Thread: Winner!
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Old 2009-09-02, 04:16 PM   #1
sperry
The Doink
 
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Real Name: Scott
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 20,335
 
Car: '09 OBXT, '02 WRX, '96 Miata
Class: PDX/TT-6
 
The way out is through
Default Winner!

Anyone ever buy a car from this d-bag at Jones-West Ford?

http://www.rgj.com/article/20090902/NEWS/90902052

Quote:
A 33-year-old former car salesman learned the hard way Wednesday that you can’t get away with threatening to kill your arresting officers and their families.
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Washoe District Court Judge Brent Adams ordered Robert Adam McGuffey to spend at least two years in prison before he is eligible for parole on two felony counts of intimidating a witness for trying to get out of a drunken driving arrest.

Adams sentenced him to two consecutive terms of 1 to 3 years in prison.

A jury in July took less than two hours to find him guilty of the charges that stem from a May arrest by Nevada Highway Patrol troopers. McGuffey’s string of threats to the troopers were captured on video in a patrol car. He told one trooper “I hope you are a quick draw...you won’t be the first cop I’ve killed...you won’t be the last.”

McGuffey was a salesman at Jones West Ford and said he would use his connections there to sabotage NHP vehicles that are serviced at the business, and to find out where the officers and their families lived and shopped. His blood alcohol level at the time of arrest was .11 percent, while the legal limit is .08 percent.

During Wednesday’s sentencing, Pueblo, Colo., police officer William Doyle testified that in March of 2000, he stopped McGuffey for drunken driving. McGuffey, he said, told him he was going to find his family and “kill your bitch-ass wife and rape your kid...Pueblo is a small town. I will follow you home and kill your whole (expletive) family. You better just pull over and let me go.”

Chief Deputy District Attorney said McGuffey had been arrested four other times for felonies, and that all had been pleaded down to misdemeanors with a lenient punishment. “Today, there was judgement,” Hahn said.

McGuffey apologized for his behavior, which his lawyer has said were “empty threats.”

Officers also testified that in January 2008, officers responding to his home for a domestic violence report had to shoot him with a Taser gun because he was resisting arrest.
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