Philadelphia

Started by Diomedes, October 19, 2006, 12:38:46 PM

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Sgt PSN

#405
for the love of farg.  you mean to tell me that you are related to someone who has published work and yet you still suck ass when it comes to writing? 

Seabiscuit36

Quote from: Sgt PSN on August 25, 2009, 12:39:51 PM
for the love of farg.  you mean to tell me that you are related to someone who has published work and yet you still suck ass when it comes to writting
"For all the civic slurs, for all the unsavory things said of the Philadelphia fans, also say this: They could teach loyalty to a dog. Their capacity for pain is without limit." -Bill Lyons

MDS

ha

and on what planet do i suck ass. i am the next jason blair bitch.
Zero hour, Michael. It's the end of the line. I'm the firstborn. I'm sick of playing second fiddle. I'm always third in line for everything. I'm tired of finishing fourth. Being the fifth wheel. There are six things I'm mad about, and I'm taking over.

Sgt PSN

Quote from: Seabiscuit36 on August 25, 2009, 01:11:35 PM
Quote from: Sgt PSN on August 25, 2009, 12:39:51 PM
for the love of farg.  you mean to tell me that you are related to someone who has published work and yet you still suck ass when it comes to writting


i didn't go 2 skool 4 it tho

Seabiscuit36

Judge got this one right
And LOL at the mother Viaketta, seriously, your kid murdered someone. 
"For all the civic slurs, for all the unsavory things said of the Philadelphia fans, also say this: They could teach loyalty to a dog. Their capacity for pain is without limit." -Bill Lyons

Diomedes

those kids are gonna experience gang beatings from the other end for a while now
There is considerable overlap between the intelligence of the smartest bears and the dumbest tourists." - Yosemite Park Ranger

ice grillin you

i can take a phrase thats rarely heard...flip it....now its a daily word

igy gettin it done like warrick

im the board pharmacist....always one step above yous

methdeez

Quote from: Seabiscuit36 on August 26, 2009, 11:17:39 AM
Judge got this one right
And LOL at the mother Viaketta, seriously, your kid murdered someone. 
From the article:
QuoteStanton's attorney, Lonny Fish, said his client's verdict was inconsistent and the result of the confusing way in which the state's conspiracy law is written.
"How can you be found guilty of conspiracy of murder in the third degree and then found not guilty of murder in the third degree?"

This guy is a criminal defense attourney?
How can you be found guiilty of planning something but not guilty of carrying it out?
Becuase maybe you planned it but didn't carry it out...

Sgt PSN

i picked up on that but didn't bother mentioning because of the extraordinarily high level of stupidity laced in that comment.  people get convicted of conspiring in this country all the time.  in many cases, before they even have a chance to execute their crime. 

he must have gone to temple. 

PhillyPhreak54

http://www.untermeyerforda.com/findmike.htm

# Click on Link Below
# Enter in Login Information, and click submit
    Username: Untermeyer
    Password: Untermeyer
# Click "Group Status" in Red Top Bar
# Click the circle next to Total Population, and click Submit at bottom of chart
# See Michael Untermeyer's Name and click Submit
# See Michael Untermeyer's Status, and click "LOCATE" at bottom
# The "RED STAR" indicates Michael's Location
# Utilize the map, satellite and hybrid features at the top right, as well as the "History" button at the bottom of the map to not only see where Michael is, but where he has been.
# Simply exit website when finished, no need to logout
Click Here To Find Mike

PhillyPhreak54

QuoteFriday, September 11, 2009
Fox29's Bolaris attacked in Avalon

John Bolaris thinks of himself as being a pretty down-to-earth, approachable guy.
You spot him in a bar or restaurant, and want to amble over to ask about the weather, maybe take a picture? Go ahead, he's game.
But the Fox 29 chief meteorologist isn't too pleased about an encounter he had last week with a boorish brute who left him bruised and bloodied in Avalon, N.J.
Bolaris, 52, said he headed to his favorite Shore town in the wee hours on Sept. 4, not long after he finished his shift at Fox.
He walked into the Circle Tavern at the Princeton, on Dune Drive near 21st Street, at 1:30 a.m.
"I was supposed to meet some buddies of mine, but they weren't there. I was in there for about 10 minutes, watching highlights of the Boise [State football] college game," Bolaris said.
He left the pub when his pals sent him a text-message, inviting him to their house for a few beers.
Outside, a girl approached and — you guessed it — asked about the weather.
"I told it her, 'It'll be nice.' Then this guy comes over and starts jumping around me in circles, kinda acting strange.
"I looked at him and said, 'You OK, buddy?' He kept moving in circles, then he yells ... and tackles me into the street."
During the ensuing tumble, the weatherman said, his head smacked against a curb, and his finger was cut to the bone.
"There was blood everywhere. The guy took off down an alley," he said, still sounding shocked by the whole thing.
An Avalon police sergeant yesterday confirmed that an ambulance was called to the scene that morning to treat Bolaris for a hand injury.
The weatherman, who thinks he might have suffered a concussion during the takedown, wants justice.
He recalled the incident yesterday morning on the "Preston and Steve Show" on 93.3 WMMR-FM, and later to the Daily News, hoping that someone will help police catch the lunkhead.
"I'm really aggravated that someone would do that and try to get away with it. My head could've cracked open," he said.
"I want to press charges. He needs to sit in a jail cell for a couple of days."
Bolaris described the attacker as a twentysomething white man, about 5-feet-8, 165 pounds, with a blondish buzz-cut.
Tipsters can contact Avalon police at 609-967-3411.

Seabiscuit36

One of my HS friends has pics of Bolaris partying at their house down at the shore from this summer. 
"For all the civic slurs, for all the unsavory things said of the Philadelphia fans, also say this: They could teach loyalty to a dog. Their capacity for pain is without limit." -Bill Lyons

PhillyPhreak54

QuoteBlind lawyer: Pro took me for 8G

By STEPHANIE FARR
Philadelphia Daily News

farrs@phillynews.com 215-854-4225

Whether it was prostitution or Pilates, a blind Delaware County lawyer is hoping for a happy ending after his federal civil suit against a Philadelphia woman and a credit-card company was thrown out last week.

John F. Peoples, 60, was steamed after he learned that the woman who he says he hired for sex allegedly overbilled his Discover card by $8,600.

So he sued her for damages and the credit-card company for alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act, claiming that it had not sufficiently protected its blind customers.

"This wouldn't have happened to a sighted person," Peoples said yesterday, adding that he plans to appeal.

In court documents, the woman named in the suit, Ginger Dayle, said that she had provided Pilates lessons to Peoples and denied that she was a prostitute or that she had defrauded his credit card.

She filed a countersuit claiming that Peoples had inappropriately touched her butt and that he initiated the lawsuit after she rebuffed his sexual advances, according to court documents.

That case also was dismissed.

Peoples, 60, of Broomall, who has been legally blind since birth, claims to have met Dayle through an escort-services Web site.

He said that he had sessions with her about every other week for six months in 2007 at $275 to $375 an hour.

He said that he charged the sessions to his Discover card and signed a receipt - which he couldn't see - that Dayle told him had the agreed-upon amount - usually $750 for two hours.

But on 11 occasions, Dayle actually charged him $1,100 and in one case $1,600, "knowing he was blind and could not see he was being tricked," according to court records.

Peoples also claimed that she had forged his signatures on slips for days that did not use her services.

He said that he realized the alleged fraud only when his mother read him his credit-card bill.

When Peoples reported the alleged fraud to Discover, it failed to take any action, court documents said.

In his suit, he cited the Americans with Disabilities Act, claiming that Discover does not provide "reasonable accommodations" for blind consumers to use their services without running the risk of being defrauded by merchants.

In his initial complaint, Peoples did not allege that Dayle was a prostitute, saying only that she "advertises herself as an expert at providing personal, hands-on service to individual customers in private sessions at a set rate," according to court documents.

It was only during his deposition in October 2008, that he first stated that those services were prostitution, court documents said.

When asked during deposition if he ever, as a lawyer, thought twice about using a prostitute, he said, according to court documents: "It doesn't bother me because it doesn't affect my practice of law. Prostitution, I believe, is a misdemeanor. Even if convicted, it would not be a problem for the disciplinary board."

In an interview yesterday, Peoples said that many blind men "get stuck" using prostitutes because it's hard to meet women.

"If you go to a singles bar with a stick in your hand, you're not going to be attacked by women," he said. "Women aren't too interested in blind men."

He said that he had the chutzpah to bring the suit because he figured this was the only way to "make her pay."

"They figure nobody will do anything to them and people will be too embarrassed, and that's why this happens," he said.

Dayle, who bills herself as a fitness instructor, professional dancer, actor and an adjunct professor, denied being a prostitute in court documents.

When reached yesterday, she declined to comment except to say that the case was "bad publicity." She referred all questions to her attorney, William Reil, who did not return calls for comment.

Peoples said that Dayle's claims that she had provided him with Pilates lessons were "ridiculous."

"I have arthritis, diabetes and chronic fatigue syndrome," he said.

In court documents, he said that he was "barely able to walk, let alone do Pilates" and that sex is "one of the few exercises I get to do."

In his memorandum, U.S. District Judge Edmund Ludwig dismissed Peoples' claim against Discover and said that he couldn't recover his disputed charges because they were for an illegal and "prohibited transaction," which constituted a breach of the card-member agreement.

Ludwig also said in court documents that the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) did not apply in the case because it refers only to a "public accommodation."

Martin C. Bryce Jr., an attorney for Discover on the case, explained: "The use of a credit card in this instance did not fall under the ADA because the ADA applies to places and a credit card is not a place," he said.

Peoples said that he was upset that the statute had been interpreted not to include credit-card companies.

"I don't think the people who designed the ADA and put it into words expected credit-card companies not to help us," he said. "This denies the blind access to credit cards. If you can be cheated, then you can't use credit cards."

Sgt PSN

QuoteWhether it was prostitution or Pilates, a blind Delaware County lawyer is hoping for a happy ending

he should have hired a masseuse. 

Seabiscuit36

he has no case against the credit card company. 
"For all the civic slurs, for all the unsavory things said of the Philadelphia fans, also say this: They could teach loyalty to a dog. Their capacity for pain is without limit." -Bill Lyons