Compelling Explainations
Stephen Peterson, 42, went back to court in Sydney, Australia, in August to challenge the “not guilty/insanity” decision against him nearly 10 years ago, claiming that he should have been allowed to call as defense witnesses certain “higher beings” who had ordered him to bash the victim. Those entities included the “sun god,” Spacedust and the “plasma being” Kadec. The court turned him down.
British physician Stuart Brown, 37, was sentenced in August only to a small fine after a conviction for brutally beating his wife. Brown had explained the fight by saying that a “red mist” had descended on the room, causing him to lose control.
Dennis and Betty Hager filed a lawsuit in Wilmington, N.C., in July against the school system for causing them emotional pain and suffering by not stopping the love affair between their 16-year-old daughter and the school’s married, 40-year-old track coach. However, the Hagers have already signed a form (to satisfy state law) to allow the daughter to marry the coach.
Helene de Gier filed a lawsuit earlier this year against the National Postcode Lottery of the Netherlands, claiming emotional distress from not winning, even though she never entered. That particular lottery picks a geographic postal code at random and awards prizes to all of its residents who have entered that lottery. Since so many of her neighbors were flaunting prizes, she felt particularly humiliated, she says. (Seven people on her street won the equivalent of about $18 million each, according to a June Associated Press dispatch.)
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