Message from @Oscar_Brovo

Discord ID: 459841060441423902


2018-06-22 21:58:51 UTC  

The organized crime ring broken up by the Attorney General's Office was known as Operation Car Wash. According to prosecutors, the license plates were rented to people in New York City and other locations. Since the plates didn't match the cars, the drivers didn't have to pay tickets or tolls.

Levi and two others were also ordered to pay $1.3 million in restitution. Authorities said part of the restitution will be paid with the $600,000 in proceeds from the sales of luxury vehicles Levi agreed to forfeit.

2018-06-22 21:58:51 UTC  

War over how to disclose

2018-06-22 22:00:30 UTC  

LOS ANGELES —
A heavy metal singer convicted in a murder-for-hire plot to kill his estranged wife has reunited with his Grammy-nominated band and performed with the group in San Diego over the weekend.

Tim Lambesis and his Christian-inspired band As I Lay Dying performed together Saturday for the first time since May 2013. That’s when Lambesis was arrested after an undercover agent recorded him saying he wanted his wife killed.

2018-06-22 22:01:06 UTC  

Must be voter fraud

2018-06-22 22:01:27 UTC  

Lambesis gave the agent $1,000 in cash and instructions on how to kill Meggan Lambesis, including her photo, address, security-gate code and dates he would be with their children to give him an alibi, prosecutors said.

The undercover operation was staged after the singer twice told a man at his gym that he wanted his wife killed, complaining that she was making it difficult for him to see their children and impossible to complete their divorce.

Lambesis pleaded guilty in the case and served two years of a six-year sentence.

In a Facebook post on the band’s fan page in December, Lambesis apologized to his ex-wife and children for his “appalling actions.”

2018-06-22 22:01:54 UTC  

Lambesis pleaded guilty in the case and served two years of a six-year sentence.

In a Facebook post on the band’s fan page in December, Lambesis apologized to his ex-wife and children for his “appalling actions.”

“Words cannot begin to express how deeply sorry I am for the hurt that I have caused,” Lambesis wrote. “There is no defense for what I did, and I look back on the person I became with as much disdain as many of you likely do.”

At their San Diego show on Saturday, Lambesis told a packed venue that he and his bandmates were thankful.

“We’re not only thankful for you guys, we’re thankful for each other,” he told fans. “We’re thankful for the relationships we’ve rebuilt. We’re very, very excited about that.”

The band formed in San Diego in 2000 and released six albums before Lambesis’ arrest, including 2007′s “An Ocean Between Us,” which reached No. 8 on Billboard’s charts. A single from the album, “Nothing Left,” was nominated for a Grammy for top metal performance.

The band released a new single on June 7 called “My Own Grave.”

In a sometimes-tearful video posted Saturday on their YouTube page, the band talked about how they got back together.

Guitarist Nick Hipa said that at first, he wasn’t open to hearing Lambesis’ apologies, referring to an interview the singer gave before his sentencing that amounted to “one long excuse.”

“That’s the moment that whatever shred of empathy I had for him turned into just blind hatred,” he said.

But when they met in person for the first time since Lambesis’ release, Hipa said he saw a changed man.

“It took all of those years, him facing punishment and the consequences for his actions, living in the ruin that he made for himself,” Hipa said. “What he did was very public and it cannot be forgotten and it shouldn’t. But that’s part of what he has to endure for the rest of his life.”

2018-06-22 22:02:50 UTC  

??? If Potus has given people in congress their freedom or got them to resign, why don't they change the voting rules and get his agenda passed? Give us constitutional judges now!!

2018-06-22 22:03:08 UTC  
2018-06-22 22:03:38 UTC  

NEWARK, N.J. — A New Jersey woman has admitted her role in a month-long crime spree in two states, including an attempted bank robbery in Pennsylvania where she and another woman dressed as nuns.

Melisa Aquino Arias also pleaded guilty Friday to robbing a bank in Garfield, New Jersey while wearing a head covering and conspiring to steal money from an ATM machine at a bank in Scotrun, Pennsylvania. The 23-year-old Passaic woman faces up to 41 years in prison when she's sentenced Sept. 21.
The pleas came just weeks after her co-defendant, 19-year-old Swahilys Pedraza-Rodriguez, of New Haven, Connecticut, pleaded guilty to the same offenses.
ADVERTISING

2018-06-22 22:03:52 UTC  

They were arrested about two weeks after the Garfield robbery, when they went to a Teaneck bank and asked about opening an account. An employee there recognized them as suspects in the Garfield robbery and called police.

**RUDOLPH "RUDY" GIULIANI**
**MASTER OF RICO - Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act**
**The man rewrote RICO by himself**

https://themobmuseum.org/notable_names/rudolph-giuliani/

2018-06-22 22:05:43 UTC  

@MadderMartigan what r u working on ?

2018-06-22 22:06:15 UTC  
2018-06-22 22:07:13 UTC  

:0

2018-06-22 22:07:23 UTC  

Potus, please make sure we do not have voter fraud during the midterms.

2018-06-22 22:07:41 UTC  

.pics of masked FBI Agents 1-2-5

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/459841940142161922/DgU8ghGUEAA2Kqn.jpg

2018-06-22 22:08:04 UTC  

**dab**

2018-06-22 22:08:24 UTC  

People need to be indicted for voter fraud and serve time in prison.

2018-06-22 22:08:43 UTC  

CANTERBURY, N.H. (WHDH) — A 21-year-old man accused of stabbing his mother to death in New Hampshire before fleeing to Virginia in May pleaded not guilty to murder Friday.

Phillip Nash is charged with second-degree murder in connection with the death of his mother, 51-year-old Frances Nash, of Chicester.

Frances Nash was reported missing on May 19 and later found dead on May 21 in a swamp in Canterbury. An autopsy revealed that she had died from multiple stab wounds, according to the chief medical examiner.