Brett Favre steals and is redneck scum.

Discussion in 'The Mainboard' started by DUCKMOUTH, May 5, 2020.

  1. Prospector

    Prospector I am not a new member
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    Wait, what? Don't want to fuck up my search history
     
  2. southlick

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  3. Fran Tarkenton

    Fran Tarkenton Hilton Honors VIP
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    what a dumbass

    republicans only move these days is grandstanding for social media reaction
     
  4. Beeds07

    Beeds07 Bitch, it's Saturday
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    If it goes to trial I assume the first person called will be the co-conspirator who has been fired and arrested?
     
  5. hood b. goode

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  6. Dirt Dirt McGirt

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    Am I missing something? Doesn’t this open Bert up to discovery? Seems like he’s getting poor legal advice
     
  7. Harrison Beck

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  8. Baron

    Baron Well-Known Member
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    #308 Baron, Feb 10, 2023
    Last edited: Feb 10, 2023
  9. southlick

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  10. DUCKMOUTH

    DUCKMOUTH People don’t you know, don’t you know
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    Long, but lot of details

    Brett Favre says the welfare agency didn’t help satisfy his volleyball pledge, but Aaron Rodgers, Jimmy Buffett and others did
    by: Anna Wolfe, Mississippi Today

    Posted: Apr 13, 2023 / 02:34 PM CDT

    Updated: Apr 13, 2023 / 02:34 PM CDT

    [​IMG]
    NFL legend Brett Favre says Mississippi’s welfare department didn’t help satisfy his pledge to fund a new volleyball stadium at University of Southern Mississippi.

    But current Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, a charity started by Margaritaville-songwriter Jimmy Buffett, and former Gov. Phil Bryant’s political action committee did.

    Favre has made national news in recent years for tapping his home state’s welfare agency to raise funds for the stadium, but an email Mississippi Today recently obtained shows he also raised at least $180,000 for the facility from at least four charities. These are organizations that claim to increase economic, educational or workforce opportunities for families in need.

    One of the key allegations against Favre in Mississippi’s welfare scandal is that he personally benefited from a scheme to divert federal funds intended to help poor Mississippians to build a volleyball stadium at his alma mater.

    Mississippi Department of Human Services, which is suing Favre and dozens of others to recoup the misspent funds, draws this conclusion because, they allege, Favre personally committed funds to the project, so any welfare money used to offset that obligation was a financial benefit to Favre.

    The athlete, who also directly received $1.1 million in welfare funds, did personally agree to fundraise or donate just over $1.4 million, according to a never-before-published donor agreement introduced in court this month. The document was signed by Favre, his wife, and University of Southern Mississippi Athletic Foundation President Leigh Breal.

    But this guarantee came months after Mississippi Department of Human Services and one of the agency’s subgrantees, nonprofit Mississippi Community Education Center, had already crafted a lease agreement allowing them to funnel $5 million in federal welfare funds to the project.

    In Favre’s latest reply to MDHS in early April, his attorneys accuse MDHS of using legal fallacies in its civil charges against Favre.

    “MDHS’s theory would effectively place no limits on UFTA (Uniform Voidable Transactions Act) liability—anyone could be sued who could in any way be deemed to have reaped some undefined benefit from a transfer,” Favre’s latest motion reads. “That of course is not the law in Mississippi or anywhere else.”

    Since Mississippi Today first uncovered in February of 2020 that officials used welfare money to build the volleyball stadium, the entities involved have not made public a full accounting of who paid for the roughly $8 million facility, which would show who contributed to the project following Favre’s commitment so he didn’t personally have to.

    An email recently obtained by Mississippi Today reveals publicly for the first time that, at least by the time initial arrests were made, the following individuals had made contributions towards Favre’s pledge:

    • American Family Insurance Dreams Foundation Inc. (6/22/18): $100,000
    • Imagine Mississippi Political Action Committee (6/4/18): $2,500
    • Anonymous Donor (7/30/18): $150,000
    • SFC Charitable Foundation (7/10/18): $33,378
    • Brett Favre (8/16/18): $50,000
    • Steel Dynamics Foundation (7/9/19): $25,000
    • Aaron Rodgers (10/10/19): $10,000
    • Howard Deneroff (1/7/20): $500
    • Jimmy A. Payne Foundation (1/13/20): $22,000
    • Matt Helms (1/24/20): $360,000
    Favre attached this email to his most recent court filing, but redacted the donors’ names. Mississippi Today retrieved an unredacted copy, which University of Southern Mississippi should have produced to the news organization in response to a public records request last year, but did not.

