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Whats so special about this guy? Its the same story with all the big drug dealers so what. People these days
Quote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 08:32:46 PMWhats so special about this guy? Its the same story with all the big drug dealers so what. People these daysi think there is a quite difference between this guy & most drug dealershe was selling the most potent heroin the streets had ever seen, for prices that were extremely lowhe had his in source, and brought the drugs into the U.S.A from Vietnam in military war planes....that sounds like most big drug dealers to you??
Quote from: Lunatic 63 on November 09, 2007, 09:02:55 PMQuote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 08:32:46 PMWhats so special about this guy? Its the same story with all the big drug dealers so what. People these daysi think there is a quite difference between this guy & most drug dealershe was selling the most potent heroin the streets had ever seen, for prices that were extremely lowhe had his in source, and brought the drugs into the U.S.A from Vietnam in military war planes....that sounds like most big drug dealers to you?? Maybe most big time drug dealers didn't go to Vietnam, but his story is virtually the same. He get knocks and snitches on a whole bunch of others.
Quote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 09:12:38 PMQuote from: Lunatic 63 on November 09, 2007, 09:02:55 PMQuote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 08:32:46 PMWhats so special about this guy? Its the same story with all the big drug dealers so what. People these daysi think there is a quite difference between this guy & most drug dealershe was selling the most potent heroin the streets had ever seen, for prices that were extremely lowhe had his in source, and brought the drugs into the U.S.A from Vietnam in military war planes....that sounds like most big drug dealers to you?? Maybe most big time drug dealers didn't go to Vietnam, but his story is virtually the same. He get knocks and snitches on a whole bunch of others.ok, when u sum it up like that, surebut the:vietnam thingprices he sold forpotency of his herointhat all makes him very different to me...
Quote from: Lunatic 63 on November 09, 2007, 09:14:57 PMQuote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 09:12:38 PMQuote from: Lunatic 63 on November 09, 2007, 09:02:55 PMQuote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 08:32:46 PMWhats so special about this guy? Its the same story with all the big drug dealers so what. People these daysi think there is a quite difference between this guy & most drug dealershe was selling the most potent heroin the streets had ever seen, for prices that were extremely lowhe had his in source, and brought the drugs into the U.S.A from Vietnam in military war planes....that sounds like most big drug dealers to you?? Maybe most big time drug dealers didn't go to Vietnam, but his story is virtually the same. He get knocks and snitches on a whole bunch of others.ok, when u sum it up like that, surebut the:vietnam thingprices he sold forpotency of his herointhat all makes him very different to me...No doubt, I guess when you put it like that. I was just saying nothing big.
Quote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 09:16:20 PMQuote from: Lunatic 63 on November 09, 2007, 09:14:57 PMQuote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 09:12:38 PMQuote from: Lunatic 63 on November 09, 2007, 09:02:55 PMQuote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 08:32:46 PMWhats so special about this guy? Its the same story with all the big drug dealers so what. People these daysi think there is a quite difference between this guy & most drug dealershe was selling the most potent heroin the streets had ever seen, for prices that were extremely lowhe had his in source, and brought the drugs into the U.S.A from Vietnam in military war planes....that sounds like most big drug dealers to you?? Maybe most big time drug dealers didn't go to Vietnam, but his story is virtually the same. He get knocks and snitches on a whole bunch of others.ok, when u sum it up like that, surebut the:vietnam thingprices he sold forpotency of his herointhat all makes him very different to me...No doubt, I guess when you put it like that. I was just saying nothing big.i guessagree to disagree lol
Im more Frank Lucas than Ludacris??? the fuck does that mean??
