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Two New York City Correction Officers Among Six Defendants Charged with Conspiring to Accept Bribes and Smuggle Contraband into Rikers Island Facilities for Gang Members | USAO-EDNY
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5 days agoon
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Burrell ComplaintTwo criminal complaints were unsealed today in federal court in the Eastern District of New York charging six defendants with conspiring to bribe correction officers employed by the New York City Department of Corrections (DOC) as part of contraband smuggling conspiracies. Correction Officers Krystle Burrell and Katrina Patterson, as well as Ashley Medina, Imani Matthews and Terrae Hinds were arrested earlier today, and their initial appearances are scheduled for this afternoon before United States Magistrate Judge Lois Bloom. Defendant Michael Ross is currently in New York State custody and will make his initial appearance at a later date.
Breon Peace, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, Ricky J. Patel, Acting Special Agent-in-Charge, Homeland Security Investigations, New York Field Office (HSI), Jocelyn E. Strauber, Commissioner, New York City Department of Investigation (DOI), and Keechant L. Sewell, Commissioner, New York City Police Department (NYPD) announced the arrests and charges.
โThe defendants, public servants on the Cityโs payroll, allegedly smuggled contraband, including cell phones and drugs, to incarcerated gang members at Rikers Island. The flow of contraband into our jails is a serious problem which puts inmates, fellow officers and potentially the public at risk,โ stated United States Attorney Peace. โWe will continue to root out corruption at Rikers Island and work to protect incarcerated individuals and correction officers in our jails.โ
โAs alleged, Burrell and Patterson, both New York City Correctional Officers, brought shame and disgrace to New Yorkโs Boldest by putting the safety of fellow officers and inmates at risk by conspiring to introduce contraband at Rikers Island Correctional Facilities on behalf of known Bloods Gang members,โ said HSI New York Acting Special Agent in Charge Patel. โThe details in the complaint allege that both officers brazenly betrayed their oath to act with integrity and professionalism to create a safe environment in correctional facilities – their actions tarnish the great reputation of the men and women who put on the uniform of a New York City Correction Officer and risk their lives on a daily basis. HSI New Yorkโs Violent Gang Task Force, with our local and federal partners, will continue to conduct violent crime and gang investigations throughout the New York City area to ensure those perpetrating criminal activities in any manner are held accountable.โ
DOI Commissioner Strauber said, โAs alleged, these correction officers facilitated the illegal entry of drugs and cellphones into the Cityโs jails in exchange for thousands of dollars in bribes, enriching themselves at the expense of the safety and security of inmates as well as their fellow officers. The contraband trade fuels violence that endangers inmates and staff, and undermines the rules and regulations intended to maintain order on Rikers Island. DOI is committed to continued collaboration with our law enforcement partners in the United States Attorneyโs Office for the Eastern District of New York, the New York Field Office of Homeland Security Investigations, and the New York City Police Department to expose and stop this type of corruption that destabilizes the Cityโs jails.โ
โThe charges detailed in todayโs federal complaints reflect an intolerable betrayal of public trust โ including by those who allegedly abandoned their sworn oath to uphold the law,โ said Police Commissioner Sewell. โI commend our NYPD officers, along with our law enforcement partners and the prosecutors in the U.S. Attorneyโs Office for the Eastern District of New York, for working together to build this important case.โ
HSI, DOI and the NYPD have been investigating contraband smuggling rings involving the payment of bribes to DOC officers in exchange for smuggling contraband, including unauthorized cell phones and narcotics, to Bloods gang members on Rikers Island.
As alleged in one complaint, New York City Correction Officer Katrina Patterson accepted at least $34,090 in bribes from Ashley Medina and Imani Matthews on behalf of Michael Ross in exchange for Patterson smuggling contraband into the Robert N. Davoren Center on Rikers Island for Ross. Ross, who was incarcerated on unrelated offenses, arranged for the bribes to be sent to Patterson. DOC subsequently located narcotics and cell phones in Rossโ cell. In addition to obtaining surveillance video from Rikers Island showing Patterson bringing unauthorized items to Ross, law enforcement also seized Pattersonโs text messages, including messages with Matthews where Matthews told Patterson that some of the contraband would be โ4 black joints in 1 paper,โ and Patterson responded, โit better be wrapped so many times I donโt want to smell it.โ Patterson and Matthews also discussed the need to delete their text messages.
