NFL: Michael Vick Saga **Signs with Eagles (page 13)**
#205
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Thread Starter
Originally Posted by sonnyg80
yumyum's made a killing on betting on the next bungal to become a jailbird
#207
Senior Moderator
Thread Starter
Originally Posted by Scottman111
And I was already having a bad day...now look at it
Although I'm an idiot for saying this, but I can't believe Yumtwit hasn't posted the latest Bengals news
Just haven't had a chance yet. I gotta work too, you know.
#208
Originally Posted by Scottman111
And I was already having a bad day...now look at it
Although I'm an idiot for saying this, but I can't believe Yumtwit hasn't posted the latest Bengals news
sorry scotty
#211
Senior Moderator
Thread Starter
Originally Posted by NetEditor
So much for the "clearing my good name" BS that was in his statement to the press.
#216
Bent = #1
Originally Posted by sonnyg80
You plead guilty to lesser charges i believe.
I know he pleads guilty.. but for the sake of this bet.. who wins or is it a draw
To clear up the details on the bet it is as follow. If you agree then the bet is on.
I have Vick being guilty.
You have him being not guilty.
If there is a mistrial neither of us win. He has to be found guilty or not guilty, anything other than those 2 the bet is void.
Let me know if you agree.
#217
Senior Moderator
Thread Starter
Originally Posted by sonnyg80
Yea, not looking good for him. Either a plea deal or go to court with two more charges under his belt..hmmm
#219
Bent = #1
Originally Posted by gsi00154
Hmmmm........
First he has to do it.. then we'll take a vote from the crowd.. IMO I don't think it counts because of how I said "anything other than those 2." He wouldn't be found guilty, just admitting it, and he wouldn't be found not guilty. So it would be a split decision
#220
Originally Posted by hornyleprechaun
First he has to do it.. then we'll take a vote from the crowd.. IMO I don't think it counts because of how I said "anything other than those 2." He wouldn't be found guilty, just admitting it, and he wouldn't be found not guilty. So it would be a split decision
He has til Friday to submit a plea deal or he will for sure go to trial.
#222
Bent = #1
Originally Posted by sonnyg80
He'd be pleading guilty to lesser charges though. So you would lose the bet technically
He has til Friday to submit a plea deal or he will for sure go to trial.
He has til Friday to submit a plea deal or he will for sure go to trial.
He still won't be found not guilty, so neither of us win/lose..
#225
Bent = #1
Originally Posted by sonnyg80
Wouldn't he be pleading/found guilty on some of the charges though? Dunno..
#227
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Interesting article in the AJC.
Vick left to mull fast rise, fall
By Mark Bradley | Tuesday, August 14, 2007, 07:54 PM
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Mark Bradley How must it be, being Michael Vick?
From prince of this bustling city to pariah of an entire country; from idol of millions to cheap joke on the “Tonight Show;” from having too many friends to having no friends at all — how must that feel? How must it feel to arise each morning believing the walls have moved ever closer in the dark of night?
Twenty days ago you stood in a federal courtroom as one of four defendants. Today you stand apart. The other three have, or will, plead guilty. The other three have turned on you, the old pal they called Ookie. The other three are scrambling to save themselves. At this late date, who saves Michael Vick?
Not Arthur Blank. That cord has been all but cut. So completely have you fallen from the rich man’s graces that he has been moved to apologize, nearly four years after the fact, for the hardly heinous act of pushing you in a wheelchair. How must that feel, knowing Blank once deemed you worth $130 million of his money and all of his conspicuous affection but having no reason to believe he ever wants to see you again?
How must it feel, knowing you came as close to Having It All as anyone from your background — heck, as anyone from any background, the Rockefellers included — ever can? How must it feel, having gone from seeing your replica jersey adorn the backs of folks from all walks of life to being reduced to the indignity of your likeness peddled as a $7.99 doggie chew toy?
How must it feel, having spent your formative years dreaming of bigger and better, having risen from the rough neighborhoods of Newport News — Bad Newz, as it’s known, the same name you gave your ill-fated “kennel” — only to find that those old ties were a snare? How must it feel, knowing the speed that enabled you to run away from everybody cannot shake the feds?
The feds, you learn with every passing day, aren’t the Carolina Panthers. They aren’t the Miami-Dade cops. They don’t want your autograph. They want to throw you in jail. The feel-good story of rising from the streets of Bad Newz to owning a mansion in Sugarloaf is surely yielding to the stark reality that you could be prison-bound. How do you sleep at night? In whom (besides your many lawyers) do you confide?
Warrick Dunn told reporters Monday he’d spoken with you recently. He also said, “I don’t think anybody on this team, right now, is hoping that Mike comes back.” Perhaps that sounded harsher than Dunn, a genuinely nice man, meant, but the sentiment was coldly instructive. Once you were the face and future of this franchise. Now you’re yesterday’s man. The Falcons don’t want you and act as if they don’t need you. How has it come to that?
