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#TODD OLIVIERI
mommydearestella · 1 year
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Michael Jackson Documentary
Last night I watched a documentary on Michael Jacksons and the circumstances surrounding his death. According to this documentary he was being administered the drug Propopol which I may be spelling incorrectly. It was said that this is a powerful drug used to anesthetise people and that he supposedly needed this to sleep. Why would someone feel the need to be anesthetized in order to fall asleep on a regular basis? Then I wondered if someone may have been bombarding him with unwanted noise or a barrage of constant dialogue or static noise which I have experienced before. I think the purpose of it or one of them is to bombard a person, keep them stressed out, maybe keeping them up at night which then would result in waking up later and getting less done during the day. In addition, at such times the subject or target may appear to be very quiet or distracted and may even at times look lost when in fact they may be trying to concentrate to be able to hear something at a low volume that is somehow broadcast or directed at them. Ironically this is happening to me as I write this and the purpose of it is to distract me from writing this. In my experience the group doing this wants to run down their subject financially by wasting their time and have made several racist and anti-Gay remarks on a regular basis when engaging in, among other things, economic terrorism in the process. I have no idea and think it is probably a long stretch however if someone is distracted enough or if the abusers are successful in interfering in subjects ability to work and earn money there may be an expectation that a wealthy person would sell off some assets to raise cash. Since this group of losers have engaged in real estate mobbing it would not surprise me at all. Maybe they have an expectation that such assets could be bought at less than fair market value. Who knows however I thought that it was an interesting question.
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fromthe-point · 6 years
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ECHL Transactions - Nov. 20
Signed and Added to Active Roster:
Ludlow Harris | Norfolk Admirals
Don Olivieri | Atlanta Gladiators
Bobby Watson | Tulsa Oilers
Contracted Players Released:
Travis Armstrong | Kalamazoo Wings
Vince Dunn | Orlando Solar Bears
Recalled to AHL:
Ivan Kosorenkov | Worcester Railers → San Jose Barracuda
Scott Moldenhauer | Tulsa Oilers → San Diego Gulls
Chris Nell | Maine Mariners → Hartford Wolf Pack
Assigned from AHL:
Jonne Tammela | Syracuse Crunch → Orlando Solar Bears
Assigned by AHL:
George Estephan | Toronto Marlies → Newfoundland Growlers
Brady Ferguson | Toronto Marlies → Newfoundland Growlers
Parker Milner | Hershey Bears → South Carolina Stingrays
Cole Ully | Colorado Eagles → Utah Grizzlies
Activated from Injured Reserve:
Chis Leone | South Carolina Stingrays
Activated from Reserve:
Hayden Hodgson | Wichita Thunder
Tommy Panico | Worcester Railers
Luke Ripley | Greenville Swamp Rabbits
Placed on Injured Reserve:
J.C. Brassard | Greenville Swamp Rabbits
Brett D’Andrea | Toledo Walleye
Christian Frey | Utah Grizzlies
Kelly Klima | Norfolk Admirals
Adam Morrison | South Carolina Stingrays
Placed on Reserve:
Max Joyaux | Kalamazoo Wings
Roberts Locans | Norfolk Admirals
John MacLeod | South Carolina Stingrays
Myles McGurty | Orlando Solar Bears
Todd Skirving | Newfoundland Growlers
Zach Todd | Wichita Thunder
*Shane Walsh | Florida Everblades
* Previously acquired in a trade from Reading
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powell8862 · 3 years
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Todd Olivieri
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gramilano · 5 years
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After Riccardo Chailly opens the season with Tosca, continuing the cycle of works by Puccini, he will conduct his first Strauss opera, as well as the complete Beethoven symphonies. Zubin Mehta will conduct two Verdi operas as well as Luigi Nonno’s Intolleranza which will be performed at La Scala for the first time. Handel’s Semele will also receive its first staged performance at the theatre. There are fifteen operas in the 2019-2020 season, of which eleven are new productions.
Anna Netrebko will open the season in Tosca on 7 December, but strangely the tenor has not yet been confirmed. Backstage voices say that the Russian diva is pressing for her husband, Yusif Eyvazov, to be given the role.
After the popularity over the last couple of years, the opening of the season will again be transmitted live on Italy’s main television channel, Rai1.
The recital series, listed below, features Matthias Goerne, Erwin Schrott, Aleksandra Kurzak, Ekaterina Semenchuk, Bejun Mehta, Marina Rebeka, and Sabine Devieilhe.
OPERA SEASON 2019-2020
Anna Netrebko, photo Dario Acosta
  4 December 2019 Young People’s Preview
7, 10, 13, 16, 19, 22 December 2019; 2, 5, 8 January 2020
Giacomo Puccini
TOSCA
Conductor Riccardo Chailly
Director Davide Livermore
Sets Giò Forma
Costumes Gianluca Falaschi
Lighting Antonio Castro
  Cast
Tosca Anna Netrebko / Saioa Hernández (2, 5, 8 Jan.), Cavaradossi (to be announced),
Scarpia Luca Salsi, Angelotti Vladimir Sazdovski, Sagrestano Alfonso Antoniozzi,
Spoletta Carlo Bosi, Sciarrone Giulio Mastrototaro
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
  Diana Damrau
  15, 18, 21, 26, 30 January; 2, 13, 16 February 2020
Charles Gounod
ROMÉO ET JULIETTE
Conductor Lorenzo Viotti
Director Bartlett Sher
Sets Michael Yeargan
Costumes Catherine Zuber
Lighting Jennifer Tipton
  Cast
Juliette Diana Damrau, Roméo Vittorio Grigolo,
Frère Laurent Nicolas Testé, Mercutio Mattia Olivieri, Stéphano Marina Viotti,
Le Comte Capulet Frédéric Caton, Tybalt Ruzil Gatin, Gertrude Sara Mingardo,
Le Comte Paris Edwin Fardini, Le Duc Jean-Vincent Blot
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
Production from The Metropolitan Opera, New York
  Violeta Urmana
  6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 23, 26, 29 February; 6 March 2020
Giuseppe Verdi
IL TROVATORE
Conductor Nicola Luisotti
Director and Set Design Alvis Hermanis
Costumes Eva Dessecker
Lighting Gleb Filshtinsky
Video Designer Ineta Sipunova
  Cast
Leonora Liudmyla Monastyrska, Manrico Francesco Meli,
Il conte di Luna Massimo Cavalletti, Azucena Violeta Urmana,
Ferrando Gianluca Buratto/Riccardo Fassi
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala (co-production Salzburger Festspiele)
  Rosa Feola, photo Todd Rosenberg
  22, 25, 28 February; 4, 13, 15, 17, 19 March 2020
Gioachino Rossini
IL TURCO IN ITALIA
Conductor Diego Fasolis
Director Roberto Andò
Sets and Lighting Gianni Carluccio