As alleged in a separate complaint, New York City Correction Officer Krystle Burrell accepted bribes in exchange for smuggling contraband into the Anna M. Kross Center on Rikers Island for Terrae Hinds, facilitating Hindsโ contraband smuggling business and permitting Hinds and others to violate DOC regulations. Hinds, who was incarcerated on unrelated offenses, arranged for approximately $9,780 in bribe payments to be sent to Burrell. In exchange, Burrell smuggled at least two unauthorized cell phones to Hinds, and also facilitated Hindsโ sale of narcotics and other contraband items at the Anna M. Kross Center.
The charges in the complaints are allegations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. If convicted, the defendants each face a maximum sentence of five yearsโ imprisonment.
The governmentโs case is being handled by the Officeโs Public Integrity Section and prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Philip Pilmar.
The Defendants:
KATRINA PATTERSON
Age: 31
Jamaica, NY
IMANI MATTHEWS
Age: 25
Bronx, NY
ASHLEY MEDINA
Age: 24
Bronx, NY
MICHAEL ROSS
Age: 36
Comstock, NY
E.D.N.Y. Docket No. 22-MJ-377
KRYSTLE BURRELL
Age: 35
Lawrence, NY
TERRAE HINDS
Age: 28
Yonkers, NY
E.D.N.Y. Docket No. 22-MJ-378
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LI Pawn Shop Owner Accused Of Running Organized Retail Theft Ring
Published
51 mins agoon
August 10, 2022By

BRENTWOOD, NY โ A Brentwood pawn shop owner and three associates were arrested after prosecutors said they ran an organized retail theft ring.
Carlos Ulloa, Henry Delgado, Sandra Cruz and Sandra Palomino each face a top count of felony enterprise corruption and used Ulloa’s Brentwood pawn shop as a front, Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney said Wednesday.
The conspirators used “boosters,” or thieves who stole items from major retailers such as Lowe’s, Home Depot, Petco and PetSmart, prosecutors said.
Find out what’s happening in Brentwood-Central Islipwith free, real-time updates from Patch.
Ulloa, 50, of Patchogue, the owner and operator of EZ Cash Pawn and Jewelry in Brentwood and renter of a warehouse in East Patchogue where numerous stolen items were recovered, was arrested and charged with enterprise corruption; second-degree money laundering; fourth-degree conspiracy; and third-degree criminal possession of a weapon, prosecutors said.
Delgado, 40, of Medford, was arrested and charged with enterprise corruption; second-degree money laundering; and fourth-degree conspiracy.
Find out what’s happening in Brentwood-Central Islipwith free, real-time updates from Patch.
Delgado sold the stolen goods online through internet websites, Tierney said.
Cruz, 23, of Patchogue, an associate of Ulloa who managed the warehouse and its employees and utilized the warehouse to sell stolen goods for Ulloa through online websites, was arrested and charged with enterprise corruption and fourth-degree conspiracy, Tierney said.
Palomino, 45, of Brentwood, the manager of EZ Pawn and its employees, was arrested and charged with a count of enterprise corruption; and fourth-degree conspiracy.
Between October 1, 2021, and August 6, 2022, after Palomino bought stolen merchandise from boosters at the pawn shop, Ulloa and his associates then transported them to the warehouse in East Patchogue, according to court documents and statements made at the arraignments.
The stolen items were then photographed, listed on internet websites to be resold, and packaged for delivery, Tierney said. The repeated act of reselling stolen items on different platforms generated a large sum of criminal proceeds, Tierney said.
During the 10-month period, the investigation revealed that more than $1 million was transferred just from eBay accounts to bank accounts owned by Ulloa, Tierney said. Delgado would then issue checks to Ulloa and his two corporations when requested by Ulloa to do so, Tierney said.
Search warrants executed on August 6, 2022 at the pawn shop, the warehouse and Ulloa’s
residence resulted in the seizure of thousands of new products stolen from retailers
throughout Suffolk County, Tierney said. Police also seized a stolen handgun and
illegal high capacity magazines, Tierney said.
“These defendants and their associates allegedly engaged in a massive stolen property fencing operation run out of a pawn shop that has been fueling the retail theft epidemic in Suffolk County and elsewhere,” said Tierney.
