How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
How can I buy cocaine online in El-KhufufHow can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
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How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
Box 20 Signal Mountain, TN Open navigation menu. Close suggestions Search Search. User Settings. Young Sentencing. In August , U. District Judge Kevin H. Sharp in Nashville sentenced a repeat drug offender to a life term. It was wrong, he says now, but he had to do it because of mandatory minimum sentences. This is a transcript of that sentencing hearing. Document Information click to expand document information In August , U. Did you find this document useful? Is this content inappropriate? Download now. Jump to Page. Search inside document. Sharp presiding. Y'all can be seated. All right. We're 10 here in the sentencing in the case of United States v. Chris 11 Young. Everyone has had a chance to read the presentence 12 report? I don't think there were any 16 objections. I know you've got your outstanding appeals on the 17 conviction itself, but you didn't have any objections to the 18 PSR? Again, mostly they 20 were factual, and I sent it by letter to Ms. Winfree on 21 June 30th. Have you seen 5 these, Mr. Were they -- 13 MS. Winfree 14 had a hard time opening and emailed me, and I sent it in a 15 different format. Well, this isn't just factual, 18 though. You're objecting to the calculation of the offense 19 level on at least one of the counts; right? This is just going through 23 his criminal history. I'm just going through these paragraphs. A lot of them 2 are -- 3 MS. But then on 19 it talks about prior to 6 his arrest being convicted of a felony offense, and then it 7 goes through what they were. Are you challenging these 8 convictions as well? Paragraph 19 on page My 11 client advises me he was never convicted of burglary. It's paragraph 56 that's listed. I was 19 going through your 8 through But are you including 19 in 20 all of that? Like I said, it's been a 24 long time since I wrote that. I just saw it today. I apologize too. I didn't 2 realize nobody got it, otherwise I would have ensured. So Mr. Let's just come back in 15 minutes. Is it possible I could get a copy of the letter? Let's just come back in 15 15 minutes, and let me know what your response is to those 16 things. All right? Well, go 21 ahead if you've got something to say. Hang on one second. Here's what I 24 want to do: I would like to clear the courtroom and talk to 25 Mr. Young and Ms. So if everybody can step out, and we're just going to 2 leave these two in here along with the marshal's office. Koshy, you were about to have 9 responses. First of all, your Honor, could we 11 please make the June 30th, , letter a part of the record 12 in some way? As far as the objection to 15 the summary of a very long trial and the few paragraphs of the 16 presentence report, this Court presided over the trial itself 17 and surely is relying on its memory of the actual evidence 18 rather than a summary. But to the extent it's necessary, we 19 believe that the defendant's objection is too general to 20 address. And, of course, the same felonies are reiterated in 25 paragraphs 41 and 43 and further on in the presentence report. And Ms. McFadden told me that 36 3 was a misstatement. She's not objecting to 36, which was the 4 enhancement paragraph that circles back around and picks up 5 those same prior convictions. KOSHY: The objection to paragraph 24, which is 7 that he should receive the two- or three-level credit for 8 acceptance of responsibility because he pled guilty to the 9 felony possession is addressed by Sentencing Guideline 10 1B1. And that's the rule that provides for the 11 sequence by which the various calculations in the guidelines 12 are to be applied. As you go through everything and then you 13 apply the grouping rules, and only after that, is there the 14 consideration of acceptance of responsibility. It's clear he hasn't 19 accepted responsibility for the overall conduct because even 20 in this letter he continues to object to his -- to the facts 21 which the jury may have used. So he has not clearly accepted 22 responsibility, and it's his burden to show that he has 23 accepted responsibility. First of all, the objection is 2 immaterial. That calculation has nothing to do with either 3 the guideline offense level or the statutory penalty 4 applicable in this case. Young at the time of the take-down at the Shell gas 9 station. The 40 and the call, the 10, leads to the The 10 proof at trial was that the defendant initially was getting 11 crack cocaine from Mr. Porter and then switched to getting 12 cocaine, learning how to cook it, manufacturing crack cocaine 13 by which he could bring back extras basically on the crack 14 cocaine. He could produce more than an ounce of crack cocaine 15 from an ounce of cocaine. There's no points. There's nothing for this. Probation officer relies on a record which either 7 she has or I have, which is from, I believe, the juvenile 8 court showing arrests for burglary and vandalism. Again, 9 that's something that I don't believe the Court has to make a 10 particular determination on. We've shown the document to 11 Ms. McFadden over the break. That accurately quotes the guideline. Regardless 18 of that, under the statute that's cited in paragraph 88, it's 19 not just may deny. Congress has determined that the Court 20 must deny. That's the government's specific response to the 21 objection. I think the government's basic point, however, is 22 that none of it matters. And I think that's the situation here. That's it. I agree with you that 4 none of those objections, particularly where you take out the 5 objection to paragraph 19 and The others don't make a 6 difference, and if they do, somebody will tell me later. They're 9 advisory. And I'm not bound to impose sentences within those 10 guidelines. Rather, I can look at the factors and 11 fashion a sentence that's sufficient but not more harsh than 12 necessary. That's out the window here. The sentence that 13 everybody knows is coming is certainly more harsh than is 14 necessary, and I wish it was not that way. Young was convicted on four counts, conspiracy to 16 distribute and possess with intent to distribute grams or 17 more of cocaine and grams or more of crack cocaine, 18 attempted possession of a detectable amount of cocaine with 19 intent to distribute within a thousand feet of a school, 20 possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking 21 crime, and being a felon in possession of a firearm. Ultimately end up with 3 a total offense level of The criminal history, except 4 with regard to the objection that was noted, it won't make any 5 difference, establish 6 points, which put him in a category 3. And there were no objections to 8 that except as noted. Young was born in 10 Clarksville in He's had no relationship with his 11 father, and I don't believe anyone knows where his father is 12 at this moment. His mother had her own substance abuse 13 problems, spent time in and out of jail, although she 14 currently resides in Clarksville and is unemployed. Both he 15 and his mother have significant physical problems. He had a 16 biological brother who appears to have committed suicide, that 17 he was close with that brother. For all intents and purposes, by the 20 time he and his brother were 13 and 17, they were left to 21 their own devices, which you see from his criminal history 22 really starts the downward spiral. He's got some chronic leg 24 pain, no history of mental health issues. There was some 25 history of substance abuse beginning back in high school. He attended some modeling and acting 4 classes and was an aspiring rap artist, which also led to his 5 involvement, I think, with people that he clearly should not 6 have been involved with. There was some 8 time at the family funeral home and doing some packing jobs. McFadden, do you have any proof to introduce? Young, you have the right to 13 address the Court, speak on your own behalf. You don't have 14 to exercise that right, but the federal rules certainly allow 15 for it. I hope everyone here has been having 19 a good morning. I wanted to be solemnly sincere, coming from my 23 heart and not from my brain. I wish we had the time to 24 one-on-one, tete-a-tete, but since we don't, I'll try to make 25 this substantive. To 6 accomplish this I was going to speak on a variety of topics, 7 one of which being American history. Can I 13 stop you for a second and slow you down a little bit so that I 14 can catch what you're saying. I want to listen to you, and, 15 also, the court reporter has to take it down. I'm familiar with Margaret Thatcher and Ronald 11 Reagan's theory on the government's role in society, the 12 Wall Street crash; how the beginning of the nineties, like 13 around , America changed the way it kept up with its 14 economical data, switching from the GNP to the GDP. I'm familiar 17 with the original Declaration of Independence that was printed 18 by John Dunlap, and if given a chance to be released within a 19 reasonable amount of time, I can do something remarkable and 20 epic like Thomas Lynch, Jr. But I'm not going to focus on that. Snow; Jan Christian Smuts. I was going to speak on philology. I love to 14 look at the etymology and semantics of a word, but I'm not 15 going to focus on that. I try to 2 keep up with Christine Lagarde and her comments. But I'm not going to focus on 9 that. But I'm not going to 18 focus on them. As you know or can see in my appearance or 22 probably can see from there, I have tattoo on my neck that 23 says feel my pain. Now, why did I get something like that 24 tattooed in such a conspicuous place? It's a blood condition you 6 have to be born with, which takes your blood cells from the 7 normal shape to a sickle shape, which makes you rheumatic and 8 locks your body up and