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I walk the street light, shackle and chain, Oh, who's some dirty, it's calling my name.
There is no mercy, and there's been a tensionry, just ask the hill string gang, wrangle
the three.
I'm here for life, I'm here to die, inside these walls, inside the wild, and when more
cries I know it's over, oh, bloody and no love, oh, bloody and no love.
Hey, everyone and welcome back to Bloody Angola.
I'm Jim Chapman and today I am bringing you another 50 shades of evil series episode,
and today I'm taking you straight to the big apple New York City, and I'm going to tell
you the story of Alex Enriquez who after being found guilty in the murder of three victims
and suspected of many more from 1998 to 1990, he to this day denies his infamous reputation
as a serial killer.
And while the case lacked hard evidence, the circumstantial evidence was overwhelming
enough to secure conviction.
So let's get into it, and this one is going to start out in 1961 in South Bronx, New
York.
Now a quick bit of education on New York City where the Bronx is located.
New York City is a city in New York State, obviously, and in that city there are smaller
communities, and these are referred to as burrows.
You may have heard the phrase the five burrows of New York City, you have Manhattan, Brooklyn,
Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island.
And Alex, whose birth name was Alejandro Enriquez, was from the South Bronx in what's known
as the Hunts Point section.
And in 1961, when he was born this burrow of New York City, it was going through a lot
of change, especially demographically.
More affluent people in New York City started moving out and into more suburban areas of
the city, like Manhattan.
And the South Bronx at that time would see a massive increase in their black and Puerto
Rican population.
Now Alex would grow up in much later in life as most psychopaths do when he would discuss
his upbringing, he would paint it as this big success.
He would even say later on that he went to the best schools in the area and that he was
a hugely successful business owner.
When in reality, he was a high school dropout and by adulthood, he would be known as a
liar, a deceiver, a fraudster.
And this is primarily accusations levied by a large amount of girlfriends who would come
forward later on in life and claim he would build himself up.
To be someone he simply was not had a very high opinion of himself, let's just say that.
So in the early 1980s, he meets a woman by the name of Andrea Rosario and that would become
a very long term relationship for Alex.
Now eventually in 1989, they would get married.
However, prior to his arrest in 1990, it was discovered that the marriage, it was
not even legal because he was married to another woman at the time that he finally married
Andrea.
So this would start a long road for Andrea in which he would discover that Alex really
since they met, he had an entire life that she knew nothing about and a whole other
side to himself.
So we're going to back up again and go back to the early 80s.
And at this point, Alex is in his very early 20s and he buys a town car that looked very
similar at the time to the police cars that detectives undercover cops in New York would
use and he would tell teenagers primarily in the neighborhood that he was an undercover
NYPD detective.
Now he would allow them to play in the vehicle, hang out in the vehicle, he would talk to
these teenagers all day long and we'll get into a lot of why that was later on in his
psychological profile.
But y'all at the end of the day, he bought that car because he wanted to start a taxi
service.
He was essentially a taxi driver, but this would enable him to gain access to these teens
as well in a grooming sort of way.
He would keep toys in there, he would keep candy in there.
These would attract young people and he would also buy a lot of these neighborhood teenagers
in that area toys and things of that nature, classic grooming techniques to be sure, but
at this point in the early 80s, no one knew really what grooming was.
So he would come off as this nice guy just spending time with the youth of the neighborhood,
right?
And adults would actually think, oh, what a cool guy to take time out to talk to kids
not knowing who this guy was in real life.
Honestly, in Alex case, he hit it really well, he didn't look like a pedophile.
These days, we know that pedophiles don't have a look, but in those days, he was considered
a young attractive guy and on the outside, you would have thought because of all the
boasting he did that he had this big successful business and eventually, he would even purchase
a fake badge and start defrauding the women he would date.
He would even tell them that he was a secret detective, right, for the NYPD.
He would steal their credit card information, et cetera.
He was just a total fraud, this guy that claimed to be someone he was not to the point that
he started believing it himself.
So it was not long into the 80s as a matter of fact, 1983, when he is charged with molesting
one of his side girlfriends, five year old daughters, five years old.
Now there's very limited public information available due to the fact that this victim
was just five years old.
And all we really know in that case is that he was charged with it.
