:roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll:
Hard studies pays off!!
http://rt.com/usa/news/ticket-krioukov-diego-math-409/
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SAS_LtCol_DeCapi
Commanding Officer
GCHQ
22nd [SAS] Elite Virtual Regiment
:roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll:
Hard studies pays off!!
http://rt.com/usa/news/ticket-krioukov-diego-math-409/
SAS_LtCol_DeCapi
Commanding Officer
GCHQ
22nd [SAS] Elite Virtual Regiment
Impressive he actually won the case!
SAS_Master - Regimental Sergeant Major
GCHQ
"He's trusting you to do your job which is to clear that corner! Nothing else!"
...math will still forever be my worst enemy! :x
[SAS] VET WEST
SQUADRON SERGEANT MAJOR (RET.)
22nd [SAS] E.V.R. - Who Dares Wins
Nice one
DUKE, Germany
"What's the plan?
Track'em, find'em, kill'em!"
They dismiss the case because he has put a lot of effort and used a complex way to explain his story that seemed intelligent. Nothing in what I saw makes sense... His example with the train doesn't mean anything... Think about it, if the cop was very near of the car, he would have seen if it was stopped. Therefore, he relies on the fact that the cop was far. His example says that if you are further, you levy the car is going slower than actual. So if the policemen was far and saw the car not doing a complete stop, the car was actually even faster then what the policemen levied. He is basically invalidating his own judgement of not guilty.
I guess they needed a scientist as the procurer instead of a lawyer.
SAS_Nick
22nd SAS Elite Virtual Regiment
Yeah, what Nick said. Kinda lame...when they just accept a mathematical explanation because they don't understand it.
If the wheels dont stop turnin then he ran the stop.
Jeez, guys, the date this was published was April 1st. Think, think . . .
Yep, He still ran the stop.