Making Hit Songs From Prison...For MURDER?! Vybz Kartel Case Breakdown + Call In Show!
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And we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed.
I'm here with a good friend, as you guys remember, Dollface in the house.
And we're gonna be breaking down the Vibes Cartel case, man.
Hope you guys enjoyed this new intro that I got as well.
Let me know what y'all think but uh between this one and the one that I played last week.
I was a special agent with homeland screen investigations.
Okay, guys, HSI cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.
The sheriff is an official in a county independent city responsible for keeping kidnapping guys, you know, happens in the drug game.
Um September 29th, 2014.
I was on duty that day.
So obviously, you're always on duty when you're a special agent, right?
Because you, you know, you're playing clothes.
No one else has these documents, by the way.
I've been looking everywhere, and no one has them.
Ain't nobody gonna be able to tell you all this except over here on FedEx.
So we are back.
What's up, guys?
Welcome.
Hope you guys enjoyed that one.
I'm gonna be going between that one and another one.
Let me know which one you guys like better.
Uh, but anyway, uh without further ado, guys, we got Vibes Cartel today.
Uh, it's gonna be a good show.
I don't know, I didn't know too much about this case, to be honest with y'all.
Thank you to Dollface for actually help quite a bit with putting this together, as you guys know, she's Jamaican herself.
Uh so I'm gonna introduce her, man.
Welcome to the house, man.
Uh don't.
For some of you guys that don't know uh newer viewers.
Can you introduce yourself to the audience?
Um, my name is Dollface on Instagram is Dollface Duh.
Um, I'm a Jamaican descent.
And I'm excited because this is actually one of my favorite artists in dance hall.
Favorite, one of my favorite artists, period.
So yeah.
What's up, y'all?
Give them an update with with you, what's going on with you, where you've been at, uh, and then also how much you hate uh recruiting girls.
Where I've been at, I've been working, um, working on myself, just trying to like figure out where what direction I want to take myself to.
So that's where I'm at right now.
And also about recruiting.
Oh my gosh.
Recruiting is annoying.
Like recruiting girls are annoying, like for real.
Like, it's a headache.
What are the top three things that annoy you about it?
What annoys me is they're flakers, number one.
Like, if you're gonna just tell me no.
I'd rather the person that be like, all right, I'm not interested, I don't want to do this.
They'll lead you on, be like, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm interested.
And then it's like, okay, cool.
And then it's like when they hear about it from their friend, they'd be like, oh, I heard about it, I don't want to do it no more.
Like, bitch, you just wasted like two weeks of my time.
Like, what the hell?
Like, I don't like that.
So I don't like recruiting.
I don't like give me something else to do.
How does it feel to be a guy?
Um, it sucks to be y'all right now.
Honestly.
Now imagine trying to get these chicks out for dates, man.
This shit's crazy.
So anyway.
Boom, boom.
We're about to do the show.
No, I'm just kidding.
It's bat, bat.
How do you how do you do it?
Uh what is it?
I messed up.
It's bat bap.
Yeah.
Okay.
It's not boom, boom, boom.
You could do boop, boop, boop.
I thought I was like, Yeah, like a fire.
It's basically Yeah, you know, like when you know how I like Jamaican Myron in the house.
I got my address going.
Yes, Rastamon Myron.
Yes, Rasta Myron.
Let me go on.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
All right.
Anything else new with you before before we get into this bad boy?
Um, anything else that's new with me?
I mean, you guys could follow me on Instagram.
Also, I have a YouTube channel that I want to launch.
So the more subscribers I get, I will post.
Period.
Yeah, stop being a bum post.
Yeah, I'm not being a bum.
You gotta post it.
I could never be a bum.
All right, cool.
Um, so we'll go ahead and get right into it, guys.
And uh let's see here if we have any chats.
We got 400 five of you guys in here already, man.
So go ahead and like the video.
Um, you guys have been requesting this one quite a bit, which is why we're doing uh the vibes cartel case.
Again, this is Jamaican law, guys, so I'm not too familiar with Jamaican law, but we're gonna go through kind of the case.
Uh, I'll give like someone of my predictions.
Dolphase will give her predictions, right?
And uh we'll kind of get into it.
But you know, just keep in mind that this isn't an American case, so it's I'm not gonna be as like well versed in it because Jamaican law is obviously very different.
I mean, it's it's closer, I think, to like British law if I'm not mistaken.
Yeah, because they're under the um British rule.
Yeah, yeah.
I heard him like in an interview say, like, uh, God save the queen because she's the only one that could save me, right?
So I'm like that.
He says some shit like that.
Um, but yeah, so shout out to all you guys here um in the chat.
So uh okay.
So first we're gonna go ahead and get into who is vibes cartel, Okay.
Um, because I had to do my research as well with you guys.
So uh so here he is, guys.
Here's the Wikipedia page, right?
Real quick summary.
Uh Adija Azim Palmer, born uh January 7, 1976, better known as Viper Cartels, Jamaican reggae and dance hall recording artists.
Real quick, can you break down for people uh Dolph Face the difference between dance hall and reggae?
Okay, so I didn't know that there was a difference.
I thought it was the same thing.
Yeah, it's different.
Okay, so dance hall is more vulgar, it's more raw, like it's very vulgar.
Like it's talk about fucking you, man.
Yeah, it talks about fuck it.
It talks about how put how the pussy tight uh all these tapes man demonetization is here now.
Go ahead, you're fine, go ahead.
It talks about like it's very vulgar.
Um versus reggae is more i it's more Bob Marley.
Think of Bob Marley, that's reggae, he's the face of reggae, like it's more, you know, it's more suitable for the airs.
Gotcha.
Okay, yeah, so the dance hall is like we're trying to smash reggae, it's like, you know, just like somebody say Ross be happy, okay?
Ross, yes, don't worry, be happy versus like I want to bang you now.
Boom, boom.
Yes, okay.
Um all right, uh, so he's a recording and dance hall, recording artist, composer, record, producer, entrepreneur, and convicted murderer.
Right.
I love how it was all just great, and then bam, convicted murderer, right?
Right.
Um, among his various nicknames, he has referred to as world boss.
Uh, how do you say it?
Is that how you say world boss?
Okay, no D, guys.
If you use a D, you're a loser.
At summarize by Rolling Stone, he attained folk hero status of Jamaica with provocative lyrics and a mischievous public persona, and few have captivated the dance hall audience or offended the sensibilities of us detractors as consistently and thoroughly as cartel.
It's spelled with K, by the way.
Cartel singles include Romping Shop 2009, Dance Hero, Dance Hall Hero 2010, and Summertime 2011, and Romping Shop.
Yeah, let's see here.
This is it, right?
Yeah, that that um song's been banned in a lot of countries.
Uh and I'm gonna play this literally a few seconds of it, guys, because I don't want to get hit with copyright because y'all know how this goes.
Yep.
This is basically uh, you know, him talking about Smash and Chick, which I guess is the difference between dance hall versus like reggae as we were just saying, yeah.
Somebody said dance hall is a lifestyle of the party scene, and reggae is more cultural.
Yeah, that's a cleaner way of saying it.
That's a clean and dance hall, okay.
All right, fair enough.
Well, what would Elephant Man be considered?
Remember that shit, back elephant man um dancehall, dance hall, dance hall too.
He was he was pretty clean though, from what I remember.
He's clean, yeah.
Or is that like water dancing?
Because you could dance, you could dance like dancing is included.
Okay, that's the whole point.
It's a day, like it's dancing.
Okay, so you see people on their head top, or you see people jumping off the speakers.
Oh, yeah, what's the WWE shit?
Yeah, that's what it is.
That's that's their yes.
That shit should be called fucking WrestleMania.
Yo, have y'all seen that stuff, bro?
Yo, legit, man.
It's like some wrestling shit.
It's like jumping off the top roofs and like doing some wild shit.
I'll show you guys some of this stuff.
But this this is uh this is uh rompin's shop here.
Damage it fish pipe, not the common boosty tie.
What?
Okay, she said don't damage it because our pussy tight.
Okay, and he said her cock, he said his dick is longer than a knife.
Okay, fantastic.
So that that's uh that's uh, and then this is like the if I'm not mistaken, the Neo song here that they're using.
See, you know, yeah, I I knew that.
Yeah, I mean uh I'm old, you know.
We're both old, actually.
We both remember it when Neo was hot back in the day.
Yeah.
Uh okay, so yeah, so this is like an example, guys, of like what this type of music is here.
Um, yo, what's it hold on?
I I gotta do this for the people so they know what the hell I'm talking about.
WWE, um, what is it called?
Dancehall dancing, just the dance hall, like um y'all must have yo, I know y'all have seen this shit before.
This shit is crazy.
I mean, I'll realize this.
Yo, they be doing this shit in in the clubs in the party.
Yep.
Double magnetic use the WWE shit with it, man.
It's hilarious, man.
Thank you.
They got a little WWE thing, but okay.
So these are like more like the garrison parties, like cards in the ghetto.
Oh, no, no, what the fuck?
Yo, what?
Yeah, but I'm going.
What the fuck do that?
Bro, what the fuck is going on?
Yo.
What is this?
It's the culture.
I need to come to Jamaica.
I'm telling you.
I'm not trying to die.
No, you're not gonna die.
Yo, you're not gonna die.
What the hell is going on?
I didn't die.
Oh bro.
I'm not doing that.
That's crazy.
I'm not doing that.
That's all I saw right there, man.
That big chick fell on him.
I'm crying.
Oh, right.
Okay.
So this do they do this to Vibes Cartel music?
Yeah.
Any song, any song.
Okay.
Any song.
The pussy tight, then just draw a drop on you.
Yep.
Any song.
Okay.
Any song.
Fantastic.
All right.
Um, let's see here.
We got a King Light Five Bucks.
That pussy Lasan backed out like a keyboard warrior does.
Bitch ass pussy Hassan needs to be renamed a phobus for fear.
Here's the thing.
He said he would do it, but then he mentioned something about us being broke or something like that.
Oh, wow.
Uh, and I'll in my head, I'm like, uh, bro.
I control real estate worth three and a half million dollars.
What are you talking about, brokey?
Are you fucking dumb?
Like what?
I probably I'm new to this YouTube thing, and I may have a higher net worth than he does, bro.
Who I mean, uh I I'm an investor, so I don't know what he's talking about just because I don't show it.
But no, I'd be happy to buy his plane ticket so he can come down, debate me and Tay, and take a big L. It's just that he's scared.
That's what it comes down to.
Uh so yeah, when he said broke, yeah, I was like laughing in my head, like, okay, bro.
Uh Big Mo, uh, by the way, in the house.
It's all fun and games till I fall on some of these girls from the top of the speaker.
Yeah, bro.
Uh that my friend will be finish her.
Be the finishing move right there.
He does a five-star fraud splash.
That'll be the last splash he ever sees, man.
Uh, any other chats here?
Uh nope.
Hold on.
Okay.
Right here.
There's one.
One more.
So uh, and then we got uh Zoji.
Yo, Myron, I don't know what is happening with them.
Jock Cure got six years over here in the Netherlands for stabbing a promoter.
Like the video, guys.
Who's Jock Hure?
Um, he's another Jamaican artist.
I did hear about that.
He stabbed somebody in the Netherlands, yeah.
Um, a promoter.
Why?
I don't know.
I'm surprised him.
Because he his songs is nice.
He got this around, man.
No, we don't.
Yeah.
We we do not when we get disrespected, like is it's a yeah, but don't worry, guys.
I'll make a formal response to uh your boy Hassan, uh, probably tomorrow.
Okay, but today is it's fed it, man.
We we ain't gonna talk about this.
Yeah, we're not gonna talk about him right now.
Yeah, we're talking about him tomorrow.
Yeah, we're talking about five-star frogs splashing big girls on people right now.
Um, and then uh okay, so we're I think we're caught up, right?
Yep, okay, cool.
So, all right, guys.
So um, we're gonna go ahead and give you guys a quick little uh background on who Vibes Cartel was.
Shout out to um before they were famous, they actually did a special on us before as well, and I figured, you know, who better to explain who Vibes Cartel is than these guys.
So we'll go through his little history real quick.
Also, guys, just to let y'all know, I'm gonna be opening up the phone lines on today's episode, so you'll be able to call into the show and talk with me and Dollface and uh give us your take on everything else like that.
We're gonna make this show a little bit more um interactive, and uh yeah, man, we're really happy to have y'all here, man.
This is gonna be a little bit more of a fun show because like I said, this is Jamaican law, this isn't really American law, but you guys asked for it, so since you guys asked for it, we're giving the people what they want.
So before I play this, you got anything you want to say to the people, Dollface?
Um not really, just enjoy the um the content, please.
And like the video, and like the video.
All right, so uh you're seeing the book before vibes cartel will become one of Jamaica's most influential musical artists with track and you guys are noticing.
I just want you guys to notice he has light skin here, and then notice what happens a little bit later.
And fever up shot, extra nothing sweet, don't he sign the music video, guys?
Because that music video was dropped in 2016 when he was arrested or after he was arrested in 2014, but we'll talk about that in a second.
Before we would find international success, collaborating with American artists, including Rihanna, Missy Elliott, Pitbull, and Buster Rhymes.
Give Rap with a ribbon gun, I'm a press.
Look at me to let the visit them live.
Can you break down what Gaza means for the people real quick, Dollface?
It's um like uh it's like the they have I know I don't I just know it's Gaza and Gully.
It's the ghetto, so that's all I know.
Okay, so anyway.
Yeah, he does.
Yeah, he does.
Um, and what where's it he's a part from a part of Jamaica that they call it Gazaville or something like that?
Yeah, um, Portmore.
Portmore, and they call it It's basically the ghetto.
And they call it Gaza.
Yeah, they don't even call it Portmore anymore.
No, well, they still call it Portmore.
That for people don't know on the map, but Gaza, we know it's a data Gaza, meaning the ghetto.
Gotcha.
And um, just yes, just so you guys know, um, this dude has a massive influence over Jamaica.
It's actually incredible.
When I was doing my research on him, uh he's like almost like presidential status out there.
I mean, you want to talk about that a little bit as far as like because you'd be going back to Ireland and stuff like that.
His influence on the island.
His influence, the thing with him, his influence is through his music, like he influenced a lot of people, but also like you know how people get rich and switch.
He basically he didn't get rich in switch, he basically helped the people still, like he put people on.
So that's why he's such so big out there because it's not he made an impact in a lot of people's lives.
Fair enough, yeah.
Music and all of that.
He got rich and got the bitches.
That's what he did.
Uh he did get the bitches too.
He had a TV show where he had like 20 girls competing for his first.
Yeah, that that was lit.
That show is not teachers.
And it had that in the United States, right?
They had that only in Jamaica.
Um no, they had it in the United States.
It's kind of like the flavor of love.
Yeah, they did, but they they aired it here.
Um, no, it was on, I think it was on YouTube.
Oh, okay.
I don't think it made the airwaves.
Okay, okay.
So yeah, he had a bunch of chicks uh competing for him as well.
So all right, cool.
Well, I told y'all, man.
What women want to they'd rather share one winner than be a loser all to themselves?
Somebody said Portmore.
Oh somebody said what Portmore is like a war zone, the Gaza Strip in Jerusalem.
That's why they call it like that.
Is that dangerous?
Yeah, I didn't know that.
Of course.
All right.
Let's keep going with the video.
Shout out to before they were famous.
And go check it, check them out, guys.
Go subscribe to their YouTube channel as well.
And LMB gun me.
