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12-22-00
Nevada Denies L.A.
Developer Gaming License.
Real estate: Regulators turn down Judah Hertz's
application, citing alleged dealings with reputed mob figures. He denies
wrongdoing.
From The Los Angeles Times Staff and Wire Reports
Judah Hertz, owner of the California Mart and several other
major downtown Los Angeles properties, lost a bid Wednesday for a Nevada
gaming license as a result of alleged ties to reputed mobsters involved in
drug dealing and prostitution.
Hertz "obviously is unsuitable for licensure with the state
of Nevada and has no business here," said state Gaming Commission Chairman
Brian Sandoval as the commission voted 4 to 0 against Hertz's application.
Hertz denies any wrongdoing. In an interview with The Times,
he said he has sold the Comstock hotel-casino in Reno and withdrew offers to
buy two other Reno properties, the Flamingo Hilton and a 50% stake in Sands
Regent. Hertz Investment Group and an affiliate, Sapphire Gaming, began
acquiring the three Reno casinos in 1999, starting with a $5-million deal
for the Comstock.
The New York native had asked to withdraw an outdated
application for a gaming license, but regulators rejected the request and
voted unanimously to deny him. Nevada officials said Hertz failed to show up
to a hearing of the state's Gaming Control Board and a meeting of the gaming
commission.
"I knew what the ruling was," said Hertz, who owns about 3
million square feet of office space in central Los Angeles. "There was no
point in going."
The Nevada gaming control board said Hertz had dealings with
reputed organized crime figures including Jacob Orgad, an Israeli immigrant
and accused international drug smuggler. The board said Orgad allegedly
distributed cocaine for the Gambino and Escobar crime families, supplied
cocaine and recruited women for notorious Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss and
has been linked to the illegal distribution of methylene
dioxymethamphetamine, or MDMA, also called Ecstasy.
Control Board documents also state Hertz got some of the
money for his Reno ventures from an uncle of Hai Waknine and Assaf Waknine,
alleged enforcers for Orgad and members of the Bachsihan crime organization
involved in ecstasy dealing.
Hertz said his only connection with Orgad was during the
purchase of a downtown building on Hill Street. He said he paid Orgad a
brokerage commission as part of the purchase and has had no further dealings
with him.
The real estate investor has also been a mentor and a
business associate of Hai Waknine, according to John Forbess, an attorney
for Hertz. Waknine might have had a troubled past, but "he's been completely
straight and has been a respectable businessperson," Forbess said. "It's not
like Judah has been hanging around with unsavory characters."
Hertz, who had sought licensing approval for himself and
several families, got the only denial from Nevada gaming regulators. The
other applications were referred to staff. Though they could come up again,
it's unlikely given the concern about Hertz.
|
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div. of PLR International
P.O. Box 19146
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Only
Blacks Flooded
New Orleans is divided along
racial lines by floodwaters, with most of the affluent, predominantly
white neighborhoods largely untouched, and most of the poor, predominantly
black neighborhoods underwater. And some want to keep it that way.
An article in the online version of the Wall Street Journal
tells the story, though it’s only available to those who pay for it. Raw
Story quoted excerpts:
Thursday, September 08, 2005
By Christopher Cooper, The Wall Street Journal
NEW ORLEANS -- On a sultry morning earlier this week, Ashton O'Dwyer
stepped out of his home on this city's grandest street and made a beeline
for his neighbor's pool. Wearing nothing but a pair of blue swim trunks and
carrying two milk jugs, he drew enough pool water to flush the toilet in his
home.
The mostly African-American
neighborhoods of New Orleans are largely underwater, and the people who
lived there have scattered across the country. But in many of the
predominantly white and more affluent areas, streets are dry and passable.
Gracious homes are mostly intact and powered by generators. Wednesday,
officials reiterated that all residents must leave New Orleans, but it's
still unclear how far they will go to enforce the order.
The green expanse of Audubon Park, in the city's Uptown area, has doubled
in recent days as a heliport for the city's rich -- and a terminus for the
small armies of private security guards who have been dispatched to keep the
homes there safe and habitable. Mr. O'Dwyer has cellphone service and ice
cubes to cool off his highballs in the evening. By Wednesday, the city water
service even sprang to life, making the daily trips to his neighbor's pool
unnecessary. A pair of oil-company engineers, dispatched by his son-in-law,
delivered four cases of water, a box of delicacies including herring with
mustard sauce and 15 gallons of generator gasoline.
Despite the disaster that has overwhelmed New Orleans, the city's monied,
mostly white elite is hanging on and maneuvering to play a role in the
recovery when the floodwaters of Katrina are gone. "New Orleans is ready to
be rebuilt. Let's start right here," says Mr. O'Dwyer, standing in his
expansive kitchen, next to a counter covered with a jumble of weaponry and
electric wires.
More than a few people in Uptown, the fashionable district surrounding
St. Charles Ave., have ancestors who arrived here in the 1700s. High society
is still dominated by these old-line families, represented today by
prominent figures such as former New Orleans Board of Trade President Thomas
Westfeldt; Richard Freeman, scion of the family that long owned the city's
Coca-Cola bottling plant; and William Boatner Reily, owner of a Louisiana
coffee company. Their social pecking order is dictated by the mysterious
hierarchy of "krewes," groups with hereditary membership that participate in
the annual carnival leading up to Mardi Gras. In recent years, the city's
most powerful business circles have expanded to include some newcomers and
non-whites, such as Mayor Ray Nagin, the former Cox Communications executive
elected in 2002.
Israeli Security
A few blocks from Mr. O'Dwyer, in an exclusive gated community known as
Audubon Place, is the home of James Reiss, descendent of an old-line Uptown
family. He fled Hurricane Katrina just before the storm and returned soon
afterward by private helicopter. Mr. Reiss became wealthy as a supplier of
electronic systems to shipbuilders, and he serves in Mayor Nagin's
administration as chairman of the city's Regional Transit Authority.
When New Orleans descended into a
spiral of looting and anarchy, Mr. Reiss
helicoptered
in an Israeli security company to guard
his Audubon Place house and those of his neighbors.
He says he has been in contact with about 40 other New Orleans business
leaders since the storm. Tomorrow, he says, he and some of those leaders
plan to be in Dallas, meeting with Mr. Nagin to begin mapping out a future
for the city.
The power elite of New Orleans -- whether they are still in the city or
have moved temporarily to enclaves such as Destin, Fla., and Vail, Colo. --
insist the remade city won't simply restore the old order. New Orleans
before the flood was burdened by a teeming underclass, substandard schools
and a high crime rate. The city has few corporate headquarters.
The new city must be something very different, Mr. Reiss says, with
better services and fewer poor people. "Those who want to see this city
rebuilt want to see it done in a completely different way: demographically,
geographically and politically," he says. "I'm not just speaking for myself
here. The way we've been living is not going to happen again, or we're out."
Not every white business leader or prominent family supports that view.
Some black leaders and their allies in New Orleans fear that it boils down
to preventing large numbers of blacks from returning to the city and
eliminating the African-American voting majority. Rep. William Jefferson, a
sharecropper's son who was educated at Harvard and is currently serving his
eighth term in Congress, points out that the evacuees from New Orleans
already have been spread out across many states far from their old home and
won't be able to afford to return. "This is an example of poor people forced
to make choices because they don't have the money to do otherwise," Mr.
Jefferson says.
Calvin Fayard, a wealthy white plaintiffs' lawyer who lives near Mr.
O'Dwyer, says the mass evacuation could turn a Democratic stronghold into a
Republican one. Mr. Fayard, a prominent Democratic fund-raiser, says
tampering with the city's demographics means tampering with its unique
culture and shouldn't be done. "People can't survive a year temporarily --
they'll go somewhere, get a job and never come back," he says.
Mr. Reiss acknowledges that shrinking parts of the city occupied by
hardscrabble neighborhoods would inevitably result in fewer poor and
African-American residents. But he says the electoral balance of the city
wouldn't change significantly and that the business elite isn't trying to
reverse the last 30 years of black political control. "We understand that
African Americans have had a great deal of influence on the history of New
Orleans," he says.
