![]() |
Hauls of Shame - Who is Peter Nash?
Peter Nash is Prime Minister Pete Nice of 3rd Bass. Here he is preforming on stage July 2013 in Brooklyn, first show in 13 years, see link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aijf-nq1Zgk Hope you do well Peter because you owe a lot of people money. Maybe you should write a new song about pleading the fifth since you have firsthand experience. You can give some words of wisdom about how you got the gas face by pleading the fifth dozens of times in a civil lawsuit. I have a suggestion for you write something about your life experiences on your Hauls of Shame website such as your “American Baseball Archives and Wax Museum” in Cooperstown, NY that you used to own in 1995 & 1996. Your “American Baseball Archives and Wax Museum” had a large collection of old trophy balls and very interesting artifacts and memorabilia on display such as that 1853 Knickerbockers Trophy Ball that was given to Henry Chadwick, now subject to the lawsuit between Corey Shanus and Robert Lifson. Where did you get all those items on display at the wax museum? It’s time to tell all Peter Nash! After all you own the Hauls of Shame website. We want to know the truth! What about the 1854 Trophy Ball you had on display at the wax museum and then you sold it for $72,050 back in 1996 which was a record selling price at the time and now that same 1854 Trophy Ball is on permanent display at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY. MastroNet wrote in there description that the 1854 Trophy ball is similar in color and lettering to the 1853 Trophy Ball that Corey Shanus bought for $161,992 in 2003. Mr. Nash, where did you get these items from? Corey Shanus should depose you and put you in the hot seat! What about the 1903 World Series baseball once owned by Cy Young and donated to the Brooklyn Elks Lodge #22 that you sold in 1994 and was recently sold by Legendary Auctions for $65,000. Where did you get that 1903 World Series baseball that was owned by the Brooklyn Elks #22? See Link: http://www.legendaryauctions.com/Lot...y-Winning-Pitc I noticed some of the items that you sold have BPOE No. 22 stamped on it meaning (Brooklyn Elks Lodge 22 of the Benevolent Protective Order of Elks). For example the Henry Chadwick cabinet card you sold in 2007 on the back of the cabinet photo it is stamped with BPOE No. 22, see link: http://www.robertedwardauctions.com/.../2004/470.html It’s interesting to note that Henry Chadwick belonged to Brooklyn Elks No. 22 and so did Abe Yager the sports writer that took over Henry Chadwick position at the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Henry Chadwick’s cabinet card you sold has Yager’s name written on it and Brooklyn daily Eagle. Where did you get these items from? Why did Cy Young donate his 1903 World Series Baseball to the Brooklyn Elks No. 22 in 1953? Is it because this Elks club had a baseball collection and you bought it? Mr. Nash you go into extreme details about the items you write about on Your Hauls of Shame website so please write about the items mentioned here that you once owned. Intriguing minds would love to know the history of these items. If anybody else would like to know more about Peter Nash here’s a couple of links: http://www.nydailynews.com/blogs/ite...tax-returns-ov Peter Nash will be preforming with 3rd Bass at Warm Fest 2013 on Sept 2, Broad Ripple Park between 3:15 - 4:00pm Indianapolis, Indiana. http://lineup.warmfest.org/events/2013/09/02/ |
This ought to be interesting.
|
Doesn't Sunny need to post his full name?
|
1. Steppin To The AM was my cut.
2. That DJ in the video KILLS IT. |
Sunny just gave Pete the Net54 Gas Face.
-Ryan |
it's crazy that Nash is such a questionable character and yet he has done awesome work on Hauls of Shame.
And, man, 3rd Bass did some great music back in the day. |
Quote:
|
Yep Sunny does need to
post his name. And there are many people in the 1st Joseph P coumn who need to do the same. I know it's a lot of work but Leon needs to add those names.
Actually Sunny did post his name in the long thread over on the auto board on Heritage which morphed into a new discussion. His name is Rob.ert Fra.ser |
You should also take Corey's full name out of the post.
|
Quote:
You guys are posting at 5 freaking a.m my time. I am snoring about then. Sunny will have his name in all of his posts (now). I doubt he cares but regardless it's the rule. There was no mandate in the first thread about every single poster having their name in it, but the rules of the board still apply. So I will be going back over that thread sometime today and adding names where need be. I will not mess with anyone's comments. The other mods or I don't tell people what to say or not to say. |
No sleep for you
:D
|
I was up at 5!:D
|
I'm not surprised he was behind on taxes at one point, I heard when he signed his record deal all he really got was a box of Newports and puma sweats.
|
Quote:
|
"get was a box of Newports and puma sweats...."
