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THE DOSSIER
THE DOSSIER

THE DOSSIER

Welcome to The Dossier, an immersive documentary audio experience brought to you by Criminal Minded Media and led by Emmy-nominated television producer Don Sikorski.  The Dossier is a hub for compelling audio series' that delve deep into the complexities of crime and culture, including the groundbreaking podcast that investigates the LAPD's alleged cover-up of the murder of hip-hop icon The Notorious B.I.G. Discover Unjust Justice: The Story of James Rosemond, which explores the intricate intersections of justice and morality, along with Hip-Hop vs. The Cops, Collateral Damage, USA vs. Hip-Hop, and Family Business: Organized Crime in America.  Additionally, tune in to Criminal Minded, a bi-weekly true crime journey that captivates listeners with its gripping narratives. For more information, please visit www.criminalmindedmedia.com

Available Episodes 10

In hip hop, the end of the 80s ushered in a thriving music industry, with hip hop, diversifying itself immensely.


In 1990 alone, A Tribe Called Quest, Public Enemy, Ice Cube, D Nice, Special Ed, LL Cool J, Vanilla Ice, and EPMD all had seminal releases.


These artists would start to define the trajectory of hip hop music as it invaded white suburbs and penetrated the minds of American political thought as hip hop started to gain in popularity.


The traumatic events inside the crack epidemic and the war on drugs resulted with draconian drug sentences, and most of the major drug kingpins facing huge life sentences or death.


The crack trade that spawned 1000s of corner millionaires was now coming home to roost, and its path of destruction was young men and women just out of their teenage years, being shipped to federal and state jails for 30 year and two life sentences.

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There were many defining events as it relates to the intersection of crime, the War on Drugs, and hip hop throughout the 80s.


That being said, there was a singular event that took place in Southside Jamaica, Queens, in February of 1988 that arguably changed the course of policing in this country, the mythology of the drug trade, and symbolically ended the crack era for the exalted hustlers inside New York City.


This event was the execution of a rookie NYPD Cop named Edward Byrne.


The NYPD, led by Chief Bill Bratton, would form the Tactical Narcotics Team, aimed at systematically taking down all drug crews in the city.


In part 2 of our interview with Prince Miller, he discusses the ramifications of Ed Byrne’s murder and Fat Cat Nichols' cooperation with the government leading to the fall of The Supreme Team.


**If you’re a fan of The Dossier, please visit our Patreon page for free and paid content featuring exclusive documents, unedited interviews, and monthly online meetups with other Dossier fans and the Dossier team.


Go to Patreon.com/Dossier to subscribe!!

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The years of 1987 and ’88 ushered in the golden age of hip-hop, when a few groundbreaking artists, acting as cultural critics, show the power of this art form.


Led by the protest rap of KRS-One, Public Enemy, Eric B & Rakim, among others, hip-hop was now shining a light on the plight of the inner-city struggle, the crack epidemic, mass incarceration & other societal plights.


The presidential race of 1988 is filled with subtle racial dog whistles, aimed at scaring white America into voting for George H Bush.


On the West Coast, we witness the rise of LA street gangs such as the Bloods & Crips, while NWA releases the seminal album Straight Outta Compton.


**If you’re a fan of The Dossier, please visit our Patreon page for free and paid content featuring exclusive documents, unedited interviews, and monthly online meetups with other Dossier fans and the Dossier team.


Go to Patreon.com/Dossier to subscribe!!

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As hip hop and the war on drugs hit the mid 1980s, it can be argued that both commercial endeavors hit their strides in inner cities across the United States.


As crack cocaine exploded, members of the United States government enacted one of the first steps in the revolution of our criminal justice system in soaring incarceration rates.


The comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 was the first revision of the US Criminal Code since the early 1900s.


It was sponsored by a racist Strom Thurmond, a Republican from South Carolina in the Senate, and by Hamilton Fish, a Republican from New York.


**If you’re a fan of The Dossier, please visit our Patreon page for free and paid content featuring exclusive documents, unedited interviews, and monthly online meetups with other Dossier fans and the Dossier team.


Go to Patreon.com/Dossier to subscribe!!

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If any story defines what New York was like at that time, it's the story of New York City subway vigilante Bernard Goetz's shooting of unarmed black teens.


