Though Major David Clarke was indicted in the US on April 13, 2006 on drug charges, neither the Guyana government nor the Guyana Defence Force made any disclosures to the public about this. No reason has been forthcoming about why the public was not told.
Clarke will be sentenced next month on the two drug charges, according to court documents, but it is not clear if he pleaded guilty to the charges or if there was a trial at which he was found guilty, since there seems to be some secrecy surrounding his case. Clarke was to be a key witness against Roger Khan and he was also the target of the witness tampering bid by Khan and his then lawyer Robert Simels.
Public statements were only made by President Bharrat Jagdeo, who is also the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, after a report appeared in the Stabroek News earlier this year on his indictment.
The organisation that Clarke served for 20 years, and not with distinction according to President Jagdeo, refused to offer any comment on him and senior GDF officers declined even to discuss him privately.
For his part, Commodore Gary Best recently told Stabroek News when contacted that the army he now headed had no comment to make on Clarke either now or in the future.
This newspaper had attempted to contact Chief of Staff, Brigadier (Rtd) Michael Atherly, who was heading the army at the time Clarke was alleged to have been working with the criminals and trafficking in narcotics. Around this time there was also a battle between the army hierarchy and the Commander-in-Chief on the promotion of Clarke. Brigadier (rtd) Atherly has refused to speak.
Attempts to contact Brigadier Edward Collins, who was number two at that time and who later took over the helm of the GDF, have been futile.
This newspaper has been reliably informed that Clarke was in the GDF up to 2006 when he was indicted in the US during the period Collins was in charge.
Given the serious charges levelled against Clarke and considering that he was once the commander of the Buxton anti-crime operations, observers feel that both the army and the Commander-in-Chief/Defence Board should explain why the public was not apprised of the indictment and the security risks posed by the defendant to the anti-crime and anti-drug trafficking campaign.
At the time Clarke was accused of working with some of Guyana’s most dangerous criminals, he was heading an operation – Tourniquet – set up to quell the criminal activities in the village of Buxton. While he was in charge there many had concerns about the ineffectiveness of the campaign and about the continuing levels of major crime.
And while he has been accused of working with the criminals, an accusation that came first from convicted drug trafficker Khan, he was also apparently along with family members funnelling drugs out of Guyana to the US.
‘Confidential information’
Following a report in this newspaper about Clarke being in a US jail on drug trafficking charges, Jagdeo revealed that he had received “confidential information” from Buxtonians that the officer was working with the criminals in the village. At the time Jagdeo, who said he was “vindicated” in blocking Clarke’s promotion for a year and ordering that he return home from an overseas training stint he had half completed, said he could not order a court-martial as Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces since he wanted to protect the identities of the informers. He repeated a few months ago that he was still not willing to reveal the persons’ identities.
“I have made it clear about my position on Clarke because… I knew about Clarke …the information on Clarke came from people whom I know in Buxton. And I would never ever, ever betray their confidence because they told me this in confidence. And I had it. It was clear. I shared it but you had a cabal that was pushing it but of course he didn’t get to move forward. …this happens routinely, people share information,” Jagdeo said at a recent press conference. The Commander-in-Chief’s statement did not address why the army had not moved against Clarke given the seriousness of the allegations. Clarke left the army upon his indictment. Sources say he travelled to the US and handed himself over to the authorities.
In 2003, the President had created a stir when he had refused Clarke’s promotion – the only one he denied from a long list of recommended officers. The then captain was recommended by a promotions panel chaired by the then army Chief of Staff, Brigadier Atherly, based on the recommendation of his battalion commander.
The commander’s recommendation was said to have come as a consequence of Clarke’s attitude and performance in his substantive rank, his suitability for promotion to higher rank and authority as well as his suitability for retention in the army.
That assessment was reached following the recommendation of a promotion panel at the battalion level that had reviewed the ex-officer’s annual confidential reports and assessed his suitability.
Clarke was subsequently promoted.
Some are of the view that if the President knew that Clarke was indeed working with criminals, as he and others have said, then he should not only have ensured that the officer was never promoted but he should also have ensured that he was dismissed from the GDF. The head of state said when asked, that he could not have ordered a court-martial against Clarke as he was not willing for those who supplied the information to be exposed, and since it was not a “kangaroo court” system such a move would have been worthless.
However, it has been pointed out that if President Jagdeo was convinced and had evidence to support the accusation that Clarke, an army officer, was in fact a criminal and not working in the national interest then more should have been done to get him out of the system and prosecuted.
