Thursday, May 7, 2009
SAY GOOD BYE TO THE BAD GUY "A GANGSTERS STORY"
SAY GOOD BYE TO THE BAD GUY "A GANGSTERS STORY" PART 1 INTRO "Thoughts of a Successful Hustler" My life is burden by the fact of an early end, 99% of the time I'm trying to out think the government, or trying to predict the betrayal of close friends: Charlatans conceal envy, with only one thing on their mind; hoping that they will get their chance to shine , when it's my death or prison time: Girls flock around me in groups; men surround me armed ready to shoot: I can buy whatever is in a millionaires reach: even though I moved into a two million dollor home, I still crave to hang in the hood with my peeps; I have a fear to drive through the city in the same car with my wife and son: because I would hate for them to be repaid for something that I had previously done: But from the outside looking in, I appear to be living great: I own a six car fleet, my family is beautiful, we have access to millions, living on a multi-million dollar estate: But the reality of it all is, I wish I could start my life all over again; I would keep my family, give back my money, and hopefully earase the envy out of the hearts of my friends: I know this may sound like a joke, but my happiest memories come from the time when I was broke: Don't get me wrong, there's nothing sweet about being poor, but before I had my Rolex, my Benz or my house, when a person displayed their love for me, I knew I was all that they saw. My line of work has close friends working to turn me in, while others conspire about my death. And since the streets have already taken my freedom to enjoy my success, I often wonder what will it take next................................
TRIGGA
In the late 1980's at the height of the New York Citys crack epidemic, there was a 15 year old boy in the Soundview section of the Bronx who had dreams of making it big. As a child, all of his elders from his parents, to his teachers, to his basketball and football coaches would always tell him that he had the special ability to accomplish anything that he set his mind to; therefore he should always reach for his dreams... But what happens when your dream is to become one of the youngest, most feared, Drug King Pins in New York City history, and you actually achieve that goal??? While TRIGGA is a hardcore street tale full of action and detailed descriptions of all of the dealing and killing that goes on in the drug world in the inner city of New York. Overall the story is laced with with a positive mesage that can be life changing for people of all ages, race, and genders everywhere... "Sometimes in life a persons dreams can betray them. Once you choose the conduct, you choose and must accept the consequences of that behaviar.........
(TRIGGA) THE BOOK BY PISTOL PETE
TEAM ROLLOCK GOT THE STREETS ON SMASH WITH THE CLASSIC STREET NOVEL TITLED "TRIGGA" WATCH OUT FOR THAT NEXT BANGER TITLED "SAY GOODBYE TO THE BAD GUY "A GANGSTERS STORY" Team Rollock street novels are available for retail and wholesale distribution at www.TeamRollock.com Tel:917-691-3641 ALSO AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE AT: www.yahoo.com www.E-Booktime.com www.Amazon.com www.BarnesandNoble.com www.BooksaMillion.com...and other internet book sellers
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
SEND MONEY TO PISTOL PETE
March 14, 2009 - Saturday
For all those who want to send money to the big homie Pistol Pete. Send all money orders to: Federal Bureau of Prisons Peter Rollock # 12874-058 P.O. Box 474701 Des Moines, Iowa 50947-0001 |
Monday, May 4, 2009
Gone Now But Never Forever
lot of people think pistol cant write anyone or cant see his family this is not true i write him all the time i will be posting more letters on my blog soon so keep looking out for that
LETTER #1
7-2-02
MEL,
What's good? I was just informed that i had approval to correspond with you, Kiron,Mike Mike & Missy, so I had to reach your way to let you know the good news....Now I can see if you still got skills on the mic. Dont let me find out that you fell off....Anyway! this letter will be short because i have to notify everybody that I just mentioned about their approvals and I want to get all of that done today.So as soon as you get this letter halla back we'll take it from there...Until then, Be good!.Take care& Send my love to all....
Much love! Much Respect
PETE!
