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All this whining about how unfair it was or how the bailiff should have talked to him, or, whatever, sounds just like the convoluted nonsense Michael Browns momma was coming up with when he got shot. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Seems like a finding of contempt would be cleaner, but either way he was asking to get his pee pee smacked. He knew he was getting arrested and he knew exactly what for. When the deputy reached for him he pulled away which made it resisting and required force was used. Pretty damn simple to understand. It’s also obvious that this deputy had tangled with him before and knew he wasn’t going peacefully. Best to take him down fast rather than end up fighting in a confined space full of bystanders. |
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As a young attorney in the mid-90’s, my law firm thought I’d be the perfect candidate to handle a breach of contract case against a SC. I’ll say this about this particular individual, while he was nuttier than a fruitcake (more on that in just a sec), he made me, my client and the judge work overtime responding to the myriad of non-sensical briefs, motions and discovery requests that he filed. He also threatened my managing partner’s wife and kids during a particularly antagonistic court hearing. To add to this SC’s nutty persona, he was also in the middle of transitioning from a man to a woman throughout both the trial court proceedings and the subsequent sham appellate court filings he engaged in. I began to rethink my career choice at that point. I still do, really, but my skill set is pretty limited nowadays. View Quote Also it sounds like you got the case because you were the new guy and nobody else wanted to touch it. Shit rolling downhill and all that. |
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Yup, whether a cop dealing with them on the road or judges/attorneys dealing with them in court, the common practice they follow is to barrage the other side with so much non sense that they hope the cop or court will just drop the issue and decide the juice is not worth the squeeze. From what we are being told the judges here often get 70 plus pages for a single motion and that after a cursory review dismiss the motion due to it containing no argument with applicable legal standing under the law. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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As a young attorney in the mid-90’s, my law firm thought I’d be the perfect candidate to handle a breach of contract case against a SC. I’ll say this about this particular individual, while he was nuttier than a fruitcake (more on that in just a sec), he made me, my client and the judge work overtime responding to the myriad of non-sensical briefs, motions and discovery requests that he filed. He also threatened my managing partner’s wife and kids during a particularly antagonistic court hearing. To add to this SC’s nutty persona, he was also in the middle of transitioning from a man to a woman throughout both the trial court proceedings and the subsequent sham appellate court filings he engaged in. I began to rethink my career choice at that point. I still do, really, but my skill set is pretty limited nowadays. A few years ago we responded to an illegal burn at the request of the sheriffs department. Our resident sovereign nut was burning a stack of tires, paint cans, copper wire, pallets, and god knows what else in his backyard in a densely populated residential area. The pile was the size of a small house and it was a humid day with no wind so the toxic black smoke choked out the whole neighborhood. Residents were on their porches with wet towels over their faces trying to breath. Of course Mr SC thought it was his god given right to turn his neighborhood into Chernobyl and did his best to try and stop us from extinguishing the fire. He ended up scuffling with deputies and got tazed and arrested for his trouble. The EPA was notified as well and he ended up losing his property over the stunt but that’s another discussion. Later on he filled FOIA requests and got the identity of everyone present. He field liens and civil suits on everyone, everyone. Since I was the OIC on that run one day I came home and found a phone book sized stack of paperwork on my porch from some made up court where I had been judged guilty of whatever offense he accused me of and was ordered to pay $250,000 in restitution in the form of gold and silver coin. that one I tossed onto my burn pile but the nut must have spent $100 on ink and paper to print that pile of crazy. No idea how he got my address. All of his liens and civil suits were dismissed of course but it was still a PITA to deal with. That was how I first learned of sovereign citizens. If it were up to me upon identifying them they would be taken into custody and deported to a raft anchored somewhere in international waters. |
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Good. All those sc are nuttier than squirrel shit they should all be sent to their own special island.
