Teen Piss Face

Teen Piss Face




💣 👉🏻👉🏻👉🏻 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻




















































The celebrity attorney, who is representing three women who’ve accused the R&B singer of sexual assaulting them when they were underage, also claims he is aware of a third tape.
Updated Feb. 26, 2019 5:53PM ET / Published Feb. 26, 2019 3:45PM ET 
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Getty/Reuters
Michael Avenatti, who is representing three women accusing R. Kelly of sexual assault, described to The Daily Beast on Tuesday the second video he obtained of the R&B star with an underage girl.
According to Avenatti, the video shows Kelly performing and receiving oral sex, peeing on the girl’s anus, vagina, right breast, and face. He penetrates the girl vaginally and anally, chokes her, and repeatedly refers to her as 14. She also refers to herself as 14. He coaches her on what to say and adjusts the camera angle like he’s shooting a porn video. Avenatti said there is no question the man is R. Kelly, and that the other person is 14.
On Twitter, Avenatti shared some incriminating lines that Kelly allegedly says in the tape, including “Give me that 14 year old pussy” and “Show daddy that 14 year old pussy.” He also claimed to have “substantial evidence that R. Kelly and his enablers purposely hid this tape from prosecutors in connection with his 2008 trial and obstructed justice by paying witnesses to assist them in an effort to destroy all copies of the tape prior to trial.”
Avenatti told The Daily Beast that he is aware of a third tape showing Kelly with an underage victim. He said he is working to get the tape.
The girl on this new tape, which Avenatti said he submitted to prosecutors at the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office in Chicago yesterday, is the same person as the one on a previous tape submitted by Avenatti, according to the attorney. CNN reportedly reviewed this prior tape, and it also allegedly shows Kelly “performing multiple sex acts” and urinating on a girl who repeatedly refers to herself as 14 years old. Both videos contain sex acts that are similar to those in a previous video that emerged during Kelly’s child pornography in 2002 (he was later acquitted).
Kelly’s attorney, Steve Greenberg, told The Daily Beast: “I believe that the public discussion of child pornography is possibly illegal. I would also hope that Mr. Avanetti [sic] would respect the process but he does not. Unfortunately he fails to follow the ethical rules that bind us as attorneys in Illinois.”
Avenatti said that Chicago police have been “phenomenal.”
“This is a bad man,” Avenatti told The Daily Beast. “This guy is a psychopath. There’s no question about it and when this thing finally gets busted wide open, people are going to be shocked at the level of depravity. I know I am.”
“If these girls weren’t black and poor, for the most part, this would have ended a long time ago,” he added.
On Monday night, Kelly was released from jail after posting a $100,000 bond on his $1 million bail.
Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast here.
Avenatti Cries as He Gets 30 Months in Prison for Extortion
Kate Briquelet
Rudy’s Legal Fund Was a Bust. Now, Its Donation Page Is Gone
Adam Rawnsley, Asawin Suebsaeng
U.S. Citizen Was Involved in Haitian Assassination: Official
Zoe Richards, Noor Ibrahim
The ‘Good’ Republicans Are Bad, and the Bad Ones Are Batsh*t
Molly Jong-Fast
Man Jumps Off Ship Jammed With 572 Souls Running Out of Food
Barbie Latza Nadeau
The high-flying lawyer also faces future criminal trials for allegedly stealing from Stormy Daniels and embezzling funds from clients.
Updated Jul. 08, 2021 5:42PM ET / Published Jul. 08, 2021 2:49PM ET 
Disgraced lawyer Michael Avenatti, who skyrocketed to fame for representing adult film star Stormy Daniels in her hush money suit against former President Donald Trump, was sentenced Thursday to two-and-a-half years in prison for trying to extort Nike for millions of dollars.