causes excruciating pain. So when I 9 was a child, I spent a lot of time in the hospital and up 10 under my mother, which in so many ways and words made me a 11 mother's boy, which also can help you imagine the pain I felt 12 watching her struggle with her addiction and domestic violence 13 in her various relationships. And it also had me feel like I 14 need to prove myself. I was told I couldn't do this, you 15 can't play this sport, you can't do that, you can't drink this 16 liquid, you should only drink water. It made me feel I need 17 to prove myself a lot. We spent a 22 significant amount of time living with no lights and water. Combine these two scents 7 and imagine the malodorous smell we was carrying to school 8 with us each and every day. Imagine what your opinion would 9 be upon first meeting us. A lot of times I didn't have 16 bathed unless my brother sucked up his pride and asked one of 17 his friends in the neighborhood could we bathe at their house 18 or asked one of the neighbors could we bathe at their house, 19 and not to mention at this time my brother was going through 20 puberty. And he was wanting to deal with young ladies, but he 21 was too dissident and insecure to approach them, not to 22 mention the occasional argument and fight a child has to deal 23 with when he's a teenager, but more so my brother because he 24 had to take up for his obstreperous young brother, which is 25 me. Dorothy Brown, offered us to come live 7 with them. As time went on, me and my brother began to love 8 and revere Ms. Brown as our grandmother and started to call 9 her the nickname that everybody in the neighborhood called 10 her, which was Big Mama, the most appropriate name for a 11 generous and benign woman like her, you know. So even though Big Mama was able 17 to help provide us with the necessities like food, heat, 18 water, and shelter, she was not able to provide us with 19 material things that young teenagers and kids needed and 20 wanted, not to mention at the end of the day Big Mama was only 21 human. Why am I going through this? Why 24 am I putting up with this? You know what I'm saying? And this 3 only increased at a time when me, my mother, and my 4 grandfather girlfriend happened to pull up on a crime scene 5 and witnessed my cousin being put into an ambulance from a 6 gunshot wound to the head. This was very traumatic for me to 7 witness at a young tender age of 10, but it was even harder 8 for my brother to accept given the fact that my cousin was one 9 of the only true brothers and father figures my brother had. But the person I 22 do love and revere as my daddy is George Rudolph, my mother's 23 ex-husband, whom we call Mickey. Me at the time, I actually 19 eschewed drugs. I hated them. I tried to stay away from 20 them, and I tried to exert my energy towards the things that 21 other young teenagers was doing at the time, like playing 22 sports. But given the fact of my physical condition and my 23 disease and the fact I was not good at it, just didn't last 24 very long. But I was a precocious young man, and I loved 25 scholastic material. So I tried to focus on my academic work. It was hard for me to compete with the 7 other guys on impressing the young ladies. But, like I said, I hated drugs, so I tried to 10 do it the right way. But the only workers you see in my 11 community are proletarians, which is actually not appealing to 12 me, and I was too young to work in a factory. I was actually 13 too young to even work in fast food, so given this fact I went 14 to the only man and the only business I knew would hire me, 15 which was Hooker's Funeral Home, my grandfather's funeral 16 home, Mr. And depending on who you ask and their 17 definition, some of them would say my grandfather was 18 successful or rich. He owned several funeral homes in 19 Tennessee and several other small businesses. And it took more me to grow older and more mature 2 and for my grandfather to pass -- while I was locked up he 3 passed away in -- for me to realize he did love us. He 4 just chose to love us in his own way, given the fact that all 5 the years he had to deal with my mother and my uncle stealing 6 and lying and just denigrating his name. He just chose to 7 love his grandkids from a distance. But it was one 12 problem. And I don't know if you 15 ever bought a pair of Michael Air Jordan tennis shoes. Because I did 22 not sell drugs I was not allowed to hang at the different 23 spots with them no more. He told me every time I see you me and you are 6 going to fight or just simply buy the drugs from me and hustle 7 with me out of my drug house, which happened to be my mother's 8 house while she was incarcerated. I chose the latter given 9 the fact that by this time my brother and the guys in my 10 neighborhood were quasi successful buying multiple ounce 11 quantities of crack cocaine and cocaine. I 15 didn't squander my money. I actually did things that people 16 kind of only see in movies. I took it upon myself