On December 22, 1984, Barry Allen, Troy Canty, Darrell Cabey, and James Ramseur were shot and wounded by Bernard Goetz after they accosted him on a New York City subway train in Manhattan.


In America, you would think that we would learn from our mistakes as it relates to race, class, and the divisions that have been created.


One could see this case taking place in 2024, with protests in the cable news wars elevating it into the mainstream.


In the first two episodes, we set the stage in the early 1980s with iconic hip-hop drug kingpins who came to define an era.


Those names are "Freeway" Rick Ross in Los Angeles, Lorenzo "Fat Cat" Nichols in Queens, Guy Fisher in Harlem, And finally, a mention of a crew called the Supreme Team.


These early kingpins were the table setters for what would become a new breed of hustling and the young men from Queens who launched a business idea that would revolutionize the drug trade forever.


In the Bible of hip-hop gangsters, Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff and Gerald "Prince" Miller of the Supreme Team were the top dogs.


**If you’re a fan of The Dossier, please visit our Patreon page for free and paid content featuring exclusive documents, unedited interviews, and monthly online meetups with other Dossier fans and the Dossier team.


Go to Patreon.com/Dossier to subscribe!!

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In the dynamic early years of hip hop, you could still see the influences of the disco era in the fashion the samples, and the party music played via car stereos in different neighborhoods in New York City.


The hip-hop releases for 1982 and 1983, included Wildstyle the first feature film to reveal the nuances of hip-hop culture written by Fab Five Freddy and directed by Charlie Ahern.


The film explores the work of artists such as Lady Pink, Daze, Grandmaster Flash, and the Rock Steady Crew.


Hip Hop goes international with a tour featuring Afrika Bambaataa, Fab Five Freddy, Double Dutch Girls, and fashion icon Dapper Dan opened his first boutique in Harlem, while Edward Koch is the mayor of New York City.


There's a case to be made that inside neighborhoods in New York City, hustlers still slinging heroin operate almost with impunity, as local police forces are overworked and underfunded.


In 1982, & '83, there's a young man who is starting to corner the market for illicit narcotics, and that man is Lorenzo "Fat Cat" Nichols.


**If you’re a fan of The Dossier, please visit our Patreon page for free and paid content featuring exclusive documents, unedited interviews, and monthly online meetups with other Dossier fans and the Dossier team.


Go to Patreon.com/Dossier to subscribe!!

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In America in 2024, we have all watched major American cities burn the result of a powder keg that exploded around incidence of police killings. We should all know the names by now, George Floyd, Trayvon Martin, Breanna Taylor, Stephon Clark, Philando Castille, and more.


And the list goes on the debate surrounding race policing, mass incarceration, and the war on drugs it seems has reached the tipping point. Fault lines have been drawn as our divided country simmers in a cauldron of new stories that may or may not be true, internet conspiracy theories, and a fracturing of what is commonly held facts and assumptions that should guide any democracy are hanging by a thread to understand the vast societal shifts that are going on in contemporary America.


And the proposition of understanding where we are now has to be analyzed through the eyes of an art form, that for close to 40 years, arguably, has been the voice many generations, and an analytical mirror that has reflected back the ills of the United States of America.


And that is Hip Hop, an irony filled twist of fate, the music that has caused 1000s of controversies and internal war and conflict really has come to define America in 2024.


The proposition is not easy, and the narrative will go down many roads.


USA vs. Hip Hop will tell this 40 year story through the eyes of the gangsters, the cops and the artists who wrote lyrics, and created visuals not only has shifted the world, but is a living and breathing experiment where Crime and Punishment can be unpacked and traced.


The starting point for our story is in two places.


First New York City in 1980. Also 1981 was engulfed with a crime wave in Oakland, California, not an obvious place to start any story as it relates to hip hop music, but arguably one of the most important geographical cities where the symbiotic relationship between the fall of the Black Panthers and the rise of a young man named Todd Shaw will begin this 40 year Odyssey.


Remember, this tale will have music, but it won't focus on the music, MTV VH1, and Netflix has already given you the paint by numbers version.


Recently I listened to the NPR podcast Louder than a Riot, an impressive piece of journalism, and a narrative track that they define as stories at the intersection of crime and punishment.


I did notice one missing piece to their stoop, puzzling, that I will address in depth and that is the symbiotic relationship between the iconic and mythological gangsters that were attached to hip hop music and how their stories and myth-making has created hip hop's version of War and Peace.


