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#prisoner 0109
harukapologist · 3 months
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i never noticed your blog title. i am no.2 0109 siblings enjoyer. do you have headcanons for them too? (i am begging, respectfully)
OH MY GOD YIPPIE YIPPIE FINALLY SOMEONE ASKED ME FOR 0109 SIBLINGS HCS.... Ive been waiting for an ask like this for such a long time thank you... AND YAY FELLOW 0109 SIBLINGS ENJOYER worry not i have plenty!!! for both haruka & mikoto and haruka & john
-THEY BOTH LIKE ART!!!! haruka liking art & drawing is a hc of mine that i adore... and mikoto canonically likes art, but feels that he isnt good at it. at first he watches haruka draw and praises him and then one day haruka asks mikoto to draw him something, mikoto is like "oh im not that good of an artist actually..." but then picks up the pen and haruka is MESMERIZED by mikoto's art he's like. Oh my god. Please teach me. You're an amazing artist.... and Mikoto is really surprised because no one ever praised his art like this before. And he already sees Haruka as a great artist so he feels really encouraged to draw again. and they both spend a lot of time drawing together....
-mikoto likes sketching more & is great at it, but haruka likes painting more & is great at it, so sometimes mikoto will sketch something and haruka colors it, and the other way around if they wanna experiment. and they give each other tips (Haruka is very shy to give mikoto tips but mikoto is like " I'd love to hear your opinion on my art, i want to paint more like you!!! youre so good at it!!!" and haruka is just like :D !!!
-remember from the 0105 platonic hc post that, in my post milgram AU, shidou drives haruka home from school. If Haruka doesn't walk with the other 3 prisoners who are in school, Mikoto takes him on his bicycle and drives him to school in the morning before cycling to work!!! i like to imagine sometimes fuuta has morning lectures so he joins them (fuuta is tiny enough that there won't be a space problem i Think but they'll still be kinda squished on each other ahhaha) and the bicycle ride is disastrous because mikoto and fuuta are bickering while haruka is holding onto mikoto for dear life LMAO
-speaking of cycling since mikoto likes to cycle. he teaches haruka!!! haruka is always very scared if he'll fall but mikoto is patient with him, reassures him that the safety gear is there for a reason (Mikoto has no plans of letting haruka get hurt, he always makes sure haruka is wearing safety gear when he's a total beginner) and is encouraging haruka when he makes even the smallest progression!!! like haruka could cycle for 3 seconds and mikoto is like "LET'S GOOOO YOU DID IT IM SO PROUD OF YOU" and goes to high five haruka and hug him
-sometimes the evening or night time makes haruka feel down & scared or have a lot of intrusive thoughts or nightmares, it's been a thing since he was in the real world but its more frequent and harsh in milgram so he goes to mikoto's room with his plush and just lies down next to him while mikoto is doing whatever he's doing. often when haruka does this he will end up falling asleep next to mikoto in his bed and mikoto tucks him in and sleeps next to him and holds haruka if he wants to be held. mikoto really feels protective over haruka especially when he's resting, like anyone could be entering the room and mikotos like " be quiet... haruka is sleeping!" :'3
-speaking of harukas bunny plush, he really REALLY doesnt like anyone touching it without permission (the autistic urge to gatekeep the comfort item) and mikoto understands when he asks haruka if he can touch his plush and haruka just., *shakes head nervously* but soon haruka allows him to and mikoto is delighted that haruka trusts him enough to let him interact with his comfort item!!!!
-haruka really likes mikoto's hair and one day he's like "mikoto-san, I want to dye (well... bleach) my hair too someday" and mikoto gets really excited and they talk about what colors they could dye haruka's hair when they get out of milgram :D
-haruka always "heard" of john but he actually sees john for the first time after mikoto's guilty verdict in t2, and rightfully so hes very scared of him, but when he tries to approach mikoto on his birthday in 2022 (haruka was the first and only person to approach mikoto without bad intent ever since he got the guilty verdict and i cannot stop thinking abt that), he asks mikoto about what's been happening to try and understand and mikoto just. he tries his best to be strong but haruka can see that mikoto himself has no idea what's going on and is close to breaking down. haruka just hugs him gently, gently enough so mikoto can refuse the hug if he wants, but mikoto doesnt. haruka does his best to comfort mikoto from his guilty verdict, even though he doesnt really understand. all he knows is that his friend is a good person and he wants to comfort and understand him the best he can. and then at one point haruka approaches mikoto to try and talk to him and john is fronting!!!
