Posted on 12/01/2010 11:30:13 AM PST by a real Sheila
WARNER ROBINS -- A Bonaire man is accused of threatening a Warner Robins man and his family over $750,000 in winnings from a lottery ticket the man claims belongs to him and not the winner.
Jose Antonio Cua-Toc, 25, was arrested Saturday by Warner Robins police and charged with terroristic threats, according to a police report and Houston County jail records.
Cua-Toc is accused of repeatedly calling Erick and Sonia Cervantes and threatening to kill each of them and their children if they did not give him some of the lottery winnings that they had recently won, the police report stated.
Erick Cervantes, 31, told The Telegraph on Nov. 23 that he sent a friend to the OM Food Mart
(Excerpt) Read more at macon.com ...
Glad to see his priorities are in order. /s
Ah yes, the culture of whats yours is mine.
I won $1000 on a scratch off ticket and the 7-11 clerk tells a lady that I won on the same ticket she buys.
The lady starts cursing me out and calling on the people in the store to “beat the crap out of this guy!”
Wiinning can be hell, apparently.
Diversity is our strength..........
-—Jose Antonio Cua-Toc, 25, was arrested Saturday by Warner Robins police and charged with terroristic threats-—
I could be wrong, but aren’t they playing fast and loose with the word ‘terrorist’? What would he have been charged with if it was before 9/11/01?
Exactly. This is not terrorism - it’s one guy pissed at another. They love to misuse the law, don’t they.
Must be a “hate crime” too.
Sigh.
Celebrate Diversity!
If I recall correctly, threatening to commit a violent crime against another person is considered a “terroristic threat”. You are instilling fear (terror) in the person to whom you are threatening violence.
No, it’s the culture of bringing in good for nothing messycans by the millions.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.