Kristen Diane Parker, Scrub Technician, Causes Major Hepatitis Scare In Colorado

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P. SOLOMON BANDA | July 11, 2009 01:26 PM EST | AP

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In this photo released by the Denver County Sheriff's Department, Kristen Diane Parker, 26, is shown. Parker, is accused of is accused of injecting herself with painkillers meant for patients, then filling the used syringes with saline solution. (AP Photo/Denver County Sheriff)

DENVER — Kimberly Spencer's 9-year-old son went to Audubon Ambulatory Surgery Center last month for what was supposed to be a routine surgery. The rambunctious child stuck a BB in his ear and doctors had to operate to remove it.

What happened next shocked the family. They were notified that their son is one of 6,000 patients who may have been exposed to hepatitis C by a painkiller-addicted technician who had the disease and allegedly passed on dirty syringes to patients.

The technician has been jailed, thousands of rattled patients have been getting hepatitis C tests, and two medical facilities where she worked have been bombarded with questions about how they let it happen. Ten cases of hepatitis C have been linked to Rose Medical Center, where Kristen Diane Parker worked until April.

"It was originally a humorous child story we could write about in his baby book and now it's just gone south a little bit," Spencer said Friday as she awaited results of her son's blood test. "We're very optimistic, we think it's going to be just fine. It's still unnerving."

During a police interview videotaped June 30 that was played in court Thursday, the 26-year-old Parker told a detective that she kept dirty saline-filled syringes in her pocket and watched for opportunities when doctors and nurses left the room. She then allegedly stole syringes filled with Fentanyl from operating carts and replaced them with the used syringes.

"I didn't want to make it obvious to everyone that I was using," the 26-year-old Parker told the detective in the interview, saying she stole between 15 and 20 syringes of Fentanyl. "I knew my limit."

Health officials are conducting tests to determine if the 10 hepatitis C cases are definitively linked to Parker. Many people with hepatitis C don't know they are infected because they don't develop symptoms until years later.

Parker said she used between 100 to 250 micrograms of the drug each time, roughly enough medication for a 500-pound person, according to medical malpractice attorney Dr. Eric Steiner, a former cardiac anesthesiologist.

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Thousands of former surgery patients have contacted Denver's Rose Medical Center and Audubon Ambulatory Surgery Center in Colorado Springs for free blood tests being offered by both facilities. More than 1,900 former Rose patients have been tested, said hospital spokeswoman Leslie Teegarden.

An Audubon spokesman did not return messages Friday, but state health officials said those at that facility, including Spencer's son, will be tested again in about seven weeks because it takes that long for the disease to show up in the bloodstream. Hepatitis C is a treatable but incurable blood-borne disease that can cause serious liver problems.

Despite a hopeful attitude for Spencer, mundane every day occurrences have taken on disproportionate significance, such as Thursday when her son fell off his bike and skinned his knee.

"A simple little scrape to me is, 'Oh my gosh,' we need to take care of that, wash our hands, bandage him up. It makes you think twice, for everybody; the children he's playing with, the children I have at home. At the same time I don't want to overreact for him. He's nine.

"It's probably going to be like this for six more weeks until we know for sure."

Parker's case could end up being the first in Colorado where a patient got an infection from a health care worker who was tampering with drugs, said Dr. Ned Calonge, chief medical officer for the state health department.

Nationwide, there were four documented cases of nurses and doctors infecting patients with hepatitis C between 1992 and 2003, according to the latest information from Centers for Disease Control. A 1992 case cited in the CDC study involved a surgical technician who was using anesthesia medications.

Parker gave several reasons for using Fentanyl, which is a narcotic 80 to 100 times more powerful than morphine: to deal with a custody battle with her ex-husband over her 2-year-old son; six-hour stretches of being on her feet; and back pain from the physical requirements of moving patients around the operating rooms.

She also said she had a problem with painkillers in the past and she may have gotten hepatitis C when she used heroin last summer while living in New Jersey.

"She's going to take responsibility," Parker's attorney Gregory Graf said. He had argued that Parker should be released on bail because her cooperation with investigators proves she was not a flight risk.

A key point that could lead to more serious charges is whether she knew she was infected with hepatitis C.

She tested positive for the disease before starting her job at Rose in October, but she didn't follow up when told about it because she didn't have health insurance or money for a doctor and she got distracted with her new job.

She also said hospital officials didn't make it clear she tested positive. A federal magistrate judge disagreed and declared her a danger to the community and ordered her held without bond, saying her actions showed significant disregard for the safety of others. Her next hearing is Oct. 6.

Those infected with hepatitis C are not barred from working in health services, so long as standard precautions are taken, according to the CDC.

"She knew she had hepatitis C, she's a health care worker and she understands how this disease is spread," said Pat Criscito, 56, an author and freelance writer from Monument south of Denver. She underwent back and hand surgery at Rose last fall and spent a sleepless night worrying about hepatitis C while she waited for her test results. Criscito said a positive result would have been meant certain death because years of arthritis treatment have severely weakened her immune system.

"If I was going to die, she deserves life in prison. I can't understand how somebody can do that to another human being," Criscito said, who tested negative and is waiting the results of a second test.

Hospital and state health officials aren't sure how many people were injected with Parker's dirty needles or with saline solution contaminated when Parker allegedly dipped her dirty needles to fill bogus syringes to cover her tracks.

Denver police launched a drug investigation in April and the state health department began its investigation June 1 after former Rose surgery patients began testing positive for hepatitis C. Parker was arrested June 30 on state drug charges, but Denver police turned the case over to federal agents when they discovered the tampering.

(This version RECASTS headlines to correct that defendant is a technician, not a nurse)

DENVER — Kimberly Spencer's 9-year-old son went to Audubon Ambulatory Surgery Center last month for what was supposed to be a routine surgery. The rambunctious child stuck a BB in his ear and do...
DENVER — Kimberly Spencer's 9-year-old son went to Audubon Ambulatory Surgery Center last month for what was supposed to be a routine surgery. The rambunctious child stuck a BB in his ear and do...
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One can only wonder why so many of us are turning to drugs, resulting in more and more disturbing incidents like this. The increasing variety of drugs? Their availability? The decline of our society? Increasing depression and hopelessness? All of the above? Is there any hope? Is intensive drug education the answer? Obviously, the war on drugs is failing miserably, and even if t weren't, healthcare professionals like Parker would continue to abuse their positions to obtain painkillers, sedatives, etc. What a mess.

On a side note, this picture of Kristen Parker looks just like the painting, "Girl in Pink Blouse," by Amedeo Modigliani.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:15 PM on 07/11/2009
- aweissnet I'm a Fan of aweissnet 26 fans permalink
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Drugs, like alcohol, help to numb reality. And more and more, looks like we need some numbing to this reality.

I learned at an early age numbing has a price, and it just don't feel good, so I don't do it.

The decline of society ... the decline of the country. I agree.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 07/12/2009

Hep C is a horrible illness. It is "treatable" but not curable. You can have it for decades without any symptoms. By that time, your treatment is minimally succesful in reducing the virus. Most people with Hep C end up on a transplant list, and pray they live until they receive one. That is, if they have insurance that will ok it. Most transplants cost around half a million - after some involved overcharge for services. If you have no insurance, you die... This woman may ultimately be responsible for many deaths. Why don't hospital personnel have piss tests? My husband had to for his job...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 PM on 07/11/2009
- quindy I'm a Fan of quindy 31 fans permalink

Because in the current system even piss tests are limited.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 AM on 07/12/2009
- layman I'm a Fan of layman 21 fans permalink

Hospitals are contaminated and infectious. It's dangerous to stay there for any length of time. American health care at work.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:34 PM on 07/11/2009

I have Hep C and the treatments are not fun! I got it through a blood transfusion before 1992. This lady needs to be strung up by her thumbs! She knew she had Hep C yet she continued what she was doing. Let her rot in jail!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 07/11/2009

Her MySpace page featured pictures of bleeding body parts and hypodermic needles. Very disturbing images. The main picture was a needle piercing a bleeding tongue. Clearly a sick woman.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 07/11/2009
- AlsoSarah I'm a Fan of AlsoSarah 76 fans permalink
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Most drug addicts are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 PM on 07/11/2009
- Dynamohum I'm a Fan of Dynamohum 59 fans permalink

Really sick and twisted to put it up on Myspace and have no apparent concern for the consequences of doing so!! This is digusting and sad. Someone in my past knowingly exposed me to Hepatitis C and I acquired it. As a health educator today, I cannot stress enough to every audience I have spoken in front of, the absolute importance of assuming that everyone you have sex with has every STD you can think of. Many men and women with these STDs continue having sex and don't tell their victims, because let's face it they are committing a crime against humanity without any concern. It is more pervasive than anybody can imagine. Protect yourself!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:44 PM on 07/11/2009
- hapiday I'm a Fan of hapiday 101 fans permalink
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"I was considering doing surgical tech. Then my dad, who's a doctor, told me it was a job that trashy people did. Looking at this lady, it appears he's spot on."

