Mel Gibson dropped by agents
California experimental lawyer Mark Geragos, who told Fox News' Pop Tarts he has listened first-convenient to the tapes that are currently under seal in the L.A Superior Court, said that prosecutors could potentially remaining a solid case against Gibson if he is found to have acted unlawfully toward his ex, Oksana Grigorieva.
He could visage a year in jail for misdemeanor battery or "the courts could upgrade the control to assault with enhancement of great bodily injury," Geragos explained. "The peak penalty for that is four years behind bars in a state prison, and the D.A.'s aid almost always seeks state prison under those charges."
Now substituting for the 'Voice of God' ... Chuck Morgan
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Love 'em, hate 'em or barely countenance 'em, the New York Yankees have had a rough week. The deaths of the Yankees' fanciful PA announcer Bob Sheppard and lightning-rod owner George Steinbrenner -- two days separately from -- spelled back-to-back losses of franchise icons, yet Sheppard never as a matter of fact fit the "Evil Empire" mold. "Bob Sheppard was baseball compensation, although he probably would be embarrassed by that," said Rangers public apply oneself to announcer Chuck Morgan, who was handed the Yankee Hippodrome PA reins by Sheppard for one memorable day in 1979. At the time, Morgan was a 24-year-old PA man for the Nashville Sounds, any minute now to become a Yankees farm team (1980) after a brief affiliation with the Cincinnati Reds (1978-79). Steinbrenner approved the Morgan Examine (cooked up by the Sounds) to give a young man he never met a one-time shot to drudgery alongside Sheppard. The Sept. 22, 1979, meeting between the Yankees and Smutty Jays, both out of the AL East race, was selected. As only Sheppard could in that opulence voice and deliberate delivery, he informed a crowd of 37,000: "Safe afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Yankee Hippodrome..." Then, Sheppard added, "Your announcer for today from the Nashville Sounds, Chuck Morgan, will be the next verbalize you hear from Yankee Stadium." Reggie Jackson once dubbed Sheppard as the "Give utterance of God," and he really was. He could read the instructions off a box of Pop-Tarts and make it sound shocking. In what was perhaps Steinbrenner's last order of business, a team-released declaration from "The Boss" just 48 hours before his own death, in part, infer from: "[Bob's] death leaves a lasting silence... players were thrilled to get wind of his majestic enunciation of their names." Ex-Red Sox great Carl Yastrzemski once said, "You're not in the big leagues until Bob Sheppard announces your name." So, you can advised how a young Chuck Morgan felt as though he were shaking hands with Babe Ruth. "It's something I'll memorialize forever," Morgan said, recalling how he arrived at Yankee Arena that day dressed in a powder-blue sport coat, polyester, of no doubt... hey, it was 1979. "I even wore a tie," said Morgan, laughing. "I was dressed up like I was contemporary to Sunday school." Sheppard, an angular man with a serene identity, sort of a cross between Connie Mack and Mister Rogers, politely asked Morgan how much wanted to do in the box. "I'll do as much as you want me to do," Morgan replied. After a few program announcements and pair promos were tossed his way, Morgan read the lineups for both teams. Sheppard turned to him and then said, "My boy, you'll be pleasant. I'm going to go on home." And he left. Sheppard was 68 years old at the chance. Most people his age weren't knocking off work a couple of hours primeval; they were buying condos in Florida. "Funny story," Morgan said. "Al Oliver's Rangers equal (1978-81) was zero. Well, Bob refused to accept zero as a digit. For example, he'd announce, 'No. 2. Derek Jee-tah, No. 2,' but when Al Oliver was introduced, he'd tell, 'Integer zero. Al Oli-vah, integer zero.'"
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