MEL,
What's good? I was just informed that i had approval to correspond with you, Kiron,Mike Mike & Missy, so I had to reach your way to let you know the good news....Now I can see if you still got skills on the mic. Dont let me find out that you fell off....Anyway! this letter will be short because i have to notify everybody that I just mentioned about their approvals and I want to get all of that done today.So as soon as you get this letter halla back we'll take it from there...Until then, Be good!.Take care& Send my love to all....
Much love! Much Respect
PETE!
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Soundview
NAME: Soundview Houses
LOCATION: Rosedale Avenue, Bronx.
ACTUAL FACTS: Soundview Houses has thirteen, 7-story buildings containing 1,258 apartments. Completed October 29, 1954, it now houses 3,148 residents.
TOUGH GUY RATING: Off The Meter. Spawned the infamous Sex Money Murder Bloods (founder Pistol Pete is not to be confused with the character of the same name who is part of Fat Joe’s Terror Squad). Was named New York’s “Murder Capital” in 2002, and currently holds the title for the most car thefts in the city.
LOCATION: Rosedale Avenue, Bronx.
ACTUAL FACTS: Soundview Houses has thirteen, 7-story buildings containing 1,258 apartments. Completed October 29, 1954, it now houses 3,148 residents.
TOUGH GUY RATING: Off The Meter. Spawned the infamous Sex Money Murder Bloods (founder Pistol Pete is not to be confused with the character of the same name who is part of Fat Joe’s Terror Squad). Was named New York’s “Murder Capital” in 2002, and currently holds the title for the most car thefts in the city.
This is an excerpt from Street Legends book
Pistol Pete and the Blood affiliated Sex, Money and Murder gang were the scourge of the Soundview section of the Bronx back in the day. In his teens and into his early twenties Pistol Pete acquired a reputation as a ruthless killer, who made millions in the drug game in the late 80’s and early 90’s. He was known as one of the most feared and powerful men in New York during the crack era, who could get people killed with his word alone. His influence and organization stretched south from the city’s five boroughs reaching out and touching states all across the eastern seaboard. Pistol Pete was one of Soundview’s Original Gangsters, setting the bar high for his hood and the Northeast Bronx.In the city and all down the coast Pistol Pete was known for bustin’ his guns with no conscious. When it came to that gun smoke, the kid didn’t play. He was all business. It’s rumored his body count numbered over three dozen. The kid was quick to pull and quicker to blast. He lived by that NWA credo, “It’s not about a salary its all about reality.” That’s why they called him Pistol Pete. He was like a gunslinger from the old west. A modern day Billy the Kid. Many of the murders Rollack was allegedly involved in were ordered from his prison cell. Even after being locked up he still controlled his set- Sex, Money and Murder, from jail, as they wreaked havoc on the streets of the Bronx and beyond. Even to this day Pistol Pete’s name is revered in the South Bronx and the walls and buildings still carry the SMM markings from Pete’s heyday. Because of all this, Pistol Pete has gone down as a true certified street legend.Part 4- Rikers Island and the BloodsPistol Pete’s prison nightmare began in late 1995 when he was arrested at Grant’s Tomb in Harlem, New York for the murder of Karlton Hines. Pete and Karlton Hines, a local basketball star who had a scholarship to Syracuse allegedly had some beef. On the street it was known that Karlton Hines had one foot in the game (drug) while trying to make his name in the other game (basketball). Pistol Pete caught Karlton outside a car stereo shop off Boston Road and killed him and wounded another individual by the name of Carlos Mestre on April 8, 1994. A couple of months later the Pistol caught Carlos Mestre coming out of a hip-hop store known as the Jew Man in the Bronx and killed him, because he was a witness to the murder of Karlton Hines. At the time Pete was arrested at Grant’s Tomb for the murder he was carrying a gun and was required to do an eight month mandatory sentence while awaiting the murder charge.