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Wednesday, February 24, 2010

That didn't take long

It always seems to boil down to money, doesn't it? I hate to have to tell Mrs. Hunter, but money won't bring Mr. Hunter back, unfortunately.

Say Mrs. Stack did think of warning someone.... who should she have approached? And would it have done any good, or would she have been viewed as someone wearing a tin-foil hat?

I think it could be hard to prove that Mrs. Stack was aware of just how angry and dangerous her husband was. Look how many news reports we see where relatives and associates tell the world in the wake of a tragedy that they had no idea that the perpetrator of said tragedy "would do something like that."

IRS worker's widow sues Texas suicide pilot's wife
The Associated Press
Tuesday, February 23, 2010; 9:05 PM

AUSTIN, Texas -- The widow of the Internal Revenue Service employee killed when a Texas man crashed his plane into the agency's Austin office is suing the pilot's widow.

Attorney Daniel Ross says the lawsuit against Sheryl Stack seeks to determine if the pilot left behind insurance policies or other assets.

Ross represents Valerie Hunter, whose 68-year-old husband Vernon Hunter was killed last week when authorities say Joseph Stack deliberately crashed his single-engine plane into the IRS office.

Joseph Stack left behind a lengthy anti-government Internet posting blaming the IRS for personal problems spanning decades.

The lawsuit filed Monday says Sheryl Stack should have warned others about her husband. ...


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