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softball
01-22-2007, 11:13 AM
BUFFALO, New York (AP) -- He was an 18-year-old Marine headed to war.

She was an attractive young woman sending him off with pictures and lingerie.

Or so each one thought.

In reality, they were two middle-aged people carrying on an Internet fantasy based on seemingly harmless lies.

When a truthful 22-year-old was drawn in, authorities say, their cyber escape turned deadly.

"When you're on the Internet talking, you haven't got a clue who that is on the other end," Erie County Sheriff's Lt. Ron Kenyon said. "You don't have a clue."
Puzzling shooting death

When Brian Barrett was shot to death on September 15 outside the factory where he worked to help pay for college, investigators and his family were stumped.

Barrett, 22, was an aspiring industrial arts teacher, an accomplished high school athlete who had coached Little League all summer and helped his father coach soccer. Those who knew the Buffalo State College student described him as quiet and unassuming.

He had clearly been targeted. Barrett was shot three times at close range in the neck and left arm after climbing into his truck about 10 p.m. at the end of a shift at Dynabrade Corp. in Clarence, 20 miles outside of Buffalo. His body was found two days later when a co-worker spotted his pickup in an isolated part of the company parking lot.

"He was just a nice kid, a gentleman," said Starpoint High School Athletic Director Tom Sarkovics, who was Barrett's baseball coach for two years. "I don't think anybody could say a bad thing about him."
Co-worker charged

On November 27, Barrett's 47-year-old co-worker and friend, Thomas Montgomery, was charged with Barrett's murder. The motive, investigators said, was jealousy over Barrett's budding Internet relationship with the same 18-year-old woman Montgomery had been wooing since the previous year.

What neither man knew was that the woman was really a 40-something West Virginia mother using her daughter's identity to attract Internet suitors.

Cyberspace, it appeared, was enough for her, and it was a near certainty she would never have met either man.

"The game would have been over at that point and time for sure," Kenyon said.

When Montgomery began chatting with the woman in 2005, the former Marine portrayed himself as perhaps a previous version of himself -- a young Marine preparing for deployment to Iraq, Assistant District Attorney Ken Case said.

For a time, they communicated strictly through chat rooms and e-mail.

Then the woman began sending gifts to Montgomery's home, Case said. Pictures of the woman's daughter, lingerie and a set of custom-made dog tags arrived at the pale yellow suburban house that Montgomery shared with his wife and two teenage children.
Wife intercepted gift

Montgomery's wife intercepted one of the packages, Case said. She wrote back to the woman at the return address, and included a family portrait to make her point.

"As you can see, Tom's not 18," Case said she wrote. "He's married and he's a father of two. He's 47 and I'm his wife." And, believing she was writing to an 18-year-old: "You've obviously been fooled."

The West Virginia woman -- whom authorities will not identify -- remembered a friend named Brian that Montgomery had mentioned. She recalled enough of his computer screen name to contact Barrett to ask him about what Montgomery's wife had told her.

Soon Barrett was in regular contact with the woman. Despite knowing the truth about Montgomery, the woman remained in contact with him as well, Case said.

The woman made no secret of the fact she was chatting with Barrett, Case said, and Barrett talked about the relationship at work. Montgomery, authorities say, became jealous.
Wife files for divorce

Sheriff's investigators believe Barrett's killer wore camouflage and a ski mask when he approached Barrett in the parking lot with a .30-caliber rifle and fired at close range.

Montgomery is being held without bail after pleading not guilty to second-degree murder. Tall and with thinning hair, glasses and a mustache, he said nothing at a procedural court appearance on January 10.

He is due back in court in June.

His wife, whom authorities have not named, has begun divorce proceedings, Case said. She did not respond to a message left at Montgomery's home in suburban Cheektowaga or answer a reporter's knock there.

Internet crime expert J.A. Hitchcock, author of "Net Crimes & Misdemeanors," said the case illustrates the dangers that lurk on the web.

"I'm hoping that this case will make people think twice about what they do online and what their actions can cause in the long run," she sai

Rcourt64
01-22-2007, 12:01 PM
you truly are writtin a book :huh: LOL- J/K

But reading this story when they use sentences like:
"...shot to death on September 15 outside the factory where he worked to help pay for college" or "...was an aspiring industrial arts teacher..." etc, etc.
My dick goes limp because it sounds like such a whack of crap the way they work on peoples sympathy. I think it's amazing how the play of words can influence the way we are taught to see something or feel something to make us be influenced on our final decision of what we read or watch.

softball
01-22-2007, 08:22 PM
"I think it's amazing how the play of words can influence the way we are taught to see something or feel something to make us be influenced on our final decision of what we read or watch."
Really? I have made an entire career out of it. I still do it in porn today. Some is so subtle you barely notice it. Like "fuck my hottie whore lesbian bitch milf dick sucking bukkake loving gang banged wife" for instance. It is so understated you barely even notice it. But it will actually influence your opinion of some fellows wife. It may even cause you to purchase his product.

sarettah
01-22-2007, 08:26 PM
"I think it's amazing how the play of words can influence the way we are taught to see something or feel something to make us be influenced on our final decision of what we read or watch."
Really? I have made an entire career out of it. I still do it in porn today. Some is so subtle you barely notice it. Like "fuck my hottie whore lesbian bitch milf dick sucking bukkake loving gang banged wife" for instance. It is so understated you barely even notice it. But it will actually influence your opinion of some fellows wife. It may even cause you to purchase his product.

:blink:

If that is understated, then I would hate to see what you think is blatant in your face text...lololololololol


Dayum :huh:

softball
01-22-2007, 08:52 PM
:blink:

If that is understated, then I would hate to see what you think is blatant in your face text...lololololololol


Dayum :huh:

Be extremely subtle, even to the point of formlessness. Be extremely mysterious, even to the point of soundlessness. Thereby you can be the director of the opponent's fate.

gonzo
01-22-2007, 09:08 PM
:weird:

Heres another Sare

Rcourt64
01-23-2007, 09:48 AM
:weird:

Heres another Sare


The powerful and amazing art of subliminal advertising.
it's one of my most favorite hobbies I indulge in.

Heres an example, What are they attempting to sell here Mr. Gonzo?
or anyone for that matter?

http://myadg.com/oprano/GlassUp.jpg

Keywords hints is in title:
"Laid by the best"

Did you figure it out yet?

Rcourt64
01-23-2007, 12:28 PM
I guess not huh? what a bunch of pussies around here, :hmm:

and as for "Sare".... thats not even a freaking real word.

Whether it's in pictures or in text writings,
Its a very powerful tool advertising to the subconsciouses of the people

http://myadg.com/oprano/GlassDown.jpg

at least I think so, even though no one else seems to around here.

Robert
01-23-2007, 12:33 PM
I think it's amazing how the play of words can influence the way we are taught to see something or feel something to make us be influenced on our final decision of what we read or watch.

see sig

Rcourt64
01-23-2007, 12:42 PM
see sig


Thought Control in Democratic Societies - :okthumb:

gonzo
01-23-2007, 02:01 PM
Thought Control in Democratic Societies - :okthumb:


Food Network is using subliminal advertising for McDonalds.

Rcourt64
01-23-2007, 04:41 PM
Food Network is using subliminal advertising for McDonalds.

So your saying the future of food might be in our mental hormones?
http://outhouserag.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/babyronald.jpg

Haha

sarettah
01-23-2007, 04:53 PM
Food Network is using subliminal advertising for McDonalds.

The church has been doing that for centuries

http://www.partyafterdark.com/lastmcsupper.jpg

http://www.partyafterdark.com/lastmcsupper2.jpg