But instead Clarke was able to opt for the 20-year retirement facility upon his indictment and was granted this by the GDF without a word to the public.
At the time President Jagdeo had refused to promote Clarke, senior army sources had told Stabroek News that nothing in the man’s record indicated that he had behaved in an inappropriate manner either during his assignment in Buxton or at the other locations where he had been stationed.
Drug-trafficking charges
However, even though he was indicted in 2006, around the same time Roger Khan was indicted, it was only earlier this year the matter was reported in the media through the agency of this newspaper. This was after Khan had filed a motion stating that he had never worked in cahoots with Clarke and the former army officer had worked with criminals while he was in the army. The testimony was picked up by Stabroek News from US court documents and formed the basis for the first news item on Clarke’s case.
The US authorities are still not revealing much about Clarke’s case, but a brief letter written by his lawyer Gary Schoer to Judge Raymond J Dearie on November 2 and seen by this newspaper, asked for the sentencing to be postponed to December 4 at 11.30 am.
The judge granted the order and has given the lawyer up to November 23 to make his sentencing submissions, while the prosecution will have up to November 30 to respond.
According to the first charge, between October 2003 and April 5, 2005, Clarke, his brother Hubert Clarke called ‘Dun Dun’ and Hubert’s girlfriend, Shelly Mcqune, together with others, did knowingly and intentionally, conspire to import more than five kilogrammes of cocaine into the US. On the second charge, between the same dates, they also conspired to distribute the cocaine in the US.
During the trial of Robert Simels and Arianne Irving, Khan’s former lawyers, on witness tampering charges recently, Clarke had been named as a target to be intimidated and/or neutralized by the two along with Khan.
When the US drug report was published, Khan had made “assorted accusations” against Clarke and others at a meeting in March 2006 with US officials at the Ocean View Hotel. He had sought to provide “evidence” that Clarke had worked in concert with Shawn Brown, one of the five February 23, 2002 prison escapees. He had alleged that during Clarke’s tenure as head of ‘Operation Tourniquet,’ he was in league with Brown, who was responsible for kidnapping former US diplomat Stephen Lesniak in April 2003.
Following his arrest in Trinidad in June 2006 and his subsequent indictment on drug charges, Khan had sought to deny that he and Clarke could have been co-conspirators in exporting drugs, arguing that he had exposed the former officer’s links to the criminal enterprise in Buxton.
And in a motion filed through his lawyers prior to him throwing in the towel and pleading guilty to drug trafficking, Khan had alleged that the then officer was so involved in criminal activities in Buxton that he delayed finding Lesniak, even though information about the location of the kidnapped man had been provided.
The US had sought to disallow any evidence about Clarke’s alleged criminal activities from the trial as they saw it as “self serving” for Khan.
Clarke was charged shortly after Khan was described as a drug trafficker in the 2006 US drug report.
‘New theory’
In the first meeting between Simels and the US government’s confidential source (CS), last year before he and the others were charged with witness tampering, Simels had allegedly told the CS that prosecutors had been saying for almost two years that the case against Khan was a “straightforward drug case.”
However, he said, about one month before they were expected to go to trial in April last year “…they come with a whole new theory of the case. This new theory of the case is everything about Roger’s phantom gang as they put it, it should be evidence because they want to prove that while he started out as a patriot, he then used that phantom force to help him in the drug business, and that he would murder rivals.”
According to a typed record of that conversation, made by the US government and seen by this newspaper, Simels is reported to have told the CS that the government was alleging that Khan murdered Dave Persaud, who was killed in front of Palm Court Restaurant and Bar, and boxing coach Donald Allison.
CS: “Why did they make the change?”
Simels: “Well, we didn’t know it but we found out that David Clarke is now telling them [that] Roger is a murdering thug…”
Simels further told the CS that the prosecution knew the defence would have made several allegations about Clarke during his tenure in Buxton, the main one being that he acted in concert with the criminals in the village.
The lawyer said in the conversation that because of the prosecution’s theory the defence had to let the jury know during the trial what Guyana was like because people in Brooklyn, Queens and Long Island could “never fathom what goes on there [Guyana].”
Simels: “As I said to the judge this is not [US President Barack] Obama and [US Secretary of State] Hillary [Clinton] saying bad things about each other. Down there when that happens they just kill each other…”
The lawyer then told the CS that Khan had told him he had to find him (the CS) to help demonstrate to the jury what happened in Guyana.
