100 Percent Fed Up Feed
100 Percent Fed Up Feed

100 Percent Fed Up Feed

@100percentfedupfeed

BREAKING: Multiple Earthquakes Rock Venezuela – 7.1 And 7.5 Magnitude – Footage Shows Collapsed Buildings
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

BREAKING: Multiple Earthquakes Rock Venezuela – 7.1 And 7.5 Magnitude – Footage Shows Collapsed Buildings

Back-to-back powerful earthquakes shook Venezuela on Wednesday, causing buildings to collapse in the capital of Caracas. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said the first earthquake had a magnitude of 7.1 and its epicenter was “28 km NW of Montalbán.” Notable quake, preliminary info: M 7.1 – 28 km NW of Montalbán, Venezuela https://t.co/0C6sVStlcv — USGS Earthquakes (@USGS_Quakes) June 24, 2026 The USGS said the second earthquake had a magnitude of 7.5 and its epicenter was “16 km SW of Morón.” Notable quake, preliminary info: M 7.5 – 16 km SW of Morón, Venezuela https://t.co/abXtXq2euP — USGS Earthquakes (@USGS_Quakes) June 24, 2026 More from the Associated Press: People evacuated swaying buildings in Caracas and remained outside, many visibly shocked as they saw entire walls that had collapsed, making furniture visible from the street. Dust columns could also be seen in two neighborhoods of the capital, where restaurants and other businesses are typically busy. Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello said the quake could be felt in several states, adding that the Altamira neighborhood in Caracas had “alarming situations” with collapsed homes and buildings. He urged people to remain outside as aftershocks could further damage some structures. He also suggested people were injured in the earthquake, asking motorists to clear to give way to ambulances and other emergency vehicles. “We understand that some people may be desperate, but we are acting according to protocols to activate aid and rescue efforts to help those who need it most,” Cabello said on state television. “Be very careful with children and the elderly; call each other and check that no one has been harmed.” Viral footage online shows collapsed buildings following the earthquakes: Numerous buildings collapsed following strong earthquakes in Venezuela. pic.twitter.com/MBHnrCIocr — Breaking911 (@Breaking911) June 24, 2026 WATCH: Magnitude 7.1 earthquake destroys apartment building in Caracas, Venezuela. Number of casualties unknown. pic.twitter.com/eTVroUH5St — BNO News Live (@BNODesk) June 24, 2026 BREAKING: Multiple structures have reportedly collapsed in Caracas, Venezuela, following a powerful earthquake that struck the region. pic.twitter.com/9KSN4srhwB — Breaking911 (@Breaking911) June 24, 2026 Cameras from a baseball game in Caracas caught the violent shaking: Momento en el que empezó a temblar. Estadio Universitario de Caracas. pic.twitter.com/C1USIiO6lp — Héctor A. Hernández (@hectOr_2410) June 24, 2026 ABC News provided video coverage: A strong 7.1 magnitude earthquake rattled the coast of Venezuela on Wednesday evening, damaging buildings in the capital and triggering a tsunami advisory. https://t.co/xPM3p6I0MO pic.twitter.com/Uype0YE7Zh — ABC News (@ABC) June 24, 2026 Reuters shared further: Residents in Caracas rushed to evacuate as ​the quake shook buildings. Maria Romero, an 80-year-old pensioner on the south ​side of Caracas, said that the police helped her evacuate her building. “This earthquake was horrible, even worse than the one in 1967,” she added. According to ​videos from Reuters witnesses, fire trucks were on the streets ​in Caracas, and the facades of some buildings had suffered significant damage. Many residents ‌in ⁠Caracas lost power or internet service right after the quake. One witness said that cracks had formed up the side of their apartment and glass in the entryway had shattered. Power went down ​shortly after, the ​witness added. “Several ⁠walls in my building broke open or cracks formed,” a witness in Valencia, to the west ​of Caracas, told Reuters. “As soon as it stopped (shaking) my ​husband ⁠and I evacuated.” The U.S. Tsunami Warning System issued a tsunami threat for Puerto Rico and the U.S. and British Virgin Islands following ⁠the earthquake, ​adding that islands off the coast ​of Venezuela — Aruba, Curacao and Bonaire — could also be hit by hazardous waves. The post BREAKING: Multiple Earthquakes Rock Venezuela – 7.1 And 7.5 Magnitude – Footage Shows Collapsed Buildings appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.

WATCH: Democrat Congressman Allegedly “Lashes Out” When Asked About Endorsing Controversial Candidate
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

WATCH: Democrat Congressman Allegedly “Lashes Out” When Asked About Endorsing Controversial Candidate

Footage posted by Fox News Politics Editor Cameron Cawthorne appears to show Rep. Seth Moulton (D-MA) knocking down someone’s phone when asked if he endorses Maine Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner. Moulton is running for Senate in Massachusetts, attempting to defeat incumbent Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) in the Democratic primary. “@sethmoulton lashes out and knocks down phone when asked whether he endorses Platner,” Cawthorne wrote on X. “You gotta do a better job of hanging on to your phone,” Moulton says in the video. Watch below: .@sethmoulton lashes out and knocks down phone when asked whether he endorses Platner Video obtained by @foxnewspolitics pic.twitter.com/OSgrOzjdY6 — Cameron Cawthorne (@Cam_Cawthorne) June 24, 2026 Boston Herald has more: The Moulton campaign claims the unnamed person is with the political action committee America Rising, which conducts opposition research on Democratic candidates. “It’s not surprising that Fox is too scared to invite Seth back on their shows, but they’re happy to pay a MAGA tracker with America Rising to harass him at multiple events across Massachusetts,” Moulton campaign Communications Director Taylor Hebble told the Herald in a written statement. “Seth takes on MAGA anywhere, anytime, and won’t back down. If this tracker can’t handle a reality check or hold onto his own equipment, that’s on him.” A spokesperson for FOX News tells the Herald that the Moulton campaign’s claims are untrue. “FOX News has never paid a tracker to attend an event,” the spokesperson told the Herald in a written statement. But Moulton is firing back at the national cable news network, posting to X “how much MAGA pisses me off.” “Typical MAGA to classify an @AmericaRising tracker as a ‘reporter.’ I’m not going to apologize for how much MAGA pisses me off. I’ll take them on anywhere, anytime, and I won’t back down. If this tracker can’t handle a reality check or hold onto his own equipment, that’s on him. Sorry not sorry,” Moulton said. “And if @FoxNews wants me back on their airwaves so badly, they should stop ghosting my team,” he added. Typical MAGA to classify an @AmericaRising tracker as a "reporter." I'm not going to apologize for how much MAGA pisses me off. I'll take them on anywhere, anytime, and I won't back down. If this tracker can’t handle a reality check or hold onto his own equipment, that’s on him.… pic.twitter.com/riBM8tu119 — Seth Moulton (@sethmoulton) June 24, 2026 Mediaite shared further: That wild exchange comes after Platner’s campaign has been hit with several scandals. He infamously had a Nazi tattoo on his chest — which he later removed and denied knowing it was tied to Nazi Germany; a former girlfriend later contested his claim and told The New York Times he knew exactly what it was. There have been plenty of other unsavory headlines, like Platner’s campaign admitting he sexted a number of women who were not his wife. Platner ripped the “establishment media” for trying to tear apart his loving marriage in response. Platner also praised Nazi-allied soldiers in now-deleted Reddit posts and was accused of abusive behavior by ex-girlfriends in the aforementioned NYT report. Platner denied the accusations. Despite the baggage, Platner easily won the Maine Democratic primary last month. He will face Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) in this November’s general election. The post WATCH: Democrat Congressman Allegedly “Lashes Out” When Asked About Endorsing Controversial Candidate appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.

