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Post Info TOPIC: 100 reasons


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RE: RE: RE: RE: 100 reasons
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quote:

Originally posted by: alwayswatching

"15 have a surplus of useless government employees 16. are not silly song challenged (right Dovey)"

         17.The grass is always glowery on the other side  18.Trees outside do not need christmas lights they glow on their own...........right AW and other people are jealous..

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Anonymous

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17. Our UFOs could be flying buffalos.

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quote:

Originally posted by: Anonymous

"17. Our UFOs could be flying buffalos. "

Hey it's me I forgot to sign in & it is #18.

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       20.all the school play grounds glow    21.The vegs, grown here light the stores at night

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Anonymous

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So should I call the show or owners or sponsers,Is that really what you want ,YOU are bullies


dovey



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Anonymous

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but i got it copied first

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this is for the few anonymous posters who would ruin an otherwise informative fun forum http://www.wiredsafety.org/911/stalking_overview.html  .    


as i understand it , this forum is a place for friendly [sometimes passionate or spirited  ]discussion and debate .   not about veiled intimidation and or threats.       key word here is friendly , we are all Americans here , we are are all on the same side.   


    even if you think you are anonymous when you post , you may not be invisible to  law enforcement ;this event below happened in 2003 , technology has improved since then .


January 24, 2003


QUEENS STUDENT CHARGED WITH MAKING INTERNET TERROR THREAT



Swift, Coordinated Action Leads to Arrest under Tough New Anti-Terror Laws


Governor George E. Pataki, Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown, State Criminal Justice Services Director Chauncey Parker, State Police Superintendent James W. McMahon and State Education Commissioner Richard P. Mills today announced that a Queens high school student has been charged with making a terrorist threat over the Internet, and threatening to use bombs and guns in a shooting spree at his high school.


Lukasz Lagucik, 17, of 59-77 60th Place in Maspeth, Queens, a student at Forest Hills High School inQueens, has been charged with Making a Terrorist Threat, Falsely Reporting an Incident in the First Degree and Aggravated Harassment in the Second Degree. He faces up to seven years in prison if convicted.


"We must and will have zero tolerance for this type of behavior, particularly when aimed at our students and our schools," Governor Pataki said. "Today, New York's Anti-Terrorism laws, in conjunction with New York's SAVE legislation, proved its merit in protecting all New Yorkers by providing clear communication among all levels of law enforcement and school officials. I thank Arkansas law enforcement as well as law enforcement throughout New York State for swiftly passing along this information and assisting schools, and congratulate them for their thorough investigative work leading to this arrest."


District Attorney Brown said, "The alleged threat was a serious public safety issue and all such threats whether actual or fake require immediate attention. Threats such as the one charged in this case cause unnecessary alarm and divert vital law enforcement resources from other important matters. Such threats when made against school children compound the offense because law enforcement must act swiftly to avert possible harm. We in law enforcement hope the arrest today will send a clear message that threats of violence whether real or feigned will not be tolerated."


The defendant was arrested at 3:30 a.m. today at his residence in Maspeth, where he lives with his family, when detectives of the District Attorney's office and investigators of the State Police, assisted by a New York City Police Department Queens Emergency Service unit, executed a court authorized search warrant that was drafted by the District Attorney's Civil Enforcement Bureau, Computer Crimes Unit.


According to law enforcement officials, New York State Police learned on Thursday from the Wynne, Arkansas, High School principal that he had received a copy of a note which said that youths had been "chatting" on the internet and had stated that they had bought firearms and were making bombs to engage in a "Colombine" type of killing spree at a New York high school not identified.


"Teamwork and communication are the foundation of effective law enforcement," State Director of Criminal Justice Chauncey G. Parker said. "By working together and sharing timely and accurate information, law enforcement officials nationally, at the State and local levels, we were able to identify and apprehend a suspect -- resolving a potentially dangerous situation."


