Monday, October 30, 2017

sini murders by omission

if you have an autoimmune disease you should  be sble to treat it with bcg as oer faustmsnlsb.org pubmed.org faustman dl uspto.gov inventor search faustman pubmed.org ridtori+ bcg

failre to do so kills

fentanyl is great stuff and dhould be useful for more thsn seeing that police have toys and job security fighting a war thst has been lost years ago


vote not guilty on all drug cases and make prople work fir a living by mudering, extorting, prostitution, etc

drugs must be free for all and bcg which is more useful should be free to alll

policemen with children with autoimmune diseases should ponder how their health insurance does not provide the best treatment for thrir children


express yourself vote not guilty snd get drug cases out of the federal and state courts


LONG ISLANDCRIME

3 men arrested, large amount of fentanyl seized in raid, police say

Suffolk County Police Commissioner Timothy Sini holds images
Suffolk County Police Commissioner Timothy Sini holds images of three men charged with multiple offenses after authorities seized 725 grams of fentanyl in a raid of a Mastic Beach house at a news briefing at police headquarters in Yaphank on Saturday, Oct. 28, 2017. Photo Credit: Newsday / Jean-Paul Salamanca 
Authorities arrested three men and seized enough opioid fentanyl to make 1.1 million street doses during a raid of a Mastic Beach home, officials said Saturday.
The trio face multiple charges in connection with possessing 725 grams of fentanyl, Suffolk police Commissioner Timothy Sini said at a news conference Saturday at police headquarters. Sini said Suffolk police and other law enforcement agencies executed a search warrant for the Edwards Road home on Friday at 4 p.m. 
The fentanyl was shipped via regular mail from Hong Kong to New York City for distribution on Long Island, Sini said. Suffolk County police, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the NYPD and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service were among the agencies that collaborated in the investigation. Authorities also seized $7,400 cash, numerous 9 mm rounds, two cellphones and a 2007 Mercedes-Benz during the raid.
“That’s over 1.1 million doses of fentanyl that aren’t being used in our communities and that saves thousands and thousands, potentially hundreds of thousands of lives,” Sini said. 
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Corey Robinson, 24, who lived in the house, was charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance, a felony. Thomas Moore, 41, who also resided in the house, was charged with obstruction of government administration. Daequan Rickenbacker, 25, of Woodland Drive in Mastic Beach was charged with loitering. 
Police said Moore ignored repeated warnings to keep his pit bull on a leash and allowed the dog to charge at detectives during the raid, police said. Although police shot the dog, the animal survived, according to Sini. No police were injured.
Robinson and Moore were arraigned at First District Court in Central Islip on Saturday. Robinson was released on recognizance and his next court date is Dec. 6. Moore was released on recognizance and his next court date is Nov. 3. No arraignment information was listed in online court record for Rickenbacker late Saturday.
Used to help prevent pain after surgery or other medical procedures, the highly addictive fentanyl is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

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