Download Vice City Ultimate Trainer

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Suyay Escarsega

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Aug 4, 2024, 8:06:20 PM8/4/24
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Ihave GTA vice city and I recently tried using the GTA vice city ultimate trainer (both the latest and the older versions one by one). The problem I'm facing is that whenever I use the hot keys to activate the infinite health, infinite armour, bullets, etc, the game crashes and reports an unhandled exception namely c0000005. However, when I use the trainer to spawn cars it works alright. I tried pizzadox +10 trainer but the problem with it is that there's no way to get stuff back to normal (such as infinite car damage) once you have activated it.

If I remember correctly you said this was a Warezed version of the game in your last topic. If that's the case you should try using a legal copy (or simply see if the game has in-game cheats, most games of this type do and those are easier than trainers if you're into that sort of thing).


"Alright, I've been thinking. When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade - make life take the lemons back! Get mad! I don't want your damn lemons, what am I supposed to do with these? Demand to see life's manager. Make life rue the day it thought it could give Cave Johnson lemons. Do you know who I am? I'm the man who's gonna burn your house down! With the lemons. I'm going to to get my engineers to invent a combustible lemon that burns your house down!"


Known as one of the top athletic trainers in the National Football League, Rick Burkholder enters his 12th season with the Kansas City Chiefs in 2024 and his seventh serving as the club's Vice President of Sports Medicine and Performance. Following his promotion in 2018, he continued to oversee the athletic training staff and added the team's strength and conditioning and equipment departments to his responsibilities.


Burkholder and his staff were instrumental to the health of the team as the Chiefs claimed back-to-back Super Bowl titles (LVII and LVIII). In 2023, several key players including LB Nick Bolton (ankle and wrist) and RB Isiah Pacheco (shoulder) faced injuries. Burkholder and his staff were able to develop rehab plans conducive to a return to the field as both players finished the regular season and had strong postseason performances. In his 10th season, RB Jerick McKinnon was sidelined with a groin injury, eventually undergoing surgery in January. McKinnon was able to return in time for the Super Bowl after a rigorous rehab. In 2022, five key players, including QB Patrick Mahomes and WR JuJu Smith-Schuster, experienced injuries during the AFC Championship Game win. Under Burkholder's direction, including the development and execution of their individual treatment plans, and with the aid of the athletic training staff, four of the five injured players were able to return to action for Super Bowl LVII. Smith-Schuster went on to be the team's second-leading receiver in the victory and Mahomes threw for 182 yards and three touchdowns as he was named Super Bowl MVP.


After his term, Burkholder has continued to be recognized for his service to both the Chiefs and the field. In 2023, Burkholder was honored for his work with his induction into the National Athletic Trainers' Association (NATA) Hall of Fame. He was also inducted into the Pennsylvania Athletic Training Hall of Fame (2016).


Burkholder is actively involved in the Kansas City community, particularly with youth sports, and in 2022, he added two more honors to his resume. The first being his NATA Service Award as recognition for his contributions to the athletic training profession as a volunteer at the local and state levels. Burkholder has given educational presentations on concussions and heat and hydration as part of The University of Kansas Health System Sports Medicine and Performance Center and currently sits on the athletic trainers advisory group and served on the head, neck and spine committee and the return to play task force, all of which address the treatment and prevention of concussions in the sport. ATSA recipients have been involved in professional associations, community organizations, grassroots public relations efforts and service as a volunteer athletic trainer.


In February 2022, he earned the Fain-Cain Memorial Award for 2021 Outstanding NFL Athletic Trainer of the Year. The Fain-Cain award is named for Dr. Thomas E. Cain and Dr. Robert H. Fain, both long time team physicians for the then-Houston Oilers. The award was established shortly after Dr. Cain's death and Dr. Fain's retirement. Both physicians exhibited long term commitments to the NFL and exemplary performances. The award is given annually to an NFL athletic trainer who manifests these traits and is presented to the PFATS member who best reflects the virtues of a certified athletic trainer and displays the highest level of professionalism.


In back-to-back years, Burkholder received prestigious awards for his work on the field. First in 2017 he became just the second person and first athletic trainer to receive the NATA's President's Award, honoring his contribution to the profession after earning the NATA Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer Award in 2016. He and his staff were recognized by their peers following the 2010 season, being named the NFL's top training staff for the year.


In 2020, the NFL and the world faced a public health crisis, the coronavirus pandemic, forcing the adoption of new COVID-19 protocols across the National Football League. Burkholder became the team's Infection Control Officer (ICO), a leading member of the club's Infection Response Team (IRT). As the local ICO, Burkholder was integral in the development and execution of the club's IDER (infectious disease emergency response) plan, a document detailing how the club adapted its operations to mitigate risk, cleaning protocols, how the team complied with state and local guidelines, as well as an action plan for positive COVID-19 tests or symptoms within the staff or locker room, among other topics. Burkholder's plan was the first among all clubs to be reviewed and approved by the NFL, the NFLPA and jointly appointed infectious disease experts.


Having spent 26 years with Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid, including 14 in Philadelphia as Reid held the same position with the Eagles (1999-2012), Burkholder became well known for his expertise in his rehabilitation programs. In 2004, an aggressive rehabilitation program allowed WR Terrell Owens to return from a surgically-repaired ankle in seven weeks to play in Super Bowl XXXIX with the Eagles. He also helped RB Duce Staley return to the field in 2001, who suffered a severe Lis Franc sprain in his foot. The process went so well that Burkholder was published and has spoken nationally on the Lis Franc injury and its rehabilitation process. In addition, Burkholder designed a rehab program for Steelers CB Rod Woodson in 1995 after he suffered a torn ACL in the season opener. Woodson returned just four and a half months after surgery to play in Super Bowl XXX. Burkholder has created specialized rehab programs for several Chiefs over the years, including several Achilles tendon injuries: LB Derrick Johnson (2014 & 2016), DE Mike DeVito (2014), WR Chris Conley (2017) and S Eric Berry (2017). He also played a major role in Berry's return to the field in 2015 after battling Hodgkin's lymphoma.


Before joining the Eagles training staff, he spent five seasons as an assistant athletic trainer with the Pittsburgh Steelers and three seasons as an assistant football athletic trainer at his alma mater, the University of Pittsburgh. A 1987 Pittsburgh graduate, Burkholder went on to earn his master's degree in athletic training from the University of Arizona where he spent two seasons as a graduate assistant and another as an assistant athletic trainer.


Burkholder is a certified athletic trainer and a member of the National Athletic Trainers Association and the Pennsylvania Athletic Trainers Society, in addition to his membership in PFATS. While with Philadelphia, he served as the NFC head athletic trainer representative on the PFATS executive committee.


Burkholder first gained NFL experience serving as a summer intern with the New England Patriots training staff in 1986. He was influenced by his father, Richard, a long-time athletic trainer at Carlisle High School, and his mother, Nancy, a registered nurse. In 2003, Burkholder and his father were named distinguished alumni of Carlisle High School, and in 2013, Burkholder was honored with the Pennsylvania Athletic Trainers Society Distinguished Merit Award.


Deputy Chief Jeff Jensen joined the Colorado Springs Police Department in 1996. He served as a patrol officer in Sand Creek before transferring to the Metro Vice, Narcotics and Intelligence Division in 1999. While with Metro VNI, he served as both a Street Team detective and Bureau of ATF Gun Interdiction Unit Task Force detective. He was promoted to sergeant in 2003 where he served as a patrol supervisor and as a sergeant supervising the Robbery, Homicide and Cold Case Units. He was promoted to lieutenant in 2012. He served as a patrol watch commander and as the supervisor of the Peak Substation, where he was responsible for the Downtown Area Response Team and the Homeless Outreach Team. He was promoted to the rank of commander in 2017 with assignments in the Investigations Division and the Gold Hill Patrol Division. In December of 2020, he was promoted to deputy chief where he has oversight of the Patrol Operations Bureau.


Deputy Chief Jensen holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Law Enforcement and Judicial Administration from Western Illinois University. He is a graduate of the Center for Creative Leadership and the FBI National Academy, Session 278.

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