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#81
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How do you spell relief?
Greegor wrote:
Kane wrote Mine is social responsibility by political action. Yep, no Megalomania in that expression! Did they swear you in for your testimony to the HW&MC hearing? But when you're trying to pretend at "social responsibility" Then you weren't trying to be socially responsible when you submitted your long, and sometimes erroneous testimony to the HW&MC? What would you call it then? You are artful with language you surely can come up with something. I mean you certainly showed me that "execution" and "suicide" can't both be used for the same thing. 0:- wouldn't that work better if you hadn't have spent over a year publicly posting profanity? Many of your actions, as YOU described them, were profane, Greg. Yes there you were, being socially responsible by political action, regardless of what a fool you were making of yourself. You might as well have worn a tinfoil beanie with a propeller given the content, but heck, I recognize even those folks attempt to be responsible...without calling the megalomaniacs. It's their right. Yours too. You mistake things like my disapproval of content to disapproval of acting as you did. Or am I not correct? Going to continue with AA to answer? 0:- -- "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin (or someone else) |
#82
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How do you spell relief?
Fagele?
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#83
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How do you spell relief?
Greegor wrote:
Fagele? That's how you spell "relief?" -- "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin (or someone else) |
#84
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How do you spell relief?
What was your point about this one, Kane?
http://www.cnn.com/2006/LAW/05/18/li....ap/index.html Killer at 12, teen back in prison for 30 years Judge: 'In plain English, Lionel Tate, you have run out of chances' Thursday, May 18, 2006; Posted: 3:41 p.m. EDT (19:41 GMT) Lionel Tate, shown at an earlier hearing, was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Image: FORT LAUDERDALE, Florida (AP) -- Lionel Tate, the teenager who got a second chance after he beat and stomped a 6-year-old girl to death, was sent back to prison for 30 years Thursday for gun possession. "In plain English, Lionel Tate, you've run out of chances. You do not get any more," Circuit Judge Joel T. Lazarus told Tate, who smirked as he was led off to jail in shackles. Tate, now 19, was convicted of beating Tiffany Eunick to death in 1999, when he was 12, claiming he accidentally killed the girl while imitating pro wrestling moves he had seen on television. He became the youngest person in modern U.S. history to receive a life sentence. His murder conviction was overturned in 2004 by an appeals court that said it was not clear Tate understood the charges. He was freed under a deal in which he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to 10 years' probation. On Thursday, he was back in court over the holdup of a pizza deliveryman last May. In a deal with prosecutors, Tate had faced 10 to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to robbery and violating his probation by having a gun. On Thursday, the judge let him withdraw his guilty plea in the robbery but still sentenced him on the gun charge. The robbery trial is set for September 18. Defense attorney H. Dohn Williams said he did not understand why Tate would want to go to trial on the robbery charge, given that a conviction could bring a life sentence in addition to the 30 years for the probation violation. "He continues to get bad advice from meddling third parties," Williams said outside court. Williams said Tate's mother, Florida Highway Patrol trooper Kathleen Grossett-Tate, told him he could win an appeal on the probation violation conviction, win his robbery case and leave jail in a year. She left court without commenting. Williams pleaded with the judge for leniency, blaming Tate's criminal behavior on his upbringing. "The death of Tiffany Eunick would never have occurred if there had been proper parental guidance and control," Williams said. "Six-year-old Tiffany tragically died while ... roughhousing with a 6-year-old boy in a 12-year-old's body." The judge said Tate has shown "disdain and disrespect" for the law after repeated opportunities to redeem himself. Since his release in 1999, Tate has had numerous run-ins with the law. In 2004, the judge sentenced him to an additional five years' probation for having a knife. Last month, the judge ruled for the second time that Tate was competent to face the robbery charge after Tate claimed he was mentally ill from years of abuse by his mother. He claimed he was hearing voices and contemplating suicide, a story he later admitted was a ruse. |
#85
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How do you spell relief?
Greegor wrote:
What was your point about this one, Kane? I don't know. What did I remark when I posted it? 0:- http://www.cnn.com/2006/LAW/05/18/li....ap/index.html Killer at 12, teen back in prison for 30 years Judge: 'In plain English, Lionel Tate, you have run out of chances' Thursday, May 18, 2006; Posted: 3:41 p.m. EDT (19:41 GMT) Lionel Tate, shown at an earlier hearing, was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Image: FORT LAUDERDALE, Florida (AP) -- Lionel Tate, the teenager who got a second chance after he beat and stomped a 6-year-old girl to death, was sent back to prison for 30 years Thursday for gun possession. "In plain English, Lionel Tate, you've run out of chances. You do not get any more," Circuit Judge Joel T. Lazarus told Tate, who smirked as he was led off to jail in shackles. Tate, now 19, was convicted of beating Tiffany Eunick to death in 1999, when he was 12, claiming he accidentally killed the girl while imitating pro wrestling moves he had seen on television. He became the youngest person in modern U.S. history to receive a life sentence. His murder conviction was overturned in 2004 by an appeals court that said it was not clear Tate understood the charges. He was freed under a deal in which he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to 10 years' probation. On Thursday, he was back in court over the holdup of a pizza deliveryman last May. In a deal with prosecutors, Tate had faced 10 to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to robbery and violating his probation by having a gun. On Thursday, the judge let him withdraw his guilty plea in the robbery but still sentenced him on the gun charge. The robbery trial is set for September 18. Defense attorney H. Dohn Williams said he did not understand why Tate would want to go to trial on the robbery charge, given that a conviction could bring a life sentence in addition to the 30 years for the probation violation. "He continues to get bad advice from meddling third parties," Williams said outside court. Williams said Tate's mother, Florida Highway Patrol trooper Kathleen Grossett-Tate, told him he could win an appeal on the probation violation conviction, win his robbery case and leave jail in a year. She left court without commenting. Williams pleaded with the judge for leniency, blaming Tate's criminal behavior on his upbringing. "The death of Tiffany Eunick would never have occurred if there had been proper parental guidance and control," Williams said. "Six-year-old Tiffany tragically died while ... roughhousing with a 6-year-old boy in a 12-year-old's body." The judge said Tate has shown "disdain and disrespect" for the law after repeated opportunities to redeem himself. Since his release in 1999, Tate has had numerous run-ins with the law. In 2004, the judge sentenced him to an additional five years' probation for having a knife. Last month, the judge ruled for the second time that Tate was competent to face the robbery charge after Tate claimed he was mentally ill from years of abuse by his mother. He claimed he was hearing voices and contemplating suicide, a story he later admitted was a ruse. -- "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin (or someone else) |
#86
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How do you spell relief?
Greegor wrote:
What was your point about this one, Kane? Can't recall now. Possibly that he wasn't a foster child? You really are dim. 0:- http://www.cnn.com/2006/LAW/05/18/li....ap/index.html Killer at 12, teen back in prison for 30 years Judge: 'In plain English, Lionel Tate, you have run out of chances' Thursday, May 18, 2006; Posted: 3:41 p.m. EDT (19:41 GMT) Lionel Tate, shown at an earlier hearing, was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Image: FORT LAUDERDALE, Florida (AP) -- Lionel Tate, the teenager who got a second chance after he beat and stomped a 6-year-old girl to death, was sent back to prison for 30 years Thursday for gun possession. "In plain English, Lionel Tate, you've run out of chances. You do not get any more," Circuit Judge Joel T. Lazarus told Tate, who smirked as he was led off to jail in shackles. Tate, now 19, was convicted of beating Tiffany Eunick to death in 1999, when he was 12, claiming he accidentally killed the girl while imitating pro wrestling moves he had seen on television. He became the youngest person in modern U.S. history to receive a life sentence. His murder conviction was overturned in 2004 by an appeals court that said it was not clear Tate understood the charges. He was freed under a deal in which he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to 10 years' probation. On Thursday, he was back in court over the holdup of a pizza deliveryman last May. In a deal with prosecutors, Tate had faced 10 to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to robbery and violating his probation by having a gun. On Thursday, the judge let him withdraw his guilty plea in the robbery but still sentenced him on the gun charge. The robbery trial is set for September 18. Defense attorney H. Dohn Williams said he did not understand why Tate would want to go to trial on the robbery charge, given that a conviction could bring a life sentence in addition to the 30 years for the probation violation. "He continues to get bad advice from meddling third parties," Williams said outside court. Williams said Tate's mother, Florida Highway Patrol trooper Kathleen Grossett-Tate, told him he could win an appeal on the probation violation conviction, win his robbery case and leave jail in a year. She left court without commenting. Williams pleaded with the judge for leniency, blaming Tate's criminal behavior on his upbringing. "The death of Tiffany Eunick would never have occurred if there had been proper parental guidance and control," Williams said. "Six-year-old Tiffany tragically died while ... roughhousing with a 6-year-old boy in a 12-year-old's body." The judge said Tate has shown "disdain and disrespect" for the law after repeated opportunities to redeem himself. Since his release in 1999, Tate has had numerous run-ins with the law. In 2004, the judge sentenced him to an additional five years' probation for having a knife. Last month, the judge ruled for the second time that Tate was competent to face the robbery charge after Tate claimed he was mentally ill from years of abuse by his mother. He claimed he was hearing voices and contemplating suicide, a story he later admitted was a ruse. -- "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin (or someone else) |
#87
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How do you spell relief?
Golly, how did THAT rate a 2 on the Kane scale?
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