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Feb. 27, 2023 - MyronGainesX
02:56:16
Fed EXPOSES Why Kay Flock Got Federal RICO Charges! (The REAL Reason + FULL Breakdown)
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Time Text
I was a special agent with homelands investigations, okay, guys?
HSI.
The cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.
No one else has these documents, by the way.
Here's what FedEx covers.
Dr. Lafredo confirmed lacerations due to stepping on glass murder investigation.
And he's positioning on February 13th, 2019.
You're facing two counselors to edit.
Racketeering and Rico conspiracy.
Young Slime Life, Karen After referred to as YSL to the 6'9.
And then this is Billy Seiko right here.
Now, when they first started, guys, 6ix9ine ran well.
I'm a fed.
I'm watching this music video.
You know, I'm bothering my hella.
Hey, this shit lit.
But at the same time, I'm pausing.
Oh, wait, who this?
Right?
Who's that in the back?
Firearms and violence.
Aka Bushaisi violated.
Bushaiski arrested after shooting at King of Divine Strip Club injury.
This is the one that's going to fuck him up because this gun is not traceable.
Well, what happened at the gun range?
Here's your boy 42 Doug right here on the left.
Sex trafficking and sex crisis.
They can effectively link him to paying an underage girl.
I'm going to look like 501, right?
And the first bomb went off right here.
Explored by Al-Qaeda, two terrorists brothers, the Zokar Sarnev and Tamerlan Sarnev.
When the cartel shipped drugs into the country.
This guy got arrested for espionage, okay?
Trading secrets with the Russians for monetary compensation.
The largest corrupt police bus in New Orleans history.
So he was in this bad boy.
And we are back.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed It.
I know we had like a little bit of an audio thing there, but I think we're good now.
Give me ones in the chat.
If the audio is good, guys, give me ones in the chat.
If I see ones, then we're going to go ahead and get this show on the road.
It's been a while.
I know you guys are excited for a live stream, and we got a lot to talk about on this one.
So, all right, audio is good.
Cool.
Guys, as you know, I got a special guest in the house, which is actually better that you guys didn't hear that part because she was saying a bunch of jibber jabber before.
So welcome back to the show, Angie.
Yeah, Myron's going to introduce you to this case, and he's going to do the most part of this case because I don't know much about this guy and everything involved in this.
So, yeah, that's what most people wanted.
So, yeah.
Yeah, so we did a poll, guys.
Give you guys a quick little update.
What's been going on, okay?
Some of you guys are probably wondering, like, yo, what's going on?
I was in Dubai for about a week or so, about 10 days.
And while I was there, shout out to Angie.
She helped me film the last episode we did, which was the Cuban spy.
Remember that one with Anna Montez?
And then I went to Dubai, where I stayed a little bit longer than I expected.
It was a great time, though.
Awesome stuff.
We'll probably do a whole recap on it on the Fresh Fit podcast for you guys.
But this one, I did a poll, and you guys wanted it.
It was between the Green River killer, right?
AK Gary Ridgeway and K-Flock.
As you guys know, K-Flock had federally gotten indicted recently.
And, you know, I've done gang investigations and federal cases, of course, and racketeering, all that stuff.
So who more qualified than me to talk about this?
But Angie, right, that's not really her expertise.
She does more with like what you like, you do research on the serial killer stuff, the psychology, that type of thing.
Yeah, that's my thing.
Like most, like, it's more psychology and yeah, how they interact and they act and behave and all that shit.
Yeah.
That's what I like.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
So basically, like this gang stuff, you know, racketeering, whatever, it's new for her.
But, you know, she has her notebook out.
She's actually going to be taking notes.
So, you know, she.
I have everything here.
Yeah.
So she'll be, she'll be asking some of the questions that you guys might not might have.
And, you know, she'll be giving some commentary as usual.
But shout out to her for showing up and always helping out behind the scenes.
Oh, real quick.
Do you want to give them an announcement on the things that are coming up?
Because they've been asking you, right?
Go ahead.
Yeah, a lot.
So I've been reading all the comments throughout all the videos that we've done.
And some of you even like DM me cases and evidence and stuff and documents and videos, which I really appreciate.
Yeah, like keep it up, guys.
I really like that.
And I have a list on all the cases that you have suggested, which is a very long list, guys.
It's like two-page list right now.
And I highlighted like the most requested cases, which are the ones that I told Myron earlier, which are Gary Richway, which is a green river killer without doing it.
Which we're going to film that.
If we have time, we might film that for y'all tonight.
Yeah.
And it's going to come out when?
Thursday, probably.
We'll drop it.
Okay.
And of course, we'll do Chris Watts.
That's a highly requested one.
The Black Mafia family, which Myron said that we're going to do what?
More videos.
I mean, he's going to explain it.
Yeah, BMF.
We'll do BMF.
That was a case basically Meach where they basically had done like drug trafficking money laundering back in the mid-2000s around 04-05 was their heyday when they were doing that.
DA ended up getting them backed up.
I remember a really good documentary that covered that that we can break down for you guys.
And then Angie found a really good one.
We're going to break down the mafia family, like the five mafia families, you said.
Oh, yes.
Yes.
So wait, were you referring to the Italian mafia or the you said that you will have to cover like all the mafias in here?
She got confused.
Okay, so BMF and okay, so BMF, as you guys know, was black mafia, the black mafia family, which is big meets in them.
But what she's referring to is La Cosa Nosha, the Italian mafia.
We're going to do them as well, too, because they asked for BMF and the Italian mafia.
Yeah.
Right?
Okay.
And I know you guys with the Italian mafia, because I've been getting a lot of requests for this.
So let me just clear it up real fast.
With the time off, you guys got to understand that there were five main crime families in New York City.
Okay.
And it expanded even more.
There was crime families in Nevada, California, Rhode Island, et cetera, all over the place.
But what we're going to probably more than likely focus on is the five crime families of New York, right?
The Lucas, the Bonanos, et cetera, right?
The John Gotti's, all that stuff that you guys want to want to see.
But for us to effectively do it, it's going to take time.
We're probably going to have to turn it into a series.
And as you guys know, we turn things into series, winds up happening.
I have to report on it for a few weeks.
That's similar to the 9-11 playlist that we made for you guys, right?
I covered, you know, what happened with 9-11 as far as like what led up to it.
We went over the FBI investigation.
We went over Osama Binlana's background.
We went over the conspiracy theories, went over everything.
So it took a few weeks to go through it.
I anticipate that's going to be the same situation with Locosa Nostra.
So that's why I'm like, okay, if we're going to do the mafia, which everyone has done the mafia to its death, we're going to make sure we do it correctly and we're going to report it extensively, which means I might have to do a separate pod on each of the individual crime families.
And I wanted to clarify this because a lot of you guys have asked for the mafia.
She's been getting a lot of requests for the mafia to include the black mafia, not to be confused.
But we're going to do both for y'all.
Don't worry.
Yeah.
Also, yeah, yeah.
Eileen Guernos, of course, very requested.
I watched the movie last week.
It's really good.
A little bit too dramatic for me, but it's good.
It's a really good movie.
And also John Bennett Ramsey.
I'm very familiar with that case.
I studied that case two years ago or something like that.
When you're in Venezuela?
Yeah, I saw all these cases.
Damn.
Just with Casey Anthony as well.
And also very similar.
It was your idea to do Casey Anthony.
Good call on that one.
I gotta give you credit.
Yeah, thank you.
And also, John Bennett Ramsey and sorry, my finger slipped.
Okay, go ahead.
Right.
I forgot what it was.
Aha, John Bernard Ramsey and a similar case to that one, Madeleine McCann.
Have you heard of that one?
Madeleine McCann?
No.
It's a similar case to John Bernard Ramsey with an unsolved case as well.
But it's a Liverpool family.
Okay.
That was like, they were having like vacation time in Portugal, I think.
And the girl went missing.
And nobody knows what happened.
Is that the one that they did on the documentary on Netflix?
The Serpents or whatever his name is?
I don't know.
That's another guy.
That's another.
Oh, that's another one.
There's like a few documentaries on Netflix that people had requested.
The Atlanta murders.
Have you heard of that?
Yeah, Atlanta Murders.
Atlanta.
No, not that one.
No.
Yeah.
A bunch of kids that got like killed.
I know the dude.
They want the second Ripper guy, not Jack the Ripper, the other dude.
I forget that's on Netflix.
Someone in the chat's going to put it.
Yeah.
I've studied that one up too.
So I'm ready for that one whenever.
Okay.
Someone in the chat's going to put it.
Y'all know what I'm talking about.
Okay.
But sorry, go ahead, continue.
Right.
Tori Le Tory.
What's the last name?
I did Tori Lane, though.
I did Tori Lane.
They might want to update on his case of what's going on.
They probably want to update is what I'm thinking.
Also, the Golden State Killer.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That one, 100% we're going to do for y'all.
Yeah.
That one 100%.
That's the dude that broke in a bunch of girls' houses.
And they didn't catch it for like 30 years.
Like he did, he was uh no, like 40 or something crazy.
He was like doing it from the 70s, they didn't catch up till like 2010 or something like that.
And they caught him through uh like one of them uh DNA websites, like you, you and you, you and me, 23, whatever the hell it's called.
They caught him through that, no way, yeah, yeah, that was gonna be hilarious.
That was gonna be funny, guys, when you guys, when we do the gold, uh, gold state killer, he was the original nice talker, by the way, uh, before Richard Ramirez, he was the original.
I had I wanted to do that, Richard Ramirez, but you already did it, yeah, right.
Um, a very hilarious case as well, Lorena Bobbit.
Uh, Myron having heard of this case, I actually watched a whole documentary on her.
This is a woman who shot her husband's tick off, which is very funny, guys.
People have been like requesting this highly because you want Myron's reaction to this.
Yeah, they want well, my reaction to it, guys, is this is exactly why women deserve less.
Book is in stores right now, ninjas.
You know what it's just so y'all know, we're number one best-selling in dating, uh, human intersexual dynamics, uh, feminist theory, etc.
The reason why we're not number one on feminist theory is because it was too easy, bro.
I was like, Yeah, I'm gonna switch it to a more competitive uh um category.
So, we're number one in all the main uh things on Amazon.
We reached, I think, at peak number eight on the list for like all the books, uh, like for like all the Amazon books.
So, uh, right now, we're at like 170 or something like that, or 200, all you know, worldwide.
So, you know, obviously it dropped off a bit.
Um, but yeah, man, we're still number one in dating, um, human psychology and slash um human intersexual dynamics.
I'll find the thing right now, but uh, but yeah, guys, this is why we deserve less.
We've sold over 10,000 copies, by the way, guys.
So, thank you so much for that.
Technically, this book, according to that standard, should be a New York Times bestseller.
To become a New York Times bestseller, you need to sell 5,000 to 10,000 in one week.
We got 10,000.
So, a lot of you guys support it.
Shout out to you guys.
I'm nothing without y'all.
Thank you guys so much.
That's why I tried to keep the book more affordable so it can get into any of y'all's hands.
It's in Kindle and it's on paperback right now.
And the hardcover version is coming out this week.
And the audible is done as well.
And that's going to be out more than likely probably this week or next week as well.
So you will be able to go ahead and say women deserve less in four different formats.
All right, guys.
But anything else?
Sorry, Angie, before the announcements are done.
Yeah.
There are a bunch of other cases as well.
Aaron Hernandez is another case that people have been requesting.
The Black Dahlia, I'm very familiar with that case.
I also studied that case ages ago.
Man, I don't know.
There are a bunch of cases that you guys have requested.
But yeah, these are like the mainly the most requested ones.
Yep.
No, facts.
Cool.
So I'll go ahead and hit these chats, guys.
Thank you again so much for the support.
We got 1,000 y'all already in here.
So please do me a favor, like the video, subscribe to the channel.
And you drop your Instagram for them real quick.
Yeah, it's at So Angelica with double A's at the end.
Please, guys, don't send dick pics.
I've been receiving some.
Please talk.
It's not funny.
It's funny for my end, but not for me at all.
I don't really like them.
Also, don't ask me for feed pics because no.
Stop laughing.
You're encouraging them.
No, it's not funny.
It's not funny.
It's not funny at all.
I mean, like, seriously, that's disgusting.
And you guys, some of you are very disgusting.
But like, for those of you that have been sending me cases and stuff, like, keep it up.
I've been reading like your DMs and stuff.
So yeah, thank you.
No, thank you for the feed pics.
Man, it's not funny.
Oh, man.
No, Lord.
Thank you, guys, for the entertainment, man.
Shout out to all y'all.
Keep sending the dick pics.
No, no.
No.
Oh, man.
Okay.
All right.
So let's sit these chats.
We got Lipracoon goes, welcome back, Blood.
I appreciate that, Lebracoon.
Let's see here.
And then we'll get into it.
We got Colonel Roughneck goes, I drilled for oil and my rig is contracted out for the oil company that owns the tanks that Chris Watts hid his family in.
Holy wow.
That's crazy.
For some of you guys that are wondering, that case was really disturbing.
We will 100% do Chris Watts.
Because the thing is, a lot of you guys had requested Chris Watts, and I was like, who is this guy?
And then Angie put me on.
I saw the documentary on Netflix and I saw another, like, I saw the GCS whole documentary series, which is really good.
He's had like a three-part documentaries on that case, which is cool because you have the interrogation, you have, what's the thing that they did on him, like the lie detector?
Oh, the polygraph.
Yeah, that thing and like the whole main story of Chris and her and his um wife.
Yeah, I wasn't familiar with it.
And then Angie sent me the documentary said, Hey, this is going to be really good.
I think your audience will really enjoy it.
And then I saw more requests, so we're going to definitely do him.
I thought it was really good.
So ask Angie if she has any sisters that need taken care of.
You have any sisters that you could take care of?
No, my sister, I have a sister, but she's like underage.
Yeah, you don't want that, bro.
You're going to end up with them boys going to show up, if you know what I'm saying.
You don't want that.
Raph 154 goes, great to have you back, Myron.
You're an inspiration.
I appreciate it, man.
Thank you so much.
And then we got here also Jerome says, welcome back, my brother.
And Montez would have been unalive had she been a man.
Just saying.
Adam Montez will have.
So she just got out of prison, too.
Michael Mistroke, $1.
And if you guys actually think about it, there was a guy that sold secrets to the Cubans as well, and he got a life sentence.
We might do him as well.
What was the fuck?
It was Walter something.
Not Walter Weeks, not him.
Not my co-host.
It was another dude, white guy.
Someone in the chat will put it.
Natalie E goes, I highly recommend the Gabriel Fernandez case.
Oh, that's a child.
Can you write that one down?
Or do you already have it?
Yeah, I think I already have it here.
Okay.
Yeah.
Let's see here.
We got Nason John goes, what happened to Christina?
She's a loyal FNF girl.
Christina's doing well, guys.
There's no issues.
Dude, Charles, Lucky Luciano, aka Salvatore, Luciana.
Lucan, the when Lucan.
Is that how you say it in Italian?
I don't know.
Maybe.
Lucania.
Okay.
You got to do the hand.
The when you do the mafia videos, he was the boss of the Genevieve's family back then.
And that's from Luciano.
Yeah, we definitely will.
Don't worry.
That's why I'm telling you.
With the mafia, bro, you got to do it right or don't do it at all.
So I'm probably going to have to separate it by crime family because each family was different.
Each crime family had different things that they were involved in.
And then on top of that, just so y'all know, the FBI, when they did their mafia investigation, there was a squad on each family, guys.
Okay.
And when you guys watch this podcast, you already know I've described what FBI squad is, but that's 10 to 15 agents focused on one crime family.
So they had it separated.
All right.
So that tells you guys how extensive the criminal organization was.
And Elek sounds like Lucifer's sister.
Welcome back, Myron.
I think it means angelica.
What else here?
We got here.
Nason John goes, why do you dump Christina?
Is she a main feta and FNF?
Guys, there's nothing wrong with Christina.
Don't worry about it.
My why Quantum's baby look like your homeboy?
Yo.
Why yo, why y'all?
Yo.
Chat got no chill, man.
But hey, it is what it is, I guess.
If they're going to roast you, I guess they're going to roast me too.
No one is safe from the chat.
Fucking gosh, bro.
I miss Fresh and Fit.
Welcome back, sir.
That's from the three diggers.
Shout out to you, my friend.
I appreciate it.
And then we got here, Help Him, goes.
Another suggestion would be the Beltway Snipers.
Oh, I don't have that one.
Can you write that one down?
It's the Washington, D.C., Washington, D.C. snipers.
They've been requesting that one for a minute, too.
All the documentaries on those are trash, though.
That's why I haven't done that one in a bit.
Welcome back, Candace M. Appreciate that.
Let's see here.
Artur Lopez goes, thoughts on the Rolo situation.
Hope you had a great time in Dubai.
Unaware, but Rolo's a homie.
So, you know, it is what it is.
New member, King Long.
Welcome to the FNF fan, my friend.
We got 1,200 of you guys in here, by the way, guys.
So guys, do me a favor, get the engagement up, like the video.
It's been a while since I've done a live.
So we got to get back on it, as y'all know.
And then we got here, Kangugu, Kangu Kid goes, Glad you guys are back.
I don't know what the hell I've been watching since y'all were gone.
Get back to the content, fellas.
Glad to have y'all back.
One mil Fed It, let's go.
Two mil Fresh of Fit.
Let's go.
Speaking of which with Fresh Fit, tomorrow we got three episodes coming for y'all.
We got Lucario Miles coming in at six.
Then we got Peshman, aka Fresh's old mentor with exotic cars.
We're going to do him at seven.
Pause.
And then we got the lovely ladies coming in at like nine or ten, as you guys always know.
So we got three podcasts for you guys.
Tomorrow, we are right back on it.
We're going to go hard in the paint.
All right.
So you guys are going to have a full stack day.
Ken's Garage goes, when is the JFK video coming out?
Okay.
I got to coordinate that one with Ryan Dawson, as you guys know, because he talks about a lot of things that aren't safe for YouTube to include them boys, if you know what I'm talking about.
So we will definitely figure that out as well.
And then is Jack the Ripper confirmed to be done?
Also, thanks for the videos.
I haven't done Jack the Ripper yet, guys, because that one too.
Okay.
I got the other ripper guy pretty much done, though.
Oh, man.
Someone in the chat, please put his name in here.
Some of y'all know.
Some of y'all know who it is.
It's the guy that got caught in, I think, the 70s or 80s.
Another ripper?
Yeah, another ripper.
It's a more modern one.
Someone in the chat is going to put his name in here.
I already know.
Peter Sutcliffe.
Yeah, I think that was his name.
Yep, Peter Sutcliffe.
He was basically like a reincarnation of the Ripper killing prostitutes out in London.
Not in London, in the United Kingdom, excuse me.
Holy.
Yeah, he was, yeah, he was going crazy.
Let's see here.
Zodiac Killer already did Zodiac Killer.
Tomorrow night is a special night for me, Myron.
Michael Me Stroke.
Okay.
It will be.
When is Kiki Kemarana case dropping?
What's up, Myron?
That one will come out as well.
And Beto Tefe with $1.
