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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: tt120]
#906436
02/09/17 04:31 PM
02/09/17 04:31 PM
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getthesenets
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wonder if he'll remain low if he is out or if he'll hit the rap circuit for interviews, party appearances, etc...
i honestly cant see any other way for him to eat unless he does that. a big part of the rap community idolizes this guy, snitch or not. i can see him popping up on IG with a ton of followers in the next year lol
rumor is dame dash threw him a welcome home party but its prob bullshit
he doesnt seem like a sideline type of guy one bit, i bet he'll be doing interviews, hosting mixtapes, maybe even a fashion line down the road. they shoulda given the guy the needle. fuckin snake When I read this before, I disagreed with the bold part, but I was completely WRONG. Somebody thought it was a good idea for him to pose in photo with his son..and post it on social media. I only posted it because it's already viral. The children of the men he sent away are grown men now, and since this generation of kids put their entire lives on social media....the wolves know who Alpo's son is, and everything about him.
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: getthesenets]
#906481
02/10/17 09:00 AM
02/10/17 09:00 AM
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Blackjack2121
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wonder if he'll remain low if he is out or if he'll hit the rap circuit for interviews, party appearances, etc...
i honestly cant see any other way for him to eat unless he does that. a big part of the rap community idolizes this guy, snitch or not. i can see him popping up on IG with a ton of followers in the next year lol
rumor is dame dash threw him a welcome home party but its prob bullshit
he doesnt seem like a sideline type of guy one bit, i bet he'll be doing interviews, hosting mixtapes, maybe even a fashion line down the road. they shoulda given the guy the needle. fuckin snake When I read this before, I disagreed with the bold part, but I was completely WRONG. Somebody thought it was a good idea for him to pose in photo with his son..and post it on social media. I only posted it because it's already viral. The children of the men he sent away are grown men now, and since this generation of kids put their entire lives on social media....the wolves know who Alpo's son is, and everything about him. Good. He deserves everything he gets over killing Rich over greed and indirectly causing his sons death. Where is the photo the link is broken?
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: Blackjack2121]
#906483
02/10/17 10:37 AM
02/10/17 10:37 AM
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Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,022 Massachusetts
southend
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wonder if he'll remain low if he is out or if he'll hit the rap circuit for interviews, party appearances, etc...
i honestly cant see any other way for him to eat unless he does that. a big part of the rap community idolizes this guy, snitch or not. i can see him popping up on IG with a ton of followers in the next year lol
rumor is dame dash threw him a welcome home party but its prob bullshit
he doesnt seem like a sideline type of guy one bit, i bet he'll be doing interviews, hosting mixtapes, maybe even a fashion line down the road. they shoulda given the guy the needle. fuckin snake When I read this before, I disagreed with the bold part, but I was completely WRONG. Somebody thought it was a good idea for him to pose in photo with his son..and post it on social media. I only posted it because it's already viral. The children of the men he sent away are grown men now, and since this generation of kids put their entire lives on social media....the wolves know who Alpo's son is, and everything about him. Good. He deserves everything he gets over killing Rich over greed and indirectly causing his sons death. Where is the photo the link is broken? If you have Instagram go to @kollegekidd 's feed.
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: Blackjack2121]
#906496
02/10/17 01:06 PM
02/10/17 01:06 PM
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Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 2,989
getthesenets
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Good. He deserves everything he gets over killing Rich over greed and indirectly causing his sons death.
I listened to the direct interview they did with Alpo years ago where he confessed to everything. I've listened to a few Azie interviews and I believe that Richard was in fact taking advantage of Alpo in terms of what he was charging him for the coke. Whether or not that warrants Po killing him over that is for others to decide, but it was a legitimate gripe. In the crack era, people got shot for stepping on somebody's shoe and not saying sorry......so somebody getting over on you for tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars? Rich's uncle was involved in the kidnapping of Donnell Porter, so I don't think Preacher's crew had any intention of releasing him alive. Gonna look up the article about Donnell's death to see if they listed forensic evidence after they found the body. The way the story is told, the boy's body was dumped in same area they found Rich's body a few weeks later. Kidnappers knew they wouldn't get ransom anymore, so they tried to pin the death of Donnell on whoever killed Rich.
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: getthesenets]
#906678
02/13/17 04:59 PM
02/13/17 04:59 PM
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Joined: Apr 2014
Posts: 1,222
Blackjack2121
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Good. He deserves everything he gets over killing Rich over greed and indirectly causing his sons death.