I'm surprised at the number of references to past 3rd Bass songs. Seems like a lot of people listened to them. No joke, they were awesome.... |
1 Attachment(s)
Awesome Album
|
The OP has first hand knowledge of Mr. Nash's trade and is quite the collector. I guess we can expect Pete to address this and many others any day now on his website. I mean after all Pete is all about making the hobby a better place right?
Nice to see Pete's trademark cane was replaced by an umbrella from the clubs lost and found, keep on keeping it real Prime Minister Nash..:D http://photos.imageevent.com/piojohn...ze/pete5th.jpg |
Def scam recordings? Hmmm
Here's a "where are they now" piece and Pete's in around 3:35 mark http://youtu.be/eAZhBA1EBJA |
I hope y'all are kidding about liking 3rd Bass. I thought they were completely wack, and I didn't know anyone else who liked them either. To me they were more of a gimmick than Vanilla Ice himself.
|
At least in NYC, they were nowhere near the joke Ice was. Ice was a clown with one hit that was a total beat bite off Under Pressure. 3rd Bass was legit with Gas Face, Stepping To The AM, Bklyn-Qns, and Derelicts of Dialect-- all solid cuts that still get a modicum of love to this day, whereas Ice's one song is played by not a DJ on earth, except maybe as a nostalgia laugh at a wedding.
Where I was (Bklyn and Manhattan late 80s thru 90s), 3rd Bass was more or less on par with say a Special ED, yeah they fell off the map but the cuts still get love. Ice went out as a gimmick sorta like Fu Schnickens and Das EfX-- though I cant lie who didn't bump Das when they dropped. Cactus Album is just not put in same bucket as Vanilla Ice, least not to the hardcore hip hop heads I knew/know. But not all areas were feeling the same stuff, of course. Not by any means saying Bass gets bumped with the likes of Gang Starr or even Masta Ace, just nowhere near Ice. |
Somehow I don't think this discussion was the OP's intent. :)
-Al |
Matty C, couldn't agree more. But Masta Ace???? Please replace Masta Ace with Eric B and Rakim.... Thanks.
|
I still listen to them almost every day. They had a short career, but they were legit.
My favorite song--Product of the Environment. Derelicts of Dialect was a hot album. (Ebbets Field/Dodger stuff in Brooklyn Queens video . . .) |
"Pushin' a drug, I can't understand, destroyin' a life for a buck in their hand...."
Kind of fitting for the post I guess... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I may have been the only person who listened to the Dust to Dust tape until it waved the white flag. I still occasionally youtube songs from it.
3rd Bass was waaaay better than Vanilla Ice, they had legit songs and Steppin to the AM got a lot of air play around my hood, not just Gas Face and Pop Goes the Weasel |
Thread
Am I the only one interested the OP's reason for the thread?
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Its interesting to see someone with 3 posts comes on here throwing out questions on how Nash obtained certain memorabilia... Implying he perhaps stole them or bought them way under market value (at least I think) Then, interestingly enough, he plugs his next concert. I'm guessing that's an attempt at saying he's trying to pay his bills with what little celebrity he has left? Just seems that OP knows much more and wanted to make Nash sweat a bit. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Go to post #157....and there is so, so much more....this will help explain it... http://www.net54baseball.com/showthr...=171957&page=2 |
Quote:
PS: I could listen to Don't Sweat the Technique and Know the Ledge over and over and never get tired of them |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
My first tapes I ever bought (all at the same time) were: 3rd Bass, Eric B and Rakim, and the greatest rapper ever, D.O.C.
|
Quote:
Really, you didn't have to buy anything after D.O.C. because he said no one could do it better. That is some title for a debut album! |
Out of morbid curiosity, I youtube'd 'Pop Goes the Weasel' and 'Gas Face'.
'Pop...' is kind of catchy, but 'Gas face' does nothing for me. 'Stink Face' might have been more interesting. I watched the Arsenio version of 'Gas...' and found that Nash's band-mates were far more charismatic and interesting, and they had some rhythm. In both videos I felt that Nash was the weakest link in the band. Was he the guy fronting the money, so they had to let him in? :confused: |
I remember the first rap cut I really played to the tape wore out was Gang Starr's Wordz I Manifest (remix). It was playing on the radio in my pops' car.
