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This thread will follow the story of Lirian "Eagle" Rrushi, an Albanian hacker who's involved in organized crime.
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this thread will follow the development of dennis woo
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Through this portrayal, readers will tangle with what it means to be young Jewish men of affluence in Modern America's vast ecosystem. For inquiries, notices and portrayal interest for the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity or the American Jewish community: @Villainous (PM)
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Hakim "Luci" Tidjani "A 5'9'' stern-faced male who through early signs of aging, looks to be in late thirties. His teeth are in quite bad condition from extended use of tobacco and poor dental hygiene, yet wears high designer clothes and expensive jewellery. He has quite a large chest and arms, his arms posses decent muscle definition however the majority of his definition is shielded by a layer of fat. He has a dark look in his eye, most likely from the emotional turmoil he has faced throughout his life. He speaks perfect English with a faded Maghrebi-Arabic accent." Character Profile Full Name: Born as Abdelkader Douati, legally documented as Hakim Tidjani. Date of Birth: 31st of Janurary 1979 Place of Birth: (Undefined) Relizane, Algeria Height & Weight: 5'9'' (175cm) & 108kg (17st) Occupation: Independent Millionaire, career criminal/crime boss (Leader of Kouachi Crime Group aka The Tidjani Clan) Character Backstory https://discord.gg/kouachi Feel free to join the above discord if you're interested in getting involved with our group!
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This thread contains material that could be classed as offensive. By reading this thread you are consenting to read graphic content of sexual and violent nature. TRISTAN 包覃 Tristan Bao-Tam (包覃) is a 19-year-old Chinatown (Textile City) resident, youth offender and career criminal. He was born on the 7th of November 2002 in Strawberry. His mother was a second-generation Chinese-Vietnamese seamstress and his father was a Hong-Kongese illegal-immigrant involved in Chinese-American organized crime, specifically trafficking. Tristan's father was deported in 2004 to serve a life-sentence in Hong Kong, this left Tristan and his mother vulnerable and impoverished. Tristan was a very shy and innocent child, throughout early elementary school he didn't have many friends and was even bullied for a few years. Tristan's mother entered a relationship with a Macedonian drug-dealer in 2010, they had a daughter together a year later. His mom's new partner would turn out to be scum, going on to beat on both Tristan and his mother for years. Tristan began puberty whilst being physically and sexually abused on a regular basis, this significantly damaged his psychology and he developed a warped perspective on humanity. Tristan grew calloused throughout his early middle school years, he would express his trauma through inflicting pain on others. Tristan began to train at a martial art gym in Chinatown from a young age, finding a passion for boxing and taekwondo. Tristan began to become a fan of conflict, enjoying it slightly too much. He would instigate problems with school peers and even strangers, regularly coming home with black-eyes and fight related injuries. Tristan's behavior caused him to be excluded from numerous schools and at the age of 16, he was put into juvenile detention. On his release, Tristan began to sell marijuana through the influence of his peers in juvenile detention. His mother began to smell the cannabis on Tristan and in his bedroom and eventually found a large quantity of marijuana underneath his bed. Over fears of losing her son, she decided to move with Tristan to Delaware. Tristan's time in Delaware was genuinely spent in reflection of his delinquency. Tristan had been running wild on the streets, doing petty crimes and mixing with scummy people. It was during this time in Delaware that Tristan's perspective on life began to mature. Tristan managed to find an apprenticeship at a local mechanic shop a few months into moving to Delaware, here he found a love for mechanical engineering and cars - overall. The position was more so meant to teach the apprentice the fundamentals of mechanics rather than pay the apprentice a workable salary, this meant that despite a full-time job Tristan and his now elderly mother remained in financial struggle. In 2021, Tristan saved up enough money to take his mother on a vacation to Vietnam where they would see family. They arranged for a family friend to look after their apartment. Whilst on their vacation, the family friend who was to look after the house began to argue with a neighbor. The family friend threw numerous parties and was extremely loud and belligerent, when Tristan and his mother returned an eviction notice was found on the door. Not long after their return, two of the landlords sons had came to the apartment in an attempt to kick down the door and forcibly remove who they believed to just be an elderly woman. Tristan was home at the time, thinking that it was a home invasion he defended his home with a knife. He slashed one of the two brothers across the face, causing the other brother to flee. His mother had already called the police, they arrived briefly and both the landlord's son and Tristan was arrested. The duo made an agreement and no charges where filed due to the nature of the incident. Not long after being released, the duo made a return for Los Santos. On returning to Los Santos, Tristan asked a long-term friend who he had been dating to be his girlfriend. The duo started going out, through the hardships they had both been dealt they formed a very close loyalty and made plans to escape poverty together. Tristan's mother was 63 when they returned to Los Santos, the incident in Delaware and witnessing her son stab a man instigated heart problems. In 2022 she passed away after having a heart attack. Tristan was left alone, it was around this time he was offered work boosting and stripping vehicles for the owner of a pawnshop in LS. He began to focus on the hustle however was arrested in late 2021, charged with grand theft auto and evading a peace officer. Tristan's set to be released in 2022.
