💀 Horrorcow Nicholas Robert Rekieta / Rekieta "Law" / Actually Criminal / @NickRekieta / "u/Early-Leopard-8351" - Polysubstance abusing puppy snuffing cuckold who dosed his child, "Lawtube pope" turned zesty Dabbleverse streamer. Swinger visitor of 🇯🇲 BBC resorts. Seethed at his ex-BF Aaron on REDDIT. Wife's gunted and toed bod worth $50. Drives like a Jeet.

Friday hearing outcome?

  • DENIED!

    Głosy: 40 9,9%
  • Upheld against Patrick Melton only.

    Głosy: 14 3,5%
  • Upheld against Nicholas Rekieta only.

    Głosy: 12 3,0%
  • Another win for the toe!

    Głosy: 192 47,5%
  • Continuance...

    Głosy: 146 36,1%

  • Łączna liczba głosujących
    404
  • Ankieta zamknięta .
The Toe had a cope session this morning. (Praise be Stallyn19)
Aaron chose violence against the prosecutor this morning.

Aaron got his bail back. The terms of is jail service isn't determined yet, in spite of what people said online.
In Stearns county, apparently you get 1/3rd of the time shaved off. (Maybe prison/jail overpopulation? Or good behavior? Not sure.) He did get 2 days credit for the days he got arrested.
Aaron teases some corruption thing in his case, presumably from the prosecutor. He's been advised by his lawyer to file something about it. Likely related to his HRO as well? So weird.
Aaron claims SP is bummed but it doesn't sound like it's life-shattering.
Aaron isn't disclosing how/if he has talked to his kids about the incident.
Aaron says jail is boring. He's planning on reading and doing some situps and planks. He talked to a guard about the Vikings.
He doesn't comment on Potentially Criminal's question, on if 8 days is enough time to convert to Islam.
The 2 years probation is actually up to 2 years. They can opt to shave it off, maybe at the PO's discretion? Minnesota really is a joke of a state.

Uh, a lot happened yesterday. Now, I had to kind of contain my laughter on yesterday morning's show because there were uh not a lot I'll be honest with you, not nearly as many angry psychopathic people. Incredible amounts of support. I have to say I was shocked by that because after yesterday, it's

00:21
usually a day where like the crazies come out and they want to, you know, let you know that you're in their head rentree 24/7 and you basically control their life, which again, I have to tell you, it's ridiculously sad. If what happened to me yesterday makes you sadder than me about it,

00:40
you're up. You've got to get help. If you're coming in here today in anger at me, you need, and I don't mean this as a euphemism, I mean this in the strongest terms possible, you need to seek psychological care. You are in danger. Your brain is in danger. Your soul's in danger.

01:00
Guys, the war's over. I've been saying this for a long time. The war is over. And yesterday, yesterday was the end of it. And uh I had my sentencing hearing yesterday. Um this the the good news is the state did not get their way. And you know while I think that the whole thing is psychotic to

01:27
begin with at least the state didn't get their way. Um I learned a lot going through the criminal defense process in this country. Number one innocent until proven guilty doesn't exist. I'm sorry to report it to you guys. What you were taught in school about the American

01:44
criminal system is wrong. It's, you know, we we can always point out like communist propaganda. We can always point out propaganda that other countries do. I think the hardest thing to notice is the propaganda that you've been living your entire life. Um, what you were taught in schools about

02:05
what our system is is incorrect. There is no such. The idea of innocent until proven guilty is incorrect. I think our legal system should be replaced um by Ivan Drago just saying I must break you because that's what it is. And you are once you are accused of something you

02:26
are allowed to be harassed, lied about, heranged, anything. They allow it. The the state the state will allow it not society in general. And I will say this, thank God for level-headed judges. Thank God for level-headed judges. And thank God for defense attorneys. Defense

02:43
attorneys in this country are the true heroes. And you might say, "Well, Aaron, they uh they defend rapists and murderers and all and terrorists and all these things. All of those people deserve a defense. If you believe in our system, all of those people deserve a

02:56
defense. If you want evil, if you want crooked, I think our def I think our uh criminal prosecution system is rotten to the core and extremely vindictive. Um the state of Minnesota in my case, the the um the prosecutor for the state of Minnesota um really tried to bring up a lot of things that have

03:22
nothing to do with the offense I pled to. It had nothing to do with anything. She the the the prosecuting attorney in this case was mad that I dared to have a sense of humor about this whole thing being done and the plea deal being done. She literally in open court was like and

03:40
he laughed about the You're allowed to in our system. You're allowed to. And it it shocks me that an attorney, it really worries me about our system because I'm sure they're not the only one that an attorney doesn't know that a person who has been crushed and pushed and

03:58
pressured and bullied and harassed by the state of Minnesota doesn't get to have a sense of humor. It that that's so telling because the whole thing about our system is it's not we're going to prove you did something. It's not any of that. It's we willing break you. And I I

04:15
cannot tell you how proud of myself I am, how appreciative I am of my loved ones, how appreciative I am of all the support I got because it's not enough that you tell them, "Hey, I up and I'm sorry and I'm willing to take whatever, you know, come what may from that."

04:32
Because I did all that. I did all that in spades. Um and and and then after our hearing in June, I was a good boy. I I didn't say a word. I didn't say a word. And they still tried to hang something on me because the prosecutor was upset that I was a good boy. You can't win

04:52
coming or going with the criminal justice system, which is a a farce to call it that. But you're a good boy. You behave yourself. the state will get mad at you because you were a good boy and you dared not to be broken. So, I'm very proud of that. Um, they get to stand up

05:11
there and just lie about you. I mean, just be and just this this bitterness that oozes out of them. So, yesterday we have the sentencing hearing and thank goodness I have to say Judge Heidi Schultz is an incredible judge, an amazing judge. I mean, she saw through

05:28
all the [ __ ] and she basically went, "Hey, dude. Look, this would all be going roses for you if you didn't up that one violation back in March or May or whatever it was." And she gave the the state what the state of Minnesota was asking for was so insane that at one

05:48
point the judge literally laughed at a request that the state made. The state said, "Well, you know, I've seen him drink on his show before, so I think he should be banned from drinking." And the judge went, "No." And then they went, "I want him to be put in jail today." And the judge goes, "I

06:10
don't I've never I don't do that for my felony cases." And then she went, she she kind of did that chuckle, smirk. She goes, "I'm not doing this for a misdemeanor case." And then, you know, did the sentence and went on. Um, I look, all in all, I'm happy with how it went yesterday. Uh, that second

06:29
violation that was made up of whole cloth did not stand because the judge saw through it. Uh, and the judge said, "Mr. Imhalt, I'm going minus fines and whatnot. I'm going to return your bail to you. I am not considering this alleged violation in my sentencing because I agree with Mr. Imhol and Mr.

06:48
Peterson. There are serious problems with it." So, I appreciate that. And basically, she gave me eight days I have to serve. People keep asking, "How are you going to serve it? How are you going to serve it?" It's not totally up to me. Um, we're checking. My attorney wants to

07:02
do it one way, I want to do it another. We'll see what happens. Either way, it's eight days. So, they gave me eight days, which if I ran the show, uh, would that is is that overkill? In my opinion, sure. But I'm biased. Uh, the state wanted 45 days. The state wanted 45 days

07:27
and we got eight. You know, people keep throwing around the the word the number 15. I don't It's not their fault. I don't think they understand how this all works. Um, you get they say 15 in Sterns County. You serve 10 of that. I got credit for two served. So, eight, you

07:45
know, you got to do eight days. And honestly, it would have been zero. It would have been nothing. But I, you know, the Gino and Keanu show from back in May or whatever it was when I was on vacation. So, and then people are like, Gino, yeah, Gino runs his mouth. Yeah, I

08:02
don't like what Gino says. I think Gino says really nasty, shitty things. And I also think Gino has a human weakness that way too many people have in that he he can't ever admit he's wrong and he'll double down a lot. So, professionally, I'm out on Gino. I won't uh I will not

08:20
be working with Gino again because uh look, the man just can't control himself. It happen. I'm not saying he has to stop. I'm not saying he has to change the way he is or anything like that. I'm just saying I'm not associated. I can't stop uh other people from, you know, just doing toxic [ __ ] I

08:39
just have to say I'm not part of it and I don't condone it. That's my thing. So, yesterday went like that. Uh, I'm getting my bail money back, which is nice. Uh, 8 days, which is remarkably manageable. I'll be honest, I went into yesterday thinking they were going to

08:55
throw 30 at me um for the violation. I thought they were going to throw 30 at me. So, when I heard 15, I was mildly relieved. When I was informed that it was actually eight, I was like, "Holy shit." Okay. I mean, it really is a matter of perspective. Like, when you prepare yourself for something, the

09:17
things that feel like a huge win and a and a burden off your shoulders. Really is crazy because I was going in thinking 30. The state asked for 45, it ended up being eight. You know, it's almost like if you come in, you go, "Oh man, what are we having for dinner?" And they tell

09:32
you something like, "Ah, it's going to taste like shit." And if it's mid, you're like, "This is gourmet." So, it really has to do a lot with perspectives. So, the state wanted 45. We got eight. So, that was nice. I think Judge Heidi Schultz did a great job of seeing through all the [ __ ] She

09:47
really did. She agreed with us on the violation. Um, she, you know, uh, the the state prosecutor tried to stop me from giving my final statement, which I thought was insane, and the judge saw through that. Um, like I said, if you ever find yourself, my advice to people

10:04
would be this. Don't ever do anything that could make you a defendant because you will be treated like absolute [ __ ] and it won't matter. You will there is no innocent until proven guilty. So I I will say this. Um keep your nose clean. Behave yourself. Don't get involved in the system. Be as

10:27
free as you can. That's what I would say. I did something stupid. You do something stupid. That's that's on me. That's my fault. But you get to learn a lot. And that's really the amazing part of all this is the amount of knowledge because you know a lot of people they

10:45
get to a certain age they stop learning. Uh I feel privileged that I've been able to open my eyes and learn a lot throughout this whole thing. So yesterday look it it feels a little like the Cowboys Packers game to be honest. It feels like like people are saying oh it's a win or oh it's a loss. It it

11:04
feels like a tie, you know? It feels like a tie in a game you thought you were going to get blown out in. You're like, "Ah, I didn't notch the huge victory, but you know, I didn't I didn't get kicked in the teeth either." I I I will say this. If there was one thing I

11:19
could like protest and change about our criminal justice system, it would be that uh I I think defendants need more rights, um I was chastised by the state of Minnesota for having a sense of humor about um my what you know my plea and everything else. And it's like people

11:38
are allowed to cope with traumatic things in their life through humor. That is okay. Those are not violations. That's not anything like that. um you're allowed to have a sense of humor. So I I thought um again going through the system, it's it's an evil system. It's a

11:55
bad system. I think in a lot of cases it does more harm than good. However, I will say to you as a human being, don't there's an easy solution to that. Don't put yourself in that situation. I put myself there and I got to I got to learn a lot about our system. Judges, I think, are are

12:14
good. I've never been like high up in the system. Uh but every judge I've ever dealt with has been very professional, very good. And you know, a skill set that I think is underrated for a lot of judges. I know that you'll talk about like federal judges that reverse Trump

12:28
[ __ ] and stuff. I'm not talking about that on the local level. I've been really impressed with their ability to see through [ __ ] and just call balls and strikes. That is really wild to me. That's uh that's a gift as a human being. And then uh yeah, I would say

12:43
other than that, it's all over. It's all done. Uh we'll figure out these eight days and then life goes on, baby. Life goes on. There was a lot of stuff that the uh that the state wanted that they didn't get and you know, people have been like, "Oh, isn't that awesome?

12:59
Doesn't Not really. I don't I don't feel, you know, I I I don't I'm not going to Again, I did something dumb and you got to take the punishment for it. So what if they didn't get everything they want? We didn't get everything we wanted. Like I said, we said zero days. We said stick

13:14
to the deal. You got to stick to the deal. And they said 45 days and no booze. Uh they didn't get either of those things, but we didn't get our zero. So, you know, things go on. Uh there was one thing that happened during this thing that I do believe shows not just bad faith, but corruption. I I

13:37
can I can maybe get into that later, not today. But um there was a thing I'm going to tell you about it someday. And I think it's going to blow any amount of faith you maybe had in our system because it's uh it kind of speaks to how even when you are the victim of a crime,

13:57
if you've ever done anything in your life, you have no rights. Um it's really wild. I don't think it's a systemic thing. I think it's a personal uh failure, a personal corruption, but I have been advised by council to file reports on it, multiple council. So, I

14:16
will probably be talking about that at a later date. And it does have something to do with the um with something else. It doesn't have to do with this necessarily. It has to do with uh with something else. So, look, man. Uh, yesterday I'm going to say went as well as it

14:37
possibly could have. Went as well as it possibly could have. Like I said, it uh it could have gone a lot worse. And I was really prepared for it to go a lot worse. Um, thank God it didn't. Thank God it didn't. Uh, let's go to 20 bucks from JD Straight Shot. He says, "The

14:59
best thing to come from this is that Gino lost his only part-time gig in the tabverse. Carmuri was coming after your time slot, then had a mental breakdown after one day. Another win for the toe." Uh, Diamonds and Henna says, "Uh, this case would have never gotten that far in

15:17
many states." Look, I live in the People's Republic of Minnesota. I live in the People's Republic of Minnesota. That's all. Uh, Kai Joe Shai says, "Seriously considering 45 days on the taxpayer dime makes the judge a stupid." No, the judge didn't consider that.

