Welcome Guest [Log In] [Register]
Add Reply
Blog and Media Roundup - Thursday, April 7, 2011; News Roundup
Topic Started: Apr 7 2011, 04:42 AM (462 Views)
abb
Member Avatar

http://www.heraldsun.com/view/full_story_news_durham/12668756/article-Task-force-tackles-academic-athletic-issues?instance=main_article

Task force tackles academic/athletic issues
04.06.11 - 09:13 pm
By Gregory Childress

gchildress@heraldsun.com; 419-6645

CHAPEL HILL -- A UNC System Task Force on Athletics hammered away Wednesday at potential recommendations it will make this summer to strengthen athletic programs and ensure the academic success of student athletes.

It's stilly early, but East Carolina University Chancellor Steve Ballard said previous task force discussions have already changed the way academics and athletics are discussed on the ECU campus.

"It's creating a much different discussion than we've had before," Ballard told task force members who attended the afternoon meeting.

The task force is the brain child of UNC System President Tom Ross. It was created in response to several high profile incidents of academic impropriety involving at tutor and football players at UNC.

One theme that emerged Wednesday was whether the academic success of student athletes should be the responsibility of the academic side or athletic side of the university.

"I would like to see more of a combined responsibility and that's what we're moving toward," said N.C. Central University Athletic Director Ingrid Wicker McCree. "I do think it should report, to a degree, more to the academic side."

There was also a discussion about the admission process for athletes who might need extra help to attain academic success.

Thomas Conway, vice chancellor and chief of staff at Fayetteville State University, said that whatever standards the task force recommends must take into account the inherent differences in the system schools.

"You have to set one, but I wouldn't set it hard and fast," Conway said.

The task force also talked about plagiarism and academic fraud. Members agreed that an aggressive educational component should be included in the recommendations because many students aren't always clear about what constitutes such infractions.

Bruce Mallette, senior vice president of academic and student affairs for the UNC System, noted that clarifying the do's and don'ts for on-line test taking is also important because of the growth in on-line classes.

"It enters new opportunities to be fraudulent into the test-taking process," Mallette said.

The 13-member task force is comprised of six working groups focusing on specific issues such as the admission process for students who need help to achieve academic success, the definition of academic success, training, mentoring, character development and creating ethical standards for athletes.

In addition, a committee is focusing on selecting and training people who offer academic support and tutoring, the organizational structure of compliance and academic support and improving oversight in the system.

The group will next meet on April 29.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
abb
Member Avatar

http://www.heraldsun.com/view/full_story_news_durham/12672444/article-Bill-to-separate-crime-lab-from-SBI?instance=main_article

Bill to separate crime lab from SBI
04.07.11 - 12:23 am
By Ray Gronberg

gronberg@heraldsun.com; 419-6648

DURHAM -- Three state senators from this area are pushing a bill that would remove North Carolina's top crime lab from the control of the State Bureau of Investigation.

The measure would go further than other recent legislation that's made it through the General Assembly by making the lab "a separate, autonomous entity that reports directly to the attorney general," said state Sen. Floyd McKissick, D-Durham, who worked with Sen. Ellie Kinnaird, D-Orange, to introduce it.

Sen. Bob Atwater, D-Chatham, has also endorsed the proposal, adding his name as co-sponsor.

But the bill's chances of making it through the Republican-controlled General Assembly appear doubtful.

Senate President Pro Tem Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, assigned it to the chamber's rules committee for review. In recent years, that's the place Senate leaders have sent bills to keep them from receiving serious consideration.

McKissick and Kinnaird introduced the bill on the same day Gov. Beverly Perdue was signing a different measure, originally from the N.C. House, that sets up an advisory board to keep watch on the lab's operations.

Legislators have targeted the lab for scrutiny because it's mishandled literally hundreds of cases, often collaborating with prosecutors to hide or fudge information about tests its technicians had conducted.

At least one Durham case, a 1998 murder conviction against Derrick Allen, has already been thrown out because of SBI lab and prosecutorial misconduct.

Superior Court Judge Orlando Hudson dismissed the case against Allen last month, finding among other things that former Assistant District Freda Black had worked with a SBI lab technician to prevent DNA testing of one key piece of evidence because they thought the analysis "would not prove inculpatory to [Allen] and could possibly inculpate others."

