So I have this neighbor. When she first moved in I befriended her.Soon after befriending her I found out that she had a child that lived with her mother and according to her it was because her ex husband had molested her. She then preceded to tell me that she could not bring herself to turn him in. However, her mother caught this girls husband in the act and turned him in.
Keep in mind that this woman is pregnant and has 2 other children. Well soon I would see her physically fighting, cursing and breaking things etc.. with her mother while her children screamed and watched. Then she would get into fist fights, choking matches, hit her boyfriend in the head with anything she could and even put his head threw pictures all in front of her children (while they screamed).
Then she began telling us that her boyfriend was hooked on herroine and she would ask us for rides to go check on him.
I blocked her phone and cut ties with her. After I blocked her phone she began telling the neighbors horrible things about us. ( fortunately these neighbors were my freidns and they knew better and they told me).
However, soon she befriended my daughter. She began using my daughter's cell phone to text her boyfriend (trying to set him up) well when he answered what he thought was my daughter, the rage began.
Once she took her rage out on my daughter, my daughter would text her boyfriend telling him everything that she did wrong.
This girl began harassing myself and my daughter. We would walk down the street and she would say things such as "that's it bitch, keep on walkin" ". Then her boyfriend cornered my daughter at a local store threatening her.
I went outside and asked them why they were threatening my daughter. She told me because my daughter was texting her boyfriend . My reply was "whatever" this shit needs to stop. She began screaming things at me such as F--- you, I stayed calm and said don't F--- you me. Then she screamed kiss my a--. I still remained calm and told her that there was not enough time in the day to kiss all of that. Her boyfriend then stood up and told me to go inside. I told him that "it was my yard and that all I did was ask a question, it was his woman that was going nuts."
I then told her to take a look at what she was teaching her children.
Well then my daughter called the cops hoping to end all of the harassment.
well....................... instead she filed a protection order on myself and my daughter stating that I threatened and harrassed her. I HARASSED HER !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!????????????????? wtf
SHE ALSO BEGAN VISTING ALL OF THE LOCAL STORES TELLING PEOPLE THESE LIES ABOUT US, TELLING NEIGHBORS THESE LIES ABOUT US ETC.. (LITTLE DID SHE KNOW THAT THESE PEOPLE WERE MY FRIENDS).
So now she has opened a can of worms that she should not have opened. She made false accusations about me, is taking me to court over them and I have hired a lawyer to file libel and slander charges.
Plus since she said I was harassing her and it was not true , it will be now. Now every time the fighting starts, I will "call the cops", Every time I see her drinking alcohol while pregant I will "call children services",Every time I know the people who her boyfriend does drugs with are visiting the home, " I will call the cops.
Moral of the story: Do not say someone is harassing you that is not and file charges because if you do it to the wrong person, the harassment will begin. You will see more cops than you ever dreamed of and you will be charged with filing false criminal charges........................
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Monday, March 1, 2010
HMMMMMMMMM they walk amongst us
I like to think that all of us conform to standards of what is right or just in behavior. I tend to try to see the good in everybody. However, on February 28, 2010 I was shown that there are people here in West Virginia who fail to have any morals whatsoever. My husband was at work at Little Caesars Pizza in Kanawha City. While in work someone hit his car doing some major damage to it. Did this person come in and apologize or even tell him that they had hit his car? No they did not. How could this person walk around in our city with a smile on his, or her face knowing that he, or she severely damaged our car have not once ounce of remorse for doing so? Only God knows.
I would like to say something to the person who hit my husband’s car and walked away as if nothing ever happened. You are a coward. Little bump or big bump it is your responsibility as a motorist to do the right thing. Think about how you would feel if the situation was reversed.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Bank of America forecloses on house that couple had paid cash for
SPRING HILL — Charlie and Maria Cardoso are among the millions of Americans who have experienced the misery and embarrassment that come with home foreclosure.
Just one problem: The Massachusetts couple paid for their future retirement home in Spring Hill with cash in 2005, five years before agents for Bank of America seized the house, removed belongings and changed the locks on the doors, according to a lawsuit the couple have filed in federal court.
Early last month, Charlie Cardoso had to drive to Florida to get his home back, the complaint filed in Massachusetts on Jan. 20 states.
The bank had an incorrect address on foreclosure documents — the house it meant to seize is across the street and about 10 doors down — but the Cardosos and a Realtor employed by Bank of America were unable to convince the company that it had the wrong house, the suit states.
"Their own real estate agent told them, and nevertheless Bank of America steamrolled right ahead," said Joseph deMello, an attorney in Taunton, Mass., who is representing the couple. "This is a nightmare for anyone, and it affected my hard-working clients a lot."
The Cardosos are seeking unspecified damages from Bank of America. The company showed negligence, trespassed and caused the couple emotional distress and financial hardship, especially because a tenant renting the home at the time got worried and left, according to the complaint. It's still unclear if the couple's credit rating has been affected, deMello said.
The suit names other defendants listed as "John Doe" who could include "employees, agents, contractors or other persons, ordered, hired, or told by BOA to trespass on the plaintiffs' property and to dispose of the plaintiff's personal possessions."
The suit also charges the company with defamation and libel. DeMello said the Cardosos are part of a Portuguese community in the area, and the foreclosure tarnished their reputation.
Charlie Cardoso is an unemployed construction worker, and his wife is disabled. They paid $139,000 for the three-bedroom pool home in the tidy neighborhood a few blocks south of Spring Hill Drive, records show. It was Charlie's life savings, the complaint says.
"We have a lot of friends there, and all the time we've been telling them the house has been paid (for)," a tearful Maria Cardoso said in an interview with WCBV-TV in Boston last month.
The couple, reached at home in New Bedford, Mass., referred a St. Petersburg Times reporter to deMello.
According to the complaint, here is what happened:
Last July, the couple's tenant called the Cardosos in a panic. The single mother of two teenagers accused the couple of lying when they told her she could rent the house as long she wanted. Three men were there to clean out the house and change the locks, she told them.
Charlie Cardoso talked to a real estate agent for Bank of America, who said he would inform the company that it had the wrong house. The couple thought that was the end of the ordeal.
It wasn't. A landscaper Bank of America hired in August to mow the grass on the property broke a fence to bring in his equipment. The tenant got spooked and moved out just before Christmas.
On Jan. 5, a friend of the Cardosos who was helping the tenant pick up belongings found men putting a lock box on the front door. The workers said the house belonged to Bank of America. The friend called the Cardosos.
When Charlie Cardoso called the bank, a representative told him there was a mistake, the problem would be fixed, and he would get a return call. The call never came. The lock box remained.
Four days later, Cardoso and his son drove to Florida, missing the homecoming of another son who was returning from Iraq for a two-week leave.
Cardoso had to prove to police that he owned the house. The next day he broke in through a back door and used bolt cutters to remove the lock box. The water and electricity had been turned off, and pipes had frozen.
The couple filed suit 10 days later.
Possessions the couple had stored at the home, including photos, clothes, tools and small appliances, had been removed and are presumably lost, the complaint states.
In September, three months after Bank of America started foreclosure on the Cordosos, it also foreclosed on the nearby home, records show.
The bank declined to comment to the Times beyond an e-mailed statement.
"We have reached out to the Cardosos' representatives and hope to have the opportunity to work with them to properly assess and address their allegations," the statement said. "We are reviewing the allegations in the lawsuit, the actual events that led to them and the causes of those events, and will consider any hardship that resulted."
Beyond financial damages, the Cardosos want something else.
"Bank of America or somebody should apologize," Charlie Cardoso said during last month's television interview.
At least one bank has acknowledged the record number of foreclosures from the mortgage meltdown has increased the likelihood of such mistakes.
Citi-Residential started the foreclosure process on a home in Kissimmee in 2008 — changing the locks and emptying the pool — even though the owner, who lives in London, didn't have a mortgage with the company, according to a report by Orlando TV station WFTV. Company officials said the high number of foreclosures they were dealing with in Central Florida contributed to the error.
DeMello said he has been fielding calls from other homeowners throughout the country with similar complaints.
As for the Cardosos, they still want to retire in Florida.
"They just don't know if they're going to be able to be in that neighborhood because of the uncomfortable feeling they have right now," deMello said. "Hopefully that will change."
HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM and we bailed them out..........................
Just one problem: The Massachusetts couple paid for their future retirement home in Spring Hill with cash in 2005, five years before agents for Bank of America seized the house, removed belongings and changed the locks on the doors, according to a lawsuit the couple have filed in federal court.
Early last month, Charlie Cardoso had to drive to Florida to get his home back, the complaint filed in Massachusetts on Jan. 20 states.
The bank had an incorrect address on foreclosure documents — the house it meant to seize is across the street and about 10 doors down — but the Cardosos and a Realtor employed by Bank of America were unable to convince the company that it had the wrong house, the suit states.
"Their own real estate agent told them, and nevertheless Bank of America steamrolled right ahead," said Joseph deMello, an attorney in Taunton, Mass., who is representing the couple. "This is a nightmare for anyone, and it affected my hard-working clients a lot."
The Cardosos are seeking unspecified damages from Bank of America. The company showed negligence, trespassed and caused the couple emotional distress and financial hardship, especially because a tenant renting the home at the time got worried and left, according to the complaint. It's still unclear if the couple's credit rating has been affected, deMello said.
The suit names other defendants listed as "John Doe" who could include "employees, agents, contractors or other persons, ordered, hired, or told by BOA to trespass on the plaintiffs' property and to dispose of the plaintiff's personal possessions."
The suit also charges the company with defamation and libel. DeMello said the Cardosos are part of a Portuguese community in the area, and the foreclosure tarnished their reputation.
Charlie Cardoso is an unemployed construction worker, and his wife is disabled. They paid $139,000 for the three-bedroom pool home in the tidy neighborhood a few blocks south of Spring Hill Drive, records show. It was Charlie's life savings, the complaint says.
"We have a lot of friends there, and all the time we've been telling them the house has been paid (for)," a tearful Maria Cardoso said in an interview with WCBV-TV in Boston last month.
The couple, reached at home in New Bedford, Mass., referred a St. Petersburg Times reporter to deMello.
According to the complaint, here is what happened:
Last July, the couple's tenant called the Cardosos in a panic. The single mother of two teenagers accused the couple of lying when they told her she could rent the house as long she wanted. Three men were there to clean out the house and change the locks, she told them.
Charlie Cardoso talked to a real estate agent for Bank of America, who said he would inform the company that it had the wrong house. The couple thought that was the end of the ordeal.
It wasn't. A landscaper Bank of America hired in August to mow the grass on the property broke a fence to bring in his equipment. The tenant got spooked and moved out just before Christmas.
On Jan. 5, a friend of the Cardosos who was helping the tenant pick up belongings found men putting a lock box on the front door. The workers said the house belonged to Bank of America. The friend called the Cardosos.
When Charlie Cardoso called the bank, a representative told him there was a mistake, the problem would be fixed, and he would get a return call. The call never came. The lock box remained.
Four days later, Cardoso and his son drove to Florida, missing the homecoming of another son who was returning from Iraq for a two-week leave.
Cardoso had to prove to police that he owned the house. The next day he broke in through a back door and used bolt cutters to remove the lock box. The water and electricity had been turned off, and pipes had frozen.
The couple filed suit 10 days later.
Possessions the couple had stored at the home, including photos, clothes, tools and small appliances, had been removed and are presumably lost, the complaint states.
In September, three months after Bank of America started foreclosure on the Cordosos, it also foreclosed on the nearby home, records show.
The bank declined to comment to the Times beyond an e-mailed statement.
"We have reached out to the Cardosos' representatives and hope to have the opportunity to work with them to properly assess and address their allegations," the statement said. "We are reviewing the allegations in the lawsuit, the actual events that led to them and the causes of those events, and will consider any hardship that resulted."
Beyond financial damages, the Cardosos want something else.
"Bank of America or somebody should apologize," Charlie Cardoso said during last month's television interview.
At least one bank has acknowledged the record number of foreclosures from the mortgage meltdown has increased the likelihood of such mistakes.
Citi-Residential started the foreclosure process on a home in Kissimmee in 2008 — changing the locks and emptying the pool — even though the owner, who lives in London, didn't have a mortgage with the company, according to a report by Orlando TV station WFTV. Company officials said the high number of foreclosures they were dealing with in Central Florida contributed to the error.