    The list does not implicate Rodgers, Buffett, or any other private donor in the welfare scheme. But the email serves as a key piece of evidence in Favre’s defense.

    The gifts cited total just over $650,000. Documents reflecting the total amount Favre personally contributed towards the project have not been made public, but his lawyer Eric Herschmann told conservative sports podcaster Jason Whitlock in a February interview that Favre donated over a million dollars of his own money to the facility. Also, The Athletic first reported that from 2018 to 2020, the same years Favre had an obligation to fund the volleyball construction, his charity Favre 4 Hope donated nearly $133,000 to USM Athletic Foundation.

    In addition to the $5 million in welfare funds that went towards the facility, Nancy New, founder of the nonprofit in charge of spending welfare funds, alleged that former Gov. Bryant directed her to make $1.1 million in payments to Favre to help Favre raise funds for the stadium — an allegation Bryant has denied to the press.

    But a spokesperson for the athlete recently confirmed that Favre did not use that money on the facility.

    [​IMG]
    Brett Favre (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis, File)
    “Brett fulfilled his only obligation to USM. No funds he received from MCEC went towards the wellness center. Brett both solicited donations and often asked individuals or groups to send money to USM instead of paying him for services he provided,” a spokesperson for Favre said in a statement last week.

    While a complete and reliable breakdown of the funds used to construct the facility has not been made public, outside counsel for the athletic foundation recently confirmed in an email requested by Favre’s wife Deanna Favre that the Favres “satisfied the obligations of their Donor Agreement by raising or paying the Foundation in excess of the pledged amount of at least $1,406,747.55 for the Volleyball Wellness Center.”

    “This includes cash donations given directly by Brett and Deanna Favre and other amounts contributed at the request of Brett and Deanna Favre,” Ridgeland-based attorney Scott Jones wrote in the Mar. 23, 2023 email to Favre’s attorneys.

    University of Southern Mississippi has refused to answer several questions from Mississippi Today about the volleyball project, citing litigation.

    [​IMG]
    University of Southern Mississippi’s new volleyball facility, opened in December of 2019.
    Favre began fundraising for the new volleyball stadium at USM, where his daughter played the sport, in 2017 – no one argues that. What’s in dispute, and belabored in lengthy court motions back and forth, is whether Favre promised to come up with the funding for construction at the outset of the project.

    Favre argues in his motion to dismiss the civil suit against him that the $5 million paid in 2017 couldn’t have satisfied his $1.4 million guarantee in 2018 since the payment came before the pledge. MDHS alleges that Favre made a “handshake deal” near the inception in 2017, which is the only reason the university proceeded with the project, meaning he was on the hook for the funding the entire time.

    [​IMG]
    Former NFL football player Brett Favre, welfare officials and University of Southern Mississippi staffers met in July of 2017 to discuss the …
    By mid-2017, Favre had supposedly contributed $150,000 towards the volleyball project, according to an April 2017 email from Morrison to then-USM Athletic Director Jon Gilbert. After struggling to secure many more big donors, Gilbert involved nonprofit founder Nancy New, who had already entered at least one lease agreement with USM for the purpose of using grant money to make building renovations on campus – a purchase that has yet to be scrutinized.

    “Brett and Deanna have agreed to help with fundraising for the facility,” Gilbert wrote in a July 16, 2017, email to New. “We currently have $1.2 million in hand from a variety of people that have committed to the project … I will find out what Brett’s schedule is Tuesday and coordinate a time he can stop by that works for everyone.”