No conviction ever occurred and we don't really know why there's nothing out there on
it.
Now things get quiet for Alex are seemingly so and I'm going to take you all the way
to July 3rd of 1998 in a young 14 year old girl by the name of Shamira Bello goes missing
in the South Bronx.
She's discovered the next day at a park in the South Bronx near a police firing range.
She was found to have been beaten and she also had a lot of trauma involved, especially
around the head area.
Now in these days, DNA was pretty much non-existent police.
They really didn't have anything to go off of one day.
This young lady 14 years old goes missing the next day her body's found there were no
ring cameras back then.
This was still had 20 years before they were even invented.
They didn't have plate readers back then, hardly anybody you had to be a business with
a lot of money to even have surveillance cameras.
So due to all of this and the fact that sadly that park was a common place where they would
find bodies over the years, they just kind of chalked this up to an isolated incident.
They would work it, but they didn't think this was going to become what it eventually
would become.
So while they collected DNA and they preserved it in the event they could use it later, they
did actually find a hair sample on the body of Shamirabello.
At the time, it really didn't provide any evidentiary value, although later on it would.
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Or take a look at Tacoma made for drivers who push past the path, agile, tough and relentless
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out more Toyota, let's go places.
So let's go to June 14th of 1990, a 21-year-old by the name of Lisa Ann Rodriguez goes missing.
Now in late June, police find her body and it is badly decomposed.
It was dumped along a highway in the Bronx and it's like a parkway really.
I don't want to say the entrance to a park, but it's a highway that exists within a park,
and she was so decomposed that even determining a cause of death proved pretty difficult,
but police and pathologist, they would later determine she was suffocated, strangled,
which was the cause of her death.
Again, no leads really, just seemingly disappeared.
Now, like the first body, you do have suffocation as a manner of death, and in both cases,
there were no efforts to conceal the bodies, but police didn't really piece that together at the
time. They just didn't have enough to go on, and these cases were far enough away from each
other nearly a year that they didn't really like these two cases by any means, just seemed like
another body. So let's go to October 10th of 1990, and I'm going to tell you about a 10-year-old
by the name of Jessica Guzman. She goes missing. Now that day, she had left her home to go
by Brad for her mother from the local supermarket, and she never returned.
Now, she was the youngest daughter of a very close-knit family in the South Bronx area,
and by 7 p.m. that day, her parents in a state of absolute panic, as you can imagine,
they call police. They report her missing, and they let police know the circumstances
has surrounded it. Now, this girl, being just 10 years old, it becomes big news very quickly,
and as you can imagine, everyone joins in the search for this young girl. The entire Bronx
police department, police from all over, volunteers, neighborhood people, even national news
reporters were reporting on this all over the country. Then, sadly, just seven days later,
three days prior to her 11th birthday, the body of Jessica Guzman was found when a park employee
along the Bronx River Parkway spots her body amongst a clump of bushes. She was found stuffed
in a black garbage bag, and she was wearing the exact same clothing that she did when she vanished.
Once again, the cause of death was determined to be asphyxiation. So it's at this point in time,
when police, they really start connecting the dots. They discover that in all three cases,
I just told you about the victim profiles matched. All three victims were young,
Hispanic females. The bodies were all dumped in isolated parks along highways, and strangulation
was the manner of death with all three of these victims. So with this, the police determined quickly,
they likely have a serial killer on their hands, and they form a large task force. 40 people.
Now, especially in this case, Alex was around a lot. He would actually help in two of these
three searches, and during him assisting to find these victims, he would ask police quite often
during the search about the investigations, not in a curious way though. Almost in a prying way,
like he was trying to gather information, and police would pick up on this, especially in the
10-year-olds disappearance. So much so that police start looking into the background of Alex
Henry Kess, and they would discover, and they were shocked when they discovered, that Alex
actually personally knew all three of these victims, with Jessica actually having been a close
friend of his daughters. Now, in addition to that, as they dug into his background, they learned he
had went on a date once with 21-year-old Lisa Ann Rodriguez. Not only that, they also learned that
the 14-year-old Shamira Bello had been one of the young teens who were playing his cab, but he
also had once told his nephew he wanted to have sex with her, and they would continue to dig further,
and police would discover other incidents involving Alex, including that 1983 charge for molestation
that I told you about. And in addition to that, there was also an incident involving his girlfriend
Andrea's three-year-old son, where he scalded the toddler with hot water. He actually pleaded guilty
to that in court, and it wasn't an accident. He intentionally scalded a three-year-old child
with hot water. He pleaded guilty to an assault charge in that incident when the boy's father
reports him to police, but it was a charge related to a robbery. In 1987, the gay police
what they needed to actually arrest Alex for something. Police discovered that Alex had an
active warrant for his arrest for having committed an armed robbery at what was known as the
World Yacht Club in Manhattan, which is where his first wife worked, and actually you could say
his current wife. Because remember, I told you about him being married to Andrea, but it wasn't
really legal, because he already had a wife, then he never divorced. Well, that was the first
wife I speak of here. So on the strength of that old warrant, police arrested Alex Emriquez.