A lot of you have just asked also Tupac and Biggie, which I'm also familiar with that case too.
Kennon Barbie killers.
Might do it.
K.A. Like the Juice.
Oh, yeah.
I don't know about that case, but they asked about that case in comments.
Yeah, I've seen it.
Okay.
All right.
Cool.
And then Young Dolph, don't worry, guys.
Young Dolph will be done.
Actually, Christina, since you guys like to mention her so much, is helping me with that one.
So she's just waiting on there was a bunch of court hearings that were supposed to occur in January for that.
So we just want to make sure that we have it done.
Blake Kaler, you must be late here, man.
I did Whitey Bulger already.
And then we got here.
Congrats on giving Myron Jr. assembly, bro.
All right, man.
Fucking guys out here coming at my neck with this baby stuff.
All right.
So real quick, before we get into it, I see that you guys might not know all the things that I've done on the channel.
So real quick, I'm going to go ahead and show you guys the YouTube channel, okay?
Because a lot of these cases I've already done for y'all, and you guys might not be aware of it.
So if you come on over to Fed It, right?
Okay.
Come on over to Fed It.
I have different playlists, right, guys?
I got my most popular videos, obviously, here, which a lot of them are rapper ones, right?
And I covered K-Flock already.
And if you guys want to go over the state murder case, it's right here.
And I go into detail on this one, all right?
About the state murder case.
We're going to cover the federal one today, right?
And then, and then I got all the live streams.
Then I got crime documentary breakdowns.
If you guys go through here, you'll see that I covered a lot of these people already.
Dixie Mafia, BTK, Samuel Little, the Zodiac Killer.
Oh, you did the Toy Box Killer?
I did do the Toy Box Killer.
This guy was really disturbing.
Yeah, it is.
Yeah.
Used to give girls a video and be like, like you would lock them up in like some kind of dungeon.
And then when they would come to from the drugs, he would play a recording like on some saw type shit.
And he'd be like, hello there, bitch.
You're going to be.
And then he just goes into detail of what he's going to do to them.
And then we got obviously a whole infamous serial killer playlist right here, right?
You got your Jeffrey Dahmer, John Wayne Gacy, Ted Bundy, the Zodiac Killer, the Nice Talker, Samuel Little, the Unabomber, the Railroad Killer.
You know, soon to come for you guys.
You know where's Miss Green?
9-11 breakdown.
D.B. Cooper.
Oh, yes.
Can you write that one down too?
Yes, of course.
Yeah, they've been asking about D.B. Cooper for a while.
But if you guys look at the crime documentary breakdowns, man, look at all the cases I've covered already, man.
Dahlia Depolito.
This girl was crazy.
Courtney Clenny, Casey Anthony.
Let's see here.
You go all the way down.
I covered.
Here's Whitey Bulger right here for some of y'all that are wondering, which I really enjoyed the Whitey Bulger case, guys.
I did OJ Simpson.
Man, I'm forgetting about some of these.
Robert Hansen at Pablo Escobar's, a crew of his.
I did the real pain in full.
I did the biggest dirty cop bust ever, Operation Shattered Shield.
So, guys, I got a bunch of different cases that I've done, man.
Oh, son of Sam.
Can you write that one down too, Angie?
Cool.
Son of Sam.
That's a good one.
I haven't.
Oh, Son of Sam or Ed Kemper.
Ed Kemper?
Is that?
No, no, no.
That's another one.
No, his name's not Ed Kim.
No, I gotta hear.
I gotta hear it.
Yeah, Son of Sam.
Hang on.
David Berkoswich.
Berkowitz.
There we go.
Bam.
Yep.
Did Monitor Serial Killer.
I have it.
I have it.
Ed Kemper is also another highly requested one.
Who?
Ed Kemper.
Ed Camper?
Okay.
I don't know who that is.
I think it's Eduardo or something.
Eduardo Camper.
Okay.
All right.
But yeah, guys, a lot of these people that you guys are like asking for, I've done them already, right?
Like from simps like Grant Amado to OnlyFans studies like, you know, Courtney Clenny.
I did the Boston Marathon bombing.
You know, I did that as well with Zokar, Sarnev.
So pretty much every crime that y'all could think of, I've covered on this channel to some extent.
All right.
So make sure to go check out the channel.
Your favorite criminal is probably in here somewhere.
And if it hasn't been done, trust me, Angie has a whole list and we are going to.
And Mike Kemper is the name.
And we're going to make sure we get it for y'all.
All right.
Okay, cool.
All right.
So any other chats that came in before we get into this thing?
Because once I start, I will read the chats at the end.
Okay, Michael Canonis goes, Myron, have you heard of John Allen Rubio and Angela Camacho from Bronzeville, Texas?
What they child their kids, they child their kids in 2003.
I never heard of that.
Angela might be my cousin, man.
Of course, what is this?
Yeah, I don't think so.
They're probably Mexican if they're Bronzeville.
Hello, my sister gets mad when she sees me watching your stuff.
Good stuff, man.
Tell your sister to stop getting mad because this is the FedEx channel.
This is not the misogyny channel.
Okay.
Actually, you know what?
It is now.
Hey, if the sister's watching, why you deserve less is out in stores right now.
Why women deserve less on Amazon?
Get it right now, guys.
Can you do HH Holmes?
Yes, we can.
That is the killer doctor.
Can you write that one down too?
And sorry, guys, for the extended intro here.
I haven't been here for a minute, so I really want to make sure I get all y'all in here before we get this thing going.
And we want to make sure we get all your questions in.
Jalen Walker, hey, Myron, man, keep up the Go Work.
I was wondering if you're thinking about Ruha and top 10 wanted.
Look it up.
Hang on.
You know what?
Just for you, bro.
This I'm feeling.
It's been a while since I've been on FedEx.
So let me go ahead.
Let me look this chick up real quick because I have never heard.
I knew it.
It's a little guardian girl.
Oh, oh, okay.
I heard of this chick.
All right.
Just so the audience knows who this is.
Okay.
Yeah.
This she's uh, I think she's the highest wanted uh woman on the FBI's most wanted list.
Yeah.
Um brutally murdered.
Man, there is a reward of a hundred thousand.
What after her?
Yeah.
You're saying that she was brutally man, probably not.
Here she is right here.
Yeah.
Wanted by the bureau.
Yeah.
If you make it, if you get on the FBI top 10 most wanted list, you messed up, bro.
You messed up.
Uh, but now they're saying that she's she probably faked her death.
Okay, whatever.
Probably faked it.
And then, real quick, just because.
Oh my God.
I want to see where we are right now.
Right?
Because the book used to be a meme, but now used to be a meme.
It used to be a meme, yeah.
Like you, like, people would just kind of like, it was like a joke book, like you can see here, which I use on the book all the time on the show, right?
This is right here.
Yeah, like it was originally this, right?
So I said, you know what?
I'm going to make this into a book.
And I did.
And here it is right here, guys.
Why women deserve less?
Where are we at right now?
Let's see here.
Shout out to Rolo Tomasi.
Go ahead and get the copyrational.
Number one in medical psychology of sexuality.
Number one in psychology and counseling books on psychology.
Number one in dating, aka Monko.
Hey, guys, do me a favor, man.
We got 913 ratings on there.
Yo, do me a solid.
The feminists in the Matrix are obviously attacking and hating.
So go in here and leave a five-star rating if you enjoyed the book.
Most of the ratings are pretty good.
I mean, the fact that we got like a 4.9 out of 5 with 913 global ratings is pretty awesome.
So shout out to you guys.
I thank you so much for the support.
And I put like a little off the thing here.
But yeah, pretty much, you know, obviously you're going to have some feminist haters, right?
Oh, this book's sexy and selfie.
But you know, it's 86 pages, bro.
I go over the detail, you know, of how the sexual marketplace is.
And it's a short, concise read onto what you need to do to become successful in today's competitive day.
No, it's a little bit cheaper now.
Yeah.
Well, it's actually, I don't know why it says this.
I think it's because if you got prime, they tell you that, right?
I don't know what it is.
But it's on Kendall paperback.
Hardcover is going to come out this week, more than likely.
I'm just waiting on some final edits.
And then the audible version will be out.
It's in, I got it in review right now.
It's with Audible.
I'm waiting for it to get approved.
Hopefully, it'll take you know a few days, but sometimes it could take a few weeks because who knows with content like this, you know, Amazon, oh my God.
So you never know.
But guys, it's a number one bestseller in dating and everywhere else.
So go ahead and check it out, man.
Go get it.
Support that, support the homie, support the movement.
And yeah, man, if it weren't for freaking all the haters, we'd probably be a New York Times bestseller.
But to become a new New York Times bestseller, you got to have like a publisher and be like on more than one platform.
It's a bunch of lame rules.
So it is what it is.
Okay, where am I here?
Okay, I'll read these last chats that we're going to really get into the show because we've been going for about 28 minutes now.
We got here.
Can you do HH Holmes?
Yeah, I read that one.
Sorry.
Guys, North Hollywood Bank Robbery.
We were planning on doing that one, but we haven't found like a good documentary or like, well, I mean, we found one, but it wasn't that like good enough.
Yeah, it wasn't that good.
It wasn't that good.
Well, we have like a lot of, I found like the footage from the videos from the police and all that stuff, which is cool.
But I don't know.
We should do it though.
I will say this, which is really good about Angie.
She watches the documentary.
And even if she enjoys it, she says, I don't think the audience will like it, though.
Yeah, this is this was boring, and like she really do be looking out for y'all.
Like, I don't think they'll like this.
So, we're very selective on if we're gonna like react to a video or react to a documentary, it's got to be entertaining so that you guys like that's the main thing.
Like, we want to educate you guys, but we also want to entertain you guys too.
So, when we watch it, if it's trash, we'll be like, nah, we'll find something else.
So, uh, the North Hollywood shooting, it's good, but the stuff that's on it right now that we've went through isn't that good.
So, we're gonna um continue to find something, but we will cover for y'all.
You guys got it.
Um, let's see here.
Uh, we read that one, my cousin, yeah.
Book is so I got Alexa reading in her female voice, yo.
And then, and then, obviously, someone in the chat got a say, Myron Simpen, bro.
Listen, man, if a girl helps you out and she's looking out and she actually has your best interests at heart, like she literally watches documentaries for y'all and is like, Yo, nah, this isn't good, etc.
I like the case, but it's, I think your audience would be bored by it.
Like, hey, man, you got it, you got to give credit where it's due.
You know what I'm saying?
It's most women deserve less, but some deserve a little bit more, and Angie deserves a little bit more.
All right, most women deserve less.
That's the right title, that's the right title, anyways.
If you're gonna be part two is gonna be why Angie deserves less.
So, uh, all right, where are we at here?
It'll be one-page book.
That's true, because you deserve less, so it'll only be one page, okay?
All right, yeah, so we're gonna go ahead and get into uh this thing.
Anything you want to say to people before we get to get into this K-Flock thing?
But thank you so much for your support, guys.
You guys are awesome.
All right, uh, and then Nima, you mean, oh, shout out to you, Nima!
Shout out to you, my friend.
You guys remember, he was on a podcast before he was exposing how corrupt TikTok is.
I think he'll be back sometime this year, man.
Let me know.
You got my number, bro.
Uh, hit me up whenever you're back in Miami.
You'll be traveling the world, you know, doing entrepreneur big money things.
But whenever you're here, let me know.
Uh, shout out to him, man.
He's exposing the BS between TikTok.
He aired a bunch of stuff out.
They canceled him real quick.
Go after.
All right.
So, guys, we're going to go ahead and get right into it now.
If you've been here, like the video, subscribe to the channel.
Let's go ahead without further ado and go into this.
So, who is K-Flock, guys?
K-Flock is Kevin Perez, known professionally as K-Flock, is an American rapper hailing from the Bronx.
Let me go ahead and enlarge this for y'all real quick.
You guys might be wondering, yo, Myron, do you like his music?
I actually do.
I think he's very talented.
Hailing from the Bronx Buchanan's musical career in 2020, he rose to fame through a variety of singles, most notably Is You Ready, which peaked at number 61 on the Billboard Hot 100.
He released his debut mixtape, the DOA tape in 2021.
Okay, and you guys can see here, he's very young, born April 20th, 2003.
That's an interesting birthday, 420.
He's only 19 years old.
He's going to turn 20 in a few months.
He's from the Bronx.
And him and a couple of his buddies pioneered a sound called Bronx Dro, which we're going to talk about that here in a little bit.
But for you guys to understand what's going on here, you have to understand first his history.
Okay.
And we're going to go into that here right now.
All right.
Shout out to my boy Traplore Ross.
Okay.
Don and Markov for having this video.
Dom De Marco.
Welcome back to his channel.
We did a sit-down where we went over my career, drill, a bunch of different things on this channel.
He's been on the show several times.
Good friend of ours, man.
Good dude.
I think, personally, he probably has one of the best hip-hop channels on YouTube.
He's right up there with Academics and No Jumper, one of the best reporters.
He goes into explicit detail on a lot of these rappers and backgrounds, etc.
So I highly suggest if you enjoy hip-hop and you like to know the backgrounds and the beefs, et cetera, subscribe to his channel, check him out.
Okay.
And he has another channel called Trap Lord Clips as well.
So for you guys to truly understand what's going on here, we need to go ahead and go over the background.
All right.
So let's go ahead and start with Sev's side.
Okay.
And that's going to be right here.
All right.
So Sev's side is the gang that K-Flock represents.
All right.
So that way you guys will kind of understand the beef and how this all originated because there's been a pattern of violence that led the feds to going into this Rico.
And we're going to explain what Rico is and everything else like that, but I want y'all to really understand the background.
All right.
So let's get into it.
Sev'side is an area around East 187th Street.
Historically, the gangbangers from Sebside have been in alliance with crews from Mount Vernon and Hilltop, known as the H T Y B's or Hilltop Young Bosses, or sometimes just YBs.
HTYBs being seen mobbing through the streets of the Bronx as early as 2010 with home movies still circulating online to this day, seemingly showing members running their block, claiming Seth Side or Hilltop, all while hating on their ops and declaring their intention to K or kill any rivals from the 800s, YG's, or Y's.
Very YP, Seth gang, y'all ain't here in the big suit.
Yo, man, YP's up, man.
Seth's out and JJ here, dude.
Don't throw my mouth.
Shout out to my Seth's out.
YG, gang.
And as y'all can see, these are all basically teenagers.
Okay.
Yeah, they seem very young.
Yeah, they're all teenagers.
So you guys are going to see a trend here.
Now, much like the other gangs we've discussed so far, after a decade of beef and indictments, a modern-day crew out of Sebside would emerge, with some gangbangers from this area identifying as 700 DOA.
This is a crew made up of a mixture of...
Okay, as you guys can see here, you see some red bandanas.
All right, here's Kay Flock right here.
So you already know what gang that represents, the Bloods.
But New York is a bit different, and I'm going to explain that here in a second.
Different sub-gang sets like the Mac Baller Brims and Sex Money Murder Bloods, as well as Crip gangs like the Rolling 80s, because you've got to remember that Bronx gang politics is not as simple as Bloods versus Crips.
There's a lot of mixed up and overlapping gang sets that you maybe wouldn't expect traditionally to be cool with each other, but some bloods and crips might be an alliance under the umbrella of the 700 DOA crew.
And to make it even more confusing, 700 DOA from Seth Side apparently identify as EBK or everybody killers, meaning that they hate everybody.
There might be a few friendships and alignment.
All right, so let me explain this real quick because this might go over a few of you guys' heads.
For all the people out there that are international, et cetera, as you guys know, you got the Bloods and the Crips, right?
Two famous African-American gangs, street gangs, right?
Now, historically, they came from Los Angeles and they have had rivalries with each other since decades, right?
But in New York, gang politics are a little bit different.
What might happen in New York is it's not necessarily bloods and crips fighting each other, it's neighborhoods fighting each other, okay?
So you might have a guy, right, that's from the neighborhood that's a blood, then you got another guy that's a crit, then you got another guy that might be a gangster disciple, then you got another guy that's like king.
They'll all align with each other, right?
And they'll go beef with other people that are from other neighborhoods, all right?
So it's not necessarily the flags that differentiate them, it's more along the sides of its neighborhoods in New York, okay?
This might be different in other parts of the country, but in New York, this is very common.
If you look at someone like Pop Smoke, right?
The Wu, right?
That was an umbrella gang that covered both bloods and Crips, and they aligned together to fight who?
The Gangster Disciples, the GDs, right?
So they're beefing with guys like 22Gs, et cetera, right?
So that's why you hear them say, whoa, and then you see some of them with, look at Pop Smoke, he's a crit.
But then you'll see him with other guys, I think like Ross Wish, for example, right?
Who's a blood, to my knowledge, if I'm correct.
Someone correct me if I'm in the chat, but you guys understand where I'm going here.
They'll have bloods and crips under the same umbrella because it's the neighborhood, all right, against them.
And that's very common in New York politics when it comes to gangs, etc.
You know, that's why you got someone like 5-year-in, he'll be cool with bloods, but they align it and fight against who?
The GDs.
So that's how New York is a little bit different.
Yeah, that affects Ross Wish Blood.
Thank you, Steasy.
But that's how New York gang politics operate compared to LA.
Now, does LA also have, you know, sets that are cool with each other that might beef?
Of course.
But it's very common in New York is the point I'm trying to make.
Alliances between some DOAs and OGs, but one thing's for sure, the guys from DOA have furious beef with the likes of the YGs and the OYs, and things can get very confusing and very dangerous indeed.
And I know it could get very confusing, guys, but just if you're going to boil it down, think of it as it's neighborhoods fighting against each other.
And within those neighborhoods, there might be people repping different flags, but it doesn't matter because they're all from the same neighborhood.
So if you got a blood in a crypt, they're from the same neighborhood.
They will align and go fight against bloods and crypts from other neighborhoods because the neighborhood overrides the flag in New York City at least.
Now, the most famous of the Sev Side rappers from the Bronx drill scene is, of course, Kay Flock.
But before he was known for his raps, he was just doing his thing in the dangerous streets of the Bronx alongside a couple of his friends.
More specifically, Dougie B and B-Love, who actually is OGs, with this trio being Sev-Side natives, growing up on 187th Street in Belmont in the Bronx.
Where are you two from and how did y'all get into this music stuff?
Oh, from 187, okay.
Now, it was apparently B-Love who started rapping first out of this trio.
funnily enough, citing his biggest inspiration in the rap game as Chicago drill rapper turned convicted murderer Rondo No.
9.
From here, B-Love would end up getting Dougie B and Kate Block in front of the microphone with a little encouragement.
I'm not, I wasn't really good rapper.
I wasn't really good rapper right here.
I was I was doing the moment it's already here, for me.
Going in the school playing for me.
And then I started taking the series out of sea.
I'm going up for me.
My son love like not please.
Tom goes to serious.
Little did this trio know that together they would be pioneering one of the biggest musical movements to come out of the Bronx since the 70s.
But this would have been hard to appreciate at the time.
And despite convincing.
And the Bronx was the birthplace of hip-hop in the United States.
Well, birthplace of hip-hop period.
Two of his day one homies to get into the rap game.