Before he was tried for two separate murders and sentenced to life in prison on April 3rd, 2014.
Should I give you no life?
Yeah, y'all heard that right.
He's been in prison since 2014, but he's been releasing music the whole fucking time.
Can you tell the Dolphist?
Tell people real quick, how much uh music how many songs does he release since he's been in jail?
Listen, the man have thousands of songs, and you know how you know somebody got a lot of songs.
I remember a couple of years back, um, there was a party promoting that they only played Vibes Cartel song from start to finish.
So that's how much songs this man got.
And how long did that party last?
It was like four hours.
Four hours, and they only played his music.
Only played his music.
No Sean Paul.
No, man, no Sean Paul.
That's what I know.
No, no, no.
No Sean Paul.
That's not a hot.
Am I showing my age right now?
That's the trash.
That's trash for me.
Like, nah, you there's so much other good songs.
There's so much other good songs.
It's like, nah, that's not it.
That's not it.
That's not it.
Damn.
I I guess I'm showing my oh niggas in the chat.
Okay, so you got two songs.
Bro, that was come on, man.
Just give me a light.
No, okay.
I mean, yeah, it's international, but I mean, that's not everybody looks at that as that's dance hall, but it's not.
It's way more okay.
I was gonna say, what genre does that fall into?
Is that reggae or dance hall?
They say it's reggae up here, but it'll be, I guess, dance hall.
You would consider dance hall?
Yeah, reluctantly.
You say that begrudgingly.
Yeah.
Yeah, she only because um dance hall is down, I feel like dance hall is like downplayed.
Okay.
You know what I'm saying?
Um, dance hall with the DJ and all of that.
I think well, not what I think, but I know hip hop originated from dance hall.
So with the MC.
I noticed you don't say I feel like anymore.
Nah.
I cut that out.
My vocabulary Larry.
No, sir.
No, I cut that out.
Oh man.
Traumatizing.
Uh man, I hope you guys are having a good time as much as we are.
All right, let's keep going with this bad boy.
And then Michael means Shrugmiron.
We knew they would back out number one podcast of the world.
It's okay, man.
We we'll we'll uh address Hassan and L3 uh later tomorrow.
So we got y'all, man.
And uh Sir.
Well, yeah, something.
There's one more super chat.
Hold on.
One more?
Okay.
Yeah.
Shout out to Dollface and the ones and twos.
She's helping me out here.
Uh Haitian Jack Timbucks.
Uh, me what okay.
Me, why?
What does that mean?
He won't he want put a baby in me, basically.
Uh well, yeah.
Go ahead.
Send your shot on Instagram, my friend.
I don't date Haitians, sorry.
Oh, damn!
I don't.
Ouch!
No offense.
God damn.
I still love my Zoos, though.
Julie I've spoken.
The judge I've spoken.
And we know look forward to the court of appeal.
As a young man, Vibes Curtel was a promising student, but dedicated more and more of his time to his musical aspirations.
When he was just 16 years old, he was kicked out of high school, but fortunately found a mentor in the dance hall legend, Mountie Killer.
Yeah.
This helped to launch the promising young artist career, but their falling out was ugly, even leading to violence on the streets of Kingston.
I'm not a religious leader, and I'm not a political leader.
So I shouldn't be unresponsible for growing a child response.
And you guys are probably wondering that yes, that is Vibes Cartel right there, isn't that?
Yeah, yeah, guys.
He he did skin bleaching, which is a while.
You guys are probably wondering why the hell is he so much lighter skin in his in his photographs versus right now on video?
That is the same individual because I got confused too.
I had to do a double take.
Yes, that was him before, guys.
He did uh skin bleaching, so that's why he's light skin in his photos and you know his more later appearances versus the older stuff he's dark skinned.
Um, real quick, can you give the people about background on who Bounty Killer is?
Who's that?
He's a Jamaican artist as well.
Okay, um, he put basically Bounty Killer put Vibes Cartel on.
Okay, okay, and then they ended up having a falling out, which led to some violence on the island, right?
I don't think they fell out.
No, they're so cool.
Well, the guy said that they that they had an issue.
Maybe it's I don't know about that.
Okay, that's the time because there was a time I didn't really follow up dance all.
Okay, so I I'll only listen to Dancing.
Because uh early 2000s, I didn't really listen to dance all.
Uh yeah, okay and a lot of drama happened during the early 2000s.
You're listening to fucking what jaw rulers.
Yep.
Nelly, yep.
Nelly, I was listening to all of that.
Nelly.
Yes, yo, the country grammar.
Ludicris.
Yes.
Man, yo, the music of the early 2000s was was was crazy.
It was.
And that and it's funny, that's when dance hall got real popular in New York with the pasta pasta and the dancing and stuff, but I I never uh during them times I was American.
Yeah, I got introduced to reggae through uh through Sean Paul, as much as you guys want to make fun of me.
Uh that's what like when he came out with like with just give me the light.
I was like, what the fuck is this shit?
Like it was a whole whole other thing.
And that's when I noticed a guy hit on the map.
Uh but yeah, anyway.
Early 2000s.
She was out here listening to high and here and stuff like that.
What one?
My name Michael McCritten documenting the life and career of Vibes Cartel, pride of fame.
Here for you.
What does one wag one mean?
What's up?
Okay, all right.
It's a Jamaican greeting gentleman.
Yes.
We've actually never covered any Jamaican dance hall artists in the past, but all that can change.
Just let me know who's next in the comments down below.
Sorry, my cameraman's laughing at me.
I'll never do the Wog One again.
Yeah.
More, continue.
And it's purest fun.
It would be intolerable.
Yes, that is him, guys.
Vibes Kartel was born a disja Azim Palmer on January 7th, 1976, and Victoria Jubilee.
Guys, write that mental note in your head.
Adhija Palmer is his government name.
So because when we look at like some of the court documents and everything else like that, Adija Palmer, all right, aka Vibes Cartel.
Hospital in Kingston, Jamaica.
He was raised in the Waterford district of Portmore with his four sisters and one brother.
Growing up, he idolized artists like Will Smith, Papa Sen, Ninja Man, and KRS One, and began tending lyrics when he was just 11 years young.
Two Medija's uncles were aspiring musicians who helped to encourage his musical.
Will Smith before he embarrassed himself with all the Jada Pickett bullshit that's going on right now, man.
Holy crap.
From a young age, but his parents didn't always approve.
Adige's parents emphasize discipline and education, In fact, his sister Maureen actually grew up to become a high school vice principal.
As for a didja, well, he did well in school.
He excelled in math, geography, and English.
He was such a bright student that one of his teachers had this to say.
He could have become a rocket scientist if he had so desired.
He attended Calabar High School, but after spending most of his time pursuing his musical interests, he was expelled when he was just 16 years young.
Going by the name Addie Banton, a nod to reggae artist, Booshu Banton.
He recorded his first single when he was just 17 years old.
The 1993 track was called Love Fat Women and Addie Form.
Wait, hold on.
Wait, the name of the song was What?
Love Fat Women.
What the fuck?
You want to tell the people about that one real quick?
I mean, there's Jamaican men that love fat women.
They do.
They call him Fluffy.
What?
Fluffy Man.
They call him Fluffy.
Is that like a thing?
Some Jamaican men love big women.
They do.
All right.
Well, that explains them jumping on each other at the fucking.
All right.
Uh and it'd be the smallest men.
All right.
Okay.
I guess uh so there, I guess there's a little bit of a fat love out there.
What name is on fat love fat women?
And that was a hit.
I I never heard that one.
You never I would have to lit, I would have to hear how that songs.
You'd have to hear that.
I never heard that.
Never heard that one.
All right.
My head, I'm like, what the fuck?
I know.
You we know, we know.
Yeah, me, uh, me and fat people have a beef.
Yeah, we know.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, let's keep going on here.
His own group, Vibes Cartel, along with Mr. Lee and Escobar in 1996.
The group didn't last long, but he decided to keep the name, but with different spelling, as his own moniker as he transitioned into a career as a solo artist.
While performing at a show at Portmore in 1998, he caught the attention of a popular dance hall singer known as Bounty Killer.
Bounty headed up the musical collective called The Alliance and invited Vibes to join.
Body made friends with another rising star, Vivado, and began writing for Bounty Killer, Elephant Man, and others.
he also collaborated on songs like girls like mine liquid rhythm and cal clown Can you translate that for the people real fast?
I don't know what this occurred.
I didn't even hear what he said, but I think that was the time that he was beefing with this other artist named Mavato.
Okay.
I don't know.
I wasn't listening.
Okay, can you can you tell the people who Mavato is real fast?
He's another Jamaican artist.
He's ugly too.
All Jamaican artists are friggin' ugly.
We all know that, but they talented though.
So you tell me you wouldn't let Vibes Cartel hit hit.
Come on, man.
No.
What?
No.
No.
Cat Man.
His songs is lit, though.
Okay.
I wouldn't fuck him.
I will fuck two of his songs.
Okay.
Okay.
if you say so.
As the two vibes began recording a string of hits like Most High, Guns Like Mine, Bust My Gun Like None...
And War Organizer.
Sorry if I butchered any of that.
I know it doesn't sound as cool.
He also collaborated with Wayne Marshall on tracks like Why Crazy Rhythm, New Millennium, Mad Ann's Rhythm, and Why Again, Good To Go Rhythm.
Oh shit, yes, braces.
Yeah, he he had braces when he bleached out his teeth.
He always changes looks.
Okay.
By 2003, he was selling more singles than another artist on the reggae charts, other than fellow Alliance member, Elephant Man.
Also in 2003, well, this happened.
He became the first artist in dancehall to physically attack another on stage.
I can't do this anymore.
I can't do this anymore.
What happened?
He released his debut.
All I heard was boom boom boom.
Who was that that is that was Ninja Man.
That was Ninja Man?
Yeah, that nigga ugly.
I wore him in Ninja Man fighting.
It's like some Mortal Kombat shit.
I don't know.
They did have beef.
I know them two had beef.
Okay.
All right.
All right.
Album up to D time on October 28, 2003, with both Timeless and more up to D time following in 2004.
during singles picture and the tech buddy But Vibe Cartel.
Can you translate that for the people real fast?
He's basically saying, take this dick.
What?
You think it's easy?
You tap my ting, you take my things, you take my money too.
So take my dick.
So that's what Buddy, Buddy is dick.
All right.
Okay.
Learn something new every day.
All right.
That was easy.
Thank you, Adolphus, for that fantastic translation.
I would have never been able to come up with that.
Um stays with the alliance would last with his career beginning to take off his status as bounty killer's protege was making less and less sense.
Then a personal incident marked a clear break in the relationship when Bounty Killer sworn rival Beanie Man got married.
Not only did Vibes Cartel attend the wedding, he brought Bounty Killer's ex-girlfriend as his date.
In 2005, oh what?
Yo, shit.
He brought his mentor's girl to as a date.
That's what I heard.
God damn.
All right.
This guy is fucking crazy.
Savage.
Six vibes married New York bank supervisor, Stacey and Elliott.
But the marriage wouldn't end in divorce just too.
What the fu he got what?
Who's that?
What the fuck?
This must have been built before he was famous.
What are you laughing for?
Because your reaction.
This is your favorite artist.
Yeah, but I don't know.
Can you explain this?
I don't know.
What hell?
I didn't even know he was this.
Must have been.
Because I know he could get way better ticks than this.
He can.
Yeah.
Two years later.
But his love life would eventually come together.
He's presently married to Tanisha, Shorty Johnson.
And together, they have three sons.
Fudge Cartel left the alliance in 2006 and formed his own collective.
Portmore Empire and a label Adidih Records.
He immediately began trading in.
And Portmore is the town that he's from, right?
Insult with Bounty Killer and Mavado, who soon became the bounty to do protege.
The beef spilled over into the streets with a number of murders and shootings linked to the Gaza Gully War, prompted by the dancehall rivalry.
Vibe Cartel is nothing anywhere with any artist.
You know what I mean?
Vibe Cartel is just doing music, making hit songs, you know what I mean, making products.
And Wolverce making money.
The police and other well, of course he has to say that, right?
So not between all the shootings and the killings and everything else that happened.
So it looks like him and Bounty Hunt Bounty Hunter?
Is that the guy's name?
Bunti Killer.
So tough to keep track of all these names.
So between the crazy uh speaking and everything else like that.
So they they were, I guess they were they had beef, and then he ended up discovering Movado, and then says Bounty Killer had an issue with Vibes Cartel.
Movado aligned with him, and then they just started attacking each other, I guess.
That led to the shootings and everything.
I don't know.
That's what it sounds like to me.
What shootings?
He literally just said it.
Oh, I was tuned out.
Man, what do you man pay attention?
We got a show over here.
Pay attention, woman.
Public officials called on the artist to swatch the beef.
In 2007, both Mavato and Vibes Cartel publicly announced an end to the hostilities.
But by the summer of 2008, both artists were releasing new tracks aimed at each other, and more violence between the artist groups followed.
In 2009, Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding asked for a peace meeting and planned to have a peace concert in Barbados featuring both Mavato and Vibes Cartel.
Oh shit, they wanted to have it in uh Fresh's homeland.
They wanted to have it in Barbados.
They was not having it.
Yeah, they ended up uh not going, right?
I think it ended up getting cancelled or whatever.
Yeah, it ended up getting canceled.
Yeah, but why Barbados?
Well is Barbados considered like neutral territory, probably would have been safer.
Maybe.
Yeah.
Or they probably just wanted different location.
Too hot in their own country.
Yeah, probably.
Okay.
Yeah, Bayesians are pretty peaceful, at least from what doesn't have an angry bone in his body.
No, he does not.
Nicest guy ever.
He does not ever.
I've maybe seen him mad in years that I've known him.
I've seen him mad maybe one or two times.
Wow.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
That's crazy.
that ended up getting canceled but vibes cartel did drop the song life we live in as a call for peace towards a 2008 and that year also expanded his entrepreneurship beyond music he launched a line of liquor called street vibes rum Rum and a line of Prophics called Daggering Condoms.
Okay.
The word the D word wasn't actually being used.
I think we can't say Dagger.
Okay, we can say that.
Yeah, we can't see Dagger in the world.
I think we can't say dagger anyway.
Dagger.
What?
You can't say dagger in Jamaican.
No, I guess on because it's an interview.
So he was trying to see if he could say it on TV.
So that's why he said the D word.
And then she was like, No, you could say it.
You could say it.
Just dagger?
Yeah.
Daggering.
What does daggering mean?
Oh, what do that motion again for the people?
What is that motion again?
Okay.
It is uh it's fornication.
Basically.
Daggering.
Yes.
Basically, um doggy style.
Oh, it's doggy style.
Yes.
That's what daggering means.
Yes.
Penetration.
Which makes sense that he would release his own condom line, I guess.
Right.
Ah.
This guy's a smart entrepreneur, my friend.
Very, very, very smart.
And the same.
The same bleaching cream he used on his face, he's selling.
So hold on.
My man has a bleaching.
He puts out music.
Then he bleaches his skin.
Then on top of that, he makes music that makes me want to smash, then he puts out condoms for it.
Smart.
Man, that's 4D chess right there, my friends.
That right there is the secret.
More awards would come in 2009 with three wins at the EME Awards.
Then after the success of his singles, Clarks, Clarks 2, Clarks Again, and Clarkswear will you have sales of that brand of shoes spiked in Jamaica?
Everybody up the house.
Let me get me clubs.
So in 2011, he released his own shoe line named Addi's.
Far more controversial.
He also came out with a line of skin bleaching, cake soap.
He also hosted this.