Now at the same time, he had just pleaded guilty in that scalding incident with the three-year-old I
told you about, and the arrest at least put him behind bars while police continued to investigate
these murders and really build this case up. Now Alex knew that police were on him about these
three murders. So he commits what I would say is really the most damning evidence against him
in the murders by this time, and he came up with a scheme and he's going to enlist the help
of his nephew for this scheme. So he asked his nephew to call police from like a payphone,
and claimed that it was the killer calling and that he was still on the loose. He even gave his
nephew a script. He had written out in jail and told his nephew, hey, disguise your voice,
so they don't know who you are. And get this, really the most damning part to me. Alex gives his
nephew some of the details of the murders that police never released to the public. Things like
a rip in Jessica Guzman's training brawl and the exact color and pattern of her panties.
Now these are things that only the killer would know. Police had never released this to anyone.
His nephew, smartly, records one of these conversations with his uncle, and subsequently he
turns that recording over to police. This is in January of 1991. Well, when police are that,
they know we got our guy here, but they don't quit investigating. They want to build a case, right?
So by April of 1991, police do officially name Alex Imriquez as the prime suspect. And in July of 1991,
they get an indictment on all three murders. Now evidence they had at this point,
included fibers matching all three victims that they found in a car vacuum at Alex's home.
In DNA, it had went through some advancements between the time he was arrested in the time that
they actually charged him with these murders by this point in time. And remember that hair that
I told you that they found on Shamira, Bella's body. Well, they were able at this point to match it
to Alex Imriquez through DNA. Also very damning. Police were able to determine the sweatpants
that Lisa and Rodriguez was wearing when her body was found. Those were actually sweatpants that
belonged to Alex Imriquez's wife, just a ton of what you would call really reliable circumstantial
evidence there. So of course, Alex denies everything when police ask him about this. And honestly,
the case was harder to prove than you might think beyond a reasonable doubt. It's very circumstantial.
There were no eyewitnesses. There were no weapons, no real smoking gun that they could link
to Alex, but they had a ton of circumstantial evidence. And in 1992, he gets tried in all three
cases at the same time. And these were high profile national news type shit, right? On August
28th of 1992, he is found guilty and sentenced to 25 years in prison for each crime for a total
of 75 years. Now at this point, he's in his mid 20s. So he's going to die in prison. He's basically
cannot get released. No parole eligibility until he's 100. And at this hearing, families of the
victims, they get to finally speak and they issue their victim impact statements to the court.
The Toyota Tundra and Tacoma are built to keep going, blending rugged muscle with precision
engineering all supported by Toyota's time tested legacy of dependability. Step into a Tundra
and feel the unyielding capability with the available I force max engine. Tundra puts out
impressive power torque and towing performance and the roomy high tech cabin keeps you connected
on the go or take a look at Tacoma made for drivers who push past the path agile tough and
relentless with available features like crawl control, portable JBL speaker, a power lift gate,
so gear goes in fast and the adventure keeps moving. The Tacoma and Tundra are engineered to
endure season after season, mile after mile. So drive one home today, visit toyota.com or stop by
your local Toyota dealer to find out more Toyota. Let's go places. And here is what those
sound like, because I think that those are very important for you to hear.
Right with the sports permission, we want to ask Mr. Rodriguez to address the toward.