A key question will be the position of Mr. Nagin, who was elected with
the support of the city's business leadership. He couldn't be reached
Wednesday. Mr. Reiss says the mayor suggested the Dallas meeting and will
likely attend when he goes there to visit his evacuated family
Black politicians have controlled City Hall here since the late 1970s,
but the wealthy white families of New Orleans have never been fully
eclipsed. Stuffing campaign coffers with donations, these families dominate
the city's professional and executive classes, including the white-shoe law
firms, engineering offices, and local shipping companies. White voters often
act as a swing bloc, propelling blacks or Creoles into the city's top
political jobs. That was the case with Mr. Nagin, who defeated another
African American to win the mayoral election in 2002.
Creoles, as many mixed-race residents of New Orleans call themselves,
dominate the city's white-collar and government ranks and tend to ally
themselves with white voters on issues such as crime and education, while
sharing many of the same social concerns as African-American voters. Though
the flooding took a toll on many Creole neighborhoods, it's likely that
Creoles will return to the city in fairly large numbers, since many of them
have the means to do so.
On Thursday, President Bush issued an executive order allowing
construction firms to pay less than the prevailing wage for projects to
rebuild New Orleans.
One could say, therefore, that the poor will rebuild the city for the
rich, and be paid as little as possible doing it.
Not everyone agrees, though. Critics argue that the Davis-Bacon Act,
passed in 1931, which requires federally funded construction projects to pay
at least the prevailing wage in an area,
is itself
discriminatory and should be repealed altogether.
But not all has gone well for Hertz.
In Nevada, gambling regulators
rejected his application to buy three Reno casinos in 2000 because of his
"reputed mob ties." Hertz this week said the problems with the Reno
casinos were instigated by Las Vegas interests that didn't want his competition.
Hertz hired a former U.S. Justice Department prosecutor and a corporate
investigation firm to conduct a six-month investigation into the allegations.
The firm, in its report, concluded "that the central allegations made in the
(Nevada) Gaming Board's denial recommendations are not supported by evidence we
have reviewed."
Th
most damning association was with an Israeli immigrant Hertz had a minor real
estate investment with in Los Angeles during the late 1980s. The Israeli man was
later indicted in a large Ectasy
smuggling import ring by federal authorities.
Hertz, earlier this summer, said he
had no idea of the criminal activity of the associate, and that the
indictment against the man dates the criminal activity to a period after Hertz
no longer had a relationship with the smuggler. Hertz added that he had met the
man in a social setting and made one small transaction with him. As he said at
the time, "If you have dinner with someone you don't know well, are you expected
to know" their criminal intent or involvement in criminal acticvity?
Regardless, the damage has been repaired and Hertz has long been back on
track doing what he does best.
Malnik Bahamas
The Palm Beach
Post reports: "Alvin Malnik, the man once regarded as the heir apparent to
mobster Meyer Lansky, ... described by federal authorities as a top associate of
organized crime figures ... Among
his friends, Malnik counts Saudi royalty. His son once married a princess
descended from the Middle Eastern kingdom's founding family. ... The sole owner
of a Georgia company, Title Loans of America,
Malnik runs a national chain of loan
stores that make millions of
dollars from the interest charged on quick cash offered to people in desperate
need of money. ... Attorney General Bob Butterworth [Florida] likens the
business to 'legalized loan sharking.' ... 'It was a known fact among the
criminal underworld that dealing with Al Malnik was the same as dealing with
Meyer Lansky,' [said] Vincent Teresa, 'a convicted criminal and frequent
government witness currently in the federal Witness Protection Program,' ...When
Lansky died in 1983 at age 81, Reader's Digest named Malnik his 'heir apparent.'
... 'He is not welcome here,' James Hurley, the chairman of the New Jersey
Casino Control Commission ... 'He's done nothing to overcome his reputation of
being closely identified with Meyer Lansky and other organized crime figures.'
...
In
1962, Malnik was listed as a director of the Bank of World Commerce, a
Bahamas-based institution that involved 'some of the nations' top gangsters,'
... In 1978, a Bahamian company named Appolonia Investment Limited paid $3.35
million to buy the property just north of Malnik's Ranch. ... Malnik refuse to
divulge Appolonia's owners. But records from the Register General's Office in
the Bahamas show the principal shareholder is a Saudi Arabian prince who is a
prominent member of the kingdom's royal family and longtime friend of Malnik's.
