Breaking Bad? Zimmy Puts Hand To Gun At Estranged Wifes Home..

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
when you go after someone who is running away, that is called chasing them down.

look it up, sweetheart.



martin was residing there, it was his neighborhood as much as anyone else's.

unknown people walk past my house all the time, that does not give me the right to chase them down in the dark with a gun.



i'll keep that in mind if someone ever tails me in their car as i'm walking home from the store, then grabs their gun and gets out of their car and chases me down. totally not a self defense scenario.

some people just need to know their places, i guess.

especially those "watermelon heads", eh?

you have a vagina, and it is getting more inflamed.
How come you never get the facts right?
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
george knew about the money and they were "attempting" to talk code on the phone at the jail, which obviously was recorded and she perjured herself lying about it..
Does this somehow make her less guilty of lying under oath in court?

Does this somehow make her current testimony any more believeable?

I have not really been paying attention but I believe that it has already been proven that she was lying about the gun. If not, my bad...

Personally I would have been happy to find out she was divorcing me but I would never have married her in the first place. She is only slightly better looking than UB's wife...
 

kelly4

Well-Known Member
um, no it's not because i used the word "typically"..a racist substitution would be "always" or "all"..don't try to troll it into something it's not.
Typically, blacks love fried chicken, white women, watermelon, and crack smokin'.


Totally not racist, thanks to the word typically.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
http://thegrio.com/2012/07/16/zimmerman-relative-witness-9-accusations/

“I don’t know what happened, but I know George”


Documentation and recordings previously released by prosecutors, who charged Zimmerman with second degree murder in April, show that the witness called Sanford police on February 28th — two days after the shooting, and well before the weeks of protests that erupted over the Martin’s death (Zimmerman was ultimately arrested on April 11th.) She wanted to talk to homicide investigator Chris Serino, who was investigating the shooting as a likely case of self defense. Serino, then-Police Chief Bill Lee, and the head of the city’s major crime unit had all agreed they lacked sufficient evidence to arrest Zimmerman, and he had been released on the night of the shooting. When the woman called the station, Serino wasn’t there, so she spoke with another officer, Trekelle Perkins.
“I don’t know what happened,” the woman said, referring to the shooting. Her voice sounded shaken and she seemed close to tears on the recording released by prosecutors last month. “I don’t know at all who this kid was, or anything else. But I know George. And I know that he does not like black people, and he would start something.”
“He’s a very confrontational person,” the woman said of Zimmerman. “It’s in his blood, let’s just say that. And I don’t … I don’t want this poor kid and their family to just be overlooked.”
The woman seemed very concerned that her identity would get out. When Perkins asked if she knew Zimmerman from the subdivision, presumably referring to the Retreat at Twin Lakes where Zimmerman and his wife Shellie lived, and where the fatal confrontation with the 17-year-old Martin took place, the woman reacted sharply. “Can this please not at all relate back to me?”
After receiving reassurance from the officer, the woman returned her focus to Zimmerman. “I don’t talk to him because of the the things that he says … the person he is … the things that he does,” she said, adding, “I know his mother, I know everybody and they’re all the same way, and I hate that. They’re just mean and [they're] open about it.”
The woman, who three sources who spoke with her tell theGrio is a younger relative of Zimmerman’s, said of the 28-year-old former neighborhood watch volunteer: “I don’t know what he’s capable of, but I do know things he’s done to me that I would never talk about to him every again.”
The officer offered to give the woman his phone number, and assured her that “we don’t have to do an investigation or anything like that.” He asked her to stay in contact with him, and said that if she was to hear anything she thought was relevant, she should let him know. He told her she wouldn’t have to give her name.
Witness 9 did eventually give authorities her name, and the witness list released by prosecutors last months lists two entries for statements given by Witness 9 on March 20th to two investigators from the Seminole County State Attorney’s office in Sanford, to investigators Jim Post and Jim Rick.
In those later interviews, the woman said she came forward because she was “afraid that he may have done something because the kid was black.” She alleged that when the two were growing up, Zimmerman’s family, and particularly his mother, “made statements that they don’t like black people.” She said that the family only “like black people if they act white. Other than that they talk a lot of bad things about black people.”
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
the tackle is pretty good, but it's even better that he doesn't miss a note.

he just stopped singing for a song and a half in tucson when someone threw a glass bottle at his head.

he came back in at the end of 46&2, and after it was over, he said "i think you guys need to find a more positive way to use your energy".
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
So, do racists typically say things like, "yay, a bunch of old white men are dying!"?
that must have really struck a cord with you because it's the only thing you talk about now..when one group decides that its their way or the highway with obstructionism..it's time to go.
 
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