sconnie1984
Sconnie1984
sconnie1984

Possibly, but we also don't know what he may have said to the officers when they arrived. We also don't know why he ran from the police all evening as he indicated in one of his tweets. What we do know is running from the police has a way of giving them reason to worry about what you are up to and the safety of

As a Packers fan, I support this message.

Born and raised in Wisconsin here. Lived 29 years here until a minor brain meltdown convinced me to leave for Western Missouri for a year. Nice enough place, but when it comes to great midwestern places, it doesn't compare to Wisconsin, and one major reason was the lack of great beers. Since moving back I'm guilty of

Have you ever read those agreements and realized there is no legal binding to them? The dealership may not be directly responsible, but an agreement doesn't absolve a dealerships employees of responsibility from committing the theft.

So I just want to clarify, a customer with a leased vehicle has no rights to expect or have any granted expectation that property they own that they place into a leased vehicle would not be moved off site for longer than standard services would dictate? I've never heard of a person being deprived of their property not

Regardless of your understanding of the lease agreement, the reality is the property inside the vehicle that the man went to the dealership to retrieve was in a car that was registered to his name. Much like how a landlord can enter your home when your leasing, they are not entitled to deprive you of your property

They end up saying in the video they only do 3.5 miles with a 9,000 pound trailer.

Your ignorance is depressing.

Like many of the responses on this site... It depends on the state.

Like many of the responses on this site... It depends on the state.