Costumes Nanà Cecchi
  Cast
Selim Alex Esposito, Donna Fiorilla Rosa Feola, Don Narciso Edgardo Rocha,
Prosdocimo Mattia Olivieri, Don Geronio Giulio Mastrototaro,
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
  Riccardo Chailly, photo Brescia e Amisano
  8, 11, 14, 18, 21, 25, 27, 31 March 2020
Richard Strauss
SALOME
Conductor Riccardo Chailly
Director Damiano Michieletto
Sets Paolo Fantin
Costumes Carla Teti
Lighting Alessandro Carletti
Choreography Thomas Wilhelm
  Cast
Salome Malin Byström, Herodes Roberto Saccà, Herodias Anna Maria Chiuri,
Jochanaan Michael Volle, Narraboth Attilio Glaser, Nazarener Thomas Tatzl
  Orchestra of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
    Daniele Gatti, photo Brescia e Amisano, Teatro alla Scala
  4, 7, 10, 14, 18, 21, 24 April 2020
Claude Debussy
PELLÉAS ET MÉLISANDE
Conductor Daniele Gatti
Director Matthias Hartmann
Sets Volker Hintermeier
  Cast
Pelléas Bernard Richter, Mélisande Patricia Petibon, Golaud Markus Werba,
Arkel Nicolas Testé, Geneviève Sylvie Brunet-Grupposo,
Le petite Yniold Caterina Sala, Un medecin/Berger Vladimir Sazdovski
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
  Tannhauser, photo Brescia e Amisano, Teatro alla Scala
  23, 26, 30 April; 3, 7, 10, 24, 27 May 2020
Richard Wagner
TANNHÄUSER
Conductor Ádám Fischer
Director Carlus Padrissa / La Fura dels Baus
Sets Roland Olberter
Costumes Chu Uroz
Video Designer Franc Aleu
  Cast
Tannhäuser Peter Seiffert, Elisabeth Krassimira Stoyanova / Dorothea Röschmann (24, 27 May),
Wolfram von Eschenbach Christian Gerhaher / Markus Werba (24, 27 May),
Walter von der Vogelweide Martin Piskorski, Venus Daniela Sindram, Hermann Albert Dohmen,
Biterolf Florian Spiess, Heinrich der Schreiber Sascha Emanuel Kramer,
Reinmar von Zweter Chi Hoon Lee
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
Produzione Teatro alla Scala
  Ferruccio Furlanetto
  17, 20, 23, 26, 29 May; 4, 10 June 2020
Italo Montemezzi
L’AMORE DEI TRE RE
Conductor Carlo Rizzi
Director Àlex Ollé / La Fura dels Baus
Sets Alfons Flores
Costumes Lluc Castells
Lighting Marco Filibeck
  Cast
Archibaldo Ferruccio Furlanetto, Manfredo Roberto Frontali, Avito Giorgio Berrugi,
Fiora Federica Lombardi, Flaminio Giorgio Misseri
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
  Mario Martone, photo Brescia e Amisano
  3, 6, 9, 13, 17, 22, 25, 30 June 2020
Umberto Giordano
FEDORA
Conductor Daniel Oren
Director Mario Martone
Sets Margherita Palli
Costumes Ursula Patzak
Lighting Pasquale Mari
  Cast
Fedora Sonya Yoncheva, Loris Roberto Alagna,
Olga Mariangela Sicilia, De Siriex Massimo Cavalletti, Barone Rouvelle Marco Ciaponi,
Boroff Costantino Finucci, Grech Vladimir Sazdovski
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
  Gabriele Salvatores, photo by Brescia e Amisano
  20, 23, 26 June; 2, 7, 10, 13, 16 July 2020
Giuseppe Verdi
UN BALLO IN MASCHERA
Conductor Zubin Mehta
Director Gabriele Salvatores
Sets Gian Maurizio Fercioni
  Cast
Riccardo Fabio Sartori, Amelia Saioa Hernández, Renato Luca Salsi,
Ulrica Violeta Urmana, Oscar Julie Martin Du Theil,
Silvano Liviu Holender, Samuel Fabrizio Beggi, Tom Emanuele Cordaro
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
  La traviata with Marina Rebeka and Leo Nucci, photo by Brescia e Amisano, Teatro alla Scala
  11, 14 July 2020;
12, 14, 17, 20, 22, 25 November 2020
Giuseppe Verdi
LA TRAVIATA
Conductor Zubin Mehta / Michele Gamba
Director Liliana Cavani
Sets Dante Ferretti
Costumes Gabriella Pescucci
Lighting Marco Filibeck
Choreography Micha van Hoecke
  Cast
Violetta Valéry Marina Rebeka (11, 14 July) / Angel Blue,
Alfredo Germont Francesco Meli (11, 14 July) / Charles Castronovo,
Giorgio Germont Leo Nucci (11, 14 July) / Plácido Domingo (12, 14 Nov.) /
George Petean (17, 20, 22, 25 Nov.)
  Chorus, Orchestra and Ballet Company of Teatro alla Scala
Produzione Teatro alla Scala
  Il viaggio a Reims, photo Brescia e Amisano, Teatro alla Scala
  1, 3, 5, 8, 10, 12, 15, 17, 22, 25 September 2020
La Scala Accademia Project
Gioachino Rossini
IL VIAGGIO A REIMS
Conductor Paolo Carignani
Director Luca Ronconi
Sets Gae Aulenti
Costumes Giovanna Buzzi
Lighting Marco Filibeck
  Soloists, Chorus and Orchestra of the Teatro alla Scala Academy
Production Rossini Opera Festival di Pesaro and Teatro alla Scala
  Cecilia Bartoli, photo by Uli Weber
  17, 19, 21, 23, 26, 28, 30 October 2020
Georg Friedrich Händel
SEMELE
Conductor Gianluca Capuano
Director Robert Carsen
Sets e Costumes Patrick Kinmonth
Lighting Robert Carsen e Peter van Praet
Coreografia Philippe Giraudeau
  Cast
Semele Cecilia Bartoli, Jupiter/Apollo Ian Bostridge,
Athamas Max Emanuel Cencic, Juno Sara Mingardo
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
  Zubin Mehta, photo Brescia e Amisano
  29, 31 October; 2, 4, 8, 11 November 2020
Arnold Schönberg
ERWARTUNG
The Woman Camilla Nylund
  Luigi Nono
INTOLLERANZA 1960
Cast
Un emigrante Giorgio Berrugi, La sua compagna Camilla Nylund,
Una donna Anna Maria Chiuri, Un algerino Simone Piazzola, Un torturato Dario Russo
  Conductor Zubin Mehta
Director Damiano Michieletto
Sets Paolo Fantin
Costumes Carla Teti
Lighting Alessandro Carletti
  Orchestra and Chorus of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
  Daniela Barcellona
  10, 13, 18, 21, 24, 27, 29 November 2020
Amilcare Ponchielli
LA GIOCONDA
Conductor Ádám Fischer
Director Davide Livermore
Sets Giò Forma
Costumes Mariana Fracasso
  Cast
La Gioconda Saioa Hernández, Laura Adorno Daniela Barcellona,
Enzo Grimaldo Francesco Meli, Barnaba Luca Salsi, Alvise Badoero Roberto Tagliavini,
La cieca Judit Kutasi, Zuane Fabrizio Beggi
  Chorus, Orchestra and Ballet Company of Teatro alla Scala
New Production Teatro alla Scala
  Aleksandra Kurzak, photo Andrzej Swietlik
Bejun Mehta, photo by Marco Boggreve
Marina Rebeka, photo Janis Deinats
Matthias Goerne, photo Marco Borggreve
Sabine Devieilhe, photo Fabien Monthubert
Ekaterina Semenchuk
Recital Season
3 December 2019
Matthias Goerne
Piano
Leif Ove Andsnes
Schumann
  26 January 2020
Erwin Schrott
Piano
Giulio Zappa
  23 February 2020
Aleksandra Kurzak
Piano
Julius Drake
Viola
Tomasz Wabnic
Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, and Strauss
  15 March 2020
Ekaterina Semenchuk
Piano
Semion Skigin
Glinka and Musorgsky
  19 April 2020
Bejun Mehta
Piano
Jonathan Ware
Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn, Britten, and Mahler
  27 October 2020
Marina Rebeka
Piano
Giulio Zappa
Rachmaninov, Bellini, and Verdi
  9 November 2020
Sabine Devieilhe
Piano
Alexandre Tharaud
Debussy, Poulenc, Fauré, and Ravel
Teatro alla Scala 01
La Scala, Milan: Opera and Recital Season 2019 – 2020 After Riccardo Chailly opens the season with Tosca, continuing the cycle of works by Puccini, he will conduct his first Strauss opera, as well as the complete Beethoven symphonies.
