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Mary Phagan Case Centers on Jim Conley; Negro Lone Hope of Both Sides The Atlanta Georgian Sunday, July 6, 1913 *Editor's Note: See insert article, "Decisions Which May Aid Defense of Leo Frank", at the conclusion of this post. Leo Frank Expects Freedom by Breaking Down Accuser's Testimony, and State a Conviction by Establishing Truth of Statements. BY AN OLD POLICE REPORTER. The developments in the Mary Phagan case have been of late highly significant and interesting. During the past week, it became evident that the very heart and soul of both the prosecution and the defense is to center largely about the negro, James Conley. He is at once apparently the hope and the despair of both sides to the contest! This circumstance, however, while tending to add much to the dramatic and the uncertain, in so far as the outcome is concerned, is not by any means an unusual thing in cases of this kind. It frequently happens in mysterious murder cases that both the State and the defense must pin their faith to one and the same witness. Of late there has been some talk of the Grand Jury indicting Conley, even over the Solicitor General's head, which, of course, it would have a perfect right to do. The thought occurred to me some time ago that the case might take that direction, but in the article in which that point was discussed, I mentioned it incidentally, rather than as a likely thing. Indictment may Mean Much. It seems, nevertheless, that the idea of indicting Conley has had, and still may have, much more behind it than some people have been willing to admit, and that phase of the situation has caused me to speculate somewhat in detail today as to how and why Conley might be indicted. I find that those who are urging it have much more to stand upon than would seem probable at first blush. Two things are evident: First, the defense will attack Conley vigorously. Second, the character of Leo Frank will be put in issue by the defense, fearlessly and frankly! These two things, I take it, will constitute the defense's primary challenge to the prosecution! And if I be right about that, the issue will be thrilling and dramatic enough to satisfy the cravings of the most exacting, when the case comes on for trial later along this month. About these two points of disagreement, Hugh Dorsey and Frank Hooper, on the one hand, and Luther Rosser and Reuben Arnold, on the other, will be on their mettle—and if the fur and likewise the fire doesn't fly, I mistake my guess at this writing! Leo Frank has been indicted for the murder of Mary Phagan, and for reasons presumably unsatisfactory to the Grand Jury. Points Against Conley. Let's examine the points upon which the defense will indict Conley, if the Grand Jury fails to beat the defense to it—which yet is problematical. The defense will contend: (1) That Conley wrote of his own notion the notes found beside the dead girl's body. (2) That the negro told of incidents and conversations which took place admittedly in the pencil factory an hour or more before he swears he went there. (3) That the negro admits he was drinking and "broke" when he went to the factory Saturday morning and is known to have spent in the afternoon about the amount of money Mary Phagan is supposed to have had in her little mesh bag when she started out of the factory. (4) That the negro admits he was in hiding or loafing near the open elevator shaft, at the foot of the steps Mary Phagan must have used as she came down to go out of the factory. (5) That at the inquest Frank said he thought he had heard voices outside his office, very soon after Mary Phagan started down the stairs, and that the voices he thought he heard which might have been voices of Mary Phagan and the negro, just as the negro attacked the girl. (6) That the negro said the body of Mary Phagan was carried down the elevator shaft, and yet two witnesses stand ready to swear, and have sworn, that the elevator did not run on the fatal Saturday at all. (7) That, while the negro accounts after a fashion for the girl's shoe and hat thrown onto a trash pile, he fails to account for the incriminating parasol found at the foot of the elevator shaft, where it might have been thrown with Mary Phagan's body from above. (8) That the negro says Leo Frank called him at 12:56, notwithstanding the fact that Frank was talking to Mr. and Mrs. White at 1 o'clock, and immediately thereafter left the factory, reaching home about 1:20. That, therefore, Frank could not have down the things Conley accuses him of having done, for sheer lack of time, if nothing else. (9) That the negro did not flee, if guilty himself, because the police promptly accused in turn Newt Lee, Gantt, Mullinax and Leo Frank as suspects, not once mentioning Conley; and, besides, no one knew at the time these suspects were proclaimed that Conley had even been in the pencil factory Saturday morning. (10) That Conley was caught washing his shirt, which might have been blood-stained, very soon after Mary Phagan's murder was effected, and that he said at the time he was worried over something not stated. (11) That