B-Love himself said that he didn't really see the potential in music initially.
It was only after spending some time in prison that he would realize that rapping could be a legitimate way out of the streets upon his release.
What was it the moment for you that really kind of made you want to like do this in a more serious manner?
I got locked up.
Nah, you gotta keep going.
But sadly, through their journey into the music industry, there's been a whole lot of setbacks and backstabs.
The guys from Seth's side used to hang out with another rapper called PNVJ, another rapper from their block who was apparently one of the first people in the Bronx to rap over a UK drill B and introducing Dougie B to the potential of the music industry.
For me, I'll f with it, but like Phoebe, EVJ used to be for my host for me.
I ain't gonna lie.
He did his own thing.
He separated, he's respected it.
Seen somebody for me.
See all right.
So now you guys kind of know how K-Flock got into it and the gang that he reps.
Now we're gonna get into K-Flock's wild antics, okay?
This is hilarious.
Over on Seth's side, K-Flock had yet to release any music yet.
At this point, K-Flock was still deep in the streets, spinning the op block on IG Live without a care in the world for who was watching.
In fact, in a now iconic IG live session, K-Flock would record himself in 800 YG's territory, seemingly hunting for ops, showing the world that he was outside the ops building and ready to shoot or make a movie, as he called it.
And for all the people out here that aren't versed in gang culture and or vernacular, ops stands for opposition, which means the enemies, okay?
Commonly used in drill music.
Come outside of y'all building.
Look.
In front of y'all building.
He living in this building, y'all.
I feel like a warrior.
I'm Dolo.
Which, just so you guys understand, this is extremely dangerous.
He's in a neighborhood controlled by his opposition.
And he said, I'm Dolo, which means I'm by myself, right?
It's a slang term for solo for all my.
And you guys got to remember, we have a lot of international viewers that listen in, so they might not be familiar with American slang.
But yeah, well, Angie as well.
So this is crazy what he's doing, right?
This is before he has a hit.
So you guys could see here that he was on demon time before the music.
Like that.
I'm like that.
What am I doing?
I wish when y'all drilling over there, he would just shot one y'all in your face with no motherfucking love.
What is he looking for?
He's looking for one of his enemies.
I'm on a block.
And at a certain point, K-Flock seems to spot who he was looking for, but is then immediately spotted himself by the cops.
Okay, when he says the boy's right here, that means the police, the NYPD.
Watch this up.
So Jay.
I'm not moving, bro.
So rats, where am I?
Look, I'm about to run down.
What am I daddy?
The boys right there.
Look.
The right running.
The boys right there.
The boys right there.
Like, look.
So come in.
Come on.
The block.
Come run the block.
Can't more than boys dying.
Lord, the boy's still down there.
Boy's still down there.
But despite the police presence.
So as y'all can see, my man is an IG Live chasing after enemies, telling him, come do something with a police leave, etc.
Right?
And just so y'all know, the Bronx is extremely dangerous.
Probably one of it, I would say, I would argue it's probably the most dangerous borough right now in New York City.
It's one of the few bros that still hasn't felt like the super heavy hand of gentrification.
Is he going through gentrification now?
Of course, but not to the same level as like Harlem, Brooklyn, etc.
So someone will correct me in the chat if I'm wrong.
But I think right now, Bronx has the most violent crime of all the bros in New York City.
But this goes just to show, like, this dude was on some demon time.
And unfortunately, you know, you could take the dude off the hood, but you can't take the hood out the dude.
K-Flock remained on the block, ready for ops and still streaming live despite the presence of the police.
K would even go on in this live to tell his homie that he literally spun the block for views and bragging about the sub 200 live viewers that he had on his live while this was going on.
And this guy goes to show the clout generation that we're in, where social media literally inspires people to go out and, you know, spin the block.
And I say that way, air quotes, spinning the block means looking for opposition in rival neighborhoods to commit acts of violence against.
So and at this point, I think he's like 17, 18.
He's probably a minor at this point, maybe maybe sorry, 16, 17, maybe even 18.
But yeah, this just goes to show like the mindset of a lot of these younger generation.
Yeah.
To me, this shows just how crazy K-Flock was in the streets before his rap career had even begun.
He was a truly lost kid with zero fear, something to prove with complete disregard for the safety of his ops, his friends, or even himself.
So while the clashes in the streets were heating up, so too were the clashes in the music as rappers from the OG side of the beef would also begin releasing provocative music with the sole aim of provoking their ops.
On May the 1st, 2020, Sha-EK, PJ Glizzy and B-Dot released their breakout song, Shoot or Get Shot, with the main hook of the song basically saying, if you represent the YGs, you will get shot.
And with lyrics dissing YGs throughout the whole track.
And so what was the buzz about Bronx drill beginning to rise?
At a certain point, K-Flock decides to take a break from spinning his ops block on IG Live, getting in the recording booth and making a little song of his own.
And at the end of May 2020, K-Flock would drop his first solo track, FTO, a 2-2-G's remix that would begin to blow him up in the rap gang too.
Now, the template had been set.
K-Flock had a genuine opportunity to build himself a legitimate career as a rapper.
But as we see as this story progresses, he would remain heavily invested in the streets, perhaps not even realizing just how big of an opportunity he was creating for himself by picking up a microphone.
And unfortunately, as the month would go on, both sides would see bloodshed as a result of the deadly gang lifestyle that they were tied up in, ultimately leading to a whole lot of heartbreak, loss, and disrespectful music being made.
Okay.
So, um, and this leads to a lot of people getting killed, right?
A lot of, um, killings back and forth.
And here's the thing too, with this cloud generation that you guys need to understand what, like a lot of these like younger rappers.
So don't make a song.
Somebody gets killed.
Don't go on IG live, making fun of them.
Say, are we smoking on a pack?
All that other stuff, as you guys know, that was made famous by Chief Keefe and them, right?
We smoking on that.
insert name of dead individual pack right then they put it on instagram they make songs about it they laugh at the person that's dead you know they disrespect the individual knock the candles over at the memorial like all crazy stuff like this is stuff guys that didn't happen in any other era of hip-hop that i could think about right i'm 33.
i remember right in the 90s or 2000s right when rappers had beef it wasn't to the point where they were taunting each other about death like it is now like nowadays it's like a whole other level right and they laugh at each other make songs laughing at each other years after it okay so um but we'll just skip over this but this was a very uh well you know what give me one to the chat if y'all want to go over the bloody summer of 2020 if you guys want to go over it because it kind of does build into it right so
you guys understand that whenever you have acts of violence happening like this the police are going to start targeting you and then eventually the feds are going to come in and start uh uh targeting you so if y'all want okay damn that's resounding ones all right let's all right let's let's do it let's uh let's play it um because this kind of sets the stage for why the police got interested and then eventually the feds got interested on june the 26th point
2020, Ty Benji, real name Tyron Mitchell Almadovar, is sitting in the back of a taxi.
At around 11 p.m., a white BMW pulls up.
Reports suggested that after yelling something, an occupant of that BMW opened fire, hitting Ty Benji in the head.
He would be left for dead in the back of that cab on a busy street.
Now, Ty would initially survive that attack, spending several days in the hospital.
But sadly, only two days after the shooting of Ty, yet another attack would take the life of another young man, leaving the local community shaken.
Just before midnight on June the 28th, 2020, a 17-year-old by the name of Brandon Hendrix, known to his friends as Diddy or B. Diddy, was apparently at a dice game outside of a building in Morris Heights on Davidson Avenue near 176th Street.
After an argument, he was unfortunately caught in the crossfire with a stray bullet hitting his neck, causing him to lose his life later in hospital.
Was shot and killed overnight in the Bronx.
So as y'all can see, they're just kids, man.
There's overwhelming grief following.
I'm just going crazy.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, they're the kids.
It's wild.
I really can't.
Police say he was shot in the neck outside an apartment building on Davidson Avenue near West 176th Street just before midnight on Sunday.
After some sort of argument, he died at the hospital.
Here outside his home, neighbors say he was a good kid who had big dreams of playing basketball.
Diddy was apparently a talented basketball player with a promising future.
Killed just days after graduating.
Apparently, he wasn't in a gang, but he did know some people that were involved in that lifestyle on the OGs and the OY side.
As a result, the YGs would mock Diddy's passing on social media, saying things like basketball players need to stay at home.
But sadly, the tragedies in the streets of the Bronx were far from over.
Two days after Diddy's shooting, Ty Benji, who had spent days fighting for his life in hospital, would lose that battle and succumb to his injuries.
The Bronx is truly a war zone at this point.
And only a few days after this, YG's member Rajeez would be wounded in a shooting just aged 15.
Now, police say the call came in at 3:30 for a 15-year-old boy shot one time in the back.
Detectives working a crime scene at Oakland Place and Prospect Avenue.
A police source tells me after the 15-year-old was shot, he made his way around the block towards his home.
Police say the two suspects, possibly teenagers themselves, fled northbound on Prospect Avenue on a black and silver scooter.
So while the streets of the Bronx are filled with gunsmoke, the Bronx drill music scene would begin to show more and more signs of life.
On August the 12th, 2020, D-Thang of the YGs would become the latest Bronx rapper to rise to men.
So, as you guys can see, there's a link between acts of violence and then the music becoming more and more popular, right?
And this is why the city of New York has been going so hard on these drill rappers.
Mainstream fame off the back of his new song, Caution.
This high-energy anthem is a Bronx drill favorite, partly because of its amazing beat and D-Thang's impeccable flow, and partly.
And on top of that, D-Thang is probably opposition number one for K-Flock and the related.
Partly because of the dark negativity and disrespect contained within its lyrics.
D-Thang's song caution is crammed with disses and disrespect.
He disses Sha E.K., addressing him by his nickname, Jiggy Man.
He references their earlier song, Shoot or Get Shot, saying that they're the ones who end up getting shot.
An apparent reference to Shaw E.K. being shot by a YG's affiliate, something that Shah E. K alluded to in a talk of the town interview, which D-Thang reacted to personally on his Instagram.
It was a rumor saying that you got shot.
Is that true?
No, you know.
Yeah, you know.
Also, in caution, D. Thang disses EDOT, but D-Thang's disrespect.
Bro, talk about self-snitching.
Yeah, you know, you know.
Like, bro, I will keep our mouth shut, man.
The next thing you know, you're gonna end up.
And these guys wonder why they get indicted, bro.
On this song, would go much deeper than simply insulting his living ops, and he would go on to reference several people who lost their lives, saying that his ops can go out like Noah, saying that he smokes Benji.
But D-Thang wasn't the only one in the Bronx drill scene upping the disrespect.
Because the following month, on the 6th of September 2020, K-Flock and B-Love would drop their latest drill banger, the song Op Spotter.
In the track, both K-Flock and B-Love say that they'll shoot people for bunny hopping, an apparent reference to a dance that D-Thang and other YGs are known to do.
B-Love says that he's smoking on Woo Lottie and that he screams OGs while rolling through the YG's building.
And sadly, as these two sites would provoke each other in music, the deadly consequences of the gangbanging lifestyle would also continue to play out in the streets.
On September the 10th, 2020, 17-year-old Kurther Wurtz, aka K-Dub or Dubski, was walking on the street in Ho Avenue in Crotona.
And here, he was confronted by two masked gunmen.
He too would attempt to run away, but tripped up, with his assailants getting up close and shooting him multiple times.
With K-Dub sadly late.
K-Flock, that's why he says it all the time, don't run, don't trip!
Says that famously in one of his songs.
Loved ones lit candles and shows stories of 17-year-old Kether Wurtz.
He was a cool dude, always laughing.
He never bothered nobody unless he had to.
That's a fact.
He was just a chill guy.
Once again, the whole shooting was caught on camera and broadcast on the news, but again, it's way too shocking to show you on YouTube.
The cops would later make an arrest in this case, with later unconfirmed speculation suggesting that the killer may have been from Sev's side.
But from here, only days later, will there be another senseless killing seemingly carried out by YG's affiliates on September the 12th, 2020?
23-year-old Christopher Pagan, aka Yellow, was in a parked car at Jackson Houses on Park Avenue near East 158th Street in Melrose.
Here, a gunman approached his vehicle and opened fire.
One man was shot and survived, but sadly, Yellow was hit once in the shoulder and once in the head, leading him to tragically pass away at the scene.
The YGs would mock Yellow after his death and begin to reference his name.
Smoking Yellow Before Work.
So you guys can see here that what is this?
What is this?
Yo, she's disturbed.
I didn't warn her, but guys, you don't know what's going on right now.
This is like kids playing with guns.
Yeah, yeah, I know.
It's crazy.
It's crazy.
Like, yo, this is wild that they be saying stuff like this.
I know.
In their songs, three people were arrested for this crime.
Two for being the shooters and one for providing the gun to them.
Interestingly, the person who allegedly provided the gun in this hit was the younger brother of one of the older YGs who pled guilty for his role in Noah's death.
And the so Noah was a guy that got stomped out, guys, by a bunch of opposition, and they make fun of him all the time for that.
Younger YG's member who was implicated in the killing of Yellow by allegedly providing the weapon actually ended up being caught and confronted on camera outside of a courthouse by B Love himself.
B Love, you talk about coming close to She.
I can't even quote with it.
Lock me throw that up one more time.
You talking about come across the street.
Come across the street.
Suck my Gove.
Now, this video was taken by the YGs as a massive provocation against the group.
And as a result, it would have only made B Love and his close friends even more wanted targets for the YGs who are continuing to put in work on the streets.
However, regardless of the dangers, with B Love and K-Flock doing numbers in music, soon Dougie B would also musically put his name on the map too.
And it wouldn't take long for this Sev side trio to wind up dominating the budding Bronx drill music scene.
All right, so this is where they start to blow up.
But as you guys can see, that was a very violent summer, okay?
Which kind of set the stage because, guys, remember, each of these violent acts that occurs, the police are keeping track of it, okay?
And when the police are keeping track of it, they're like, okay, this was going on with this.
They're talking with informants.
They're developing informants.
People are coming forward.
Good Samaritans are coming forward.
Sources of information.
When people get shot and killed like this, right?
The police are able to go ahead and canvass information.
Now, here's the thing, though.
What they know and what they can prove are two different things.
However, when it comes to Rico cases, the burden of proof isn't as high.
And I'll explain that here in a little bit when we go into what racketeering is and why it is so detrimental to gangs.
Now, let's go ahead and go into K-Flock once again.
Well, here you guys can see real fast.
I'll show you.
This is him and his cousin, D-Thang, on Instagram Live going against each other.
All right.
You would see a reckless K-Flock acting wild on live, riding around his enemy's hood, screaming at them not to run out of a window.
Seemingly, K-Flock would eventually catch someone, dissing them from out the window, and even telling the driver to use the car to run them over.
Oh, my God.
Hit him with the what?
Hit him with the what?
losing their supposed off in a brief chase okay bro like could you he's literally documenting himself antagonizing chasing after and attempting to hurt and or kill his opposition via in 1080p All right?
Crazy.
Crazy.
And you guys got to remember when the police have evidence like this, right?
And they see clearly that this dude not only is an artist that has a bunch of influence, he is responsible for violence occurring, whether he might openly advocate for it or not.
The thing is, is that he's a lightning rod because he's the one that has influence.
So automatically, he goes higher up on the list for them, right?
And again, gang violence in New York is very bad.
So what do they do?
We got to go after the people that are stimulating the violence.
And if he's on here recording himself chasing after ops in the hood and making music about it, which is the fuel a lot of the times for this gang violence, of course they're going to target him, right?
And I guarantee you, if you looked at the case file, you're going to see situations like this where he's acting up crazy on live.
But let's keep going.
Then claims that they're still on the block and they're not leaving.
He's still on a strip though.
We're not leaving.
K-Flock would continue spinning that block for a couple of minutes, seemingly catching someone again, jumping straight out of the car with his friends yelling, flock them, and doing all of this whilst wearing an expensive Montclair jacket and diamond encrusted necklace.
The Montclair murderer, the Amiri assassin, as academics calls him, bro.
My man is out here in $5,000 to $10,000 outfits chasing after ops, okay?
With rare Jordans on.
Like, bro, and we're going to talk about this, how they were able to so easily identify him when he actually did end up shooting somebody.
But, bro, this is a whole other level of, uh, ridiculousness.
He right there, he right there, he right there.
Where, where?
He right there.
Don't run!
Don't fuck it, daddy!
Fuck him!
Fuck him!
Hey, buddy!
Yo, yo, yo, hop back in!
Hop back in!
What?
Yo, yo, get back in the car.
Yeah, go.
Yo, bro, hurry us and come back around!
But once again, he failed to...
Yo!
Yo, what the fuck?
Yo, gets out the car and chases after the dude.
Yo, don't run.
Like, bro, could you imagine?
Like, they're just like, a car just pulls up and the next thing you know, hey, yo, don't run, don't run, bro.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, what?
And a bunch of dudes with masks and Montclairs run after you, bro.
But would go on to assure the fans, if they did get him, they would have killed him and put him in the trunk.
We would have really been in a trunk.
They had a chick in the car.
Could you imagine?
Hey, you want to go on a first day?
We got about to go spin the block on some haters.
I'm about to be dripped up and dripped out so we can go ahead and get some blood dripping off this idiot.
Bro, craziness.
Absolute craziness.
Now, funnily enough, we never actually get to see Kay do anything illegal or actually catch anyone in these lives.
And there's a small part of me that believes that riding around staging this sort of thing would be the perfect marketing strategy for an up-and-coming drill rapper to cultivate a tough guy image.
But whether or not he's doing this for the camera or is just genuinely bloodthirsty, you can't deny that the way that K-Flock is behaving in these lives is completely out of control and extremely alarming.
And to add another part, definitely can be used against them in the court of law and can be used to establish that he's a violent individual that is not safe to be out in society, which, my friends, that is definitely not a good look because all of this can be used against them.
And I promise you guys that these lives, this video evidence was used, right, by the prosecution to say, yo, we have to go after this guy.
Okay.
And this is an instance where Chasing Klout to come off as a tough guy can come back and bite you in the ass.
Let's say he staged it and he didn't chase after anybody.
He was just doing it like, oh yeah, this lit, blah, blah, blah.
It doesn't matter because it could be seen as problematic because what they're going to say is, yo, so what you're telling me that you did all this effort and you didn't really chase after anyone.
Well, what about all those other videos of you where we clearly see you arguing with individuals, right?
So if they got one video that shows them doing something and they can actually show him arguing with other people, and if the police weren't there, the violence would have occurred.
They're going to go ahead and believe that the other videos are probably very similar, if not the same, where he's actually chasing down on individuals, which shows that he's the aggressor, which shows that he's a menace to society, which shows what he is more than likely guilty.
All right.
So this is all a bad look for him.
And on top of that, it's more than likely the reason why the feds got involved in the first place.
The state was probably like, yo, I don't know how we feel about our case.
I think we could get him on racketeering because as you guys know, he went to jail for murder.
And I'm going to cover the murder case first after we go over this little thing so you guys understand the background of who this guy is.
We're going to cover the murder and then we're going to go into the federal case.
All right.
So this all makes sense for y'all.
