Witness the breathtaking reality of America's most violent gangsters and actual intervies of real gangmembers and real gangbangers.
Gang fighting
Drug Dealing
Death & Violence
Casualties
Tragedies
Police Aftermath
Every year thousands of people are killed or seriously injured due to gang related incidents. We have got to find a way to live in peace.
Who benefits from this atrocity? Islam? Israel? Or is it those who wish to establish a NEW WORLD ORDER on the smoldering ashes of American Sovereignty?
There's been a greater assault on our Bill of Rights in the past 90 days than in the past 200 years. Who'll call for a police state? Who'll call for martial law? Who'll call for national ID cards to give us "security?" It won't be Bin Laden. Are we watching the Naziazation of our true nation?
In this 86 - minute volcanic video, former FBI chief agent Ted Gunderson blows the lid off the "FBLies" involvement in the 1993 Trade Center bombing. THEY SET IT UP! Illuminati historian Jordan Maxwell, publisher Clayton Douglas at The Free American, Gunderson and Anthony J. Hilder are calling the attack at the U.S. an "inside job." America has been suckered one more time.
This video will shake and shock you into a reality check.
You're right! We are witnessing the Naziazation of this Nation.
More Rights & Freedoms have been lost in the last 120 days through Executive Orders & our cowardly Congress than were lost in the past 200 years.
Illuminzai 9-11 tells it all in clear, precise terms.
This is the beginning of World War III. Make no mistake about it."
A four part series condensed onto a double dvd set
I Remember Harlem: The Early Years (1980) - The first of four programs traces the history of African Americans and other ethnic groups arriving and surviving over three centuries in Harlem.
I Remember Harlem: The Depression Years (1980) - The second program in the series that traces the early history of Harlem over three centuries covers the depression years.
I Remember Harlem: Toward Freedom (1980) - The third program in the series that traces the early history of Harlem over three centuries, covers the 1940s to 1965.
I Remember Harlem: Toward a New Day (1980) - The last program in the series that traces the rise, decline and regeneration of Harlem over three centuries.
He was torn between two worlds: the love of the game & the love of the streets.
Karlton Hines was one of the most fierce basketball players in the streets ofNew York City, from age 12 he would go on to dominate the game.
His talent would eventually catch the eyes of every top Division 1 college in the nation. Coaches would flock from suburban areas into the inner-city projects to recruit him. But inevitably, scouts would face a big disappointment, Karlton preferred to live the street life.
At the age of 18, Karlton went on to make a name for himself in the New York City drug trade. Ultimately he would face the harsh reality of the streets, by being gunned down.
You've heard rappers like 50 Cent talk about them in numerous songs. They were on the cover of one of the best-
selling F.E.D.S. Magazines. You heard bits and peices of the real life drama on the street DVD Hood Vision. Now you get the full story of legendary drug kingpins Pretty Tony, Lance, and Todd Feurtado
aka. The King of Kings.
Up until 1995, when the government brought the to justice
the Feurtado brothers ran a criminal enterprise which spread across 23
states trafficing marijuana, heroin & cocaine and grossing up to $15 million
a week. They influenced and/or launched the criminal careers of some of the countries most notorious drug kingpins including: Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff, Lorenzo "Fat Cat" Nichols, Pappy Mason, George Wallace, Tommy Mickens, Gerald "Prince" Miller, and others.
With commentary from A-List celebrities like Russell Simmons, Jay-Z, Irv Gotti,
Fat Joe, and a host of others, the picture is painted perfectly and ranked up there
with the stories of some of your favorite fiction and non-fiction underworld figures.
The true king of cocaine. At his peak he sold 2,000 keys a week, reaped gross profits of $70 million a month, and ran an operation with over 150 soldiers to support him. In his life champagne flowed like water, trips to Vegas, New York, and Los Angeles were the norm, and $150,000 shopping sprees were nothing.
At the height of Washington, D.C.’s brutal crack epidemic in 1987, there was a 22 year old man responsible for distributing 90% percent of Columbian Cocaine onto the city’s streets.
This man is Rayful Edmond III.
In the media’s eyes he was guilty until proven innocent, but in the streets eyes he was a hero who made it to the top.
This is his story.
A story of Power, Money, Murder, Betrayal and the rise and fall of the Edmond’s Empire.
Rayful Edmond III probably is the most notorious drug dealer in Washington, D.C. history. In the early 90's when he was arrested for running a criminal enterprise the trial riveted the area. From news accounts he started drug dealing at an early age - in fact his entire family has a history of organized criminal activity dating back to the fifties. I read a newspaper account that claimed he was bagging cocaine for his father at the tender age of 3.
This docudrama uses news clips, interviews with Edmond associates and undercover cops, televised interviews with Edmund himself, and reenactments to tell Edmond's life story. For the most part it is okay but the choice of music is sometimes questionable and the arrest scene staged for this film was a bit silly and overblown.
This docudrama appears to be told from the point of view of Rayful Edmond. It tries to make Edmond out really not to be that bad of a guy. His associates describe him as a peaceful, fun loving guy throwing money around to all his friends and neighbors. For example, he settled a violent gang war because it was hurting both his business and the rival gang's. And all those witnesses schedule to appear at this trial that got murdered? That was somebody else not Edmond! Give me a break! This guy had connections to the Columbian drug lords and was crafty enough to broker drug deals from jail. I find it incredulous to claim he didn't have anything to do with witnesses getting knocked off or that he wasn't part of all the violence that gripped DC because of drugs in the late `80s and early `90s (and still does today).