To: AmericaUnited
I've got a buddy that's a prosecutor in a small town in which Wal-Mart is the biggest employer. Recently, he had a case come up where two women claimed an ex-husband of one of them stalked and harrassed them all around the store, then beat the hell out of them in the parking lot.
It turned out, these women were unaware of all the security cameras in the lot. When the tapes were played in the judge's chamber, it showed the women literally chasing the guy all over the store and screaming at him in the lot while he just frantically tried to leave. They then tried to block his truck as he attempted to pull out. One of the women suddenly took a dive, acting like the truck hit her (it was probably at least ten feet away). The other woman, seeing what her friend did, attempted the same. The judge was not amused.
14 posted on
12/07/2003 4:43:42 AM PST by
LanPB01
To: LanPB01
I've got a buddy that's a prosecutor in a small town in which Wal-Mart is the biggest employer. Recently, he had a case come up where two women claimed an ex-husband of one of them stalked and harrassed them all around the store, then beat the hell out of them in the parking lot. It turned out, these women were unaware of all the security cameras in the lot. When the tapes were played in the judge's chamber, it showed the women literally chasing the guy all over the store and screaming at him in the lot while he just frantically tried to leave. They then tried to block his truck as he attempted to pull out. One of the women suddenly took a dive, acting like the truck hit her (it was probably at least ten feet away). The other woman, seeing what her friend did, attempted the same. The judge was not amused.This goes on all the time, with false testimony by women putting men in jail. The judge probably did not put the women in jail for a couple of years where they belonged.
25 posted on
12/07/2003 6:30:44 AM PST by
friendly
(Man is so made that whenever anything fires his soul, impossibilities vanish.)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson