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A family members driver license had been suspended for driving under the influence, I testified that he had changed his habits and was abstaining from alchahol and drugs, and that he would continue abstenance. Also I testified that his life had changed. The family member mislead me and others, and has now left his spouse, and I wish to withdraw or change my recomendation that his or her driver license be reinstated.

2006-06-09 16:18:04 · 4 answers · asked by Archer_007 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

I forgot to mention that a week after his wife testified in his behalf he filed for divorce and he no longer is attending church which was a diciding factor.

2006-06-09 16:56:57 · update #1

hey asshole, gummrapper half ***, the church is where the AA program is, wanna change your answer?"?????

2006-06-09 17:53:21 · update #2

Qick to judge ain't ya half mass?? Your wisdom is a mockery of the human race, do everyone a favor and listen instead of runnin your mouth, ya might get some real knowledge.

2006-06-09 18:00:53 · update #3

4 answers

can you spell p e r j u r y ?

The streets would be empty of licensed drivers if people who don't attend church or those whose marriage was not honky dorey were denied drivers licenses.

LMBO@ not attending church as the deciding factor.

You give the courts a load of premeditated and rehearsed bull and you have the nerve to condemn a man for not going to church.

Gimme a break, you liar!

PS You lied in court by pretending you had first hand knowledge, when in fact you didn't. Here you first express you had sympathy for the family member because that family member attended church. Now you you want to change your testimony to the court, and now you want us to believe church attendance had nothing to do with your decision but that you are simply selfishly ticked that he may not be attending AA counselling regularly.

It seems that you have a deep personal problem whereas you feel there is always a need to dishonorably lie to suit your agenda.

It's understandable that you have a guilty conscience.

(I'm betting and giving 10-1 odds that this family member is not direct blood line related, but through marriage.)

2006-06-09 16:23:20 · answer #1 · answered by ½«gumwrapper 5 · 0 0

that would NOT be perjury. Please,for the safety of drivers everywhere, (and maybe more importantly,those too young to drive) get this guys licence revoked. You now have new facts to work with (he is not in a stable marriage,not going to church etc..) GOOD LUCK

2006-06-10 00:21:07 · answer #2 · answered by shannon d 4 · 0 0

Most likely this person is on probation. Cunsult the probation officer (if you know who it is) or just contact your police department. They will be able to help you.

2006-06-09 23:22:54 · answer #3 · answered by Wendy 3 · 0 0

go back to court, say what happened, although it may be to late.

2006-06-09 23:22:51 · answer #4 · answered by curious115 7 · 0 0

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