from russia -
'i can see sarah palins house from here!'
http://api.ning.com/files/6XuJ6uwxRr...ratDupri2.jpeg
Last edited by tomt; August 18th, 2013 at 04:45 AM.
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
எந்திரன்
http://padamhosting.com/out.php/i56999_arima.jpg
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Los Angeles is good and bad because it's full of people that are either running away from something
or looking for something.
It's the most unintentionally funny city in the world.
- John Joseph Theodore Rzeznik
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Fixed:
You are insane i̶f̶ ̶y̶o̶u̶ ̶t̶h̶i̶n̶k̶ ̶F̶a̶u̶x̶ ̶n̶e̶w̶z̶ ̶i̶s̶ ̶l̶e̶s̶s̶ ̶r̶i̶g̶h̶t̶ ̶t̶h̶e̶n̶ ̶c̶n̶n̶ ̶i̶s̶ ̶l̶e̶f̶t̶.̶
Last edited by tomt; August 21st, 2013 at 01:30 AM. Reason: எந்திரன்
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
Dick Van Dyke Emergency -- Actor Pulled Out of Flaming Vehicle | TMZ.com
6230 Sylmar Ave. Room 350, Van Nuys, CA 91401
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pupguns - 8/20/2013 10:53 PM
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Retrospect: folks still don't get it, there is more racism, sexism, and outright oppression here in Mexico than you could ever imagine. "But beautiful Mexico and it's rich culture!". Really, which ones?!? Day of the dead, quincenas, siestas, fiestas, the old worldness of it all? Yeah, sorry those are things from Spain. The Conquistadors, came here and wiped out the great civilizations, killed off or enslaved the men, bread the women into their own new 'elitist' raza: Castillano. "But the great Mayan culture still..." No it doesn't. They may have a few communities in the mountains. They are looked down upon, their heritage spat out as an insult against them, 'indio' 'ranchero' 'negro'. The only culture here is pomp and circumstance, corruption, elitism and more corruption. An old world communist/socialist structure. Coming to La'merica, (actually already arrived, most just can't see it yet). I've seen the one's who have come back, they spit as they tell big stories of racism and oppression. You can tell who they are, the drunken blowhards: speak a few words of English, and then recite the liberal BS they were fed, and the consequence of their delinquency, without telling why they were really booted. The un-educated eat the "Chisme", the more wisdom-ed realize that there is no reason to fight with stupidity. Who is oppressing and using the Latino in La'merica. A bi-lingual liberal/socialist/(read:elitist) Hero Avenger, The Latino Rights Activist. Tells the spanish-speaking-only immigrant how the gringo jefe hates him, not to worry Hero will get him a job @ 5 USD/hr cash, a bed, (paying mortgage on one of his many HUD homes with 15 other guys) he will take care of him. The Heroes:the Latino HR queen of some mfg co, her boyfriend having founded Temp Services LLC, getting mfg co a great deal on laborers for just 10usd/hr. Super Latino social workers, w/a network in your hospital, school, court, police, welfare, housing, charity, etc, etc.
pupguns - 8/20/2013 10:52 PM
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The other girl was 16 when taken eight years ago, so, now 24. She could be on the fast track under asylum, she has an existing threat in her home country, and a "community support system". Her not crossing is fishy, but could easily be explainable, circumstances and choices of adults. Glad the 12 year old is out of harms way. The whole rest of the circumstances with Mexico are fishy, always will be. It's part of the culture of Mexico. Always a lie, based on a xenophobic facade, to protect social elitists and their criminal counterparts.
Last edited by tomt; August 21st, 2013 at 07:50 PM.
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
A former sheriff's deputy in Utah walked in on a scene that might as well have been straight out of a B-grade movie the other day. Timothy John 'TJ' Brewer walked in on his wife and his father having sex. Let that sink in a moment. This poor guy walked in on HIS wife (and the mother of his four children) on top of HIS father -- fire chief Wesley 'Corky' Brewer. Good Lord.
TJ reportedly went ballistic (um, of course he did), backhanded his wife, pistol-whipped his father, and then wanted to "finish the job," but before he could, Corky Brewer went home and stabbed himself, puncturing his lung and slicing his liver.
Honestly, it would be hard to imagine a different outcome. The details are just so, so sordid.
According to the reports, TJ was unable to find his wife and father after a dinner together that included drinking. When he went upstairs, he found his son's door locked. Somehow he got in and he found them. In bed together. IN HER SON'S ROOM.
I don't really care how bad your husband is, you just don't do this. With his father. In your child's room? I mean, I don't condone violence, but come on? What would you do? Can you even imagine the betrayal?
Soon after, according to police, he went out and got his gun and pointed it at his wife, who managed to somehow get it away from him and raced to her parents' house.
Now it's TJ Brewer who is paying the ultimate price. He was arrested and isn't allowed to speak to his wife or father, and his visits with his children must be supervised. His wife is saying she won't testify against him, which I guess is good. But still. Wow.
Deputy Beats Up Dad After Discovering Sick Family Love Triangle | The Stir
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MOAB — A former Grand County sheriff's deputy apologized in court Tuesday for his violent response to finding his wife and his father — Moab's former fire chief — having sex in his home last month.
"I do apologize for my actions that night and I take full responsibility," Timothy John "TJ" Brewer told Judge Lyle Anderson before pleading guilty to assault and assault on a police officer, both class A misdemeanors.
Shortly after midnight on July 12, officers were called to Moab Regional Hospital because Brewer, who was shirtless and apparently intoxicated, was trying to get into the emergency room to kill his father, Wesley "Corky" Brewer, according to a police report.
"TJ then explained to me that he had caught his wife, Logan, having sex with his father, Corky, in one of his children's bedrooms upstairs in his own house," one officer wrote.
TJ and Logan Brewer had hosted Corky Brewer at their home for dinner on July 11. After the meal, the trio sat around having drinks until Logan Brewer said she was putting one of the couple's children to bed. "TJ realized awhile later that he was alone when the kid (his wife) put to bed came downstairs," the report states. "So he went up to check on where his wife was."
Brewer told investigators he discovered his father with his wife and "lost it." He beat his father, then retrieved a handgun, loaded it and pointed it at his wife's head, the report states.
Brewer also backhanded his wife, pistol-whipped his father, and later hit a Moab police officer who was trying to keep him from returning to the hospital, according to the report.
Deputy sheriff arrested for alleged attempted murder released from jail
A Grand County sheriff's deputy who was arrested for investigation of attempted murder following an alleged attack on his father — who serves as Moab's fire chief — has been released from the San Juan County Jail.
"It's kind of a classic law school scenario where, if you walk in on a situation that's very upsetting, are you justified in taking that action," defense attorney Tara Isaacson told the Deseret News after Brewer pleaded guilty.
"We had to analyze it both legally and factually and then make a decision about how to move forward," Isaacson said. "This is definitely more than just a criminal case, so it's been difficult I think, for my client to work his way through it."
Corky Brewer, who resigned last week after 24 years as Moab's fire chief, went home immediately after the assault and stabbed himself with a kitchen knife, investigators said. The knife punctured his lung and nicked his liver, making it necessary to fly him to a hospital in Grand Junction, Colo., for treatment.
"This is a family tragedy, and frankly a town tragedy that ended as well as I think it could," assistant Utah attorney general Scott Reed said after court.
Reed said TJ Brewer was initially jailed for investigation of attempted murder, aggravated assault, and several other offenses out of a desire to protect the public, the deputy's family and the deputy himself.
But after a "thorough investigation" by the Utah County Sheriff's Office, "what we found was that the charges were not as serious as suspected," Reed said.
"I do apologize for my actions that night and I take full responsibility."
–Timothy John "TJ" Brewer
"What Mr. Brewer was charged with is what he actually did and that's what he pled (sic) guilty to today," the prosecutor added.
Brewer, who was assigned to the narcotics unit at the time of the incident, asked to be sentenced immediately after entering his pleas.
He was given credit for the three days he spent in jail after his arrest, ordered to serve 24 months on probation and given a fine of less than $800. Brewer was also ordered to complete substance abuse and anger management assessments, and complete any recommended treatment.
Whether the 12-year law enforcement veteran will keep his certification as a peace officer remains to be seen, his attorney said.
"There may be ways for him to try to salvage that," Isaacson said, noting that Peace Officer Standards and Training has not begun its formal investigation yet.
"But from the beginning TJ's idea was: Let's get in, let's take responsibility, let's try to move forward, and then we'll deal with the career issue later," she said.
http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=26323494
Replies: 276
Views: 10,318
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For the last three weeks, news outlets in Utah have been reporting on a mysterious criminal case involving a sheriff’s deputy, his wife, and his father, who is the local fire chief in Moab, UT. However, the exact circumstances of the alleged crime have remained unknown to the general public, even after the Utah attorney general took over the case due to potential conflicts of interest stemming from the family’s extensive ties to the local government in their hometown.
Now, police records obtained by TPM, reveal for the first time that this case allegedly began with a love triangle involving a father and son that ultimately ended in a booze-fueled night of rage and murderous threats.
The son, Timothy “TJ” Brewer, was initially charged with attempted homicide, aggravated assault, two counts of domestic violence in front a child, assault on a police officer, intoxication, and disorderly conduct. After an investigation by the sheriff of another county, the Utah attorney general last week reduced the charges against Brewer to two misdemeanors: assault and assault against a peace officer. Those charges remain pending.
The story began on the evening of July 11 and spilled over into the early morning hours of July 12. Brewer, a deputy with the sheriff’s department in Grand County, Utah, and his wife, Logan, invited his father to their home for drinks. The elder Brewer, Wesley “Corky” Brewer, was the fire chief in Moab and director of emergency management for Grand County. TJ was one of several law enforcement officers in the extended Brewer family, which includes multiple police officers and local sheriff’s deputies.
TJ would later tell officers that after dinner, which he cooked, his wife went upstairs to put one of their children to bed. Soon afterward, he realized he was alone in the house “when the kid she put to bed came down stairs,” according to police reports.
“He went up to check on where his wife was,” one officer recounted in the reports. “He stated that when he opened the door to his son’s room, he saw his wife on top of his dad” having sex.
The sight of his father having sex with his wife allegedly sent TJ into a rage. He “beat the fuck” out of his dad, he later told police. Logan, TJ’s wife, told police later that night that TJ had hit her and “pistol whipped” his father with one of multiple guns he kept in his home. She also allegedly said all three of them had been drinking. The officer’s account of his interview with Logan does not specifically address the claim that she and Corky were having sex. Corky’s injuries prevented him from speaking to officers that night, the records show.
Somehow, after the alleged confrontation in the bedroom at TJ’s home, all three participants managed to leave the residence. Logan went to her parents’ house. In his incident report, Moab Police Officer Shaun Hansen said Corky, the father, returned to his own home where he was “apparently looking for a firearm.”
“His wife, Cindy Brewer, denied him access to a firearm,” Hansen wrote in his report. “Corky then grabbed a butcher knife and stabbed himself two times, puncturing a lung and slicing his liver.”
Corky was initially taken to Moab Regional Hospital. According to the police, when TJ learned his father was hospitalized, he headed to the hospital to kill him.
What ensued was a dramatic confrontation in the hospital parking lot. TJ was initially confronted by his uncle, Curt Brewer, who is also a sheriff’s deputy. When police arrived at the hospital, they found TJ fighting with Curt outside the hospital. TJ was not wearing a shirt or shoes, was screaming, and in the words of one officer, “had the odor of an alcoholic beverage on his breath as he spoke.”
“He stated several times that he wanted to kill his dad, that he wanted his gun to ‘finish the job,’” one officer wrote in his report.
Officers continued to try to subdue TJ, who remained belligerent.
“TJ made numerous remarks to each officer and deputy that arrived, about all of us being stupid, dumb asses, and at one point stated we needed to call someone with a brain to come and talk with him,” the officer wrote.
TJ was taken into custody without further incident, but for the next three weeks the dramatic serious of confrontations, including the public standoff in the hospital parking lot, remained unreported.
Part of the reason so little information about the case has been revealed is the variety of agencies that are involved due to the ties TJ and his family have throughout Moab and Grand County. Due to the risk of potential conflicts of interest, local officials made the decision to hand the case over to the sheriff in Utah County rather than the department in Grand County where TJ was a deputy. For the same reason, the Utah Attorney General is prosecuting the case rather than the local district attorney.
After his arrest in the early hours of July 12, TJ was held in the San Juan County Jail. He was initially facing charges of attempted homicide, aggravated assault, two counts of domestic violence in front a child, assault on a police officer, intoxication, and disorderly conduct. These charges were reduced after the investigation by the Utah County Sheriff’s Office. TJ is currently charged with two class A misdemeanors; assault and assault against a peace officer.
When TPM initially began looking into the case on July 18, both the Moab City Police Department, which arrested Brewer, and the Grand County Sheriff’s Department told us they had no records to release because other agencies were handling the case. After we filed a request under the Utah Government Records Access and Management Act, known as GRAMA, with the Moab County Police Department for TJ’s arrest report and other related records, we received an email July 30 informing us that, after speaking with the Utah Attorney General’s office, Moab Police Chief Mike Navarre was “able to close the report” on Brewer and would release it.
TJ was released on bail July 15. He has been prohibited from drinking alcohol and from contacting Corky or his wife. Visitation with his children must be supervised. TJ resigned from the Grand County Sheriff’s Department and is next due in court August 6. He did not answer phone calls TPM made to his residence in Moab.
Corky, who was later airlifted to a Colorado hospital for treatment and has reportedly since been released, also did not answer a phone call made to his residence. An administrative assistant answered when TPM called Corky’s number at the fire department, where he had been chief since 1989.
“He has actually resigned and has taken retirement,” the assistant said.
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2...ffs-deputy.php
Last edited by tomt; August 23rd, 2013 at 07:54 PM. Reason: Replies: 276 Views: 10,318
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
Army Sergeant Who Admitted to Slaughtering Sixteen Afghan Villagers Is Sentenced to Life
By Erin B 3 hours 44 minutes ago // Latest News | Army Sergeant Who Admitted to Slaughtering Sixteen Afghan Villagers Is Sentenced to Life
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Army Sergeant Who Admitted to Slaughtering Sixteen Afghan Villagers Is Sentenced to Life
A U.S. Army sergeant who admitted to slaughtering 16 Afghan villagers will spend the rest of his life in a military prison.
Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, 40, pleaded guilty in June to charges he killed the civilians in their huts during a nighttime rampage in March 2012. In exchange, prosecutors agreed not to pursue the death penalty.
On Friday, a military jury at Joint Base Lewis-McCord in Washington returned a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole for the father of two.
Bales became emotional yesterday as he testified that he was angry and afraid when he left his military outpost and ventured alone into the village in Kandahar province in Afghanistan. The villagers he murdered were mostly women and children.
'I'm truly, truly sorry to those people whose families got taken away,' he said Thursday. 'I can't comprehend their loss. I think about it every time I look at my kids.'
Nine survivors from the Afghan village were flown to Washington state to testify against Bales. He said he hoped his apology would be translated for them. However, all of them decided to stay away from the court when Bales testified.
Bales said the massacre was 'an act of cowardice, adding: 'I'm a mass of fear and bulls*** and bravado.'
Bales said he was mad at himself for being angry all the time, drinking too much and hiding his problems.
Bales was nervous when he took the stand as the final witness in the hearing at which his lawyers have tried to paint a sympathetic picture of the soldier to contrast his own admissions and the testimony of angry Afghan villagers about the horror he wrought.
Former pro football player Marc Edwards testified as a character witness, telling jurors he remembered Bales as a great leader from their high school days in Norwood, Ohio.
Wearing the Super Bowl ring he won with the New England Patriots in 2002, Edwards said the slightly older Bales was an 'unbelievable leader' who 'took me under his wing' on their high school team.
Bales was even magnanimous when Edwards took his position at starting linebacker, he said.
'He came up to me after that practice kind of sheepishly,' said Edwards, who played nine years in the NFL. 'He says, "Hey Marc ... I want the team to be successful."'
The jurors on Thursday also heard from an Army officer who served with Bales in Iraq. Major Brent Clemmer said it was unfathomable to learn that the competent, positive soldier he knew could have committed the atrocity.
'I walked myself into my office, poured myself a glass of scotch, and cried,' he said.
A brother of the soldier testified at Bales' sentencing hearing, on Wednesday, portraying him as a patriotic American, high school class president and football team captain.
'There's no better father that I've seen,' William Bales, 55, said of his younger brother. 'If you brought the kids in here today, they'd run right to him.'
William Bales repeatedly referred to his sibling ? once the captain of his high school football team and class president in Norwood, Ohio, where they grew up ? as 'my baby brother' and 'Bobby.'
He described how as a teenager his brother cared for a developmentally disabled neighborhood boy, assisting him with basic life functions. The neighbor's father also testified about Bales' helpfulness.
'I don't know too many 16-, 17-year-old boys who could do that,' William Bales said.
On Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning, nine Afghan villagers who traveled about 7,000 miles to testify at the hearing in traditional garb spoke of their lives since the attacks.
Haji Mohammad Wazir lost 11 family members, including his mother, wife and six of his seven children.
He told the six-member jury that the attacks destroyed what had been a happy life. He was in another village with his youngest son, now 5-year-old Habib Shah, during the attack.
'If someone loses one child, you can imagine how devastated their life would be,' said Wazir, who received $550,000 in condolence payments from the U.S. government, out of $980,000 paid in all. 'If anybody speaks to me about the incident ... I feel the same, like it's happening right now.'
His son, now 5, 'misses everyone. He hasn't forgotten any of them.'
'I've gone through very hard times,' he added.
Wazir and a cousin, Khamal Adin, didn't get to say everything they wanted to in court. Each asked for permission to speak after the prosecutors' questions were finished, but the judge said it wasn't allowed.
Two military doctors testified Wednesday, describing the treatment of Bales' victims, including a young girl who had been shot in the head and spent three months undergoing surgeries and rehabilitation at a naval hospital in San Diego, relearning how to walk.
Bales' attorneys, who have said the soldier suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, didn't cross-examine any of the Afghan witnesses.
Bales, a father of two from Lake Tapps, Washington, was serving his fourth combat deployment when he left the outpost at Camp Belambay in the pre-dawn darkness. He first attacked one village, returning to Belambay only when he realized he was low on ammunition, said prosecutor Lieutenant Colonel Jay Morse.
Bales then left to attack another village.
The massacre prompted such angry protests that the U.S. temporarily halted combat operations, and it was three weeks before Army investigators could reach the crime scene.
If he is sentenced to life with the possibility of parole, Bales would be eligible in 20 years, but there's no guarantee he would receive it. He will receive life with parole unless at least five of the six jurors say otherwise.
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
Last edited by tomt; August 24th, 2013 at 01:45 PM.
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
A doctor, an architect and a lawyer are arguing about which of their jobs is oldest.
The doctor says: "It's definitely mine. On the 6th day of creation, God gave surgery to Adam.
The architect says: "No, it's mine. Creating the universe required an enormous blueprint."
The lawyer says: "But before that, there was chaos. Only lawyers could've caused that!"
- - - Updated - - -
kanye playing a tuba?
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Last edited by tomt; August 24th, 2013 at 09:14 PM.
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
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