Wait, what's it called?
Cake soap.
Yeah, cake soap.
Clean like me wash my face.
Kik soap.
That's what he said basically his face is clean.
He said his face is clean, like he washes face with the cake soap.
So basically, when he bleached his face, it's supposed to be clean.
Because remember, he was black.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So yeah.
Yo, what?
I want to see all them angry black women that hate me go after this guy.
Like, what the color inspiring, you colorist.
Bleaching is a thing in Jamaica, though.
It is what?
Oh, I didn't know.
It's a big thing in Jamaica.
Really?
Yeah.
Okay, because the people are gonna ask, do you bleach your skin?
No.
No, yeah.
That is her natural skin complexion, guys.
So uh yeah, you know, that regular.
I mean, what?
Do you trust me?
You could definitely tell when somebody bleach.
You could tell by the lips, you could tell by the knuckles, they means okay, because that's still gonna be naturally like darker, right?
Yeah, okay.
That's why sometimes they'll have to like use certain bleaching cream to rub out their knuckles.
They had a whole documentary about bleaching in Jamaica.
Wow.
Yeah.
Is it's that big of a thing?
Yeah.
Okay.
I mean, that's entrepreneurship right there.
Like he he sees that there's a pe there's hey, people like to bleach their skin here.
They like my music, and they like to smash.
I'm gonna release a bleaching cream.
I'm gonna release condoms and I'm gonna make continue to make music that incites what's that term?
Daggering?
Yes, yes.
Dude, that this is guy, this guy's a smart entrepreneur, man.
Very smart, cornering the market, baby.
Uh all right, let's see some of these chats real quick.
I hope you guys are enjoying the video, by the way, man.
You know, like I said, this is a little bit more of a funny one.
Uh Derrick Mitchell, five bucks, skin bleaching is epidemic in the Caribbean and Africa.
Okay, all right.
Uh I didn't know that.
Uh what else we got here?
We got uh Mike Hill Taylor, five bucks, Gaza.
Uh okay, you might have to read that.
It said Gaza Messeh, Aditica, free cartel.
He a cool dude.
He was my uncle's neighbor before he got arrested.
What does that first part of it mean?
Basically, he's saying Gaza, which is the neighborhood.
Yeah.
He's repping it.
So it's like Gaza Missa.
He's saying it.
And it says he called himself teacher.
So cartel name is Aditia.
Okay, okay.
So yeah.
Yeah, when he got like uh when they were doing the trial or whatever, the people were outside protesting.
No, no teacher, no school, right?
Yeah.
When he got convicted.
So they're talking about him.
Ah, yeah.
Okay, now that makes it goes by a couple of names.
Okay, he has a lot of nicknames.
Yeah, he does.
He has quite a few nicknames.
Okay, anything else?
Uh, let me see.
I'm looking, I'm looking at yo, guys.
Thank you so much for donations.
We appreciate it, man.
Really do.
Like I said, this channel isn't necessarily about making money.
This channel's about uh, you know, getting y'all the entertainment.
And help us get to 100k, man.
Subscribe to the channel.
That's all ass.
Like the video, subscribe to the channel.
Camino 12, uh, 10 bucks.
X-rated and Mac Dre were released uh releasing records from prison in the early 90s.
A fat episode on X rated will be awesome.
Thanks for the fire content, Ryan.
We got y'all.
And don't worry, guys.
I'm gonna release a documentary for y'all on Tuesday.
I'm debating whether I'm gonna re release episode that me and Dollface did on um on Hansen, the FBI spy, or who knows?
Maybe we'll record another one for y'all where we react to a uh a show.
Who knows?
Maybe we'll maybe we'll do that for y'all.
Um, and then we got uh fry hunted bands, uh Shelly Fraser Price on the chat.
Shout out to you.
Uh what else?
You know who Shelley Fraser is?
No, I have no idea.
she's um she just won the um Olympic?
Well, not the Olympic, um, a race.
She's a um track star track star in Jamaica.
Okay, yeah.
So they just won.
Well, the Jamaican track team is yeah, it's lit.
Yeah, like they just won.
I think she won like five years ago, and the the year that she didn't win, it was the year that she was pregnant.
So she won every year that she won.
Oh wow, yeah, and then she came back from the pregnancy and smacked him still, smacked them.
Smack them.
Well, see it with female sports, it's like it's it's like it when a girl's dominant, she's like dominant.
They don't they don't just lose, they just don't lose.
Like, you look at like the Yukon women's basketball team, win for years, you know, just smashing shit out of everybody.
So um, okay, what do we got here?
Um right here.
Uh DL saying, bro, I'm learning so much.
I need to research Jamaican life.
Wow, shout out to y'all.
Yo, I I'm telling you, I'm learning alongside you guys, man.
I got Dolph Face here, she's helping me out because I don't know anything about Jamaican culture, to be honest with y'all.
So uh she's helping out.
I'm learning right now alongside with you guys, man.
No one's no one's above learning, right?
Becoming better.
Uh Beast with red pill, two bucks.
Screw bleaching.
I'm trying to get darker, weirdos.
Okay.
You gotta jump in the sun, my friend.
Beast with the red pill.
Uh, anybody else?
We caught up.
And it's 1200 of you guys in here, by the way.
Please like the video.
Like I said, this was a supporter request.
All you guys wanted Vibes Cartel, so we're here doing Vibes Cartel, man.
Even though I don't know much about Jamaican law, whatever you guys asked for, so we're here.
And I brought a real Jamaican here as well to help y'all out with it.
So and for y'all saying I'm fake Jamaican.
Oh, they're calling you fake Jamaican in the chat.
All my parents, listen, my whole lineage is Jamaican.
I'm I I'm just born here, but I grew up around Jamaicans my whole life, so I am Jamaican.
Like, come on.
100%.
So it doesn't matter.
Like 100% pure bread, man.
Yeah, man.
Yeah.
Okay.
His own reality show, Teach a Pet, which featured 20 women living in a house together, vying for the artist detention.
Not a bad life.
In September of 2011, Vibes Cartel became the first artist to be banned from the airwaves by the National Communications Network of Guyana.
The same month he was arrested by police for possession of marijuana.
They banned him in Guyana?
Why'd they ban him in Guyana?
It's music.
Uh was it because daggering?
I don't think it was just Dakar.
It was other stuff.
All right.
It's probably not a very serious crime in Jamaica, but the country's major investigation task force later tacked on two more charges.
Illegal possession of a firearm and conspiracy to commit murder.
From prison vibes authored a book with his business associate with the Malcolm X thing.
But that's his eyes.
You see him?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, that's him.
Yeah, that's funny.
That's funny.
And you can see the Gaza tattoo here.
Uh with the famous Michael uh Malcolm X pose.
And he has the uh these tattoos.
Well what are these drop tattoos?
In in American culture, the teardrop tattoos mean you killed somebody.
What does that mean?
Does it have a different meaning in Jamaica?
I don't know.
You don't know?
Yeah, it's probably the same thing.
I don't know.
Okay.
Michael Dawson called the voice of the Jamaican ghetto incarcerated but not silenced, which was published in 2012.
Well, awaiting his trial for that murder, new charges were added in connection to a second murder.
Five was charged with the murder of Clive Blizzard Williams and for preventing the course of justice.
One guy here, Mo G K says, uh the teardrops in Jamaica means someone who died.
Oh so it might not necessarily mean you killed someone, but it means someone died.
So maybe he lost some people that were close to him.
Yeah, okay.
I I learned that that's something new.
I learned today.
There we go.
We all learn it over here, baby.
After his associate, Vanessa Gaza Slim Sadler allegedly claimed that she was robbed by lizard.
Apparently, to mislead the police into believing that he was still alive.
Vibes was and lizard is the alleged victim, by the way, guys.
We're gonna read about a little bit more.
Who was uh allegedly killed?
Found not guilty of the murder of Barrington Burton murder, but after a 65-day trial, the longest in Jamaican history on March 13th, 2014, Vibes Cartel was found guilty of the murder of Clive Blizzard Williams, and he was sentenced to life in prison.
He's eligible for parole in 2049.
Well, plenty of artists have continued on careers throughout long.
2049, god damn.
That's crazy.
And he was born in 76, guys.
2049.
How old will he be?
Let's see here.
Old and wrinkly.
2049 minus 1976.
He'll be 73 years old.
God damn.
Prison sentences.
Five Cartil still releases music so regularly that it feels like he never even left.
Right.
Even a social media counter.
Is that him in prison with a chick?
Go what?
What the fuck?
What the fuck?
Yeah, he got charged for two murders, guys.
He beat one and then he the other one he got in prison for with like four other defendants.
But can you explain this to us, Dolphin?
Like what?
I don't know if that's really him.
Oh, they're saying that's not him.
Okay.
All right.
I was about to say, what the fuck?
Allegedly that's him.
It kind of looked like him.
Okay, they're saying that's not him.
All right.
I was about to say.
That's a stun double.
I was about to say, bruh.
What the fuck?
Oh, yeah.
But he's releasing music though, still, right?
Yes, he is.
How much music has he released since he's been in jail?
He's been in jail since 2014.
Listen, a lot of I can't even tell you because it's so much songs been released since then.
Till now.
And he alleges too that like the music, like, oh, uh, I I'm not releasing, like, I'm not recording or anything like that, but when he releases the music, isn't it like based on like stuff that's actually happening now is relevant.
So it's like he wasn't even on the track with um Nikki, Nicki Minaj.
Um he's on the track with some new artists in Jamaica.
Like yeah, I was looking at it.
He's relevant.
I was looking at him on Spotify.
Like he had music songs in like 2022.
Yeah, he even dropped the album.
I think it's um Don's and Divas or something like that.
Meanwhile, we got artists that have been that have been free for a decade, plus they haven't released music.
What the fuck?
All right, let's hit some of these chats real quick.
All right, all right.
I guess that's not him.
Uh same dollface.
I'm first generation Jamaican, everyone else straight off the banana boat.
Okay.
Michael Taylor.
Uh uh, let's see here.
Former special agent Officer Myron, you were the best federal agent the US has ever seen.
I hear by honor you, the director's award for excellence.
Thank you, Kevin Thomas.
I appreciate that.
I did get a director's award in 2020, though.
I did actually get one.
Um, I had one of the best cases uh in the US uh back then.
Um anybody else?
Yep, one more.
Uh and then we got uh NJ Pat Patsen, five bucks.
Dolly, when last uh okay, I'll let you take this one.
I don't know what that says says when last the Babylon boy make you set good, like uh ice in a freezer okay.
Translate the first sentence for us before you get into this.
Okay, so she's saying Dali.
Okay, so she's like, when the last time Babylon boy, meaning Babylon, they call police.
Okay.
So they're probably talking about you.
Me.
Okay.
Basically saying to set good like an ice in a freezer.
Basically, like, you know.
Uh I don't know.
That's why I'm asking.
Talking about Babylon and Freezers.
Basically, is basically saying when the last time basically we fucked.
Oh, that's that's what it's saying.
Uh but she's singing his lyrics.
Oh, okay, okay.
Some of his lyrics.
So until that's you give him the Ben's Punani, make him go and ride it out.
So Ben's Panani, meaning, you know, a Ben's is a high price car.
Yes.
So they're trying to say, like, Ben's my pump is like Ben's price.
Okay.
This is extremely creative ways to ask this these questions.
So that's what that's what she's saying.
Okay.
All right.
Thank you for translating that for us.
Basically.
That was uh perfect.
Okay.
I'm like, wait, what?
Uh anything else?
Oh, is that it?
That was it.
We'll keep going.
Uh active.
But denies that he's continued to record behind bosses.
But it's a pop.
Are y'all sure that wasn't him?
That looked like him.
True.
Legendly.
Continues to release tracks that seem oddly relevant today.
And inside the Tower Street prison, there was a studio at a low frequency radio station, cult free.
F that.
That's what my man had a red.
What?
How do you think that recording studio at the prison?
I really think he has a recorded studio.
Because how the hell he's coming out with all this music.
This would never fly in the United States, bruh.
Only in Jamaica.
The rest of the story.
I think that's it.
Well, you know, uh, because this is before they're famous.
Shout out to the YouTube channel, guys.
Uh before they're famous, go ahead and give them a subscribe.
Actually, yeah, subscribe just like I did and hit the like button on there and show them some love.
Uh, this isn't the main YouTube channel that I use, which is why I wasn't sub to it.
But yeah, guys, always show love and support.
So um, so okay, so now we're gonna go ahead uh into this documentary right here.
Okay, same thing, guys.
Always like and subscribe, right?
Uh and this documents the actual takedown when he was arrested, okay, guys, and we'll go over this a little bit.
Um, so we know who he is.
We covered his music.
Uh we translated some Jamaican phrases for y'all.
Uh and what's the official language?
It's Patois, right?
Yeah, Pato, which is essentially broken English.
Broken British English, not American English.
Oh, okay.
Okay, okay.
When you go in England and they say certain terminology of words, they understand them perfectly better than here.
Yeah, because it's the same, it's just the Queen's broken English.
Okay.
Just like Haitian Creole is broken French.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
That makes a lot more sense because now that I think about it, um, they were they they use the term roadman a lot in in the UK.
And there's like a lot of Jamaicans that speak that way and has that have that sling, and I always wonder like, why is there such a huge?
But now that makes sense.
I didn't know that.
Okay.
Learn something new every day, man.
Um got one super chat.
Okay, and then we got Chris Thomas, Virgin Islands in the building.
Mother Skunt.
Okay, what does that mean?
I don't really know, but um, Trinidad and um Virgin Island people say that a lot.
Mother Skunt.
I don't know what it means.
Okay, if we can get a translator in the building to translate that, we need subtitles in this motherfucker, man.
I need help.
This is this is not Myron Gaines comfort zone right here.
And I'm willing to admit, um I admit this.
I don't know what's going on.
Uh okay, and I think we're caught up on everything, right?
Okay, cool.
This is a takedown, guys.
The popular and controversial dance hall artists of Vimes Cartel, whose given name is Adeja Palmer, remains in police custody this evening.
He was arrested before daybreak this morning after police raided a New Kingston hotel and allegedly found a quantity of ganja.
But in a move that could indicate that the police have other charges in mind, officers spent much of the day searching premises linked to the entertainer on September 29th, 2011.
Cartel was arrested by police for possession of Genja.
Jamaica's major investigation task force then later charged him with the murder of a Jamaican businessman, Barrington Burton, conspiracy to murder and illegal possession of a firearm.
Kirk Right was in tow as investigators went from one location to another.
So they went ahead and picked him up, guys, back in like 2011.
All right, and um, and you guys are gonna see here that clearly there was a little bit more to it because they started searching other places.
Um I do James Whitey Bulger case FBI is corrupt.
Okay.
Um I will do uh Whitey Bulger for y'all, man.
Uh that was actually a good case.
Um, I could definitely do a breakdown on that one.
I might even react to um the movie for you guys.
There was a movie that was released on Whitey Bulger a couple years ago that I thought was pretty good.
Or I'll react to one of the um uh one of the documentaries on him.
But yeah, we could definitely cover the Whitey Bolger case, the mafia, the Winter Hill gang, all that.
Um are you familiar with Whitey Bulger or no?
No, not at all.
No, okay.
It sounds interesting, famous crime uh famous crime boss out of Boston.
Okay.
Um, but we could definitely I'll definitely cover that.
I'll write that down for y'all.
Um, and then hit the damn like button.
Hell, maybe we'll even do it tonight for y'all.
Who knows?