Now, wife and I would like to personally thank you for serving the judge in the case of our
daughter, Lisa and Rodriguez. Since the beginning, when we first heard of you, we learned that you were
fans during judge and depicted that same very same image in your program. We hold you in the high
system. Honorable Sullivan, there are no words that can describe what the murder of
only child Lisa has done to our lives. My daughter has been gone for months for over two years now,
and at times, we still wake up and think that it's only a bad dream. But we wake up to reality and
we know different. We go to sleep and wake up asking ourselves, why? Why did this person kill
our Lisa? What did she ever do to him to deserve this union's act of violence on a person?
She was such a vibrant and vivacious young lady of 21 years.
To understand the pain, hurt and suffering that has and gross our lives for the past two years,
you need to know of the relationship we have with our daughter. And there's only one word that
can describe it. Beautiful. With me, Lisa was not only my daughter. She was my confidant and most
of all, she was my friend. We shared a lot together. I love and miss my daughter very much.
The week of June 11 through June 30 of 1990 were the most horrifying weeks of our lives,
and they were always pointless forever. On Sunday, June 17, Father's Day, I feared that something
wrong had been falling my daughter. She did not come to be with me like she always did on that special
day. I cried myself to sleep. Excuse me, that night and many others, I cried myself to sleep.
The voice inside me is so deep, at times I can't bear it. That is why I hate this person so much.
He not only killed my daughter, he killed me too.
Since the day of my daughter's disappearance, I have seen my wife deteriorate before my eyes.
She has gone from a happy and active person to a highly depressed one.
On Easter Sunday of this year, my wife visited our daughter's grave,
cy for the first time since she'd bury her. The next day, she tried to commit suicide.
She only wanted to be with her baby as she would later put it. Honorable Sullivan, our lives
would never ever be the same. We would never experience the happiness of seeing our
Lisa married. Now, we will ever experience the joy of being grandparents. These are the two
most important dreams that will never be, but we will always keep our memories of Lisa alive.
Honorable Sullivan, I know you would do what is right according to what the law allows and we
can only pray that God will guide you in your decision. Help us keep Alex and Rico's incarcerated
so that he may never be allowed to walk the streets of New York to home another child again.
Respectfully yours, my wife and I. I would ask that a lot of girls go swimming,
the mother of Jessica's mom, be allowed to speak to the court.
And my sons, my husband, to give us the opportunity to stand here and express our feelings.
It's very hard to express our feelings that we've had for almost two years now
and the pain that this has brought us. I have four sons kind of an adopted one and we have adopted.
And Jessica was my only daughter, my youngest one or so.
For me to say what it has done to us is like if Mr. Henrique has actually also murdered us.
There's a part of me inside that died the day I found out that I would never see her again.
I don't think that part of me would ever live again. And I think that same part is that
within all my family. Jessica was a very happy little girl. We raised her to trust people,
to be good, to what was wrong and what was right, being a parent that had a work.
And my husband, I had a teacher from a very young age,
what was right and what was wrong. I've taught them all to my boys and I am very proud of my
boys just like I was as proud of her. She knew. She knew what was right, she knew what was wrong.
She was like friendly and maybe that was something that maybe was wrong because that friendship
was what killed her. Jessica to me was everything. She was the dream come true after having four sons.
She had turned, she was just about to turn 11 and I was thinking of she was going to be now a
friend to me. I was going to actually stop being a mom and now I was going to be also a friend to
her. She has started to put on my t-shirts and show me different dances and different things in school.
So this was like a very special time for me. Way hard. She would have turned 13 this year
in another few weeks and that would have been the greatest time of my life to see her turn 13.
She was a joy to be with everybody, everybody that saw her and spent time with her.
Love took just very polite. She was everything to us. I don't have any of the daughter
and since this has happened, my husband has had lots of problems expressing his feelings,
which is why I am talking. My boys have their also problems with the fact of knowing
that somebody could murder their little sister. This will be something that they would live with
and I hope that now that they have seen justice done in this courtroom, that they know that you
have to follow the law, that it is wrong to do with wrong, be against the law and I thank the court
for giving me that back to me. I didn't know how I was going to finish raising them
if they saw anything else in this courtroom. I was very scared for them. I was afraid. I would end
up losing more than just a daughter in this courtroom, but you have grant me that and I hope you
grant us the fact that he will pay for her death and we will never see him again, that he will never
hurt any other child again. It's the only thing we have left besides her memory and her pictures
and our dreams that we will always have. They might not come true, but our dreams will always be
there. Thank you. I mean, just horrific what these people must have went through and are probably
still going through. So not only did they get a chance to speak, but just prior to the sentence,
Alex also spoke directly to the judge and of course categorically denied any involvement
on anything, but the family was not having it even in the open court. Listen to this.