CS: “But how important really is David Clarke to this case?”
Simels: “He is everything to their case now. Their whole case is based upon him.”
CS: “But there’s nothing which can be done about this guy, you’re saying?”
Simels noted that Clarke would be the only prosecution witness who could actually say he spoke to Khan during the time Khan reportedly committed the offences.
Simels: “…It would be helpful if you could sort of tell me what you do know about him, how you came to meet David Clarke or what you came to know about Roger, how you met Roger. Could you like give me a… your version, not Roger’s version which is sometimes a little…”
The CS related to Simels that he had a cousin, who is now serving 20 years in a US jail for a drive-by shooting, who once worked for Khan and it was while he was attempting to assist his cousin that he was eventually introduced to the “boss.” He said that while in 2003 he knew of Khan and would help Khan from time to time it was in 2005, that “I met the director.”
The CS said it was believed that the escapees and their cohorts were being supported by elements of the military in Buxton but he had no firsthand knowledge of that.
Simels: “And did you know David Clarke?”
CS: “Yes I knew the guy… because of the fact he is related to Donald Allison. Donald Allison is my neighbour.”Simels: “When you said ‘boss’ earlier were you talking about Roger?”
CS: “Yea, the boss so… he ran things.”
The CS said he and Clarke’s brother, Hubert, whom Simels referred to as ‘Dumb Dumb’ instead of ‘Dun Dun,’ were schoolmates and that the brothers were from Agricola.
According to the CS, he knew Clarke was in charge of the operation in Buxton while he was captain Asked by Simels if he knew whether Clarke was favourable to the people in Buxton the CS said yes.
CS: “Well yea, I would take it that way. Because I mean he was in charge, these guys were able to come out, do certain things and get back into Buxton, somebody had to be sanctioning it. Somebody had to be sanctioning it, and it had to be somebody who was very much at the scene. Because it’s the only way I could have seen them doing that.”








Well, well it certainly appears that there is a cover up going on. Nobody wants to say anything, and i’m beginning to wonder why. Is it because the PRESI and those in authority want to keep this under-cover because thats what suita their purpose better?
The fact that the “PRESIDENT” claims that he had imformation about Clarke’s involvement with the Buxton gang and allowed him to continue serving in the army and also to eventually get promoted while doing nothing about it “stinks to high heaven”.
and frankly I dont believe JAGDEO
What Clarke knows, the US knows. Enough said.
When I was on the BRC, I had 4 very respectable staff who trained us vigorously and according to the G.D.F training mandate. They were bright, strong and loved the army with all their mind, body and soul and this was evident by the way in which they carried themselves..chest held high…There was a young Amerindian staff who stood out because of his age and dedication..and possibility because of how he tormented us physically and mentally. I had assumed that he had joined the army immediately after he left school and there he had already spent about 5 years training recruits.
After the course was finished we all went to our various departments. A few years later, i was on an overseas course when i had learnt the the same staff was held at the airport as a drug mule…I couldn’t believe it…but I had to. I was later revealed that the drugs he was carrying belonged to a “top brass” in the army and he was doing this for years. He was sentenced to a few years in jail and kicked out of the army and now he has “touched tar”. This story went undercover because of the higher ranked officer involved. The army can get visas for any country for any soldier or civilian with eeeaaaassssseeeeee…..
Wow…am I reading this right…from the horse’s mouth. No wonder the govt had little confidence in the Army at that time. Top brass betrayed their oath. They apparently allowed criminals to operate with impunity. No wonder the majority of Guyanese saw RK as a hero for saving their lives and bringing Guyana back from the brink.
Raj please read the paper again. Don’t jump into the discourse and say things. Just read this extract from the paper again.
“Simels: “And did you know David Clarke?”
CS: “Yes I knew the guy… because of the fact he is related to Donald Allison. Donald Allison is my neighbour.”Simels: “When you said ‘boss’ earlier were you talking about Roger?”
CS: “Yea, the boss so… he ran things.”
Raj lets deal with this story as it is. You may not like Sandman but he shared something with us and that is.
“The Army can get you a visa to any part of the World” If you can use your wits and think back because some of us have short memory. Does the Name Walter Rodney rings a bell…..join the ends if it is true that the Army can get you avisa to any part of the world under any Govrnment that manages Guyana.
This is serious and Guyanse must now look pass the PPP and the PNC. We must look to Guyana.
what your life history has to do with this story… focus on the topic … how about yor other side.
