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Dumbest/Most Corrupt youngsters from my ends


Bruno Di Gradi

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Na certain man are happy, got more friends in jail than they have on road

It's no wonder how many people are knee deep in crime with videos and stories like that coming out..

Everyone these days seems to try soo hard to be hard, they get out and tell the youngers "it's a walk in the park in jail, it's nothing trust me"

Go away for couple years, come out wham with added street cred and some new connects

It's not a deterrent at all lol

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Na certain man are happy, got more friends in jail than they have on road

It's no wonder how many people are knee deep in crime with videos and stories like that coming out..

Everyone these days seems to try soo hard to be hard, they get out and tell the youngers "it's a walk in the park in jail, it's nothing trust me"

Go away for couple years, come out wham with added street cred and some new connects

It's not a deterrent at all lol

  

That's quite sad

Blk people are so happy to just be in prison wasting away

Don't think they are happy to be in pen

Making the best out of a bad situation

What do you expect them to do

This and that

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That's quite sad

Blk people are so happy to just be in prison wasting away

Don't think they are happy to be in pen

Making the best out of a bad situation

What do you expect them to do

But the social media thing is very silly

 

 

You shouldn't be allowed to make the best out of a bad situation in jail

 

You are in there for a reason

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That's quite sad

Blk people are so happy to just be in prison wasting away

Don't think they are happy to be in pen

Making the best out of a bad situation

What do you expect them to do

But the social media thing is very silly

 

 

You shouldn't be allowed to make the best out of a bad situation in jail

 

You are in there for a reason

 

 

:\

Yes you should, people should be coming out of jail a better person than when they went in.

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That's quite sad

Blk people are so happy to just be in prison wasting away

Don't think they are happy to be in pen

Making the best out of a bad situation

What do you expect them to do

But the social media thing is very silly

You shouldn't be allowed to make the best out of a bad situation in jail

You are in there for a reason

So what do you think should happen?

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That's quite sad

Blk people are so happy to just be in prison wasting away

Don't think they are happy to be in pen

Making the best out of a bad situation

What do you expect them to do

But the social media thing is very silly

 

 

You shouldn't be allowed to make the best out of a bad situation in jail

 

You are in there for a reason

 

 

:\

Yes you should, people should be coming out of jail a better person than when they went in.

 

 

exactly

 

youre supposed to rehabilitate them

 

you throw them in a dungeon and expect them to come out perfect citizens after? lol

 

inb4 how does iphones help even though i didnt mention it

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That's quite sad

Blk people are so happy to just be in prison wasting away

Don't think they are happy to be in pen

Making the best out of a bad situation

What do you expect them to do

But the social media thing is very silly

 

 

You shouldn't be allowed to make the best out of a bad situation in jail

 

You are in there for a reason

 

 

:\

Yes you should, people should be coming out of jail a better person than when they went in.

 

 

You're responding to my post in isolation and not into the context of the quote thread.

 

Doe seems to think them being happy and uploading posts on insta/snap listening to trap music, dancing, drinking etc is making the best out of a bad situation

 

Imagine being a parent, you're child was killed and you are seeing his murderer dabbin on the daily mail while inside 

 

Rehabilitation, education, etc has nothing to do with having access to a smart phone

 

You forfeited those type of luxuries when you committed an illegal activity which had a potential consequence of prison

 

Unless you can prove a correlation between having smart phones and social media apps in prison with rehabilitation and reducing the chance of going back into prison, please dont come at me with that nonsense  

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End of the day should they have phones - of course not

Do I agree with the them having the liberties of camera phones and Internet access -no

Your problem should be with the authorities for not doing their job properly.

I can't be mad at humans beings for making good of a bad situation regardless of how they got there

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Gullible middle-class teenagers are being lured through Facebook to join criminal gangs in bank account hacking scams, a Mail on Sunday investigation has discovered.

The youngsters are being promised the chance to make up to £12,000 in just half an hour via the social networking site.

They offer their bank accounts to fraudsters as a place to deposit funds plundered from innocent hacking victims.

The ‘card mules’ then withdraw the cash and split the proceeds with the criminals, helping them to avoid detection by police.

