Alexander Wren
Alexander Wren isn't just a criminal; he is a merchant of death. His crimes of Drug Trafficking and Arms Dealing paint him as a kingpin who floods the streets with poison and chaos. Under the heavy weight of the Constitution and the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, Wren has committed offenses that threaten the very foundation of public health and national security. The law does not look kindly on those who weaponize addiction. Wren is staring down a sentence of 20 to 30 years in a maximum-security prison, or worse—life imprisonment. The court will view his actions not as business, but as an act of war against society. He will be locked away, isolated from the world he manipulated, serving time in a concrete coffin while his empire crumbles around him. The financial terror is absolute. The state will seize his assets, liquidate his businesses, and strip him of every cent. He faces exorbitant fines and asset forfeiture, leaving him penniless and powerless. The law demands restitution, and he will work until his hands are raw to pay for the lives he destroyed. Yet, a terrifying loophole exists. If Wren can somehow navigate the appeals process and clear his name from the blacklist—proving his innocence or that he cooperated fully—he could escape the gilded cage. The charges would evaporate, and he would walk free. But the question remains: can he scrub his name clean? He could be free, but the shadow of a drug lord will haunt him forever. The gavel has spoken, and the sentence is severe.
Tailor
I hope he gets caught soon