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SteamWake
12-14-09, 09:42 AM
Charged with the murder of her 100 year old roomate :o


A grand jury has indicted a 98-year-old woman on a second-degree-murder charge for allegedly killing her 100-year-old roommate in a dispute over the room they shared at a nursing home in Dartmouth.


http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2009/12/woman_98_charge.html

IanC
12-14-09, 09:56 AM
Remind me to keep an eye on my grandma.

SteamWake
12-14-09, 10:28 AM
Ive seen it many times when pepole reach this kind of age they lose alot of their inhibitions due to the fact that they have very little to lose.

Torvald Von Mansee
12-14-09, 02:33 PM
I hope she isn't granted bond, as I don't want a murderer walking the streets.

Sailor Steve
12-14-09, 02:37 PM
"Madame, how do you plead?"

"Eh? What?"

"Guilty or not guilty?"

"No, I'm to old for quilting."

"Did you or did you not kill your roommate?"

"What kind of pills do I take? Oh, I'm not sure. Ask my nurse."

Biggles
12-14-09, 03:33 PM
"Madame, how do you plead?"

"Eh? What?"

"Guilty or not guilty?"

"No, I'm to old for quilting."

"Did you or did you not kill your roommate?"

"What kind of pills do I take? Oh, I'm not sure. Ask my nurse."

I do like your sense of humor Mr. Steve. :haha:

SteamWake
12-14-09, 04:00 PM
I hope she isn't granted bond, as I don't want a murderer walking the streets.

Im just picturing an old lady shuffling behind a walker with assault rifles strapped to it. :rotfl2:

August
12-14-09, 04:11 PM
If I were a member of the victims family i'd have to ask why the home decided to put a person who had "a long standing diagnosis of dementia and exhibited other erratic behaviors" in the same room with my Grandma.

SteamWake
12-14-09, 05:00 PM
If I were a member of the victims family i'd have to ask why the home decided to put a person who had "a long standing diagnosis of dementia and exhibited other erratic behaviors" in the same room with my Grandma.

Have you ever spent time in one of these 'homes'?

You just desribed over half of their residents.

August
12-14-09, 06:12 PM
Have you ever spent time in one of these 'homes'?

Yes, as a matter of fact I have.

SgtPotato
12-14-09, 06:54 PM
I remembered a bogus newspaper article I found during playing GTA4 and it said a newborn baby murdered his father with a knife as a murder weapon. :o

I lol'd hard.

kiwi_2005
12-14-09, 10:22 PM
Use to go see my ex-inlaws parents in one of those homes with the wife back in the day and their did always be a old fella sitting in the lounge watching tv, i found going to see my inlaws parents with the wife totally bored the crap outta me so I would go sit with the old fella and listen to his stories he would tell me. After a few visits to that place the nurses told me that i would brighten his day whenever i showed up as i was the only one that was willing to listen to him. I found him interesting, the moment i sat down he would start and talk non stop about the old days and his V8 cars he use to own. :) I think the poor buggar would of been better off living on the outside spending his last days drinking beer instead of wasting it in front of the television.

stabiz
12-15-09, 07:23 AM
Life sentence!

longam
12-15-09, 07:54 AM
Go from one cage to another.

Oberon
12-15-09, 08:34 AM
Can't say I'm entirely surprised. A few nursing homes hang on to dementia patients when they're not supposed to because of the funds they provide.
Nine times out of ten, nursing homes are run as a profit organisation which means that the 'inmates' are just left to their own devices so long as their sons and daughters pay the fee. The man that kiwi describes is typical of a lot of people in these homes, they're bored, because no-one will listen, no-one wants to know. You get to a certain age and no matter what you've done for society, it doesn't matter and you're cast on the scrap heap. The carers don't listen because they either don't care, or don't have the time to, my Mother worked as a travelling social services home care around our town for a short time and she hated the fact that she had a strict timetable she had to keep to which gave her at the very most ten minutes per household! There is not a lot of care in the care business any more, which is a terrible shame because if we can't look after our elderly after they've spent their lives looking after us, then what the hell is going wrong?

Wolfehunter
12-15-09, 09:34 AM
Can't say I'm entirely surprised. A few nursing homes hang on to dementia patients when they're not supposed to because of the funds they provide.
Nine times out of ten, nursing homes are run as a profit organisation which means that the 'inmates' are just left to their own devices so long as their sons and daughters pay the fee. The man that kiwi describes is typical of a lot of people in these homes, they're bored, because no-one will listen, no-one wants to know. You get to a certain age and no matter what you've done for society, it doesn't matter and you're cast on the scrap heap. The carers don't listen because they either don't care, or don't have the time to, my Mother worked as a travelling social services home care around our town for a short time and she hated the fact that she had a strict timetable she had to keep to which gave her at the very most ten minutes per household! There is not a lot of care in the care business any more, which is a terrible shame because if we can't look after our elderly after they've spent their lives looking after us, then what the hell is going wrong?Your right dude... These elderly people have a lot of cool old stories to share.. :up:

Sailor Steve
12-15-09, 04:37 PM
Life sentence!
Nah, give her 10 to 15 and then let her go.


Oh, hey! I figure I do know what life is like in those places. I just saw a movie about it. What was that called again? Let's see...oh, yeah - Bubba Ho-Tep!