I listened to the direct interview they did with Alpo years ago where he confessed to everything. I've listened to a few Azie interviews and I believe that Richard was in fact taking advantage of Alpo in terms of what he was charging him for the coke. Whether or not that warrants Po killing him over that is for others to decide, but it was a legitimate gripe. In the crack era, people got shot for stepping on somebody's shoe and not saying sorry......so somebody getting over on you for tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars? Rich's uncle was involved in the kidnapping of Donnell Porter, so I don't think Preacher's crew had any intention of releasing him alive. Gonna look up the article about Donnell's death to see if they listed forensic evidence after they found the body. The way the story is told, the boy's body was dumped in same area they found Rich's body a few weeks later. Kidnappers knew they wouldn't get ransom anymore, so they tried to pin the death of Donnell on whoever killed Rich. So what he was charging him what he wanted...it was his connect! He didnt force him to buy, if he didnt like it or could get it cheaper elsewhere, thats what he should have done.
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: SinatraClub]
#906683
02/13/17 07:22 PM
02/13/17 07:22 PM
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Joined: Jul 2010
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getthesenets
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Fellas,
The Alpo interview that I alluded to is worth the listen.Nobody tells a story quite like NY jail dudes..and Po is great in the interview. SPOILERS if you want to listen to it later.
The dispute with Rich went this way, according to 'Po. Rich and Alpo had a NY connect who supplies them both. Rich is in Harlem,Po in DC...so the connect deals with Rich and Po drives up to get his share of the bricks from Rich. Pays Rich a small commission for putting the money up to get large volume discount from the connect. Rich also has another connect, Fritz.
Rich tells Po that their shared connect hit a dry spell, but his connect Fritz has steady coke.Po comes up a few times and pays the rate that Rich says that Fritz is charging.
Po comes to NY and happens to bump into the connect, and asks him when he's gonna start supplying him again. NY connect says that he's been giving Rich coke steadily for both of them. Po calls BS....and asks the connect to describe the packaging of the latest bricks of coke.Connect describes exactly the packaging of the last batch of coke that Po got from Rich.
Po realizes that Rich had been lying to him for a while, and that rather than charging him the low price that the NY connect agreed to sell bricks to them, he was selling him those same bricks, but telling him that they were from Fritz and he had to pass along the difference in price to Po and charge him much more.
Po's quote is "Rich was lying to me about something he had no reason to lie to me about. And if this little bit of money could come between a friendship, no telling what he'd sell me out for"
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: getthesenets]
#906702
02/14/17 08:34 AM
02/14/17 08:34 AM
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Joined: Apr 2014
Posts: 1,222
Blackjack2121
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Fellas,
The Alpo interview that I alluded to is worth the listen.Nobody tells a story quite like NY jail dudes..and Po is great in the interview. SPOILERS if you want to listen to it later.
The dispute with Rich went this way, according to 'Po. Rich and Alpo had a NY connect who supplies them both. Rich is in Harlem,Po in DC...so the connect deals with Rich and Po drives up to get his share of the bricks from Rich. Pays Rich a small commission for putting the money up to get large volume discount from the connect. Rich also has another connect, Fritz.
Rich tells Po that their shared connect hit a dry spell, but his connect Fritz has steady coke.Po comes up a few times and pays the rate that Rich says that Fritz is charging.
Po comes to NY and happens to bump into the connect, and asks him when he's gonna start supplying him again. NY connect says that he's been giving Rich coke steadily for both of them. Po calls BS....and asks the connect to describe the packaging of the latest bricks of coke.Connect describes exactly the packaging of the last batch of coke that Po got from Rich.
Po realizes that Rich had been lying to him for a while, and that rather than charging him the low price that the NY connect agreed to sell bricks to them, he was selling him those same bricks, but telling him that they were from Fritz and he had to pass along the difference in price to Po and charge him much more.
Po's quote is "Rich was lying to me about something he had no reason to lie to me about. And if this little bit of money could come between a friendship, no telling what he'd sell me out for" Well, this makes more sense...IF TRUE. This is coming from a sociopath, so I take it with a grain of salt. Did Azie back up the story?
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: Blackjack2121]
#906708
02/14/17 11:53 AM
02/14/17 11:53 AM
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Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 2,989
getthesenets
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Did Azie back up the story? In the America's Most Evil episode.. SPOILER When they have the segment about Po's stated reasons for killing Rich...they show Azie's reaction and his exact words to the allegations are "Well, Rich ain't in business working for free"
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: getthesenets]
#918110
08/07/17 11:32 AM
08/07/17 11:32 AM
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Joined: Jul 2010
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getthesenets
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just read an article that Seth Ferranti did for the Huff Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/what...4b09e26b6d768fd What Don Diva Magazine Means To The Incarcerated 07/16/2017 03:47 pm ET | Updated Jul 18, 2017
Known and respected in the streets, prisons, and hip-hop circles worldwide- Don Diva, which bills itself “the original street bible,” is known for the integrity it exercises in telling the stories of the notorious drug lords and street legends that populate street lore.