-so this is like harukas first time actually interacting with john. hes like Oh no. i came to talk to my friend but now hes in the Scary state (he doesnt know yet what DID is) what do i do im scared. but he actually tries totalk to john. and john is surprised that haruka, although scared of him, actually tries to talk to him and understand him. john tries to calm himself to not scare haruka further and they have a long talk, mainly haruka trying to understand john. they get closer after this
-at one point john just asks. hey why are you still trying to approach me. I'm scaring everyone off and ruining your friend's life you should be scared of me. you should be viewing me like a monster. but haruka out of everyone understands what it feels like, being viewed as a monster for a mental condition. its why he's in milgram after all. and he realizes just how similar him and john are and hes like "..uh uuh. nobody should be viewed as evil for being mentally distressed right?" and him and john both start to see some positives in themselves, haruka because "hey if my friend is a good person even though he gets scary (when john fronts) maybe i can be a good person too." and john for a similar reason because "hey if this kid here has allegedly committed a murder too but can still be so nice (probably the only nice person to john) maybe i can still have a chance to Not ruin mikoto's life"
-ohmy gosh im so sorry I spoke too much righ t aaaa.... so sorry... but john feels protective of both mikoto and haruka after this. 0109 siblings are the realest ever and i have more abt haruka and john but ill stop here hehe I hope you like these!!!
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koirion · 2 years
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offender42085 · 2 years
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Post 0109 
Joseph Broscko, NY Inmate 18D0032, born 2000, incarceration intake April 2018 at age 17, sentenced to 18 years to life, eligible for parole May 2035
Murder
So many people attended the sentencings of Nikolai Mavashev and Joseph Broscko in support of the slain 19-year-old David Feliciano that the proceeding had to be moved to a larger courtroom.
“All these people here are here to support David because they all loved him,” Bonnie Jones told the men, before they were each sentenced to up to life in prison.
The mother called that the pain Mavashev and Broscko caused “immense” and said her heart will forever be broken. David’s family will never be the same, she said.
“I hope you think long and hard about the pain and suffering you caused,” Jones said. “I can never forgive you for your selfish and cruel act.”
The men pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for robbing and killing Feliciano. Police arrested them two days after the killing.
Judge James A. Murphy III imposed the agreed-upon sentences at Wednesday’s proceeding: 20 years to life for Mavashev and 18 to life for Broscko. Mavashev, of Halfmoon, was 19, and Broscko, of Clifton Park, was 16 at the time of the killing.
Both were on drugs when they went to Feliciano’s house with the intent to kill him. Both had guns, though Mavashev fired the shot that killed Feliciano. One gun was recovered early in the investigation, and Mavashev and Broscko helped investigators find the other as part of their plea deals.
Both men gave their own brief statements in court. Their attorneys said the men had come to understand the impact of what they did. Broscko has wanted to take responsibility since early on. The other attorney while noting the enormity of what Mavashev did, said she believes Mavashev is not a bad person.
Those in the gallery drew an admonishment from the Judge, as they reacted negatively to the defendant’s attorney’s comments.
For his part, Mavashev said he understands he destroyed lives. “Although nothing can be done, I’m sorry,” he said. Broscko told the court: “I just want to say I’m sorry for what I did.”
In sentencing the pair, the Judge addressed Mavashev and called it frightening that his “diabolical mind planned, crafted and conceived this really horrific plot to kill someone in cold blood.”
There are severe consequences for that, the judge told Mavashev, “and the severe consequences will be that, potentially, you could spend the rest of your life in prison.”
