refresh it one more time just to make sure I didn't miss anything with y'all.
And, guys, thank you so much for the donations.
This money will be used to get Denise new boobs.
Just kidding.
We ain't Simpson here.
BZS.
Well, your doctor did a good job.
You know, you don't even really need a new tip job.
Not yet.
Love show.
Can you pull up Google images more often, like images of drugs, IGs, gangs involved, interstate picks, departments, locations, etc.
Yeah, I could do that.
I could definitely do that for y'all.
Hey, Martin, have you dealt with drugs going into Canada?
How much is the mark up/slash period of the drugs?
Yes, I have dealt with drugs going into Canada.
They go up significantly once they make it into Canada, guys.
They go up a lot.
And that's seven bucks from Canada.
Thank you so much for that super chat.
Marlon is cute and she is pretty.
Thank you.
Okay.
And then Isaac J Smooth.
Denise read that one.
So, all right, cool.
I think we're caught up, guys.
This one was a shorter one.
I think we're under two hours on this one.
What are the likes at, though?
Are we at?
Let's see what the engagement is like.
Guys, we should easily have 2,000 likes on this goddamn video.
I gave you guys a lot of heat.
No one on YouTube gives this much information on how federal cases work in general or drug cases.
Guys, we only got 1.4k likes.
Come on, man.
Like the video.
I barely stopped the video to get the likes up.
You know what I'm saying?
So do me a solid and like the video.
All right.
It helps a lot.
Like the video for her leopard jacket that she took off.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I took off my jacket for you guys.
There you go.
That's not fair.
Like the video, goddammit.
You know what I'm saying?
Like the video.
But anyway, with that said, guys, you got anything you want to tell the people?
Why are you looking at me like that?
Because I don't know what to say, but all right.
Fantastic.
Women.
Sorry.
Charisma on fire.
Great charisma right there.
I was yours.
You told me I'm your assistant.
Not this.
I'm not good at this.
I warned you.
I'm very shy.
You shy with those tits?
Bro, I know you ain't shy with them things.
This is, I'm confident with them, but I'm still shy.
Pathetic.
All right.
Well, like the video, guys.
Yo, tomorrow we're going to have Bandman Kevin.
We're going to talk about NFTs and making money on the metaverse, guys.
And yeah, other than that, we're going to.
What else are we going to do tomorrow?
Oh, we're going to have a late night show.
It's Valentine's Day tomorrow.
Well, technically today.
It's a 14 today.
So yeah, guys, other than that, man, you know, I wish Feddy Wap the best, honestly.
I hope nothing happens, but guys, it's not good, man.
It's definitely not good.
I think he's going to have to plead guilty.
They got a very strong case.
They got wiretaps, guys.
It's a wrap.
What did that one say?
Burning Wolf?
Which one?
The one you just had, the highlighted one?
Okay, hold on.
Let me go down.
Like the video, guys, by the way, while we read this last chat.
Still shadow banned on the main channel.
It was fun to follow the channel, but seems that it comes to an end.
Good luck for future success, though.
What?
You're shadow banned?
I'll talk with Chris, bro.
We got you, Bernie Wolf.
Don't worry about that.
I'll make sure that you aren't shadow banned, my friend.
I got you.
Anything else that I might have missed here?
No, I think you have better.
Okay, in a days.
I'm 25 gay in my life right going to school for X-ray tech.
Yeah, bro.
Go ahead.
In a days, do your thing, man.
Go to school.
Guys, go to college if it's going to benefit you and get you a job.
If it ain't going to get you a job, bro, don't do it.
College is a scam.
Did you go to college?
You?
Ms. McGee?
Well, did I go to college?
Did you go to college?
I'm a college dropout.
Your college repout?
Yes.
Oh, what did you major in before you dropped out?
Stupid.
I got my associates in science.
I was supposed to become a nurse.
But then I just started working on my job, learning a lot about it, putting so much hours into it, dedication, and I just dropped out of college.
I said, fuck it.
I said, fuck it.
And then I actually really did make it as an administrator there.
And then I started doing my side hustle, which is what?
Which is medical credentialing.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
So what I do is on the side, I work for other doctors, helping them with the inspections and contracting.
I usually have the hookups for all the Miami-Dade contracts with the medical insurances.
So that's what I usually do.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
All right.
Inspections, like I told you.
So, so you help the doctors get the licensing to give people boobs and BBLs.
Yeah, and I also help people.
Oh, God.
Okay.
I also help with HEDIS, which is with.
Is that how you find your plastic surgeon?
No.
Oh, okay.
No, I just did research on real self.
Okay.
All right.
You didn't give them his.
It's Miami.
I don't know.
I don't like usually going with people I know too well.
Okay.
All right.
That would.
Okay.
Well, that makes sense.
Hey, I know you really well.
I kind of don't want you to put a knife on my boob.
And like I've seen you doing bad things.
I don't trust you.
I've seen you at the bar doing strange things.
I don't want you operating on me.
Like, I know you self-medicate.
I'm good.
Yeah.
I don't want to know that part of it.
Doctors began down, bro.
They'd be some of them.
And they act like they have a very high tolerance.
Yeah, they're going crazy.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, man.
And the nurses, everybody.
Oh, nurses.
There's a reason why Chris always hits that fucking button.
You know what I'm saying?
Anytime, oh, I'm a nurse.
He's just like, yeah, but not all nurses.
All nurses are amazing people, though.
Don't get it.
Of course, you got to give the politically correct fucking.
They know how to have a good time because, you know, you just see a lot.
So you learn to cherish life.
It's true.
All right.
Like the fucking video.
That's a grind through that.
By the way, guys, no other chats came in.
I'm checking it now.
Okay.
Oh, big owl.
Get Tommy Soto between those cheeks.
Tommy Soto, what does that mean?
Tommy Sotomero was on the show the other day with us.
And we had this.
We try to stay away from race, but it always happens with Tommy.
He goes in and he just starts going in on a bunch of topics that I will not mention on this Feda channel because this is a show on crime drama, not race drama.
But that's a whole other thing.
But other than that, guys, yo, love you guys so much, man.
Like the video.
I hope you guys enjoyed that show.
And yeah, man, I'm going to be back tomorrow.
I think we're going to do the show with Bandman Kevin at 5 or 6 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
And then we're going to do a show with the ladies after hours at 8 p.m.
All right.
But other than that, guys, thank you so much.
I'll catch you guys later.
And I got to hit the outro here.
Let me show you guys this little cool outro I got.
Shout out to Kaisen Graphics, by the way, for doing this for me, man.