BigWillie
New member
Personally, I do not know the kid and wish to never know the kid. However, from everyone that I have spoken to that does, the same thing comes back on Andy. I'd vouch that those guys know Andy and his situation as better than anyone.All I am saying is I hope you actually know the kid, which I'm betting probably is not the case....did you ever play the telephone game in school...
Also, a person might get extremely angry if they are getting accused of something they didn't do....especially if they have been drinking alot or if they have "problems" as has been stated many times by you Big Willie....think about it.
The flawed system works both ways....it is possible for women to bring up ridiculous charges against men to avoid embarrasment, keep the hubby away from the kids, etc....and it's a little easier to get out of a speeding ticket than it is to get off a charge of sexual assault. You're throwing pretty strong allegations around...I just hope you actually know these things and you're not just inferring them from stories you heard from random people who know people.
And in summary, in our society....not guilty is technically not guilty....until you meet the creator.

Andy got mad because the police were called? Oh yes, the first thing that gets in my mind when I did nothing wrong is I will compound the situation by attempting to wreck a bar which I will have to pay for, then fight with cops which I will DEFINITELY go to jail for.
And I never said Andy was drunk and I definitely did not say his problems were alcohol related. I only said Andy had problems. Anything after that is only what you assumed.
Man, you don't take correlations well at all, eh?
And dude, you don't have to believe me. I frankly do not care either way. However, your mind was made up before you read what I said. So why debate it? Just to debate it and attempt to stir the pot? If you think Andy is a good kid and really innocent, more power to you. We will have to agree to disagree and leave it at that.
Not guilty only applies in the court room and not to the actual world where facts actually apply. You are right about the last part though.