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Monday, June 17, 2024

LAX Airport is Becoming a Major Global Drug Trafficking Hub

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat

From an ABC7 Eyewitness News Series


Some 80 million people fly through Los Angeles International Airport every year. And another 50,000 work there every day. That all adds up to an enormous and complicated ecosystem.

And amid all this energy is a massive problem that has been building for years - and nobody is talking about. Well, nobody except a sheriff some 2,000 miles away. Sheriff Grady Judd of Polk County, Fla., says a large quantity of the drugs that end up in his jurisdiction first entered the country through LAX.



"Over and over on these domestic airlines from LAX, through suitcases drugs were smuggled here," Judd said, as he displayed luggage packed with narcotics at a press conference announcing a drug bust.

Through good police work, his agency cracked a big drug ring - and the bust illustrates a much larger problem.

"On one occasion, on one airline, six suitcases with this drug was smuggled into Orlando," Judd said. "They didn't so much as throw a pair of underwear in the suitcase to act like they were hiding the drugs. You think LAX has got a drug smuggling problem?"

The investigation began 4 years ago and involved multiple local and federal agencies, resulting in dozens of arrests. They didn't so much as throw a pair of underwear in the suitcase to act like they were hiding the drugs.

Who is Responsible for Stopping Drugs at LAX?

Judd told Eyewitness News one of the lessons he learned from the bust:

"It's so easy not to be caught. We see drugs pouring out of LAX. The traffickers know this. This was not a one-off event. This was an everyday event during the operation. They use this multi, multi-billion dollar travel industry as their go-to, to move drugs across this country."

He notes his county is just one small jurisdiction and says it's fair to assume similar operations running through LAX are happening all over the country. And he's right. An Eyewitness News investigation uncovered drug cases across the United States and the globe, all originating out of LAX. Multiple law enforcement sources say LAX likely is the drug trafficking hub of the world.

So the problem isn't just affecting Los Angeles - but nearly everyone. Who is responsible for stopping it? As Sheriff Judd and other law enforcement experts say, it's a shared responsibility.

TSA's Narrow Search Authority
The TSA, for example, is responsible for screening bags of every passenger that boards a plane - but they aren't looking for drugs.

"Our search authority is very narrow," said Jason Pantages, TSA's security director for LAX. "We search for weapons, incendiaries and explosives and we want to keep those out of bags and off of planes." LAX is one of the busiest airports in the world - and just looking at originations and destinations, it's the single busiest. They deal with hundreds of thousands of bags and people every day.

Pantages says searching for drugs cannot be part of TSA's job. "We don't have the ability to do that because we're not law enforcement officials. We're transportation security officers."

"We can't search for criminal activity. It's not within what we're able to do with our search authority." TSA screens bags brought onboard as carry-ons using an X-ray machine. But when bags are checked in, they are screened just for explosives, not for drugs. If the explosive detective system doesn't detective explosive material, the bag keeps moving.

LAPD's LAX Jurisdiction
When TSA agents do detect drugs, the first thing they do is notify law enforcement. That starts with the LAX police agency, headed by Chief Cecil Rhambo. He notes that his agency has a long list of responsibilities and crimes to monitor, from thefts to assaults to parking violations and, of course, drug trafficking.

But screening bags? "No," Rhambo says. "Bags are TSA."

DEA Investigations
The DEA also plays a role in cracking down on drug smuggling at the airport. "A lot of what they do is investigative," said Matthew Allen, special agent in charge of the DEA in Los Angeles. "A lot of what they do is try to stop the narcotics before they ever actually even make it to LAX. So part of the dilemma is if they're not going to look at bags - then who should be doing this?"

"We all have a role to play, right? Screening is not the role of the DEA." It's complicated because this airport is so complicated.

FBI's Federal Responsibility
The FBI also plays a role in enforcing drug laws, but only in a limited sense:

When airport employees try to use their credentials to smuggle narcotics past checkpoints. And when illegal drugs are found on a plane. But only if the doors to the cabin have been shut. While they are open, the plane is still under LAX police jurisdiction.

"It's complicated because this airport is so complicated," says FBI special agent David Gates.

Trained Dogs Searches
Even when you see trained dogs at the airport - only a few of them are trained to look for drugs. Most are focused on explosives.