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“Here’s what I think: the only reason I’m not ordinary is that no one else sees me that way.”― R.J. Palacio, Wonder
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The Bamboo Union, Homeland Origins, 1950's-1960's. The Bamboo Union was formed in the 1950s by (mainland Chinese) children who wanted to protect themselves from threats by Hoklo children. The first members lived in the Bamboo Forest Road in Jung Ho City, Taipei County, of New Taipei City. Its first members were made up of mainland Chinese teens who joined together to secure a place in Taiwan after 1949. The mainland Chinese were regarded as an unwelcome minority that was rejected by Hoklo citizens following the end of the Chinese Civil War when the Nationalist Kuomintang (KMT) government led by Chiang Kai-shek fled to Taiwan. Although the NRC (National Republic of China) continued to hold claims on mainland China after 1949, the mainland was controlled by the Chinese Communist Party, and Taiwan was controlled by the KMT. The Bamboo Union criminal gang started with street-fighting to gain recognition in society. By the late 1960s, the aspirations of the Bamboo Union membership shifted from street-fighting to profiteering. The gang began making a name for itself through the extortion business taking from places such as shops, factories, and even certain government facilities, but the gang's treasury overflowed when thousands of well-paid American global leaders flocked to Taipei while on R&R from the Vietnam War. Chinese nightclub owners welcomed Bamboo Union members to their premises to banish rival gangs of ethnic Taiwanese trying to carve out a share of the lucrative trade in gambling, prostitution, and drugs. By this stage, the Bamboo Union was fast developing into a triad. Aiding the Kuomintang & Chen Chi-Li's Passing, Taiwan, 1980's-2007. By the time the 1980's struck, political chaos was starting to wreck through the streets of Taiwan, at the time members of the Bamboo Union were carrying out hits on certain political figures throughout the region, the most notable hits were done on Lin Yi-hsiung (a prominent opposition figure), Chen Wen-chen (a statistics professor at Carnegie Mellon University), Henry Liu (an opposition journalist) and Tung Kei-sen (an inmate at a prison), people were intimidated by the actions of the triad, even when their leader Chen Chi-Li ('King Duck') was convicted and tried for the murders of Henry Liu, he was still operating and running the triad from deep within the justice system. Eventually as time went by, things began to settle in Taiwan with the Kuomintang reaching political dominance because of Chen's aide, which had made him somewhat of a loved and hated figure amongst the eyes of the general public, around this time the Chung family had started to make more notoriety internally, even gaining them the respect of the current leader Chen, they were diehard nationalist thugs that pushed the families ideals to the best of their abilities, they were even directly involved in the pact with the "Iron Blood Patriots" which had resulted in the family gaining more overseas trade in things such as narcotics. They had remained loyal for many years to Chen Chi-Li, however by the time 2007 came, he had passed away of terminal cancer, amongst 10,000 attendee's (many being general members of the public, certain political figures, other shady crooks), which had left the Chung family somewhat disheartened, however not totally defeated, because for their loyalty to the triad, they were plenty of newly found opportunities as a reward for their hard work and skills. Expanding into the States, Taiwan & America, 2007-2021. The Chung's had further pushed the ideals of a functioning Triad, making sure that the trade from Taiwan functioned properly, Kai Chung (the head of the family) had at this stage proposed the idea of setting up their family in the United States with ambitions of staking out more power for their triad, wherein the family were given a reasonable amount of NTD (New Taiwan Dollar) to immigrate into the United States. Around this time, everything was prepared, but Kai had unfortunately passed away a week before actually gaining a valid visa to enter America, driven and determined, both of his sons have taken on his little legacy, preparing for what America has to offer. OOC Clause
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This thread will showcase the development of Emily "Lil Lady 2Extra" Nuon, an Asian Boyz Crip banger with Organized Crime ties.