Your legal options have apparently been reduced to two lousy choices: Either plead guilty or get hit with more charges, these surely bolstered by testimony from your former buddies. It’s still possible you could be acquitted at trial, but do you dare take that chance? Guilty at trial could mean five years in jail. A guilty plea might mean a year. How must that seem, the grim notion of a lesser sentence as best-case scenario?
And what of football? If you plead guilty, when might you be cleared to play again? What team would want you and your baggage if/when you are? You spoke often of wanting to be a great quarterback, a Super Bowl quarterback, but now, at age 27, you’re damaged goods. You haven’t been brought low by debilitating injury — you’re long past the broken leg of 2003 — or an act of God. You’ve undone yourself. You put yourself in places you didn’t need to be.
And now you’re alone. You don’t really have a team or teammates anymore, and you mightn’t have a job for long. How must it feel, to have been given so much and to have thrown it all away? How must it be, being Michael Vick
By Mark Bradley | Tuesday, August 14, 2007, 07:54 PM
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Mark Bradley How must it be, being Michael Vick?
From prince of this bustling city to pariah of an entire country; from idol of millions to cheap joke on the “Tonight Show;” from having too many friends to having no friends at all — how must that feel? How must it feel to arise each morning believing the walls have moved ever closer in the dark of night?
Twenty days ago you stood in a federal courtroom as one of four defendants. Today you stand apart. The other three have, or will, plead guilty. The other three have turned on you, the old pal they called Ookie. The other three are scrambling to save themselves. At this late date, who saves Michael Vick?
Not Arthur Blank. That cord has been all but cut. So completely have you fallen from the rich man’s graces that he has been moved to apologize, nearly four years after the fact, for the hardly heinous act of pushing you in a wheelchair. How must that feel, knowing Blank once deemed you worth $130 million of his money and all of his conspicuous affection but having no reason to believe he ever wants to see you again?
How must it feel, knowing you came as close to Having It All as anyone from your background — heck, as anyone from any background, the Rockefellers included — ever can? How must it feel, having gone from seeing your replica jersey adorn the backs of folks from all walks of life to being reduced to the indignity of your likeness peddled as a $7.99 doggie chew toy?
How must it feel, having spent your formative years dreaming of bigger and better, having risen from the rough neighborhoods of Newport News — Bad Newz, as it’s known, the same name you gave your ill-fated “kennel” — only to find that those old ties were a snare? How must it feel, knowing the speed that enabled you to run away from everybody cannot shake the feds?
The feds, you learn with every passing day, aren’t the Carolina Panthers. They aren’t the Miami-Dade cops. They don’t want your autograph. They want to throw you in jail. The feel-good story of rising from the streets of Bad Newz to owning a mansion in Sugarloaf is surely yielding to the stark reality that you could be prison-bound. How do you sleep at night? In whom (besides your many lawyers) do you confide?
Warrick Dunn told reporters Monday he’d spoken with you recently. He also said, “I don’t think anybody on this team, right now, is hoping that Mike comes back.” Perhaps that sounded harsher than Dunn, a genuinely nice man, meant, but the sentiment was coldly instructive. Once you were the face and future of this franchise. Now you’re yesterday’s man. The Falcons don’t want you and act as if they don’t need you. How has it come to that?
Your legal options have apparently been reduced to two lousy choices: Either plead guilty or get hit with more charges, these surely bolstered by testimony from your former buddies. It’s still possible you could be acquitted at trial, but do you dare take that chance? Guilty at trial could mean five years in jail. A guilty plea might mean a year. How must that seem, the grim notion of a lesser sentence as best-case scenario?
And what of football? If you plead guilty, when might you be cleared to play again? What team would want you and your baggage if/when you are? You spoke often of wanting to be a great quarterback, a Super Bowl quarterback, but now, at age 27, you’re damaged goods. You haven’t been brought low by debilitating injury — you’re long past the broken leg of 2003 — or an act of God. You’ve undone yourself. You put yourself in places you didn’t need to be.
And now you’re alone. You don’t really have a team or teammates anymore, and you mightn’t have a job for long. How must it feel, to have been given so much and to have thrown it all away? How must it be, being Michael Vick
#228
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2972161
Plea deal would give him less than a year in jail.
Plea deal would give him less than a year in jail.
#229
Senior Moderator
Thread Starter
Nifty read. And again, I must reiterate the one word to sum up the entire Michael Sick episode:
#230
Bent = #1
Originally Posted by bent09
Why do you make so many bets if you just try to wessel your way out of them?
That was definately a table.
That was definately a table.
Can you and sonny not read! I would win the bet if Vick is found GUILTY! I'm trying to help the other guy out! He would be pleading, but not be "found" guilty, so I don't think I would win the bet.
#231
Originally Posted by hornyleprechaun
Can you and sonny not read! I would win the bet if Vick is found GUILTY! I'm trying to help the other guy out! He would be pleading, but not be "found" guilty, so I don't think I would win the bet.
#232
Bent = #1
Originally Posted by sonnyg80
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2972161
Plea deal would give him less than a year in jail.