Beautifully said Raj!!! Damn beautifully said!!! The horse ate 2 much and forgot his senses!
Nonsense Raj! From where and whom do you think the couriers got the drugs ? The answer was the drug lord. If the gov’t knew of such activities, it was therefore condoned to have a hold on the military and bring the DS under its control. Roger Khan became the go between.
“Junk story”
Mo, like you cannot add properly….
This story is about DRUGS…COCAINE…How did my story stray away from DRUGS…COCAINE….
And where did you come from all of a sudden…I AM FED UP WITH BLOGGERS ON THIS SITE USING MORE THAN ONE ID NAME WHEN THEY WANNA DISGUISE THEMSELVES….ALL OF A SUDDEN “MO” APPEARED…COME ON YOU BLOGGERS IN CANADA STOP USING MORE THAN ONE BLOGGING NAME!!!
From the mouth of a disgruntled ex-soldier. How can I believe this man, when his integrity has been challenged? Sandman, tell your Nancy stories to others, not bloggers in this forum. ISNM
…. not only the army ,, but the POLICE as well ,, one has to consider that the US EMBASSY will always deal with the security services of any country where we have an embassy ,, it the source of nat’l security both for the embassy and the country wherein the embassy operates ,, i keep saying it many here ,, on this forum ,, and those who is just low key ,, was helped to get a visa ,, to “mule” the drugs ,, get paid and den disappear in the milieu ,,,, conjecture ,, speculation ,, theorising abt why they are so robust abt the “corruption” by the PPP led govt ,, is a ruse to derail the govt ,, so that they could be back in operation ,, being out is an embarrassment to their previous life stlye ,, as fuh de “el chapo” there is more dan 1 in GUYANA ! and nuff i knoe who knoe me ,, playing hands in de game ,, which is why i was put upon to be assasinated on the seawalls by eve leary !…
the selling of visas ,, by carrol in the 90’s was initiated by members of the police force and the army ,, tell dem i seh suh ,, it was i who told the state dept abt carrol ,, and they took it and sent an operative to GUYANA with a wire ,, and took him out !…..
….de real of the reason why atherly under whose watch the break down in the army took place ,, is the reason why none of them has a voice relative to clarke ,, lots of them here has their reason for saying the Leader of the Opposition is weak ! now go figure……
Raj and others i will try to be objective here as much as i can. Sandhurst said something and we should look at it very carefully. First i wonder what the hell is happening in the Army when i hear stories like this. To me it shows a clear lack of leardership from all quarters because no one can tell me that Political figures did not had knowledge of these events. Roger Lucheon should know about this because he held the same position for for the last 17 years, during which time no memeber of the army was brought before the courts on any drug related charges. Someone had to know.
I applaud Sandman for giving us an insight to some of the things that are happening in the army as there is only so much he can say. But rather we listen and try to understand what was just filtered to us we continue to see our troubles through the PPP and PNC lens and even at times through ethnic lens. For some to use the proverbial Horse phrase to respond to what SH said, is simply rediculous and insensitive.Further to link Roger Khan in any shape or form to what he has just said is even more insensitive to the extent of lost of mind.
The picture i came away with from SH statement, is that the morale fabric of everything is Guyana is gone. The army Dealing in Drugs, Police dealing in drugs and with drug dealers, Drug dealers on the rampage. The biggist blunder the PPP did was to get mixed up with roger khan and his criminal enterprise.
I said this from the beginning and i know why i believe it, i live in buxton from 2001 to 2006, and the level of crime we saw was primarily due to DRUGS. It was a drug war and nothing more. There was too much drug money out there and everyone wanted there share of it. Raj when you dealing in drugs you dont trust anyone. Hence i blame the government for all the deaths from 2002 to date.
One of the major problems when it comes to RK and the FF is that they represent two sick sides of our society. Anyone taking either sides and justify it is sick in mind.
Ulric…this ah one true nancy story….like it hurt you though…like it came close to your doors….muhahahahahhaha.
pres jagdeo seems to know all about david clark and other criminals even the gy terrorist living in the us but he knows nothing about the biggest drug baron raja do he really think gy people believe this nonsense.Mr prez keep u mouth shut
I agree, brian. My guess is that Clarke and Khan were drug rivals but because he had his own “team with guns” behind him while Khan had his phantom squad, he was untouchable by Khan.
My other guess is that the information about Clarke to Jagdeo came from somewhere within Khan’s “squad” so you are right in advising Jagdeo to keep his mouth shut, although I would love it if he opens it some more.
