My father was gruesomely murdered on this day many years ago, at the age of 42. I was 10 years old.
He lost his life that day, I lost my childhood, my inner peace, and my soul. Samuel Wolkoff was MY FATHER.
To me it's very personal when June 6th arrives every year, a very painful day. It has now been 65 agonizing years since my father Samuel Wolkoff was brutally tortured and murdered.
My father believed in kindness, honesty, family, hard work, ethics, and his rights as a human being to reap the fruits of his labor for himself and our family.
He was a man who did not run away from the corrupt animals who wanted a "cut of his business" for themselves.
He believed in himself and the law enforcement, legal, supposedly ethical "systems" to protect him from those that wanted the business that he had built from nothing, with his blood and sweat.
He believed in a code of personal ethics, morality, integrity that dictated honor, family, respect, fairness, loyalty, faith in humanity, and that no one is entitled to steal from another human being their right to live.
On June 6th, 1958 the world was already very evil, corrupt, his life was cheap, and scum bags took what they wanted, from who ever they wanted. That was the day they took my father's life, his business, and all of our souls.
Today, June 6th, 2023, the world is infinitely more evil, more corrupt, life is even cheaper, scum bags enjoy their lives as they take even more of what they want, from whomever they choose.
Many of the murderers of my father, their children, and family members are still alive. We know who you ALL ARE. You have done extremely well financially and live with a high standard of living for themselves with their families having all thrived in spite of their evil deeds.
Yes, my father was a hero, he is a hero who sacrificed his life for his beliefs. Seems old fashioned, naive, for someone to believe so strongly in doing the right thing.
Yet somehow, he who had nothing, created a thriving business, and maintained his righteousness of believing in goodness, his business associates, his relatives, the legal/law enforcement system, and that his being a hard working, good person was to be rewarded by having a good life.
In the end, his naive belief in the humanity of others, particularly his relatives (we know who you are) proved that he was DEAD wrong and he paid for it with his life.
We all know each other, or about each other, you know I have hidden away safely the written confidential secret official documents with my honest law enforcement and political friends, the written proof of all "missing" documented, detailed real facts that would expose the ugly truths.
Nothing to be concerned about, it will remain buried.
We know the deal that protects all of us, the reasons that nothing else has been done by any of us about my father's murder, the reason these documents will remain hidden, is the unspoken but very clear mutual understanding we all have forever, of don't ever again fuck with any of my family, and in return, we won't fuck with any of you by making the real truth public.
Was it worth the unimaginable pain that he felt as he was tortured slowly for 5 hours on the night of June 6, 1958?
What must he have been thinking during those horrific hours of going in and out of consciousness as they repeatedly tightened and loosened a rope around his neck?
Samuel Wolkoff's cause of death, 5 long hours of tortured Murder By Strangulation.
Try to hold your breath for as long as you can, then wait 40 more seconds, exhale, that will give you a tiny sense of the horrific way my father felt for 5 consecutive hours, a rope tied as a noose, was continuously alternately tightened, then loosened around his neck, while his hands were tied behind his back.
Death, when it finally came, must have been a merciful release for my father.
Justice not served, justice not given, nothing complicated, nothing new, an innocent, honest, good person, a human life stolen without any remorse, it happens all the time.
How can a loved one who dies suffering, rest in peace, ever? The answer is they cannot rest in peace because of the way they died.
Seems like a simple thing to believe and its even reduced to a short acronym, R.I.P., easy to write. I can't write it, not possible, not after all the never ending suffering of my father, and our family.
Was it worth it, my hero, my dear beloved father?
Was it worth it?
The march of the dead continues, May/June are the saddest months for me, I dread this time of the year, horrifically gruesome memories of human, innocent lives of my family wasted.
I am often intrigued as to why over 163,000 people as of this date have visited my Blog.
There are many good people who come here, victims, families of victims, people seeking justice, those who are fighting against injustice, human beings who care.
I see search terms on my Blog from people who arrive looking for information about my father, a lot of other interesting search words that only "you" would know.
There are visitors here to this Blog who are criminals, the very worst evildoers of all kinds, organized crime family leaders, law enforcement, the curious, all are responsible by their actions or inaction's for the injustices that are specifically detailed in many of my different blog posts about all the victims I write about.
For an ultra private person like me, a Blog is obscenely public, personal, grossly revealing, definitely not my style, but interestingly, momentarily cleansing, a way of coming out, being up front with unbearable realities, my reality. Mostly I do it for those that can no longer speak for themselves, who experienced unimaginable suffering that ended their lives. In this moment, my father's reality.
I do know that MY FATHER was a courageous HERO.
Dead heroes, no matter how courageous they are, never get remembered by society for their acts of courage. They are quickly forgotten, except by those who loved them.
Was it worth it for MY FATHER, Samuel Wolkoff, to stand his ground and give up his life in such a terrifying, grotesque manner at the hands of cowardly pussy punks?
The world did not care about his life and did nothing.
My father's fatal errors that cost him his life? He believed in trust, in the sense of obligation to very close members of his family, by giving them a chance to change their ways.
The good deeds he did, paid back by these very same, who had him murdered. Horrifically ugly, but brutally true, and they all got away with it, no guilt, no conscience, didn't bother any of them, never mattered to them.
Today we remember my courageous father. He is not resting in peace, and he never will rest in peace, that is certain.
I see search terms on my Blog from people who arrive looking for information about my father, a lot of other interesting search words that only "you" would know.
Dead heroes, no matter how courageous they are, never get remembered by society for their acts of courage. They are quickly forgotten, except by those who loved them.
My father's fatal errors that cost him his life? He believed in trust, in the sense of obligation to very close members of his family, by giving them a chance to change their ways.
Today we remember my courageous father. He is not resting in peace, and he never will rest in peace, that is certain.








