jarrod
Senior Master
Do they need new names then? LOL!
I've heard Kentucky is nice, my daughter's boyfriend worked there for six months for a horse racing trainer.
depends on what you mean by nice. the outdoors there are absolutely beautiful, & on the whole the people there are very, very friendly. lots of poverty though, & i was surprised when i found out the state is still mostly dry (meaning no alcohol sales allowed). fortunately i'd picked up a jug of wine in nashville the night before!
If the criminal had complied in the first place none of this would have happened.
He chose his actions: to assault an officer, to try and elude capture, to endanger innoncents in the process; therefore he chose the results of those actions and must accept them.
I have absolutely no sympathy for this idiot or any other idiot that runs from the law, especially when they endanger the public in doing so.
I don't condone evidence tampering, and I don't condone police brutality either but I don't feel like this guy should get rich off of this incident either. I guess I view police brutality as being "unprovoked." At any rate, the actions of the LE's involved should be investigated but this fellow got what he deserved.
When are people going to realize there are consequences for making a choice and when one makes a bad choice the productive thing to do is learn from it so you don't make the same bad choice again. Making bad choices should not equate to hitting the lottery.
well, yeah, & maybe if his daddy had played catch with him when he was little this wouldn't have happened either.
i agree that he shouldn't profit from this, & i don't exactly pity him. but viewing police brutality as "unprovoked" allows for a pretty broad & dangerous interpretation. give a cop some attitude while getting a ticket, & is that provoking him? how about protesting too loudly? kind of a slippery slope, imo.
jf