to be 17 financially responsible for several of my little cousins who 18 father was incarcerated. The geriatric and elderly people in my 22 neighborhood knew that if they caught me at the local grocery 23 store or the little stores or neighborhood restaurants, I 24 would pay for their items. This led to me being extolled in some type of way. I was He was 18, which led to us still 5 making some reckless and perilous decisions, which led to the 6 Clarksville Drug Task Force having a search warrant for my 7 mother's house. But this day I happened to be in school, and 8 this day my brother actually had no drugs in the house. But 9 given the fact that my brother name was on the search warrant 10 and the police did happen to find an ounce and a half of crack 11 and cocaine, my brother claimed the drugs and end up with a 12 lengthy time on probation. So it was 16 around this time that I did try to change my life. I started 17 attending acting and modeling school and began rapping, began 18 attending most of the make shift studios around the city. I'm pretty sure of it. If you was to listen to 9 it, I'm redundant because I stress the fact I wish me and 10 everyone around me could change their lives. I wished that, 11 and I stressed that in my music. It was also around this time 12 that me and Robert Porter began feeling like we was local 13 neighborhood celebrities, Clarksville superstars. He was dealing with his 18 querulous baby mother who actually was always complaining and 19 used his child as a bargaining chip for him to get her the 20 things she wanted, but at that time my brother was not selling 21 drugs. My brother was actually trying to do the right thing. And we all know how cruel young year-olds can be. This was very traumatic and very 11 severe for me to witness. I was only But unlike 12 everybody else in my extended family and in the neighborhood, 13 I didn't want to argue over whether it was a suicide or a 14 robbery attempt turned into a murder. All I knew was that the 15 only person that truly loved me unconditionally and truly was 16 there for me all of my life was dead and gone. All I knew was 17 that the only person that truly, no matter what, had 18 understood everything I had been through was dead and gone. For my niece in Christmas of , when she 15 was ten years old, to tell me, Uncle, Mama didn't give me 16 everything I wanted, but it's okay. I know as soon as you get 17 out you'll take me shopping. My little cousin in Christmas 18 he was actually 13, and he told me, Chris, Mama didn't 19 really get me nothing for Christmas. But it's all right. I 20 know if you was here, you would try to help. He couldn't tell you 17 who Mr. He couldn't tell you that he's a black man, and he 20 could be successful like him. He couldn't tell you that 21 Mr. Thomson, the CEO of McDonald's, which is one of the 22 biggest franchises in the world, is a black man, and he could 23 be successful like him. He couldn't tell you that Ken 24 Chenault, the CEO of American Express, a large financial 25 provider, is a black man, and he could be successful like him. He couldn't tell 4 you that he's a black man, and he could be successful like 5 him. He couldn't tell you that Ms. Ursula is a black woman, 6 the CEO of Xerox, a leading technology company, and he should 7 be aiming to have a girlfriend or a wife like her, not Nicki 8 Minaj. He couldn't tell you the same. Woodson or 12 George M. James or Joseph Rainey -- actually, Joseph Rainey 13 was the first black man to be part of the House of 14 Representatives. He couldn't tell you who these people are. He couldn't tell you what the 17 difference between a regular engine or a diesel engine, let 18 alone who the scientist, Rudolf Diesel, is. This hypothetical 19 young man gets on Google every day, your Honor, but he looks 20 up something inane and frivolous, and he can't tell you who 21 Larry Page or Sergey Brin is, the founders of Google, at a 22 time in our country, Judge Sharp, when most economists, 23 politicians, and journalists constantly speak on income 24 equality and income mobility -- income inequality and income 25 mobility. And to sum both of these 5 factors up together into one, Judge Sharp, it boils into 6 influences, the influences that a person is around. And if I 7 was given a chance to be released back into society within a 8 reasonable amount of time, I know I could be a positive 9 productive person. I could be a positive influence on these 10 young men and women in my neighborhood. I could be the person 11 that helps teach them the financial literacy that I actually 12 feel is not adequately taught in the high schools. I feel like I could be there 18 to help provide for them financially and not just giving them 19 free money because Andrew Carnegie said it the best. It should serve as a buttress for the community to 22 take responsibility of its own welfare. And I'd just help 23 teach these young men and women how to be successful and, most 24 important, how