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CHINESE TRANSNATIONAL ORGANISED CRIME: THE RISE OF CRIMINAL CHINESE DIASPORA by Randolph Finkenbauer, Ph.D. International Center National Institute of Justice I. Organisational Structure The organizational structure of Chinese organized crime in the United States is quite complex. Broadly defined, there is a great variety of Chinese criminal organizations. These include gangs, secret societies, triads, tongs, Taiwanese organized crime groups, and strictly US-based tongs and gangs. According to Ko-lin Chin, the foremost academic expert in the U.S. on Chinese organized crime, there is no empirical support for the belief that there is a well-organized, monolithic, hierarchical criminal cartel called the “Chinese Mafia.” Chin says: “My findings do not support the notion that a chain of command exists among these various crime groups or that they coordinate with one another routinely in international crimes such as heroin trafficking, money laundering, and the smuggling of aliens” (1996:123). One of the structural characteristics that makes Chinese organized crime different from other forms is the relationship between some of the street gangs and certain adult organizations. The latter are called tongs. Tong-affiliated gangs, like the Wah Ching, have an ah kung (grandfather) or shuk foo (uncle) who is their tong leader. The top gang position is the dai-dai lo (big big brother). Communication between the tong and the gang occurs principally between these two individuals. Below the dai dai lo in descending order are the dai lo(s) or big brothers, the yee lo/saam lo (clique leaders), and at the bottom the ma jai or little horses (sai-lo). There are a variety of norms and rules that govern the gangs. These include respecting the ah kung, beating up members of other gangs on your turf, not using drugs, following the orders of the dai lo, and not betraying the gang. Rules violators are punished, sometimes severely, such as through physical assault and killing. II. Violence Our research and our interviews with various experts confirm that violence is a defining characteristic of Chinese criminal gangs. Use of violence within the group and against other organized crime groups is very prevalent. Disputes over territory and criminal markets among the gangs are typically resolved using kong so, a process of peaceful negotiation. When this does not occur, however, the resolution is usually a violent one, in which guns are used against rival gang members. Law enforcement authorities believe that an escalation of gang violence has taken place in recent years and to gangs involvement in alien smuggling activities. Based on his research, Chin concludes the following with respect to Chinese gang violence in general: The capacity for violence appears to be one of the key defining characteristics of street gang culture. Its employment, however, is shaped and determined by a cluster of constraints related to profit generating goals. Violence between and among gangs is regulated through an agent or ah kung who attempts to channel aggressive behavior in ways that effectively maintain gang coherence. Gang coherence in turn supports the gang’s involvement in extortion activities and in the provision of protection services to organized vice industries in the community (Chin, 1996:138). The gangs are violent, but their use of violence is not very sophisticated nor specialized. It is not the systematic use of violence (including threats) to protect and gain monopoly control of criminal markets that is associated with mature forms of organized crime. Instead it is more likely to be random street level violence, with guns, employed by anyone in the gang. Sometimes this violence is sanctioned and sometimes not. III. Economic Resources Understanding alien smuggling to be the illegal movement of migrants across national borders, and human trafficking to be migrant smuggling that includes coercion and exploitation, the Chinese gangs are extensively involved in both types of activities. Indeed, these criminal activities, along with kidnapping, are the main transnational crimes of the Chinese diaspora gangs. Their dominance is related to Fujian Province being the principal source of Chinese being smuggled and trafficked into North America. On the domestic scene, their main criminal activities in Los Santos’ Chinatown are extortion and gambling. Each Chinese gang dominates these crimes in their particular Chinatown neighborhoods. The professionalism and sophistication of the criminal groups are quite low, again as compared to more mature forms of organized crime. This may be due to their being generally much younger than, for example, LCN