- Pleads Not Guilty - Update : November 19, 2021 - Kansas City Chiefs agree to pay medical expenses for girl who was hurt in crash. Britt Reid's trial date set for April 18, 2022 [Reply]
Originally Posted by fan4ever:
I'm glad to see the Chiefs organization has committed to helping support the family. Most people have no idea the expense of having to care for a child injured like this. I hope the family has done their due diligence in estimating the cost so they're adequately covered.
I thought this was a settlement between the Chiefs and the victim’s family in order to avoid a huge lawsuit. Don’t think the Chiefs organization volunteered to pay the medical, it was a settlement. A lot of questions regarding Reid consuming alcohol at the facility, was it known, was he drinking alone, how often did he drink?
“Will the Chiefs or the NFL ever provide public answers to these questions? Last November, the Chiefs reached an agreement to provide the family of Ariel Young, who was five years old at the time, “with world-class medical care and long-term financial stability.” Those terms undoubtedly were the subject of a settlement as to any claims that could have been made against the Chiefs.” [Reply]
Originally Posted by AdolfOliverBush:
Britt Should consider himself lucky. People get more time than that for possession of weed.
Where? In Russia maybe. In the US, it's pretty much a misdemeanor these days. Even at the federal level these days, I think it's a max penalty of like 2-3 years? [Reply]
Originally Posted by Megatron96:
Where? In Russia maybe. In the US, it's pretty much a misdemeanor these days. Even at the federal level these days, I think it's a max penalty of like 2-3 years?
Before "these days," punishments for weed possession were quite lengthy. There are people who have been in prison for several years. There have probably been some of "these days" people get arrested, convicted, served their time, and gotten released for the same crime that some people that have been in prison for years are still in for today. [Reply]
Originally Posted by luv:
Before "these days," punishments for weed possession were quite lengthy. There are people who have been in prison for several years. There have probably been some of "these days" people get arrested, convicted, served their time, and gotten released for the same crime that some people that have been in prison for years are still in for today.
Yeah, I get that. When I was a kid a million years ago, weed possession was a serious offense. Some kid in another HS was in the papers (1985?) for possession and got 5 years or whatever. Some other kid was sentenced to 10 years or something for possession of half a pound, I think. Some poor prep school kid, never did anything illegal in his life except that one time, and lost nearly 8 years of his life.
But now, one of my friend's kids got nicked with about a quarter and only got a fine? And that was his 2nd offense, iirc. [Reply]
It looks like the Tipton Correctional Center is pretty close to Lake of the Ozarks. That would be pretty nice if he could get out occasionally. [Reply]
Article states he was being investigated a few months prior broke someone's window in a road rage incident that person happened to be an off duty cop. Wonder how much the Chiefs knew about all of this [Reply]