Discussion:
Christine Blasey Ford Calls 911
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disturbed mind
2018-09-27 07:16:17 UTC
Permalink
At a police station in Maryland, a phone rings and a female
officer answers.

911: Hello, 911. What is your emergency?

Ford: Hello, police? Someone just tried to rape me.

911: Tried to rape you?

Ford: Yes. Tried to rape me.

911: What’s your name?

Ford: Christine.

911: What happened?

Ford: Well, the guy was really drunk.

911: OK. He was drunk.

Ford: The guy was really drunk and he tried to take my clothes
off.

911: Then what happened?

Ford: I tried to scream but he put his hand over my mouth.

911: OK, then what happened?

Ford: He tried to rape me but he did not succeed.

911: So there was no actual rape?

Ford: No, but he tried, believe me. And that’s a crime.

911: Ma’am, at this police station we know the laws of the state
of Maryland. We know that rape is a crime.

Ford: Good, so . . .

911: Who is this drunk who tried to take off your clothes
intending to rape you?

Ford: Uh, I can’t really say.

911: You can’t say or you don’t know?

Ford: Uh, I guess I don’t know who he was. Kinda. Sorry.

911: Ever see him before?

Ford: Uh. Not that I know of.

911: Any witnesses to the attempted rape?

Ford: Yes, there were two drunks in the room.

911: So the attacker had an accomplice?

Ford: Yes. Wait, there might have been three others in the room.

911: Three others? So four in all?

Ford: Yes, there were four. I think I remember that. Or maybe
just two.

911: Maybe just two. Any names of any of the others?

Ford: Uh, no. I don’t know any of the names. But I know they are
all from an upscale prep school.

911: Do you recall the name of the school?

Ford: Uh. No I don’t. But as you know there are plenty of
schools like that in this area.

911: Did the attack take place in a residence?

Ford: Yes, it was a party at a private residence.

911: Had you been to a party like that before?

Ford: Uh, yes I had.

911: What is the address where this party occurred? The
homeowners may have more information?

Ford: Uh, I can’t say. I don’t know the address. I don’t know
who owns the place or even where it is.

911: You don’t know the location of the place you were attacked?

Ford: No, I don’t. Sorry.

911: How did you get to the residence? Did a friend perhaps
drive you?

Ford: Uh. I don’t recall just how I got there. Kinda.

911: Were you drinking at the time?

Ford: Look, I’m not going to talk about that. I mean, I have a
right to privacy, okay?

911: OK. What time did the attack take place?

Ford: Uh, I don’t know.

911: How did you get home after the attack?

Ford: Uh, I’m not sure about that either.

911: But you are sure this drunk preppie tried to rape you?

Ford: Yes. I’m sure about that. He tried to take off my clothes
and when I screamed he put his hand over my mouth.

911: Did you maybe grab an article of his clothing?

Ford: No I didn’t.

911: No scratches or wounds of any kind?

Ford: No.

911: Did you tell anybody else? Friends? Parents? Teachers?

Ford: No, I didn’t.

911: OK. Do you want to come in and file a formal police report?

Ford: Uh, no. I don’t want to file a police report.

911: You realize, ma’am, that without a police report it’s
pretty hard for us to respond in any meaningful way?

Ford: I don’t understand why. I told you the story.

911: Just so you know, if you do file a police report with false
information you can be charged for that.

Ford: I can?

911: Yes, you can. It’s actually a serious matter because anyone
accused of a crime is presumed to be innocent.

Ford: But he tried to . . .

911: You might keep that in mind, ma’am. The accuser has to
prove the person guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. And without
the address, time of the crime, name and description of the
attacker, and with no witness or physical evidence, you won’t
have much of a case.

Ford: But I told you the story.

911: In fact, you won’t have any case at all. You have given us
essentially nothing. No evidence.

Ford: But I told you what happened.

911: You did, but here’s the thing: a story is not evidence of a
crime. An accusation is not evidence. Just so you know.

Ford: So I can’t just tell you the story?

911: Not the way you did just now. We need things called “facts.”

Ford: So you aren’t going to do anything?

911: Based on what you said, ma’am, no police department in the
United States would touch this case.

Ford: What about the FBI?

911: It’s not a federal jurisdiction. No, they wouldn’t. If you
had specifics for us, maybe we could bring in an FBI profiler or
crime scene specialist, but you don’t know where the crime scene
is, who attempted the rape, or when it took place. The FBI would
have nothing to investigate.

