Stone Kolowaka

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Stone Kolowaka

Stone Kolowaka

@CryptoControlls

⚠️ DISCLAIMER: All of the information presented is strictly for educational & entertainment purposes.Nonthing should be taken as legal or financial advice. DYOR

By the River Side شامل ہوئے Eylül 2023
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Stone Kolowaka
Stone Kolowaka@CryptoControlls·
Reason for the BULL season Crypto.
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Stone Kolowaka
Stone Kolowaka@CryptoControlls·
@AlchemistTheOG He try'n to get reported like last time me....to get kicked....at the end of the day yall got played again from ben......keep play'n
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𝑾𝒊𝒔𝒅𝒐𝒎 𝑷𝒓𝒊𝒎𝒆 ⚜️
@AlchemistTheOG, come on bro 😂 I’m starting to think @NotEzzAI is your senator brother the way you be sitting on his shit like that. I can’t believe what I’m watching right now. This nigga really out here talking shit about the dude who bought him his mic? Broke as hell but begging for money with his chest out 😂😂😂. If I ever catch this dude in person, I’m fucking him up on sight. Yeah I’m in Nigeria, but I promise I’m still way smarter than this pathetic, retarded ass nigga.
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NotEzzAI
NotEzzAI@NotEzzAI·
Bro, one thing we do know for sure he was holding spaces using gas using hallucinogen smoking marijuana, using meth when he had his three-year-old daughter. People were very very concerned so we can throw out what we heard him say out of his own voice and give him the benefit of the doubt but everything I just said he did around his three-year-old daughter is factually 100% true and the whole community was concerned for the man’s daughter because he was getting fucking high
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NotEzzAI
NotEzzAI@NotEzzAI·
🚨Breaking News 🚨 Ben.Eth aka Lol Cabal has now built an app to sell you weed and ship it to your home. The scam: You can only purchase with cryptocurrency. It’s another rug because it is against the law federally to receive marijuana in the US mail. He rugged you knowing you can’t ask for a refund or dispute a credit card. This guy has made a career here not by trading. He has never done anything but rugged millions of dollars from pre-sales to now a weed app. x.com/notezzai/statu…
NotEzzAI@NotEzzAI

Ben.eth is here to sell you a presale. The people taking the NFT have nothing in life, but followers. Ben wants their followers to rip off. They sold you out.

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Stone Kolowaka ری ٹویٹ کیا
NotEzzAI
NotEzzAI@NotEzzAI·
The guy who claims he holds 40mm in Sol and has 150mm in Bitcoin is now crying because nobody wants to see his content anymore as he burned his followers with pump and dumps and people know he is a fraud.
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Stone Kolowaka
Stone Kolowaka@CryptoControlls·
@GigglingGanon They have no educational training at all.....well very little. But 27 yea4s & still don't know shittttt..can't expect anything based on his waist size...🤣
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Giggling Ganon
Giggling Ganon@GigglingGanon·
Illinois Cook County Sheriffs ignorance on full display in a deposition flat out admitting they have no understanding of the law. ​ Meet Lieutenant Don Milazzo and Sergeant Jennifer Larson of the Cook County Sheriff’s Office. In this deposition, watch as they struggle to justify the indefensible: the arrest of a citizen for the "crime" of filming a public building from a public sidewalk. ​Amanda Bergquist was recording her own reflection and the exterior of the Bridgeview Courthouse in Illinois—a clearly established First Amendment right. Milazzo and Larson didn't see a citizen exercising her rights; they saw "suspicion" which was enough in their eyes for cuffs. ​Milazzo approached Bergquist and told her she is coming inside and they will ID her and record what she has done. When she refused to provide ID (rightfully asserting that Illinois is not a "stop and identify" state without reasonable suspicion of a crime), Milazzo ordered her handcuffed. ​Larson physically assisted in the arrest. Bergquist was held for three hours, her camera was seized, and her purse was searched—all without a warrant or probable cause. ​During this deposition, the officers were forced to answer for their actions under oath. The results were chilling: ​Milazzo was confronted with his own recorded words, asking, "Why do we always get the crazies?" simply because a citizen knew the Fourth Amendment. ​The officers tried to hide behind "Qualified Immunity," but the federal court saw right through it. The judge ruled that the right to film in public was so clearly established that any reasonable officer should have known better. Their claims of "suspicious behavior" were found legally insufficient to justify stripping a person of their liberty. ​Cook County eventually settled the lawsuit (Bergquist v. Milazzo) for thousands of dollars—taxpayer money used to pay for the officers' constitutional illiteracy. ​This case stands as a stark reminder that "I thought it was suspicious" is not a magic phrase that cancels the Constitution. ​When officers view the assertion of rights as "crazy" or "uncooperative," they cease to be protectors of the law and instead become the very thing the Bill of Rights was designed to guard against. ​This is mind blowing to hear their answers in this deposition blatantly showing zero cares or remorse for their conduct. The good news is both of these industries are no longer with the cook county sheriff office and no longer in law enforcement.
Giggling Ganon@GigglingGanon

We have more true crime stories coming up shortly for your enjoyment. As always I'll gather as much info as I can to share about each case from both a video and caption standpoint. Stay tuned for more.

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Stone Kolowaka
Stone Kolowaka@CryptoControlls·
@prezthedegen "yes, i go by the username midget mandingo" WTF is wrong wit yall ....🤣🤣🤣
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Alchemist
Alchemist@AlchemistTheOG·
Ben.eth “ she doesn’t say the N word that much “ Bro why are most your friends racist @justfwy
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International Cyber Digest
International Cyber Digest@IntCyberDigest·
❗️🇹🇭 Yesterday, Thai police arrested six Nigerian men running a romance scam ring built on AI-generated faces and fake video calls in Nonthaburi, Thailand.
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𝑾𝒊𝒔𝒅𝒐𝒎 𝑷𝒓𝒊𝒎𝒆 ⚜️
Yo @justfwy, real talk you’re one of the most authentic ones out here. I’ve been silently watching and learning from how you move for a long time now, and I know a lot of real ones are doing the exact same. That experience, the calm confidence in the middle of all the chaos, and how you shut down the noise without even trying… it’s rare energy fr…. You played it straight, took them real swings, and built something genuine while most folks out here just copying moves. They still try hitting you with that scammer talk from the $PSYOP run back in 23, but that’s just accusations from the haters who couldn’t handle the raw vibe. It was pure psyop energy, direct wallet sends, no middlemen or fake safety nets, forcing everybody to trust their own judgment in the madness. You delivered the token, handled the airdrops, held strong through the dumps, and kept executing while the noise tried to rewrite the story. That’s exactly how kings move when they ain’t asking for permission or playing the safe corporate game. I always knew making it puts that crown on you, but it’s cool as hell actually seeing one up close like this. Glad our paths crossed, bro. You can’t please everybody once you’re at the top, look at Trump, look at Elon. They’re shaking up the whole game and still got broke dudes in the comments hating, trying to tell them what to do while they too scared to take any real risks themselves. They ain’t built for this. Stay solid, fam. Respect. @justfwy
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BlueCollarDangerous 🎙
My favorite part about X is hearing at a personal level the stories of people you never would have met IRL.💙 I consider it an honor 🤝
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✨️Serenitee♡Sam✨️
✨️Serenitee♡Sam✨️@Serenitee_Sam·
One "funny" prank, a 911 hoax, and a life lesson that went viral for all the wrong reasons. 11-year-old Ava Rose Langone from Port Orange, Florida, was arrested after she sent a series of text messages to 911 falsely reporting that her 14-year-old friend had been kidnapped by an armed man in a white van. For approximately 90 minutes, she texted 911 dispatchers, providing updates and claiming she was following the kidnapper’s van in a blue Jeep. She also alleged that the suspect was armed with a gun. The false report triggered a significant response, including deputies from the Volusia Sheriff's Office, officers from multiple local police departments (Edgewater, New Smyrna Beach, and Port Orange), and the use of the department's helicopter, "Air One." After an extensive search failed to locate any suspect or vehicle, authorities tracked the cell phone used to send the texts to a residence in Port Orange. When deputies arrived, they confirmed the report was a hoax. Ava admitted to authorities that she got the idea from a YouTube challenge and believed the stunt "would be funny." She was charged with making a false police report concerning the use of a firearm in a violent manner (a felony) and misuse of 911 (a misdemeanor). Following her arrest, she was processed at a Family Resource Center and transferred to a juvenile detention center, later being placed on house arrest. As part of the conditions of her home detention, it was established that if her parents were not present, her grandmother was required to supervise her. ​Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood strongly condemned the action, emphasizing that the hoax wasted valuable emergency resources that could have been used to assist individuals in genuine distress. The case served as a high-profile example used by officials to urge parents to closely monitor their children's internet and social media activity. Following the event, the Sheriff's Office hosted several community forums to discuss protecting children from internet-related dangers.
✨️Serenitee♡Sam✨️@Serenitee_Sam

