Monday, April 10, 2023

Bank robber, 78, foiled

The Pleasant Hill, Missouri Police Department said that Bonnie Gooch, 78, walked into Goppert Financial Bank last week and handed the teller a note demanding "13,000 small bills." Gooch also apologized to the teller, writing, "Thank you, sorry, I didn't mean to scare you." She left the bank with the money but was stopped by cops about two miles away. Her breath smelled strongly of alcohol, and they found the stolen bills scattered throughout her car. Gooch was previously convicted of robbing a bank in California in 1977 and a bank in the Kansas City suburb of Lee's Summit in 2020. Her probation for the second conviction ended in November 2021.

PlayStation box = 22 years in jail for dealer


During a raid of that condo, cops found 30 kg of fentanyl and more than $500k in cash.
Maurice Montain McCoy, Jr., 41, of Moreno Valley, California, led a drug ring that trafficked fentanyl, heroin, and cocaine across the country. The DEA investigated McCoy's stash house in July 2017. Agents traced a UPC code off of a Sony PlayStation box used to deliver heroin to a customer.
It was the largest fentanyl seizure in Michigan and one of the largest in the country.

Sunday, April 9, 2023

Vancouver fraudster Mark Chandler in California jail

Former Langley real estate developer Mark Chandler sits in Terminal Island, a low-security federal prison in San Pedro, Calif., serving a six-year sentence for a multi-million dollar fraud scheme. It’s his second conviction in the United States. Chandler fought extradition to the U.S. B.C.’s real estate watchdog issued a formal notice of hearing alleging Chandler mishandled more than $10m of deposits from home buyers for a Langley condo project called Murrayville House.
Would-be buyers waited years as repeated construction delays stalled the project. Mark Chandler was busted for fraud in California following an FBI investigation. The charges resulted from an investigation into a development project known as Hill Street in downtown Los Angeles between 2008 and 2011. “The record of the case portrays a fraud that does not exist,” said Chandler’s lawyer. The judge disagreed, and ordered Chandler extradited to face trial in the U.S. Chandler is best known for the Murrayville House project which dissolved into multiple lawsuits in 2017.
Units in the development were sold to two, three, or even four purchasers.
All contracts were eventually voided in court. Chandler accumulated a long list of lawsuits from burnt creditors, including from an American private jet leasing agency, a Vancouver yacht charter company, a Ferrari Maserati dealership, and a waterfront Hawaii getaway.

Chandler had repeatedly lied and forged documents to dupe his investors, prosecutors noted. It was his second conviction in the United States, following a 2003 guilty plea to theft in Arizona. After that incident, Chandler was deported, given three years of probation, and ordered to pay $189,550 in restitution.

Empty, scuttled semi-submersible found in Spain

Spanish cops discovered a semi-submersible off the northwestern coast of Galicia on March 13. The ship was found scuttled, likely on purpose after the traffickers had finished unloading their cargo. Authorities suggested it may have been sitting there for weeks. The vessel could have carried up to five tons of cocaine.
The 16-meter (52-foot) vessel was spotted half sunk a kilometer off the coast in the Arousa estuary in the Ganorthwester. A similar vessel with three metric tons of cocaine on board was found in another northern Spanish estuary in 2019. The Galicia semi-submersible may be a sign of things to come. "There is nothing technically from stopping these vessels being used more frequently to smuggle drugs to Europe," one expert said.

Saturday, April 8, 2023

Crack, cocaine resurgence in NYC

A record influx of Colombian cocaine has spurred the return of crack — the cheap, smokable scourge that sparked a crime wave in New York in the late 1980s and 1990s. An increase in cocaine supply has driven down street prices to levels not seen in decades.
Cops say a rock can be had for $5. Turf wars are breaking out as dealers battle over street corners, just as they did 30 years ago. Abundant supply and efficient processing have sent wholesale prices plummeting. An uncut kilo of cocaine, which hit an all-time high of $35k five years ago, is now about $17k.
In New York, 2,668 people died of drug overdoses in 2021, an increase of 78% since 2019 with fentanyl detected in 80% of the deaths.

Texas man brags about robbing cartel - MIA in Mexico

Texas man Erik Tadeo Ramirez bragged about stealing $50k from a Mexican drug cartel. Less than two hours later, he was kidnapped by a group of armed men from a home in southern Texas and taken over the border. The FBI says he's still missing. Witnesses overheard him bragging on a phone call about stealing money from the Cartel del Noreste while he was at a house party in Laredo at about 11 p.m. on March 23. At 12.45 a.m. on March 24, a group of masked men arrived at the location in a blue Dodge pick-up truck and assaulted Ramirez before forcing him into the car. On March 27, U.S. authorities arrested Jonathan Cavriales, who is a member of CDN.

Friday, April 7, 2023

FBI “Operation Cookie Monster”

Dark web marketplace Genesis has been shuttered. UK cops said 17 countries were involved in the operation, led by the FBI and Dutch which resulted in about 120 arrests. The US Treasury Department called Genesis “one of the most prominent brokers of stolen credentials and other sensitive information”. Genesis specialized in the sale of digital products, especially “browser fingerprints” harvested from computers infected with malicious software.

Fugees rapper Pras Michel in the shit

Former Fugees rapper Pras Michel's trial continued with actor Leonardo DiCaprio among the witnesses taking the stand. Michel is accused of conspiring with Low Taek Jho, a Malaysian businessman who allegedly stole billions from state fund 1MDB (1Malaysia Development Berhad), and faces charges of money laundering, campaign finance violations, acting as an unregistered agent. Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, who led the country between 2009 and 2018 but is now in prison, cofounded the 1MDB fund in 2009.

Trump’s behavior worse than mob boss - bad for business

Trump’s unhinged attacks on New York authorities in the wake of his arraignment have reached new depths. Within hours, Trump attacked both the judge and his family — including his daughter, who worked for the Biden-Harris campaign — as part of the 'Trump-hating' conspiracy against him. “This is appalling … you do not have this behavior from a mob boss!” Former prosecutor Andrew Weissmann said.
“There is a rule in organized crime: You do not do this with respect to prosecutors. You don’t do this with respect to the judge. You certainly don’t go after their families." "It’s bad business to do that.”
Trump is due back in court on Dec. 4.

Thursday, April 6, 2023

Furore over bikie Dayne Brajkovich - Redux II

Latest in cyberspace are photos of tuff guy Dayne Brajkovich as a fresh faced dude with hair. Brajkovich's mug became so notorious that he was the poster boy for the Western Australian Government's bikie crackdown.
Nobody could miss bikie Dayne Brajkovich and his little woman at a recent court appearance. CCTV caught the moment infamous Aussie bikie Dayne Brajkovich queued up at a gift shop at the Perth Mint to buy $27k worth of gold - allegedly without any checks on where his cash came from.

Brajkovich, 43, who has a swastika inked onto his chin and 'Bad News' scrawled across his forehead, bought the gold at the Perth Mint in June.
CCTV footage appears to show Brajkovich had covered up many of his tattoos with black make-up on his face and hands to comply with strict WA bikie laws. High-risk customers are supposed to attract 'rigorous' checks by Mint staff to ensure criminal proceeds aren't used to buy gold as part of a money-laundering scheme. Nobody is more high-risk than world famous bikie Dayne Brajkovich.

See ----->Bikie Dayne Brajkovich - Out and Fu*k the Police
The boss of the Perth Mint now has an inquiry on his hands. It isn't the only one.

Headlines today are screaming "The historic Perth Mint is facing a potential $9 billion recall of gold bars after selling diluted or "doped" bullion to China and then covering it up"

See ----->Doped Gold - Perth Mint