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A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take away everything you have. --Thomas Jefferson
Guns are responsible for killing people much the way pencils are responsible for misspelling words.
Scarecrow : I haven't got a brain... only straw.
Dorothy : How can you talk if you haven't got a brain?
Scarecrow: I don't know... But some people without brains do an awful lot of talking... don't they?
Dorothy: Yes, I guess you're right.
ADA mini-m planted
ADA mini-m riparium
ADA 30-C nano reef
ADA 90-P community Tanganyikan
ADA 120-p overflow Full reef in progress
Eheim 90cm SA biotope
110g Peacocks
Armke's near San Antonio. That is where Dave's Rare Fish came from I believe.
Scarecrow : I haven't got a brain... only straw.
Dorothy : How can you talk if you haven't got a brain?
Scarecrow: I don't know... But some people without brains do an awful lot of talking... don't they?
Dorothy: Yes, I guess you're right.
Dave bought Armke's "Armke's rare fish" and moved operations from New Braundfelts to San Antonio and in the move renamed the place "Dave's Rare Fish"
You will still see Dave show up at HAS auctions with boxes named Armke's on the side of them.
What fish do Jesper have 180 WC T. Moorii Chilambo +1 Petro trewavasae.
110 Cyps, WC Xeno Spilopterus Kipili WC/F1/F2 T. sp red Kiku
58 S. Decorus "The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money." -Margaret Thatcher
380G For Sale $3000 Acrylic tank & stand 300G Petrochromis Trewavasae and Tropheus mpimbwe Red Cheek & Duboisi 180G For Sale $1,100 Oceanic Cherry with Stand, T5HO Lights, (2) Eheim 2262 150G Tropheus Annectens Kekese & Ikola
IT might be my work blocking it, cause I still cannot get the link to work out.
I will say this, from the looks of everyone's post its a shocker, but I've been dealing with the Armke's since 1999 and up till the place went to crap then they sold to Dave.
If it's Keegan, Drugs would not suprise me one bit. That guy always seemned jacked up on something most times, I talked to him, and especially in those last couple years.
Ken on the other hand would be a shock to me, he always seemned very straight up. But they were used car dealers..
380G For Sale $3000 Acrylic tank & stand 300G Petrochromis Trewavasae and Tropheus mpimbwe Red Cheek & Duboisi 180G For Sale $1,100 Oceanic Cherry with Stand, T5HO Lights, (2) Eheim 2262 150G Tropheus Annectens Kekese & Ikola
IT might be my work blocking it, cause I still cannot get the link to work out.
I will say this, from the looks of everyone's post its a shocker, but I've been dealing with the Armke's since 1999 and up till the place went to crap then they sold to Dave.
If it's Keegan, Drugs would not suprise me one bit. That guy always seemned jacked up on something most times, I talked to him, and especially in those last couple years.
Ken on the other hand would be a shock to me, he always seemned very straight up. But they were used car dealers..
geoff_tropheus here you go i copy and pasted it for you to see..
***Local man jailed on murder charge
By Mark Koopmans
The Herald-Zeitung
Published September 23, 2008
Detectives with the New Braunfels Police Department charged a local resident with the shooting death of a 34-year-old man following an incident early Sunday.
Kenneth Leo Pittman Jr. of Copperas Cove, near Fort Hood, was pronounced dead by Comal County Justice of the Peace No. 1, Judge William Schroeder.
According to police reports, dispatchers received a 911 call of shots being fired about 2:30 a.m. in the 300 block of Fair Lane. More than a dozen officers responded to the call. Once they arrived, officers found Pittman, who had been fatally shot.
“(Pittman) was shot, and, as a likelihood, died from injuries received. However, whether he was shot, once, twice or 10 times, the investigation remains ongoing and I cannot go into more specifics,” Sgt. Mike Penshorn said Monday.
As part of their investigation, detectives questioned 36-year-old Keegan Koy Armke, the man who lived at the house on Fair Lane where the shooting occurred. Following questioning, detectives arrested Armke at the scene and booked him into the Comal County Jail on one count of murder, Penshorn said.