‘I Lost My Temper’: GOP Senator Describes Shouting Match With President Trump Over War Powers Vote
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

‘I Lost My Temper’: GOP Senator Describes Shouting Match With President Trump Over War Powers Vote

Four Republicans joined every Democrat in the Senate to cast a vote in favor of a war powers resolution aimed at strong-arming President Donald Trump into pulling out of Iran. Even as negotiations were underway to end the military operation in the region, a handful of the president’s GOP detractors couldn’t resist ensuring that the largely symbolic measure sailed through the Senate after narrowly passing in the House. And one of those individuals, Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA), opted to take a victory lap by denouncing  As The Hill reported, Cassidy later described what happened during a meeting after the vote: Trump asked “why would anybody vote for the war powers” resolution, according to Cassidy, who later recounted his tense debate with the president. “I stood and said, ‘Is that a rhetorical question or would you like to really know?’” Cassidy said. When Trump said he really wanted to know why Cassidy and three other Republicans — Sens. Rand Paul (Ky.), Susan Collins (Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) — voted with Democrats to attempt to curtail his authority as commander in chief, Cassidy stood up and ripped into Trump’s handling of the unpopular war. “I stood and said, ‘You have not told the American people what’s going on. It was supposed to last four weeks, it’s lasted four months. Our original objectives have not been achieved and I want to know what’s going on,’” Cassidy said, recounting the heated back-and-forth. Trump, infuriated over the Cassidy’s defiance in front of the entire Senate GOP conference, started yelling at the senator and Cassidy yelled back – matching the president’s tone and anger. “He did not particularly care for my comments, raised his voice. I lost my temper, that’s not appropriate – it’s the Irish in me,” Cassidy said. “I matched his tone and his volume and it went back and forth.” Cassidy said Trump then got personal, insulting him over his primary election loss. “What does President Trump say? ‘Oh, you lost the election,’ that sort of thing, whatever comes to mind to demean another person,” Cassidy said. Cassidy said he sat down at the urging of the senator next to him in an attempt to “de-escalate.” News of the clash soon prompted some social media chatter: Cassidy on what he said to Trump: "You have not told the American people what's going on. It was supposed to last for four weeks, it's lasted four months. Our original objectives have not been achieved. And I want to know what's going on. He did not particularly care for my… pic.twitter.com/3TnZAsDLR0 — Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) June 24, 2026 My president should have called him a lame duck and a has been irrelevant loser — (@zc7867hhhd) June 24, 2026 JUST IN: President Trump did NOT hold back on Senate Republicans in his meeting Trump spent "90%" of his lunch RAILING ON RINOs like Lisa Murkowski, Bill Cassidy, and Mitch McConnell, per Punchbowl "I don't like a few people, but that's OK. I think you know who they are,"… pic.twitter.com/Hc9tFWKD4o — Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) June 24, 2026 The New York Post had this to add: “We had a really great meeting, and we’re very proud of the party. We like our leader. We like everybody. Really, in the room, we don’t like a few people, but that’s okay,” Trump told reporters afterward, refraining from naming names. “For the most part, we had a really well unified party.” Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), sarcastically told reporters the exchange was “very pleasant” before describing how Trump and Cassidy butted heads. “Very much like a hospital board meeting when a bunch of doctors are yelling at each other, but at the end of the day, we’ll figure out a way to get along,” said Marshall, a practicing OB/GYN before entering politics. “Voices were raised. … I think the vote yesterday on the War Powers Act, the president’s very disappointed.” Here’s some additional coverage: CNN reports that Bill Cassidy lost his temper with Trump and "berated the president for what has transpired in Iran, for not being clear with Congress about his actions in the region" pic.twitter.com/4tq7GC3pU1 — Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) June 24, 2026 What are your thoughts? TAP HERE TO ADD YOUR VOTE This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here. The post ‘I Lost My Temper’: GOP Senator Describes Shouting Match With President Trump Over War Powers Vote appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.

HEADS UP: I Am Now Limiting This To 10 Per Month…Here’s Why!
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

HEADS UP: I Am Now Limiting This To 10 Per Month…Here’s Why!

