Goddamn its cold in here.
I know it must be absolute shyt to wake up every morning and look in the mirror and know you, loser, are still alive. This thread stinks of vintage bytch.Since single moms are the lowest of the low, obviously their offspring would be too. If a man's father abandoned him, he may too abandon his kids
Give us ladies some telltale signs to stop this cycle
I dont know what to look for, or not look for
they're only separated by a row and almost 4 columnsI know it must be absolute shyt to wake up every morning and look in the mirror and know you, loser, are still alive. This thread stinks of vintage bytch.
One star.
when men disagree, yall be all calm, no insults or vulgar language is thrown until it escalates. Men disagree with a woman, and the single parent raised signs come out.

If your parents aren't married doesn't matter if they lived in the same house, you grew up in a single parent home.
kinda logic is this? Single is another way of saying one. 1 unmarried parent + 1 unmarried parent = 2 unmarried parents in a single home. You sound like math is hard barbie.if you're not married, you are single. Deal with it, fukkboi.kinda logic is this? Single is another way of saying one. 1 unmarried parent + 1 unmarried parent = 2 unmarried parents in a single home. You sound like math is hard barbie.
Hopefully this is wordplay on single
right these boys are lucky to have a strong male model guiding their lives(just think if they had a ratchet single mother raising them were would have went wrong)
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Father and reputed patriarch of 110ers gang testifies against sons at trial
Antonio "Big Rico" Johnson, pausing frequently to wipe away tears, sat facing an Orleans Parish jury Thursday (Jan. 22) while telling them of how his son, stepson and two of their friends opened fire on a unsuspecting group of partygoers in Central City on May 29, 2012, killing a five-year-old girl and a 33-year-old woman.
The gunfire, meant for a group of rival gang members, struck and killed little Briana Allen, who was standing on the porch of a home in the 1200 block of Simon Bolivar Avenue, celebrating her 10-year-old cousin's birthday. Stray gunfire fatally wounded Shawanna Pierce, 33, who was struck in the forehead by a bullet blocks away, while driving to return a rental car in the Central Business District.
Johnson, shackled and dressed in black prison garb, sat opposite from his son Demond "Lil D" Sandifer and stepson Sam "Lil" Newman while telling jurors that the two men and their co-defendant Tyron "T-7" Harden were members of a violent 10th and 11th Ward street gang known as the 110ers.
Harden, 21, Newman, 19, and Sandifer, 19, are on trial this month facing charges of second-degree murder in the deaths of Allen and Pierce, along with a litany of other charges including conspiracy to engage in racketeering activity, conspiracy to discharge firearms during crimes of violence, armed robbery, weapons violations and multiple murders.
Another man, Stanton "Nan Nan" Guillory, also is accused in the double-murder, but is being tried separately from his co-defendants.
The group were named in a sprawling, 34-page racketeering indictment announced by Orleans Parish District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro's office a year after the murders.
The group is said to have been involved in a violent turf war with other gangs, including the Get Money Boyz from the 12th Ward and the Young Melph Mafia from the 3rd Ward, who prosecutors say were the intended targets on the evening Allen and Pierce lost their lives in the gun barrage.
While addressing the jury, Johnson sat trembling and weeping, after being asked to read from a letter he wrote to his sons after taking an eight-year plea deal in exchange for his testimony against his children.
"To my sons, who I'm going to love and miss so much. There's so much I want to say to the both of you," Johnson began.
Johnson continued reading the three-page letter that attorneys say was addressed to Newman, but references two other sons -- Sandifer and Rico "Max" Newman, who was also charged in the indictment.
Begging for his sons to take a plea deal, he asks them to not take their chances at trial, for which they are facing a mandatory life sentence if convicted on the murder charges.
"I know 25 to 30 years is long, but remember one thing, life is longer ... there's no coming back from that."
"There's no other way out for me...I took eight years so I can get back to my wife and my other kids because they need me," Johnson said.
Sam "Lil" Newman, Demond "Lil D" Sandifer and Tyron "T-7" Harden,who prosecutors allege are key players in the 110ers street gang, are facing charges of second-degree murder in furtherance of gang activity in the deaths of Briana Allen and Shawanna Pierce.Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office
While reading the letter, the courtroom was silent. Newman sat facing his stepfather, shaking his head while Sandifer remained stone-faced and emotionless, staring straight ahead while listening to his father weep.
"I had to do what I had to do to save myself...the three of you have to do the same. In this game it's every man for himself -- I think all of you know that already."
Johnson's testimony came at the end of the second week of what is expected to be a three-week trial before Orleans Parish Criminal District Court Judge Tracey Flemings-Davillier.
Jurors have already heard from an exhaustive number of convicted gang members, but Johnson has been the first family member charged in the indictment to testify against his kin.
In February 2014, Johnson pleaded guilty to charges of accessory after the fact to second-degree murder, accessory after the fact to attempted second-degree murder and racketeering. Johnson's sentence is among the shortest of his co-defendants.
Most of the 15 members charged in the indictment have since received plea deals attached to lengthy prison sentences, and many have already testified against the trio during the trial.
Attorneys for the three men have focused closely on the credibility of the witnesses paraded in front of jurors, and have hinted that many might have lied in an effort to secure a more favorable plea deal for themselves.
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In the past, prosecutors have painted Johnson as a type of patriarch in the gang, a father-type figure -- both biologically and metaphorically -- who would advise members on ways to elude prosecution, including admonishing them not so speak on jailhouse phone calls about the crimes they committed.
Throughout his testimony, Johnson repeatedly said he was not a member of the 110ers and refuted claims that the organization had a hierarchical structure, describing the group instead as an unruly bunch of teenagers who did "whatever they feel like they want to."
"I was not there, I'm not no 110er," Johnson said. "Every charge that I got that's on me today is because of my kids,"
"I'm mad at my children because whatever they did in life I shouldn't be punished for it," Johnson told the jurors.
This was not the first time Johnson testified against his son. In August, Johnson took the stand during a trial where Sandifer was convicted of murdering a 22-year-oldrival gang member.
In October, Newman was found guilty on the same charge in the slaying of 21-year-old Jonathan "Kruga" Lewis, who was shot to death on June 11, 2012.