Uh what I because what I've noticed, guys is when I react to the documentaries, I have to record them ahead of time, right?
And uh, and then and then upload it to YouTube, and then that way I don't get hit with like you know, copyright anything like that.
As you guys know, I did a documentary.
Um actually I did with Dolph Face too when we reacted to Hanson, Robert Hansen, and the video got taken down after, like all this other stuff, even though it was like 100%, you know, fair use.
But once I upload it and then I, you know, I put in my any appeals that I might have to, whatever, it's good.
So then y'all can go ahead.
But I re- I'm re-releasing the handsome one for y'all.
Updated time, Sam, super fucking detailed.
And we're gonna go ahead and record another one for y'all, uh, maybe tonight or tomorrow, where we cover another case.
Uh, because you guys really like those documentary reviews.
We did one on paid in full.
I know you guys really enjoyed that one.
So um, okay, we got D Howard here, 20 bucks.
Fresh of fit, love you brothers, watch you every day.
You talk about the same things I've been going through, 80s, 90s, and 2000s.
These women need to go back to school alone.
Feminism etiquette and how to be a woman to get the man.
Yeah, man.
Uh, my friend, those days are done.
Like, girls are girls don't give a fuck, bro.
They're just gonna want what they want, and if you don't adhere to it, they're gonna just move on to the next guy.
And if you do, then you know it is what it is.
But trust me, guys, uh, girls are not conceding any of the levers that they have nowadays.
Um, all right, so let's keep going on with the with the documentary here.
You have anything uh you want to say Dolphice for um no, not not at the moment, no investigators were kept busy all afternoon as they souped down on several premises reportedly frequented by Vipes Cartel.
The police team comprising the Caribbean search center and the science quad first went to the upscale sinj neighborhood of Norbrook, armed with and that's a really nice neighborhood in Jamaica, right?
Where he lives at now, Norbrook.
Sounds like it.
I don't know.
No, I I don't know them parts of Jamaica.
You don't know, you only know the hood parts.
No, actually, no, I don't.
It's just certain parts I know that I've been.
So they went to go get him first.
Various tools.
The officers went straight to work.
Here, a team member carefully searches a knapsack allegedly found inside the DJ's home.
After more than an hour, the team emerged with several bags containing various items.
And guys, DJ means artist.
Um, that's like a Jamaican thing that they refer to, like term a musician as art as a DJ.
The DJ also emerged in Huntos to be taken to another premises linked to him.
Now, after that detailed search of the entertainer's house in Norbrook, the police moved on to another location here in Havendale.
At this time, it was a premises on Swalefield Avenue in Havendale, St. Andrew, which persons in the area confirmed had been damaged by fire about two weeks ago.
At each location, the police brought the DJ inside the premises before conducting a search.
The police spent about half an hour at the Haven Day location before removing a scorched computer hard drive and what appeared to be a computer.
The team then went to Port Morrison St. Catherine, independent city, to be exact, where they spent some time searching another premises.
Many persons, including his girlfriend Shorty, converged at the location.
As the DJ emerged from the premises, persons jeered the police, saying Cartel should be free.
He was quickly whisked away by the police to an undisclosed location before his journey across the corporate area and St. Catherine.
So they searched the bus a bunch of his red residences and got him out of their ASAP.
So anytime, guys, I mean, this is any country that practices common law.
When they arrest you and they're searching your house and they're searching a bunch of other places that you live as well, you best believe that they're trying to build a uh, you know, a strong case against you for potentially other charges, okay.
Um, the whole purposes of search warrants, a lot of times, guys, is to gather evidence to uh to substantiate and or more than likely to create new charges, okay.
Um, so the fact that they were in not only arresting him but also searching means that they had quite a bit of probable cause, right, to be able to go ahead and search.
Now, obviously, every country is different, but in general, when it comes to the United States, England, Australia, these first world countries that they practice common law, typically the threshold to be able to search is probable cause.
Okay, they might have a different term for it, but it's the general same amount of um of evidence needed.
The popular artist had spent the morning here at the Kingston Central Police Station.
The DJ was brought here after being nabbed during a raid at the New Kingston Hotel about four o'clock this morning.
Two other associates, including a woman were held.
A quantity of ganja was allegedly found in the room they occupied.
But the quantity of ganja, uh, that is marijuana, gentlemen.
Um question Dolphins, is weed actually illegal in Jamaica?
That I don't know.
You would have to ask a caller.
Okay, all right.
Because I'm not sure, but like I said, when I go down there, I see it on the streets, so I don't know.
Yeah, maybe they're just enforcing it for him.
Maybe.
Yeah.
All right.
DJ's attorney.
Okay, someone's saying not anymore.
Yeah, I've seen so it might not be legal anymore.
But this uh yes, it's illegal, but no one gives a fuck.
Okay, thank you guys for the clarification.
Uh, granted, this was in 2011, guys, so maybe 10 years ago.
I mean, even here in the United States, weed laws were a lot different even here.
True, you know, a lot of states have decriminalized it uh since.
But yeah, okay, some people are saying it's legal now.
Yeah, at law, Kristen Tavares Vincent told TV J New Center that the Ganja found in the entertainers' room cannot be linked to the artist, as there were other persons who had access.
It appears, however, that the police may have something bigger than ganja charges on their minds.
Assistant commission of police Eden Powell confirmed that the DJ's detention is part of a wider investigation, but would provide no more information.
Oh, our sources say murder charges could be laid against persons close to the controversial entertainer.
The DJ's attorneys said that was when the shit first broke out.
They will be waiting for the police to indicate the way forward.
Thank you.
Though Cartel was granted bail for the Burton's murder at a sum of three million Jamaican dollars, he remained in jail in connection with a second murder of one Clive Lizard Williams.
Three million Jamaican dollars.
I gotta see how much that is in US.
Hold on.
Addie was charged along with Sean Storm and others, including Vanessa Gaza's Slim Sadler, with perverting the course of justice after Sadler allegedly claimed that Williams had robbed her in order to mislead the police into believing that he was still alive.
Carter and the others are alleged to have killed Clive Lizard Williams over two missing guns, which Carter refers to as shoes.
During the case of the key prosecution witness test because went missing.
He testified that Carter demanded their return on Tuesday, August 16, 2011.
He said the entertainer sent for them.
They were taken by Sean Storm in a taxi to number 712th Avenue in Haven Dale.
First, the voice notes beginning two days before the August 16, 2011 incident, where Clive Blizzard Williams is believed to be killed.
August 14, 2011, 242 p.m.
Okay, this is the voice recording call that I think they use in as evidence as well.
Um just so you guys know, it comes out uh three million Jamaican dollars comes out to about 20,000 US, 19,732.
This is as of now, so probably was less before.
This is remember, this is back in what 2011 when he posted this bond or whatever.
So uh it was probably worth even less back then.
Um, but that as of today, it's about 19,732.
So this is a voice recording call that they actually pulled from his phone, if I'm not mistaken, a voice note, right?
Um, where he's talking about some stuff.
They're gonna beep it out a bit, but I'm gonna go ahead and play it for y'all.
Uh it's really tough to understand because it's Pato, but um, we'll see what he's saying here.
August 14th, 2011, 242 p.m.
Umbrella my phone to the until we say them can't find the two bul shoot them when we get them dog.
Say them lack them in our own side of all feature bill up dog in a bell shoes and can't find no bulls by gene.
And I come tell my dog make sure I'm gonna get my shoes by clock in a bad match.
Now, during his testimony, the key prosecution witness told the court that shoes was another name for gun and lace bullet.
If I was I was telling us cartelist talent that I I would never be there.
And that was some of the evidence used against him to convict them in 2014.
Sound like him.
That's the crazy don't sound like him.
Yeah, and there's some controversies as well, which we're gonna address here in a second, guys.
Uh, someone actually made a really good uh more of a more of a conspiracy video as far as like why he's you know, he could not have committed that murder.
We'll talk about that here in a second.
Everybody knows a lizard Dakila.
Everybody know that.
Let's feel like 25 years.
Well, I'm gonna be my game on 25 years.
I'm gonna stay a little bit.
The lack of evidence and evidence being tampered with no dead body to confirm William's death, and with the hatred for him by the upper class society on April 3rd, 2014.
Cartel and three others were sentenced to life in prison for the 2011 murder.
Addie Japama is to serve 35 years before he becomes eligible for parole.
Andre St. John, 30 years, and Sean Campbell and Kyra Jones, 25 years.
God damn.
Well, so this is this is what they got, guys.
One more time for y'all.
And Kyra So he got 35 years before eligible for parole.
And these are his co-conspirators.
Do you know anything anything about these people?
Uh Dolph Race or no.
Nah.
I know one of the girls got hit with um like tampering because she um excuse me.
Uh she she lied about um she lied about one of the guys like being leaving the country or some shit like that, or the victim.
She tampered with the investigation essentially is what she did.
Okay, okay.
Uh maybe Jones, 25 years.
35 years, I'm saying, if I deserve it, I'm leaving, but we can't start.
I'm going to file it, I'm going to file it.
And just so y'all know, there were hundreds of people lined up when he was um when he was getting uh sentenced.
Uh so when he when he when they read the conviction and waiting on the verdict and everything else like that.
So, yeah, I mean, this guy's loved in Jamaica.
I mean, hell, some of y'all in the chat love him as well.
A lot of you guys, yeah.
Free world boss, man.
Yeah, I see it.
should have This is Tim Aprini.
Show me your ghetto youth when I've been out.
Why you don't have me so happy time?
Where you come and search in on me out so far?
Where you all have got shanty by?
You know, see me with the gun in the office time?
Well, yeah, that's what it was.
She lied that the deceased robbed or uh lizard.
Um, who Lizard himself, apparently, from what people are saying, uh, is was a killer himself.
Right.
So, and we'll talk about that here in a second.
Oh, yeah.
Who's this by the way?
That's Cartel.
That's him.
Oh, okay.
I just heard I just heard the word free.
So, so this is a song about setting him free before he went into jail.
It probably, but it's a song.
Okay.
Well, he knew the other guys.
He foresee he foresaw what was gonna happen, I guess.
Um, okay.
So let's hit some of these chats real quick.
Uh, Dolphins, can you take take this for a second?
Um, here I'm go ahead and like get the get some of the chats up real fast.
And thank you guys so much for the support.
You guys are the best.
Um, and you know, guys, do me a favor, go ahead and like the video, goddamn it, because uh, you know, it took quite a bit of time for me to prepare for this thing.
And Dolphin's did quite a bit of work as well.
Shout out to her for you know getting the documents and everything else like that and the video.
She was a big part in making this presentation happen.
So you guys gotta give her a big thank you.
Because if it were for her, I probably wouldn't be doing this case right now because I don't know enough about this stuff.
I'm not educated enough on uh Jamaican culture, music, and the legal system.
So um so yeah, so shout out to her.
You know, I'm I did my best because I don't know about the legal system there as well.
So it's a lot of information, is it and it's interesting because I didn't really know about the case.
I knew he was locked up or whatever.
But doing the research, I'm like, wow, like doing the other cases with you made me like look at it from a different lens.
Like you were able to like analyze it a little bit better, yeah.
So okay.
So uh, all right, so I got another video here.
Okay, so we'll go ahead and some of the some of these chests before I play the next video.
Uh Christina for Fresh Fit 2 bucks.
I'm sorry for walking in front of the camera.
Mine, you guys are fucking clowns.
Antoine Dunkley, five bucks.
I love this Dolphis.
You gotta put Myron Hip.
Us Jamaicans are a different breed.
I'm seeing that, my friend.
We're very different.
Uh what else?
Anything else?
Nope.
That's it.
Cool.
All right, so I got another video here that we're gonna play for y'all real fast, guys.
And this is from uh a guy named uh Soul Flow TV.
Um, you want to give the people a background on this guy real quick because he's been covering this case extensively, if I'm not mistaken, right, Dolphface?
Um, it looked like he's a big Vibes Cartel fan.
Uh-huh.
Um, he's definitely I've been watching the videos leading up to this trial, and he definitely got the information on luck.
Okay, so as usual, guys, you know, shout out to him.
Like, subscribe.
Okay, do the same thing for this channel, guys.
Go ahead and show that love, man.
Because real talk, guys, it really helps a lot with the algorithm when you like the video, helps push it uh in.
More people can find it.
And uh, yeah, man, like I said, uh uh, I did this video for y'all, man.
Like I guess you know, I don't know anything really about Jamaican culture.
So I had to do some research, get ready and study this thing up, and uh, you know, it is what it is.
We do what we gotta do for the people, man.
Because you guys have been requesting this case since like the beginning of FedEt, man.
I remember hell uh for a while, a couple months.
I mean, you were with me when they were first asking for this case.
So um, so okay, so he's gonna go ahead and talk.
The name of this video is Vibes Cartel was not at the house.
Concrete evidence shows.
All right, so we're gonna play a portion of this thing so you guys can kind of get another perspective here on why vibes cartel uh may not be uh the person that was involved in the murder, and then on top of that, guys, just so you know that there is an appeal out there, which I'll show you guys that as well.
Again, everybody, it's your host of the most as you know now that this whole vibes cartel appeal thing with Sean Starman and the rest of the fellas.
Then this here is hot topic, right?
Side note for a little bit.
Remember, I said that this would be the perfect time for Mavato to learn in Jamaica.
Nobody wouldn't even pay him much mind because something else is more pressing right now.
By the way, what's going on with Mavato's son?
Is he still incarcerated?
Um, is Mavado still overseas?
Are the police still pressing for him to come back to Jamaica?
If you know anything about that, answer that in the comment section.
But what we come to talk about right now, lawyers insist that Vibes Cartel was not present when Lizard was killed.
So Vibes Cartel was not present when Clive Lizard and remember, guys, Clive Lizard is a business associate that was killed.
Um, and just to give you guys a little bit of background, him real fast.
Allegedly, he was a murderer himself, and then the other girl was saying that he robbed her.
And the other thing too, guys, is that you gotta understand that no one has his body, his body was never found, and there was reports that he fled the country and he left.
So he was never he, so he's still alive.
So they don't have a body.
So that's also very interesting, as well.
That they were able to successfully prosecute this without having a body.
What happened?
Real Jamaican Christina for First of Fit.
Nah, Trust Voice, what they said, Natrust voice note, Masaria Huago and Dalface.
Basically, um, they don't trust the voice, she don't trust the voice note, and um, she just saying what's up, Delpha.
Okay, all right, you guys are clowns.
And of course, it's his attorney's job to insist that her client was not present, right?
While what someone is being murdered, given the fact that he is on a murder trial, common sense.
But there are so many information, pieces of information here that do not add up.
Honestly, in my personal opinion, I'm gonna stinks of the whole case blown out already.
Big holes are in it that I don't see any way that the prosecution are going to be able to patch these holes up.
But however, I'm gonna go off of what's out there and not what I personally feel.
And this is a big thing, guys.
We're gonna they're gonna he's gonna talk a little bit about the evidence here.
So, while Scartel's lead attorney, Valerie Nita Robertson told the appeal court on Wednesday, July 18th, that the world boss DJ could not have been at a Havendale St. Andrew House where Clive Lizard Williams was allegedly being killed because Cartel was at the corporate area hospital when the alleged murder was committed.
Oh shit.
So the cell phone data shows that he was at a hospital at the same time that Clive was allegedly being murdered.
Okay, so he could not have been at two places at once.
All right, so let's keep going.
During the appeal case hearing, the lawyer stated that the dance hall entertainer arrived at the corporate area hospital.
Now, people, them have actual proof enough.
Time checked in with doctors seen by someone at this specific time, documented.
So he was at the hospital, guys, proven documents.
Okay, you know, so he was there because he signed in or checked in or whatever, maybe.
So he could not have been at the other place at the same time.
So not only does the cell phone confirm this, but also other witness statements and or potentially even cameras if it's a hospital.
I know people are gonna still try to argue this away, but there's so many things in this case that still has me questioning, like why had all this not come to light before?
And the issue is that judge that was overseeing the case, made sure that he omitted or barred all these types of evidence from entering, right?
So again, she's saying that her client could not have been there because at that time it there's documented proof that the entertainer arrived at the corporate area hospital at 7 48 p.m. on the same day as the alleged incident.
Oh shit, alleged, you know, because nobody's still gonna know if he's dead yet, and there has still been no proof that he was murdered in the house or location that they're claiming he was.
Walk with me so far.
It would mean that Mr. Palmer would not be at the house when this thing, the murder happened.
The Queen's counsel told the court, the attorneys argued that this information challenges the accuracy of cell tower information that Was used during the entertainers 2014 murder trial.
All right.
So here we have a discrepancy.
They have documented proof of what time he was at there at the um hospital.
And it does not match up to the cell phone cell tower information that was used during his trial in 2014.
Somebody made up something and made it fit conveniently.
Police inspector Warren Williams, who heads the police cybercrime unit, had given evidence that cell tower information placed cartel at the Havendale house at 752 p.m.
Now with cell tower information, guys.
You guys are probably wondering what the hell is cell tower information.
Um anytime you're using a cell phone, okay, guys.
The cell phone is continuously looking for a cell tower to connect to so that it has service.
Okay.
As soon as that phone is on, it's always pinging, trying to find a cell tower to get service to, okay.
And what that does is it creates data.
That data, okay, can be gathered from law enforcement agencies through a subpoena, through a grand jury subpoena, through a search warrant, whatever may be, depending on how invasive they want to get with it, and they can go ahead and get where your phone was at at a certain location at a certain time, based off of where the phone was trying to uh locate a cell tower.
This is the same evidence that they're using against YW Melly, guys, in the case, which is why it's so strong because the phone puts him at the place of the crime the entire way, which goes against what his um he was uh his co-defend um uh the people that were covering from Ellie, they all lied saying he was here, he was there, blah blah blah.
But the reality is the cell phone shows he was in the locations where his two friends were murdered.
So cell phone location, guys, is extremely reliable because there's no disputing it, you know.
When you go ahead and look at cell phone records, you can't dispute the fact that you were at this location at this time, and with the way technology is nowadays, they can pinpoint it down to fucking meters, guys.
We're talking feet, inches, whatever.
So, in the case of the Melly case, they were able to show that he walked around the car, shot into the vehicle, etc.
Okay.
So cell phone location data is extremely reliable as far as figuring out where someone was at a given time.
Now, I want to know because is this police uh a techie?
Does this police work with Digicel or whoever else is the carrier and has privy information to this cell phone tower information?
Because this is not just readily information, right?
You have to do a bit of digging to get this.
So I want to know where he got this from.
But anyhow, what he present in the United States, you can get cell phone tower stuff depending on you can do it with um a grand jury subpoena, or you could do it with uh with a search warrant, okay.
If it's historical, all right.
Typically, you may need a search warrant for that.
Again, it depends on uh what type of investigation you're running, uh what kind of records you're trying to get.
The more invasive, the more probable cause you need, okay.
But typically you can go ahead and get it through a search warrant, all right.
Or um you could do an active one where you listen, like where you actually pinging the phone, right?
Where you're actually like seeing seeing where they're at at the same time.
This is commonly used in drug investigations, which is what I used to do, right?
If I had if I knew I was watching a drug dealer, I would, you know, you want to be able to do surveillance on them, so you can go ahead and do something called a ping warrant, which is you could attract their phone, or you could do historical sell site cell site data, which also requires a search warrant, and that would give you uh where the phone was at certain times and certain dates, which is what a lot of homicide investigators will use a lot of the times on the dates of uh of of alleged crime.
Presented at court at the time last year at the trial.
I mean, at the trial in 2014, he said at 752 cartel cell phone, by the way.
Stop the show real quick, man.
I'm looking real fast, and we only got we got 1.4k.
You guys watching right now, but we only got what 800 like not even what 900 likes, guys.
Get us to at least at least we should be at 1200 easy right now.
Yeah, 1200 likes, man.
Like the video, guys.
Don't be a ninja watcher, man.
This this episode is for the people, man.
You know, I got uh a fake Jamaican here, Dollface allegedly according to all you guys, she's a fake Jamaican.
You have anything you want to say say to the people about that, by the way.
Hey, I can't convince you if I'm Jamaican or not.
If you want to believe I'm a fake Jamaican, that's cool.
Bam, there you go.
uh so I got this fake Jamaican in the house, and then also you know, we're breaking down this case for y'all, man.
This isn't even in my purview, really, but we're doing it for the people.
So all I ask, guys, is that you guys like the video, man.
You don't have to donate a dollar to the stream.
Like I said, this is really for entertainment purposes and education.
I love doing these kinds of things.
So just like the video, man.
Help the channel grow.
I want to get another plaque so I can flex it on the haters.
Help me hit 100,000 subscribers, guys.
And you do that by liking the video and subscribing.
You don't have to donate a dollar to the stream.
I appreciate it so much.
Oh, and puts him at the house.
His attorney is saying no, he could not have been there because at 748, he was at the hospital.
However, Nita Robinson cited evidence from the main prosecution witness also that he arrived at the house at 8 p.m.
And that after the events he witnessed at the house, he personally took Cartel to the hospital close to 9 p.m.
This is what the prosecution's witnesses saying, you know.
No, mind you again.
Must I remind you that it is documented at the hospital that Mr. Palmer checked in at the hospital at 7 4 again, Palmer's Vibes Cartel, guys.
So here you have the key witness to the prosecution saying that him see a bagating one at the house.
And uh whoa, see a bagating that that what he's saying, um, a lot of things happening at the house.
Okay, so a bagatings.
Oh, okay, okay, thank you.
Yeah, the house that went down.
It was about nine o'clock that he took Cartel to the hospital.
Cartel, whose real name is Adija Palmer was convicted in 2014, as we all know, along with his protege Sean Stomp, real name Sean Campbell, and Kahira Jones and Andre St. John for the killing of Clive Williams, aka Lizard.
They were all given a mandatory life sentence, right?
And they're supposed to serve out all this time.
But here we stand at the court of appeals because they have been granted appeal and they are fighting for their freedom once again.
And I must admit, this is very compelling now on behalf of the defense, because there are big holes being blown, there are shotgun size holes being blown in this case right now.
So a little side note someone said so floor, where is Mr. Finson?
Tom Tavares Finnson, big high power Tom Tavares Finson.
Where is he now?
How come he's not showing his face more regularly?
How come he's not the one that's out in the forefront, like how he was in 2014 at the trial?
Well, I don't work with Mr. Finnson, I don't work with any of the lawyers, but I can make a wild guess that all the attorneys are working together that represent this team of men, right?
And what they're doing is they're putting a fresh face, a fresh face to the whole thing.
Because I remember I know under Mr. Tom Tavares Finson and his son.
Uh the case they failed.
And I remember specifically Tom Tavares Fints is saying something to the effect of we can't believe it.
It is not that we were prepared, it is that we had so much that we could have put forward because we over here looking in from the outside, we were saying, Well, damn, I wouldn't want a lawyer like that because I don't think he was aggressive enough in defending his client's freedom.
I mean, you have a high profile client here, and you have all this information to free the client.
And uh, guys, go ahead and like the video, man.
Um, the other thing, too, also, um, is a defense attorney didn't go hard enough on defending him as well.
Did it?
Uh and you would think like, yo, like this is a high profile case, you go a little bit harder, and then it challenged the evidence hard enough.
And the thing is, guys, you gotta understand with all criminal cases is you have when you have a criminal case, it's the it's the defense's job to attack the evidence, okay.
And when you attack the evidence, you're gonna attack chain of custody issues, you're gonna attack with how the evidence was gathered, you're gonna attack the validity of the evidence, you're gonna attack witnesses, you're gonna attack witness credibility.
These are all things that you have to attack to be able to make the prosecution's case weaker.
So you gotta remember that the prosecution has to be dead on.
The defense, all they have to do is show that there's a little bit of doubt.
Hey, maybe that the that witness isn't that credible.
You know, hey, they're a little bit weird.
You know, or hey, I've been able to prove that this witness is lied in the past.
They're not a credible witness, whatever.
All you have to do is muddy up the waters a little bit as a defense, and then get it to what?
Reasonable doubt.
That's all you got to do is create reasonable doubt that okay, he probably killed him, but I'm not 100% sure, so he's got to walk.
Okay.
The laws are written in a way where you're innocent until proven guilty, and it's um you got to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
And the burden of performance is on the government to prove that you are in fact the killer.
All right.
But you went and that's the case in most countries that practice common law.
And in there willy-nilly came out every day, spoke to the media as if it's all going well, and bam, we got hit with guilty verdict, and then life sentence.
It was quite shocking.
And I remember Mr. Finson saying they're shocked because they actually they did not push as hard as they could have, because half of what they heard in there made no sense to them, and they did not and could not still believe that Judge Burt Reynolds actually went through with that verdict, given everything that went down in that courtroom.
And I think it was a 10-1 decision, uh, where um it was 11 jurors, 10 uh uh 10 of them said yeah, um, he's guilty.
And then another uh, I think one person was like, nah, but they were still able to convict him.
Uh Garage Man Teddy, 20 bucks.
What's good, Myron?
Are you familiar with the Fed sting rate?
I've heard it's so conventional they avoid bringing it up at trials.
Uh, I'm not gonna talk about it.
I'm not gonna talk about it.
Hold on, there's one more.
Uh, and then uh Gabriel Milaku, uh, 10 bucks.
I cannot confirm or deny anything.
Uh, can you cover crime bross Bumpy Johnson and drug trafficker Frank Lucas during a 1960 heroin epidemic in contrast to the movie American Gangster and show us how this drug ring came to an end?
Uh, yeah, I could I could cover that.
Uh maybe we'll watch the movie Blue Magic or some shit like that.
That would be tough.
Um, okay.
So we kind of got an idea here now from this video.
So the other thing I want to also bring to your guys' attention is another piece of evidence that they were able to show that has issue with it, which was a cell phone that they seized from him.
So I'm gonna go ahead and pull this appeal up for y'all real fast, and then we're gonna start taking calls.
And guys, to call into the show, by the way, and I'm gonna go ahead and fire up the phone lines right now.
Okay, the fo the phone number to call into the show, guys, is uh five oh five one five six oh five nine seven four zero.
Again, that number is five oh five six oh five nine seven four zero.
And I'm gonna go ahead and pull it up for y'all.
Give me one second.
We have so many banners here.
Um thank you guys so much for the support, by the way.
Don't forget to like the goddamn video.
God damn it, Chris.
Chris has this shit organized in a whole other way.
Uh where is the goddamn thing?
All right, bam.
There you go.
Uh 515 605 9740.
Guys, again, that number is 505605-9740.
Uh I'm gonna connect it right now.
And then we're gonna analyze this last piece of evidence here.
Uh-huh.
And that are, well, this issue with evidence, and then uh we'll start taking some here for now.
Press one to hear important instructions.
Your show will go live in five seconds.
Four.
Three.
That British lady.
You know what time it is.
Lock talk radio.
Lock talk radio.
All right, cool.
So uh we're hot now, guys.
So go ahead and call into the show again.
The number is 515-605-9740.
Uh, and uh, yeah, we'll take it some of y'all calls.
So, okay.
So the other thing I want to talk to you guys about, I'm gonna stop sharing this.
I'm gonna share this screen right here, real fast with y'all before we take the phone calls.
This is an appeal that was filed uh on behalf of um your boy Vibes Cartel.
Shout out to Dolph Face for getting me this document.
Like I said, she did a bunch of work on this case for y'all, man.
So you guys gotta thank her as much as you guys call her a fake Jamaican.
Um, she was able to get some real Jamaican stuff here.
Uh, this is the uh the court um out of the court of appeals here, as you guys could see.
Um, here's our boy right here, uh Adija Palmer, right?
And his other co-defendants.
So the thing here that we were gonna, you know, pay attention to is a phone, okay?
So uh where is it?
Um, hold on.
Okay, so one of the things that they want to attack, right, is the phone that was seized from um Vibes Cartel.
The technology evidence that has two main aspects to it.
The first is an offshoot of the analysis of the effect of the admission of C D J S two on the right to privacy.
The second is the admissibility of a seller or telephone that is said to have been taken from Mr. Palmer during the course of the investigation of Mr. Williams' death.
Um remember, guys, Mr. Williams is the victim, Clive Williams Williams.
On the issue of the admissibility of JS2 through the analysis conducted above uh has concluded that the issue does not qualify for reference under section one uh zero.
Uh, it does not appear that it gave the court some concern given the departure by police for at least a second time from the provision of the ICA.
The court also considered the importance of the application of the constitutional right to privacy.
Accordingly, it does seem that the issue warrants referral to the lordship by virtue of 30 section 35 of the J A J A, Mr. Taylor conceded that this was an area of exceptional important uh public importance.
Okay, so we're gonna go ahead to the second thing that references the phone.
Uh, did the fact that the information which was provided by the communicator communications provider Digicel to the police about the use of exhibit 14 C a Blackberry Cellar telephone um and digital guys is very big in the Caribbean, okay.
Um, and I think Jimmy is it the main uh issue um service provider in Jamaica, did you sell?
Yes, did you sell there's two um digicell and flow?
Okay, um on the communications provider network in circumstances where there was not strict compliance with the procedure laid down provisions of the interception of communications that give risk to the breach of the Charter of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms of 2011.
Okay, so that's another thing that they're trying to go at it for.
And then on the issue of admissibility of the seller telephone, which is a crucial part of the prosecution's case, the applicants assert that the use and handling of the instrument is plagued with uncertainties that should have prevented its admission into evidence.
And we're gonna talk about those uncertainties here in a second.
According to the applicants, the uncertainty surrounding the instrument had its contents are such that not only was the learned judge wrong to have admitted it into evidence, but this court erred in principle in holding that the mere possibility of tampering is insufficient to prevent admission admission into evidence.
The applicants argue that the court's approach reduces the standard of proof that the prosecution bears.
The applicants extend that the reasoning of the admission of JS2, which is probably what the evidence is numbered as, you know, uh, which also suffered from their uncertainty that it may be different from their master or control copy of the CD JS1, which had gone missing.
So long story short, what the hell does this mean in English, guys?
So the main thing is this essentially the phone that was seized from Vives Cartel was held improperly by the police.
It was seized by the police and put into evidence.
Once it was put into evidence, one of the cops took it out and brought it home.
And he used it to make a phone call, if I'm not mistaken, right?
And then he brought it back and put it back into evidence.
And there were some issues with obviously chain of custody here.
This is how they were able to beat the OJ case, right?
They attacked the evidence and chain of custody.
Because anytime you seize a piece of evidence, guys, the the agent or the law enforcement officer that seizes it, seizes it, puts it in a bag, seals the bag, not able to open it again, writes up like a chain of custody thing, right?
And like a document for him, they call a chain of custody, and the person that seizes it writes their name, signs it in the dates and times it.
And then anyone else that handles that piece of evidence has to put their name on it.
So you can go ahead and have the chain of evidence.
Uh you can see who touched the evidence.