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mommydearestella · 2 years
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KEY WEST FLORIDA
IF ANYONE READING THIS KNOWS ANYONE WHO RESIDED IN KEY WEST IN THE LATE SIXTIES AND EARLY SEVENTIES I WONDER IF THEY EVER HEARD ANYTHING AT ALL ABOUT ANY PLANS TO STEAL INHERITANCES FROM DENNIS FELCHER’S KIDS OR ANY PLANS TO DRIVE THEM CRAZY OR CAUSE THEIR DEATH?
AT TIMES THESE MORONS DOING THIS BOMBARDMENT OF INFLAMMATORY SPOKEN DIALOGUE THRU NEARBY SPEAKERS AS IN RIGHT NOW WILL GO ON AND ON UNTIL THEY CAN GET A HEATED REACTION OUT OF ME AND THEY WON’T STOP UNTIL THEY DO.  IT IS LITERALLY TRYING TO DRIVE SOMEONE CRAZY EVEN IF JUST TEMPORARILY TO IN FACT GET A HEATED REACTION OUT OF THEM.  THEN I SUSPECT WHOEVER THE SHMUCK IS OR THE ONE BEHIND IT GOES AROUND ASSERTING THAT WHOEVER THEY OR SOMEONE ELSE IS DOING IT TO IS CRAZY.  IT WOULD NOT SURPRISE ME IF, AT TIMES, I HEAR ONE THING AND ANYONE WHO CAN LISTEN HEARS SOMETHING ELSE IF ANYTHING AT ALL.  IF YOU WEREN’T HALF CRAZY BY THE TIME  YOU TRIED TO EXPLAN THIS TO SOMEONE THERES PROBABLY A GOOD CHANCE THAT THEY WOULD THINK YOU ARE.  I THINK THIS IS ALL ON PURPOSE.  IT IS SO INVOLVED AND SO OUT OF THE ORDINARY IT IS VERY DIFFICULT TO EXPLAIN WHAT IS GOING ON AND TO FIGURE IT OUT YOURSELF.  IN ADDITION, I SUSPECT THAT THE ABUSERS WILL INVENT NONSENSE, USE VOICE CLONE APPS TO INVENT STATEMENTS OR ADD A WORD OR TWO TO ANYTHING EVER SAID ALL TO EITHER DISCREDIT THE SUBJECT OR TO CAUSE OTHERS TO BE ANGRY... SOMETHING LIKE THAT.
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mommydearestella · 1 year
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ADVANCED INSURANCE UNDERWRITERS
I WONDER HOW MANY PEOPLE AT THE HOLLYWOOD OFFICE ON NORTH 29TH AVENUE KNOW WHAT IS REALLY GOING ON? THIS IS, TO THE BEST OF MY KNOWLEDGE, THE OFFICE MY FORMER PROPERTY INSURANCE AGENT TODD OLIVIERI WORKED OUT OF. HIS UNFORTUNATE MOTHER, MY STEPMOTHER, IS A BITTER ENEMY OF MINE FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS.
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mommydearestella · 1 year
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Does Anyone Know this Person?
I ran across this pic online the other day and I know this guy as chase in Jacksonville for 4 years. He's homeless, according to him, but hardly ever around. This pic was taken at Residence Inn where I have stayed many times. I can tell by the coverlet. Its obviously posed AND PROBABLY POSTED ONLINE WITH THE ABUSERS HACKERS WHO I AM SURE, MADE SURE THAT I WOULD SEE IT. Could this be my long lost cousin Greg Katz backside? He is the son of the venerable Dr. Richard Katz of Ballenisles country club in illustrious palm beach gardens Florida. Or.... Could it be someone who is around Dennis Felcher. or Miss Todd Olivieri in South Florida or NY? How about anyone around David kaufman in NY who at one time resided in Brooklyn on Quentin road. Davids glamorous mother is Sarah Kaufman who always wore a big round diamond on her hand and probably the most beautiful diamond wedding band, all long rectangle diamonds all the way around set in platinum, of course, that I have ever seen in my life. Has anyone seen this person around David or his well tar do sister Allison Kaufman? Maybe this is her, uh, Assistant?? Delicious Allison Kaufman is like the girl next door who collects rent from tenants with a baseball bat in her Louis Vuitton handbag. She is so adorable you want to squeeze her cheeks. Not her fanny of course she's a traditional young lady. Yes indeed. She's Daddy's little Gurl!! I heard she is the real estate queen of Tudor City in NYC. She is most definitely a proper young woman but how proper? Her brother David is a formidable guy once he finally finishes brushing his hair. I heard He is well hung. Brooklyn's 11 inch pride and joy! He's a real stunner David. Just ask any doorman in Tudor city! I think he went to Yeshiva. Has anyone seen the guy pictured below around any of the people mentioned in this post or around Nathan James Smith my ex? As far as I know Sarah and Seymour Kaufman have one son and one daughter. David and Allison. Maybe they dropped David on his head. Who doesn't call back or check on their younger cousin?? Dunce... what .. do I have to rim this guy to get a call back? Isn't it all very convenient? I guess if I don't speak with them they can say that and maybe escape blame for not telling me something??
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mommydearestella · 1 year
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SAVED BY SOCIAL SECURITY
IN 6 MONTHS I CAN ELECT TO TAKE EARLY SOCIAL SECURITY SO ATLEAST I WON’T BE HOMELESS AND THEN HOPEFULLY, IF I HAVEN’T BY THAT TIME, CAN GET SOMETHING GOING TO MAKE MONEY AND/OR FIND A NICE AFFORDABLE HOUSING PROPERTY TO LIVE IN.  I HEARD THE BALLENISLES RETIREMENT HOME IS ALL BOOKED UP!  LUCKY FOR THEM!!  SO THEY TOLD ME I WILL GET $2000. PER MONTH IF I TAKE IT AT AGE 62.  I CAN’T BELIVE I AM GOING TO BE 62.  I KNOW MY DEBONAIR UNCLE RICHARD AND COUSIN GREGORY ARE GOING TO COME THROUGH AND BUY ME A TOASTER WHEN I GET MY OWN APARTMENT!  YES INDEED FOLKS.  THESE GUYS ARE THE REAL DEAL.  REAL PHILANTHROPISTS!  I’M IN AWE OF THEM!  I CAN’T BELIEVE THIS IS MY LIFE AFTER SACRIFICING SO MUCH AND WORKING SO HARD FOR OVER 30 YEARS BUT I’M DOING THE BEST I CAN WITH IT.  IF I CAN GET WORK THEN I WON’T HAVE TO TAKE IT AND IT WON’T MATTER.  MEANWHILE I’M HAVING A REALLY DIFFICULT TIME AND WORKING ON MY NOTES AND LAWSUIT TO SUE DENNIS FELCHER, ELLA FELCHER, TODD OLIVIWERI, ALLISON OLIVIERI AND STACY OLIVIERI FLORA.
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mommydearestella · 2 years
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JUST CURIOUS.  DOES ANYONE KNOW OF ANY ANESTHESIOLOGIST OR NURSE ANESTESIOLOGIST THAT HAS SPENT AN INORDINATE AMOUNT OF TIME AROUND DENNIS FELCHER, ELLA FELCHER, ALLISON OLIVIERI OR TODD OLIVIERI?
IF YES, DO THEY SEEM TO HAVE ALOT MORE MONEY THAN WOULD BE REASONABLY EXPECTED?
IF YES, HAVE THEY ACQUIRED PROPERTY SOMETIME IN THE LAST 10 YEARS IN THE BAHAMAS, PALM BAY, MELBOURNE FLORIDA, PALM BEACH GARDENS OR JACKSONVILLE, PONTE VEDRA BEACH FLORIDA?