15:36
The judge did not consider that. Uh, the judge thought that was a bridge way too far. So, I appreciate that. And I have seen two people are very unhappy in the chat. Uh, I mean, look guys, I didn't make the decisions yesterday. All right? like I I didn't make the

15:57
decisions. So take it up with the judge who made the decisions if you're unhappy with what happened. Like I said, your mental illness, I want to help you. You should not be more upset about this than I am. Like even my fans who might think this is all [ __ ] like Diamonds and

16:14
Henna and others, even they're saying like, "Hey, Aaron took responsibility. What are you going to do? You up? You up?" Like they're like because they have jobs and they have lives. If you're more bummed about this than I am, seek help and maybe consider. And I did see a

16:30
SteelToe hater say this yesterday and they got jumped on big time. They're like, you know, maybe they they kind of had an are we the baddies moment. They were like, are we maybe a little too obsessed with this and is this insane? And like I wanted to go, yes, there you

16:44
go. Pull it that thread. It is you. And I I I didn't see anything else from that person, but I did. I was like, you know what? Maybe there's hope for a couple of them. Maybe there's hope that they can live normal lives. The rest of them, I think I think their steeltoe

17:02
derangement syndrome might have gotten them. Yeah. Again, the thing about the criminal justice system is that they don't want you to have a good attitude. They want you to be broken. They want your spirit dead. And if you don't if you if you have the audacity to have a

17:17
good attitude and an upbeat attitude, they if they can't crush that, they will get pissed and they will I mean they'll just stand there and the state of Minnesota will lie about you. It like honestly going through this, it made me like I had a mild panic attack for other

17:33
people. It was either yesterday or the day before because I was like I was just calculating just how many people in your local community are I I I worry about how many innocent people are in jail. Like yesterday I thought I'm like man if I could have taken any different steps

17:49
in life I would have been a defense attorney because I think being a defense attorney you can really help people and if you want to stick it to the government you want to fight back against a corrupt system I think you have to do it from the inside and being a defense attorney might be a good way

18:04
to do that. I really do think they are the heroes and the knights and the guardians of our system. those in judges. I I think um I think if you work for the government, you work for the devil. I really do. Cuz I I just thought yesterday, I'm like, you know, the

18:21
saying, I'd rather have 10 guilty men go free than one innocent person spend a day in jail. Um I feel that and I worry about others who didn't do anything wrong. Like me, that I did something wrong. But like people who didn't do anything wrong and they just don't have the resources and the

18:41
state can slander them, lie about them, hammer them down, beat their souls, you know, maybe they're not as internally tough as I am. They don't have a sense of humor and a way of dealing with things like, "Hey, life goes on. You learn your lessons. What do you do?

18:55
Teach people." But like, I worry about, you know, the mentally ill. I worry about the poor. I worry about these people who the state doesn't care if they the state doesn't care about the truth. They just care about getting their guy and getting a win and putting a a a plus on their win percentage on

19:14
the back of their baseball card and these poorers get railroaded. You know, I could pay for an attorney. you know, I I could um I I was privileged to be able to go through the way I was and they still try to break you and they still I mean just and if you the the crazy part to me is if you

19:35
choose not to be broken, they will use it against you. It's I I mean I I worry about others. This made me really worry about other people in that sense. I it just eight eight days feels like nothing compared to the weight that's off my shoulders. You know, the the weight

19:59
that's off my shoulders. Um 8 days it'll come and go. Eight days will come and go. How how many times have you you know you've been on a trip or you got a trip coming up and it's eight days away and you're like, "Ah, it's forever." And then blink of an eye here's here's what

20:16
I figure. I got at least 40 more years spinning around on this rock. I got to find eight days of that next 40 years to give and then poof. The the dumbest thing I've ever done in my life goes away. It's all done. Scott Jonesy with a dollar says, "How are the kids in

20:39
SP taking it all in all this insanity? It's how it affects others that I've thought about. And aside, how did Gino and Keanu manage to pay their rent? I don't ask people that question. Uh, you know, look, uh, SP's like a she's she's bummed, you know, about the whole eight days thing, but it is

21:00
I I mean, how do I how do I put this? It's manageable, you know. It's just something you'll do it, you'll go through it, and then it'll be over, you know. Uh, as far as the the kids go, um, I'm not going to I look, I think there needs to be certain parts of your life that are private.

21:22
And, uh, how the mother of my children and I talk to our children about that, I'm I'm going to keep that home if that's all right with you. One thing I'm very grateful for is I get to teach my kids very valuable lessons and they don't get to go, you know, because I

21:38
remember when my parents would try to teach me [ __ ] You'd get defiant and you'd be like, "Oh, what do you know? You don't know anything." And blah blah blah blah blah. I get to teach my kids now based on, "Hey, I know." All right. Don't don't tell me like, "Oh, what do

21:51
you know?" Like when they get older, they're not like that now, but like when they get older like, "Oh, what do you know?" It's like, "Mother, I know. I know uh Los because there's a lot of people who probably think like, "Oh, I can do this and I'll be fine. I'll do I'm like, do I know where all the

22:07
pitfalls are? You can't [ __ ] me." I don't know. Uh also, my attorney was um very interested and um in the fact that people were organizing a harassment campaign to try to have me harmed whenever I go in. uh that has been reported and that will be dealt with. Um again, I think that's a sign of

22:33
crippling mental illness and you should probably get that checked on in my opinion. L Omega Red Boy says, "Hey, you're not in jail." That was another thing yesterday. I had to keep a lot of stuff quiet yesterday, but there were a few things I was kind of laughing at the anti- Steeltoe people

22:51
about because I I think the reason they're mad today is that you notice anytime like I tell them what's going on and they don't want to believe it, it's you're lying. It's like, well, guys, I'm I'm living it. Sorry. I I know what's going on. But I think what they're mad

23:08
about is they set themselves up for these delusions and then those delusions didn't come true. So they had to cope about it somehow. Like yesterday they were like, "You're going to jail today." And like I knew a long time ago that I wasn't going to jail today or yesterday. I knew that I

23:30
we we knew we weren't. Uh my attorney was like I think that he's like I think we're going to pretty much get the deal and we pretty much did but he said even if you get sentenced to a little jail time you're not going tomorrow obviously. So I knew that wasn't going to happen. Uh

23:48
but I just kind of let people believe it cuz they whip themselves up into a frenzy and then they get to be mad at me after. And then there were other people going your felony is still on the table. Your I'm like it's not guys. It's literally in black and white that it's

24:02
going to be dismissed today. And then they uh they they thought that that was going to happen. And then again, these people, they build up [ __ ] in their head. And then when they don't get it, they get mad at me. Like if I get something that they didn't think I was

24:18
going to get, then I'm lying. It's like, guys, it's crazy how you think. Sean Le uh god damn it. Why can't I think of his uh handle? I talked to him. I call him Shawn, potentially criminal. He was He asked me, he's like, "Is 8 days enough for you to convert to Islam?

24:37
I'm going to get I I think one thing I'm going to do, you get to read a lot. I I think I'm going to read and I should probably exercise. I should probably do planks and situps and [ __ ] like that and, you know, work on this [ __ ] since I got time." It's uh people ask you,

24:51
they're like, "What what's jail like?" Cuz they're like, "Oh, jail's going to be boring." It's really really boring. You can I I mean I think uh the first time I was there for the arraignment I talked to one of the guards for a while about like football and [ __ ] like the

25:07
Viking season was coming up. So oh my god that was the Darnold season. It was that long ago and uh yeah we we talked about that for a while and then I read a book and you know if you find [ __ ] to do you can you can pass the time. Yeah. I also um uh part of the sentence was up to

25:29
I I thought this was interesting. I had to ask my attorney about it. Uh he they they said up to two years probation, right? And I'm like what does up to mean? And he said uh what's up to uh he said that it's kind of their discretion like cuz I I thought it was just two two

25:50
years straight up, right? like two years. That was part of our deal. It was, you know, you get a suspended sentence and two years probation. And uh he said it's actually at probation's discretion. Like if you turn out to be a boring probation guy and you're not doing anything and you're checking in
1550sAdd a noteJump to

26:06
and they find it to be a waste of time, they'll say, you know, you're good. So, I don't know. I'm I'm uh I'm a rookie when it comes to this particular

Summary of the Transcript
Aaron opens by saying he was surprised at how much support he received after his sentencing hearing, instead of the backlash he expected. He criticizes people who are angrier about his situation than he is, suggesting they need psychological help.

He explains that he had his sentencing hearing the previous day. The prosecution asked for 45 days in jail and additional restrictions (like a drinking ban), but the judge rejected most of those requests. Ultimately, Aaron received 8 days of jail time (down from what he feared might be 30 or more) and will have up to two years of probation, but the exact length will depend on probation officials. He’ll also get his bail money back.

Aaron repeatedly criticizes the U.S. criminal justice system, saying “innocent until proven guilty” doesn’t exist in practice. He accuses the Minnesota prosecutor of acting vindictively and trying to punish him for maintaining humor and composure during the process. He praises his judge (Heidi Schultz) for being fair and level-headed, and says defense attorneys are “true heroes” for protecting people against an unfair system.

He says he’s cutting ties with Gino (a former associate) for being too toxic, but emphasizes he’s not telling others what to do — only distancing himself. He also says the experience has made him worry about poor or mentally ill defendants who lack his resources or coping skills, believing many innocent people are probably in jail.

Aaron frames the outcome as “not a win, not a loss, more like a tie in a game you thought you’d get blown out in.” He takes responsibility for his own mistake but is relieved the sentence wasn’t harsher. He plans to spend his jail time reading and exercising, and stresses the lesson: don’t get involved with the criminal justice system at all if you can avoid it.

He ends by saying the whole ordeal is basically over and life goes on.
For completeness, here are Aaron's comments from last night:

0:00
Welcome to the show. But what happened?
0:03
What happened? Everybody who hates the
0:05
toe was telling me I wasn't going to be
0:06
here tonight. That I wasn't going to
0:08
make What happened? What happened, guys?
0:12
Ah, I'm just busting your balls. I know.
0:15
Look,
0:16
I know you need me. I knew you wouldn't
0:19
leave me. And here you are. Welcome to
0:22
the show. We've got a great one. Look, I
0:25
know why you're here. And it's not
0:28
because I'm burping up acid because I
0:30
decided that SP and I would have pizza
0:33
and orange juice for dinner. Why did I
0:35
combine pizza and orange juice? A long
0:39
line of bad decisions
0:42
got me to pizza and orange juice.
0:45
Welcome to the show, guys. Um, look,
0:49
I I'm sorry
0:51
if you came here expecting a certain
0:53
thing. Don't get mad at me. I know you
0:55
guys get mad if I have a positive
0:58
outlook or a smile on my face or I
1:01
correct anything you say. Don't get
1:03
weird on me. Don't you guys get
1:06
psychotic, please, cuz a lot of you you
1:09
just
1:11
you got to learn to take it easy a
1:13
little bit. I try to tell you, but you
1:16
don't listen. There was a lot of [ __ ] I
1:18
was um I was having a hard time keeping
1:20
a straight face this morning because a
1:23
lot of people were getting a lot of
1:25
things wrong. Uh I did have my
1:28
sentencing hearing today. It went better
1:31
than I thought it was going to go. Uh
1:34
you know, I haven't talked about it at
1:36
all. Uh I've been a very good boy, which
1:39
was confirmed today. I was appreciative
1:41
of that. Uh there was that thing that
1:44
came out yesterday that uh the judge
1:46
agreed was total [ __ ] which I'm
1:48
very happy about. I think it was a last
1:50
minute thing um because I was being a
1:53
good boy for the last 3 months and this
1:56
was kind of a just kind of a last minute
1:58
thing
1:59
uh by the the the prosecutor. And you
2:02
know, I get it. Look, it's it's her job
2:04
to, you know, do do her thing. So, I'm
2:07
not mad at her, but we kind of knew it
2:09
was [ __ ] from Jump Street, so we
2:11
weren't too worried about it. It was
2:12
nice that they saw through that uh in
2:14
the court. Uh the other thing I I was
2:17
watching today, I was watching some of
2:19
the chat and some people were just
2:22
apoplele. Some of the steeltoe hate
2:24
people were just apoplelectic like their
2:26
life was going to be ruined if I wasn't
2:28
like hauled away in cuffs today.
2:32
I don't mean to spo I could have spoiled
2:34
it for you this morning, but I figured I
2:36
was just going to let you wait there. I
2:38
was never getting led away in cuffs
2:40
today. Like that was never going to
2:42
happen. Like even the judge said today,
2:44
she laughed at the idea. She was like, I
2:46
don't even do that for felonies.
2:49
And so I that was that was kind of the
2:51
first thing I laughed at. The other
2:53
thing that you guys were uh the minority
2:56
of you were going off about was like,
2:58
"Oh yeah, it's going to be a felony.
3:00
It's going to be and I'm like, "Guys,
3:01
it's a deal." Like, it's getting We do
3:04
the guilty plea and then the felonies
3:06
dismissed. Like, there was a gasp. There
3:08
was an I heard a few people go when they
3:11
said, "Yeah, the felonies dismissed."
3:13
And we're like, "Yeah, guys, that's the
3:15
whole reason we did this."
3:17
Like, I I don't I I don't understand why
3:21
people thought that. I don't know what
3:22
bad advice they were listening to. Then
3:24
there were a bunch of people and I'm not
3:27
going to bust these people's balls
3:28
because
3:30
I I think they were a little more
3:34
they were a little closer to where where
3:36
I was thinking. They're like you're
3:37
going to go away for a you're going to
3:39
have to serve like 30 days or whatever.
3:41
And that's kind that's what I was
3:42
thinking like I was going into today
3:44
going look weeducked up on the
3:46
violation. That's legit. Uh you know I I
3:51
don't think the the prosecutor liked the
3:53
deal. that we cut initially. So, they
3:56
were if they got the violation, they
3:57
were going to do what they could with
3:58
it. So, I kind of thought it 30. I'll
4:02
say this about my sentencing hearing.
4:04
This judge unbelievably fair. Like, I
4:07
mean, by the book, like just it's
4:11
unbelievable like being a judge how
4:14
these people can just shut off biases
4:17
and just do their job. It's one of the
4:20
rarest jobs in the world. I really do
4:22
think defense lawyers are heroes because
4:24
I do believe and going through the
4:26
system, I do believe that it's not
4:28
designed for innocent until proven
4:30
guilty. It's designed to break human
4:32
beings. I think it really is designed to
4:35
break human beings. I think there's an
4:36
assumption of guilt from the beginning
4:38
in our system in general. Uh that's kind
4:41
of how I feel going through it. But like
4:43
the one thing I'm impressed with is one,
4:45
defense attorneys. They're incredible
4:46
people. Uh they really are like the last
4:48
vanguard against uh violent uh
4:51
violations of the Constitution. Uh the
4:54
other thing is judges, man. And I don't
4:55
know, maybe there's some bad ones out
4:57
there. I have no idea, but the way
5:00
they're able to just see through and cut
5:02
through [ __ ] and just deliver I
5:05
thought is I was so impressed by that.
5:08
So what happened today was because of
5:11
the one violation
5:13
uh the state of Minnesota wanted 45 days
5:18
and I was just like like I I we thought
5:22
it should be zero. We thought just stick
5:24
to the agreement because I've been a
5:25
good boy for 3 months. I thought
5:29
they would just do you know we we were
5:32
like we'll make it zero and they were
5:34
like make it 45. And what they ended up
5:37
on was eight. Now, I understand not a
5:40
lot of people go through the system, so
5:42
I'm not going to get mad at you for
5:43
getting [ __ ] wrong. It's okay. And I
5:45
know you hate me, so you want it to be
5:46
as as bad as possible. Um, when the
5:50
sentence is 15 and you have two days
5:54
served, I got credit for two days
5:56
served. You serve 10 of the 15. So,
6:00
sometimes you hear about people who get
6:01
like four years in jail, right? They get
6:04
four years, they're out in two. How the
6:06
hell does that happen? Well, I'll get uh
6:08
15 sentenced serve 10 time served for
6:11
two. So, it's going to be eight days. Uh
6:15
which, you know, look, I mean, if you
6:17
just do it by the math, uh the state of
6:19
Minnesota wanted 45 days. We wanted
6:22
zero. We got eight. Uh you can't really
6:26
look a gift horse in the mouth. And and
6:28
this is what I mean by I thought the
6:30
judge just did a fantastic job. just did
6:32
their job. Called it right down the
6:34
middle. Basically, what the judge said
6:36
was, "I'm gonna honor the deal. You
6:38
plead guilty to this. I'll dismiss the
6:40
felony. Cool. Awesome. But because you
6:44
had that violation, here's basically a
6:46
week of time."
6:48
What the deal called for was I was going
6:51
to get a a 364day sentence, stayed with
6:55
two years probate, up to up to two years
6:57
probation, and that's at the discretion
6:59
of probation. Um, and we're going to do
7:01
this and then we're going to do the
7:02
show. I know a lot of you want to do
7:03
this like the whole show. I'm not going
7:05
to. I consider to I'm so thankful for
7:08
today. Uh, it's over. It's done with.
7:12
It's full speed ahead. I'm so happy that
7:14
this is finally over and we can put it
7:16
all behind us. And hopefully you can. If
7:18
you can't put it, like if I can put it
7:20
behind me and you watching this, you
7:23
can't put it behind you as just a
7:25
viewer, you really do need to have your
7:27
brain checked for some parasocial
7:29
problems. Because look, I don't care if
7:34
you get over it, but if you can't get
7:36
over it, I just need I need it to get
7:38
through your head somehow. It's a you
7:40
problem, not a me problem. I don't know
7:43
what you should be thrilled. Like, you
7:45
should be very If you hate my guts, you
7:46
should be thrilled. If you're thinking
7:48
eight days is bad, like eight days is
7:50
crazy for this whole thing. Like, it's
7:53
wild. It really is. It's It's
7:55
mindboggling.
7:57
But you should be very thrilled about
8:00
it. I don't understand why you wouldn't
8:02
be. So, they uh the state wants 45. We
8:05
get eight. We wanted zero. We get eight.
8:07
Nobody's happy. Everybody's happy. I
8:10
think the judge did perfect job. They
8:13
basically they said, "Look, you'd be
8:15
getting your way, but you got the one
8:16
violation." Boom. There you go. Eight
8:19
days. So, that's where we're at now. And
8:24
you know, I got to tell you, it it feels
8:26
like a weight has been lifted off my
8:29
shoulders. And again, um it wouldn't be
8:33
nothing if I didn't do something stupid.
8:36
I did something stupid.
8:39
You pay a price for it. You move on with
8:42
your life. And again, if this if this is
8:45
going to trigger you, if this reaction
8:46
is going to upset you, again, I'm sorry.
8:50
I can't be what you need me to be. I
8:52
just have to be authentic. So, there you
8:56
go. Down and dirty. Uh it was very nice
9:00
that that uh second violation thing. The
9:03
judge did throw that out. They said,
9:04
"I'm not considering that because I
9:06
agree with Mr. Rimhol and Mr. Peterson."
9:09
That's got a lot of questions on that
9:12
one. Um, I did say today that I am out
9:14
of the Gino Biscanti business. That is
9:16
1,000% accurate. Look, man, the dude's
9:19
reckless. What can I say? Gino Biscanti
9:23
is a reckless guy. And uh, you can't
9:26
have reckless people like that in your
9:28
orbit when you got crazy [ __ ] going on.
9:31
You know, I really do feel like the
9:33
weight of the world, like there were so