the negro's statements have been inconsistent and conflicting, both those under oath and those not under oath, and that he has admitted having sworn falsely more than once. (12) That the negro's defense of himself is of no merit, because it is the only possible defense of himself he could frame—a last and desperate resort to fix upon Frank Conley's own guilt. (13) That Conley's evidence is of small if any value against Frank, because it was not given until suspicion seemed drifting rapidly toward Conley. (14) That Frank's statements have been straightforward, consistent and reasonable, whereas, in contrast thereto, the negro's have been inconsistent, conflicting and unreasonable. (15) If the negro's presence in the factory had been known at the time Frank was indicted, Frank likely never would have been indicted; or, at least, would not likely have been indicted in preference to the negro. (16) That the motive in the case of Frank never has been established and will be difficult to establish, but that the motive in the case of the negro—i. e., robbery—is immediately apparent. (17) That the entire factory force testifies to the good character of Frank, whereas the character of the negro, both by his own admissions and the police court records, is bad. (18) That many of the horrible details of the murder, scattered broadcast when it was first effected, are not true, and that the circumstances of the crime point to the negro Conley as its perpetrator, much more surely than to Frank. Now, the reader must understand that which I have tried to impress upon him in every article I heretofore have written about the Phagan case, to wit: I know nothing more about the POSITIVE TRUTH of the case than he does—that is to say, my sources of information have been precisely the same sources that his have been—the newspapers. I have scrutinized the files of The Georgian and The American and other Atlanta papers, and the foregoing eighteen counts against Conley I have gathered together from perhaps fifty different issues. Framework is Powerful. I have set them forth as showing the strength of the position of those—or the imaginary strength, whichever it is—invoking the indictment of Conley NOW. They may be of tremendous significance—they may be of no material significance. But they DO serve to show the framework of the powerful defense that is being constructed for Frank. I give them for what they are worth. There stands between Conley and Grand Jury indictment, of course, the compelling necessity of using Conley as a material witness—THE material witness, indeed!—against Frank. To indict Conley NOW would weaken the State's case against Frank, unquestionably. And yet the fact remains that certain members of the Grand Jury have been reported as seriously inclined to that course, nevertheless. And, after all, that matter (theoretically, anyway) is utterly impersonal with the Grand Jury and arbitrarily in its hands. Before I became a newspaper man and later along police reporter, I studied law, as I mentioned before, and was admitted to the bar, I practiced four years, and while I abandoned the law long ago for the newspaper profession, I never lost my taste entirely for my first love. I went over to the State Library Saturday and looked up some few decisions bearing upon the two vital points to be raised in the Phagan case, as I view it now, and two things impressed me profoundly. State Can Not Attack Frank. When the defense attacks Conley it will be backed by some weighty law affecting his credibility, and when it puts Frank's character in evidence—the State CAN NOT put his character in evidence, it will be understood—it will be backed again by some weighty opinions as to the value of character, established and proved. In the Twenty-third Georgia Supreme Court Reports I find that Mr. Justice McDonald laid down this rule: If a witness swear willfully and knowingly false, even to a collateral fact, his testimony ought to be rejected entirely, unless it be so corroborated by circumstances, or other unimpeached evidence, as be irresistible! That is the law of the land, and it will be invoked, I suppose, against Conley, with vigor and possible effect. The defense, no doubt, will contend that Conley has sworn falsely—and proved it by written instruments—and it then will insist that Conley's entire evidence must be rejected unless corroborated by other unimpeached testimony. Can the State corroborate Conley by such evidence? Evidently the defense doubts it. I do not know, of course. Hearsay, irrelevant matter, street gossip, newspaper stories—those things will not do when it comes to trying Leo Frank for his life. Conley Must Be Corroborated. Conley, at best an admitted accessory after the fact of the murder, must be corroborated by COMPETENT and LEGAL evidence. And right here, I think, the defense expects to give the State one of its very hardest nuts to crack. Maybe the State can crack it, all right! That remains to be seen, and as to that I venture no opinion. Again, I take it the defense expects to strike straight from the shoulder when it puts Frank's character in issue. I do not KNOW that