or Russian organized crime figures. In his research, Chin (1996) found that Chinese gangs were quite active in legitimate businesses in New York City’s Chinatown. For example, they owned or operated restaurants, retail stores, vegetable stands, car services, ice cream parlors, fish markets, and video stores. On a higher, more professional level, they also owned or operated wholesale supply firms, factories, banks, and employment agencies. In addition, on the West Coast Chinese gangs are believed to have penetrated the entertainment industry. IV. San Andreas Analysis on Chinese Diaspora (Geo-focus Little Seoul) The majority of the Chinese-American population of more than 400,000 in Los Santos County lives within the Las Colinas Valley, which is particularly noted for cities that have a large Chinese-American ethnic plurality. The following cities have the highest percentage of Chinese-Americans in Greater Los Santos. Traditionally centered in San Fierro and Chinatown Oakland, the suburbanization of the Bay Area's Chinese-American population has resulted in significant concentrations in the southwestern East Bay, eastern Peninsula, and northern Santa Clara County. Chinese enclaves have also formed in many of these cities, in a similar manner to that of Southern San Andreas' Las Colinas Valley. One of the most populated Asian American communities in Los Santos is Koreatown. Similar to Downtown, Commerce holds a high dense population of people living very close to each other. Statistics show that 6% is African-American, 19% is Hispanic, 25% is Caucasian, 48%, is Asian-American while the last 2% is Other. Even thought the design behind Koreatown was to be a Korean-dominated ethnic enclave, a vast majority of Chinese American families also reside in Little Seoul due to the language similarities, traditions and customs. IV.(a) Wah Ching of Little Seoul The term Wah Ching simply implies Chinese youth, meaning any gang that has influence from a tong (gathering hall) is considered "Wah Ching" such as Jackson Street Boys, Ghost Shadows, Chung Ching Yee, Joe Boys, Black Dragons Gang, and more, importantly being of course earlier Wah Ching cliques from all sides. Today, modern terms have changed where Wah Ching gangs that have influenced themselves different are due to a shooting in a pool hall in the 1990's where an Asian Boyz member, "Lea Mek" was gunned down by an unknown side Wah Ching gang member named Chieu Luong Yang. Due to this incident, Asian Boyz gangs mostly kept the blue rags and consolidated under the African-American Crip movement. In retaliation after the 1990's, active Wah Ching sides in Los Angeles kept red rags but never claimed to be Bloods, only in retaliation to identify who was part of Asian Boyz cliques or who was Chinese youth. Despite Wah Ching meaning Chinese youth, multiple, if not more, are minority East Asians such as mainly Vietnamese, and Hmong, Laos or Cambodian. Today, modern Wah Ching sides in Los Santos and Asian Boyz gangs (Exotic Families, Long Beach ABZ, Tiny Raskal Gang), Vietnamese gangs (Viet Boyz 2202, Insane Vietnamese), Hmong (Menace of Destruction) Korean (Korean Gangstas, Korean Playboys), Filipino (Satanas), Samoan/Tongan (Sons of Samoa, Tongan Crip) cliques get along really well and are not rivals. Today, most East Asian, South East Asian and Pacific Islander gangs get along due to them being outnumbered by Hispanic, Black and White gangs. This unity was formed inside in multiple high profiled state prisons in San Andreas under the API car, (Asian/Pacific Islander group). In 2001, a 17–year–old Wah Ching member, who was an advanced placement student at Diamond Bar High School, shot and killed two members of the rival San Gabriel Killas (SGK) while attending a football game. On December 2005, a 20 year old Wah Ching member murdered a Chicano man with unknown gang affiliation by running over him with a car in front of his house. He repeatedly backed over the man with the car while holding down the car's horn to ensure that neighbors in the area saw the act. On June 2, 2007, Anh Duoc Nguyen, a member of Monterey Park-Side Wah Ching shot at five people in Westminster's Bowling Green Park, severely injuring one. The shootout was believed to be motivated by the fact that one of the victims changed his Myspace page bio to read "garden gang". Sometime in 2009, a 14 year old member of Ocean-Side Wah Ching got into an argument with members of a rival Hispanic gang. During the argument, police report that one of the Hispanic gang members called the Asian teen a "Chink", and told him to "Go back to China". The Wah Ching gangster responded to the racial slur by pulling out a .45 caliber pistol and shooting the rival gang member.