New York State Police Superintendent James W. McMahon said, A I wish to thank Chief Michael Bachand of Wynne Arkansas, who contacted us with this information. This enabled us to expedite the information to local law enforcement throughout New York State and to the New York State Education Department who quickly disseminated the information to New York State=s school districts for their consideration. This arrest sends a strong message that terrorist threats will not be tolerated@


State Education Commissioner Richard Mills said, "The SAVE legislation assures that schools in New York State have safety plans to respond to threats such as this. As a result, school districts were able to evaluate the available information and act appropriately." Arkansas Police determined that one of the chat room participants was a 17-year-old female student at the local high school. She was contacted and she told police that she had been chatting on line and by cell phone with an individual she believed was a high school student and who used a certain screen name which she provided to police.


The female student told State Police that the youth had said that he and a friend had been building bombs and had obtained firearms in order to engage in a shooting at school like the incident at the Colombine School in Colorado. She said that the individual indicated to her that the date of the intended attack was to be January 23, 2003.


The information was provided to the New York State Police Squad which worked with the District Attorney's Civil Enforcement Computer Crimes Bureau and obtained information about the defendant's on-line account from the internet service provider, Earthlink. Earthlink confirmed that the defendant had been logged on the internet on January 23, 2003 at about the same time that the female student said she had communicated on-line with him.


State Police investigators conducted surveillance yesterday of the defendant's residence, obtained a search warrant last night and executed the search warrant early this morning, arresting the defendant. The defendant is being held pending arraignment in Queens Criminal Court.


The investigation was conducted by the New York State Police Investigator Alan Brown under the supervision of Senior Investigator John Cassino and the overall supervision of State Police Superintendent James W. McMahon.


The case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Robert D. Alexander, Chief, Computer Crimes Unit, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorney Anthony M. Communiello, Chief, Civil Enforcement Bureau, and the overall supervision of Executive Assistant District Attorney for Investigations Peter A. Crusco and Assistant District Attorney Linda M. Cantoni, Counsel to the Investigations Division.


PL 490.20 Making a Terrorist Threat is a Class D Felony: is punishable by a definite or intermittent term of up to one year. It is also punishable as an indeterminate term of a minimum of 1-3 years up to a maximum sentence of 2 and a half to 7 years. The same sentence range applies to PL 240.60 Falsely Reporting and Incident in the First Degree as it is a D Felony. PL 240.30 Aggravated Harassment in the 2nd Degree is an A misdemeanor, punishable by a definite or intermittent term of up to one year in jail.


 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------          in case anyone is wondering what this is about  some earlier posts of this thread have been wisely deleted by management.....             so please o please , let us all play nice .    


 



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Anonymous

Date:
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mike of the mountain wrote:


this is for the few anonymous posters who would ruin an otherwise informative fun forum http://www.wiredsafety.org/911/stalking_overview.html  .     as i understand it , this forum is a place for friendly [sometimes passionate or spirited  ]discussion and debate .   not about veiled intimidation and or threats.       key word here is friendly , we are all Americans here , we are are all on the same side.        even if you think you are anonymous when you post , you may not be invisible to  law enforcement ;this event below happened in 2003 , technology has improved since then . January 24, 2003 QUEENS STUDENT CHARGED WITH MAKING INTERNET TERROR THREAT Swift, Coordinated Action Leads to Arrest under Tough New Anti-Terror Laws Governor George E. Pataki, Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown, State Criminal Justice Services Director Chauncey Parker, State Police Superintendent James W. McMahon and State Education Commissioner Richard P. Mills today announced that a Queens high school student has been charged with making a terrorist threat over the Internet, and threatening to use bombs and guns in a shooting spree at his high school. Lukasz Lagucik, 17, of 59-77 60th Place in Maspeth, Queens, a student at Forest Hills High School inQueens, has been charged with Making a Terrorist Threat, Falsely Reporting an Incident in the First Degree and Aggravated Harassment in the Second Degree. He faces up to seven years in prison if convicted. "We must and will have zero tolerance for this type of behavior, particularly when aimed at our students and our schools," Governor Pataki said. "Today, New York's Anti-Terrorism laws, in conjunction with New York's SAVE legislation, proved its merit in protecting all New Yorkers by providing clear communication among all levels of law enforcement and school officials. I thank Arkansas law enforcement as well as law enforcement throughout New York State for swiftly passing along this information and assisting schools, and congratulate them for their thorough investigative work leading to this arrest." District Attorney Brown said, "The alleged threat was a serious public safety issue and all such threats whether actual or fake require immediate attention. Threats such as the one charged in this case cause unnecessary alarm and divert vital law enforcement resources from other important matters. Such threats when made against school children compound the offense because law enforcement must act swiftly to avert possible harm. We in law enforcement hope the arrest today will send a clear message that threats of violence whether real or feigned will not be tolerated." The defendant was arrested at 3:30 a.m. today at his residence in Maspeth, where he lives with his family, when detectives of the District Attorney's office and investigators of the State Police, assisted by a New York City Police Department Queens Emergency Service unit, executed a court authorized search warrant that was drafted by the District Attorney's Civil Enforcement Bureau, Computer Crimes Unit. According to law enforcement officials, New York State Police learned on Thursday from the Wynne, Arkansas, High School principal that he had received a copy of a note which said that youths had been "chatting" on the internet and had stated that they had bought firearms and were making bombs to engage in a "Colombine" type of killing spree at a New York high school not identified. "Teamwork and communication are the foundation of effective law enforcement," State Director of Criminal Justice Chauncey G. Parker said. "By working together and sharing timely and accurate information, law enforcement officials nationally, at the State and local levels, we were able to identify and apprehend a suspect -- resolving a potentially dangerous situation." New York State Police Superintendent James W. McMahon said, A I wish to thank Chief Michael Bachand of Wynne Arkansas, who contacted us with this information. This enabled us to expedite the information to local law enforcement throughout New York State and to the New York State Education Department who quickly disseminated the information to New York State=s school districts for their consideration. This arrest sends a strong message that terrorist threats will not be tolerated@ State Education Commissioner Richard Mills said, "The SAVE legislation assures that schools in New York State have safety plans to respond to threats such as this. As a result, school districts were able to evaluate the available information and act appropriately." Arkansas Police determined that one of the chat room participants was a 17-year-old female student at the local high school. She was contacted and she told police that she had been chatting on line and by cell phone with an individual she believed was a high school student and who used a certain screen name which she provided to police. The female student told State Police that the youth had said that he and a friend had been building bombs and had obtained firearms in order to engage in a shooting at school like the incident at the Colombine School in Colorado. She said that the individual indicated to her that the date of the intended attack was to be January 23, 2003. The information was provided to the New York State Police Squad which worked with the District Attorney's Civil Enforcement Computer Crimes Bureau and obtained information about the defendant's on-line account from the internet service provider, Earthlink. Earthlink confirmed that the defendant had been logged on the internet on January 23, 2003 at about the same time that the female student said she had communicated on-line with him. State Police investigators conducted surveillance yesterday of the defendant's residence, obtained a search warrant last night and executed the search warrant early this morning, arresting the defendant. The defendant is being held pending arraignment in Queens Criminal Court. The investigation was conducted by the New York State Police Investigator Alan Brown under the supervision of Senior Investigator John Cassino and the overall supervision of State Police Superintendent James W. McMahon. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Robert D. Alexander, Chief, Computer Crimes Unit, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorney Anthony M. Communiello, Chief, Civil Enforcement Bureau, and the overall supervision of Executive Assistant District Attorney for Investigations Peter A. Crusco and Assistant District Attorney Linda M. Cantoni, Counsel to the Investigations Division. PL 490.20 Making a Terrorist Threat is a Class D Felony: is punishable by a definite or intermittent term of up to one year. It is also punishable as an indeterminate term of a minimum of 1-3 years up to a maximum sentence of 2 and a half to 7 years. The same sentence range applies to PL 240.60 Falsely Reporting and Incident in the First Degree as it is a D Felony. PL 240.30 Aggravated Harassment in the 2nd Degree is an A misdemeanor, punishable by a definite or intermittent term of up to one year in jail.  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------          in case anyone is wondering what this is about  some earlier posts of this thread have been wisely deleted by management.....             so please o please , let us all play nice .      



