ITS GOING DOWN ON THE INC.
Isnt the picture so DRAMATIC!!!!!!
Today was the first day of trial for The Inc. on money laundering charges in Brooklyn Federal Court. Ja Rule, and Ashanti turned out to show there support. In his opening argument, assistant U.S. attorney Sean Haran outlined the case federal investigators spent years building against the Gotti brothers, whose real names are Irving and Christopher Lorenzo. The prosecution accused the pair of running a covert money-laundering operation via the Inc. (formerly Murder Inc.) and its corporate bank accounts. The prosecutor alleged that the Gotti's accepted shopping bags and shoeboxes crammed with cash — the proceeds of convicted crack dealer Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff's drug-dealing enterprises. The defense denies the charges, and claims the success of The Inc soely on the brother's "entrepreneurial spirit and hard-fought rise to become lucrative businessmen(bullshit).One prosecution witness, former McGriff employee Phillip Banks, testified that he personally delivered thousands of dollars in cash to Irv Gotti in the mid-1990s, New York's Newsday reports. During Lefcourt's cross-examination, Banks acknowledged that he didn't know why the money was given to Irv Gotti. Either way this is going to be a page turner of a court case. Stay tuned........
Today was the first day of trial for The Inc. on money laundering charges in Brooklyn Federal Court. Ja Rule, and Ashanti turned out to show there support. In his opening argument, assistant U.S. attorney Sean Haran outlined the case federal investigators spent years building against the Gotti brothers, whose real names are Irving and Christopher Lorenzo. The prosecution accused the pair of running a covert money-laundering operation via the Inc. (formerly Murder Inc.) and its corporate bank accounts. The prosecutor alleged that the Gotti's accepted shopping bags and shoeboxes crammed with cash — the proceeds of convicted crack dealer Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff's drug-dealing enterprises. The defense denies the charges, and claims the success of The Inc soely on the brother's "entrepreneurial spirit and hard-fought rise to become lucrative businessmen(bullshit).One prosecution witness, former McGriff employee Phillip Banks, testified that he personally delivered thousands of dollars in cash to Irv Gotti in the mid-1990s, New York's Newsday reports. During Lefcourt's cross-examination, Banks acknowledged that he didn't know why the money was given to Irv Gotti. Either way this is going to be a page turner of a court case. Stay tuned........
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