While Mavashev was the mastermind, the judge said Broscko played a large part in the murder.
Mavashev will be able to petition a parole board for release in 20 years, Broscko in 18.
Mavashev photos can be found in Post 0110.
2j
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meeedeee · 7 years
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The apartment complex looked innocuous enough.
That it was skirted by a 7-foot wall fringed with barbed wire hardly raised eyebrows, not amid the stark concrete jungle of El Monte in the San Gabriel Valley, east of Los Angeles. But as dawn unfurled on Aug. 2, 1995, police officers swooped into the boarded-up rooms of the apartment building and awakened the 72 Thai workers found asleep inside. The event and its consequences, later dubbed the El Monte garment factory case, still echo to this day.
The workers were tightly crammed into small rooms – some for up to seven years – having been lured to America with the promise of high-paying jobs. Once there, they were put to work sewing all sorts of clothing. Eighteen-hour days were the norm, as were wages of no more than $1.60 an hour.
The workers were prisoners. Their passports were withheld, and to dissuade them from running away, their captors threatened retaliation against family members back home. Seven people were eventually found guilty in the case, and sentenced to up to seven years in federal prison. It was the first example of modern-day slavery to hit U.S. shores, where human trafficking is an ongoing problem; in 2016 alone, there were at least 824 labor trafficking cases reported.
Twenty-one years later, Rotchana Sussman is still haunted by memories of her years spent locked away. “I still have nightmares,” she said. “I go back to the time in my dream: It’s dark, the walls are dark, and we have a sad party, everybody in black.” And yet, she considers herself one of the lucky ones.
Sussman, now 47, is a massage therapy teacher, founder of a meal delivery nonprofit, and an entrepreneur. Early this year, she is taking charge of a vegan food stall at a market in LA’s Thai Town, thanks to an initiative spearheaded by the Thai Community Development Center (Thai CDC).
The Thai CDC has played an integral role in LA’s growing yet socially and economically divided community, said Chancee Martorell, founder and executive director.
For more than 22 years, the Thai CDC has played a part in some of the most notorious human-trafficking cases in the United States, encompassing garment workers, welders, and domestic laborers, as well as the 2003 Thai farmworkers case involving some 1,200 trafficked laborers.
At the same time, the organization’s small team has provided victims of human trafficking, as well as the city’s broader Thai immigrant community, with tools for long-term economic self-sustainability and growth, making the organization something of a rarity, Martorell said, as a lot of anti-trafficking organizations only help workers with their immediate needs post-liberation.
The Thai CDC helps survivors seek financial restitution, find housing and shelter, and gain access to emergency funding. In 1999, the Thai CDC began leaving its physical footprint across LA, spearheading the transformation of a rundown, six-block stretch of East Hollywood into the first designated Thai Town in the United States – now home to more than 60 Thai-owned businesses, including restaurants, book and grocery stores, as well as a weekly farmers market. The Thai CDC’s offices are located in the basement of a historic Hollywood apartment block that the organization redeveloped in the 1990s, turning the deteriorating building into 46 affordable, multifamily housing units.
The Thai CDC even played a part in a subsidized senior housing project, working in partnership with the nonprofit Little Tokyo Service Center Community to create 60 one-bedroom units for some 100 seniors, many from Thailand.
Still, a large portion of the Thai CDC’s workload is spent guiding trafficked workers through the time-consuming, bureaucratic labyrinth of applying for T visas. Specifically geared toward victims of human trafficking who want to stay in the United States, T visas also allow family members to join them – hugely important, because many victims of the modern slave trade fear returning home because of trafficking organizations still operating in their communities.
“Thai CDC offers the sorts of services that simply aren’t often available to trafficking victims,” said Joanne Lee, directing attorney of the Asian and Pacific Islander Outreach Project at the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles, a nonprofit that frequently offers legal services to the Thai CDC. “To have that training they do to help people become self-sufficient – I think it’s extraordinary. It really helps people on a new path.”