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Anonymous wrote:


mike of the mountain wrote: this is for the few anonymous posters who would ruin an otherwise informative fun forum http://www.wiredsafety.org/911/stalking_overview.html  .     as i understand it , this forum is a place for friendly [sometimes passionate or spirited  ]discussion and debate .   not about veiled intimidation and or threats.       key word here is friendly , we are all Americans here , we are are all on the same side.        even if you think you are anonymous when you post , you may not be invisible to  law enforcement ;this event below happened in 2003 , technology has improved since then . January 24, 2003 QUEENS STUDENT CHARGED WITH MAKING INTERNET TERROR THREAT Swift, Coordinated Action Leads to Arrest under Tough New Anti-Terror Laws Governor George E. Pataki, Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown, State Criminal Justice Services Director Chauncey Parker, State Police Superintendent James W. McMahon and State Education Commissioner Richard P. Mills today announced that a Queens high school student has been charged with making a terrorist threat over the Internet, and threatening to use bombs and guns in a shooting spree at his high school. Lukasz Lagucik, 17, of 59-77 60th Place in Maspeth, Queens, a student at Forest Hills High School inQueens, has been charged with Making a Terrorist Threat, Falsely Reporting an Incident in the First Degree and Aggravated Harassment in the Second Degree. He faces up to seven years in prison if convicted. "We must and will have zero tolerance for this type of behavior, particularly when aimed at our students and our schools," Governor Pataki said. "Today, New York's Anti-Terrorism laws, in conjunction with New York's SAVE legislation, proved its merit in protecting all New Yorkers by providing clear communication among all levels of law enforcement and school officials. I thank Arkansas law enforcement as well as law enforcement throughout New York State for swiftly passing along this information and assisting schools, and congratulate them for their thorough investigative work leading to this arrest." District Attorney Brown said, "The alleged threat was a serious public safety issue and all such threats whether actual or fake require immediate attention. Threats such as the one charged in this case cause unnecessary alarm and divert vital law enforcement resources from other important matters. Such threats when made against school children compound the offense because law enforcement must act swiftly to avert possible harm. We in law enforcement hope the arrest today will send a clear message that threats of violence whether real or feigned will not be tolerated." The defendant was arrested at 3:30 a.m. today at his residence in Maspeth, where he lives with his family, when detectives of the District Attorney's office and investigators of the State Police, assisted by a New York City Police Department Queens Emergency Service unit, executed a court authorized search warrant that was drafted by the District Attorney's Civil Enforcement Bureau, Computer Crimes Unit. According to law enforcement officials, New York State Police learned on Thursday from the Wynne, Arkansas, High School principal that he had received a copy of a note which said that youths had been "chatting" on the internet and had stated that they had bought firearms and were making bombs to engage in a "Colombine" type of killing spree at a New York high school not identified. "Teamwork and communication are the foundation of effective law enforcement," State Director of Criminal Justice Chauncey G. Parker said. "By working together and sharing timely and accurate information, law enforcement officials nationally, at the State and local levels, we were able to identify and apprehend a suspect -- resolving a potentially dangerous situation." New York State Police Superintendent James W. McMahon said, A I wish to thank Chief Michael Bachand of Wynne Arkansas, who contacted us with this information. This enabled us to expedite the information to local law enforcement throughout New York State and to the New York State Education Department who quickly disseminated the information to New York State=s school districts for their consideration. This arrest sends a strong message that terrorist threats will not be tolerated@ State Education Commissioner Richard Mills said, "The SAVE legislation assures that schools in New York State have safety plans to respond to threats such as this. As a result, school districts were able to evaluate the available information and act appropriately." Arkansas Police determined that one of the chat room participants was a 17-year-old female student at the local high school. She was contacted and she told police that she had been chatting on line and by cell phone with an individual she believed was a high school student and who used a certain screen name which she provided to police. The female student told State Police that the youth had said that he and a friend had been building bombs and had obtained firearms in order to engage in a shooting at school like the incident at the Colombine School in Colorado. She said that the individual indicated to her that the date of the intended attack was to be January 23, 2003. The information was provided to the New York State Police Squad which worked with the District Attorney's Civil Enforcement Computer Crimes Bureau and obtained information about the defendant's on-line account from the internet service provider, Earthlink. Earthlink confirmed that the defendant had been logged on the internet on January 23, 2003 at about the same time that the female student said she had communicated on-line with him. State Police investigators conducted surveillance yesterday of the defendant's residence, obtained a search warrant last night and executed the search warrant early this morning, arresting the defendant. The defendant is being held pending arraignment in Queens Criminal Court. The investigation was conducted by the New York State Police Investigator Alan Brown under the supervision of Senior Investigator John Cassino and the overall supervision of State Police Superintendent James W. McMahon. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Robert D. Alexander, Chief, Computer Crimes Unit, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorney Anthony M. Communiello, Chief, Civil Enforcement Bureau, and the overall supervision of Executive Assistant District Attorney for Investigations Peter A. Crusco and Assistant District Attorney Linda M. Cantoni, Counsel to the Investigations Division. PL 490.20 Making a Terrorist Threat is a Class D Felony: is punishable by a definite or intermittent term of up to one year. It is also punishable as an indeterminate term of a minimum of 1-3 years up to a maximum sentence of 2 and a half to 7 years. The same sentence range applies to PL 240.60 Falsely Reporting and Incident in the First Degree as it is a D Felony. PL 240.30 Aggravated Harassment in the 2nd Degree is an A misdemeanor, punishable by a definite or intermittent term of up to one year in jail.  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------          in case anyone is wondering what this is about  some earlier posts of this thread have been wisely deleted by management.....             so please o please , let us all play nice .      