... Malnik and the prince -- a son of King Abdul Aziz, the founder of modern
Saudi Arabia -- once lived in neighboring condos in the Cricket Club. According
to news stories in the 1980s, the pair also traveled abroad together. Malnik's
son ... would later change his name from Mark to Shareef and marry into the
royal Saud family."R158 It is known that the Saudi King would frequently send
his private 747 to Florida to pick up Malnik and his associate so they could
conduct business on the plane away from prying eyes. We do have a sizable amount
of information on Malnik and his Saud family relatives. For instance, we do not
know if the children born of the marriage are living in the Saud family palaces
as "royals" or in Miami. Actions speak louder than words. We see time and time
again the Saud family speak one way and act another. The Saudi prince whose
daughter married a Malnik's son had complete control over his daughter actions.
The Saudi prince not only blessed the marriage but works with the US organized
crime associates.
Another,
Alvin
Malnik
(born 1932), was picked by
some observers of organized crime to be Lansky's probably successor. He first
came to prominence in the early 1960s with the
attempt to establish a gambling resort at Paradise Island in the Bahamas.
He had already established himself in
the banking and real estate businesses in Miami but soon become Lansky's public
"front-man." The
Paradise Island venture led to
the establishment of Resorts International, the entertainment and gambling
conglomerate which was the subject of intense law enforcement scrutiny for years
as charges of control by Meyer Lansky surfaced (Mahan, 1980).
Meyer Lansky was known as the treasurer of
the US Mafia. He would launder Mafia
money through Bahamas companies and send the money to Israel to purchase Israeli
defense bonds. It is well known in Washington that the Saud family have
had a long term covert relationship with Israel which has evolved into Israel
being the Saud family defenders of last resort. In turn, the Saud family have
shown good faith by investing in Israel through, among others, Bahamas front
companies. We do not know if Ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz
brokers this relationship.
Malnik License
The
New Jersey
Casino
Control Commission denied
Malnik
a casino license
in 1980, citing, among other things, his long association with mob financier
Meyer Lansky. The commission ruled that
Malnik
was "a person of unsuitable character and unsuitable reputation." And in 1993
the commission disciplined two Atlantic City casinos for allowing
Malnik
to set foot in them.
source
Bernie Rothkopf also owned the MGM
Hotel. Allen Glick was, between 1974-79, "the mob's front man at the Stardust,
Fremont, Hacienda, and Marina hotels." [MORRISON, J.A., p. 1A] "In July, 1979
Allen Glick was stripped of his Nevada gambling license and fined over $500,000
for a variety of improprieties." Glick sold his interests in
casinos
to Allan Sachs, who was, with a partner, "figureheads for the Chicago mob
responsible for providing skim monies" from Las Vegas gambling operations. [MOLDEA,
1989, p. 336] Jerome Mack, past president of the Dunes and Riviera, was a former
national chairman of the Israel Bonds Campaign. Jewish entrepreneur Hank
Greenspon owned the Las Vegas Sun newspaper and a local TV station. [See
his efforts for Israel in the mass media section]
New Orleans charm
could fall to bulldozers
By JOHN KESSLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/12/05
While an estimated 80 percent of
the 200,000 homes in New Orleans have suffered some degree of flood damage,
the decision on how to handle them will have to wait for the immediate
crisis to pass. The city must first be fully evacuated, its streets pumped
dry and its utilities restored.
But already two drastically different visions of a rebuilt New Orleans
are starting to emerge. While home builders warn that
whole neighborhoods may have to be
bulldozed and rebuilt, the city's preservationists are rallying their
forces in absentia to plead the case for every historic structure worthy of
salvage.
What particularly concerns the latter group are not the famous structures
in the French Quarter and Garden District — the city's two National Historic
Landmark districts, which escaped severe flooding — but rather the many
thousands of examples of vernacular architecture that contribute to New
Orleans' uniqueness. The Crescent City is filled with distinctive homes that
predate the Civil War — ornate if narrow shotguns sidling like piano keys on
30-foot-wide lots, camelbacks with partial second stories like jutting
humps, and Creole cottages with their extended roof lines called abat vents
that hang like a snoopy neighbor over the sidewalk.