Yet another one of my guesses here; the US made Clarke their informer, offered him a secret deal, which I am hoping SN will get to in the court documents when he comes up for sentencing. The clue to this is the mysterious silence sorrounding his case in the US and his uneventful surrendering. That smacks of deal, deal deal, all over! The question is, in exchange for what or who?
What I would like to know on the Guyana side, is who told Jagdeo about Clarke and when, what was the time period between then and when Clarke travelled to the US and surrendered.
You see, I have my own little theory going on here but first I would like to know what does the president know and when he knew it, who told him and why wasn’t action taken against Clarke from within the army and outside by the police.
Is it that Clarke knew “secrets” about others that they were afraid he was going to reveal? Were they protecting themselves or others out of fear, loyalty or bribery? It appears now, that Khan was interested in shutting down the Buxton operation, not out of any patriotic sence of duty. He just wanted to shut Clarke (his rival’s drug operations down) using the resources of the state to do it, so ofcourse, he “tricked” the state to think that he had Guyana’s interest at heart.
Stay on top of it SN, we need to know much more. There are much too much more questions than answers to this point. Great reporting BTW, you get my pulitzer for investigative journalism anyday.
There has been a mountain of info that Clarke facilitated the freedumb fighters. The President seemed to have fought with the seniors in the army at that time to rid the army of this disease, but apparently was met with staunch opposition. It appears to be a well planned collusion. It is believed that other political actors supported these army cabals.
Brain, Gap1,Dandy Andy, send yo applications to the Obama cause.. ayo a furtune teller. a wonder if a yo know about the secrete in a yo back ward hahahahahahaha
Mo, I guess as much as it sucks, somebody’s got to do your job. hahahahahahahaha! I hope that makes you feel better.
Gap1, give us more of your conspiracy theory. Tell us why Clarke met with a certain political leader and why that leader said nothing about the info supplied to him regarding the spy equipment and the COP. Enquiring minds want to know. ISNM
Jagdoe doan kno NOTTIN? he got information about Clarke and still allowed the promotion….THAT SAYS MORE THAN ENOUGH…I DO HOPE HE IS NOT ALLOWED A THIRD TERM…..HE MUS BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR ALL CRIME ACCOUNTABLE UNDER HIS GOVERNANCE…
GAP1 lets think logical or try to put 2an2 together….I know that U doin wrong tings that involves lots of millions in profit….U is mee STUGE and gon always teck dee rap.Don’t think I will enjoy while the going is good….Little did govt realize that its hench-men happiness/liberty was short-lived…he and all those who are not available for comments and keepin dem mout shut are GUILTY AS SIN…this is a long walk, but Uncle Sam doan get tired….I want to believe that this Clarke man has called a lot of names, that would to a lot of exposure…evidence that might bring down the GoG. Dead men don’t tell tales but day duz HAUNT and WATCH-OVER their loved ones, dem duz also hear.All the innocent lives that were lose would not be in vain…
An extremely lengthy piece. I will have to revisit when I return from work later. However, from the little portions I read, it is a valid observation that actually helps keep the issue on the front burner lest people forget this is another unsolved puzzle in Guyana’s political high jinks.
Khan was a drug dealer who worked/mingled with government officials and was never arrested. Clarke was an army officer who got caught with drugs entering America, yet the government made Clarke out as the bad guy when the President cited his Buxton sources who said Clarke worked for the Buxton gang, but Khan was the one that did make that revelation public, and on that exposure the President reacted against Clarke. Was Khan the President’s Buxton source?
The Guyana government is corrupt and thanks to the imperfect US, at least both Clarke and Khan had to face justice. There is no justice in Guyana, only politics.
When will the other shoe and sock fall?
You’ve got a point there my friend, that angle needs investigating.
Dandy Andy….sure looks like Roger could have been Jagdeo’s informant….so that’s why Jagdeo can’t say more…..remember he’s already said he don’t know Roger…..
Simels: “As I said to the judge this is not [US President Barack] Obama and [US Secretary of State] Hillary [Clinton] saying bad things about each other. Down there when that happens they just kill each other…”
The lawyer then told the CS that Khan had told him he had to find him (the CS) to help demonstrate to the jury what happened in Guyana.
Now, to all the lovers of the PPP in Blog land I call on you to examin the above quotes and think about real serious about this story and our country where we say we all love.
