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In this gripping episode of Gangland Wire, host Gary Jenkins sits down with Robert “Bob” Cooley, the Chicago lawyer whose extraordinary journey took him from deep inside the Outfit's criminal operations to becoming one of the federal government's most valuable witnesses against organized crime. Cooley pulls back the curtain on the hidden machinery of Chicago's underworld, describing how corruption, bribery, and violence shaped the Chicago Outfit's power in the 1970s and beyond. As a lawyer, gambler, and trusted insider, Cooley saw firsthand how mob influence tilted the scales of justice—often in open daylight. Inside the “Chicago Method” of Courtroom Corruption Cooley explains the notorious system of judicial bribery he once helped facilitate—what he calls the “Chicago Method.” He walks listeners through: How defense attorneys worked directly with Outfit associates to buy favorable rulings. The process of approaching and bribing judges. Why weak forensic standards of the era made witness discrediting the key mob strategy. His personal involvement in the infamous Harry Aleman murder case, where clear guilt was erased by corruption. Life in the Outfit: Gambling, Debt, and Mob Justice Cooley recounts his early days gambling with Chicago Outfit associates, including Marco D'Amico, Jackie Cerrone, and John DeFranzo. Notable stories include: The violent implications of unpaid gambling debts in mob circles. Tense interactions with bookmaker Hal Smith and the chaotic fallout of a bounced check involving mobster Eddie Corrado. How D'Amico often stepped in—sometimes with intimidation—to shield Cooley from harm. These stories reflect the daily volatility of life inside the Outfit, where money, fear, and loyalty intersect constantly. Bob Cooley has a great book titled When Corruption Was King where he goes into even greater detail and has many more stories from his life inside the Chicago Mob. Hit me up on Venmo for a cup of coffee or a shot and a beer @ganglandwire Click here to “buy me a cup of coffee” Subscribe to the website for weekly notifications about updates and other Mob information. To go to the store or make a donation or rent Ballot Theft: Burglary, Murder, Coverup, click here To rent ‘Brothers against Brothers’ or ‘Gangland Wire,’ the documentaries click here. To purchase one of my books, click here. 0:06 Introduction to Bob Cooley 1:32 Life as an Outfit Gambler 2:00 My Relationship with Marco D’Amico 10:40 The Story of Hal Smith 11:05 A Dangerous Encounter 20:21 Meeting Sally D 22:23 A Contract on My Life 22:37 The Harry Alleman Case 34:47 Inside the Courtroom 51:08 The Verdict 52:26 Warning the Judge 53:49 The Case Against the Policewoman 58:36 Navigating the Legal Maze 1:08:14 The Outcome and Its Consequences 1:11:39 The Decision to Flip 1:24:38 A Father’s Influence 1:33:57 The Corruption Revealed 1:50:12 Political Connections 2:02:07 The Setup for Robbery 2:20:29 Consequences of Loyalty transcript [0:00] Hey, guys, my guest today is a former Chicago outfit associate named Robert Bob Cooley. He has a book out there titled When Corruption Was King. I highly recommend you get it if you want to look inside the Chicago outfit of the 1970s. Now, Bob’s going to tell us about his life as an outfit gambler, lawyer, and I use payoff to judges to get many, many not guilty verdicts. Now, I always call this the Chicago method. This happened for, I know, for Harry Ailman, a case we’re going to talk about, Tony Spolatro got one of these not-guilties. Now, the outfit member associate who is blessed to get this fix put in for him may be charged with a crime, even up to murder. And he gets a lawyer, a connected lawyer, and they’ll demand a bench trial. That means that only a judge makes the decision. A lawyer, like my guest, who worked with a political fixer named Pat Marcy. [0:53] They’ll work together and they’ll get a friendly judge assigned to that case and then they’ll bribe the judge. And all that judge needs is some kind of alibi witnesses and any kind of information to discredit any prosecution witnesses. Now, this is back in the olden days before you had all this DNA and all that kind of thing. So physical evidence was not really a part of it. Mainly, it was from witnesses. And they just have to discredit any prosecution witness. Then the judge can say, well, state hadn’t really proven their case beyond a reasonable doubt and issue a not guilty verdict and walk away. Now, our guest, Bob Cooley, is going to take us inside this world. [1:29] And it’s a world of beatings, murders, bribes, and other kinds of plots. He was a member of the Elmwood Park crew. He was a big gambler. He was a big loan shark. And he worked for a guy named Marco D’Amico, who was their gambling boss and loan shark in that crew. Among other bosses in this powerful crew were Jackie Cerrone, who will go on and become the underboss and eventually the boss for a short [1:55] period of time. and John no-nose DeFranzo, who will also go on to become the boss eventually. What was your relationship with Marco D’Amico? I talked about when I first came into the 18th district, when I came into work there, and they put me back in uniform, the first person I met was Rick Borelli. Rick Borelli, he was Marco’s cousin. [2:23] When I started gambling right away with Rick, within a couple of days, I’m being his face, and I’m calling and making bets. There was a restaurant across the street where every Wednesday and sometimes a couple days a week, I would meet with Ricky. And one of the first people he brought in there was Marco. Was Marco. And Marco would usually be with a person or two. And I thought they were just bookmakers. [2:55] And I started being friendly with him, meeting him there. Then I started having card games Up in my apartment And, Because now I’m making, in the very beginning, I’m making first $100 extra a week. And within a couple of weeks, I’m making $500, $600 extra a week. And within about a month, I’m making $1,000, sometimes more than that. So now I’m having card games, relatively big card games, because I’ve got a bankroll. I’ve got probably about $5,000, $6,000, which seemed like a lot of money to me. Initially uh and after a while that was a daily that was a daily deal but uh so we we started having card games up there and then we started socializing we started now he’d be at these nightclubs all the time when when i’d go to make my payoffs he was part of the main group there he was one of the call he was right he was right under jack right under at that time originally Jackie Cerrone, and then he was right under Johnny DeFranco. [4:07] But he was… And we became real good friends. We would double date and we spent a lot of time together. And we had these big card games. And that’s when I realized how powerful these people were. Because after one of the card games, there was somebody that was brought in, a guy named Corrado. I’m pretty sure his name was I can’t think of his first name, but Corrado was this person that somebody brought into the game. And after we finished playing cards, and I won all the time. I mean, I was a real good card player, and I wouldn’t drink. I’d supply liquor and food and everything, but I wouldn’t drink. And as the others drank, they were the same as at my office. After we finish up, this guy says, you want to play some? We can play maybe some gin. just human being. And he was there with another friend of his who just sat there and watched. So we played, not gin, but blackjack. We played and passed cards back and forth when you win. Then you’re the dealer and back and forth. And I lost, I think I lost about $4,000 or $13,000 to him. [5:26] I lost the cash that I had. I had cash about $5,000 or $6,000. And I gave him a check for the rest. You know, but everything I was doing was wrong, you know. Yeah, one of those nights. It’s in there. And it’s funny because you asked about Marco. [5:47] And I thought, you know, oh, well, and whatever. And I gave him a check. I said, no, it’s a good check. And it was. It was for my office. It was an office check that I gave him. And that next morning, I’m meeting with Ricky and with Marco at this restaurant across from the station before I go in and to work. And I said, son of a B. I said, you know, they had a bad night first ever. Marco wasn’t at that game, at that particular game. And what happened? I said, I blew about 12,000. Okay, but you? Wow. And I said, yeah, I said, one of the guys at the game played some, I played some blackjack with somebody. What was his name? Eddie, Eddie Corrado. Eddie Corrado. He said, that mother, he said, stop payment on the check. He said, stop payment on the check. He said, because it wasn’t nine o’clock. It was only like, you know, seven, you know, seven 30 or whatever. He said, and when he gets ahold of you, arrange to have him come to your house. Tell him you’ll have the money for him at your house. So that’s what I, that’s what I do. So I stopped payment on it probably about five after nine. I get a call from, from Mr. Corrado. You mother fucker. [7:17] I said, no, no. I said, there wasn’t enough money in the account. I said, I’m sorry. I said, all right, then I’ll be over. I said, no, no, no. I said, I’m in court right now. I said, I’m in court. I said, I’m going to be tied up all day. I’ll meet you at my place. I’ll meet you back there. Well, I’ll be there. You better have that. I want cash and you better have it. Okay. Oh, I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I’m at home. Marco comes in. And he was there with Tony and Tony was there and Ricky was there. And Ricky was there. And they come over a little ahead of time and he comes in. I live on the 27th floor. The doorbell rings. Up he comes with some big mustache. [8:00] I open the door. You better have the fucking money and whatever. And I try to look nervous. I try to look real nervous. and when you walk into my apartment you walk in and you see the kitchen right in front of you and to the left to the left you’ve got an area away and you’ve got the the kitchen wall blocking what’s behind it over there and these three guys are standing marco and you are standing right there alongside of it and and when he walks in behind me, He sees Marco and all but shit in his pants. When he sees Marco, he goes, and Marco, you motherfucker. And, you know, oh, I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I didn’t know he was with you. He says, how much money you got me right now? And, you know, he says, pull your pockets out. He had about, he had about three or 4,000 with him. [9:02] And he says, you give him that. He says, you, he says, you, and he says, you give him that right now. And you apologize to him. Oh, and he says, he says, and I may give you a number. I want you to call. He says, we can put you to work. Apparently this guy had done the same thing to them a few years before and got the beating of his life somebody brought him into one of their card games, did he have a technique a cheating technique or had some marked cards no it was a card mechanic he could play games with cards they call him a mechanic and, in fact the guy was great at it because he had his own plane and everything else. But again, he had moved from Chicago and had just come back in the area. And they mounted. And so anyhow, he leaves. And he leaves then, and Marco took the money. Marco took the money. Marco took the money. Typical Bob guy, man. [10:19] And I says, what about the cash I lost to him? He says, well, you lost that. He says, you lost that. That’s when I realized how powerful. That’s when I realized how powerful that [10:35] he was part of the mob, not only a part of it, but one of the operational. Yeah, important part of it. That brings to mind another unbelievable situation that occurred. [10:49] The, uh, this is probably the, we’ll know the year by when it happened. There was a bookmaker named Hal Smith. Oh yeah. I remember that name. He got, tell us about Hal Smith. [11:05] Well, Hal Smith was a, he was a big guy too. A real, a real big guy. I met him on Rush street. He knew I was a gambler. He knew that I was a big gambler and I started gambling with him. Thank you. And I was with him probably for about maybe five or six months. And I’d win with him. I’d lose with him. And he would take big places. He would take $5,000 a game for me. And as they say, so the numbers were big. At the end of the week, we were sometimes $60,000, $70,000. [11:42] They were big numbers back and forth. And he was always good for the money. I was always good for the money. And one particular week, it was about $30,000. And I was waiting for money. Somebody else was supposed to give me even more than that. And the person put me off. And it was a good friend of mine. And I knew the money would be there. But a lot of times, these guys are going to collect it at a certain time. And then they’re expecting to give it to somebody else. Well, he was short. So I said, look, I don’t have it right now, but I’ll have it tomorrow, I said, because I’m meeting somebody. Well, okay, it better be there. [12:31] And look, it’ll be there, okay? Not a problem. So the next day, the person I’m supposed to get it from says, I’ll have it in a couple of hours. I don’t have it right now, but I’ll have it by late this afternoon. And I’m in my office when Hale Smith calls me and I said, I’ll have it a little bit later. And he slams the phone bell. I’m downstairs in Counselor’s Row. In fact, I’m meeting with Butchie and Harry. We’re in a booth talking about something. They had just sent me