"The modest houses are the flesh of our city," says Patricia Gay,
director of the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans, a nonprofit
group with more than 4,000 members that oversees neighborhood revitalization
programs. "You have to look at them with some respect and think about what
you might be throwing up in their place."
But prospects don't look good for "the majority" of these flood-damaged
wooden structures, says economist Michael Carliner, who is the author of a
study on the impact of Hurricane Katrina for the National Association of
Home Builders. He predicts that every wood-frame structure that stood in
more than 6 feet of floodwater will require demolition.
"For public health purposes, they're not salvageable," says Carliner,
adding, "It's not clean water we're talking about, it's contaminated water."
Toxins in the water range from E. coli bacteria stemming from more than 90
million tons of submerged sewage, to lead, fuel and petrochemicals leaching
from thousands of submerged cars and storage tanks.
He wouldn't be surprised if the
cleanup involved bulldozing entire neighborhoods and dredging the
toxin-laced soil "like a Superfund site."
Further, early homebuilding projects will focus on shelter, not style.
Habitat for Humanity is already coordinating a "home in a box project" to
get modular housing assembled quickly for displaced people.
Attempts to reach city authorities about which way they might be heading
have been unsuccessful.
When it comes time to think about restoring devastated neighborhoods,
homeowners who hope to rebuild in historic style will have three places to
look for funds: federal and local incentive programs; flood insurance; and
their own pockets.
The federal government grants a tax credit to those restoring historic
buildings, but there's one crippling caveat for homeowners: The properties
must be income-producing, such as a bed-and-breakfast. Preservationists have
long lobbied for a change to the tax credit and will do so with renewed
vigor. Flood insurance will help those who have it, but only to a point.
Only about 84,000 (or 40 percent) of the homeowners in Orleans Parish have
policies with the National Flood Insurance Program, according to the Federal
Emergency Management Agency, and those policies cap out at $250,000 for
private residences. Private insurers do not provide flood insurance.
In many cases, this payout will fall seriously short. One fully restored
double shotgun in Uptown listed for $495,000 in The [New Orleans]
Times-Picayune classified ads before Katrina.
Blacks to sell
On the other hand, the more than
50 percent of New Orleans homeowners without flood insurance may have no
choice but to sell their lots to developers.
"This may further the Houstonization of New Orleans and the destruction
of its historic fabric," laments S. Frederick Starr, author of "Southern
Comfort: The Garden District of New Orleans" and the owner of an 1826
plantation house in the Ninth Ward, adjacent to one of the levee breaches.
"This is the most critical question with regard to the cultural survival of
New Orleans. Are you going to incentivize the owners to rebuild, or are you
going to tear it all down and build some awful thing?"
This concern may take the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans
onto new turf: lending its expertise to new construction.
"New constructions don't have to be bland, Anywhere-USA constructions,"
says the center's Stephanie Bruno. "Recent years have seen the development
of materials that make it possible to rebuild cost-consciously and make it
look more like a historic building. If we take care about our rebuilding
efforts, we can maintain our character."
But first and foremost, the organization wants desperately to save the
old buildings. Gay, the preservation center director, says that some of the
partly submerged 19th-century houses framed from impermeable, rock-solid
cypress and "barge board" taken from dismantled river barges may surprise
everybody with their durability.
"No city has the building stock we do," Gay asserts.
Preservationists in New Orleans turn to the example of Charleston, S.C.,
which managed a widely lauded restoration of its historic center after
Hurricane Hugo in 1989.
Jonathan Poston of the Historic Charleston Foundation says the rebuilding
effort began "three or four days after the storm" with a gathering of
preservation forces from across the country and continued through a
months-long building-by-building assessment followed by many months of
intensive "drying procedures."
Andy Ferrell of the National Center for Preservation Technology &
Training, a division of the National Park Service, says the discussion of
what to rebuild and what to restore in New Orleans will draw around a
familiar battle line. "There's a lot of animosity between those folks who
are building new houses and those who are preserving old houses," he says.