Ford: Don’t you care that someone tried to rape me?

911: Yes, I care, and this department has arrested and convicted
rapists. But in those cases we had something to go on. You have
given us nothing.

Ford: So can you help me at all?

911: Maybe. You might buy a can of black spray paint, find
yourself a retaining wall, and write your story there.

Ford: Excuse me, what?

911: You just . . . sorry, I’ve got another call coming in.
Good luck with your story, ma’am. Somebody will believe it.

https://amgreatness.com/2018/09/24/christine-blasey-ford-calls-
911/
 
disturbed mind
2018-10-03 21:31:46 UTC
Permalink
At a police station in Maryland, a phone rings and a female
officer answers.

911: Hello, 911. What is your emergency?

Ford: Hello, police? Someone just tried to rape me.

911: Tried to rape you?

Ford: Yes. Tried to rape me.

911: What’s your name?

Ford: Christine.

911: What happened?

Ford: Well, the guy was really drunk.

911: OK. He was drunk.

Ford: The guy was really drunk and he tried to take my clothes
off.

911: Then what happened?

Ford: I tried to scream but he put his hand over my mouth.

911: OK, then what happened?

Ford: He tried to rape me but he did not succeed.

911: So there was no actual rape?

Ford: No, but he tried, believe me. And that’s a crime.

911: Ma’am, at this police station we know the laws of the state
of Maryland. We know that rape is a crime.

Ford: Good, so . . .

911: Who is this drunk who tried to take off your clothes
intending to rape you?

Ford: Uh, I can’t really say.

911: You can’t say or you don’t know?

Ford: Uh, I guess I don’t know who he was. Kinda. Sorry.

911: Ever see him before?

Ford: Uh. Not that I know of.

911: Any witnesses to the attempted rape?

Ford: Yes, there were two drunks in the room.

911: So the attacker had an accomplice?

Ford: Yes. Wait, there might have been three others in the room.

911: Three others? So four in all?

Ford: Yes, there were four. I think I remember that. Or maybe
just two.

911: Maybe just two. Any names of any of the others?

Ford: Uh, no. I don’t know any of the names. But I know they are
all from an upscale prep school.

911: Do you recall the name of the school?

Ford: Uh. No I don’t. But as you know there are plenty of
schools like that in this area.

911: Did the attack take place in a residence?

Ford: Yes, it was a party at a private residence.

911: Had you been to a party like that before?

Ford: Uh, yes I had.

911: What is the address where this party occurred? The
homeowners may have more information?

Ford: Uh, I can’t say. I don’t know the address. I don’t know
who owns the place or even where it is.

911: You don’t know the location of the place you were attacked?

Ford: No, I don’t. Sorry.

911: How did you get to the residence? Did a friend perhaps
drive you?

Ford: Uh. I don’t recall just how I got there. Kinda.

911: Were you drinking at the time?

Ford: Look, I’m not going to talk about that. I mean, I have a
right to privacy, okay?

911: OK. What time did the attack take place?

Ford: Uh, I don’t know.

911: How did you get home after the attack?

Ford: Uh, I’m not sure about that either.

911: But you are sure this drunk preppie tried to rape you?

Ford: Yes. I’m sure about that. He tried to take off my clothes
and when I screamed he put his hand over my mouth.

911: Did you maybe grab an article of his clothing?

Ford: No I didn’t.

911: No scratches or wounds of any kind?

Ford: No.

911: Did you tell anybody else? Friends? Parents? Teachers?

Ford: No, I didn’t.

911: OK. Do you want to come in and file a formal police report?

Ford: Uh, no. I don’t want to file a police report.

911: You realize, ma’am, that without a police report it’s
pretty hard for us to respond in any meaningful way?

Ford: I don’t understand why. I told you the story.

911: Just so you know, if you do file a police report with false
information you can be charged for that.

Ford: I can?

911: Yes, you can. It’s actually a serious matter because anyone
accused of a crime is presumed to be innocent.

Ford: But he tried to . . .

911: You might keep that in mind, ma’am. The accuser has to
prove the person guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. And without
the address, time of the crime, name and description of the
attacker, and with no witness or physical evidence, you won’t
have much of a case.

Ford: But I told you the story.

911: In fact, you won’t have any case at all. You have given us
essentially nothing. No evidence.

Ford: But I told you what happened.

911: You did, but here’s the thing: a story is not evidence of a
crime. An accusation is not evidence. Just so you know.

Ford: So I can’t just tell you the story?