some business or whatever, but I’m talking about something. And George, the owner of the restaurant, comes over and he says, somebody is asking who you are and they want to talk to you. And they point out this guy. It was a guy I had seen before, because a lot of times at two in the morning, I would go down on West Street, and they had entertainment upstairs. And there was this big English guy. He was an English guy, as you could tell by his accent, a real loud guy. And when I walk up to talk to him, and he’s talking loud enough so people can hear him, and he says, you better have that. I’m here for it. You better have that. You better have that money. [13:51] Bob Hellsmith sent me, you get the money and you better have that money or there’s going to be a problem or whatever. And I said, well, the money will be there, but people can hear what this guy, this guy talking that shit. And he leaves. And he leaves. He’s going to call me back. And he leaves. I said, I’m busy right now. I says, give me a call back when I’m in the office and I’ll meet with you. So Butch, he goes, what was that all about? And I said, you know, it’s somebody I owe some money to. Well, who is he? Who is he with? I said, Harold Smith. And he said, who’s Harold Smith? You don’t pay him anything. He said, you don’t pay him anything. And he calls, when he calls back, he says, you will arrange to meet him. And I said, you know, I said, well, where? [14:44] And they knew where I lived. They’d been to my place at that time. I’m living in Newberry Plaza and they said, there’s a, there’s a Walgreens drugstore in Chicago Avenue. Tell him you’ll meet him there at Walgreens, and we’ll take it. And he says, and we’ll take it from there. When he does call me, I said, look, I said, I’ll meet you tomorrow morning for sure at Walgreens. I’ll have the cash. I said, I’ll have the cash, and I’ll have all of it. I said, but, you know, I’m tied up on some things. I said, I’ll go to my own bank when I’m finished here and whatever, and I’ll see you tomorrow morning for sure at 9 o’clock tomorrow morning. Okay. I sit down with them and they just said, I said, they said, go there and go meet them. And we’ll take care of it. The Walgreens is a store right in the corner of Michigan Avenue and Chicago Avenue, south side of the street. And it’s all windows. Huge windows here. Huge windows here. And a bus stop, a bus stop over here. When I get there, I park in the bus stop and I’m looking to my right and here he is sitting in a booth by himself, right by the window. And I look around and I don’t see anybody. I mean, with a lot of people, I don’t see Butchie. [16:06] Uh or red or anybody around but i i go in there anyhow and uh sit down and i uh sit down in the booth across from him and he’s eating breakfast he’s got some food in front of him and uh the girl comes by right away the girl comes by and i says you know just get me a coke and and he says have you got the money and i said yes and why i got i got a lot i got a lot of money in my pocket but not the, whatever it was he wanted, not the 27 or 28,000. There’s nobody there. And, uh, so we’re talking for no more than about two or three minutes. They had a telephone on the counter. I hear the phone ring and the waitress, the waitress is on the phone. And then she comes walking over and she says, it’s a call for you. And, and when I go get in the phone, I woke up and there’s a phone booth there. And here’s Butchie in the phone booth. And he’s there with a couple of other people. I hang the phone up. I walk over and I had my appointment booked. And I walk over and I just pick up the book. And as I’m walking out there, walking in, we pass each other. And so now when I get in my car and he’s looking at me in my car and right next to him is Butchie. And across from him was a red old male and Fat Herbie. [17:34] Herbie Blitzstein? Herbie Blitzstein? No, it wasn’t Herbie. This is another one. That’s one thing of Herbie. We called Herbie Fat. It was Fat Herbie. And the third guy is like sitting facing him. This is like, that weighs about 300 pounds. Oh, Sarno. Make Mike Sarno. Mike Sarno. That was it. And that’s, that’s, that’s who it was. You know, and I, I drive off, go to my office and go about my business. I get a call later that day from, uh, Hale Smith. Where’s my money? Where’s my money? I said, I gave it to your guy. You what? I gave it to him. I met him at nine o’clock this morning and I gave him the money. You did. And I said, yeah. Um, okay. And he hangs, and he hangs up. I don’t hear anything for a while. I never saw him again. I saw Hale a couple of times because he was always in one of the other restaurants. I lived in Newberry right across from there, but he never talked to me. I never talked to him, never said anything. It was about maybe it had to be a good couple of months later, When I read about Hale, Hale’s no longer with us. [18:52] That’s obviously how they found out about him. I never saw the other guy again. I’m hoping they didn’t kill him, but I’m assuming that’s what probably happened to him. In a public place like that, they probably just scared him off. He probably said, you know, I’m way over my head. I’m out of here. [19:15] They didn’t kill him in the public place he wouldn’t have been in the newspapers my little thought is like with the three guys they took him for a ride, I don’t know they just told him to leave town and he realized what it was and he did Hal didn’t get a chance to leave town Hal had other problems if I remember right I’d have to look it back up but he had other problems with the outfit what I found out later what they had done, was they had gotten one of their guys connected with him to find out who his customers were. In other words, one of the other people that he didn’t realize, that Hale didn’t realize was with them, they got him connected with them where he’s the one who’s doing his collecting and finding out who the customers were because they wanted to get all his customers as well as his money. It turns out he was He was a huge bookmaker for years. That’s what happened to him. And they just took his book. Yeah, I remember something about that story because I killed him in his house, I believe. Yeah, Sally D. [20:22] Sally D, yeah. Sally D was one. When I first met Sally D, he was with Marco’s Fruit, too. [20:30] He owned a pizza place up on the north side, north shore, and I broke him. I was betting with him and beating him week after week. And one of the last times I played with him, he couldn’t come up with the money. It took him an extra couple of weeks to get the cash to pay me. But we were real close friends with him. He’s a bizarre character because he was a totally low level at that time. Yeah. When he then connected up with the Cicero crew, with Rocky and Felice, with Rocky and those people, he became a boss with them. It turns out it was after they killed Al Smith. He was part of all that. That’s Salih De Laurentiis. He’s supposed to be a boss. He moved on up after the Family Secrets trial. He didn’t go down with that, I believe, and he kind of moved on up after that. I don’t know what happened to him. What was so funny about that, when he would come into the club, Marco’s club, Bobby Abinati. [21:42] Who was strictly a very low-level player, although we indicted him with the Gambia star. He’s the one who set up the robbery. Would that have been great if that would have gone through? He’s the one who set up that robbery in Wisconsin. He’d be making fun of Salihide all the time. [22:03] When Salihide would come in, he would make fun of him and joke about him and talk about what a loser he was. This is when he’s a boss of that crew. I mean, just a strange, I mean, nobody talked to bosses like that, especially when, when you’re, when you’re what they call Bobby, you know, what was Marco’s nickname for Bobby Knucklehead? [22:23] That was his nickname, Knucklehead. Pat Marcy, uh, contacted me about, you know, handling me in the only own case. [22:32] I couldn’t have been happier because that was a short time after they put a contract on me. So now i realized if they’re going to be making money you know they finally stopped because for good six seven months when i when i came back to chicago uh i was checking under my car every day in case there was a bomb i moved i moved from uh from a place that i own in the suburbs into an apartment complex so i wouldn’t be living on the first floor yeah it’d be impossible to somebody to break into my, you know, took them thrashing into my place. I changed my whole life around in that sense. [23:10] And when I drove everywhere I went, you know, I would go on the highway and then jump over. I would do all, I wanted to make absolutes. Even though nobody came around, I wasn’t taking any chances for a long period of time. And that was too when it cost me a fortune because that’s when I stopped dealing with the bookmakers because I wasn’t going to be in a position where I had to go meet somebody at any time to collect my money and whatever. [23:39] So what had happened, though, was somebody came to see me. And when I was practicing, there’s a lot of things I wouldn’t do. I set my own rules. I would not get involved. After the Harry Alleman case, I never got involved anymore myself fixing certain cases. But even prior to that, I wouldn’t fix certain cases. I wouldn’t get involved in certain cases, especially involving the police, because my father was such a terrific policeman, and I felt I was too in a lot of sentences. I loved the police. I disliked some of the crooked cops that I knew, but on the surface, I’d be friendly with them, etc. Harry Ailman was a prolific hitman for the Elmwood Park crew. He killed a teamster who wouldn’t help set up trucks for the outfit, a guy named Billy Logan. He was just a regular guy. He’s going to take us right into the meeting with the judge. He’ll take us into a counselor’s row restaurant where these cases were fixed. Now, Bob will give us a seat right at Pat Marcy’s table. Now, Pat Marcy was the first ward fixture, and he’s going to take us into the hallway with Pat Marcy where they made the payoffs. [24:57] Now, Bob, can you take us inside the famous Harry Aileman murder case? I know you fixed it. And tell us, you know, and I know there was a human toll that this took on that corrupt judge, Frank Wilson. Okay. The Harry Aileman case was, it was not long after I became partners with Johnny DeArco. I get a call from, I’m in Counselor’s Row at the restaurant. Whenever I was in there now, my spot was the first ward table. Nobody was allowed to sit there day or night. That was reserved for first ward connected people and only the top group of people. [25:40] I’m sitting there at the table and Johnny DeArco Sr. Tells me, you know, Pat wants to talk to you. About something. And I said, you know, sure. Not long afterwards, Pat comes downstairs. We go out. We go out in the hall because we never talk at the table. And he tells me, have you got somebody that can handle the Harry Alleman case? I had seen in the news, he was front page news. He was one of the main mob hitmen. He was partners with Butchie Petrucelli. But it was common knowledge that he was a hitman. He looked like one. He dressed like one. He acted like one. And whatever. And he was one. In fact, he was the one that used to go to New York. And I know he also went to Arizona to do some hits and whatever. He traveled around the country. I said to Pat, they thought the case was a mob hit on a team street. a teamster. I assumed that it was just that. It was people doing what they do. But I said to Pat, I said, well, get me the file. Get me the file. Let me see what the case looks like. Because I would never put a judge in a bad spot. That was my nature. [27:06] When I had cases, a lot of these judges were personal friends of mine. What I would do, if I wanted to have a case, if I wanted to fix a case to save all the time of having to go to a damn long trial, I would make sure that it was a case that was winnable, easily winnable. When I got the file, when I got the file from Pat, he got me the file the next day. The next morning, when he came in, he gave me the file. I looked at the file. It was a throw-out case. When I say throw-out case, absolutely a nothing case. [27:46] The records in the file showed that a car drove up down the street. Suddenly somebody with a shotgun blasted a guy named Billy Logan in front of his house and drove away. They were contacted by a neighbor, this guy, Bobby Lowe. Was it Bobby Lowe? Yeah, I’m pretty sure Bobby Lowe. Who indicated that he opened the door and let his dog run out. And when he looked, he saw somebody. He saw a car, and he gave a description of the car. And he saw somebody pull up, and he saw him shoot with a shotgun. And then he saw the person get out of the car and shoot him with a .45, and shoot him with a .45. And then the car sped away. That was pretty much the case. Some other people heard some noise, looked out, and saw a car driving away. A period of time after that, it had to be about a year or so after that, somebody was arrested driving to Pennsylvania to kill somebody. There was a guy who stopped. [29:16] Louie Almeida was his name. Louie Almeida was stopped in his car. He was on the way to Pennsylvania. And in front of his car, he had shotguns. And he winds up, when he gets arrested, he winds up telling the authorities that he can tell them about a mob murder back in Chicago and winds up cooperating with them. He indicates what happened. He indicated that, you know, he was asked to, you know, or he got