"And remember," Ferrell adds with the guarded hope of a die-hard
preservationist. "These very buildings that we are talking about have
weathered storms before. [We] just need to get the water out as quickly as
possible and see where to go from there."
ON THE WEB National Association of Home Builders study
on the |
Shootout
Police Kill Five
Contractors on La. Bridge
Sunday September 4, 2005 11:16 PM
AP Photo VTAP102
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Police shot eight people carrying guns on a New
Orleans bridge Sunday, killing five or six, a deputy chief said. A spokesman
for the Army Corps of Engineers said the victims were contractors on their
way to repair a canal.
The contractors were walking across a bridge on their way to launch
barges into Lake Pontchartrain to fix the 17th Street Canal, said John Hall,
a spokesman for the Corps.
Earlier Sunday, New Orleans Deputy Police Chief W.J. Riley said police
shot at eight people, killing five or six.
The shootings took place on the Danziger Bridge, which spans a canal
connecting Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi River.
No other details were immediately available.
|
Drug Trade
Hong Kong and
the Sassoon Opium Wars
The 99 year British lease on Hong Kong expired in July allowing the Red Chinese
to take over. Hundreds of newspaper stories and TV reports have covered this
event but not one revealed how England first gained control of Hong Kong!
The truth lies buried in the family line of
David Sassoon, "The Rothschilds of The Far East," and their monopoly over the
opium trade.
Britain won Hong Kong by launching the
opium
Wars to give the Sassoons exclusive rights to
drug
an entire nation!
David Sassoon was born in
Baghdad in 1792. His father, Saleh Sassoon, was a wealthy banker
and the treasurer to Ahmet Pasha, the governor of Baghdad. (Thus making him the
"court Jew" - a highly influential position.)
In 1829 Ahmet was overthrown due to corruption and the Sassoon family fled to
Bombay, India. This was the strategic trade route to interior India and the
gateway to the Far East. In a brief time the British government granted Sassoon
"monopoly rights" to all manufacture of cotton goods, silk and most important of
all -
Opium -
then the most addictive
drug
in the world!
The Jewish Encyclopedia of
1905, states that Sassoon expanded his opium trade into China and Japan. He
placed his eight sons in charge of the various major opium exchanges in China.
|
Pushed by
that city's violent criminal milieu and pulled by the scale of the Asian
drug
trade, leading European
drug
dealers such as the Eliopolos brothers moved to Shanghai and Tientsin in
the early 1930s. In his 1934 report to Washington, the U.S. Treasury
attache in Shanghai reported that there had been an influx into China of
individuals formerly identified with the traffic in Europe.
In particular, the Jewish
syndicates that dominated New York's drug trade under the leadership of
Yasha Katzenberg and Louis Lepke Buchalter sent agents to purchase heroin
through European dealers based in Shanghai.
Simultaneously, Shanghai's Green Gang leader Tu Yueh-sheng emerged as the
city's leading
drug
dealer and a key intelligence operative for the Nationalist Government--an
alliance that protected the narcotics network from the regime's anti-opium
campaign of the 1930s. |
The American
people have also been led to believe that the (Mafia) crime syndicate in America
is strictly an Italian affair. Our
Jewish
entertainment media has produced countless films and Television shows, (like the
award winning “Sopranos”) depicting Italo-Americans as the masters of the
syndicate. But a closer
look reveals that Jews, NOT Italians, founded and financed “the syndicate” in
the early days before prohibition. From the late 1940s to the present, the upper
structure of the syndicate has remained pretty much the same - Jewish Meyer
Lansky dispatched his right-hand man, Bugsy Siegel, to Las Vegas in 1946 to
start the gambling and prostitution rackets in that area. Lansky ordered
Siegel's death when he learned that Siegel was embezzling from him. Siegel was
then replaced by Morris Rosen, Gus Greenbaum, and Morris Sidwirts. In Los
Angeles, Lansky's men were Jack Dragna and Mickey Cohen - all strictly "kosher."
