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I'm not hungover, but if I were, this would be the breakfast. Using up stuff in my fridge. Chili, hash brown patty, eggs and cheese. It looks like a belly ache on a plate because it was.

Oh and drinking orange juice.

View attachment 332594

I could use that right now, slight hangover, can't remember when I've slept in this late.
More digging later after the plows make more passes, coffee for the moment.:rockin:
 
I'd planned on going to the gym between batches today. Not happening apparently. I was told they were closing early Friday but should reopen Saturday (which I didn't believe). Not only did they not reopen Saturday, closed the entire weekend. Not surprising, but frustrating. Not enough room in here to get a decent workout, but I'll have to find a way to improvise. Ugh.

Coffee.

push ups, bruva. incline if you can. and change the position of your hands between reps.
 
Pitched yeast on the smokebeer, bout to keg the DIPA in a bit here. Maybe some light sledding in a minute, then I'll start cooking/drinking.
 
push ups, bruva. incline if you can. and change the position of your hands between reps.

Pushups I can do no problem. Can probably knock out some pullups in the stairway. I can figure some stuff out. It's the bouncing around stuff that'll be the problem. Tuck jumps and burpees and the like. And nothing with substantial weight either.

I could also just call it a rest weekend and not worry about it.
 
I've been in the back of a few cruisers, but never arrested. been detained and questioned a lot though. I really liked the cars in Henderson & Las Vegas. the back seat was molded to fit your arms while handcuffed and were very comfortable.


Apparently the Weatherford PD has some kind of catch and release policy for me, because I was caught and released at least five times in high school, a coupe times with just enough to get a misdemeanor, but at least a couple of other times it would have been felony intent to distribute, plus a borderline arson, at minimum vandalism.
 
I've been in the back of a few cruisers, but never arrested. been detained and questioned a lot though. I really liked the cars in Henderson & Las Vegas. the back seat was molded to fit your arms while handcuffed and were very comfortable.


Had this last night Billy, I really enjoyed it brother, thanks for sharing
View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1453655143.890091.jpg
By the way? When were you out in Vegas? I was out there from '92-'94. Can't say I miss it much now but I sure enjoyed it when I was there.

Having this now
View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1453655267.775313.jpg
 
I've been in the back of a few cruisers, but never arrested. been detained and questioned a lot though. I really liked the cars in Henderson & Las Vegas. the back seat was molded to fit your arms while handcuffed and were very comfortable.

Where's the line between arrest and detain? I've never been clear. Cuffed? In the back of a squad car? Taken to the station/holding cell? Charged? Obviously if you're put in a holding cell and charged, that's arrest. Not sure on the others. I've been cuffed in the back of a squad car a number of times. Held at the station for a couple hours twice. But never charged. I've had friends spend a weekend in a holding cell to be released without charges (and sometimes charges dropped).

Also every car I've been in the back of has had the arm cutouts. Don't know if I'd go with "comfortable" but it's better than the alternative.

Apparently the Weatherford PD has some kind of catch and release policy for me, because I was caught and released at least five times in high school, a coupe times with just enough to get a misdemeanor, but at least a couple of other times it would have been felony intent to distribute, plus a borderline arson, at minimum vandalism.

Hopefully in high school it all would have been charged as a minor anyway. My wife got lucky with that. A number of felony convictions that no longer show up on her record.
 
Flint Michigan is on my bucket
List of places to visit, right after Chicago, Detroit, Baltimore, east St. Louis, I work in new haven so I can cross that one off the list....[emoji51]


I've got an account I work with in Flint that I visit once or twice a year. It's never seemed all that bad, however, I've only gone straight to my hotel, and 5-10 min commute to the account, then outa town. The first time I visited, my account contact was very serious and told me "ONLY stay at one of these two hotels" - and gave me specific addresses, with instructions to let her know to call her if they were both booked. Which prompted me to google Flint, and apparently a pretty high murder rate...

Also have a couple accounts in St. Joseph. I do prefer that side of the state.
 
Had this last night Billy, I really enjoyed it brother, thanks for sharing
View attachment 332646
By the way? When were you out in Vegas? I was out there from '92-'94. Can't say I miss it much now but I sure enjoyed it when I was there.

Having this now
View attachment 332648
glad you liked it! I was in Vegas '99-'01. I moved there right after the Dan/Spit murders. it was chaotic and rough in the punk & skin scenes.