involved in it. He got the car and whatever. They did this. They did that. And he pulled up alongside Billy and wound up shooting the victim as he came out of the house. [30:09] Now, I look at some other reports in there, some reports that were made out, new reports. They talk about the Louis Almeida. They talk about the witness that gave the first statement. and they said that they found, or he’s giving us a new statement now where he says he’s walking his dog. He hears a shotgun. His dog runs towards the car where the shooting was coming from. He saw Harry get out of the car and walk over and shoot him, walk over and shoot the victim, and he was looking at him, And then he jumped in the bushes and the car drove away. A complete new story. Yeah. A complete new story. And. I looked at the reports, and this is an easy winner. And so I told Pat, you know, I’ll take it. You know, I’m sure I can handle it. I said, I’m sure I can handle it, but, you know, I’ll let you know. [31:21] That’s when I contacted, I met my restaurant, Greco’s, and I had Frank Wilson there a lot. Well, I called Frank Wilson, invited him and his wife to come to the restaurant. I had done that many times before. When he gets there, I tell him, I have the case. You know, I told him I was contacted on this case, I said. And I said, it’s an easy winner, I said. And I explained to him what it was. I told him, you know, it’s the driver of the car who’s doing this to help himself. And this other guy, Bobby Lowe, that gave a complete new story from the original story that he gave. And I indicated, you know, can you handle the case? And he tells me, I can’t handle the case, he said, because I was SOJ’d. In Chicago, Illinois, they have a rule that makes it easy for people to fool around because for no reason at all you can ask to have a judge moved off the case. And you can name a second judge that you don’t want to handle the case. [32:34] Frank Wilson’s reputation was as such that the lawyer that turned out to be a judge later on, Tom Maloney, who had the case, named him in the SOJ. It was assigned to somebody else, and he indicated he wanted any other judge except Frank Wilson. Frank Wilson on the case. And this was Harry Aileman’s lawyer. Yeah. Okay. And who Tom Maloney, who then ends up being the judge years later. But yeah. Well, because we knew he was going to be a judge. Yeah. We knew ahead of time. I knew at that time. That’s what makes the story so unbelievably interesting. Yeah. Anyhow, he says, I can’t do it because… In Chicago, in Chicago, it’s supposed to keep it honest. I love this. To keep it honest. Yeah. To keep it honest, each judge is supposed to be picked by computer. [33:33] Same thing they’re doing to this day. Trump wondered why the same judge kept getting all his cases. Because they’re doing the same thing we did, some of us could do in Chicago. He was the chief judge in the area. he said to me, I don’t think I can get the case. I don’t think I can’t get the case. I said, I’ll get the case to you. I said, I’ll get, because I already, I, in fact, through Pat Marcy, anytime I wanted a case to go anywhere, I would contact Pat and I’d give him a thousand dollars and he would get me any judge I wanted. Uh, I said, well, I think I can. I said, I said, And I gave him $1,000. [34:16] I said, here, this is yours. And if I can’t get the case to you, you keep it. If I can’t get, I never said to him, will you fix it? Will you this or that? I mean, he understood what it was. I didn’t know how he would react to it. When I asked him, would you handle it? Were the words I used. I had never fixed anything with him before. [34:43] In case he was, you know, he would want to report it to somebody. I wasn’t worried because Frank had a reputation as being a big drinker. After I got the Harry Elliman file, Pat tells me, I’m going to have somebody come and talk to you. Who comes? And we meet in the first ward office, and then we go downstairs into the special room they had for conversations. It’s Mike Ficarro. He’s the head of the organized crime section. He’s the one who prosecutes all the criminals. He’s one of the many prosecutors in Chicago. That’s why there were over 1,000 mob murders and never a conviction from the time of Al Capone. Not a single conviction with over 1,000 mob murders because they controlled absolutely everything. He’s the boss. [35:35] I knew him. I didn’t like him. He had an attitude about him. You know, when I would see him at parties and when I’d see him at other places, and I’d walk by and say, hi, he just seemed coldish. [35:47] I found out later why. He was jealous of the relationship I had with all these people. [35:54] He says, I’ll help you any way I can, anything you need, whatever. So the prosecutors on the Harry Olliman case were our people. That’s who’s prosecuting the case anyhow. But they couldn’t get one of their judges apparently who would handle the case. So, but anyhow, uh, so, uh, when we, um, when we go, when we, when we go to trial, um. [36:25] Before to help me out, I told Pat, I’ll get somebody else to handle the case. I’ll have somebody else. I said, I won’t go in there. I won’t go in there because everybody knows I’m close to Frank, very close to Frank. I said, so I won’t go in there. I’ll get somebody. He says, no, no. He said, I’ll get somebody. And so he gets a guy named Frank Whalen, who I didn’t know at the time. He was a retired lawyer from Chicago. He was one of the mob lawyers. [37:00] He was one of the mob lawyers. And he lived in Florida. He lived in Miami. I think it was, no, Lauderdale. He lived in the Lauderdale area. He was practicing there. So I fly out. I fly out to meet him. I i do all the investigating in the case the i’m using an investigator that harry alleman got from me in fact he was the same investigator that got in trouble in in uh in in hollywood for what for a lot of stuff i can’t think of his name right now but he’s the one who got indicted in hollywood eventually for you know wiretapping people and whatever it was the same one. And he got me information on Bobby on this Bobby Lowe. He found out Bobby Lowe, Bobby Lowe was a drug addict. [37:59] When the FBI got a hold of him, Bobby Lowe was living out in the street because he had been fired from his first job. He had a job in some kind of an ice cream company where they made ice cream, and he got fired there for stealing. And then he had a job after that in a gas station, and he faked a robbery there. Apparently, what he did was he called the police and said he had been robbed. This is before they had cameras and all the rest of that stuff. He said he had been robbed. And somebody happened to have been in the gas station getting gas. It was a big place, apparently. [38:45] And when the police talked to him, he said, I didn’t see anything strange. He said, I saw the attendant walk out to the back about 10, 15 minutes ago. I saw him walk out to the back of the place and then come back in. And so they go out, and he had his car parked behind it, and they found the money that was supposed to have been stolen in the car. So not the best witness, in other words. Well, that’s an understatement, because that was why… That was why now he suddenly shows up, and they know all this. The FBI agents that obviously know all this, that’s their witness. That’s their case. To me, it’s an airtight, you know. Yeah. Anyhow, I developed the defense. I went back to see Frank a second time. I flew out to Florida a second time, gave him all this information. [39:48] I had talked to some other people to a number of people that were going to indicate that Harry played golf with them that day see how they remembered not golf but he was at a driving range with them with about five people they remember what they were three or four years three or four years before that what I also found out now, and I didn’t know and it changed my whole attitude on that this wasn’t a mob killing you, This guy that he killed was married to his, I think it was his cousin or some relation was married. I’m pretty sure it was to his cousin. She had told Harry, I got this from Butchie, Butchie Petrosselli, who had become a close friend of mine after I got involved with Harry’s case, his partner. And that was why he killed them, because apparently the sister, his sister-in-law, whatever she was, had told him, you know, when he was beating her up, she had said, well, my Harry Alameda won’t be happy about this. And he said, supposedly, he said, fuck that, Kenny. [41:02] And that’s why the shooting took place. Wow. This changed me. You know, I’m in the middle of it. There’s no getting out of it now. Yeah, they’ll turn it back. And by now, I’m running around all the time with Butch and Mary at night. I’m meeting them at dinner. They’re coming to one of my places where I have dinners all the time. You know, I’m becoming like close friends, close friends with both of them. Yeah. So anyhow, but anyhow, the lawyer that he got, Frank Whalen, who was supposed to be sharp, turned out like he was not in his, let’s just say he was not in his prime. [41:46] Charitable. And when he went in, you know, while the trial was going on, you know, while the trial was going on, I get a call from Frank. From Frank Wilson, because I told him, you don’t come back into the restaurant now. You don’t come back into the restaurant. I used his office as my office all the time, along with a bunch of other judges. I had a phone, but it cost about a dollar a minute to talk on my phone. I had to talk on my phone. So when I’d be at 26th Street in the courthouse, even though no lawyers are allowed back there in the chamber, so I’m back there sitting at his desk using the phone taking care of my own other business. I stopped going in there while the trial was going on. [42:35] So, anyhow, he calls me, and he wants to meet me at a restaurant over on Western Avenue. And, okay, he called me from one of the pay phones out there in front of the courthouse, and I go to meet him. What did he want? Was he complaining about the lawyer, Waylon? What was he complaining about, Waylon? and I was screwing it up. [42:59] When I meet him, I said, you know, he’s like, you know, he said, you know, we go into the bathroom and he and he said he’s all shooken up. He says, this is going to cost me my job. He said, he said, you know, they’re burying him. You’re burying him. You know, because I had given this information on the two witnesses. And he says, Frank Whalen, he said, isn’t doing a thing and cross-examining these people and whatever. [43:32] And he says, and he’s all upset. And I said, Frank, no, I’m shook up one of the few times in my life where it’s something I can’t handle. He had never told me, you know, I’ll fix the case, never. And I said to him, and I said, Frank, I said, if something goes wrong, I said, I’m sure they’re going to kill me, is what I said to him. Yeah. I said, if something goes wrong, I’m sure they’re going to kill me. And I left. I left the bathroom. Now, I have no idea what’s going on in his mind and whatever. Yeah. I see Pat the next day. And by something goes wrong in this case, you mean if he gets found guilty, that’d be what would go wrong and you would get killed. Is that that’s what you mean? Well, no question, because when I met, I didn’t go into that. I met with Harry Alleman. I get a call after I got involved in the case. A couple days later, I get a call from Markle. Meet me at one of the nightclubs where I was all the time at night with these people. [44:47] Above it, you’ve got a motel, a bunch of hotel rooms. I get a call from Markle. The reason everybody loved me and the mob, I never discussed what I was doing with anybody or any of the other dozens of mobsters I run with that I was involved in Harry’s case. Never said a word to anybody about any of this. That was my nature, and that’s why all these people love me. I never talked about one thing with anybody else or whatever. He says, I want to meet you. When I get over there, he says, let’s go upstairs. Somebody wants to talk to you. And we go upstairs, and there’s Harry Alleman. And Harry, how you doing? How are you? [45:27] And he says, listen, you’re sure about this? And I said, yeah. I said, I’m sure. And he said, well, if something goes wrong, you’re going to have a problem. Those were his words to me. You’re going to have a problem. And I said, you know, he says, because this judge, he says, this judge is a straight judge. And he said, Tom, you mean Tom Maloney. He says, and Tom wants to handle my case. And he tells me he’s going to be named a judge by the Supreme Court real soon. And he wants to handle and he wants to handle my case before he… Uh, you know, before he becomes a Supreme court, before he becomes a judge, I knew the moment he told me that I knew for sure that was the case because we control everything, including the Supreme court. I said, you know, I said, don’t, you know, don’t worry about it. I lied to him. And I said, uh, I said, yeah, the judge is going to, I said, yeah, he’s going to throw it out. He knows, I said, he knows what’ll happen if he doesn’t. That’s what I told Harry. I want to keep him happy. [46:34] I’m going to keep him happy probably for a few hours I’m a little nervous and then that’s all behind me like so many other problems I got in the middle of oh my god talking about walking a tightrope so now the lawyer came into Chicago he was in Chicago I met him when he came in he was staying at the Bismarck was at the Bismarck Hotel right around the corner from you know where Counselor’s Row was that’s where he was staying