The need for this kind of support is simple: If survivors of human trafficking, many of whom have limited life skills, aren’t given the tools to survive economically, they’ll fall victim to the sorts of predators who lured them into the slave trade in the first place.
“Where it’s profitable for certain industries,” said Martorell, “they’re part of a larger system that leads to exploitation of workers.”
Integral to the Thai CDC’s portfolio of small-business initiatives is the Entrepreneurial Training Program (ETP) – a $108, eight-week course held twice a year that gives budding business owners a broad overview of the sorts of technical and legal minutiae of managing a business. Guest speakers offer practical problem-solving tips. “They don’t usually have an idea about the specific aspects of running a business,” said Supranee May, a business counselor at the Thai CDC, about the typical ETP attendee. “It’s pretty intense.”
“They are highly functional in that they are expert in collaborating with other organizations,” said LA City Council member Mitch O’Farrell, of the Thai CDC’s all-hands-on-deck approach to its work. “There would not be a Thai Town were it not for Thai CDC.”
Arguably the most ambitious collaborative endeavor on the organization’s roster is its Thai Town Marketplace project, where the transformation of an empty retail space at the Metro stop on the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Western Avenue in Thai Town is currently underway.
Scheduled to be completed this spring, the marketplace will feature 12 new food stalls and six retail kiosks, with the potential for about 60 new jobs. Business owners are chosen from the Thai, African American, and Latino communities. And once a purchase agreement has been hashed out, farmers at the weekly farmers market will provide a portion of the food that vendors use.
The idea behind the Thai Town Marketplace is to give first-time business owners (all of whom come from low-income backgrounds) the kinds of support necessary to mitigate the high attrition rate in small-business startups. Only about half of new small businesses survive as long as five years – two-thirds die within 10 years.
In this case, vendors will have about three to five years to prove themselves successful, though they won’t be cast adrift without a helping hand. The Thai CDC will continue to offer one-on-one business counseling and provide office space for all the vendors to share, absorbing many of the office and marketing costs. And if, by the end, their individual ventures are profitable, the Thai CDC will help them move into their own retail spaces, paving the way for the next batch of vendors to take the vacated spots at the marketplace.
“Before the training, I didn’t know how to do taxes, how to get the licenses, how to market the products, or how to test out new products. None of that,” said Sussman, who will run the marketplace’s sole vegan outlet. “It’s given me my own independence, how to learn and understand new things – how to think outside the box.”
Funding for the nearly $3 million project has come from a number of sources, mostly grants and bond proceeds – indeed, the Thai CDC as a whole is predominantly grant-funded, with additional help from donors. But the marketplace hasn’t all been smooth sailing: Some $2 million in funds earmarked for the construction phase of the project, which has been approved by the city and the city’s Bond Oversight Committee, is currently stalled within the city’s Economic and Workforce Development Department (EWDD).
Funding headaches aside, there are areas where the organization can be improved, and Martorell identifies one such area as the coordination of better mental health treatment for human-trafficking victims. This is especially important, she said, because of the deficit of Thai-speaking mental health workers, which is exacerbated by a cultural stigma within the Thai community surrounding therapy.
That said, many with long-held ties to the Thai CDC extol the close relationships they’ve forged over the years with the organization’s small team. These relationships have helped them maintain their emotional equilibrium throughout their individual journeys – people like Marut Kongchai, a victim in the Global Horizons case, the largest labor-trafficking case in recent U.S. history. Global Horizons, a Beverly Hills-based farm labor contractor, has been implicated in the trafficking of nearly 1,200 Thai workers to farms all over the United States.
“I was afraid for my life,” said Kongchai, through an interpreter, explaining how he was once held at gunpoint by his captors at a farm in Washington state’s Yakima Valley, an event that enabled his eventual escape in 2005 through an apple orchard under cover of nightfall.
Having fled the farm, Kongchai made his way south to LA. There, Kongchai found work at a Thai restaurant and was introduced to the Thai CDC, which helped him successfully apply for a T visa, and bring his wife and two daughters to the United States. Now that he’s finally paid off the debt he had accrued in Thailand, Kongchai intends to enroll in some of the Thai CDC’s business courses with an aim of starting his own restaurant or spa.