First thing I'd like to say is the ammunition of these killings. I did not commit any of these
murders that were sung guilty. I feel that nothing here has been proven. There's been a lot of
lies, a lot of deceptions. If anybody's guilty of a crime in this courtroom, there's this man
Edu Toulte who sits here for lying and deceiving the people of the Bronx, the lying to the poor
families who stood there crying while they read letters of what they believe I did because of
he said he's paid people to lie. They've come here lied against me. People that were close to me
that I could never understand why they lied. So there's a day I can't imagine why until I found out
the reason why. For the families, I'd like to say to Shamarabello's mother,
she didn't take your daughter's life. She was a wonderful person and all I wanted my nephew was
to be with her and my nephew knows her very well. Never did I hurt Shamarabello and I did not take
her life. Mr. and Mrs. Rodriguez. Mr. and Mrs. Rodriguez.
Mr. and Mrs. Rodriguez. I like to say that I
knew Lisa and I dated Lisa. She was a wonderful person. For Janitini, I hope you find the guts to
come forward someday and speak the truth. To tell the court or Mr. Toulte in the police did to him,
lie to him, tell him I was accusing him of the murders and putting fear into him that if he wouldn't
talk to him, he would lie but if he wouldn't talk to him, he would lie to him. I knew the
life would be an asshole. Everybody lied to him. Everybody lied to him, right?
All right, go ahead. Something hasn't not been said was the day in the chambers when we were
speaking to the doctor when we asked the doctor what his opinion was and he said and I believe
it's on the records and he said his opinion as a doctor no person under the influence
any drug or on a methadone should be deliberating in any jury but it's not quite what he said
but what he did say is recorded fully and is also incorporated again in your lawyer's
motion to the court today you're not quoting him accurately he didn't say that at all
all right but what he did say is a matter of record go ahead what else continue
to allow things have been hidden in his trial and all I've asked you said from the beginning
you would give me a fair trial and I feel I haven't been given a fair trial you said
you would go by the law another thing that's been hidden is during the 11 approach my
family three times something that was told to my lawyer my lawyer and my family stay away
from me and he asked to make a deal with my family
I have no anger for the families for what they're saying or what they think of me because
they have been misled and they have been deceived by Mr. Tolti I'm innocent of these crimes
thank you wrong the advisory panel and myself absolutely unanimous in what we felt would
be a fair sentence I've never had that experience before but we're all in accord with respect
to the sentence that the law requires be meted out in this particular situation and all sentences
will be for your three convictions on the Bronx indictment 4978 of 91 each for murder in the
second degree under the first count of that indictment relating to the death of
Shamiro Bello the court imposes an indeterminate sentence the maximum of which shall be for the
term of your natural life the court imposes a minimum term of 25 years said term to run
consecutively to the sentences you are now doing on the New York County indictment 14598 of 90
and Bronx County indictment 793 of 89 and the said defendant is committed to the state
department of correctional services until released in accordance with the law for your conviction
under the second count relating to the death of Gleesa Rodriguez the court imposes an indeterminate
the maximum of which shall be for the term of your natural life and the court imposes a minimum
term of 25 years said term to run consecutively to the sentence imposed today on the count one
of the same indictment and the said the defendant is committed to the state department of correctional
services until released in accordance with the law for your conviction under count three of the
same indictment relating to the death of Jessica Guzman the court imposes an indeterminate sentence
the maximum of which shall be for the term of your natural life and the court imposes
the court imposes a minimum term of 25 years said term to run consecutively to those sentences
already imposed on the counts one and two and the said defendant is committed to the state
department of correctional services until released in accordance with the law
getting the rightful appeal so that is 75th the life in this case consecutive to the five to ten
you're already doing
man you want to talk about a narcissist even after all that this asshole can't admit that he's the
one that did it just shocking to me coincidence is there are no coincidences in life you're not
going to be tied to three people that were killed in the exact same way have your freaking hairs
on them and also have their you know fibers from their clothing in your car vacuum cleaner come on man
so it's off to prison for him and really for the rest of his life in a very renowned FBI
profiler by the name of James Fitzgerald one of the absolute historic FBI profilers he does a
psychological profile on Alex and Rick as and I found it to be very interesting here's what he said
