These good ole' Kentucky boys are on a roll.
They're gonna, one of these days, wind up in 6 x 6 cubicles, staring through bars, with only the guy in the cell on either side of 'em to talk horses with throughout their long and lonely days.
This one's priceless, he too, like Indian Charlie, is another whiz on financial matters. The Commonwealth of Kentucky's judicial system should recognize these gentlemen as part of a growing statewide problem--
ACTS OF EINSTEIN SYNDROME.
http://www.courier-journal.com/artic...4/1037/rss0701
Gentry pleaded guilty in 1994 in a federal district court in Kentucky to money laundering and bankruptcy fraud in a case that stemmed from his 1987 bankruptcy proceedings. An indictment alleged that he hid at least $368,000 in assets during his 1986 divorce that weren’t discovered until the bankruptcy case.
“All I did was go through a divorce and was bankrupt and hard times can hit anybody,” he said.
So, you hid or witheld (stole) assets in your divorce proceeding to safeguard against those coming hard times?
OK. But. It doesn't work that way.
This gentleman has no business training horses due to his lack of intelligence alone.
Musselman thought he was smarter than bank regulators and the IRS.
Again.