jay
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Felt this. Bc every time you think you have your bills under control or you up your income. Something, EVERY TIME, happens. Insurance goes up, ice age ahh winter increases heat/electric bill. Insurance rates increase. Inflation. It’s always something
ML Smith@maria48308
We’re all saying and feeling like she is and it’s like fuck everything.
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@ItsKingSlime Nah I’m on the workers side. Get your stupid ah kid out the drive thru playing games
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@Raindropsmedia1 Yeah these officers are racist, condescending and bad at their jobs. What fucking losers
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Lolol where is rent $1200, let me find out. Idc please don’t respond KY, KS, MS, OK, ND, SD, OH
theficouple@theficouple
Here's the math: A single person earning $70,000/yr takes home ~$4,500/mo after tax. A realistic budget: -$1,200/mo: Rent -$400/mo: Food - $330/mo: Transportation - $280/mo Utilities/phone - $500/mo: Fun ...Living within their means lets them invest ~$1,600/mo.
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@ImJoeSchmo @tellembigcheese @TMZ Okay. Just bc it’s a crime, doesn’t mean there’s not liability there. Use your head bud.
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@imeducated @tellembigcheese @TMZ I mean entering a vehicle that’s not yours is a crime. So no it’s not for anyone to enter. He got himself in and had a phone and still didn’t call for help 😂
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Officers from the Azusa Police Department discovered the body of 37-year-old Eric Valencia decomposing in the backseat of one of their police vehicles.
Details: tmz.me/WF35SoZ
📸: Azusa Police Department
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jay retweeté
jay retweeté

I dove deep into this shocking New York Post report alleging Mount Everest guides poisoned climbers as part of a $20M insurance scam that's going viral - here are the key verified facts in concise points:
The Alleged Scam:
Nepalese trekking guides, company owners, helicopter operators, and hospital executives are accused of deliberately making tourists sick to trigger expensive emergency helicopter evacuations, then fraudulently billing international travel insurance companies. Investigators allege guides used baking soda (and in some cases incorrectly administered drugs) to induce severe gastrointestinal distress that mimicked altitude sickness or food poisoning. CCTV footage even captured “critically ill” tourists drinking beer at cafes while their medical records claimed they were receiving hospital treatment.
Scale of the Fraud:
Prosecutors say the group fraudulently obtained at least $19.69 million. The Central Investigation Bureau’s 1,243-page charge sheet breaks it down as:
- Mountain Rescue Service: faked 171 of 1,248 rescues (~$10.3 million)
- Nepal Charter Service: faked 75 of 471 rescues (~$8.2 million)
- Everest Experience and Assistance: linked to 71 suspicious rescues (~$1.1 million)
Legal Action:
Nepalese police have charged 32–33 individuals with organized crime, fraud, and money laundering. As of late March 2026, nine suspects (including prominent doctors and trekking owners) are in custody, while the rest are absconding. The government is seeking total fines of approximately 1.51 billion Nepalese rupees (~$11.3 million).
Current Status & Impact:
The investigation is ongoing and treated as high priority. Major global insurers had already begun restricting or halting coverage for trekking tourists in Nepal due to the “Heli-Mafia” reputation. This scandal has severely damaged trust in Nepal’s high-altitude rescue and tourism infrastructure.
This is a real, documented criminal investigation confirmed by Nepalese authorities and multiple international outlets.
Share if this story shocked you and drop your thoughts below: Do you think the Nepalese government’s current crackdown will be enough to restore trust for international travel insurers?
🙏 Kindly Follow me for more deep dives on trending events like this, news, sports, animals stories, aviation and more stories daily...



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jay retweeté

JUST IN: Mt. Everest guides accused of “poisoning” climbers to trigger helicopter rescues as part of an insurance scam.
The guides have allegedly been lacing hikers' food and pressuring them into taking expensive rescue helicopter evacuations.
"Guides with the trekking agencies allegedly poisoned tourists by putting baking soda in their food to trigger severe gastrointestinal distress that mimicked altitude sickness or food poisoning," the New York Post reports.
Operators would allegedly then forge medical documents and flight documents to charge international travel insurers.
According to police, the groups have received $19.69 million in insurance payouts.
Police in Nepal have charged 32 individuals for organized crime and fraud, including trekking company owners, helicopter operators, and hospital executives.
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@tellembigcheese @TMZ But why was he able to get in the back of a police car? Why are police vehicles unlocked for anyone to just enter? Why was he only discovered days later? Comparative negligence applies.
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