Avenatti cried in court as he gave a short speech, thanking his family and admitting that, “I and I alone have destroyed my career, my relationships, my life, and there is no doubt that I deserve to pay, have paid, and will pay a further price for what I have done.”
But Judge Paul G. Gardephe called Avenatti’s conduct “outrageous” and a betrayal of his clients.
“Mr. Avenatti had become drunk on the power of his platform or what he perceived the power of his platform to be,” he said. “He had become someone who operated as if the laws and rules which apply to everyone else didn’t apply to him.”
Prosecutors sought an eight-year sentence on the recommendation of federal probation officials, while Avenatti's lawyers suggested a six-month prison term and a year of home confinement. The defense argued Avenatti’s “public shaming” and “cataclysmic fall” amounts to enough of a punishment and deterrent for what they described as nonviolent crimes with no financial losses to any victims in the case.
Prosecutors disagreed. “The defendant, a prominent attorney and media personality with a large public following, betrayed his client and sought to enrich himself by weaponizing his public profile in an attempt to extort a publicly traded company out of tens of millions of dollars,” the Manhattan U.S. Attorney’s office noted in a filing last month. “This was an egregious abuse of trust, and it warrants real and serious punishment.”
“I’ve learned that all the fame and notoriety in the world is meaningless ... TV and Twitter mean nothing.”
At Thursday’s sentencing, Judge Paul Gardephe agreed with the defense’s request for a sentence lower than the minimum guideline of 108 months, in part because Avenatti’s alleged co-conspirator, prominent defense lawyer Mark Geragos, was never charged. Gardephe also referred to Avenatti’s “horrific conditions” in solitary detention at Manhattan’s Metropolitan Correctional Center.
Gardephe also imposed three years of supervised release following the two-and-a-half-year prison sentence, which is to be served at a federal facility in Oregon.
Before Gardephe's ruling, Avenatti wept in court, and for the first time expressed contrition for his crimes—shedding tears while standing at a lectern before the judge, with friends and family at his back in the gallery.
“I’ve learned that all the fame and notoriety in the world is meaningless,” Avenatti told the court, referring to his months-long stint in the spotlight. “TV and Twitter mean nothing.”
“I look forward to working hard to become the person I once was and will be if given the chance,” he added, choking up. “But I know I will never have the privilege of practicing law again.”
Avenatti dramatically concluded that he didn’t want his three children to be proud of him, but instead ashamed, because “then their moral compass is where it should be.”
In a letter to the court, Nike indicated it was seeking $1 million in restitution from Avenatti “to be paid after Mr. Avenatti’s individual victims.” Gardephe deferred his ruling on restitution but said he wouldn't impose a fine since he believed the debt-ridden Avenatti wouldn't be able to pay it.
Avenatti's lawyer Danya Perry told the court the hard-charging barrister “is a completely humbled man.”
“He lost his way,” she said. “He knows it.”
Still, Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Podolsky argued, “This case was not about hard-nosed negotiations... it wasn’t about nasty language. It was about deceit, it was about threats, it was about taking from others and abuse of trust.”
Podolsky said Avenatti never showed remorse for his crimes or took responsibility for his actions through a plea bargain.
Last year, a Manhattan federal jury convicted Avenatti of extortion, wire fraud, and transmission of interstate communications with intent to extort, in a scheme which prosecutors called “a good old-fashioned shakedown” of the shoe giant and a “betrayal” of his client Gary Franklin, a youth basketball coach in Los Angeles.
His sentencing in the Nike case—and trials in two other criminal matters on both coasts—was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The brash 50-year-old litigator, who fancied himself a Democratic contender to run against Trump in the last presidential election, will soon head to trial in Santa Ana, California. There, Avenatti is accused of embezzling millions of funds from a handful of clients and defrauding a bank to obtain more than $4 million in loans. Opening statements are expected to begin on July 20.
“A few million dollars doesn’t move the needle for me.”