you tell me what you think so the first thing he discussed was his core personality traits and
Fitzgerald described him reek as as a self-centered psychopathic individual with a constant
narcissistic need for power control and attention he lies as a mean of self-preservation he has a
very positive perception of himself and uses his superficial charm to fulfill his own ends he is a
psychopath first before anything else psychopaths prioritize control above all they don't want to be
controlled they want to control others and they'll do anything within their power through lies
or manipulation and even through violence to keep that control he talks about the narcissism
specifically in flight itself view surrounding himself with people considered inferior primarily
children and teenagers specifically to feel powerful and superior so he's basically saying there
he couldn't feel that way around adults so he would surround himself with teenagers and children
because he was maybe smarter than some of them superficial charm and manipulation he said he
presents as a successful clean cut driver who brought kids toys let them play in his cars bragged
about his dating success and inserted himself into community searches and visuals for his own
victims and that was to manipulate find out the police were on to him etc then he talked about
the lying pathological lying not random but strategic for self-preservation while in custody he
scripted his nephew to call the media pretending to be the killer feeding non public details and I
told you about that then he gets into the sexual deviance and victim selection of that profile
Fitzgerald concluded in ricas was probably incapable of having normal sexual interactions with
adult women which explains his targeting of younger females who he could dominate and manipulate
all convicted victims were personally known to him through neighborhood or family ties
suspected victims followed the same pattern his crimes combined sexual assault rape with extreme
violence embodied disposal in garbage bags near highways or parks these are signature elements
of power control motivated sexual sadist he carried a 38 pistol in a fake badge drove a large
police style Lincoln sedan imposed as an NYPD detective common in offenders who crave authority
he also said he was an organized offender careful victim selection planning and body
disposal he participated in community searches and prayer visuals while secretly probing police
methods even asking about bloodhounds and even attempting to mislead investigators throw of
insertion classic psychopathic and social behavior being close to the investigation without being
caught gave him additional power and attention and lack of remorse this is very important just like
you heard in that victim impact statement there were more to even admit doing it so that's a look
at the psychological profile from probably one of the best profiles in history so in the case
of Alex and ricas where is he now well he's still incarcerated obviously at the Sullivan
Correctional Center this is in Fallburg New York he's 65 years old and to this day still
denies any involvement in these killings now the only incident to really occur inside of prison
was very early in his incarceration it was like two years after he was arrested in 1992 a fellow
inmate stabbed him but unlike his three other victims he got to live through that stabbing
now in addition as I told you from the jump on this episode he was suspected in other martyrs
including the double martyr of his 13 year old niece and her 15 year old friend now their bodies
were discovered in black garbage bags his inmate right near a park bridge also his inmate
both teens were strangled also his inmate in 1989 which was the time when the majority of this was
going on he was never charged in that case however now also in 1990 a 17 year old by the name of
a net Rosario and that's no relation to his wife just coincidentally the same last name she
went missing and her body was never found but he was suspected in that case as well so there you
have it another 50 shades of evil went to New York this week and I wanted to bring you one that
maybe wasn't as high profile these days it was certainly high profile in the late 80s early 90s
look New York I could have told you probably 10 20 different people that are infamous from that
particular state but I wanted to bring you one that you may not be familiar with thank you so much
for listening I'll be back next week with another 50 shades of evil not sure where I'm going to
go next but I still got plenty of states to cover I think we've done about eight so far so I
look forward to bringing you more of that thank you so much for listening for commercial
free early releases and more check us out on patreon if you'd like to help support the show that's
patreon dot com slash bloody ingola podcast and until next time for bloody ingola I'm your host Jim
Chapman much love
I walk a straight line shackled chain
Oh, who's some dirty is calling my name there is no mercy and this been a
Tentuary just asked the hip string gang rang over three
I'm here for life I'm here to die inside these walls inside the wide
and when the world cries as I know it's over
oh
bloody ingola
oh
bloody ingola
You