At this point, that despite his promising rap career, he is truly on a mission to clash with his ops in the street.
And as we now know, it would ultimately be this attitude that would lead to his downfall.
But before that could happen, he would be releasing a lot more music.
All right, so we're gonna go him chasing out one more.
Smelly, two of the young men affiliated with the OGs and hybrids, respectively, who lost their lives as part of this feud.
A little while after this song released, K-Flock would go live beefing with Rajeez of the YGs, confronting Raj, who had apparently told D-Thang that he had shot K-Flock in the stomach, with Rajeez suggesting that K-Flock is being a snitch for airing out their personal gang business on live.
What'd you do, Rob?
What am I doing?
You know why I don't believe you?
No, you say, because you said, what do you dare you clapping me in my stomach?
Why are you jacking?
You shot me in my stomach.
Oh, boy.
What am I, that's...
Oh, my God.
Word of my mother, I'm my cousin.
D didn't even tell me.
D, that's who told me.
My cousin said...
Bro, so he's here arguing with his opposition on Instagram Live about attempted murder.
Guys, like, let that sink in for a second.
You have two individuals that if they saw each other in person would probably try to kill each other.
Complete opposition.
Arguing with each other on Instagram Live in public in front of hundreds, if not thousands of people that will be seeing this later, millions probably at this point now that K-Flock has blown up.
Okay.
And this is all over Reddit, etc.
about extremely serious felonies.
You never did nothing to me.
You never even vote.
I ain't gonna lie to me going to jail.
Do you not hear what he says?
Fortunately, at this point, K-Flock was still putting out music in between his street feud.
That's one thing they were right about.
At a certain point, taken to the recording booth to pile yet more disrespect on Raji's name, K-Flock's June 20th release, What Y'all Wanna Do, aka Power, was a big track.
The song's name and the sample underlying the UK drill beat was borrowed from Kanye West's classic power.
And in the track, K-Flock disses Rajeez or Ra-Ra, saying that when they saw each other, Ra didn't shoot.
He also once again references Woolotti tripping up and losing his life.
He says openly that he's a demon and that he spins through the Bronx trying to kill and saying and if I'm not mistaken, Woolotti guys was an opposition rapper, one of their enemies.
They caught him, right?
And they jumped out the vehicle with a bunch of like, I think, like sticks and brooms and a bunch of random stuff.
And they chased after him.
He tripped and they just beat him to death.
All right, I'm going to research it, MidFact check myself.
But if I'm not mistaken, that's the individual who I'm pretty sure how they got him.
And K-Flock constantly refers to that all the time saying, don't run, don't trip.
That's where it comes from a lot of times.
And the other guy that we saw before that also was killed.
So, yeah, these guys really, I guess they don't cap in their reps, but that's not a good thing because that's all evidence for the police.
So he will spin.
Well, they stabbed him to death.
Thank you.
Thank you, guys.
They stabbed him and I think they beat him with sticks.
I'm going to double check.
But yes, they stabbed him too.
Two guns and take the life of anybody who represents OY.
Three days after this, on June the 23rd, Raj would drop his own song with Nesty Flocks, BTB responding to Kay.
The track itself is full of disses aimed at K-Flock and Shari K, specifically trying to get under Kay's skin with insult aimed at JB.
It's funny that K-Flock said in his earlier interview that he feels like he's a famous rapper now.
Because off the back of the music that he was making, despite still being at least one foot deep in the streets, K-Flock was starting to see the spoils of a successful career in music.
That same month, Kay seems to get his hands on a new car, a brand new BMW M4, a nice car which K-Flock apparently immediately starts using for sliding on the ops, posting clips online of him driving recklessly and dissing ops from the car.
To be honest, at this point, K-Flock is really coming across as a live-fast die young kind of guy.
But the reality is, the success of the music that he was making.
Yeah, they stabbed and beat him, which is wild.
King was truly giving him the financial means that he needed to get away from the dangerous blocks where he grew up and many of his friends were losing their lives.
But Kay's pride just didn't seem to want to let any disrespect slide.
On June the 28th, Raj would tease a snippet to yet another song dissing K-Flock on his Instagram page.
And only a few days later, on the 3rd of July, his homie, also of the YG's, D-Fang, along with Nesty Flocks, would release the incredibly disrespectful song Wedgie Man, with the song's title being a reference to OG's member Shah E.K., who had been seen in a viral clip being given a severe wedgie on social media.
This song extensively disses sharing.
These guys, yo, you guys should see Edgie's face right now.
She'll know what to say.
What is this?
These are kids.
No.
Guys, she's from Venezuela, so this is different.
This is different for her.
All right.
Yeah.
Obviously, there's violence in Venezuela, but this is like kids doing this.
You know what I'm saying?
I don't understand how these kids get all those like guns.
And this is that easy.
Yeah.
Yeah, even in New York, even though there's very strict gun laws.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's wild.
I know.
And if they don't have guns, like the Wuladi thing, they just chase them down and stab them and beat them down.
Once again, bringing up his earlier shooting, Nesty Flogs would go on to diss other members like Lil Thunder, who had apparently been attacked by Nesty and Rajeez, being tripped up and beaten in yet another clip posted to social media, but is again far too shocking to show you on YouTube.
In the track, Nesty also claims to be over 730.
All right, so we're going to talk about the death of Raj because this was a big W, I guess, for, you know, K-Flock and his people, which I think this also made the investigation take a more serious tone as well.
85 p.m., he found himself sat in the back of a cab at East 187th Street and Valentine Avenue in Mount Hope.
And it was here, sat in the back of a cab when he's ambushed by two young men on scooters who open fire into the car, shooting him in the head and chest, leaving him dead instantly.
But to make things even more shocking, the cab driver's CCTV passenger camera was on at the time of the hit, capturing Raji's assassination in full HD with audio.
A truly shocking clip, which once again is far too violent to show you here.
Overnight, a boy murdered at the back of a taxi in the Bronx.
This was a retaliation killing for the death of J-Rip, as you guys can see here.
Police say two suspects running on a scooter opened fire on the cab, killing the 16-year-old in front of the driver who was not hurt.
Rajeez lost his life at the hands of two teenagers with guns on scooters.
But what's crazy, that this was just a year and a couple of days on from when Raj had been shot in the back after once again being caught by teenagers on scooters.
And this is less than a day after he had allegedly played a part in taking the life of a 13-year-old boy.
In less than a week, three youngsters involved in this feud would lose their lives to violence.
For me, it's honestly hard to believe that anyone between the ages of 13 or 19 have any idea or appreciation of the dangerous lifestyle that they've been born into at this point.
Even despite some of the bad things that the youngsters involved in this story and who were targeted in these killings had allegedly done, I honestly just have the utmost sympathy for them all because they never really had the proper guidance or choice to avoid such a terrible outcome at such a young age.
No matter what they've done, they or their families just don't deserve to go through this.
And it's very hard to him.
From here, surviving members like right, so you're going to see here on Instagram, right, D Thang, right, after his boy Ra gets killed, you know, broken hearts, right?
D Thang would mourn the loss of his friend Raj, with other members making long posts on social media mourning the loss too.
Meanwhile, the ops like K-Flock, who had just been beefing with Raj only days before his killing, would brag that they're smoking on I'm smoking at Ra on Friday.
I'm dead.
Oh, I can't wait till I catch Lil Nesty.
See, like, like, yo, what the?
Like, bro, this is crazy.
Right after they die, right, you got the friends putting up broken up hearts, right?
Like, they're sad, and then you got the ops just immediately laughing at the situation.
Rah-Ra, with others tagging K-Flock's music specifically to talk and then tagging, yeah, power, power, and he goes, uh, talking on Lil Bro now, look at you, be safe.
And then, damn, Rah-Ra.
Like, yo, they're just going crazy.
This is a different world, man.
And mock Rajs and the YGs.
Others would point out the fact that Rajs had apparently said on social media that he'd been smoking on J-Rip after his death, with some suggesting that now Rajs would get the opportunity to meet J-Rip.
Mula.
Oh, see, because so that's why it with a fire beat, sampling Acon's bonanza, referencing Raj being left dead in the car.
Bory300 would rap on the same song that Rah Ra caught a headshot with Dougie B going on to say that people can talk on J-Rip, but look what happened to Rah-Ra, suggesting that they're smoking him like the weed strain Zazar.
Anywho, these back-to-back slangs were massive news in the Bronx community.
The New York Post pointed out that the Bronx shooting rates had doubled between 2020 and the same period in 2021.
Now, this is very important.
Guys, when you have raw numbers like this that show the homicides have went up significantly, okay, where it's going up twice, automatically, that sends alarm bells in the law enforcement community.
And what are they going to do?
They're going to call it up.
Them boys, if you know what I'm saying, right?
And they're going to start targeting these guys.
Because once you start doubling homicide rates and violence is on this level where people are scared to go outside, et cetera, and there's complaints and these guys have influence.
That's when the police say, okay, we need to get crime down.
We need to clean up the streets.
Ruda Giuliani did this in the 90s.
They're doing this right now again in the 2020s to curb the violence due to drill rap, which the mayor has tried to ban drill hip-hop in New York a few times already, guys.
And he's been meeting with some of the drill rappers, et cetera, to try to figure out some kind of situation to try to squash beefs.
But regardless, anytime violence goes up like this, now politicians get involved and they have an incentive to put these guys in jail.
One, with there apparently having been at least 380 shooting victims in the year up to that point.
they reported with others tagging K-Flox music specifically to taunt and talk on J-Rip but look what happened to Rara suggesting that their smiley source saying that they simply can't keep these like the weed strain Zaza Anywho, these back-to-back slangs were massive news in the Bronx community.
The New York Post pointed out that the Bronx.
And again, guys, the New York Post is one of the biggest newspapers in New York.
So if they're reporting this, that's not a good look.
Shooting rates had doubled between 2020 and the same period in 2021, with there apparently having been at least 380 shooting.
318 versus 193.
Yo, of course.
The police are coming.
Shooting victims.
And this.
Hang on.
That happened during the pandemic?
Yeah.
Yeah.
The crime rate was already high in 2020.
And in Brooklyn, they also had issues like this as well.
In 2020, the Wu, right?
And the GDs, the Gangster Disciples, they were going at it in Brooklyn.
So this was happening all over New York City.
So in the Bronx only, guys, we had 318 shootings versus they had in 2020, 193.
That's just one bro.
That's not accounting for Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, none of these other places.
So you guys can see that the New York, you know, the mayor, the police commissioner, et cetera, the feds, everybody's like, yo, what the hell's going on?
So they got to go ahead and curb the violence because this is happening in all the boroughs.
But the Bronx is one of the worst.
So whenever you have skyrocket crime like this, this sets the stage, my friends, for what?
The feds to come in and start giving these guys football numbers.
In the year up to that point, they reported saying that these kids were antagonizing each other on social media and then carrying out revenge shootings in real life.
With the police source saying that they simply can't keep these young kids in jail, citing an apparently soft catch and release policy for juveniles, suggesting that youngsters that aren't of age yet are the perfect recruits to carry out older gang members' bidding.
And it's details like this that genuinely just increase my personal sympathy for the young teenagers that are losing their lives as part of this war.
All right, bam.
So you guys got the idea.
Okay, so we know who K-Flock is, right?
Quick little recap for y'all that are just joining, which by the way, we got 2,224 of you guys in here.
So guys, please do me a favor.
Go ahead and like the video, subscribe to the channel if you're just joining in.
So let me go ahead and give you all a quick little recap because now we're going to get into the murder, which is, I would say, one of the main turning points for this investigation overall.
All right.
So we went over who K-Flock is, successful artist out of the Bronx.
We went over his background, his gang set side.
We went over the violent summer of 2020.
We went over into some of the Instagram antagonations of, you know, running around and chasing each other.
Sorry, K-Flock starting issues, chasing after ops on IG Live, et cetera, the recklessness, the self-snitching, the arguments between people, some of the killings.
There's a lot more, right?
I'm just giving you guys kind of a bird's eye view of the murders, right?
Murder here, then a retaliation, murder here, and then back and forth.
But the main takeaway that you got to get from this is that the murders significantly increased, okay, from 2020 up until 2021, 2022, etc.
So that obviously is going to put the Bronx on the map, put them under a magnifying glass.
And then this is when the police, and then more importantly, the feds start to target people, which you guys are going to see here that the feds have been looking at these guys since 2017.
Okay.
I tell y'all all the time, when the feds come, they've probably been looking at you guys for a while.
Right.
So now we're going to fast forward to December of 2021 when K-Flock got hit with the murder charge.
All right.
So, and it's going to be right here.
Hold on.
YouTube being lame.
Give me one sec, guys.
Sometimes you got to like refresh it.
Is walking with a woman.
All right, there we go.
Bam.
And shout out to my guy, Trap Laura Ross, guys.
Subscribe to him on YouTube.
He's the homie.
I always like reacting to his documentaries.
Very informative, very entertaining, very well done.
So go check him out, please.
Through Sugar Hill, the OY territory.
This is actually only one block away from where E. Baby filmed the Ready for War music video.
And just before this incident took place, K-Flock was allegedly on FaceTime with one of his enemies and seemingly posting to social media that he has a gun in his Montclair jacket sitting in the exact spot where a scene from that Ready for War video was filmed.
As you guys can see here, here he is.
You can see that looks like either a magazine or the butt of a Glock.
It's really crappy.
Let me see here.
Let me get deep.
Yeah.
According to 1090 Jake's video about this situation, the video of K-Flock with the gun in his coat was filmed literally around the corner from where the following incident took place.
Because seemingly, moments after that video, K-Flock would walk around the street where he would be spotted by O.Y. Walker, real name, Oscar Hernandez, who sees K-Flock walking down the street in his designer outfit, exiting a barbershop and confronting him.
The security footage that's currently available doesn't show exactly what happens next.
But only a moment after confronting the man in the designer outfit, the victim appears to be shot, flying back into the frame and landing.
Don't worry, I got the surveillance footage, though.
We're going to play it right now.
It's right here.
I'm going to enlarge it for you guys.
Yeah, I think we'll be okay.
All right.
So as you guys can see, here's Kay Flock, right?
And the designer.
And the dude comes out talking to him.
You can see him reaching his jacket there a bit.
He's with the girl.
The dude comes up talking smack.
He's also has his hand in his pocket, right?
Here he is right here.
He's talking smack.
Oh, yo, bro, but what you got to do?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, talking that shit.
Next thing you know, bong.
And he just rolls back after getting shot, gets blasted away.
All right.
So that is the footage right there.
I'll stop it there.
And this shooting actually happened right here, guys.
Okay.
If you look, Guzman Barbershop, this is the barbershop he comes out of.
See K-Flock walk in.
I think the surveillance footage was right from here.
And the body flies back right around this area.
There's a camera.
You can see it there.
Where?
Right here in the corner.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
This is probably where it came from then.
Good, good eye, right?
So, so yeah, and that's where he gets shot at.
And then K-Flock ends up running and dropping the gun in this area.
And I break this down in more detail, guys, on the other episode I did on this, where I cover the murder in detail.
But this is where it was.
And if you look at the distance on a map, this is basically what he did.
So here's the barbershop.
He ran around the corner, tried to find a spot, and he ended up, you know, or he probably ran actually this corner here and they came down and then dropped it off over here versus where he was before was around this area here when he was filming the IG live, you know, showing the gun off, etc.
Okay.
But yeah, wild stuff, man.
Somebody said he did a sonic roll.
So, and then you guys are probably wondering, yo, well, was it self-defense?
And I broke this down on the other video where it could, he does have a case for self-defense.
And here's K-Flock's lawyer actually speaking on it.
Okay.
For the state case.
You know, I don't want to talk too much about the deal that was in his pocket that his hand was on at the time.
Hold on.
I'll play it from the beginning.
So, and this is from Academic Shout out to him.
Go ahead and subscribe to him as well, man.
Always got to show love.
But here's K-Flock's lawyer.
He speaks on the case.
Let's get into it.
When the guy hits the ground and is found, he's got a loaded gun that was in his pocket that his hand was on at the time.
You know, we consider that to be self-defense.
So he did take, he did shoot him in self-defense.
That's what the allegation is.
You know, I don't want to talk too much about the details of the case.
The government claims that he pulled the gun out and shot him.
But at the same time, the person that was dead on the ground had his hand on a loaded weapon, illegal loaded weapon, apparently about to shoot Kevin.
Okay.
So without saying too much, you're arguing obviously self-defense.
That's the crux.
You know, that could be one of the arguments, self-defense.
And I would say to the public: somebody's walking up to you with a loaded gun and it's pretty clear who's going to use it with a criminal record a mile long.
Do you want to get shot or do you not want to get shot?
Oh, absolutely.
I wouldn't hesitate to pull the trigger.
Check it out now.
Holy, no.
Yeah, and I talked about this in the other video too, guys, where at that time, right, when I had covered the case, it wasn't, nobody knew if he had a gun or not.
But as in the video, you can see that he's reaching in his pocket.
And let's play it back one more time for y'all, right?
So we can really like analyze this.
I might lose monetization, but it is what it is, man.
We got to cover this thing in full for y'all.
So here's the footage once again, right?
We'll go back on it.
So one more time.
You see Kay Flock in his designer, which the police was actually able to use this to identify him.
He's talking to the guy, right?
Like, hey, what are you saying?
And then if you go back to the Trap Laur Ross video, right?
He only shows this part, right?
Where the guy comes out.
Pretty footage that's currently available doesn't show exactly what happened.
So he comes out from his end.
Only a moment after confronting the man in the designer outfit, the victim appears to be shot.
Right.
From that angle.
And we'll enlarge this back.
So that's where what was going on from the other side that y'all saw from the Trap Lawrence video.
So he talks to him and he keeps walking, right?
Dude, keeps following him and he has his hand in his pocket, right?
And at this point, let's be honest, what are they probably saying?
Shuck my dick, nigga.
Fuck you.
Hey, nah.
Well, I banked.
And from what I understand, this guy's a gang member.
This guy is a Trinitario, if I'm not mistaken, they identified him as, which is a Dominican gang based out of out of New York.
Well, it's a prison gang, but this guy from the, I'm pretty, I'm almost certain he was identified as a Trinitario, Dominican prison gang, and they were in North Manhattan, which, you know, is, you know, close to Washington Heights.
A lot of Dominicans in that area.
So he sees Flock, comes out the barbershop and starts the issue, right?
You can see posturing, what you gonna say, blah, blah, blah.
You know, I could already picture with the New York's like, Shuck my dick, nigga, you a bitch, nigga, right?
I got the strap on me now, nigga.
Then he comes up, hey, what you want to do, nigga?
Next thing you know, bomb, and then he flies back.
You know what I'm saying?
And then this dude comes in to kind of ate it.
What's going on?
You all right?
Blah, blah, blah.
But at that point, he's done, right?
So, personally, from my professional experience, you know, I think he has a very good self-defense case, especially if he can articulate that he felt his life was in danger.
The girl that he was with, her life was in danger.
He was posturing in a way, making threats that he was going to shoot him.
And you could tell from looking at the body language and the way he was posturing and following him, etc.
You know, I got her on me right now.
You know, all this, you know, come on, man.
