1) Can anyone who is not anattorney or can attorneys other than a district
attorneys make a special presentment to a grand jury and ask for an
indictment ,accusation or some other action in a case where local officials
are accused of racketeering type activity or any other type of crimes that
the local DA refuses to prosecute because of his own involvement.In other
words can someone privetely prosecute a crime?
2) Is it legal for someone in Georgia to hold two different governmental
positions at the same time...in this case being a city councilman and being
a police chief of a local state college located in the same city as the city
councilman job.
These two questions are not related to the same person or situation and
question two is more related to ethical considerations regarding multiple
positions of power in the same town.
Thanks
Curtis & Mayra Rowell
11-06-2003, 07:29 AM
Gee, if you had a pre-paid legal plan (pick a company, there are several),
you could ask this question of a real attorney who is rated by
Martindale-Hubbel, instead of posting to a group of well meaning individuals
who's credentials are difficult, if not impossible to validate, asuming they
have any credentials in the legal field to validate in the first place.
"alan" <dirtyal1@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:ad666de7.0311060655.56b5f51b@posting.google.c om... I have two questions about Georgia law. 1) Can anyone who is not anattorney or can attorneys other than a
district attorneys make a special presentment to a grand jury and ask for an indictment ,accusation or some other action in a case where local
officials are accused of racketeering type activity or any other type of crimes that the local DA refuses to prosecute because of his own involvement.In other words can someone privetely prosecute a crime? 2) Is it legal for someone in Georgia to hold two different governmental positions at the same time...in this case being a city councilman and
being a police chief of a local state college located in the same city as the
city councilman job. These two questions are not related to the same person or situation and question two is more related to ethical considerations regarding multiple positions of power in the same town. Thanks
alan
11-06-2003, 11:00 AM
It is so sad that these newsgroups are full of spam and full of people
such as yourselves who have bought into the prepaid legal multilevel
marketing scam. If you yourselves had any real legal knowledge and
investigatory experience you would know what prepaid legal really is.
So how many hundreds of dollars did you have to pay to be a prepaid
legal associate? And when someone ends up suing you for
misrepresentation as prepaid legal has already been accused of please
feel free to post us your question.
As for my question I am highly competent in legal research and civil
procedure. I just thought that maybe someone could save me some time
on shepardizing case law because i dont have a nexis account.
Thank you for wasting my time.
"Curtis & Mayra Rowell" <mrowell@prepaidlegal.com> wrote in message news:<LNtqb.174116$ox6.2421725@twister.tampabay.rr.com>... Gee, if you had a pre-paid legal plan (pick a company, there are several), you could ask this question of a real attorney who is rated by Martindale-Hubbel, instead of posting to a group of well meaning individuals who's credentials are difficult, if not impossible to validate, asuming they have any credentials in the legal field to validate in the first place. "alan" <dirtyal1@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:ad666de7.0311060655.56b5f51b@posting.google.c om... I have two questions about Georgia law. 1) Can anyone who is not anattorney or can attorneys other than a district attorneys make a special presentment to a grand jury and ask for an indictment ,accusation or some other action in a case where local officials are accused of racketeering type activity or any other type of crimes that the local DA refuses to prosecute because of his own involvement.In other words can someone privetely prosecute a crime? 2) Is it legal for someone in Georgia to hold two different governmental positions at the same time...in this case being a city councilman and being a police chief of a local state college located in the same city as the city councilman job. These two questions are not related to the same person or situation and question two is more related to ethical considerations regarding multiple positions of power in the same town. Thanks
Seth Breidbart
11-06-2003, 08:04 PM
In article <LNtqb.174116$ox6.2421725@twister.tampabay.rr.com>,
Curtis & Mayra Rowell <mrowell@prepaidlegal.com> top-posted:Gee, if you had a pre-paid legal plan (pick a company, there are several),you could ask this question of a real attorney who is rated byMartindale-Hubbel,
and pay a lot more for the privilege than just calling an attorney and
paying for a simple consultation.
instead of posting to a group of well meaning individualswho's credentials are difficult, if not impossible to validate, asuming theyhave any credentials in the legal field to validate in the first place.
Check out how many victims of prepaid-legal's pyramid scam renew for
the second year, and see how good a deal _they_ think it is.