Quote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 08:32:46 PMWhats so special about this guy? Its the same story with all the big drug dealers so what. People these daysmy man...he was the illest
Quote from: Chamillitary Click 07 on November 09, 2007, 08:51:01 PMQuote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 08:32:46 PMWhats so special about this guy? Its the same story with all the big drug dealers so what. People these daysmy man...he was the illest I think George Jung was the illest: (look at his website http://www.georgejung.com/ )George Jung (AKA Boston George) was born in Boston, Massachusetts and raised in Weymouth. He started out as a cannabis smuggler in the 1960s importing hundreds of pounds from Mexico, stealing airplanes, and flying from Puerto Vallarta to California. After quite a while his business grew to the point where he was making over $100,000 a month and had started using professional pilots; he was eventually arrested in Chicago with 660 pounds of marijuana at the Playboy ClubHe was sentenced to 26 months in a federal prison in Danbury, Connecticut, where his cellmate was Carlos Lehder, a young German-Colombian man, convicted of motor vehicle theft. Lehder introduced Jung to the Colombian Cartel and Jung taught Lehder how to smuggle. The day that Jung was released he was to contact Lehder in Florida, in order to begin preparation. Their plan was to fly hundreds of kilos of cocaine from Pablo Escobar's Colombian ranch to the U.S., where Jung's California connection, Richard Barile, took it from there. George never had a problem with exchanging the smuggled cocaine for his transportation fee. Initially, it was $10,000 per kilo but later it went down to $5,000 per kilo as supply grew. He had a security man that would accompany him to the exchanges where George would give the keys to a car and half the cocaine to his connection and leave. A day or two later they would meet up again and exchange keys to cars. He said he never saw/used any guns in the marijuana business. Jung was hesitant to allow Lehder, or any other cartel member to know Barile's identity, as his "California connection" was what gave Jung his edge in the smuggling game and kept others from simply cutting him out. However, in what turned out to be an error in judgment, Jung introduced Lehder to Barile. By the late 1970s, Lehder took his plans to the next level. As Jung had initially feared, by going straight through Richard Barile, Lehder no longer needed Jung in his operation. However, Jung recovered from the betrayal and found other schemes that made him more than $100 million.Jung was later arrested in Massachusetts in 1987 at his mansion on Nauset Beach,[citation needed] near Chatham. With his family, he skipped bail, but very quickly became involved in another deal, where he was betrayed by a pilot of his acquaintance. During this time, Carlos Lehder began cooperating with the government against Noriega. With Escobar's approval, Jung agreed to testify against Carlos Lehder and was set free. Lehder received life plus 135 years but after making a deal with the federal government, he went into the Bureau of Prisons' version of the federal Witness Protection Program.After working some "clean" jobs, Jung began to work in the marijuana business again. In 1994 he reconnected with his old Mexican marijuana smuggling partner and was arrested with 500 pounds of mexican weed and faced a 15 year mandatory sentence. He pleaded guilty to three counts of conspiracy. He is currently incarcerated at Federal Medical Center (FMC) Devens, MA[1]. He is scheduled to be released on November 27, 2014, at age 72. After his release, he will still have eight years of parole.
Quote from: Elano on November 10, 2007, 02:16:29 AMQuote from: Chamillitary Click 07 on November 09, 2007, 08:51:01 PMQuote from: boycriedwolf619 on November 09, 2007, 08:32:46 PMWhats so special about this guy? Its the same story with all the big drug dealers so what. People these daysmy man...he was the illest I think George Jung was the illest: (look at his website http://www.georgejung.com/ )George Jung (AKA Boston George) was born in Boston, Massachusetts and raised in Weymouth. He started out as a cannabis smuggler in the 1960s importing hundreds of pounds from Mexico, stealing airplanes, and flying from Puerto Vallarta to California. After quite a while his business grew to the point where he was making over $100,000 a month and had started using professional pilots; he was eventually arrested in Chicago with 660 pounds of marijuana at the Playboy ClubHe was sentenced to 26 months in a federal prison in Danbury, Connecticut, where his cellmate was Carlos Lehder, a young German-Colombian man, convicted of motor vehicle theft. Lehder introduced Jung to the Colombian Cartel and Jung taught Lehder how to smuggle. The day that Jung was released he was to contact Lehder in Florida, in order to begin preparation. Their plan was to fly hundreds of kilos of cocaine from Pablo Escobar's Colombian ranch to the U.S., where Jung's California connection, Richard Barile, took it from there. George never had a problem with exchanging the smuggled cocaine for his transportation fee. Initially, it was $10,000 per kilo but later it went down to $5,000 per kilo as supply grew. He had a security man that would accompany him to the exchanges where George would give the keys to a car and half the cocaine to his connection and leave. A day or two later they would meet up again and exchange keys to cars. He said he never saw/used any guns in the marijuana business. Jung was hesitant to allow Lehder, or any other cartel member to know Barile's identity, as his "California connection" was what gave Jung his edge in the smuggling game and kept others from simply cutting him out. However, in what turned out to be an error in judgment, Jung introduced Lehder to Barile. By the late 1970s, Lehder took his plans to the next level. As Jung had initially feared, by going straight through Richard Barile, Lehder no longer needed Jung in his operation. However, Jung recovered from the betrayal and found other schemes that made him more than $100 million.Jung was later arrested in Massachusetts in 1987 at his mansion on Nauset Beach,[citation needed] near Chatham. With his family, he skipped bail, but very quickly became involved in another deal, where he was betrayed by a pilot of his acquaintance. During this time, Carlos Lehder began cooperating with the government against Noriega. With Escobar's approval, Jung agreed to testify against Carlos Lehder and was set free. Lehder received life plus 135 years but after making a deal with the federal government, he went into the Bureau of Prisons' version of the federal Witness Protection Program.After working some "clean" jobs, Jung began to work in the marijuana business again. In 1994 he reconnected with his old Mexican marijuana smuggling partner and was arrested with 500 pounds of mexican weed and faced a 15 year mandatory sentence. He pleaded guilty to three counts of conspiracy. He is currently incarcerated at Federal Medical Center (FMC) Devens, MA[1]. He is scheduled to be released on November 27, 2014, at age 72. After his release, he will still have eight years of parole.LOL my nigga! his drug resume looks good . ill put him right up there with my man frank
Quote from: blunts40sbitches on November 09, 2007, 11:50:25 PMIm more Frank Lucas than Ludacris??? the fuck does that mean??more of a drug dealer than a rapper type thing