That and The Bridge Is Over Live off a BDP tape. I also remember buying sick mix tapes on Astor Place on 8th St after getting haircuts downtown. That's how I first heard Eric B For Prez on one of those tapes. Takes A Nation and Criminal Minded also were as large as it gets, alongside Follow The Leader, Paid In Full. And EPMD was right there, too. |
Matt,
I knew you wrote Paid in Full, but didn't know you were a hip hop head (and that there were so many others posting here). I'm more into 90s hip hop though - Smif N Wessun, Mobb Deep, Nas - still got love for the 80s crowd though. |
Mobb Deep is a personal favorite.
I'm also huge into Black Moon, Sean Price, Large Professor, Group Home, Jeru... I'm born in 76 so the 90's was primetime for me. As to S&W...listening to Sound Buoy Bureill (the re-re-edit) right now! "Now everybody wanna be Don Gaga..." |
1st thread I ever read on Net 54 that makes me GLAD I'm old!:)
|
Net54 members are a varied and interesting bunch.
|
Quote:
Mobb Deep is great, I go youtube surfing with their songs all the time. Almost always start with Burn I'm also big on the Clipse for "newer" stuff, but usually stick to the 80's-early 90's stuff. The first Wu-Tang album will always be my all-time favorite. I bought that tape three times and played each of them until they broke. |
You have surprised me John D. (and others). I thought I'd be the only one on the forum who followed early rap. I was very much into it as the 80s progressed and beyond. I was rather isolated from the music growing up in the Upper Peninsula of MI but became familiar with many of the groups through my complete run of RapMasters cassette tapes :)
Among my favorites . . . Beastie Boys (seen them in concert several times, sadly no more), EPMD, Eric B & Rakim, Doug E Fresh, MARRS (pump up the volume single), D Nice, and even some of the newer artists including Fat Boy Slim and others. Sadly, Columbia House took a chunk out of my OJ funds during my teenager years. I apologize for the off topic reply but I couldn't resist. |
Leave it up to me while I be livin proof'
Wow I have to agree 100 % with Joe G. And I too apologize for going off topic but I Thought for sure I was probably the only one on the board who had a love for 90's hip hop. I'm born and raised in LA (USC grad fight on!) but my hip hop affinity was strictly east coast. Group Home/Tribe/LON'S/Wu/Helta Skelta. I have to say its a great and most pleasent surprise to know that fellow board members are hip hop fans as well as old cardboard junkies! Thanks Leon!
|
Quote:
|
I'm just hoping an East Coast vs West Coast feud doesn't break out here on Net54.
|
Quote:
IMHO, 36 Chambers is one of the greatest records (and I'm all over the place musically)....ever (all genres). An AMAZING record. |
Barry
60's guy also (college and HA), but today listening to Nina Simone and Robert Johnson
|
I can't believe no ones mentioned Kool Moe Dee and the famous feud with an up and coming LL Cool J.
Eric B and Run DMC are still my favorites from my days growing up in JC... Aka Chilltown BTW, In my neighborhood, we all hated 3rd Base!! I feel like everyone on Net54 has come out of their hip hop cocoon on this thread lol. |
Jeru the Damaja! That's a blast from the past. Unbelievable first album, then fell off the face of the earth. How can nobody mention Keith Murray, Geto Boys, Tribe Called Quest, Shabba Ranks, or Nas???? I'm pretty sure Mc Serch from 3rd Bass discovered Nas....
This suddenly became one of the greatest threads ever! |
I remember when Jeru first came off on COME CLEAN-- I heard it on a late night radio mix. It was the bomb. He'd earlier made a brief appearance on Gang Starr's Daily Operation, on the cut I'm The Man.