However, the youngsters leave themselves open to being prosecuted for money-laundering – and they are risking a maximum 14-year jail sentence.

Our investigators found hundreds of Facebook pages where gang members advertise for accomplices to help them carry out frauds.

They tempt teenagers with photographs of themselves in nightclubs or shopping malls posing with the proceeds of their crime, including wads of cash, Apple computers and shopping bags from designer stores such as Louis Vuitton. One page had almost 9,000 members.

Last week police launched an investigation and Facebook took urgent action to close the pages after being alerted by this newspaper. But within a day, new pages had appeared as Facebook seemed powerless to stop the epidemic.

 
 

Andy Norton, from computer security company FireEye, said: ‘Facebook needs to work more closely with the police to shut down these gangs. They are brazenly advertising on Facebook and are being allowed to rip people off.’

Scammers gain access to their victim’s money by hacking their online bank account and then transferring the funds to the accomplices they recruit via Facebook.

Our reporter posed as a youngster willing to help the criminal gangs and was contacted by a fraudster known as ‘James Payper’.

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Gullible: The youngsters are being promised the chance to make up to £12,000 in just half an hour via the social networking site by offering their bank accounts to fraudsters. The fraudsters' runner is again pictured

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Facebook messages and images of cash (pictured) tempt teenagers to launder money for criminal gangs

He offered the reporter the chance to make between £4,000 and £12,000 in just 30 minutes and promised to split any proceeds ‘50/50’ if he could deposit cash in the reporter’s account and then meet up to withdraw it from a bank.

Our investigator was told to bring his bank card to a busy London Tube station, where it would be picked up by the fraudster’s associate, known as a ‘runner.’

[These gangs] are brazenly advertising on Facebook and are being allowed to rip people off
Andy Norton, from computer security company FireEye 

The baby-faced runner told our reporter: ‘To avoid being caught by the police after you cash out, you should ring up your bank and say your card has been stolen.’

He also advised the reporter to empty his account before laundering the money. However, our man made his excuses and left without handing over his bank card.

The exposure of apparent criminal activity on Facebook is hugely embarrassing for the company and police. 

Shadow Policing Minister Jack Dromey said: ‘The Mail on Sunday revelations bring home how rapidly internet crime is growing. More police resources are necessary to tackle internet criminality.’

In November, a Mail on Sunday investigation revealed that credit and debit card details of customers from major high street banks, including HSBC, Barclays, NatWest and Halifax, were available for sale on the ‘dark web’.

Hackers advertised internet and telephone banking log-in details for accounts. 

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Images of expensive watches are also used as a temptation so teenagers allow fraudsters to use their bank accounts to deposit funds plundered from innocent hacking victims. The ‘card mules’ then withdraw the cash

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Enticing: The proceeds are then split with the criminals, helping them to avoid detection by police. These are some of the Facebook messages posted on the social networking site to try and lure teenagers into the same

All the details needed to raid one account, allegedly containing £11,000, were for sale for £2,879. They included the account holder’s name, address, 16-digit card number, three-digit security number, and the card expiry date.

Last night Facebook confirmed that the profiles flagged up to them by The Mail on Sunday had been removed as they violated its ‘community standards’, and the company said it was continuing its investigation into the matter.

The Mail on Sunday revelations bring home how rapidly internet crime is growing
Shadow Policing Minister Jack Dromey

According to the Office of National Statistics, there were an estimated 3.8 million victims of online fraud in England and Wales last year. The shocking figures have prompted many to question the ability of police to tackle such crime.

A National Crime Agency spokesman said: ‘Recruiting “mules” to help launder the proceeds of crime is an established criminal methodology, and the web has presented new opportunities to target people.’

The Mail on Sunday has shared the information gathered as part of our investigation with the Metropolitan Police and with the national fraud reporting service, Action Fraud, run by City of London Police.

A City of London Police spokesman said: ‘This may seem like an easy way to make money, but all those who choose to launder the criminal gains of others should be under no illusion that they are committing a crime in their own right and will be treated by police accordingly.’

 

Them flip dons you see on rappers insta comments :lol:

 

Looks like he was using one of Biz's photos to show one of his happy customers :lmao:

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