The Evil Genius said:
Micky Moore got a book out talking about his years in the game. Its called The Man & its hella hard 2 find. I guess if u in Oakland its not hard. My ex-wifes auntie is from East Oakland & knew him personally & he gave her a copy. I remember being @ her house reading it. I gotta find that book. I'm suprised no one ever wrote a book on Felix Mitchell.
Yeah I had that Mickey Mo book in 2004 and my stupid ass left it at a broad's house, book was gone and the shitty thing was that book was personally autographed to me and it had a bookmarker showing the various cars he mentioned in the book. In May I was fortunate enough to find one for $7.00 so I snatched it up, book was in better condition than my original, the only thing is it is not autographed and it doesn't have the book marker. There are a few Black Panther books that talk a little about Felix Mitchell and even Little D. the main one being "Shadow of the Panther" by Hugh Pearson copywritten in 1994 by Perseus Books.The book has a few pages talking about Felix Mitchell and the 6-9 Mob. Forbes A. Flores's book "Will You Die For Me" mentions Felix Mitchell a couple of times nothing special is brought up just mentioning Huey Newton assigning Black Panthers to gather data on Feliix Mitchell's large scale heroin operation. also mentioning a guy named Cholly Baldwin that was one of Felix Mitchell's top people in his operation that Forbes a former Panther became cool with behind bars. One page in Elaine Brown's A Taste Of Power was written about the Black Panthers first becoming aware of the rise of the 6-9 Mob. Elaine Brown says; " I suppose the dirty stuff has to do with a new band of junior-flip but well armed drug dealers" Huey Newton says : " Somebody got drugs?" Elaine Brown says " It's serious, Huey. Cocaine in Oakland is cheap now, no longer the drug of choice reserved for the rich and famous. It's coming to Oakland at low prices from I don't know where. But can you imagine a white boy in a Rolls Royce riding through the projects? Well, it's happening. Big-time dealers are establishing turf in Oakland through the use of upstart local distributers." E. Brown says " Some women from the East Oakland projects-too close to our school for comfort-came to tell me what was happening. The white boys are rolling in there and the youngbloods are scrambling for distribution. It's becoming a wide-open business, though nobody speaks on it." " It seems to be limited for now to those projects because even the pigs won't fuck around in there, though you know they're in on it on the outside. The system is almost in place. A welfare mother will be given, say $50.00 a day to hold a significant quantity of cocaine in her apartment, What welfare mother can resist $50.00 ureported bucks a day? Since damn near everybody in the Projects is a mother on welfare, that's several hundred places to stash the stuff.The only thing they have to vow to keep visitors out of their safe houses unless they have clearance from the controlling dealers. One woman had an unauthorized visit from her brother one day and was later publicly-can you believe it?-publicly stomped by the little dealers for it. They broke her pelvic bone. After a few more similar examples, everyone was in line. So nobody speaks, and nearly everybody participates. Except the ladies who came to me personally at the school to ask for our help." Huey Newton says; " Wait a minute, wait a minute. Who are these niggas anyway? And how do some niggas get that much stuff into Oakland?" E. Brown says; " I don't know all of that now. Larry sent Simba with his Vietnam vet reconnaissance skills to head a squad to go inside to review the situation. Young niggas-sixteen and seventeen years old-were perched on the rooftops with automatic rifles, with scopes yet! Guarding the two enterances to that six-square block of a shithole, They had the nerve to ask Simba and his squad what their business was." Huey Newton says; " Aw no, muthafuckas !" They don't ask us. We ask the questions. We make the rules in Oakland!" Elaine Brown was at one point second in command to Huey Newton in the Black Panther Party. Brown was informing Newton of the rise of the 6-9 Mob around 1974 as Newton was in exile, fleeing the country living in Cuba for a murder case in which it's said he shot a prostitute in the head. In the book Shadow of the Panther Hugh Pearson alleges Felix Mitchell and his crew made anywhere from $20,000,000 to $50,000,000 a year.