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Brian Glaze Gibbs on Killing 6 People, Being Enforcer for Fat Cat, Getting 10 Years (Full Interview)

Jun 07, 2021
bunan, if you ever met Fat Cat or whatever. I'm talking about how you know, before he was like a big, chubby guy, now you know he's got muscles everywhere, he's a, you know, a fitness freak and his thing was he met him, you know, daddy. Prince PR, and I run away. 40,000 ring round table ring and you know, right now it was amazing when I got my ring and I got arrested for the murder of EV Burns and I went through Raz. He had my rings on like you should see, man, as far as you know. the response you get from other guys like oh well your ring said Eminem money M meant money and murder and that was your team, yeah that was my team and why did you call it that.
brian glaze gibbs on killing 6 people being enforcer for fat cat getting 10 years full interview
You know, because that's what I was into. At that time, you know, I was like, like I said, right now, making money and the bottom line was that if something or someone got in our way, we would get them out of our way by murdering them and my thing was with my guys, it's like Yeah We missed a hit, you know, I just told them off, what the hell do I need you? I can give my money to a lot of girls. I can commit the murder myself and you were essentially the big cat's main

enforcer

, yeah okay and you were helping run the drug operation, yeah, at any time, whatever I needed, whatever it took, I did it regardless that he was his organization and that's what

people

ask me why you didn't take control.
brian glaze gibbs on killing 6 people being enforcer for fat cat getting 10 years full interview

More Interesting Facts About,

brian glaze gibbs on killing 6 people being enforcer for fat cat getting 10 years full interview...

I was in Greedy, the end result he gave me. opportunity and I was doing really well or what about making $40,000 a day, what's there for me to take care of the bottom line was like you know you take care of

people

, people take care of you, and all this stuff. Was it cocaine or other drugs too no you see people don't understand BL like cocaine is good but the money is you have to do both it's the dope and the cat because once again you're kidding I don't misunderstand, crack was good and you learn a lot from it, but for me what helped me make 40 a day was drugs, you know what I'm saying, period, so you do both things well, heroin, yeah, okay , and where did these drugs come from?
brian glaze gibbs on killing 6 people being enforcer for fat cat getting 10 years full interview
One connection especially with Heron was with, you know, this Chinese guy named John and even though he was Chinese, he was

getting

from Pakistan and he was

getting

something good, so all this is working, millions of dollars are

being

spent. fact and then they put dad away Mason, they put dad away in what I'm saying in October 1985, after the murder of Bryant Rooney, they put him away and then they put dad away from October 1985 and he went to trial in February 1988 and he didn't. January 1988, when he went to trial for Rooney's murder, the jury did not reach an agreement, so they lowered Bell's price between 500,000 and 300,000 and released him on bail and, once they released him released on bail, he was free for 10 days, so the da rushed him back to trial CU when they arrested him, they arrested him with a daring and his boots, so they took him back to trial and convicted him for that daring, so you know that's just to put the hole back in so once he came back that's when the burn happened well so the burn thing was Edward Burns he was a 22 year old rookie NYPD officer

years

ago and there was an immigrant who lived in a drug block and always called the police MH and I guess his house had already been bombed a couple ago. times, so Edward Burns was parked in front of his house to essentially protect him mhm and then that's when the whole situation happened, but as you say, that guy was never in danger, the key was in this moment, when that blow was struck, the police was the target, the guy on his knees was never that, he wasn't even at the play or anything, it was like right now catching an officer off guard and this is what happened Edward Burns, the fun and crazy part That was, I think, a night or two before it was a lady, it was a young black woman who was in the car and they didn't do it because she was a young black woman, so a policewoman was a policewoman, it was a young black policewoman who I was in the car then Right now that's why they didn't do it right.
brian glaze gibbs on killing 6 people being enforcer for fat cat getting 10 years full interview
What happened that night was that two guys were lookouts. A guy came up, uh mlar, so they say he snuck into the driver's side of the car. Another guy banged on the window to distract him. to wake him up to wake him up oh, he was asleep to wake him up right and as he looked at the other guy mlar uh he shot him several times uh five times I think and killed him, at which point all hell broke loose and and They said that Papy Mason was the one who ordered the hit. Yeah, can you talk about that part?
Yes, I could talk about that part. Even when that happened that day, that night, that morning, more like, I just left that block and was me. there I probably had like 40 50,000 in cash that day and when that happened it's like the next day I got a call, a page I was getting and the page I was getting like, you know, back then, like 911, so When I called again, it was a guy who had this Bodega, which means the bugout was down, so he got a Spanish guy. He could barely understand what he was saying, but he said there were police everywhere, so he told me like you knew the police were everywhere.
I'm trying to say you know what they must have seen something that a sale was made, don't worry, something is going to happen, they are going to leave, but I didn't understand what was happening at that moment because I had just gotten up, but while I was sitting in my headquarters in Cyprus and then the news came on, as you know, where, as far as you know, the radio station interrupted this program and they started talking about a rookie policeman who was executed. Running style at 107. Inwood, I say, "uh oh, now that's why it's hot, so during that period of time my mind is racing like if something of that magnitude were to happen in our area, it would most likely happen." I would have known in advance based on my position." but I didn't know it, so I felt warm and fuzzy knowing that that blow didn't come from us, so all day I stay home, I stay in the apartment of my

being

.
I get calls from everyone. I receive calls. From the people on Brier Island, the people in the prison, daddy called me back and forth with my cat girlfriend because no one heard from the cat, so what happened? I waited until the end of the night when Pitch Black came on and then I went to Queens because Queens at that time At that time the city was so hot that you could take a cigarette and light one off the ground because that's what it was and when I went out that night and I I met everyone at the cat's sister's house and said, look this is my way of thinking, whoever did it.
They did this to heat up our area, they tried to take control or whatever and set us on fire making people think we're responsible for this, so I said, look, once I find out who's responsible, it'll be were. Blow them all and at that very moment after the meeting they pulled me to the side when they pulled me to the side it was like look, I did it and the hit came from daddy. I'm like, oh, and look, I talked to daddy earlier. and you listen to Pap and you listen to our communication, there is no indication of anything, well, Papy was locked up during that time or Papy was locked up again, that's why, as I told you, the hit happened because they returned him to preventive detention and sent him to judgment and him.
He was convicted of having that daredevil in his boots, why would Papy Mason order a police officer killed on a block he was associated with knowing the repercussions of something like that? You know what man like that's a billion dollar question because, again, it's why we have the Round Table in place the Round Table in place for the reason the key is now where is like when that's the difference is why you know you have people you can talk to when you take care of yourself and you make a move like that and you don't consult, you got here they are thinkers and you have doers and sometimes you don't have someone like Papy is a doer obviously he was a thinker because he simply got lost and lost four good cats. been in jail since 198 1988 31

