• Re: Demotards say NO MORE FREE SPEECH FOR YOU!

    From Mittens Romney@21:1/5 to K Wills on Thu Oct 10 14:05:26 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, alt.california

    K Wills wrote:
    I doubt Republicans have exclusive rights to lying.

    When your seamy Iowa past is replayed here you always project it upon
    the respondent.

    It never works, but what else can you do?

    Admit to corrupting a minor and doing time in a halfway house?

    No, for some reason you can't come clean on that, even though the court
    record is unambiguous on your conviction:


    https://casetext.com/case/state-v-wills-26

    https://groups.google.com/g/rec.autos.misc/c/Ou60H28ExUw

    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

    Around 1 a.m., an Ankeny resident called
    the local police to report that a car
    alarm sounded in the resident's
    neighborhood. The city dispatched a police
    officer to the location. Observing nothing
    unusual, the officer left the area, only
    to be stopped a couple of blocks later
    by a person who informed the officer he
    had witnessed someone running from the
    area of the car alarm. As the officer
    started driving back to the area of the
    car alarm, he noticed a person walking
    on the sidewalk. The officer asked the
    person, a minor, if he had noticed anybody
    running from the area. The minor answered
    that he had not. While the officer and
    another officer were speaking to the minor,
    another resident of the neighborhood
    arrived in her car and informed the
    officers that she had observed two people,
    one of whom was heavy set with a blinking
    light on his back pocket, walking in the
    area of her neighbor's residence. She
    observed the heavier-set individual, later
    identified as Wills, enter her neighbor's
    attached garage through an unlocked service
    door. She further observed a smaller
    individual standing by a van parked in
    the neighbor's driveway.

    The officers eventually let the minor leave
    even though they found a large amount of
    coins, a flashlight, and an electronic
    pocket organizer in his pockets. After
    releasing the minor, the police officers
    drove to the residence where the neighbor
    observed the two suspicious people and
    woke the owner. The owner, his wife,
    and two daughters were in the residence
    sleeping at the time. After a search
    of his vehicles, the owner discovered
    change and an electronic pocket organizer
    were missing from the vehicles. The
    owner's daughter reported a diamond ring
    and some change were missing from her
    vehicle. The officers then contacted
    the minor's parents, who informed the
    officers the minor was with Wills. After
    the officers questioned the minor again,
    he admitted his involvement in the theft
    and implicated Wills in the burglary.
    Although Wills denied involvement in the
    burglary, the officers arrested him.

    The State filed a trial information
    charging Wills with second-degree
    burglary. The State later amended the
    information to include two additional
    charges of burglary in the third degree
    and using a juvenile to commit an
    indictable offense.

    The jury returned a verdict finding Wills
    guilty of the crimes of burglary in the
    second degree, burglary in the third
    degree, and using a juvenile to commit
    an indictable offense. Wills appeals his
    conviction for second-degree burglary
    claiming ineffective assistance of
    counsel.

    --
    ⛨ πŸ₯πŸ₯–πŸ—ΌπŸ€ͺ

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