9:35
many different factions and thousands of
9:37
people trying to shove you down into
9:40
this box like into this grave and you
9:42
popped out of it and you made it and
9:44
it's over with now. But like after you
9:46
win, you know, I always say we won the
9:48
war. Now, after you win the war, that
9:50
doesn't mean you just gloat and you go,
9:52
"Oh, we won the war, blah, blah,
9:53
whatever. These people are dumb." You
9:54
know, these these viewers that, you
9:57
know, troll people are dumb. You you can
9:58
talk that kind of [ __ ] all day long, but
10:00
you also have to look inside your own
10:02
camp and you got to say, "All right,
10:05
who's with me and who's for themselves."
10:07
And I did say uh in court today, I said,
10:10
"I am I am will never again work with
10:13
Gino Bascanti publicly or
10:15
professionally." And that is 1,000%
10:18
true. Uh I've even told Gino this. I've
10:21
said, "I I can't work with you. I'm
10:24
sorry. You're reckless. Uh I you know he
10:27
says he he's like oh laughing about the
10:30
disavow. No I disavow the [ __ ] he says.
10:32
I think he says wild crazy offensive
10:34
[ __ ] and I don't think he should. I
10:36
think it's bad for him quite frankly.
10:39
But um yeah I'm Yeah. When I said that I
10:43
I found you know Gino's words about
10:47
different things uh disgusting and
10:49
everything. I do. I do. I find them
10:52
really really gross. And I think for his
10:54
own mental health he should stop. I I
10:57
think uh you know he keeps saying you
10:59
know oh you around in that dabble verse
11:01
it eats at your soul blah blah blah. And
11:03
I think he's right. I agree with him. I
11:05
think all these people have kind of
11:06
their souls have rotted out. Yours
11:08
included if you're into that. No
11:09
offense. But I don't think he realizes
11:12
that he's so neck deep in it he can't
11:14
pull it himself out. And I think it's
11:16
rotted his soul.
11:18
You got to get up into that rarified air
11:21
if you ask me. So, I got to say uh thank
11:24
you to a bunch of people. Uh we had some
11:28
people throwing money at the toe, not
11:30
only this morning, but throughout the
11:31
day. Uh it was wonderful. Thank you to
11:35
the person who wants to stay anonymous
11:36
who threw a hundred bucks at the PayPal.
11:38
I appreciate that. So, no goal tonight,
11:43
no goal this morning, no goal tomorrow
11:45
morning, and I think like 90 bucks away
11:50
uh from tomorrow evening. Numero Uno
11:52
with a dollar also says, "It's like I
11:54
always say with friends like Gino, who
11:56
needs hunchbacks?" And I see a lot of
11:59
people are upset that I'm not mad or I'm
12:03
not that I'm not in a terrible mood.
12:06
Again, guys, you got to check
12:07
yourselves. You're hurting your You're
12:09
not You're only hurting you when you do
12:11
that stuff. Uh Cleaner with $2 says,
12:13
"What's the story about you getting put
12:15
on a the fender list?" No, no, no, no,
12:17
no, no, no. There's a lot of people who
12:20
got a lot of things wrong. I think
12:21
because it was wishful thinking on their
12:23
part. Like some people just wanted some
12:27
people just wanted certain things to be
12:29
true. It didn't end up being that way.
12:32
Oh well. Again, I think you guys are
12:35
going to be fine. I really do. You know,
12:39
you'll get bored. You'll go away. The
12:43
toe will keep doing its show. And
12:47
I by God, I think you guys are going to
12:50
get healthy. I'm telling you right now.
12:52
There you go. Drunken Donuts. Will you
12:54
get a communal visit with SP? I'm not
12:57
I'm not exactly sure how it works yet.
13:00
Not sure how it works yet. $200 from
13:03
Unforced Ego says, "Another win for the
13:06
toe. Ups to you for taking
13:07
accountability for your actions,
13:09
brother. Some people are incapable of
13:10
self-reflection and repentance, so be
13:13
grateful." Yeah, people were mad that I
13:15
referenced my newfound faith. They were
13:17
mad about that. Uh, that's helped me a
13:20
ton. So, I was happy to profess that in
13:23
front of a court, in front of people.
13:26
Uh, I if you're I I got I'm going to try
13:28
to give you some advice even though
13:30
you're not going to like it. You're not
13:31
going to take it.
13:33
If you're living your life for somebody
13:34
else, whether it's me or anyone else,
13:37
you're going to have problems. You're
13:39
gonna wonder why everyone else is so
13:42
happy and you're so mad all the time. I
13:45
don't know what to I mean,
13:48
again, I don't care if you figure that
13:50
out, but I I just I hope you do because
13:53
sometimes I see some of you and I go,
13:55
"God, that would be a depressing way to
13:56
live." Like I said, I am just uh I'm
13:59
happy with the way it went. It went
14:02
better than I thought it would because
14:05
uh the the state of Minnesota when it
14:07
came to me, they were out for blood. You
14:09
know, they were really out for blood.
14:11
And again, uh I'm not going to sit here
14:13
and be like, "Oh yeah, the judge gave us
14:15
exactly what we No, the judge gave, you
14:17
know, got to do eight more days than I
14:20
wanted to do, but I think what the judge
14:22
did was they went, "Look, you would have
14:23
got it your way, but here's this little
14:26
up in the middle. Uh here's eight days
14:28
for it. Thank you very very much. Well
14:32
guys, I like I said,
14:34
I am so glad it's over. I'm so glad it's
14:37
done with. And uh we just got we just
14:40
got one little uh you know, the the the
14:42
cost of your actions
14:45
left to go. That's what it is. Just that
14:47
cost of your actions is left. So, thank
14:50
you guys. Uh city of Shore View with a
14:54
dollar
14:55
says, "Stay friends with Gino. invite
14:57
him over here for the anniversary show
14:59
to hang out, but that's it. Kiki is much
15:01
more rational. Um, look,
15:05
I think uh like I I think I said it
15:08
perfectly. Publicly and professionally,
15:10
I will not be working with Gino Bascanti
15:13
anymore. I won't. Uh Parlock with two
15:17
bucks says, "You shouldn't have gotten
15:19
any time." Well, you know, again, that's
15:22
what I said. Uh that's what our argument
15:26
was. The other argument was 45.
15:30
You know, it was um it was a little
15:33
closer to our way, but you know, it's
15:37
less than they wanted, more than we
15:38
wanted. And isn't that what a compromise
15:39
is? Like I said, I think that judge uh
15:42
played it beautifully. I do I think they
15:43
did uh Judge Heidi Schultz, I believe,
15:47
did a great job. Uh Aaron, are you going
15:50
to do eight straight or did you get
15:52
weekends? Uh and are you better watch Oz
15:55
to get prepped? Oh, and get prep.
15:58
Those jokes, of course. Uh, we don't
16:01
know yet. Um, we kind of, it's kind of
16:04
up in the air. It's not decided at the
16:07
moment. Um, people have like I've had
16:10
people writing to me today. They've been
16:12
like, "Dude, just do it all at once.
16:14
Just do it the the whole way through."
16:16
And I'm like, I'm just going to
16:20
to me I'm just going to kind of probably
16:22
talk to some people,
16:25
you know, see what they think, see what
16:27
the the deal is, see what's I like. I
16:29
don't know what's out there. Like you
16:30
got honestly, guys, here's what I know.
16:33
I know what happened today. That's it.
16:37
That's what I like I I'm not privy to
16:40
much more information. Like the only
16:42
things I got to straighten out today was
16:44
people are saying 15, it's eight. Um,
16:48
and there were a lot of people who
16:49
thought the felony was going to be on
16:50
the table. It never was. And there were
16:52
people who thought I was going to jail
16:54
today, which again, never was. You know
16:57
what the worst part about Gino is? Is
17:00
that he knows he's up. He knows he's
17:03
hurt people. He knows he's kind of like
17:06
done wrong, but he'll never you'll never
17:09
get him to admit it. Yeah. In in fact,
17:11
if you tell him he has, he'll double
17:14
down. That's just his n. Some people are
17:16
like that. I've I've known people like
17:18
that my whole life. Uh Rumage Sale with
17:21
a good question says, "Do you have to
17:23
give up alcohol?" Oh, that's another
17:24
thing. The state did ask, and I thought
17:27
this was really weird cuz it's not an
17:28
alcohol or chemical uh offense.
17:32
They said uh the the state said, "Well,
17:35
we want him to not be able to drink
17:38
because sometimes he has a beer on his
17:40
show."
17:42
And I'm like, "How often are you
17:44
watching the toe?" I probably have a
17:45
beer once every 20 30 shows. So, like,
17:50
how much toe are is the state of
17:53
Minnesota consuming
17:55
that there's But the judge kind of she
17:57
passed she she didn't even like address
17:59
that one. She just kind of It was kind
18:01
of like that second violation. She's
18:03
like, "No, that's not a thing. Sorry." I
18:06
again, I can't say enough how great that
18:09
judge is. She did a very She was like I
18:12
couldn't get a read on her for this
18:14
whole last year. I couldn't get a read
18:16
on what she was thinking, feeling,
18:17
doing, anything. And then when she came
18:20
down uh with a sentence, it was like the
18:23
most fair thing you could come up with.
18:26
I I thought she did. She's a pro, man.
18:28
She's a real pro.
And a summary of last night:
Aaron opens his show joking about haters who thought he’d be led away in cuffs after his sentencing. He confirms the hearing went much better than expected: a prosecutor pushed for 45 days due to a probation violation, his side argued for zero, and the judge compromised at 15 days (with credit/time served reducing it to 8 actual days). He emphasizes the felony charge was dismissed as part of the plea deal and never realistically on the table, despite speculation.

