<table width="90%" cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0 align=center><tr><td>Quote, originally posted by Hair Jig »</td></tr><tr><td class="quote">
Seriously?
OK ... I'll bite ... Obviously, you wouldn't "store powder" in a woodpile. His only reason would be to do bodily harm to another person. Such an act is usually considered to be "reckless endangerment" and carries a pretty tough punishment in most cases. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out what happened. Any detective or investigator worth a darn would figure this out in 2 minutes. And I highly doubt that a jury hearing your premeditated murder trial would have much sympathy for you when you said you killed the guy for stealing fire wood.<br /><br />
Modified by Hair Jig at 3:07 PM 3/27/2012</td></tr></table>
Not Guilty, I have doubts that the true owner of the wood knew the powder was in there. Also I need evidence that the powder was in the wood. How do I know the theif was not playing with the black powder and causeed his own accident. If I were the true owner of the wood I wouldn't ever admit to placing the powder in ther. Theif got what he deserved and probably less. Should chop his hands off. I hate theives.![]()
![]()
![]()