Not unless she provided support and/or her "professional" opinion about the viability of the claims for which the settlement was made. That may not be a "duty" and/or "responsibility" of a prosecutor in Maryland (to give legal opinions regarding civil litigation). If it is not then her actions may be outside the scope of her qualified immunity as a prosecutor, which means she could be held personally liable. The question is: Does she have money to pay a judgment. Originally Posted by LexusLoverWhat happens to attorneys who dont pay judgments?
What happens to attorneys who dont pay judgments? Originally Posted by gnadflyIn Maryland, I don't know.
Is nobody else curious about how someone neck breaks and dies but its nobody's fault? Did he break his own neck? Was it broken before the arrest but he could still function normally? Inquiring minds want to know. Originally Posted by clitlicker7Let's say you are a 55 year old, 6'4" 250 pound Italian former drill Sergeant with a disabling head injury, and you are walking down to your favorite bar to get drunk. If you trip and fall onto an old lady and squash her and she can't breathe, and you can't get up so she suffocates, is anyone really at fault?
Let's say you are a 55 year old, 6'4" 250 pound Italian former drill Sergeant with a disabling head injury, and you are walking down to your favorite bar to get drunk. If you trip and fall onto an old lady and squash her and she can't breathe, and you can't get up so she suffocates, is anyone really at fault? Originally Posted by DSKThat is profound!
That is profound!The alcohol would preserve him, so I'd go with the squirrels.
If a 55 year old, 6'4" 250 pound Italian former Drill Sergeant with a disabling head injury falls down in the forest And couldn't get up......would wild squirrels eat him or would he just turn into compost? Originally Posted by TheDaliLama
Is nobody else curious about how someone neck breaks and dies but its nobody's fault? Did he break his own neck? Was it broken before the arrest but he could still function normally? Inquiring minds want to know. Originally Posted by clitlicker7
That is profound!Squirrels don't eat Italian. BP whores do though.....according to the Italian.
If a 55 year old, 6'4" 250 pound Italian former Drill Sergeant with a disabling head injury falls down in the forest And couldn't get up......would wild squirrels eat him or would he just turn into compost? Originally Posted by TheDaliLama
Not unless she provided support and/or her "professional" opinion about the viability of the claims for which the settlement was made. That may not be a "duty" and/or "responsibility" of a prosecutor in Maryland (to give legal opinions regarding civil litigation). If it is not then her actions may be outside the scope of her qualified immunity as a prosecutor, which means she could be held personally liable. The question is: Does she have money to pay a judgment. Originally Posted by LexusLover
Since the settlement was approved in Sept. 2015 and the first trial was in Dec. 2015, how could a person with no personal involvement be liable for a settlement made by the city.and approved by the city's spending panel? Originally Posted by Munchmasterman
That is profound!Squirrels aren't known for eating shit, so I'd say he'd "compost " into a toxic spot on the forest floor where nothing else would ever grow.
If a 55 year old, 6'4" 250 pound Italian former Drill Sergeant with a disabling head injury falls down in the forest And couldn't get up......would wild squirrels eat him or would he just turn into compost? Originally Posted by TheDaliLama