Mulheres sem calcinha safadinha dando gostoso o cu e a xoxota para dois caras de uma vez só mesmo | Guardian Angels
Mulheres sem calcinha safadinha dando gostoso o cu e a xoxota para dois caras de uma vez só mesmo - Who are the Guardian Angels?
Mulheres sem calcinha safadinha dando gostoso o cu e a xoxota para dois caras de uma vez só mesmo - Who is Curtis Sliwa?
Mulheres sem calcinha safadinha dando gostoso o cu e a xoxota para dois caras de uma vez só mesmo - Who founded the Guardian Angels and when?
What is the Guardian Angels uniform?
What controversy surrounded the Guardian Angels in 2024?
What training do members of the Guardian Angels receive?
Mulheres sem calcinha safadinha dando gostoso o cu e a xoxota para dois caras de uma vez só mesmo - News •
Guardian Angels, nonprofit volunteer organization founded in New York City in 1979 by Curtis Sliwa to deter violent crime by patrolling the city’s streets and subway system. The organization eventually expanded to other cities around the world. Recognized by their uniform of red jackets and berets, the Guardian Angels have alternatively been described as helpful anti-crime crusaders and unlawful vigilantes who target immigrants and people of color. Despite their international presence, they remain strongly identified with their founder, the animal-loving, Brooklyn-born Sliwa. In 2021 and 2025 Sliwa ran for mayor of New York City on the Republican ballot; his 2025 campaign was also run on the Protect Animals ballot, an independent party that he created.
Mulheres sem calcinha safadinha dando gostoso o cu e a xoxota para dois caras de uma vez só mesmo - Membership
The Guardian Angels have claimed chapters in Los Angeles, Denver, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and other U.S. cities, as well as in the Dominican Republic, Italy, South Korea, Japan, India, and Brazil, among other countries. There is also a division dedicated to animal protection.
The Guardian Angels are unarmed, and they are trained in self-defense, first aid, mental health empowerment, and homeless outreach. They patrol in groups of eight and wear red berets to stand out from other riders on the subway and in crowds. Their uniform also consists of black pants and a white T-shirt or a red jacket featuring a logo of a winged Eye of Providence—i.e., an eye inside of a triangle surrounded by rays of light. (The Eye of Providence is also one of the symbols on a U.S. dollar bill.)
Members must be at least 16 years old to join, although applicants under age 18 need their parents’ permission to be accepted. The majority of Guardian Angels are men, but some women have joined the organization. An early female member was Lisa Evers, a model, a martial arts expert, and, later, a reporter for a local Fox News Channel who was married to Sliwa from 1981 to 1994. One of the group’s women-led divisions is Perv Busters, which aims to deter sexual harassment and sexual assault.
History of the Guardian Angels
In 1979 Curtis Sliwa, then 24 years old and employed as the night manager of a McDonald’s restaurant in the Bronx, was disturbed by what he saw as rampant crime, gang activity, filth, and drug use on the New York City subway system and in the city at large. Inspired by such fictional 1970s film antiheroes as Death Wish’s architect-turned-vigilante Paul Kersey (played by Charles Bronson) and Taxi Driver’s misguided veteran Travis Bickle (Robert De Niro), Sliwa convinced a multiracial group of McDonald’s coworkers to begin riding the subways with him at night. “I wasn’t going to live vicariously through these vigilante movies,” Sliwa explained in the 2018 documentary Vigilante: The Incredible True Story of Curtis Sliwa and the Guardian Angels.
At first, Sliwa’s coworkers did not know that their nighttime rides were Sliwa’s way of “practicing to actually patrol” the subways. But once the group began actively patrolling, membership grew “from 13 to 1,000…within a period of a year,” according to a 2024 New York Post interview with Sliwa.
Sliwa directed the group’s activities from a pay phone at the Columbus Circle subway station in Manhattan. The city’s mayor, Ed Koch, was initially suspicious of the Guardian Angels and of Sliwa’s intentions, but he later approved of their work. However, in the 1980s the Guardian Angels were often at odds with the city’s police department, especially after Sliwa claimed that three off-duty officers had kidnapped and threatened him over “taking their jobs.”
One of Sliwa’s early targets, especially through the media, was the Gambino crime family, which was led by John Gotti after its previous leader was assassinated in 1985 (reportedly on Gotti’s orders). Sliwa has long claimed that his activities with the Guardian Angels and his public callouts of Gotti made him an enemy of the crime boss. During the 2005 racketeering trial of Gotti’s son John Angelo Gotti, Sliwa testified about an incident in 1992 in which he said he was locked inside a cab and shot three times by an agent of the Gottis before escaping through the cab’s window. John Angelo Gotti was tried for the alleged kidnapping, along with RICO charges, but after three mistrials prosecutors stopped pursuing a case against him.
“If you’re one of these Bruce Lee wannabes…We can’t use you.” —Guardian Angels founding member Arnaldo Salinas, 2024
The Guardian Angels have been criticized for prioritizing publicity over legitimate crime prevention. Moreover, several of the early incidents that brought them publicity never actually happened. In 1992 Sliwa revealed that six of the Guardian Angels’ successful crime-busting activities were hoaxes, including the rescue of alleged mugging and rape victims. According to The New York Times, Guardian Angels cofounder Tony Mao admitted that he had once “drenched himself in gasoline…and claimed it had happened when he pounced on two men who were planning to attack a [subway] token-booth clerk.” Sliwa, Mao, and other members of the group rehearsed these and other stunts in the McDonald’s where they worked.
As crime in New York decreased in the 1990s, so did Guardian Angels membership; in 1992 the New York chapter had only about 30 to 125 members. By the turn of the century the organization had shifted focus to Internet safety, with a CyberAngels program founded in 1995. They also began mentoring children and teens in crisis.
In the 2010s, however, Sliwa and the Guardian Angels resumed patrol of the New York City subways after a series of violent crimes on the trains, including several knife attacks. The group was the subject of controversy again in February 2024 after members of the Guardian Angels physically accosted a man who they accused of being a “migrant” and a shoplifter. In reality, the victim (whom the Guardian Angels had put in a headlock) was a New Yorker from the Bronx, and the New York Police Department found no evidence that the man had been shoplifting. The bizarre altercation was captured on television as Sliwa and the Guardian Angels were being interviewed by Fox News commentator Sean Hannity.
- Areas Of Involvement:
- crime
Later that year the Guardian Angels announced that they were intensifying their patrols of the New York City subways after a woman was set on fire while sleeping on a train in Brooklyn. In December founding member Arnaldo Salinas told the New York Post that the group screens potential members for violent motivations. “If you’re one of these Bruce Lee wannabes, I’m afraid not. We can’t use you.”

