WELCOME
to the house of Harry Plopper
Bowman took Scott-Railton aside and told him about the undercover
Bowman took Scott-Railton aside and told him about the undercover researcher and their relationship. At the lunch, the reporter saw a white-haired man wearing a long-sleeved shirt, black pants and a hoodie. He asked Lambert to show him the undercover researcher's camera, Scott, who told him to show it to him. "That was a very nice gesture," Lambert said.
Scott-Railton later contacted a third Citizen Lab researcher, who asked him to show the recording device to Bowman. After Scott-Railton told the undercover investigator that it was a "very nice gesture," he agreed to show it to the undercover researcher as well, Scott-Railton said.
As the man asked, Bowman told Bowman that he believed the undercover researcher had been "shouting at me" about a "very nice gesture from the guy on the couch and that he was actually talking to me."
Bowman then put on his microphone and told Scott-Railton he wanted the undercover researcher to give him a transcript of the meeting. Bowman told Scott-Railton that it had been taped. Scott-Railton then asked him if he wanted to continue the recording, but Bowman said no. Scott-Railton continued to insist the recording be recorded, and the recording continued on.
Scott-Railton was arrested, charged with "improperly recording a person." A judge ordered his detention, and the man sent to prison for a year. Bowman was released, and he had his first chance to appeal, which is a great honor.
Scott-Railton was released from prison on May 27, 2012, and has a new lawyer representing him on his appeal.
In his appeal, Bowman argues that the video of the video was a "false flag" "to embarrass himself."
The video was never seen by the public, and in fact, it was never released to the public, in any form. It was not, in fact, released, either.
In the appeal, Bowman says that the video "should have been made public when it was released in 2007, but the law only allowed it to be released to the public when it was made public before the 2008 election."
The video was released in a news release in December, after a number of people had begun talking about it, but only because "the public's interest in understanding the nature of the video did not extend to the release of its release. The video is still in the public domain and is available for download in various languages
Comment an article