Ulloa, Cruz, Palomino and Delgado were arraigned by the Honorable Jennifer A.
Henry on August 6; each was ordered to be held on bail, Tierney said.
Ulloa is being held on $1 million cash/$3 million bond or $10 million partially secured bond; he is being represented by David Besso, Esq., Tierney said. Besso was not immediately available for comment.
Delgado is being held on $750,000 cash or $1.5 million bond or $7.5 million in partially secured bond; he is being represented by William Keahon, Esq, Tierney said. Keahon was not immediately available for comment.
Subsequently, on August 8 and 9, the Honorable James A. Saladino ordered the release of
Cruz and Palomino and placed them on supervised release and GPS monitoring, Tierney said.
Cruz is represented by Daniel Sullivan, Esq. “I believe she was overcharged by the DA’d office, with an enterprise corruption charge,” Sullivan said. “I don’t think they will be able to prove it. I look forward to defending this case in the future. She was an employee; someone was using her. She was paid an hourly wage and I don’t think they will have the elements it will take to prove the enterprise corruption charge, a very serious charge. I’m gathering evidence and look forward to vigorously defending the case.”
Palomino is being represented by George Duncan, Esq, Tierney said. Duncan was not immediately available for comment.
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Jack Martins backed by three Nassau County police unions – Featured
Published
2 hours agoon
August 10, 2022By


Former state Sen. and Mineola Mayor Jack Martins was endorsed by three prominent Nassau County police unions on Tuesday in the midst of his campaign to return to the Senate.
The Nassau County Police Benevolent Association, Detectives Association and the Superior Officers Association all expressed their support for Martins, and several other Republicans, at the PBA headquarters.
Martins, an Old Westbury resident who previously represented the 7th District from 2011-2016, lauded the work of the Nassau County Police Department and thanked the officials for pledging their support for his campaign.
โI am honored and humbled by the endorsement we received today from law enforcement and I want to make it clear that I have always been with law enforcement and I will continue to stand with law enforcement as we move forward,โ Martins said during a press conference.
Martins criticized bail reform, blaming โthe Democrats in Albany who have decided to take the side of criminals.โ Martins said a vote for him would be a vote for someone who will โrestore law and orderโ throughout New York.
PBA President Thomas Shevlin said his association and the two others are endorsing candidates that are not afraid to support police officers amidst calls for defunding the police and will fight to repeal the stateโs bail reform laws.ย
โThe time is now for change on bail reform,โ Shevlin said. โThe safety of our country, our county, our state and the future for our children is at stake. We are asking all of you to join us and support these officials come this November.โ
Detectives Association President Jeff Gross echoed Shevlinโs comments about bail reform needing to be repealed and that the endorsements that were made were not just because the candidates were Republican.
โThese candidates are the ones that have sat down with law enforcement,โ Gross said. โThey understand our needs, they understand our concerns and thatโs why they were chosen. They are the best choice for the safety of our residents and the best choice to support law enforcement.โ
Martins is running for the stateโs 7th Senate District against incumbent state Sen. Anna Kaplan (D-North Hills). According to the most recent Senate campaign filings, Kaplan announced she had more than $504,000 on hand, compared to Martinsโ $41,000.
The 7th Senate district includes Floral Park, New Hyde Park, Williston Park, Mineola, Garden City Park, North Hills, Albertson, Old Westbury, East Hills, Roslyn, Roslyn Harbor, Roslyn Estates, Albertson, Searingtown, Lake Success, Manhasset, Munsey Park, Plandome, Plandome Heights, Plandome Manor, and the Great Neck and Port Washington peninsulas.
Martins served as Mineolaโs mayor from 2003-2010. In 2008, he ran an unsuccessful congressional campaign against former U.S. Rep. Carolyn McCarthy before defeating incumbent 7th District Senator and Democrat Craig Johnson in 2010.
The race against Johnson was one that did not get resolved until early December due to Johnson demanding a recount of the votes, ultimately having his appeal denied by the stateโs Court of Appeals.
After another failed attempt to get into Congress in 2016, losing to U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-Glen Cove), Martins shifted his focus to becoming Nassau Countyโs new county executive, following former County Executive Edward Mangano being indicted on federal corruption charges.
