Attack of the Brown Clowns and their Dilemma

Annoying_Boy

New Member
Dear Idiot;

Read a basic primer about our judicial system so that you might actually be able to answer your own stupid question; no judge was involved in the decision not to prosecute the batch of charges.:whistle:.

Gilligan. Gilligan.

While you were down in the basement trying to figure out how to get your model sailboat into a Corona bottle, Mattingly had a cop on the stand saying "I don't need any evidence."

:killingme
 

Gilligan

#*! boat!
PREMO Member
Gilligan. Gilligan.

While you were down in the basement trying to figure out how to get your model sailboat into a Corona bottle, Mattingly had a cop on the stand saying "I don't need any evidence."

:killingme

But..I don't have a basement...??

:bigwhoop:

Prattle on all you want..the judge's words were pretty clear and damning indeed. Nothing you can put on this forum will erase that..will it now?:whistle:
 

tom88

Well-Known Member
Dear Fair and Balanced,

Why did the judge allow Mattingly to be acquitted of all charges?

Spin it. Twist it. Balance it. Do whatever to it. It's still a dilemma for the Fritz Cartel, isn't it?

Because Mattingly wasn't guilty and Fritz threw his public tantrum.

:yikes:

The judge allowed nothing of the sort. Most of the charges never were brought before the judge, or a jury. Most of the charges were dropped by Assistant States Attorney for Prince Georges County Cummings. She is also the same prosecutor who told Brown she would agree to a sentence of 30 days work release. I guess my question is why did she go so easy, and the judge saw fit to hammer Brown? Is Cummings in bed with Brown and Mattingly? I guess that's the real question. I don't know because I don't know enough about the case, but I do know that Judge Wallace saw the evidence and determined that Mattingly was corrupt.

This is what Wallace said to Brown at sentencing:

"I frankly don't think you were the instigator in any of these things, but you played a major role," Wallace said, and he barred Brown from having any contact with Mattingly after Brown is released from custody and begins five years of supervised probation.

"The two of you together did operate your business corruptly," the judge said, "in an effort to cheat other people."

So you tell me, why did Wallace say that if he didn't feel it true? No spin, just looking at the information provided by a respected judge.

Brown sentenced to two years in prison
 

Annoying_Boy

New Member
Dear Idiot;

Read a basic primer about our judicial system so that you might actually be able to answer your own stupid question; no judge was involved in the decision not to prosecute the batch of charges.:whistle:.

Ok professor of law Gilligan, talk us through the Mattingly trial events:

1. Did Mattingly have a trial?

2. Was it a jury trial?

3 What was the verdict?

4. What caused the verdict?

5. What options did the judge have after the jury's verdict?

:popcorn:
 

JOKER

Great Mills Rd
The Enterprise
Friday, Oct. 22, 2010

By JOHN WHARTON
Staff writer

Brown sentenced to term in prison

Judge says state's attorney candidate John Mattingly
also tried to cheat people in real-estate dealings


A two-year investigation of real-estate fraud and witness tampering
resulted this week in a prison sentence for Daniel Jason Brown,
and a judge's rebuke of state's attorney candidate John Mattingly

Mattingly (D) did not attend his real-estate partner's sentencing hearing.

"I frankly don't think you were the instigator in any of these things,
but you played a major role," Judge Wallace said, and he barred Brown
from having any contact with John Mattingly after Brown is
released from custody and begins five years of supervised probation.

"The two of you together (Mattingly & Brown) did operate your business corruptly,"
Judge Wallace said, "in an effort to cheat other people."

Renee Joy, assistant Prince George's prosecutor, spoke of Brown's conduct.
"His work ethic was proven to be shortcuts and scamming innocent people
to line his own pockets," Joy said. "He thinks that he's above the law."