We know how these New Yorker gang members might be how they speak, right?
Got on me right now.
I'll blame you.
And the next thing you know, Flock blams him.
And then he gets hit back and falls and ends up dying, right?
So it is what it is.
It has, it's a viable self-defense.
Now, here's the issue, though.
Number one, more than likely that gun was illegal, right?
It's no doubt about it.
We know that his DNA was found on the weapon, right?
Because you could come here to the report, which I'm going to show y'all real quick.
Actually, have the criminal complaint.
Nobody else has this, by the way, guys.
So this is the actual criminal complaint that was filed against him back in December of last year.
He wasn't 18.
When he was 18, murder in the first degree, criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree, criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree.
And this goes into the, you know, all the data, right, of the facts of the case, right?
And here, let's see here.
Yeah, it's very short.
But let's see here.
Respondent says, seen, and Hernandez had gunshot wounds to his neck and upper back, shoulder area.
Detective Lawthorne observed two shell cases on the ground on the southwest corner of West 151st Street in Amsterdam.
Hernandez was taken to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.
I observed a black Glock 9mm firearm on the stairs of 528 West 151st Street between Amsterdam Avenue and Broadway.
And this is where I told y'all where they found the gun right here is where they found the weapon.
And Kay Flock ran from this area right here.
And I'll show you guys kind of a visual so y'all understand where he came from.
So the shooting occurred right here.
Where the hell?
God damn it.
All right, let's go back.
This is where the shooting occurred, right?
Right here.
So he shoots him, and he runs around the block right here.
Yeah, one.
Yeah.
And then he runs down here and he ends up dropping the gun down the street, right?
He throws it away.
Yeah, he drops it.
Yep, because he couldn't, he knew he couldn't have it.
It was an illegal firearm, right?
Because New York has very strict gun laws.
So, that's true, apparently.
Yeah, well, true.
But either way, that's what went down.
So let's go back to the document.
Okay.
And then, and then also, right, they were able to identify him from what he was wearing, as y'all know from the pictures, right?
K-Flock.
Get the book, guys.
K-Flock shooting, right?
This is what he was wearing on the day of the shooting.
Bang.
And this surveillance footage was put everywhere after the shooting.
And obviously, he got the designer, Rare Jordans, Montclair jacket.
That's why they call him the Amiri assassin, the Montclair murderer, the designer demon, right?
The NYPD put this out after the shooting happened.
And they were able to identify him very quickly based on the outfit.
So guys, I guess here's a pro tip here.
Anytime you're going to go ahead and commit a murder, you probably shouldn't wear exclusive designer that's hard to find that's worth five to ten thousand dollars.
All right.
So that's how they're able to actually find him very quickly is by the fit, bro.
So this is an example of where dressing well, I guess he was dressed to kill, literally.
Let's see here.
Where were we at here?
Oh, yeah, back to the arrest document.
Let's see here.
Oh, and also they found his DNA on the weapon.
And I don't know if that's put here in this complaint, but his DNA was on the gun, guys.
100% confirmed.
So there's no doubt about it that he shot and killed him.
But now what they're trying to do is prove self-defense, right?
So, okay, we're going to take a quick break here.
I'm going to go ahead and read some of these chats.
So before we get into the federal, because this all sets the stage for the federal case that we're going to go over here in a second.
And guys, thank you so much for the support.
We got 2,300 of you guys in here.
You guys could be anywhere else in the world, but you're here.
So please like the video, subscribe to the channel.
Let's get the engagement up because I see what are the likes at right now.
We got the likes at, guys, let's get to 2K likes.
We only got 1K likes, bro, bro.
Guys, come on, man.
That's not even 50% engagement.
There's 2,300 of y'all in here.
Okay.
Like the video, preparing for these videos and doing these breakdowns for y'all.
It's not easy.
The only thing I ask is you guys like the video.
You don't have to donate a dollar to the show.
You don't have to buy the book.
You don't got to send a dick pic to Angie, even though that would be funny.
No.
Okay.
No, it wouldn't be funny.
That's funny for me.
You want to see the dicks?
You want to see the photos?
No.
Please, no.
Yeah, of course.
They're not sending it to me.
It's your IG.
So, you know what I mean?
You don't got to do any of that.
The only thing I ask is you like the video.
All right.
Sitcot said, hey, Myron, how can I schedule a phone call, Zoom call with you?
I have some questions on my journey in real estate.
And that's from Junit.
Junit, I'm thinking about doing a Patreon for y'all where I only do Zoom calls.
I ain't going to lie.
It's probably going to be expensive.
But I will do it probably once a month or once every two weeks where I do a Zoom call where I answer everything.
It's just an open Q ⁇ A. We could go, you know, balls deep, Paul's, on answering all your guys' questions.
Because I haven't been able to do consultations like that.
I'm not going to lie to you guys.
So I've been very, it's been very hectic, especially with the book.
But if that's something that you guys want, because I've been getting so many requests for coaching and doing consultations, all this other stuff, the best way that I can do it is doing a Zoom call.
I'd keep it very high tickets so that it's exclusive and I can give you guys the most time and the most attention with answering questions.
It would probably be somewhere between $500 to $1,000 a month.
You get in, you get one to two Zoom calls a month, and it's just with me, private, maybe five to 10 guys in there, 20 guys at the most.
I want to keep it real small so that everyone can learn.
And that's something that I could do.
Some kind of mastermind like that where I send a Zoom call and it's on Patreon and I send you guys a link and you guys can join and we can just like, you know, kind of talk and answer questions and have discussions and you get, we can go into real detail.
Because what I've noticed is that a lot of you guys have the same questions or same issues.
And sometimes one guy vocalizing it, I'll answer his question and then that just opens up the, you know, the doors to get more detailed information and or questions set across, which quite frankly, I can't do on YouTube and answer with the same honesty to the level that I want to a lot of times on social media.
So if y'all want that, that's something I might do for you guys.
Yellow now goes, I mean, can you imagine being copping and why all this evidence online?
This is absolutely wild.
Yeah, bro.
It's got easy mode for all these detectives.
Was easy.
Let's see here.
And guys, please get the likes up while we read these chats, man.
Get me to 2,000.
I really appreciate it.
Look into doing an episode about Kelsey Turner, the playmate that killed her sugar daddy.
2020 just did a doc on her, which included Michael Sartain.
Okay.
Angie, can you write that down?
Kelsey Turner?
Yeah, Kelsey Turner.
I never heard of that one.
But if Sartain did it, then he probably knew her.
He knows a lot of these playmate chicks.
Them boys are going to be knocking.
Yep, absolutely.
Them boys are going to be knocking.
And in this case, we're talking about the FBI, not the other boys.
FBI opened up.
The other boys, that's for Ryan Dawson, if you know what I'm saying.
Them boys.
The Bronx geek.
Damn, bro.
I told them, I told all them this will happen.
Oh, shit.
You know these dudes?
Well, hey, man, you tried, bro.
You tried.
You can't fix stupid, though.
Montro rather goes, Dr. Dre said it best in the chronic 2001.
These dudes are way crazier than they was back in his NWA days.
Yeah, social media highlighted.
People will do anything for clout, bro.
So it is what it is.
Let's see here.
Because we're in a clout era now.
This is a different time with social media, bro.
It actually fuels a lot of the degeneracy that you guys see.
Like, y'all literally see K-Flock chasing ops on Instagram for viewers.
So it's wild.
Shout out to most dangerous people from the Bronx in Florida.
Okay.
If you say so.
What?
Michoaka.
Okay.
Thank you.
Off topic, but I was watching your old videos and you guys came a long way.
You could barely understand Fresh back then, but congratulations, success.
Chris is still a bum for blocking me out and still waiting for my merch.
Hey, man, appreciate you, man, my friend.
Chris is a bum teacher in stories right now, guys.
Fresh atpodcast store.com.
Keep it to go work.
Love the pod.
And that's from Jose.
I think, are we caught up now?
Book on the way why women deserve less, guys.
Yes, guys, get the book, please.
It's actually a good book.
And then Nima Yamini from before.
Okay, I think we're caught up.
Anything else?
And then we got Michael Meestrop, $1.
Appreciate that.
Guys, again, like the video, subscribe to the channel.
Now we're going to get into the federal part of this thing.
Angie, what are your thoughts so far on this whole shebang?
I just don't understand how easy it is for people to get guns.
Kids.
To get guns in New York.
It's crazy.
I didn't know that.
I lived there.
Man.
Yeah, guns are easy to get in the United States in general, but in New York, they're fairly hard because there's such strict gun laws.
But yeah, they don't care out there.
You know, I've heard so many NY rappers say, I'd rather, you know, I'd rather do the time than get caught without one, even when they're felons, et cetera, or it's a legal gun, et cetera.
And I'm willing to bet that K-Flock threw that gun because, number one, probably didn't have a permit to have it.
Well, he definitely didn't have a permit to have it.
Number two, it might have had the serial number scratched off or was linked to other murders or other crimes of violence.
So there was a bunch of reasons why.
That guy didn't fear anything.
Yeah, he was.
He's wild, bro.
So anyway, now that you guys know all the recklessness that K-Flock was involved in, it's no surprise that the Southern District of New York, okay, which is responsible for locking up people like John Gotti and the Locosa Nostra, goes ahead and indicts eight members of Bronx gangs, Sev Side and Thirdside, charged with murder, racketeering, and related violent offenses.
Okay.
Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Kenneth Kichen L. Sowell, commissioner of the New York City Police Department, NYPD, announced unsealing today of an indictment charging Kevin Press, aka K-Flock, aka K-K, Devin Mason, aka BJ, Irvin Beaman,
aka J Nicholas Johnson, aka Nick, Sean Smith, aka Sticky, and Jossy Castro, aka Jesse, with racketeering, conspiracy, and other crimes related to their membership in Sevside or DOA, a street gang based in the Bronx, New York.
On January 26, 2023, a superseding indictment was unsealed, charging Isaiah Rosen, a.k.a.
Zaymuna, aka Zay, and Michael Gant, aka P, or racketeering conspiracy and other crimes related to their membership in Thirdside, a street gang, also based in the Bronx, New York, that was closely affiliated with Sevside.
All right, so that was a lot there with a bunch of unique nicknames.
So let's start number one.
As you guys can see here, I teach you guys how to read these DOAJ press releases, right?
Now, who's the United States attorney?
That is the main prosecutor, right?
The number one guy in the prosecutor office for the feds, United States attorney, not to be mistaken, with the district attorney, all right?
United States attorney is presidentially appointed and he runs the Southern District of New York, right?
He oversees all the prosecutors underneath him.
That's why assistant United States attorneys, aka USAs, report to the United States Attorney.
So the U.S. Attorney is a top guy making this announcement with the top guy from the NYPD, who is who?
Key Chat L. So well.
Now, as y'all know, I tell you guys all the time, the lead agency is the agency that ran the investigation, and they're typically the first agency named in the press release.
So in this case, you guys are probably wondering, NYPD, what the hell?
NYPD is the only agency listed here.
That's a state agency.
Why is a state agency doing a federal case?
Well, let me break this down for y'all because this is something that a lot of the, I noticed the YouTube bloggers didn't necessarily cover.
All right.
And you wouldn't know this unless you had professional experience in this endeavor, which I do.
There are some districts that will take a case from a state agency like NYPD and make it federal without a federal agency being involved.
As you guys can see here from the press release, nowhere do you see FBI.
Nowhere do you see HSI.
Nowhere do you see DEA marshals?
Nothing.
You only see NYPD, which is very unique because you typically can't take a case federal unless you have a federal agency involved.
And I'll give you guys an example of what I mean by this, right?
Because this is a very important distinction.
Let's go with example for 6ix9ine, right?
Takashi 6ix9ine, right?
Indictment.
All right.
Here's the press release from the Department of Justice, right?
You're going to see here, Jeffrey Berman, United States Attorney for the South District of New York, right?
Which clearly has changed, right?
He's the first, he's the first person that's put in.
And then who else mentioned?
Anhel M. Melendez, special agent in charge of New York Field Office of Immigration, Customs Enforcement, Homeland Security Investigations, HSI.
So that means that HSI was a lead agency in this investigation because they're the first law enforcement agency that was mentioned after the AUSA.
And this is important to know because that will tell you which agency ran the case.
And then also they'll say, okay, this other guy, Ashan M. Benedict, special agent in charge for who?
The ATF.
And also James P. O'Neill, who was a commissioner back then.
Remember, this is in 2018, guys.
It's almost five years ago at this point, right?
The commissioner of NYPD also announced this.
So that means that who did this case?
HSI was a lead.
ATF was the co-case, right?
They worked on it with them.
And then NYPD was also involved.
So the three agencies that worked on it are identified, but the first one is the lead agency.
I'll give you guys one more example so that we really understand this.
Let's go, Casanova, right?
Casanova, USDOJ, right?
Recording artist leader pleads guilty to racketeering, right?
So here you go.
Damian Williams, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced, hold on, let's go back to the original one.
18 members, right?
So this is the original one, the arrest.
So who do they got here?
They got acting United States Attorney, right, for Southern District of New York, William V. Grady.
And then you got here William F. Sweeney.
Oh, assistant director in charge for who?
The FBI.
So that's how we know now that the FBI did this case, right?
And then you got Thomas Pape, Chief of the Poughkeepsie Police, this guy, Dermot Shea of the New York City Police Department, etc.
So this was a bunch of different police departments that worked on this.
But the lead agency is who?
The FBI, right?
Because they're the first ones that are mentioned.
All right.
Just like with Takashi, who is the lead agency?
HSI.
So that first sentence tells you who you need to know ran the case.
So now that we know that, it's very unique that you have the NYPD running the case without a federal agency being involved.
And now, going back to what I was saying before, there's instances like this, and there's some U.S. districts that will allow a state agency to present a case federally.
So my experience, the districts that I know that do it are the Southern District of, excuse me, the Western District of Texas, because when I was in San Antonio, I remember I was in Laredo, but I presented a bunch of cases in San Antonio too, because a lot of my criminals worked in both districts.
San Antonio Police Department would often take drug cases to the United States Attorney's Office, and they wouldn't have the feds involved, which was very interesting, right?
But they have a very big drug task force there.
So that would make sense, right?
So they would take cases federal.
And then also, Austin Police Department would also present cases in Austin in the Western District of Texas as well, federally.
And then in New York as well, as you guys can see, what NYPD.
Now, is this done everywhere?
No.
Most United States attorneys offices wouldn't like to take a case from a state agency and make it go federal without a federal agency being involved.
But I have seen it done before in certain districts.
Now, typically, aggressive federal districts do this.
And as you guys can see here, look at the similarities.
Look, Southern District of New York, right?
That's for K-Flock.
For 6ix9ine, Southern District of New York.
For Casanova, Southern District of New York.
Guys, the Southern District of New York is probably one of the best districts in the United States when it comes to prosecutorial victories.
Okay, so this is not good for K-Flock at all.
All right.
This is probably going to end up being a district that goes after terrorists, right?
Like Ramsey Youssef, right?
John Gotti, La Cosa Nostra, all the five families.
These, this is the district.
This is the district that's responsible for the most successful RICO cases by far.
Okay.
Rudy Giuliani used to work here, putting all kinds of people in jail.
So anyway, let's continue on.
All right.
So NYPD ran this case.
So for all these people that are out here saying, FBI got K-Flock, blah, blah, blah.
No, that is very.
And you are stupid.
It was the NYPD that ran this case.
All right.
Which is unique because, like I said before, state agencies typically don't take cases federal without having a federal agency involved.
But the Southern District of New York and the NYPD is an exception to that rule typically.
All right.
So let's keep going.
Perez, and remember, guys, Perez is K-Flock.
All right.
Kevin Perez is K-Flock.
Perez, yeah.
What did you guys say?
How do you say it?
Say it again.
Perez.
How's it supposed to be pronounced?
Go ahead, Miss Hispanic.
Perez.
Okay.
Perez was also charged with a gang-related murder of Huascar Hernandez.
And we know that his name, he goes by Oscar, but this is probably his government name, Huaskar Hernandez.
Have you ever heard that before?
No, ever.
No.
I think he was Dominican.
Who was shot to death on December 16, 2021 in the Hamilton Heights section of Upper Manhattan?
Perez, Mason, Beaman, Johnson, Rosen, and Gant were further charged with multiple other violent crimes in connection with the Sev side and third side gangs, including attempted murder and assault with a dangerous weapon arising from seven shootings committed in the Bronx between June 2020, which we talked about with Trap Laurel Ross that violent summer, right?
And February 2022.
The Sev side indictment is assigned to the United States District Judge Louis J. Lehman.
The third side indictment is assigned to U.S. District Judge Paul A. Engelmeyer.
And if I'm not mistaken, I think Engelmeyer was the same judge that got up.
Yep.
It was the same judge for 6'9.
Okay.
Same judge.
So that's going to probably be not good for K-Flock once again.
Because as y'all know, everybody in the 6'9 case got football numbers.
They got some pretty significant time and they pled guilty.
All right.
And I don't foresee K-Flock snitching.
So he's probably going to get even more time.
And more than likely, he's probably not going to get a deal.
Why?
Because he's going to be higher up on the total poll because he is the rapper that has the influence.
Anyway, Rosen and Gant are currently in federal custody in connection with the charges contained in the third side superseding indictment.
Mason, Johnson, and Castro were arrested this morning in the Bronx and are expected to be presented later today before Magistrate Judge Valerie Figuero.
Perez was in state custody because, as you guys know, K-Flock was in state custody for the murder, has been transferred to federal custody and is also expected to be presented later today.
Smith and Beaman are fugitives.
Now, this is what I think is happening.
Okay.
I want you guys to pay attention here.
This is why it's so important to have a Fed look at the former Fed look at this versus regular people.
I know that there's something typically called double jeopardy, right?
You can't be charged for the same crime twice.
Now, most United States attorneys offices don't like to charge something that the state already has.
Okay.
And what I mean by this is if you're being held on a murder charge, right, for the state, which the state takes murder cases 99% of the times, 99% of the time, excuse me.
They don't like the feds, don't like to come in and take a case from the state.
The only way, it's not like the movies like you guys see, right?
Like, FBI shows up.
Hey, we're taking over this crime scene.
Get out of here, staying locals.
We're the top dogs.
That is such a fucking lie that Hollywood doesn't know what the hell they're talking about.
Stupid.
To be honest with y'all, the state feds most of the time don't want to disrespect or treat the state poorly because, number one, you're operating in their jurisdiction 99% of the time.
So you don't want to disrespect them.
And then on top of that, you have task force officers that are state officers that work with you.
State officers that are task force officers are extremely valuable.
Why?
Well, because let's say you have a task force officer like that's NYPD that works for you, works with you, and you're HSI or FBI or DEA.
Well, that task force officer, not only does he have federal authority to make arrests just like you do as a special agent, but he also has the authority to conduct state investigations as well.
That is very important because let's say you don't have enough to get a guy on a federal charge.
Well, guess what?
I can't get you federally, but I can go ahead and get you on the state charge that has a lower burden of proof.
And I can go ahead and put you in jail for a amount of time on this lower level state charge.
What does that do?