IF YES, DID THEY PAY FOR THE PROPERTY OR RECEIVE INCREDIBLE DEALS ON ALL OF THEM PAYING PENNIES ON THE DOLLAR?
IF YES, DO THEY HAPPEN TO HAVE A REAL ESTATE LICENSE OR INSURANCE LICENSE AS WELL?
THE PIECES OF GARBAGE INVOLVED IN THE TERRORISM CAMPAIGN DIRECTED AT ME HAVE STATED A FEW TIMES THAT THEY WORK CLOSELY WITH A FEW DENTISTS AND I SUSPECT ANESTHESIOLOGISTS AS WELL.
BASED ON EVERYTHING SAID BY ONE OR MORE OF THE ABUSERS DURING THE COURSE OF THIS CAMPAIGN OVER THE LAST SEVERAL YEARS I DO NOT KNOW BUT STRONGLY SUSPECT NOW THAT SOMETHING IS BEING DONE, ADDED TO TOOTHPASTE OR MOUTHWASH TO CAUSE A PERSONS TEETH TO BECOME LOOSER OR FALL OUT.  THIS HAS HAPPENED TO A FEW PEOPLE AND I KNOW THEY ARE DOING THIS SAME TERRORISM PLAN TO SEVERAL PEOPLE AT THIS TIME.  THEY HAVE SEVERAL STALKERS STALKING PEOPLE, BREAKING INTO HOUSES, SPYING ON THEM TO LEARN PASSWORDS, PASSCODES AND THAT WOULD ENABLE THEM TO GET INTO THEIR SUBJECTS RESIDENCE UNKNOWN TO THE OWNERS.  FURTHERMORE, I SUSPECT THAT GAS IS USED TO CAUSE ANY PERSON INSIDE TO EITHER FALL ASLEEP OR TO BE IN A DEEP ENOUGH STATE OF SLEEP THAT THE ABUSERS HAVE A REASONABLE EXPECTATION ANYONE INSIDE WILL NOT WAKE UP.  I DO NOT KNOW BUT AM WONDERING IF THEN THEY HAVE A DENTIST EXTRACT A TOOTH AND, IF POSSIBLE, REPLACE IT WITH A FAKE TOOTH THAT IS PROBABLY JUST QUICKLY AND EASILY INSERTED IN ITS PLACE AND THEN A DAY OR TWO LATER ALL OF A SUDDEN THE FAKE TOOTH  CRACKS, CRUMBLES AND FALLS OUT.  THIS HAPPENED TO ME ABOUT 8 MONTHS AGO AND I COULD SEE NO REASON FOR IT.  THE TOOTH JUST LITERALLY CRUMBLED AND FELL APART AND IN RETROSPECT DID LOOK A LITTLE DIFFERENT THAN I WOULD HAVE EXPECTED IT TO LOOK.  THERE IS/WAS NO REASON FOR THIS AND OTHER THAN THE LAST YEAR IT NEVER HAPPENED BEFORE.  I STRONGLY SUSPECT THAT THE ABUSERS IN ALL THEIR WISDOM WOULD RESPOND WITH SOMETHING STUPID LIKE WELL, IF THEY EVER DID THIS OR THAT THAT COULD BE THE REASON WHY.
I WONDERED ABOUT THIS BECAUSE BASED ON WHAT WAS SAID DURING THE HARASSMENT OVER THE PAST SEVERAL YEARS I STRONGLY SUSPECT THAT THE ABUSERS HAVE SOME SORT OF PLAN TO HAVE SOMEONE MADE UP TO LOOK LIKE THEIR SUBJECT AND TRY TO PASS THAT PERSON OFF AS THE REAL PERSON AND THEN HAVE THEM DO BANKING OR TRANSACT BUSINESS IN THEIR NAME.  I COULD ONLY SEE THIS HAPPENENING IF THE PERSON JUST PASSED AWAY OR IF THEY DIRECTED THEIR TERRORISM AT SUCH A PERSON IN AN AGGRESSIVE WAY TO RUN THEM DOWN, BEHIND AND HOPE TO DIRECT SOME SORT OF ECONOMIC ESPIONAGE AT THAT PERSON OR TRY TO TAKE DOWN A PERSONS BUSINESS OR, AND I KNOW NOTHING ABOUT TERRORISM, SOMEONE HAVING THE AUDACITY TO TRY TO HIDE A PERSONS DEATH, IF POSSIBLE, AND HAVE SOMEONE ELSE RUNNING AROUND PRETENDING TO BE THEM.  IT SEEMS LIKE A LONG SHOT TO ME BUT I WONDER IF ANYTHING LIKE THIS HAS EVER HAPPENED BEFORE?  IF THEY COULD GET SOME OF THEIR SUBJECTS TEETH INTACT AND IMPLANT THEM IN THE IMPOSTERS MOUTH WITH THE REST OF THE TEETH BEING VENEERS OR SOMETHING ELSE I WONDER IF THEY COULD HOPE TO GET AWAY WITH IT?
AGAIN, I DO NOT KNOW THIS I AM WONDERING ABOUT IT AND I THINK WITH GOOD REASON.
I WONDER HOW MANY DENTISTS PURCHASED PROPERTY DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY FROM ANY OF THE SUSPECTED ABUSERS OR HAD SWEETHEART DEALS HANDED TO THEM?  I WONDER IF ANY OF THE ABUSERS, AS I SUSPECT, DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY EVER PURCHASED ANY FORMER HOME OF MINE ESPECIALLY IN JACKSONVILLE FLORIDA POSSIBLY BUYING AND SELLING THE SAME PROPERTY A FEW TIMES AND SELLING WAY UNDER MARKET AS PAYMENT FOR SOMETHING ELSE?  I WONDER IF SO IF ANY OF THESE DENTISTS KNOW, SOCIALIZE OR ARE SEEN OFTEN WITH ANY OF THE ABUSERS AND/OR DO BUSINESS OF SOME KIND WITH ANY OF THEM?
I WONDER IF ANY MEDICAL PROFESSIONAL AROUND THEM INCLUDING DENTISTS, ANESHESIOLOGIST, NURSE ANESTHESIOLOGIST, NURSE, PHYSICIAN, CARDIOLOGIST, PAIN SPECIALIST, ANY PSYCHOLOGIST OR PSYCHIATRIST ESPECIALLY ANY SPECIALIZING IN PSYCHOLOGICAL TORTURE ARE OR HAVE OFTEN DONE BUSINESS WITH ANY OF THE ABUSERS DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, HAVE ANY REAL ESTATE OR INSURANCE LICENSES, IF APPLICABLE, HELD AT ANY FIRMS WITH TIES TO THE ABUSERS DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY OR EVEN IN THE SAME OFFICE BUILDING OR ONE DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY OWNED BY ANY OF THE BUSERS DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY.
I WONDER IF ANY OF THEM HAVE PURCHASED VERY EXPENSIVE CARS FOR RIDICULOUSLY LOW PRICES OR STUMBLED ACROSS A SITUATION MENTIONED SEVERAL TIMES DURING THE TERRORISM CAMPAIGN DIRECTED AT ME OVER THE LAST SEVERAL YEARS WHEREBY A NEW CAR WAS SUPPOSEDLY PURCHASED BY SOMEONE AND THEN IMMEDIATELY RETURNED FOR WHATEVER REASON THUS MAKING IT THEN A USED CAR.  IF SO, THE CAR WAS THEN SOLD FOR SEVERAL THOUSAND DOLLARS LESS THEN IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN AND IN SOME CASES 20, 30, 40k LESS.  IF SO WHO OWNS THE DEALERSHIP DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, MEMBER OF, TIES TO IN ANY WAY, A SUBSIDIARY, PARENT OR HOLDING COMPANY OR HAS SOME SORT OF AGREEMENT TO DO ANYTHING, PROVIDE ANY SERVICE FOR, ETC. THAT WOUKLD PUT THEM IN A POSITION TO PULL OFF SOMETHING LIKE THAT?
