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To: areafiftyone
2 posted on
05/23/2005 11:36:22 AM PDT by
bootless
(Never Forget - And Never Again)
To: areafiftyone
Seriously, I'm glad this scum has been caught. How dare he.
3 posted on
05/23/2005 11:37:26 AM PDT by
bootless
(Never Forget - And Never Again)
To: areafiftyone
15 years my ass, he should get the firing squad or gallows if he is guilty of aiding the enemy in terrorism.
4 posted on
05/23/2005 11:37:33 AM PDT by
boofus
To: areafiftyone
15 years in prison?
This should be a death penalty case.
5 posted on
05/23/2005 11:37:52 AM PDT by
Bullish
To: areafiftyone
Guess we know where Grecula will be for the rest of his life.
7 posted on
05/23/2005 11:39:18 AM PDT by
peacebaby
(I am a marvelous housekeeper. Every time I leave a man, I keep his house. Zsa Zsa Gabor)
To: areafiftyone
Is this the same man?
A court presided by Justice Raymond C. Pace last week awarded sole custody to Mrs Grecula after she had successfully filed an application for provisional care and custody. The mother claims that her ex-husband, Ronald Grecula had violated the terms of a custody order for the children - 10-year-old Berenger and three-year-old Emilie - issued by a Pennsylvania Court on the 26th of October 2000. She says that Mr. Grecula fled the United States with the children the following November. The US Court has since revoked his access rights and has found the father to be in contempt of court.
8 posted on
05/23/2005 11:39:55 AM PDT by
HuntsvilleTxVeteran
("In any compromise between good and evil, it is only evil that can profit." AYN RAND)
To: areafiftyone
If convicted, he could receive a sentence of up to 15 years in prison and a fine of $250,000. That's it?
To: areafiftyone
11 posted on
05/23/2005 11:41:17 AM PDT by
dead
(I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
To: areafiftyone
Someone set him up the bomb?
13 posted on
05/23/2005 11:42:07 AM PDT by
The G Man
(The Red States ... the world's only hope for survival.)
To: areafiftyone
Want to bet which party he most associates himself with?
15 posted on
05/23/2005 11:42:17 AM PDT by
Blood of Tyrants
(G-d is not a Republican. But Satan is definitely a Democrat.)
To: areafiftyone
doh!
16 posted on
05/23/2005 11:42:40 AM PDT by
raivyn
(ATTENTION: My /sarcasm is broken - please don't take ANYTHING I say personally!)
To: areafiftyone
OK, so we have people willing to stuff that goes bang to bad guys, but would not it have made more sense to have actually paid him with marked money besides the taped convos or actually let him build a prototype for better chance of getting conviction. And why only 15 years it would seem under Patriot act or something this sort of charge is more than just building a bomb to blow up a place or work or something, this was a terrorist act and he knew it.
To: wideawake
Hey WideAWake!
What was the bump about on the other thread?
21 posted on
05/23/2005 11:48:05 AM PDT by
Incorrigible
(If I lead, follow me; If I pause, push me; If I retreat, kill me.)
To: areafiftyone
Should be beaten to death....
22 posted on
05/23/2005 11:48:58 AM PDT by
theDentist
(The Dems are putting all their eggs in one basket-case: Howard "Belltower" Dean.)
To: areafiftyone
This guy must have something wrong with him...a bomb?
Did it ever occur to him that Al Qaeda probably knows how to build their own bombs?
23 posted on
05/23/2005 11:49:42 AM PDT by
Irontank
(Every decent man is ashamed of the government he lives under)
To: areafiftyone
If convicted, he could receive a sentence of up to 15 years in prison and a fine of $250,000. Not nearly enough. Obviously, criminal penalties for aiding and abetting terrorists need to catch up with reality.
24 posted on
05/23/2005 11:50:05 AM PDT by
LouD
To: areafiftyone
There are a number of things that would have been serious crimes when I was a kid that are either less serious or legal now.
He has been charged with attempting to provide material support and resources to a designated foreign terrorist organization, specifically al-Qaida, a news release from Shelby's office said.
This would have been treason. Of course, "threatening the violent overthrow of the United States" is also now commonplace and apparently largely legal (some question of immediacy).
27 posted on
05/23/2005 11:52:17 AM PDT by
JimSEA
To: areafiftyone
I think it's pretty cool that the FBI has agents in Houston that appear to be al-Qaida operatives.
Good job, FBI!
32 posted on
05/23/2005 12:06:34 PM PDT by
Dog Gone
To: areafiftyone
Wasn't this something of the opening plot in "Back to the Future", where "Doc" Elliot Brown is trying to pass off some pinball machine parts as essential parts of a trigger for an atomic bomb, and had taken some plutonium so he could power the DeLorean time machine. As I understand the story, the Libyan nationalists were pretty troubled that they had been taken advantage of, and came after Doc and Marty McFly.
What an eerily realistic and highly prescient scene that was. This guy was just trying to get some cash together to conduct his time machine experiments.
33 posted on
05/23/2005 12:18:05 PM PDT by
alloysteel
("Master of the painfully obvious.....")
To: areafiftyone
Seriously these wackos like to play with explosives... Put him in a 2x2x6 cell so he can't lay down, and put a grenade in each hand, pull the pins, close the door and wait.
40 posted on
05/23/2005 1:23:26 PM PDT by
Syntyr
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