And I'm sure if you asked him, he'd swear he was contract private security.
Sad part is, he'd probably believe his own BS story.
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And I'm sure if you asked him, he'd swear he was contract private security.
Sad part is, he'd probably believe his own BS story.
sent from me
It's funny that their website is still up.
He's not an example of humanity at all.
Merely a poor example of a human.
sent from me
Rich Wyatt - This is the subject. Please leave the rest of his family out of the thread.
There. I've said it nicely. It will be the last time I say it.
Eh, it could also be referring to my brother...sadly, my brother really wanted to get back on the show for some reason and the way to do that was go back as a brother and brother team looking for specialty guns so I had to do a bunch of interviews with producers....let's just say I'm not a good answer and a straight to the point type of person with questions and they had to constantly ask me to expand on each answer. So obviously they didn't want me on the show which made me happy as I definitely did not want to be on the show, just wanted to help my brother achieve his "dreams"
Stopped by Rich's trial today for about an hour. I heard the conclusion of a witness who testified about buying a gun from gunsmoke and then doing the transfer elsewhere.
Then heard testimony from a guy named Colt Blackburn, a former Gunsmoke employee. He was testifying under a deal with the feds that his testimony would not be used against him--i don't know if he has charges against him or not. He testified as to cash handling at the shop. Also mentioned the gunsmoke transfers were done at O.D. Green Supply, Gunner's Den, and the Gun Room.
He testified that they had at least a 1.5 to 2 year wait for gunsmithing services in 2012. He said that between the show seasons the store was packed, wall to wall, every day (i've only been to gunsmoke once, and that was before the show).
Wyatt looked smooth as ever--he did a lot of nodding when good points were made--he had a dark jacket, dark jeans, and a nice tie on. His attorney, in my opinion, looked like a boob. He wasn't wearing a suit (sportcoat) and was wearing a bolo tie with a jade medallion, like he had stepped straight out of "cowboys and indians" magazine, or some douchebag aspen jeweler. Also kooky was Wyatt's attorney was working out of a Uhaul box. Now, we all need to carry crap to court, but there are nicer banker boxes, etc. that sorta fit in a little better than a Uhaul moving box. I guess it wasn't a liquor bottle box.
during a recess, Wyatt walked by me and said "hi" and asked how i was doing. I said the same back, and he said "ok."
Interesting that you took the time to check out the trial.
Here is what the shop looks like today.
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/bR...=w1634-h919-no