Avenatti will also face a New York jury sometime in 2022 for allegedly stealing $300,000 of the advance for Daniels’ book Full Disclosure. According to the indictment, “He did so by, among other things, sending a fraudulent and unauthorized letter purporting to contain [Daniels’] signature to [her] literary agent…”
The Nike case stems from Avenatti’s representation of Franklin, who asked the lawyer for help in 2019 after Nike ended a $72,000 sponsorship of his amateur basketball league. At the time, Franklin also mentioned that Nike employees allegedly directed illicit payments to high-school players and their families. Avenatti promised Franklin he’d secure a $1 million settlement from the sportswear behemoth but didn’t tell Franklin he planned to demand up to $25 million for himself.
In March 2019, during meetings with Nike attorneys in New York, Avenatti threatened to go public about the alleged payouts to youth players unless Nike retained him for millions of dollars to do an internal investigation for the company.
“I’m not fucking around with this, and I’m not continuing to play games,” Avenatti warned in a recorded conversation with Nike lawyers. “You guys know enough now to know you’ve got a serious problem. And it’s worth more in exposure to me to just blow the lid on this thing. A few million dollars doesn’t move the needle for me.”
On July 5, Avenatti's lawyer Benjamin Silverman asked Gardephe for a new trial “based on the government’s failure to produce certain witness statements that are both material and favorable to the defense.”
In a letter to the judge, Silverman said prosecutors didn't produce material for Judy Regnier, Avenatti’s office manager who testified against him at trial, including an email to a special agent indicating she feared Avenatti might have her killed. “It establishes a clear bias and also evidences a motive to have Mr. Avenatti convicted and incarcerated,” Silverman wrote.
Regnier had read a tweet that stated, “She better be careful, she might end like a Clinton witness,” Silverman added, referring to the conspiracy theory that former President Clinton and his wife arranged to bump off people with damaging intel on them.
But Gardephe rejected Silverman's request, saying in a court filing that Regnier “was an inconsequential witness” who “had no direct knowledge of, and did not testify concerning, Avenatti's alleged crimes.”
Before Avenatti's arrest in 2019, his financial misdeeds were beginning to catch up to his high-flying lifestyle and recurring spot in the cable news limelight.
In the fall of 2018, The Daily Beast revealed Avenatti, his law firm, and his coffee company owed millions in unpaid taxes and judgments, including a $1.2 million federal tax bill in Orange County, and that the landlord of his Newport Beach office had begun eviction proceedings. Avenatti also owed a former law partner at Eagan Avenatti a $10 million judgment.
As he left a trail of debts, Avenatti and his ex-wife Lisa Storie enjoyed a luxe lifestyle, replete with a private jet, fast cars, an art collection, and regular trips to Cabo. Storie and Avenatti were embroiled in divorce proceedings just as the lawyer's star began to rise because of Daniels.
“I had unfettered use of credit cards that were in my name,” Storie said in one court filing. “My American Express bill was historically on average of $60,000 to $70,000 per month, and was paid in full each month.”
Meanwhile, Avenatti's first ex-wife, Christine, recently wrote to Judge Gardephe asking for leniency in his sentencing. She said Avenatti was a fighter for the underdog and “worked full-time to educate himself after a family hardship,” all while helping to secure care for her mother's terminal heart condition.
“The last few years have been traumatic, as I have watched who Michael Avenatti is… be condensed into a short, tragic story that is unrecognizable, versus the complete and complex novel that deserves to be told.”
Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast here.
Rudy’s Legal Fund Was a Bust. Now, Its Donation Page Is Gone
Adam Rawnsley, Asawin Suebsaeng
U.S. Citizen Was Involved in Haitian Assassination: Official
Zoe Richards, Noor Ibrahim
The ‘Good’ Republicans Are Bad, and the Bad Ones Are Batsh*t
Molly Jong-Fast
Man Jumps Off Ship Jammed With 572 Souls Running Out of Food
Barbie Latza Nadeau
Failed Pol Who Railed on Gun Crime Charged With Killing Cop
Pilar Melendez

Vile footage captures sick attack where warped gang make victim call herself insulting names before booting her
THIS is the chilling moment a girl gang attacks a helpless teen they accuse of spreading rumours about a classmate sleeping with her stepdad.