the defense will do this, but from the tone of some of the articles, particularly Mrs. Frank's remarkable interview, given out recently by the defense, or authorized by it, I SUSPECT that is exactly what it will do. This will be a bold stroke, too, for unless the DEFENSE puts Leo Frank's character in issue, IT CAN NOT BE PUT IN ISSUE AT ALL. The State is estopped, of its own motion, from doing that. Therefore, when the defense DOES it, it is pretty apt to be taken as an evidence that the defense is very confident of itself. Into the case at this point, then, will come a portion of the law of Georgia that is most picturesque and significant—a portion that is founded upon the very bedrock of decency and common sense, and that throws about all observers of the law and about all right-living men a protection as certain and as sure as it is majestic and noble. Character Good Evidence. In respect of CHARACTER as evidence of innocence of crime, I find that Chief Justice Simmons, in the 102d Georgia, said this: "Evidence of good character is admitted as evidence of a positive fact, and may, of itself, by the creation of a reasonable doubt, produce acquittal!" And, again, the same authority says: "Of what avail is a good character, which a man may have been a lifetime in acquiring, if it is to benefit nothing in the hour of peril?" Chief Justice Simmons was a Superior Court judge for some twenty years before he was elevated to the Supreme bench, and a Supreme Court justice for a like period. He was one of the noblest men that Georgia ever produced, and one of the most profound and approved students of the law. And he made good character the very Rock of Gibraltar upon which a man attacked might depend in time of peril! Once the defense puts Leo Frank's character in issue, however, the State may attack it as bitterly and as vehemently as it likes. This, it may be, the State is prepared to do. Unless the State does break down Frank's character, however, once it is put in issue by his own attorneys, the State will be thereafter at a tremendous disadvantage, I think, particularly when the defense is undertaking to shoot the character of Conley to pieces from the other flank! Character can not be broken down in a courtroom with whispered words and sinister gossip. Must Attack in Open. Under the impersonal rules of evidence and the law, character must be attacked in the open—it must be beaten down, if beaten down it be, with weapons the judge and the jury may see, wielded in fair play, and it must be a fight to a finish. True, if a defendant deliberately puts his own character in issue, the burden is upon him to sustain his character; but once the law puts that burden upon a defendant, it holds in leash and sure control the State in its attempts to demolish it. I have written of crimes and of criminals for fifteen years—of petty sneak thieves and bank robbers, of common back-alley bullies and murders, of brutes and degenerates, of clever confidence men and clumsy bunglers. I have seen the innocent made victims of cruel circumstances and the unquestionably guilty escape, but I am yet to see a case in which good character, firmly and frankly set up, was not a tower of strength to the accused—a sure and abiding "benefit in his hour of peril," as Chief Justice Simmons says it should be! After all is said and done, character is the corner stone upon which civilization and society most securely rests. It holds the business world together, and it differentiates the wheat from the chaff in the professions. Without it, the grand old name of gentleman is a mockery and a sham—and, above all things, it best marks the woman as fitted to her natural and noblest environment! If Leo Frank puts his character in issue, it will be a challenge full and free to the State to do its worst—it well may be expected to make or mar the defense of Leo Frank, charged with the murder of Mary Phagan. DECISIONS WHICH MAY AID DEFENSE OF LEO FRANK The old police reporter, in sizing up the many possibilities of the Phagan case, has reached two conclusions as to the line of action which he believes will be followed by the defense: FIRST, he believes the defense will undertake to destroy the value of Conley's evidence, and fix upon Conley the guilt the State is trying to fix upon Frank. SECOND, he thinks the defense will make the character of Leo Frank an issue. The old police reporter, in poring through the files of the Georgia Supreme Court Reports, has found two decisions upon which he thinks the defense will rely. The first which might be used to break down Conley's evidence is as follows: If a witness swears willfully and knowingly false, even to a collateral fact, his testimony ought to be rejected entirely, unless it be so corroborated by circumstances, or other unimpeached evidence, as to be irresistible. —23 GEORGIA REPORTS. As a circumstance tending to prove Frank's innocence, the defense, the old police reporter thinks, will produce the following: Evidence of good character is admitted as evidence of positive fact, and may, of itself, by the creation of a reasonable doubt, produce acquittal!—102 GEORGIA REPORTS.