Aaron praises his defense attorneys and the judge’s fairness, saying the system generally assumes guilt but that judges and defense lawyers are essential. He acknowledges he made mistakes, takes responsibility, and sees the outcome as a relief—“a weight lifted.”

He criticizes people who obsess over his case or wanted a worse outcome, calling it a “parasocial” issue, and says if he can move on, they should too. He also publicly distances himself from Gino Bisconti, calling him reckless, offensive, and unhealthy to be associated with.

Aaron thanks supporters for donations, notes there’s no fundraising “goal” for the show that night, and mentions his faith has helped him through. He closes by saying he’s grateful it’s over, the punishment is manageable, and life and the show will go on.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
They’re already planning how to trigger more violations:

And Aaron is dumb enough to take the bait.
At some point, do we think the court will see all these people working at Melton/Nick's behest as essentially the same thing as Geno immolating Aaron for $3k?

By the way: This is why people don't cooperate with courts. Because, except for the slip up of having Geno/Keanu host that one time, Aaron has been a good boy or whatever. And it got him 8 days in jail because he tried to be reasonable and work with the court. Nick fights and is unreasonable, and gets a better deal for a worse crime. Everyone watching this takes away the lesson: Be an unreasonable dick and NEVER cooperate.
 
Nick's soon-posting lmao
1759333198764.png
1759333214010.png 1759333228089.png
1759333259315.png 1759333267065.png
1759333294626.png

1759333309249.png


"admitted perjury from geno yesterday" what are they talking about? Aaron said if the court shows him mercy he won't work with Geno again. Geno said yesterday that after the hearing he and Aaron were yucking it up over text afterward. Those two things are not contradictory, there's no perjury there. Hell, there's not even perjury if Aaron changes his mind tomorrow and invites Geno on his show.

These people are fucking retarded - Nick especially.

1759333514134.png

How, indeed. At first I thought this was someone making a dig at Nick.
 
