dlharris2712
Snarky...but thoughtful.
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2016
- Messages
- 594
- Reaction score
- 6,686
We should send FD purple flowers to the hospital...(I'm mean)...lol!
Interesting how NP has changed his tune. Guess blaming the public wasn't getting him the kind of attention he thought it would.Heidi Voight on Twitter
“I feel that I let him down. He trusted me to be his good shepherd through the valley of the shadow of death & perhaps he reached out & I didn’t hear what he needed. I feel a sense of responsibility for his welfare.” - Norm Pattis to
@NBCNews
on #FotisDulos suicide attempt #nbcct
If he has just gone to the hyperbaric chamber, it will be a few hours IMO It takes time. It takes time to pressurize the chamber, then the treatment, then depressurize the chamber. He is obviously 'well enough' to go into the chamber though, which means that certain bodily functions must be under control. So many requirements to be able to safely go into a chamber because once he's in there, they can't just take him out. Even something as simple as blood sugars need to be taken before someone enters because blood sugars drop dramatically. All JMO based on experience ;-)
Much better.NYP pics are much higher quality vs any I've seen.
Here is Fd with his medical setup in helicopter. I tried to blow it up a bit to get the face to see colouring etc. He doesn't look as white/pasty as he was when he was on ground at 4Jx IMO.
View attachment 228479
It was actually the State Insurance regulators that notified the underwriter (Palmetto) this morning of the irregularity in his collateral. It probably took them a couple of weeks to verify the coverage.
I would not be surprised if the unidentified woman that first showed up FD residence is subject to action if she was paid to package FD's proposal for coverage. This would have involved securing appraisals, title insurance, etc., which all proved false and likely fraudulent -- which we know is the way FD typically operates.
Palmetto had already advised their lawyer to pull the bond and FD knew he was going to court and would be taken into custody.
The lawyer for surety arrived at FD's during the chaos to formerly serve FD his bond being pulled.
Pattis was in D.C. with another client today. Interesting, right?
jmo
NP somehow thinks he’s a modern day St John of the Cross ...bc defending Sandy Hook harassers and murderers.???.. Ok Norm.
The car was seen after 5/17 but does not say when, yes it is the same car and blood was found in it as well but no DNA results shown to public.Is this the car seen on the street behind Jennifer’s house somewhere around the time of her murder?
Whole statement is going on the "Atty. P. 4.20 quote list".NP somehow thinks he’s a modern day St John of the Cross ...bc defending Sandy Hook harassers and murderers.???.. Ok Norm.
You can also file a DNR with your primary care physician. After the federal mandate for Electronic Health Records (EHR), your DNR is accepted in every state.Can I request a DNR order?
Yes. Under New York law, all adult patients can request a DNR order. If you are sick and incapable of deciding about resuscitation, a family member or others close to you can decide on your behalf.
Do Not Resuscitate Orders (DNR) | Stony Brook Medicine
Norm Pattis is far more culpable than the public whom he blames, and he knows it.
He claims surprise that his client would attempt suicide. That's dishonest, naive, bad lawyering, or all of those.
But Norm has a responsibility in all of this. All along, he's falsely buoyed his client's ego and hopes of winning, despite the very small likelihood of same. He wasn't around this precious client at a vulnerable time.
Furthermore, he did not mentally prepare his client for this hearing or the likelihood that bond could be revoked AT ANY time.
I don't see how anyone can say he's a good lawyer.
Supposedly he had no pulse and was given CPR for some time (accounts vary). IMO you can’t stage no pulse for any amount of time!I guess it all depends on how long he sat in the car with the exhaust filling his vehicle and then how long CPR was administered IMO - my guess is IF he staged this he will recover just fine - but I think if he did he didn’t research it well enough and I believe he will have brain damage
JMO
OK, so Ryan McGuigan is Palmetto's local lawyer?The Dave Altimari timeline of the early am events IMO clarify a bit of what happened to push Fd over the edge here - looks like the bond was to be revoked and Colangelo got the news at 8:30am and Atty. P. at 9:00am:
State insurance regulators determined there were problems with the real estate valuations and transmitted the information to Palmetto Surety, the South Carolina insurer that underwrote the bond. Specifically, the bond was secured by six pieces of real estate – two of which it had been determined were subject to foreclosure and a third was found to have been substantially overvalued.