    [​IMG]
    Nancy New, who with her son, Zachary, ran a private education company in Mississippi, pleaded guilty to state charges of misusing …
    In the days and weeks following, Favre and New discussed by text the challenges in using federal grant funds for the volleyball stadium, since federal law prohibits spending of these dollars on brick-and-mortar construction projects. Favre suggested the nonprofit hire and pay him for marketing services – which are allowed under the federal rules – and that way he could pass the money to the athletic foundation.

    “Will the public perception be that I became a spokesperson for various state funded shelters,schools,homes etc….. And was compensated with state money? Or can we keep this confidential,” Favre texted New in a never-before-published text first introduced into court last month.

    New responded that only she, her son Zach New and former Mississippi Department of Human Services director John Davis would have information about the payment – a product of the secrecy shrouding the welfare program.

    “So if we keep confidential where money came from as well as amount I think this is gonna work,” Favre wrote.

    [​IMG]
    Zach New exits the Federal Courthouse after facing charges in 2021.
    The nonprofit eventually made two $2.5 million payments through a lease agreement with USM Athletic Foundation in November and December of 2017. For this, Zach New pleaded guilty to state charges of defrauding the government. To make the lease appear legit, the nonprofit said it would occupy classrooms inside the stadium, where it would conduct programming for underprivileged people. Later that December, the nonprofit also made the first $500,000 payment directly to Favre under an agreement that he would cut a radio ad for their anti-poverty program.

    In the following months, Favre learned that the construction bids had come in much higher than expected, and that USM Athletic Foundation wouldn’t be able to begin building the facility until they could guarantee more funding was coming.

    In April of 2018, an email stated that Favre’s original gift of $500,000 towards the volleyball stadium would be reduced to $250,000 after he instructed the university to transfer half to the construction of a beach volleyball arena. (His daughter had moved from the indoor team to the beach team).

    In order for work to begin, Favre signed the $1.4 million donor agreement, ensuring that he’d raise or cover the rest of the cost, on May 2, 2018.

    About a week later on May 10, New texted Favre, “I am making some progress on our money needs. What amount out of the whole loan that you signed would be most helpful right now? John and I may have a plan!!”

    This text appears to show that Favre and New had planned for the nonprofit to contribute towards his guarantee.

    On May 17, New texted Favre, “Good news. I have a little money for the ‘project’ – $500,000! Do you want me to send to the Athletic Dept. Or to your foundation.”

    New sent the payment in the following weeks to Favre’s for-profit company Favre Enterprises, Inc., according to the State Auditor’s Office.

    The text suggests that they both understood the payment to Favre – paid under what was essentially a sponsorship agreement – was ultimately for the purpose of supporting construction at USM.

    “While $1,100,000 was paid based on a contract for public appearances, and Favre did record a radio advertisement, the payment was intended, as requested by Bryant, to help Favre raise funds for construction of the Volleyball Facility,” reads New’s October filing in the civil case.

    [​IMG]
    Gov. Phil …
    Through his counsel, Bryant has denied the allegation to Mississippi Today. At the point this payment was made, Favre had not yet cut the radio ad.

    “Favre knew that this was a sham designed to allow MDHS to cover Favre’s commitment to fund construction of the volleyball facility,” MDHS alleges in its amended complaint.

    Despite their plans, Favre didn’t use the money for the alleged purpose he received it, according to his spokesperson’s statement.

    Also in June of 2018, Favre secured donations for the facility from American Family Insurance Dreams Foundation Inc. and Bryant’s PAC Imagine Mississippi Political Action Committee.

    Bryant was still governor when Imagine Mississippi PAC donated $2,500 to the volleyball project in June of 2018. Bryant started the PAC by closing his campaign-finance account and transferring the bulk of the $1.05 million he had left over to the new organization in 2017 shortly after winning his second term. The PAC’s stated goal is to support conservative candidates and officials. It spent about $220,000 in 2017, $216,000 in 2018, $307,000 in 2019 and $23,000 in 2020. It did not file an annual report for 2021 or 2022 or a notice of termination, according to what is available on the Secretary of State’s Office website.

    American Family Insurance Dreams Foundation Inc., which donated $100,000 towards the volleyball stadium, is a nonprofit focused on supporting programs in academic achievement, healthy youth development, economic opportunity, such as job training, and community resilience, including food, housing and daycare.