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Yorimarys retweeted
Argentina
#SelecciónMayor ¡Llegamos a Atlanta! ☝🏼
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jezzaica
In 2014 when MH 370 disappeared, McRaven was the Commander of the broader U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM), overseeing all special operations branches. The USSOCOM Commander signs off on administering and deploying personnel in theater, while JSOC is the operational command, coordinated directly with the CIA and the White House. During the 2011 raid on Osama bin Laden (Operation Neptune Spear), Admiral McRaven (then head of JSOC) and CIA Director Leon Panetta worked in a unique dual-hatted structure. Because the White House placed the operation under the CIA's covert authority (Title 50), the actual combat units bypassed USSOCOM's operational chain of command during the mission. However, the raid would have been impossible without USSOCOM's massive behind-the-scenes involvement. As I'm sure you've heard, The Panetta Review was a secret, internal investigation ordered by Leon Panetta in 2009 and conducted by the CIA to evaluate its agency's own use of "enhanced interrogation techniques" (torture) on terrorism suspects during the Bush administration. It became the center of a massive political and constitutional scandal when its existence was revealed to the public in late 2013. The CIA heavily distanced itself from the document, calling it an "incomplete" draft, while federal judges sided with the CIA to rule that the documents were exempt from FOIA disclosure. At the time, the Senate Intelligence Committee was drafting its OWN massive Senate Torture Report. The CIA publicly fought the Senate's findings, claiming that waterboarding and other brutal tactics were humane, necessary, and directly led to breakthrough intelligence (like locating Osama bin Laden). Diane Feinstein, Harry Reid, @MarkWarner, @MarkUdall, and Jay Rockefeller (who PEW's Tamera Luzatto worked for before Hillary Clinton), and @SecRubio were all on the SSCI at the time. During a powerful 50-minute floor speech in December 2014, Senator Mark Udall fiercely condemned the CIA, stating that "the CIA is lying" about the efficacy of its post-9/11 interrogation practices and attempting to cover up the truth. Udall revealed details of the Panetta Review. He called it a "smoking gun" because it proved the CIA’s internal findings secretly matched the Senate’s conclusions, even while the CIA publicly denied the Senate report. He emphasized that the harsh tactics were brutal, inhumane, and completely ineffective at saving lives. He also faulted the Obama administration for failing to rein in the CIA, arguing that a deeper, endemic problem existed where the White House provided cover to help the agency hide the truth from the American public. But John Brennan strongly rejected the committee's claim that harsh tactics yielded no actionable information. He explicitly stated that information extracted from detainees subjected to "enhanced interrogation techniques" (EITs) helped locate and kill Osama bin Laden in 2011. Brennan also consistently refused to label the CIA's techniques as torture. He acknowledged that, in a limited number of cases, agency officers used "unauthorized" and "abhorrent" methods that should be universally condemned. However, he blamed these actions on a few isolated individuals rather than a systemic agency policy. Retired Admiral McRaven did not issue an immediate public reaction when the Senate report was released in December 2014, but he was repeatedly thrust into the public debate regarding how the intelligence was gathered. While McRaven always maintained that locating bin Laden was a masterclass in long-term, traditional intelligence analysis (connecting scraps of data over years), the political storm surrounding the Panetta Review forced the military and the CIA to publicly litigate which specific interrogation methods actually yielded the name of bin Laden's courier. In 2013, it was revealed that McRaven had ordered military files regarding the bin Laden raid to be purged from Department of Defense computers and moved exclusively to the CIA. Media watchdogs accused him of intentionally shifting the records to the CIA to shield them from public FOIAs. In January 2017, McRaven joined a coalition of 176 retired high-ranking military officers in signing a formal letter directly opposing waterboarding or other EITs. The letter explicitly stated that these techniques constitute unlawful torture under domestic and international law, adding that "torture is unnecessary" because rapport-based interrogation is vastly more effective at eliciting actionable intelligence. In 2018, when President Donald Trump revoked the security clearance of former CIA Director John Brennan (partly citing Brennan's handling of the 2014 torture report controversy), McRaven published a blistering op-ed in The Washington Post. He called Brennan "one of the finest public servants I have ever known" and asked Trump to revoke his own security clearance in solidarity. 