Posted on 11/24/2004 7:45:29 AM PST by whodeani
A psycho with two psycho friends.
Wisconsin has no death Penalty
bttp
Only whites can be charged with hate crimes, since they are the only ones who hate......
A guy took some shots at President Franklin Roosevelt and Anton Cermak, Chicago mayor, who he killed. He was tried and executed in less than 40 days. That's the kind of justice we need for perps like this Vang
Guiseppe Zangara
... He climbed on top of an old unstable wooden chair and started to fire. One bullet
hit Anton Cermak the major of Chicago who was with Roosevelt. ...
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAzangara.htm - 14k -Cached - Similar pages
[ More results from www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk ]
LOL
Doesn't work on the natives, but this guy is from out of state.
Is there any possibility of a Federal crime here? With a death penalty?
Shame. Society needs to be shed of pukes like him, not forced to coddle them for years.
Bet he and his friends got their non-residnt liscenses at the same time and place. A check of tags issued before and after his will lead to the two other 'persons of interest.' IMO
Going to be a bit like OJ due to the racial action which is already gearing up. Based on what Vang's initial claims are, why he gunned down these hunters. He claimed they were racially insulting and threatening him. There must be a death penalty in multiple murder cases like this. It's an insult to the victims not to. It's an outrage.
Wow. I didn't keep a ping list of our likeminded friends. Can you ping them?
Hmmm....good question. I'm not a lawyer (thank you, Jesus), but I'll bet if it is a possibility, some Federal prosecutor will jump on it about two nanoseconds after the investigation is over.
Judging by some of the previous threats this poor guy should be released and the surviving two victims charged with hate crimes. It is just sick how some are trying to blame the victim here.
fyi bump
There is a lot of tension with Hmongs in Wisconsin. I'm thinking the Dahmer solution is likely.
Deer hunt has deadliest start in years
By Ed Hoskins of the Tribune Staff
The opening days of Wisconsin's gun-deer hunt season were the worst for hunting accidents in more than a decade, the state Department of Natural Resources said Monday.
At least four hunters were killed in accidental shootings - three of them in western Wisconsin - and two men died in other hunting-related incidents. It was the most deaths for the season since 1988.
"It's been a real poor start to the season and I don't know what to attribute it to," said Tom Bokelman, DNR safety warden for the west central region in Eau Claire. "It's just sheer bad luck that the accidents are as severe as this."
Six fatalities were reported, four as a result of accidental shootings in Vernon, Trempealeau, Buffalo and Adams counties, one from a fall from a tree stand in West Salem and one from natural causes in Waupaca County, authorities said.
The La Crosse County Sheriff's Department identified 38-year-old Alan D. Taylor, of West Salem, as Saturday's tree stand fatality. A cause of death will be determined after an autopsy, investigators said.
"He was in the tree stand by himself," Capt. Mike Horstman said. "His brother and father radioed for assistance with a downed deer and he didn't show up. They found him unresponsive at the foot of the tree."
In Buffalo County, a man died Sunday after being shot in the chest by another hunter during a deer drive near Fountain City, Bokelman said. The man was not identified Monday pending notification of relatives, Buffalo County authorities said.
In Trempealeau County, Ryan D. Huiss, 21, of Onalaska, was accidentally shot in the head by his 14-year-old brother Saturday while they were trailing a wounded deer in the town of Ettrick.
In Vernon County, Rick Shore, 56, of rural De Soto, died Saturday after apparently shooting himself while hunting west of Red Mound.
In Adams County, Wayne Blodgett, 76, of Hartford, was killed Saturday by a stray bullet, authorities said.
Though Bokelman did not know the reasons for the fatalities, he said there are three basic rules to helping avoid hunting accidents. Treat every gun as if it is loaded, always point the muzzle in a safe direction and be sure of a target and what is beyond the target.
"If those three rules were followed precisely, we'd eliminate 99 percent of accidents," Bokelman said.
Can anyone say for sure that Vang was actually out there hunting for deer?
I may have to get over my intense dislike of Greta. LOL
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