Oh, were you addressing me?
Very well.
It is RARE that I kid about this case, Holdon.
I don't know about that, Holdon. I consider myself a pretty well-educated guy. I was the only kid in my first grade class who read at the 9th grade level (NO BULL!), so you can imagine what I was like when I got to middle school, and even beyond. And I never used fancy-schmancy terms like "attache," "monitor," or "hence." Just something to chew on.
Business is an easy word to misspell. Heck, I even slip up on occasion.
PLUS, I grew up with EASL relatives. My dear aunt is Japanese. She's lived in America for 40 years, and she still has trouble with American grammar. Just like I'm having some difficulty learning Japanese. (Again, no bull.) So I have a bit of experience in this area.
Looks that way. Her point, I'm assuming, is that Patsy was not being "singled-out" by some "plot." It was SOP.
Like I said: we'd make lousy jurors. I appreciate that you feel strongly about this, but it changes nothing.
That presents quite a problem for document examination, wouldn't you say?
Very well.
You're kidding, right?
It is RARE that I kid about this case, Holdon.
The vocabulary barely went beyond middle school. There were zero words that exceeded an elementary school spelling bee contestants ability, and the author even misspells common words like business (something JR's wife wouldn't do). The RN vocabulary and writing skill in English for a EASL is probably less than 5 years if they are dedicated.
I don't know about that, Holdon. I consider myself a pretty well-educated guy. I was the only kid in my first grade class who read at the 9th grade level (NO BULL!), so you can imagine what I was like when I got to middle school, and even beyond. And I never used fancy-schmancy terms like "attache," "monitor," or "hence." Just something to chew on.
Business is an easy word to misspell. Heck, I even slip up on occasion.
PLUS, I grew up with EASL relatives. My dear aunt is Japanese. She's lived in America for 40 years, and she still has trouble with American grammar. Just like I'm having some difficulty learning Japanese. (Again, no bull.) So I have a bit of experience in this area.
Thanks Ames, because it seems pretty obvious that FDE's have to cope with many factors and issues with request specimens.
Looks that way. Her point, I'm assuming, is that Patsy was not being "singled-out" by some "plot." It was SOP.
Again, as a juror on any case, I would give weight only to the non-request specimens.
Like I said: we'd make lousy jurors. I appreciate that you feel strongly about this, but it changes nothing.
Between all the surveillance and coersion, I don't think you could ever get request specimens that are valid.
That presents quite a problem for document examination, wouldn't you say?