“He was originally arrested in 1995 at Grant’s Tomb for the murder of Karlton Hines,” Brenda Rollack said of her son. “He was carrying a gun at the time. After he did the eight month mandatory for the gun I bailed him out.” Police said that while Rollack had been imprisoned at Rikers Island Correctional Facility he became a member of the Bloods gang. During his eight month bid the Pistol was inducted into the gang but his induction into the Bloods wasn’t an ordinary jump in. Pistol Pete was so high profile and held in such high regard on the Island, in a cauldron of super predators, that the Bloods gave him his own set. “How he first got on, how he first became a Blood was like this,” Rock says. “He was a beast on Rikers. A monster. The Bloods on Rikers Island wanted to bring him in but he was like the only way I’m gonna be a Blood is if you all give me my own set. And to my knowledge that was how Sex, Money, Murder was brought into the Blood fold. He became a Blood in 1996.” The oldhead reiterates this, “O.G. Mack and them tried to recruit him in. Pete wasn’t a follower, he was a leader. He didn’t want to get with them, but he did and when he did he turned the whole neighborhood red.” O.G. Mack started the Nine Trey Gangsta Bloods, the first east coast blood set in 1993 at Rikers Island in 1993 with fellow prisoner Leonard “Deadeye” Mackenzie. Recruiting Pistol Pete into the fold was a coup for them. Because when Pete did something he did it all the way.That’s not all Pete was doing. During his incarceration he was also making moves and keeping his ear to the street. He had an empire to run. Under the pretense of trying to get money for his lawyer, he played some suckers too. In early 1996 while David Gonzales was still dealing with Hershey McNeil, Gonzales spoke by phone with Pistol Pete. Gonzales owed McNeil money for some fronted coke but Pistol Pete wanted the money Gonzales owed and he wanted more. During the telephone conversation Pistol Pete let Gonzales know that the source of cocaine Gonzales was moving was in fact Rollack’s father’s friend George Wallace who Pete called his uncle. The Pistol explained that, “my uncle gave Hershey some cocaine to sell for me so I could pay for my lawyer.” Pistol Pete then went on to explain that the kilo and a half of crack that McNeil fronted to Gonzales actually belonged to him and Pistol Pete wanted his money. The whole North Carolina deal had left a sour taste in Pete’s mouth so he decided to shake Gonzales down. Gonzales was shook and agreed to pay McNeil the money he owed and to loan the Pistol additional money to pay for his lawyer. Pete ended up getting about 20 grand from Gonzales, but his shakedown would come back to haunt him.Once the eight month mandatory sentence for the gun was up, Pete’s mother bailed him out and Pete walked the streets free for two weeks. But that was it. At the time Pete didn’t know this though. He went full steam ahead with his commitment to the Bloods. “When he came home he was on the Blood shit hard,” Rock says. “He had the whole block in red. All his mans and them were all in red. He was real serious on that Blood stuff. They had the red converse, red everything.” Pistol Pete was not joking. He turned his whole area into Bloods. Money explains, “That shit was like a wave when it happened. After that you saw Bloods everywhere. That whole joint was like that. All red. That whole area. Once a gang takes over a certain section you either in and out.” And that was what Pistol Pete was preaching, “You with me or against me.” He didn’t go for all that fake-ass bullshit. And Pistol Pete helped that blood shit to spill over into the streets from prison. But unknown to the Pistol that would be his last two weeks on the streets. “He’s been in since 95 with only two weeks on the streets,” Rock says. “Dude is a mystery to people. Nobody knows him really.”When he went back to court for the murder case, which he beat because there were no witnesses, he was remanded into custody because of a federal narcotics indictment out of the Western District of North Carolina. It seems the feds had matched up Pistol Pete’s prints in the NCIC computer database and with cooperation from some of Pete’s old associates, namely David Gonzales, they indicted Pete for the drugs, money and guns found in the seized van they’d been left holding. Pistol Pete was subsequently transferred to the Charlotte-Mecklenberg County jail in Charlotte, North Carolina to await trial. His mother was distraught, “Two weeks after I bailed him out when he went back to court on the murder case he was remanded for the drug case in North Carolina and he’s been in jail ever since. That was 1996, he was only twenty years old.” But the Pistol took the whole thing in stride like the gangster he was. “A true player will accept the hand that he is dealt simply because he did not live a lie.” The Pistol said and truer words were never spoken.This is an excerpt from Street Legends
Thursday, April 30, 2009
News clip
'Sex, Money, Murder' arrest in Jersey City today (drugs, too)
by Michaelangelo Conte/The Jersey Journal
Friday January 09, 2009, 6:49 PM
More than 350 vials of suspected cocaine and nearly 100 bags of suspected heroin were seized when a reputed 5-star member of the Sex, Money, Murder set of the Bloods street gang was arrested at the Salem Lafayette Court housing complex in Jersey City today, officials said.