💥💥💥Boom. There you have the coverup. 💥💥💥 But stay with you because it all is not quite as it seems... My AHIs in December 2017 and April 2018 were in fact - TORTURE. It was a full-on interrogation with threats, sleep deprivation, electroshocks, torture nightmares, and even once imagery while I was awake (a woman doused in the face with gasoline by her own husband). Did the Trump admin or some in the NSC suspect Iran was using these EIT methods & weapons? Or did this just happen to precede his decision to pull out of the JCPOA (Obama's Iran Deal). President Donald Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA) in May 2018, calling it "defective at its core." Because if Iran played a role (even if because Russia, China, or some other group could have stolen Iran's nuclear precursors or materials), then maybe that is where Trump was coming from? I obviously don't know how bad or prevalent that the CIA (or contractor) torture in Iraq or anywhere else was, but I do know John Brennan is right that EIT can in fact elicit real intelligence. That's not even a question to me. What is a question is WHAT DID JOHN BRENNAN OR BARACK OBAMA KNOW (if at all) about what happened to me in November 2013 and December 2015 (at PEW and in Rosslyn in plain view of Iwo Jima cameras)?! Because VP Joe Biden made a sudden trip to Ukraine. @GenFlynn was in Russia at a Gala with Putin. CIA materials engineer friend visited me in the hospital. So how high up did the cover up go? In their defense, the 2013 was not that bad. I didn't need to go to that hospital AT ALL, but my coach convinced my mom and got her upset so they made me. The psych treatment was worse than the crime. In 2015, same story. I could have just gone to bed or taken a few days off work. I would not have been running around the city like they let me in 2018 all because no one would tell me the truth. I was told (telepathically) that if I didn't stay up for at least 48-hours, they'd torture Eric (my U.S. Navy friend). And this was after they'd already threatened him in December 2017 while I was in the hospital over Xmas. But neither John Brennan nor Barack Obama was in office at the time. John Bolton was. And THEN guess who was appointed Secretary of State? @mikepompeo The same guy who wanted to drone Julian Assange for disclosing classified information about civilian drones. So do you see what someone did here?!? They were using ME - someone with zero access to classified info but surrounded by the @DeptofWar and @CIA @FBI to expose what was apparently happening to "dissidents" and whistleblowers. The media covered up what happen to me. Did they really do so to "protect national security" or did they do so to protect the Obama administration? Because NO ONE was protecting me. I landed in hospital again in August 2018 shortly after he put sanctions back on Iran. Personally I agree with CIA's decision to highly classify methods that WORK - but I vehemently DISAGREE with them being used on innocent civilians who ARE NOT COMBATANTS NOR IN A COMBAT ZONE. That is a war crime. And somebody is responsible for covering it up. Sadly that includes my own ex-employers. That makes McRaven a not-so-neutral party here if he has had any exposure to these weapons, EITs, their usage, or how they have been hidden from Congress. And that also gave some people one hell of a strong reason to make sure Trump would never find out what they did. Did they really think that Bill Burns was just going to wrap it all up under Biden, pin it on Russia, and case closed? I understand why Russia is one of the main suspects because it was my initial thought too, but I'm not sure all these AHIs were the same actors because it definitely was not all the same weapons or techniques. So it was wrong for Trump to revoke @JohnBrennan's clearance if he never spoke to him about all this, but it is also wrong if Obama was read-in on critical intelligence to know that Trump wasn't! If I was CIA/FBI's guinea pig (as it seems I was because instead of admitting I was a victim of these assaults and espionage they seemed to use me to try to gather more intelligence), it should have 100% been my choice to put myself in this level of danger and to give up my privacy. But it wasn't. The honeytraps were not my choice unless it was done with the good intent of finding me an actual potential HUSBAND. I thought that's what finally they actually did until about