Well, that might make you start to think maybe I should start cooperating, right?
Or I could call state and local and have them traffic stop you under the pretense that it's a traffic stop, okay?
And you wouldn't know that there's a federal investigation being called, but that state and local task force officer can make those phone calls for you as the Fed to get them to stop you because feds can't do traffic stops.
Okay.
Or it could be that they have access to state databases that the feds don't, and they can go ahead and look at people's arrest records.
They know the lay of the land better.
They wear patrol costs a lot of the time.
They know who's linked with who.
They have a certain rapport with certain individuals in the neighborhood, in the community.
They might have informants that they have been involved that they've been working with for a while.
The state and locals are an indispensable resource to the feds.
Any big case that you have, the state and locals are almost always involved.
And you're going to have task force officers assigned to the feds that are way more valuable than the special agents.
Yeah, I fucking said it.
As a guy that used to be a former special agent, I would always prefer to work with the state and local guys, right?
Whether they were task force officers or not, over other agents.
Why?
Because they typically work harder.
They're more happy to work more hours because what?
They get overtime.
They're paid by the hour.
And they're not like federal agents who a lot of times are fucking lazy.
I said it.
And only someone like me can say it because I've worked with them, right?
Because feds get paid on something called LEAP, law enforcement availability pay, which means your salary is built in.
If you make, let's say, base salary of $50,000 a year, you're only going to get 25%, which is $12,500 extra per year.
That's 62.5.
You don't want to work over 50 hours that you're supposed to work a week.
However, the state and locals get paid overtime.
So they will work as many hours as you need.
So whenever I need surveillance, I need to do stuff late at night, whatever, they get the night diff.
They are happy to work those hours, right?
You might say, oh, well, they're incentivized.
Okay, cool.
But since they're incentivized, they'll work those hours.
All right.
So I say all that to bring it full circle and let you guys know that state and locals are very important to big investigations, especially with street crime like this.
All right.
So it's not like you guys think where they show up and like, oh, we're going to take over the case.
Screw the state.
Blah, blah, blah.
Nah, that's not how this goes.
Now, I say all that to bring it full circle.
Like the video, by the way, guys, because you aren't going to get detailed anywhere else like this.
You guys can see here, he was in state custody and has been transferred to federal custody.
All right.
Now that you know that the feds in general respect the state and locals, AUSA, a federal prosecutor is not going to want to step on ADA's toes, a state prosecutor, assistant district attorney.
He's not going to want to step on his toes and charge murder again.
So the fact that K-Flock is getting hit with murder federally leads me to believe that the state more than likely one of two things.
Okay.
And I haven't seen anyone else cover this.
So I need you guys to like the video.
The state probably thinks that K-Flock has a very strong self-defense case and might lose.
Okay.
It's very important to have this distinction.
And what they're probably going to do is they're either going to A, just take the L and go to trial and possibly lose a case, or B, what I think might happen is they might drop the murder charge altogether and let the feds handle it.
You might be wondering, why?
Why would they let the feds go ahead and take the murder when they could take the murder and get more clout, right?
Or get more status because they're prosecuting a famous rapper.
I'll tell you why.
Because Rico doesn't give a fuck if you acted in self-defense.
And we're going to talk about Rico here in a second in more detail.
All Rico cares about is that you committed an act of violence in furtherance of the gang.
All right?
That's very important because if the state has to prove that it was premeditated murder, right?
Or whatever, in this case, maybe a first degree, second degree murder.
Let's look at the document here, what they charged him with one more time, just so we have a good frame of reference here.
Murder in the second degree, okay?
So it wasn't necessarily pre-med meditated, but they're saying that he committed murder in the second degree.
Well, K-Flock, we know now at this point, has a very good chance of self-defense because we know, number one, the individual that came after him started it.
Number two, he was armed, he was a gang member.
Uh, Kay Flock is a gang member, and he had to do it to defend himself.
Cool, fair.
State can't go after you for defending yourself.
You felt like your life was in danger.
Person in your situation might shoot as well.
One big caveat, though: you're a gang member, you committed an act of violence in furtherance of your gang that made your gang look cooler, right?
Gave you some status, you got rid of an op, etc.
RICO doesn't give a fuck about self-defense because you committed the act as a known gang member.
And this is why, guys, all right, get down to Mark.
Because no one is going to be able to give y'all that distinction like that because they don't got the experience.
So, like the goddamn video, get me to 2,000 likes.
All right.
The thing with RICO, right, you guys got to understand is that all they need to prove is that you're committing crimes in furtherance of the organization.
So, let's go into RICO real quick: what RICO is.
All right.
So, RICO, guys, is the Racketeer Influence and Corrupt Organizations Act.
All right.
The RICO Act is a United States federal law that provides.
Oh, my bad.
And I'll learn the screen for y'all real quick.
That provides for extended criminal penalties and civil cause of action for acts performed as part of an ongoing criminal organization.
RICO was enacted by the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970 and is codified in 18 USC, Chapter 96 as 18 USC, 18 United States Code is what it stands for.
1961, 1968.
All right.
Robert Blakely, an advisor to the United States Senate Government Operations Committee, drafted the law under the close supervision of the committee's chairman, Senator John Little McKellen.
It was enacted as title of the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970.
It was signed into law by the United States President Richard Nixon.
While its original use in the 1970s was to prosecute the mafia as well as others who were actively engaged in organized crime, its later application has been more widespread.
Beginning in 1972, 33 states adopted state RICO laws to be able to prosecute similar conduct.
As you guys know, the most popular example of this is Georgia, okay, with the YSL RICO going on right now against young Thug.
All right.
So let's go into a little bit more detail here.
The power of RICO lies in its conspiracy provision based on an enterprise rationale that allows tying together apparently unrelated crimes with a common objective into a prosecutable pattern of racketeering.
In addition, RICO provides for severe penalties and permits a defendant to be convicted and separately punished for both the underlying crimes that constitute the pattern of racketeering activity and for the substantive violation of RICO.
All right.
Now, these are some of the things that need to exist for RICO to work.
A more expansive view that holds that in order to be to be found guilty of violating the RICO statute, the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt, one, that an enterprise existed.
Okay, this is the gang, guys.
An enterprise is a fancy term for gang or mafia or cartel, any type of organized criminal activity or organization.
Two, that the enterprise affected interstate commerce.
Okay.
I've discussed with you guys before how easy it is to trigger interstate commerce.
I'll give you an example.
Let's say I have a gun, a Glock, and I choose someone to kill him, and I'm not a part of a gang.
Well, guess what?
That Glock, all right, it was made in, let's say, Georgia, but the magazine was made in Florida.
And then the bullets came from California.
Well, guess what?
Since all those parts of the gun come from different parts of the United States and they had to be transported to have that gun built and put together, guess what just happened?
I have effectively affected interstate commerce.
Now the feds have venue.
That's how easy it is to affect interstate commerce.
I'll give you another example.
You want to go ahead and download some CP.
Y'all know what I'm saying?
Cheese pizza, child prawn.
Well, guess what?
You did it on the internet.
The internet does what?
It affects interstate commerce.
Next thing you know, them boys are going to be at your house.
That's why having CP is a federal offense 99% of the time.
Okay.
Because being on the internet and doing that affects interstate commerce.
All right.
Wire fraud, bank fraud, credit card fraud, all investigated by the feds.
Why?
Because when you get a bank wire, when you get money coming in, right, and it's coming in electronically, guess what it did?
It affected interstate commerce.
So, guess what?
Next thing you know, and then the feds come in.
FBI, open up.
So, this is what I mean when I say it's extremely simple to affect interstate commerce for the feds to come in and have venue.
Okay?
Anyway, let's continue on.
So, again, number one, that an enterprise existed.
Number two, that the enterprise affected interstate commerce.
Number three, that defendant was associated with or employed by the enterprise.
Okay, so you don't even have to be an active gang member, but if you're associated with them, that's good enough.
That's how they got 6ix9ine.
Number four, that the defendant engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity.
And number five, that the defendant conducted or participated in the conduct of the enterprise through that pattern of racketeering activity through the commission of at least two acts of racketeering activity as set forth in the indictment.
All right.
Now, you guys are probably wondering, Myron, what the hell is racketeering activity?
I got y'all.
Racketeering activity, guys, can be a multitude of different crimes.
It could range from murder to drug trafficking, firearms trafficking, burglary, acts of violence, financial crimes such as money laundering, wire fraud, carjackings.
Okay.
There's a bunch of different crimes that could be associated as racketeering activity.
Illegal gambling.
This is how they got the mafia.
Okay.
Now, let's go back to the thing.
An enterprise is defined as including any individual, partnership, corporation, association, or other legal entity, and any union or group of individuals associated.
In fact, although not a legal entity, all right.
Many courts have noted that Congress mandated a liberal construction of the RICO statute in order to effectuate its remedial purpose by holding that the term enterprise has an expansive statutory definition.
Translation in English, guys?
If y'all are loosely associated to any degree, we could come after you and use RICO laws.
There you go.
Simplified.
This is why I tell y'all all the time: if you're thinking about joining a gang, if you're thinking about making a little neighborhood club and doing some criminal activity, don't do it.
All right.
Don't do it.
Just go ahead and be a criminal on your own.
Don't go ahead and involve nobody else, bruh.
Because if they could go ahead and articulate, oh, yeah, you and this other guy, y'all are some kind of click.
Rico laws coming, then what?
FBI, open up.
What the fuck?
Just don't be a criminal.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Don't be a criminal.
But some people here aren't going to listen.
So I'm just going to say, you know, anyway, pattern racketeering activity.
Okay.
So we'll cover this real quick.
Requires at least two acts of racketeering activity committed within 10 years of each other.
Congress intended a fairly flexible concept of pattern in mind.
The government must show the racketeering predicates are predicates are related and that they amount to or pose a threat of continued criminal activity.
Racketeering predicates are related if they have the same or similar purpose, results, participants, victims, or methods of commission or otherwise are interrelated by distinguishing characteristics and are not isolated events.
Okay.
Furthermore, the degree in which these factors establish a pattern may depend on the degree of proximity or any similarity in goals or methodology or a number of repetitions.
All right.
So let me simplify that for y'all in English.
What that basically means is, you know, let's go into a dream world real quick.
How about how about that?
Right.
Let's go into a dream world so that I can explain this more effectively real fast for y'all.
You liked the video, guys.
You ain't going to get a breakdown like this anyway.
We got 2,300 of y'all watching.
I only see 1,400 likes.
Get me to 2,000 because I'm going real deep on this situation.
Pause.
Let's say me and Angie, right?
And Fresh and Mo decide to rob a bank.
All right.
I'm at the crib with the money counter.
Angie, right, is one of the robbers.
Mo is the other robber.
And Fresh is the getaway driver.
All right.
And Chris is bump.
He didn't show up.
He was supposed to show up, but he didn't show up.
Right.
So Angie and Mo run into the bank, right?
Well, Mo, in this case, he waddles into the bank, but they run in there, right?
They say, hey, this is a stick up.
Shoot a gun into the air, right?
And we're like, oh my God, what's going on?
Oh, my God.
Right.
And this is the FF gang, by the way.
No, the FF Fedit gang.
Right?
So they're in there.
Mo's like, give me all the money.
Right.
And everyone's like, oh, my God.
So the cash register person, the lady, you know, pulls out the register, starts giving Mo the money.
You know, he's got this mask on, he's breathing all heavy.
You know, he's getting the money.
Angie, right?
She fucks up.
Security guard makes a sudden movement.
Of course.
Shoots his ass.
Kills him.
All right.
Because she's a woman and she doesn't know how to operate a gun.
Of course.
It's the first time.
So she messes up.
And she shoots him.
Mo only gets a thousand bucks.
2,000 bucks.
Whatever.
Okay.
He's like, what the hell?
What you doing?
Right?
L Angie.
In this case, Langie.
Yeah.
Right?
So they're like, oh man, we got to get out of here now.
Right.
So next thing you know, they run back to the car.
Right?
And Fresh just speeds off.
He just takes off, right?
And they get back to the crib.
And I'm over there, like, you know, rubbing my hands.
Like, hey, yo, we got this money.
I'm excited.
Give me that money.
Get over here.
So they give me the bag and it's only 2,000 bucks.
I'm like, what the hell's going on here?
Are y'all fucking like what?
Stupid.
And then Mo's like, yo, Angie shot the guy.
Like, what the hell?
And then I call Chris and I'm like, yo, Chris, you know, I need you to show up here with some bags.
We got to clean this money up.
It's, there's blood on it.
Right.
So Chris shows up and he, his bum has, oh, God, man.
I was sleeping on the bench.
I was tired.
Right.
And he cleans the dollar bills off.
And we're like laughing at Angie because she don't know what she's doing.
She fucking killed the security guard.
Mo's mad as hell.
She had to run, you know, exercise like that.
And Fresh, well, he's, think about this.
Linked their Gerf.
So next thing you know, we're like, all right, we go ahead and take our splits, right?
We all split the money up and we leave, right?
We all leave.
Next thing you know, three months later, we all get tagged up by the bureau, right?
Because bank robbery is a federal offense.
Because when you rob a bank, guess what?
You affected interstate commerce because that money is what?
Federally insured.
They go ahead and come after us, right?
And you're also charged with murder, right?
Like, oh, I'm getting there.
I'm getting there.
So now, feds bring me in.
Hey, are you aware that we got you involved to this bank robbery?
I'm like, well, bro, I wasn't there.
What are y'all talking about?
They're like, yeah, you weren't there, but your associate and helika shy killed this guard right here.
And they showed me the fucking footage.
And I'm like, damn, that sucks.
He's like, yeah, we know you got 2,000 bucks too.
We got that on video.
We know your boy Chris showed up and cleaned the money.
We know Fresh was talking about LinkedIn Gerf, and Mo was mad because he had to run out the goddamn bank.
All right?
Right?
So, next thing you know, they're like, just so you know, we got y'all in a racketeering Rico case.
The Fed Fresh and Fit gang is going down, and all of you are going down for murder.
And I'm like, well, hold on.
I shoot nobody.
I was at the house with the money counter.
What are you talking about?
They're like, no, y'all all are going down for murder because Angie shot the guard.
And I'm like, what?
So next thing you know, bam, we're all going to jail.
And we get hit with the Rico charges.
And guess what?
I'm like, fuck that shit.
Yeah, Angie shot him.
Yeah, whatever.
We all start snitching.
It don't matter because we're all going to get hit with the same charge.
Even though Angie was the one that pulled the trigger and actually robbed the bank with Mo, we're all going down.
That's me with the money counter.
That's Fresh as a getaway driver.
That's Chris for being a bum and not showing up to the bank.
All he did was clean the bills, but he was there anyway and he was involved in the conspiracy.
So he's going down as well.
We're all going down for that event because what?
Angie committed a crime in furtherance of the gang and that we were all a part of and we all benefited from it.
So now the enterprise goes down.
All right?
So Angie, thank you for getting us all life in prison.
Yeah.
Because you couldn't keep your finger off the trigger.
Anyway, see, they're another example of a woman putting everybody in jail.
So yeah, we would all go down.
That's how it goes, guys.
That's how Rico goes.
They're able to go ahead and take that charge and put it on everybody in the organization that stood to benefit aka the enterprise.
All right.
What are the likes at right now?
I hope y'all like that analogy there.
We got 1.5.
Guys, guys, guys, guys, guys, guys.
I need y'all.
There's 2200 of y'all in here watching.
I need you guys to like the video.
I really hate having to stop the video to get the likes up.
But all I've been asking for is 2,000.
I went into detail about how RICO cases work.
I explained what RICO is, et cetera.
So I need you to like the video.
And if you guys like the video, I'll go ahead and explain the history of RICO and how it came to be as we see it today.
Give me ones in the chat if you guys want me to explain the history of RICO or continue on with the K-Flock situation.
Give me ones in the chat.
Once in the chat if you guys want me to explain how RICO started, or two in the chat, if you guys want me to just go ahead and go through the K-Flock indictment.
Up to y'all.
I know we got a lot of new viewers that might have not heard me explain the history of RICO.
What's your thoughts on this, Angie?
I didn't appreciate the example, obviously.
I think we'll have to.
That you shot the guard?
Yeah.
I think it will have been like most likely Mo.
Why would it be Mo?
I don't know.
Mo's Haitian, man.
He knows how to use a gun.
Does he?
I do.
Probably not.
Huh?
You do too?
Yeah.
Well, you are from Venezuela, but still, bro, you're a woman.
You probably would mess it up.
And this is why, guys, white women deserve less.
Booking stores.
All right.
Yo, get the likes up, bro.
Get the likes up, man.
I need y'all to like the video.
I got to over and pitch my book and stuff like that because y'all don't want to get the likes up.
I just want to go ahead and break down.
I want to just break down this K-Flock thing, but you guys are making this very cool.
Like, seriously, like the videos.
Just like the video.
It's not that easy, man.
I mean, so it's not that hard.
Just hit that like button.
I could continue on.
Mariji is giving lessons to you always.
Yeah, man.
All these like slashes of.
I'll hit some of these chats real fast.
Nicholas Andrade goes, I'm cooking up some chicken thighs and portion out some good meals for the week.
Keep up the good work, Fed at 1811.
I appreciate it, bro.
We got here also one call goes, if we instead claimed to be militia rather than a gang protected by the first and second amendments, can we still be charged with RICO?
Good question.
Yes, you absolutely can.
They've done this with white supremacists.
They charge them with racketeering.
So, yeah, being called the militia is not going to save you, my friend.
Good question, though.
But they've definitely used RICO against militias that ended up becoming like white supremacist groups.
It's basically a way, guys, and I'll explain this here in a second.
Embarrass goes, Angie, eyes and lips.
I think that means he likes you.
You have anything you want to say back to him?
Senator Dick Pic?
How does that know?
How does that mean he likes me?
It's a bunch of more yeast.
I mean, it's like open googly eyes and some lips.
Yeah, exactly.
No?
Well, I don't know.
All right.
Shout out to you, Embar.
Okay.
So how RICO started, guys, basically, long story short, was it was created, as you guys know, in the 1970s because back then, La Cosa Nostra, aka the American mafia, American Italian mafia, was going crazy.
Lacosa Nostra means our thing in Italian.
And the families, the way they operate it was they had a control of a bunch of different things, whether it was gambling rings, loan sharking, which is giving people loans at the same interest rates, acts of violence, drugs, union taking money off the top of unions, all this type of stuff, extortion, all this, you know, traditional organized crime.
The FBI couldn't penetrate into it because they'll get the lower level guys, but the lower level guys never wanted to snitch because the charges weren't enough.
And they were never able to go ahead and tie the lower level guys to the top guys, even though they knew that the top guys were the ones calling the shots.
So what racketeering was able to do was RICO laws were able to allow the U.S. Attorney's Office and the FBI to go ahead, right?
And at the time in the 70s, the FBI was the lead law enforcement federal agency that did investigations.
Nowadays, Homeland Screen Investigations has kind of taken a big part of that because FBI focuses a lot more on terrorism after 2001.
But it allowed them to look at the organization as a whole and prosecute the organization as a whole and attribute charges to the entire organization versus selecting certain individuals.
