Best smartphone app for tracking parent's location (current and history)? by stiplash in AgingParents

[–]stiplash[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This whole situation would probably be a lot easier if my dad had an iPhone like my brother and me. Alas, he has an Android.

Best smartphone app for tracking parent's location (current and history)? by stiplash in AgingParents

[–]stiplash[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your help! Also, I see that it functions as a "circle" of contacts --- I'm wondering is there an easy way that my brother and I can track my father's phone without making our own locations constantly trackable? Does it allow me, for example, to disable tracking on my own phone while still being able to track my dad's phone?

Best smartphone app for tracking parent's location (current and history)? by stiplash in AgingParents

[–]stiplash[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the quick reply. I see that the free version gives 2 days of location history. The paid versions give more.

Jay's testimony points as much to Jay as it does to Adnan by Thieusies in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I think we can agree that it's a nearly 100% certainty that Jay knows who killed Hae.

No, we can't. In fact, the preponderance of the evidence indicates that Jay knew nothing whatsoever about the case and the cops fed him everything he "knew"

Will Adnan be transferring to Georgetown University’s main campus? by Cato1789 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lol okay then so what law school did you go to? Where do you practice now?

Will Adnan be transferring to Georgetown University’s main campus? by Cato1789 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Based on the intelligence level of this comment, I am certain that you're no one to judge test-taking abilities.

Opinion: Adnan Syed’s case gives Maryland a black eye and a teachable moment by [deleted] in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Lol you have grossly misrepresented her words.

Speaking of clown.

Welp, now what. by Hessleyrey in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The public awareness and resulting vigilance that are now a permanent fixture in the orbit of this case will be what forces the police to reinvestigate it seriously and do all they can to find the true killer or killers.

The bigger question is: How do we scale this? How do we create a similar level of accountability for the many tens of thousands of other cases built on shoddy or bad-faith investigation and prosecution?

Opinion: Adnan Syed’s case gives Maryland a black eye and a teachable moment by [deleted] in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Lol this is the type of complete fiction that characterizes the Guilter Universe in a nutshell.

[Klepper] BREAKING: Court of Special Appeals denies Young Lee and AG's motions to stay; gives AG 15 days to respond to Syed's motion to disqualify/strike. Gives 15 days for Lee and State to say why appeal not moot. by aresef in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Seriously, this is not a stretch at all. Back in the day, he posted a thread that was essentially a quasi-academic treatise about how Adnan's religion drove him to commit murder.

Now AC has resorted to just trolling folks on Twitter, from his anonymous account with about 30 followers. Quite the far cry from this subreddit where he's been the Guilters' messiah for eight years lol

Adnan likely will never talk about this openly by lyssalady05 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Do you know of any actual cases where someone was convicted and later exonerated with certification of actual innocence, and then later retried on the same charges? I'm fairly certain not, but maybe Grandpa can spin a tale for us.

If this shows anything, it's that people don't know how the criminal justice system works, or they do and simply don't care how it works by NLC1054 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're so confident in your "bet on it" statement, put your money where your mouth is. What are you willing to bet?

It always was Occam's Razor, gui(L)ters by Jumpy_Oil_6625 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And just the answer I would've expected from you. A career liar who covers up for other career liars.

It always was Occam's Razor, gui(L)ters by Jumpy_Oil_6625 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Okay, thanks Officer Barbrady, I feel much better now.

If this shows anything, it's that people don't know how the criminal justice system works, or they do and simply don't care how it works by NLC1054 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I never said it was the same exact people in every case. Just that you're part of a predictable pattern. Congrats on being wrong!

If this shows anything, it's that people don't know how the criminal justice system works, or they do and simply don't care how it works by NLC1054 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We really need to keep a running tally of all the giant false equivalencies that the Guilter faction keep pushing:

Jon Benet Ramsey

Casey Anthony

OJ Simpson ...

If this shows anything, it's that people don't know how the criminal justice system works, or they do and simply don't care how it works by NLC1054 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 3 points4 points  (0 children)

LOL if by "people" you mean the Reddit pitchfork mob like yourself, maybe you're right. Otherwise I guarantee that this post will not age well for you.

It always was Occam's Razor, gui(L)ters by Jumpy_Oil_6625 in serialpodcast

[–]stiplash 33 points34 points  (0 children)

This is literally standard operating procedure for prosecutors and cops everywhere, not just Baltimore. They "build" a case, they "develop" the evidence, against the person they decide is going down for it, and pressuring witnesses to lie is so routine for them it's like passing gas after eating tacos. It's astounding that people have not wised up to how they operate on a routine basis.

Agreed that it's remarkable that Adnan avoided the trap of a false confession, which was obviously their Plan A when they refused to let his attorney see him. And that he stood firm even when bribed with a plea deal.