Video: Black American woman enjoyed torturing & killing a man in a wheelchair for snitching
(005320.38-:E-003569.93:N-HO:R-SU:C-30:V)
S.Africa: Black Efficiency: Post Office delivers package 13 years late
A White Family in S.Africa had this crazy experience! The Post Office is worthless. It was bankrupt recently ... AGAIN!
[These blacks get very worked up, not that this is a threat to whites or a reason for whites to fear them. Leave them to experience their anger to the full and to ATTEMPT to vent it on whites. This can be made to backfire on them. Some of them experience extreme levels of hatred and it is interesting that this woman enjoyed torturing this man. Although Jews love labelling whites with the fake label of "HATERS", the reality is that nobody hates more than JEWS DO, and blacks are next on the list. Jan]
(Proud Of Murdering A Man In A Wheelchair For Snitching.. Pulled Out His Teeth)
Here’s the link to the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ngtXPP5krU
A Phoenix woman who said in jailhouse interviews that she enjoyed torturing and killing a man in a wheelchair because he was a snitch has been sentenced to life in prison. Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Paul McMurdie handed down the sentence to Angela Simpson on Tuesday. Shortly after sentencing, Simpson sat down with 3TV’s Mike Watkiss to talk about it. During previous television interviews, Simpson said in a calm voice that she lured 46-year-old Terry Neely to her apartment with a promise of sex and drugs. Once there, Simpson says she beat Neely with a tire iron, pulled out his teeth and strangled him with a television cable during three days of torture. Simpson says she also dismembered Neely’s body and set it on fire. Neely’s remains were found burning in a trash container outside a church on Aug. 5, 2009. Autopsy results show a 3-inch nail had been driven into Neely’s head" – AP
White Shop: Adolf Hitlers Beautiful Painting: The Munich Opera House
Much of Hitlers art was created during his time as a struggling artist in Vienna and Munich, where he sold watercolors to support himself. Some of his works are owned by collectors and institutions.