Hey everyone, Noah here with a couple of quick, fun updates about my new book. I’ll keep this short and to the point…. FIRST: the book officially launches on or before July 4th. It’s consuming almost all of my free time, but I’m pushing hard and I’m so pleased with how it’s shaping up. Can’t wait to show you! SECOND: you can get on the Wait List here and everyone who joins the Wait List gets entered in a FREE Raffle to win a signed first edition copy of the book! THIRD: if you’d rather just get one right now, the companion website to the book has already launched right here: https://wltlh.com/ If you’ve read some of my early sneak-peak chapters, you know the main character secretly runs a website called WLTLH.com and fiction meets reality as that website is now officially live and loaded with some really fun Easter Eggs for readers of the book. How cool is that? That’s also where you can order a SIGNED first-edition of the book if you want one! ORDER A SIGNED BOOK HERE FOURTH: I realized today that it’s going to take me a good amount of time to sign and mail all of these signed first-edition books and I also want to make sure it remains premium for anyone who gets in, so going forward I’m going to be limiting the signed books to only 10 per month. Once they’re gone, they’re gone and the Order button will literally automatically shut off. So, if you want one grab it now. FINALLY: there’s only about 10 days left from now until launch, and for those remaining 10 days I’m posting a free sneak-peak of the first 21 chapters for all of you to read. I am confident that once you read these, you will by dying (no pun intended) to read the back half of the book! The book will officially be 44 chapters when it’s done and I’m currently on Chapter 34. The book is comprised of Acts 1-4, and the core center spine of the book is Chapter 21. The third victim is killed by The Confessor and this time it’s the beloved Mega-church Pastor Grace Kimball. The only problem? The first two were dirty and paid the price. But Grace? Grace was innocent. The first half of the book wraps up in Chapter 21 in an absolute crescendo and I’m so excited about it I’m sharing it with you here as a sneak preview. This will be the last freebie I can post, so if you want the rest of the book you’ll have to wait until it’s published on Amazon….which I am aiming to do on July 4th. How cool is that? I’m also creating a Wait List so if you want to be notified the moment the book goes live, just add your name right here: And to make it extra fun, I’ll be doing a random drawing from everyone who gets on the Wait List and giving away three SIGNED first-edition copies of the book for free! Want one? Get on the list. The only thing I ask as you read this is would you please send me your feedback? Drop a comment below. Or email me at noah@dailynoah.com. I read them all and I would LOVE to hear from you to see what you think. I think you’re gonna love it. Please enjoy: THE CONFESSOR Dedication This book is dedicated to my favorite author of all time, John Sandford. And particularly to the Lucas Davenport universe. After reading countless Sandford thrillers beachside and poolside for nearly three decades, it has always been my dream to attempt to write something similar. Logan Hollister is his own man with a lot of myself baked in, but my hope is that he could pass for a distant cousin of Lucas. A warmer, West Coast cousin. And just as Del Capslock was born of the keyboard, I hope Curt Alton brings a smile. Together they could successfully reboot a computer. Much like Kobe Bryant modeled his game after the greatest of all time, that is my vision for this book. A young 16-year old Kobe Bryant at Lower Merion High School, just outside Philadelphia, studying game tape and patterning his own game to honor and echo Michael Jordan. If I accomplish anything with this book and the Logan Hollister universe, I hope it has those same echoes. The pacing. The dialogue. The alternating point-of-view chapters that suck you in and flip you back and forth from killer to hero. The moments where Sandford will stop and tell you an utterly useless fact that does not advance the plot at all, just because he thinks the reader needs to know it. It’s all what makes Sandford uniquely Sandford and while there will never be another #23, here’s to hoping this could one day be The Black Mamba. Chapter One Nobody called him The Confessor yet. That would come later, after the police found the pattern and the media found the name. For now, he was just a man standing near a window with the blinds drawn, laying down the next card. “October 14. Check number 4471. $62,000 to Pacific Ridge Consulting for program evaluation and strategic planning.” He paused. “Pacific Ridge Consulting has never evaluated a program or planned a strategy in its life. Pacific Ridge Consulting is a shell company owned by Coastal Venture Holdings, LLC.” Another pause. “Coastal Venture Holdings has one member. You.” David Kirsch didn’t say anything. His hands were flat on the desk, pressing down, as if the surface might hold him in place. He’d been behind that desk for 40 minutes now — still wearing the white button-down from tonight’s donor dinner, the collar dark with sweat, his blue blazer draped over his chair. His silver hair, always camera-ready, had been raked through more than once. The practiced face — the warm eyes, the fundraiser smile — was all gone. What was underneath it looked older and smaller. Not much to look at, once you peeled the label off. The desk lamp threw a circle of warm light across the office and caught the edge of a framed photograph: Kirsch shaking hands with the mayor at last year’s Veterans’ Day gala. Beyond the light, shadow. Plaques on the walls. Commendations. The kind of awards they give out at luncheons where everybody claps and nobody checks the math. Half the frames were crooked. The building was empty, the HVAC off, and the silence had a weight to it — the particular quiet of a place built for daytime noise that now had none. “November 9. Another check. $41,000. This one to Meridian Group Advisors — community impact assessment.” The Confessor watched Kirsch’s face. “Meridian Group Advisors has never assessed anything. Same ownership chain. Same destination. You used different company names because you thought it would look less obvious than repeat payments to the same vendor.” He let that sit. “Your controller processes 60 invoices a month at a foundation that practically runs itself. She doesn’t check. She’s never had a reason to. You knew that when you hired her.” Kirsch’s jaw tightened, but his eyes stayed on the desk. The Confessor had been going through the file for 20 minutes, and the numbers filled the room like something physical. Specific dates. Specific amounts. Account numbers that Kirsch had probably never heard spoken aloud by another human being. The foundation had taken in just under $4 million in the last 3 fiscal years — donations, corporate sponsors, two federal grants — and roughly $600,000 of it had been rerouted through fabricated invoices from companies that didn’t exist. All owned by a holding company that existed only to catch the money and move it along. From there: a brokerage account, a money market, and a two-bedroom condo in Palm Springs deeded to Coastal Venture Holdings but with David Kirsch’s golf clubs in the closet and his reading glasses on the nightstand. He knew all of it. Every dollar. Every date. Every lie the numbers told. Kirsch had come to the office tonight on his own, the way he always did after donor events. The Confessor had been watching him long enough to know the pattern. The dinners ran until 9:00, sometimes 9:30. Then Kirsch would drive here — not home, here — and let himself into the empty building to do the work he couldn’t do with staff around. Building the next round of fake invoices. Updating the books for companies that didn’t exist. Reconciling the money as it moved from the foundation through the shells and into his own pocket. The careful architecture of his second life. Careful was generous — a halfway competent auditor would have found it in a month. Tonight The Confessor had been inside the building for 3 hours before Kirsch arrived, sitting in the dark of the back hallway, listening to the building settle. The building had no security cameras — a frugal foundation serving homeless veterans didn’t spend donor money on surveillance systems, and the irony of that was not lost on him. He’d been here before — twice in the last month, learning the layout, the locks. The side entrance had a keypad, no alarm — same frugal logic as the cameras. He’d watched Kirsch punch in the code from 60 yards away through binoculars one night, sitting in his car on the cross street. Kirsch never covered the keypad with his hand. Why would he? It was 10 o’clock at night at a veterans’ charity. Nobody was watching. Except someone was. He’d sat at this very desk on one of those visits, in the dark, and gone through the filing cabinets and the desktop computer — QuickBooks left logged in, no password on the screen saver, the digital hygiene of a one-person accounting department that had never expected an intruder — with the patience of a man who had all night and nothing but time. The sun had set before 5:00 — it was three days from the winter solstice — and he’d waited in his car until the dark was complete. Nothing started until the dark was complete. Then he’d driven to an abandoned lot a few blocks from the building, removed both license plates, and continued on to the residential street where he’d scouted his parking spot. A few blocks without plates, residential streets, no reason to be stopped. He’d parked between a pickup truck and a minivan, killed the engine, and walked the three blocks to the building while the December night settled around him. Dark clothes. Black stocking cap pulled low — December nights in Los Angeles got cold enough to justify one, but the cap had nothing to do with the cold. He’d watched enough CSI: Miami to know that even one hair could carry enough DNA to send you away. Black COVID mask — enough people still wore them that it wouldn’t draw a second look. Latex gloves under leather gloves. No fingerprints on the keypad or anything he would touch inside this office. No doubt the street was littered with Ring cameras on the front porches — no avoiding all of them. He’d accepted that. Head down, cap low, mask on. If a camera caught him from across the street, it would see a man — 6-1, thick through the shoulders and chest — in dark clothing. No plates, no face, no prints. Almost nothing. But almost nothing wasn’t nothing, and he’d thought about that too. Kirsch came in the way he always did — no overhead lights. A fully lit office at ten at night was the kind of thing a patrol car or a curious neighbor might notice, and a man living a second life learns not to be noticed. Just the desk lamp. Enough to work by, not enough to advertise. The Confessor had counted on it. He waited in the high-backed chair in the corner, angled toward the window, off the path from the door to the desk — the one chair in the room nobody ever looked at twice. The knife lay flat across his thigh. Kirsch crossed the dark office he knew by heart and turned on the lamp. His eyes adjusted in a second or two, the way eyes do, and by the time they had, The Confessor was on his feet. Unhurried. Knife in hand. Two steps to the side and squarely between Kirsch and the door. That was the whole trap. The desk in front of him, the window and its drawn blinds beside him, and the only way out of the room blocked by a man with a blade. Kirsch was stuck before he’d taken his second breath. The panic had been brief. The knife made the introduction, and Kirsch had understood the rest on his own. “The condo in Palm Springs,” The Confessor continued. “You paid cash. $260,000. You furnished it yourself — receipts from Design Within Reach, Restoration Hardware. You drove out on weekends in the Lexus.” The Lexus ES Hybrid was in the parking lot right now, straddling two spaces the way people park when they think no one else is around to care. A sensible vehicle, though. Not flashy, but still luxury. Responsible. “Your wife thinks you golf with a college friend on those weekends.” Something moved across Kirsch’s face when The Confessor mentioned his wife. “She’s not part of this,” Kirsch said. They were the first words he’d spoken in several minutes. His voice was thinner than the one from the gala footage, the TED-style talks, the cable news appearances. Kirsch had done a TED talk. Of