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mommydearestella · 3 years
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MORE EXAMPLES OF STALKING AND GANGSTALKING CONTINUED
pets are killed.
knocking on the door: no one is there or the person is at the wrong apt.
synchronicity: things happen (an engine starts up, someone coughs, a vehicle horn honks, etc) precisely as the target does something (e.g. moves around or exits his apt, etc).
the same harassment happens every single day, day after day, year after year.
deception: the stalkers may pretend to be members of a "community group," "concerned citizens" who are "informing" the community about a "bad person" who is living among them. These are lies: The stalkers are members of a right-wing hate-vigilante group.
the target's residence is entered and vandalized or items are taken. Sometimes the stalkers do this (in an apt complex) by convincing the resident manager or the maintenance person that the target is a child molester, some other kind of criminal, a spy, etc. Sometimes the stalkers play upon the resident manager's or the maintenance person's "patriotism" to get access to the target's residence. Deception is used at every level in gang stalking. mail is stolen or damaged.
goals: The stalkers wish to drive the target insane & to get him forcibly taken to (and incarcerated in) a psychiatric institution. They wish to make the target became violent, so that he can be violently assaulted, arrested, and taken to jail. They wish to make the target suffer so much that he kills himself. They wish to make the target become poor by making him lose his job and spend his money moving from place to place trying to escape from the stalkers. They wish to completely isolate the target, so he can have no support from anywhere or anyone. Overall they wish to destroy the target emotionally, financially, socially, and physically.
My personal experiences below:
In my case I am spied on against my will by a number of different methods.  The Stalkers and Abusers, I suspect, think if they say it is out of concern or some other excuse that makes it acceptable.
They have sought to portray me as inept.  Have gone to great lengths to sabotage me.  They will pay some people or try to to say or do certain things at certain times.
The Terrorist Stalkers have broken into my former home and stolen documents, replaced documents or notes all in efforts to confuse me, cause, me more work and to make me look inept.  Meanwhile they have spied on me and used my research and business plans to enrich themselves.
Two years ago I did alot of research into banking and before that about 6 years ago.
A little over a year ago I did research on the Vending Machine business in an unconventional model.
Five and a half to 6 years ago or so I did alot of research into the trucking industry and incorporated the location of the business, available incentives, zones, etc. into my plans.
One evening the Terrorists were rambling on and bombarding me with dialogue thru a nearby hidden speaker about several different properties that had been for sale.  I quickly realized that these were properties that I had aggressively pursued in the past.  They rambled on about the financials incredibly and even if they were going off of a proforma it is incredibly unprofessional to discuss the details of properties that you may have looked at and were for sale in the past.  They rambled on about 10 properties or so and probably had been spying on me back then unknown to me and bidding against me in some cases.
Hacking into computers and cell phones and seeking to interfere in a persons communication are examples of Economic Terrorism and Economic Espionage.
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mommydearestella · 3 years
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(via GIPHY) THAT IS NOT TODD OLIVIERI!
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mommydearestella · 3 years
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mommydearestella · 3 years
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BLOOD MONEY IN THE RICH, CLUBBY WORLD OF HORSEMEN, SOME GREEDY OWNERS HAVE HIRED KILLERS TO MURDER THEIR ANIMALS FOR THE INSURANCE PAYOFFS
On the rainy night of Feb. 2, 1991, in despair over the prospect of causing the death of a horse by breaking its hind leg with a crowbar, Tommy (the Sandman) Burns sat in a bar outside Gainesville, Fla., and got drunk on gin and tonic. "Really wasted," Burns recalls. "I had never done one like that before."
For a decade the cherubic 30-year-old had made a sporadic living as a hit man hired to destroy expensive horses and ponies, usually so their owners could collect on lucrative life-insurance policies. But no owner had ever ordered Burns to dispose of a horse by breaking one of its legs—that is, by causing a trauma so severe that a veterinarian would be forced to put the animal down with a lethal injection.
Burns's preferred method of killing horses was electrocution. It had been so ever since the day in 1982 when, he says, the late James Druck, an Ocala, Fla., attorney who represented insurance companies, paid him to kill the brilliant show jumper Henry the Hawk, on whose life Druck had taken out a $150,000 life-insurance policy. In fact, says Burns, Druck personally taught him how to rig the wires to electrocute Henry the Hawk: how to slice an extension cord down the middle into two strands of wire; how to attach a pair of alligator clips to the bare end of each wire; and how to attach the clips to the horse—one to its ear, the other to its rectum. All he had to do then, says Burns, was plug the cord into a standard wall socket. And step back.
"You better get out of the way," says Burns. "They go down immediately. One horse dropped so fast in the stall, he must have broken his neck when he hit the floor. It's a sick thing, I know, but it was quick and it was painless. They didn't suffer." And it was, for the collection of insurance claims, an ideal method of execution. According to doctors at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center, one of the nation's leading large-animal hospitals, even the most-experienced pathologist would be unlikely to detect signs of death by electrocution—unless, perchance, the pathologist was looking for it and the clips happened to leave singe marks. Many of the horses Burns electrocuted were assumed to have died of colic.
So Tommy Burns (a.k.a. Timmy Robert Ray), who had worked around horses since he had run away from home in Connecticut at the age of 15, became a serial killer of horses and got away with it for 10 years. According to federal agents, Burns destroyed some 20 horses, mostly show jumpers and hunters, on the show-horse circuit from Florida to Vermont to Illinois. "In 1989 it got crazy," Burns says. "I killed three horses in one week." Indeed, toting the canvas athletic bag in which he hid his deadly wires, Burns became such a regular presence among the wealthy show-horse crowds that he earned a sobriquet of which he would remain, until recently, unaware. "People knew what was going on," says a prominent West Virginia horsewoman. "When Tommy arrived at a show, they would say the Sandman was around. They knew a horse would be put to sleep." In almost every ease, something about a horse—its performance, its health, its age—had made the unthinkable occur to its owner.
By that night of Feb. 2, Burns had, by his own admission, run "hard and wild for 10 years." A few days earlier he and his associate, Harlow Arlie, had driven a vanload of show horses from their base in northern Illinois to Canterbury Farms in Florida. Among the equine passengers was Streetwise, a sporty chestnut jumper with a white stocking on each leg, a blaze on its face and a $25,000 insurance policy on its life. Burns has told federal investigators that the 7-year-old gelding's owner, Donna Brown, a prominent horsewoman on the clubby show-horse circuit, had hired him for $5,000 to arrange a fatal accident for Streetwise. According to Burns, the insurance policy did not cover death by colic—Streetwise had a history of colic, a life-threatening condition in a horse—so Brown insisted that he break the animal's leg.
"I don't want to break his leg," Burns, at the bar near Gainesville, sang to Arlie in his executioner's song. "I'm not into that."
"I'll do it," Burns says Arlie told him. "For half your fee."
The two men left the bar and returned to Canterbury. Burns figured the rain that night would make the perfect alibi: They were loading Streetwise into the van when the horse slipped, fell off the ramp and broke its leg. At about 10:10 p.m., after helping to load three other horses into the van for a trip south to West Palm Beach, Burns stood in the middle of a brightly lighted lot and held a lead shank tethered to Streetwise's halter.
Unbeknownst to Burns, investigators for the Florida Department of Agricultural and Consumer Services, acting on a tip, had been following his van ever since it had rolled into Florida, and on this night they were staking out the farm. One of the investigators, Harold Barry, lay flat and still on the top of a beat-up horse trailer less than 100 yards away, watching helplessly as the dark, rain-swept scene suddenly turned from eerie to macabre.
