Ray Nagin’s Corruption Trial Resumes

Daily Stormer
February 4, 2014

"Nigga I aint choose dis muffuggen mair life.  Dis muffuggen mair life choose me.  I be do wut I do cuz there aint no way out for a yung nigga bein da mayor on dem streets.  Only gawd ken judge me." -Mayor Ray Nagin on the mayor life and how he does not believe a court can judge him
“Nigga I aint choose dis muffuggen mair life. Dis muffuggen mair life choose me. I be do wut I do cuz there aint no way out for a yung nigga bein da mayor on dem streets. Only gawd ken judge me.” -Mayor Ray Nagin tells the judge about the mayor life

Though corruption is endemic in our Jew-run political system, no one does it like the blacks (except perhaps the Jews themselves).

The behavior of Mayor Ray Nagin is typical of a black government official.

From the AP:

A businessman told a jury Monday that he arranged for former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin to receive monthly payments of more than $12,000 after leaving office, part of what prosecutors say was the multifaceted bribery scheme that has landed the ex-official in federal court.

Nagin’s corruption trial entered its second week with Frank Fradella returning to the stand. Testifying as part of a plea agreement with federal prosecutors, Fradella detailed an arrangement for consultant work that prosecutors say eventually led to $112,250 going to Nagin. The payments were made after he was mayor but constituted bribes for favors during his time in office, prosecutors said.

Fradella is the fourth witness to take the stand and say he made payoffs to Nagin. Last week, he detailed arrangements to get $50,000 to Nagin when the then-mayor said he needed money to support Stone Age, the family company he founded with his sons. Fradella also said he paid Nagin off with free granite for the business.

As he has with other witnesses, Nagin defense attorney Robert Jenkins attacked Fradella’s credibility, noting that the plea agreement. Fradella acknowledged the deal and affirmed that he had pleaded guilty in an unrelated case involving insider stock trading. It was transferred from Texas to the federal district in New Orleans, Jenkins noted, suggesting that Fradella hoped for leniency in that case as a result of his testimony against Nagin.

Fradella said he didn’t know whether consolidating the Texas and Louisiana cases benefited him. “I don’t know that we would have gotten a better deal,” he said.

Please, tell me, you noble anti-racists: what do black people offer White society?

Can you name one single thing?