Welcome to Everett Information Central, A New Online Publication for All of Everett, Focusing on How City Hall Abuses the Elder Community.
An Editorial by Joe Viglione
Photo Barbara M, back in the 1980s when our production was by Jimmy Miller, the man who created "Gimme Shelter," "You Can't Always Get What You Want," "Waiting on a Friend," "Jumpin' Jack Flash," "Brown Sugar," "Honky Tonk Women," over 100 songs for The Rolling Stones, and my band's critically acclaimed album, THE INTUITION ELEMENT.
Elder Abuser Edmond A, an Everett city worker with a bad reputation around town, was parking in the lane for street sweeping on the morning of Thursday, October 5, 2023. With the zombie-like look in his eyes, while driving, we can only surmise he was on a mission. Like the Dunkin' commercial "Time to Make the Doughnuts!"
By the way, readers, I've dropped six and a half pounds this month working my walking exercise program. Edmond, not so much. I'm looking to get back to my 1980's rock star look now that I'm pushing '70! (see photo above.)
Around 7:30 am 10/5/23 on McKinley St., Everett.
Edmondo lied to a citizen and falsely claimed that his name was "Delucci." Found out after some investigating, that it is not. File under: coward!
The Edmondo Terrorist Organization (ETO) launched a deadly full-scale attack on a senior because Edmund-Duh! - parked in front of a tow-zone sign - maybe wanted to buy lottery tickets at the convenience store, or consume a bunch of donuts, emphasis on nuts, at Dunkin's on Route 99.
Look, if Edmondo here wants to be a dirty, filthy slob in his own home (where rumor has it, he allegedly abused his 91 year old landlord; that's an allegation, we have a public records request in (of course!) to attempt to find out,) that's his decision.
But the consequence of Edmond not parking across the street like the abused seniors have to in this elder community targeted-for-towing, well, that dirty wrapper you see somehow went onto the sidewalk (either the wind, or the street sweeper who allegedly had to come back because my camera caught Edmondo red-handed!) so Mayor Carlo DeMaria's inconsistent, and ineffective, street sweeping program appears to ACTUALLY be entrapment to get seniors to pony up money that they don't have, that they need, instead of keeping the streets clean.
Lazy Eddy, not to be confused with the late criminal Crazy Eddie with his chain of stores in New York, appears to be allergic to work. Then again, when rumor has it that he does the Everett Mayor's dirty work and has protection, well, all bets are off.Now I may not be a lawyer, but Pro Se Jose does know enough to look at the law, so here's the double-sided, do as we say, not as we do, "law" that Anthony DiPierro, the mayor's cousin with a dirty mouth, seems to employ all the time. We call it the Deanna Deveney Doctrine, or DD Syndrome. (Not DD as in Dunkin Dough-nuts, Edmondo, get your mind off of the sugar!!!, DD as in Dirty Racist Now-"resigned," Deanna Deveney of ex Medford Mayor Muccini-Burke infamy, partner-in-crime to Mayor Carlo DeMaria's cousin, the aforementioned donkey DiPierro (another DD!))
Or RDD: Racist Donkey DiPierro!
Crimes against the elderly
MGL c.19A, § 14-26 Elder abuse
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Is there a resemblance?
Gangster Crazy Eddie and Everett's Lazy Eddy separated at birth?
Retail Gangster / fraudster Crazy Eddie Antar
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a youthful Carlo DeMaria live at the Encore?
Probably not...
Eddie Antar, Retailer and Felon Who Created Crazy Eddie, Dies at 68 Sept 2016
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/12/business/eddie-antar-retailer-and-felon-who-created-crazy-eddie-dies-at-68.html
Eddie Antar, the Brooklyn-born man who created the chain of Crazy Eddie electronics stores only to watch it collapse when an underlying fraud was exposed, died on Saturday. He was 68.
His death was confirmed by the Bloomfield-Cooper Jewish Chapels in Ocean Township, N.J., which did not say where he died or give the cause.
Mr. Antar, who was born on Dec. 18, 1947, grew his business from a single Brooklyn store, founded in 1969, into the largest consumer electronics chain in the New York metropolitan area, fueled in large part by the spread of the VCR. At its peak, the chain had 43 stores, with locations as far north as Boston and as far south as Philadelphia.
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