Abigi Shabazz, 22, aka "BG" of Martin Luther King Drive at Union Street was charged with multiple drug offenses including drug possession with intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of a school and within 500 feet of public property, reports said.
Based on information that Shabazz controlled early-morning drug distribution around the housing complex, narcotics officers set up surveillance there today and saw him come out of his residence at 7:05 a.m., reports said.
Officers watched him walk around the complex meeting with numerous people and at 8:45 a.m. he met James Gathers, 51, of Summit Avenue, and appeared to sell him drugs which Gathers stuffed into his left pants pocket, reports said.
Perimeter units closed on Gathers at Clinton and Monticello avenues and found a bag of heroin in the pocket with the logo "Over the Top," reports said, adding that narco cops then converged on Shabazz and found $397 on him after his arrest.
The officers then went to Shabazz's home where his sister answered the door carrying Shabazz's 2-year-old daughter, police said. Shabazz's mother gave the officers permission to conduct a search, reports said.
Inside a shoebox under a bed police said they found 98 bags of suspected heroin with the logo "Over the Top," as well as 364 vials of suspected cocaine and $1,640, reports said, adding that drug paraphernalia found
by Michaelangelo Conte/The Jersey Journal
Friday January 09, 2009, 6:49 PM
More than 350 vials of suspected cocaine and nearly 100 bags of suspected heroin were seized when a reputed 5-star member of the Sex, Money, Murder set of the Bloods street gang was arrested at the Salem Lafayette Court housing complex in Jersey City today, officials said.
Abigi Shabazz, 22, aka "BG" of Martin Luther King Drive at Union Street was charged with multiple drug offenses including drug possession with intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of a school and within 500 feet of public property, reports said.
Based on information that Shabazz controlled early-morning drug distribution around the housing complex, narcotics officers set up surveillance there today and saw him come out of his residence at 7:05 a.m., reports said.
Officers watched him walk around the complex meeting with numerous people and at 8:45 a.m. he met James Gathers, 51, of Summit Avenue, and appeared to sell him drugs which Gathers stuffed into his left pants pocket, reports said.
Perimeter units closed on Gathers at Clinton and Monticello avenues and found a bag of heroin in the pocket with the logo "Over the Top," reports said, adding that narco cops then converged on Shabazz and found $397 on him after his arrest.
The officers then went to Shabazz's home where his sister answered the door carrying Shabazz's 2-year-old daughter, police said. Shabazz's mother gave the officers permission to conduct a search, reports said.
Inside a shoebox under a bed police said they found 98 bags of suspected heroin with the logo "Over the Top," as well as 364 vials of suspected cocaine and $1,640, reports said, adding that drug paraphernalia found
News clip
PISTOL PETE'S AWAY FOR LIFE Murderer who became local hero won't be getting out
BY GREG B. SMITH DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Thursday, November 9th 2000, 2:15AM
A vicious drug-dealing killer whose cold-blooded slayings made him a legend in the Bronx's mean streets and a cult hero in the rap world was sentenced yesterday to life behind bars.
The misdeeds of Pistol Pete Rollack, 26, were so celebrated in Soundview, the Bronx, that graffiti artists decorated numerous walls with his gang's name: Sex, Money & Murder (SM&M).
But hours after Rollack was sentenced to life plus 105 years, police in the Bronx took the anti-hero to task - pasting up posters of Rollack's scowling face and the none-too-subtle words: "Life Without Parole" and "Don't Be Next!"