โโMartins ultimately lost that race to Democrat Laura Curran, who served as county executive before being defeated by Republican Bruce Blakeman this past fall.
General
Revisiting housing in Newsomโs hometown- POLITICO
Published
3 hours agoon
August 10, 2022By

THE BUZZ:ย The Newsom administration just hurled a lightning bolt into the epicenter of Californiaโs housing crisis.
San Francisco is a notoriously difficult place to permit and build homes. A protracted, expensive and byzantine process has helped dig a housing chasm that has the city facing a state mandate to plan for some 82,000 new units in the next decade. That shortfall has helped push rents to prohibitive levels, squeezing a shrinking middle class and exacerbating homelessness. That confluence of forces is a microcosm of a broader affordability crisis that two-thirds of Californians see as a big problem.
So it stands to reason that Gov. Gavin Newsom wanted to make an example of his home city. Californiaโs Department of Housing and Community Development announced yesterday that San Francisco would be the target of a first-of-its-kind review of housing policy. Specifically, HCD Director Gustavo Velasquez said the agency would examine โprocesses and political decision-making in San Francisco that delay and impede the creation of housing.โ Velasquez also brandished a hammer, promising to sniff out and penalize violations of state housing law.
Housing has come to dominate San Francisco politics. It was the focal point of an expensive Assembly race between two Democrats who agreed on pretty much everything else. San Francisco Mayor London Breed ran on accelerating housing construction and has repeatedly clashed with the supervisors over both individual projects and broader policies to accelerate development, which has spilled into a legal clash over dueling ballot measures. Breed welcomed the stateโs probe, as did San Franciscoโs state legislators: Sen. Scott Wiener lauded a review of the cityโs โbroken, illegal housing policyโ after having urged the state to sue. Assembly member Matt Haney pledged his support.
But the dramatic intervention by the Bay fits with a more muscular state role on housing law compliance. Newsom had scarcely taken office when he announced California would sue Huntington Beach over affordable housing requirements (the Orange County enclave sued the state and lost over separate housing laws). Attorney General Rob Bonta has defended a hard-fought law allowing four units on single-home lots against local lawsuits and attempts to hide behind mountain lions; he weighed in on a local housing review dispute yesterday. The stateโs challenge that Anaheim violated housing law collided with a broader corruption scandal. California has backed Breed on fourplexes and warned San Francisco on project rejections.
The state has more leverage over counties and cities because the Legislature has passed a stream of housing laws. More could be coming. San Franciscoโs Wiener and other Bay Area lawmakers comprise the core of the Legislatureโs housing-focused cohort. The housing bill weโre watching most closely in the next few weeks: Assemblymember Buffy Wicksโ measure expediting construction on formerly commercial sites, which has split labor as Wicks seeks the sweet spot of enshrining labor standards and streamlining projects.
BUENOS DรAS, good Wednesday morning. Lawmakers might not accomplish their legislative goals in the next few weeks, but they can notch some goals tonight as SoCal legislators play NorCal counterparts in a charity soccer match benefiting foster youth. Team NorCal won Mondayโs softball game.
Got a tip or story idea for California Playbook? Hit us up: [emailย protected] and [emailย protected] or follow us on Twitter @JeremyBWhite and @Lara_Korte.ย
QUOTE OF THE DAY: โDespite what you will hear on Fox News, the cause of potential [grid] shortfalls is not reliance on renewable energy. Meeting our goals of 100 percent clean electricity by 2045 is still the key component in fighting climate change and preventing these weather conditions in the first place.โ Sen. Josh Becker argues renewable energy should prevent, not cause, blackouts.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Top Newsom housing adviser @Jason_Elliott on the SF crackdown: โSan Francisco isn’t exempt from our housing crisis, and they aren’t exempt from being part of the solution. They have to follow the law just like everyone else and stop making political decisions that kill or slow housing.โ
WHEREโS GAVIN? Nothing official announced.