Very slept on one hit wonder cut that still gets play is TOP BILLIN by Audio 2. Yes Wu coming up was a huge event on the timeline: I had the single to Protect Ya Neck with METHOD MAN on the B side. I also vividly recall when Black Moon first hit with WHO GOT DA PROPS; that first album ENTA DA STAGE was sonically fresh. Was a place called Bondi's on Park Row by J&R Music World in downtown manhattan where you could always cop a big anticipated release a week early. In terms of combo of quality and output, KRS/BDP was a real standout with Gang Starr-- so many good whole albums. Who could forget LOVES GONNA GET YA from the former and DWYCK from the latter! "I got more props and stunts than Bruce Willis..." "Leaving the bodega I say, 'suave.'" Tribe was of course awesome and Native Tongues was like its own little sub genre with De La and Black Sheep (anyone remember Chi Ali?). After I did PAID IN FULL I was working on the sequel for Total Recall for Miramax, and my office was next to one Tip had in the TriBeCa film center. We became quite friendly when we'd see each other out and about, and he was always a really nice, chill guy. Many of those cats are incredibly warm people. Beastie Boys were always special; also fantastic cats. A life highlight for me was hooping on two occasions with Yauch and Mike D and my buddy-- just running two on twos in the park. |
I always thought Jeru should have been bigger than he was. Seemed like he could never follow up the debut album, and he tried for years.
|
Quote:
|
Interesting thing is he's put out some material-- very indie label stuff, some of it good. I will check but I'm pretty sure some is on iTunes.
Incubating lots of underground artists. Afu-Ra was one of his guys who has a great single from some years back called MIC STANCE. I remember Jeru did have some pretty good cuts on Wrath Of The Math. But yeah he definitely went deep, deep underground after that. Ultimately I think he really, genuinely shunned the Bigtime or mainstream and made a conscious career choice to do more indie underground stuff. His strengths and natural style and observations would be like jamming a square peg into a round hole, if he wanted to widen out or up sales. He is kind of a counter weight to the Diddy Cristal Maybach bulls1t materialism that chatacterizes so much rap today. Same can be said to some extent for Talib Kweli I think. |
Barry & Peter W--
I think it's fair to say we are more Doo Wop than Hip Hop---Thank God for the Dubs, the 5 Satins, the HillToppers & the Hollywood Flames!
|
Quote:
Never liked Geto Boys except for the song from Office Space and a couple Scarface singles. It always sounded like they wouldn't lower the mic for Bushwick Bill, so he had to yell into it. Keith Murray was up there for me, Redman is an all-time favorite and I'll admit that I really liked Das Efx and still listed to them quite often. Tribe is good and Scenario is one of my favorite songs because I liked them and LONS. I listened to a lot of Lords of the Underground, mostly their earlier stuff, same for Fu-Shnickens. The line about Bruce Willis in DWYCK is good, but the line before it is even better, "lemonade is a popular drink and it still is" :) Whoever said D-Nice brought up a good one. Anyone ever listen to Nine? He didn't have his name in lights for long... |
Nine is a very deep call-- playing WATCHAWANT right now; that's one of my main running cuts.
Call Me D-Nice is a favorite. Anyone remember the cut with D-Nice and Treach? TIME TO FLOW? That was fire. Sleeper cut on that Das EfX album is CLAP YA HANDS. Sick beat. And how can we forget all those amazing Pete Rock Remixes? Shut Em Down Remix? Even Jump Around Remix. Too many. And all those cuts on Mecca & The Soul Brother-- Skinz? The Creator? T.R.O.Y?! That isht was volcanic. Straight magma. Edit to add: So here I am listening to JUSSUMMEN (Pete Rock Remix), and what is the lyric I hear? This just goes to show how even back in 1992, just like now, everyone gives a certain player props... "I kills'em when I gamble... And when I swings my thing I take a swing like... http://www.collectorfocus.com/images...-mickey-mantle |
The Def Squad
Wow you guys have me going way back!
"Damaging your medulla, cerebrum and cerebellum, you got a crew you better tell em!"-Keith Murray |
Just call me D-Nice... One of my top 5's of all time!
|
Quote:
How about one hit (or 2) wonders like Kurious...."and the fellas try to dip in the miracle whip!" Plus there's a connection back to 3rd bass :D |
Quote:
|
I remember Elvis's hips being censored on Ed Sullivan back in 56. :) Dave
|
Quote:
Music made a partial comeback in the early '80s, but it's been a trudge ever since. |
?
I don't know what the hell you youngsters are talking about! 90's hip hop?
