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To: miss marmelstein

I think you are being a little harsh on clear case guy. Here is an example of what he is talking about.

https://youtu.be/eu0O1VNZWeE

The “lady” in the video doesn’t hesitate to start trouble: She knows the resulting violence will not involve her.


113 posted on 02/14/2018 11:02:32 AM PST by j. earl carter
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To: j. earl carter

117 posted on 02/14/2018 11:09:57 AM PST by NorthMountain (... the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed)
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To: j. earl carter

So what? We generalize that all women are crazy based on a few who turn up in videos? I seem to remember a doctor being literally dragged off a plane screaming and crying like a little girl not too long ago. Find me a post from a woman here saying that all men are like that.


121 posted on 02/14/2018 11:13:48 AM PST by miss marmelstein
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To: j. earl carter

My favourite mouthy girl video where she did get some instant justice:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Czb4rImsph0

Thanks for posting that pizza video from 2004. I had not seen that before. I tried to find the final disposition of the attacker but could only get info up to 2010:

Violent Encounters: A Tale of Two Pizza Shops

https://www.buckeyefirearms.org/violent-encounters-tale-two-pizza-shops

Excerpt:

Mark Jones was convicted of felonious assault in February 2005 for the beating and sentenced to four years in prison. (As felonious assault carries a minimum two-year and maximum eight-year sentence in Ohio, Mr. Jones didn’t even reach the mid-range sentence of five years.) This would ordinarily be the end of a typical “if only an armed person had been present to stop the offender” story. However, while researching this case a little further in response to a class I taught, I discovered the story does not end there.
It turns out that Mr. Jones felt he learned his lesson in prison, and filed a motion to be released after serving only two years of his sentence. That motion was properly denied. Not willing to take no for an answer, Mr. Jones filed his motion for early release again in 2008. Despite vigorous opposition from Summit County Prosecutor Sherri Bevan-Walsh, Summit County Common Pleas Judge Brenda Burnham-Unruh, who heard this beating case in horrifying detail as the presiding trial judge (and was the judge burned for sentencing Mr. Jones to probation only in the original trafficking case), released Mr. Jones from prison on February 7, 2008, with more than a year left to serve on his original sentence. Judge Burnham-Unruh “threw the book” at Mr. Jones by ordering 90 days of intensive supervision and anger management classes.

Not coincidentally, at this same time, Judge Burnham-Unruh was launching her own personal program to “break the cycle of violence.” Mr. Jones would apparently be one of the first “clients” in this community-based program. (Judge Burnhum-Unruh would, within a month of this shocking release, win an uncontested primary election to retain her seat.)

You will be shocked (!) that Mr. Jones did not thrive in his anger management classes or his mentoring, and, within four months of being released by Judge Burnhum-Unruh, kicked down the door of his former girlfriend and physically beat her. (Court records in this new felony violence case reveal a subpoena issued for a “P. Simms” for the trial, so it is abundantly clear that the victim “former girlfriend” in the new violent felony was the young lady that accompanied Mr. Jones on his night of infamy at the pizza shop.)

In this new violent felony case, Mr. Jones was convicted in September 2008 of two counts of aggravated burglary, two counts of domestic violence and one count of obstructing official business. Court records show Mr. Jones was sentenced to five years in prison for this new case, resentenced to four years in prison for violating the terms of his early release from prison in the original pizza shop beating case, and re-sentenced to nine months in prison for violating his probation in the original drug trafficking case.

All of these sentences are ordered to be served consecutively, meaning Mr. Jones will be in prison for nearly a decade, unless some judge releases him early, again.

This remains a possibility, as Judge Burnhum-Unruh won the general election and is “serving” as judge until at least 2014. Mark Jones, aka Inmate A553960, is scheduled for review by the parole board in 2014.


150 posted on 02/15/2018 2:45:01 AM PST by beaversmom
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