For feeding a police dog pizza. The poor doggy was barking, I thought he was hungry.
2006-11-12 05:36:16
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answer #1
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answered by Leo 2
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In 1999, at the age of 40, I ran a child molester over with a car, and was subsequently convicted of class C felony battery. Just prior to sentencing, I told the judge that, given the same circumstances, I would do it again.
In 2003, while on probation for that, I was falsely accused, and convicted, of impersonating an FBI agent. I was nowhere near the place, but I believe the first conviction contributed to the second one.
Prior to that battery conviction, I have never been in trouble for anything more serious than speeding.
2006-11-12 21:17:30
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes. A former friend had me arrested under false charges of Uttering Threats and had her friends purjore themselves as witnesses.
It's unbelievably easy to have someone arrested by laying false charges.
And that's why arrests don't count as a "criminal record". Only convictions count.
Needless to say I have not been convicted.
2006-11-12 13:34:29
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes. For several counts of aggravated jay walking, and for felony seat belt violatons. I served time in the big house for the tearing the warning tag off my mattress. Even the most hardened criminals gave me a wide berth. I have a tattoo of a build-a-bear on my chest. I am bad to the proverbial bone.
2006-11-12 13:34:17
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Spent a night in a cell on the night of 20th birthday after a friend and myself drunkenly tried to remove a bollard from a traffic island.
I still can't believe the police caught me after i sprinted 10 metres away from them and hid behind a parked car!
2006-11-13 07:39:21
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answer #5
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answered by greg m 3
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Yes, I believe many people have been arrested. Usually because they have broken some law.
2006-11-12 13:27:55
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, mostly for simple drug possession but what's to be expected in the United TOTALITARIAN POLICE STATES of AMERIKA -- where 4th Amenedment rights to privacy have been all but obliterated in order to ``send the right message to young people?''
USA = ``Land of the Oppressed, Home of the Subjugated."
God doesn't bless countries like this one--ones that defund education in order to build more jails and prisons for non-violent, otherwise law-abiding people..
2006-11-12 13:47:25
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answer #7
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answered by S D Modiano 5
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Yes for a domestic dispute. They have zero tolerance for that where I live and will take you in for questioning. I shoplifted too when I was 15.
2006-11-12 13:27:05
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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in my youth was arrested for GBH. much calmer now tho and by the way it was a wrongful arrest!!!!
2006-11-12 13:26:40
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answer #9
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answered by delaruedebbie 2
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nope, because I try not to do anything bad enough to get arrested.
2006-11-12 13:28:17
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answer #10
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answered by Tom B 4
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