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70 pages is nothing. A few years ago we responded to an illegal burn at the request of the sheriffs department. Our resident sovereign nut was burning a stack of tires, paint cans, copper wire, pallets, and god knows what else in his backyard in a densely populated residential area. The pile was the size of a small house and it was a humid day with no wind so the toxic black smoke choked out the whole neighborhood. Residents were on their porches with wet towels over their faces trying to breath. Of course Mr SC thought it was his god given right to turn his neighborhood into Chernobyl and did his best to try and stop us from extinguishing the fire. He ended up scuffling with deputies and got tazed and arrested for his trouble. The EPA was notified as well and he ended up losing his property over the stunt but that’s another discussion. Later on he filled FOIA requests and got the identity of everyone present. He field liens and civil suits on everyone, everyone. Since I was the OIC on that run one day I came home and found a phone book sized stack of paperwork on my porch from some made up court where I had been judged guilty of whatever offense he accused me of and was ordered to pay $250,000 in restitution in the form of gold and silver coin. that one I tossed onto my burn pile but the nut must have spent $100 on ink and paper to print that pile of crazy. No idea how he got my address. All of his liens and civil suits were dismissed of course but it was still a PITA to deal with. That was how I first learned of sovereign citizens. If it were up to me upon identifying them they would be taken into custody and deported to a raft anchored somewhere in international waters. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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As a young attorney in the mid-90’s, my law firm thought I’d be the perfect candidate to handle a breach of contract case against a SC. I’ll say this about this particular individual, while he was nuttier than a fruitcake (more on that in just a sec), he made me, my client and the judge work overtime responding to the myriad of non-sensical briefs, motions and discovery requests that he filed. He also threatened my managing partner’s wife and kids during a particularly antagonistic court hearing. To add to this SC’s nutty persona, he was also in the middle of transitioning from a man to a woman throughout both the trial court proceedings and the subsequent sham appellate court filings he engaged in. I began to rethink my career choice at that point. I still do, really, but my skill set is pretty limited nowadays. A few years ago we responded to an illegal burn at the request of the sheriffs department. Our resident sovereign nut was burning a stack of tires, paint cans, copper wire, pallets, and god knows what else in his backyard in a densely populated residential area. The pile was the size of a small house and it was a humid day with no wind so the toxic black smoke choked out the whole neighborhood. Residents were on their porches with wet towels over their faces trying to breath. Of course Mr SC thought it was his god given right to turn his neighborhood into Chernobyl and did his best to try and stop us from extinguishing the fire. He ended up scuffling with deputies and got tazed and arrested for his trouble. The EPA was notified as well and he ended up losing his property over the stunt but that’s another discussion. Later on he filled FOIA requests and got the identity of everyone present. He field liens and civil suits on everyone, everyone. Since I was the OIC on that run one day I came home and found a phone book sized stack of paperwork on my porch from some made up court where I had been judged guilty of whatever offense he accused me of and was ordered to pay $250,000 in restitution in the form of gold and silver coin. that one I tossed onto my burn pile but the nut must have spent $100 on ink and paper to print that pile of crazy. No idea how he got my address. All of his liens and civil suits were dismissed of course but it was still a PITA to deal with. That was how I first learned of sovereign citizens. If it were up to me upon identifying them they would be taken into custody and deported to a raft anchored somewhere in international waters. |
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As a young attorney in the mid-90’s, my law firm thought I’d be the perfect candidate to handle a breach of contract case against a SC. I’ll say this about this particular individual, while he was nuttier than a fruitcake (more on that in just a sec), he made me, my client and the judge work overtime responding to the myriad of non-sensical briefs, motions and discovery requests that he filed. He also threatened my managing partner’s wife and kids during a particularly antagonistic court hearing. To add to this SC’s nutty persona, he was also in the middle of transitioning from a man to a woman throughout both the trial court proceedings and the subsequent sham appellate court filings he engaged in. I began to rethink my career choice at that point. I still do, really, but my skill set is pretty limited nowadays. A few years ago we responded to an illegal burn at the request of the sheriffs department. Our resident sovereign nut was burning a stack of tires, paint cans, copper wire, pallets, and god knows what else in his backyard in a densely populated residential area. The pile was the size of a small house and it was a humid day with no wind so the toxic black smoke choked out the whole neighborhood. Residents were on their porches with wet towels over their faces trying to breath. Of course Mr SC thought it was his god given right to turn his neighborhood into Chernobyl and did his best to try and stop us from extinguishing the fire. He ended up scuffling with deputies and got tazed and arrested for his trouble. The EPA was notified as well and he ended up losing his property over the stunt but that’s another discussion. Later on he filled FOIA requests and got the identity of everyone present. He field liens and civil suits on everyone, everyone. Since I was the OIC on that run one day I came home and found a phone book sized stack of paperwork on my porch from some made up court where I had been judged guilty of whatever offense he accused me of and was ordered to pay $250,000 in restitution in the form of gold and silver coin. that one I tossed onto my burn pile but the nut must have spent $100 on ink and paper to print that pile of crazy. No idea how he got my address. All of his liens and civil suits were dismissed of course but it was still a PITA to deal with. That was how I first learned of sovereign citizens. If it were up to me upon identifying them they would be taken into custody and deported to a raft anchored somewhere in international waters. The backstory was that the guy had been burning copper wire in his yard for sometime and the neighbors complained. The big rubber bonfire was his passive aggressive way of responding to them. He’d been rounding up tires and other junk to burn for weeks and deliberately picked a bad day to burn just to spite everyone on the block. It earned him a massive fine and clean up bill from EPA that he of course couldn’t pay so his house and other assets were liquidated to make restitution much to his neighbors delight. |
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The sad thing is there are more than a few here that think that sort of behavior is acceptable. It's why we can't have nice things or lax laws. The backstory was that the guy had been burning copper wire in his yard for sometime and the neighbors complained. The big rubber bonfire was his passive aggressive way of responding to them. He'd been rounding up tires and other junk to burn for weeks and deliberately picked a bad day to burn just to spite everyone on the block. It earned him a massive fine and clean up bill from EPA that he of course couldn't pay so his house and other assets were liquidated to make restitution much to his neighbors delight. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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As a young attorney in the mid-90's, my law firm thought I'd be the perfect candidate to handle a breach of contract case against a SC. I'll say this about this particular individual, while he was nuttier than a fruitcake (more on that in just a sec), he made me, my client and the judge work overtime responding to the myriad of non-sensical briefs, motions and discovery requests that he filed. He also threatened my managing partner's wife and kids during a particularly antagonistic court hearing. To add to this SC's nutty persona, he was also in the middle of transitioning from a man to a woman throughout both the trial court proceedings and the subsequent sham appellate court filings he engaged in. I began to rethink my career choice at that point. I still do, really, but my skill set is pretty limited nowadays. A few years ago we responded to an illegal burn at the request of the sheriffs department. Our resident sovereign nut was burning a stack of tires, paint cans, copper wire, pallets, and god knows what else in his backyard in a densely populated residential area. The pile was the size of a small house and it was a humid day with no wind so the toxic black smoke choked out the whole neighborhood. Residents were on their porches with wet towels over their faces trying to breath. Of course Mr SC thought it was his god given right to turn his neighborhood into Chernobyl and did his best to try and stop us from extinguishing the fire. He ended up scuffling with deputies and got tazed and arrested for his trouble. The EPA was notified as well and he ended up losing his property over the stunt but that's another discussion. Later on he filled FOIA requests and got the identity of everyone present. He field liens and civil suits on everyone, everyone. Since I was the OIC on that run one day I came home and found a phone book sized stack of paperwork on my porch from some made up court where I had been judged guilty of whatever offense he accused me of and was ordered to pay $250,000 in restitution in the form of gold and silver coin. that one I tossed onto my burn pile but the nut must have spent $100 on ink and paper to print that pile of crazy. No idea how he got my address. All of his liens and civil suits were dismissed of course but it was still a PITA to deal with. That was how I first learned of sovereign citizens. If it were up to me upon identifying them they would be taken into custody and deported to a raft anchored somewhere in international waters. The backstory was that the guy had been burning copper wire in his yard for sometime and the neighbors complained. The big rubber bonfire was his passive aggressive way of responding to them. He'd been rounding up tires and other junk to burn for weeks and deliberately picked a bad day to burn just to spite everyone on the block. It earned him a massive fine and clean up bill from EPA that he of course couldn't pay so his house and other assets were liquidated to make restitution much to his neighbors delight. |
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Just a wild guess that this wasn't his first rodeo in that court....