Like the original, the 40 year story of hip hop, and its characters of the underbelly, came to define thematically America's relationship with crime.

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From its start, the art of Hip-Hop music has not only defined our countries generations, it has done so by reporting on social and criminal injustices in America.


Referred to as the “Black CNN,” Hip-Hop music, throughout the past 40 years, has been reporting all of societies major issues and complex policies that remain to this day.


Whether it is the subject of brutal and biased policing, over-crowded jails, marginalized neighborhoods, public education, and the imbalance of economic wealth — it has been holding up a mirror to the world casting a dark reflection of the state of our country.


Rappers are the voice of poor, urban African - American youth, whose lives are dismissed or misrepresented by the mainstream media.


Hip-Hop music, with its African roots, has become an American art that reflects itself and the times in our country in profound ways. A country at war with itself, is also at war with Hip-Hop.


The music in 2024 has transcended race and class; it has become intertwined with the American Dream and the Amerikkkan Nightmare.


Executive Produced by Ice T, USA vs. Hip-Hop, will trace in chronological order the defining events of the music as it pertains to criminal justice, the connection between federal & state law enforcement, mass incarceration, social justice reform, and public policy.


These singular events defined the music, and how Americans have categorized race and American exceptionalism.


You can’t have Hip-Hop without the War on Drugs and vice versa.


This sprawling anthology will outline in sweeping detail — the Hip-Hop stars, American gangsters, and law enforcement agencies that were intertwined in a narrative that strangely connects like a puzzle starting in 1980 to present day.

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The Sopranos considered by many the greatest show in television history, made the New Jersey mafia water cooler talk across the country from 1999-2007.


While based on fictional characters, there was an actual mafia family neck deep in criminal activities across the Hudson River from their La Cosa Nostra contemporaries in New York.


In New Jersey, starting in the 1960’s, the DeCavalcante family ran the show and are considered the inspiration for many of The Sopranos characters and storylines that fans are familiar with today. This season on Family Business, we will look at the rise and fall of the DeCavalcante family. Sometimes truth is even more colorful than fiction.


THE PODCAST FRANCHISE FAMILY BUSINESS, is an 8 episode investigative audio documentary focused on the most notorious mafia crime families and their impact and relationship with Hollywood.


Each season we will take on another family, another city, and another set of nefarious, deadly and sometimes even comical, characters and their stories.


We begin Season One with the DeCavalcante crime family based in Northern New Jersey.


The DeCavalcante crime family is an Italian American crime family that operates in Northern New Jersey, particularly in Elizabeth, Newark and the surrounding areas in North Jersey and it operates on the opposite side of the Hudson, from the Five Families of New York, but it maintains strong relations with many of them, as well as with the Philadelphia Crime Family and the Patriarca Crime Family of New England.


Its illicit activities include bookmaking, cement, and construction violations, bootlegging, corruption, drug trafficking, extortion, fencing, fraud, hijacking, illegal gambling, loan-sharking, money laundering, murder, pier thefts, pornography, prostitution, racketeering, and waste management violations. Interviews with informants, gangsters, defense lawyers, cops, family members, and journalists weave a true-crime tale/

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Join hosts Nicole Luciano and Johnny ‘The Greek’ Anagnopoulos, two of the producers of The Dossier, as they break down all things crime and hip-hop, gleaned from their years of investigative work on the topic.


From the Biggie and Tupac murders, to the twenty plus killings that are tangentially related to Death Row Records, Suge Knight, the Bloods, the East vs. West rivalry, the gangster cops inside the LAPD and much more.


This week, Johnny and Niki begin the episode with some current events and an explanation for their breif hiatus.


Then they welcome a VERY special guest to look back at the Rampart Scandal and the actions of infamous ex-LAPD officer Ray Perez - his former friend and cellmate, Kenneth Boagni.


Kenny walks listeners through his history testifying for the LAPD in numerous Board of Rights Hearings, the crooked detectives who threatened him to keep quiet, passing polygraph exams, LAPD's involvement in the murder of Biggie and MUCH more.


**If you you’re a fan of The Dossier, please visit our Patreon page for free and paid content featuring exclusive documents, unedited interviews, monthly online meetups with other Dossier fans and the Dossier team.

Go to Patreon.com/Dossier to subscribe!

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices