People don't get this kind of sentence for murdering people in most
jurisdictions. Only in the wonderful Roanoke Valley do people get
convicted on one persons lies and no other evidence.
Oh yes. I am sure this guy is totally innocent just like your boy Earl
(cough, cough, hack hack). I am so glad Roanoke has a great
"detective"
such as yourself to set the record straight. We don't have anyone as
clever as you here in Frisco. I bet Adolf Hitler wishes you would have
been in Germany at the end of WWII, I bet you could have convinced
everyone there that he was innocent as well. How would the authorities
EVER do their jobs without a great mind like yours.!!!
I didn't claim he was innocent. I just said the sentence is not in
line with the crime.
http://nyronnichols.site90.com
I don't think Hitler ever killed anyone except himself. If you are
going to blame him
for the others then you have to blame George W. Bush also. They both
started
wars without provication.
You may want to read the latest about Earl Bramblett. New information
has emerged.
Totally unsolicited but much appreciated.
Certainly gives credence to what I have been saying all along.
Selling tens of thousands of bags of heroin brought a Roanoke barber a
federal prison sentence of seven years and three months on Monday.
Daniel "Day" Fitzgerald McNair, 39, will be supervised by the federal
probation office for four years after his release from prison, U.S.
District Court Judge James Turk ordered.
McNair pleaded guilty in August to a charge of conspiring to
distribute heroin. The 87-month prison sentence was at the low end of
the range suggested by federal guidelines.
McNair was described by prosecutors as the highest-level dealer so far
brought into court in a chain of heroin sales that extended to a group
of addicts who last year broke into a home in Northeast and found it
filled with thousands of firearms stockpiled by a collector. They
began stealing the guns to trade for drugs but were quickly discovered
by police. All the weapons were recovered.
Testimony in McNair's sentencing hearing and character letters filed
with the court described his work with charity events, the free
haircuts he gave young men seeking work and his role as a father and
mentor.
Prosecutors said he had sold drugs over the course of a decade, moving
into heroin in 2008 and helping distribute at least 23,000 bags of it
last year in and around Roanoke.
-- Mike Gangloff
How fair is that?