Talk:Jackie DiNorscio

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Sexist Prosecution

New Jersey's reluctance to arrest women, left holes in the RICO case. How many women were they pursing, ZERO. The jury could detect missing pieces and things that failed to make sense. Quite frankly, there was sexism in the prosecution. Not all women were victims or housewives some were trying to be Dons. Two New Jersey women were dealing and cutting cocaine (Ironia and Butler), even cutting with fentanyl and when female drug dealers were outted in several police reports (Butler and Ironia), the local police failed to connect the dots in towns in Morris County, NJ, instead just focusing on harassing the men around them. It is nothing short of mind numbing, that women can call the police as part of their racketeering, because someone told them to keep the cocaine away from their children(Butler), and the police would defend the young women and threaten the victims, even threatening to take their children away(Butler and Ironia), even after a physical assault from the drug dealer, in front of his child (Ironia) was used to stop the complaints. The police would inadvertently join the racketing by harassing the complainer. You'd have to connect two or three police reports to see how the police were likely unwilling participants in the racketeering, and played. Now, the jokes on everyone, as one of them, the primary abuser, now works with law enforcement in her work (North Western NJ). The two women now co-own a house they do not live in, also in Morris County (Dover/Rockaway), whereas they profited from their nonsense, yet, they work part time on the books, with low hourly wages, nor could anyone reasonably explain how they could afford a home worth more then half million dollar they do not live in, and pay the bills, the answer, laced cocaine sales, as found in the police reports, from when victims asked them to stop cutting around their children. It's also the house, where the first day a murderer was out of prison, went and sat at the kitchen table, and they plotted new crimes. He was only out of prison briefly, then went back. The level of abuse from racketing, is off the charts, and lots of their cousins work in law enforcement. I'm not sure anything has changed in New Jersey. They do not see their contribution to peoples deaths, and racketeering violence, because they refuse to see it, and they mistakenly join it, when they fall into the racketeering trap, that also involves the police, via making other complaints. b.t.w. The same two women stole from a woman in a comma (Dover) and her son(dover/rockaway), ~$10,000 in total, check fraud, even her social security, to fund their drug dealings, and when caught, were able to pay it back. Yup. Pay it back. Who else has that sortof immunity against prosecution. And one tried to have an out of state house swatted! They were doing that nonsense in the 80's and the 90's, so, this prosecution changed nothing. Sexist policing failed to realize, sometimes the women were the Dons, not the men. Leaving the prosecution, literally pursing the wrong people. When the Dons are the women, they can escalate their abuse, by manipulating others. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 162.72.88.128 (talk) 08:28, 21 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Untitled

This is a work in progress as he a very large figure in RICO proceedings of the 20th century.