Every once and I while I see a news story that is just unbelievably stupid event and wanted to start this thread. This is the type of story I am talking about
Omaha World Herald wrote:Fleeing police at 60 mph, a drunken Russell S. McCormick veered off a residential street in April and into the southeast Omaha police precinct parking lot. There, he got out of his 1990 Ford Aerostar minivan and assumed a fighting posture. Officers swarmed him. A preliminary test showed his blood-alcohol content was .16 — twice the legal limit. At the time of his arrest, McCormick's license had been suspended in both states: in Nebraska since 1995 and in Iowa since 2002. McCormick's attorney, William Pfeffer, said his client suffers from two diseases: diabetes and alcoholism. He called his client a hard worker and a nice guy. In McCormick's case, with credit for eight months he has already served in jail, the Council Bluffs man will be eligible for parole in about seven months and probably will be released in about two years.
It is funny you posted this. Â I just clicked on the "record" today and was amazed at the number of DUI's there was for ONE day. Â Obviously, the amount of fines we have are not a deterrent. Â I don't know why they don't jack the fines up.
I like the idea of requiring more people convicted of DUI to have their cars outfitted with that devise that they must blow in to determine alcohol level and whether the car will start.
joeglow wrote:It is funny you posted this. I just clicked on the "record" today and was amazed at the number of DUI's there was for ONE day. Obviously, the amount of fines we have are not a deterrent. I don't know why they don't jack the fines up.
Because people won't and/or can't give up their cars. Â Most of the country's economy is based around everyone having access to a car. Â If it wasn't, $4.00 gas might have an affect on people's habits, other than spending less elsewhere to pay for the gas.
Start impounding people's cars from the get go and you'll see a change.
As reported yesterday by KCAL9 here is a clip from a 1967 instructional video entitled 1999 A.D. predicting the future in which we see a family shopping, paying bills and using e-mail from home.
Omaha World Herald wrote:Grabowski said Thomson's blood-alcohol content registered .40 percent, more than five times the legal limit of .08. Thomson is employed at Beneficial Behavioral Health in Omaha, which contracts with the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services to provide transportation, Grabowski said. She was driving a child to Lincoln, he said.
KETV wrote:Much like Solomon's biblical court, an Omaha man said he was forced to split a tree down the middle to satisfy a neighbor. A 20-year old pine tree sits in Steve Liston's front yard near 130th and Ellison streets. One side is green and lush and the other is shaved down to the middle of the tree. Liston said he has lived in his home for 11 years. Last year, he got a certified letter from his neighbor asking him to cut the tree because it was damaging the grass.
"I trimmed it as far back as I possibly could and he sent me a certified letter and said it wasn't good enough," Liston said. "Then, we went to small claims court and the judge said I got to trim it." Liston said he decided not to cut the tree down entirely because it helps prevent his son's basketball from going onto the neighbor's property. "My little boy's ball went over the fence and I went over to retrieve it and he called the police," Liston said. The city of Omaha said that when residents have a dispute over private property, if the residents can't solve it themselves, legal action is about the only other option available.
TODD COOPER WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER wrote:As Neaman sorts through paperwork, Briceno picks up the correction fluid bottle and taps it on the desk. Neaman leaves. Briceno twirls the bottle some more, then rolls it on the desk. He glances over his shoulder, then untwists the cap and raises the bottle to his lips. Briceno takes a gulp, caps the bottle and sets it back down. He wipes his mouth with the back of his left hand, then with his T-shirt. Neaman returns. Briceno buries his mouth in his right palm.
An Omaha police evidence technician then enters the room to administer the breath test. She immediately points out Briceno's mime-white lips to Neaman, the officer. Neaman picks up the bottle and, incredulous, studies the whites of Briceno's lips and hand. The bottle label warns users that correctional fluid is flammable and can be harmful or fatal if inhaled. But the question is: Did it work? Did the correction fluid counteract the other fluids on Briceno's breath?
Officers simply escorted Briceno to Creighton University Medical Center for a blood test. Turns out, Briceno may have wanted to save the Wite-Out for the hospital's reports. Medical personnel registered his blood-alcohol content at .28, three and a half times the legal limit.
The owner of a 32-year-old horse named Peter Rabbit wasn't able Tuesday to buck a local ban on livestock within city limits.
After widespread publicity of the ban that threatened to kick Peter Rabbit off the pasture where he was born, the Hickman City Council considered an ordinance Tuesday night that would allow horses inside city limits. But council members ultimately voted 4-2 against adopting it, leaving the ban intact.
For a bedroom community where people live to get away from the hustle and bustle of nearby Lincoln, Hickman and its population of 1,085 have had a lot of racket lately. After publicity of Peter Rabbit's fight with City Hall, people around the country did some of the lobbying the horse couldn't.
Reminds me of those Highlights magazine for children 'Goofus and Gallant' stories... here's an alternate one... see if you can see the difference...
Omaha man who shot another man to death has been charged with first degree murder
The Omaha man who shot another man to death on Saturday will be charged in the shooting, Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine said today, because the man’s account of what happened doesn't align with the physical evidence found at the scene.
Domingo Gutierrez Jr., 25, shot Robert J. Muckey, 41, of Omaha, about 5:45 p.m. Saturday at Gutierrez's house, 5629 N. 29th St. Gutierrez told police that Muckey, his land lord, had entered the home in an attempt to confront Gutierrez on the issue of delinquent lease payments.
Gutierrez told police that he had grabbed a rifle when he heard Muckey at the door. Gutierrez said he told him, "Don’t come in, I’ve got a gun," and Muckey replied, "I need your lease payment." When Muckey came in the house, Gutierrez fired upon Muckey with no apparent provocation, Kleine said.
Gutierrez has been been booked into the Douglas County Correctional Center on suspicion of criminal homicide and use of a weapon to commit a felony. After reviewing the evidence, Kleine said, he decided there was sufficient evidence to charge Gutierrez with a crime. Kleine said he intends to seek the death penalty.
Shoot for the Moon... if you miss, you'll land among the stars.
Let's just say that next time your -Hispanic- land lord decides to drop in and press you for your past due lease payment... feel free to shoot him in cold blood. Â Most likely nothing will come of it.
Shoot for the Moon... if you miss, you'll land among the stars.
Wow, even our most culturally savvy... are blind to what's happening around us.
For crying out loud... some (black) |expletive| accidentally shoots his nephew at the door and they throw the book at him. But the (white) scumbag who shoots the (Hispanic) land lord under the most suspicious of circumstances... gets off scot free.
(The 'Gallant' version of the story by the way highlighted justice being served in the circumstance where the white landlord got shot by the Hispanic tenant)
Shoot for the Moon... if you miss, you'll land among the stars.
No problem, actually, I wouldn't have thought the Highlight magazine reference would have been necessary to get the point across... I suppose in the end it may have merely provided you some confusion.
And D'Shawn... that guy didn't intend to shoot his nephew. Â That makes it an accident. Â As tragic as it was, the district attorney didn't waste any time in rushing it to trial.
This most recent shooting involved a minority land lord attempting to get payment from his white tenant. Â Despite what were obviously very unusual circumstances, the only rush here was to establish innocence (and in this case, the shooter knew precisely who he was targeting).
Shoot for the Moon... if you miss, you'll land among the stars.
espn wrote:Avery was punished indefinitely by commissioner Gary Bettman for using a crude term about his former girlfriends now dating other hockey players. Bettman acted within hours, in time to keep Avery out of the Dallas Stars' game against the Calgary Flames on Tuesday night.
Avery's inflammatory line came following a morning skate in Calgary, Alberta. Reporters were waiting to speak with Avery about disparaging remarks he'd made last month about Flames star Jarome Iginla when Avery walked over to the group and asked if there was a camera present. When told there was, he said, "I'm just going to say one thing."
"I'm really happy to be back in Calgary; I love Canada," the Ontario native said. "I just want to comment on how it's become like a common thing in the NHL for guys to fall in love with my sloppy seconds. I don't know what that's about, but enjoy the game tonight." He then walked out of the locker room.
Avery's ex-girlfriend, actress Elisha Cuthbert of the television show "24" and the movie "Old School," is dating Calgary defenseman Dion Phaneuf; she had been romantically linked to Mike Komisarek of the Montreal Canadiens. Avery also dated Rachel Hunter, the former Sports Illustrated swimsuit cover model and actress who is now the girlfriend of Los Angeles Kings center Jarret Stoll.
BTW, I don't think "Sloppy Seconds" are a bad thing in this case:
Not really a strange news story... I just didn't want to create a separate thread. Â While I have little doubt of Casey Anthony's guilt... I found it rather sad this morning when I saw the national media airing prison phone conversations, complete with video... between Casey and her parents. Â I can understand law enforcements right to look at this stuff... but is it really necessary that the rest of society have the right to watch this stuff on television?
Shoot for the Moon... if you miss, you'll land among the stars.