Jump to content

TreSixO

Premium Member
  • Posts

    3,179
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Everything posted by TreSixO

  1. Re: NASHVILLE!!! that shits actually pretty cool
  2. ugh dude, I lost a 800$ diamond/gold/titanium bracelet bombing drunk and high as fuck on king st in Toronto. I know everyone is saying wtf were you doing bombing with a iced out bracelet on. I was drunk, and yes I got what I deserved. I didnt expect to go painting that night... also got spray back on fresh kobe bryant warm up and new white dunks. Dont paint straight in your club gear kid! I hope I made some bums night. I bought the shit like only a week before, so I could floss it in the TDot
  3. you sound like a rookie at life you = seriously, eating pussy on a 1 night stand?!? Dont they teach you kids anything in school? AND IN A FORIGEN COUNTRY? Hairy snatch? Are you sure youve done this before?
  4. passed out at like 12 drunk/pilld/dro'ed out even tho I was on guest list at the club, and some promoter who owes me over 200$ I told needed to square up his debt by this weekend called me at fuckign 11:57 but its all good, Imma see his bald ass at the pool party today after I get off work
  5. cosign I got scholiosis and lift heavy ass shit all day, so I stay half faded most the time Its a good life tho.
  6. I hope to god it was in New Haven please tell me it was
  7. fuck yeah. Im scared they would let one of those dogs on me for some bullshit and I would just have to fight it on instinct. I mean its a fucking animal and cant be reasoned with... but then you get like 10 years? Fuck
  8. HEY ARE YOU GUYS TALKING ABOUT BODYMORE IN HERE?!?
  9. lose your money and part of your soul at the MGM Grand Casino
  10. FRI-work.pills. parlet. burn. club. nap SAT-work. dj pool party. steak& Shrimp. Impregnate random (?) skank disrespectfully, wipe me down SUN- shoulderschestpantsshoes, sleep, smoke, simpsons, pizza/calzone
  11. dusty mc dust hit me up mane or pick up ur fone lets git er done!
  12. I went from smoking 2 packs of newports to like 2 cigs a day. On the weekend more, weekdays sometimes none. I guess Im a social smoker or whatever... Its all mind over matter, you just gotta concentrate on how dirty your lungs feel and how toxic it is as opposed to how much you like it. Cigarettes are kinda gross to me now, but I still buy a pack when Im drunk at the club
  13. I saw that PCP saVED MY LIFE sTEVE-0 DVD and I gotta say that dude is a lightweight I smoked way more dust than steve-0 and didnt act like a dumbass
  14. especially if you r boy has some sort of stock in that bar IE he throws shows there or drinks there all the time.. Seen it go down like this a few times... fuckin snitch bastards also I would record convos with dude where hes blackmailing you, then flip the script on him and tell him its even
  15. dude meth made the second dude on the top, and second from last on the bottom grow more hair! METH CURES THE BALD!
  16. This was a friend of mine who was tazed to death by the cops. He was trippin on acid, but never once according to every single witness made any threatening motion to cops - he took his shirt off to show the cops he didnt have a weapon on him - he was trying to walk out of the parking lot but they cornered him, and hit him with tasers 19 times! Then beat his ass. Taser jolts didn't lead directly to man's death Finding that 'excited delirium' caused fatality after club run-in challenged by victim's family By IAN DEMSKY Staff Writer The Metro medical examiner ruled yesterday that repeated shocks from police stun guns did not directly kill a Nashville man outside a Cannery Row nightclub last month. But an attorney representing the family of Patrick Lee, 21, is challenging the findings of Chief Medical Examiner Bruce Levy, who ruled that Lee died from "excited delirium." The condition causes people who are high on some type of drug or who suffer from mental illness to have heart attacks or stop breathing after agitated confrontations with authorities, say those who are convinced of its validity. Typically, they say, people suffering from excited delirium take off their clothes, have greatly increased strength and high resistance to pain. But the condition is not without it detractors, who see it as a convenient way for officials to deflect complaints of police brutality. And Taser International, the device's manufacturer, warned in June against using its product against people exhibiting symptoms of excited delirium. "We're not surprised," said Tommy Overton, the attorney representing Lee's family. "The family pretty much expected the report to be somewhat favorable to the government. "The report issued by Dr. Levy talks about the actions of Patrick Lee on the night in question, it gets specific about the way he acted, but does not get specific about the particular manner the police officers acted on the night in question." Levy said that he chose not to classify the death as a homicide or an accident because of the many factors involved. "It's not like a gunshot," Levy said. "There's nothing you can put your finger on and say this is what caused Patrick Lee's death. It's a very complex case." Levy said he could not say definitively that the Tasers did not play a role in Lee's death. At the time of the Sept. 22 incident, Lee had twice been ejected from the Mercy Lounge after bizarre behavior. The behavior continued when officers arrived. Lee stripped naked and scuffled with officers who tried to restrain him. He suffered numerous cuts and bruises in the fracas with officers and was shocked with the Tasers up to 19 times. He was rushed to a hospital after officers noticed that he was having breathing and possibly heart trouble. He died two days later at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. An autopsy found that Lee had LSD and marijuana in his system. Dr. Levy also found that the man had an enlarged heart — a pre-existing condition. Levy said his finding was based on the facts that Lee's external injuries