WHOโS WHO? โ โCapitol Weeklyโs Top 100 of 2022,โ by the Capitol Weeklyโs staff: โDespite the obvious handicaps โ mano-a-mano gossip sessions in coffee shops were jettisoned, for example, and itโs hard to hear people talking through masks, anyway โ we think we managed to come up with a good list that meets our basic objectives: Depict the unelected political hierarchy reasonably faithfully, have some new faces, offer a few surprises and have fun.โ
โ โL.A. City Council meeting erupts in chaos, with one protester arrested,โ by the Los Angeles Timesโ David Zahniser and Julia Wick: โ[Los Angeles Council President Nury] Martinez abruptly recessed the meeting, leaving dozens of activists in the room chanting โAbolish 41.18!โ โ a reference to the city law prohibiting homeless encampments at libraries, freeway overpasses and other locations.โ
โ โElonโs Biggest Boondoggle Why did the worldโs richest man spend the past five years trying to sell cities a hole in the ground?โ by the New York Magazineโs Alissa Walker: โMusk has never once proposed a mere tunnel. What he has proposed are infinite tunnels, a โ3-D network of tunnels to alleviate congestion.โโ
โ โExclusive: Sacramento teacher aligned with antifa received 3 years of pay to resign,โ by the Sacramento Beeโs Jason Pohl: โIn exchange for leaving his post at Inderkum High School and not fighting his prospective firing, officials in January agreed to pay Gabriel Gipe $190,000, according to settlement records the district provided in response to a California Public Records Act request from The Sacramento Bee. The payout was taxed, and the final checks the district cut totaled about $100,000.โ
DOUBLE DOWN: All four state legislative leaders came out on Tuesday against Proposition 27, the sports betting ballot initiative funded by platforms like DraftKings and FanDuel. As we reported, this came after the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians outspent every other interest group in this yearโs second quarter, with much of that $3.4 million going towards rallying lawmakers against Prop 27.
โ โDA Jenkins Pocketed Six Figures as Consultant for Nonprofit Linked to Boudin Recall Backers,โ by the San Francisco Standardโs Michael Barba: โThe revelation comes a day after Jenkins officially declared her candidacy in the November election to complete the term [former San Francisco District Attorney Chesa] Boudin did not finish. While other candidates are in the running, Boudin has decided not to challenge her.โ
WIDENING THE GAPS โ GOP polls show House battlefield stretching into double-digit Biden districts, by POLITICOโs Ally Mutnick: Four surveys conducted in late July reveal close races in open seats in Oregon, Colorado and California that President Joe Biden carried by between 11 and 15 points in 2020. Taken all together, GOP operatives view the data as a sign that Bidenโs sinking approval numbers could drag Democratic candidates down enough to bring deep blue turf into reach.
NUEVA DIRECCION: The California Latino Legislative Caucus will get new leadership in December: Assembly member Sabrina Cervantes is taking over as chair and Sen. Lena Gonzalez as vice-chair.
โ โSan Bernardino County sheriff, DA weigh in on โfair shareโ measure,โ by the San Bernardino Sunโs Beau Yarbrough: โAt the board meeting Tuesday, Sheriff Shannon Dicus and District Attorney Jason Anderson both said the state is starving the county of needed resources, leading to reduced services for residents, especially with unfunded mandates where the county is required to perform a service the state does not provide funds to do.โ
โ โThey were unarmed when police shot at them. Then LAPD pushed for weapons charges,โ by the Los Angeles Timesโ Libor Jany: โThe decision to push for charges against [Jermaine] Petit and [Joshua] Hatfield has drawn condemnations from neighbors, activists and academics, who see the departmentโs response as an attempt to deflect scrutiny from its officersโ actions.โ
PAYDAY โ โWelcome to the Great Salary Convergence โ a seismic shift in the way you’re going to get paid,โ by Business Insiderโs Aki Ito: โEarly in the coronavirus pandemic, remote workers who fled the expensive coasts were allowed to keep their big-city paychecks. But a host of new data suggests that what looked like a short-term exception to the rule is fast becoming a new and permanent norm.โ
โ โNewsom Pins Political Rise on Abortion, Guns, and Health Care,โ by Caifornia Healthlineโs Angela Hart: โPolitical strategists and national health care experts say health care is a winning issue for the Democratic Party as it readies for a midterm election battle in November โ and as Democrats seek a strategy to retain the White House in 2024. And they say Newsom could be a strong contender.โ
ย โ โL.A. residents saving more water but face bigger test as heat intensifies,โ by the Los Angeles Timesโ Hayley Smith: โThe report from the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power comes as drought continues to sap supplies across the region. But while Julyโs conservation surpassed the record 9% reduction achieved in L.A. in June, officials urged residents to keep going.โ
MOVING DAY BLUES โ โDid U-Haul run out of trucks as Californians fled the state?โ by the Sacramento Beeโs David Lightman: โCalifornia has been losing population, though it remains by far the nationโs most populous state with 39.2 million people as of July 2021, down about 300,000 from April, 2020.โ
โ โCalifornia puts some of its most vulnerable prisoners in solitary confinement. A state bill would change that,โ by the San Francisco Chronicleโs Camryn Park: โProlonged solitary confinement is defined by the United Nationsโ โNelson Mandela Rulesโ as a form of torture. Itโs still used in California and throughout the United States, though over the past year, states like New York and Connecticut have limited its use.โ
SLEEPING IN โ โSchool bells ring later for San Jose students,โ by the San Jose Spotlightโs Loan-Ahm Pham: โAlthough school officials agree that teens need more sleep, the new bell schedules can result in other logistical issues that could impact students, parents and school employees alike.โ
DATA DIVES โ โThis Is the Data Facebook Gave Police to Prosecute a Teenager for Abortion,โ by VICEโs Jason Koebler and Anna Merlan: โMotherboard has obtained court documents that show Facebook gave police a teenagerโs private chats about her abortion. Cops then used those chats to seize her phone and computer.โ
โ โ75-year-old arrested in connection with teenโs death 40 years ago, CA officials say,โ by the Sacramento Beeโs Daniella Segura.
โ โDid Sacramento illegally raise city stormwater fee? Lawsuit might have merit, experts say,โ by the Sacramento Beeโs Amelia Davidson.
โ โMercedes driver involved in 13 prior wrecks before Windsor Hills crash that killed 5, D.A. says,โ by the Los Angeles Timesโ Richard Winton, Nathan Solis and Noah Goldberg.
HORSES IN THE RACE? โ โFair cancels Thursdayโs racing, citing lack of horses,โ by the Press Democratโs Phil Barber.
โ Eric Sauer has taken over as CEO of the California Trucking Association. He was formerly senior vice president of government affairs.
Clarissa Rojas of Rep. Antonio Cรกrdenasโ (D-Calif.) office โฆ Amazonโs Cameron Onumah โฆ Robert N. Feldman โฆ Steven Mitchell Glazer โฆ Buffy Wicks
CALIFORNIA POLICY IS ALWAYS CHANGING: Know your next move. From Sacramento to Silicon Valley, POLITICO California Pro provides policy professionals with the in-depth reporting and tools they need to get ahead of policy trends and political developments shaping the Golden State. To learn more about the exclusive insight and analysis this subscriber-only service offers, click here.
Want to make an impact? POLITICO California has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Golden State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause youโre promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness amongst this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: [emailย protected]


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๐ซ๐ฎ๐ฎ ๐ฅ๐๐ฃ๐ข๐ฅ๐ง! ๐๐ฃ. ๐ฎ๐ด๐ญ๐ฏ๐ – ๐๐ก๐ข๐ง๐๐๐ฅ ๐ฃ๐๐๐๐ ๐ง๐ข ๐ง๐๐ ๐ฃ๐จ๐ญ๐ญ๐๐ ๐๐ข๐ ๐๐ก๐, ๐ง๐๐๐ฆ ๐ช๐๐๐ ๐ฆ๐๐จ๐ง๐๐ข๐ช๐ก ๐ง๐๐ [๐๐ฆ]
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New York1 month ago
๐ด Koudyรจ | EN DIRECT | 5 JUILLET 2022 – 3H
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Military Corruption1 month ago
เฆจเฆพเฆฐเฆเงเฆฒ เฆซเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจเง เฆเงเฆฒเงเฆเงเฆเฆพเฆฐเฆฟ | Hasir Video | Bangla Cartoon | Pass Entertainment
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Civil Rights Violations1 month ago
๐ดLIVESTREAM: TAROT READINGS BY JANINE & JeanClaude@BeyondMystic
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Civil Rights Violations3 weeks ago
RAW CHASE VIDEO: Camaro vs Police After Game Stop Robbery in Houston