Sir Gregory crying with no dates. . . .
On Fri, 18 Mar 2016 13:37:13 -0700, Mustaffa Sheboygan wrote:
In article ,
says...
On Fri, 18 Mar 2016 10:01:18 -0700, Mustaffa Sheboygan wrote:
You mean there's more than one family member as despicable as my sister?
How can you not notify someone when their own father dies? It doesn't
get much lower than that.
One wonders if you cared about your father's life and
death, why didn't you stay in contact with him directly
instead of relying on a suspect sister to keep you
informed of his status?
If he was in a nursing home as a next of kin you could
easily have notified them to contact you immediately
in case he died.
While your sister sounds like a real scumbag, are you
not at least a little culpable for your being out of
the loop, so to speak?
I guess you weren't taking notes when I explained all of this. She hid
him from me in a rest home. I found out where he was, and started
calling him every day. I tried to get him moved closer to me, and was
told by the staff that since my father had let her talk him into giving
her full control of his medical decisions, she was the only one who
could make that decision. I also hired an attorney at my father's
request, to get her control of his life transferred to me. The staff
notified her that I was trying to do that, and two days before I could
make it happen, she moved him to parts unknown. My sister didn't give a
rat's ass about my father, just his money. She never even called or
visited him when she stuck him in the rest home.
I hope you find this explanation "interesting".
I think you have a good criminal case for kidnapping. You should
pursue it.
--
Sir Gregory Hall, Esq.
"It is my erudite opinion that a man
should not mince words just to spare
the sensibilities of the ignorant or
the thin-skinned."
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