were all minor, the drugs in his system were not in lethal levels, and the electric shocks did not immediately kill him. On Sept. 30, Metro Police Chief Ronal Serpas took Tasers away from street-level officers and placed them exclusively with supervisors. That situation will continue, Serpas said yesterday. "I feel no sense of vindication" from the autopsy findings, Serpas said. "Mr. Lee's death is a tragedy, as is any loss of life. … As it stands, Tasers remain a less lethal force option for our officers, contingent on supervisor evaluation." During the incident, two Metro officers each deployed their Tasers twice and activated them a combined total of 19 times, police said. The bursts of electricity ranged from two to nine seconds, with most of them lasting five seconds. It remains unclear, however, how many times Lee was shocked, because it is not known if the probes were in contact with him during all of the activations. Nearly three months before Lee's death, the devices' maker, Taser International, sent a bulletin to police departments warning them of the potentially deadly consequences of zapping people exhibiting symptoms of excited delirium. "These (people) are at significant and potentially fatal health risk from further prolonged exertion and/or impaired breathing," the June 28 training bulletin says. The message was passed along to Taser-equipped officers. "Please read this e-mail it is very important information from Taser International," the July 6 e-mail said. Department officials said the Taser e-mail was to have been treated as a direct order because it was sent by supervisors. One of the two officers who zapped Lee opened the e-mail that day; the other opened it the following day, police officials confirmed yesterday. But the question of whether they read the new instructions is part of an ongoing departmental investigation. The U.S. Department of Justice has also opened an investigation into the incident, an agency spokesman said yesterday. Agitated, delirious people can pose a particular danger to police officers, said Michael Conner, a psychologist from Bend, Ore., who studies emergency crisis intervention. "These people are highly dangerous not only to themselves but others," he said. "If you do nothing, you run the risk of other people being hurt or the individual being hurt. If you do something, you can end up seriously injured or disabled. No matter what you do, you run the risk of being blamed and second-guessed." But critics have said the Lee case appears to validate the warnings raised by the Taser company itself. "What's the rationale behind 19 shocks?" asked Edward Jackson, a spokesman for Amnesty International, a human-rights watch group that has called for a moratorium on the stun guns. "Even the company says that if you shock someone a few times and it doesn't work, consider something else." While he sees no evidence that the shocks directly killed Lee, Levy raised the same issue. "The question I think this case raises is, 'Where is the use of Taser appropriate and when do you say to yourself, this is not working?' If you have someone in excited delirium and shock them once or twice and it's not working, why keep doing it?" Yesterday, Serpas said the Metro police training staff would team with Levy, the head of Vanderbilt's emergency department and Metro's emergency medical chief, to develop new guidelines for dealing with people exhibiting symptoms of excited delirium. "They're being proactive now about what should have been acted upon in June. For Patrick Lee and his family, it's too late," the attorney for Lee's family said.
  17. also speaking of my work, this client of ours that was scheduled to do a HUGE club contract ended up on the news Wide-Scale Drug Raid Yields Cash, Cars 24 People Arrested; Cash, Weapons, Drugs Seized NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- The U.S. Attorney's office said two dozen people have been arrested and several indicted in a major drug investigation in Middle Tennessee. Officials say 31 indictments were issued for money laundering and narcotics. The drug operation allegedly brought hundreds of pounds of cocaine and marijuana into Tennessee from Mexico. The Drug Enforcement Agency said the drugs were then stored in Arizona and California and couriered to middle Tennessee. Law enforcement officials said this was a large scale, sophisticated and profitable organization and that they worked very hard to stay under the radar. Investigators from several agencies raided businesses in Davidson, Rutherford and Williamson counties. They said they arrested 24 people, seized 7 kilograms of cocaine and $150,000. Officials said they also confiscated weapons and cars. Representatives said the raid was a major victory in stopping some very organized drug traffickers. “The organization that’s been responsible for the importation, the transportation and the distribution of hundreds of kilos of cocaine and hundreds of pounds of marijuana, much of which was distributed right here in middle Tennessee,” said DEA spokesman Harry Sommers. Officials say 300 law enforcement agents were involved in the arrests. They said many of the people indicted were familiar to law enforcement and that the indictments were a result of collaboration between agencies. The sting yielded at least one notable arrest. Officials said Terry Biles, who has done event promotion for rapper Young Buck, was among those taken into custody.
  18. In nashville theres a strip club that USE TO BE A CHURCH
  19. DMT will make you believe shit like this just check out http://www.myspace.com/zoopyfunk
  20. My boy was tazed to death here in Nashville last summer and the cops cited his cause of death was "excited delerium resulting in heart attack" yeah, being tazed over 20 times didnt kill him. Fuck cops.
  21. If u wanna go to a strip club but dont want bitches to bother you, just roll up there with some 40s of colt liek me and my boys did one time... drinking 40s at the club screams broke ass
×
×
  • Create New...