 Let me ask you this, cause I wanted to ask you this, cause I didn't get to ask you last time. When Tookie Williams, when he passed, were you locked up during that time when he was, you know, when, where were you at? When Tookie was on his last two weeks, his lawyers, Barbara Becknell, this other lady out of Richmond or something, because I knew about the case, so I had to fill out an affidavit, cause I had some newly discovered evidence where they wanted to hear my side of a, my testimony on the sworn affidavit. So once they closed the prison down on a Sunday and shut down to where after the visiting was on a Sunday, it ended at about three, five o'clock, they called me up into the visiting room to talk to his attorneys and fill out the affidavit. So now that was on a Sunday, Tookie got executed that Wednesday. So once I filled out the affidavit and they left immediately, I had a gate pass at that time, they took that, took me off and made it where I couldn't work no more and then gave me, placed me up under pretty strict restrictions. Wow. So we were waiting on the decision from the Supreme Court. You had the option of the governor signing a clemency or you had the Supreme Court, which could overturn the conviction on what we had filed because you also had some white guys that were in high power with him that had testified that when he said certain things, he was high on drugs and now they were recanning. So you had three affidavits, I believe, and then one of them was Mines. And unfortunately, they, I think they aired in my affidavit, which could have spared his life. And I think that's where the error occurred. Wow. So and yeah, man, so and I knew that you, so how, what was the atmosphere like because you were locked up during this time? Yeah. What was the atmosphere like after they executed? Tooky. Well, prior to them executing tooky, what happens is they lock everybody down 24 hours before an execution because you got to remember they just had started back. Very few people have been executed. In fact, tooky in 2005, I believe, has been basically almost the last one to be executed in the state of California, but in other states they do, but at that time, it was like it wasn't no like the tension in its media grabbing and its talk because you're talking where tooky had been gone since 1979 when he was arrested. So that's 21 and about five. So tooky had been gone 26 years. So it's an attitude that you have in prison on them yards to where it was understood, but not accepted. And if it wasn't going to be no moves on the police behind it, no retaliation, it just was a sad thing. But also treachery and evil who wrote the books with him, a Disa and a Johnny that are still on death row, they locked them up for eight years in solitary confinement behind tooky execution to where they had to do a hunger strike to get off those conditions that was set for behind tooky's execution. Wow. So what I think, because I remember during that time Snoop Dogg was really, you know, in the media trying to press for change, of course. When you think about Snoop Dogg and all the times that he's been pushing the Crip narrative, what type of influence did they have on gang culture in California? Well, Snoop is just one of many in an era that has influence on the gang culture. He's been around. He's a veteran. See, the West Coast is not the same as the East Coast where they spit knowledge, we've got a different mentality and the way our get down is in the state of California. Nobody does it like California, particularly when it comes to this banging many emulate. But until you come to the land of Compton's, the Long Beach and these areas that are infested with these community influencers, then you will get a real taste of what this game is all about. And I promise you, I promise you, you ain't going to want to come back.