And obviously, when a lower level guy is looking at football numbers for a charge, he's going to be more than likely to cooperate and snitch on guys higher up on him than a go-ahead, the domino effect, and bam, you start to go ahead and take down organizations.
But that was the number one mission for the FBI back in the 1970s was to get rid of organized crime.
It's a big part of the reason why Kennedy was killed as well, which we're going to talk about that with Ryan Dawson and them other boys, if you know what I'm saying, however they were involved.
Which I won't go into much further because we're on YouTube.
But anyway, let's see here.
Let's keep going here.
Any other chats?
But that is how RICO laws were put in place and what they did.
It was originally created to go after the mafia, but nowadays is used to go after street gangs, etc.
Let's see here.
All right.
So let's go ahead over the actual indictment, guys.
All right.
Oh, my bad.
Let's see here.
So according to the, well, you know, we could just go ahead right into the right into that indictment.
So here we go.
United States, Southern District of New York, United States of America versus Kevin Perez, aka K-Flock, Devin Mason, Eric, Irvin Beaman, Nicholas Johnson, Sean Smith, Josie Castro with all their unique nicknames, as you guys see, right?
Here's a case number 23 CR.
23 is a fiscal year.
CR stands for criminal.
If it was civil, it would be CV.
And then this is the case number 099, right?
And as you guys can see here, Southern District of New York.
And then here's one racketeering conspiracy, the grand jury charges from at least in or about 2017, up to and including the present.
Kevin Perez, aka K-Flock.
So they've been looking at this dude since 2017, bro, this gang.
All right.
And all the other associates and others known and unknown were members and associates of a criminal organization named Sevside or D-WA, short for dead on arrival, which operated principally in the Belmont neighborhood of the Bronx in New York or the enterprise.
Members and associates of the Sevside DOA engaged in, among other activities, robberies, wire fraud, bank fraud, and acts involving murder and assault.
Well, we discussed earlier, guys, what are the crimes that are attributed to racketeering?
Here are some of them right now.
Robbery, wire fraud, bank fraud, and acts involving murder and assault.
Okay.
Sevside, including its leadership, its membership, and its associates, constituted an enterprise.
Remember, guys, that magic word, enterprise, is what they use in racketeering cases as defined by Title 18.
Title 18, guys, of the United States Code is the criminal section of the United States law.
All right.
Title 18, anytime you see Title 18, USC, it means it's a criminal violation.
All right.
That is a group of individuals associated in a fact, although not a legal entity.
All right, because obviously these guys didn't form some LLC and were operating legally.
And I'm going to skip through this thing a bit, guys, because some of it has mundane language, but I'll read what's pertinent.
Okay.
Kevin Perez and all the other individuals, the defendants, participated in law and unlawful and other activities in furtherance of the conduct of Sevside and DOA.
All right.
So purpose.
The purpose of Sev Side DOA included the following.
Preserving and protecting power and territory of Sev Side and its members and associates through acts involving murder, assault, other acts of violence, and threats of violence, which we saw they're going to use.
Where did we see that?
We saw that in the IG lives.
Okay.
Enriching members and associates of Sev Side through, among other things, robbery and financial fraud, promoting and enhancing Sev Side and the reputation and activities of its members of associates.
An example of that can be all those IG lives that you guys saw, right?
D, keeping victims and potential victims in fear of the enterprise and its members and associates through acts and threats of violence.
Well, guys, remember all those killings that we talked about earlier?
That could be constituted under D. Means and methods of Sevside slash DOA.
Among the means and methods employed by the members and associates in conducting and participating in the conduct of the affairs of Sefside DOA were the following.
Members and associates of the organization committed and conspired, attempted and threatened to commit acts of violence, including acts of involving murder and assault to protect and expand Sevside DOA's reputation and to retaliate against rival gangs.
Members and associates of Sefside DOA committed robberies.
Members and associates committed financial frauds, including attempts to obtain funds by depositing fraudulent checks into bank accounts controlled by members and associates of Sev Side and submitting fraudulent unemployment claims.
So, okay, scamming has come back to bite them in the ass because it has been constituted as racketeering activity that can be used against them in this overall RICO case.
Members and associates of Sevside, see if I can get a highlighter.
I'm going to go ahead and do this thing in red.
Okay.
Members and associates of Sefside obtained a possess and used firearms and ammunition.
Well, we know that.
Why?
Because your boy, K-Flock, was running around with guns on IG Live, aka.
Stupid.
Stupid as hell.
Stupid.
Members and associates of Sevside promote and celebrated the criminal conduct of Sefside DOA and social media websites such as Instagram and Facebook and through reference to real acts of violence and songs posted publicly on websites such as YouTube.
Bro, actually, like, bruh.
Literally in the indictment that they posted on social media websites such as Instagram, Facebook, and through reference to real acts of violence, songs posted publicly on websites such as YouTube.
Okay.
So the music they were able to use against them.
Now, I know what you guys are saying.
Well, yo, Myron, what about the First Amendment?
Freedom of speech, bro.
It's got to be protected.
You're right.
We do have the First Amendment where your speech is protected.
But where your First Amendment ends, guys, is when what?
You start to confess to criminal activity through your music that can be independently corroborated.
So for example, if you say, yo, we smoking on that rah-rob pack.
Yeah.
And the police are able to find out that you and or a member of the organization was involved in the murder.
Those lyrics can absolutely be used against you.
You can say, oh yeah, we smoked that boy and we stabbed him up or whatever it may be.
And they're able to figure out independently through their investigation that they did stab that boy up and do whatever they did.
That are also in the song lyrics.
It could be used against you.
All right.
Self-snitching is real.
All right.
The racketeering conspiracy.
From at least in or about 2017 and up to and including the present in the Southern District of New York and elsewhere, Kevin Perez and all the homies, the defendants, others and unknown being persons employed by and associated with the racketeering enterprise described in paragraphs one through five of this indictment namely Subside engaged in activities which affect interstate and foreign commerce.
Well, we already described guys how easy is it to affect interstate commerce?
Well, it could be you simply putting money into a bank account that was criminally achieved.
Bang, they got you.
Next thing you know, them boys are showing up with the IRS.
FBI open up.
And all right, let's see here.
So this is a little bit, okay.
And they talk about more of the acts, right?
Murder, and then they go ahead and they cite the statutes that are the state version.
So they're talking about murder.
Okay, it's a violation of New York penal law 125.25, right?
And if you guys look here, same thing in this document right here, penal law 125.25, right?
Because the feds, if they're going to charge a law, right, on the federal side, they typically need to mirror the state case or excuse me, the state statute to a degree, especially for racketeering.
All right.
Multiple acts involving robbery.
And then they go ahead and cite the laws, right?
So we'll go ahead and move forward.
Notice of special sentencing factors, murder.
On or about, December 16th, 2021, in the Southern District of New York and elsewhere, Kevin Perez, aka Flock, the defendant, knowingly murdered and aided and abetted the murder of Oscar Hernandez in the vicinity of 151st Street and Amsterdam Avenue in New York, New York, in violation of New York penal law 125.25.
We talked about that earlier, guys, where he committed the murder, which was right here.
God damn it.
Right here.
Okay.
And here's Amsterdam F. You can see the camera right there.
You can see the camera right here on the corner.
K-Flock was walking.
Dude came out of the barbershop and he slumped that boy in the back.
All right.
Going back to the indictment.
With the intent to cause the death of another person, Prez caused the death of Oscar Hernandez and aided and abetted the same under circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life.
Prez recklessly engaged in conduct which created a grave risk of death to another person and thereby caused the death of Hernandez and aided and abetted the same.
Now, guys, as you guys can see here, they're not saying premeditated murder or any of this other stuff like the state case is saying.
They're just saying he committed murder.
Okay.
And this murder did what?
Brought up his status and that of the gang, which we talked about earlier in the indictment.
Okay.
So the feds don't give a shit that it was in self-defense.
Why?
Because he's a gang member.
All right.
And here's another thing, too, that I wanted to also add in.
Let's say, guys, you commit a crime, right?
Let's say, let's go back to that bank robbery example.
Most crimes have something called the statute of limitations, right?
Which means they can only charge you within a certain amount of time.
Sometimes it's five years.
Sometimes it's 10 years.
Sometimes it's 20 years.
Let's say we don't get caught for the bank robbery.
All right.
Angie, even though she messed up and shot that guard, we don't get caught.
10 years passes, right?
But Angie has been selling drugs.
All right.
Uh-aswell.
Okay.
Yeah, you're a drug dealer now.
Yeah.
We got it.
We got to, you know, use the imagination.
Well, she might, well, it may not be an imagination.
What else did I do?
You've been selling drugs, right?
Okay.
So she's been selling drugs during this period.
I have been, I don't know, doing scam over credit cards.
Mo has been doing fraud with sandwiches, selling fake sandwiches.
Chris has been doing unemployment fraud, right?
Because he's a bum.
And Fresh has been scamming with Lamborghinis, right?
He's been renting out Lamborghinis and charging people way too much money, right?
We've all been committing crimes, okay?
But it's been 10 years.
But guess what?
Even though the statute of limitations, let's say statute of limitations of bank robbery is 10 years.
I don't know what it is exactly.
It's probably between five to 20 years, somewhere in that range.
Let's say it's been 10 years and the statute of limitations has passed.
It doesn't matter because we've been committing acts, right, that are considered racketeering activity and furtherance of the gang.
So now, not only are they going to hit her with the drug trafficking, okay, and they're going to hit me with the scamming and Chris for the unemployment fraud and Fresh for the Lamborghini scam, they're going to hit us with that bank robbery too.
Why?
Because we committed crimes in furtherance of the gang and it was uninterrupted.
We committed, and we still continue to commit acts, criminal acts, racketeering activity, so to speak, from the government's perspective that furthers the organization.
So now they can come back for us with crimes that occurred past the statute of limitations.
Why?
Because of Rico.
So there again, guys, another reason why you should never be in a gang because they can go ahead and come after you for crimes that pass the statute of limitations.
And on top of that, let's say a charge might have got dismissed, right?
And they're like not going to pursue it.
It doesn't matter.
That crime can come back and be used against you as a pattern of racketeering activity.
And we saw that happen to a couple of the guys at YSL where charges were dropped on the state level, right?
But then they came back and hit them with those same charges again because it constitutes as racketeering activity.
Okay.
So this is why you don't join a gang.
You might be in a case on one level, but then they could go ahead and bring those same charges from that case, even though it was dropped, to display that you've been involved in a pattern of racketeering activity, regardless of statute limitations, or if that case was dismissed.
So like the video, guys.
All right.
Count two: violent crime and aid of racketeering.
The grand jury further charges at all times relevant to this indictment.
Sev'side is described in paragraphs one through five.
Right.
This is just a bunch of filler language.
You have a chart on the New Year report thing.
There is a chart of all the charges for all the groups.
Do you see it?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I could go through that and show them what I'll do that after the indictment, what they're looking at.
Let's see here.
Okay, so they're citing again the namely acts of murder, right?
So they're saying that this is a violent act that occurred and they're using murder as the main crime to use, right?
Because they're saying here, violent crime and aid of racketeering, right?
So not only are they going after him for murder, they're also going after him for a violent crime in aid of racketeering.
Okay.
And then also they go here, a title 18 wire fraud and bank fraud.
Okay.
18 USC 1343, 1344, and aiding and abetting.
And then they go again back to the murder on or about December 16, 2021, right?
K-Flock, et cetera, and others known and unknown as consideration for the receipt of and consideration for a promise and agreement to pay a thing of pecuniary value from Sev's side and for the purpose of maintaining an increasing position in the Sev Side DOA and enterprise engaged in racketeering activity as described above, knowingly murdered Oscar Hernandez and Aiden abetted the same in the vicinity of 151st Street with the intent to cause the death of another person.
Prez caused the death of Hernandez and Aiden abetted the same under circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life.
Perez recklessly engaged in conduct which created a grave risk of death to another person and thereby caused the death of Hernandez and Aiden bedded the same to wit.
Preston killed Hernandez in violation of New York penal law.
Okay.
So what this paragraph is basically insinuating, okay, is that K-Flock and others known and unknown, all right, to the conspiracy, there was a promise of payment or some kind of pecuniary typically means money, all right, from Sev's side for the purpose of maintaining the increasing position in the Sev side DOA and enterprise engage in racketeering activity.
So something was paid after the murder of Oscar Hernandez.
We don't know what it is, right?
Because you'd have to read the reports, but they're using this as a basis to charge him as well.
Okay, but you can see here that there was money involved with wire fraud and bank fraud.
All right, which that could be anything.
Wire fraud, guys, is a very broad charge.
It's actually one of the most broadest, one of the broadest charges that the feds use.
It could be me paying you to kill somebody, right?
And they're going to consider that wire fraud because I'm paying you for an illegal act.
And then count three, murder through the use of a firearm.
So look at that, bro.
Look at this.
They're giving up different charges for the same act because it was a murder number one.
Number two, it was an act of violence.
Now they're getting him because it was murder through the use of a firearm.
Holy.
The feds don't play around.
And what is tying all of this together?
Racketeering statutes is what's tying this all together.
So even though it was self-defense, it doesn't matter in this case.
And I have a big feeling that the state is more than likely, A, going to dismiss the case against Kay Flock, or B, go to trial and lose knowingly because he has a very strong self-defense.
But that self-defense doesn't matter when you committed an act of violence and you're a member of a gang.
Honor about December 16, 2021 in the Sun District of New York and elsewhere, Kevin Perez, aka K. Flock, the defendant during and in retaliation to a crime of violence for which he may be prosecuted in the court of the United States, namely the murder charge in the count two of this indictment, knowingly lose and carried a firearm and in furtherance of crime, possessed a firearm and in the course thereof did cause the death of a person through the use of a firearm, okay?
Which killing is murder as defined in Title 18, United States Code, Section 111, and did aid and abet the same to wit.
Perez did shot and killed Oscar Hernandez and Aiden abetted the same in the vicinity of first 151st Street.
So guys, this is very important here.
Okay?
Stop the show.
He goes here, the defendant, during and in relation, okay, to a crime of violence for which he may be prosecuted.
Keyword, may be prosecuted in a court of the United States, namely the murder charge in count two of this indictment.
Nowhere in there do they give a shit about self-defense.
Y'all see that?
Just the fact that he could be charged for the murder.
Okay?
Knowingly used and carried a firearm and in furtherance of such crime possessed a firearm and of course thereof did cause the death of a person through the use of firearm, which killing is murder as defined on Title 18, United States Code, Section 111, and did in aid abet the same to wit.
Perez shine killed Oscar Hernandez.
Okay?
They don't give a shit about self-defense anywhere here.
You triggered my trap card.
Why?
Because he's a gang member, guys.
All right.
Now, let's look this up real quick.
All right.
18 USC 111.
All right.
Murder.
Let's see if they have here anywhere self-defense.
So you can't even find it.
Y'all hear it right now.
You can't find it.
Nowhere to be found.
They don't give a shit.
It's murder.
The unlawful killing of a human being with malice afterthought.
Every murder perpetrated by poison, laying in weight, or any other kind of willful, deliberate, malicious, and premeditated killing or committed in the perpetration of or attempt to perpetrate any arson, escape murder, kidnapping, treason.
Let me enlarge it for y'all so you guys can see this.
Espionage, sabotage, aggravated sexual abuse or sexual abuse, child abuse, burglary, or robbery, or perpetrated as part of practice or pattern of assault or torture against a child or pattern or perpetrator perpetrated from a premeditated design, unlawfully and maliciously to affect the death of any human being other than him who was killed is murder in the first degree, man.
Holy.
And I know some of you guys are saying, well, wait, hold on.
Was this, was this murder premeditated?
No.
But look at this long ass run-on sentence, guys.
Any other murder is murder in the second degree.
Bam.
There you go.
All right.
And then it goes into more detail as to how it can be constituted there.
All right.
So all of this is a fancy way of saying, regardless of how you killed this dude, all right?
It doesn't matter.
Murder is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice afterthought.
All right.
So every murder, and then also they have here murder in the second degree, which what?
Kay Flock, your boy?
Murder in the second degree right here.
Okay?
So it flies.
And once again, notice, guys, in the federal statute, if I search self-defense right here, that shit is red.
They don't care.
Okay?
Nowhere to be found.
Why?
Because he's a gang member and he killed somebody.
That's all they care about.
And he used it with a firearm.
Now, here we go.
Violent aid of racketeering, November 10th, 2021, assault with a dangerous weapon and attempted murder, Perez, Mason, and Beeman.
As you guys know, they're running around on Instagram, chasing after people, et cetera, and they shot at somebody.
And this happened.
Let's find here.
Honorable November 10th, 2021 in Sun District, New York, and elsewhere.
Kevin Perez and all the guys, for the purpose of maintaining an increasing position at Sev's side and enterprise engage in racketeering activity as described above, knowingly assaulted an individual with a dangerous weapon and attempted to murder an individual and aided and abetted the same to it.
Perez Mason and Beeman shot at rival gang members and aided and abetted.
They're shooting at rival gang members in the vicinity of Mathewson Road and Roberto Clemente State Park Bridge in the Bronx, New York, in violation of New York penal law.
And then Cal 5, firearm offense, Perez Mason and Beeman, once again, November 10th.
See how they're hitting him twice for the same event because they had a firearm.
So they go ahead and just hit them with the firearm offense because they had the gun as they did what?
They assault with a dangerous weapon.
So they hit him twice.
Assault with a dangerous weapon and attempted murder.
And they hit him with the fact that they used the gun.
So it's a firearm offense now, too.
So they're able to double dip on the same events.
This is why being in a gang can be so bad, guys.
And then a triple, the third time.
Oh, no, another event.
February 10th, 2022, assault with a dangerous weapon and attempted murder.
So this is after, right, your boy, Perez, is in jail, was already arrested.
But guess what?
They hit Mason with this one.
All right.
So, and then Cal 7, Mason again, which is another person in it.
And I think that's all the charges for Perez because at this point, Perez was completely locked up.
So he couldn't have been involved.
Right?
He didn't have a planet whatsoever.
And that is the indictment, my friends.
So let's go back to the press release, right?
And this is a summary.
This is what we talked about before.
Them shooting at the gang members on June 26, 2020, that violent summer that trapped Laura Ross talked about, July 7th, July 16th, 2020.
And then December 13th, 2020, how Bowson shot a gang member.
And then obviously Perez, aka your boy kick Flock with the murder in 2021.
And then here's the defendant.
Let's look at what Kay Flock is looking at.
Kevin Perez got hit with racketeering, conspiracy, murder in the aid of racketeering use of a firearm resulting in death, attempted murder and assault with a dangerous weapon and aid of racketeering use of firearm for attempted murder and assault with a dangerous weapon.
Mandatory life prison or death is what he's looking at.
Bruh.
I genuinely thought that Kay Flock was going to beat the state case on self-defense, but this was a chess move with the feds coming in and hitting him with Rico.
And the only way that they were able to hit him with Rico is because he committed these crimes unknowingly.
Basically, since he committed these crimes and they were gang related, because remember, the guy came up to him on some gang shit, right?