And then as soon as it's seized, put in the bag, it's supposed to be put in the evidence room and held there until the case either hits trial or the case is done and it's 100% adjudicated.
Okay.
So the fact that there were issues with the evidence, um, and how it was held uh with the police obviously causes a lot of problems, okay.
And this cell phone was admitted into evidence uh during the trial and was used right to convict them.
And since it wasn't properly, you know, held on a chain of custody and it could have been tampered with, you know, there were some issues with you know uh voice memos being altered and everything else like that with dates being off.
This is something that should not have been admitted into evidence.
I mean, in the United States, this would have been immediately removed as evidence, but for some weird reason it came into evidence in Jamaica.
So this is another point of issue as well.
Uh, you have any anything on this?
Yeah, I just thought it was weird.
Like if it was up here.
No way it would have been admitted.
That whole case would have been thrown out.
It's just too many loopholes.
Yeah.
So you know, because you got to be spot on.
Yeah, how you you're the cop, you take the phone home, make a phone call, and say, Oh, it wasn't tampered.
Like, um, hello, do you know the meaning of tampered evidence?
Yep.
like and some of the people here in the chat are saying um, you know, that it was definitely tampered with.
Um, and uh he proved it was tampered with in England recently.
Yeah, I mean, there's issues here, there's definitely issues here, you know.
Uh okay, so anyway, uh so we're gonna go ahead and go to the phone lines here.
Uh you have anything you want to say, uh Dolphas before I um get into this.
Let's hit these phone lines, and you guys like the video.
Yeah.
So I mean, like I said, in the United States, this would have never flown, but again, this is this is just kind of what it is.
Uh in in other places, man.
Uh you know, a lot of people talk shit about the United States being corrupt and all this other stuff.
But I'll tell you guys this our rule of law is a lot stronger than a lot of these other countries.
That's the reason why the United States is the world's reserve currency, man.
Because like it or not, you know, we're pretty damn good when it comes to dealing with corruption.
You know what I mean?
Like uh, you know, there's nothing I'll tell you guys this from a federal law enforcement standpoint.
There's nothing more that the US Turny's office likes to do than take down dirty cops and dirty politicians, bro.
They love it because it's a huge press release, it gets the office a lot of clout, it's a big win.
Um they get some federal funding.
So, you know, um going after corrupt officials in the United States is huge.
I mean, you guys saw the episode that I did on Operation Shattered Shield, which was the biggest dirty police um corruption uh br takedown in New Orleans history, and that case they spent millions of dollars to get that shit done back in the 90s, man.
So they do go after corrupt police as much as people want to talk shit about the government.
They in the United States, it's a sexy thing to do, man.
I mean, I'll tell you guys this.
I've done busted a bunch of dirty cops myself, and the US Attorney's Office never turns down um dirty law enforcement or dirty uh public servant cases.
All right, cool.
So let's uh hit the first person here, uh 813.
A13, welcome to the show, my friend.
Yo, yo, what up, man?
Byron, that's you, yeah, it's me, man.
What's up?
Cool, cool.
Yeah.
First time calling in.
But yeah, man.
So I'll call in uh I had a federal case uh not too long ago, man.
And my question is like, you know, did you used to get like uh I don't know, like a high almost off of like touching crooks.
I I mean it wasn't necessarily a high, man.
I mean, I just I just derived a lot of uh you know uh fulfillment from uh doing big cases and you know piecing things together and everything else like that.
Okay, yeah, and my other thing was like am I allowed to ask like a fresh and fit related like issue?
Uh absolutely not, but but go on, answer your question.
Like, no, but we will answer.
Yeah, we're we're we were trying to keep it uh organized, but uh go ahead.
But for everybody else, go ahead.
Yeah, no, it was in regards to like the little like uh Christina thing when she walked in front of the camera.
No, man, we're not gonna talk about that.
Okay, all right, fuck it.
That's all I had to say, bro.
Yeah, I wasn't really prepared for this, but yeah, stay on topic, guys.
Please stay on topic.
All right, man.
Later, thanks for calling in.
Yeah.
All right, we got uh 239 coming up.
239, welcome to the show.
What up, man?
Two through nine.
Yep.
All right, all right.
First time calling in, so it's all to everybody.
So it's all to uh Dolly as well.
Okay, hello, thank you.
Um I just yeah, I'm just gonna keep it, you know, just about the vibes card as a kid.
Right.
Okay, thank you.
Um starting off with the with this with the system in Jamaica.
It's I'm gonna say it's probably one of the most corrupt system.
Is it just like you could tell it's similar to the Hand system?
You know, it's the Caribbean, they don't have as much power in the in the um in laws and stuff like that.
So everybody usually thought about poor and money.
Okay, not really about the laws.
Everybody read the rules, be able to laws and stuff like that, right?
Okay.
And I personally believe that Vibes Carter is tied to the kids.
And he probably wasn't at the scene at the time of murder, I probably didn't do it instead, but it's Vibes Carter.
Vas Carter is like the bin Laden of Jamaica, you know, the Saddam Mussian, and he's very influential, as you can see.
He he literally like he runs downtown music.
I think even prison right now making millions of dollars um multiple music from box to buck.
All right, so you think he did it?
So I think he's definitely decided.
Yeah, well, I don't think he did it personally, but he's probably the one that called the shot because the voice note, even though they're gonna say it's not his voice note, you know, it's somebody else.
But basically saying the guy lizard stole his shoes, which is the gun, you know, and the bullets and stuff like that, and he needs it back by a certain time.
And then that's when it leads to uh lizard being missing.
So I think that he's tied to it.
But just because like so many holes in the case, you know, people tampering with evidence, and yeah, it's just a whole bunch of um, you know, in Jamaica, the laws and rules don't apply.
So I think that's where everything went down here.
But okay, big up the vibes cartel, show it fresh on fit, and um big up Dalkhay Saga.
Okay, all right, man.
Uh, thank you for calling it to the show.
And uh cool.
Um, so you he that you think he's guilty then.
All right.
Um, cool.
So we're gonna go go ahead and go to 876 here.
Uh 876.
Go ahead.
You are on the air, my friend.
Yo, can you hear me?
Yeah, we got you, my friend.
And guys, if you want to cut the line and get on the show, go ahead and shoot, send the super chat in with the last four digits of your phone number, and uh you'll cut the line and be able to get on faster.
Uh if you guys want, because I can already see the the phone lines are starting to blow up here a bit.
So if you want to jump in quicker, put the uh send a super chat in last four digits to your number, and I'll get you in.
Go ahead, brother.
Welcome to the show.
This is uh 876 I've got here.
Yeah, so I'm actually calling from Jamaica.
Okay.
Hey, yeah, bro.
Um, this it was strictly a political move.
I'm telling you, because you if you realize the only evidence they had was the voice notes and some text messages because the reason why they did it is because cartel had a lot of power and influence over Jamaica, he was basically exposing how corrupt the government was.
That's why they like took him down, basically.
Uh Dolphis, you you you have a very similar um you you want to go ahead and give your theory on what happened.
She actually said the same exact thing to me before the show, and I didn't want to say that early on.
I didn't want to influence anybody, but since now we're kind of done talking about it.
Dolphus, go ahead and give your take on it as far as uh what what you what you think.
Like what the caller said, I did I do believe that because he had so much power, like he had to be incarcerated.
There was no way because the way how Jamaicans in Jamaica, like if you have the money, he has the money, the power, and the respect.
So he could do a lot in Jamaica if he was not incarcerated, if you get what I mean.
So I do agree with what you're saying.
Yeah, and you were saying that you they just needed to lock him up.
They took they were just trying to find a way to lock him up.
If you if you if you look at it, uh Myron, there's not really much that the police have on him, they don't have a body, yeah.
They don't have any DNA, yeah, only the voice notes and the text messages from a phone that had issues with it.
Yeah, and then also the police tampered with the evidence, yes.
Basically, like how huge no no you can't be doing that shit.
Yep, right.
Yep.
That's the big red flag right there.
There's there's chain of custody issues.
I mean, if this happened in the United States, that phone would have been thrown out and never been admitted into evidence in the first place.
You know, the fact that the officer had the phone, took the phone home, and actually used it for a fucking phone call.
I was like, what?
Like that would that would never ever ever fly.
You know what I mean?
Like ever.
Yeah.
So I still think he did it though.
I still think he did it.
So yeah.
Oh, okay.
So you still think that he he committed the murder.
However, people in no, are you so you still think he committed the murder?
Your thing is just that he um the the evidence against him isn't strong enough to prove it.
Okay, yeah.
Fair enough.
I think he did it, but I think he did it, but the evidence just isn't enough to prove it.
They still got him, though.
Yeah, yeah.
Gotcha.
Okay, fair enough, fair enough.
So yeah, I mean, clearly, you know, you're not that you think he still did it, but you obviously you don't think they actually had enough to convict him.
Fair enough, man.
All right.
Uh yeah.
All right, shout out to you, man.
We got some boots on the ground out there in Jamaica.
So thank you so much for calling into the show.
We got uh six.
Uh let's see here.
I see a couple of chats here uh that called in um a couple of people put in numbers.
Uh, we got Here, uh, John Doe goes, been waiting on that Snoop Dogg murder case, bro.
Uh, I mean, maybe I'll cover that, man.
Like, yeah.
I'll cover it eventually.
I'll cover it when you here's the thing.
Some cases I'm not enthusiastic to cover, like that one is not gonna be that sexy, guys.
Trust me, it's really not.
Right.
Um, it's a state murder case that he beat, so it's like uh whatever.
Um, but since you guys want it, I'll cover it.
Uh, real Jamaica Christina from Fresh to fit me sorry.
Okay.
All right.
And then we got here, Roadrunner 2 bucks 9644.
Okay, cool.
We got you, my friend.
Uh, let me see if I see you here on the line.
Okay, I got you right now.
All right, 9644.
Welcome to the show, my friend.
Hey, what's up, Mark?
What up, man?
Um there's a lot of um evidence that you guys didn't cover, but um, the reason why he was convicted was because they had a witness that was actually at the scene.
Okay, yeah, one of the guys.
So the guy that was at the scene, he said he um escaped because when he ran outside, there was a dog that bit Vibes Carter when he when the dog bit him, he um jumped over the fence and ran away.
And um, the hospital visit for Five's car when he um left the to the hospital, it was because of a dog bite.
So he could um collaborate all the evidence that was um presented.
So he was one of the main reasons why he was convicted because he was a star witness.
So it's not really the phone or any of those things.
Okay, it was because of the witness.
Okay, okay.
That he was convinced.
And and and they were attacking that witness in the appeal as well, um, saying they're not credible or whatever.
But okay, so it was it was two witnesses, if I'm not mistaken, right?
It wasn't just one.
Um it was two, but um the main witness was actually at the scene.
Okay, he was one of the two people that um that um stole Vice Cartel's guns in the voice.
No, it he spoke about two people, right?
Yeah one of them that was he escaped because they had him in a room and they were like torturing them, and he had escaped.
Okay, so like of the people that were charged, one of them um is called Mud Sus.
He is a gang member, he's a member of the Clans in Jamaica.
Clans.
Yeah.
Okay.
He's one of the he he has um other murders too.
So people didn't people think like Warves Carter was like very innocent, but he was operating a gang in um Waterford Portmore.
Okay.
Um that they call the Gaza.
Okay.
So he is actually a known gang member, but because people um love them so much, like it's hard to paint him as like somebody bad or but if you live in like Port Boy, you all know.
Okay, that do you do you live in Jamaica yourself or no?
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
I used to live in Portmore.
Okay, but uh yeah, so he's he it is pretty much well known that he did it.
And um Lizard is not uh business partner, he was a member of the gang.
He was one of Vance Carter's shooters.
Okay, so all right, he just didn't return his um guns, so he had to die.
Okay, so uh a lot uh I guess uh if you're friends of Varge Cartel and you don't bring the guns back, he he's not he doesn't like it when you don't when he lends you guns and you don't bring them back.
Yeah, it's it's like for every game.
That's a known rule.
Okay, are are are guns hard to protect it to get in Jamaica?
Um they're illegal and expensive because you they have to be shipped.
Oh, so you you have to get them illegally, you can't get them legally.
Yes, you can, but um, it's very hard.
You gotta be like affluent, you gotta be a politician or you gotta be rich.
Okay, all right.
Cool.
Uh well, thanks for calling into the show, man.
Uh, you know, uh it's great to get these different perspectives on it.
And we got a lot of people calling in from Jamaica, which is pretty cool.
Uh-huh.
So, guys, give me a quick favor.
There's 1300 plus you guys in here right now.
Give me to uh 1.3k likes, man.
Let's get 100% engagement.
Because like I said before, this video was done for the people by the people, as we can see, people calling in.
And hey, thank you for calling into the show, my friend.
Um, let's see here if we got anyone else.
Uh we got Michael Mistrook here, five bucks goes.
Um, I got basketball practice, Myron.
You're the best fam along with doll.
Yeah, man, go ahead and you know, uh, go play some basketball again in shape, my friend, and thank you so much for uh, you know, supporting and modding and everything else like that.
Um, are there any other numbers that called in uh Dolph Face or no?
That's super chatted in?
No.
Okay, cool.
So we'll go back to the phone lines real quick here.
Um guys, try to keep it brief.
That way I can get as many people as line on the line as possible.
I want people to be able to get their voice heard.
Uh 978, welcome to the show, my friend.
And guys, get get me to 1.3k likes.
I see right now that we got, let's see here.
We got um 1.2.
100 more likes, guys.
We'll get 100% engagement.
Go ahead, 978.
Welcome to the show.
And mute yourself, mute my uh the video in the back, please.
So it's not echoing.
I can hear me.
We got you, man.
Welcome to the show.
Hey, what's up, man?
So I I really think that I don't think he did do it.
Um, just going based off the evidence, be quite honest because that evidence tamper was it's just weird.
I don't know.
That's like that wouldn't fly here in America or in most like first world countries, but you know, if it if it's in a corrupt uh Caribbean like it's a little island, bro, like you know, yeah.
I don't know.
That shit kind of weird.
Yeah, I I mean uh you know the evidence in itself is a problem, but again, like uh, you know, you got the testimony from those people.
Uh, but the phone was heavily relied upon.
So yeah, the fact that they admitted in it, you know, it is what it is, my friend.
Yeah, one thing too is that I going based off of like because Mar, you know this too.
Um going based off of testimonies from from like uh bystanders that that that that watch it's kind of hard to go based off of that because if I'm not mistaken, that's like one of the hardest evidence to use in in a court case when it's like uh people who themselves are watching it from afar because everybody has their own different like you like you know how people feel nowadays,
like, oh, I feel like and it'll it'll be harder to prove you know what I mean, or maybe I'm watching too too much law and order, I don't know.
Well, you gotta remember, man, that not everyone is gonna have as as a uh much of a refined court system as the United States.
As much as people talk shit about the United States and our legal system, um it is still you know, heads and shoulders above most other countries.
So um, you know, and that this I guess is an example of it.
You know, this probably wouldn't have flown in the United States, but it is what it is.
Um, you know, if this case happened in the United States, he probably wouldn't have been convicted.
So uh all right, cool.
Anything else, bro?
Before I move on to the next caller.
Nah, I was gonna say, yo, is that really big over in Jamaica?
Uh I'm referring to Dollface.
Is that big like bleaching?
That's kind of weird, bro.
Yeah, it is.
Yeah, I was surprised too, bro.
It is but they they bleach all over the world.
Even in Thailand, they bleach all over.
Well, I know that.