Samjung23

I am sorry to tell you this, but your dad sounds like a pompous a-hole. I'm a RN and many of my associates think doctors are a-holes. There are many surgical techs who are professionals and take their jobs seriously. This woman was the exception. People need to know that there are countless nurses and doctors who abuse the system, steal drugs, rip off patients and do unspeakable things that would curl your toes. Doctors are some of the worst abusers and offenders.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 PM on 07/11/2009
- AlsoSarah I'm a Fan of AlsoSarah 76 fans permalink
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Thank you for making that point. I have known a few doctors personally. Um...no angels.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 07/11/2009
- AlsoSarah I'm a Fan of AlsoSarah 76 fans permalink
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Nurses are underpaid, overworked and underappreciated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:03 PM on 07/11/2009
- tlgeiger62 I'm a Fan of tlgeiger62 60 fans permalink
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Doctors such as that are part of the reason healthcare is in the shape that it is in. Self-serving, ego-manical, greedy, narcissistic A-HOLES.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 07/11/2009
- Dynamohum I'm a Fan of Dynamohum 59 fans permalink

You are 100% correct.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 PM on 07/11/2009
- samjung23 I'm a Fan of samjung23 10 fans permalink

Believe it or not, I'm not going to argue with you about doctors being prima donnas. I know.

I just remembered in the course of my work life, another person who wanted to be a surgical tech. He was not a winner. He claimed you could make a lot of money doing it. After I saw my liberal arts degree wasn't taking me anywhere, I asked him about it. He scoffed at the idea, and I sensed he was probably right.

I don't have the best impression of nurses though. It's too easy to go from minimum-wage jobs to working as a health care aide or a nurse. Many of them just aren't as qualified or competent as doctors, although they like to think they are. I meant "love to." They love to shove food in their face all day long and are basically living life up at the expense of the average patient, who goes bankrupt for care. I think most hospitals are delusional when it comes to their cost and budget management, and when the health care system is cleaned up, many hospital workers will find themselves out of a job. This industry is not going to replace real jobs like manufacturing, I'm sorry!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 07/11/2009
- AlsoSarah I'm a Fan of AlsoSarah 76 fans permalink
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I have spent alot of time in hospitals. Thank god for the nurses. The doctors aren't around. It's the nurses that do the work. Not all that many doctors know what they are doing either. Some nurses know more than the doctors. And...some moms know more than either.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 07/11/2009
- transe I'm a Fan of transe 2 fans permalink

ummm, it isn't easy to become a nurse. you have to have at least 4 years of school to be an rn. i know i am not a doc, i wouldn't want to be one. i like being a nurse. but, at a hospital, the doc's breeze in and out, maybe five minutes are spent with a pt. the nurses are there the rest of the time. you had better hope we know how to diagnose/assess you. because that is going to be the difference, and when we do see a problem and call the doc, they usually listen to us, because WE ARE THERE AND THEY AREN'T. there aren't enough nurses, and as such, pt's suffer. are a lot of us overweight? yeah, i think it is a result of stress. but we are professionals. i didn't spend 5 years in college to be a glorified health care aide.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 PM on 07/11/2009
- JoDeeVa I'm a Fan of JoDeeVa 18 fans permalink
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I dont know where you live and "it's too easy to go from minimum-wage jobs to working as a health care aide or a nurse"..bu­t, the US requires a minimum of 1-2 years (LVN), 3-4 years (RN) education to be a nurse. States also have nursing board examinations that you must pass before being licensed, as well as mandating continuing education for re-licensure.