And Kay Flock was like, yo, I'm not on that, blah, blah, blah.
But he shot him on some gang shit.
So since he shot him on some gang shit, it doesn't matter that it's self-defense because you committed a murder in furtherance of Sev's side.
And that, my friends, is how the feds were able to come in and effectively charge him under the racketeering statutes.
So my prediction is Kay Flock is pretty much cooked, man.
Career over frugality.
And that sucks because, quite frankly, I really enjoyed his music, even though it's violent and stuff like that.
But I did like it.
Yeah, he was pretty good.
So that sucks, man.
He literally, yo, he is a definition of grand opening, grand closing.
He was literally on the scene for like a year and gone, just like that.
So anyway, let me see here.
I'll read the chats and then we'll close this thing out.
We've been going for two and a half hours now.
Let's see here.
Andrew, what are your thoughts on this while I pull up the chats?
Man, I don't know what to say.
It's just very disturbing how these guys will do this, man.
These kids will do this.
Crazy.
But yeah, I mean, this guy just like finished his career, like you said.
And he had just signed a seven-figure deal with a major record label.
Was it?
Seven figures?
Like a million plus.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yep.
And he just screwed it up.
He's just screwed it up.
Immature.
I was going to ask when is he having his case?
His trial.
At this point, it's probably going to take, unless he asks for a speedy trial, which is done, I think, within 90 days.
He's more than likely going to knowing a case like this with Rico, they're not going to ask for a speedy trial because it's going to take a while for them to get all the evidence to prepare accordingly.
I don't foresee him going to trial for like a year or two.
Easily.
Rico cases are typically pretty complex.
There's going to be informants involved 100%.
They wouldn't have been able to build a racketeering case like this.
They're going to have IG videos, Facebook, all that stuff, as y'all can see that they even mentioned in the indictment.
Remember, guys, the indictment is just kind of like that doesn't list like all the evidence.
It just says, yo, on this date, this occurred, blah, blah, blah.
But they're not going to talk about what it is.
That's why I don't like reading indictments as much as criminal complaints because criminal complaints go through all the evidence, way more detail.
And it's typically written by the agent who has way more knowledge of the investigation.
Arsenal Connor goes, bro, thank God you're back.
Holy appreciate it.
Ajax God goes, Folly caught you live on Fed.
Much respect for your work, Myron.
Keep up the hard work.
Much love from Amsterdam.
Shout out to you, my friend.
I hope you guys enjoyed the video, man, because I don't think anyone else has given you guys this level of detail with this case.
I've looked at a couple of them, but there's a lot of missing stuff.
Shadow goes, Hey, Myron, I sent the super chat at the end of the episode.
I think, Clenny, it was my fault for being late and stupid.
Anyway, can you do the Brock Turner case?
I think it should be relevant to FNF watchers.
Brock Turner.
Look at that.
Did it?
Someone.
No, it was Kelsey Turner.
Okay.
Is it the same one, though?
Maybe it is.
Yeah, can you look that up, please?
Shout out to Angie.
Making things happen in the background.
Let's see here.
It says Brock Allen Turner is a high-profile criminal case in which Brock Alerto was convicted by Jurai trial on three counts of felony sexual assault.
Okay.
All right.
We could put that on the list.
Normally, guys, what I do is I just go off of what the most popular thing is, what you guys want.
Myron, how would a gang member get out of gang, out of a gang after seeing this case from a Fed's perspective?
You change your name and move, bro.
Like, this is one of the worst times to be a rapper involved with a gang and be involved in anything.
You will 100% get indicted in today's day and age.
I didn't know there were many rappers involving gangs.
I didn't know about the most famous ones, like, you know, those groups from the 90s, the 80s.
Yeah.
No, there still are today.
But I did.
Gang culture is very popular nowadays.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's wild.
If you're a rapper, especially like a gangster rapper, a very dangerous time, my friends.
The FBI is coming after you.
And see, look, FBI even agrees with me.
He knows that.
Look, the boys are in the chat.
They're even saying facts.
We're coming.
Let's see here.
Chief Clef.
You said you sent a super chat.
Let me see here.
I didn't see it.
Honor.
Myron, how would it?
No, got that one.
Chief Clef.
I don't know if you sent the chat, man.
I'll look for it.
Let me see here.
And guys, do me a favor while I pull up this chat.
Please like the video.
Give me the 2,000 likes here.
We got 2,000 plus y'all watching.
We should be able to get the engagement up to 100%.
Let's see here.
Let me make sure.
Hey, shout out to Cina.
She's always watching.
Oh, shout out to Zina in the chat box.
She wants to come out, by the way.
Let's see here.
Chief Keith goes, Rico, like Johnny Rico for from Starship Troopers.
People that do Joe Rogan podcast cartoons, you need them for a Fed It, that expressive analogy.
Okay.
Drop a like on the video.
This channel is one of a kind.
Thank you for Jacob.
Angie said, Angie, say Kevin Perez one more time for me.
You keep saying Perez.
That's so funny.
You want to say it for them?
What?
The name?
Kevin Perez, yeah.
Kevin Perez.
Kevin Perez.
That's the name.
Fair enough.
It goes here.
That's what happens with most of these guys.
Not even a year in the industry, bro.
Vaughn died before he saw success.
Stay away from violence.
Facts.
Guys, seriously, if any of you guys are watching your gang-related bro, just leave.
Do you think they would try using Rico for the Tates?
No, he's in Romania, so those laws don't apply.
Let's see here.
Rico, I think, let's see here.
I'm just making sure I caught all the chats.
Will you do a breakdown of Netflix making a murder with Andrew Esquire?
Maybe if we have time.
Netflixes are hard to react to.
Shout out to you, Fresh and your dream team, including Angie.
When are you going to release the hardcore version of Why Women Deserve Less?
And that's from Eli.
It's coming very soon, my friend.
It's coming probably this week, hopefully.
Elizabeth Shorts.
Yep.
And that's from S. Penno Ellis.
That's Black Dalias.
Okay.
Elizabeth Shorts Black Dalias case is very requested as well.
Okay.
It's 5 a.m. in Austria, bro, and that's from Austria and the Serbo-Croatian.
Okay.
Think I think we're caught caught up here.
Yeah, I think we're caught up.
Thank you guys so much for the super chats.
I appreciate it greatly.
Uh, honor says, by the way, I bought your book and sent it to my dad for Valentine's.
Hey, that's what we're talking about, baby.
No more simping 2023, man.
No more simping.
And that's for honor 1110.
I appreciate that greatly, my friend.
Uh, and we got 1.8k likes, guys, 200 more guys, and we will hit 2,000.
Uh, could you do Chris Benoit murder?
Yes, I have it on the list.
Yeah, that's John Bene Ramsey.
Uh, I'm making sure I hit uh the rest of the chats here.
Uh, uh, anything else?
Oh, Nima Yamini, uh, 50 bucks.
I appreciate that.
I think that's another one.
Um, anything, okay.
I think, I think we're closing out here.
Angie, what are your last thoughts?
You read this one?
Is it possible for him to pull a 69 or going?
Uh, he would have to snitch, but I don't foresee him them cutting him a deal, guys, because he is uh at the top of the indictment, which means he's the most important, which I doubt that they're gonna cut him a deal.
So, I don't think so.
The difference between gun and 6ix9ine is he wasn't the top guy.
So, when you're the top guy, you typically can't.
Um, it's very difficult for you to cooperate because no one's there's no one above you.
I am the warner.
Have no fear.
The warners here.
Much love to my brother Myron, big supporter of the movement.
You keep creating, keep killing the YouTube game.
We got your back, my brother.
Keep leading from the front.
Thank you so much.
I am the warner.
I appreciate that greatly, my friend.
Um, I think we're caught up.
Yeah, I think we're caught up.
Thank you guys so much.
I appreciate that greatly.
Uh, all right, Angie, what are your last thoughts?
And where can people find you?
Uh, yeah, you can find me on Instagram again.
It's at So Angelica or Angelica.
I'll link it below for y'all with two A's at the end.
Yeah, with two A's at the end.
Um, so yeah, guys, keep it up with the cases and the suggestions for like possible cases that we can do on this channel.
Although, there are a lot of cases.
I'm not gonna lie to you guys.
Um, we got 20 already just from this show, yeah, plus now on the list.
There are plenty, plenty of cases that I have on the list.
So, yeah, I mean, we have to like research and like see if we can find like good material for the videos and all that stuff.
So, if you don't see us like making the videos because there is a lot of you know, like stuff behind, so we might do just like the most requested first, and then we'll go, you know, like, yeah, I think after this, we'll uh we'll go ahead and go through that list that she has, and then um, we'll prioritize them based on how many requests you guys have because you guys have so many, yeah, yeah, yeah, but interact with the channel, subscribe, like.
Um, Mario keeps doing like this poll so where you get you can vote on like Angie, too, guys, what you want because that does help because then she tells me, Oh, like uh, yo, let's do this one because I've been getting a lot of messages for this, right?
Or, yo, a lot of people have been asking this or whatever, and then we'll actually like look into it.
Yeah, like who's that crazy LAPD officer that we were Chris.
Um, damn it, what's his name?
Someone in the chat is gonna put it, yeah, Chris Dorner.
Like, we researched him, right?
We got we're ready to go, we got all the facts on that one, but the documentary we found was trash, so we're like, no, we're not gonna, we're not gonna watch it, you know what I mean?
Yeah, because I watched, I was like, ah, and then um, it was kind of boring, yeah, but there are plenty more.
We can we can do some other things like which there are some.
We'll find a good one for y'all, yeah, exactly.
We'll find a good one, all right.
Take update, guys.
They're gonna have a hearing tomorrow in Romania.
Well, technically, it's today because I know in Romania right now, it's 12 a.m. here, so it's they're gonna have a hearing, hopefully, on the appeal today.
So, we'll see what happens.
Um, and yeah, we all know that they're innocent, though, guys.
You know, I mean, they're gonna be free soon, very soon, inshallah.
We all know that those chicks were capping.
Um, I want to mention some of the cases that I haven't we haven't like mentioned before.
There are some that you guys haven't asked that much, but you still like keep commenting on them.
Um, the Lonider serial killer that we mentioned before, yes, David Berkowitz, Berkowitz, that is, yeah, that's uh, um, son of Sam, son of Sam.
There is another, actually, I looked him when I was like researching that guy.
There is another son of Sam, which is not this serial killer, and it's another serial killer from Long Island, I think.
From where from Long Island, I think it's from Long Island, Long Island, yeah.
Are you sure it's not because Berkowitz was from Yonkers, but it's has he had another name?
No, it's not Long Island, but oh, you're thinking of the Long Island, the Long Island serial killer that they still haven't caught, maybe that one, yeah.
But he's also called and he's moderate, he's been killing chicks like he's recently been uh recently, not recently, like maybe 10 years ago.
He was killing him.
He's also called the son of Sam, so that's what got me confused because when I look when I looked up, like, Son of Sam, this guy came up, and also the other guy.
So, I was like confused because I know that there's a serial killer right now, the Long Island Strangler, I think they call him.
They call Okay, I need a research.
Yeah, also Chris Dorner.
Yeah, we just said it.
Alisabusamante.
I don't know who that is.
I don't know.
Yeah, I don't know about this case, but I'll look it up.
When it's women, it's kind of interesting because, you know, like women and men are different in these kind of things.
They kill for different purposes.
Rafael Perez, we talked about him a few episodes back.
The Rampo scandal in LAPD.
I watched the movie Training Day.
The guy that was training day was a movie.
Yeah, I watched it.
it's really cool that with Denzel Washington and we never seen training today.
No, I hadn't seen it.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
I hadn't seen it.
And I'm a big fan of Denzel Washington.
So, yeah, I really like that movie.
Okay.
Did you watch it because the audience said it?
No, I watched it because I had it on my actually, I had it on my list on HEO, and I was like, man, I haven't seen this movie.
And I watched it.
I also watched The End Lewy Werners with what's this girl's name?
The actress.
She's very beautiful.
Charlie Zeron is really good.
Yeah, I saw it.
It's really good.
I saw it.
It's really good.
Yeah, Tupac and Biggie.
The cases, Tupac and Biggie.
Yeah.
I really like to do that one too.
The 1997 Hollywood Bank robbery.
We mentioned that.
Yep.
We studied up on that one.
We just need to find a good reaction video for y'all on that one.
Yeah.
Ed Kemper, Ed Gain, the Black Dali See.
Oh, Ed Guine.
That's who the Texas Chainsaw Mask was based on.
Ed Guyne.
Yep.
That's a dude that used to wear human skin.
Crazy.
He has a museum, actually.
What?
Yeah.
Man.
I looked that guy up like ages ago and he has a museum.
Crazy.
The Memphis Treat Case.
I don't know about that.
Have you heard of that?
Memphis Treat Case.
No.
No?
Crazy.
Well, I don't know.
And this is what they've been sending you.
These are like the most popular ones they've been sending you?
Yes.
Oh, shit.
Yes, yes, yes.
The Atlanta Child Murders.
There is a documentary on that on Netflix.
Okay.
It's a series.
So when I watch it.
And OJ Simpson.
I did OJ Simpson.
Did you?
Yeah, I did OJ Simpson.
That's also accent.
Guys, OJ Simpson, I have, I'll show y'all real quick.
Who else?
I've got a whole list.
I'm just like mentioning that people's been asking about Armenian genocide as well.
Yeah, Aaron Hernandez.
There is another Richard that is not Richard Ramigue, but I can't remember.
Richard Fisher, that too.
If I'm not mistaken, that is the guy that's on the FBI most wanted list for, I think, killing his family.
Wow.
He's been on the list for literally decades.
Let me double check.
Oh, there is also a few cases.
I forgot.
Some people sent them to me on Instagram.
A guy that will feed his pigs with women.
Something like that.
Real fast.
Here's the OJ Simpson one right here, guys.
It's just that it's lame because they made it age restricted, so it's hard to find.
But just search.
Oh, what the hell?
Not this one.
This one, yeah.
See, this has been identified of YouTube as inappropriate.
we are live what's what the why won't it play See, yo, they'd be hating, bro.
Yeah.
They'd be haying.
It's your own content.
Because it's age-restricted.
And we are like, whatever.
Yeah, but y'all get the idea.
This is an OJ Simpson video right here, which is super lame that they're doing that.
But yeah, bro.
Super lame.
Did they even let me hit play here?
Whack.
Whack.
They won't even let me play my own video.
But anyway, and then what was the other?
There was another one that you mentioned.
What was the other case?
I was just mentioning one that, but I can get it straight because I don't remember.
But it's kind of crazy.
It's a guy that used to feed his pigs with women or something like that.
Oh, okay.
You know what?
Hold on.
Richard Fisher.
That's the guy you mentioned, right?
Yes.
If I'm not mistaken, let me see if my memory is.
Hang on.
I'm familiar with Nick Fisher.
FBI Most Wanted.
Oh, yes, guys.
I've been one.
Robert William Fisher.
This is who I think it is.
Yeah.
Let me see if he's still on the also.
Not to be confused.
Let's see here.
Let me see if he's still on.
Okay, he was removed in November 2021.
So he was on the top most wanted list.
Okay.
Yeah, here he is right here.
Robert William Fisher, 1961.
Yeah, this dude killing his wife and children, then blowing up the house, which they all lived in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Oh, yes.
This is the guy I think they wanted.
Yes, yes, yes.
Yep.
Crazy.
So.
Yeah, yeah, I'll put an El Susan in the chat.
You guys can watch it.
I don't know why.
It won't let me watch it now, but the video is up.
You guys can still watch.
It's just age-restricted, which is why it's hidden.
But yeah, that OJ breakdown.
And actually go into my theory on who actually killed the two people, his wife and her friend.
Books goes 10 bucks.
Appreciate that.
And Money Monday, yes, guys, tomorrow, just so y'all know, three episodes we're giving you guys.
We're giving you guys on Money Monday, right?
We're going to have Pegman, Fresh's mentor.
He has YouTube channel, Exotic Car Hacks.
Then we got Lucario Miles at six, and we got the girls at three.
So we got a three-print for y'all tomorrow for Monday.
Okay.
And I think we're caught up.
So I think we went on a little bit thing a tangent there, giving you guys the updates.
Nathan John, yeah, y'all can miss it, Christina, if you guys want.
All right, Angie, last words for the people?
Man, I missed it.
There's a guy that out here.
So shout out to this guy.
I've been wanting you guys to mention this case for ages because Elisa Ian.
Elisa Lamb.
Elisa Lam is a very famous case because this girl disappeared in a very, very famous hotel in LA that has his own steeries.
There's a whole case on the, mainly like the hotel, because people say it's like haunted.
Yes, haunted.
Because there were plenty serial killers that stayed there.
And there were plenty of killings around the area.
Well, that happened.
So she went missing.
I think, if I'm not mistaken, it was 2013, 2013.
Oh, recent.
Yes.
I think.
Yes.
Oh, put on the list of torso killer too.
Okay.
But that's another one that people want.
Put torso killer.
That's the guy.
Okay.
He used to like cut women up in hotel rooms in the 70s.
Yo, serial killers will go wild in the 60s all the way into the 90s, bro.
Because they wouldn't be.
DNA.
DNA wasn't a thing back then like that.
But still, though.
Yeah, and she appeared dead on the hotel tanks, water tanks.
And people were complaining about the water coming.
Smelling?
Not smelly, like colory, like had a red, had a red tint to it.
Yes.
Oh, wow.
That's crazy, crazy.
Wow.
It's a crazy case.
I would love to do that one.
All right.
Well, guys, hope you guys enjoyed that video, man.
We went into detail here with K-Flock.
Timestamps will be up definitely.
So you guys can go ahead and surf around the video as much as you need to to get what you need.
The only thing I ask, like the video.
Check out Angie on Instagram.
So Angelica with two A's at the end, one word.
So Angelica, common spelling with two A's.
Send her your request on what you guys want us to cover on FedIT.
And other than that, man, love you guys.
We're going to give you guys a three P tomorrow.
Arabic Top G goes, Marin Habibi, Ramana's clothes.
Be ready.
Free Top G. Yes.
Andrew will be home very soon, inshallah, guys.
Trust me.
We all know he's innocent and the truth does not lie.
All right.
Or the truth.
That truth always comes out.
It always comes out.
I said it on the TamCon.
Actually, you guys are wondering, I did a bunch of podcasts while I was out there, but I did TamCon.
I did Mike Thurston.
I did, damn, Ahmed, Ahmed Mo Vlogs.
Did a couple of podcasts while I was out there.
The one thing I said on the TK podcast was there's three things that always come out.
The sun, the moon, and the truth.
And the truth is definitely going to come out when it comes to Andrew.
We all know he's innocent.
But other than that, guys, like the video.
Subscribe to the channel.
Check out Angie at SO Angelica with two A's at the end.
Don't send dick pics, please.
Send dick pics to her.
I'm sure she'll love it.
Love you guys.
I'll catch you tomorrow at 6 p.m. for Fresh and Fit with Lucario Miles.
Peace.
I'm special agent with Homelands Investigations.
Okay, guys, HSI.
The cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.
No one else has these documents, by the way.
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