course he had. Everybody with a secret and a blazer had done a TED talk. But now, small. A reduced man’s shaky voice barely filling a quiet room. “She’s not,” The Confessor agreed. Kirsch looked up. Tried something. The Confessor could see it happening — the straightening of the spine, the steadying of the breath, the attempt to find the version of himself that worked in rooms like this. The public face. The one that made rich people feel virtuous for writing checks they’d forget about by dessert. “I don’t know where you got your information,” Kirsch said, and his voice found a little of its old warmth, “but you’re looking at this without context. Nonprofit accounting is complicated. Operating reserves, restricted funds, pass-through allocations — money moves in ways that can look irregular on paper but are perfectly—” “David.” He stopped. “Coastal Venture Holdings is the parent company you set up to own your little network of fake vendors — Pacific Ridge, Meridian Group, and however many others there are. It has no employees, no business operations, no tax filings beyond the minimum to keep it active. You created it 19 months ago using a registered agent in Nevada. The condo in Palm Springs is not an operating reserve. Your brokerage account is not a pass-through allocation.” The public face collapsed the way a stage set comes down after the final performance — fast, deliberate, everything that looked solid a moment ago revealed as just plywood and paint. One moment it was there — the posture, the voice, the practiced calm — and the next it was just David Kirsch, 57 years old, sitting behind a desk in a dark building with someone who knew everything. The Confessor watched it happen. It was fast. Most people would miss it. He didn’t miss things. Kirsch tried again, and this time the quality was different. Lower. Closer to the ground. “I was going to put it back.” As if intention were a currency you could spend after the fact. The Confessor said nothing. “The foundation was hemorrhaging money in 2022. Donations dropped 40 percent after Covid. The federal grants were delayed — months of delays, the paperwork alone was—” Kirsch stopped himself. Took a breath. “I moved money to keep the lights on. I know how it looks, but I was trying to save the foundation.” “And the condo?” Kirsch’s mouth opened. Closed. “The brokerage account?” Nothing. “The golf weekends while the veterans your foundation was supposed to house slept under the 405 overpass on Wilshire?” Kirsch put his hands over his face. His shoulders dropped. I was trying to save it had lasted less than a minute. The rationalizations were thinner than the denials. The Confessor gave him time. The truth had to come on its own, the way water finds its level. The desk clock ticked. Through the drawn blinds, a car passed on the street below — headlights sweeping across the ceiling, then gone. He waited. “I need you to say it,” The Confessor said. “What you did. Out loud. In your own words.” Kirsch looked at him through his fingers. His eyes were wet, but he wasn’t crying. Something past crying. “Why?” “Because you’ve never said it. Not once. Not to anyone. You’ve lived inside the lie so long that the truth has become a foreign object. I need you to let it out.” Kirsch stared at him for a long time. The photographs watched from the walls — Kirsch at ribbon cuttings, Kirsch hugging veterans, Kirsch accepting a crystal plaque from the city council. When it came, it came quiet. Barely audible: “I stole the money.” He said it the way you’d set down something heavy you’d been carrying too long. “I knew what I was doing,” Kirsch said. His voice steadied as he went, as if the truth, once started, had its own momentum. “It wasn’t about saving the foundation. It was about wanting… things. The condo. The weekends. A life that felt like what I thought I deserved. I told myself it was temporary. I told myself I’d pay it back. But I wasn’t going to pay it back. I knew that. I knew it every time I made a transfer and I did it anyway.” He looked at the photos on the wall. “Those people trusted me.” “Yes.” “The veterans. The donors. Maria.” His wife. “They all trusted me and I let them because the lie was easier than any version of the truth.” Something inside The Confessor loosened. A pressure he’d been carrying for months — since he’d first found the discrepancy in the foundation’s public filings — released. A completion. He set a legal pad on the desk. Yellow, college-ruled. A black pen beside it. “Write it down,” he said. “Everything you just told me. In your own words.” Kirsch looked at the legal pad. Looked at The Confessor. The calculation was visible — what this document would mean, who might read it, what it would do to his life. But his life was already over. He’d known that since the account numbers started. Kirsch picked up the pen. His hand shook, but his handwriting was legible. He wrote slowly, carefully. Nice penmanship for a man confessing to multiple felonies. Probably the same hand that signed the thank-you notes to the donors he was stealing from. While Kirsch wrote, The Confessor began to circle. Not quickly. Not with any urgency that would pull attention from the page. He stepped from where he’d been standing near the window and moved along the side wall, past the plaques, past the framed commendation from the city council. Slow. Patient. The way a hand moves around the face of a clock. This was the part that mattered. Not the file. Not the money. The handwriting. A man putting himself on paper because someone had finally made him do it. Kirsch didn’t look up. The pen kept moving, the scratch of it the only sound in the room. The Confessor passed the corner of the office, continued along the back wall, came around behind the desk. He could read the handwriting now, over Kirsch’s shoulder. Specific amounts. Account names. The condo. His wife’s ignorance. All of it. He filled one page, turned it, continued on the next. The Confessor completed the circle and stopped directly behind the chair. Kirsch finished. Set the pen down and straightened up in his chair, rolling his shoulders slightly, the way you do after leaning forward for a long time. The legal pad sat in front of him — two pages, dense with handwriting, the ink still drying on the last line. Signed at the bottom. He started to turn his head. The blade was short and very sharp. The Confessor drew it across Kirsch’s throat from behind in a single smooth motion, left to right, fast enough that his expression barely changed. Kirsch’s hands came up — reflex, not decision — and then dropped. He settled into the chair. His eyes stayed open for a moment, looking at the photograph directly across from him — the one from the Veterans’ Day gala, the handshake with the mayor, the smile — and then they didn’t look at anything. It was over in seconds. The mercy of truth. He looked at his hands. He’d expected them to shake. They didn’t. His breathing was even, his pulse no faster than it had been when he’d walked in. Whatever he’d thought he’d feel afterward, it wasn’t this. Calm. Full. And under that, something bright enough to worry him. He checked his sleeves, his gloves, the toes of his shoes. Nothing wet. Nothing bright. The angle had done what he’d planned for it to do. The room was very quiet. The desk lamp still threw its circle of warm light across the legal pad, the confession, the dead man’s hands resting on the arms of his chair. Blood moved across the white button-down in a way that looked almost deliberate, like ink spreading on cloth. He cleaned the blade, folded it, put it away. Positioned the legal pad squarely on the desk in front of Kirsch, where it would be found. Blood had reached the pages — a fine spray across the second sheet, dotting the ink, soaking into the yellow paper. The handwriting was still legible underneath it. Two pages, stained with what they’d cost. He looked at the photographs one last time. Kirsch at the fundraiser. Kirsch with the veterans. Kirsch accepting awards for compassion from people he was robbing. $600,000 redirected to a condo and a brokerage account while the men it was meant for slept under overpasses. The photographs would stay on the walls. The confession would stay on the desk. He turned off the desk lamp. The room went dark except for thin bands of parking lot light coming through the blinds, falling across the floor in pale stripes. He left the way he’d come in — side entrance, keypad, quiet hallway. The building was just a building again. The back door opened onto the parking lot. Cool air, dry, the faint bite of December in Los Angeles. The Lexus Hybrid sat under a light pole, still straddling its two spaces. Couldn’t even park straight in an empty lot, The Confessor thought. This asshole cheated at everything. He pulled the stocking cap low, adjusted the mask, and walked. Unhurried. Far side of the street, head down, the same route he’d walked in. A man in dark clothes on a cold night in a city where that meant nothing. He got in, started the engine, and drove the few blocks back to the empty lot. The license plates went back on in under a minute — a screwdriver from the glove box, four screws, done. Then east on a side street, north on Western Avenue, west on Wilshire Boulevard. He drove the speed limit. He signaled his turns. A dark sedan on a wide boulevard at 11 o’clock on a Friday night, indistinguishable from the delivery drivers and the night-shift workers and the restless insomniacs going nowhere in particular. The city moved past the windows. Late-night Los Angeles — strip malls and gas stations, dark stretches between them, billboard faces selling things to people who weren’t paying attention. A city that never fully closed its eyes. He thought about the veterans. Not sentimentally — he didn’t do that. But he thought about them. The ones who’d slept on sidewalks while David Kirsch slept in Palm Springs. About how many more David Kirsches were out there right now, behind their desks, inside their lies, while the people who needed them went without. More than you’d think. More than anyone wants to believe. The boulevard stretched ahead of him, long and steady, the Friday night traffic thinning as he moved west. Just another set of headlights in the flow. He drove toward home. There would be others. Chapter Two Two weeks later, the matte black Tesla Model X Plaid slid to the curb on Melrose Avenue without making a sound. Two patrol cars were angled nose-in near the yellow tape, light bars still cycling, and a forensics van sat behind them with its rear doors open. The Tesla pulled in behind the van the way a shark pulls into a marina — wrong neighborhood, didn’t care. Logan Hollister stepped out with a coffee in one hand and his phone in the other. The coffee was from a diner on Pico — a place with cracked vinyl booths and a waitress who called everyone “hon.” He’d passed four Melrose coffee shops on the way. Tall, wide through the shoulders, lean everywhere else. Dark suit. Badge clipped to his belt. He stood at the curb for a moment and took in the scene — not looking at the whole thing, looking at the parts. The spiderweb crack in the boutique’s plate glass window. The blood smear visible through it. The smashed display cases inside, glass and price tags on the floor. Two uniforms at the tape line, keeping a small crowd of early-morning Melrose joggers and yoga-mat carriers at a distance. A bright Saturday morning on the high-end stretch of Melrose — designer boutiques on both sides, the kind of stores that buzz you in and know your name. The kind of neighborhood where the worst thing that usually happens is someone double-parks a Range Rover. But today the blood was real. A young uniform near the tape, a face Logan didn’t recognize, gave the Tesla a look. The kind of look that does math on a cop’s salary and comes up short. Logan caught it. “You need something, Officer?” The uniform looked away. Logan didn’t. Curt Alton was standing just inside the tape, coffee in hand, rumpled in the way a man gets when he’s been awake for 14 hours and running on caffeine and stubbornness. He had the face of a guy who’d been decent-looking in college and now just looked like a cop who didn’t sleep enough. His tie was loosened, his sport coat wrinkled at the elbows. He’d been here all night. “You look like hell,” Logan said, ducking under the tape. “You look like a catalog,” Curt said. “How was the drive?” “Left Laguna at midnight. Condo was freezing — forgot to set the thermostat from the app.” “Tragic.” Curt was already walking. Logan fell in beside him and they moved toward the