The family that Instagrams together… Kim And Khloe Share Never-Before-Seen KimYe Wedding Pics On Instagram Not even a month after the nuptials and the Kardashian Klan is already getting nostalgic for Kim’s third big day. Kim has already been pretty obsessed with showing off her shots on social media for the last few weeks. Now, as she and ‘Ye gear up for Honeymoon #2 , Kim is showing off new pics of “her everything.” Meanwhile, Khloe caught a candid of ‘Ye giving all the Kardashian/Jenner sisters (plus Grandma Kris & Nori) an earful right before jumping the broom with his lady. Hit the flip to see Kim and Khloe’s Instagram snaps from the Western Union…
There will be no piff-puffin in jail . Correction Officers Arrested For Dealing Drugs To Inmates According to The NY Post Two city correction officers were charged today with dealing pot to inmates on Rikers Island. Austin Romain and Khalif Phillips, both 31, were busted while on the job after getting ratted out by jailhouse snitches who were their alleged customers. Both guards operated independently of each other but used similar methods to sell marijuana and other contraband — including scalpels and tobacco — to prisoners inside maximum-security facilities at the jail complex, according to the Manhattan U.S. Attorney’s Office. Both men arranged to get paid by the jailbirds’ wives and girlfriends — usually via Western Union money transfers — then smuggled the drugs onto Rikers and hid them inside garbage pails, light fixtures and lockers, court papers said. The inmates would then retrieve the drugs from the drop spots, court papers said. Romain was accused of selling marijuana he purchased on his own for between $300 and $800 an ounce — depending on its quality — while Phillips was accused of charging $1,000 to pass along a package of pot provided to him. Their arrests capped a two-year probe into by the federal Drug Enforcement Agency and the city Department of Investigation, with DOI Commissioner Rose Gill Hearn noting that they bring the number of Department of Corrections employees busted on contraband charges in the past decade to 30. Romain and Phillips were being held overnight pending court appearances today. If convicted, each faces up to 10 years in the slammer. I guess these ninjas thought they were officer Ricky Rozay and by dealing drugs their rap career would blow up too….not.
Colorado Mother-Daughter Duo Indicted For Online Dating Scam A mother and daughter in Colorado were indicted for their role in a “Nigerian internet romance scam” in which associates in Nigeria posed as members of the U.S. Armed Forces and stole over $1 million from 374 victims. Tracy Vasseur, 40, and her mother, Karen Vasseur, 73, of Brighton, Colo., about 21 miles north of Denver, face a hearing on Tuesday in the Adams County District Court. The Colorado Attorney General, John Suthers, said the two were part of a scam since 2009 that “lured unsuspecting women to internet dating sites by posing as members of the U.S. military serving in Afghanistan. The Vasseurs’ 374 victims over a three year period were based throughout the United States and from 40 other countries.” The Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), a government organization that refers cyber crime complaints to law enforcement agencies, says people 40 and older who are divorced, widowed, or disabled are most likely to fall prey to online dating scams. ABC News previously reported on other victims of these fraudulent Romeos, like Joan Romana from Lynbrook, N.Y. and Esther Ortiz-Rodeghero, a widow from Castle Rock, Colo. The Vasseurs were indicted of 20 counts in violations of the Colorado Organized Crime Control Act, money laundering and theft in a 27-page document filed by Suthers’ office. Tracy Vasseur faces up to 205 years in prison if convicted on all counts. Karen Vasseur faces up to 172 years in prison. “After a phony relationship was established, victims were asked to send money and were led to believe that the soldiers would use the money to retrieve property, travel to the U.S., and pay other expenses,” the attorney general’s office said in a statement. The mother-daughter duo worked with associates in Nigeria, wiring most of the stolen money to them and kept about a 10 percent cut “although they would often receive less,” the indictment stated. The Vasseurs sent stolen money addressed to 112 different names in Nigeria, but most often to “Olamigoke Ayodeji.” They also wired money to individuals in Ecuador, Great Britain, India, United Arab Emirates and the U.S. “After a relationship was established, the purported military member would begin asking the victim to send money to an ‘agent’ in Colorado,” primarily through electronic fund transfer services like Western Union or Money Gram, according to the indictment. “Among other reasons, victims were frequently told that the money they sent would pay for satellite phones, so that the victim and the perpetrator could talk directly to each other, or for travel expenses, so that the “soldier” could take authorized leave from duty to visit the victim in the U.S.” The money transferred was usually over $10,000 and as high as $59,000, according to the indictment. According to the attorney general’s office, the two recruited family members of friends to participate. Tracy Vasseur allegedly used her then 16-year-old daughter to fraudulently receive stolen money and then wire it to Nigeria as part of the scam over a year because Western Union had restricted her access, according to the indictment. The indictment stated the grand jury is aware of “one or more individuals residing in Nigeria” who were involved in the scam, “but is unable to affirmatively identify them at this time.” The Vasseurs established 20 personal and business bank accounts at 11 local banks for the purpose of laundering the stolen money. SMH. They had it poppin with those poor lonely ladies’ money. Source