To: stuartcr
It is often said to be a potential liability issue during the subsequent trial.
4 posted on
07/27/2012 8:45:28 AM PDT by
Rio
(Tempis fugit.)
To: Rio
It is often said to be a potential liability issue during the subsequent trial. How is anyone to know unless you tell them? All that is left is the casing, which is the same whether new or reloaded.
/johnny
To: Rio
I can’t seem to find anything officially written about it.
11 posted on
07/27/2012 9:03:58 AM PDT by
stuartcr
("When silence speaks, it speaks only to those that have already decided what they want to hear.")
To: Rio
“It is often said to be a potential liability issue during the subsequent trial.”
There hasn’t beena single court case that ever had that as an issue. Not a single one. It is simply been passed around on the Internet.
88 posted on
07/27/2012 12:55:08 PM PDT by
CodeToad
(History says our end is near.)
To: Rio; All
It is often said to be a potential liability issue during the subsequent trial.
Show me even ONE case where this has happened.
This is a myth, like the Loch Ness Monster.
97 posted on
07/27/2012 2:01:55 PM PDT by
Red in Blue PA
(Read SCOTUS Castle Rock vs Gonzales before dialing 911!)
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