“Thai CDC, they’re synonymous with the community,” he said. “Through them, I’ve come from a place of hell to a sense of warmth and community. It’s a relief that there’s such an organization out there.”
• Daniel Ross wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Daniel is a Los Angeles-based writer. He is frequently featured in the Guardian, Truthout, Vice, and The Huffington Post, among others.
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alands9 · 6 years
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S1E08 The Passenger
Tricorders are magic devices that can scan all sorts of bullshit. I would expect them to work just fine on dead bodies.
Yes, this is why Bashir doesn't work as this series Riker. He's a self infatuated blowhard.
“Relax.” Or, maybe don't. Your ship is on fire and full of poisonous gas. Come to think of it, relaxing is probably a terrible idea.
The seemingly dead prisoner is totally not dead, is he? I'm guessing he's possessed someone somehow.
Just feel free to grab my medical supplies and play with them.
I appreciate her thoroughness, even if Bashir doesn't.
I see that Quark is still serving drinks in coffee mugs.
TMI Quark. TMI.
The Starfleet security guy is totally the prisoner, isn't he? I hope Odo is not stupid enough to hand over all the security plans without basic verification.
Okay, the Starfleet security guy’s fake identity is at least good enough to fool Sisko. Although the part where he doesn't want Odo involved is pretty damning.
You know, his captor would also be a pretty good fake identity to be using.
Oh no, they hacked the Gibson!
The prisoner is totally the captor!
Please, please stop trying to justify your poor computer security. It's just making me cry. That is not how computer security works at all.
CVE-2371-0109: Attacker can bypass file permissions by doing a full disk read. No permissions are enforced on the full disk level.
If there's an auto destruct system, and this is a technical thing, I think you want engineering, not security.
It's a bad 3D model of a brain? That doesn't seem very valuable.
Quark’s railings are made out of welded together rebar?
I don’t think I supposed to see the bad guy's face in that shot. Going back and freeze framing it, he doesn't look like either of my suspects.
I was definitely using sleeping pills, and not busy choking Quark in the darkness.
Why does everybody call each other and ask them to put down their duties and come help them? Why not go to them for once? Especially since the majority of the time you just going to show them something on a computer. You can do that anywhere.
“A humanoid only uses a small portion of the brain.” If that’s what you think, you're not qualified to be a doctor of the 21st century let alone the 24th, Bashir.
Just have the computer track her movements? Odo is right to be dismissive of you, random Starfleet security dude.
Whenever somebody lists a very small subset of people who have access to a piece of information, or a secret key, it never bodes well for one of them.
Also he specifically called out random Starfleet security dude. He is the obvious other person. I don't think that he is where the prisoner is hiding. I'm guessing he's the co-conspirator.
How exactly did she spontaneously fall over a railing, a pretty well-designed railing from the mooks of it?
“...why would anyone induct a bioelectrical charge into a glial cell?” “A question I've always wondered about.” I love you, Sisko.
Clearly the prisoner subscribes to the transhumanist idea that a copy of your memories is the same as you.
I hope Odo is already making plans for the possibility that the random Federation security dude was going to sabotage him.
Bashir, huh? Okay. I guess.
CVE-2371-0134: Cardassia mining starbases can have root privileges compromised by a user with elevated access to the waste reclamation system.
Being suspicious and checking in on things is a good idea, Mr. Security Dude. Not checking in with the guy who's your boss, that's not a good idea. It would certainly make me suspicious of you.
Apparently the prisoner possessing Doctor Bashir is of the special sort of television idiot. He repeats other people statements back to them as questions.
Why are you looking surprised? It was pretty obvious that he possessed Dr. Bashir.
“You have one minute to decide.” I appreciate a villian who knows to not give them time to come up with a plan.
And the day is saved by technobabble!
Stun first, sort out later. The crew of the Enterprise never figured that out. Good on you Sisko.
So, you're just going to steal some glial cells from Bashir? Does he not need those?
