Echo echo echo
We are now going to hear the argument that guns should not be allowed but Pops was justified to shoot this guy to death.Go on counselor, spin that beotch.Announcer: "The crowd now watches, in awe, as Psycho-Boy talks out of both sides of his mouth."
the Truth will set you free
The guy is not going to able to invoke "Stand your ground".
thanks but says who? I saw the police say that it did not appear to be an SYG issue. Is that what you are posting about?
I thought the judge said hell no. Isn't the premise of SYG designed so that you aren't in jail like this crazy old man is currently?
Echo echo echo
We are now going to hear the argument that guns should not be allowed but Pops was justified to shoot this guy to death.Go on counselor, spin that beotch.Announcer: "The crowd now watches, in awe, as Psycho-Boy talks out of both sides of his mouth."
you caught that too? for 100s of pages with no shame, lol
The guy is not going to able to invoke "Stand your ground".
thanks but says who? I saw the police say that it did not appear to be an SYG issue. Is that what you are posting about?
I thought the judge said hell no. Isn't the premise of SYG designed so that you aren't in jail like this crazy old man is currently?
oh, I think you are talking about the court denying bond. That does not prevent the shooter fro using SYG as a defense (although it sounds like a losing defense right now anyway). It's only that he cant bond out, which is really about the overall facts, only one of which being that it does not appear to this judge to be an SYG situation. he would assert the defense later, to avoid trial
On Tuesday, Curtis Reeves, 71, made his first appearance in court for a charge of second-degree murder. Reeves' attorney, Richard Escobar, tried to persuade Circuit Judge Lynn Tepper that the former police officer was actually the victim in the incident and that Oulson was the "aggressor." Police said despite Reeves' claim that he was in fear of his safety, this was not a case for Florida's "stand your ground" defense. "Working with the state attorney's office it was determined that stand-your-ground does not fly here in this case," Pasco County Sheriff Chris Nocco said.