HSI's International Scope
And Homeland Security is another agency that is involved. "We have approximately 40 special agents that reside there on a daily basis," says John Pasciucco with Homeland Security Investigations.

But those agents are primarily focused on international drug cases, he says. And like the DEA, their focus is on investigations, not screening bags. That appears to leave a gray area in terms of who is really in charge of stopping drugs from moving through LAX.

Pasciucco argues that the shared responsibility works well and the issue is not one of conflicting or overlapping jurisdictions. It's just about the sheer volume of people, bags and drugs that move through the airport on a daily basis.

That defines the problem. Agencies may be doing their job well but ultimately no one is actually searching all those bags for drugs.

No More Private Air Strips

The cartels figured all this out years ago, and Sheriff Judd says it's made their job easier. That's why it's rare now to see private drug planes fly into secret landing spots: There's no need.

"We've not seen an airplane, a small airplane, fly into a clandestine strip in decades," Judd says. "The infrastructure's already in place. The drug dealers don't have to create the infrastructure. It's here."


LA Logistics Hub

"Los Angeles, and the area around it, it is the number one hub for drug activity in the country," said U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada. "Mexican cartels use the Los Angeles area to get drugs into the country and then distributed throughout the country, and also internationally."

Estrada grew up in L.A. and is now a key part of the fight against the ruthless dealers that are now on our streets. The more drugs the cartels pour into the city, the more money they make and the more powerful they become.
Why L.A.?

Estrada said it is partly because of those long-established drug trafficking networks.

"Mexican cartels have trusted lieutenants and individuals in this area that helped bring the drugs into it, and then broker deals in the Los Angeles area," he explained. "There's a ton of drugs that get sold in the L.A. area."

Supply & Demand

While some of those drugs are distributed in L.A., huge quantities are shipped to global markets. It's big business and distribution is everything, and LAX is just one cog in the system. Southern California has become the cartels' unwilling partner.

"Number one, we have one of the busiest airports for passenger and cargo in the United States, if not the world," said John Pasciucco with Homeland Security Investigations. "We have the largest seaport over here, as well as we're 90 miles north of the busiest border crossing in the Western Hemisphere. In addition, we have one of eight international mail facilities."

Pasciucco says smugglers are brilliant in finding ways to get the drugs out - they adapt, diversify and are constantly changing tactics. Their reward is money. Drugs like cocaine, fentanyl, heroin and methamphetamine are abundant in L.A. and as a result, they're cheap. But if you can get the drugs into other markets, like Canada, Australia or Japan, it increases in value 20-fold or more.

"You can get a pound of meth here for probably $800 in Los Angeles, and you could turn it into $200,000 with a 16-hour flight," explained Pasciucco when discussing the profit margin in New Zealand. From nondescript travelers to airport employees, that kind of money lures many people to become drug runners.

"We have a case right now where an individual was smuggling methamphetamine through LAX to Japan," said Estrada. "He was caught, and now he faces a very lengthy sentence. He told us he was going to get paid over $120,000, just for moving this one shipment."
Priority mail

But it's not just what's going out, it's also about what's coming in. Fentanyl has already reinvented itself. In 2018, I was shown a brick of pure fentanyl delivered from a lab in China - that's how it used to get here. "The U.S. government got pretty good at identifying those packages coming in and were seizing it," said Pasciucco. "I think the cartels saw it as an opportunity to kind of expand their portfolio, too."

Precursor Shipments

The cartels have figured out they can make their own fentanyl by bringing in the raw ingredients, which are known as precursor chemicals, which are legal.

"What we've seen at LAX specifically, is precursor chemicals flying Air Cargo into Los Angeles," said Pasciucco. In other words, packages airmailed from Asia to LAX.

With synthetics, like fentanyl, I mean, there's an unlimited supply of chemicals ... it's never-ending.
Matthew Allen, DEA in Los Angeles

The cartels then bring the chemicals over the border to their own labs in Mexico, synthesize it into fentanyl, and then smuggle it back to L.A. to be distributed around the world. Matthew Allen, special agent in charge of the DEA in Los Angeles, says it's given the cartels an unlimited supply.

"I mean, when you look at things like cocaine, heroin, things of that nature, you're talking about agriculture, right? You have a growing season, and it's time-consuming and it takes a lot of effort," explained Allen. "With synthetics, like fentanyl, I mean, there's an unlimited supply of chemicals. I mean it's never-ending. They just keep getting more and more and more."

And that's what will be hitting the streets of LA and everywhere else, in what is promising to be a busy travel season.

Sources ABC7, ABC7

108 comments:

  1. Lax the last place I would fly out of right now there is way too many smaller airports in Los Angeles area that ship you out easier

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No period kid 😭 your funny.
      Prices are more expensive at smaller airports.

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    2. You haven't been on a plane.

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    3. Sometimes less of a hassle is worth paying a little more.

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    4. Not all of us travel on a budget, moron

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    5. Youre* Jesus lol

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    6. 7:06

      It's "you're" , needs apostrophe.

      Delete
    7. @9:02 it’s “you’re,” (comma right after the e, quotation mark follows).

      Delete
    8. The smaller airports don’t have as many direct flights as lax does, smaller airports you gotta deal with layovers!

      Delete
    9. coma AFTER the quotation mark, moron 😅

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    10. 11:35
      Re-read the comment @9:02. You are in error.

      Delete
    11. 5:49
      The comma is there, pay attention.

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    12. 3:44 when I fly international it has to be LAX especially direct flights. For travel within the US I fly out of Ontario, CA or Burbank.

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    13. 3:44 prices are more expensive at smaller airports? You dont fly much huh? I can fly from Ontario to Vegas for like 50 round trip no carry on just personal item. Ontario to chicago round trip same like 80 round trip. Guess youve never hear of frontier airlines lol

      Delete
    14. So bb has teachers now. Hahah they try to hard to type.

      Delete
    15. 10:19
      Nino I guess you never heard your teacher tell you to use Periods at the end of a sentence.🤣

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    16. So quick question. We here to learn and debate and criticize cartels or are we in grammar school. 🤦

      Delete
    17. 1:32
      Are you serious? I consider it polite when one corrects me. Yeah, some do get snarky but that's beside the point.

      Delete
    18. It's become the teenager reddit kids room. So in essence it's also grammar school. You do see some not using Capitals when needed then you have the no period kid, not knowing when to use Periods.
      Top ass is your teacher for today.

      Respect him .

      Delete
    19. 1:32 A written question ends with this question mark: ?.

      Delete
    20. 1:06 PM correcting my grammar like I give a F! Lmao this is not an English course. I always find it hilarious people like you correcting yet your grammar sucks too. It is NOT "nino" (that's a godfather). Did you mean "niño"??? Freaking idiot i swear.

      Delete
    21. It's too bad SIR is no longer around to kick everyone ass when they run afoul.

      Delete
    22. 2:02 go learn in an English class if you want to learn proper grammar lol .

      3:50 you are correct my friend . Missed the question mark. Sorry I was to busy running my company with 300 employees to correctly check my grammar.

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    23. 11:35 yes there's English classes in here. Learn don't be a crybaby when corrected.

      Delete
  2. wonder what part of Mexico these guys are from.....

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  3. Investigate all airports in USA.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. USA wash down all the toilet 🚽

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  4. How mexico is cool country, beltran leyvas had control over fucking mexico city airport :) and we have customs here telling us how they are fucking mad over few briefcase shipings 😱😵🤣💯

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  5. Wow:
    > "You can get a pound of meth here for probably $800 in Los Angeles, and you could turn it into $200,000 with a 16-hour flight," explained Pasciucco when discussing the profit margin in New Zealand.

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    Replies
    1. This assumes that you can score the meth for that price, mule it yourself through customs to New Zealand, and then connect with the buyer who has the money. Nice trick if you can do it.

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    2. New Zealand is nice country. No need to do CCP any favors by turning it into METHico. 🚫

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    3. New Zealand is swimming in meth. We’ve had a bad problem here for 25 years and now we have Mexican cartel meth here all the time. About 100 k US dollars a kilo wholesale here. Economics add up.

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    4. Back in the day the homies used to fly to Hawaii from lax with meth taped to their bodies! New Zealand Australia way more money!

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    5. 604 whats ccp?

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    6. 10:58 Chinese Communist Party CCP the Political Party that runs China and supplies many of the chemical precursors

      Delete
  6. DHS protecting the ports?