The banks on the
rare occasions when they are caught laundering
drug
money, shed rivers of crocodile tears, rub their eyes and whine how they were
victimized by devious ole’ dope dealers and when the evidence is too damning,
they simply point the finger at the lowest level employee plausible. The fact
is, that not only do the banks knowingly handle
drug
money, they compete avidly for the business. Whole sections of financial
institutions, law firms, accounting firms, and consulting firms, have been
specifically set up to run
money-laundering operations; it is a huge, lucrative business and yet again,
principally run by Jews.
In a recent article in the
OBSERVER, London -
Sunday, November 10, 2002, entitled “Ultra
Orthodox US Jews accused of 'cleaning' Colombian coke cartel cash,”
reporter Ed Vulliamy, not only proves
the point of covert
Jewish
involvement in
CRIMINAL
enterprises including drugs, but the article clearly illustrates how the belief
system of the oh-so-pious Hassidic Jews, are a complete and utter sham!
“British
and American
drug-busting
authorities claim to have smashed one of the most bizarre money-laundering
services ever operated for Colombian cocaine cartels: a circle of
ultra-religious Hassidic Jews in New York. The ring is said to be one of the
biggest to be 'cleaning' profits amassed by the Colombian coke barons, with the
strange twist that it is run by a group from the
Jewish
community that acts as moral and spiritual guardian of the Orthodox faith. This
is not the first time the Hassidim have been exposed as involved in the big-time
drug
trade.
Jews And Cocaine Trade
Aloysio de Andrade Faria
...Brazilian Drug Family
Roberto Rocca and family
....Colombian Drug cartel
Alfonso Romo Garza family
.....Mexico Drugs
Aliza`s family went to Colombia with the
Sephardic Jews who fled the Spanish Inquisition in the early 1500`s.
Her family maintained a traditional home and she is glad to have taken stronger
steps to building a Jewish home. Zeev`s parents are both from Rumania. After
WWII they traveled to Bogotá, Colombia
where they also kept a traditional home. Neither Aliza nor Zeev were religious
nor did they think much about aliyah or Judaism
Cocaine in its various forms is derived
from the coca plant which is native to the high mountain ranges of South America.The
first recognized authority and advocate for this drug was world famous
psychologist, Sigmund Freud. Early in his career, Freud broadly promoted cocaine
as a safe and useful tonic that could cure depression and sexual impotence.
Cocaine got a further boost in acceptability when in
1886 John
Pemberton included cocaine a
From the 1850's to the early 1900's,
cocaine and opium laced elixirs, tonics and wines were broadly used by people of
all social classes. This is a fact that is for the
most part hidden in American history. The truth is that at this time there was a
large drug culture affecting a broad sector of American society. Other famous
people that promoted the "miraculous" effects of cocaine elixirs were Thomas
Edison and actress Sarah Bernhart. Because there were no restrictions placed on
acquiring these drugs in the early 1900's, narcotics were an acceptable way of
life for a large number of people, many of whom were people of stature.
Cocaine was a main stay in the silent
film industry. The pro-drug messages coming out of Hollywood
at this time were receiving international attention which
influenced the attitudes of millions of people about cocaine.
1855 |
|
Cocaine first
extracted from coca leaves.
2 |
1862 |
|
Merck produces 1/4 pound of cocaine.
2 |
1869 |
|
Seeds from the commercial variety of coca arrived at Kew Gardens. |
1870 |
|
Vin Mariani (coca wine) is for sale throughout France, containing 6 mg
cocaine per ounce of wine. Exported Vin Mariani contained 7.2 mg per ounce
to compete with the higher cocaine content of American competitors.
2 |
1870s |
|
Parke,Davis manufactures a fluid extract of coca.
2 |
1876 - 1885 |
|
Race walkers in England chew coca leaves to improve their performance.
2 |
1883 |
|
Merck produces 3/4 pound of cocaine.
2 |
1884 |
|
Cocaine's use as a local anesthetic in eye surgery is popularized.
2 |
1884 |
|
Freud
publishes On Coca in which he recommends the use of cocaine to treat
a variety of conditions including morphine addiction.
2 |
1884 |
|
Merck produces 3,179 pounds of cocaine.
2 |
1886 |
|
Merck produces 158,352 pounds of cocaine.
2 |
1886 |
|
Coca-Cola is first introduced by John Pemberton, containing cocaine laced
syrup and caffeine. |
Late 1880s |
|
Parke,Davis starts to manufacture refined cocaine.