boutique entrance. Ten years they’d worked together. The last three, Logan had the money to walk anytime he wanted, and that was exactly why he never had to. Robbery-Homicide, Special Cases Division — a title the Deputy Chief had invented to make the arrangement look official on paper. SCD. A division of one. Logan lived in Laguna, picked his cases, and answered to nobody below the fifth floor. The department kept its best detective. Logan kept the job without the leash. “Walk me through it,” Logan said. “Crew of three, last night, 8:45. Masks, gloves, one handgun visible — looked like a Glock to the witnesses but witnesses are witnesses. In and out in under 3 minutes. They knew what they wanted: handbags, watches, loose jewelry. Stuff you can carry in a duffel bag and fence before breakfast.” They stepped through the front entrance. The boutique was small and deliberately elegant, or it had been. Display cases smashed open, glass crunching under their shoes, empty velvet trays where the merchandise used to sit. A single earring on the floor near the door. Dropped on the way out, not worth going back for. A $4,000 earring. These guys had standards. A blood smear ran along the base of a tall glass case near the register, head-height, then down to the floor, the ugly physics of someone’s face hitting glass and then hitting tile. “The clerk,” Curt said, following Logan’s eyes. “Alyssa Medina, 26. Worked here 2 years. She tried to reach for the silent alarm and one of the crew caught it. He grabbed her by the hair, put her face through the case, then pistol-whipped her on the floor.” Logan looked at the blood smear. The impact point on the glass was about 5 feet up. The smear tracked straight down. She’d dropped like weight. He stood there a beat too long. Curt knew the look. “She’s at Cedars,” Curt said. “ICU. Fractured skull, swelling on the brain. They’re watching her but it doesn’t sound good.” “Same crew as the other two?” “Same playbook. Jewelry store on Robertson 2 weeks ago, boutique near the Beverly Center 8 days later. First hit was clean — grab and go, nobody hurt. Second one, they roughed up the owner a little, shoved him around. This time they almost killed somebody.” Curt took a sip of his coffee. “They’re getting comfortable.” Logan stopped walking. He was standing near the back of the store, looking at the smashed display cases. Two along the left wall. One on the right. The one on the right was untouched — still locked, still full of merchandise. Bracelets, earrings, some pieces that looked expensive even from here. “What’s in that case?” Logan asked. Curt looked. “One-of-a-kind designer pieces. Statement stuff — crystal, semi-precious stones, handmade settings. Looks expensive. Probably is expensive, retail.” “But try fencing a one-of-a-kind necklace,” Logan said. Curt’s mouth moved a little. Not quite a smile. “Yeah. I was getting to that.” “They’ve been in here before,” Logan said. “As customers. Or pretending to be. They walked around, they looked at the layout, they figured out what moves and what doesn’t. That case” — he pointed to the right wall — “didn’t get touched because it’s too distinctive to sell. The stuff they took — watches, gold chains, loose stones — that’s liquid. That’s commodity. You walk that into a fence and you’re holding cash by morning.” “I pulled the store’s customer log this morning. They keep one — names, phone numbers, preferences. Very high-end service. But walk-ins don’t always get logged.” “How’d they leave?” “Black SUV, no plates. Went east on Melrose, turned south on La Brea. We’ve got traffic camera footage from the intersection but the plates were either removed or covered. Still working it.” “East on Melrose, south on La Brea,” Logan repeated. He was looking at the boutique’s position on the block. Mid-block, between two other stores. “And the alley?” “Runs behind the building. Exits onto a side street.” “Two escape routes. So they scouted the exit as well as the merchandise.” Logan turned back to the front of the store. “These guys aren’t tourists. They know the Westside. They’ve done this before or they’re planning to keep doing it.” They stepped back outside into the morning light. After the dim wreckage of the boutique, Melrose Avenue looked almost aggressively normal — a woman walking a French bulldog, a guy on a phone outside a coffee shop, a delivery truck easing past the patrol cars. Half the crowd at the tape line had their phones out. Somebody would have it on Instagram before Logan got to his car. “Owner’s across the street,” Curt said. “Diane Barstow. She’s been at that coffee shop since it opened. She’s on her third espresso and her second call to the mayor’s office.” “Connected?” “She’s got the kind of money where connected is the default setting.” Logan crossed the street. Diane Barstow was sitting at an outdoor table with her uncased iPhone flat on the surface and her eyes locked on the boutique across the street like she was daring it to look away. Late 50s, thin, dressed in the kind of casual that costs more than most people’s formal. She looked like a woman who solved problems with a phone call and was deeply offended that this one hadn’t cooperated. “Mrs. Barstow? I’m Logan Hollister, LAPD.” She looked up at him — 6-2, broad through the shoulders, the kind of build that filled a doorway without trying. She took in the suit, the badge, the fact that he didn’t look like the uniformed officers she’d been dealing with all night. Something in her posture shifted — not relaxed, but recalibrated. “Alyssa is 26,” she said. “She just got engaged. She’s lying in a hospital bed with her skull fractured because three animals walked into my store and—” She stopped. Pressed her lips together. “What are you going to do about it?” “I’m going to find them,” Logan said. He said it simply, without drama, the way you’d tell someone what time it was. “Can I ask you a few questions?” She nodded. “In the last two or three weeks, has anyone come into the store who felt off? Someone who didn’t buy anything but spent a lot of time looking around?” Diane Barstow’s eyes narrowed. “There was a man. Maybe 10 days ago. He came in, said he was looking for a gift for his wife. Spent 20 minutes browsing but didn’t try anything on, didn’t ask prices. He was interested in the layout more than the merchandise.” “Can you describe him?” “30s. Average height. Nice jacket — Brunello Cucinelli, I think. He looked like he belonged, which is probably why I didn’t think much of it until now.” She paused. “I remember everyone who comes into my store. I didn’t recognize him.” Logan filed it. His expression didn’t change. “Does the store have security cameras?” “Of course. The system records to the cloud.” “Can you pull up the footage from 10 days ago and send it to me?” Logan took out his phone and showed her the number. “Text it directly. I don’t want to wait for the evidence unit to process it.” She looked at him — a quick, sharp assessment, the kind a businesswoman makes when she’s deciding whether someone is competent. Then she picked up her phone and started tapping. “I’ve called the mayor’s office,” she said while she worked, and there was an edge in it — not a threat exactly, more like a weather report. This is coming. Be ready. “I’d expect nothing less,” Logan said. He gave her a card. She set it on the table next to her espresso without looking at it. While Logan was talking to Barstow, a plainclothes detective had walked over to the tape line and was having a conversation with one of the uniforms that involved a lot of gesturing toward the Tesla. Curt intercepted him before he got to Logan. Logan saw it in his peripheral vision — Curt showing his badge, a brief exchange, the other detective’s body language cycling from pissed off to resigned. The guy had been working the robbery series for 2 weeks, grinding it out, and now Logan rolls up in a Tesla and takes it. Logan got it. He’d feel the same way. But the Deputy Chief wanted his best on it, and that was that. By the time Logan walked back across the street, it was handled. “New friend?” Logan asked. “Detective Morales. He’s been working these robberies since the first hit. He’ll get over it.” Curt glanced at Logan’s phone. “Did you just have a civilian send you evidence footage directly?” “I had a victim send me security video that I’ll watch in the car in 10 minutes instead of waiting 2 days for the evidence unit to get around to it.” “Defense attorney’s going to love that.” “Then log it before he gets out of bed.” Curt shook his head, but he was almost smiling. He’d seen this before. They walked to the Tesla. As Logan got close, the driver’s door swung open on its own, interior lights already on, the car sensing his phone in his pocket and presenting itself like a valet had been standing there the whole time. Curt watched this with the expression of a man who’d seen it a hundred times and still found it mildly ridiculous. “Your car has better manners than most people I know,” Curt said. “Most people you know are cops.” “You lasted, what — three days in Laguna this time before you picked up the phone?” Curt said it lightly, the way you bust a friend’s chops. Logan had bought the house in Laguna 2 years ago. Beautiful place, ocean views, the kind of quiet that was supposed to feel like peace. It never did. Three days in and the walls started closing. He’d start checking his phone, scanning the news, looking for the thing Laguna couldn’t give him. The beach house was where he lived. LA was where he was alive. They got in. Logan pulled away from the curb heading east on Melrose, and Curt felt the seat push back. Logan always drove harder when a case was building, like the motor in the car had to keep up with the one in his head. Curt grabbed the door handle and didn’t say anything. He’d learned. “Cedars first?” Curt asked. “Cedars first. I want to talk to the charge nurse, find out what we’re looking at. If she wakes up, I want to be the first call.” “And if she doesn’t?” Logan’s hands tightened on the steering yoke. Just slightly. “Then this stops being a robbery investigation.” They drove south on La Brea. The morning traffic was building — the particular slow-motion gridlock of Los Angeles, where everybody had somewhere to be and nobody knew how to merge. Logan let the car handle the crawl. “How’s Laguna?” Curt asked. “Quiet.” “You say that like it’s a complaint.” A beat. “Sarah call?” “Don’t.” The word came out harder than Logan probably intended. Or maybe exactly as hard as he intended. Curt let it go. He’d been partnered with Logan long enough to know where the fence was. “3 hits in 2 weeks,” Logan said. “Same playbook, escalating violence, all high-end Westside. Someone’s running this crew. The guys in the masks are the muscle, but there’s a brain picking the targets.” “Because of the casing?” “Because of all of it. The location — mid-block, two exit routes. The timing — right before close, after the foot traffic dies down but before the safe gets locked. And the case selection — they walked past the showpiece stuff, the one-of-a-kind items worth six figures on paper, and went straight for the commodity pieces. Gold chains, loose diamonds, small watches that move without questions. Stuff you can fence before breakfast. A crew that grabs the flashiest thing in the case is a crew that doesn’t know what they’re doing. These guys were shopping by resale value.” Smart enough to know the difference between commodity and bullshit. That was the part that worried him. Curt was quiet for a moment. “The other two scenes — Robertson and Beverly Center — I can pull the owner interviews, see if anyone remembers a walk-in who didn’t buy.” “Do that. And pull traffic footage from a two-block radius of all three locations for the week before each hit. If the same vehicle shows up near all three, we’ve got our scout. I also want to know who leases retail space on this stretch of Melrose — anybody new in the last 6 months, any vacancies, any units that changed hands. If this crew is local, they might be operating out of something nearby.” Curt stared at him. “I’ve been up since 6 o’clock yesterday.” “So get another coffee.” Curt made a note on his phone. Logan turned right on Beverly Boulevard, heading toward Cedars-Sinai. The hospital was close — just up the road, the kind of proximity that was either lucky or depressing depending on how you thought about it. Logan’s phone buzzed in the center console. He glanced at the screen. A notification from the WLTLH app — traffic numbers, something about a trending post. He dismissed it with a flick of his thumb, but