Early Tuesday, Palmetto instructed its local lawyer, A. Ryan McGuigan, to move in court to revoke the bond. McGuigan said he notified State’s Attorney Richard Colangelo at about 8:30 a.m. of the impending revocation and that Colangelo notified Pattis at about 9 a.m. [BBM]
McGuigan said he and a private bondsman arrived at the Dulos home in Farmington at about 11:30 a.m. to serve notice that they would be formally moving in court later in the morning to pull the bond. McGuigan said he encountered a state of confusion. [BBM]
Two Farmington patrol cars had already arrived and they were quickly joined by dozens of police officers and emergency medical personnel.
The first responders located Dulos in the garage of his home. McGuigan said Dulos, who appeared unresponsive, was moved to the back yard from the garage, which appears to have been filled with smoke or exhaust. Emergency medical personnel immediately began efforts at resuscitation, which continued for an extended period of time, two sources said.
It was believed initially by the first responders that Dulos had died. But after at least a half hour of efforts at resuscitation, medical personnel detective a faint pulse, one of the sources said.
Well I was wrong. I figured Norm would point the finger at the state of Connecticut for causing this suicide attempt. It appears he’s actually pointing the finger at the public.
It makes perfect sense though. He murdered his wife, disposed of her body, and was charged with murder.
So naturally, it’s our fault that we believed something as trivial as “mountainous evidence.”
Shame on us, or something. What a transparent jackass.
Fotis Dulos' attorney Norm Pattis on his client's attempted suicide ... "All the folks who harped on Mr. Dulos can take some grim satisfaction in today’s event but my message to each and everyone of them is shame on you." Hear from him tonight on News 4 at 6pm
#nbc4ny
Steven Bognar on Twitter
Well, I'm no NP fan, but the only person responsible for his action is FD. He's a grown man and fully capable of making his own decisions, which he did.Norm Pattis is far more culpable than the public whom he blames, and he knows it.
He claims surprise that his client would attempt suicide. That's dishonest, naive, bad lawyering, or all of those.
But Norm has a responsibility in all of this. All along, he's falsely buoyed his client's ego and hopes of winning, despite the very small likelihood of same. He wasn't around this precious client at a vulnerable time.
Furthermore, he did not mentally prepare his client for this hearing or the likelihood that bond could be revoked AT ANY time.
I don't see how anyone can say he's a good lawyer.
IMO it simply won't happen as that isn't how Atty. P. rolls and in this respect I believe he and his client here are virtually indistinguishable from each other!Norm Pattis is far more culpable than the public whom he blames, and he knows it.
He claims surprise that his client would attempt suicide. That's dishonest, naive, bad lawyering, or all of those.
But Norm has a responsibility in all of this. All along, he's falsely buoyed his client's ego and hopes of winning, despite the very small likelihood of same. He wasn't around this precious client at a vulnerable time.
Furthermore, he did not mentally prepare his client for this hearing or the likelihood that bond could be revoked AT ANY time.
I don't see how anyone can say he's a good lawyer.
He trusted him to be his "good shepherd through the valley of the shadow of death?"
Is he for real?
IMO it simply won't happen as that isn't how Atty. P. rolls and in this respect I believe he and his client here are virtually indistinguishable from each other!Norm Pattis is far more culpable than the public whom he blames, and he knows it.
He claims surprise that his client would attempt suicide. That's dishonest, naive, bad lawyering, or all of those.
But Norm has a responsibility in all of this. All along, he's falsely buoyed his client's ego and hopes of winning, despite the very small likelihood of same. He wasn't around this precious client at a vulnerable time.
Furthermore, he did not mentally prepare his client for this hearing or the likelihood that bond could be revoked AT ANY time.
I don't see how anyone can say he's a good lawyer.
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