It never occurred to me that he may have stolen it. They were jr high kids. I will ask him about that. The story at the time was the kid gave it to him. I returned it to the owners. Would I have turned my son into the police? Probably not because I didn't want him to have it on his record and ruin his life, and it didn't occur to me at the time anyway. Doesn't matter now because he can't own one anyway due to domestic disputes w/ex wife when she was the one to pull knives on him, deliberately ran into a telephone pole, her dad is a detective and got them out of that, etc. She finally had to spend some time in jail for assault of somebody else. He is 34 now and makes a six figure income, has been a good son, came over late last night to snowblow my sidewalks.
Another mistake by picking the wrong woman, broke his heart. He is stuck with mega child support for his son by her, she is going to ask for a modification because his income keeps increasing and lives with her boyfriend off the money she gets from him although I think he does work. The other father pays $30 a week when he can. How would you like to live with that? He pays faithfully, and we didn't get any child support after the first couple years from his own dad.
No, you wouldn't want to know us. For sure. You can thank God in your prayers that you don't know trash like us.
Good choice there anyway
He is 34 now and makes a six figure income, has been a good son, came over late last night to snowblow my sidewalks.
Gun laws sure haven't treated your son fairly have they.
No, you wouldn't want to know us.
Don't read stuff into what I said. That doesn't mean I think you're trash. Your saying you "made a mistake" in not turning the gun into the police was a giant red flag to me. Anyone who thinks that the police can actually solve problems is not someone I'd want to hang around with - it has nothing to do with your income or social status. I prefer my friends to be more of the self sufficient mindset.