Curt caught the glance. “What’s WLTLH?” Curt asked. “You check that thing constantly.” “News app.” “Never heard of it.” “You should read more.” They pulled into the Cedars-Sinai parking structure. Logan found a spot on the second level and the car shut off the second he opened his door. Logan sat for a moment. Somewhere in this building, a 26-year-old woman with a ring on her finger was fighting for her life because three guys wanted commodity gold and a bag full of watches. Curt’s phone buzzed. He looked at it, then looked at Logan. “Robertson jewelry store. The first hit.” He read from the screen. “Owner says she’s been thinking about it since we called yesterday. She remembers a walk-in about a week before the robbery. Man in his 30s. Didn’t buy anything. Spent a long time looking around.” Curt lowered the phone. “Sound familiar?” Logan was already out of the car. “Same guy,” he said. “He scouted all three. Pull everything you can on the Robertson walk-in — dates, times, anything on camera.” He loosened his tie and started walking toward the hospital entrance. His left knee was stiff from the cold — it did that sometimes, a chain-link fence in Boyle Heights years ago that never healed right — but he didn’t slow down. Three robberies had just become one operation. Somewhere in the footage from three different stores was the same face, and Logan was going to find it. He could already feel the case hooking into him — the familiar pull, the thing that made Laguna feel too quiet and the condo feel like home. The machine was running. GET ON THE LIST HERE Chapter Three The diner on Western had a name but nobody used it. The sign out front said Nick’s, or maybe Rick’s — the first letter had burned out years ago and no one had replaced it. Logan was in the third booth from the back, facing the door, a loaded omelet going cold in front of him and a cup of coffee that the waitress had refilled twice without being asked. She’d been pouring his coffee for 6 years. By now he was just booth three, black coffee, no cream. Curt was at the counter, two stools from the end, working on a plate of eggs and toast with the slow determination of a man who hadn’t slept in 36 hours. A trucker sat three stools down, watching a Dodgers replay on the mounted TV with the sound off. The closed captioning was running two pitches behind the picture. The griddle behind the pass-through window hissed and popped, and the whole place smelled like bacon grease and floor cleaner — not quite clean, not quite dirty, the permanent smell of a kitchen that had been running since before most of its customers were born. Logan was scrolling through the security footage Barstow had sent him. Three angles, 10 days old. The walk-in was there — 30s, average height, browsing the left-wall cases with the unhurried attention of a man who already knew what was in them. Nice jacket. Hands in his pockets half the time, which meant he was conscious of touching things. Logan zoomed in on a frame where the guy’s face was almost in profile. Almost. The resolution fell apart past a certain point, the way resolution always did when you needed it most. He set the phone down and ate a forkful of omelet. The hashbrowns were perfect — crispy on the outside, soft underneath, the kind you only got from a griddle that had been seasoning itself for decades. A four-star restaurant couldn’t do this. They’d try, and they’d charge you $40, and it wouldn’t be the same. The door opened at 10:15. Eddie Lam came in like a man walking into a dentist’s office — resigned, unhappy, getting it over with. He slid into the booth across from Logan without saying hello. Short, narrow through the shoulders, wearing a jacket that was trying hard to be nothing — the kind of thing you’d forget five seconds after you saw it. But the sneakers were immaculate. White-on-white, fresh out of the box or maintained with the kind of care that said something about a man. Everything else about Eddie was forgettable. The shoes were not. “I ordered you coffee,” Logan said. “I don’t want coffee.” “Drink it anyway. You look like you need it.” Eddie wrapped his hands around the mug but didn’t drink. His eyes moved to the counter, found Curt, moved back. “He with you?” “He’s always with me.” “So this is official.” “This is coffee.” Logan leaned back. “How’ve you been, Eddie?” “Fine.” The word meant nothing and they both knew it. “Staying clean?” Something flickered across Eddie’s face. Fast. A micro-flinch. “Yeah,” Eddie said. “Staying clean.” Logan let that sit. He picked up his coffee, took a sip, set it down. The waitress passed behind Eddie and topped off Logan’s mug without breaking stride. The Dodgers replay had moved to the seventh inning. The trucker was asleep. “I need to ask you about some merchandise,” Logan said. “Watches, loose stones, gold — the liquid stuff. The kind of inventory that’s been disappearing from the Westside in large quantities over the last 2 weeks.” “I don’t do that anymore.” “I know you don’t.” Logan’s voice was easy, warm even. “That’s not why you’re here. I’m not looking at you. I’m looking past you. But you hear things. People in your world talk.” “My world.” Eddie said it flat. “Someone’s moving commodity pieces south. Not the showroom stuff — the things you can actually sell. Gold, brand-name watches, loose diamonds. Stuff that walks into a fence as inventory and walks out as cash. I’m hearing Inglewood. You hearing anything like that?” Eddie’s thumbs pressed against the sides of the coffee mug. He was quiet for a beat too long, and the quality of the silence told Logan everything he needed to know. Eddie had heard something. The question was how hard Logan was going to have to push to get it out of him. “I don’t know anything about any Inglewood—” “Eddie.” Logan’s voice didn’t change. Same warmth, same ease. But the eyes were different. “The Breitling.” Eddie’s hands went still on the mug. “Last month. Came through Tommy Pak, who got it from a friend of a friend, who got it from somewhere you didn’t ask about because you didn’t want to know. You moved it for $1,500. Quick and clean. Nobody got hurt, nobody noticed, and you told yourself it was a one-time thing.” Logan paused. “I noticed.” The diner was quiet. The griddle hissed. The closed captioning scrolled across the Dodgers game two pitches late. Eddie looked at his coffee. He looked at his sneakers — the perfect white sneakers, spotless on a greasy diner floor. A man trying to keep something clean. “That was one watch,” Eddie said. “That’s all it takes.” “I’ve been straight for 2 years. One watch.” “I know.” Logan’s voice was almost gentle, which made it worse. “And I’d like to keep it that way. I’d like that watch to stay between us. But I need something from you, and the math is pretty simple.” Eddie stared at him. There was no anger in it — just the tired recognition of a man who’d been in this exact position before, in different booths, with different cops, his whole life. “There’s a watch repair place,” Eddie said. “Inglewood. Crenshaw, just north of the 105. Between a botanica and one of those tax-prep offices that’s only open three months a year.” He spoke quietly, eyes on the table. “Guy named Manny runs it. The shop looks closed most of the time — grate down, lights off. But stuff moves through there. I don’t know who’s bringing it in. I don’t know names. I just know that in the last month, word’s been going around that somebody found a pipeline for moving high-end goods south. Watches, jewelry. Westside stuff.” “How good is the word?” “Good enough that people who usually talk stopped talking. That’s how I know it’s real.” Logan filed it. His expression didn’t change. “What’s Manny’s last name?” “I don’t know his last name. I don’t know Manny. I know the shop because everybody in that world knows the shop. It’s been there for years. It used to be small-time — estate sale stuff, minor repairs, nothing worth noticing. But lately it’s been different. Volume’s up. The kind of volume that doesn’t match a watch repair place in Inglewood.” Eddie glanced at his coffee. “And the stuff coming through is clean. No custom pieces, no one-of-a-kinds — nothing that gets a jeweler asking questions. All commodity. Whoever’s feeding that pipeline knows what moves and what sits.” He paused. “Word is Manny keeps some for the shop and moves the rest to buyers. Bigger people. I don’t know who. Nobody I’ve talked to knows who. But there’s no way one shop absorbs all of that.” “Have you been inside?” “No.” Fast. Definitive. Eddie wanted that on the record. “But you know someone who has.” Eddie’s jaw worked. He looked toward the counter again — Curt was paying his check, not looking their way, giving them the room. Eddie turned back to Logan. “I know a guy who dropped something off there 3 weeks ago. A bracelet. Not from any robbery — this was separate, his own thing. He said there was merchandise in the back he’d never seen in a place like that. Display cases worth of stuff. And a black SUV parked out back that he’d seen before on the Westside.” Logan leaned forward slightly. “He get a plate?” “No plate. No front plate, anyway. Dark windows.” “Your guy have a name he’d be willing to share?” “My guy has a name he’d like to keep breathing with.” Logan nodded. He took a last sip of coffee, set the mug down, and put a twenty on the table. The omelet was half-eaten. The hashbrowns were gone. “Eddie.” Eddie looked up. “I appreciate this. The Breitling stays between us.” Eddie stood up. He didn’t say thank you. He didn’t say anything. He just turned and walked toward the back door, the one that led to the parking lot. Logan watched him go — the forgettable jacket, the forgettable face, the perfect white sneakers crossing the cracked linoleum like they were walking on glass. The parking lot behind the strip mall was the kind of dark that meant half the lights had been out long enough that no one expected them to come back on. A nail salon, a laundromat, a taqueria with its steel shutters down, and a vacant unit with brown paper over the windows. Two dumpsters. A cat somewhere. The kind of dark that had settled in and wasn’t leaving. Logan followed Eddie out. Curt was already outside, leaning against the Tesla in the far corner of the lot, arms crossed. He’d seen them come out. He stayed where he was. “One more thing,” Logan said. Eddie stopped. His shoulders tightened. “I gave you what I got. Don’t squeeze me for shit I don’t know.” “The SUV. Your guy said he’d seen it before on the Westside. Where on the Westside?” “I told you everything—” “Where, Eddie.” Logan didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t need to. He stepped closer — not threateningly, but the way a man steps closer when he wants you to understand that the conversation isn’t over until he says it is, filling the space between Eddie and his car. The parking lot felt smaller. Eddie’s eyes went to the Tesla, to Curt, back to Logan. The same arithmetic. It never changed. “Melrose,” Eddie said. “My guy saw the same SUV on Melrose, maybe 2 weeks before the bracelet drop-off. Parked on a side street. He noticed it because of the no-plate thing.” “Melrose where? Which block?” “I don’t know which block. He just said Melrose. The shopping part.” Logan held his eyes for another second. Then he stepped back. Gave Eddie the space. “Go home,” Logan said. Eddie went. He got into a silver Civic with a dented rear quarter panel. Through the window, Logan could see his hands shaking on the steering wheel. Eddie pulled out of the lot without turning on his headlights. Old habit. The kind of thing you do when you’ve spent your life leaving places you don’t want to be remembered at. Logan watched the taillights disappear onto Western Avenue. Behind him, Curt hadn’t moved from the Tesla. “The guy was trying to stay clean,” Curt said. “Everybody’s trying to stay clean.” Curt didn’t say anything else. He didn’t need to. They drove south on Western, then picked up the 105 pushing west toward Inglewood. Late-night traffic was thin — a few trucks, a few rideshare drivers, the occasional car moving fast enough to suggest someone was late for something or running from something. The city scrolled past the windows in neon and sodium light. “Manny’s watch repair,” Curt said. “Crenshaw south of the 105.” “Between a botanica and a tax office.” “And the SUV with no front plate matches the getaway vehicle from all three hits.” “Same description. Dark, no plate, tinted windows. Could be coincidence.” “You don’t believe in coincidence.” “I don’t believe in coincidence,” Logan agreed. Curt’s phone buzzed. He looked at