In the home-improvement case, Joy said, "Mr. Brown was showing the
epitome of greed. He was taking advantage of an elderly woman who was
an amputee and had recently lost her husband."

for full story click on link below
Brown sentenced to term in prison
 

hvp05

Methodically disorganized
You forgot these follow-up quotes. Let me help ya out...
Why do you keep posting that quote? Bresamil doesn't know anything more about it than anyone else does, and she was a baby when it actually happened. Using an anonymous forum poster to try and make your case is ignorant.
And I asked my sister, who was the actual person who was around them all at the time to come on here and say what she knows, but she has declined.
:howdy:
 

Annoying_Boy

New Member
Ok professor of law Gilligan, talk us through the Mattingly trial events:

1. Did Mattingly have a trial?

2. Was it a jury trial?

3 What was the verdict?

4. What caused the verdict?

5. What options did the judge have after the jury's verdict?

:popcorn:

Still waiting Gilligan?

:tap:
 

Gilligan

#*! boat!
PREMO Member
Ok professor of law Gilligan, talk us through the Mattingly trial events:

1. Did Mattingly have a trial?

2. Was it a jury trial?

3 What was the verdict?

4. What caused the verdict?

5. What options did the judge have after the jury's verdict?

:popcorn:

Ya got me. Mattingly is as inoccent and pristine as newly fallen snow. Tell me where I should go for the free champagne when he gets elected SA in couple weeks.
 

Annoying_Boy

New Member
Ya got me. Mattingly is as inoccent and pristine as newly fallen snow. Tell me where I should go for the free champagne when he gets elected SA in couple weeks.

So you talk a bunch of B.S to confuse issues, but you can't answer the real questions.

AB has powned the island punk.

:killingme
 

Gilligan

#*! boat!
PREMO Member
So you talk a bunch of B.S to confuse issues, but you can't answer the real questions.

AB has powned the island punk.

:killingme

Ahh yes..so powned I am. ...my inferior weapons are no match for your puny intellect...

well..until Nov 2nd anyway. Come to think of it...what on earth are you going to do after Nov 2??
 

Hadenuff

New Member
MR. White

Ahh yes..so powned I am. ...my inferior weapons are no match for your puny intellect...

well..until Nov 2nd anyway. Come to think of it...what on earth are you going to do after Nov 2??

Who does Mr. White support for States Attorney? Can't be fritz. What a worm.
 

hvp05

Methodically disorganized
what on earth are you going to do after Nov 2??
(Ooo, can I guess?!) Throwing the mother of all temper tantrums! :lmao: People will stare and be amazed that a grown person could react in such a way. Throwing things and the only word he'll be able to say is "Fritz", sometimes as a whisper, sometimes yelling as if he's trying to form a sentence but it all comes out as "Fritz". How much do you want to bet he gets locked into a plain white room? :popcorn:
 

Gilligan

#*! boat!
PREMO Member
so you know everything locally and politically and don't know who White is?

:killingme

Shoot..I never made such a claim. I would never have known a single thing about Mattingly were it not for the sudden appearance on this forum of his troop of clowns.


So again..who is 'Mr. White'?
 

JOKER

Great Mills Rd
The Enterprise
Friday, Oct. 22, 2010

By JOHN WHARTON
Staff writer

Brown sentenced to term in prison

Judge says state's attorney candidate John Mattingly
also tried to cheat people in real-estate dealings


A two-year investigation of real-estate fraud and witness tampering
resulted this week in a prison sentence for Daniel Jason Brown,
and a judge's rebuke of state's attorney candidate John Mattingly

Mattingly (D) did not attend his real-estate partner's sentencing hearing.

"I frankly don't think you were the instigator in any of these things,
but you played a major role," Judge Wallace said, and he barred Brown
from having any contact with John Mattingly after Brown is
released from custody and begins five years of supervised probation.

"The two of you together (Mattingly & Brown) did operate your business corruptly,"
Judge Wallace said, "in an effort to cheat other people."

Renee Joy, assistant Prince George's prosecutor, spoke of Brown's conduct.
"His work ethic was proven to be shortcuts and scamming innocent people
to line his own pockets," Joy said. "He thinks that he's above the law."

In the home-improvement case, Joy said, "Mr. Brown was showing the
epitome of greed. He was taking advantage of an elderly woman who was
an amputee and had recently lost her husband."

for full story click on link below
Brown sentenced to term in prison
 
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