🎨 Artcow Iconoclast / Jonathan Mack Sweet - The Chris-Chan of Arkansas

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Naw, she has power of attorney over him, meaning he likely has some papers explaining his condition. If she dies and his brothers don't want to take him on, he will likely get sent to a group home.

Far out. I didn't know "hairy balding racist pervert dead cat collector" was a condition that would admit you to one of those. Or by "papers" do you mean some of his comic pages? That ought to get him put away right quick.
 
Naw, she has power of attorney over him, meaning he likely has some papers explaining his condition. If she dies and his brothers don't want to take him on, he will likely get sent to a group home.
Unless he's actually declared incompetent, at most he'll just get a payee to make sure his money goes to keeping a roof over his head, and he doesn't die of starvation. The rest of the time he'll be left to his own devices.
 
Naw, she has power of attorney over him, meaning he likely has some papers explaining his condition. If she dies and his brothers don't want to take him on, he will likely get sent to a group home.

Where do you think these "group homes" exist where they have unlimited funding to house random psychos whose only illness is they're lazy?
 
The statute of limitations on any civil action has no doubt expired. I'm sure ASU has a similar limit on appealing expulsions.

Almost certainly long, long ago and even sooner than it otherwise would have been, as the defendant ASU and anyone involved would be state. You generally have a very short period of time to file a notice of claim against a state entity.
 
Sweet holds grudges permanently and projects that onto the legal system.

That or no one told him about statute of limitations.
This is the guy who can't figure out how to operate the dryer in his house so you're probably right.
 
Almost certainly long, long ago and even sooner than it otherwise would have been, as the defendant ASU and anyone involved would be state. You generally have a very short period of time to file a notice of claim against a state entity.

I looked this up in the pertinent Arkansas statutes and posted the info earlier in the thread. As I recall , the statutes of limitation on his ability to sue the university and his coworkers all expired more than 15 years ago. And suing the school would have been a waste of time because a deputy assistant attorney general would stand up in court and say, "Sovereign immunity," and that would be the end of that.
 
I looked this up in the pertinent Arkansas statutes and posted the info earlier in the thread. As I recall , the statutes of limitation on his ability to sue the university and his coworkers all expired more than 15 years ago. And suing the school would have been a waste of time because a deputy assistant attorney general would stand up in court and say, "Sovereign immunity," and that would be the end of that.

They're all expired and would have expired 180 days after they accrued (they didn't because he has no claims and never did).

12-821.01. Authorization of claim against public entity, public school or public employee

A. Persons who have claims against a public entity, public school or a public employee shall file claims with the person or persons authorized to accept service for the public entity, public school or public employee as set forth in the Arizona rules of civil procedure within one hundred eighty days after the cause of action accrues. The claim shall contain facts sufficient to permit the public entity, public school or public employee to understand the basis on which liability is claimed. The claim shall also contain a specific amount for which the claim can be settled and the facts supporting that amount. Any claim that is not filed within one hundred eighty days after the cause of action accrues is barred and no action may be maintained thereon.

https://www.azleg.gov/ars/12/00821-01.htm

Almost every state has one of these. So if it's a state entity, you blew the deadline that means you couldn't pursue it even later within the statute of limitations. There are definitely cases where you file the notice of claim but then actually sue later, but you have to give notice you're reserving the right to do that.
 
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