This week I caught a clip of a police drama set in Manchester where a female detective was trying to find out who had killed her partner.
Her partner was standing at a bus stop and was killed when a woman crashed into it trying to get away from a group of youths who were firing a gun at her.
It wasn’t as straightforward as it first appeared.
It wasn’t an accident as they first thought.
The detective wasn’t in the wrong place at the wrong time, and the drive-by shooting wasn’t coincidental, it was all staged as a way to look like an accident and the intention was to kill the detective at the bus stop.
As part of her investigation, the female detective went and spoke to several people in the criminal underworld which resulted in the revenge killings of the youths who were paid to shoot-up the car.
Before the youths were killed, the drama showed them ‘working’ in the park selling drugs.
What I found interesting about this part of the show was the system that they used to minimise the risk of being arrested and sent to prison.
A simple drug purchase involved about five people.
There was the guy who acted like a receptionist. He would greet people and take the order, and direct them to another gang member who would take the money.
A guy on a bike would be motioned over who would be told what drugs was wanted.
He would go and collect the money then ride to a location nearby where he would meet with another gang member on a bike who would swap the money for the drugs.
He would then take the drugs to a fourth gang member who would then pass the drugs onto the customer.
The other gang member on the bike would then take the money back to the place from where he had fetched the drugs.
There were five people in the system, six if you count the person at the flat who was storing the drugs.
The reason for this system was that should the police swoop onto the park, each member of the gang were carrying either a small amount of money or a small amount of drugs that can only be considered as for ‘personal use’.
They didn’t have both money and drugs; it was one or the other.
None of the gang members were carrying anything that could have them arrested and charged with intent to supply or for carrying the proceeds of drug dealing.
The system protected them from being sent away for a long time. The system worked perfectly.
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The biggest risk was to the people in the flat holding on to the larger amount of drugs, but with only one person showing up there to collect the drugs and drop off the money, it wasn’t so obvious that anything criminal was going on.
It reminds me of a documentary I watched a year or two back that interviewed a couple of ex-drug lords from Liverpool who now regret their involvement in turning Liverpool into a cesspit of drug damaged people and gang violence.
One man who had spent many years in prison for his involvement in gang killings and violence shared how at one point he had a well oiled machine where he had a team of people all doing different tasks.
Just like the youths in the drama, he had a team of people who would sell weed, another team who would sell heroin, and another team selling crack cocaine.
Each team had several individuals who had their own part to play which they would not deviate from.
He had a system that ran smoothly and made him a lot of money.
Sadly it created a lot of damage and devastation to the people of Liverpool, but for him, at that time, it made him a lot of money.
Unfortunately for him, he ended up in prison, he lost his family, he lost a lot of close friends, and he had nothing financially to show for this money making operation. At the end of the day it wasn’t worth it for him.
However…
The point I want to make here is that systems work… you just need to choose your system wisely!
System 903 is a system that makes money with the added bonus of you not having to worry about the police, going to prison, or rival drug gangs wanting to hurt you badly… or worse, kill you.
Roy, the man who developed System 903, made £47,000 in one year using it.
What’s better is that you don’t need a team for this, you can do this alone from the comfort of your own home, and you can do it on your smartphone.
The only other thing you may need is a notepad and a pen to do some basic arithmetic. But you could do that on your smartphone too if you wish.
To discover how you too could make £47,000 in one year using Roy’s system, click the link below:
System 903
Kind Regards
John Harrison
PS… Please note; there are only 250 copies of System 903 available and numbers are dwindling. Once they’re gone, they’re gone. No more will be printed after the last one has been sold.
Here’s that link again: