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He broke a model's leg in a pickup game. :roll: 

That one I hadn't heard. 

This is true, they have no credibility, which is why the only people that can comment on this are me and...well mainly just me.

31 minutes ago, Kz! said:

He broke a model's leg in a pickup game. :roll: 

That one I hadn't heard. 

Yes. But that one is as much on her. She was practicing football drills in his backyard.  https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/nfl/article-13131307/Tyreek-Hill-accused-breaking-leg-influencer-Sophie-Hall.html?ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490&ito=social-twitter_dailymailsport

Certainly Hill has a bad history. If you make him look like the innocent party, you've done wrong.

Surprise!

 

  • 2 months later...
  • 2 months later...

Alabama Police Department acted like a criminal enterprise, passing around steroids and Adderall, and covering their tracks:

https://www.al.com/crime/2025/02/culture-of-corruption-may-destroy-hanceville-police-department-scandal-shocks-small-college-town.html

Quote

The records spell out the disturbing allegations against Hanceville’s police chief, 51-year-old Jason Marlin, officers Cody Alan Kelso, 33, Drew Shelnutt, 39, Jason Wilbanks, 37, Eric Michael Kelso, 44, and his wife, 63-year-old Donna Kelso.

Indicted on a combined 26 criminal charges, all six surrendered to the Cullman County Jail Wednesday, and all were released on bond.

Eric Kelso is accused of distributing Adderall to someone who is not charged in the indictments and hydrocodone and performance enhancing anabolic steroids to Wilbanks. He also, according to the indictment, provided anabolic steroids to Cody Kelso.

Eric Kelso’s wife, Donna Kelso, is also accused of providing anabolic steroids repeatedly to Wilbanks and Cody Kelso.

Wilbanks, charging documents state, traveled while on duty to receive the "unlawfully distributed” steroids from Donna Kelso. Cody Kelso and Wilbanks allegedly both traveled to an undisclosed hospital while on duty to get the anabolic steroid injections from Donna Kelso.The indictment also alleges Wilbanks accessed a records management system to obtain information on an unnamed woman and an unnamed man and provided that information to other officers. He also illegally used the Law Enforcement Tactical System (LETS) to obtain a vehicle’s tag information for Eric Kelso, according to the indictment. Wilbanks is also accused of removing and/or mishandling evidence from the property room.

Chief Marlin is charged with two counts of failure to report ethics crime and tampering with physical evidence. He retired from the Birmingham Police Department where he worked at the South Precinct. The indictments against Marlin allege that as the head of the police force, he had a duty to report ethics violations of his officers to Alabama Ethics Commission and failed to do so. Specifically, records state, he did not report violations by Cody Kelso and Wilbanks after being notified of the violations by the State Bureau of Investigation. Marlin, according to court documents, also removed or mishandled evidence from the property room.

 

 

4 hours ago, toolg said:

Alabama Police Department acted like a criminal enterprise, passing around steroids and Adderall, and covering their tracks:

https://www.al.com/crime/2025/02/culture-of-corruption-may-destroy-hanceville-police-department-scandal-shocks-small-college-town.html

 

 

Well done Eric Michael Kelso.  Landed a 63-year hag almost 20 years older than you.  We are the same age and my wife is 30 years younger than his.  

Such A Loser GIFs | Tenor

  • 1 month later...
29 minutes ago, Procus said:

where's the woke narrative?

2 hours ago, Alpha_TATEr said:

where's the woke narrative?

Check the title of the thread.

22 hours ago, Procus said:

Check the title of the thread.

so, there are news articles from the woke media on this with that narrative, or is this just an assumption?

  • 5 months later...

Georgia Mayor and ex-trooper A.J. Scott faces sentencing in fatal crash https://www.courttv.com/news/ex-trooper-a-j-scott-faces-sentencing-in-fatal-crash/

CARROLLTON, Ga. (Court TV) — A former Georgia state trooper convicted in a fatal crash faces sentencing Wednesday.

Prosecutors argued Anthony James "A.J.” Scott was speeding on Sept. 26, 2015, while driving north on U.S. Highway 27 in his patrol car when he slammed into a vehicle heading south with four people inside. The driver, Dillon Wall, suffered a fractured skull. Benjamin Finken, a passenger, suffered a traumatic brain injury. Two teenage girls in the car, 16-year-old Isabella Chinchilla and 17-year-old Kylie Lindsey, were killed in the crash.

Scott took the stand at his trial and admitted he was driving without his emergency lights or sirens on before the fatal crash. When asked if he was responding to a dispatch, Scott replied, "No, sir.”

During cross-examination, prosecutors established that Scott had received multiple trainings on proper vehicle operation and rules of the road. Scott acknowledged that while there are circumstances where law enforcement officers are permitted to exceed speed limits, none of those exceptions applied in this situation.

Scott was found guilty on two counts of serious injury by vehicle, one count of second-degree homicide by vehicle for victim Isabella Chinchilla, speeding and reckless driving. He was found not guilty of the other count of second-degree homicide by vehicle for victim Kylie Lindsey.

At the time of Scott’s trial, he was the mayor of Buchanan, Georgia. Following his conviction, he was removed from his position.

Scott faces up to 30 years in prison at his sentencing.

1 hour ago, Mike030270 said:

He stole that kids backpack while pointing a pistol. That's called armed robbery.

SC Code § 16-11-330 (2024):

A person who commits robbery while armed with a pistol, dirk, slingshot, metal knuckles, razor, or other deadly weapon, or while alleging, either by action or words, he was armed while using a representation of a deadly weapon or any object which a person present during the commission of the robbery reasonably believed to be a deadly weapon, is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction, must be imprisoned for a mandatory minimum term of not less than ten years or more than thirty years, no part of which may be suspended or probation granted. A person convicted under this subsection is not eligible for parole until the person has served at least seven years of the sentence.

She had it coming to her

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