in the in the hotel right there by the first board office and there was a way to go in there without being seen and there was a, You go through another restaurant and you go through the alley and go up there. And I wouldn’t, I didn’t want to be seen walking into there because I know the FBI are probably, are probably watching and whatever. When he comes into town, they handle the case. So I go upstairs to see him. You know, I said, what the hell’s going on in court? He says, I’m going, it’s going great. It’s going great. I said, it’s going great. I just, you know, I just got a call last night. I had to go meet the judge. And he said, you’re not doing any cross-examining. Oh, I’m doing a great job. You know, I’m doing a great job. So after a few minutes of, I leave. Yeah. [47:52] That’s when I saw Pat Marcy, too. And I said, Pat, I said, the judge is upset about whatever’s going on. I said, maybe we should give him some more because I agreed to give him $10,000. And he said, you know, what a piece of work he is. You know, he said $10,000, and that’s all he’s going to get, not a nickel more or whatever. So now to say I’m nervous again is an ultra statement. The case, I walked over, and I wouldn’t go in the room, but I wanted to just be around that room for some reason. FBI agents all over the place. [48:30] FBI agents all over the place. And so now I’m at home and I’m packed. I’ve got my bags packed because if he finds it, I don’t know what he’s going to do. I’m worried he might find him guilty because of all that had happened. He, when the trial ended a given night, and the next day he was going to give the result. In fact, I didn’t go out and play that night. I was a little nervous, and I stayed home, and I packed up my bags. I packed up my bags, and about 9 o’clock, I got in the car, and I started driving. And by the time he gave the ruling, I was probably about 100, maybe 150 miles away. And I hear on the radio, you know, found him not guilty, found him not guilty. So I turn around. Hit the next exit, turn around and come back. I turn around. Northbound on I-55. [49:27] Probably a couple hours later, here I am parked in my parking spot. My parking spot was in front of my office, right across from City Hall. And I parked in the mayor’s spot when she wasn’t there. And drove probably to drive her crazy. But that was where I parked. That was my parking spot. We’d see my big car with the RJC license plates parked in the bus stop. And so here I am. I parked the car and I go in. I go in. [50:01] And I’m sure Pat told some people, probably not, but I’m sure they told all the mobsters, all the top mobsters, because these guys all wanted to meet me afterwards and get the restaurant. I go in to see them. We walked into the janitor’s closet. You walk out of Counselor’s Row. You go to the left. It goes into the 100 North Building. Now, you’ve got the elevators to the right. And behind that, you’ve got a closet where the janitors keep all their stuff. And you’ve got some stairs leading up to the, there was a, what do you call it? There was an office there where the commodities, big commodity exchange was right there. that there was a stairway leading up to where the offices were with some doors with bars and everything on it. And Pat is standing on those stairs, about two or three stairs. You know, I said, wow. I said, you know, everybody’s going nuts. And he goes, well, you know, you did a good job. And he gives me an envelope. He gives me an envelope. And, you know, I put the money in my pocket. [51:09] We said we had some more. We said a couple other words about, you know, this and that. And then I just go in there. I go back in the counselor’s. [51:21] Now, after the feds started getting indictments, did you try and warn the Aleman case judge, Frank Wilson? Why did you do that? And when I went to see Frank Wilson, I went to help him. I said, Frank, I said, look, I said, I was contacted by, I said, I was contacted by the, by the, by the FBI. They were investigating the Harry Aleman case. I said to him, I said, they, they feel the case was fixed. I said, when they come to see me, I said, you know, I said, I’m not going to talk to them. I said, I’m not going to talk to them. I’m going to take the fifth. And in your case, you can do the same thing. When they, if they come to talk to you, you just take the fifth amendment. If they give you immunity, I said, you know, then you, then you testify, but you tell them the truth. I said, don’t worry about me. Tell them the truth. This is how I talk to him. When I’m talking to him like that, it’s almost like he’s trying to run away from me. [52:27] We’re at a restaurant in a big complex. It was in one of those resorts in Arizona. He’s all but running away from me. I was trying to help him. What I said to him was, Frank, I said, the statute of limitations ran on all this. It’s been more than five years. There’s nothing they can do to you or to me, I said, because the statute ran. I said, so don’t lie to them. What the feds were concerned about, and I don’t know why, that he would deny ever fixing the case when it went through. I don’t know why they’re worried about that, but they were, and I didn’t want to see him get in trouble. [53:13] That’s why I went there to protect him. Hey, Bob, you were asked to represent an outfit associate or an outfit associate’s son who was accused of breaking the jaw of a Chicago policewoman. And you know, when a cop is injured in a fight with somebody, the cops follow that case. And I do not want to see any shenanigans going on. So, so tell us about how you walked that line. And I bet those cops were, were not happy with you in the end. Some people think this is a reason you flipped. Take us inside that case, will you? [53:45] And the reason I mentioned that it had a lot to do with what I eventually did. Now we’ll get back to what made me do what I was going to do. When I was practicing law now, and now I have been away from all this for years, I was out of town a lot because I’m representing the Chinese all around the country. I’m their main lawyer right now. [54:10] And I get a call from Lenny Colella. And he says, my son, he said, my son is in trouble. I want to come in and I want to talk to you about handling his case. This was a heater case, too. This was a front page case because he was charged with aggravated battery and attempted murder. Supposedly, he had beat up a policewoman and it was all over the place. He was a drug addict and whatever, supposedly he did all this. And when he came into the office with his dad, he was high. When I talked to him, he’s got his kid with him. And the kid is a smart aleck. As we’re talking, the kid, and I asked the kid, well, whatever. The kid was a smart aleck. And I just said to him, I said, Len, I can’t help you. I said, get him out of here. I want nothing to do with him. I said, I can’t help you. You didn’t take cases that were involved with cops anyhow, for the most part. No. I didn’t know what had happened in this case. I know what I saw in the paper. I didn’t know what the facts or anything were or whatever. I mean, if it turned out that if I felt when I talked to him that he had done it, whatever, I would not have taken the case anyhow. [55:26] I mean, I would not have. That’s why I say, too, that may be, too, why I was as quick and as rude as I was when he came in there and was acting and was a little bit high. I just wanted nothing to do with him, period. I said to his dad, his father said, you know, if I get him cleaned up, you know, I said, well, if you get him cleaned up, then we’ll talk again. I said, but I can’t help him, and I can’t help him. [55:54] And off he goes. the father re-contacted me about a week later. And he said, I had him in rehab and he straightened out and whatever. And he brought him back in and it was a new person. And when he told me the facts of the case, when he told me what happened, because he was a big, tough kid. He was a big, you know, he was a weightlifter, but he was a big, tough looking kid. [56:19] And it’s a little police woman. When he told me what happened, I believed him. Because I’ve been out in the street and whatever. And he says, you know, he told me what happened, that he had gotten stopped. He was out there talking to her. And when she said, you’re under arrest for DUI, he just walked. He says, I walked. I was going to get in my car and drive away. And she grabbed me and was pulling me or whatever. And I hear all these sirens coming. And within a few minutes, there’s all kinds of police. There’s about half a dozen police there. He says, and then they started jumping on me. He said, she was under me. He was all beaten up. He was all bloody and whatever. And she apparently had her jaw broken. And there’s no doubt in my mind when he’s telling me that, you know, when they were hit with his clubs or with this thing that they claimed he had without his fingerprints, it was a metal bar. Right, a slapper. A chunk of lead covered by leather. Everybody used to carry a slapper. How about you carry a slapper? They claimed, but there was no cloth on this. It was just the metal itself. Yeah, oh really? [57:45] Anyhow, that makes it interesting during the trial when they flat out lied. No, he had no blood. I got the hospital reports. They wouldn’t take him in the station because he was too badly beaten up. But anyhow, he also had two other charges. He had been involved in a fight in a bar. And he had been involved in another situation with the police. And he was charged with resisting arrest and battery on a policeman out in Cicero. So he had these three cases. So I gave the father a fee on handling, you know, the one, I was going to, I gave him a fee one case at a time. I said, you know, first thing we’ll do, I want to get rid of those other two cases. I’ll take them to juries, I said. [58:36] I’ll take them to juries because I wasn’t going to put them. I knew both the judges on those cases, but I wasn’t going to put them in a position on a case like that. I take the first case to trial. And I get him a not guilty. That was the fight in the bar. [58:54] That was out in one of the suburbs. That was out in, I’m not sure which suburb, in the northwest side. After we get that case over with, before that case, I get a call from Pat Marcy. Pat Marcy, I hadn’t seen him probably even for a couple months, but I hadn’t talked to him for quite a long period of time. And he says to me, you got a case that just came in. He said, we’re going to handle it. And I said, there’s no need, Pat. I said, I can win these cases. I said, there’s no need. I can win these cases. And he said, we’re going to handle this. The case is going to go to Judge Passarella, he said, and we’ll take care of it. I said, Pat, there’s no need to. I said, I can win these cases. I said, they’re all jury trials, but I know I can win them all. And he says, you do as you’re told. Pat had never talked to me like that before. [59:54] Powerful as he was and crazy as I am, And he never, you know, you never demand that I do anything or whatever. We had a different type relationship. And although I hadn’t broken away from them by now, it’s been years. I had broken away from them for about, you know, two, three years. And he says, you know, take the case to trial. I said, well, he’s got some other cases, too, and I’m going to take the one. And she says, I’ll take it to a jury, and I’ll win it. You’ll see how I win it. I take her to trial, and I get her not guilty. The second case was set for trial about a month after that. Not even, yeah, about a month or so after that. And during that time, a couple of times I’m in counselors, and Pat says, when are you going to take the case to trial? I said, well, Pat, you know, I won the one case. I got the other case on trial, and it was before Judge Stillo. He was a judge that we eventually indicted. [1:00:51] Stillo was very, very well connected to the first ward. He’s one of the old-time judges out in Maywood. And I told him, you know, when I came in there, he assumed I’d take it to trial and he’d throw it out. And I said, no, no, no, there’s no need to. I says, I’m going to take the jury on this one. Number one, I had stopped fixing things long before this. And, but he was, to make money, he was willing that he would have thrown the case out. It was a battery with a Cicero policeman. And I says, no, no, I’ll take it. I’ll take it to, you know, I’ll take the jury. I said, I don’t want to put you in that pursuit. Oh, don’t worry about me. I take that one to trial and I win that one too. Now Pat calls me, when the hell are you going to take the case to trial? And that’s the original case with the police woman. That’s the main one. The main one. Okay, go ahead. [1:01:44] When are you going to take it to trial? And I don’t want to take it to trial. In fact. I had talked to the prosecutor, and I said, look, I said, because he was charged with, he was charged with, you know, attempted murder and arrest. I said, if you’ll reduce it, the prosecutor was an idiot. He knew me, should have realized that, you know, that I never lose cases. Yeah. You know, but I want to work out something. He was a special prosecutor on it. He said, we’re not going to reduce it. We said, you know, if you want to work out a plea, we went five years, we went five to ten or whatever in the penitentiary. And I said, well, that’s not going to happen. I said, well, then we’ll just have to go to trial. So now, while I’m at Counselor’s Row, on one of my many occasions, because I was still having some card games over there at