As a former nurse, I worked in teaching hospitals with medical students, interns and residents, some of whom I then worked with, as doctors, in community hospitals. Doctors/ nurses are a team, inter-dependent on each other for patient care in both of those settings, but especially so in teaching hospitals. If you think ANY hospital could exist without nurses, you don't have a clue. Don't blame nurses for cost/ budget management problems or care that bankrupts patients..­blame the hospitals/ healthcare system.

Your attitude toward nurses seems to owe a lot to your father's arrogance and condescending attitude, as a doctor, towards them. I've known quite a few like him and they were usually compensating for their own inadequacies as doctors, that manifested in a lack of understanding/ empathy for co-workers and patients. I've also known incompetent, uncaring nurses. I judge neither profession by those bad apples.. most are qualified professionals and compassionate human beings who are dedicated to caring for their patients.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:47 PM on 07/11/2009
- AlsoSarah I'm a Fan of AlsoSarah 76 fans permalink
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One more reason why we need universal healthcare. If everyone can be seen and treated there is no reason why this can happen and if it does, it's criminal. Right now society bears the burden for not having medical care in place.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 PM on 07/11/2009

Uh, no. She bears the burden. I'm all for universal healthcare, but this story is about a druggie stealing the drugs that are intended for specific patients.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:18 AM on 07/12/2009
- edwarvir I'm a Fan of edwarvir 36 fans permalink

Lock her up and throw away the key.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:40 PM on 07/11/2009
- AlsoSarah I'm a Fan of AlsoSarah 76 fans permalink
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I would kinda agree if she could have had her condition treated first. After that, I have zero tolerance for drug addicts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 07/11/2009
- MintysMom I'm a Fan of MintysMom 18 fans permalink
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I would need to know first if she EVER tried to get treatment. Something tells me this chick just sailed along until the day she got caught.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:04 PM on 07/11/2009
- Dynamohum I'm a Fan of Dynamohum 59 fans permalink

This women is obviously sick and committed a serious crime, but drug addiction is an illness that for the most part gets ignored in this country, and health insurance used to cover treatment, but most do not anymore. Just another glaring example of our broken healthcare system. While I agree with you, if a person is reaching for recovery, some empathy might just be warranted, because encouragement and compassion are important as well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 07/11/2009
- Acleacius I'm a Fan of Acleacius 6 fans permalink

This was completely preventable, we don't treat addiction, much less try to prevent sociopath behavior and social disconnect, here in the US.

Iirc, in England they allow addicts to register with a doctor, they receive free drugs, support and counseling as they are weened off their addiction. In addition, crimes committed by addicts from petty crimes, major thefts and violent crimes dropped more than 80%. I don't remember all the details as this was more than 5 to 10 years ago I read about it. Afaik, they proved this worked years ago, not only it works but works long term and people actually rebuild their lives.

What does this mean to us here in the US? Well it means that even though we have proven effective methods to solve this types of horrible crimes, people are preventing us from fixing the problems of our broken society. These people whether government officials, religious officials or uneducated mob incited protesters are responsible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 07/11/2009
- MintysMom I'm a Fan of MintysMom 18 fans permalink
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The conservative Right in this country has a lock on the morals of the public at the moment. What you are proposing sounds like coddling to these people. They believe locking everyone up for something is deterrent enough. They are wrong, of course.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:06 PM on 07/11/2009
- Acleacius I'm a Fan of Acleacius 6 fans permalink

How does showing the people who are responsible for making decisions about our society, being held accountable for problems like this, constitute coddling them?

Personally feel there are several directions to solve the problems once you know the causes. Let's take this story as an example, first and foremost we need exposure of any group religious or political that actively lobbies against comprehensive Drug Rehabilitation through scientifically proven methods or the best we as an advanced scientific nation have to offer atm. Force them to expose their positions on a national nonpartisan stage/venue. It could be in a some form of town hall with a board of scientific, education and medical judges. Let everyone make their case in front of the world, with fact checker standing by able to break through any phony arguments, such as used in tobacco or climate change opposition.

Second would be to provide some legal accountability against people or groups lobbing against/for to prevent or pass something based on political, religious or profits, instead of benefiting the stability of our society.

Of course the fundamental principal of humanity is the easiest most efficient measure, i.e. is a position based on hypocrisy, is so it's fundamentally corrupt there for weakens the society.

