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This is all quite silly. But I'm partially to blame: didn't
explicitly state that a local relative of Mr. X will get
death cert. and distribute copies to all involved parties.
On Sun, 17 Feb 2008 07:34:32 -0500, <josh@phred.org> wrote:
>Mr X wants
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Hi,
xmas eve 3 cops at my house to serve me papers.
I wasn't there
xmas day 1 cop. I walk out of my house, into front
yard, and talk to officer.
he says he'll cite and release me for a $2000 failure
to show proof of community service warrant.
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Please read the following and tell me if these two can be disbarred from
practicing law.
In the district court of Leavenworth County, Kansas a defendant who is a
former police officer was charged with a felony of taking a police radio
from the la
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In article <4eagr3lgt01dvr25enp1tpaeocf4neoogr@4ax.com>,
bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi) wrote:
> >
> >While he might be able to do a lot of activities being color blind
> >(although I would be unwilling to hire him to do my electrical
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"Stuart Bronstein" <spamtrap@lexregia.com> wrote in message
news:pdagr3l3t6ieed4334f2139av6djenb3uu@4ax.com...
> Do you really think that, if such an odd case really existed, there'd
> be no indication of it on the internet at all? I found none - can
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My dad actually physically lives in New York City. BUT: _every_ "address"
for him is to my place, in Virginia. [e.g., his bank accounts are here,
all his bills and such are sent here, all of his mail comes here, his assets are
registered at my addres
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If one draws up trusts (I'm thinking of an AB trust, for example) in one US
state, then moves to another state, is the trust still valid?
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