[SHILLS]
I'd say, it's time for Q return, to fix the delete team running the blockade of connecting comms.
[SHILLS]
I'd say, it's time for Q return, to fix the delete team running the blockade of connecting comms.
Billionaire couple lists most expensive home in US for sale. See price.
The most expensive home in the United States is officially on the market, and it'll cost whoever purchases it a whopping $300 million.
The over 27,000 square foot, 74.1-acre estate is located at 161 Stillwater Drive in Aspen, Colorado, and it includes 18 bedrooms, 20 full bathrooms and four partial bathrooms, according to the listing by Sotheby's International Realty.
The property, named "Little Lake Lodge" in the listing, was built in 1994. According to The Aspen Times, the home was built by California billionaires Stewart and Lynda Resnick, who co-ownThe Wonderful Company, a $6 billion private company that grows, harvests, bottles, packages and markets an array of health-focused products, includingFIJI Waterand POM Wonderful.
According to Pitkin County property records reviewed by USA TODAY, the Wonderful Company is listed as the owner of the residence.
Sotheby's lists Little Lake Lodge as the most expensive home for sale in the United States, with a property in Long Lake, New York coming in second with a price tag of $125 million.
Here is what to know about the single-family home, including the annual property taxes its eventual new owner will be paying.
Where is Little Lake Lodge?
According to the home's listing, it "borders public land, yet downtown Aspen is a mere mile away." The residence also sits beside a "pristine, private lake" that is "amid thoughtfully chosen native landscaping and preserved wild flora."
"Given its exceptional scale with four parcels of land, Little Lake Lodge represents the opportunity to establish an enduring legacy of luxury and harmony with a majestic natural setting—an opportunity unlikely to occur again in the great Mountain West," the listing says.
Mandy Welgos, the Sotheby’s International Realty broker associate who is the listing agent for the property, told The Aspen Times that the high asking price is attributed to the home's many features, including the four parcels of land, its proximity to downtown Aspen, the private six-acre lake it sits beside, its privacy, 45 parking spaces and the trail system near it that is "built for hiking, cross country skiing, and biking."
Welgos added that there are currently multiple interested parties since the home was listed for sale earlier this month. Despite the home's high value, she told the outlet the property may continue to appreciate for its new owners, especially with the restrictions on the size of homes allowed in Pitkin County.
In November 2023, the Pitkin County commissioners finalized a new rule to reduce the maximum house size from 15,000 to 9,250 square feet, the Aspen Daily News reported. When Little Lake Lodge was built in 1994, any home with more than 15,000 square feet of livable space had to undergo a special review, according to a report by Aspen Snowmass Sotheby's Broker Tim Estin.
Moar Demon panic
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/billionaire-couple-lists-most-expensive-195739768.html
Infiltration, not invasion.
[THEY] chose the wrong side.
There will be no truth noted here, until [THEY] are eliminated
ICYMILate crime-busting sheriff Buford Pusser inspired Hollywood. Investigators say he killed his wife
08-29-2025
A late Tennessee sheriff who inspired a Hollywood movie about a law enforcement officer who took on organized crime killed his wife in 1967 and led people to believe she was murdered by his enemies, authorities said Friday.
Authorities acknowledged that the finding will likely shock many who grew up as Buford Pusser fans and watched 1973's “Walking Tall,” which immortalized him as a tough but fair sheriff with zero tolerance for crime. The movie was remade in 2004, and many officers joined law enforcement because of his story, according to Mark Davidson, the district attorney for Tennessee’s 25th judicial district.
There is enough evidence that if Pusser, the McNairy County sheriff who died in a car crash seven years after his wife's death, were alive today, prosecutors would present an indictment to a grand jury for the killing of Pauline Mullins Pusser, Davidson said. Investigators also uncovered signs that she suffered from domestic violence.
Prosecutors worked with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, which began reexamining decades-old files on Pauline's death in 2022 as part of its regular review of cold cases, agency director David Rausch said. Agents found inconsistencies between Buford Pusser's version of events and the physical evidence, received a tip about a potential murder weapon and exhumed Pauline's body for an autopsy.
“This case is not about tearing down a legend. It is about giving dignity and closure to Pauline and her family and ensuring that the truth is not buried with time,” Davidson said in a news conference streamed online. “The truth matters. Justice matters. Even 58 years later. Pauline deserves both.”
Evidence does not back up sheriff's story
The case dates to Aug. 12, 1967. Buford Pusser got a call in the early morning hours about a disturbance. He reported that his wife volunteered to ride along with him as he responded. Buford Pusser said that shortly after they passed New Hope Methodist Church, a car pulled up and fired several times into the vehicle, killing Pauline and injuring the sheriff. Buford Pusser spent 18 days in the hospital and required several surgeries to recover. The case was built largely on his own statement and closed quickly, Rausch said.
During the reexamination of the case, Dr. Michael Revelle, an emergency medicine physical and medical examiner, studied postmortem photographs, crime scene photographs, notes made by the medical examiner at the time and Buford Pusser's statements. He concluded that Pauline was more likely than not shot outside the car and then placed inside it.
He found that cranial trauma suffered by Pauline didn't match crime scene photographs of the car's interior. Blood spatter on the hood outside the car contradicted Buford Pusser's statements. The gunshot wound on his cheek was in fact a close-contact wound and not one fired from long range, as Buford Pusser described, and was likely self-inflicted, Revelle concluded.
Pauline's autopsy revealed she had a broken nose that had healed prior to her death. Davidson said statements from people who were around at the time she died support the conclusion that she was a victim of domestic violence.
Brother says investigation gave him closure
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/crime-busting-sheriff-buford-pusser-002028916.html
>11:21
1121
Apr 10, 2018 1:40:13 AM EDT
Q !xowAT4Z3VQ ID: bbd970 No. 979093
Actions today [raid] will be met w/ swift action.
FBI burning midnight oil.
Q
7y,
GOP leader reveals 'unprecedented' detail in Biden autopen investigation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VixjGmAKEUA