Have you ever been trashed?
Dude this is the second time you have gotten this wrong. The NY Post article said a resident came outside, confronted the guy and was punched. Other articles mention a 17 year old that helped Jones prop the guy up before he left. They dont appear to be the same person.
Jones was put on leave.
The guy DIED from a HEAD injury and you're asking if he talked to his family to detail what happened before he DIED. C'mon, man.I did go to the beginning of the thread and read two articles about the incident and neither one said anything about the date of death nor him not regaining consciousness. I wasn't going to read all through the thread again but leave it to assholes on the board to be assholes.
This 17 year old is becoming a mythical character on this board. So far people on here have said he/she was:
In Jones's car
A recruit that was with Jones
The person that got punched
Witness that helped tend to the drunk guy posy punch/fall (sounds like the legit description)
Did I miss any? Uber driver? Kid delivering newspapers?
Hey don’t be an asshole when talking to those with special needs.
Alex Jones is saying this kid doesn't really exist. The whole story is a government conspiracy, and Sabor is really an actor who is alive and well.
lolSabor threw the first punch. He should expect to get hit back.
Nah. We suck too hard for anyone to conspire against us.
Not to get all Trumpy/DonaldRossy, but the media's handling and reporting of this so far is pathetic. How are there such different narratives floating around? How is more information not yet known from something that happened 6 days ago? This and the OSU Smith/Meyer debacle really are great examples of how pathetic "journalism" has become in America.
Les, my gripe wasn't with you. Sorry I wasn't clearer on that. It was more with the other post by StopMakingSense. People read a couple of blogs these days and think they know what they're talking about. I've had enough discussion with you about the justice system to know you know what you're talking about. That said, I stand by the "rogue" characterization. While it might be your experience that this is common practice, it's not mine, and my position is supported by the Rules of Professional Responsibility. Plus, don't you practice in Florida? (Sorry, couldn't resist). Here, the issue is more a lack of experience because it's difficult for prosecutors' offices to retain good lawyers.
But overcharging is something that is taken very seriously. Please to LIO's are highly discouraged, and where a violent felony was indicted a prosecutor needs to write a memo and get supervisor approval to even offer an LIO. Maybe it's because I worked for a former federal prosecutor when I was a prosecutor myself, but that's how we did it.
newsflash: it's an unfortunate, but tiny incident that really doesn't warrant that much investigative power