The powerfully built Arlie appeared behind Streetwise's right rear leg, a crowbar in his hand. Arlie swung the bar like a baseball bat, and agents across the highway could hear a crack. Neighing loudly, in a high, panicky scream, Streetwise began thrashing on his dangling leg, fell to the ground as a stunned Burns hung onto the lead—"I'd never seen anything like it; the horse went into shock," he says—and then scrambled back to his feet. The keening horse tore the shank from Burns's hand and took off around the stable, disappearing in the night, falling again, bellowing, only a sound now, an echo behind the barn now, in the dark now, in the quiet rain.
Tommy Burns punched numbers on a cellular phone, calling Donna Brown in West Palm Beach to inform her of events. Meanwhile Arlie informed Carlie Ferguson, president of Canterbury Farms, who summoned a vet. The vet phoned Brown, and on her instructions he called the insurance company on its 800 emergency number. Of course, the company authorized immediate euthanasia for the suffering animal. Moments after arriving on the scene, the vet put the horse down.
Burns and Arlie did not get far. After the death of Streetwise, Burns fired up the rig and took off. But two miles down Route 26, Florida Highway Patrol cars converged on the van from all directions. "They were even coming out of dirt roads," says Burns. He made a run for it, but he was quickly subdued, handcuffed and arrested at shotgun point. "What were you guys doing at the farm?" a cop yelled in Burns's ear.
They had him cold. Agricultural investigators found the crowbar and the electrocution wires in Burns's white pickup. An accomplice who had helped to load the horses at the scene, Chad Sondell, said in a sworn statement to state investigators that Burns and Arlie had told him they were to be paid $5,000 by Brown to kill Streetwise. Arlie confirmed Sondell's story, according to police reports, and admitted having struck Streetwise with the crowbar. Arlie soon pleaded guilty to charges of insurance fraud and cruelty to animals, and he eventually served six months of an 18-month sentence before being paroled.
Federal authorities had been investigating Burns for months—it was they who had tipped the Florida agricultural department that the Sandman was heading south with a potential victim in his van—and Burns's arrest turned out to be the major break in what had become a difficult collection of cases to crack.
Underscoring the importance of the arrest, an FBI agent and a top Justice Department prosecutor from Chicago, Steve Miller, descended on Gainesville only hours after Burns was taken into custody. Caught in the act, incriminated by Arlie and Sondell and facing certain conviction and a jail term on charges of insurance fraud and cruelty to animals. Burns decided to cooperate with federal prosecutors. He spent three weeks in jail, and after the Alachua County Circuit Court finally released him on $100,000 cash bail—under an order that he stay away from horses—he returned to Chicago, where he began cooperating with a grand jury that has been looking into the killing of horses for insurance money.
Burns quickly unraveled his sordid tale to law-enforcement officials, giving names, places and dates from his history as a professional horse-killer and a co-conspirator in cases of insurance fraud. Burns faces sentencing Dec. 14 in the case involving Streetwise, and he expects the feds to seek leniency on his behalf on grounds that he is a key government witness in what has become an investigation of stunning scope.
"Tommy Burns turns out to be the tip of the iceberg," one federal agent says. In the next few weeks, as agents from the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms wind up their investigations, sources estimate that as many as 40 owners, trainers, veterinarians and riders will be indicted on various charges related to the killing of horses for insurance payments. Law-enforcement officials are piecing together felony fraud cases against the owners and trainers who hired Burns, and they're tracking down itinerant stable hands and grooms who can confirm details of the killings that the Sandman carried out for their bosses. The inquiries have led agents on a long, circuitous trail from one scene of electrocution to the next, and along the way investigators have picked up leads on other insurance-related deaths not involving Burns and on still other crimes that include suspicious stable fires and the fraudulent sale of overvalued horses.
In the 21 months since Burns's arrest, investigators have developed hard evidence that such crimes have not been confined to the show-horse business and that Burns is not the only hit man working expensive stables. During that time the investigators have concluded that killing horses for insurance claims is business as usual at all levels in the world of show horses.
This phenomenon is hardly new, nor is it confined to jumpers and hunters. Twenty years ago, at some prominent thoroughbred racetrack barns, animals were dying at such an alarming rate that insurance companies were refusing to insure the trainers' horses. At one Belmont Park barn where horses were expiring mysteriously in the night, cynical grooms would show up in the morning and ask, "Anyone die last night?"
Veteran insurance adjusters say, however, that the number of suspicious claims by horse owners has increased dramatically in the years since the 1986 Tax Reform Act eliminated performance horses as depreciable assets. That "reform" and the anemic state of the economy cut the bottom out of the horse business, leaving a cash-starved industry with farms and stables struggling desperately to stay afloat.
Unlike paintings by Renoir or baseball cards bearing pictures of Honus Wagner, horses experience wild, often unforeseen fluctuations in value. Say, for instance, that a thoroughbred investor spends $500,000 for a well-built, well-bred yearling, insures him for that sum and sends him off, as a 2-year-old, to a racetrack trainer. And say that the trainer then informs the owner that the colt is so slow that he couldn't beat a $15,000 maiden claimer. Or that he is an ill-tempered, untrainable rogue. Or that he is about to bow a tendon and will never race. The humane sportsman might wince and take the loss, but more than a few others would make other arrangements. "The insurance is there, and it is very tempting," says one federal agent.
Over the last few years, says Harvey Feintuch, a New York lawyer who specializes in the investigation of equine insurance claims, "we have had a very, very significant increase in the number of claims that just don't look right."
Given the current economic climate, the sudden deaths of expensive, stall-bound horses tend to raise suspicions, even at the highest levels of the horse business. A widely respected freelance turf writer, Carol Flake, sent shudders through the thoroughbred industry when, in a meticulously reported article in the February 1992 issue of Connoisseur magazine, she raised the possibility that the death of Alydar—one of the most popular racehorses of modern times and one of the world's prepotent stallions—was not an accident (box, page 22).
In the investigation of thoroughbred fatalities, federal agents have found more than mere suspicions. In Brooklyn and South Florida, the feds say, they recently uncovered an insurance scheme that led to the death of one horse, a son of Seattle Slew named Fins, and nearly resulted in the death of another, Cutlass Reality, a New York stakes winner of $1.4 million. Prosecutors say that the scheme involved Victor Arena, the reputed head of the Colombo crime family; Howard Crash, a New York securities broker who is under indictment for bribery; and Larry Lombardo, a licensed owner and trainer of thoroughbreds who has been indicted on federal charges that he killed Fins "while making the death appear to be due to natural causes." Sources speculate that the horse was injected with parasitic bloodworms that brought on a case of thromboembolic colic, a fatal illness.
According to a 21-count indictment handed up in Miami on Aug. 4, Lombardo purchased Fins for $7,500, inflated the horse's value to $400,000 through a series of sales of phony shares, insured Fins for that amount and then collected on the policy after the horse died. Ron Rubinstein, Lombardo's defense attorney, claims that Fins died of natural causes and argues that the colt, at $400,000, was not overvalued as a breeding prospect. But Seth Hancock, the president of Claiborne Farm, which bred Fins and has been in the thoroughbred-breeding business for 80 years, said that Fins was a big, crooked-legged colt who couldn't run a lick.
Lombardo is also charged with conspiring to kill Cutlass Reality, the terrific winner of the 1988 Hollywood Gold Cup (and conqueror of the Horse of the Year, Alysheba), in an alleged insurance-fraud scheme. Crash and his former business associate Mark Hankoff—the two key government witnesses against Lombardo, according to sources close to the case—owned the horse in partnership with Lombardo and several others. What saved Cutlass Reality is unclear, but the hit was never made. "Somebody got scared and backed out," an FBI agent says. What is clear, according to the sworn testimony of an FBI agent involved in the case, is that Crash, Lombardo and Arena would have each received $1 million from the insurance settlement if the horse had been killed. Instead, Cutlass Reality will be standing stud in California next spring, servicing mares at $5,000 a pop—and that beats colic.
