Posted on 02/18/2008 2:30:20 PM PST by jimbo123
His arraignment had been scheduled for Thursday, but his lawyer, retired Hudson police Capt. Ray Mello, asked last week to waive the hearing. Judge James Leary agreed, and the court set a trial date of Feb. 21.
(Excerpt) Read more at nashuatelegraph.com ...
Prepare for some missile attacks on Ira..Ooops, forgot the clintons aren’t in power anymore.
Manchester, NH — that’s the town where the Massachusetts BK judge was just recently arrested on a DUI, dressed as a woman, after leaving a gay/drag bar.
And Blumenthal was arrested apparently leaving a bar in Manchester, and his story about where he was driving from didn’t add up.
Hmmm........................
Can somebody do a photo-shop of Bluemental’s picture above, adding a wig and some makeup? I think he might have appeared in the drag revue.
“retired Hudson police Capt. Ray Mello?”
“Ray Mello? Ray Mello’s dead! I’m Ray Nello! With an ‘N’”
Well I think that Hillary and all her campaigners should suspend all political activity on Feb 21 to be in-sympatico with Sid.
Street name: Sid Viscious
These lefties just look goofy.
Drunk or sober.

Blumenthal was drinking in Manchester, but was busted and is being tried in Nashua. No jury, just a judge. I’m sure the fix in by Team Hitlery.
BWAAAAHAAAAHAAAA!
That was GREAT!
Case dismissed. Next...
A rhubard bomb?
No justice, no peace. Do the right thing judge.
Here’s the judge’s bio:
James Leary Joins Nashua Court
Filling a position vacant in one of the states busiest courts for more than two years, James H. Leary was sworn in as presiding justice of the Nashua District Court on July 26.
Leary, a special justice in the Nashua court since 2002, is the first judge to be appointed by Gov. John Lynch, who had reinstated a Judicial Selection Commission to propose names for his consideration.
Leary, who had been associated with the Sullivan & Gregg law firm in Nashua, had been active in the NHBA Pro Bono program and was the 2001 Pro Bono Attorney of the Year for Hillsborough County. He also had been a regular faculty member for DOVE volunteer training programs. He obtained his law degree from Franklin Pierce Law Center in 1984. While in law school, he was director of the NH Mediation Program.
I am very excited about the new position, said Leary. I am being allowed some transition time from my practice, but hope soon to be able to focus entirely on the court and its needs.
Leary is one of two full-time justices assigned to Nashua; Associate Justice Thomas Bamberger was appointed as a full-time judge for Nashua in 1999.
The fix is in... definitely.
There’s just *something* about that guy that doesn’t look human... dunno what.
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