pHaT`eL wrote:Editing posts never really gets old
I have a tiny tiny penis.
Frost wrote:I read it in the paper.
And 18 and 19 year old male teens, in the car with a 13 and 15year old female teens.
oneredED wrote:Frost wrote:I read it in the paper.
And 18 and 19 year old male teens, in the car with a 13 and 15year old female teens.
Ive noticed this is a recurring theme... is there a correlation to be made here?
SnyperEB wrote:No one is getting the drink driving message someone got done today at 7 times the legal limit.
LTDHO wrote:How often do drink drivers crash?
TACSafety.com.au wrote:28% of all drivers and motorcyclists killed on Victoria's roads over the last year were 0.05 g/100ml or over. The majority of drivers are heavily intoxicated, registering more than three times over the legal limit.
SnyperEB wrote:You would of thought the percentage was higher.
HeraldSun wrote:A YOUNG hoon who lost his arm in a car crash remains unrepentant after he was involved in two hoon-related offences in less than two hours.
Joshua Shelton's arm was amputated this year after he crashed his car at high speed on the Calder Highway in Ravenswood.
Less than two months later, while still recovering from the crash, the Bendigo 19-year-old lost his licence after being caught by police doing doughnuts.
On Sunday morning he proved he still hadn't learnt his lesson when he came under police attention twice in 90 minutes for his involvement in separate hoon-related activities.
Mr Shelton claims he is being victimised by police and denied he was placing himself in further danger.
"We weren't doing any harm, I've got to live with this for the rest of my life," he said.
"The cops have put a target on my head, I would sue but I haven't got a leg to stand on."
Mr Shelton's most recent run-in with police was at 2.30am on Sunday when he was a passenger in his own late-model Holden Calais.
The driver of the car, a 19-year-old friend, was pulled over by police after he was caught doing burnouts in Bendigo East.
A second car carrying several of Mr Shelton's mates was also impounded under anti-hoon laws.
Just 90 minutes later Mr Shelton was the passenger in another vehicle caught performing burnouts.
Again, the car was seized and impounded.
Bendigo traffic Sgt Peter Beaman said he was shocked by Mr Shelton's repeated behaviour.
The senior traffic management unit officer said: "Apart from dying, he has experienced one of the worst possible outcomes from a road accident.
"That's what makes it even more baffling, he has first hand knowledge of what the possible outcomes can be.
"I'm at a loss to explain what they were thinking. It's typical of what young people today think, they seem to live for the moment.
"I just don't understand that, they don't seem to understand the seriousness of it."
Mr Shelton's mother, Ruth Gray, said her son deserved a second chance.
"He's had massive health problems," she said.
"People don't understand what he's been through with his health . . . he gets very frustrated."
It is believed Mr Shelton's car was bought with the proceeds of a TAC payout stemming from the road crash that caused his arm to be amputated.
Frost wrote:Theres our Rego money at work right there.
old_mate wrote:fog so think you couldn't see your knob at the end of a hard on
thank **** i dont live in vic.
as for the one arm dude, he was in the passenger seat a few times...no news really.
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