The DNA test had been requested by Durham police, who with Black "were aware there was a viable" second suspect who should have been scrutinized "in a fair and competent investigation," Hudson ruled.

The report the SBI lab wound up filing was so deceptive it would have convinced most non-scientists the victim's blood was on the evidence when lab technicians in fact hadn't been able to confirm that, the judge said.

Hudson added that the lab's reporting policies were so badly rigged that they demonstrated "a pro-prosecution bias" on the part of its agents deep enough to damage their credibility "in every criminal case in which they testify on behalf of the state."

The forensic-sciences bill Perdue signed was sponsored or co-sponsored by a group of House members that included Reps. Mickey Michaux and Paul Luebke, both D-Durham.

In addition to setting up the advisory board, it instructed state lab technicians that they work for "the public and the criminal justice system," not just the prosecution. It also required them to disclose all their work to an accused person's lawyer, including a "preliminary test or screening results and bench notes."

Kinnaird, though, made it clear to constituents she considers the House bill weak tea. It "didn't go far enough to deal with the systemic problems that would be solved by an independent lab," she said in her office's weekly newsletter.

An aide to Perdue was non-committal when asked if she would consider signing the McKissick-Kinnaird bill. "We'll wait and see if it passes and, if it does, what it looks like then," said Mark Johnson, the governor's deputy communications director.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
abb
Member Avatar

http://www.heraldsun.com/view/full_story/12667884/article-Letters--April-7?instance=opinion_hs_letters

Letters, April 7
04.06.11 - 07:51 pm
Enough with the rape allegations

Enough with Crystal Mangum! If you need to write about her, write about what concerns her current activities, not what she did years ago.

I'm certainly no fan, but your reporters keep the past in front of us, making it hard to be realistic about the present.

DANA MOCHEL

Carrboro
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
abb
Member Avatar

http://www.dukechronicle.com/article/coach-k-s-influence-extends-beyond-court

Coach K’s influence extends beyond the court

By Harrison Comfort
April 6, 2011


Editor’s note: This is Part 2 of a three-part series spotlighting the connection between the NBA and Duke Basketball. Yesterday’s emphasis was on how Duke’s power brokers achieved their positions in the NBA [7]. Today’s story focuses on how Duke influenced them. Tomorrow, The Chronicle looks at an uncertain future of those entering the NBA Draft.

While many of Mike Krzyzewski’s former players have thrived in professional basketball, this success also extends to those who came into contact with the Hall-of-Fame coach, but never even suited up for the Blue Devils.

Krzyzewski’s knack for inspiring others has left lasting impressions both on and off the court, whether they be on the basketball team’s former head manager or the NBA’s second highest-ranking executive.

And his uncanny ability to maximize others’ potential starts with the fundamental message he preaches to his teams.

“Coach K uses an expression with his team and that is about being ‘All-In,’” said Adam Silver, the NBA deputy commissioner. “He finds a way to make everyone feel, whether you’re the person booking the travel arrangements or responsible for the uniforms, that they are equally part of the team. There’s no doubt that that’s a large part of why he’s so successful…. He finds a way to get the best out of everyone.”

Silver, who did not meet Krzyzewski until after he graduated, saw firsthand how the Hall-of-Fame coach interacted with the USA Basketball personnel in the 2008 Beijing Olympics, and he has applied a similar attitude to the Commissioner’s office as he leads the League’s global expansion and collective bargaining agreement.

Nick Arison, who assisted with the National Team’s day-to-day operations and currently holds an executive position with the Miami Heat, learned the importance of buying into a team concept when he served as the Blue Devils’ head basketball manager. Working with Krzyzewski on both the collegiate and international level taught him about the time commitment necessary to establish a winning culture. The hard work also yielded gratifying rewards.

“Being a Duke manager, you are totally immersed in [the program],” Arison said. “Your personal schedule revolves around the team schedule, games, practices, meetings, and the travel…. But by being willing to do that and putting in the huge time commitment, I was part of one of the greatest basketball programs there is, if not the greatest, and in my opinion, the best coach in college basketball.”

