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ALL A DI PARENTS DEM N WANNA BE PARENTS COME TALK WHA UNNO WUDDA REALLY DO

Shantayah Lewis, 17, sat in her room at Kings County Hospital Saturday, calmly reflecting on the Friday afternoon attack that left her with dozens of stitches in the left side of her face.

“My face is too beautiful to be fighting,” Shantayah told the Daily News. “Fighting is not the key. Violence is not the way.” Shantayah was walking with her 15-year-old cousin, Shakeena Grant, on Franklin Ave. near Lincoln Place in Crown Heights about 3:30 p.m. They were being tailed by a girl who is dating the ex-boyfriend of Shakeena’s sister, Shamaula. “She kept following us,” the injured teen said. “She wanted to fight
After a brief scuffle, the 17-year-old girl who had been following the cousins vowed to return. About 5 p.m. the girl came back with her boyfriend, the center of the beef. She then whipped out what witnesses said was a knife and started slashing. “She swung and started stabbing my face,” Shantayah said. “I didn’t know what to do.”
Shakeena, who was stabbed, was released from a hospital Saturday. The two girls somehow escaped and ran to the Union St. home of Shantayah’s grandmother, Cheryl Evans. The grandmother called 911 and the two girls were taken to Kings County Hospital. Though the wounded teens believed the boyfriend was holding them down, cops said he actually was trying to break up the attack. Police talked to the man, who said he was trying to help, and surveillance video backs up his claim, sources said.
Shantayah said the whole thing should never have happened. “Basically, [Shakeena] fought for her sister,” she said, referring to Shamaula, who used to date the attacker’s boyfriend. “She should not have done that. We should not have been involved.” The young girl responsible for the attack was still at large last night and no arrests have been made.
That poor girl’s face is permanently scarred for pure BS. We have to send more positive messages to our youth, this is ridiculous!!!

Source: Bossip

From Independence to Garrison-  /From Queen Elizabeth’s palms to Dudus’ arms- 1962-2010

The Badd Exxperience: Vintage Sundays 5-6pm EST

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PPL CHOON IN DI MUSIC WICKED

SIMPLEX…”bounty” REWINEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE REWOUND

BOUNTY SMADDY ASK WHEY DAY WHAT U TUNG STATUS WAS BECAUSE U USE IT MORE PAN DEM DAN HENNYTING ELSE..
PEOPLE IS NOT LIE SAY DI LIKKLE GYAL AND MS IVY CYAA GREE IS CHOO… BUT DAT SED LIKKLE GYAL WHEY LIVE A DI OAKLANDS SHE NAW BEHAVE… MI WAA KNOW IF  SHE NUH TELL PPL SAY BOUNTY DO WHATEVA TO HAR CLOTHES DEM LAST YR… PPL DIS MIX YAH BIGGA DAN WE… PLUS AS MI SAY A NEW B DEH PAN DI BLOCK HAR NAME START WID B…. BOUNTY U BAD NUH BLOODCLOT… on a nedda note… di likkle gyal whey live wid simplex name javana…. di same one whey dem say love hype but it look like she confused bout killa lick dem cause she waa lef n dow know how…ppl unno talk up di taleeeeesssss

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MISSY SMITH N HER CONNECTS

MET MEET MS. SMITH…DIS AH DI GAL WEY SEN FI GARY…INNA DI PIC # MET3 AH DI “FINANCIAL-MARRIED-BACKER” WEY DIS GAL CONVINCE FI SEN FAH DIS WUTLESS BWOY…! IF U LOOK GOOD, U CAAN SEE SAY AH SHE A DI ONE WEY A HOLD DI MIC N A DO DI INTERVIEW! MI NAH GO SEY SHE NAH DO ONE N TWO LIL TINGS BUT A WHOLE HEEP OF PPL INNA DI CITY TRY FI BRING GARY UP HERE N IT NEVA HAPPEN! SO ME WAAN NO IF AH REALLY FUK SHE GO FUK DI OLD MAN FI MEK GARY COME A TORONTO? N ME STILL WAAN NO WAT TALENT DOES GARYY HAV? JMG MI AH ASK UNNO?