Unlike other street magazines, which take a more exploitive angle like the tabloids, Don Diva’s reputation in the American criminal justice system is unblemished. Respected by both career prison gangsters and those using their time to reform and rehabilitate themselves. Don Diva is about providing the information that the mainstream media doesn’t, information that those in prison and in the streets need. And due to the magazine’s relationships with the men that have been lionized in hip-hop’s lyrical lore as stars of the drug game Don Diva get’s the stories straight from the source, not going the New York Times-sanitized route.
I’ve written a bunch of cover stories for the magazine including the Supreme Team, Boobie Boys, and Cash Money Brothers features. While in prison I used to write under Soul Man because the prison authorities would throw me in the hole for writing articles and even transfer me to higher security level prisons. This persecution strengthened my skill as I kept writing, publishing 8 books on gangsters and prison life and also founding Gorilla Convict from the cell block. Telling tales that would have otherwise never been heard. Straight from the voices of convicts.
People out here in the real world don’t really know what a “street magazine” like Don Diva means to those incarcerated. Don Diva isn’t the only magazine in the genre, with F.E.D.S., As Is, and Street Elements having been in the game at one time or another, but none of them consistently publishes like Don Diva, which is over 60 issues strong and has been publishing since 1999, while founder Kevin Chiles was still serving time for a drug conspiracy charge. To find out what Don Diva means to the incarcerated I reached back inside to some of my former cellmates and some of the street legends I’ve written about for the magazine.
“It means two things,” Plex, who’s doing life at USP Coleman for his convictions on the Boobie Boy case out of Miami, tells me. “He probably ain’t never going home, and it means he’s a stand up dude that was about his business. Its like an honor.” And Plex should know, I wrote and interviewed him about his case for issue 41, which profiled the street kings of Dade County. But like Plex inferred, street fame usually means life in prison or death. And that’s the cautionary tale or underlying theme that Don Diva stresses. Despite the glorification of the magazine among convicted criminals.
“If someone has a story featured in Don Diva or F.E.D.S., you already know that they’re about something.” Judge, serving 18 years at USP Big Sandy, tells me. “But most of the time, you already know that when they walk in. Dudes will use it as a bragging tool though. Like, ‘My case was in Don Diva.’ They’ll pretty much be rock stars when the magazine comes out. Dudes will try to holler at them about their connects and what they were doing. More so on trying to get put down, then really giving a fuck.”
Motives aside, the magazine is cherished in prison systems nationwide. When I would get copies in, which I did regularly, guys would have dibs on checking the magazine out twenty men deep. Eventually after I let my main dudes see it I’d give it away to someone just so dudes couldn’t keep asking me for it. They would sweat me to death to check out a Don Diva magazine. But I was the same way if I didn’t get my copy in.
“Don Diva is like the Wall Street Journal of gangsta lore.” Titi, whose doing 20 years for a drug conspiracy, tells me. “And being that they don’t let them in the pens, it’s like reading a rare or lost book of the bible when someone manages to get one in. Don Diva’s status among dudes in here is impeccable.” And since prisoners love it, the magazine is detested by prison administrators and mail room officials who’ve been rejecting the magazine and not allowing it into their prisons since its inception. Due in part to the perception that the magazine is detrimental to the security, good order, or discipline of the institution and/or that it facilitates criminal activity.
“We do have a problem getting them in if the cover is on them.” Rob, doing a life sentence for drugs at FCI Terre Haute, tells me. “The mail room doesn’t seem to have a problem with them when the covers are changed or torn off. Being in these magazine is like a badge of honor in here. If the person is a rat, it would be detrimental to them. The mailroom is super on point about letting anything in here that will glamorize anything, or make motherfuckers feel good or informed.”
The federal Bureau of Prisons and other prison systems make such a big deal about rejecting Don Diva magazine yet the same types of articles, taken verbatim from court records or a prosecutor’s press release, come into prison all the time via The New York Times or The Washington Post or any other major publication. Plus you can read about these big cases and who the snitches are if they are published in the law books. Every prison has a law library. Talk about blatant censorship.
Despite all this the BOP can’t legally ban a magazine and copies of Don Diva regularly make it inside. Some sensible wardens allow the magazine on their compound and some mailroom staff just doesn’t care or feel the reading of such material causes problems. To the men behind the fences Don Diva is considered the truth, everything else is fake news.
“Being featured in Don Diva magazine or F.E.D.S. was a way that guys got exposure and were able to deliver a message to the communities they came from.” The infamous stick-up kid, King Tut, doing a life sentence for the unjust three strikes law, tells me. “It was epic to be in a position that enabled you to surrender your truth to the world without having to worry about words being changed or distortions. They would allow the world to receive you just the way you delivered your message.