    A spokesperson for the foundation told Mississippi Today that Favre played in its golf tournament for several years, drawing large crowds and helping fundraising efforts for its nonprofit partners. “For his participation, we made charitable contributions to a few select organizations of his choice, including the University of Southern Mississippi. Supporting colleges and universities, including programming that impacts students, aligns to the mission of the American Family Insurance Dreams Foundation.”

    The spokesperson did not respond to follow up questions about what programming the foundation thought its gift was supporting.

    In July of 2018, Singing For Change Charitable Foundation — a charity founded by Pascagoula-native and USM alum Jimmy Buffett with the slogan, “Turning good vibes into good deeds” — gave $33,378 for the facility. Its website says it gives grants to small, grassroots nonprofits across the country that help people “get back on their feet, back into homes, back to work, find meaningful jobs, become better educated, and thrive according to their definition.” One dollar for every concert ticket Buffett sells on tour goes towards his foundation.

    “Our contribution on behalf of student wellness at USM was made in good faith to the University’s foundation,” a spokesperson for SFC Charitable Foundation said in a statement to Mississippi Today. “… When any nonprofit goes astray and mismanages funds, it’s a sad day for those of us in the sector but especially distressing and financially stressful for local organizations handling the fallout. As Jimmy’s tour resumes this spring, we will to continue to support people living on the margins across the U.S.”

    An anonymous donor also contributed $150,000 towards the volleyball stadium that month, according to the Morrison email, and Favre himself donated $50,000 the next month.

    Despite personally receiving $1.1 million from the nonprofit, Favre continued in the following months and years to lobby welfare officials, other government officials and current Gov. Tate Reeves in an attempt to secure more public funds to satisfy his obligation.

    But this never happened: “Zero public funds went towards satisfying this voluntary pledge,” the spokesperson for Favre confirmed for the first time to Mississippi Today recently.

    It’s unclear how Favre may have used the $1.1 million he received from MCEC, which he has since repaid to the state. When he spoke to his associates about his debt in the project, the number varied from $1.1 million or $1.2 million in March of 2019 to $1.8 million in September of 2019.

    By July of 2019, Davis had been ousted for suspected fraud and Favre was becoming worried.

    “Nancy has been awesome to me and has paid 4.5 million for a 7 million dollar facility. And she said it was all gonna be taken care of until this morning,” Favre wrote to his business associate, Jake Vanlandingham, founder of a pharmaceutical startup company called Prevacus, on July 16, 2019. This text was first published by Mississippi Today in its investigative series “The Backchannel.”

    [​IMG]
    Jake Vanlandingham …
    (MDHS also alleges that Favre participated in the funneling of $1.7 million in welfare money to Prevacus, to which New has pleaded guilty criminally, and that Favre is liable. In response, Favre’s attorneys argue, “All Favre is alleged to have done with respect to Prevacus is to have introduced VanLandingham to New … This is insufficient to state a claim that Favre agreed to join a conspiracy … if this conduct was sufficient to join a conspiracy, then MDHS could also add as co-conspirators Southern Miss Athletic Director Jon Gilbert for his role in introducing New to Favre and attending the meeting.”)

    “Suddenly she said I don’t think I can do anymore,” Favre wrote to Vanlandingham, referring to New, according to “The Backchannel” texts. “So now I am looking at a big pay out.”

    The same month, Steel Dynamics Foundation donated $25,000 towards Favre’s volleyball pledge. Steel Dynamics Foundation is the foundation associated with Steel Dynamics Inc., a Fort Wayne, Indiana-based company that has manufacturing sites in Mississippi and recently received $247 million in tax incentives from the state. The foundation’s website says its goal is to improve the quality of life and local economies in the communities where its employees work.

    By September of 2019, Favre’s debt had apparently grown. “I have more shit going on not to mention a very likely 1.8 million note coming due that I thought was covered,” Favre texted Vanlandingham.