Guyanese its about time we all awake from our slumber……Guyana is in a serious crisis and need to organize more than to engage each other more than ever. Let join hands together for a better place. Let rid ourself of the petty differences and set an example for the many looking at us.
I realy do love my country…..this information that was chronicled today in SN about Clark and Khan has proven that Guyana needs a new start with a new Government in place.
BTW, with Khan and Clarke doing drugs, was it ever possible that they worked together at some point and then had a falling out? I ask that because in Khan’s New York ore-trial court hearings, Khan reportedly asked for Clarke to be neutralized, but no harm should come to his mother? This implies Khan knew Clarke’s mother! THINK FOLKS!
Everyone knew the two worked together. After they fell out khan carried news on him to the big chief office.
But the drugs belonged to khan.
Great observation there, DA.
You guys thats not news,dont let the yeasayers hear you,dont look foolish.Common sense would tell you
1.The president Buxton informant could have been RK
2.The reason for the passage of the wire tapping bill was simply because the government saw how easy it was to know more than you should courtesy RK
3.Need I say more
If you cant trust the messenger you cant trust the message
My thought all along was that they were friends. Clarke may have worked for Khan since he would have been able to pass easily at the airport without being searched or he bought the drugs from Khan. I think the former is more like it. I have been to Simmels trial, Khan’s sentencing and hope to go to Clarke’s as well.
Dandy I hope that these tapes of the Khan’s trial will one day reach Guyana and Guyanese all over the world.
Their is much much more to come you will soon see big the tree shedding their leaves, and you will ask. What happen to all them big trees that use to shade only a few in in Guyana?
Why does Jagdeo continue to attempt to make fools of the Guyanese people? The Commander in Chief has all sorts of means of getting rid of bad eggs in the military so go and put that nonesense where the monkey put the nuts, Jag.
Imagine Jagdeo having confidential sources in Buxton. BUXTON?????? Why not come out and tell us that Roger or his people gave you the zeppy from the spy equipment? One of the hardest places to get information on anybody was, and probably still is Buxton.
Look how easy it was for Jagdeo to replace the top ranks of the GDF on the retirement of Brig. Collins. All he had to do is second Clarke to some organisation and when he refused fire him for disobeying a lawful command. After trying him of course. There may be other reasons why Clarke was not touched. Maybe like Khan, he had friends in high places.
I second that…all my father’s family are from buxton and i live there from 2001 – 2006 and even i can’t get info on people there. Buxtonians don’t trust “Outsiders” and it doesn’t matter what colour you come in. People need to understand that. If you’re not buxtonian you are, if i can say this as the muslims say, an infidel and view with suspicion. I don’t trust Bharrat on his source at all.
WELL SOLDIER ITS YOUT TURN ??
WELL DE-MOTHER-RATE-THER I CAN SEE YOU WILL HAVE ALOT OF WORK T-DAY
Last Friday, after opening up an email from what I thought was a last remaining trusted friend within my old party, both computers on my network became infected with an ominous virus which crashed my hard drives within minutes. I just got a new computer today and am back online.
Allow me to weigh-in on why the PPP never aired the incident about David Clarke; “it was politically imprudent”.
Bismat: I finished the PPP a long time. Only a fool would allowed emails from those cabals resulting in computers crashing and burning. Burn, baby, burn!
Anyways, I thought it was Enrico and company who was ‘airing’ incidents about drug trials in the US, but now you’ve got me confused. We should be holding SN, Enrico, KN and the others accountable for Clarke’s case not being ‘aired’. Them again, some of these media people may be betraying their alleigence…don’t you think?
Amen!
They are all quiet because they are all in cahoot with the druglords and have to keep that way because they got skeletons in their closets.
Amen-ra I will say amen to that. They are all tied together.
One thing is hate is insensible allegations. If you have the facts, show them. Otherwise stop playing with words because people will think you’re idiots. If you have proof let it be known.
CORRECT IS RIGHT MY BROTHER…BIRDS OF A FEATHER FLUK TOGETHER!!
Bro. some people conveniently find their keyboards when they can find solace in the past while condemning their homeland to doom and gloom while they live in virtual comfort in societies they didn’t work to make what they are but are quick to be judgemental.PATHETIC.
we run things or whatever your name is, if the u.s knows this who else wouldn’t know, the facts are there in the court, why you think rk confessed, had he gone to trial do you know how many names would be calling, but nevertheless khan sang like a sparrow.
Ra! I am awaiting the big shout….some go halla. You will be here in blog land