In addition to encouraging the “All-In” concept, Krzyzewski forces his players to self-reflect and evaluate how they can improve their individual performances. This introspective approach pays dividends over the course of a season, whether in the locker room or the front office, and helps players and executives alike focus on accomplishing future goals. So even if the team is winning, Krzyzewski focuses more on the team’s progression than its victorious results.

“I’ve never heard [Coach K] say a win is a win,” said Jay Bilas, the ESPN basketball analyst who helped lead Duke to the 1986 National Championship game. “He might be the most unhappy person on the planet during a win streak if he feels it’s going to hurt them in the long run…. He’s always challenged us to think about winning…and taught us to evaluate where and who you are right now, not just as a person, but as an organization.”

Yet while Krzyzewski encourages individuals to evaluate their team contributions, he also guides players to help them maximize their potential. Serving as an educator rather than just a basketball coach, he remains a mentor to former players and stays loyal to those who have supported his team concept, providing advice in basketball, personal matters and even life-changing decisions.

“I’ve never made a major decision in my life without talking to Coach K,” New Jersey Nets General Manager and former Blue Devils captain Billy King said. “Whether it be taking a GM job or coaching job, I’ve always talked to him for advice and guidance.”

Most importantly, Krzyzewski leads by example in handling the spotlight. He teaches those around him to develop a thick skin and stay focused on fulfilling one’s obligation to the team.

This has proven especially helpful for Arison in Miami. The Heat acquired Olympic gold-medalists Lebron James, Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade from Krzyzewski’s National Team in the off-season, spawning a media frenzy that still persists.

“The other thing that Duke really prepares you for is the scrutiny and media attention,” Arison said. “There aren’t many college programs that are like that. So to be able to handle the interviews and demands on your time off the court, I think being at Duke prepares you for that.”

Ultimately Krzyzewski, similar to the university at which he coaches, has a multi-faceted influence on former students.

“One thing that Duke prepares you for, as well as Coach K, is not just to be a pro basketball player,” King said. “It prepares you for life.”
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
abb
Member Avatar

http://www.dukechronicle.com/article/making-impact

Making an (im)PACT
my favourite things
By Samantha Lachman [3]
April 7, 2011


I had always thought of sexual assault as an abstract concept. I knew it existed at Duke, but as senior Bhumi Purohit wrote in her March 24 column, “More than a statistic,” incidents of sexual violence were just a statistic for me.

In only the last two weeks, I’ve been confronted with an avalanche of personal stories. They range from a friend waking up with a guy at a hotel and not knowing how she got there, to another friend who experienced unwanted touching from a guy she knew on her hall (when she thought they were just going to sleep), to a woman who was pressured to hook up with her date (who she considered a friend) at his fraternity formal.

These by no means represent the only ways in which students at Duke have negative experiences related to sex and/or alcohol. They are just ones I have been exposed to recently, and the patterns in these stories terrify me. I worry that students only realize the gravity of these situations once they personally experience an incident (or have a friend who does).

At that point, it’s already too late.

Fortunately, the Duke Women’s Center has begun a pilot program called Prevent Act Challenge Teach (PACT). Inspired by a University of New Hampshire program called Bringing in the Bystander, Amy Cleckler, the center’s gender violence prevention program coordinator, has been working this year with four student facilitators to get the initiative off the ground.

The first goal of PACT, Cleckler described in an email, is to teach both women and men how to “safely intervene before, during and after sexual violence occurs.” Moreover, it “emphasizes the need for everyone to take daily courageous actions toward prevention, regardless of gender or sexual orientation, to ensure that the campus community is safer for victims of violence.”

Early in the school year, facilitators Andrei Santalo, a junior, and Lucy Goodson, a sophomore, started working with Cleckler on the program—along with two other student facilitators, sophomore Kevin Jones and senior Amanda Johnson. Santalo and Goodson were in public policy professor Tony Brown’s “Changemaker Leadership” class at the time. Santalo describes working on the project as “killing two birds with one stone” because they could “do something really cool for the class but also put a lot of energy and effort into this project.” Goodson added that their vision was to make sexual assault and violence “a real concept,” considering how abstract it can be for most students.

The program powerfully asserts that “we’re all a part of the context of sexual assault and rape,” Santalo said, and “we are all contributing to this culture.” PACT stresses creative ways to intervene in everyday life. I know that I’ve been afraid of checking up on friends, but as Goodson points out, “doing something is better than nothing,” and there’s “no loss” to being a good bystander.

The program treats sexual assault as a spectrum. Unacceptable behaviors bystanders can effectively counteract range from making a sexist joke, to grabbing someone’s a—, to more serious violations of another’s boundaries. Santalo says their aim as facilitators is “to encourage awareness and then get students to come up with their own strategies.”

So far, PACT has held one open session for all interested students, one with greek leaders and others with specific sororities and selective living groups. I wonder whether more targeted approaches to these issues are needed. For instance, is it worthwhile to be especially concerned about date functions, fraternity formals and glorifications of blacking out within the greek community? Goodson emphasized that PACT is “not blaming gender violence on any one group or party” because “it’s not [always] one particular person or set of people that is at fault.”

Indeed, Cleckler says “participants come to PACT with so many specific concerns about challenging social situations where they are unsure how to act or respond.” These are issues LGBTQ students face and issues men face. Freshmen can be perpetrators, and seniors can be victims. Basically, everything’s on the table, and as much as it’s frustrating to me that I can’t go on diatribes and point a finger, that’s not the way for PACT to succeed and gain a presence here.

It is worth considering the possibility of making PACT training mandatory for every Duke student. Santalo thinks that “the program is good enough to hold its own if it were mandated,” but worries it might lose its credibility if it were. Cleckler hopes the training will “eventually” be mandatory, as “university settings provide an opportunity to introduce effective interventions because of the insular nature of the college experience.”

During a speech at the University of New Hampshire April 4, Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan highlighted new federal guidelines for how universities must respond to complaints of campus sexual assaults. Duke is already ahead of the game, but there’s always more we can do. In my opinion, a program for every sophomore would be the best approach, as they have had time to experience the reality of the problem firsthand.

Goodson is optimistic. “Undergraduate culture is different every four years, and... if you can get change to start now, it won’t take that long to take effect.” We can, as Santalo says, “do better.” We can work as a team, understand what consent actually involves and means, stop thinking of sex as an obligatory act, combat dangerous drinking patterns, raise awareness and provide better support for victims.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
abb
Member Avatar

http://www.dukechronicle.com/article/get-faculty-board-kunshan

Get faculty on board with Kunshan
By Editorial Board
April 7, 2011

The costs keep rising for Duke Kunshan University, a project once billed by the administration as all but free. A document released at the March 25 Academic Council meeting estimates that around $37 million will be needed to cover the campus’ operating costs for its first six years.

This is the first editorial in a series of two about the ongoing construction of Duke Kunshan University. Today we will discuss the steps the administration must take to get faculty members on board with the Kunshan project. Tomorrow we will explore the University community’s reaction to a Duke campus in the most populous nation.

Skepticism of the Kunshan project has grown among the faculty during the past year, and for professors costs are the biggest concern.

This is understandable. Nearly every academic department at Duke has suffered a sizable cut in the past three years. The University’s bold venture abroad, which will be funded partially by a $13.3 million loan from the central administrative fund for campus furnishings, is predictably unsettling.

“Everyone is trying to get a handle of what the costs are,” Craig Henriquez, Academic Council chair and a biomedical engineering professor, told The Chronicle this week. “[Currently], only a handful of faculty are involved, and the rest are wondering if it’s a good investment until they see it in action.” Professors want to know how a campus in Kunshan is relevant to their department and their research. Until they find out, they will continue to question whether the funds for the China campus could be better spent in Durham.

As the Kunshan initiative progresses, the University must do a better job of getting faculty members on board.

President Richard Brodhead told The Chronicle in January 2010 that “since we’ll be having Duke faculty teach there, our faculty will come to gain a better understanding of this very dynamic society, which will be a benefit to our students in Durham.” But so far it is entirely unclear how this transfer of knowledge for faculty outside of the Fuqua School of Business and the Duke Global Health Institute.

The construction of Duke Kunshan University must become a topic brought up in lectures, faculty meetings and classroom discussions on campus. It is time for Brodhead and Provost Peter Lange to explain to professors how the meaningful cross-cultural dialogue Duke’s president envisioned last January might play out in practice. Even if the administration does not yet know all that Kunshan will bring, it should do a better job of engaging professors in the collective brainstorming process, especially by consulting with faculty members who specialize in the region. A few faculty members enthused about the Duke Kunshan experiment could do much to further constructive dialogue about the China campus among their peers.

