TAMPA, Fla. - One of the passengers inside a speeding vehicle that crashed in a Seffner dealership parking lot has since passed away.
Florida Highway Patrol troopers said 24-year-old Jennifer Carvajal was speeding on Interstate 4 near Mango Road on Sunday morning. She was already on probation for a previous DUI manslaughter conviction.
MADD: If we could just talk to these young people and tell them the choices they make could influence their futures in a negative manner, perhaps they would not decide to drink and drive." Or, Exterminate all the brutes. Kill somebody while you're drunk, you are going away for-ever. I was on a jury that gave a 50-something man life for his 6th or 7th DWI charge, in which he killed another man. He was on probation for a DWI charge. Some things, "education" will not fix.
Lock her up and lose that key. 'Cause she'll do it again! I know this shit because I watch Judge Judy. And if she was driving without insurance, Judy'll blow a gasket!
I know of just 1 person who accumulated multiple DUI convictions and accidents, then straightened out. Let's call him "SGT Connected" (USAF), because it turned out his brother-in-law was a Congressman. When I departed Cannon AFB, he was serving 6 months in the county jail for a drunken crash while his license was suspended for DUI's; that sort of thing was cause for a BCD, so I figured it unlikely I'd ever see him again, and certainly not in uniform. When I reported back in 3 years later, it turned out the squadron was having a party - and to my surprise, there was SGT Connected, still in uniform, and standing by the Kool-Aid where he'd never been seen before! I learned his BCD paperwork had been left unfiled until the county was through with them, and then it was too late, at least for a guy who was Connected. So he stayed in the service and the squadron. BUT the bigger surprise was that some part of this - or whatever his brother-in-law told him while saving his career - finally made a sufficient impression that he stayed on the wagon, at least until he completed his 20 years and could draw retirement.
MADD: If we could just talk to these young people and tell them the choices they make could influence their futures in a negative manner, perhaps they would not decide to drink and drive."
ReplyDeleteOr, Exterminate all the brutes.
Kill somebody while you're drunk, you are going away for-ever.
I was on a jury that gave a 50-something man life for his 6th or 7th DWI charge, in which he killed another man. He was on probation for a DWI charge. Some things, "education" will not fix.
Wonder if she is an illegal.
ReplyDeleteJails full, youth dead which is more important.
ReplyDeleteLock her up and lose that key. 'Cause she'll do it again!
ReplyDeleteI know this shit because I watch Judge Judy. And if she was driving without insurance, Judy'll blow a gasket!
Probation.
ReplyDeleteFor killing folks.
Does 'probation' indicate a jail term of less than one year?
In TheOldenDays, killing usually involved a penitentiary.
Then, if you stop your killing for a while, you might get parole.
In the older days, killing involved a noose.
Nobody could afford to house/feed a killer for years/decades...
I know of just 1 person who accumulated multiple DUI convictions and accidents, then straightened out. Let's call him "SGT Connected" (USAF), because it turned out his brother-in-law was a Congressman. When I departed Cannon AFB, he was serving 6 months in the county jail for a drunken crash while his license was suspended for DUI's; that sort of thing was cause for a BCD, so I figured it unlikely I'd ever see him again, and certainly not in uniform. When I reported back in 3 years later, it turned out the squadron was having a party - and to my surprise, there was SGT Connected, still in uniform, and standing by the Kool-Aid where he'd never been seen before! I learned his BCD paperwork had been left unfiled until the county was through with them, and then it was too late, at least for a guy who was Connected. So he stayed in the service and the squadron. BUT the bigger surprise was that some part of this - or whatever his brother-in-law told him while saving his career - finally made a sufficient impression that he stayed on the wagon, at least until he completed his 20 years and could draw retirement.
ReplyDelete