to be happy. But if he's caught making wrong actions and 4 decisions, he can and will face a penalty and a punishment. As you know, I've just spent four years in a 9 jail, in a pod, where ignorance is proliferated. I'm talking 10 about it's just ridiculous. But I've stayed dedicated, 11 determined, and disciplined to learn the things I feel that I 12 need know and wanted to know to help me become a positive, 13 productive, successful, law-abiding citizen. All I'm asking, your Honor, is that you please 19 acknowledge my ambition, my order, and my potential, and that 20 if I was given a chance to be released back into society 21 within a reasonable amount of time, I could accomplish and 22 achieve my aspirations and hopefully go down in the ranks with 23 some of the men I admire the most, such as Reginald Lewis, 24 Robert Johnson, Henry Kravis, Christopher Gardner, Shawn 25 Carter, Dr. Robert Sheldon, Nicholas Berggruen. This right here is directed to 3 Mr. Sunny Koshy. Sunny Koshy, I have no hard feelings for 4 you. I actually think you're a great attorney. You're 5 extolled and venerated throughout the Sixth Circuit, even by 6 the defense, even though they might feel minimal towards you. I loved Indiana Jones, but I wasn't told I can be an 11 archaeologist or an anthropologist. I was told, child, that 12 isn't real. You can't be that, expletive. You know what I'm 13 saying. To be a teenager who felt like he needed to take 14 responsibility of his own life and end up making some choice 15 that did prove I was financially responsible but made some 16 choices and also came to some consequences and repercussions 17 to now I'm a man, a man who has matured, a man who has become 18 versed within the focal points of knowledge. Now, I'm not a 19 man who knows everything, but I am a man who has the aptitude 20 and the comprehension and skills to learn everything and 21 utilize it. I'm a man who could 5 explain profoundly the Kering trade phonetic and why and how 6 policy and regulation here in developed countries like America 7 have major effects on emerging markets and countries. I could listen to the tape recordings of President 10 Nixon during the Watergate Scandal, which you can listen to on 11 wikileaks. And if I was took 17 to an auction or an art show, I probably could point out a 18 Bondone or Durer or Greene or Brueghel the Elder, Henri de 19 Toulouse-Lautrec, Bellini, a Venite, Michelangelo, a Leonardo 20 da Vinci, a Raphael, who actually died at the young tender age 21 of 32, a Bosch or Basquiat, a Van Gogh or Rembrandt or Warhol 22 or William Blake, who was also a poet and a critic, who some 23 would call an iconoclast. And with my free will 16 and with my choice, I choose to be a positive, productive, 17 successful, law-abiding citizen if given the chance. I had it memorized, but to actually 20 get up here and speak to you -- I could visualize you in my 21 head all day long, but to actually look at you and to see you 22 look at me back in my eyes as a man and how I feel a man 23 should speak to another man, it kind of caught me and had me 24 stumbling a little bit. So I want to say thank you for 5 listening to me, and I hope everyone here has a good evening. Thank you, sir. I appreciate 7 your words. I will say this: When I was about your age, 8 somebody told me about C. Snow, who you mentioned in there. Also, 11 you mentioned Genghis Khan. All three of those are 14 really good. You might want to start with Genghis Khan. It's 15 a little easier to read. But you'll enjoy it. I appreciate 16 it. Thank you for speaking to me. McFadden, anything you want to add to 18 that? As if there is anything you can now add. I don't know what else to say. The Court has noted 21 his PSR. The Court has heard from Mr. I think if the 22 Court were free to just use the a factors, his -- 23 Mr. Young's ambitions might be realized. However, the Court 24 is not free to do that. We would ask, as Mr. Young as soon as possible to a facility where he will 4 be instead of the county jail where he's been for four years. Thank you. Young mentioned a lot of people that 7 I know nothing about. This Court and the defendant are much 8 better read than I. I live in the gutters, and I see the pain 9 the defendant has caused all those people during this life in 10 this conspiracy. That's what this is about. That's why 11 Congress has enacted the laws that it has. Of all that 13 reading and thinking that he did, did the Court hear one thing 14 that recognized that the things that got him reverence in that 15 community, which was drug dealing, is profiting from causing 16 other families the same kind of pain that he went through. He 19 talked about his mother's addiction to crack. That's how 20 his -- by the things that he did he gained the reverence in 21 the community. And when he talks about role models, he, as a 22 drug dealer, was a role model to the community leading others 23 astray. That's what this is about, and that's why these law 24 