I know in Asian cultures, like in um and in oriental cultures, I know that they're very big with bleaching.
Yeah, they want to look as pale and and stuff like that.
Yeah, I don't know.
But I didn't know that was that shit was happening with um with uh in Jamaica or shit.
I was like, damn.
Yeah, it's it's it's it's in the culture, yes.
All right, thanks for calling into the show, my friend.
I'll I'll leave you, yeah.
Yeah, I'll I'll leave you guys be.
All right, man.
Thanks.
Appreciate it.
Um, and then if anything else, Adolf Face comes through, let me know.
Uh all right, so we'll take a couple more calls.
We got uh 4-4 on the line.
I think he's calling from is this 4-4.
Is that the country code for England?
Let's see here.
Maybe might be.
Let's see here.
Yeah, what up, man?
Welcome.
Hey, uh, Myron, I had a question.
Cool.
Could you give me some bike shots?
Um what?
Why would you ask him for a box shot?
I'm gay.
I'm good.
Oh this nigga, bro.
Nah, they must be playing on the phone.
Yeah, man.
Yeah, what the fuck was that, man?
Wasn't turning used for that in uh Mati boy, boty boy.
All right, baty boy off the line.
Yes, we're gonna go ahead and go back uh to 876.
Welcome to the show, my friend.
Ms. Wah.
I thought he was asking you for me.
Yeah, I was I was confused there.
Batiman is what it would be called.
Bati boy, Batiman.
Batiman, Batiboy.
Yeah, what up, 876?
Welcome to the show, bro.
I'm calling him fish too.
They call him fish as well.
Yep.
Okay.
Nothing from yo, 876.
What's up, man?
What's up?
What up?
Can you guys hear me?
Yeah, we got you, man.
What's your question or comment?
Oh, yeah.
I was like, Yeah.
Like Vice Cartel, man.
I believe I don't really have a I don't really uh I would say like he do it 100%, but I would say like maybe like 60%.
Okay.
But I don't he do um they do a you know Fox Five News like that.
Yep.
I think they interview him why they did was in the jail, and he yeah, they used on the line and he said he going to come out, and he said he didn't do anything wrong.
So yeah, I watched a little bit of that interview, actually.
Yeah.
And if you like Darfur, no, like most of his song.
Most probably you say that that that most of his song he sings about criminality and all this thing.
Well, I mean he's he just sing this song for entertainment, but I don't believe that you do what he say in the song.
I think he sings honestly all topics because he have gal songs, girl.
He got songs for the gal them, and my song for the bad man them.
He has songs for everybody.
So if he gonna talk about the gunman them, you you get what I'm saying?
It's a part of the culture as well.
He's gonna talk, he's gonna have songs for them.
He got songs that the girls at Dash or them will tell them have song for them too.
So he got song for everybody.
And the the guy Sean Stan Campbell, he's uh part of the god.
Like I he he's like the vice cartel right hand, like he is right on a vice cartel, and you got Tamil Spice, Tamily also in jail too.
Yeah, that's what I heard.
That's what I heard.
I remember Vice Carter got got got two sons, all the other sons are doing music also as well.
But Vice Carter left a big impact on Jamaica, where he actually sing a song to become a president of Jamaica, and a lot of people willing to vote for him to be a prime minister of Jamaica.
He actually do it.
Wow, what's the name of the song?
So I can hear it after.
Uh Rare Boss government.
Okay.
I think I heard I think that I heard about that one.
Yeah, he actually shoots a video for you.
Like, yeah.
And another thing, uh, he got a lot of respect.
More like, that's why the government has a caller, so the government willing to bring him down because people respect him more than how they even respect the government.
The prime exactly, they don't have the respect for the um prime minister and all of them.
Yeah.
All right.
Uh, we got uh thanks for calling it to show my friend.
Right.
All right, cool.
All right.
We got uh Yuri Oliveira here.
Uh goes, um, do the 2021 the baby case using uh kill me, don't you?
I'm sorry, that was actually the the baby case.
All right, we could possibly cover that one as well from the Walmart shootings what he's talking about.
Oh, okay.
And here's the interview that uh they're talking about, guys, here real fast.
Um, and I'll go ahead and share a screen with y'all.
This interview right here with Fox Five, it's five minutes.
Oh, actually, it's a lot longer, it's like 20 minutes long.
We did it with Lisa Evers here.
Um exclusive Vibes Cartel and the jailhouse interview, you won't see anywhere else.
That's right, the singer speaking out for the first time since being arrested 10 years ago, and the only one he's talking to is Arlie Samper.
International dance hall superstar Vibes Carl, Adja Palm, despite being locked down, he's a charismatic entertainer whose nickname World Boss hints at the respect he's given on the streets.
He's a champion of the poor and the convicted murderer whose claim from day one he was framed.
His talent, drive, intelligence, and wicked wit have never been in question.
Now yeah, they're like you guys can see, man.
The people love it, man.
He's like a they call him the world boss, man.
The only question is whether his last legal appeal to the highest court in the UK will determine he was yo, you guys are layers.
Fake Jamaican's face, two dollars.
Yo, no read me super chats, man.
Why didn't I read the super chat?
Oh, there we go.
Why in the reading the super chats, man?
Yo, I can't.
They just literally put you.
Oh, yeah, you want to say back to him?
Hey, go suck yourself.
No, there you go.
Go suck yourself, man.
Garage man teddy ten bucks.
I was locked up in 2016 for murder and attempted murder with firearm, awaited trial for five years, facing life, declined plea deals, and went to jury trial.
May 2021, I was found not guilty on both counts.
Congratulations to you, my friend.
God damn, you be in a murder case, bro?
All right.
That's what's up.
Convicted based on falsified phone evidence.
A lot is on the line.
He could be a free man by 2022 or an inmate for 30 or more years.
It's enough to send anyone into depression, but not vibes cartel.
I hope you're here.
You're hearing me.
Yes.
As you look around the cell that you're in right now, can you describe for us what that looks like?
It's dark.
It's hot.
It has like three or four bunk beds.
It's got a toilet in the corner.
And it's got a huge grill.
Huge grill.
What?
Rise of metal.
It's like a dungeon, but it's, instead of being in the celery, It's in the attic.
I'm actually in the roof.
You say you're in a better place mentally than physically.
A lot of people would find that hard to believe.
Yeah, because I I was sick for a few years.
So definitely I'm recovering physically, but yeah.
Um you hear this the difference in the voice on the voice note in his voice now.
Like what does he have?
Um, what's his disease?
Is is it um I heard it was something with his kidney with his kidney?
Okay.
Yeah.
Someone in the chat gone, no.
Yeah, somebody in the chat.
I know that I know that he he was sick of something.
I don't know what exactly what it was, but someone is uh someone's gonna know in the chat.
Mentally, I've always been in a good place because I'm not innocent, and I'll know I'm coming out.
Do you really believe that?
Look that up.
Yeah, of course I agree with that.
And to be totally honest, the system really wanted me thrown away.
It was never about me being charged for a murder.
It was about getting rid of vibes, cartel, not a dishapana, the person.
Why do you say the system is out to get you?
Because they told us they say we have too much influence.
If you remember when Movado and I had that little feud a few years ago, we even went to King's House, which is like the home of the prime minister.
Um, guys, it it uh Graves disease, it's an immune system disorder of the butterfly shaped gland and a throat thyroid, the thyroid overproduced hormones and conditions is more common in women under age 40.
Okay, so that's what uh grave disease is.
And they were telling us that oh, we're leaving the kids astray, and if we don't stop what we're doing, we're not gonna get any permission to do shows and stuff like that.
So it has always been about the influence that lifestyle has.
The dance hall music genre, like gangster rap, does not shy away from lyrics that talk about guns and street violence.
Oh, I didn't know that.
I thought it was just straight smashing.
No, I told you, like it they um that's where hip hop originated from dance hall because they take it's kind of the same.
You see how they have like drill music, yeah.
All right, they have like they call it gunmon tune, like bad montoon, songs for gun mantun, is that what they call it?
Yeah, gunman badman.
Yeah, so they have songs for that, like they'll talk about bust and gun.
That's what a bop bop bop bop comes from.
Oh, boom, boom, boom.
Yeah, boom, boom, boom.
Oh, okay.
That's where the busting of the gun comes from and all of that.
Remember, he grew up in a ghetto, so it's all about sex, drugs, and money and all of that.
You can see about you're gonna sing about that.
Okay, fair enough.
All right.
Um as well as sexually explicit content.
How do you keep your spirits up in prison?
That's good question.
That's why I said by all the chicks that they probably let it go in there and smash.
I'm more mentally in a better place because I read a lot, I write a lot, you know.
I watch movies, I listen to music, and I've met people here that are cool, like cool people that we can talk about stuff, you know, good friends along the way.
So that's how I spend my time.
You've had a lot of songs come out since you've been incarcerated about how many songs have you written during the last decade that you've been behind Bob.
This is crazy.
What he's about to say.
Lots of songs I can't even count.
At one point, I was sending out like three, four books a month.
Because when I write the songs, I usually send the books out when I get visits.
Thousands of songs, really.
And I know all of them are not gonna be able to get released.
Maybe in my crazy shit.
But you know, I just keep writing and writing.
It makes me better.
Are you concerned that the conditions there are going to impact your health?
I'm basically just thinking about going home now because everything is drawing to a close, so I'm not really worried about my health as much.
I'm doing much better, you know, so it's all good.
Looks like he's in good spirits, man, that he's gonna get out.
Here's his lawyer here, I think as well, or one of his uh people on the legal team.
Cartel's attorney, Isaac Buchanan, filed a fresh evidence appeal based on the findings of a British digital expert who found that his cell phone had been tampered with prior to his trial.
It's expected to go before the Privy Council, second only to Queen Elizabeth and authority.
God save the Queen, because she's the only one that can save me now.
God save the Queen, because the only one that can save me now.
Oh, man.
So yeah, they confirmed that his phone was in fact tampered with, guys, which someone in the chat said that earlier.
All right, seven uh seven, six seven, you're on air with uh with Fed it fresh and f uh, aka uh Myron and uh Dolphins.
Go ahead, man.
Almost said fresh fit.
I know we don't get a full time.
Yeah, hey, thank you, man.
Um just want to say uh I've been listening to um FNF for a good time and uh I just want to tell you um I'm from the Caribbean.
Okay, is uh uh an island in the Caribbean, it's Dominica.
So we we know about the culture and stuff like that.
So I'm just gonna answer a few of your questions.
So Modest is like saying somebody's mother pussy, but it's like it's it's not like always in a rude way.
Sometimes we say it in a sarcastic way, like holy motor skun, some shit like that.
All right.
And then the weed the weed is not legalized, but it's decriminalized.
So you're allowed to smoke and have a certain amount, but you kind of be like having too much to be selling and stuff like that.
Okay.
Right.
And then the Jamaican, they take like a they take a bit of the Asian culture.
I think that's where the bleaching comes from.
They take a bit of the Asian culture.
That's why some of them you'll hear the nickname is Qi or China or like Shen Siya Shen Yang.
Like they they get um a lot of Asian culture and stuff like that.
Okay.
Yeah, just want to say big of yourself one time.
That's it.
Thank you, man.
I appreciate that greatly, man.
Uh happy to have you on the show.
Right, we'll go to the next caller now.
We got uh 914 uh about to come in.
And guys, do me a quick favor.
There's 1400 of you guys.
If you guys could do me a huge song and like the video, we're at 1.3k likes, but if you guys could get me to 1400, I'd really appreciate it.
Uh 914, welcome to the show.
Uh happy to have you on the show.
Hello?
Yo, welcome.
How are you doing?
So I just wanted to talk a little bit about uh the show with Bob's cartel.
And I just think that uh the system, the whole legal system there in Jamaica is corrupt.
Okay.
With um not only with Bob's cartel, but with Ninja Man.
Because if you review Ninja Man's case and Rob's cartel's case, and you look at the evidence they have, it just makes no sense whatsoever how you can give somebody that much time in jail.
Okay.
All right.
Uh you have anything on that, Dolphus?
I agree.
You agree with that?
I agree with what he's saying, yeah.
Okay.
Are the police really that fucked up in Jamaica?
Hell yeah, that's why they don't like police in Jamaica.
Uh okay.
Don't like police in Jamaica.
Fair enough.
And welcome to uh Mike Phillips becoming a new member.
That's all I have to say, really.
I just, you know, I just feel I mean, even if you did another uh show where you review kind of like the legal system in Jamaica, that would be really interesting too, just to show how corrupt it is.
And so people can kind of get like uh more and I have an idea of how unfair the legal system is.
I feel my personal opinion is I feel that somebody in the legal system was paid off to put Ninjamin and um Bob's Cartel behind bars because if you really look at their careers, Ninja Man and Bob's Cartel are very, very popular in Jamaica.
Okay, very, very popular.
All right, you know, and the whole situation which we were talking about earlier with the uh incident between Bob's cartel and Ninja Man, that basically started from a clash they had in Jamaica.
There's like uh a concert and they were reversing.
Oh, I th I think we played that earlier.
We we got the clip of them f fighting each other.
Yeah, we got that clip.
Right, right.
And then uh Ninja Man said something, and uh uh Vibes Cartel took a personal, and then that's how the whole the whole artification started.
But then afterwards they made up and they became really cool.
Okay.
But Vibes Cartel, before he got locked up, was doing a lot in Jamaica.
He had his own reality show going on over there.
Yep.
I mean, he was just talking about that.
All right.
You know.
So uh appreciate you calling into the show, my friend.
No, thank you for calling in.
Uh we got uh 778 uh on the air, gonna get you in.
And then uh we get we'll hit take a couple more calls and then we'll we'll can the thing.
And like I said, man, this show's for y'all, man.
Uh so this is for the people by the people.
Uh 778, you're on air.
You're welcome.
Can you hear me?
Yeah, go ahead, say your piece, man.
Uh uh, what's up, man?
Um respect.
Uh big up yourself, Dolph Face.
Yep.
Um just that they wanted him gone.
But I was I grew up in Jamaica around that area.
He uh he didn't need to even kill anybody because he had people, you know, Gaza was uh his gang, it was his thing.
He didn't need to do anything.
Um they just wanted him gone because basically me as uh young and my uh my friends, we see Vibes Cartel as like really up there.
Whatever he says, basically, everyone would do follow.
So they just wanted him gone.
He was he had too much power.
So that's why I say and in Jamaica it's it's really um popular for the judges to get paid off.
Oh and also yeah, so it happens a lot where the judges get paid off or the judges uh would because you can't because I think in Jamaica they give out things where a random person can be a judge like for a day or something.
What the fuck?
And that's that's putting um people's life at risk because if my mom becomes a judge and she you know prosecutes someone, then you know maybe those persons will come after her.
So it's like judges can't get paid off easy at the system is messed up in Jamaica, but they just wanted Vibes Carter to off the streets.
He had too much influence over the people.
So yeah.
All right.
He was he was basically um telling people in his songs everything what the government was doing bad.
Yep.
Okay, all right.
I mean, you're you're not the first person to come with that uh that conclusion.
So all right, cool, man.
Um let me see here.
Who else do we got?
Uh we're gonna go ahead hit and hit uh 774.
Uh I think we got a super chat here as well.
Uh blanks, we got uh Lil P gang 10 bucks.
Hey, would it be possible for you guys to do a show, Marquette, Jabrizi, and Andrew Tate, and maybe Steph Elohim down 30 in super chats uh and I had to change my name to Super Chat this question.