years

destroyed the entire organization behind that movement, well the four guys that were involved were arrested like a week later, you want to hear some BL like you say they were arrested a week later I guess.
That when they picked them up, they picked me up first? They picked me up first and what they did was because during that period of time everyone, from precent 103 to precent 113 and my precent 75, joined together. Who did this? Everybody says Brian Glaz Gibbs Brian Glaz Gibbs is the one they bet they like to tweak this. This is the person who was crazy enough to have the balls to do with it, so he guesses they picked me up when they picked me up. There were three guys with me, my uncle dad and two other guys, and guess what they let them go and they accused me of a murder that I did commit, but at the same time they killed Burn, that was a murder that I committed, but they let these guys go guys. and they took me through the whole system and the next thing you know while I'm on Rer Island they start getting a reward.
I think the reward came to like $40,000, that's when you know some of the family members converted the guys. I went in to get that reward and everyone's name came up except who, Briyan Glaz Gibbs, dad's name came up, everyone's name came up, but my name came up again on that, okay, so all four guys were finally charged ​​mhm and I guess there was a video confession. where they told they talked about bragging about what had happened, they talked about how Papy Mason urged them to do it and they all ended up getting 25 years to live, yeah, and they're still in prison to this day, all four of them still in prison, all four . they were fine and the repercussions of this went far beyond the New York drug war uh oh yeah the drug war was kind of based on this this murder of this rookie cop uh President Ronald Reagan called personally to the burned family to offer his condolences and then when George HW Bush started running for president he actually had the Edward Burns badge on the campaign trail and he showed it off while talking about being tough exactly exactly and all of this happened in a situation you were in Did you know that you were not personally associated with this situation but you were part of that entire team?
Yeah, so I was guilty on an association technicality. Well, around the same time that Edward Burns was murdered, there was the whole situation with Clifton Rice. Yeah, now I guess he was. There, when a friend of yours was robbed, yes, exactly, and I took it personally, it's like even at this moment, probably simultaneously during the time that Edward Burn is executed, I shot and killed, killed, you know. what I'm saying, Clifton Rice and what was going on. With that situation it was like I had returned from Queens to Brooklyn and for me it was like I was just watching, it's like I don't know late in the morning and you watch people as they walk into an exent and like I was watching, You know? he walks in and walks up to me it's like you know okay cool we're actually SLA five and he walked past me and walked past me and I realized that when he was incarcerated fighting sil with the murder of men , he was there when a friend of mine was robbed and he didn't do anything to stop it, he didn't prevent it, so to me that was like, come on, that's a no, whereas if you were there and you could have stopped something from happening , you didn't do anything or whatever.
You're guilty, you're part of it, so in that present moment, yeah, I, I, I did some stupid things. You know, sort of, I went after this guy and you know, did you know? Murder him that night or that morning because of something that happened in the past with one of my friends, so this is the second person you murdered, not because right now, if you follow the timeline at that moment, there are a few more before him , it's okay, because in the end you admitted to five murders later, five Mur. murders and two attempted murders later uh are they five more civilians or are they five total including cibil six including cibil six including civilian so how many other murders occurred between the civilian and the murder of Clifton Rice um Misha um Maisha no Maurice Bellamy a guy his father Maurice yo Bellamy his son was involved cat and paty on parole for murder and Misha is like the girlfriend cat happened before Clifton won well well the guy who was involved in the murder of the professional officer what was going to testify against someone Yeah, basically, at this point he was the one who said his statement like I don't know, I think it's still in his statement, it was like that, you know, the cat gave an order, Paty was there, but his state was completely wrong, as if he had made up a story. and he convicted himself and from what I understand, I think he's still in jail, but what happened was like all the time sit down and think about it.
Papy was the only officer charged with Rooney's murder, and then as time went by, Cat got charged with Rooney's murder, then once Cat was charged with Rooney's murder. Rooney, it was like now it became emergency help, you know something had to be done and the plot was to kill aof his own actions, what is your opinion on tekashi 69 and telling the rest? from his team and all these guys, you know, you said your statements didn't lock anyone up, his statements locked up a lot of people and, like I say, it's a different time in Era, I don't really know anything about him. the keys regarding what as I say is nothing I can really say about that individual because for me it's a time and it was different like I tell you now I don't know anything about this gang I don't know anything about him I never follow their music um like I said, I saw him, you know who he is with colorful hair and a tattoo or whatever, but in all honesty, he did what he felt was best for himself, yeah, well, Brian Glaze Gibbs.
I appreciate you sharing the story about yourself and when we talk about this throughout the

interview

there are six people that you killed and that you have admitted to over the years those people have children those people have grandchildren they have grandchildren they had parents who may be Whether alive or not today, they have siblings, they have close friends, they have wives, girlfriends, people who loved and respected them. Do you feel any sense of remorse for that whole situation? yes yes yes as I say, I hate myself for that the key is that I was Bor in the Christian Environment I allow myself to get lost like a sheep and go astray as you know, here it is right now, clear as if the changing event in my life was when my mother died when I lost my mother the key was and then do you ever reflect like even when I was sentenced and I had to appear before Judge Edward Corman and I had to confess to him that I can't blame anyone for what I did.
I did what I did because that's what I want to do. I want to be depressed I want to be great, so I destroyed life. I was a part of

killing

people, hurting people, all for the wrong reason. I had people with me for the wrong reason. And to me, as I say when my mother told you. Talking about a pain that was so painful that you wouldn't even want your worst enemy to feel it, so even in this moment, many times I reached out and I send you a message, you know, I apologize, I'm sorry because once again after the nonsense that was. a sick individual who allowed me to be trapped in a temporary euphoria even with Amari who was there with me.
I apologized to him a few years ago because I didn't know what I was going to do, he was just a victim like everyone else I didn't talk about it Mari look at this what I'm about to do do you want to be depressed no you want to be depressed, because some people call it premeditated, how can it be premeditated when you did something and you didn't know what you were going to do until you did it, so my message to the victim's family. I'm sorry, if I had the chance to do it all over again, trust me, none of that would have happened. a just stupid man over the years i have

interview

ed several people who have committed murders in various situations uh i interviewed Ben Jay of the new kids uh it was a group a group called the new kids once the group didn't he found out that He started selling marijuana in Las Vegas a guy ran into his house trying to rob him with a gun and ended up