    That month, Favre secured a meeting with Bryant and the new welfare director, Christopher Freeze, who replaced Davis. They discussed pushing additional grant funds to the volleyball project. After the meeting, Bryant encouraged Favre by text that “We are going to get there. … But we have to follow the law.”

    Freeze told Mississippi Today he rejected the proposal and there’s been no evidence that any additional welfare money went to the project after this point.

    The next month, Aaron Rodgers – the quarterback who replaced Favre at the Green Bay Packers, prompting a memorable feud in sports pop culture history – donated $10,000 to the facility, according to the Morrison email. Favre had also talked to Vanlandingham in 2019 about asking for Rodgers’ support with the pharmaceutical venture. Rodgers’ agent did not return emails or a call from Mississippi Today.

    By early 2020, Favre was desperately trying to come up with the rest of the funding. According to the Morrison email, he then secured $500 from Howard Deneroff, executive producer of Westwood One Sports, an NFL broadcaster. Favre had asked Deneroff to donate in exchange for a sit-down interview on the network. Favre also collected $22,000 from the Jimmy A. Payne Foundation, the foundation of a USM alum and businessman, and $350,000 from Matt Helms, owner of a sports memorabilia store in south Mississippi.

    But it wasn’t enough. Favre even attempted to involve the Mississippi Community College Board, incoming Gov. Tate Reeves and the Legislature.

    Bryant texted then-USM President Rodney Bennett about Favre’s insistence.

    “The bottom line is he personally guaranteed the project, and on his word and handshake we proceeded,” Bennett texted Bryant on Jan. 27, 2020, shortly after the outgoing governor left office. “It’s time for him to pay up – it really is just that simple.”

    MDHS uses this text to substantiate its allegation that Favre committed the funds before the welfare payment, since the athletic foundation proceeded with the project by hiring architects to start drafting renderings of the building in July of 2017.

    All of this together, MDHS alleges, “support the reasonable inference that Favre personally committed to guarantee the volleyball facility’s construction at the outset of the project.”

    Favre’s attorneys push back: “MDHS takes this text message completely out of context—it clearly related to efforts by Favre to raise funds to meet his 2018 written commitment,” Favre’s recent reply states. “MDHS takes a giant and unsupported leap of faith in claiming that the text message related to some different, earlier commitment.”

    On the day of the initial arrests in February of 2020, Morrison, the associate athletic director, sent Favre the email describing “the following gifts that have been applied towards your commitment to the Volleyball Facility.”

    Asked about the timing of the email, the Favre spokesperson said, “it is purely coincidental.”

    The indictment, which was made public that day, had named Prevacus and its affiliate PreSolMD, alleging that the News had embezzled welfare funds from their nonprofit to invest in the companies.

    About a week later, Vanlandingham texted Favre, saying he wasn’t sure if one of their potential investors was going to follow through with his contribution “given this MS embezzlement shit.”

    Vanlandingham asked the athlete to make another $50,000 donation so PreSolMD could begin developing what it called a “pregame cream” that it promised could prevent concussions.

    “…I would but up to my eyeballs in vball debt,” Favre responded.

    This article first appeared on Mississippi Todayand is republished here under a Creative Commons license.[​IMG]
     
  11. Emma

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    DUCKMOUTH, I love ya. But there's a lot of words in that post.
     
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  12. Redav

    Redav One big ocean
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    I gave up on reading that. Someone post a two sentence tweet that's the gist of it.
     
  13. Emma

    Emma
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    I got to Aaron Rodgers; that's all I needed to read. Fuck that guy.
     
    #313 Emma, Apr 14, 2023
    Last edited: Apr 14, 2023
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  14. Cabs

    Cabs eatin' fried okra with Oprah
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    My god put that shit in a spoiler
     
  15. DUCKMOUTH

    DUCKMOUTH People don’t you know, don’t you know
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    got you fam.


    Brett Favre steals and is redneck scum.
     
  16. Gizmoandsooz

    Gizmoandsooz Well-Known Member
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    Pretty sure the stuff about rodgers is bullshit
     
  17. Emma

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    idkman. Aaron Rodgers killed my neighbor's dog, Buttons. I wouldn't put this past him.
     