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  7. "yeah there's a guy with a ticket to Mexico, couldn't look much stranger
    Walkin' in the hall with his things and all
    Smilin' says he was the Lone Ranger
    Coming into Los Angeles, bringing in a couple of keys
    Don't touch my bags if you please, mr. customs man"
    ..Arlo Guthrie
    🦎

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ughh..
      Cringy hippy quotes…

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    2. I enjoy your music quotes 2:58.
      8:39 it is only "cringy hippy" as you say bc you know who the artist is. Those type lyrics can similarly be found in a corrido or rap song also. Why does everyone feel the need to complain about some one else's comment? Is that really the best you can add to the conversation?

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  8. For one person that gets caught you have another 40 to 50 that get through. It's just like bringing the drugs through the boarder. Too many people to check. Not enough time or resources to hire more agents. The profits are to great for a person down on their luck to ignore. One successful delivery and your life changes for the better. There really is nothing that can be done to fix this problem. Nuff Said!!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Technology will come along to change it. Cars will be scanned drugs will be found.

      Delete
  9. An alleged audio of "Chiricuazo" from CDN telling his story


    https://youtu.be/k8lO-Gs9Bpo?si=FpmbyTzkUQyuSO6m


    😎

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  10. There's a few incidents of airport staff moving kilos out, one in SD 10 years ago, and many more in LAX

    then there was the flight attendant with like 60 bricks flying out of LAX in 2016

    but I didn't know that it was so easy for anybody to do that. because TSA isn't really screening for drugs. but they do have the scanners, so a bag full of kilos is going to get flagged, but smaller amounts, no. do that lots of time I guess. esp. meth and fent.

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    Replies
    1. When I was in the national guard I would here stories of soldiers on the take when they were in sensitive border operations.

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    2. This whole story is so ridiculous, one agency is scanning all the bags but searching only for weapons or explosives. Seems the HSI guys have an easy job and when failing they blame others.

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  11. Not surprised. LAX busy Airport

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    Replies
    1. But i am very surprised because they ALWAYS get you for any liquids ans theres tons of security.

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    2. obviously people getting paid off. Some supervisor/management level position is on the payroll

      Delete
  12. Clinton controlled the airport in Arkansas for the CIA Barry Seal drug drops

    ReplyDelete
  13. i just use DHL Fedex Ups and old school way driving it across state lines

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Avoid driving through Utah, the cops don't play by the rules there.
      Also, if you have brown skin and California plates, you're gonna get eyeballed by state troopers all over the American heartland.
      Even hick small-town sheriffs know what time it is when Hispanics drive through their sleepy villages.😅

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    2. i usually switch rentals when i’m going from LA to chicago..easy peasy bought 3 times every trip

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    3. True shit. Had to stop in Provo once to gas up. I had to make sure everyone saw that I took my piece out of the trunk, and had it up front with me. It was a vibe, and not a good one.

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    4. Iowa and Kansas are worse. The local cops get a "cut" of what ever cash they seize moving back west. It's a total racket they live off of.

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    5. you never drive cross country with ca plates always use rentals

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    6. You need to be a normal looking very white person to brave a cross country trek, or a nerdy asian stereotype maybe, but driving while black or brown in flyover county is a risky proposition these days

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    7. Stop speeding, use your turn signals, stop when it’s required, no tinted windows, have a valid driver’s license and an insurance. From what i have seen, most that are caught lack at least one of these.

      Delete
  14. Off topic, but what happened to the dude who got his ass bit by a spider on Saturday? 🕷️

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. He turned into Spider-Man and now fights cartels

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    2. His ass is dead!

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    3. I was wondering the same thing hahahahahahha

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    4. I'm here I'm here , I'm ok , I just know not to wear open rapid release chones no more

      Delete
  15. I think this guy inadvertently just exposed the big lie that the US government is telling by painting the mexican cartels as the big boogey man and the only producers of fentanyl:

    "What we've seen at LAX specifically, is precursor chemicals flying Air Cargo into Los Angeles,"

    "The cartels then bring the chemicals over the border to their own labs in Mexico, synthesize it into fentanyl, and then smuggle it back to L.A. to be distributed around the world".

    Why would anybody do that? Why smuggle twice and run the risk of getting caught twice? It makes absolutely no sense logically or logistically. Why not just synthesize it in L.A., which is what they are probably doing but they are never going to accept that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "They (the Mexicans) have seized record amounts of fentanyl, they have dismantled production centers but, all of that is because of our assistance; our help, an example of the allow them to make additional resources to strengthen their capacity," the Secretary of State stated.

