Gypsy Nirvana

racerboy71

bud bootlegger
nirvana seeds is not gypsy nirvana..
gypsy nirvana owns(ed) the seed boutique, a very separate entity from nirvana seeds..
 

HGK420

Well-Known Member
Soooo does he own seedbay too then?

i see its linked on the boutique. i hope not. i just started browsing there.
 

|B3RNY|

Well-Known Member
nirvana seeds is not gypsy nirvana..
gypsy nirvana owns(ed) the seed boutique, a very separate entity from nirvana seeds..

Good to know, I assumed he owned Nirvana seeds.. I've never ordered their seeds (boutique) by my opinions stand.. . nobody deserves jail time for selling seeds, being an as$hole or hiding from cops... looks as though he was right in hiding. Hopeully the rat gets his karma back, SoB.
 

yesum

Well-Known Member
Sorry to hear this. Hope he had plans to deal with this type of thing and will ride it out.

Over on Icmag they kind of have this censored, which is weird and wrong imo. They do a lot of censoring over there. Great site and info but some practices that seem wrong to me.
 

apollo4

Well-Known Member
He was an arrogant asshole for those that know him he would be cool with you today flip out on you tomorrow.we knew karma would come back.he will sing like a bird too
 

greenghost420

Well-Known Member
yea i was checking out seedbay i think it is, they had some nice shit, tons of storys of people getting ripped though
 

HGK420

Well-Known Member
thats too bad. it had potential.

completely off topic but does anyone have experience with cannazon? the seed-bank not the auction site.
 

Jogro

Well-Known Member
Good to know, I assumed he owned Nirvana seeds.. I've never ordered their seeds (boutique) by my opinions stand.. . nobody deserves jail time for selling seeds, being an as$hole or hiding from cops... looks as though he was right in hiding. Hopeully the rat gets his karma back, SoB.
I agree, but it looks like its more than just selling ceeds:

Mison said Nirvana was later indicted for conspiracy to manufacture, distribute and possess with intent to distribute marijuana; conspiracy to import marijuana. . .and conspiracy to export marijuana from the US to England.
Don't know how hard/easy its going to be to make these "conspiracy" charges stick, but it sounds like they wanted this guy pretty bad. He's also been indicted for money laundering, and that particular charge could be a tough one to beat.
 

yesum

Well-Known Member
^^ Was not clear if marijuana meant seeds or pot? If he was into moving pot then that is something else again. Not that any of it should draw a sentence or fine.

The laundering money... would any seedbank have to come up with fancy money tricks to avoid getting asked where they got all the money? The DEA so often hypes stuff up that I am thinking he was just moving seeds and had to be creative with the money from their sale.
 

Jogro

Well-Known Member
^^ Was not clear if marijuana meant seeds or pot?
You'd have to read the text of the actual indictment to know what was meant there, but FWIW, under US Federal law, viable ce-eds are considered "mari-juana".

If he was into moving pot then that is something else again. Not that any of it should draw a sentence or fine.
It was "conspiracy". Again hard to know what that means without reading the actual indictment.

Maybe it just meant he knew that the se-eds he was moving were going to be used in an illegal commercial grow. . .even if he had no more involvement in said grow other than selling the beans.

Also, an indictment is one thing. . .actually proving a case beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law something else. The MO of agencies like this is first locate guy they want to nab, then catch him, then throw the book at him, charging him with anything and everything they have even the slightest hint of evidence for, even if they really don't have the "goods" to make it stick. The idea is to scare the defendant with massive charges, and ridiculous penalties, and also massive legal expenses, so that he opts to plead guilty instead of even trying to fight it. Sometimes this works. . .sometimes not.

The laundering money... would any seedbank have to come up with fancy money tricks to avoid getting asked where they got all the money? The DEA so often hypes stuff up that I am thinking he was just moving seeds and had to be creative with the money from their sale.
Again, don't know, you'd have to read the details of the indictment, and then see what evidence was presented in court.

In fact, since possessing and selling beans is perfectly legal in England and many other places, for many banks, there is simply no need for "money laundering" at all. They can run a legal open books business, and report their income.

Maybe this guy did try to launder money. . .maybe not.
 

racerboy71

bud bootlegger
You'd have to read the text of the actual indictment to know what was meant there, but FWIW, under US Federal law, viable ce-eds are considered "mari-juana".


It was "conspiracy". Again hard to know what that means without reading the actual indictment.

Maybe it just meant he knew that the se-eds he was moving were going to be used in an illegal commercial grow. . .even if he had no more involvement in said grow other than selling the beans.

Also, an indictment is one thing. . .actually proving a case beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law something else. The MO of agencies like this is first locate guy they want to nab, then catch him, then throw the book at him, charging him with anything and everything they have even the slightest hint of evidence for, even if they really don't have the "goods" to make it stick. The idea is to scare the defendant with massive charges, and ridiculous penalties, and also massive legal expenses, so that he opts to plead guilty instead of even trying to fight it. Sometimes this works. . .sometimes not.


Again, don't know, you'd have to read the details of the indictment, and then see what evidence was presented in court.

In fact, since possessing and selling beans is perfectly legal in England and many other places, for many banks, there is simply no need for "money laundering" at all. They can run a legal open books business, and report their income.

Maybe this guy did try to launder money. . .maybe not.
all very well said jogro, not that i'd expect anything different from you. :D
 

Jogro

Well-Known Member
waiting for tax evasion or racketeering charges. you know they are trying...
If he's not a US citizen and his business wasn't conducted in the USA, he shouldn't owe US taxes, and I'm not sure how the Feds can make a case for tax evasion, let alone a criminal one.

On "racketeering", a full discussion on that is way beyond my ability, but my understanding is that the charge implies a pattern of behavior related to certain specific crimes, usually associated with mob-like organized crime. Certain drug/narcotic crimes, including sales and manufacture could merit a charge of "racketeering". While the original RICO act was supposedly aimed at breaking up real mob activity, the statues are so vague that RICO could (and has) been aimed at any number of "small fish" with multiple applicable offenses.

Again, I don't know exactly what evidence the Feds have here, but I suspect it probably "could" be applied here. But just because it "can" doesn't mean it makes sense to do it. Proving RICO charges requires a higher level of prosecutorial effort, and the penalties associated with it are so severe it really ups the "ante" so to speak. It may be the Feds can't make a case like that stick, or even that they feel they have so much other evidence, they don't "need" to.

Again, don't know.
 

greenghost420

Well-Known Member
like you said, we need to see the affidavit. but when you launder money you evading taxes usually lol i would love to see the indictment details!
 
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