I mean, I'd be down, man, but like I said, uh it'd be tough to gather all those guys, man.
It's guess you gotta understand that you know, coordinating with guests and you know everyone's schedule aligning and everything else, it's a lot harder than it looks, guys.
You know, you can't you can only offer the venue, but that doesn't necessarily mean that they're gonna come every time, guys, or their schedules uh don't conflict.
Now that ninja did it, keep him locked up and throw away the key.
God damn blank space.
All right, uh so we got here.
Um we got 774 on the line.
Go ahead, bro.
Hey, what's up, man?
I appreciate the content, bro.
For real.
Thank you.
I grew up in Jamaica, man.
I was I came into America probably like 2015.
Okay.
So like I grew up at the time when Vibes Cartel was hot, man.
Everybody like fucked with him, you know.
Anything he did, we all followed.
Uh-huh.
I'm not saying I don't know if he actually did it, but he was probably involved, you know.
He pretty much run the gang.
Uh-huh.
You know, he was in Clansman, Clansman gang.
It it was all like it was crazy, man.
It was crazy.
He was beating up everybody, everybody in his gang, he was beating them up.
Like Popcon, you know who PopCon.
I do not know who that is, but no, I was trying to tell him Golfways probably knows.
Well, I'll go on Pop Con signed to Drake.
He signed the old right now.
Yeah, my beat up PopCon, beat up Rhine.
Um Black Rhino, yes.
I like Black Rhino.
Black Rhino is very talented.
Yeah, man, he beat up all that Monday.
It was crazy.
He's too influential influential.
So they can't have him, you know.
They can't have him being so influential and not like try to take him down, you know.
So even if he did it or not, he just it's impossible for them just to let him keep him going because he's just too influential, pretty much.
Okay.
But all right, man.
I appreciate the content for real.
Covering Jamaica for real.
I appreciate you too, Dalface.
Appreciate all of this.
Yeah, man.
Uh, this is yeah, this this episode for y'all was for y'all, bro.
Because honestly, I don't know.
I don't know much about Jamaican culture.
I don't know anything about reggae dance, so I didn't even know the difference between the two until Dolphas explained it earlier.
Um, so shout out to her because y'all wouldn't have this episode without her.
You know what I'm saying?
And uh and uh shout out to all my Jamaicans out there, man.
Uh I I learned a lot on this stream just from looking at the chat, listening to the interviews, listening to the evidence, is just like you guys.
So, but that seems to be the general consensus they wanted him locked up because he had too much goddamn power in Jamaica, which from looking at how much people love him and how much people you know um are tuning in, and people the amount of requests that I had for this case was crazy.
So um, even though I'm not well versed in Jamaican law, I say you know what, let's cover it uh and and give the people a little bit more insight as to this one, you know, and get y'all involved.
So thank you for calling into the show, my friend.
So we got uh here uh Mike Phillips, I'll get you on right now, 2639.
Uh let's see here.
We got you right now.
Go ahead, Mike Phillips.
Hey man, I just want to show you love, but um Thank you.
I appreciate the contents you're putting up because there's nobody on the internet doing what you're doing.
I do have your request, so I have two of them.
Yeah, go ahead.
Um you do the Florida twins from Chicago that uh was working hand to hand with uh uh one uh or El Chapo.
And then can you tie in?
You said the Flor the Flores twins.
Yeah, the Flores twins.
They were El Chapo's right hand man and Chicago.
Okay, um, they ended up ratting out and was probably a little bit of the reason why he got taken down because they were like right next door to him.
Okay, and then um Sam Heard.
He played for the Dallas Cowboys and the Chicago Bears.
And he got hit with a drug trafficking charge, right?
Yep, and this was in your territory.
Yeah, he got caught with like 88 grand and his cousin snissed on him.
Yeah, what was his uh what say uh because you know what it was, bro?
I think it was DEA and that my old agency at Homeland Security that actually got him.
What was his name again?
Sam Hurd.
Sam Heard?
Sam Heard.
Yeah.
Um H-U-R-D.
Yeah.
Um he played wide receiver and uh uh kick returner.
I went to college with him.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I remember this guy.
It was I'm almost certain it was Homeland Security investigations that got him.
Uh let me see here.
Yeah.
Yep.
Yeah, they set him up something nasty, bro.
And it's crazy because I think when the feds come knocking on your door before they get there, there's a few warnings that I think you should see.
But yeah, here, look.
I don't know.
I I'll share the screen with y'all right now.
It actually was HSI.
I got it right here.
So I could cover this case for y'all in the future.
Uh, yeah, it looks here.
Agency immigration customs enforcement HSI IC A HSI arrested Samuel uh George Heard 26 of Lake Force, Illinois last night on a criminal complaint filed in Northern District of Texas.
Yeah, I could do this one.
It was our HSI uh Ice HSI Dallas office.
So yeah, I could I could definitely do it, do this for y'all in the future.
I think uh HSI got uh the Flores twins too.
Uh Chicago.
I the uh the thing with El Chapo, and I'm looking it up right here.
The thing with El Chapo was that um there were so many different agencies that indicted him, you know what I'm saying?
So uh it could have been it could have been anybody, yeah.
But Chicago Twins cooperation against Cindel Cartel you it's 14-year prison term sentence new charge.
Okay, so let's say here.
So okay, uh DEA.
Uh unparalleled correction to the drug enforcement.
Okay, let's see here.
Flores brothers.
And I tell you guys all the time how you can tell who who the main agency was.
Okay, so bam, the investigation in Chicago has been led by the DEA joined by the IRS uh CID.
But I will tell you guys this.
You guys may not know this, but it was actually an HSI Title III that was able to first identify what El Chapo was.
Was it HSI L uh uh title three?
You know, that's some exclusive info right there that people don't really know.
Dumb the motion.
As you guys know, Title III is uh is a wiretap intercept.
So um and I I mean that's public information now, but a lot of people would then know that.
Go ahead.
Yeah, thanks to Sean Penn.
All right, yeah, man.
I'll I'll cover uh the Sam Heard case.
I've I've uh I'm definitely familiar with that one because I remember when he got arrested, I was yeah, I heard about that.
So uh thanks for calling in, man.
Hey, well, I appreciate you, boss.
Hey, stay black, all right.
I'll try, man.
Allegedly, I'm not though.
But I'm gonna we're all gonna stay black.
We won't be using that creep.
Thank you, bro, for calling in.
Uh we got uh 860 in the house right here in my my neck of the woods.
Don't embarrass Central Connecticut, bro.
You're on the air.
Go ahead.
Yeah, what's up, man?
Yo, what up?
You um I hear I hear um a guy called just now saying that um you could have um judge like any person could be a judge.
That's a fucking line.
Don't follow that shit.
That's not true.
Okay regarding the vibes, hell for no.
Are you from Jamaica?
Um yeah, mommy, I had man.
Yes, you can I can hear it.
I can I can always tell Jamaica.
What happened is I was just trying to decor my voice, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah, you try trying pretty it up, but all right.
But this is what happened.
Um the Vice Cartel case is just corruption and fight corruption, and I mean that guy has so much influence over the younger generation, and the government I try to put a stop on what he was trying to do, right?
Okay, wait.
Wait with the old um the way uh the process and the case do show all the flaws of the system with such a big act of the country.
It does show your old messed up.
The system is in Jamaica and media change.
It's just as if it's like in America in the 1960s and the 70s and the eight is before technology all advanced, and you know, so you always got corruption and all of that.
The country I'm moving in the right direction, it's just that all of this kind of stuff gonna take it and play with until we get up to power with technology concern, and then we can't get rid of all these corrupt motherfucker.
But if there's corruption of fire corruption, I just sit on the side with my popcorn eating, watching this shit pay though, you know.
I mean, so it is what it is.
But whatever you guys doing regarding your guy's show, it's it's a beautiful thing, man.
You know, I see I've seen a lot of little young fellas buffling outside here, dealing with these girls, man.
If they want to be a whole, let them be a whole thing.
You you know that's what it is, man.
It's that's that's how it is, man.
They're gonna have good girl, they're not.
Yeah, don't try to change them.
Let the whole being.
They never are, bro.
Just go find your cell phone.
They're they're never gonna change, dude.
I'll be trying to tell people that shit.
They're not gonna change.
The girls are gonna keep doing the shit that they're doing, and it is what it is.
Like, you're not gonna change.
I only do the podcast so the guy that got I I do the podcast, people so men can learn that they're not gonna change.
Exactly.
That's what I'm saying.
Just be a man, build yourself up, so you can choose from every race of women in America.
You're sure we'll find a nice girl we can check along with and have your family with and live the rest of your life.
You know what I mean?
That's the man you want to be.
There you go.
I'm saying, all right, man.
Well, thanks for calling into the show.
I didn't mean man.
There's a itchy on your neck, bro.
You're slacking up, bro.
What is that?
There's a what it's saying you gotta hicke on your neck, you slack it.
There's a marker in there, bro.
You're slacking.
Oh man, I don't know how you even notice that motherfucker.
I'm gonna kick you up there now.
No, I'm just kidding.
Yo, well, you said 860.
Where are you at?
Are you in Hartford or you in New Brand?
Where are you at?
I'm in artwood, bro.
And where?
High friends.
Hartford, okay.
Yeah, we there's a pretty strong Jamaican population in Hartford.
All right, bro.
Take it out to take it easy.
Shout out to the beat.
All right, man.
Yeah.
No something.
All right.
Uh we got DL saying here.
I really want to know podcast unbox.
This is why Americans need to travel as bad as it is here in America.
It's far worse overseas.
Great show.
Keep leaning from the front, brother.
Thank you so much, DL St. Man.
Go check him out, guys.
On his uh podcast as well.
I really want to know podcast.
Nikki V, uh Seven Bucks Canadian.
Regarding Pale Asian skin and Jamaican's bleaching, it's a saddest thing.
Workers get tanned, and Rich owner stand.
The office out of the sun, uh YW.
Okay.
Um, and then I will go ahead.
We got three other callers On the line.
I'm gonna take y'all three and then I'm gonna end it here.
Uh we got 202, 270, and 289.
All right.
So I'll get y'all on the line before anyone else calls in.
We're gonna stop the phone lines here.
Okay, thank you so much for farting on the line.
Appreciate that.
Uh that makes it easier for us.
270.
You're on the air.
All right.
So I put y'all on the line.
Go ahead, man.
We're gonna stop the phone lines here.
All right, I can hear myself in the back.
Thank you so much forts as well.
Cool.
And then we got 289.
Can you all hear me?
We got you, bro.
Welcome to the show.
Oh, thanks for having me on.
I appreciate the opportunity to come on.
It's your boy Guts, by the way.
I was roasting Chris on Friday.
I'm here to like celebrate.
Fantastic thing you're doing over here, man.
I just want to add on to the whole point with the whole case, right?
Um the thing I find really interesting about it, especially since I'm from Trinidad myself.
Okay.
The influence vibes cartel had in Trinidad.
It led to an uptick in crime where I'm from.
We had a place called Lavanthill in Trinidad, and it got so bad that the crime rate had like triple and peak by cartel here, cartel years, and then afterwards it started going back down afterwards.
Right.
Yeah, the impact was like across the whole Caribbean.
He affected everything.
Wow.
Our music changed everything.
It switched from like the Calypso to more focus on Soka and then became more dancehall, then it even changed to be a genre bender between the two different things.
Okay.
Interesting.
I mean, I will say this.
He definitely um, you know, I mean, even fresh, like you know, you know, rocks with the vibes cartel stuff.
So I mean, obviously, he he's huge in the Caribbean in general because that's like probably the only episode fresh gonna watch on Fed it is that one.
Uh Amy Love Two Bucks, President Haiti.
Will you cover it?
Uh, probably not, man.
I'm trying to stay away from international cases unless like the people really asked for it, like on this one.
Um, but no, man, okay.
Well, thanks for calling into the show, bro.
Wait, one second, sorry.
Oh, good.
I want to last thing.
Is it possible you can do Ray Caruth case?
Is that like uh is that like a federal case or is it a state?
Ray Carew, who's at?
I cover state cases too if it's good enough.
Because he's uh he's a he's a football player who um whose girl I think was trying to sort him for money, then he tried to kill her, and the baby survived.
And it was like a I feel though it blends in FNF topic along with FedEd stuff.
Hold on, I'm gonna look it up.
Ray Ray, what Ray, what?
Ray Ray Caruth.
So it's uh R-A-Y and the last name is C-A-R-R-U-T-H, I think.
Ray Caruth, okay, Conspiracy to Kill.
Okay.
Let me see here.
Um, I'll take a look at it.
I got it here.
Right.
Um, I got it here on on screen.
All right, I'll take a look.
All right, man.
Thanks for having me on, man.
Have a good night, bro.
Enjoy it.
Your rest of your night.
And Dolph Face, what's up?
Hey.
Thanks for calling into the show, man.
Anyone that makes fun of Chris is a friend of mine.
So niggas is roasting Chris, bro.
I heard that shit was funny as hell.
Um, seen it.
Yeah.
Oh, you seen it?
I seen it on the Reddit.
All right, cool.
Uh, thanks for calling into the show, bro.
Have a good day.
All right, man.
Peace.
All right.
Uh, so I'm gonna go ahead and um can the uh couple other calls came in, but we gotta we gotta get going here.
Um thank you for using blog talk radio.
Goodbye.
Hope you guys enjoyed that episode, man.
On uh Fed it anything you want to tell the people, uh Dolphin before we close out here.
Um, thank you guys for tuning in.
You know, I like you said, I'm not a real yardie.
Sure, fraud.
So I'm a fraud, so I did my best.
I did not have all the information.
But you know, Vice Cartel is my artist too.
It's my DJ, so uh big up him.
And yeah, free world boss.
I think he was even if whatever happened.
I mean, street is street crime, whatever, but I don't think he personally did it.
I think he was wrongfully convicted.
So that's just it.
All right.
Uh, and where can the people find you?
Um, they could find me on Instagram, Doll Face D U H. Um, also, you guys could follow me on Snapchat.
I have like every social media, so follow me.
Go check her out and send a dick pic on uh on Instagram.
Don't send those, you will get blocked.
And then we got to our own H H here.
Last one.
Are there any recent crop fed cases you can cover?
Absolutely.
There's there's a couple of them.
I'm gonna be releasing the um the Hanson one, uh, which was the biggest intel leak in U.S. history.
Actually, I did that one with Dollface.
Uh, re-releasing it, gonna put better timestamps in there, and then I'm gonna put it as a premiere for you guys so that YouTube didn't take it down.
Because when I first uploaded it, we had issues with it getting taken down and shit like that.
So I re-uploaded it, got everything cleared with copyright, all the other stuff.
Because we actually reacted to a documentary was really good.
So I'll be re-releasing that.
But anyway, guys, we're gonna go ahead and give y'all a couple episodes tomorrow, money Mondays.
We're gonna talk about crypto.
We're gonna have my accountant Steve from accounting in in the house.
And I might have a special interview for you guys tomorrow afternoon as well with a special guest in town that's in town here in Miami.
But uh other than that, guys, I'm gonna go ahead and leave you guys with the you know, with the one of the new outros that we got here.
And I appreciate all the love and support that you guys have been giving on the show, man.
You guys have been great.
And uh let's get this channel to 100k, man.
But other than that, man, we'll catch you guys tomorrow uh on Fresh and Fit.
Check out Dollface uh on Dollface Duh on Instagram and uh go ahead and send your dick pics.
Later, guys.
I was a special agent with Homeland Screen Vestigations, okay, guys.
H S I. The cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.