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Tekashi arrested by the Feds on RICO charges. Update: Snitch9‘s disrespects Pop Smoke and Nipsey on IG Live

Its 2019, and he testified on some dirty niggas in an NYC street gang, not some sophisticated syndicate. He could just move upstate and have a good chance of not seeing 99% of those niggas again.

He can still tour and all he has to do is hire real armed security. People just gunna scream shit at him in person and threaten him online, just like they were doing before he got arrested.

The people that are going to have the real stress is w/e family he has that still live on the block. They're gunna get a lot of harassment for a while.
 

TEKASHI 6IX9INE NO THANKS ON WITNESS PROTECTION24/7 Security's Fine By Me!!!

Tekashi 6ix9ine plans to do something very un-snitch-like -- after all the snitching he just did -- and that's to reject the witness protection program as soon as he's a free man again.

The federal trial that saw the rapper sing like a canary for 3 days wraps up Thursday as prosecutors and defense attorneys give closing arguments. Tekashi pointed fingers and named names of his old gang members (and other celebs too), but sources close to him tell us he will forgo any participation in witness protection -- and will instead opt for a life of fame.



That might sound like a death wish, considering how many people he rolled over on during his testimony -- but we're told Tekashi's still itching to make new music, and believes he can pick up where he left off.

Tekashi realizes the Nine Trey Bloods could be gunning for him, and possibly others who are pissed he turned rat for the feds -- but we're told his safety plan is simply round-the-clock security. It's, essentially, the hide-in-plain-sight approach.

As for how he'll foot the bill for 24/7 bodyguards -- we're told Tekashi still has some cash left from before his arrest ... plus, he's planning on his music career taking off again, once he's out.

It won't be cheap. As we reported, Tekashi also has family members who fear for their lives -- so expenses could add up fast if he's protecting them too. We reached out to his attorney, Dawn Florio ... but she had no comment.

Tekashi testified he believes he'll be out as early as next year, which would mean the feds cut him one helluva deal. He was facing a minimum sentence of 47 years before agreeing to fully cooperate with prosecutors.


Bottom line, Tekashi isn't following in the footsteps of famed mafia snitch, Henry Hill, who survived under witness protection for just under a decade.

Apologies to Sinatra, but 6ix9ine's gonna do it his way.
:ualreadyknow: that's kinda gangsta
 
I don't know why ya'll are talking about Martha Stewart.

Martha Stewart was charged with insider trading. Basically she owned stock in a company called mClone. mClone was a company that was involved in stem cell research. There were legal issues about whether or not cloning people for medical research should be legal. It went all the way to the Supreme Court, and they ruled that stem cell research is unconstitutional and should be illegal.

I don't know how Martha Stewart heard about the Supreme Court ruling but as soon as they announced their verdict, Martha Stewart sold her share in the company, which is illegal.

If you have inside information about a company and you act on information that isn't available to the public, it's insider trading. It's not fair to investors that aren't privy to the information. You have to wait until the information hits the news whether it be on TV, in the newspapers, or even online. So the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) asked her why she sold the stock and she said that she had put in a sell order with her stockbroker to sell the stock as soon as it reaches a certain price (which is legal). The problem was that there was no such order on record and her stockbroker didn't corroborate her story.

So she went in front of the Grand Jury and lied about having put in a sell order with her stockbroker. There were no pink slips or documentation that she ever put in such an order. She got charged with pergury and was sentenced to a year in prison.

There was nobody she could snitch on. She committed insider trading and she tried to pass the buck to her broker, who was innocent.

It's not that Martha Stewart isn't a snitch, rather, she was guilty of insider trading and she lied about it to the Grand Jury.
 
I don't know why ya'll are talking about Martha Stewart.

Martha Stewart was charged with insider trading. Basically she owned stock in a company called mClone. mClone was a company that was involved in stem cell research. There were legal issues about whether or not cloning people for medical research should be legal. It went all the way to the Supreme Court, and they ruled that stem cell research is unconstitutional and should be illegal.

I don't know how Martha Stewart heard about the Supreme Court ruling but as soon as they announced their verdict, Martha Stewart sold her share in the company, which is illegal.

If you have inside information about a company and you act on information that isn't available to the public, it's insider trading. It's not fair to investors that aren't privy to the information. You have to wait until the information hits the news whether it be on TV, in the newspapers, or even online. So the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) asked her why she sold the stock and she said that she had put in a sell order with her stockbroker to sell the stock as soon as it reaches a certain price (which is legal). The problem was that there was no such order on record and her stockbroker didn't corroborate her story.

So she went in front of the Grand Jury and lied about having put in a sell order with her stockbroker. There were no pink slips or documentation that she ever put in such an order. She got charged with pergury and was sentenced to a year in prison.

There was nobody she could snitch on. She committed insider trading and she tried to pass the buck to her broker, who was innocent.

It's not that Martha Stewart isn't a snitch, rather, she was guilty of insider trading and she lied about it to the Grand Jury.


She easily couldve gave up the person/people giving her inside info
 
I don't know why ya'll are talking about Martha Stewart.

Martha Stewart was charged with insider trading. Basically she owned stock in a company called mClone. mClone was a company that was involved in stem cell research. There were legal issues about whether or not cloning people for medical research should be legal. It went all the way to the Supreme Court, and they ruled that stem cell research is unconstitutional and should be illegal.

I don't know how Martha Stewart heard about the Supreme Court ruling but as soon as they announced their verdict, Martha Stewart sold her share in the company, which is illegal.

If you have inside information about a company and you act on information that isn't available to the public, it's insider trading. It's not fair to investors that aren't privy to the information. You have to wait until the information hits the news whether it be on TV, in the newspapers, or even online. So the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) asked her why she sold the stock and she said that she had put in a sell order with her stockbroker to sell the stock as soon as it reaches a certain price (which is legal). The problem was that there was no such order on record and her stockbroker didn't corroborate her story.

So she went in front of the Grand Jury and lied about having put in a sell order with her stockbroker. There were no pink slips or documentation that she ever put in such an order. She got charged with pergury and was sentenced to a year in prison.

There was nobody she could snitch on. She committed insider trading and she tried to pass the buck to her broker, who was innocent.

It's not that Martha Stewart isn't a snitch, rather, she was guilty of insider trading and she lied about it to the Grand Jury.

She got convicted of Conspiracy, Obstruction of justice & lying to the SEC. And her broker wasnt innocent, he got convicted too. He lied but his assistant told the truth that he was tipping off certain people. Martha didnt even have anyone to snitch on, they all got caught.
 
She easily couldve gave up the person/people giving her inside info

I think it was as simple is having one of her employees sit at the Supreme Court trial and calling her/texting the result.

And I don't think it's illegal to call somebody and tell them about a Supreme Court ruling. So whoever that person was didn't do anything illegal imo.
From what I read online. She and other people had stock in some company that was making cancer drugs. Their new drug went to the FDA for testing and failed (when that happens to a company usually their stocks drop for a period of time). When the drug failed, one of the founders of the company knew right away and told all his fam and friends that had stock in the company, to sell right away, before it became public that they failed the test. Her broker was one of the few that knew and had her sell.
Then they all got caught cuz they randomly dumped all their shares like the day before its value tanked. So she had literally no one to snitch on even if she wanted to.
 
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Choppa City fool
 
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