Rocksolid Light

Welcome to novaBBS (click a section below)

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

"If it ain't broke, don't fix it." -- Bert Lantz


interests / alt.dreams.castaneda / Re: Jeez, everyone ok?

Re: Jeez, everyone ok?

<1og0gh9e5n460ijo7clp796u4vu8nanhqi@4ax.com>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/interests/article-flat.php?id=2926&group=alt.dreams.castaneda#2926

  copy link   Newsgroups: alt.dreams.castaneda
Path: i2pn2.org!i2pn.org!eternal-september.org!reader01.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: liberti...@south.south.com (o'Mahoney)
Newsgroups: alt.dreams.castaneda
Subject: Re: Jeez, everyone ok?
Date: Sat, 20 Aug 2022 10:19:20 +0800
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Lines: 116
Message-ID: <1og0gh9e5n460ijo7clp796u4vu8nanhqi@4ax.com>
References: <ro5hfhpb2mdd8pakij1ddbbv6u3igcr6bs@4ax.com> <c004c7ec-d7a7-48ad-b928-9596a82e01adn@googlegroups.com> <4095b421-a912-41a3-b698-1b0d17ee8a8cn@googlegroups.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Injection-Info: reader01.eternal-september.org; posting-host="82a50a4ec90528f42c4852def44a28ff";
logging-data="1875531"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX1+x2NqTK8IM8bP7Y6WNhseL"
User-Agent: ForteAgent/7.10.32.1212
Cancel-Lock: sha1:0+6MKzH3QUQ2QJZSY0ZXwlnMIOI=
X-Antivirus: Avast (VPS 220817-4, 8/17/2022), Outbound message
X-Antivirus-Status: Clean
 by: o'Mahoney - Sat, 20 Aug 2022 02:19 UTC

On Fri, 19 Aug 2022 08:14:43 -0700 (PDT), LowRider44M
<intraphase@gmail.com> wrote:

>On Sunday, August 14, 2022 at 8:27:38 AM UTC-5, chris rodgers wrote:
>> On Saturday, August 13, 2022 at 11:34:04 PM UTC-7, o'Mahoney wrote:
>> > Wonder who will be first of us three to kick the bucket?
>> >
>
>Those prions in the clot shot are 4th Reich mad cow disease.
>The vaccine shall kill 2 billion within 10 years. The Covideo-19 was the bait.
>
>> > Everytime there's a sustained hiatus here, I'm thinking the worst.
>> >
>> > You all ok?
>
>I'm in 2485 working on a new ocean going yacht, 640 octillion lightmach cruiser.
>A wedding present for a special person.
>
>> all i can tell is that you gone a long time when you croak .
>
>We are what we think.
>Only consciousness exists, all else is froth.
>
>The King Of Snitches
>
>
>Connecticut
>Federal authorities charge three inmates with beating Boston mob boss James ‘Whitey’ Bulger to death in a West Virginia prison in 2018
>By Edmund H. Mahony
>Hartford Courant
>•
>Aug 18, 2022 at 7:11 pm
>
>https://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-news-feds-cjarge-three-with-whitey-bulger-murder-20220818-20220818-mmbu7jg55nbizerrb555qdklcy-story.html
>
>This file June 23, 2011, booking photo provided by the U.S. Marshals Service shows James "Whitey" Bulger. Three years after he was bludgeoned to death in a West Virginia prison. Questions such as why the well-known government informant was put in the troubled penitentiary's general population alongside other New England gangsters,
rather than solitary confinement, remain unanswered. Bulger was 89 when he was fatally beaten in October 2018. (AP Photo/U.S. Marshals Service, File) (AP)
>
>A mob hitman from Springfield and two other inmates have been indicted for the brutal beating death of Boston mob boss James “Whitey” Bulger in a West Virginia prison in 2018, federal authorities said Thursday.
>
>Springfield mobster Fotios “Freddy“ Geas, 55, Paul J. DeCologero, 55, another gangster from Lowell, Massachusetts, and Sean McKinnon, 36, originally from Montpeiler, Vermont, were all charged Wednesday with conspiracy to commit first degree murder, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in West Virginia said in a statement
issued shortly after 5 p.m. Thursday.
>
>All three were imprisoned with Bulger at the Hazleton federal prison in Bruceton Mills, West Virginia, the spokeswoman said. The 89-year-old Bulger, who became one of the nation’s most powerful gangsters in part by being a secret FBI informer, was so badly beaten that he was left for dead and was almost unrecognizable when found
on the floor of a prison corridor. Geas and DeCologero had reputations for hating informers.
>
>The U.S. Attorney’s office in West Virginia said Geas and DeCologero are accused of beating Bulger and causing his death in October 2018, hours after he had been transferred to the high security federal prison and released into general population. In addition to conspiracy, the two are charged with aiding and abetting first-degree
murder and assault resulting in serious bodily injury.
>
>Geas faces a separate charge of murder by a federal inmate serving a life sentence.
>
>McKinnon is charged separately with making false statements to a federal agent.
>
>Geas remains incarcerated at the federal prison at Hazelton. DeCologero is being held at an undisclosed location elsewhere in the federal prison system. McKinnon had been released and was arrested Thursday in Florida, the spokeswoman for the West Virginia U.S. Attorney said in the statement.
>
>There was nothing in the statement about why Bulger’s death went uncharged for almost four years, or why he was released into general population. At the time of his death, law enforcement sources said Bulger, whose health was deteriorating and who was confined to a wheelchair, chose to be confined in general population rather than
requesting protected status, which would have limited his freedom of movement and contact with other inmates.
>
>Federal law enforcement officials in West Virginia could not be reached on Thursday night.
>
>Bulger, who was serving a life sentence for 11 murders and a variety of other crimes, had survived at least one prison murder attempt before his transfer to the West Virginia penitentiary. He was convicted after a sensational, months-long trial in Boston that laid out, in detail, how the Irish mob boss from South Boston arranged a
deal with corrupt FBI agents that guaranteed his rise to top of the New England underworld.
>
>In return to giving federal agents the evidence they needed to arrest his underworld rivals, Bulger was tipped in return to who was informing on him — and many of them became his victims.
>
>Geas has been the top suspect in Bulger’s murder since discovery of the aging gangster’s battered body. He was — and still is — serving multiple life sentences for, among other crimes, two murders, a murder conspiracy and an attempted murder, after once-trusted mob partners informed on him. Offered the chance to reduce his
sentence by becoming an informer himself, Geas told federal prosecutors he’d rather spend the rest of his life in prison.
>
>“He is vicious, absolutely vicious,” retired Massachusetts State Police Det. Lt. Steve Johnson, an organized crime expert who worked on the cases that sent both Geas and Bulger away for life, once said. “There really is no way to describe him other than an absolute animal.”
>
>Organized crime investigators describe Geas as a ruthless killer affiliated with the New York-based Genovese crime family, which dominates the rackets in upstate New York and western Massachusetts. The Genovese Springfield operation has been involved in gambling and loansharking in Hartford for decades and in recent years. its
interests in Hartford have expanded.
>
>On the other hand, Springfield defense lawyer Daniel D. Kelly, who has represented Geas for years, has called Geas one of the “most personable” people he knows.
>
>“If I introduced him to you as an insurance broker, you wouldn’t doubt me,” Kelly said during an interview at the time of Bulger’s death. But he said Geas’ hatred of informers was well known
>
>When Geas was looking at multiple life sentences for multiple murders, Kelly said one of Geas’ mob partners and co-defendants sent a back-channel message informing him that the partner was negotiating a cooperation deal and that Geas shouldn’t worry because it would be a package deal that included him.
>
>“He turned it down in like two seconds flat,” Kelly said. “The idea that he would cooperate with the government and become a rat for some kind of consideration? He wouldn’t even consider it.”
>
>The government made a similar offer and Geas dismissed it, too, Kelly said.
>
>Geas, 51, grew up in West Springfield. He was sent to prison for life in 2011 following a sensational federal trial in New York that also convicted, among others, the acting Genovese Boss Arthur Nigro and Geas’ younger brother Ty, 46.
>
>The highlight of the trial was the 2003 murder of the cigar-chomping, Springfield Genovese capo Adolfo “Big Al” Bruno, who was riddled with bullets as he left his weekly card game at his Springfield social club, the Our Lady of Mount Carmel Society.
>
>The Bruno hit was sanctioned by Nigro, who complained Bruno wasn’t sending New York enough of what he raked off Springfield rackets. As a Greek, Geas could not become a sworn member of the Italian mafia. But he did the next best thing, which was become partners with Anthony Arillotta, the gangster the family had decided would
replace Bruno.
>
>When the case went to trial, Arillotta and Frankie Roche, another killer recruited by Geas, rolled over, testifying in exchange for leniency that Geas set up and took part in the hit. It was Arillotta who offered to include Geas in a leniency deal.
>
>Geas also was found guilty of killing Springfield area drug dealer Gary Westerman, who was beaten with bats, shot and buried in a makeshift grave. He was convicted of the attempted murder of a New York union officer, who survived nine gunshots, and of conspiring to murder Springfield drug dealer Guiseppe Manzi, who somehow emerged
unscathed from a burst of machine gun fire at a Springfield intersection.
>
>Bulger had survived at least one other murder attempt. At the Arizona prison where he was first sent after his conviction in 2013 for 11 murders and dozens of other crimes, another inmate stabbed him in the neck with a pen.
>
>After the attack, Bulger was transferred to the high-security prison at the Coleman penitentiary complex in central Florida. But Bulger was transferred again when prison officials considered assigning former Patriarca crime family boss Francis “Cadillac Frank” Salemme to Coleman.
>
>Prison officials feared violence because Salemme knew that Bulger and his former partner, Stephen “The Rifleman” Flemmi, had been informing to the FBI about him and his mafia associates for decades.
>
>Authorities with knowledge of the events said a decision was made to move Bulger because he was suffering from deteriorating health. His heart was said to be failing and he was using a wheelchair to get around.

Interesting you posted this on Geas etc. I was reading about it the
other day and always had an interest in Whitey's Boston capers (on
which the excellent movie "The Departed" was based).

This guy killed Whitey because Whitey was a hypocritical rat snitch.
Geas was a hitman for a guy in the mafia who turned on Geas and put
him away for life along with his brother - Arillotta is free now
(maybe dead soon) but Geas refused straight up to cooperate with the
Feds and is doing his life in jail because he hates rat snitches.

Geas is old school stone cold killer with a code. Whitey was just
pond scum and if there is a hell (which I strongly doubt) he is
roasting for the next few million years with a pitchfork up his arse.

SubjectRepliesAuthor
o Jeez, everyone ok?

By: o'Mahoney on Sun, 14 Aug 2022

4o'Mahoney
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.81
clearnet tor