Plea deal would give him less than a year in jail.
It says that is what he wants, but the Feds want more than a year.
#236
http://asp.usatoday.com/community/ot...burst&tag=news
Michael Vick Sued for $63 Billion and Accused of Allegiance to Al Qaeda
From the blog:
NFL GridIron Gab
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
South Carolina prison inmate Jonathan Lee Riches filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in Richmond, Va. alleging that Michael Vick stole his pit bulls and sold them on eBay to buy “missiles from Iran.” Riches alleges that Vick stole 2 pit bulls from his home in Holiday, Florida and used them for dogfighting in Richmond, Virginia. The handwritten complaint also claims that Vick would need those missiles because he pledged allegiance to the terrorist group Al Qaeda in February.
Riches, who is serving time for wire fraud at Williamsburg Federal Correctional facility in South Carolina, wants $63 billion delivered to the front gates of the prison. Riches also wrote in the complaint, “Michael Vick has to stop physically hurting my feelings and dashing my hopes.” How can anyone physically hurt someone’s feelings? This guy must be a real genius, I wonder if he is a member of Mensa.
From the blog:
NFL GridIron Gab
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
South Carolina prison inmate Jonathan Lee Riches filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in Richmond, Va. alleging that Michael Vick stole his pit bulls and sold them on eBay to buy “missiles from Iran.” Riches alleges that Vick stole 2 pit bulls from his home in Holiday, Florida and used them for dogfighting in Richmond, Virginia. The handwritten complaint also claims that Vick would need those missiles because he pledged allegiance to the terrorist group Al Qaeda in February.
Riches, who is serving time for wire fraud at Williamsburg Federal Correctional facility in South Carolina, wants $63 billion delivered to the front gates of the prison. Riches also wrote in the complaint, “Michael Vick has to stop physically hurting my feelings and dashing my hopes.” How can anyone physically hurt someone’s feelings? This guy must be a real genius, I wonder if he is a member of Mensa.
#238
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Thread Starter
Originally Posted by sonnyg80
#239
Safety Car
Michael Vick being sued for $63 BILLION
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,293268,00.html
South Carolina Inmate Hits Michael Vick With '$63,000,000,000 Billion Dollar' Lawsuit Alleging Al Qaeda Ties
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Embattled NFL quarterback Michael Vick, facing federal charges related to his alleged participation in dogfighting, has been hit with a "$63,000,000,000 billion dollar" lawsuit filed by a South Carolina inmate who alleges the Atlanta Falcons star stole his pit bulls and sold them on eBay to buy "missiles from Iran," FOX News has learned.
Jonathan Lee Riches filed the handwritten complaint over "theft and abuse of my animals" on July 23 in the U.S. District Court in Richmond, Va.
Riches alleges that Vick stole two white mixed pit bull dogs from his home in Holiday, Fla., and used them for dogfighting operations in Richmond, Va. The complaint goes on to allege that Vick sold the dogs on eBay and “used the proceeds to purchase missiles from the Iran government.”
The complaint also alleges that Vick would need those missiles because he pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda in February of this year.
“Michael Vick has to stop physically hurting my feelings and dashing my hopes,” Riches writes in the complaint.
Riches wants $63 billion dollars “backed by gold and silver “ delivered to the front gates to the Williamsburg Federal Correctional facility in South Carolina. Riches is an inmate at the facility serving out a wire fraud conviction.
FOXNews.com attempted to contact Vick, but neither he nor his spokesman could be reached for comment.
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Embattled NFL quarterback Michael Vick, facing federal charges related to his alleged participation in dogfighting, has been hit with a "$63,000,000,000 billion dollar" lawsuit filed by a South Carolina inmate who alleges the Atlanta Falcons star stole his pit bulls and sold them on eBay to buy "missiles from Iran," FOX News has learned.
Jonathan Lee Riches filed the handwritten complaint over "theft and abuse of my animals" on July 23 in the U.S. District Court in Richmond, Va.
Riches alleges that Vick stole two white mixed pit bull dogs from his home in Holiday, Fla., and used them for dogfighting operations in Richmond, Va. The complaint goes on to allege that Vick sold the dogs on eBay and “used the proceeds to purchase missiles from the Iran government.”
The complaint also alleges that Vick would need those missiles because he pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda in February of this year.
“Michael Vick has to stop physically hurting my feelings and dashing my hopes,” Riches writes in the complaint.
Riches wants $63 billion dollars “backed by gold and silver “ delivered to the front gates to the Williamsburg Federal Correctional facility in South Carolina. Riches is an inmate at the facility serving out a wire fraud conviction.
FOXNews.com attempted to contact Vick, but neither he nor his spokesman could be reached for comment.
and here is the rest of the actual filing
http://www.foxnews.com/projects/pdf/...athan_file.pdf
Last edited by Shadzilla; 08-15-2007 at 06:42 PM.
#240
The sizzle in the Steak
He's a terrorist!