First of all Wattscrackin, westcoast, dubtz, purpleman, watts angeles, wattsworld, purplepeopleeaters, purpleslurpeemonster, and many others are the same person. You can tell by his obsession with Grape Street & houncho, and his hatred for Bloods, 60s and Lil Fee. You can also tell how he is always aggressive and disrespectful.. and always calling out Alonso. He has almost as many personalities and screen names than he does IP addresses.
watts angeles wrote:he also the one who got his ass whooped by Stagalee from ETG, he didnt stab tookie he missed.....

Wrong & Wrong again.
commonsense wrote: He is no legend. This kid was basically a punk (if you knew him). He joined 60's to be somebody. Nobody knew him outside the hood
I wonder why Monster was so obsessed with him in the Youth Authority if no one knew him. I wonder why Monster remembers him shooting back at him @ the street races, and details about his eyes, and his demeanor since nobody knew him.
Damn.. he even had RSC on his neck before Blacks were putting their hood on their neck. Look at the 1984 video or photograph in court and you will see it.
I guess Monster wasnt outside the hood. I guess you will tell me the same about the IFG's. As long as your border enemies know who you are thats all that counts. Everyone else is irrelevant!
RassyKassy wrote:Just to share a couple stories about this dude..
Stagalee (from ETG) beat Lil Fee in prison and Lil Fee told on him..
Lil Fee has never been to Adult Prison until he went to death Row, and Stagalee was never on Death Row. You're story is all twisted up... it was the L.A. county jail crip module and Lil Fee beat up multiple people at the same time! He knows Martial Arts real well.
alexalonso wrote:His arrest on multiple murders was his first adult arrest.
He was already in jail for a gun case, waiting to be released when he was booked on this case. So it was actually his second case as an adult, and fresh out of YA.
WLA PALMS wrote:Yeah, that artery is called your femoral artery, but if lil Fee really wanted to kill Tookie, or cause any REAL , serious damage, he would have aimed for the neck, or anywhere in the chest cavity, like a real killa would! LMAO!
In YOUR scenario does this article below make him a "real killa"?
SAN QUENTIN, Calif. — While gang wars raged on the streets of Los Angeles, a little noticed though violent series of attacks broke out among members of the Crips gang imprisoned on San Quentin's Death Row, prison officials say.
The battle reached its height last October when Tiequon A. Cox, who was in the Rolling 60s faction of the Crips in Los Angeles, stabbed and wounded Stanley (Tookie) Williams, a body builder who helped found the gang 20 years ago.
Williams has denied any continuing role in Crip activity on or off the row. And Colleen E. Butler, Cox's attorney, noted that in prison, "what appears to be the case is not always what happened."
Dozen Inmates PenalizedNevertheless, Jeannie Ballatore, legal affairs coordinator at San Quentin, said in an interview, "We believe it was a power struggle between the Crips." Prison documents state that the attack was one of several assaults among Crips last year. It prompted prison officials to confine more than a dozen suspected Crip members and associates on Death Row to "Grade B" status, where some remain.
As Grade B inmates, they are denied various items and privileges, and are allowed 10 hours a week out of their cells on exercise yards. That is a third of the exercise time given condemned inmates who have not caused major problems.
By attacking Williams, 36, the 23-year-old Cox took on a man thought by San Quentin officials to be the leader of most of the 20 to 30 Crips who are under a sentence of death.
In Los Angeles, law enforcement authorities on gangs viewed Cox as part of a new generation of violent Crips.
Williams remains a part of the lore of the streets in Los Angeles a decade after his capture. Even detectives who work on gang-related crime recall with some nostalgia the days when they could turn to Crips leadership to help quell disputes before someone was murdered.
"When he was out here, there was some control," said Herbert Giron, a Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy who specializes in gang work in Operation Safe Streets. "There weren't all these factions. I wish it were still true. We wouldn't have all these killings."
Most gang members on Death Row put aside differences, knowing that any prison rule infraction can haunt them if their sentences are overturned on appeal and they are retried. That made the eruption of the recent violence all the more unusual.
Details of the Crips power struggle were pieced together from interviews with officers and documents filed in a federal court hearing over prison conditions earlier this year.
Allegedly Ordered AttackThe attorney general's office filed the documents to justify the prison's decision to place the inmates on Grade B status and revoke their privileges. Inmates' lawyers protested introduction of the documents, saying they were incomplete and inaccurate. A federal hearing officer is considering whether the prison violated the inmates' rights by revoking their privileges.
According to one of the documents, the struggle began when Williams ordered Cox to stab another Death Row inmate, Darren Williams, apparently because Stanley Williams suspected Darren had been an informant. Darren Williams also is on the row for his role in the murder of Alexander's family members.
Cox refused the alleged order and instead, on Oct. 10, slashed Stanley Williams as Williams walked past an outdoor shower in an exercise yard.
A gun officer ordered everyone on the yard to "freeze," and Cox tossed the 4 1/2-inch blade onto a basketball court. Williams, bleeding from a neck wound, refused to talk to officers. The report quoted Williams as saying simply: "I don't know what happened. I don't remember."
In the report stating why Williams was confined to Grade B status, Lt. Melford Hamilton cited "numerous violent incidents" involving Crips members and identified Williams as a Crips leader.
'Bigger Than Life' Figure"A more controlled environment appears warranted," Hamilton concluded.
Not long after the attack, word reached the streets of Los Angeles that Tookie had been "killed," Giron said, adding that prison news gets "down here faster than the U.S. mail."
"You'd be surprised how many of the youngsters 'know' Tookie," Giron said. "I know they don't. It's the folklore they know. You say, Tookie, and people know that name all over the county. . . . He is bigger than life to some of these kids."