While the company that insured Fins had some doubts about the horse's stated value and was suspicious of the timing of the claim, which was made six months after the purchase of the policy, it nonetheless sent the $400,000 check to Lombardo and his cohorts. (Lombardo goes on trial next March 22; if convicted, he may be forced to make restitution to the insurance company.) Increasingly, however, insurance companies are balking at paying suspicious claims and are fighting them in court. The companies are also investigating suspicious claims more assiduously, looking for signs of fraud such as the bogus inflation of a horse's value and the concealing of ailments and infirmities. "We began to take more time and more care," says Feintuch, adding that Lloyds of London and other carriers have toughened their approach to paying claims.
Lloyds's increased vigilance dates back eight years to a case that rocked the highest levels of the thoroughbred breeding world and drove some of its biggest players to hide behind the woodshed in embarrassment. When, on March 25, 1984, an imported English horse named Pelerin died of vitamin D toxicosis shortly after ending his inconsistent career by finishing out of the money in a race in Louisiana, the underwriters of the insurance on the horse, all associated with Lloyds, had reason to be skeptical of the $1.45 million policy that Kentucky horseman Harold Snowden held on his half of the animal. Not only did Pelerin appear to have been poisoned, as the term toxicosis implies, but his value (Snowden and a partner had purchased him for $2 million) had dropped sharply in light of his less-than-stellar racing career.
Snowden, co-owner of the Stallion Station farm and breeder of two Kentucky Derby winners, Dust Commander (1970) and Bold Forbes (1976), had been one of the most active players in the business, the syndicator of more than 100 stallions and a prolific insurer of horses. In a gesture aimed at staying in Snowden's favor, the underwriters offered him $1 million—exactly what he had paid originally for half of the horse—to settle the claim. Snowden held out for $1.35 million. The carriers refused to budge, and Snowden took them to court. It was the first time that an equine insurance company had opposed someone of his stature.
Snowden came armed with 10 letters from fellow horsemen, all dated before Pelerin's death, in which each breeder expressed interest in buying a share in the horse for $75,000 upon his retirement to stud. At the 40 shares Snowden said he would have sold, Pelerin's claimed value now rose to $3 million. Among the nationally known breeders who sent letters were Warner Jones, then chairman of the board of Churchill Downs; J.T. Lundy, later head of Calumet Farm; and the late Leslie Combs II, then the aging pillar of Spendthrift Farm.
Snowden looked as if he would win in a gallop when—in a maneuver Perry Mason would have envied—Feintuch, acting on the underwriters' behalf, called two witnesses who destroyed Snowden's case and earned him the glowering wrath of the judge, Henry Wilhoit. One of the witnesses, a secretary for breeder Dwayne Rogers, testified that she had typed Rogers's letter to Snowden. The problem was that she had not begun working for Rogers until 14 months after Pelerin's death. She explained to the court that Rogers told her to backdate the letter to Jan. 5, 1984, two months before the horse's demise. The other witness, a receptionist at Spendthrift Farm, testified that she had typed Combs's letter to Snowden but that she did not go to work at Spendthrift until July 1984, by which time Pelerin had been dead four months. She testified that Combs had her type the backdated letter late one day, after everyone else had left the office.
Snowden was in trouble. His lawyers withdrew on him, leaving him to face a furious Wilhoit. Snowden hired F. Lee Bailey to put the toothpaste back in the tube, but that did no good. After a third horseman admitted that his letter was a fraud, Wilhoit concluded that "all 10 letters had been backdated." While never addressing the question of whether Pelerin was poisoned, Wilhoit charged that "a fraud had been practiced upon the court." Not only was Snowden out the $1 million that Lloyds had offered in the original settlement, but he was also left with a dead horse, a court-ordered judgment against him for $194,131.12 (to cover court costs and the amount Lloyds spent in legal fees fighting his claim) and bills from his own departed lawyers, not to mention from Bailey.
While the thoroughbred business has had its sorry share of cases involving insurance fraud, it has experienced nothing like the maelstrom that Burns is about to set spinning in the show-horse business. Sources say that, based on Burns's testimony, some of the most celebrated figures in the game are targets of the grand jury probe. They include Donna Brown and her husband, Buddy Brown, a member of the U.S. equestrian team at the 1976 Olympics and still one of the nation's leading performers in Grand Prix jumping. Not only does Donna face allegations in connection with the death of Streetwise, but she and Buddy are also under investigation for the death of Aramis, another show jumper. According to sources, insurance records show that Aramis, while insured for $1 million, died under suspicious circumstances. (No charge has been tiled in either case.)
Asked about the federal investigations into the deaths of two of the Browns' horses, the couple's lawyer, Mark Arisohn, a Manhattan criminal defense specialist, says, "I wish I could give you a response. We will plead not guilty. Our defense will be established in the courtroom."
Another horseman who has attracted the attention of investigators is George Lindemann Jr. of Greenwich, Conn., who has emerged as one of the nation's most accomplished equestrians since graduating from Brown University in 1986. Lindemann has ridden his stable of gifted show jumpers to victory in some of the Grand Prix circuit's richest and most prestigious events, but federal investigators are more interested in what role, if any, he played in the December 1990 death of his champion hunter Charisma.
Tommy Burns has told authorities that Charisma was insured for $400,000 when Burns electrocuted him for Lindemann in a stall at the Lindemann family's Cellular Farms, in Armonk, N.Y. According to another source, Lindemann had purchased Charisma for $250,000 in 1989. Minus Burns's alleged $35,000 fee for the hit, the insurance payoff would have left Lindemann with a $115,000 profit. It also left investigators wondering why, if Burns's allegations are true, the enormously rich Lindemann—the name Cellular Farms refers to cellular phones, the source of the family's wealth—would take so big a risk for so small a sum.
Asked about the inquiry into Charisma's death, Lindemann referred all questions to his lawyer, Elaine Amendola, who said, "Why should I be talking about this when George has the FBI hanging all over his neck?" She added, however, that "George is completely innocent."
Additionally, federal agents are looking into the possible involvement of veterinarian Dana Tripp, also an accomplished equestrian, in the death of Streetwise. Florida investigators say that Tripp's red pickup truck—with DANA TRIPP, D.V.M. emblazoned on its doors—was part of Burns's caravan as it made its way toward Canterbury Farms. It was Tripp, according to sources cited in the police report, who recommended to Donna Brown that she hire Burns to stage Streetwise's accident. Prosecutors have phone records revealing Tripp's numerous conversations with both Brown and Burns in the two days leading up to the death of Streetwise. Tripp has refused to respond to SI's questions about the matter.
The Sandman's trail has led federal agents to stables in at least eight states. Sources say that Paul Valliere of North Smithfield, R.I., one of the show circuit's leading trainers, is under federal investigation. Burns has told authorities that Valliere hired him to destroy Roseau Platiere, one of Valliere's own horses. Burns says he electrocuted the animal one night in its stall at a horse show in Sugarbush, Vt. Reached at his Acres Wild Farm in Rhode Island, Valliere refused to answer any questions. Seeking corroboration of Burns's Sugarbush story, SI spoke to a woman who said that she had picked Burns up at the airport in Burlington, Vt., and taken him to the horse show. (The woman said she had given this information to the FBI.) SI also spoke to others who described Roseau Platiere as vigorous and healthy in the hours before Burns's visit. Burns says he has federal agents that Roseau Platiere was one of the three horses he destroyed in 1989 during the busiest week of his career as a contract killer.
Agents are also following up Burns's account of the death of a show horse named Rainman. His owner, Chicago businessman Allen Levinson, collected a $50,000 insurance policy on Rainman's death, but he denies any wrongdoing. "I have never heard of Tommy Burns," Levinson says. "I was trying to sell that horse. I had it sold for more money than the insurance policy. There was a complete autopsy."