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Who the hell burns copper wire? Other than Mr. Sovereign Citizen that is. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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As a young attorney in the mid-90's, my law firm thought I'd be the perfect candidate to handle a breach of contract case against a SC. I'll say this about this particular individual, while he was nuttier than a fruitcake (more on that in just a sec), he made me, my client and the judge work overtime responding to the myriad of non-sensical briefs, motions and discovery requests that he filed. He also threatened my managing partner's wife and kids during a particularly antagonistic court hearing. To add to this SC's nutty persona, he was also in the middle of transitioning from a man to a woman throughout both the trial court proceedings and the subsequent sham appellate court filings he engaged in. I began to rethink my career choice at that point. I still do, really, but my skill set is pretty limited nowadays. A few years ago we responded to an illegal burn at the request of the sheriffs department. Our resident sovereign nut was burning a stack of tires, paint cans, copper wire, pallets, and god knows what else in his backyard in a densely populated residential area. The pile was the size of a small house and it was a humid day with no wind so the toxic black smoke choked out the whole neighborhood. Residents were on their porches with wet towels over their faces trying to breath. Of course Mr SC thought it was his god given right to turn his neighborhood into Chernobyl and did his best to try and stop us from extinguishing the fire. He ended up scuffling with deputies and got tazed and arrested for his trouble. The EPA was notified as well and he ended up losing his property over the stunt but that's another discussion. Later on he filled FOIA requests and got the identity of everyone present. He field liens and civil suits on everyone, everyone. Since I was the OIC on that run one day I came home and found a phone book sized stack of paperwork on my porch from some made up court where I had been judged guilty of whatever offense he accused me of and was ordered to pay $250,000 in restitution in the form of gold and silver coin. that one I tossed onto my burn pile but the nut must have spent $100 on ink and paper to print that pile of crazy. No idea how he got my address. All of his liens and civil suits were dismissed of course but it was still a PITA to deal with. That was how I first learned of sovereign citizens. If it were up to me upon identifying them they would be taken into custody and deported to a raft anchored somewhere in international waters. The backstory was that the guy had been burning copper wire in his yard for sometime and the neighbors complained. The big rubber bonfire was his passive aggressive way of responding to them. He'd been rounding up tires and other junk to burn for weeks and deliberately picked a bad day to burn just to spite everyone on the block. It earned him a massive fine and clean up bill from EPA that he of course couldn't pay so his house and other assets were liquidated to make restitution much to his neighbors delight. |
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They won't take burned wire around here. Too many thieves burning stolen wire for scrap. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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You get more money for it at the scrap yard if the coating is off when you turn it in. Bare wire gets you more money. We just used to take what we collected, sit and strip the wire after work, and then turn it in & split the money equally with all the people who collected and helped strip it. |
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Who the hell burns copper wire? Other than Mr. Sovereign Citizen that is. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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As a young attorney in the mid-90's, my law firm thought I'd be the perfect candidate to handle a breach of contract case against a SC. I'll say this about this particular individual, while he was nuttier than a fruitcake (more on that in just a sec), he made me, my client and the judge work overtime responding to the myriad of non-sensical briefs, motions and discovery requests that he filed. He also threatened my managing partner's wife and kids during a particularly antagonistic court hearing. To add to this SC's nutty persona, he was also in the middle of transitioning from a man to a woman throughout both the trial court proceedings and the subsequent sham appellate court filings he engaged in. I began to rethink my career choice at that point. I still do, really, but my skill set is pretty limited nowadays. A few years ago we responded to an illegal burn at the request of the sheriffs department. Our resident sovereign nut was burning a stack of tires, paint cans, copper wire, pallets, and god knows what else in his backyard in a densely populated residential area. The pile was the size of a small house and it was a humid day with no wind so the toxic black smoke choked out the whole neighborhood. Residents were on their porches with wet towels over their faces trying to breath. Of course Mr SC thought it was his god given right to turn his neighborhood into Chernobyl and did his best to try and stop us from extinguishing the fire. He ended up scuffling with deputies and got tazed and arrested for his trouble. The EPA was notified as well and he ended up losing his property over the stunt but that's another discussion. Later on he filled FOIA requests and got the identity of everyone present. He field liens and civil suits on everyone, everyone. Since I was the OIC on that run one day I came home and found a phone book sized stack of paperwork on my porch from some made up court where I had been judged guilty of whatever offense he accused me of and was ordered to pay $250,000 in restitution in the form of gold and silver coin. that one I tossed onto my burn pile but the nut must have spent $100 on ink and paper to print that pile of crazy. No idea how he got my address. All of his liens and civil suits were dismissed of course but it was still a PITA to deal with. That was how I first learned of sovereign citizens. If it were up to me upon identifying them they would be taken into custody and deported to a raft anchored somewhere in international waters. The backstory was that the guy had been burning copper wire in his yard for sometime and the neighbors complained. The big rubber bonfire was his passive aggressive way of responding to them. He'd been rounding up tires and other junk to burn for weeks and deliberately picked a bad day to burn just to spite everyone on the block. It earned him a massive fine and clean up bill from EPA that he of course couldn't pay so his house and other assets were liquidated to make restitution much to his neighbors delight. |
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They won't take burned wire around here. Too many thieves burning stolen wire for scrap. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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You get more money for it at the scrap yard if the coating is off when you turn it in. Bare wire gets you more money. Copper thieves and sovereigns should be forced to fight to the death in gladiator matches for public amusement. |
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Quoted: You'd thinks so but somebody is still buying AC coils or crack heads wouldn't keep stealing them. Lots of unscrupulous scrap dealers out there. A year or two ago a local school had every coil ripped out of their AC units and it cost tax payers over $100k to repair. Copper thieves and sovereigns should be forced to fight to the death in gladiator matches for public amusement. View Quote |
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Scrappers burn it to remove the insulation. Scrap yards pay more for bare copper. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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As a young attorney in the mid-90's, my law firm thought I'd be the perfect candidate to handle a breach of contract case against a SC. I'll say this about this particular individual, while he was nuttier than a fruitcake (more on that in just a sec), he made me, my client and the judge work overtime responding to the myriad of non-sensical briefs, motions and discovery requests that he filed. He also threatened my managing partner's wife and kids during a particularly antagonistic court hearing. To add to this SC's nutty persona, he was also in the middle of transitioning from a man to a woman throughout both the trial court proceedings and the subsequent sham appellate court filings he engaged in. I began to rethink my career choice at that point. I still do, really, but my skill set is pretty limited nowadays. A few years ago we responded to an illegal burn at the request of the sheriffs department. Our resident sovereign nut was burning a stack of tires, paint cans, copper wire, pallets, and god knows what else in his backyard in a densely populated residential area. The pile was the size of a small house and it was a humid day with no wind so the toxic black smoke choked out the whole neighborhood. Residents were on their porches with wet towels over their faces trying to breath. Of course Mr SC thought it was his god given right to turn his neighborhood into Chernobyl and did his best to try and stop us from extinguishing the fire. He ended up scuffling with deputies and got tazed and arrested for his trouble. The EPA was notified as well and he ended up losing his property over the stunt but that's another discussion. Later on he filled FOIA requests and got the identity of everyone present. He field liens and civil suits on everyone, everyone. Since I was the OIC on that run one day I came home and found a phone book sized stack of paperwork on my porch from some made up court where I had been judged guilty of whatever offense he accused me of and was ordered to pay $250,000 in restitution in the form of gold and silver coin. that one I tossed onto my burn pile but the nut must have spent $100 on ink and paper to print that pile of crazy. No idea how he got my address. All of his liens and civil suits were dismissed of course but it was still a PITA to deal with. That was how I first learned of sovereign citizens. If it were up to me upon identifying them they would be taken into custody and deported to a raft anchored somewhere in international waters. The backstory was that the guy had been burning copper wire in his yard for sometime and the neighbors complained. The big rubber bonfire was his passive aggressive way of responding to them. He'd been rounding up tires and other junk to burn for weeks and deliberately picked a bad day to burn just to spite everyone on the block. It earned him a massive fine and clean up bill from EPA that he of course couldn't pay so his house and other assets were liquidated to make restitution much to his neighbors delight. Kharn |