it, and something changed in his face — not dramatic, just a shade darker. “Cedars,” he said. “Alyssa Medina. She’s out of surgery. Swelling’s down. They’re cautiously optimistic.” He paused. “Cautiously.” Logan nodded. He didn’t say anything for a while. The freeway stretched out in front of them, mostly empty, the Tesla’s headlights cutting clean lines through the dark. “Three robberies, one scout, and now a fence in Inglewood,” Logan said. “The crew’s been running merchandise through this watch repair shop. They scout the locations on the Westside, hit them, move the goods south through Manny. Hit the fence, identify the pipeline, roll it up to the crew.” “Standard playbook.” “Standard playbook for smart guys. And these guys are smart. But the fence is always the weak point. Manny knows who’s bringing him the merchandise. He might not know the whole crew, but he knows the delivery man. And the delivery man knows everything.” They exited the 105 at Crenshaw and turned north. The neighborhood shifted — smaller buildings, older signage, the kind of commercial stretch that had been the same for 30 years and would be the same for 30 more. A liquor store with bars on the windows. A church with a lit cross. An auto body shop with three cars in the lot that would probably still be there next year. The watch repair shop was on the east side of Crenshaw, mid-block. Logan spotted it without slowing down. Security grate pulled across the front. Dark storefront. A botanica on the left with saints in the window. A tax-prep office on the right — H&R Block knockoff, seasonal, closed for the year. The shop looked like it had been closed for a decade. But there was a blue television light in the back room, flickering through the gap where the security grate didn’t quite meet the door frame. Someone was home. And behind the building, visible as Logan passed the side alley: a black SUV. No front plate. Logan didn’t stop. Didn’t slow down. Just looked. “That’s our place,” Curt said. “Yeah.” They kept driving. Logan turned west at the next block, looped back toward the freeway. Tomorrow they’d come back in daylight. Run the plates on the SUV — assuming it had rear plates. Check business licenses for the shop. See who Manny was and what he was connected to. Build it before they kicked it. Tonight was enough. The thread was real. Logan dropped Curt at his apartment in Koreatown — a two-bedroom walk-up that looked exactly like what a detective’s salary could afford, which was exactly the point. Curt got out, leaned back in before he closed the door. “Get some sleep,” Curt said. “I will.” “You won’t.” Logan almost smiled. Curt closed the door and walked inside without looking back. The drive to the condo was 12 minutes at this hour. Downtown at midnight was a different city — the towers lit up, the streets mostly empty, a few clusters of people outside the bars on Spring Street. Logan pulled into the garage, parked in his spot, and sat in the dark for a moment after the car shut off. He pulled out his phone. The WLTLH app had 4 notifications — traffic stats, a comment thread, a story trending. He opened it. The trending piece was something his senior writer had filed that afternoon — a deep dive on city council campaign financing that was gaining traction. Good work. Clean sourcing. The kind of thing that would get picked up by the Times or the Daily News by tomorrow afternoon. Logan typed a quick note to the writer through the encrypted channel — two lines, editorial feedback, a suggestion for a follow-up angle. Then he closed the app and got out of the car. The condo was cold again. He fixed it, tossed his jacket over a chair. He’d only needed the one bedroom, but the two-bedroom had been the smarter buy — better resale, better floor plan, better sight line down 5th Street. The second bedroom had become something between an office and a case room: whiteboard on one wall, corkboard on the other, a printer, and banker’s boxes stacked along the baseboard. When a case got big enough, Logan needed to see it standing up. Faces, dates, routes, lies. Some things didn’t connect until they were on a wall. He stood at the window. The city glittered. Somewhere south of the 105, a watch repair shop was running a side business with merchandise from three Westside robberies, and tomorrow Logan was going to start taking it apart. He could feel the case in his chest now. The pull. The thing that made Laguna feel like a waiting room and the condo feel like home. He turned away from the window and went to bed. He wouldn’t sleep much. He never did when a case was pulling. Chapter Four The performer was 14 minutes late. The Confessor sat in the dark sedan, parked between a contractor’s van and a white Escalade, watching the gym through floor-to-ceiling windows that turned the whole place into a fishbowl. He’d been here for an hour and 12 minutes. The coffee in the cupholder was from a Shell on Santa Monica. Nothing precious. The notebook on the passenger seat was open to a page with six lines of handwriting and a time stamp. Physical notebook, not digital. Digital left traces. Digital remembered everything and told anyone who asked. The gym was the kind of place that charged $200 a month for the privilege of sweating in exposed brick. A converted warehouse on Robertson with black iron fixtures and motivational text stenciled on the walls in a font designed to look hand-painted. The parking lot was leased Range Rovers and G-Wagons and a Porsche Cayenne that somebody had wrapped in matte olive like it was going to war. Everyone who walked through the front door looked like they’d already completed a workout just getting dressed for one. A woman in matching lavender animal-print activewear crossed the lot carrying a smoothie in one hand and her phone in the other, filming herself walking through the door. Content. Everything was content now. The performer arrived at 11:14 in a lifted Ram TRX — glossy black, oversized wheels, light bar across the roof that had never seen a dirt road. The truck filled the spot near the entrance so completely that the spaces on either side became theoretical. The correlation between truck size and what it compensated for was the most reliable equation in Los Angeles. A smaller man climbed out of the passenger side carrying a camera bag and a ring light on a collapsible stand. The cameraman. He had the patient, slightly defeated look of someone who’d been documenting another man’s biceps for a living and had made peace with it. The performer stepped down from the truck and the parking lot got smaller. He was massive — 6-3 at least, 240 pounds of the kind of mass that didn’t come from meal prep and early mornings no matter what the captions said. Capped deltoids, traps that climbed toward his ears, the dense waterlogged look through the chest and arms that certain compounds produced when you pushed them hard enough. He wore a tank top that had been cut to show the maximum amount of shoulder and an expression of practiced ease — the look of a man who knew exactly where every mirror was and adjusted accordingly. Primal Jack. That was the brand. The Instagram count said 2.3 million. A supplement line, a training app, a $49.99/month program called PRIMAL PROTOCOL that promised the physique in the photos if you just worked hard enough and believed in yourself and bought the stack. His driver’s license said Jack Ralston, age 31, a Riverside kid who’d discovered that the distance between average and extraordinary was about $2,000 a month in chemicals and a good cameraman. The Confessor watched him cross the lot. The performer stopped at the door to greet someone — a young guy, maybe 19, wearing a PRIMAL JACK tank top he’d probably bought from the merch store. The kid looked nervous. He said something and held up his phone, and the performer broke into the smile — the big one, the one from the thumbnails — and put his arm around the kid’s shoulders and talked to him. Not briefly. A full minute, maybe longer. The kid’s face changed. The performer squeezed his shoulder, took the photo, said something that made the kid laugh, and went inside. Performance for an audience of one. The Confessor made a note of the time and turned back to the windows. Inside, the performer moved through the gym floor like a man walking through his own living room. Nods to the regulars, a fist bump for the guy at the front desk, the cameraman trailing three steps behind with the ring light already set up near the free weights. Between sets, the performer talked into the camera with the rehearsed ease of someone who’d done ten thousand takes. The smile clicked on. The authenticity clicked on. He hit his marks the way an actor hits marks. The Confessor watched Ralston curl a barbell that no natural lifter his age should be curling for reps. The vascularity in his forearms looked like a road map drawn by someone having a bad day. Trenbolone did that. Trenbolone and testosterone cypionate and 4 IUs of growth hormone daily, administered at a wellness clinic in the Valley that didn’t use real names and took cash. The Confessor had found the clinic through Ralston’s trash — a receipt from a compounding pharmacy, crumpled and tossed in the bin behind his old apartment in West Hollywood. The receipt led to the pharmacy. The pharmacy led to the clinic. The clinic led to a patient file it had no intention of sharing, under the name “Jake Rollins.” Testosterone at 4 times the natural ceiling. The program. The transformation photos. The supplement stack with his face on the label. Every dollar built on a body that cost thousands a month to maintain and a lie that cost nothing to tell. He thought about the followers. Not with sympathy — he didn’t carry that particular equipment. But with something adjacent. Recognition, maybe. They were believers. Young men spending money they didn’t have on programs that couldn’t deliver what was promised, measuring themselves against a standard that was chemically impossible, hating their own reflections because the reflection didn’t match the lie. The performer wasn’t just dishonest about himself. He was breaking other people with the dishonesty. Selling them failure dressed as possibility. That was what made this one matter. The gym crowd thinned after noon. The performer finished his session — toweled off, checked his phone, spent 10 minutes at the smoothie bar talking to someone the Confessor didn’t recognize. The cameraman packed the ring light into its case with the careful economy of a man who did this 6 days a week. A guy in compression shorts walked past the windows flexing his lat in the reflection. The sun sat high and flat over Robertson, making everything look staged. The Confessor sat in the car. The notebook was closed. The coffee was cold. He’d taken the day for this. Tomorrow he’d be back at a desk, in an office full of people who’d sat near him for years and still couldn’t tell you one true thing about him — which was exactly how he liked it. The tightness was back. Behind his ribs, low and steady, the way a headache sits behind your eyes before you fully register it. Not sharp. Not yet. Just present. A hum. He’d felt it rebuilding for the last week, maybe longer, and he’d been waiting for it to settle into something he could name. It hadn’t. It just grew. He’d found the performer before Kirsch. Two months of research — the clinic, the fake name, the supply chain — mapped and verified while Kirsch’s file was still open. Two targets in development at once. He hadn’t planned it that way. The performer’s trail had simply appeared while he was looking for something else, and once he saw it he couldn’t unsee it. Kirsch first — Kirsch was ready, the foundation’s fiscal year was closing. The performer could wait. After Kirsch, the quiet had come. Flat and clean, the noise behind everything dialed to nothing. He’d thought it would last — weeks of silence, a manageable rhythm. But the quiet had thinned faster than he expected. The pressure rebuilt before he was ready for it, and when he returned to the performer’s file the hum was already there. The research was done. The evidence was clean. The supply chain, the clinic, the cash payments, the fake name, the program, the money. He knew all of it. Everything was in the notebook, verified twice, cross-referenced against the performer’s public content for the specific dates and specific lies. There was nothing left to find. So why wait? The question felt like efficiency. It sounded like efficiency in his own head. The target was ready. The location was ready. He was ready. Waiting served nothing. H