somebody else’s other lawyer’s office, because I had had big card games going on there for years. I’m sitting at the counselor’s row table, and Judge Passarella comes in. There’s just him and me there, and when he comes in, I say, Oh, you’re here to see Pat? [1:02:56] And he goes, Pat, who? No more conversation. Who the fuck? No more. The guy’s treating me like I’m some kind of a fool or whatever. And I developed an instant disliking to him. I had never seen him around that much or whatever before that. So now, after the second case, you’re going to go to, you know. So I talked to Lenny. When Lenny came in, Lenny came in with him when we were starting to get prepared for the case. And, oh, this is before this is before I talked to the prosecutor. And I said, Lenny, I said, I says, if I can get it reduced to a misdemeanor, to a misdemeanor. I said, you know, can we work with, you know, and work out a plea, let’s say, for maybe a month or two, you know, a month or two. Is that OK with you? Oh, sure. He says, oh, sure. [1:03:57] Now, this Lenny, this was the kid’s dad, your client’s dad. This is his dad. Now, explain who he was, who Lenny was. His dad was. What’s his last name? Yeah, Karela. Karela, okay. Lenny Karela, I’m pretty sure was his name. He owned a big bakery out there in Elmwood Park area. Okay. And he was friendly with all the mobsters. Okay, all right. I got you. For all I knew, he may have been a mobster himself, but I mean, he may have been because we had thousands of people that were connected. He was a connected guy. All right, go ahead. I’m sorry. And he said, oh, yeah, sure, no, not a problem because the papers are meant, they’re still, after a year, they’re still mentioning that case will be going to trial soon and every so often. [1:04:43] What I had also done, I tried to make contact with the policewoman, not with her, but I put the word out and I knew a lot of police and I got a hold of somebody that did know her. And I said, look, I said, no, the case is fixed if I want it. Yeah. But I don’t want it. Even though I know that, you know, that it’s all BS, you know, I said, look, I said, get a hold of her and get a hold of her lawyer and tell them if they want to file a lawsuit, you know, you know, we can, they can get themselves some money on it. Uh, you know, he’ll indicate, you know, he’ll, he’ll, he’ll indicate that, you know, he, he was guilty or whatever, but I wanted to get her some money. The word I get back is tell him that piece of shit, meaning me to drop dead, to drop dead. You know, we’re going to put this guy in prison and that’s where he should be too. When the case now, now when the case goes to trial. [1:05:48] The coppers lied like hell and talk about stupid. I’ve got the police reports there. When they took him into the police station, they wouldn’t take him. The station said take him to a hospital. He goes to the hospital and the reports, you know, bleeding here, bleeding there, and, you know, marks here, marks there. They beat the hell out of him. [1:06:10] You know, nobody touched him. You know, nobody touched him. Nobody touched him. Was he bleeding? No, no, he wasn’t. He wasn’t bleeding. Didn’t have any, you know, along with, you know, along with everything else. Flat out lied. How many policemen were there? There were two or three. There were about 10 by the time it’s over. But it’s an absolute throwout. Any fingerprints on that metal? Well, we had some fingerprints, but not his. And on and on it went. It’s a throwout case to start with. The courtroom now where the case was, was very interesting. You walk in there, and when you walk in there, there’s about 20 people that can sit. And then there’s, it’s the only courtroom in the building where you have a wall, a glass wall, all the way up, all the way up. Covering in the door, opens up and goes in there. You go in there. It’s a big courtroom. A bunch of benches now in there. You go to the left, and here’s the judge’s chambers. You come out of the chambers, and you walk up about four steps. And here the desk is on like a podium. And it’s not where all the others are, you know, where you look straight forward. It’s over on the side. It’s over, you know, to the left as you walk out of his chambers. [1:07:40] When the judge listens to the case he goes in there I’ll come up back with my ruling he comes out about 10 minutes later he walks up the steps, And now he turns off the microphone. Somebody turns off the microphone so the people in the back can’t hear anything. The ones inside there can, you know, can hear. The one back there can’t hear anything because it’s all enclosed. [1:08:11] That’s why they got the microphone back there. Somebody shut it off. He says, basically, I’m not guilty in a real strange voice. And all but runs off the all but run and don’t ask me why this is what he did all but runs off all but runs off into the into his chambers, you know he’s afraid all those cops out in the audience were going to come and charge the stand I guess and put a whack on him. [1:08:43] But think about it this is Chicago he’s with the bad guys but I’m just saying I don’t know why he did all that, but that’s what he did. And so now, as I come walking out with Mike, and they’re all in uniform, and most of them are in uniform, and then you’ve got the press and all kinds of cameras and whatever there. And as I come walking out along with him, some of these guys I know, and these jerk-offs are like calling me names and whatever. I go, I go see Pat. [1:09:23] And when I go back into Counselor’s Row now, he’s there at the table. And when I come in, it’s a repeat of the Harry Allerman thing. He walks out. He walks directly. And I’m following him, and he walks in. He goes back into the same janitor’s closet and stands on the same steps just above me, you know, talking to me. And I said to him I said this judge is going to have a problem, I said, he’s going to have a problem. I said, what if he says something? And he said to me, nobody would dare. He said, nobody would dare cooperate against us. They know what would happen. Or words to that effect. And don’t ask me why. So many other things had happened before this. But now I’m looking at him and I’m thinking, you know, somebody’s got to stop this craziness. All this stuff. I’m thinking that at the moment, but then I’m worried for some reason, I think he can read my mind. [1:10:34] Stupid as all of this seems, I’m afraid to think that anymore. I’m almost, you know, cause Pat’s such a powerful person and every sense I know, I know his power, but anyhow, so I leave. And like I say, 10, 15 minutes later, that’s all forgotten about. He paid me the rest of the money I was supposed to get from them. [1:10:56] Obviously, he wanted to do it because he was probably charging a lot of money. That’s why he didn’t want me to take things. He wanted to collect the money because while the case was going on too, he puts me in touch with the head of the probation department because he was able to help in some way. He knew some of the, you know, some of the, some of the policemen involved in the thing had been contacted too. Yeah. But they were contacted and they messed up by, you know, they messed up by lying about all that. Yeah. When there’s police reports saying, oh, no, but anyhow, that was that particular case. Tell us why you decided to flip. [1:11:38] These had been your friends. You knew you had explosive information. You knew as a lawyer, you knew what you had to say would send these people to prison for many, many years. if not life. It had to be hard. As other things happened, why did I commit the, Probably two or three other times things happened. But the most important thing was to think when my dad was dying, and I was very close to my dad. When my dad was dyi
A Festive season mix for warm nights, soft lights, and anyone who believes the dancefloor can feel like a heartbeat… This set was crafted with pure affection—for groove, for connection, for that slow-burn heat that rises when the right records meet the right moment. It opens with the velvet glow of Jessie Ware's “Freak Me Now,” Babert's flirtatious “I Wanna Dance Tonight,” and the soulful lift of “Back Together Again.” From there, every track becomes a touch, a look, a breath. Purple Disco Machine's edit of Claptone's remix of Mylo – “Drop the Pressure” pushes the energy into a beautiful, irresistible strut—sleek, sexy, and confident. Nick Reach Up's remix of Gadjo's “So Many Times” wraps everything in sunlit nostalgia, the kind of groove that feels like warm hands on your waist. And then there's Fango's remix of Silicone Soul's “Right On”—deep, hypnotic, intimate. A late-night whisper disguised as a rhythm. Mixed between the magic, you'll find the tenderness of Nile Rodgers & Emeli Sandé's “When Someone Loves You,” and the timeless swing of Moloko & Mousse T.'s “Sing It Back”. And to close it all with love, Crazy P's “One True Light” brings the whole journey home—glowing, soulful, and softly euphoric. This is a mix made to hold you. To warm you. To move with you—body, mind, and heart. Press play, settle in, and let the night unfold. Here's the full tracklist: 1. Jessie Ware – Freak Me Now 2. Babert – I Wanna Dance Tonight 3. Sarah Jane Morris, Mario Biondi, Micky More & Andy Tee – Back Together Again (Micky More & Andy Tee Radio Edit) 4. Ken@Work – Touch The Sky 5. Karl Wolf – Only Tonight 6. Millie Jackson, Dimitri From Paris – We Got To Hit It Off (Dimitri From Paris Liberated Women Mix) 7. Hotmood – Raised In The Ghetto 8. Lex (Athens), Locke, Funk Missile – Juk the Box 9. The Shapeshifters – Lola's Theme – VIP 10. Nathalie Duchene, Yuksek – Praia (Yuksek Remix) 11. Diplo, SIDEPIECE, Purple Disco Machine – On My Mind (Purple Disco Machine Remix) 12. Shakedown, Purple Disco Machine – At Night (Purple Disco Machine Extended Remix) 13. Allen Craig – Crazy Legs 14. Jules Grant, Nic Hanson – Alive 15. Emeli Sandé, Nile Rodgers – When Someone Loves You 16. Hotmood – Jump Off 17. Mirko & Meex – Back Into The Funky Groove 18. Moloko, Mousse T. – Sing It Back (Mousse T's Feel Love Mix) 19. La Felix, Relaye, DE SOFFER – HOT (DE SOFFER Remix) 20. Da Lukas, Giovanni Di Martino – Butter Track 21. Sammy Deuce – Funkin You (Original Mix) 22. Claptone, Mylo, Purple Disco Machine – Drop The Pressure (Purple Disco Machine Remix Edit) 23. Gadjo, Nick Reach Up – I'm Watching You (So Many Times) – Extended Mix 24. Silicone Soul, Fango – Right On (Fango Remix) 25. Seamus Haji, Mike Dunn – Fire – Extended Mix 26. Crazy P – One True Light 27. Chris Rea – Loving You Again
"2 In Bianconero " con Vincenzo Marangio. Ospite: Mirko Nicolino (Bianconeranews)
Quanto è politica l'arte? Cosa significa oggigiorno fare ed essere un artista? Siamo in grado di salvaguardare gli eventi culturali? Lisia e Laura ne parlano con Salvatore, Mirko e Giulia. p.s. buone feste
Das erste "6" Pubktewochenende ist in den Büchern und die Weihnachtszeit mit 8 Spielen in 16 Tagen wirft seine Schatten voraus. Die Eispiraten stehen auf einem starken 6. Tabellenplatz und wollen weiter punkten, doch die angespannte Situation im Kader macht die Sache nicht einfacher. Im aktuellen Podcast, spricht Moderator Steve mit den Eispiraten Verteidigern Adam McCormick und Mirko Sacher über das letzte Wochenende, die angespannte Personalsituation und die kommende Weihnachtszeit.Also hört rein, es lohnt sich... Wie immer!
"2 In Bianconero " con Vincenzo Marangio. Ospite: Mirko Nicolino (Bianconeranews)
Najnowsze trendy i najciekawsze HOUSE MUSIC premiery #923 #KLUBFM
Finance Forward - Der Podcast zu New Finance, Fintech, Crypto, Blockchain & Co.
Der deutsche Versandhändler Otto rüstet sich für die Ära des KI-Shoppings. „Das ist ein richtiger Trend", sagt Mirko Krauel, Chef der Zahlungssparte Otto Payments, im Finance Forward Podcast. KI-Shoppingassistenten vergleichen Preise, empfehlen Produkte und können sogar eigenständig bezahlen – doch das sogenannte „Agentic Commerce“ ist auch eine Gefahr fürs Werbegeschäft. Noch sei deswegen unklar, „wer Freund oder Feind ist“, so der Payment-Experte. Im Podcast erklärt Krauel, wie Otto über mögliche Partnerschaften mit OpenAI, Perplexity und Co. nachdenkt, was er vom deutschen PayPal-Konkurrenten Wero hält und warum Otto bei Klarna zurückhaltend bleibt.
All'interno del programma di Radio PNR condotto da Alberto La Piana, “Buongiorno PNR”, la Dott.ssa Anahi Dettoni dell'Associazione "L'Arcobaleno di Mirko, ci ha presentato il progetto di outdoor education “ImmaginOltre”, un'iniziativa dedicata all'educazione all'aperto e allo sviluppo delle competenze attraverso esperienze innovative.
ResiDANCE - house, deep house, techno, electro-house, progressive, edm mix - Европа Плюс Official
1. Pernatkin.Gleb - Everybody 2. Demarkus Lewis - In Da Raw 3. Mirko & Meex - There's A Light 4. Unai Bellamy - La Party 5. Diskobar - Tender Lovin' 6. Bastian Bux - Lose My Mind 7. Ciava - Freedom 8. ABOUTME - She's Gone 9. JØRD - The Bump 10. Demian Muller, Karen Neumann - 3i Atlas 11. Abdon, Sebastian Rivero - Never 12. Dino Lenny - Not About The Volume (Tiger Stripes Remix) 13. Cervera - Take Me 14. Kideko, Roland Clark - Have A Good Time
SPRIND – der Podcast der Bundesagentur für Sprunginnovationen
Where is the next AI frontier? How could Europe leapfrog the US and China in the upcoming wave of AI innovation? And why has SPRIND committed to raise and spend 3 billion Euros on three European frontier labs? In today's episode, our host Thomas Ramge talks with SPRIND's innovation managers Mirko Holzer and Dr. Johannes Otterbach about the launch of our big, no very big AI frontier lab initiative.