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White joined with the NYPD's 43rd Precinct to launch a highly unusual public relations campaign aimed at dissuading others from idolizing Pistol Pete's homicidal ways.
"This is a very direct way to take back to the very streetcorners where this gang operated what has happened to this gang in a way that really hits home," said federal prosecutor Elizabeth Glazer, chief of crime control strategies for White.
In January, Rollack pleaded guilty to his involvement in six murders in the early 1990s. Thirteen other gang members targeted by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms have been convicted of various crimes and sentenced to years in prison.
As the gang's leader, prosecutors say, Rollack really stood out.
He "seemed to relish" murder, hanging on the walls of his bedroom lists of Mafia hit men with the names of their victims, prosecutor Nicole LaBarbera wrote last week to the judge sentencing Rollack.
He allegedly committed his first murder when he was 18, and referred to murders as "wet T-shirt contests" because the victims' clothes were drenched in blood, LaBarbera said.
Rollack admitted to ordering a notorious attack on two former underlings during a Thanksgiving 1997 tag football game in the Bronx. Two men were killed and three bystanders were wounded.
Particularly galling to law enforcement was the fact that the gangsters of SM&M evolved into twisted folk heroes.
Their reputation allowed them to affiliate themselves with the Bloods street gang, and they were brazen enough to incorporate themselves as SMMC Inc. (Sex, Money & Murder Corp. Inc.).
At one point, police even saw Soundview teens wearing T-shirts with Rollack's likeness under the statement, "Free Pistol Pete."
Though Rollack was arrested in 1995, his gang continued to control sections of Soundview's drug trade. SM&M graffiti cropped up throughout the neighborhood.
In 1998, a rapper, Lord Tariq, released a CD featuring a song, "Sex, Money, Life & Death," that offered a hagiography of Rollack. The CD thanked the Rollack family and boasted, "SM&M, it ain't over."
In a September interview on a local radio station, Lord Tariq discussed the gang and sent "shoutouts" to gang members, LaBarbera wrote.
"Rollack's influence and the reach of his gang is not limited to the Bronx," LaBarbera stated, alleging that new inmates at federal prisons in New York, "many of whom have never met Rollack," speak of Rollack "reverently."
But law enforcement officials are now trying to turn Rollack's notoriety on its head, slapping up the "Life Without Parole" posters on buildings and lampposts near schools and where gang members were known to hang out in Soundview.
On Oct. 7, federal probation workers painted over the gang graffiti throughout Soundview. As of yesterday, the walls remained free of gang tags, prosecutors said.
Yesterday, Manhattan Federal Judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum sentenced Rollack and ordered him to pay $25,400 toward the funerals of his victims. The mothers of three of those victims asked her to show no mercy.
In 1994, Rollack murdered 23-year-old Karlton Hines, a one-time high school basketball star from the Bronx, simply because Hines was friends with a man who tried to shake down a member of SM&M.
During yesterday's emotional hearing, Hines' mother, Theresa, glared at Rollack, who sat staring at the table, and declared, "I hope that when you go to sleep, you see all these bodies that you murdered."
"They'll come to you," she said. "That's your penalty."
SIDEBAR
1998 DC 'Make It Reign,' by Lord Tariq
The cover of thte CD shows the site of the Sex, Money & Murder Thanksgiving Day murders. The liner notes also pay tribute to the gang - "SM&M It ain't over" - as well as a thank you to Pistol Pete Rollack's family.
Here is an excerpt from one song, "Sex, Money, Life & Death:"
"You know what makes
the world go 'round?
It's obvious: Sex,
Money, Life and
Death.
You've got one life to live
One gun to bust
One n--r to save
One n--r to brush
It's all about Sex,
Money, Life and
Death."
The fate of Pistol Pete Rollack, 26, has been posted on the streets of Soundview, the Bronx. Among his most notorious murders were the slayings of two men on Thanksgiving Day in 1997 on Rosedale and Randall Aves.