Seth
Buckwheat
11-11-2003, 10:51 AM
Curtis & Mayra Rowell wrote:
Gee, if you had a pre-paid legal plan (pick a company, there are several), you could ask this question of a real attorney who is rated by Martindale-Hubbel, instead of posting to a group of well meaning individuals who's credentials are difficult, if not impossible to validate, asuming they have any credentials in the legal field to validate in the first place.
Even if you didn't belong to a prepaid legal scam you could ask this question of
a real attorney that is rated by http://www.martindalehubbell.com/
Curtis
11-12-2003, 08:29 AM
"Thoth" <Thoth@unlisted.net> wrote in message
news:3FB12FCD.993CBADD@unlisted.net... Curtis & Mayra Rowell wrote: Gee, if you had a pre-paid legal plan (pick a company, there are
several), you could ask this question of a real attorney who is rated by Martindale-Hubbel, instead of posting to a group of well meaning
individuals who's credentials are difficult, if not impossible to validate, asuming
they have any credentials in the legal field to validate in the first place. Even if you didn't belong to a prepaid legal scam you could ask this
question of a real attorney that is rated by http://www.martindalehubbell.com/
Ah yes. But what the wise and witty Thoth doesn't tell you is that you
would have to pay anywhere from $150 - $250 for your consultation. He even
makes a poor attempt at stating that the attorney firms you would work with
via a prepaid legal plan aren't REAL ATTORNEYS.
Note he is even too cowardly to post a real name with a real email address
because if he did, he would then be tracable and might end up facing charges
for libel.
Buckwheat
11-13-2003, 12:20 AM
Curtis wrote:
Ah yes. But what the wise and witty Thoth doesn't tell you is that you would have to pay anywhere from $150 - $250 for your consultation. He even makes a poor attempt at stating that the attorney firms you would work with via a prepaid legal plan aren't REAL ATTORNEYS.
Are you a liar, or is the above an unintentional misrepresentation? Many,
perhaps most, law firms provide free initial consultations. Perhaps you will
show the rest of the group where I suggested that the firms to which PPL refers
its marks are "aren't REAL ATTORNEYS."
Note he is even too cowardly to post a real name with a real email address because if he did, he would then be tracable and might end up facing charges for libel.
LOL! You're cracking me up. I post anonymously so desperate trolls like you
can't accuse me of trying to drum up clients on usenet.
It would be very easy for someone to find me. I suggest you call one of you
free advice firms and ask them what the chances are that I'll "end up facing
charges for liable." Please report back here with the results. I'm sure your
staff of most excellent AND "real attorneys" are frothing at the bit just
waiting to leap to your service (for just pennies a day, no less).
I have to go wipe the tears from my eyes, now. No fair making me laugh so hard!
Seth Breidbart
11-13-2003, 04:04 PM
In article <Gdtsb.162618$RP2.109812@twister.tampabay.rr.com>,
Curtis <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote:
Note he is even too cowardly to post a real name with a real email addressbecause if he did, he would then be tracable and might end up facing chargesfor libel.
And we're not supposed to figure out that a RoadRunner user forging
"noyb.com" and posting without a last name isn't real? (Or maybe
somebody doesn't know the acronym for "none of your business"?) Or do
you claim to actually own that account?
Seth
Curtis
11-13-2003, 07:08 PM
"Curtis" <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote in message
news:Gdtsb.162618$RP2.109812@twister.tampabay.rr.c om... "Thoth" <Thoth@unlisted.net> wrote in message news:3FB12FCD.993CBADD@unlisted.net... Curtis & Mayra Rowell wrote: Gee, if you had a pre-paid legal plan (pick a company, there are several), you could ask this question of a real attorney who is rated by Martindale-Hubbel, instead of posting to a group of well meaning individuals who's credentials are difficult, if not impossible to validate,
asuming they have any credentials in the legal field to validate in the first
place. Even if you didn't belong to a prepaid legal scam you could ask this question of a real attorney that is rated by http://www.martindalehubbell.com/ Ah yes. But what the wise and witty Thoth doesn't tell you is that you would have to pay anywhere from $150 - $250 for your consultation. He
even makes a poor attempt at stating that the attorney firms you would work
with via a prepaid legal plan aren't REAL ATTORNEYS. Note he is even too cowardly to post a real name with a real email address because if he did, he would then be tracable and might end up facing
charges for libel.
My real email address is posted in my signature, you idiot.