La cucina italiana eletta patrimonio Unesco, ma qualcuno rosica. Seguici su www.allthebest-radio.com
Greg Henderson - Dreamin' (Alex Di Ciò Soulful Remix),Dan The Drum x Carmy Love - Hurt So Bad (Terry Jones Village Soul Remix), Audiowhores/Angela Johnson - Touch The Ground (DJ Passion & George Jackson UK Remix),Louie Vega feat. Anané Vega/Tony Touch - Last Night A DJ Saved My Life (Anané's Dub),Luisitio Quintero - Aqualis Coisas (DJ Erv Rework),Brutha Basil, Kelvin Sylvester - No More Mind Games (Original Mix),Joe Claussell - Je Ka Jo (Demo Version - 2025 Remaster), Mirko & Meex - There's A Light,Incognito - Running Away,Lack of Afro/Greg Blackman - Make It Shine,Dave Anthony/Patrick Collins - It's Up To You,Dave Anthony/Rachel Evans - The Last Night At Studio 54, Tony Momrelle - It Will Be Alright (Reel People Remix),Angie Stone - Wish I Didn't Miss You (IQ Musique House Remix),JD's Time Machine/Cleveland P. Jones - Kiss of Freedom (Neil Pierce Remix), Will Downing - Vibe With You,Kem - Give My Love (Joy & Pain Remix), David Ruffin - In The Cool of The Night (From Detroit With Love VIII),Gladys Knight & The Pips - The Things Time Can't Erase (From Detroit With Love VIII),Smokey Robinson & The Miracles - My Business Your Please (From Detroit With Love VII),The Whispers - Can't Do Without Love (Whisper In Your Ear LP, 1979),Directions Band - We Need Love (Alvaro's X-Tended Version),George Benson - Love x Love (Koko Southport Edit),
Moooooin Flakeys.Neue Folge mal wieder. Unsere Tooomee hat bisschen mit sein Mirko rumexperimentiert, ging aber nicht so gut aus. Dafür entschuldigt uns bitte. Das nächste mal wirds bombastisch.Viele geile Themen mal wieder. Das Jahr mal kurz aufgerollt. Heiße Insights und was geht im nächsten Jahr ?Viel Spaß beim zuhören.LGHEEEENREE & TOOMEE
Do Nočnej pyramídy prijal pozvanie človek, ktorého hlas a aj tvár pozná na Slovensku takmer každý. Herca, Miroslava Nogu, mnohí považujú hlavne za komika, lebo okolo seba rozosieva dobrú náladu. Rodák z Bratislavy vyštudoval herectvo na VŠMU, počas štúdia bol spoluzakladateľom a členom kabaretnej skupiny Strapatí gentlemani, ktorá prerazila revuálnymi predstaveniami, ako Fujarová show, alebo Rýchlokurz geniality. Bol členom činohry Novej scény, divadla Astorka Korzo' 90. ... Spolu so Štefanom Skrúcaným bol interpretom politicko-saritických televíznych, aj rozhlasových programov. Vydali spolu štyri, prevažne humorne ladené, hudobné albumy. Miro Noga má za sebou množstvo divadelných a TV inscenácií, rozhlasových hier, filmov i seriálov. Je otcom dcéry a dvoch synov a podobne ako my, sa teší na Vianoce... Obľúbený herec, ktorého všetci volajú Mirko, v tejto epizóde NP v rozhovore s Ľudovítom Jakubove - Mravcom. | Hosť: Miroslav Noga (herec, komik, bratislavské Divadlo Astorka). | Moderuje: Ľudovít Jakubove - Mravec. | Tolkšou Nočná pyramída pripravuje Slovenský rozhlas, Rádio Slovensko, SRo1.
Mirko spricht über das Nachwehen seines Brauereidungeons, während Philipp weiter in die Tiefen des unmöglichen Vordringt - in die Tiefen der Night Floors. WERBUNG: Mit dem PromoCode: PREPCAST25 15% auf alles bei der https://fantasyschmiede.de/. Links zur Folge: https://dysonlogos.blog/maps/dysons-delve/ Auf https://www.patreon.com/rppcast könnt ihr unsere medialen Inhalte aus den Folgen kostenlos begutachten. Wenn ihr auf dem Laufenden über den Rollenspielprepcast bleiben wollt, folgt uns gerne auf Instagram. Dort findet ihr uns unter RollenspielprepCast.
"Colpo di Tacco" con Alessandro Santarelli e Vincenzo Marangio , cronaca di Antonio Paolino commento di Samuel Tafesse Ospiti: Camillo Demichelis, Mirko Nicolino (Bianconeranews).
Not everyone might be enchanted with the idea of vegan gelato -- but Nice Cream could be the brand that convinces hard-nosed skeptics to change their minds. The brand which has two thumbs up from noted vegan site Happy Cow got its start in Taiwan and has gone from strength to strength, thanks to hard work and determination on the part of its owners Mirko and Patty. Hosted by ICRT's Hope Ngo. -- Hosting provided by SoundOn
L'adorazione è quel luogo in cui il cuore si arrende e l'anima riconosce Chi è Dio.Non è solo un gesto, un canto o un'emozione: è un incontro che che va oltre, un movimento dello Spirito che ci porta davanti al trono, proprio come la visione di Apocalisse 5:11-14. Mentre la chiesa si unisce, sembra di sentire l'eco di quella moltitudine celeste che proclama: "A Colui che siede sul trono e all'Agnello siano la lode, l'onore, la gloria e la potenza nei secoli dei secoli."È allora che l'adorazione diventa un ponte tra cielo e terra. Le mani che si alzano parlano di resa, gli occhi chiusi di fiducia, la voce che si innalza racconta un amore eterno. La presenza di Dio non rimane un concetto: diventa reale, percepibile, viva.Quando il tempo si ferma e tutto il resto diventa silenzio, comprendiamo che l'adorazione non è per riempire uno spazio: è per ricordare chi è l'Agnello e chi siamo noi, il Suo popolo. Dio ci avvolge con la stessa gloria che riveste il cielo, e ci ricorda che quando lo adoriamo, la nostra voce si unisce a quel canto eterno.In quel legame tra Lui e la Sua chiesa ritroviamo identità, forza e pace.
Puntata incentrata sulla lotta estrema delle femministe che sta diventando piu una lotta di genere che per diritti.
Da sind sie wieder, ein letztes Mal treffen sich Patrick und Kay vor dem Mirko, um das Jahr 2025 nochmal Revue passieren zu lassen. 18 Folgen sind es geworfen, es wurde gelacht, diskutiert, argumentiert und große Pläne geschmiedet.
In dieser Episode dreht sich alles um Feiertagschaos, Familienmomente und kleine Überraschungen. Patricia und Janina berichten von ihren Thanksgiving-Feiern, vom Black Friday und mit welchen Aktionen sie diese Woche von Coleman und Mirko überrascht wurden. Eine Episode voller Holiday-Spirit, ehrlicher Einblicke und herzlicher Momente.
Was darf man heute noch sagen – und was wird sofort zum Shitstorm?Patrick Reiser spricht mit MrWissen2Go über Meinungsfreiheit, Selbstzensur, Cancel Culture und die subtile Macht von Algorithmen.Warum wird der Meinungskorridor immer enger? Wie beeinflussen Social Media unsere Wahrnehmung – und unser Denken?Ein wachrüttelndes Gespräch über Polarisierung, digitale Verantwortung und den Mut, frei zu sprechen._____► Kostenlose Achtsamkeitsmeditation für tiefere Verbundenheit und mehr Klarheit: https://start.patrickreiser.com/meditation_____► Kostenloser Klarheitstest: https://klarheitsquiz.com_____► In 12 Wochen zu tiefer Verbundenheit, Sinnhaftigkeit und Lebensfreude: Hier geht es zu meinem Mentoring: https://patrickreiser.com/human-elevation-mentoring______► Das exklusive Retreat in den Schweizer Bergen, welches die Grenzen deine Wahrnehmung sprengt und dich in eine zielgerichtete Umsetzung deiner Vision bringt: https://patrickreiser.com/retreat______► Jetzt Patricks neues Buch versandkostenfrei bestellen
In dieser Folge dreht sich alles um die Frage "Wie wird man eigentlich?". Heute mit Mirko Drotschmann auch bekannt im Internet als MrWissen2go. Erfahrt wie Mirko angefangen hat, seine Anfänge beim SWR, wie sein Alltag aussieht und z.B. wie er die Rolle von Social Media sowie KI in der Zukunft einschätzt! Von Gesprächen über Medienkompetenz bis Kaiserschmarrn ist alles in dieser Folge für euch dabei!
Mirko Lange hat zwei Wortschöpfungen entwickelt: „Meinungsbehauptung“ und „Tatsachenmeinung“ – für das Phänomen, dass jemand eine Meinung als Behauptung ausgibt oder eine Behauptung als Meinung. Das Phänomen selbst bespreche ich bereits in meinem Buch „Immun gegen Unsinn“, doch bislang hatte ich dafür keine Bezeichnungen. Ein bekanntes Beispiel ist der Schweizer Historiker Daniele Ganser, der Sätze [...] Der Beitrag 323 Klartext-Podcast: Mirko Lange und die Polizeihochschule erschien zuerst auf Thilo Baum.
Mirkos Gruppe dringt tiefer in den Dungeon unter ihrer Taverne vor. Doch was lauert jenseits des Dungeons? Die Kamapgne geht auf ein Ende zu, die Frage ist nur wie? Philipp stellt Impossible Landscapes vor. Der Horror in dieser Kampagne ist sehr psychologisch und persönlich. Also viel vorzubereiten. Zum Glück hat er Mirko... WERBUNG: Mit dem PromoCode: PREPCAST25 15% auf alles bei der https://fantasyschmiede.de/. Auf https://www.patreon.com/rppcast könnt ihr unsere medialen Inhalte aus den Folgen kostenlos begutachten. Wenn ihr auf dem Laufenden über den Rollenspielprepcast bleiben wollt, folgt uns gerne auf Instagram. Dort findet ihr uns unter RollenspielprepCast.
30 Novembre e si entra ufficialmente nel periodo Natalizio! Domenica in musica e sport con la ricetta di Sweet Agata.
TRACKLIST: 01 - Memi P - Don't Wanna Believe 02 - Luppi Clarke - Raw Affairs 03 - Alex Preston, Mo'funk, Secret Weapons (AU ) - People Dancing 04 - House Freakers - Feel The Heat 05 - DJ Chus, Harry Romero - Celebrate Life 06 - Mirko & Meex - Buzzed Out 07 - Armand Van Helden - A Girl Like You (Dave Spoon Remix) 08 - Mix Masters, Housequake - In The Mix (Housequake Reconstruction) 09 - CASSIMM - In Your Face 10 - Alex Preston - By The Hour 11 - Joaquin Phunk, John Soulution - Jack Ur Soul 12 - The Cube Guys, Silvano Del Gado - Chambacú 13 - Nari, Steve Tosi, Nabuk - Ain't Nobody 14 - Crazibiza & Bartouze - One Last Time 15 - Free Samuele (Sartini Remix) 16 - Jerome Robins & Dolly Rockers - What About My Love (Etienne Ozborne & Peter Brown Remix) #luppiclarke #djluppiclarke #HBFam #housemusic #house
In questo episodio commentiamo "The Boulet Brothers' Horror Picture Show" e con sorpresa scopriamo che in Dragula si possono fare belle challenge musical.Il camp è sempre più ingrediente fondamentale per capire il mondo creato dai Boulet Brothers. Puoi seguirci anche in diretta e interagire con la chat ogni martedì e spesso il giovedì su twitch.tv/puntateenaRimani aggiornatə seguendoci su instagram.com/puntateenaIl nostro merch è disponibile nella Boutique di Puntateena puntateena.myspreadshop.it Hosts di oggi: Mama Xandy, Pecio, Mirko
Ancora nel bosco. C'era anche Luca Scazzi.Anna da Roma dove la fa? Luca Boccoli contro Gio Urso. Porschage + rolexage... uguale Fi...Mirko de Carli, il Duce e Alessandra da MilanoMartina Bellotti e Alejandro... uno sciamano in studio.