- Will took a look at the audience for the Nick/Aaron story and decided that there are more Aaron alogs out there on the internet than Nick alogs. That there are more views and more engagement in being on the dabbleverse side of things than complaining about Nick.
If he ever thought that, that was a bad miscalculation on his part. It's been demonstrably proven there is way more engagement in shitting on Nick than Aaron.

That's not even what this is about though. Like I said, Herren was initially content to try and play both sides, but Aaron got tired of it, and cut him off. In retaliation, Herren went full Team Nick and has been on an unhinged vendetta against Aaron ever since.

Seems like that should have set up some editorial red flags like: "Hey, why are you blocked by one of the people in your story?"
There are no editorial safeguards in place... yet. That's why he gets away with this shit. Station manager Jim Parker let's him.

I figure if Gray Media ends up removing Jim Parker (likely, given that new owners frequently like to bring in their own management), Herren's ass is grass. Gray wouldn't even have to touch Herren from on high. A new station manager would simply have to do their job.
 
The puppet's stuff also suggests the issues that were in play with the second violation. The judge (and to a lesser extent the prosecutor) were playing fast and loose legally to use that second violation to create a self-serving set of facts that were not properly established nor had been properly examined in the spirit of any sort of due process. The judge as much as announces "I'm going to fuck you over with this. I'm not going to listen to any argument about it. I don't care. Fuck the law." The puppet's account suggests that Aaron's attorney was making the expected threat that if the judge went too far in the sentence, they would be appealing. And rightly so.
I'm not so sure.

Look, Aaron directly told his audience that when he is on vacation, Geno and Keanu would be hosting HIS SHOW, and his audience should ask them questions he can't talk about. Geno promptly spilled his guts. That violation is fairly straight forward.

Then Aaron, after being rearrested and conditions tightened, paid Geno to come perform, cos he is an amazing talent obviously, and Geno cracked his jokes re Kayla.

If you are the Judge, what are you supposed to think? It's harsh for the second one, I agree, but Aaron did this to himself.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
If you are the Judge, what are you supposed to think?
The judge only works with what they are told, its Aaron's lawyers job to represent his client and present to the court evidence or explanations that would put this entire saga into the proper context, which might have saved Aaron a lot of grief.

Aaron and his lawyers over the past ~18 months have so royally fucked him, its hard to overstate.
 
So, you know, things go on. Uh there was one thing that happened during this thing that I do believe shows not just bad faith, but corruption. I I

13:37
But um there was a thing I'm going to tell you about it someday. And I think it's going to blow any amount of faith you maybe had in our system because it's uh it kind of speaks to how even when you are the victim of a crime,
13:57
if you've ever done anything in your life, you have no rights. Um it's really wild. I don't think it's a systemic thing. I think it's a personal uh failure, a personal corruption, but I have been advised by council to file reports on it, multiple council. So, I
14:16
will probably be talking about that at a later date. And it does have something to do with the um with something else. It doesn't have to do with this necessarily. It has to do with uh with something else.
This is clearly referring to Nick’s conduct after the ex-parte HRO stipulations, conduct that both of Aaron’s counsel in those cases advised him to report to the police.
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So its something that occurred prior to Ross Montgomery's withdrawal motion on July 21st.
Could the so-called “corruption” simply be the prosecutor’s lack of interest in pursuing the matter? What could it be? 🤔🤔🤔
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
If I understand the situation correctly Aaron got slammed because now he is a repeat offender with multiple violations between stuff with his ex-wife as well as the Rekieta's. So rather than getting a first time offender treatment of five years probation they actually said he need to go to time out for 15 days and think about what he has done. The MN system appears to view the quantity of offenses rather than the quality of the offense when it comes to sentencing.
*Ignoring the fact Nick was found with "dealer" level weight of drugs and guns inside the same domicile which as far as I am aware is instant jail in many other states.
 
This is clearly referring to Nick’s conduct after the HRO stipulations, conduct that both of Aaron’s counsel in those cases advised him to report to the police.
Could the so-called “corruption” simply be the prosecutor’s lack of interest in pursuing the matter?
I guaran-fucking-tee Nick and/or Melton report this for violating the gag order of the HRO cases.
 
*Ignoring the fact Nick was found with "dealer" level weight of drugs and guns inside the same domicile which as far as I am aware is instant jail in many other states.
Nick I think is getting the professional "we're all in the legal system" benefit more than anything else. Like how cops sometimes look the other way when they pull over a buddy. "Oh, he's a lawyer like us. He wouldn't REALLY deal cocaine or dose his daughter."

This is clearly referring to Nick’s conduct after the HRO stipulations, conduct that both of Aaron’s counsel in those cases advised him to report to the police.
Its something that occurred prior to Ross Montgomery's withdrawal motion on July 21st.
Could the so-called “corruption” simply be the prosecutor’s lack of interest in pursuing the matter?
I think it has to do with the coordinated campaign -- someone was joking about how Aaron had to be escorted out by police because on his way in, people were asking him questions/trying to stop him and talk to him who were clearly there to harass him.
 
Ostatnio edytowane przez moderatora:
If I understand the situation correctly Aaron got slammed because now he is a repeat offender with multiple violations between stuff with his ex-wife as well as the Rekieta's. So rather than getting a first time offender treatment of five years probation they actually said he need to go to time out for 15 days and think about what he has done. The MN system appears to view the quantity of offenses rather than the quality of the offense when it comes to sentencing.
*Ignoring the fact Nick was found with "dealer" level weight of drugs and guns inside the same domicile which as far as I am aware is instant jail in many other states.
And that Aaron got an activist judge and he technically broke his probation terms by letting Geno host and talk shit about Kayla, something the judge who already hated him was more than willing to use to fuck him as hard as possible.
 
I find myself believing Geno when he says that Aaron texted him afterwards, yucking it up.
Aaron totally texted Gino. Then Gino blabber in the worst way, like the drunken loswr does.

Aaron said he wouldn't *work* with Gino *professionally," not that he would disassociate from Gino & never speak with him again. Aaron is an insecure tard who thinks Gino will help him move up in his career. He thinks Gino is a friend.

Tard move

After sentencing he called Gino. Guessing he was mad & Gino laughed it off. He then immediately streamed that *they* laughed it off. So within moments Gino did what he does - screw Aaron, y basically saying Aaron laughed & gave the finger to the judge.

Aaron's lawyer probably convinced him to drop Gino *professionally*, but Aaron is too retarded to realize he should just drop Gino and especially not use him as a confidant. Because Gino will spill the beans in the worst, most dangerous, way cuz its funny & he wants a dollar.
 
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