*PEOPLE DI PERSON SAY DI ABOVE  BUT IF MISSY CAN GET GARY FI COME PAN TOUR SHE HAVE DI CONNECT LOCK MAN DWLLLLLLLLLLLL GARY WHEY U LINE A WORK AGEN?*
PPL UNNO CHOON HEEN LAYTAH
Garrisons: From Independence to Dudus

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AWTISTE WEH GI DI MOST BUN AND GET D MOST BUN

YES PPL UNO COME TALK D TINGS DEM CAWZ DEM SEH HIM GI DI MOST WHILE HIM GETTING IT HAWT OUT DI OVEN

UNDACOVA SKETTELS OF DANCEHALL SEGMENT 5


NicOLE Duhaney aka Nikki Z used to sleep wid whole heap a rappers both stars and wanna be stars, but somehow it never work inna her favour cuz she still did affi do waitress wuk.
After AJ & FREE leff BET, she did sleep her way inna d BET audition, but she neva get it cawz d gyal weh get FREE spot clearly do d tings dem betta (unno kno, d sawt out) suh from dat Nikki Z hate d gyal, yuh kno how dem groupie yah be, dem nuh hab nuh honour or loyalty, but di minute one a dem fellow groupie stab dem inna dem back is pure malice and vexation.
Shi did inna di US army (di way shi love tek man, only God knows how she an di army work out). She is not a trained journalist, she just happen fi sleep her way to a radio station in Ja (ZIP) after di BET betrayal. bwoy nikki it must hurt fi kno seh yuh put heen all dat work and it never come to fuition. Yuh should really consult Supa Head on how to milk a nigga.
Nikki Z JA list consist of (an me nah exaggarate) BUSY, BOUNTY, BEENIE, KARTEL, MOVADO, RICHIE FEELINGS, ROLEXX, BUGLE, me kno dere is more but me affi guh check me linky who is frenz wid her. di fact dat none a dem nuh wife her is proof dat sinting very wrong cuz unno kno how jamaican man dem love accent. An they dont rate her cawz none a di Alliance member dem nor Movado who she was sleeping wid at di time did guh celebrate her birthday wid har outta sugaman beach. Shi did vex bout dat suh til shi all come pan radio a cuss dem
**********************************************************************************
suh me get it suh me dash it

JUS SOME PICS AND A FEW QUESTIONS

THIS  DI TOPIC WHEY WE A GO CALL OUT DI REGULAR DEM NAME… DI MATE DEM WHEY NEVA WIN DI MAN AND WHY?  AND DI RINGLESS WIFE DEM WHEY NAW GO WALK DUNG DI  ISLE… N WHY… PEOPLE UNNO COME DASH DI TINGS
DI GYAL DEM WHEY A OWN DI MAN N DI MAN A NUH FI DEM
*pics dont have nothing fi do wid di question,,, di fus two is the automic dancers and di second one di girl pan di right is mr high flosser baby mother*

TO DI FLOSSERS AND OVERTALKERS

WASHINGTON – The Feds are on Facebook. And MySpace, LinkedIn and Twitter, too.

U.S. law enforcement agents are following the rest of the Internet world into popular social-networking services, going undercover with false online profiles to communicate with suspects and gather private information, according to an internal Justice Department document that offers a tantalizing glimpse of issues related to privacy and crime-fighting.

Think you know who’s behind that “friend” request? Think again. Your new “friend” just might be the FBI.

The document, obtained in a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, makes clear that U.S. agents are already logging on surreptitiously to exchange messages with suspects, identify a target’s friends or relatives and browse private information such as postings, personal photographs and video clips.

Among other purposes: Investigators can check suspects’ alibis by comparing stories told to police with tweets sent at the same time about their whereabouts. Online photos from a suspicious spending spree — people posing with jewelry, guns or fancy cars — can link suspects or their friends to robberies or burglaries.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based civil liberties group, obtained the Justice Department document when it sued the agency and five others in federal court. The 33-page document underscores the importance of social networking sites to U.S. authorities. The foundation said it would publish the document on its Web site on Tuesday.

With agents going undercover, state and local police coordinate their online activities with the Secret Service, FBI and other federal agencies in a strategy known as “deconfliction” to keep out of each other’s way.

“You could really mess up someone’s investigation because you’re investigating the same person and maybe doing things that are counterproductive to what another agency is doing,” said Detective Frank Dannahey of the Rocky Hill, Conn., Police Department, a veteran of dozens of undercover cases.

A decade ago, agents kept watch over AOL and MSN chat rooms to nab sexual predators. But those text-only chat services are old-school compared with today’s social media, which contain mountains of personal data, photographs, videos and audio clips — a potential treasure trove of evidence for cases of violent crime, financial fraud and much more.

