Jbleenk's Posts
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Bless. Sorry for ur loss. |
Pleas who watched the video? Was the woman killed along with the kid strapped to her back? I can't bring myself to view the video. Someone should please say no. |
When ur man gives u his bank card but then he also gives u a very complicated way to retrieve his pin.
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Hezbola:Bros no human have immunity over tear gas including fayose. As e dey hot so |
06 to 60 miles in 6secs? My girls mouth beats that at 0 to 100 miles in 2.5 sec. |
Mikel Obi's dad was kidnapped but that didn't stop Mikel from doing his job against Argentina. |
countryfive: ![]() |
U used the wrong choice of word here I suggest u replace bottleneck with traffic or better still for want of word "go slow" lol |
falcon01:Same rule should apply actually. The CODS, COAS, IG, DPO should answer for that in a normal clime. It's sad really |
The death of the little one is as a result of sheer negligence and carelessness somebody has to answer for it maybe do a time for it. |
If u will take 45k for the sofa let me come pick it |
seems naira is the weakest currency in the world. I just tire |
Miss. Shummway Waves a Wand is the funniest of his book and about the best I've read. |
What do I want his number for? To revive his already dead career? I don't want thank u. |
Maket:If say u be babe I for come give u one round for this but u be guy so chop knuckle. |
Nairatrend:Fact is
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Cigarette burn on the carpet, did anybody else sport it? Females seem to hold dear to friendship than male. |
Yuck � this look durty!!! ![]() |
diamond88:I don't think FA's usually pay sport companies to produce their kit might be wrong tho |
Lalasticlala Seun pls can this be moved to fp for wider view? |
Cutefine02:We seem to have had similar experiences as regard SP in terms of it's frequency of occurrence. Good. This goes to show there are others who frequently experience SP just like I do. OBE is what I hope to experience next. People who have had such experiences should pls share. |
malificent:I really don't think there's a spiritual connotation or explanation to this phenomenon. I am so used to it I care less whenever I'm about experiencing it. I usually experience some odd vibration like feeling right before its onset. All I usually do is try move any part of my body then I will be free of it. Just like u said, I usually need not utter "Jesus" to get outta it. Sounds and strange presence are all part of the experience. I don't think it has anything to do with demons. |
Does anybody else experience sleep paralysis? Or is it just me? If not, why is it less talked about even though it's a weird phenomenon? My first experience of Sleep Paralysis (SP) was very frightening. At a point during the episode I said to myself "so this is how people die in sleep". Now, I'm used to it and not scared about it anymore as I experience it very often. Having read a lot about SP on the internet, how you can achieve Out of Body Experience (OBE) if you relax ur body and not struggle to gain consciousness during the episode, how lovely OBE is, how totally harmless and normal it is, I resolved within me to not fight it when next I'm experiencing SP, to let go and follow throug to the end in order to satisfy my curiosity. Before then, has anybody here experienced and follow through to the end? If yes, please share your experience. Mods, I'd appreciate it if this can get to the front page in order to gain a wider view on this issue. Thanks. |
Why is he not in casket? |
We at Ekiti we are not smiling. Don't come be forming big boss here we'd snatch ur chain and if u come with ur woman we snatch her too. |
DaddyKross:I'm at home come and slap me |
Nigeria all the way. Meanwhile
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Obj the Nigerian mafia |
would American government not see this as a threat to their economy in the long run? And would they not because of this come hard on Nigeria knowing what the Americans are capable of? |
Update... The truth was very different. In his ancestral homeland, Onwuhara might have been a chief. In America he became one of the world's most successful cyberscammers, a criminal genius who used his talents to filet a poorly regulated banking and credit system. In less than three years Onwuhara stole a confirmed $44 million, according to the FBI, which believes the total may be anywhere from $80 million to $100 million. All he needed was an Internet connection and a cellphone. Onwuhara called it "washing." He'd set up a boiler room in a fancy hotel (the Waldorf-Astoria was another favorite) to wash information on wealthy victims. Then he'd wash bank accounts. One group in his crew would do online research using databases and websites to harvest names, dates of birth, and mortgage information. They'd build profiles of victims for a second group, who would call banks posing as account holders. The callers cadged security information and passwords. Then Onwuhara would breach the accounts and wire funds from them to a network of money mules he had established in Asia. The money would be laundered and wired back to his accounts in the U.S. "I call it modern-day bank robbery," says FBI special agent Michael Nail. "You can sit at home in your PJs and slippers with a laptop, and you can actually rob a bank." Onwuhara specialized in hitting home equity lines of credit (HELOCs), the reservoirs of cash that banks make available to homeowners. Once Onwuhara gained access to a HELOC, he could siphon out vast sums in seconds. His weapon was persuasion. It got him enough money to start building a colonnaded fortress in Nigeria; enough to gamble at the high-stakes tables in Vegas casinos all night. Even his accomplices appear not to have known how much he was really pulling down -- not even his beautiful fiancée, Precious Matthews. To be contd. |
FORTUNE -- A luxury suite at the W Hotel in Dallas is as good a place as any to conquer the world. At least it seemed that way in 2007 when Tobechi Onwuhara got the crew together. They'd meet there often, seven or eight of them. Some had nicknames from the Ian Fleming lexicon: C, Q, and E. Others were called Mookie, Orji, Uche. They would spread out on designer sofas and at the wet bar, open three-ring binders, and fire up laptops with hard-to-trace wireless cards. On a nearby table there'd be prepaid cellphones with area codes taped to them. A phone for Southern California. A phone for Northern Virginia. A phone for any place Onwuhara had found the "good money." In those days, the good money wasn't hard to find. The housing boom had flooded the country with capital. Lenders were making promiscuous loans to unsophisticated borrowers. It was an ideal environment for Onwuhara, 27, a brilliant, pug-faced visionary who favored True Religion jeans and Ed Hardy shirts. Looking out over the neon skyline of downtown Dallas, it was easy for the crew to believe his assurances: He'd make them rich. When the sun glinted off one of his $100,000 diamond-encrusted Audemars Piguet watches, who could doubt it? Every few months he would buy a new Maserati or Bentley. He owned expensive properties in Miami, Dallas, and Phoenix. He even had a secret love condo in the W, where scantily clad women visited in such numbers that one bellhop became convinced that the first-generation Nigerian-American was a porn director. To be contd.
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