Long island Taxi cab robber
True crime tuesday story from Mr No filter! Before he went to jail and turned his life around he robbed Long Island houses for 3 years!
Dex Mitchell
12/2/20232 min read


Mr No Filter details his modus operandi, where he would use his position as a taxi driver to scout and execute robberies. "I would take everybody that I could in the vehicles and make sure everybody was out of the house. I'd take them to the club and drop them off. I'd turn around and call dispatch, tell them I had to use the bathroom. I'd go back to that house and rob it, take anything of value that I can. Phones at that time. Cameras and cash. Jewelry and especially the drugs," he recounts, revealing a calculated criminal operation that went unnoticed for years.
The audacious taxi driver would then pick up his unsuspecting passengers, return them home, and revel in the chaos he left behind. "I would go back to the club that night, pick the people back up, take them back home, wait for the report the next morning, and laugh. The whole time I did that consistently for three and a half years," he admits with an unsettling nonchalance.
Dex, the interviewer, is visibly stunned as he probes further, asking if Mr No Filter ever got caught. The response is as chilling as the revelation itself: "At the end before I went away from my big deal. I went to work one afternoon and as I pulled in, the owner was standing there talking to a detective from the local police station. They wanted to speak to me, so we went on down to the police station."
In a jaw-dropping Call on the show, Mr No Filter reveals a dark chapter from his past, shedding light on a life lived on the edge in the glamorous Hamptons of Long Island. Growing up in the lap of luxury, where the affluent reside, Mr No Filter took an unexpected turn, delving into a world of crime that lasted for three and a half years.
"I grew up in the Hamptons of Long Island. You know, all the rich people live in. When I got old enough, I decided to start driving a taxi on the weekends at a 15 passenger club," he confesses, setting the stage for a narrative that is both riveting and shocking.