Erroll Southers, who was serving as an FBI special agent at the time of the censure, asked a co-worker's husband who worked for the San Diego Police Department to run a background check on his ex-wife's boyfriend. [More]That sure makes him sound like a stalker, doesn't it? And sweetie's taste in men is a surprise?
Good thing he recognizes it was a "mistake" to abuse his awesome federal "Only One" powers for personal business, as he asks us to now endow him with even more.
Thing is, to me, a mistake is when I'm doing math and forget to carry the two...
[Via Michael R]
"Erroll Southers, who was serving as an FBI special agent at the time of the censure, asked a co-worker's husband who worked for the San Diego Police Department to run a background check on his ex-wife's boyfriend."
ReplyDeleteIn Texas, that is a crime. The solicitor as well as the officer who ran the check could well have been prosecuted. Maybe not in Kalifornia ???
O'Bobble-head's appointment of this guy seems to fit the pattern of many of his other appointments.
A mistake is unintentional. What he did was wrong and illegal, but it wasn't a mistake as he did it on purpose.
ReplyDeleteWWW, no, it's a crime in Ca. also, but who watches the watchers?
Isn't funny that if one's memory is imperfect he/she can be prosecuted as a felon for lying to law enforcement and it is never considered just an honest mistake? But this guy's intentional act is allowed to misnamed as a mistake?