suave
04-09-2008, 05:19 PM
PLZ IF ANY ONE OF U HASNT READ OR WATCHED THE RAYFUL EDMONDS DOCUMENTRY GO DO IT.
GOTO YOUTUBE.COM
TYPE IN RAYFUL EDMONDS
AND WATCH THE FIRST DOCUMENTRY
THEN THE SECOND ONE.
WHILE YOUR AT IT READ UP ABOUT
ALPO.... IF YOU HAVE EVER WATCHED "PAID IN FULL" ALPO WAS PLAYED BY CAMRON.
suave
04-09-2008, 05:39 PM
oh shit! swiss my homie long time no see bro? i been stackin nad mackin really, jus heard about dg last year and i see all the old faces
hows everything?
emceeswiss
04-09-2008, 06:35 PM
word up. suave, hit me on aim :)
clickclack
04-09-2008, 06:37 PM
watch gangland on youtube. pretty pimp ass documentaries
PLZ IF ANY ONE OF U HASNT READ OR WATCHED THE RAYFUL EDMONDS DOCUMENTRY GO DO IT.
GOTO YOUTUBE.COM
TYPE IN RAYFUL EDMONDS
AND WATCH THE FIRST DOCUMENTRY
THEN THE SECOND ONE.
WHILE YOUR AT IT READ UP ABOUT
ALPO.... IF YOU HAVE EVER WATCHED "PAID IN FULL" ALPO WAS PLAYED BY CAMRON.
guy everyone acted like they new this nigga, it all went down like 15 mins from me
Edmond was alleged to have moved 2000 kilos of cocaine per week in the Washington, D.C. area making $70 million dollars monthly. (Ironically, while in jail later on his cocaine distribution peaked at a mark of roughly 6000 kilos a week). Edmond controlled as much as 70% of the D.C. drug trade in the late 1980s. He was known to have spent some $457,619 in an exclusive Georgetown store (Linea Pitti, specializing in Italian men's clothing) owned by Charles Wynn who was later convicted on 34 counts of money laundering.
Edmond is a rabid fan of the Georgetown Hoyas mens basketball team. He loved the image of the Hoyas as "Black America's Team," the first team of the hip-hop inner-city youth, always cast as the dark, intimidating villain. Edmond revered the tenacity, snarl and swagger the Hoyas played with, so much that when his soldiers were gunned down, they were always buried in Georgetown jerseys [1].
At the height of his empire, Edmond became very friendly with several Hoya players. When Georgetown University basketball coach (and D.C. native) John Thompson received word of what was happening, he sent word through his sources to have Edmond meet him at his office at McDonough Gymnasium. When Edmond arrived, Thompson was initially cordial, and informed Edmond that he needed to cease all contacts with his players post haste, specifically Alonzo Mourning, whom had befriended Edmond[2]. When Edmond tried to tell him not to worry, that Mourning was not involved in anything illegal, the 6'10" Thompson stood up and put his finger in Edmond's face. A profanity-laced tirade ensued, in which Thompson told Edmond not to (expletive) with him, and that he was not going to repeat himself: stay the (expletive) away from his players, or Edmond would suffer serious consequences[3]. By all accounts, Edmond never associated with another Hoya player on a personal level . It is believed that Thompson is the only person to stand up to Edmond without consequence (see below).
Edmond was arrested in 1989 at the age of 24. His arrest and subsequent trial were widely covered by local and national media. Judicial officials, fearful of reprisals from members of Edmond's gang, imposed unprecedented security during the trial. Jurors' identities were kept secret before, during, and after trial, and their seating area was enclosed in bulletproof glass. Edmond was jailed at the maximum security facility at Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia and flown to the Federal Court House in Washington, D.C. by helicopter each day for his trial. Authorities took this unusual step due to heightened fears of an armed escape attempt. This gang was believed to have committed over 40 murders including the attempted murder of a local pastor, the Reverend Mr. Bynum, who was shot 12 times during an anti-drug march in his Orleans Place neighborhood.
Edmond was eventually sentenced to life in prison. His mother, Constance "Bootsie" Perry, was sentenced to 14 years in prison for participating in his criminal enterprise. Several of his sisters and cousins also received sentences.
Rayful continued to deal after being incarcerated in Lewisburgh,PA federal prison. He hooked up with Dixon Dario and Osvaldo “Chicky” Trujillo-Blanco (son of Griselda "Godmother" Trujillo Blanco) who shared the same cell block with him. Rayful was setting up deals between D.C. area traffickers and his Colombian connect (Dario and Blanco)while incarcerated.(2) In 1996, Edmond and another drug dealer from Atlanta, named Lowe, were convicted after conducting drug business from a federal prison phone. Edmond received an additional 30-year sentence. Edmond's case is one of the most notorious abuses of such phone privileges,[4] and an embarrassment for the Bureau of Prisons. In an interview with the Bureau of Prisons, Edmond said he had spent several hours every day on the telephone, occasionally using two lines simultaneously to conduct his drug business.
Following this conviction, Edmond became a government informant in order to secure his mother's release from prison and a reduced sentence. He is no longer incarcerated, and Edmond is now part of the United States Federal Witness Protection Program.
He was known to have spent some $457,619 in an exclusive Georgetown store (Linea Pitti, specializing in Italian men's clothing) owned by Charles Wynn who was later convicted on 34 counts of money laundering.
and wynn
suave
04-10-2008, 09:28 AM
this nurga was a gangsta, none of htese dgs even knoww the deally
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