Re: Virtually All USCF Financial Records have been Destroyed



Who cares about Sam's sordid domestic entaglements?

Let's keep our eye upon the doughnut and not upon the hole.

Does anyone have anything intelligent to offer about the
status of the missing records or how the USCF lost
millions of dollars?

Board members sure ain't talking!


parrthenon@xxxxxx wrote:
AN AFFAIR OF THE HEART

I wrote that Sam Sloan was convicted of a felony
that involved an affair of the heart. Vinnie Hart,
not so aptly named, then lists all of the
circumstances that support my point.

A father taking his daughter against a court
order is not necessarily a criminal in my book -- and
certainly less criminally inclined than those who have
spent a career living off public employment, mulcting
money forcibly extracted from taxpayers.

The idea that criminality automatically equates
with breaking a law would make North Korea's secret
police honest brokers. As for the millions of that
country's citizen's who violate economic laws simply
to continue living, they become "criminals."

There used to be the idea in the United States
that government did not intrude into family affairs
and an entire host of social matters. There were
legal "norms," and these norms could make a law
unlawful when said legislation violated the norms.

Meanwhile, where are those missing records?


Vince Hart wrote:
parrthenon@xxxxxx wrote:
THE GAUNTLET


Sam Sloan was convicted of taking his daughter
against a court order in an affair of the heart that
would not even have been in the courts a generation or
so back. Let us keep that in mind.


Let's keep the complete story in mind when we consider Parr's
characterization of Sam's felony conviction as "an affair of the
heart":

Sam abandoned the girl for two and one half of her first five years
with no contact and no support.


Sam violated multiple (i.e., three) court orders by "taking the child
out of the juridisdiction of the appropriate court and away from the
custodial parties."


His last attempt was thwarted when the child had the good sense to run
from Sam and lock herself in the car of the social worker who was
monitoring the visit between Sam and his daughter.


Sam "testified that he was still married to at least two wives and that

at least two of them and their children resided in the same house."


The court found that "Mr. Sloan's unfitness [as a parent] was
exhibited in his lifestyle, attitude, behavior, instability, living
circumstances, personal habits and emotional status."


The court noted that "[h]is credibility as a witness was very poor."


The court decided that contact with Sam was "not in the child's best
interest because of the unusual circumstances in that Mr. Sloan
continually takes the child to foreign countries or other jurisdictions

when court ordered not to do so."

Let us also keep in mind that Parr knows no more about family law than
he knows about the laws of evidence, copyright, or sexual abuse. Parr
likes to assert as fact whatever pops into his head.

.



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