BY GREG B. SMITH DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Thursday, November 9th 2000, 2:15AM
A vicious drug-dealing killer whose cold-blooded slayings made him a legend in the Bronx's mean streets and a cult hero in the rap world was sentenced yesterday to life behind bars.
The misdeeds of Pistol Pete Rollack, 26, were so celebrated in Soundview, the Bronx, that graffiti artists decorated numerous walls with his gang's name: Sex, Money & Murder (SM&M).
But hours after Rollack was sentenced to life plus 105 years, police in the Bronx took the anti-hero to task - pasting up posters of Rollack's scowling face and the none-too-subtle words: "Life Without Parole" and "Don't Be Next!"
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White joined with the NYPD's 43rd Precinct to launch a highly unusual public relations campaign aimed at dissuading others from idolizing Pistol Pete's homicidal ways.
"This is a very direct way to take back to the very streetcorners where this gang operated what has happened to this gang in a way that really hits home," said federal prosecutor Elizabeth Glazer, chief of crime control strategies for White.
In January, Rollack pleaded guilty to his involvement in six murders in the early 1990s. Thirteen other gang members targeted by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms have been convicted of various crimes and sentenced to years in prison.
As the gang's leader, prosecutors say, Rollack really stood out.
He "seemed to relish" murder, hanging on the walls of his bedroom lists of Mafia hit men with the names of their victims, prosecutor Nicole LaBarbera wrote last week to the judge sentencing Rollack.
He allegedly committed his first murder when he was 18, and referred to murders as "wet T-shirt contests" because the victims' clothes were drenched in blood, LaBarbera said.
Rollack admitted to ordering a notorious attack on two former underlings during a Thanksgiving 1997 tag football game in the Bronx. Two men were killed and three bystanders were wounded.
Particularly galling to law enforcement was the fact that the gangsters of SM&M evolved into twisted folk heroes.
Their reputation allowed them to affiliate themselves with the Bloods street gang, and they were brazen enough to incorporate themselves as SMMC Inc. (Sex, Money & Murder Corp. Inc.).
At one point, police even saw Soundview teens wearing T-shirts with Rollack's likeness under the statement, "Free Pistol Pete."
Though Rollack was arrested in 1995, his gang continued to control sections of Soundview's drug trade. SM&M graffiti cropped up throughout the neighborhood.
In 1998, a rapper, Lord Tariq, released a CD featuring a song, "Sex, Money, Life & Death," that offered a hagiography of Rollack. The CD thanked the Rollack family and boasted, "SM&M, it ain't over."
In a September interview on a local radio station, Lord Tariq discussed the gang and sent "shoutouts" to gang members, LaBarbera wrote.
"Rollack's influence and the reach of his gang is not limited to the Bronx," LaBarbera stated, alleging that new inmates at federal prisons in New York, "many of whom have never met Rollack," speak of Rollack "reverently."
But law enforcement officials are now trying to turn Rollack's notoriety on its head, slapping up the "Life Without Parole" posters on buildings and lampposts near schools and where gang members were known to hang out in Soundview.
On Oct. 7, federal probation workers painted over the gang graffiti throughout Soundview. As of yesterday, the walls remained free of gang tags, prosecutors said.
Yesterday, Manhattan Federal Judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum sentenced Rollack and ordered him to pay $25,400 toward the funerals of his victims. The mothers of three of those victims asked her to show no mercy.
In 1994, Rollack murdered 23-year-old Karlton Hines, a one-time high school basketball star from the Bronx, simply because Hines was friends with a man who tried to shake down a member of SM&M.
During yesterday's emotional hearing, Hines' mother, Theresa, glared at Rollack, who sat staring at the table, and declared, "I hope that when you go to sleep, you see all these bodies that you murdered."
"They'll come to you," she said. "That's your penalty."
SIDEBAR
1998 DC 'Make It Reign,' by Lord Tariq
The cover of thte CD shows the site of the Sex, Money & Murder Thanksgiving Day murders. The liner notes also pay tribute to the gang - "SM&M It ain't over" - as well as a thank you to Pistol Pete Rollack's family.