Administrators should look to involve faculty every step of the way. Reserving one of Duke’s three seats on the five-member Board that will govern the new university for a member of the faculty could be a particularly meaningful gesture.

Duke’s push to build a campus in China is well under way. But it will not succeed without buy-in from the thinkers and researchers who make the University what it is.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
abb
Member Avatar

http://www.journal-news.com/opinion/politics-have-no-place-in-justice-1128894.html?cxtype=rss_opinion

‘Politics have no place in justice’
11:08 AM Wednesday, April 6, 2011

In response to the letter by Butler County Prosecutor Michael Gmoser (“Prosecutor sets record straight”), March 27:

Mike Gmoser and Mike Nifong may have more in common than a first name. This past week, a federal judge permitted the falsely accused Duke Lacrosse players to sue Nifong. The civil rights lawsuit can include malicious prosecution, concealment of evidence and fabrication of false evidence.

Mike Nifong became infamous for the prosecution of three Duke lacrosse players. Nifong became prosecutor when he was appointed to serve an unexpired term. By 2006, he was fighting for his political future in a Democratic primary, and later, a general election. During the campaign, he brought criminal charges against three Duke lacrosse players for allegedly raping a female dancer.

Nifong won re-election, but the criminal charges against the Duke lacrosse players were eventually dismissed. Nifong was later disbarred and highly criticized for taking the case public with a series of false accusations. It was alleged that he tried to manipulate witnesses and exaggerate facts. His alleged motive — using the case to his political advantage.

Recently, Gmoser was appointed as prosecutor to fill an unexpired term. According to campaign statements, he will run in a primary and general election next year. The first few months of his administration have been focused on attacking and “investigating” his political opponent. Gmoser even told his opponent to lawyer up the very evening he was elected by the Butler County Republican central committee. The following day, during the course of the hearings, Gmoser readily spoke to the press. However, in a rare move, last week Gmoser “took the case public.” He wrote an article, published by a local paper, discussing matters pending before the court.

First, a prosecutor should be professional and focused on justice. A prosecutor should be able to ignore the media’s criticism by having a thick skin. Second, when a prosecutor addresses the media, he should always err on the side of caution in his statements. Just last week, Gmoser exaggerated by saying the “judge ruled these indictments are defective.” However, the judge actually ruled that he would defer “to the appropriate court the validity of the indictments in these cases.”

Last week, Gmoser’s office issued a new indictment to correct what he says were irregularities. This action could have been completed two months ago, but instead, Gmoser filed motions and issued subpoenas, causing a media sensation. Sensationalizing a case could be described as prosecutorial inexperience or political posturing.

Politics have no place in a prosecutor’s office. Politics have no place in the courtroom. Politics have no place in justice. Mike Nifong learned that lesson the hard way. We can only hope Mike Gmoser learns this lesson before people’s lives and careers are ruined.

Mike Allen

Attorney

Cincinnati

Editor’s note: The letter writer represents former Butler County assistant prosecutor Jason Phillabaum in legal proceedings over alleged grand jury irregularities.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
abb
Member Avatar

http://www.dailytarheel.com/index.php/article/2011/04/dps_failure_to_alert_unc_students_a_recurring_theme

DPS failure to alert UNC students a recurring theme
By Letter to the Editor | Letters
TO THE EDITOR:

In light of the University’s failure to notify students of the possible threat Monday, I flash back to my freshman year, when most students were notified by Daily Tar Heel journalists or local news stations about a possible bomb threat. The University was silent until hours after the incident. Officers with shotguns prevented anyone from approaching the Pit for reasons they would not disclose.

Two years later, we’ve taken steps in the wrong direction. No alerts were sent out, so students walked around freely. A coworker and I unknowingly passed by Morrison minutes before the men entered the building. I’m sure countless others passed by during and immediately after the robbery. Instead of being safely inside a building with locked doors, students were left out to dry.

Had the fleeing man seen SafeWalkers wearing their vests, he could have mistaken them for some kind of security detail and a deadly altercation could have occurred. Any passerby could have become the next Eve Carson, carjacked and murdered. The Department of Public Safety urges students to call 911 immediately if they see anything out of the ordinary, alert others, and remove themselves from the situation. Where is the mutual responsibility on their part?