Remember when the Beatles got off of the plane when they came to America? Now that was exciting. |
I remember.:)
|
Rest assured that being a fan of hip hop does not preclude us youngsters from being avid listeners and huge fans of other genres ;)
For example I have deep collections of classic rock-- Stones, Zeppelin, Clapton, Beatles, even McCartney's efforts, Hendrix, all the way to Clash, Police, etc. I also let jazz run from Thelonious Monk (alum of my HS) to Cannonball Adderley to Grant Green and then even to Herbie Hancock. Then there are other greats from Sinatra to Stevie Wonder. And then you have the 80s pop and English bands, a whole other genre with which I can get down. Especially when American Psycho is playing in the background and it's snowing indoors. |
I would say at least 95% of the stuff I listen to is rap music, but I am a big fan of CCR, Skynyrd and Sonny Boy Williamson(find a song called Cool Disposition if you don't know him)
|
Quote:
http://www.robertedwardauctions.com/.../2004/466.html It’s puzzling why Peter Nash didn’t correct the description of the write up on the Henry Chadwick cane when Robert Edward Auctions sold it. Anybody that has ever read Nash’s Hauls of Shame website can see how Peter Nash can write extreme details about the memorabilia he writes about but why not on this great artifact that belonged to Henry Chadwick that Nash owned. Could it be that Peter Nash is hiding something? When I was a very close friend of Peter Nash’s he told me that when he was a musician he had this barber in Brooklyn that told him about a friend that belonged to an Elks Club in Brooklyn that had a large collection of old painted baseballs and trophies and other stuff. Nash told me it was one of his best finds ever and he scored big on it. Recently I spoke to Fran Henry, Henry Chadwick’s great, great granddaughter and she told me that when Peter Nash bought a large collection of Henry Chadwick items from her back around 2002 that the Henry Chadwick Gold Headed cane was not part of her collection and that Peter Nash told her that he owned the Henry Chadwick Gold cane for a long time and that he used it in his performances on stage when he was a musician. That would place Peter Nash with the Chadwick cane around 1990. John Thorn, official historian for MLB recently wrote an article about Fran Henry, see link: http://ourgame.mlblogs.com/2013/07/1...enry-chadwick/ So were did Peter Nash get this Chadwick cane from? I guess it was part of the Brooklyn Elks Club collection. Where did Nash get the 1903 World Series baseball that Cy Young owned and donated to the Brooklyn Elks #22 in 1953 which Peter Nash sold in 1994? This same 1903 World Series ball was sold recently by Legendary Auctions for $65,725. Peter Nash where did you get the 2 Abe Yager Brooklyn baseball scrapbooks and the Henry Chadwick framed picture of his gravesite that you gave me as collateral these 3 items are stamped (BPOE No. 22) which means Brooklyn Elks Lodge No. 22. Where did you get the miscellaneous group of Brooklyn Elks items that you gave me as collateral including the very old gold medal that says” Brooklyn 22 B.P.O. E.” that you gave me as collateral? Maybe the medal was owned by Henry Chadwick? I need to know the provenance of all the collateral you gave me as collateral. Early this year you refused to give me provenance on the Ed Delahanty bat. As you are aware I spoke to Jerry Casway that wrote the book “Ed Delahanty in the Emerald Age of Baseball” Mr. Casway told me you are friends with him and that you speak with him about once a week for the past three years. Mr. Casway told me the Delahanty bat is real but you refused to tell him the provenance of the Delehanty bat. Where did you get Ed Delahanty's 1887 pocket watch that's now in "The National Pastime Museum”? Not giving me provenance makes no sense! It’s obviously in Roxanne Nash’s best interest and yours to sell the collateral items at the highest price possible to reduce your debt. My wife, Lisa and I have a large Judgment against you and your wife, Roxanne totaling over $475,000 when adding on the 8 ˝ % interest accruing on the Judgment. Peter Nash please send me a detail list of the provenance of all the collateral you gave me. For instance I need the provenance of the George Wright old timer’s reunion hat you gave me as collateral. Although it make no sense for you not to give me the provenance but if don’t I will depose you and Roxanne for an asset deposition and in the end you will pay for any legal expenses I incur because I have the right to go back to the judge and ask for legal fees and cost. Peter Nash you have been Order by the judge to return the 1912 Red Sox World Series Player Diamond Stickpin that you stole from my wife, Lisa and I. As you are aware you gave this 1912 WS gold diamond stickpin to Al Angelo as collateral and also gave the 1868 Albumen photo of Brooklyn Atlantics to Mr. Angelo as collateral. I want both items returned immediately. I have a legal document signed by you and Mr. Angelo that says Mr. Angelo has those items. In your deposition in June of 2009 you stated that Al Angelo has the 1912 WS diamond stickpin. By the way Peter Nash I’ve been in touch with Katherine Dooley’s law firm and they have supplied me with some documents including your receipt of 54 items that you bought from Katherine Dooley for $25,000 and a receipt for when you purchased the 2 scrapbooks for $1,000 given to her father by John Drohan. So please don’t be afraid to give me provenance of the McGreevy items and other items you gave me as collateral that you acquired from the Dooley family. The cat is out of the bag! No reason to plead the fifth this time! Just thing how much you could have sold that Hugh Duffy 1898 trophy for if you had told the truth! What about the Babe Ruth signed Mitt or the Mike Kelly bat or Hugh Duffy bat or the Cap Anson bat that Nuf Ced McGreevy once owned. Why did you plead the fifth, it make no sense! Where you afraid to tell people that the old lady was giving you stuff? I saw Katherine Dooley give you some items in August of 2007 when you and I were at her house in Milton, MA with the film crew. Bottom line Peter Nash you need to the truth! |
Amazing!