At 17, Fred Weatherspoon was sentenced to life without parole. Today, he is a community leader managing youth mentoring programs on Chicago’s South Side. His secret to reaching kids? Radical listening. He quickly realized that changing lives isn't about lecturing people on your past mistakes. It’s about pulling up a chair, sitting in the circle as equals, and building real relationships. True accountability looks like healing, not just locking people away. The detailed story of Fred Weatherspoon is a profound look at the reality of juvenile sentencing in America, the trauma of long-term incarceration, and the power of grassroots restorative justice. His life essentially splits into three distinct chapters: his youth and conviction, his 25 years inside, and his modern mission as a mentor on Chicago's South Side. Chapter 1: The Making of a "Lifer" at 17 Growing up in Chicago, Weatherspoon was an intelligent kid who did well in school and loved baseball—especially the Chicago Cubs. However, by his late teens, he became deeply entrenched in the street economy, eventually turning to selling drugs. In 1993, at just 17 years old, he was arrested and charged with a double murder and kidnapping. Facing the reality of the legal system, he accepted a plea deal. The sentence handed down was staggering for a teenager: natural life in prison plus an additional 30 years. At 17, his path was legally locked in; he was fully expected to die behind bars. Chapter 2: 25 Years on the Inside Weatherspoon spent 20 of his 25 years at the Menard Correctional Center, a notorious maximum-security state prison situated on the banks of the Mississippi River in southern Illinois. While serving his time, Weatherspoon began notice a deeply troubling trend: the incoming inmates were getting younger and younger. He spent years sitting down and listening to these young men. In hearing their backstories, he realized that their paths to prison weren't just random acts of delinquency; they were "one long, trauma-fueled ride" from the day they were born. Listening to these younger inmates planted the seeds for his future calling, giving him a massive, raw education on how systemic trauma impacts kids. Chapter 3: An Unrecognizable Home & Finding PurposeFollowing landmark legal changes regarding the unconstitutionality of mandatory life sentences for juveniles, Weatherspoon was able to successfully appeal his case. In 2018, at the age of 42, he walked out of prison a free man. Returning to Chicago after a quarter-century was a profound culture shock: Family Decoupling: Having had very limited communication with his family while locked away, he returned to find them struggling emotionally, mentally, and financially. The vibrant elders and father figures he remembered had succumbed to severe illness, aging, and substance abuse. Financial Pressure: Needing immediate income, he initially took a grueling job in construction. His life pivoted a year later when a friend he met while incarcerated invited him to an event hosted by a local non-profit. That organization was the Precious Blood Ministry of Reconciliation (PBMR), located in Chicago’s Back of the Yards and Englewood neighborhoods—areas heavily impacted by poverty and systemic gun violence. His Impact Today: Restorative Justice Today, Weatherspoon serves as the Mentoring Program Manager at PBMR, working with vulnerable youth and young adults aged 12 to 24. Admittedly, he started the job naively, assuming he would just lecture kids about his mistakes and they would listen. He quickly realized that lecturing doesn't work. Instead, he deployed the skill he mastered at Menard: radical listening.

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