Chase Miller

Junior

History and English
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
abb
Member Avatar

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1374070/John-Edwards-suicidal-facing-jail-claim-pals.html

'I'd kill myself first!' John Edwards 'suicidal' over facing jail, claim pals

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 1:10 PM on 7th April 2011

Disgraced politician John Edwards is said to be deeply depressed - to the point of being suicidal - over the prospect of a criminal trial that could end with him being jailed if found guilty.

The 57-year-old former Presidential candidate reportedly told a close friend: 'I won't go to jail. I'd kill myself first!'

He has lost 20lb in the last year and is a 'broken spirit,' reports the National Enquirer.

According to the Enquirer, a close source said: 'I think John is suicidal. He knows that if he's indicted, prosecutors will try to get him to serve jail time and make an example of him.

'He's absoluetly despondent over the fear of prison.

'Over the last year, he's lost about 20lb and friends are concerned that he's escaping reality with booze.

'In early March, his legal team told him there was a strong chance he could be indicted, and John completely lost it.

'He cried his eyes out and said, "I won't go to jail. I'd kill myself first!"'

The Enquirer first broke the story of Edwards's affair with blonde divorcee Rielle Hunter. A series of exclusives charted his sordid double life and his efforts to cover up the birth of his love child, daughter Frances Quinn, who is now three.

The former North Carolina senator has been under federal grand jury investigation since April 2009 for alleged payments to take care of Miss Hunter in violation of campaign rules.

Probes have been carried out by both the IRS and the FBI.

Complicating matters for Mr Edwards is the actions of Andrew Young, the former aide who helped cover up the affair by claiming he was Frances Quinn's father.

Mr Young, who later admitted he lied to protect Mr Edwards, wrote a book about his role in the cover-up.

Now Mr Edwards is said to be worried about the prospect of Mr Young taking the stand as the prosecution's star witness.

Mr Young has claimed that two wealthy supporters of the Edwards camp pumped vast sums of money into the campaign for the cover-up.

The case of the mysterious alleged sex tape involving Mr Edwards is also gathering pace.

Mr Edwards has had to give evidence over Miss Hunter’s request to get the purported 'private and personal' recording back from Mr Young.

Mr Hunter is suing Mr Young for the return of the tape that reportedly Mr Edwards performing sex acts on her.

Mr Young’s wife, Cheri, said on Oprah Winfrey's show last year: ‘I won't give any fine details, but I'll tell you yes, he is naked.

‘He is performing sexual acts. The woman is holding the camera. He is aware he is being taped.’

According to the Wall Street Journal Mr Young has described the tape as like ‘watching a traffic pile-up occur in slow motion - repelling but also transfixing.'

Now Edwards fears for the future of his family.

His three oldest children - Harvard-educated lawyer Cate, 28, Emma, 12, and Jack, ten - are still mounring the passing away of their mother Elizabeth, who died of breast cancer in December.

A second source told the Enquirer: 'John isn't hiding the fact that he's terrified of going to prison, but he's also extremely distraught about what will happen to his children.

'He's severely depressed and even John's parents, who are very close to him and their grandkids, are on edge.'

Mr Edwards recently took his three oldest children to a beach resort fior as getaway.

According to the Enquirer, the source said: 'John's children are all that he has left, and the trip was a way for him to say goodbye.

'He doesn't want to leave the children, but he says he can't go on living like this. His spirit is broken.'
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
nyesq83
Member Avatar

boo hoo
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
cks
Member Avatar

I feel no more sorry for him than I do for any other criminal. Where was his concern for his children when he was romancing Rielle? I can well imagine that he would be despondent about facing possible jail time - for any of a number of reasons. However, his despondency nor the "plight of his children" be taken into consideration if he is convicted. Sorry, he already played the "illness of his wife" chord; he shoul not be allowed to use a realted chord "death of his wife" to sing his way to a lesser sentence.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
1 user reading this topic (1 Guest and 0 Anonymous)
ZetaBoards - Free Forum Hosting
Enjoy forums? Start your own community for free.
« Previous Topic · DUKE LACROSSE - Liestoppers · Next Topic »
Add Reply