rdfs:comment
| - Omar Devon Little, Baltimore stick-up man, frequently robbed street-level drug dealers. Omar's unique characteristics included a personal morality code including refraining from harming those not in "the game," his homosexuality, his refusal to use profanity, his scar, his use of a short 12-gauge shotgun, and his haunting whistle of the tune "The Farmer in the Dell" as an ominous warning to the neighborhood.
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abstract
| - Omar Devon Little, Baltimore stick-up man, frequently robbed street-level drug dealers. Omar's unique characteristics included a personal morality code including refraining from harming those not in "the game," his homosexuality, his refusal to use profanity, his scar, his use of a short 12-gauge shotgun, and his haunting whistle of the tune "The Farmer in the Dell" as an ominous warning to the neighborhood. Omar was constantly in inevitable conflict with the Barksdale and Stanfield drug organizations. Some of his raids, no matter how well-planned, failed but Omar had an uncanny knack for survival. Omar was also noted for his close relationships with his partners and guardian and ad hoc banker Butchie. Butchie's execution was enough to motivate Omar from a peaceful tropical retirement to an impulsive revenge mission.
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