I blame you, Doctor.
Okay, first, don't shoot weapons inside somebody else's house. Second, you were supposed to capture the prisoner, and bring him home. I'm not sure you were authorized to summarily execute in. And you can't claim self-defense or that he was about to escape, he was a coaster.
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Fentanyl Bust in Berrien County, MI
Fentanyl, Carfentanil, and other elephant tranquilizers are making a lethal highly-powerful heroin cocktail nicknamed “The Elephant” – and its killed dozens in Michigan and thousands nationwide
By Greg Peterson U.P. Breaking News Owner, News Director 906-273-2433
(Grand Rapids, MI) – In a lightening quick case, federal prosecutors have charged – and entered into a plea agreement – with a man who admits he distributed a narcotic drug used in a deadly heroin cocktail that has killed numerous Michigan residents called “the Elephant.”
The nickname of the heroin cocktail apparently derived from Fentanyl and similar cancer drugs that are used to treat elephants – and to make their lethal concoction.
31-year-old prison parolee Robert Daniel Herr admitted distributing of Fentanyl in Berrien County, MI, according to federal documents.
Herr was charged on Friday in a federal “felony information,” then immediately entered into a plea agreement with federal prosecutors, according to document released today, Mon. Jan. 23, 2017. Herr signed the agreement earlier in the week, and the federal prosecutors signed it Friday.
Robert Daniel Herr Plea Agreement 1-20-17
Herr is scheduled to be arraigned and plead guilty at 9 a.m. on Feb. 22, 2017 in Grand Rapids, MI before U.S. Magistrate Judge Phillip J. Green. Herr served two years in state prison for writing lots of bad checks (uttering/publishing) and was released in September 2016.
Herr could be sentenced to a maximum of 20 years in prison and lifetime on supervised released. The maximum fine is $1 million dollars.
As part of the agreement, Herr pledged to “fully cooperate with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Berrien County Sheriffs Department, the Benton Township Police Department, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, and any other law enforcement agency in their investigation. Herr pledged to testify if needed and provide all the information he has about the distribution of Fentanyl and other drugs.
  Federal Fentanyl Case:
Filed: 01/20/2017
Berrien County
One count of selling narcotics – sell, distribute, or dispense; distribution of Fentanyl
Defendant Robert Daniel Herr represented by Paul S. Jancha
(269) 983-0109
pauljancha at hotmail.com
USA represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Justin M. Presant
(616) 456-2404
justin.presant at usdoj.gov
1:17-cr-00023-GJQ
USA v. Herr
Date filed: 01/20/2017
Date of last filing: 01/20/2017
Law Citation:
21:841A=ND.F
21:841(a)(1), (b)(1)(C), 18:2
Offense Level: 4
Previous conviction:
Robert Daniel Herr
http://mdocweb.state.mi.us/OTIS2/otis2profile.aspx?mdocNumber=941040
Sentence: Uttering & Publishing
MCL#: 750.249
Maximum Sentence: 2 years
Date of Offense: 7/14/2014
Berrien County
Date of Sentence: 9/08/2014
Conviction Type: Plea
MDOC Number: 941040
31-year-old Robert Daniel Herr
Racial Identification: White
Gender: Male
Hair: Strawberry
Eyes: Blue
Height: 5′ 11″
Weight: 175 lbs.