DeMello said he has been fielding calls from other homeowners throughout the country with similar complaints.
As for the Cardosos, they still want to retire in Florida.
"They just don't know if they're going to be able to be in that neighborhood because of the uncomfortable feeling they have right now," deMello said. "Hopefully that will change."
HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM and we bailed them out..........................
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Couple make burglar clean their home at gunpoint
An American couple turned the tables on a burglar they caught ransacking their home by dispensing their own summary justice.
Without waiting for the law to arrive, the pair doled out their own punishment to the surprised criminal - they made him clean up the house at gunpoint!
The unlucky burglar was caught red-handed when Adrian and Tiffany McKinnon returned to their house near Montgomery, Alabama, after a week away.
To their dismay they discovered their home had been plundered.
"Tears just rolled down my face as I walked in and saw everything gone and piles of trash all over my home," Mrs. McKinnon told her local newspaper the Montgomery Advertiser.
When her husband walked into another room to check what was missing he came face to face with the burglar, who was wearing one of Mr. McKinnon's hats.
"My husband Adrian caught the thief red-handed in our home. And what is even crazier, the man even had my husband's hat sitting right on his head," Mrs. McKinnon said.
Mr. McKinnon held suspect Tajuan Bullock at gunpoint and made him sit down until he decided what to do.
"We made this man clean up all the mess he made, piles of stuff, he had thrown out of my drawers and cabinets onto the floor," Mrs. McKinnon said.
When the police arrived the work-shy burglar had the cheek to complain to them - about having to clean up his mess at gunpoint.
"This man had the nerve to raise sand about us making him clean up the mess he made in my house," said Mrs McKinnon.
But the police officer laughed at Bullock when he complained and told him that anybody else would have shot him dead.
Bullock was arrested on burglary and theft charges and was held in Montgomery County Detention Facility.
A police spokesman said the victims were lucky to be able to catch the suspect in the act and hold him until police arrived. It was an unusual case because usually burglars struck while the homeowner was away and were in and out fast so they could quickly sell the stolen items, the spokesman added.
HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM now making a man clean THAT is punishment !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Without waiting for the law to arrive, the pair doled out their own punishment to the surprised criminal - they made him clean up the house at gunpoint!
The unlucky burglar was caught red-handed when Adrian and Tiffany McKinnon returned to their house near Montgomery, Alabama, after a week away.
To their dismay they discovered their home had been plundered.
"Tears just rolled down my face as I walked in and saw everything gone and piles of trash all over my home," Mrs. McKinnon told her local newspaper the Montgomery Advertiser.
When her husband walked into another room to check what was missing he came face to face with the burglar, who was wearing one of Mr. McKinnon's hats.
"My husband Adrian caught the thief red-handed in our home. And what is even crazier, the man even had my husband's hat sitting right on his head," Mrs. McKinnon said.
Mr. McKinnon held suspect Tajuan Bullock at gunpoint and made him sit down until he decided what to do.
"We made this man clean up all the mess he made, piles of stuff, he had thrown out of my drawers and cabinets onto the floor," Mrs. McKinnon said.
When the police arrived the work-shy burglar had the cheek to complain to them - about having to clean up his mess at gunpoint.
"This man had the nerve to raise sand about us making him clean up the mess he made in my house," said Mrs McKinnon.
But the police officer laughed at Bullock when he complained and told him that anybody else would have shot him dead.
Bullock was arrested on burglary and theft charges and was held in Montgomery County Detention Facility.
A police spokesman said the victims were lucky to be able to catch the suspect in the act and hold him until police arrived. It was an unusual case because usually burglars struck while the homeowner was away and were in and out fast so they could quickly sell the stolen items, the spokesman added.
HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM now making a man clean THAT is punishment !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Monday, February 8, 2010
Hmmm I've got it
I will pack live lizards in my underwear, eat my chocolate clothes, let you know when I am pooping and then post my butt fat measurements on the internet for you to see.
HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM I need to go to bed. Things are getting really weird around here.
HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM I need to go to bed. Things are getting really weird around here.
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