      But in the previous article Blinken Made this statement.
      You gotta be really gullible to believe the crock of shit these politicians are trying to push while this article narrates a whole other story....
      🤔"So tell me more about how the U.S allowed Mexico to achieve all them seizures but you can't control what goes out of LAX!" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🫠

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    2. It’s flown sometimes into LAX and trafficked BACK to TJ concierges into fent and then crossed

      In the earlier days like 2017

      4ANNP those precursors were coming in smaller form china

      Big container shipments after that

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    3. @8:55 no need to cook it in Mexico if here in Cali it’s being cooked few years ago their was a cook around making it out here in Cali 😉 that good good 😂 alledgelly.

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    4. 8:55
      You must be new to this.

      Delete
    5. 855...he's talking pre-2017 bro. Mexicans weren't involved back then. Straight dark-web shit. Singles would cost 500-1000.

      Delete
  16. I mean. I mean. I mean. 🤦‍♂️
    Sheriff doesn't mention anything about foreign nationals doing these crimes.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Number one, we have one of the busiest airports for passenger and cargo in the United States, if not the world," said John Pasciucco with Homeland Security Investigations. "We have the largest seaport over here, as well as we're 90 miles north of the busiest border crossing in the Western Hemisphere. In addition, we have one of eight international mail facilities."

    These are all just lazy excuses, he isnt doing his job.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Proof America is a failed state. We should send in Mexican Special Forces to clean up that shit pile.

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  19. Swimming trunks are on

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  20. Gilbertona scares me

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  21. Over 10 years ago LAX police raided the homies house in La Puente cuz he was shipping out AZ Reggie weed to some Jamaicans back east via LAX!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Im from El Monte, im sooooo glad your homie got busted hoepfully hes still in the pen.

      Delete
    2. Gotta be trusha with them bumbaclouts they'll just end up robbing or snitching on you.

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    3. 129 He only did a few months cuz they got him on a probation violation! 1048 no pen just regular county jail!

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    4. 1048 he’s free like a bird now! But eppie, Epifanio Mercado a jack boy bajador from El Monte is still dead tho, and santos from El Monte PD would give him the intel on all the licks! Is santos retired now? What about From El Monte pd? Is he retired?

      Delete
    5. 1048 Is Batres from El Monte PD retired now?

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    6. 1048 you must be a fat hating ass cholo from EMF Flores gang and you probably hate on Bassett and puente 😂

      Delete
  22. Is becoming??? Do you mean is becoming WORSE?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Top ass you are you directing that to???

      Delete
    2. Well. Honestly I have no idea!! Looks like my brain vapor-locked. I bet it was gonna be good tho

      Delete
  23. SOCALJ...FELICITACIONES BUEN ARTICULO.....Y EN LAS NARICES DE LA DEA,,,,,,,,Y DESPUES DICEN QUE SON LOS MEXICANOS...........LA CORRUPCION ES GRANDISIMA.....LAX AIRPORT.YUL MONTREAL.CANADA..NYC.PARIS.FUMICINO.ROMA ITALIA,,,,,,,HAY MUCHA CORRUPCION........MOCHILAS...MOCHILAS......LA LEY DE LA VIDA..................TA CANIJO.....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Pendejo no letra capitalis.

      Delete
    2. No grites wey. Lo que estas diciendo no es tan importante.

      Delete
    3. La pipa alas 3:15 am.

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    4. Pack my pipa por favor y algo bien

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    5. Why are you so anal about capitals? Did you have a panic attack about it ?

      Delete
    6. 3:39 ya dorkie

      Delete
  24. Replies
    1. lmao ya vete a la chingada sol, nadie te quiere aqui guey

      Delete
    2. Sol is cool, I think he took my order at Applebee's yesterday.
      He called me a clown when I commented one time, so I stiffed him on the tip

      Delete
    3. 11:39 what the hell you doin at Apple bees ? It's juneteenth honey

      Delete
    4. King of fake military career.

      Delete
  25. Grady Judd is the kind of Sheriff everyone wishes they had in their city. That's a good man right there. Real police.

    ReplyDelete
  26. This story has to be a trap for drugs. Why tell them about this if not a set up. 🤔

    ReplyDelete

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