🏈 Alabama LB Ryan Anderson arrested on domestic violence charges

3rd degree domestic violence involves property damage. Imagine an argument broke out and property was thrown around and some things were broken. Not right, but this crap really falls under "domestic violence?"
 
Comment from a poster on that link ..

"For the record:



Arrests the last 2 years:

Alabama-11

Auburn-2"



Gotta imagine the number of non-covered up arrests for both schools is higher, but is that "actual" number above correct?
 
Section 13A-6-132. Domestic violence -- Third degree.
(a) A person commits domestic violence in the third degree if the person commits the crime of assault in the third degree pursuant to Section 13A-6-22; the crime of menacing pursuant to Section 13A-6-23; the crime of reckless endangerment pursuant to Section 13A-6-24; the crime of criminal coercion pursuant to Section 13A-6-25; the crime of harassment pursuant to subsection (a) of Section 13A-11-8; the crime of criminal surveillance pursuant to Section 13A-11-32; the crime of harassing communications pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 13A-11-8; the crime of criminal trespass in the third degree pursuant to Section 13A-7-4; the crime of criminal mischief in the second or third degree pursuant to Sections 13A-7-22 and 13A-7-23; or the crime of arson in the third degree pursuant to Section 13A-7-43; and the victim is a current or former spouse, parent, child, any person with whom the defendant has a child in common, a present or former household member, or a person who has or had a dating or engagement relationship with the defendant. Domestic violence in the third degree is a Class A misdemeanor.

(b) The minimum term of imprisonment imposed under subsection (a) shall be 30 days without consideration of reduction in time if a defendant willfully violates a protection order issued by a court of competent jurisdiction and in the process of violating the order commits domestic violence in the third degree.

(c) A second conviction under subsection (a) is a Class A misdemeanor, except the defendant shall serve a minimum term of imprisonment of 10 days in a city or county jail or detention facility without consideration for any reduction in time.

(d) A third or subsequent conviction under subsection (a) is a Class C felony.

(e) For purposes of determining second, third, or subsequent number of convictions, convictions in municipal court shall be included.
 
LB Ryan Anderson kicked a woman’s car, leading to 3rd degree domestic violence charge: http://goo.gl/B47btS

Here you go! Seems she keyed his vehicle and threw change at it and return, he kicks her door or fender denting her vehicle. Because they date or have dated, this is considered domestic violence. The great and wonderful media runs with "domestic violence" before the report is even released!! Sensationalism at its best!!
 
Last edited:
Remember when Upshaw was arrested? The girl slapped him because he was seen "talking to another girl" and he grabbed her to stop her from doing it again. Imagine this incident has a similar story.
 
I can't stand people who key cars...one of the most chicken shit things in the world. I'd be f'ing pissed off for sure.

I'm with you there. I'd much rather get into a fist fight with someone and lose rather than someone key or mess with my car. It's expensive property and you outta have respect for other people's belongings. And this goes to those assholes that also ding doors and such in parking lots because they don't care or can't freaking park and get too close.
 
Roll Bama Roll @rollbamaroll
Summary: Anderson and bae are yelling in the yard; she keys his car; he kicks hers. No one is hit. Both are arrested for being dummies.

Roll Bama Roll @rollbamaroll
TPD has a long-standing history of dual-arrests. I'd expect both parties to have these dropped or reduced to vandalism -depending on damage.



Just had to google what "bae" is .. Guess I am getting old, lol. Bae = before anyone else .. :notall:
 
Roll Bama Roll @rollbamaroll
Summary: Anderson and bae are yelling in the yard; she keys his car; he kicks hers. No one is hit. Both are arrested for being dummies.

Roll Bama Roll @rollbamaroll
TPD has a long-standing history of dual-arrests. I'd expect both parties to have these dropped or reduced to vandalism -depending on damage.

Just had to google what "bae" is .. Guess I am getting old, lol. Bae = before anyone else .. :notall:

LOL, I thought you were with the younger generation...that isn't what bae means. Try again :)

Only reason I know, one of my kids cares about this stuff...the other doesn't.
 
LOL, I thought you were with the younger generation...that isn't what bae means. Try again :)

Only reason I know, one of my kids cares about this stuff...the other doesn't.

From da interwebz:

BAE is Twitter slang or urban talk for "baby," which came about because some people dropped the "b" when pronouncing "baby," so it came out sounding like "ba'y" or "ba'e."

People often use it as shorthand in texting to refer to their significant other, also known as "before anyone else."

On Twitter, BAE often means the same thing, and occasionally, "before anything else."
 
From both my experience and some research I've done on the issue of domestic violence, reporting tends to be skewed in favor of women. I say this because little respect is given to males who report being abused by their female partners. Therefore, men tend to self-censor such instances. This male tendency leads some women, particularly those from abusive childhoods, to exploit men's hesitance to report their abuse as well as their hesitance to match female aggression reciprocally. The result is lots of women abuse men, and lots of men say nothing about it and do nothing about it until they snap. Obviously, no one justifies violence, but equality requires us to acknowledge it equally between the sexes and praise the men who report being abused instead of shaming them. Shaming them only makes retaliation that much more tempting and "manly." In low-income households especially, you see the worst display of conflict resolution skills and simultaneously the narrowest understanding of what it means to be "a man."

And off my soap box I go.
 
From both my experience and some research I've done on the issue of domestic violence, reporting tends to be skewed in favor of women. I say this because little respect is given to males who report being abused by their female partners. Therefore, men tend to self-censor such instances. This male tendency leads some women, particularly those from abusive childhoods, to exploit men's hesitance to report their abuse as well as their hesitance to match female aggression reciprocally. The result is lots of women abuse men, and lots of men say nothing about it and do nothing about it until they snap. Obviously, no one justifies violence, but equality requires us to acknowledge it equally between the sexes and praise the men who report being abused instead of shaming them. Shaming them only makes retaliation that much more tempting and "manly." In low-income households especially, you see the worst display of conflict resolution skills and simultaneously the narrowest understanding of what it means to be "a man."

And off my soap box I go.

Dude... wtf?! You just went off on this huge rant about low-income this and low-income that and blah, blah, blah when the story is that they got into an argument and essentially dented each others vehicles. They were both arrested, both will have the charges dropped, far from domestic violence. Read before getting on that soap box next time bruh, at least you didnt go into a conspiracy theory this time :)
 
Back
Top Bottom