“The incident occurred partly in the yard (of Armke’s home) and partly in the roadway,” Penshorn said. “It appears (Pittman) was already deceased when officers first arrived on the scene.”
Armke is a New Braunfels native and is involved with several local family businesses, including OHI Trading Company, according to the company’s Web site.
As of Monday night, Armke remained in jail in lieu of a $50,000 bond.
Penshorn said the shooting remains under investigation and refused to comment on any motive.
With the exception of four, orange spray-painted marks identifying the position of a car, which was outside Armke’s home, the quiet, tree-lined street showed little signs of a major crime Monday evening.
Pittman is survived by a sister and two brothers, who live in Houston, Dallas and Buffalo, Texas, respectively, according to his aunt, Deborah Sanders who also lives near Houston.
He was a former Marine, who after his military service, lived in Austin and San Antonio. He lived in Copperas Cove for the past two years where he managed a local club, Sanders said.
Better known as “Chipper” to friends and family, Pittman also was the father of a10-month-old daughter, Haven, said his aunt, adding he was divorced from the child’s mother.
“Chipper had visitation rights on Monday and Tuesday, and he came every week,” Sanders said Monday.
Funeral arrangements for Pittman, who was born in Pasadena and graduated from Leon High School in Marquez, Texas, before joining the U.S. Marine Corps, were not yet finalized Monday afternoon. His aunt, however, said plans are in place to have her nephew buried next to his mother in Marquez.
By Mark Koopmans
The Herald-Zeitung
Published September 23, 2008
Detectives with the New Braunfels Police Department charged a local resident with the shooting death of a 34-year-old man following an incident early Sunday.
Kenneth Leo Pittman Jr. of Copperas Cove, near Fort Hood, was pronounced dead by Comal County Justice of the Peace No. 1, Judge William Schroeder.
According to police reports, dispatchers received a 911 call of shots being fired about 2:30 a.m. in the 300 block of Fair Lane. More than a dozen officers responded to the call. Once they arrived, officers found Pittman, who had been fatally shot.
“(Pittman) was shot, and, as a likelihood, died from injuries received. However, whether he was shot, once, twice or 10 times, the investigation remains ongoing and I cannot go into more specifics,” Sgt. Mike Penshorn said Monday.
As part of their investigation, detectives questioned 36-year-old Keegan Koy Armke, the man who lived at the house on Fair Lane where the shooting occurred. Following questioning, detectives arrested Armke at the scene and booked him into the Comal County Jail on one count of murder, Penshorn said.
“The incident occurred partly in the yard (of Armke’s home) and partly in the roadway,” Penshorn said. “It appears (Pittman) was already deceased when officers first arrived on the scene.”
Armke is a New Braunfels native and is involved with several local family businesses, including OHI Trading Company, according to the company’s Web site.
As of Monday night, Armke remained in jail in lieu of a $50,000 bond.
Penshorn said the shooting remains under investigation and refused to comment on any motive.
With the exception of four, orange spray-painted marks identifying the position of a car, which was outside Armke’s home, the quiet, tree-lined street showed little signs of a major crime Monday evening.
Pittman is survived by a sister and two brothers, who live in Houston, Dallas and Buffalo, Texas, respectively, according to his aunt, Deborah Sanders who also lives near Houston.
He was a former Marine, who after his military service, lived in Austin and San Antonio. He lived in Copperas Cove for the past two years where he managed a local club, Sanders said.
Better known as “Chipper” to friends and family, Pittman also was the father of a10-month-old daughter, Haven, said his aunt, adding he was divorced from the child’s mother.
“Chipper had visitation rights on Monday and Tuesday, and he came every week,” Sanders said Monday.
Funeral arrangements for Pittman, who was born in Pasadena and graduated from Leon High School in Marquez, Texas, before joining the U.S. Marine Corps, were not yet finalized Monday afternoon. His aunt, however, said plans are in place to have her nephew buried next to his mother in Marquez.
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