You want a piece of me, come and get it. By the way, how deep are YOUR
pockets? I've got 150,000 hours of an AV rated attorney firm's time already
prepaid for me.
crowell@tampabay.rr.com
Curtis
11-13-2003, 07:38 PM
Correction, $150,000.00
"Curtis" <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote in message
news:%GXsb.13217$w66.219130@twister.tampabay.rr.co m... "Curtis" <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote in message news:Gdtsb.162618$RP2.109812@twister.tampabay.rr.c om... "Thoth" <Thoth@unlisted.net> wrote in message news:3FB12FCD.993CBADD@unlisted.net... Curtis & Mayra Rowell wrote: > Gee, if you had a pre-paid legal plan (pick a company, there are several), > you could ask this question of a real attorney who is rated by > Martindale-Hubbel, instead of posting to a group of well meaning individuals > who's credentials are difficult, if not impossible to validate, asuming they > have any credentials in the legal field to validate in the first place. Even if you didn't belong to a prepaid legal scam you could ask this question of a real attorney that is rated by http://www.martindalehubbell.com/ Ah yes. But what the wise and witty Thoth doesn't tell you is that you would have to pay anywhere from $150 - $250 for your consultation. He even makes a poor attempt at stating that the attorney firms you would work with via a prepaid legal plan aren't REAL ATTORNEYS. Note he is even too cowardly to post a real name with a real email
address because if he did, he would then be tracable and might end up facing charges for libel. My real email address is posted in my signature, you idiot. You want a piece of me, come and get it. By the way, how deep are YOUR pockets? I've got 150,000 hours of an AV rated attorney firm's time
already prepaid for me. crowell@tampabay.rr.com
Seth Breidbart
11-14-2003, 04:02 PM
In article <Y6Ysb.13343$w66.224422@twister.tampabay.rr.com>,
Curtis <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote:Correction, $150,000.00
Providing it takes no more than 2.5 hours of preparation, right?
Seth
Curtis
11-15-2003, 08:35 AM
"Seth Breidbart" <sethb@panix.com> wrote in message
news:bp3qe8$23u$1@panix5.panix.com... In article <Y6Ysb.13343$w66.224422@twister.tampabay.rr.com>, Curtis <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote:Correction, $150,000.00 Providing it takes no more than 2.5 hours of preparation, right? Seth
No, you are refering to the Standard Plan. I have the Extended Plan which
has 17.5 hrs of pretrial preparation. Although, in your case, I'm sure my
attorney's wouldn't need more than a couple minutes to send you packin'
Seth Breidbart
11-17-2003, 06:01 PM
In article <FBstb.179562$RP2.10854@twister.tampabay.rr.com>,
Curtis <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote:"Seth Breidbart" <sethb@panix.com> wrote in messagenews:bp3qe8$23u$1@panix5.panix.com... In article <Y6Ysb.13343$w66.224422@twister.tampabay.rr.com>, Curtis <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote:Correction, $150,000.00 Providing it takes no more than 2.5 hours of preparation, right?No, you are refering to the Standard Plan. I have the Extended Plan whichhas 17.5 hrs of pretrial preparation. Although, in your case, I'm sure myattorney's wouldn't need more than a couple minutes to send you packin'
My real name is in the headers.
Have fun.
Maybe they should spend some of their preparation time looking up
Federal Rule 11 first, though.
Seth
Curtis
11-18-2003, 11:58 AM
"Seth Breidbart" <sethb@panix.com> wrote in message
news:bpbuht$c8c$1@panix5.panix.com... In article <FBstb.179562$RP2.10854@twister.tampabay.rr.com>, Curtis <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote:"Seth Breidbart" <sethb@panix.com> wrote in messagenews:bp3qe8$23u$1@panix5.panix.com... In article <Y6Ysb.13343$w66.224422@twister.tampabay.rr.com>, Curtis <NOYB@NOYB.COM> wrote: >Correction, $150,000.00 Providing it takes no more than 2.5 hours of preparation, right?No, you are refering to the Standard Plan. I have the Extended Plan
whichhas 17.5 hrs of pretrial preparation. Although, in your case, I'm sure
myattorney's wouldn't need more than a couple minutes to send you packin' My real name is in the headers. Have fun. Maybe they should spend some of their preparation time looking up Federal Rule 11 first, though. Seth
Bring it on...
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