The Justice Department document, part of a presentation given in August by top cybercrime officials, describes the value of Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, LinkedIn and other services to government investigators. It does not describe in detail the boundaries for using them.

“It doesn’t really discuss any mechanisms for accountability or ensuring that government agents use those tools responsibly,” said Marcia Hoffman, a senior attorney with the civil liberties foundation.

The group sued in Washington to force the government to disclose its policies for using social networking sites in investigations, data collection and surveillance.

Covert investigations on social-networking services are legal and governed by internal rules, according to Justice Department officials. But they would not say what those rules are.

The Justice Department document raises a legal question about a social-media bullying case in which U.S. prosecutors charged a Missouri woman with computer fraud for creating a fake MySpace account — effectively the same activity that undercover agents are doing, although for different purposes.

The woman, Lori Drew, helped create an account for a fictitious teen boy on MySpace and sent flirtatious messages to a 13-year-old neighborhood girl in his name. The girl hanged herself in October 2006, in a St. Louis suburb, after she received a message saying the world would be better without her.

A jury in California, where MySpace has its servers, convicted Drew of three misdemeanor counts of accessing computers without authorization because she was accused of violating MySpace’s rules against creating fake accounts. But last year a judge overturned the verdicts, citing the vagueness of the law.

“If agents violate terms of service, is that ‘otherwise illegal activity’?” the document asks. It doesn’t provide an answer.

Facebook’s rules, for example, specify that users “will not provide any false personal information on Facebook, or create an account for anyone other than yourself without permission.” Twitter’s rules prohibit its users from sending deceptive or false information. MySpace requires that information for accounts be “truthful and accurate.”

A former U.S. cybersecurity prosecutor, Marc Zwillinger, said investigators should be able to go undercover in the online world the same way they do in the real world, even if such conduct is barred by a company’s rules. But there have to be limits, he said.

In the face-to-face world, agents can’t impersonate a suspect’s spouse, child, parent or best friend. But online, behind the guise of a social-networking account, they can.

“This new situation presents a need for careful oversight so that law enforcement does not use social networking to intrude on some of our most personal relationships,” said Zwillinger, whose firm does legal work for Yahoo and MySpace.

Undercover operations aren’t necessary if the suspect is reckless. Federal authorities nabbed a man wanted on bank fraud charges after he started posting Facebook updates about the fun he was having in Mexico.

Maxi Sopo, a native of Cameroon living in the Seattle area, apparently slipped across the border into Mexico in a rented car last year after learning that federal agents were investigating the alleged scheme. The agents initially could find no trace of him on social media sites, and they were unable to pin down his exact location in Mexico. But they kept checking and eventually found Sopo on Facebook.

While Sopo’s online profile was private, his list of friends was not. Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Scoville began going through the list and was able to learn where Sopo was living. Mexican authorities arrested Sopo in September. He is awaiting extradition to the U.S.

The Justice document describes how Facebook, MySpace and Twitter have interacted with federal investigators: Facebook is “often cooperative with emergency requests,” the government said. MySpace preserves information about its users indefinitely and even stores data from deleted accounts for one year. But Twitter’s lawyers tell prosecutors they need a warrant or subpoena before the company turns over customer information, the document says.

“Will not preserve data without legal process,” the document says under the heading, “Getting Info From Twitter … the bad news.”

Twitter did not respond to a request for comment for this story.

The chief security officer for MySpace, Hemanshu Nigam, said MySpace doesn’t want to be the company that stands in the way of an investigation.

“That said, we also want to make sure that our users’ privacy is protected and any data that’s disclosed is done under proper legal process,” Nigam said.

MySpace requires a search warrant for private messages less than six months old, according to the company.

Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes said the company has put together a handbook to help law enforcement officials understand “the proper ways to request information from Facebook to aid investigations.”

The Justice document includes sections about its own lawyers. For government attorneys taking cases to trial, social networks are a “valuable source of info on defense witnesses,” they said. “Knowledge is power. … Research all witnesses on social networking sites.”

But the government warned prosecutors to advise their own witnesses not to discuss cases on social media sites and to “think carefully about what they post.”

It also cautioned federal law enforcement officials to think prudently before adding judges or defense counsel as “friends” on these services.

“Social networking and the courtroom can be a dangerous combination,” the government said.

Posted by YardFlex at March 16, 2010 10:20 PM

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