Where's the line between arrest and detain? I've never been clear. Cuffed? In the back of a squad car? Taken to the station/holding cell? Charged? Obviously if you're put in a holding cell and charged, that's arrest. Not sure on the others. I've been cuffed in the back of a squad car a number of times. Held at the station for a couple hours twice. But never charged. I've had friends spend a weekend in a holding cell to be released without charges (and sometimes charges dropped).

Also every car I've been in the back of has had the arm cutouts. Don't know if I'd go with "comfortable" but it's better than the alternative.



Hopefully in high school it all would have been charged as a minor anyway. My wife got lucky with that. A number of felony convictions that no longer show up on her record.
I believe it's jail & charged. and after being cuffed in the back with normal seats, the cutouts are comfortable to me. hahahaa!!!
 
I believe it's jail & charged. and after being cuffed in the back with normal seats, the cutouts are comfortable to me. hahahaa!!!

Honestly I think it's intentionally a gray area and the courts could interpret it either way. If you're not free to leave, it's detention. If you're not only not free to leave but forcibly taken into custody, it's arrest, is what it sounds like. That could include being cuffed in the back of a car. I don't know.

I hate grey areas.
 
Honestly I think it's intentionally a gray area and the courts could interpret it either way. If you're not free to leave, it's detention. If you're not only not free to leave but forcibly taken into custody, it's arrest, is what it sounds like. That could include being cuffed in the back of a car. I don't know.

I hate grey areas.

no joke! it seems like an interpretive loophole for the judge to decide upon looking at you.
 
Let me help all the Billy badasses in here ;)

Detained requires a lower burden of proof than an arrest (reasonable suspicious vs probable cause). A traffic stop is an example of a detention, in which the officer has a reasonable suspicion that a crime (or infraction) will, has been, or is about to be committed. This detention allows the officer to investigate his/her reasonable suspicion to see if it turns into probable cause or is nothing.

In a detention, you are not free to leave but you are not under arrest. In a detention, you can (and probably will) be restrained temporarily (for everyone's safety) until they investigate information provided by yourself and others and determine you do not pose an extreme risk by being unrestrained.

The easiest way to remember this:

A detention is made when an officer has a reasonable suspicion that you are about to, in the process of, or recently committed a crime.

An arrest is made when an officer believes a crime was committed and you probably did it.


Don't quote me, I'm not a lawyer and have never played one on TV. Just some guy on the internet.
 
Let me help all the Billy badasses in here ;)

Detained requires a lower burden of proof than an arrest (reasonable suspicious vs probable cause). A traffic stop is an example of a detention, in which the officer has a reasonable suspicion that a crime (or infraction) will, has been, or is about to be committed. This detention allows the officer to investigate his/her reasonable suspicion to see if it turns into probable cause or is nothing.

In a detention, you are not free to leave but you are not under arrest. In a detention, you can (and probably will) be restrained temporarily (for everyone's safety) until they investigate information provided by yourself and others and determine you do not pose an extreme risk by being unrestrained.

The easiest way to remember this:

A detention is made when an officer has a reasonable suspicion that you are about to, in the process of, or recently committed a crime.

An arrest is made when an officer believes a crime was committed and you probably did it.


Don't quote me, I'm not a lawyer and have never played one on TV. Just some guy on the internet.

And the line between reasonable suspicion and probable cause is also a gray area that often needs to be decided by a judge.
 
Let me help all the Billy badasses in here ;)

Detained requires a lower burden of proof than an arrest (reasonable suspicious vs probable cause). A traffic stop is an example of a detention, in which the officer has a reasonable suspicion that a crime (or infraction) will, has been, or is about to be committed. This detention allows the officer to investigate his/her reasonable suspicion to see if it turns into probable cause or is nothing.

In a detention, you are not free to leave but you are not under arrest. In a detention, you can (and probably will) be restrained temporarily (for everyone's safety) until they investigate information provided by yourself and others and determine you do not pose an extreme risk by being unrestrained.

The easiest way to remember this:

A detention is made when an officer has a reasonable suspicion that you are about to, in the process of, or recently committed a crime.

An arrest is made when an officer believes a crime was committed and you probably did it.


Don't quote me, I'm not a lawyer and have never played one on TV. I'm just a simple caveman lawyer .


FTFY

View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1453661507.114417.jpg not sure what this suppose to be
 
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