2 |
c. 1901 |
|
Coca-Cola removed coca from their formula.
2 |
c. 1905 |
|
Snorting cocaine becomes popular.
2 |
1910 |
|
First cases of nasal damage from cocaine snorting are written of in medical
literature.
2 |
1910 |
|
First cases of nasal damage from cocaine snorting are seen in hospitals.
2 |
1912 |
|
U.S. government reports 5,000 cocaine related fatalities in one year.
2 |
1914 |
|
Cocaine banned in United States.
1 |
Early 1930s |
|
Japan is the world's leading cocaine producer (23.3%) followed by the United
States (21.3%), Germany (15%), U.K. (9.9%), France (8.3%).
2 |
c. 1976 |
|
Freebase cocaine first developed (probably in California). It would soon be
popularized by dealers and glamorized by Hollywood media. |
Blacks leave New Orleans
Study: New
Orleans could lose 80 percent of black population
By Michelle R. Smith, Associated Press Writer | January
26, 2006
PROVIDENCE, R.I. --The
city of New Orleans could lose up to 80 percent of its black population if
people displaced by Hurricane Katrina are not able to return to their damaged
neighborhoods, according to an analysis released
Thursday by a Brown University sociologist.
Blacks and the poor were disproportionately affected by
Katrina, according to the study led by Brown Professor John R. Logan. The
analysis concludes that the difficulty in moving back to the city could mean a
massive loss of population, overwhelmingly among blacks.
New Orleans was more than 65 percent black before
Katrina hit in August, but it appears most of the estimated 135,000 residents
who have been able to return are white. Mayor Ray Nagin recently apologized for
saying New Orleans would remain a "chocolate city" as he tried to allay fears
that blacks would not return.
The study found that if New Orleans' returning
population was limited to the neighborhoods undamaged by
Katrina, about half the white population would not return and 80 percent of its
black population would not.
"There's very good reason for people to be concerned
that the future New Orleans will not be a place for the people who used to live
there, that there won't be room in New Orleans for large segments of the
population that used to call it home," said Logan, who studies urban areas.
The study used maps from the Federal Emergency
Management Agency that detailed flood and wind damage and compared them to data
from the 2000 U.S. Census to determine who was affected and in what numbers.
It found the
hurricane-damaged areas of New Orleans were 75 percent black
compared to 46 percent black in undamaged areas of the
city. It also found that 29 percent of the households in those areas lived below
the poverty line, compared with 24 percent of households in undamaged areas.
More than half of those who lived in the city's damaged
neighborhoods were renters, the analysis found. Those people were unlikely to
have property insurance, and because so many are poor, would be unlikely to have
the resources to return to the city.
"The odds of living in a damaged area were clearly much
greater for blacks, renters and poor people," the study said. "In these respects
the most vulnerable residents turned out also to be at greatest risk."
Along the Gulf Coast, about 46 percent of the
population in damaged areas was black, compared with 26 percent in non-damaged
areas. The study did not consider areas damaged if they reported just
superficial problems, such as missing roof shingles.
By sheer numbers, the study noted there were almost as
many non-Hispanic whites as blacks affected in damaged areas of the Gulf Coast
region -- just under 300,000 of both populations. But it said that whites would
be more likely to return to damaged neighborhoods.
"Whites are more likely to be homeowners," the study
said. "But more important, they are much more likely to have the personal
resources to reinvest in their homes or to find a new residence in a difficult
housing market."
Some former residents may not be able to return to
their old neighborhoods even if they wanted to, Logan said. Parts of New Orleans
may close forever to development, renters can't necessarily return to homes
they've left for months, and the housing market is tight.
In addition, several large public
housing complexes in the city have been closed since the storm and the federal
Department of Housing and Urban Development has not offered specific details on
how or when those projects may be restored or rebuilt.
------
This city will be chocolate at the end of the day," he
said. "I don't care what people are
saying Uptown," referring
to a mostly white area of New Orleans. Nagin also suggested that God unleashed
last year's hurricanes because he was "mad at America"—and particularly at the
black community, for failing to take better care of itself. "I was shocked,"
recalls Wilson