911: Not the way you did just now. We need things called “facts.”

Ford: So you aren’t going to do anything?

911: Based on what you said, ma’am, no police department in the
United States would touch this case.

Ford: What about the FBI?

911: It’s not a federal jurisdiction. No, they wouldn’t. If you
had specifics for us, maybe we could bring in an FBI profiler or
crime scene specialist, but you don’t know where the crime scene
is, who attempted the rape, or when it took place. The FBI would
have nothing to investigate.

Ford: Don’t you care that someone tried to rape me?

911: Yes, I care, and this department has arrested and convicted
rapists. But in those cases we had something to go on. You have
given us nothing.

Ford: So can you help me at all?

911: Maybe. You might buy a can of black spray paint, find
yourself a retaining wall, and write your story there.

Ford: Excuse me, what?

911: You just . . . sorry, I’ve got another call coming in.
Good luck with your story, ma’am. Somebody will believe it.

https://amgreatness.com/2018/09/24/christine-blasey-ford-calls-
911/
 
Wop-A-Roo
2018-10-13 02:00:58 UTC
Permalink
Joe Giudice has to get the hell up outta the United States -- a
judge is deporting him to his native Italy ... once he gets out
of prison, that is.

The judge issued the deportation order Tuesday in Pennsylvania.
The 'Real Housewives of New Jersey' star had begged the judge to
let him stay in the U.S. with Teresa and their 4 kids, but no
dice for the Giudices.

Joe's more than halfway through serving a 41-month prison
sentence for conspiracy to commit wire and bankruptcy fraud.

Teresa was well aware deportation was a very real possibility
and sounds like she's down to stand by her man. Earlier this
year, during the 'RHONJ' reunion, she called Italy a beautiful
place to live and said she'll embrace the change if it comes.

Well, the change is coming. Unless, Joe files a successful
appeal. He has until Nov. 9 to do that.

http://www.tmz.com/2018/10/10/joe-giudice-ordered-deported-italy-
real-housewives-new-jersey-teresa/
 
Wop-A-Roo
2018-10-13 02:45:05 UTC
Permalink
Teresa Giudice turned to Donald Trump right before Joe got
locked up in 2016, hoping he would write a letter vouching for
her husband ... TMZ has learned.

Sources close to the Giudices tell TMZ ... Teresa reached out to
Trump several months before Joe started serving his 41-month
sentence, and asked Donald to write a character letter. This was
before he was elected President, but she hoped the letter would
help Joe get a lighter sentence.

Our sources say she and Trump got along while she was on the
fifth season of the 'Celebrity Apprentice' in 2012, so we're
told she thought she'd give it a shot. Nothing ventured, nothing
gained ... but it didn't work.

We're told Trump's office -- and not Trump himself -- wrote a
letter back saying he would NOT be able to do anything for her
with regards to Joe. His staff wished her and her family well,
FWIW.

As you know, Trump went on to become Prez ... and Joe went on to
enter a federal prison. Joe was just ordered to be deported back
to Italy once he's out of prison.

Joe's crime was a federal offense, so it's at least possible
Trump could pardon him. Take 2, Teresa?

http://www.tmz.com/2018/10/10/teresa-giudice-trump-character-
letter-husband-joe-sentencing-presidency/
 
Wop-A-Roo
2018-10-13 04:30:00 UTC
Permalink
Teresa Giudice is a cold-hearted, good-for-nothing mom who'd
rather party like a rock star than sweat about her husband Joe's
pending deportation to Italy ... so claims her cast mate Kim
DePaola.

The 'RHONJ' star ripped into Teresa when we spoke to her just a
few hours after the news broke Joe's getting deported after he
finishes serving his 41-month federal prison sentence. She
doesn't have much sympathy for Joe, either ... telling us he's
not a citizen, and the law's the law.

Then she went off on Teresa's alleged non-stop partying
lifestyle, and joked (we think) that TG's already found a way to
cash in on Joe's downfall.

Kim D's attack should come as no surprise -- they have a bitter
history. Teresa once accused Kim of running a prostitution ring
back in Season 8.

TMZ broke the story ... Teresa has zero plans to uproot their 4
daughters and move to Italy when their dad gets the boot,
because they've made a life here and she wants to keep it that
way.

Pretty sure Kim won't be delivering a homemade pan of ziti to
console Teresa.

http://www.tmz.com/2018/10/10/teresa-giudice-joe-deported-italy-
kim-depaola-real-housewives-new-jersey/
 

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