The vile footage, which is being used as evidence in a police investigation, shows the victim being forced to humiliate herself while being kicked and punched.
She is made to call herself insulting names on camera before a boot stomps on her face.
There are even reports that this was the second violent assault on the defenceless victim in just two days.
The video, filmed in Russia, shows a pack of six girls circling the victim, who can only be named Kristina K to protect her identity.
Two male teens were also present during the attack.
One of the boys appears to hold the camera for most of the sickening video.
Four of the attackers and the two boys -- all of whom are aged between 14 and 17 -- have been shamed on Russian social media site Vkontakte.
The girls were named as Alexandra A, Avgustina R, Elena K, and Elena. The boys were named as Krill K and Alexander L.
Both the filmed assault and the alleged first attack are being investigated by police in Chaikovsky, a town in the Perm region.
The initial attack is thought to have been over a boy, according to investigators.
A girl that knows the attackers described them to local media as "a bad example for other teenagers".
Another said the attack was over "dirty gossip" being spread about a classmate sleeping with her own stepfather.
"So this girl gathered her friends and they beat her", she said.
Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at tips@the-sun.co.uk or call 0207 782 4368
OFF THE WALL Why Denmark’s opener against England should have been disallowed
WILLS AT WEMBLEY Buzzing Boris goes wild with Carrie as he cheers England win with William
ENGLAND 2 DENMARK 1 Three Lions heroes FINALLY break semi jinx & can end 55 years of hurt
GREAL BRAVE Southgate explains 'embarrassing' Jack Grealish sub against Denmark
'I’M SO HAPPY' Danniella Westbrook shows off new look after getting lip fillers and Botox
NOT HER GOAL Lauryn Goodman posts pic of son supporting England and fans spot Kyle Walker
CUT ABOVE Farmer harvests field surrounded by APARTMENT BLOCKS after refusing to sell land
HAA-D TO TAKE Haaland gutted about Sancho transfer & posts crying emoji on pal's Instagram
NEW PRICE Katie Price reveals new face after fearing op left her 'looking like a monster'
HEAD TO HEAD Love Island's ‘secret feud’ between two Islanders - but have you spotted it?
BOSS BABE I got Stacey into labelling- I created my company with £300 & Lord Sugar invested
WHAT THE DECK? Builders started work on my garden by mistake - I won't tell them, I want it
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
©News Group Newspapers Limited in England No. 679215 Registered office: 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF. "The Sun", "Sun", "Sun Online" are registered trademarks or trade names of News Group Newspapers Limited. This service is provided on News Group Newspapers' Limited's Standard Terms and Conditions in accordance with our Privacy & Cookie Policy. To inquire about a licence to reproduce material, visit our Syndication site. View our online Press Pack. For other inquiries, Contact Us. To see all content on The Sun, please use the Site Map. The Sun website is regulated by the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO)
Our journalists strive for accuracy but on occasion we make mistakes. For further details of our complaints policy and to make a complaint please
Red X Teen Titans
Full Hd Teen Nude
Cool World Sex
Psycho Teens 12
Elle Rose Enjoys Anal Sex
Young men bully teenage boy, pee on his face - China News ...
Peepiss (@Peepiss) | Twitter
Avenatti: New Tape Shows R. Kelly Urinating on 14-Year-Old ...
Shocking video shows moment group of female teens pounce ...
gaypissppv (@gaypissppv) | Twitter
Barefoot Teen Videos and HD Footage - Getty Images
Teen cheerleader forced into split: "The world is a scary ...
teen bikini - Simpahtikoh Photo (41186281) - Fanpop
Little Girl Face Images, Stock Photos & Vectors | Shutterstock
Inside Dubai apartment where Ukrainian models posed naked ...
Teen Piss Face


Report Page