Alternative form of crimie(“fellow gang member”)edit
2011, Marvin Wines, A warrior's road: the life of an independent criminal (→ISBN), page 156:
I knew I was going to the hole the minute I heard some bully's trying to punk someone when they're the punks themselves. So lets look on the bright side. And that was when I got my yard crimmie as a cellie.
criminal record; a (usually formal, legal) list of crimes a person is alleged to have committededit
1983, United States Congress, House Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Crime, Armed Robbery and Burglary Prevention Act: Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Crime of the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, Ninety-seventh Congress, Second Session on H.R. 6386 ... September 23, 1982:
[...] factually, too, that when you deal with these career criminals and look at the criminal records, as I have on so many, once a person is in a career criminal category they have convictions in New York State, in New Jersey, in Pennsylvania, in Ohio, in California, and they are multicolored "crimmies," or criminal records.
2016, John Tracy Greene, The Fruits of Madness: Perspectives on the Prophetic Movements in Three Traditions (→ISBN), page 30:
[...] the prophetic yarns concerning them were probably as popular and well-loved in their day as are today's 'crimmies'/mysteries from Belgium (Commissar [Jules] Maigret), France (Blood of the Vine, Dolmen), [etc...]