@stoical.mindset:

StoneMindset
StoneMindset
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Sunday 26 October 2025 19:54:03 GMT
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alvaro35985
alvaro :
what book is it?
2025-10-27 17:46:06
15
dej_30
🏳️‍🌈🫷🏻🗿🫸🏻🏳️‍⚧️ :
That hits
2025-10-27 22:43:41
57
tiktok179674
tiktok17 :
Powerful
2025-10-28 00:24:54
30
abdel_ariffi
Joyboy :
That’s amazing
2025-10-28 18:05:24
0
fender353
fender450 :
book name anyone knows?
2025-10-28 07:33:04
0
tbag.07
hehe :
what's the moral of this story?
2025-10-31 00:39:31
0
verners01
Verners :
Amen🙏🙏🙏
2025-10-27 19:57:16
17
imanghr
ImanGHR :
Wow the ending got me
2025-10-30 07:49:17
1
wealthwired49
WealthWired :
This is it 🔥
2025-10-28 18:36:44
0
jcrjppjrcj1
JCRJPPJRCJ :
Algo
2025-10-28 07:37:57
1
advanhr
advanhr ♛ :
Real
2025-10-28 12:16:15
0
sirmuffin_3rd
Sir muffin :
and people think rich people are the ones that make it to heaven.
2025-10-26 22:02:54
4
wardakx1
🖤 :
🥀🥀🥀
2025-10-30 19:33:44
0
grizzz333
Gabrielll01🇧🇷 :
🙏
2025-10-30 00:26:30
0
jdjdjdjdjdjdjdj136
jdjdjdjdjdjdjdj :
😁😁😁
2025-10-29 10:56:34
0
dizzy580
D izzy :
😁
2025-10-28 19:06:05
0
jackso_191
jackson_11 :
alg
2025-10-29 17:29:41
0
kalleda1le
KalleDalle :
Discipline…
2025-10-29 05:46:32
0
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Other Videos

It was Sunday, February 7, 1999, in Westminster, Colorado. Paul Skiba, the owner of Tuff Movers, spent the day working alongside his employee Lorenzo Chivers, completing two moving jobs in Thornton and Morrison. His 9-year-old daughter, Sarah Skiba, joined them for the day. She loved riding in the big moving truck with her dad and rarely missed a chance to tag along. At 6:22 p.m., Sarah made her final phone call. Not long after, the three returned to the Tuff Movers yard located in the 7100 block of North Raleigh Street around 7 p.m. But after that moment, all communication stopped. They were never seen again. Sunday, February 7, 1999, began as a typical workday for Paul, Sarah, and Lorenzo. The trio spent the day completing two moving jobs, one in Thornton and another in Morrison. Sarah was full of energy, happy to spend time with her dad and watch him work. At 6:22 p.m., Sarah made what would be her final phone call. Around 7 p.m., the three returned to Tuff Movers, Paul’s business located in the 7100 block of North Raleigh Street in Westminster. Witnesses later recalled hearing the moving truck return and hit the fence as it was being backed into the yard. No one saw who was driving, and after that moment, all contact with Paul, Sarah, and Lorenzo stopped. As the night went on, families on both sides began to worry. Sarah’s mother, Michelle Russell, tried calling Paul several times, but there was no answer. It wasn’t like him to keep Sarah out late or miss check-ins. Meanwhile, Lorenzo’s family also grew alarmed. They said he was close to his family and would never just leave without telling anyone, describing his disappearance as completely out of character for someone who always called home after work. By midnight, both families knew something was wrong. The following morning, Monday, February 8, 1999, employees arrived at Tuff Movers expecting to begin another workday. Instead, they found the front gate closed but unlocked, the company truck already parked in the lot, and no sign of Paul, Sarah, or Lorenzo anywhere on the property. Confused and concerned, they contacted police to report that the trio hadn’t been seen or heard from since the previous evening. When Westminster Police arrived at the Tuff Movers lot, what they found was alarming. Detective Troy Gordonier of the Westminster Police Department said officers immediately realized something was wrong, explaining that when they arrived, “it looked to be a crime scene.” The moving truck had been returned to the lot and was parked unevenly, its side covered in bullet holes. Inside the vehicle and throughout the yard, investigators found a large amount of blood. Forensic testing later confirmed the blood belonged to Paul and Sarah. Gordonier described what appeared to have unfolded, saying it seemed there had been a confrontation and that people had been shot. A witness told detectives they heard the truck return to the yard that night, striking the fence as it was backed in. But when police arrived, no one was there. Whoever brought the truck back was gone, and so were the three who should have been inside it. To Be Continued Part 2 👉…. #crime #truestory #fyp #truecrime #mystery
It was Sunday, February 7, 1999, in Westminster, Colorado. Paul Skiba, the owner of Tuff Movers, spent the day working alongside his employee Lorenzo Chivers, completing two moving jobs in Thornton and Morrison. His 9-year-old daughter, Sarah Skiba, joined them for the day. She loved riding in the big moving truck with her dad and rarely missed a chance to tag along. At 6:22 p.m., Sarah made her final phone call. Not long after, the three returned to the Tuff Movers yard located in the 7100 block of North Raleigh Street around 7 p.m. But after that moment, all communication stopped. They were never seen again. Sunday, February 7, 1999, began as a typical workday for Paul, Sarah, and Lorenzo. The trio spent the day completing two moving jobs, one in Thornton and another in Morrison. Sarah was full of energy, happy to spend time with her dad and watch him work. At 6:22 p.m., Sarah made what would be her final phone call. Around 7 p.m., the three returned to Tuff Movers, Paul’s business located in the 7100 block of North Raleigh Street in Westminster. Witnesses later recalled hearing the moving truck return and hit the fence as it was being backed into the yard. No one saw who was driving, and after that moment, all contact with Paul, Sarah, and Lorenzo stopped. As the night went on, families on both sides began to worry. Sarah’s mother, Michelle Russell, tried calling Paul several times, but there was no answer. It wasn’t like him to keep Sarah out late or miss check-ins. Meanwhile, Lorenzo’s family also grew alarmed. They said he was close to his family and would never just leave without telling anyone, describing his disappearance as completely out of character for someone who always called home after work. By midnight, both families knew something was wrong. The following morning, Monday, February 8, 1999, employees arrived at Tuff Movers expecting to begin another workday. Instead, they found the front gate closed but unlocked, the company truck already parked in the lot, and no sign of Paul, Sarah, or Lorenzo anywhere on the property. Confused and concerned, they contacted police to report that the trio hadn’t been seen or heard from since the previous evening. When Westminster Police arrived at the Tuff Movers lot, what they found was alarming. Detective Troy Gordonier of the Westminster Police Department said officers immediately realized something was wrong, explaining that when they arrived, “it looked to be a crime scene.” The moving truck had been returned to the lot and was parked unevenly, its side covered in bullet holes. Inside the vehicle and throughout the yard, investigators found a large amount of blood. Forensic testing later confirmed the blood belonged to Paul and Sarah. Gordonier described what appeared to have unfolded, saying it seemed there had been a confrontation and that people had been shot. A witness told detectives they heard the truck return to the yard that night, striking the fence as it was backed in. But when police arrived, no one was there. Whoever brought the truck back was gone, and so were the three who should have been inside it. To Be Continued Part 2 👉…. #crime #truestory #fyp #truecrime #mystery

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