enforcement officers work so hard, risk their lives, to bring 25 this conspiracy to an end. He was well familiar with Robert Porter's studio, 6 which is in that same building. Genesis Teen Learning Center, 7 which the proof at trial, is for troubled youth. He decided 8 to further commit armed drug trafficking in a specially 9 protected zone, a loaded Ruger in a ten thousand dollar effort 10 to get cocaine that the defendant was going to cook into crack 11 cocaine. This is a person focused on 14 finances with improving his lot in life at the expense of 15 others. He had chances through the judicial system. He could 16 have been in prison and maybe he should have been earlier, but 17 he was granted community corrections and was on community 18 corrections under the supervision of the judge, a probation 19 officer, when he did all of this. We're simply here to 22 execute the law. The defendant had choices along the way. He 23 took his chances. Just like every time he went out there with 24 a gun and dealt crack, he took his chance, and he get away 25 with it for a very long time. It is because of his choices and his 8 willingness to harm others to make a profit for himself. The defendant hurt people along the way to 15 make money, and now is the time to impose the sentence 16 required by law because of his choices. That's 17 all I have, your Honor. I'll now state the sentence. Count 12 23 is at least five years to run consecutively. Count 13 is not 24 more than ten. Because of the mandatory life sentences the guideline 2 range becomes life. Young is a career offender also convicted on 4 Count 12, which requires five years consecutive. So the 5 guideline provision becomes life plus 60 months. Supervised 6 release range is ten years to life on Counts 1 and 11 -- makes 7 no sense -- not more than five years on Count 12 and not more 8 than three on Count Guideline range is ten to life, two 9 to five years on Count 12, one to three years on Count Restitution is not 13 applicable on Count 1, 12, and Community restitution can 14 be ordered on Count And I've considered them. As 20 I said earlier, none of the other factors would weigh in 21 terms -- would weigh in favor of or toward a sentence of life 22 imprisonment. But with regards to Counts 12 and 13, in the 23 event 1 and 11 are set aside, I have looked at the nature and 24 circumstances of those offenses, your criminal history and 25 character. Each defendant is supposed to be 14 treated as an individual. I don't think that's happening 15 here, but you are sentenced to a term of imprisonment in the 16 custody of the Bureau of Prisons for life on Counts 1 and There's no supervised release on 1 and Those will run 21 concurrently. Your fine a waived. There's no restitution. The 23 standard conditions of your release will apply. The special 24 conditions are on page 29 of the PSR. Maybe somebody can fix 25 this. Bostic, any objections? The sentence is imposed. On Count 13 -- on Count 12 10 and 13 the Court simply said 60 months concurrent -- I'm 11 sorry. Let me start over. I said concurrent on supervised 15 release. Consecutive on 12, which gets into life plus 60; 16 right? I misspoke. I think 18 the Court said on Count 13 60 months, and you just said 19 concurrent. And I wanted to verify. I think under the law it 20 can certainly be concurrent with Counts 1 and 11 and cannot be 21 consecutive. That's right. No, 1 and However, I think you imposed 60 5 months on Count 13, and the maximum is three years per statute 6 on Count You're right. I misspoke on that. It's -- let me go 9 back. Yeah, it's 60 months on Count 12 and 36 months on Count 10 13 to run concurrently. I apologize. Young, do you have something to say? She already ended it. I 16 would greatly appreciate it if you could recommend I go to 17 some type of facility where I can get to the form and get my 18 hips, legs, and waist fixed. I'm not exactly for sure what's 19 wrong. I never took notice to my posture up there. It was 20 not meant to be disrespectful on posture or anything like that 21 but my leg, if you lift my pants leg up, you can see that -- 22 THE COURT: That's all right. I'll make those 23 recommendations for you. Thank 25 you. Jury Deliberation and Verdict Document 51 pages. Daryl Hall Declaration Document 11 pages. Sewer Status Report January 31 Document 25 pages. Curling v. 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6 going to fight or just simply buy the drugs from me and hustle. 7 with me out of my drug house, which happened to be my mother's. 8 house while she was.
How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
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How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
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How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
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How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf
How can I buy cocaine online in El-Khufuf