Comments by "Goose" (@goose7574) on "COURT TV"
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@dabouras
They Always Take 10%, but usually people need to have some sort of assets in this kind of a case, that would help total closer to the actual amount (like a house, cars, etc., that they would put up titles or deeds for).
So the only amount of cash money that would actually need to be put up is $100,000, but many bondsman in her situation, would want equity in a home or something, because if she gets out and runs, then the bondsman could be out the entire million if she were to run.
If she wasn't such a flight risk and hadn't ran before and didn't have such a high chance of running, that might not be necessary, but given this case and all the "bits and pieces," they wouldn't just need $100k for a bail.
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angiemorgan215
I originally thought the guy in the back might have as well, but after watching it, over 20 times, and even in slow-mo, I'm 99% sure he actually didn't, because on the last shot, 3:19 you can actually see the shell casing right next to the guys head, along with the smoke from the gun. I'm guessing when they were fighting for the gun, the son pulled the trigger, so that's why you can see the shell right by his head. If the guy in the truck fired, you wouldn't see it like that, because he only had a handgun, and it would've been even smaller to see.
Also, you can't say the guy filming is an accessory, because what we see here, is only part of what happened. Supposedly the guys in the truck had actually followed the guy running, because they saw him run by earlier and wanted to talk to him, so I'm guessing the guy filming, saw this and thought it was odd, and started filming, not knowing how serious things were going to get. I've watched 6 different videos on this now and so I'm getting a different picture of what may have happened.
But again, you've got
Shot #1 not seen
Shot #2 Off camera
Shot #3 3:19 you can see the smoke, and the the shell right by the victims head, thus proving it was the shotgun and not the handgun.
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@debbiehellionandtheapocaly845
When you mentioned earlier in the comments that you didn't have trauma but had seen so much carnage, that's why I said that. In all reality, it is clear you do have trauma from it, if you're waking up feeling that way, and it's taking time for you to stabilize throughout the day.
Lastly, the only groups of people that I know who can become desensitized to something like death and gruesome crime scenes are medical personnel, first responders (officers, paramedics, firefighters, etc.) and people like that who see it more often and actual use desensitization as a way to cope with their jobs. However, even those types of individuals aren't fully immune to trauma. Probably the only types of people who are, are people like psychopaths. And with them, only the extreme ones who don't have normal thought processes or emotions would be more immune from trauma.
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@terriewilliams8831
I have to agree that when I commented after her first comment, that was one thing because she wasn't targeting her entire race, but then her second comment bothered me.
Yes, I'm Caucasian, but... I have 11 African American family members that were adopted into different parts of my family, and my twin brother and his wife, adopted a little girl at birth, as well.
It's one thing, to discuss some of the issues within your race, just like it's okay to discuss issues within certain careers (because there are ALWAYS going to be bad apples in the bunch).
When she made her second comment about not wanting certain people in her family to date other African Americans as a whole, that made my heart hurt, because she's basically saying that ALL African American men are created "equally" and they ARE NOT.
Even I WOULDN'T ever say that, and the two men who raped me were African American.
To me, those were just two guys who did two horrible things. It DOESN'T mean that they are ALL bad people now.
What if somebody was saying the same thing about her, or something like that? I don't think she would like it, if the shoe were on the other foot.
I feel that we ALL need to try to do our parts to end racism, and for somebody, in HER SITUATION especially, to say those things... I just don't get it....
Some people seem so shocked when I say these things, but it's the truth. Maybe not enough "white" people say them? I don't know. I just know how I was raised, and what she said in her second comment, wasn't okay.
💔
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@Keturah-Renet
I really hope, eventhough you're an evil person, that you NEVER have to endure what I did.
It's REALLY easy for people who haven't ever gone through it, to say "just take it up with the courts," (eventhough it happened over 20 years ago) or "call the police," or whatever...
But when it happens to you, the only thing you want, is for it to just go away. You don't want to have to talk about it again and tell people EXACTLY what happened.
You feel ashamed and like it was your fault, even when it wasn't (I was actually drugged).
I don't even understand people like you. People who make it their mission to just TRY to be as DISGUSTING and VILE as possible to others.
But then again, this IS the internet, and it seems to give people like you, some sort of power that they wouldn't otherwise have if they were in public...
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