.:.:.:.:
RTTP
.
Mobile
:.:.:.:.
[
<--back
] [
Home
][
Pics
][
News
][
Ads
][
Events
][
Forum
][
Band
][
Search
]
full forum
|
bottom
Reply
[
login
]
SPAM Filter:
re-type this
(values are 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,A,B,C,D,E, or F)
you are quoting a heck of a lot there.
[QUOTE]blah blah blah[/QUOTE] to reply to deadlikemurf.
Please remove excess text as not to re-post tons
message
[QUOTE="deadlikemurf:662847"]pires said:[QUOTE]How can someone go to jail 41yrs. later after he's already been convicted of shooting the cop? This is outrageous!!![/QUOTE] Barclay briefly returned to the force as a dispatcher, and later manned an Amtrak information booth, but the work proved too taxing. Hospital stays became more frequent as his organs and immune system weakened. And he'd known what was coming. "The surgeon gave Walt his lifetime prognosis right after he was shot," his sister said. "He said what would happen to him in his 50s and 60s, and that's exactly what did happen." Barclay spent his last five years in a suburban nursing home, flat on his back, an invalid with a feeding tube in his stomach and no control of basic bodily functions. It was the outcome he most feared. "He dropped contact with people because he didn't want them to know he was in there," his sister said. "Everything had to be done for him. He could not accept that." In the end, he went into cardiac arrest brought on by a urinary tract infection. Bucks County coroner Joseph Campbell concluded the death resulted from the years of cascading complications from the 1966 shooting. In truth, Barclay's sister said, he had been dying for 41 years. that's how.. fuck that fucking shitbag.. let him rot. [/QUOTE]
top
[
Vers. 0.12
][ 0.003 secs/8 queries][
refresh
][