Showing posts with label tattoos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tattoos. Show all posts

Friday, July 15, 2011

Patrick Francis Brooks's tattoo: he was easy to pick out in the police lineup


By Mona Goldwater
American Jurisprudence Editor




Patrick Francis Brooks, in the cooler at the Shasta County Jail, is being held without bond on charges of burglary, parole violations, receiving stolen property, and forgery.  Brooks was arrested by the Redding, California heat July 11 after he tried to cash a bogus check from Cottonwood Bible Baptist Church.


Patrick Brooks
 
The owner of the check-cashing store told police the tattoo made him a little suspicious; the fact that Brooks blacked out the church's phone number on the check nailed it.  The check-cashing guy called the minister of the church and found out he did not write the check.  Later police found the church had been burgled for $200 and some checkbooks.
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Monday, February 23, 2009

Five Tattoos people may live to regret



Statististically, and otherwise, we are in the midst of one King-Hell tattoo boom. From 1995-2005, more tattoos were needled on than ever before, and more tattoo parlors opened than in any ten year span.

A Harris poll conducted in 2003 found that 16% of all adults in the U.S. have at least one tattoo. [1]
From 2005 on, it has possibly even increased...I just can't find any data past 2006. In late 2006, Flumesday.com collected the ten most pathetic categories of tattoos:

  • The tramp stamp - the tat above the buttocks that skyrocketed to popularity with the rise of thongs and low-rise jeans.
  • The Jailhouse tat.
  • The teardrop
  • Anything on the ankle
  • Barbed wire "Nothing says, "I got a tattoo in the late '90s" like the barbed wire arm band."
  • Anything on Mike Tyson's body. He has a Maori face tattoo and a picture of Mao on his arm.
  • Something tribal
  • Something misspelled (awsome for awesome for example)
  • Your lover's name
  • Chinese characters
Flumesdat also mention in their article that, unlike horn-rim glasses, beehive hairdos, and other fashion statements, tattoos are a bit more permanent.



Where do these folks even work? I mean, we're used to seeing 7-11 clerks and baristas duded up with tats and piercings, but not quite to this extent. . .




[1] I'm pretty sure the number approaches 100% in prisons:


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