summer 2022. That's when it started to go really wrong. Oddly that lines up with when Jack Smith raided Mar-A-Lago. Then Covington LLP (where my friend and witness worked as a lobbyist since June 2015) represented HIM (2025) instead of helping me. My friend had already quit in February 2024 but other people at that firm know me. If it was an effort to protect my privacy (and the officers who honeytrapped me) then that is appreciated. But if is a COVERUP this is really f'd up. Either way, a delay is a delay. David Grusch told Congress this issue was urgent in July 2023 because it was!!! Then what does PEW do? Fire me instead of help?! And they didn't even tell me about Grusch. Who is pulling all the strings?? If @usairforce had not fired my friend in 2023 maybe he wouldn't have got to go work for @NORADCommand, which is where it would seem most needed. But also @USSpaceForce did nothing to protect ME nor care about MY life and my running career. And when he retired, they threw it in my face again. Terrible cover. Literally the *only* excuse to do protect him but not me is if I am an actual hostage. Considering they shot me twice just 2-3 weeks before I visited him (2021 & 2023), this may be the case. But that's why @USNavy and the @FBI should have protected me in the FIRST PLACE. They didn't. And now I'm learning from Sarah Gamm that the UAP Task Force was all about protecting pilots. They are the top priority along with Navy officers due to where these weapons appear, but that isn't the only people at risk! So who has actually been investigating me? And who can negotiate my freedom please? Because that would mean I can actually talk to my old friends (if anyone still even cares, it has been so many years). The right call in 2015 was not the right call in 2018. But what they did to me in July 2014 to forcibly separate me from my entire running team was also a terrible call. So was not letting me do any weekend runs with any of my favorite training partners after 2018. And so was letting GEORGE go to the Olympic Trials and someone quite possibly suiciding my then teammate, after which no one wanted to travel or stay there in Atlanta with me. The media is supposed to expose civil rights abuses - not cover them up. Or were they being threatened with the Espionage Act if they tried to report that these AHIs even happened?! Notice they couldn't talk about the mental health abuses in the legacy media either. The only one to get any criticism at all has been the PIW, but the psychological torture with weapons in 2017 and 2018 happened in two different northern VA INOVA locations (not Loudon), which no one wants to admit. The media also did not report on the local running club discrimination I faced after this that closely paralleled what Kara Goucher and even Mary Cain went through. I did not want to go public, but that didn't mean I didn't deserve any help at all, @FBI! And trust me when I say many competitive D.C. runners know about it, because this investigation hurt their running and social networks too! But even if the media can't tell the truth because the CIA or whomever in charge won't let them, they can at least recognize THEY DIDN'T HAVE ENOUGH CRITICAL INFORMATION to make such definitive judgments about Trump's decisions and criticism. That said, I think Brennan and Trump need to work this one out. I think they might have even been on the same page in 2018 if only things hadn't gone so bad once my friend Major Ueki died on November 22, 2019. I REALLY NEEDED TO KNOW if my best Air Force friends would be there in the end for me or not by March 2023. Because I deserved someone to be there. Ten years of isolation, lack of privacy, and the manipulation of my personal life was way too much. But I would have held on just fine even for a few more YEARS if they just told me they would. But no one would tell me anything. Instead they burned me in silence like the ones before, and then when I started yelling at them (via private text) they just tell me I have "mental health issues." I'm sorry but no. If you can't plan a covert operation that protects women you need better planners and definitely better CI policies. Layth got mad at me when I once said maybe Trump was helping me and I just didn't know. But I also hope maybe he was helping me when I didn't know. But I really don't know who my real friends are right now. I just know they asked me to do things I know they can't. And so I'm really tired of waiting for answers that may never come and wasting my life alone. Please release some NDAs @POTUS. Because I don't think we can get the real truth any other way. Good luck with your book, @GallaudetTim. If at the end of this it needs some revisions or a sequel, I will be more than happy to help.