For the agents, investigating horse killings has been a difficult, unfamiliar experience. Only rarely has there been a body on which to perform a necropsy, as there was in the case of Streetwise; the carcasses usually have been lost to the rendering plants. So this has been in good part a paper chase. In some cases agents have served subpoenas on claims adjusters who had long before paid the owners for their losses. But the owners' files and personal financial records have been valuable, frequently confirming details of Burns's story of a horse's death—including in some cases the exact barn and stall where it occurred.
In fact, investigators have been struck by the ease with which they were able to follow the paper trail that some of Burns's clients left behind. Burns's presence on the circuit and the things that tended to happen when he was around became so accepted that he was treated like the feedman or the farrier. His employers frequently paid him with personal checks and sometimes with cashier's checks purchased at their banks.
Even federal agents, who thought they had seen everything, were shocked by the insouciance of some of those who dealt with Burns. Burns recalls one woman's approach to him at a horse show: "She said, 'Do you think you could kill my horse for $10,000?' So I did. She bought another horse with the insurance money and came up to me two months later and asked me to kill her new horse. She didn't like it."
There is a troubling banality about the evil at work in these cases. "We are dealing with a way of life here." one investigator said. "These people thought they had some sort of right to do these things."
Largely because of the nature of the crime ("These animals are so vulnerable that I'd compare it almost to hurting children," says Florida agriculture commissioner Bob Crawford), some law-enforcement officials have pursued the investigation with an inspired intensity. "This is a case where you can lose your detachment," says one federal agent. "These were beautiful animals. They were standing there helpless in their stalls. Most of these people had plenty of money. So you get outraged. And you work a little harder."
Burns knows better than anyone how the horses were standing in their stalls, wearing their halters and alligator clips and watching him curiously, like deer in a clearing, as he stepped outside and moved for the socket. He wants it known, as he has been telling the feds, that he wasn't there on his own. "I was not alone in all of this," he says. "I feel terrible about what I did. But I did not advertise. I did not do any sales calls. People found me and came to me. Very important people. Very wealthy people. They came to me because they somehow knew that I might be willing to do something they wanted done. They wanted these horses dead."
What the clients wanted, the clients got. However well he warbles, Burns knows he will do some jail time, just as he knows there will be no escaping, ever, what he did for so long with his life. There's no escaping that night in Florida, in the dark, in the rain, and the sight of Arlie with the crowbar, and the crack and the screams, the horse falling and thrashing, rising and running. Burns can still hear the cops yelling at him after his arrest: "You killed all those horses, and we know you did!"
"They were right," says Tommy Burns.
They always will be. That is his sentence.
FIVE ILLUSTRATIONS
ANASTASIA VASILAKIS
Arlie swung the crowbar like a baseball bat, and agents watching from across the highway could hear a crack.
According to federal agents, Burns destroyed some 20 animals on the show-horse circuit from Florida to Vermont to Illinois.
Burns's presence became so accepted that he was treated like the feedman or the farrier. His employers frequently paid him with personal checks.
Over the last two years agents have concluded that killing horses for insurance payoffs is business as usual in the world of show horses.
BY
WILLIAM NACK
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mommydearestella · 3 years
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REMOTE NEURAL MONITORING IS READING A PERSONS THOUGHTS.  I SUSPECT THAT MY RESEARCH INTO THE BANKING INDUSTRY AND SOME IDEAS THAT I HAD A COUPLE OF YEARS AGO WERE STOLEN.  I THINK THE CAMPAIGN OF TERRORISM DIRECTED AT ME IS INTENTIONALLY TRYING TO KEEP THEIR ABUSE GOING TO SIDETRACK ME AND MAKE IT MORE DIFFICULT TO GET AHEAD, GO TO WORK, ETC.
QUESTION:  DOES ANYONE KNOW IF ELLA OLIVIERI FELCHER, HER SON TODD OLIVIERI (WILLIAM TODD OLIVIERI), HER DAUGHTER ALLISON OLIVIERI, STACY OLIVIERI FLORA, CYNTHIA KATZ FELCHER, ANY MEMBER OF THE SEYMOUR KAUFMAN FAMILY IN NYC, TUDOR CITY AND BOCA RIO, ALLISON KAUFMAN, DAVID KAUFMAN,  DENNIS FELCHER, ANYONE AFFILIATED IN ANY WAY WITH ANY OF THESE PEOPLE OR ADVANCED INSURANCE UNDERWRITERS OR RISK STRATEGY CONSULTANTS IN HOLLYWOOD FLORIDA DISCUSSED THE BANKING BUSINESS OVER THE LAST FEW YEARS ESPECIALLY 1 1/2 - 2 YEARS AGO?
DOES ANYONE KNOW IF THEY MADE APPLICATION TO OR HAD SOMEONE ELSE DO IT FOR THEM TO OPEN A BANK, PURCHASE A BANK, BUY A SIGNIFICANT NUMBER OF SHARES IN A BANK AT ANYTIME OVER THE LAST COUPLE OF YEARS?
HAS ANYONE EVER HEARD ELLA OLIVIERI FELCHER, TODD OLIVIERI, ALLISON OLIVIERI, DENNIS FELCHER, SEYMOUR KAUFMAN FAMILY, MEMBERS OF THE ROY LERMAN FAMILY SAY ANYTHING AT ALL ABOUT HARMING ME IN ANY WAY? 
 TRYING TO BANKRUPT ME?
DISCUSSING, THREATENING OR PLANNING TO KILL ANY OF MY PETS INCLUDING MY TWO BELOVED DOGS AND MY BELOVED CAT?
MENTION ANYTHING AT ALL ABOUT THREATENING ANY FRIEND OF MINE OR TRYING TO FORCE THEM TO DO OR SAY SOMETHING WHICH IS ACTUALLY HUMAN TRAFFICING?
DID ANY OF THE ABOVE REFERENCED PERSONS EVER DISCUSS ANYTHING AT ALL TO DO WITH CHEMICALS, CHEMTRAILS, REMOTE NEURAL MONITORING, MAKING DEATH THREATS TO ME, MY PETS AND FRIENDS?
ELLA OLIVIERI FELCHER
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mommydearestella · 3 years
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EXAMPLES OF STALKING METHODS
THIS INFORMATION IS FROM WHAT IS GANGSTALKING BLOGSPOT.
24 hour surveillance every day.
the "noise regime": very frequent sounds, which follow the target everywhere: sirens, loud engine accelerations, high-pitched beeping sounds, vehicle alarms, screeching-tire sounds, coughing, throat clearing, loud booming sounds (from vehicles) and mechanical squeaking sounds (from vehicles), etc.
derogatory name calling: Sometimes this is done from passing vehicles.
invading the target's personal space: standing next to, behind, or in front of the target when he is standing, and sitting or standing next to the target when he sits down. And walking in front of or parallel to the target.
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mommydearestella · 3 years
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Nazi Torture Tactics being used in the Campaign of Terrorism directed at me for 5 years and 9 months including GASSING.  This is usually carried out by someone walking past me with a backpack and I would notice it about 45 seconds later.  Sometimes something is  hidden in a nearby garbage can or a potted plant and there is a small narrow stream of gas coming out of it.  There were times that it made me very tired for 3-4 hours and other times made me feel very sick.
They have also used SLEEP DEPRIVATION many times including last night, NOISE TORTURE, bombarding a person with spoken dialogue to hog their attention over an extended period of time usually delivered thru hidden speakers nearby or in a/c vent in car including while they are driving which is very distracting and dangerous to that driver and others on the road near him.  In addition, they will use PSYCHOLOGICAL TORTURE usually with a musical background and at a low volume and at some point pick up the pace to try to incite anxiety, infuriate.
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