That was me,so sorry forgot to sign in.

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So does that mean the "I'll hunt you down" posts scattered around this site are illegal?

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Anonymous

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Scott didn't delete any of those posts, Dovey/Jenny did. And then deleted the screen name. That seems to be a misrepresentation of the facts.


 "  in case anyone is wondering what this is about  some earlier posts of this thread have been wisely deleted by management.....             so please o please , let us all play nice ."
----------------------
  in case anyone is wondering
That was me,so sorry forgot to sign in.
------------------
Anonymous
Date: Wed May 11 7:38 AM, 2005
Views: 107
RE: 100 reasons
17. Our UFOs could be flying buffalos.
------------------------------------
ANOTHER DOVEY IDENTITY...
nukiegirl
Member
Posts: 9
Date: Wed May 11 7:44 AM, 2005
Views: 104
RE: RE: 100 reasons
quote:
Originally posted by: Anonymous
"17. Our UFOs could be flying buffalos. "


Hey it's me I forgot to sign in & it is #18.
 
Dovey
Senior Member
Posts: 477
Date: Wed May 11 7:48 AM, 2005
Views: 101
RE: 100 reasons
       20.all the school play grounds glow    21.The vegs, grown here light the stores at night


Anonymous
Date: Mon Jun 20 11:29 AM, 2005
Views: 5
RE: 100 reasons


So should I call the show or owners or sponsers,Is that really what you want ,YOU are bullies


dovey 
---------------------------


 



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starlight wrote:


So does that mean the "I'll hunt you down" posts scattered around this site are illegal?


legal , illegal , who knows - but clearly a violation of the very rules the anony-mouse poster continues to post .


this is after all a public forum .



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Run a search on the word "hunt." I didn't see the use of "hunt anyone down" Anywhere. There were 16 entries. None said that. Is this a lie or what? Who said it and where? Why is Starlight saying this?

-- Edited by NuclearLou at 23:50, 2005-12-08

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NuclearLou wrote:


Run a search on the word "hunt." Don't see no "hunt anyone down." Anywhere. There were 16 entries. None said that. Is this a lie or what? Who said it where?


certain things are implied , yes they are all over this forum , when maps are posted , and little tidbits about axe murderers under the bed and all the rest ...


  a blind man [ or woman ]  can see them .



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Senior Member

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Now THAT'S a leap. And a laugh. Thanks! LOL

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"Life is a daring adventure or nothing at all." Helen Keller "...and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us..."
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