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Friday, April 30, 2021

That's some Dukes of Hazzard shit right there

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.
-Denise


6 comments:

  1. 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.

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  2. Wonder if she is an illegal.

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  3. Jails full, youth dead which is more important.

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  4. 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!

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  5. Probation.
    For 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...

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  6. 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.

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