killing

him he was just a guy, you know what I'm saying so far, you know what I'm saying, you know what?
I'm saying he came in, you know what I'm saying, but then boom, you know what I'm saying, he shoots and this thing fell like it fell. I shot that because you still had the gun in your hand the whole time, yeah, and he. I never realized, I never realized, I just said there was another situation. I just interviewed Jason Williams, uh, the basketball player, oh, the Nets basketball player, right, yeah, the limo driver, the limo driver, he had a limo driver at his house . showing him and a group of other people the gun collection, they accidentally pulled the trigger and a shotgun went off, killing the driver.
I take responsibility. I'm not going to say that someone did that and he was supposed to look down the barrel. showing people guns here goes a gun look at this you know this coach gave me this this is beautiful this and when I went to hit the gun with my hand I didn't even know that Mr. Gustavo was in the house there the gun went It went off and hit Mr. Cafi in the chest, killing him instantly. Both guys are crying while describing the situation. You know, you know, tears are streaming down their faces. You could say he's killing. inside them that someone is no longer alive and this whole situation is really weighing on them a lot you're telling me the story there's not a lot of emotion that comes with this and you know what it's like right now yeah years this is something I've been struggling with during my life, this is something that I have been struggling with for over 30 years, the key is right now, it's like What I told you now is that I don't have to put myself in the scene or in the front and, as already you know, turn on the camera action and you see tears, the bottom line is right now, if you watch some of my other interviews, like now is when certain things happen. you are not an act you come with that and for me regarding what I say the only thing I have is my word regarding my action my behavior I am very you know that I am saying sorry for that because once again who I am I say who lives and who died, I am not God, I am awake and I can admit that and this, as I say throughout my years, I have been punishing myself for over 30 years based on my behavior, so with these guys or whatever. you know what you know like comparison there is no comparison everyone reacts differently or whatever when we start sitting down to talk about it or whatever even right now I have a clip that I wish I could give you from inside my dam or whatever when he starts talking about how I stole these feet with Legacy, I took mom's feet, I took you from you, you know, I'm saying, come on, who am I to say who lives and who died, so I don't have to pretend with you , that's not what it is at all? about the whole key if I had the chance to do it all over again or if I could trade my life for theirs, guess what, we wouldn't even be here, yeah, well, Brian Glaze Gibbs.
I appreciate you sharing your story and one of the The themes we really try to do on Vlad TV are not glamorizing, not Glam, these types of situations, you committed a lot of crimes, you killed several people, you sold a lot of drugs, which indirectly killed many people, uh, and you. You didn't get out of this, you're a billionaire. You spent quite a bit of time in prison. Some people would say it's not enough, but you still did it. I mean, off the top of my head, it sounds like about 15 years total, yeah, and you have.
This weighs on you to this day, something that will never go away and I would assume that you are always watching your back to some extent because a lot of times people don't get over the murders, you could apologize, you could say, "I'm sorry and so on, but That doesn't mean that someone's father isn't there, that doesn't mean that someone's brother or sister isn't there, so this is something you have to live with and it's not something to be proud of and it's you know, BL, I like that because it's not this, it's not an opportunity, it's what I'm doing right now, whatever coaching counseling training I'm in right now is like I say right now, telling my story and letting let this not be this.
It's not make believe, you know what? Back then I was playing Grand Theft Auto live with my life and we didn't have a reset button pressed I had a death wish and I didn't even understand it so. my message to them guys, look, do the right thing the first time you know how to develop a work habit or a work ethic, go out and build a career, that's what it's all about and what I'm trying to say now is that a As you get older and you can reflect on life and your mistakes you see the dos and don'ts you see the mistakes you see what happened or whatever so even now when you say like now trust me it's like a revelation , man, I sit and think you have a lot.
I'm living in regret for the rest of my life when you say look over my back you know why I pay attention anyway that's what got me to where I am right now so the key is right now when I'm in New York, I'm in L. do what I have to do and don't get caught up in that I don't do drugs I don't do anything out of the ordinary but as I say when I go back to New York City when I go back to Brooklyn when I go back to my old neighborhood Cyprus if I go to Queens if I go to Harlem or whatever, you know what for me why I don't worry about anything because the fact is that I was sincere, the key is right now is if it's for me God, the day The day we are born is the day we start to die and God knows when it is my time to go and for me, as long as I can write my mistake now and when my day comes I will be able to say you know what hey, I had a great life, you know, I I regret it so much, damn right, I wish I could start over, damn true, but that's not the reality, all I can do is speak my truth now and tell my story and I hope someone pays attention.
I get a lot of responses from my DM on my Instagram Brian Glaz Gibs. I get so many on my Facebook. G, you know what they tell me. Oh man, thanks for sharing your story and I'm talking to this. younger generation why am I with an open book, I'm not going to sit here and tell no one the truth because the truth is that you are free

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