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Scrap yards around here won't take burned copper, IIRC. Kharn View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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As a young attorney in the mid-90's, my law firm thought I'd be the perfect candidate to handle a breach of contract case against a SC. I'll say this about this particular individual, while he was nuttier than a fruitcake (more on that in just a sec), he made me, my client and the judge work overtime responding to the myriad of non-sensical briefs, motions and discovery requests that he filed. He also threatened my managing partner's wife and kids during a particularly antagonistic court hearing. To add to this SC's nutty persona, he was also in the middle of transitioning from a man to a woman throughout both the trial court proceedings and the subsequent sham appellate court filings he engaged in. I began to rethink my career choice at that point. I still do, really, but my skill set is pretty limited nowadays. A few years ago we responded to an illegal burn at the request of the sheriffs department. Our resident sovereign nut was burning a stack of tires, paint cans, copper wire, pallets, and god knows what else in his backyard in a densely populated residential area. The pile was the size of a small house and it was a humid day with no wind so the toxic black smoke choked out the whole neighborhood. Residents were on their porches with wet towels over their faces trying to breath. Of course Mr SC thought it was his god given right to turn his neighborhood into Chernobyl and did his best to try and stop us from extinguishing the fire. He ended up scuffling with deputies and got tazed and arrested for his trouble. The EPA was notified as well and he ended up losing his property over the stunt but that's another discussion. Later on he filled FOIA requests and got the identity of everyone present. He field liens and civil suits on everyone, everyone. Since I was the OIC on that run one day I came home and found a phone book sized stack of paperwork on my porch from some made up court where I had been judged guilty of whatever offense he accused me of and was ordered to pay $250,000 in restitution in the form of gold and silver coin. that one I tossed onto my burn pile but the nut must have spent $100 on ink and paper to print that pile of crazy. No idea how he got my address. All of his liens and civil suits were dismissed of course but it was still a PITA to deal with. That was how I first learned of sovereign citizens. If it were up to me upon identifying them they would be taken into custody and deported to a raft anchored somewhere in international waters. The backstory was that the guy had been burning copper wire in his yard for sometime and the neighbors complained. The big rubber bonfire was his passive aggressive way of responding to them. He'd been rounding up tires and other junk to burn for weeks and deliberately picked a bad day to burn just to spite everyone on the block. It earned him a massive fine and clean up bill from EPA that he of course couldn't pay so his house and other assets were liquidated to make restitution much to his neighbors delight. Kharn it did a pretty good job of slowing metal thefts. Jay |
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Quoted: You’d thinks so but somebody is still buying AC coils or crack heads wouldn’t keep stealing them. Lots of unscrupulous scrap dealers out there. A year or two ago a local school had every coil ripped out of their AC units and it cost tax payers over $100k to repair. Copper thieves and sovereigns should be forced to fight to the death in gladiator matches for public amusement. View Quote You and I really need to get together have drinks some time. |
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Quoted: Scrappers burn it to remove the insulation. Scrap yards pay more for bare copper. View Quote I took some computer monitors to a scrapper. I guess there's trace amounts of precious metals in them? I realized the next day my password for my arfcom account was written on the top of a monitor bezel. Oops |
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@Fidel_Cashflow You and I really need to get together have drinks some time. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: You’d thinks so but somebody is still buying AC coils or crack heads wouldn’t keep stealing them. Lots of unscrupulous scrap dealers out there. A year or two ago a local school had every coil ripped out of their AC units and it cost tax payers over $100k to repair. Copper thieves and sovereigns should be forced to fight to the death in gladiator matches for public amusement. You and I really need to get together have drinks some time. |
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See, who says you never learn anything on Arfcom. I never heard of burning it off before. Makes sense, it'd be way faster than stripping it. I took some computer monitors to a scrapper. I guess there's trace amounts of precious metals in them? I realized the next day my password for my arfcom account was written on the top of a monitor bezel. Oops View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: Scrappers burn it to remove the insulation. Scrap yards pay more for bare copper. I took some computer monitors to a scrapper. I guess there's trace amounts of precious metals in them? I realized the next day my password for my arfcom account was written on the top of a monitor bezel. Oops Some of the circuitry in electronics contains platinum, gold and silver. It’s a fairly minuscule amount and the recovery process is tedious so it’s generally not with the headache unless you have a dedicated setup to recover it. |
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I can generally get one night a week free. First round at Fast Eddies is on me. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: You’d thinks so but somebody is still buying AC coils or crack heads wouldn’t keep stealing them. Lots of unscrupulous scrap dealers out there. A year or two ago a local school had every coil ripped out of their AC units and it cost tax payers over $100k to repair. Copper thieves and sovereigns should be forced to fight to the death in gladiator matches for public amusement. You and I really need to get together have drinks some time. |
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