Military Hating Lawyer Update

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Mr. Kass at the Chicago Tribune updated us all on the case of the lawyer who keyed the Marines car and it should give you goosebumps:

Grodner pleaded guilty in a Chicago courtroom packed with former Marines. Some had Marine pins on their coats, or baseball jackets with the Marine insignia. They didn’t yellor call him names. They came to support Marine Sgt. Michael McNulty, whose car Grodner defaced in December, but who couldn’t attend because he’s preparing for his second tour in Iraq.

Grodner was late to court for the second time in the case. Grodner called Assistant State’s Attorney Patrick Kelly, (Marine Corps/Vietnam 1969-1972), informing Kelly that he would be late to court.


“He wanted to avoid the media,” Kelly said Friday. “So he’s coming a half hour late.”

“I don’t run my courtroom that way!” responded Judge William O’Malley, ordering Grodner be arrested and held on $20,000 bail when he arrived. Finally, Grodner strolled in. A short man, wide, wearing a black fedora, dark glasses, a divorce lawyer dressed like some tough guy in the movies.

Grodner told me he’d describe himself as a “radical liberal” who’s ready to leave Chicago now with all this negative publicity and move to the south of France and do some traveling.

Judge O’Malley has also traveled, but in his youth. He was a police officer on the West Side during the riots before law school. And before that, he performed another public service. Judge O’Malley served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1961-1964.

During the proceedings, the judge described the offense as anger rose in his voice, especially as Grodner started balking on a plea arrangement he’d made with prosecutors.

“Is this what you did? Yes or no,” Judge O’Malley asked Grodner.

“Without knowing, yes,” Grodner said, sticking to his I-might-have-done-it-but-didn’t-really-mean-it defense.

O’Malley asked again, in a stronger voice, not that of a judge but of a cop on the street or a Marine who meant business.

“DID YOU KNOWINGLY CAUSE DAMAGE TO THIS CAR?” O’Malley asked.

Grodner bowed his head, meekly, and responded in an equally meek voice:

“Yes,” he said.

After the admission, came the details and Grodner was lucky, getting off with a misdemeanor and no jail time, and not a felony even though he caused $2,400 in damage to Sgt. McNulty’s car.

So Grodner received a $600 fine, which will go to a Marine charity, 30 hours of community service and a year of court supervision. If he doesn’t pay up in a month, the judge promised to put him in jail for a year.

Judge O’Malley had something to say. He looked out into his courtroom, at all those men who’d come to support a Marine they didn’t know.

“You caused damage to this young Marine sergeant’s car because you were offended by his Marine Corps license plates,” said Judge O’Malley.

Grodner stood there, hands behind his back. He grasped the fingers of his left hand with his right, and held it there, so they wouldn’t wiggle.

“You’re probably also wondering why there was a whole crowd of people here, Mr. Grodner,” said Judge O’Malley.

“I don’t want to wonder,” said Grodner, continuing in his new meek voice, not in his tough divorce lawyer voice, but the gentle, inside voice he’d just learned.

“That’s because there is a little principle that the Marine Corps has had since 1775,” the judge continued. “When they fought and lost their lives so that people like you could enjoy the freedom of this country. It is a little proverb that we follow:

“No Marine is left behind.

“So Sgt. McNulty couldn’t be here. But other Marines showed up in his stead. Take him away,” said the judge and former Marine.

Kass also wrote about a 20 minute conversation with the scumbag in which he said he would apologize to the Marine IF he scratched the car.

Just so typical.

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“move to the south of France and do some traveling.”

Move to France, where apparently they never arrest anyone for damages to cars.

“During the past three weeks of rioting an additional 10,000 cars were torched; 130 police officers got wounded; some 100 factories and industrial buildings were vandalized and/or set ablaze; the same thing happened to some 100 schools, kindergartens, sports centers and (other) government buildings, as well as to at least 13 Christian cemetaries, chapels and churches, plus at least 4 Jewish centers and synagogues. There was also one attempt to set fire to a mosque. Two people were murdered: 56-year old Jean-Claude Irvoas was beaten to death in front of his wife and child, and 61-year old Jacques Le Chenadec was kicked to death when he tried to extinguish a burning dustbin in front of the apartment block where he lived.

Article

Should fit right in in France.

“During the past three weeks of rioting an additional 10,000 cars were torched;”

No one seems to care.