“The magazines also enabled you to enhance your value or attract people who could be of benefit to you. I’m genuinely grateful for those outlets, because there are so many voices that would have never been heard and faces we would have never seen if it wasn’t for those magazines being direct and from the grassroots.”
Thats how I felt when I was inside writing and doing these stories. It was exclusive, it was on the cutting edge, and even though I was in prison already I still risked getting locked up in the hole for writing about other prisoners. It wasn’t against the rules to do so, I had a right to write, but depending on the subject matter, it was highly frowned upon. I had many talks with prison administrators about my writing. I’m sure they were happy when I left the system finally, after completing my sentence. And being out in the world I know that people have no idea how much these street mag’s mean to those incarcerated due to the drug war.
“It is extremely big to have your story featured in Don Diva or F.E.D.S.,” Shocker, who is doing 405 months for being in Pappy Mason’s Bebo crew, tells me.”You know most of these cats is jock riders, real live groupies, and wanna-be gangsters talking about living that thug life. Many are called, but only a few are chosen. Don Diva’s reputation is solid, as good as gold in here. They don’t call it the street bible for nothing.” I wrote about Shocker and his time in the streets under Fat Cat and Pappy Mason in F.E.D.S.
Guys used to come up to me on the yard and try to convince me that I needed to write about them. They would bring newspaper clippings from their hometown newspaper. I would just be honest with them- that’s the best course in prison, don’t leave anything open- and tell them that unless their case had a minimum of 50 articles in the papers, then it wasn’t big enough for me to write about. I was writing about gangs like MS-13 and the Green Dragons and gangsters like Kenneth “Supreme” McGriff from the Supreme Team, Wayne Perry, and Rayful Edmond, guys who had upwards of 500 or more articles written about their drug dealing and criminal exploits. I probably hurt a lot of dudes ego’s, but I only wrote about the creme of the crop of crack era gangsters.
To me this 1980s and 90s gangsta shit was like the Wild, Wild West, but set in the age of hip-hop. I was the chronicler, weaving the Billy the Kid-like tales, but to Don Diva it was as important to educate as it was to entertain. Priding itself on telling the stories that the mainstream media couldn’t get, Don Diva has found its niche among people who have time to read a magazine- hip-hop industry insiders and power brokers, drug lords and prisoners, and rappers, wanna-be’s, and true crime aficionados. But with the website they have expanded their audience and continue to do so by telling more diverse, yet still impactful stories of the criminal justice system and who it targets.
“Two particular individuals we featured stood out for us,” Don Diva founder, Kevin Chiles, tells me. “One being the former mayor of Detroit Kwame Kilpatrick and the other Paul Bergin a once prominent federal prosecutor and acclaimed criminal defense lawyer whom both unfortunately found themselves behind bars. They both realized how influential Don Diva magazine was in the jails as well as in their communities and asked us to feature theirs plights in our magazine.”
Since it’s inception Don Diva has been about something bigger. They went global and 24/7 with their website launch a few years ago. For a quarterly magazine that was a big gamble and a gamble that has paid off with tons of traffic and continued interest in the site and back issues of the magazine. Writing for Don Diva while I served my time was an honor for me also. When I stepped on any compound on the East Coast guys on the pound knew who I was due to my affiliation and writing for the magazine. But from the inside I saw the reality of the world in which we live. A world that is chronicled in all it’s unfairness in Don Diva’s pages. Attempting to give the oppressed a voice and those buried in the belly of the beast a forum.
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: getthesenets]
#951062
08/22/18 09:06 PM
08/22/18 09:06 PM
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Posts: 252
kingoflittlenewyork
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Preacher was the real shit uptown , he one of scariest ever . The mafia cop Epploito was the lead officer assigned to the Porter kid kidnapping by Preacher and Apple Did Preacher snitch? His son did. The Alpo Story is on YouTube, so is game over. Never forget I had just started making moves when I first saw Paid In Full. It's funny now but just for that night while I laid in bed I thought I was dead already. Goofy shit. Didnt stop nothin tho. Taught me wholesale on the streets though, get it and get it gone.
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Re: Alpo allegedly released from prison
[Re: getthesenets]
#951064
08/22/18 09:11 PM
08/22/18 09:11 PM
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Joined: Nov 2014
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kingoflittlenewyork
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Maybe because he was a shady/greedy guy and wanted rich out of the picture to either steal his connect for himself(if it wasnt shared) and gain access to his territory or customer base in addition to his other bases. (Greed)
Perfectly logical as well imo. If you follow the chain of events, your theories don't really add up. If you listen to Alpo interview, it all can down to Rich adding a surcharge to coke front to him and Alpo by Alpos connect. When the guy fronted Rich the coke(with Nixon's head stamped on it) it was for Rich and Alpo. Instead of giving it to Alpo for what he got it for he added $3000 a key. Listen to the interview, it explains every murder.
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