Out CAC me....(ongoing)

Those evil cunts deserve the death penalty. Two years to 35 months in prison is fucking insane for what they did. :angry: Rest in peace Christopher John Tsoulos.


'Unless you want me to ruin him': Couple blackmailed intellectually disabled Chick-fil-A greeter into suicide​

Jerry LambeMar 13th, 2026, 12:48 pm


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Inset, clockwise from top left: Christopher John Tsoulos (Kenneth W. Poe Funeral Services), Trysten Anthony Cullon (York County Sheriff) and Jade Stone (Charleston County Sheriff). Background: Chick-fil-A security footage showing Tsoulos giving his phone to Cullon (federal court documents).

Inset, clockwise from top left: Christopher John Tsoulos (Kenneth W. Poe Funeral Services), Trysten Anthony Cullon (York County Sheriff) and Jade Stone (Charleston County Sheriff). Background: Chick-fil-A security footage showing Tsoulos giving his phone to Cullon (federal court documents).
A couple in North Carolina who admitted to targeting a vulnerable man with an intellectual disability in a blackmailing and extortion scheme that ended with the victim taking his own life have been sentenced to federal prison.
U.S. District Judge Max O. Cogburn, Jr. on Thursday ordered Trysten Anthony Cullon and Jade Ashlynn Stone, both 27, to serve 41 months and 27 months in prison, respectively. Cogburn handed down the sentences after the duo pleaded guilty to one count each of conspiracy to commit cyberstalking, authorities announced.
Prosecutors said the pair carried out a short but devastating harassment campaign against Christopher John Tsoulos, a 37-year-old Charlotte man who had an intellectual disability and relied heavily on his family for support.

"This couple intentionally tormented a young man with intellectual disabilities for personal enrichment," FBI Special Agent in Charge Reid Davis said in a statement. "While Christopher's life is priceless and his family is forever changed, we hope a federal prison sentence will bring some form of justice and comfort for his loved ones."


According to court documents, the scheme began on Sept. 5, 2024, when Cullon approached Tsoulos while he was working at a Chick-fil-A in Charlotte, North Carolina.


At about 4:52 p.m., Tsoulos allowed Cullon to use his cellphone. Minutes later, Cullon used the device to send messages to Stone asking her to pick him up and telling her the situation was "urgent." Phone in hand, Cullon then left the restaurant and returned to the vehicle where Stone was waiting in the parking lot.
"This couple intentionally tormented a young man with intellectual disabilities for personal enrichment," FBI Special Agent in Charge Reid Davis said in a statement. "While Christopher's life is priceless and his family is forever changed, we hope a federal prison sentence will bring some form of justice and comfort for his loved ones."
According to court documents, the scheme began on Sept. 5, 2024, when Cullon approached Tsoulos while he was working at a Chick-fil-A in Charlotte, North Carolina.
At about 4:52 p.m., Tsoulos allowed Cullon to use his cellphone. Minutes later, Cullon used the device to send messages to Stone asking her to pick him up and telling her the situation was "urgent." Phone in hand, Cullon then left the restaurant and returned to the vehicle where Stone was waiting in the parking lot.

Court records say the two had already created a new Gmail address and a Cash App account earlier that day as part of their plan.


Because the phone was unlocked, Cullon and Stone had "unfettered access to the financial applications on the phone, including mobile payment apps and Christopher's bank account," prosecutors said in a news release. The defendants used Tsoulos' phone and Apple ID to attempt unauthorized transfers from his financial accounts, including Cash App, PayPal, and his bank account.


When those attempts failed, prosecutors say the pair escalated the scheme.


Using the stolen phone, the defendants began sending threatening messages to Tsoulos' family members and associates, accusing him of being a "pervert" and threatening to spread humiliating allegations to his employer.


In one message sent to a relative, the sender warned:


"Your son is a pervert and I'm going to let his job and everyone else in his family know that."

The message continued:


"Unless you want me to ruin him and embarrass you I suggest you provide some compensation."

According to court filings, the defendants demanded $300 through Cash App and threatened to send the allegations to Tsoulos' employer if the money was not paid.


Additional messages threatened to accuse the victim of "harassing girls," visiting brothels, paying women for sexual images, and engaging in sexual activity with minors.


Federal prosecutors say the harassment campaign lasted just a few days — from Sept. 5 through Sept. 8, 2024 — but had devastating consequences.


On Sept. 8, Tsoulos shot and killed himself on the front steps of his Charlotte home. His father found his body the following morning.


Authorities said the cyberstalking scheme "drove him to suicide," leaving his family devastated.


U.S. Attorney Russ Ferguson said the case left a profound impact on those involved in the proceedings.


"There was not a dry eye in the courtroom," he said in a statement following the sentencing.


Federal officials also described the defendants as exploiting a vulnerable victim for financial gain to "fuel their drug addiction."


"Cullon and Stone turned to preying on the most vulnerable among us," Ferguson said.


In addition to their prison sentences, both defendants were ordered to serve three years of supervised release and pay $26,699.65 in restitution, prosecutors said.


The Charlotte Observer reported that more than 60 of Tsoulos' friends and family members were in the courtroom Thursday as even more waited outside.


"Chris was a shining light in the lives of all whom he encountered," an online obituary for the victim states. "His limitless heart extended compassion and love to everyone he met, creating connections that left lasting impressions. As the 'co-owner' of John's Family Restaurant for many years, he poured his energy into creating joyful dining experiences, always considering the happiness of others first. More recently, he embraced his role as a host at Chick-fil-A, an opportunity that reaffirmed his devotion to service and his natural flair for making others feel welcomed and cherished."
Court records say the two had already created a new Gmail address and a Cash App account earlier that day as part of their plan.
Because the phone was unlocked, Cullon and Stone had "unfettered access to the financial applications on the phone, including mobile payment apps and Christopher's bank account," prosecutors said in a news release. The defendants used Tsoulos' phone and Apple ID to attempt unauthorized transfers from his financial accounts, including Cash App, PayPal, and his bank account.
When those attempts failed, prosecutors say the pair escalated the scheme.
Using the stolen phone, the defendants began sending threatening messages to Tsoulos' family members and associates, accusing him of being a "pervert" and threatening to spread humiliating allegations to his employer.
In one message sent to a relative, the sender warned:
"Your son is a pervert and I'm going to let his job and everyone else in his family know that."
The message continued:
"Unless you want me to ruin him and embarrass you I suggest you provide some compensation."
According to court filings, the defendants demanded $300 through Cash App and threatened to send the allegations to Tsoulos' employer if the money was not paid.
Additional messages threatened to accuse the victim of "harassing girls," visiting brothels, paying women for sexual images, and engaging in sexual activity with minors.
Federal prosecutors say the harassment campaign lasted just a few days — from Sept. 5 through Sept. 8, 2024 — but had devastating consequences.
On Sept. 8, Tsoulos shot and killed himself on the front steps of his Charlotte home. His father found his body the following morning.
Authorities said the cyberstalking scheme "drove him to suicide," leaving his family devastated.
U.S. Attorney Russ Ferguson said the case left a profound impact on those involved in the proceedings.
"There was not a dry eye in the courtroom," he said in a statement following the sentencing.
Federal officials also described the defendants as exploiting a vulnerable victim for financial gain to "fuel their drug addiction."
"Cullon and Stone turned to preying on the most vulnerable among us," Ferguson said.
In addition to their prison sentences, both defendants were ordered to serve three years of supervised release and pay $26,699.65 in restitution, prosecutors said.
The Charlotte Observer reported that more than 60 of Tsoulos' friends and family members were in the courtroom Thursday as even more waited outside.
"Chris was a shining light in the lives of all whom he encountered," an online obituary for the victim states. "His limitless heart extended compassion and love to everyone he met, creating connections that left lasting impressions. As the 'co-owner' of John's Family Restaurant for many years, he poured his energy into creating joyful dining experiences, always considering the happiness of others first. More recently, he embraced his role as a host at Chick-fil-A, an opportunity that reaffirmed his devotion to service and his natural flair for making others feel welcomed and cherished."

 
How is she out of touch with most of society? They want you to know what their morning routines are, clicks, and likes. She’s 60 years old, has a nice body, but her face looks like shit from the plastic surgery and the Botox, but other than that, she’s living a good life with a beautiful ocean view.



Lots of jealousy and envy from common folk who want that kind of luxurious lifestyle and NOT wanting to be a part of the North American rat race many call life, lol.
 









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A Nebraska urban explorer has died in a freak accident inside a city sewer system just three days before his 21st birthday.

Trevon Anderson, 20, had been navigating the sewers beneath the state's capital city of Lincoln with two friends early Saturday morning.

At around 3:05am, Anderson attempted to climb out of a sewer in the Havelock neighborhood using a ladder when it is believed that he fell and struck his head.

Emergency personnel rushed to North 65th Street and Logan Avenue, where they found Anderson 'several hundred yards' within the sewer system, according to the Lincoln Police Department.

He suffered a severe head injury and was pronounced dead at the scene.

Lincoln police told the Daily Mail that the group of friends had been inside the sewer system for between 90 minutes and two hours before the presumed fall.

Anderson's death is believed to be accidental at this time and an investigation is ongoing.

Urban exploration is when people visit man-made structures that are off-limits, abandoned or tough to access such as catacombs, sewers or deserted building sites.






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  • CEO Tushar Atre was murdered by 4 employees (2 brothers, 1 brother-in-law, 1 friend)
  • 2 were military men making $200/day working sunrise to sunset planting on a marijuana farm
  • they went on break & the keys to a vehicle went missing, so Atre cancelled their checks
  • The keys were located, but Atre still forced them to do 500 pushups to get new checks issued
  • Atre taunted them that they were wasting his time and he was worth thousands per hour
  • the humiliated men hatched a plan to rob Atre in his home
  • during the robbery, Atre attempted to run out of the house screaming when one of the men tackled & stabbed him
  • Atre was then shot in the head out of mercy
  • two were sentenced to life, another was recently found guilty for his part

Sam Borghese, another one of Atre’s former employees, testified that his multimillionaire boss had created a hostile, fear-based work environment. Though Borghese reportedly had a friendly relationship with Atre, he said Atre would also withhold his employees’ paychecks, yell at them and fire them if he felt disrespected. Borghese also told the court that Lindsay and Kaleb Charters performed manual labor on Atre’s farm from sunrise to sunset for nearly two weeks, KRON-TV said.

After Lindsay and Kaleb Charters finally received their paychecks, they reportedly told Borghese that they needed a break since the work was so intense. Once the two of them left, Atre discovered that the keys to one of his farm trucks was missing, and he bounced the checks, the outlet said.

"Tushar was flipping out," Kaleb Charters testified, noting how he and Lindsay had just planted hundreds of cannabis plants in the Santa Cruz Mountains, allegedly working 10 days straight from dawn until dusk for $200 a day. "He was going to cancel the checks."

When Lindsay and Kaleb Charters argued with Atre about their paychecks, their boss told them that they had wasted his time and that “he was worth thousands of dollars an hour — because he makes millions — so anyone who wastes his time is costing money,” Borghese reportedly told the court. Atre then offered the two of them new paychecks for $1,400, but on one condition: They had to perform 300-500 pushups.

"You guys are in the Army. Do 500 pushups," Kaleb Charters recounted Atre telling him and Lindsay, another former National Guard member, according to KRON.

“They were humiliated,” Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Detective Ethan Rumrill said, the outlet reported.


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"Did Mr. Atre invoke fear in his employees? (So) people would work harder for him?" Charters' defense attorney, Thomas Brewer, asked Borghese during his trial.

"Yes," Borghese replied.

Charters, who was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison, recruited Camps and his own brother, Kurtis Charters, to take part in a planned robbery of $1 million at Atre's home. Things went wrong, though, after Atre managed to escape, according to prosecutors.

"Camps … started stabbing him over, and over, and over," a prosecutor explained during Kaleb Charters' trial, while showing jurors photos of an SUV with Atre's blood smeared all over it. "Kurtis grabbed [Atre] and threw him in this car."

The men drove Atre to a Santa Cruz cannabis property to finish him off, with Lindsay yelling at him during the drive. "Why are you so mean to people?" Lindsay shouted, according to a confession that police say Camps gave after his arrest.

According to KRON, employees came forward and accused Atre of creating a toxic work environment to the point where staffers often "joked" behind his back about robbing or hurting him before Atre's murder. They said he yelled at workers repeatedly, withheld and bounced their paychecks, and fired employees if he felt disrespected by them.

Prosecutors said the four men killed the multimillionaire CEO at the very same location where the work abuse unfolded.

"It's fitting where they chose to take him to," Santa Cruz County Assistant District Attorney Michael McKinney told jurors during closing arguments of Kaleb Charters' trial, according to the Los Gatan newspaper, in reference to his marijuana farm.


"We zip-tied his hands, shoved a sock in his mouth," Camps said. "I told him no one wants to hurt you, we are just here for your stuff. He kept saying, 'Who are you guys?' He didn't know what was going on. … He was covered in blood. He was saying, 'Please let me go.'"

Camps allegedly admitted to stabbing Atre in the neck after he tried to escape. He confessed to shooting him with an AR-15 rifle several times in the jaw and the back of the head afterward to put him out of his misery, according to police.

"He wasn't going to last much longer," Camps said. "I knew he was going to die."

Lindsay and Kurtis Charters were both sentenced to life in prison without parole, along with Kaleb Charters. Camps is due to be sentenced on March 19.

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