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AlexisH413
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JucoRecruiting
College Coaches: Our committed player list & all other event info can be found on the link below for the @JUCOShowcase Invitational 🔵 July 11-12 (Sat/Sun) | Atlanta, GA 🔵 Loaded field with all of the top JUCO prospects in the 2027 class‼️ jucoshowcase.com/?page_id=41…
iboydraftt
selling two ariana grande tickets in atlanta tonight 7/6! they are club seats with unlimited food and drink for face value each, my flight was cancelled and i won’t be able to make it to atlanta
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بانـــⷱــᷜــᷠـــᷧــᷩـــکے مᷠـــͣـــͥــⷨــــیاں retweeted
NoContextHumans
Atlanta spent $130M to build glass walls for fare evasion prevention. Result:
End Wokeness
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sarahhhlizano
2 Ariana Grande Concert Tickets on sale for Jul-06 happening Tonight @ State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA < MUST GET ON A CALL BEFORE GIVING OUT ANY DETAILS OR PROOF SO SCAMMERS STAY OFF The Eternal Sunshine Tour ARIANA GRANDE TICKET
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𝙽𝙾 𝙻𝙾𝚆 𓂀 retweeted
ambatanot
Tu parles a un noir dans les rues de atlanta avec vla les tattoue et un glock , tu demandes il s’appelle comment il te dit il s’appelle Charlemagne ????
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OMCepe retweeted
PlanetaBoca
🇦🇷 La Selección Argentina ya está en Atlanta. El martes, los octavos de final vs. Egipto 🇪🇬. Leandro Paredes tiene chances de ser titular.
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PeachAnt7
I’ve got 3 Argentina vs Egypt World Cup tickets at Mercedes Benz Stadium, Atlanta, USA. Seats are together. DM me for more details if you’re interested.
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fiahupdates
Fiah estaría viajando para el partido de Argentina y Egipto en Atlanta.
Alexandria retweeted
GrandeTourNews
TONIGHT: Ariana brings the Eternal Sunshine Tour to Atlanta, GA with her first of three sold out shows! Doors: 6:30pm Show: 8:00pm Use the #ESTAtlanta if you're attending the show ∞ ☼
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Vladimir Mikhail™ retweeted
TheAfricaReport
Once it is complete, ➡️ l.theafricareport.com/lVL Ethiopia’s $12.7bn giant airport hub will overtake Atlanta in passenger numbers – a goal linked to the expansion of the continent’s leading airline. Report by Salimata Koné.
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fannys7p
I’ve got 2 tickets available for the Argentina vs Egypt match at Atlanta Stadium in Atlanta I’ll transfer through the fifa app Send me a message if you’re interested! #FIFAWorldCup #Atlanta #Argentina   #Egypt
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DabanomadJordy
I’ve got 3 Argentina vs Egypt World Cup tickets at Mercedes Benz Stadium, Atlanta, USA. Seats are together. DM me for more details if you’re interested.
Sayuri retweeted
catrina_nortena
🚨 ESTE VIDEO LE DARÁ MUCHO, PERO MUCHO ARDOR AL CLUB DE EPSTEIN Una aficionada de Marruecos fue detenida en Atlanta por un guardia de seguridad que le queria quitar una bandera de Palestina y justo cuando fue a amenazarla nuevamente toda la gente empezo a gritar: "Free Palestine, Free Palestine"...
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mundoargentinaradio retweeted
LuisFregossi
☑️La selección Argentina llegó ayer a la noche a Atlanta 🇺🇸 ☑️Este lunes a las 11.30 hs Entrenamiento en Kennesaw University. ☑️17 30 hs conferencia de Lionel Scaloni y un jugador del plantel desde el Mercedes Benz Stadium
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Faroni retweeted
JulianMaciasT
Un guardia de seguridad en Atlanta quiso quitarle a una aficionada de Marruecos en el mundial de fútbol una bandera de Palestina y un cartel sobre los asesinatos de Israel sobre futbolistas palestinos. La gente respondió gritando "Free Palestine"
Leyla Hamed
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Pacheco3286
Hii Guys! I managed to get closer seats and I #WTS 3 of my Tonight Mon, Jul 6th ARIANA GRANDE Tickets, in State Farm Arena. Atlanta GA Time: 8:00pm I’m asking for $225 each! Pls dm me if you would be interested!!, also I can negotiate the price 🚨 #ArianaGrandeTickets
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