[Husker] Solich email
Mike and Kelly Petersen
husker at communicomm.com
Wed Apr 5 17:36:40 CDT 2006
Scott,
You are grounded!
Scotts Parents
P.S. YOU will write a letter of apology to Tyson Foods on our behalf.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Scott R Lawson" <SLawson at uamail.albany.edu>
To: "Jeff Volk" <jeffv at alphavideo.com>; "Mike Jaixen"
<mikejaixen at yahoo.com>; <jonlists at cbsol.com>; <husker at tssi.com>
Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2006 8:15 AM
Subject: RE: [Husker] Solich email
> This reminds me of when I got drunk once at a party in high school, was
throwing up for two days, and told my parents that I ate some bad chicken
wings the night before.
>
> I guess it sucks if it really did happen, but it is difficult for me to
believe without knowing the facts.
>
> Scott in NY
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: husker-bounces at tssi.com [mailto:husker-bounces at tssi.com]On Behalf
> Of Jeff Volk
> Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2006 9:35 AM
> To: Mike Jaixen; jonlists at cbsol.com; husker at tssi.com
> Subject: RE: [Husker] Solich email
>
>
> "The "Frank Solich was drugged" story came out shortly after the story
> broke last year; I believe it may have started at Huskerpedia, and was
> discussed on Ohio message boards."
>
>
> While people who have taken or been dosed with GHB do appear and react
> similarly to those suspected of alcohol related DUI, the presence of GHB
> in your blood stream will not create a false test for blood alcohol
> level. According to the US Department of Justice Website, some law
> enforcement agencies, including Pinellas, FL actually administer GHB
> tests in addition to BAC tests for suspected DUI offenders and in 2000
> only approximately 8% of those suspected of DUI were actually under the
> influence of GHB and not alcohol.
>
> Unfortunately we don't know what Frank's BAC was or wasn't because he
> refused a field sobriety test.
>
> So, my question to all of the conspiracy theorists is why, if he really
> thought he had been drugged and wasn't drunk to the point of passing
> out, would Frank refuse to take a breathalizer or a blood test that
> would then prove his innocence, or at least the fact that he wasn't
> drunk out of his skull? To me the very fact that he refused the
> breathalizer shows guilt.
>
> As for his supposed drug test that proved he had been given GHB,
> according to Project GHB, an educational website on GHB and the social
> perils around it, no current drug panels (the list of drugs included in
> a drug screening) include GHB, meaning he would have had to request a
> test specifically for GHB for it to be found in his system.
>
> But for those that still can't believe a "koolaid drinker" like myself,
> you might want to check out the link I am providing to the Athen's Ohio
> local newspaper, which quotes employees of the bar that Frank was at for
> 4+ hours that night drinking margaritas and shots before being cut off
> from further drinking, served coffee and then having a cab called for
> him (which he refused). That doesn't sound like GHB to me - sounds like
> being drunk.
>
> http://athensnews.com/issue/article.php3?story_id=22791
>
> Have a great day!
>
> GO BIG RED!
>
> Jeffrey Volk
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> husker site list
> husker at tssi.com
> http://romaine.tssi.com/mailman/listinfo/husker
>
> _______________________________________________
> husker site list
> husker at tssi.com
> http://romaine.tssi.com/mailman/listinfo/husker
> ---
> [This E-mail scanned for viruses by Declude Virus]
>
>
More information about the husker
mailing list