Legendary NFL Quarterback Reveals Recent Stroke Hospitalized Him
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

Legendary NFL Quarterback Reveals Recent Stroke Hospitalized Him

Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Jim Kelly revealed on Tuesday that he suffered a stroke this spring, which hospitalized him for a few days. Kelly provided details during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Buffalo Bills’ new stadium. “I had a little setback about a month and a half ago,” Kelly said. “But right now, I feel good. Eyesight’s not great. My hearing still sucks, but that’s part of life,” he added. Bills’ great Jim Kelly said he recently suffered a stroke, but he now feels “really good.” Story via @agetzenberg:https://t.co/VLUDOEzsdF — Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) June 23, 2026 ESPN shared further: Kelly, 66, has dealt with a variety of health issues over the years and has been diagnosed with cancer multiple times. He initially had surgery in 2013 to remove squamous cell carcinoma of the upper jawbone and underwent chemotherapy treatment in 2014 when cancer was found in his maxillary sinus. Kelly then had surgeries in 2018 to remove oral cancer and reconstruct his upper jaw. He said his recent scans have come back clean. “Everything’s good,” Kelly said. “All good.” The former quarterback played for the Bills from 1986 to 1996, appearing in four consecutive Super Bowls. He received the Jimmy V Award for Perseverance in 2018. “It’s going to be special, not only for the players, but imagine the fans in there, how crazy and wild and loud they’re going to get,” Kelly said, according to Fox News. “And that’s what I’m looking forward to. I want to see how loud this stadium can get. And from what I’ve been told, it’s going to be unbelievable, but I don’t expect anything less,” he added. Watch below: #Bills legend Jim Kelly disclosed he had a stroke recently, but is “all good” now. (@salmaiorana on the questions)#BillsMafia pic.twitter.com/Pxg94zaPTD — Andy Young (@AndyYoungTV) June 24, 2026 Fox News noted: Kelly is well known in Bills lore, having been the team’s franchise quarterback from 1986-96, where he helped lead his team to four consecutive Super Bowls. Unfortunately, all Bills fans remember how those ended – four straight defeats. Thus, the Bills still don’t have a Vince Lombardi Trophy in their team facility despite having made runs in recent seasons with Josh Allen now at the helm for Buffalo. The Bills made it as far as the AFC Championship Game twice since Allen was drafted in 2018, but they lost to the Kansas City Chiefs in both of those games. Kelly, who still lives in the Western New York area and is actively involved with the Bills, is looking forward to the team’s first home game in their new stadium. The Bills will host the Detroit Lions in their regular-season opener on Sept. 17, when he hopes the new Highmark Stadium sees a victory in its debut. The post Legendary NFL Quarterback Reveals Recent Stroke Hospitalized Him appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.