Watch your temper!
Now if you were in your house and some one broke in and you shot them I'd be fine with that but some one coming up to your car door and you want to empty 12+ rounds into them? You need some professional help.
No offense to the OP, ok, just my .02, I would like to see people on this board paste the text of the story they're linking to, as well as the link. Seems to be how most other boards do it, that way, people can click the link to verify the story, or check for updates, but if the link disappears, you still have the text of the story for all to read and understand.
Some links stay up for years, but more and more, they get pulled, or moved, within weeks, days, even hours, so it's lost forever to anyone trying to read it from a forum.
Hope that helps... I only say something because I've been coming here for a few months now, and I'd bet 90+% of the stories people want you to read only have the hyperlink and no text, I don't even usually bother w/ em anymore, except this was interesting to me, as it involved a potential SD case vs a biker, etc.
Thanks, again no offense
Road-rage shooting trial in Jeffersonville delayed until February
By MATT THACKER
Yalanda Parrish and Wesley Mosier Jr. were back in the Clark County Government Building on Tuesday afternoon for a final pretrial conference.
Parrish, 39, of Jeffersonville shot Mosier, 52, of Corydon in an apparent road-rage incident June 17. A grand jury indicted her on charges of class B felony aggravated battery and class C felony criminal recklessness. She claims the shooting was in self-defense.
Clark County Circuit Court Judge Abe Navarro agreed to delay the trial until Feb. 10 after Parrish’s attorney, Brian Butler, asked for a continuance.
Butler said he has not received transcripts from witness testimony that he requested and will need more time to go through the hundreds of pages of documents to prepare for trial.
Prosecutor Steve Stewart did not object to the continuance. He said he would have been ready on the originally scheduled trial date of Nov. 10.
“We were ready as soon as the grand jury returned an indictment,” Stewart said.
Neither side would comment on whether a plea deal will be offered or accepted.
“I think it’s too early to comment on whether any offers will be made,” Butler said.
He said the Parrish family wants this to be over, but he wants to make sure they can read all of the transcripts before making any decisions.
Mosier and his mother, Eva Leachman, were in court as well.
Leachman said it was a “travesty that someone could do something like that” in broad daylight, but she also said she feels no anger toward Parrish or her son.
While she said Mosier was admitted into the hospital again for a short period last week, she knows it could have been much worse.
“We’re really thankful he’s alive,” she said. “He was injured very badly.”
Parrish faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted of the more serious charge.

Krusr
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