'Presumed' local gangster gets shot up in his TL...
#1
'Presumed' local gangster gets shot up in his TL...
I really dont feel sorry for the drug dealing gangsters getting shot up and stuff...but holy crap, leave the TL at home if its gonna happen to you!
its no secret that we've been having a bit of a gang war here in vancouver so we are seeing shootings almost every weekend now.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/dea...608/story.html
its no secret that we've been having a bit of a gang war here in vancouver so we are seeing shootings almost every weekend now.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/dea...608/story.html
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#10
but thanks for the touching words Justin.
#12
#14
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Acura_Dude (10-23-2011)
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combat mediC (10-24-2011)
#28
here is a type-s that got shot up in ATL over the weekend...
http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/apd-i...-daylig/nFLHd/
http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/apd-i...-daylig/nFLHd/
#29
UPDATE... damn gangsters de-valuing the 3G!
judge has ordered ICBC to pay a Quesnel mom nearly $12,000, the value of the car her son was driving at the time he was shot and killed in a gangland slaying.
On Oct. 22, 2011, Stephen Leone, a former associate of gangster Sukhveer Dhak, was shot dead by a masked gunman while driving a car in a Surrey parking lot. The 2004 Acura TL driven by Leone was written off by ICBC.
John Steven, the car’s registered owner, made an insurance claim and was to be paid $11,440.56.
Steven then offered to transfer the car, along with the payout amount, into the name of Leone’s mother, Hazel Burns, to help with funeral costs for her son.
After checking with an ICBC Dial-a-Claim agent and being reassured that the pending claim would still go through, Burns arranged for the car to be transferred into her name.
An ICBC adjuster contacted Burns a few days later and said the claim was “rendered void due to the transfer,” according to court documents.
Another ICBC adjuster to which the case was then referred said ICBC had every intention of paying the amount of $11,440.56 to the car’s previous owner and that “the only reason this money was not paid out to Mr. Stevens was because of the transfer.”
Burns then filed a notice of claim in B.C. Provincial Court in June 2012.
Shortly after, she was informed for the claim to proceed, a written statement from the original claimant had to state the intention to relinquish all rights on the car and the insurance payout to the new owner. That statement was then drafted by Burns and signed by Steven but during trial an ICBC adjuster said the document was presented too late.
However, in Judge R. D. Morgan’s written decision released last week, he noted there should not have been any confusion as to what Burns was asking and why in her initial conversation with the Dial-a-Claim agent.
ICBC has been ordered to pay Burns $11,440.56 and $166 in filing and service fees, for a total of $11,606.56.
judge has ordered ICBC to pay a Quesnel mom nearly $12,000, the value of the car her son was driving at the time he was shot and killed in a gangland slaying.
On Oct. 22, 2011, Stephen Leone, a former associate of gangster Sukhveer Dhak, was shot dead by a masked gunman while driving a car in a Surrey parking lot. The 2004 Acura TL driven by Leone was written off by ICBC.
John Steven, the car’s registered owner, made an insurance claim and was to be paid $11,440.56.
Steven then offered to transfer the car, along with the payout amount, into the name of Leone’s mother, Hazel Burns, to help with funeral costs for her son.
After checking with an ICBC Dial-a-Claim agent and being reassured that the pending claim would still go through, Burns arranged for the car to be transferred into her name.
An ICBC adjuster contacted Burns a few days later and said the claim was “rendered void due to the transfer,” according to court documents.
Another ICBC adjuster to which the case was then referred said ICBC had every intention of paying the amount of $11,440.56 to the car’s previous owner and that “the only reason this money was not paid out to Mr. Stevens was because of the transfer.”
Burns then filed a notice of claim in B.C. Provincial Court in June 2012.
Shortly after, she was informed for the claim to proceed, a written statement from the original claimant had to state the intention to relinquish all rights on the car and the insurance payout to the new owner. That statement was then drafted by Burns and signed by Steven but during trial an ICBC adjuster said the document was presented too late.
However, in Judge R. D. Morgan’s written decision released last week, he noted there should not have been any confusion as to what Burns was asking and why in her initial conversation with the Dial-a-Claim agent.
ICBC has been ordered to pay Burns $11,440.56 and $166 in filing and service fees, for a total of $11,606.56.
#33
I've heard it before referring to me, but not for truly nefarious reasons.
It's a perfect recipe:
People half-joke that I must be a drug dealer to own a car like that at my age. It's happened a few times that people ask to "see my piece" under the seat, because they assume I have one.
When you manage your money right and work hard, a nice car is one possible benefit.
It's a perfect recipe:
- Living in Utah (whitest state)
- From Cincinnati
- I'm perpetually tan (dark complexion = "shadier" person)
- I can speak jive
- Black 2004 TL
- Tinted windows
- Driving a TL while in college
- Paid it off myself
People half-joke that I must be a drug dealer to own a car like that at my age. It's happened a few times that people ask to "see my piece" under the seat, because they assume I have one.
When you manage your money right and work hard, a nice car is one possible benefit.
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