guilty
Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time; a look into all aspects of a guilty verdict from the burden of proof to conviction to the judge’s sentence and more.
The Fall of El Chapo: The Man Who Built a Drug Empire Beneath the Earth. AI-Generated.
Deep in the rugged mountains of Sinaloa, Mexico, a boy named Joaquín Guzmán Loera was born in 1957 into poverty. His father was a poor farmer who sometimes grew opium poppies to survive. From a young age, Joaquín learned two truths: power came from money, and money came from risk.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
The Ghost of Moscow: The Billion-Dollar Crimes of Semion Mogilevich. AI-Generated.
In the dark corridors of global finance, where politics, business, and organized crime intersect, one name has lingered for decades — Semion Mogilevich. To most, he’s invisible. To law enforcement, he’s the “Boss of Bosses.” To those who crossed him, he’s the ghost who always wins.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
Invisible Empire: Inside the Global Web of the World’s Most Wanted Mafia Bosses. AI-Generated.
In the shadows of the modern world, beyond digital firewalls and government surveillance, lies an invisible empire. It stretches across continents — run not by politicians or CEOs, but by men whose names inspire fear even decades after their arrests or deaths. These are the world’s most wanted mafia figures — architects of a global underworld that thrives on drugs, weapons, money, and silence.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
The Facebook Kingpin: The Rise and Fall of Hakan Ayik. AI-Generated.
In the glittering world of social media, where luxury cars, private jets, and designer watches dominate timelines, one man stood above them all — Hakan Ayik, known to his followers as the “Facebook Gangster.” But behind the glamorous photos and lavish lifestyle lay a dark reality. Ayik wasn’t just another influencer; he was one of the world’s most wanted drug traffickers — a criminal mastermind whose empire stretched across continents and cost countless lives.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
Russia& Ukrainia Latest Developments
How much of Ukraine has Russia taken? By 2025, Russian forces occupy or claim control over approximately 20 percent of Ukraine’s territory (this includes areas seized since 2022 and newly taken ground in later offensives). The situation remains very fluid, with local counteroffensives, shifting frontlines, and contested zones.
By America today 6 months ago in Criminal
The Kinahan Empire: Ireland’s Untouchable Cartel. AI-Generated.
In the underworld of European organized crime, one name commands both fear and fascination — The Kinahan Cartel. Born in the gritty streets of Dublin, this family-run syndicate grew from small-scale dealing into one of the most powerful drug empires in the world. With operations stretching from Ireland to Dubai and Spain, the Kinahans built an empire worth billions — and for years, they did it all in plain sight.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
The Cocaine Broker: Inside the Empire of Roberto Pannunzi. AI-Generated.
In the murky world of international drug trafficking, few names carry as much weight — or mystery — as Roberto Pannunzi. For decades, he was the invisible thread connecting Colombia’s cocaine cartels with Europe’s most powerful mafia networks. To law enforcement, he was a ghost; to criminals, a legend. Interpol once called him “Europe’s most wanted drug trafficker.” To his enemies, he was simply “the broker.”
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States:
Forensic science sits at the intersection of evidence, behavior, and belief. When performed with discipline, it brings order to chaos and truth to uncertainty. When it drifts into assumption or politics, it risks turning science into spectacle.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin6 months ago in Criminal
The Fifth Key. AI-Generated.
The rain was a cold, relentless drumbeat on the window of the interrogation room. Detective Elias Thorne, a man whose face was a roadmap of sleepless nights, watched the suspect across the table. Sarah Vance, a retired librarian in her late sixties, was knitting a lavender scarf, her needles clicking with unnerving calmness. She was the prime, and only, suspect in the murder of her neighbor, Mr. Arthur Finch.
By Hussein Gazo6 months ago in Criminal