Here is an excerpt from one song, "Sex, Money, Life & Death:"
"You know what makes
the world go 'round?
It's obvious: Sex,
Money, Life and
Death.
You've got one life to live
One gun to bust
One n--r to save
One n--r to brush
It's all about Sex,
Money, Life and
Death."
The fate of Pistol Pete Rollack, 26, has been posted on the streets of Soundview, the Bronx. Among his most notorious murders were the slayings of two men on Thanksgiving Day in 1997 on Rosedale and Randall Aves.
history
Sex Money Murda (S.M.M. or $.M.M.) is a street gang operating on the East Coast of the United States.
Sex, Money, Murda is a neighborhood-based street organization that originated in the Soundview section of the Bronx, New York.[citation needed] More specifically, the gang was fathered by Peter Rollack a.k.a. Pistol Pete from the Soundview Houses, a low income public housing development managed by the NYCHA. Pistol Pete is now serving a life sentence without parole on a plea bargain for killing and committing to kill 6 people. S.M.M. eventually affiliated itself with the United Blood Nation which emerged during the 1990s. Over a relatively short time the S.M.M. set spread to other locations. They are primarily located in the Soundview section of the Bronx, as well as the South Bronx and many east Brooklyn neighborhoods like Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brownsville, and East New York. They have also branched to cities as far as Trenton, Newark, and Camden in New Jersey, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania), and Baltimore, Maryland, and other cities along I-95.
During the summer of 2002 Tommy Terrell Thompson established the S.M.M. in Jersey City, New Jersey. On November 14, 2004 an 18-count RICO indictment charged Thompson with one count of racketeering conspiracy, one count of racketeering, encompassing specific and non-specific, ongoing acts of murder conspiracy, robbery and robbery conspiracy, heroin and cocaine conspiracy and distribution. The indictment also charged Thompson with nine counts of violent crimes in aid of racketeering, including specific attempted murders, murder conspiracy, robberies and shootings; four counts of possession, use and carrying of a firearm for violent crime; one count of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and heroin, and one count of heroin distribution.[1] Thompson pled guilty on July 6, 2005, and admitted that he directed other members and associates of the Sex, Money, Murder set to commit acts of murder and assault and took part in one of the assaults himself. He also specifically admitted directing the murder of a Jersey City man whom Thompson believed was cooperating with cops against him and other gang members.[
Sex, Money, Murda is a neighborhood-based street organization that originated in the Soundview section of the Bronx, New York.[citation needed] More specifically, the gang was fathered by Peter Rollack a.k.a. Pistol Pete from the Soundview Houses, a low income public housing development managed by the NYCHA. Pistol Pete is now serving a life sentence without parole on a plea bargain for killing and committing to kill 6 people. S.M.M. eventually affiliated itself with the United Blood Nation which emerged during the 1990s. Over a relatively short time the S.M.M. set spread to other locations. They are primarily located in the Soundview section of the Bronx, as well as the South Bronx and many east Brooklyn neighborhoods like Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brownsville, and East New York. They have also branched to cities as far as Trenton, Newark, and Camden in New Jersey, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania), and Baltimore, Maryland, and other cities along I-95.
During the summer of 2002 Tommy Terrell Thompson established the S.M.M. in Jersey City, New Jersey. On November 14, 2004 an 18-count RICO indictment charged Thompson with one count of racketeering conspiracy, one count of racketeering, encompassing specific and non-specific, ongoing acts of murder conspiracy, robbery and robbery conspiracy, heroin and cocaine conspiracy and distribution. The indictment also charged Thompson with nine counts of violent crimes in aid of racketeering, including specific attempted murders, murder conspiracy, robberies and shootings; four counts of possession, use and carrying of a firearm for violent crime; one count of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and heroin, and one count of heroin distribution.[1] Thompson pled guilty on July 6, 2005, and admitted that he directed other members and associates of the Sex, Money, Murder set to commit acts of murder and assault and took part in one of the assaults himself. He also specifically admitted directing the murder of a Jersey City man whom Thompson believed was cooperating with cops against him and other gang members.[
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