So, this pretty much vanished from headlines didn't it? Looks like his bond was revoked due to misrepresenting of finances. No biggie. Just saw it and thought it was odd that it had been so quiet lately.
...
My wife is into all that stuff. Her current favorite show is Body of Proof. Second favorite is SVU. She tells me that she wished she had gone into Forensics. Yeah, dead bodies don't bother her.Jay wrote:
The interest in this case just shows why there are so many law and order shows CSI NCIS SVU everyones an expert now
she's learning......Ilocano wrote:
My wife is into all that stuff. Her current favorite show is Body of Proof. Second favorite is SVU. She tells me that she wished she had gone into Forensics. Yeah, dead bodies don't bother her.Jay wrote:
The interest in this case just shows why there are so many law and order shows CSI NCIS SVU everyones an expert now
/worriesCC-Marley wrote:
she's learning......Ilocano wrote:
My wife is into all that stuff. Her current favorite show is Body of Proof. Second favorite is SVU. She tells me that she wished she had gone into Forensics. Yeah, dead bodies don't bother her.Jay wrote:
The interest in this case just shows why there are so many law and order shows CSI NCIS SVU everyones an expert now
She stands over you while you sleep.Ilocano wrote:
/worriesCC-Marley wrote:
she's learning......Ilocano wrote:
My wife is into all that stuff. Her current favorite show is Body of Proof. Second favorite is SVU. She tells me that she wished she had gone into Forensics. Yeah, dead bodies don't bother her.
Last edited by west-phoenix-az (2012-06-21 09:02:40)
Then you haven't had many life and death events.-Sh1fty- wrote:
I'd think he would remember every detail from such a life-changing event.
Does spinning out of control on ice in a car toward oncoming traffic and luckily not getting hit count? Cause I remember that shitHITNRUNXX wrote:
Then you haven't had many life and death events.-Sh1fty- wrote:
I'd think he would remember every detail from such a life-changing event.
Sure, I will give you one. But after several life and death situations, you will notice: Sometimes time slows down, and sometimes it speeds up. A lot has to do with how in control you are, and what position you are in to be aware of your surroundings. A great example: I remember every flutter of my heart during a car wreck when I was 16 (Brakes went out, and I had forever to think about my options in that split second). However, I couldn't tell you what happened in between me having a guy pull a knife on me and having him in an arm bar on the ground. I am told it was amazing to watch, but I couldn't tell you how I went from standing there to having him on the ground. Wish it was on video so I could see it, lol.-Sh1fty- wrote:
Does spinning out of control on ice in a car toward oncoming traffic and luckily not getting hit count? Cause I remember that shitHITNRUNXX wrote:
Then you haven't had many life and death events.-Sh1fty- wrote:
I'd think he would remember every detail from such a life-changing event.
Last edited by HITNRUNXX (2012-06-21 13:45:45)
So what would that mean exactly?Jaekus wrote:
I've been saying all along it's manslaughter, lol.
An attorney would typically need to be qualified wouldn't they?Spearhead wrote:
Who are you going to trust, the guy on the street who is there because he is qualified or some State's attorney who is there possibly from a political appointment?
Exactly... Not enough evidence for manslaughter, so lets go for murder charges that require MORE evidence.Spearhead wrote:
"Lead investigator Serino later recommended that manslaughter charges be brought up against Zimmerman, but Seminole County State's Attorney Norm Wolfinger rejected the request citing a lack of solid evidence."
Sad but true. A lot of police departments over over the past 10 years have started requiring college degrees, but the majority still only require high school equivalent. Also, the average starting salary of a cop is between $12 and $15/hour. Hard to justify getting a degree when you can make the same amount of money by working at 7-11.Dilbert_X wrote:
Police aren't typically highly qualified, or all that smart either.
Eh... not necessarily. A "lead investigator" has probably been in the force for a while and would know what would stick and what wouldn't. It was the state attorney who cited the controversial state law and had to give up the case before charging him. Bureaucracy+politics+race sensitivities. What could go wrong?Dilbert_X wrote:
An attorney would typically need to be qualified wouldn't they?Spearhead wrote:
Who are you going to trust, the guy on the street who is there because he is qualified or some State's attorney who is there possibly from a political appointment?
Police aren't typically highly qualified, or all that smart either.
Like the Police - for example.Lawyers are obviously academically astute but can still be (and are) as incompetent as people in any other profession.
As do lawyers.Cops have to have some degree of social intelligence.
Or the shitty old middle school teacher and the amazing college professor.It's kind of like the difference the amazing working class middle school teacher and the shitty old college professor.
So what are you trying to do?I wouldn't go across the board and call one group worse than the other.
Really? They start about $12 here for your training period, then bump you up to close to $15 when it is over. I thought that was national.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Dude I'd take a job at 7-Eleven in a heartbeat if it paid $15 an hour. I'm pretty sure that around here you wouldn't get more than a dollar over Maryland's minimum wage.