Mirko Novakovic, Gründer von Dash0, spricht über den richtigen Zeitpunkt für erfahrene Sales Leader. Er teilt, warum man ab 500.000 bis 1 Million ARR einen erfahrenen Sales Leader brauchen kann, wie man Top-Talente erkennt und warum die zweite Reihe oft die bessere Wahl ist. Was du lernst: Den richtigen Zeitpunkt für Sales Leadership Wie du Top-Talente erkennst Die Balance zwischen Erfahrung und Kultur Warum Teams mitbringen wichtig ist ALLES ZU UNICORN BAKERY: https://stan.store/fabiantausch Mehr zu Mirko und Florian: Mirko Novakovic: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mirkonovakovic/ Dash0: www.dash0.com Florian Dostert: https://www.linkedin.com/in/florian-dostert/ Syntinels: https://www.syntinels.com/ Join our Founder Tactics Newsletter: 2x die Woche bekommst du die Taktiken der besten Gründer der Welt direkt ins Postfach: https://www.tactics.unicornbakery.de/
0:00 Wenn du nicht 1 Mio. machst im ersten Jahr nach Verkaufsstart, kannst du dicht machen 5:55 Hustling Lifestyle 10:06 Wie Mirko den CRO für Dash0 gehired hat 14:22 Was genau macht ein CRO? 18:18 Warum wird Dash0 gekauft? 29:38 US-Expansion 32:38 Mirko hat seine Meinung zu KI geändert 50:46 Sales-Aufbau und Kultur ► LinkedIn von Mirko Novakovic: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mirkonovakovic/ ► Dash0: https://www.dash0.com/ ► data:unplugged ○ Website: https://www.data-unplugged.de ○ YouTube: https://youtu.be/JJK3anrukt4?si=6EiqlyCwE7ce0pLo ○ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/data-unplugged/ ○ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dataunplugged/ ► FESTIVAL 2026: haltet Euch den 26. & 27. März 2026 frei! Das größte Data & AI Festival Deutschlands kehrt zurück!
In this Nash Holos exclusive interview from 2014, Pawlina speaks with Mirko Petriw, Vancouver-based author of two spy thrillers set in Ukraine and president of the Ukrainian-Canadian Congress Vancouver branch.Recorded during the Maidan Uprising, in the tense weeks leading up to Russia's annexation of Crimea, this conversation delves into the intersection of energy politics, propaganda, and democratic struggle in Ukraine.Listeners will hear about:• Ukraine's shale gas ambitions and what they could have meant for energy independence • How Russia and Gazprom sought to block Ukraine's EU association and undermine shale gas development • The propaganda battles around fracking and environmental fears, echoing debates in the West • The political crackdown on protesters, including restrictive laws and state-directed violence against demonstrators • The broader struggle for sovereignty, democracy, and Ukraine's future direction Petriw's insights reveal how hopes for energy independence collided with Russian influence, Gazprom's pressure, and authoritarian tactics during one of Ukraine's most pivotal moments.This interview originally aired on the Vancouver edition of Nash Holos on AM1320 CHMB on January 18, 2014. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Kaum zu glauben, aber seit Folge 167 der Morningshow sitzen endlich mal alle 3 Podcaster wieder gemeinsam vorm Mirko! Das muss gefeiert werden und zwar in Form einer weiteren Quizrunde! Ein Hörer hat uns ein selbst erstelltes Quiz zugesandt, Olli geht in seiner Rolle als Moderator auf und Benjamin darf gegen Thomas antreten. Ist heute vielleicht mal wieder Benjamin am längeren Hebel und kann das Quiz für sich entscheiden? Was für ein toller Start in die neue Woche!
La F1 approda a Las Vegas per il GP ed ovviamente non può mancare lo spettacolo ed il glamour. Seguici su www.allthebesy-radio.com
TRACKLIST: 01 - Memi P - Don't Wanna Believe 02 - Luppi Clarke - Raw Affairs 03 - Alex Preston, Mo'funk, Secret Weapons (AU ) - People Dancing 04 - House Freakers - Feel The Heat 05 - DJ Chus, Harry Romero - Celebrate Life 06 - Mirko & Meex - Buzzed Out 07 - Armand Van Helden - A Girl Like You (Dave Spoon Remix) 08 - Mix Masters, Housequake - In The Mix (Housequake Reconstruction) 09 - CASSIMM - In Your Face 10 - Alex Preston - By The Hour 11 - Joaquin Phunk, John Soulution - Jack Ur Soul 12 - The Cube Guys, Silvano Del Gado - Chambacú 13 - Nari, Steve Tosi, Nabuk - Ain't Nobody 14 - Crazibiza & Bartouze - One Last Time 15 - Free Samuele (Sartini Remix) 16 - Jerome Robins & Dolly Rockers - What About My Love (Etienne Ozborne & Peter Brown Remix) #luppiclarke #djluppiclarke #HBFam #housemusic #house
È venerdi, finalmente. Andrea Ruggeri fa 50 anni. Evviva. Festa aperta.Mirko de Carli e Alessandro Cecchi Paone, che scontro.C'è un reggente ad Antarticland, Caporaso Gottlieb.La dottoressa Fanny Guidolin, la pulizia, i batteri che risalgono con lo sciacquone e l'amore per il pavimento pelvico.
"il Club degli Inviati" con Giulia Borletto. Ospiti: Camillo Demichelis, Mirko Di Natale.
"il Club degli Inviati" con Giulia Borletto. Ospiti: Camillo Demichelis, Mirko Di Natale.
FEVERBALL 309 by Ladies On Mars FIRST HOUR: FEVERBALL MIX LADIES ON MARS 01. Pipi Le Oui - Anyway You Want It (Extended Mix) 02. Dua Lipa - Break My Heart (Tommy Glasses Funky Remix) 03. Tom Jerry feat. Abigail Bailey - Touch Me (Jerrys Super Disco Remix) 04. The Lab Rats feat. Lisa Millett - Music Is My Way Of Life (Dr Packer Extended Remix) 05. Gus Monzon, Fer De Leo - Night Moves (Original Mix) 06. Ladies On Mars - Wanna Scream (Clean Extended Mix) 07. Villanis & Msystem - G.T.F. (Get The Funky) (Ladies On Mars Remix) [Feverball] 08. Jain - Makeba (Effendi Beach Disco Edit) 09. DE SOFFER - No Good (Exended Mix) 10. Mark Picchiotti - I Feel For You (Extended Blueprint Mix) 11. Robin S & TheFREEZproject - Don't Let Go (DJ Emmaculate Synthesized House Mix) 12. Sonic Soul Orchestra Ft Kathy Brown - Need You (Extended Mix) 13. Ladies On Mars - Jumping (Extended Mix) [Feverball] 14. Fatboy Slim - Rockafeller Shank (Giovi MMXX Bootleg) SECOND HOUR: FEVERBALL MIX LADIES ON MARS 01. Ladies On Mars - Midnight Operator [Feverball] 02. Fran Deeper - Davidson 88 (Ladies On Mars Extended Remix) 03. Ladies On Mars - Feverball Radio, Where Disco Lives (feat. D.C. LaRue) [Feverball] 04. Newik Another - Way (Effendi Remix Kool Edit) 05. Claborg, FabioEsse, Miss Kelli - Get Up (Ladies On Mars Re-Dub Mix) 06. Sugar Hill - Felling (Original Mix) (LOM Edit) 07. Mirko & Meex - Out Of My Head (Original Mix) 08. Ladies On Mars - Heart [Feverball] 09. Ladies On Mars - Bodytalk [Feverball] 10. Musa Nova - Friday Vibe (Ladies On Mars Extended Remix) 11. Martina Budde - Lost In Music (Club Mix) (LOM Edit) 12. Fer De Leo, Ladies On Mars - Where Are You? (Extended Mix) [Feverball] 13. Mark Funk, Danny Cruz - This Is Hot (LOM Edit) 14. Matias Sundblad - BIG (Ladies On Mars Remix) 15. Ladies On Mars - If You Want Me (Extended Mix) [Feverball] 16. Donna Summer - Leave Me Alone (Ladies On Mars “Club” Mix) [Demon Music] 17. Ladies On Mars - Do It Tonight (Extended Mix) [Feverball] FOLLOW TO LADIES ON MARS HERE: Website: https://www.ladiesonmars.com Official Music Store: https://www.ladiesonmars.com/musicstore/ Bandcamp: https://ladiesonmars.bandcamp.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ladiesonmars Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ladiesonmars Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/ladiesonmars Soundcloud: https://www.soundcloud.com/ladiesonmars YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/ladiesonmars FOLLOW TO FEVERBALL HERE: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/feverball Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/feverball Soundcloud: https://www.soundcloud.com/feverball Mixcloud: https://www.mixcloud.com/feverball Website: https://www.ladiesonmars.com/feverball
V novi epizodi oddaje Radio Ga Ga – Nova generacija so vajeti prevzeli novi vladni anketarji Jelka, Mirko in Milka, ki so od hiše do hiše zbirali podatke in merili priljubljenost vlade in kakovost mošta. Na posebni telefonski številki za oddajo orožja je klice sprejemal Jure Longyka, orožja pa bi se po novih pravilih radi znebili vsi, od Hojsa do Luke Mesca in seveda Bavčarja in Janše, ki se oglašata z mariborskega letališča. Na predreferendumski petek seveda ne moremo brez nove duhovne misli, Uroš Slak z Matozom, Strelom, Zahovičem in drugimi strokovnjaki razpravlja o neustavnosti alkotestov, svetoval nam je dvojni doktor Miran Kranjc, ki je pripravil krajši tečaj rokovanja, Elon Musk in Donald Trump na Bledu iščeta nov otok ljubezni, verjetno pa se nam bo oglasil tudi sam predsednik vlade Robert Golob, ki še vedno ni našel pravega imena za svojega mačkona. Vse to in še točno tri stvari v petek dopoldan na Prvem.
01. Nukier - Drop It 02. Angel Heredia, Karretero - Push It 03. Jay Vegas - Move U 04. Moniquea, Xl Middleton, Charles Levine - Red Light 05. Andrew Azara - Doing It 06. Rico Slavic - Taste Your Skin 07. Danny Marx - How Could You Say 08. Kenny Bizzarro - Revenge 09. Darius Syrossian, Jena (Us) - E-Soul 10. Norty Cotto, United House - Stand On Up 11. Darius Syrossian, Jamie Coins - Fever 12. Scott Diaz - Dream Big 13. T-Bor - Set Me Free 14. Dilby, Mustafa Ismaeel - Part Time Lover 15. Ruze - Hardwire 16. D Stone - Yes I Am 17. Angelo Ferreri, Pietro Over Jack - Step 18. Menesix - Dance With You (All Night) 19. Trilucid, Tim Cullen - See Through You 20. Deepmore - Groove Static 21. Habitaat, Elocin Cole - Feel Your Soul 22. Mirko, Meex - Bring It Back 23. Kiinjo, The Patchouli Brothers, Planet B - Love On The Dancefloor 24. Mell Hall - Slow 25. Eliza Rose, The Trip, L.P. Rhythm - Weekend 26. Stardust, Wh0 - Music Sounds Better With You 27. Anamstyle - All Night Long 28. Marcus Harger - I Got That 29. Ruze - Journey 30. Stanny Abram - Malo 31. Pong - Together 32. Jay Latune - Lunar Lullaby 33. Max Dean, Luke Dean - Gets Like That 34. Love Language, Lisp - All A Dream 35. Inntraw - Freak Bugs 36. Chicken Lips, Groove Armada - He Not In 37. Fdf - Happy Island 38. Low Blow, Riley Misere - Ain't Cool 39. Mike Millrain - Let The Spirit 40. Hinev, Franz Kolo - Cala Bonita 41. Franck Roger - The Calling 42. Cave Studio, San Pacho - Playboy 43. Matroda, Martin Ikin, Sian-Lee - 4U 44. Obando - Signal Drift 45. Blackbox Records, Lvnk - In My Head 46. Fred Everything - What You Say 47. Papa Marlin - Move Your Feet 48. Cioz, Eleonora, Lucky Shot - Dancing In The Night 49. Swatkat, Jason Dewey, Romi Lux - Call You Out 50. Bingewatch - After Hours Club 51. Mao Silgrand - Alright 52. Fraz (Uk) - Gimme That 53. Hector Couto, Alejandro Paz - El House 54. Melbourne Drum Authority - In The Groove 55. Nic Fanciulli - La Luna 56. Brandon - Going Gone 57. Enzo Carrera, Paul C - Snatch 58. Dexter Troy - Ohh Yeahh 59. Zenbi, Hoxton Whores - SD Man 60. Never Dull - Bonkers 61. Charlotte Moss - Shake Da Funk 62. Criss Korey - Can't Stop 63. Marc Cotterell - Say It Loud 64. Tony Romera - VHS 65. Demarkus Lewis - Don't Let Me Go 66. Baastian Buensik, Marc Lenz - Brighter than the Sun 67. Killed Kassette, Skapes - That Stuff 68. Cecilia'S Groove - You Said 69. Chevals, Sorley - My Love My Kisses 70. Lucy Pearl, Fede Aliprandi - Don't Mess With My Man 71. Mathias Kaden, Retrouve - Voices 72. Block & Crown - Buckwild 73. Ruze, Chesster - NY Project 74. Wh0, Joe Killington - Wide Awake 75. Anthony Attalla - G7 76. Bonetti - Sem Mais Brigas
01. Nukier - Drop It 02. Angel Heredia, Karretero - Push It 03. Jay Vegas - Move U 04. Moniquea, Xl Middleton, Charles Levine - Red Light 05. Andrew Azara - Doing It 06. Rico Slavic - Taste Your Skin 07. Danny Marx - How Could You Say 08. Kenny Bizzarro - Revenge 09. Darius Syrossian, Jena (Us) - E-Soul 10. Norty Cotto, United House - Stand On Up 11. Darius Syrossian, Jamie Coins - Fever 12. Scott Diaz - Dream Big 13. T-Bor - Set Me Free 14. Dilby, Mustafa Ismaeel - Part Time Lover 15. Ruze - Hardwire 16. D Stone - Yes I Am 17. Angelo Ferreri, Pietro Over Jack - Step 18. Menesix - Dance With You (All Night) 19. Trilucid, Tim Cullen - See Through You 20. Deepmore - Groove Static 21. Habitaat, Elocin Cole - Feel Your Soul 22. Mirko, Meex - Bring It Back 23. Kiinjo, The Patchouli Brothers, Planet B - Love On The Dancefloor 24. Mell Hall - Slow 25. Eliza Rose, The Trip, L.P. Rhythm - Weekend 26. Stardust, Wh0 - Music Sounds Better With You 27. Anamstyle - All Night Long 28. Marcus Harger - I Got That 29. Ruze - Journey 30. Stanny Abram - Malo 31. Pong - Together 32. Jay Latune - Lunar Lullaby 33. Max Dean, Luke Dean - Gets Like That 34. Love Language, Lisp - All A Dream 35. Inntraw - Freak Bugs 36. Chicken Lips, Groove Armada - He Not In 37. Fdf - Happy Island 38. Low Blow, Riley Misere - Ain't Cool 39. Mike Millrain - Let The Spirit 40. Hinev, Franz Kolo - Cala Bonita 41. Franck Roger - The Calling 42. Cave Studio, San Pacho - Playboy 43. Matroda, Martin Ikin, Sian-Lee - 4U 44. Obando - Signal Drift 45. Blackbox Records, Lvnk - In My Head 46. Fred Everything - What You Say 47. Papa Marlin - Move Your Feet 48. Cioz, Eleonora, Lucky Shot - Dancing In The Night 49. Swatkat, Jason Dewey, Romi Lux - Call You Out 50. Bingewatch - After Hours Club 51. Mao Silgrand - Alright 52. Fraz (Uk) - Gimme That 53. Hector Couto, Alejandro Paz - El House 54. Melbourne Drum Authority - In The Groove 55. Nic Fanciulli - La Luna 56. Brandon - Going Gone 57. Enzo Carrera, Paul C - Snatch 58. Dexter Troy - Ohh Yeahh 59. Zenbi, Hoxton Whores - SD Man 60. Never Dull - Bonkers 61. Charlotte Moss - Shake Da Funk 62. Criss Korey - Can't Stop 63. Marc Cotterell - Say It Loud 64. Tony Romera - VHS 65. Demarkus Lewis - Don't Let Me Go 66. Baastian Buensik, Marc Lenz - Brighter than the Sun 67. Killed Kassette, Skapes - That Stuff 68. Cecilia'S Groove - You Said 69. Chevals, Sorley - My Love My Kisses 70. Lucy Pearl, Fede Aliprandi - Don't Mess With My Man 71. Mathias Kaden, Retrouve - Voices 72. Block & Crown - Buckwild 73. Ruze, Chesster - NY Project 74. Wh0, Joe Killington - Wide Awake 75. Anthony Attalla - G7 76. Bonetti - Sem Mais Brigas
Best selection of new and classic house tunes presented to you by ID. Me - Episode 5 @VamosSandros www.youtube.com/@VamosSandros ⚡️Like the Show? Click the [Repost] ↻ button so more people can hear it!
Siamo tornati dal Forum... siete mica stanchi?Daniele Capezzone e una sorpresa...Klaus Davi e Mirko de Carli... sull'omosessualità. Che battaglia.Giacinto Butindaro è tornato, evviva!La Dottoressa Leni e l'erezione femminile.
FEVERBALL 303 by Ladies On Mars FIRST HOUR: FEVERBALL MIX LADIES ON MARS 01. Ladies On Mars - Intro Welcome To Discoland [Feverball] 02. Ladies On Mars - Midnight Operator [Feverball] 03. Fran Deeper - Davidson 88 (Ladies On Mars Extended Remix) 04. Ladies On Mars - Feverball Radio, Where Disco Lives (feat. D.C. LaRue) [Feverball] 05. Newik Another - Way (Effendi Remix Kool Edit) 06. Martin Eigenberg, Ryan Shade - Disco Affairs (Extended Mix) 07. Sugar Hill - Felling (Original Mix) (LOM Edit) 08. Mirko & Meex - Out Of My Head (Original Mix) 09. Ladies On Mars - Heart [Feverball] 10. Ladies On Mars - Bodytalk [Feverball] 11. Les Bisous - I'm Coming Out Feat. TIAAN (LOM Edit) 12. Martina Budde - Lost In Music (Club Mix) (LOM Edit) 13. Fer De Leo, Ladies On Mars - Where Are You? (Extended Mix) [Feverball] 14. Mark Funk, Danny Cruz - This Is Hot (LOM Edit) 15. Ladies On Mars - Discoland (feat. Efectos Especiales) [Feverball] 16. Ladies On Mars - If You Want Me (Extended Mix) [Feverball] 17. Donna Summer - Leave Me Alone (Ladies On Mars “Club” Mix) [Demon Music] 18. Ladies On Mars, Daiuja - Destination Unknown (Club Mix) [Mr Rodgers Music] SECOND HOUR: FEVERBALL MIX LADIES ON MARS 01. Ladies On Mars - Sexy Model-D [Feverball] 02. Ladies On Mars - About Disco [Feverball] 03. Dua Lipa - Hallucinate (Tensnake Extended Remix) (LOM Edit) 04. Syke'n'Sugarstarr - Ticket 2 Ride (Sugarstarr's 2020 Disco Extended Mix) (LOM Edit) 05. DE SOFFER - Rapture (Extended Mix) (LOM Edit) 06. Ladies On Mars - Same For Me (LOM Edit) 07. Sharam Jey - Your Body (Original Mix) (LOM Edit) 08. Spankox - To The Club (Dave Leatherman & Bruce Nolan Extended Remix) (LOM Edit) [Armada Music] 09. Fer De Leo, Ladies On Mars - Moscow Diskow (Extended Mix) [Feverball] 10. Ladies On Mars - Jumping [Feverball] 11. KPD - Special (Extended Mix) 12. Luke Million - I Feel Giorgio's Love 13. Sugar Hill, Ricky Valens - Black Case feat Ricky Valens (Extended Mix) 14. Ladies On Mars - Do It Tonight [Feverball] 15. Ladies On Mars - Soul Train [Feverball] 16. Ladies On Mars - Love Me, Want Me [Feverball] FOLLOW TO LADIES ON MARS HERE: Website: https://www.ladiesonmars.com Official Music Store: https://www.ladiesonmars.com/musicstore/ Bandcamp: https://ladiesonmars.bandcamp.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ladiesonmars Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ladiesonmars Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/ladiesonmars Soundcloud: https://www.soundcloud.com/ladiesonmars YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/ladiesonmars FOLLOW TO FEVERBALL HERE: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/feverball Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/feverball Soundcloud: https://www.soundcloud.com/feverball Mixcloud: https://www.mixcloud.com/feverball Website: https://www.ladiesonmars.com/feverball
Mirko Jeleč je do izbijanja rata bio novinar Radio- Doboja, i dugogodišnji dopisnik za Oslobođenje i Radio Sarajevo. Dobitnik je nagrade Udruženja novinara Doboj “Najbolji novinar za 1986. godinu”, te Druge nagrade za programska ostvarenja Radio-Sarajeva “Dežurni mikrofon” i reportaža o ljudima dobojskog kraja. Napisao je 5 knjiga, uglavnom dokumentarne proze, koje se tiču Doboja, voljenog, nezaboravljenog zavičaja i njegove mnogobrojne dijaspore, danas rasute širom svijeta. Gospodin Jeleč živi u Vancouveru, Canada.
What do you really want in life?It's one of the hardest questions we can face—personally, professionally, spiritually, and financially. And if you don't have an immediate answer, that's OK. Most of us don't. But that's where the real work begins.In this episode of The VIBE with Kelly Cardenas, Kelly unpacks the question his friend Mirko asked him that shook him to the core: “What do you want?” That moment led him to Proverbs 23—a passage that doesn't hand us answers, but instead gives us the framework to discover them.You'll hear how chasing money, fame, or the food of this world will never satisfy the hunger of the spirit—and how seeking wise counsel, applying discipline, and spending time with God aligns your heart, mind, and skills. When we guard our hearts and live from wisdom, our words and actions overflow with love and joy.Kelly also shares a powerful story about Mirko, the founder of Opus Footwear—from pushing a stranger up a hill during a charity ride in Las Vegas to building the best skate shoes on the market. His life reminds us that true leadership is about lifting others, often without recognition.
Throwback Thursday! The Throwaway Kids: Combating the StereotypeOriginally Released On: 4-9-2021This week, we're revisiting one of our timeless episodes from Leading Out The Woods! In this episode:✅ Mirko discusses the obstacles that stand in the way of making sure that every student succeeds.✅ Mirko shares what can be done to ensure that students who had experiences similar to his are able to be seen, heard and succeed.Whether you're hearing it for the first time or revisiting a classic, this conversation is packed with insights that still resonate today.
L'avventura in Australia di Mirko Giacomini ha rischiato di finire prematuramente per colpa del Covid-19 e di un viaggio in Italia dalle circostanze temporali sfortunate.