Coddling? Bah, more likely my poor communication skill set. :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 07/11/2009
- rivahcat I'm a Fan of rivahcat 6 fans permalink
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Any health-care worker with an infectious disease should NOT BE ALLOWED TO WORK WITH PATIENTS. And I agree with Malkin71: She should be charged with murder if anyone dies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 PM on 07/11/2009

and ANY worker ANYWHERE who has a cold, flu, scabies, crabs, sniffles, HIV, nail fungus, etc etc, ad nauseum... should not do ANY work that may, even indirectly, have contact with the public, or anything piece of equipment, clothing, food, that MAY come in contact with the public, etc etc, should not be allowed to work ANTWHERE.

what an idiotic, paranoid, uninformed and neandrethal response.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 07/11/2009
- MintysMom I'm a Fan of MintysMom 18 fans permalink
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Thankfully, the public health system is not as cavalier as you are. The CDC would agree with rivahcat, and thank God, not you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 PM on 07/11/2009

I agree, rivahcat is ridiculous.
But anyone, health care worker or other can become addicted to narcotics or alcohol and those drugs poison one's judgement.
I wonder how many people posting to this forum have ever driven drunk or were too tired to drive but did so anyway....­.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 07/11/2009
- samjung23 I'm a Fan of samjung23 10 fans permalink

I was considering doing surgical tech. Then my dad, who's a doctor, told me it was a job that trashy people did. Looking at this lady, it appears he's spot on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 07/11/2009

lol

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 07/11/2009
- Gin1234 I'm a Fan of Gin1234 17 fans permalink

That was very kind hearted of your father. Does he look at all the people he works with that way?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 PM on 07/11/2009
- Altruth I'm a Fan of Altruth 58 fans permalink

Sound like he on the same level as this lady!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 07/11/2009
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But is your dad a surgeon ? Ask a surgeon what they think. You might find out that you couldn't handle the stress. Or the training. Your dad may think that they're "trashy" because they are willing to
do a very important job for a lot less money than they're worth. Ask an operating room nurse about that. Better yet, ask my friend, who sent me the link to this story, why she would go back to work on her day off to assist on a heart transplant­.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 PM on 07/11/2009
- 7tsgirl I'm a Fan of 7tsgirl 2 fans permalink

Thanks David!! I posted a comment to that person and my comment has not posted yet. I wonder why? And it was early on in the comment section. Hmmmm

Oh well....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 07/11/2009

Your dad could use an ego bypass. What an attitude.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:56 PM on 07/11/2009
- Malkin71 I'm a Fan of Malkin71 26 fans permalink
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She should be charged with attempted murder.

Attempted murder should carry the same punishment as murder, by the way....

Why reward failure?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 PM on 07/11/2009

You can't be serious.
You should be posting on a ne0c0n website, by the way......

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 07/11/2009
- MintysMom I'm a Fan of MintysMom 18 fans permalink
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I agree and I'm as left leaning as they come. People who drive while drunk are now being charged with murder as opposed to manslaughter in many jurisdictions.

She has had enough training to know what she was doing. Hep C can kill a person, very slowly too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 07/11/2009
- Sam T I'm a Fan of Sam T 3 fans permalink
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Without the evidence, I can't rule a serious charge, like Manslaughter (reckless indifference) or Attempted Murder (if her actions are found to be malicious, or if done in the context of other appropriate penalties) in or out. However, the DA said around 5,000 people are at risk, and 10 have already been proven to be exposed. There is a risk that someone exposed will die. What then? Wait until someone dies and charge her?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 AM on 07/12/2009
- tlgeiger62 I'm a Fan of tlgeiger62 60 fans permalink
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If murder is pre-meditated (planned out ahead of time) then absolutely. And those caught in the act or who admit to the crime, should simply be eliminated ON THE SPOT!! No trial.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 07/11/2009
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You wrote in a previous comment that you used to be a legal assistant and were laid off. I doubt it. You were probably fired because you obviously have no understanding of the law.

By the way, I do believe this person deserves to be punished, and to the full extent of the "law", not your version of vigilante justice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:32 PM on 07/11/2009

So if you're out driving late one night and collide with a car driven by the local police chief, and he dies, you think the cops who arrive on the scene, should they decide you were at fault and thus murdered him, shoot you then and there? I bet you'd prefer a trial.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:38 PM on 07/11/2009
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