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  18. Drown ‘Em

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    Not a tweet and a little longer than two sentences , but, it’s at least a little shorter.
    • A woman named Nancy New created and ran a nonprofit subsidiary of the Mississippi Department of Human Services that was tasked with spending federal welfare money.
    • In late 2017, that nonprofit paid $5m over two payments for the construction of the new volleyball stadium as part of a “lease” it signed to use office space in the new stadium to run programs for underprivileged children. Her son has since pleaded guilty for defrauding the state relating to this transaction.
    • In April 2018, Favre signed a promissory note committing to cover at least $1.4M and any overages by May 2018 to get construction of the volleyball stadium under way after the construction bid came in much higher. His total commitment ended up being $1.8M.
    • After signing this commitment, Favre began fundraising efforts to help offset his burden of the note.
    • Favre contacted New for another $1.1M, but New said she couldn’t just give the money since federal rules prohibit the money spent on brick and mortar jobs.
    • Favre suggested that the nonprofit hire him to run an ad campaign and pay him the money for his services which would be a legal cover story.
    • Favre took the $1.1M but no one knows what happened to it as he didn’t use it to fulfill his note to USM. He has since paid back this amount to the state.
    • As recently as 2020, Favre hadn’t paid up and was still lobbying the state for more public money to help offset his personal liability.
    • The state is arguing that any money received by Favre for the project was criminal misappropriation of funds for a personal benefit as it reduced personal liability, including the initial $5M paid in 2017. Favre is arguing the $5M shouldn’t count since it happened before Favre signed the note. The state argues texts and emails show USM never would have started the project originally in 2017 had Favre not made a handshake deal to cover the funding of the project.
    • Oh and Favre introduced his sleazy “concussion prevention cream” friend to New who funneled welfare money to his pharmaceutical company.
     
    #318 Drown ‘Em, Apr 14, 2023
    Last edited: Apr 14, 2023
  19. southlick

    southlick "Better Than You"
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    They charged the Million Dollar Man so maybe Favre won't be too far behind.

     
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  20. JonathanCoachman

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    Technically it’s the son of The Million Dollar Man that was charged.

    The Trust Fund Boy
     
  21. $P1

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    Everybody has a price
     
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  22. Redav

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    Theodore Marvin
     
  23. MG2

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    Damn. Tough month for Legacy.
     
  24. hood b. goode

    hood b. goode B I O I N B I O
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    Too bad, i wanted mcafee to expose him in court
     
    #325 hood b. goode, May 11, 2023
    Last edited: May 11, 2023
  25. Dirt Dirt McGirt

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  26. Roy

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    They should get Woody Harrelson to play Bret in the comedy movie they make about this dumb asshole
     
  27. Redav

    Redav One big ocean
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    This whole story stinks like hell and seems to involve the highest ranking officials in the state
     
  28. Beeds07

    Beeds07 Bitch, it's Saturday
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    I know this is Mississippi and we dont get good things but how does Southern Frat boy face Reeves skate through this?
     
  29. Redav

    Redav One big ocean
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    I love them using football metaphors in texts as they commit crimes
     
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  30. Dirt Dirt McGirt

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    Brett was never the highest IQ guy, probably has to use football terms because his vocabulary is so small
     
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  31. southlick

    southlick "Better Than You"
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    Lol at suing Shannon Sharpe :roll:

     
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  32. killerwvu

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  33. Boo MFer!

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    Good. Fuck ‘em.
     
  34. JonathanCoachman

    JonathanCoachman The Coach
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    Brett shouldn’t have been expected his legal opponents to drop anything much like the opposing defenses that never seemingly dropped any passes he threw their way.

    #InterceptionMachine
     
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  35. killerwvu

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  36. laxjoe

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    No he wouldn’t do that
     
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  37. El Tiburon

    El Tiburon Well-Known Member
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    Those texts must have gotten intercepted.
     
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  38. Oranjello

    Oranjello Well-Known Member
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  39. DUCKMOUTH

    DUCKMOUTH People don’t you know, don’t you know
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    Wish Kelce would go all in on him. Challenge him to fight
     
  40. hood b. goode

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