Image Date:
2/2/2015
MDOC Current Status: Probation
Supervision Begin Date:
09/08/2014
Assigned Location:
Berrien/St. Joseph/Probation
Supervision Discharge Date:
09/08/2016
Marks, scars and tattoos
Body Piercing- Center Left Ear
Scar- Front Left Forearm
Tattoo- Front Chest – Spider/Card
Supervision Conditions
01 – No violations of any criminal law
02 – Not leave state without permission
02.0 – Not use/possess alcohol or intoxicants
02.1 – Alcohol testing
02.2 – Drug testing
02.4 – Not use or have any controlled substances or drug items
02.6 – Use prescription drugs as prescribed
02.7 – Must attend AA/NA/CA
02.8 – Outpatient Substance Abuse Treatment
03 – Monthly reporting
03.0 – Take medicine per physician
03.3 – You must complete mental health, DomViol/Batterer
03.5 – Disclose information
03.7 – Participate in Electronic Monitoring Program
04 – Notify of change of residence
04.3 – You must reside at __ and not change w/o permission
04.4 – You must be in your approved residence between the hours of_
04.5 – No contact or be 500′ away from their residence
04.6 – No contact with (name)
04.16 – Must obey Court Orders
04.18 – Behavior
04.19 – Association
04.20 – Not own or possess weapons
04.21 – Contact field agent
04.22 – Comply with field agent
04.23 – Allow Field Agent into your residence
04.24 – Authorize a search if Field Agent has cause
04.25 – Report any arrest or police contact
04.26 – Personal Protection Order
06.4 – You must make genuine efforts to find employment
08.0 – Serve jail time as described
08.1 – Pay restitution as described
08.2 – Pay a Crime Victim’s Assessment
08.3 – Pay Supervision Fee pursuant to PA 185 of 1993
08.5 – Fine
08.11 – Assignment of wages until ordered assessments are paid
08.12 – Forfeit tax refunds to pay court assessments – State Costs
Feds bust Fentanyl dealer in Berrien County – An ingredient in “ELEPHANT” heroin cocktail – Suspect signed agreement to plead guilty to federal charge next month Fentanyl Bust in Berrien County, MI Fentanyl, Carfentanil, and other elephant tranquilizers are making a lethal highly-powerful heroin cocktail nicknamed "The Elephant" - and its killed dozens in Michigan and thousands nationwide…
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offender42085 · 2 years
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Post 0110
Nikolai Malashev, NY Inmate 18A1608, born 1998, incarceration intake April 2018 at age 20, sentenced to 20 years to life, eligible for parole April 2037
Murder
So many people attended the sentencings of Nikolai Mavashev and Joseph Broscko in support of the slain 19-year-old David Feliciano that the proceeding had to be moved to a larger courtroom.
“All these people here are here to support David because they all loved him,” Bonnie Jones told the men, before they were each sentenced to up to life in prison.
The mother called that the pain Mavashev and Broscko caused “immense” and said her heart will forever be broken. David’s family will never be the same, she said.
“I hope you think long and hard about the pain and suffering you caused,” Jones said. “I can never forgive you for your selfish and cruel act.”
The men pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for robbing and killing Feliciano. Police arrested them two days after the killing.
Judge James A. Murphy III imposed the agreed-upon sentences at Wednesday’s proceeding: 20 years to life for Mavashev and 18 to life for Broscko. Mavashev, of Halfmoon, was 19, and Broscko, of Clifton Park, was 16 at the time of the killing.
Both were on drugs when they went to Feliciano’s house with the intent to kill him. Both had guns, though Mavashev fired the shot that killed Feliciano. One gun was recovered early in the investigation, and Mavashev and Broscko helped investigators find the other as part of their plea deals.
Both men gave their own brief statements in court. Their attorneys said the men had come to understand the impact of what they did. Broscko has wanted to take responsibility since early on. The other attorney while noting the enormity of what Mavashev did, said she believes Mavashev is not a bad person.
Those in the gallery drew an admonishment from the Judge, as they reacted negatively to the defendant’s attorney’s comments.
For his part, Mavashev said he understands he destroyed lives. “Although nothing can be done, I’m sorry,” he said. Broscko told the court: “I just want to say I’m sorry for what I did.”
In sentencing the pair, the Judge addressed Mavashev and called it frightening that his “diabolical mind planned, crafted and conceived this really horrific plot to kill someone in cold blood.”
There are severe consequences for that, the judge told Mavashev, “and the severe consequences will be that, potentially, you could spend the rest of your life in prison.”
While Mavashev was the mastermind, the judge said Broscko played a large part in the murder.
Mavashev will be able to petition a parole board for release in 20 years, Broscko in 18.
Broscko photos can be found in Post 0109.
2j
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