Thursday, February 16, 2006

I don't go along with the idea of taxing income so "deductions" don't really excite me all that much--they should make deductions not applicable to taxes.  Deductions are just the government attempting to screw people a little bit less, but we are still screwed.  Anyway, Australia is going to be doing less screwing of prostitutes:

STRIPPERS and prostitutes will be allowed to claim condoms, lingerie, oils and other "tools of the trade" as tax deductions under new rules issued by the Tax Office.

In a directive obtained by The Daily Telegraph, the Australian Taxation Office informs sex workers that they should also claim for their exotic dancing lessons.

Damaged bondage equipment and "adult novelties" are also listed as valid tax deductions.

Sex workers who keep a separate premises will also be able to claim a deduction on their accommodation costs - even if it is a room rented by the hour.

Freedom | Sex
Joe Huffman  Thursday, February 16, 2006 9:06:33 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The UK is on it's way just as F.A. Hayek warned.  This is from an editoral, again warning the British people:

FEW industries could be more competitive than retailing. The drive to better their rivals is what pushes the major store groups to continuously improve what they offer to customers. So what does a gaggle of Members of Parliament suggest applying to this thriving industry? A regulator, of course.

Imagine how the staff of the Retail Regulator might delight in “protecting” consumers by dictating permissible prices, and suitable sales mixes. The customer would no longer be king, instead it would be the bureaucrats who held sway over what appeared in the stores.

The MPs would have their new creation charged with bringing forward “proposals for the maintenance of a vibrant, diverse and sustainable retail sector”. That is a tall order of a bureaucrat, as likely to result in a dictat that every high street should have the approved quota of coffee shops, chemists and clothes stores and end up looking remarkably similar.

The All-Party Parliamentary Small Shops Group has identified a problem but it is reaching for the wrong weapon to deal with it. In its own evidence it cites the heavy regulation that already governs retailers, with the burden being disproportionately heavy on smaller stores. There is a genuine concern about the speed at which smaller stores are vanishing: in the last decade the UK has lost nearly 30,000 independent food, beverage and tobacco retailers. Yet dubious regulation has hastened this trend.

The insistence of the competition authorities that there were two distinct types of grocery shop, the superstores and the convenience stores, and that the first could be allowed to gobble up the second, has dramatically changed the retail landscape in Britain. There now seems a willingness to rethink that view but it is too late to undo the damage. One lobby group, the new economics foundation, is calling for the major grocers to be forced to divest their stores to limit their market share to a maximum of 8 per cent. Even if that were possible, consumers would be incensed.

Competition authorities and Retail Regulators? Wow!

The serfs are loosing even more freedom in other areas:

SMOKING will be banned in all pubs, clubs and workplaces from next year after historic votes in the Commons last night.

After last-minute appeals from health campaigners, MPs opted for a blanket prohibition which will start in summer 2007, ending months of argument over whether smoking should be barred in pubs and restaurants only. They voted to ban smoking in all pubs and clubs by 384 to 184, a surprisingly large majority of 200.

Smoking will still be allowed in the home and in places considered to be homes, such as prisons, care homes and hotels. But there are difficult decisions to be made on exemptions for places such as oil rigs, where smoking outside the workplace would be dangerous.

Smokers lighting up in banned areas will face a fixed penalty notice of £50 and spot fines of £200 will be introduced for failing to display no-smoking signs, with the possible penalty if the issue goes to court increasing to £1,000.

Caroline Flint, the Public Health Minister, also announced that the fine for failing to stop people smoking in banned areas would be increased to £2,500 — more than ten times the £200 originally proposed.

The Bill also allows the Government to increase the age for buying cigarettes. Ministers will consult on raising it from 16 to 18.

Smoking could still be banned at outdoor locations that are “substantially enclosed”, such as football grounds and railway platforms. The details will be contained in regulations after a three-month consultation.

No decision has yet been made on whether smoking will be banned in cars carrying passengers.

Joe Huffman  Thursday, February 16, 2006 8:38:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

What signify a few lives lost in a century or two?  The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.  It is its natural manure.

Thomas Jefferson
Letter Nov. 13, 1787
referring to Shay's rebellion
[Present day examples of tyrants and patriots abound and are a constant reminder we must not give up the fight to keep our right to keep and bear arms.--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Thursday, February 16, 2006 7:58:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Read all about it here.

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, February 15, 2006 9:19:11 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The ineffectual, expensive, and dangerous gun registry in Canada is about to get dismantled:

OTTAWA (CP) - The Conservative government has created a committee of two cabinet ministers and a backbencher to figure out how best to kill the long-gun registry as soon as possible.

Registry critic Garry Breitkreuz, who is working with Justice Minister Vic Toews and Public Security Minister Stockwell Day, said he has been given wide leeway to deal swiftly with the registry.

Remember New Orleans and remember Canada.

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, February 15, 2006 7:40:47 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]  | 

Via Bruce Schneier comes this cartoon.  Airplane security isn't improved by removing tools (such as knives and firearms) from the passenger compartment.  It's improved by removing the people that are a threat and giving the innocent people onboard the tools and the will to help with their own security.

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, February 15, 2006 8:52:03 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The potassium chlorate was delivered this week.  I just need to order the boxes used as containers for the explosives and I will have all but the most trivial items needed for Boomershoot 2006 in stock.

Last Saturday I tested out a flour mill as a tool for getting all the lumps out of the potassium chlorate just prior to mixing it with the other ingredients.  It works but requires constant human attention.  Dad had an idea that I will try at the next opportunity.  In any case I think I can get rid of the blenders which are the biggest power drain and another drain on labor as when they are used they require constant attention as well.

The main reason for the Saturday excursion to Boomershoot country was to test target detonation with .223 at the greater ranges.  I made some new targets and shot at them from 630 yards with a .223. I made a number of errors and didn't realize until after I got home that because of the cold (30F) and the exceptionally high air pressure (30.5" of Hg) the target velocity was probably under 1200 fps. This velocity is below what I would have expected the targets to detonate and that in fact is exactly what happened. I had nearly a dozen solid hits without them detonating. I fired one round of CCI Stinger (high velocity .22LR) from about 15 yards away (probably about 1500 fps target velocity) and a target with three .223 holes detonated. I really want to test the .223 with a target velocity of 1400 to 1500 fps. 

Below is the target array I made to make it easier to assure a hit on a target while not having all of them detonate at once causing the neighbors to have things fall off the walls.  I had something else in mind, Ry suggested this but figured I would need someone at the shooting line to help get things lined up. While driving home from the Seattle area I figured out a way I could line it up myself.  I keep telling him that between the two of us we have a complete brain.  Lots of ideas from one or the other of us will be half baked and the other turns it into something quite clever.


From the shooters viewpoint


Side view

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, February 15, 2006 7:53:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  | 

From Connecticut:

HARTFORD -- Getting guns off the streets was the focus yesterday of 15 Connecticut mayors and Gov. M. Jodi Rell at a summit on a statewide urban violence problem.

A rash of shootings, fights and other violent incidents that has plagued Stamford and Norwalk in recent months has also hit other cities. Rell last month invited the top local officials of the state's 14 largest cities and the town of Windham to meet to share suggestions and strategies for attacking the problem, particularly among Connecticut's youth.

Most of the 90-minute meeting, which was closed to the public, focused on the problem of illegal guns, participants said.

Just as Heinlein said.  I have Just One Question for them.

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, February 15, 2006 7:27:05 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

If "everybody knows" such-and-such, then it ain't so, by at least ten thousand to one.

Robert Heinlein
[Can you say "we need more gun control?"--Joe]

Joe Huffman  Wednesday, February 15, 2006 7:15:40 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Yesterday the court began jury selection for the Michael Williams murder trial.  At 15:38 today I received a call from Williams.  He told me the trial had just gone to the jury.  He said he had lots of stories to tell from the trial but I was busy at work and couldn't take the time right then.  I told him I would call him back later this evening.  At 18:39, as I was about to leave work, he called me again.  The verdict was in--Voluntary Manslaughter.  This was in the case where the prosecutor insisted Williams was guilty of first degree murder.  Williams remains a free man while the judge decides on a sentence.  Williams is very happy about the result.  The family of the dead man, of course, is not at all happy and Williams had an armed escort to his car and out of the parking lot.

He is to email me more stories which I agreed to post.

Previous postings on the topic:

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, February 14, 2006 10:39:21 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [6]  | 

If it passes, as it almost for certain will, it will be with an English rather than a German accent this time when the police demand "papers":

MOST Britons will be forced to have an identity card within five years after MPs defeated the Lords last night, despite a Labour backbench rebellion.

Moves to require people to buy ID cards when they request or renew a British passport were carried by 310 votes to 279, a majority of 31.

...

The Identity Cards Bill will now go back to the Lords, who had voted to decouple the issuing of ID cards from passports, blocking ministers’ plans to add millions of people to the identity register each year technically on a voluntary basis.

The Lords must decide whether to insist that passport applications stay separate from identity cards, amending the Bill again in a “ping-pong” with the Commons, or to give way, which is the more likely option.

Charles Clarke, the Home Secretary, moved amendments overturning changes made to the Bill by peers, saying that the Government had made clear that it envisaged linking ID cards to passports as part of their phased introduction.

Applicants for residents’ permits and for visas from certain non-European Union countries and asylum-seekers would also be subject to compulsory registration of biometric data — fingerprints and iris scans — on the identity database.

See also my essay on the fatal flaws of universal ID cards and my Jews in the Attic Test.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, February 14, 2006 8:22:22 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Don't ever expect them to be truthful.  In order to get their numbers up they included suicides, justifiable and praiseworthy homicides and woundings--bigots dancing in the blood:

WASHINGTON, Feb. 13 /PRNewswire/ -- Saturday's shooting of a fellow hunter by Vice President Dick Cheney was just one more addition to the more than quarter million Americans who have been injured by firearms during President George W. Bush's tenure. From 2001 through 2004, the most recent year available, 252,076 Americans were injured by firearms according to federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data. From 2001 through 2003, the most recent year available, nearly 30,000 Americans a year were killed by firearms according to information from the CDC's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control.

...

Josh Sugarmann, Violence Policy Center executive director, states, "The Cheney shooting punctures the pro-gun argument that 'knowing guns' and 'having respect for guns' are enough to overcome the inherent hazards of firearms. Vice President Cheney's victim is now just one more sad statistic in America's annual gun toll."

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, February 14, 2006 12:43:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

Dr. Joe doesn't need to be convinced but not everyone is certain yet:

It can help to reduce stress, soothe pain, cure insomnia, lower the risk of a heart attack and, as if that wasn't enough, make your hair shine and your wrinkles vanish.

"Forget about jogging round the block or struggling with sit-ups," says the UK National Health Service patients' helpline, NHS Direct. The key for healthy living is, in fact, "a good bout of sexercise".

Undertaking "regular romps" will bring a plethora of health rewards, from staying fit and burning calories to combating cancer, says the website.

"Orgasms even release painkillers into the bloodstream, helping keep mild illnesses like colds and aches and pains at bay, and produce extra oestrogen and testosterone hormones," the site says.

"These hormones will keep your bones and muscles healthy, leaving you feeling fabulous inside and out."

But Dr Melissa Sayer, an expert in sexual health, said the site made unproven claims.

Sounds like more research is needed.  I'm a research scientist...now where is my female assistant?  We need to get started on this right away.

Sex
Joe Huffman  Tuesday, February 14, 2006 12:36:36 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

If this had happened in the U.S. where police officers are armed things probably would have turned out different.  But instead it was in the "gun free paradise" of London England:

LONDON (Reuters) - A female trainee police officer is seriously ill in hospital on Tuesday after being shot as she and a colleague tried to apprehend a suspected burglar.

Police said the incident occurred shortly before midnight when two officers, an experienced male officer and the 25-year-old female probation officer, were called to a burglary in the Lenton area of Nottingham and tried to stop a man nearby.

"The suspect produced a firearm and shot one of the officers," a Nottinghamshire police spokeswoman said, adding the victim had not yet been named.

The wounded officer, who was wearing body armour, has undergone emergency surgery for a gunshot injury and is in intensive care in a serious condition.

No one has been arrested.

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, February 14, 2006 12:31:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

New Orleans was the first place in American history to disarm peaceable citizens, house-by-house, at gunpoint. And I promise you this standing here today: We at the NRA are going to make sure it's the last place it ever happens.

Never again can Michael Bloomberg or Rebecca Peters or Mike Wallace, or the United Nations, or the Brady Center, or anywhere else say that honest citizens don't need firearms because what happened in New Orleans proves beyond a shadow of a doubt what we've said all along.

The next time some arrogant politician looks at you and says, 'Why does anyone need to own a gun?' I want you to look them straight in the face and say this: 'Remember New Orleans!'"

'Why do you need to own a gun?' Remember New Orleans!

'Aren't you just being kind of paranoid?' Remember New Orleans!

'Why does anyone need right to carry?' Remember New Orleans!

'What makes you think our government would ever try to confiscate your guns?' Remember New Orleans!

'Is the Second Amendment really relevant in the 21st Century?' Remember New Orleans!


Wayne LaPierre
Executive Vice President
National Rifle Association
From speeches given:

Joe Huffman  Tuesday, February 14, 2006 12:20:01 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Monday, February 13, 2006

You knew it was coming.  Here's the first I've seen:

"Now I understand why Dick Cheney keeps asking me to go hunting with him," Jim Brady said in a statement. "I had a friend once who accidentally shot pellets into his dog -- and I thought he was an idiot."

"I've thought Cheney was scary for a long time," Sarah Brady said. "Now I know I was right to be nervous."

They do personal attacks so well.  They have lots of practice at it so it's not surprising.  I can only think of two reasons for this; 1) They don't like the results when they stick to facts, or 2) They can't handle high school math.

Joe Huffman  Monday, February 13, 2006 9:25:43 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [4]  | 

Xenia went on trial for murder this weekend--actually there were three trials.  She was found not guilty in the first two by a votes of 10-2 and 9-3.  Barb figured with her brother on the second jury she would be found guilty for certain.  But I knew him better than she did.  There was no way with the 'evidence' given that he would vote for a conviction let alone try and convince other jurors.  Just before the third trial, as I was about to leave for the Seattle area, I gave her a handcuff key just in case they convicted her.  She was found guilty but didn't need the key because she was able to squeeze out of the handcuffs.

It was a good performance.  I didn't realize Ayn Rand had written any plays.  This was apparently her first and it shows it in many ways but it wasn't really bad.  When Xenia got on the stand and told the court she had been raped by her employer ten years earlier on her first day at work and was proud to became his mistress from there after we gave each other "the look".  Yup, just the part Xenia would like to play.  Check out the pictures Xenia has on her Live Journal.

Joe Huffman  Monday, February 13, 2006 2:16:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  | 

It's way too late for me to comment intelligently on the following newspaper clippings.  Michael Williams sister sent them last week.  I've read them all but was unable to comment on them due to my exceedingly busy weekend (more details later but it involving guns, explosives, and two murder trials unrelated to Williams trial).  If you are interested in this case go ahead and read them.  I'll comment later after I have had some sleep.

Joe Huffman  Monday, February 13, 2006 1:58:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Once Law was sitting on the bench
        And Mercy knelt a-weeping.
"Clear out!" he cried, "disordered wench!
        Nor come before me creeping.
Upon you knees if you appear,
'Tis plain you have no standing here."

Then Justice came.  His Honor cried:
        "YOUR states? -- Devil seize you!"
"Amica curiae," she replied --
        "Friend of the court, so please you."
"Begone!" he shouted -- "There's the door --
I never saw your face before!"

Ambrose Bierce
The Devil's Dictionary

Joe Huffman  Monday, February 13, 2006 1:42:36 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, February 12, 2006

Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place.

Frederic Bastiat
1801-1850

Joe Huffman  Sunday, February 12, 2006 11:34:49 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, February 11, 2006

Taking a long view of history, we may say that anyone who lays down his arms deserves whatever he gets.

Col. Jeff Cooper

Joe Huffman  Saturday, February 11, 2006 12:14:38 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Friday, February 10, 2006

If you want to fire an assault weapon, do what so many patriotic Americans do: Join the armed forces.

Does that sound familiar to anyone?  

That could have been Lenin rephrased, as in this case, where the party members were exempt from a weapons ban.  Or it could have been Adolf Hitler who said:

If any citizen wants to possess arms, let him join the Party.

But it was neither.  And it was said in todays newspaper, not by a despot known to have killed millions, but by the U.S. politician Del. Anthony G. Brown who is Martin O'Malley's running mate for the governor of Maryland.  He also said this:

Assault weapons have one purpose and one purpose only: That is to kill human beings.

Of the thousands of rounds I have fired through my "assault weapons" no humans were killed as a result.  I have to conclude that either my guns are defective or Brown's thinking is defective.  I don't have to toss a coin on this one.  In a comparison between my rifles and Brown's brain I'll take my rifles as the better of the two any day.

Joe Huffman  Friday, February 10, 2006 8:44:54 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  | 

Another womans says she just couldn't control herself and had to have sex in public:

RANDY Alana May was nabbed having sex in public by police THREE times in 30 MINUTES, a court heard yesterday.

Two of the romps were at a floodlit abbey in the middle of a town. The third was on land also owned by the church.

Officers first saw Alana, 25, with her pants down with a semi-naked man outside Selby Abbey, North Yorks. They ticked her off and told her to go home.

But they returned 15 minutes later and discovered Alana performing a sex act on the man against the 11th century abbey’s walls.

She was again told to go home. But just 15 minutes after that the pair were spotted having sex in church parkland.

Alana and the romeo were arrested. She said of the romps: “I couldn’t wait until I got home.”

She was fined £50 for outraging public decency. Her unnamed lover, who has no previous convictions, got a caution.

Sex
Joe Huffman  Friday, February 10, 2006 8:25:39 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

THE STORY that amused me most in 1998 came out of the Christopher Hitchens' column in The Nation: "At a glamorous book launch given by Vogue for Katharine Graham, a Nation colleague of mine was introduced to Henry Kissinger. On hearing the name of the magazine, the doctor drew back. "The Nation? So I suppose you think I am a war criminal?"  Yielding to that fatal instinct that sometimes urges people to be laid-back and unpredictable, my comrade attempted a pleasantry and observed that in these post-Cold War days, the old mag was just as likely to describe - who knows? - Bill Clinton as a war criminal. Kissinger stared into his cocktail and said slowly and distinctly, `Mr. Clinton does not have the strength of character to be a war criminal.'"

From Paul Smith
January 13, 1999

Joe Huffman  Friday, February 10, 2006 8:14:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Thursday, February 09, 2006

They said they had this urge they couldn't control.  Oh well... I'll bet they will find a little more willpower the next time the urge occurs:

LONDON: In Argentina 'sex' is something which should be enjoyed within the four walls of the house, as if one intends indulging in it publicly, one is more likely to be put behind bars.

An Argentinean couple were recently arrested for making love outside a mayor's office in broad daylight.

The man and woman, in their mid-30s, were having sex in a completely nude state on a bench by the Nahuel Huapi river in Bariloche, and when cops arrived to arrest them, they shocked them further, by asking the officers to let them finish what they were doing.

A crowd gathered and cheered the couple on, but the Mayor of Bariloche said he was shocked by the spectacle.

Not ashamed of the incident, the woman concerned told police that she had always fantasised about having sex outside the mayor's office while politicians were working inside.

"They are otherwise two very respectable citizens but they told us they had this urge to have sex in public and that it was very strong and they couldn't control it," Fox News quoted a police spokesperson, as saying.

The couple were arrested on charges of disrespecting public space and indecent exposure.

Sex
Joe Huffman  Thursday, February 09, 2006 9:34:46 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Very nice.

Joe Huffman  Thursday, February 09, 2006 3:26:27 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

In Pierce County [Washington] the way the prosecutor decides whether to press charges or not is to print out the arrest records of the people involved and weigh them... Scumbag dead, good guy still upright -- good guy walks.  Scumbag dead, other scumbag still upright -- scumbag gets prosecuted.  The guy is an IPSC shooter himself, he figures you are just cleaning out the gene pool when you shoot a scumbag.

Greg Hamilton
Self Defense Instructor
Nov. 19, 1995

Joe Huffman  Thursday, February 09, 2006 8:28:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Wednesday, February 08, 2006


Michael Charles Williams

I received two calls from Michael Charles Williams today.  I was driving to work the first time and couldn't take notes but here is what I remember.  Where I could I found news stories that relate to what he told me:

  • Adams (the guy Williams shot three times) had a long rap sheet.  His associates have criminal records too.
  • Adams was partway into Williams truck through the window by the time the last shot was fired.
  • Today the prosecuting attorney tried to get the blood alcohol content of Adams (0.327--legally drunk in Idaho is 0.08) ruled inadmissible in court.  He failed.
  • The ex-wife testimony was ruled inadmissible. The prosecutor was virtually begging for it to be admissible and said he would "go all the way to the Supreme court" to achieve that.
  • There are no other witnesses that claim Williams "was looking for someone to kill."
  • Detectives didn't try to get fingerprints or other evidence off of the truck.
  • The first detective and Williams knew each other in high school 15 years prior and had a bad history between them.
  • The first detective had a good relationship with Adams family.
  • Williams had some handgun training in the military but no formal training on civilian self defense.
  • The gun was a "brand new" Springfield 1911 style compact in .45 ACP with "self-defense ammo".
  • The prosecutor has a conceal weapons license.
  • The prosecutor once shot at, in error, a plainclothes police officer.
  • At my suggestion the defense attorney plans to call SAF.
  • Williams thanked me profusely for "helping" (not sure I have actually done much).
  • Williams said he sent a link to my previous blog posting to friends, family, and his private investigator.  My log files have confirmation of such traffic.
  • His sister is digging up more newspaper stories for me to put on the web and comment on.
Joe Huffman  Wednesday, February 08, 2006 9:56:21 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [11]  |