|
Has anyone seen "White Betsy"?
|
Quote:
|
OK, I read some of the early threads on this and then came back to it today.
I'm with the oldies.....Beatles, Elvis. etc..... I have no idea who some of these other performers are/were....it will probably stay that way. RC |
Pop-pop goes the weasel.
-Al |
Robert, great post. Hopefully you can be made solid on this mess one day shame you as a collector have been a victim of such bad stuff. Not to mention the threats about folks coming to "break your legs" correct?
Also those great photos that seemed to not add up from our good pal Mr. Nash. Seems our white knight of hobby cleanup is rather dirty and like many of the trophy balls he once owned quite tarnished. Cheers, John P.S. I’ll be on the lookout for the Henry Chadwick umbrella soon. :) |
Quote:
The weasel in question definitely needs to go 'pop'. |
What? No love for Big Daddy Kane from this crew?
|
Quote:
69. Nash told Robert that the Frasers would make a “great profit” by selling the 1912 Red Sox World Series Trophy to him, as he would pay the most because he needed to have it for McGreevy’s. 70. Robert told Nash that he and Lisa had decided to put the 1912 Red Sox World Series Trophy up for auction to obtain the best price possible. 71. Nash became extremely angry and threatened Robert, saying that if the 1912 Red Sox World Series Trophy were not sold to him he would “send someone to break your legs”. (The threat was reported to law enforcement authorities.) Nash went on to state, “If you put the [1912 Red Sox World Series] Trophy up for auction, I will interfere with the sale.” It should be noted that Nash lied to his partners at McGreevy’s by claiming he owned 50% of the 1912 Red Sox World Series Trophy. The truth is Nash had no ownership in the trophy and he was worried that his partners would sue or remove him for lying to them about the true ownership of the 1912 trophy. The email below is an Exhibit Peter Nash used in a Certification to the court. He wanted Ken Casey one his partners at McGreevy’s Bar to testify to this audio tape/transcript. (Ken Casey is the singer for the Dropkick Murphys). Ken Casey must have been delighted that Peter Nash wanted him to testify to this audio tape/transcript. It’s shocking that Nash could actually think that this statement could help him, it only helped my lawsuit. In plain English it’s delusional! Definition of delusional in the Encarta Dictionary: English (North America) 1. False belief - a persistent false belief held in the face of strong contradictory evidence, especially as a symptom of a psychiatric condition 2. Mistaken notion - a false or mistaken belief or idea about something From: "Peter Nash" <pob70@earthlinknet> To: "Erin l. Henderson" <Erin@cslawllc.com> Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 10:43 AM Subject: Audio Tape/transcript Erin, The audio tape with the phone voice mail from my partner Ken Casey took place on Saturday April 19th, 2008 at 4:24 pm FROM xxx-xxx-xxxx. (22 SECONDS) Vice Mail Transcript: Ken Casey: Pete, it's Kenny. I got that 150 cash. let's get down there with a f**kin bag of money and a baseball bat and a f**kin pen and a piece of paper. Give me a call back. Peter PS I have the tape, don't have a dupe deck? |
Im a 70's guy myself
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 02:22 AM. |