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IS THIS JMD?- JMG CASH COLLECTIONS COURT

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Title: nasty life mi need mi moneyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy

Message Body:
met please and kindly me a ask u fi tell samantha lawernce fi pay mi back mi hard working 59grand weh she have fi mi cause she a f+++ so much man and still cannot pay me my money oooo.please met please thanks.

PUT HAR UP DEN PLACE OF SAFETY

Message Body:
dont live no where

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BAD PPL

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SEND DI VIDEO WID DI MAN DEM COME

This Bitch needs to be put on blast cause she a walk and a tek man left to right and she a f++ gyal too and inna dance a hype wid har man breadhead weh a pimp har out a mek she f++ and suck man fi money and tek the money give him a long time she fi get air out mi is weh day ya somebody forward this to mi seh shi a f+++ a nigga a brooklyn and a video a go round see some clip ya

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IDLE

Wendy’s Jealous ex friends

Met its so funny, as soon ass they see Wendy name they get palpitations, they want to hang wit her, but envy her. Her are some more pic to with her friend to make all you green. Look how classy Wendy look in this green dress, poor chunky old foot tried green to. She wear the wrong clothes for her body shape.
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MI NEEDAH

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‘Mi Nuh Chat English’ – Jamaican Roots Strong In Costa Rican Town
Published: Thursday | March 28, 2013 2 Comments
Audley Boyd, Assistant Editor – Sports

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica:

SPANISH is the native language here in Costa Rica. But if you speak the good, raw, born Jamaican Patois, you will find that you are not out of place here – even among those who don’t speak English.

As a matter of fact, there are people in Costa Rica who talk Jamaican Patois better than Jamaicans. And they have never been to the country.

They number far less than the majority of the country’s nearly 4.6 million inhabitants, but many are located in a town called Limon, with Jamaican descendants spanning at least three generations.

“That is our town,” José Laird Johnson declared.

The 47-year-old Johnson has lived all his life in Costa Rica, but you could never tell, given his strong Jamaican accent and knowledge of the Caribbean country. He says he has been there once, and attended Reggae Sumfest at Jam World in Portmore, St Catherine.

Johnson tells much about Jamaica, but the knowledge wasn’t garnered on his visit when he went in search of relatives. He did not find them.

“Our foreparents came over from the railway and banana plantation days and remained here,” he explains of the emigration. “We hold on to our Jamaican roots and keep di strong customs and tradition.

EARLY INTRODUCTION

“So in Limon, our children grow up learning to talk Patois,” he said. “You see, my first name is Spanish because it is a Spanish country, but mi other names in Jamaican.”

Limon is some ways off the Costa Rican capital, nearly two hours in the direction towards Panama, which borders the nation to the north.

To its south is Nicaragua, closer to where Joan Campbell-Daly lives. She, too, had lived in Limon, and was actually returning home from Limon, where she had spent the weekend with relatives.

“Nowadays, mi go there once every month because mi have work and school and haffi travel by bus. It far,” said Campbell-Daly.

Unlike Johnson, Campbell-Daly was born in Costa Rica, but moved with her parents to live in Jamaica until she was five years before returning to the Central American country. Most of the Patois she speaks was learnt growing up in Limon.

We saw a group of youngsters walking the streets of San José and stopped them to ask for directions.

“Mi nuh chat English,” responded one with a quizzical expression on his face, as everybody ‘buss out a laugh’.

In Costa Rica, even the natives without Jamaican ancestry make you feel very much at home by talking the raw, born Jamaican Patois.

ON THIS NOTE……….WHA REALLY A GWAAN..IS THIS ABOUT APPEASING THE IMF?

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Lottery Scam Bill passed – Bunting promises early prosecutions
Wednesday, March 27, 2013

THE Anti-Lottery Scam Bill finally completed the parliamentary circuit in the House of Representatives yesterday and immediately Peter Bunting promised early prosecution of scammers who have been destroying people’s lives and damaging Jamaica’s name internationally.
“That certainly is our intention,” Bunting, the national security minister, told Opposition spokesman on national security Delroy Chuck, who had suggested that lottery scammers seemed to be sneering at the Bill and the possibility of being extradited to the United States for trial and that it would need prosecutions to win public support.
(L-R) BUNTING… once we receive an extradition request, once it is compliant and lawful, it will be dealt with. CHUCK… Opposition is hoping that the Act will be implemented as soon as possible
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“That’s why we are moving this Bill through all its stages urgently, so that it will come into law and the police will have this tool,” the minister said as he closed the debate on the bill, officially titled the law reform (Fraudulent Transactions) Act 2013, after the House approved 14 amendments made by the Senate last week Thursday.
The Bill will now go to the governor general to be signed, after which it will be gazetted, then become law.
Yesterday, Chuck said that the Opposition is hoping that the Act will be implemented as soon as possible, as the matter is of national importance and has been giving Jamaica a very bad image abroad.
“Until we have prosecutions of these scammers, we are going to have this destructive operation continuing,” Chuck said.
“Once we receive an extradition request, once it is compliant and lawful, it will be dealt with as provided for in our extradition act and the various treaties that cover that,” Bunting said.
Chuck also thanked the Senate for “fine-tuning” the Bill and coming up with 14 amendments, most of which sought to protect legitimate operators and operations who might have become victims of the wider provisions of the original act.
Bunting said that while some of the amendments might seem like semantics, in talking about illicit gain there was the need to avoid any question of legitimate businesses which end up benefiting from some “small fraction” of the profits from the lottery scam being treated as scammers.
He said that he had met with the Justice Minister Senator Mark Golding, Leader of Opposition Business in the Senate Senator Arthur Williams, and the drafters of the Bill from the Office of the Chief Parliamentary Counsel to discuss the issues raised by the Senate.
“We went over this for a long time, and I was satisfied, not being a lawyer myself, that the changes adequately addressed the concerns,” he said. He also noted that both sides of the Senate had agreed on the amendments.
Concerns about the legality of aspects of the Act, the key legislative tool in the fight against the lottery scam, led the Senate to delay passage of the Bill by a week, and eventually make 14 amendments, including provisions regarding being contaminated by the proceeds of the scam.

Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Lottery-Scam-Bill-passed_13957898#ixzz2Oo6ZxntX

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