Nevadans?

Okay. I'm game for a few work tales:

In the court reporting (stenographer) field we are privvy to a lot of weird stuff in an assortment of cases. And sometimes the testimony is just odd:

"Q: And could you please tell us exactly what it is that you don't know?"
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I was taking down the arraignments in court one day when the occupants from the holding cell came in. One guy (Joe X) upon being arraigned insisted that it wasn't him and gave the name of his friend, Sam Y. BAD move. The clerk ran the new name in the data base. It turns out his friend had warrants and was looking at a lot more time than Joe X was setting up for. So the judge gave him the option of deciding who he wanted to be and all day to think about it....and that if he was going to be Sam Y and not Joe X there would be additional time (a day or two in custody) and expense involved for fingerprinting. At the end of the day Joe X was brought into the courtroom (now all suited up in those flattering orange jail jumpsuit) and came to the realization that if he were to claim to be Sam Y that the charges for being Joe X would still be out there unresolved. Amazing what a little think time in the tank can do.... And, of course, the moral is you never know what sort of skeletons are rattling around in your neighbor's closet.

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I travel a bit and do depositions in either the S.F. Bay Area or here in Las Vegas. As such I get to see the insides of some pretty fancy offices (you would not believe the casino bigwigs...why do they even go home? And one law firm in S.F. could double as an art gallery...an original Wayne Theibaud in the ladies room?) and on occasion get to go to some homes, too. I've had very memorable location depos:

1) I was in Sacramento at the time and, during winter about 15 years back, was sent to a doctor's office. Mind you, this was back when I had the ranch and so my usual mode of transportation was a Ford F-150 truck. Arrived at the office and parked. Well, outside the rain deluged and suddenly it was a flood situation in the parking lot. I could hear the office staff scurrying about and I peeked out the door into the hallway....Somebody hand opened the front door and a wall of water was heading down the hallway to the doctor's office. I said "Quick! All files on the floor on the desk!" and soon we were in our chairs amidst 3" of water. The attorneys were adamant that the depo go forward as there was an upcoming arbitration, although by this time the doc was severely stressed and probably wasn't giving her best testimony. The piece de resistance, though, was the doc's sports car was parked on the downhill side of the parking lot and we all could hear the car alarm going off...until it finally glub-glubbed from going underwater. By this time the doc was a total wreck. The depo finished and the attorneys who was really kind of rude throughout this disaster asked if I would carry her to her car! (Sorry, not in my job description) I waded out to my truck (setting up high) and was able to drive home.

2) Another Sierra foothill job had me going to an attorney's office only to find out we'd be going on a field trip that day. Well, it turned out it was to a remote hilltop home and, unpredictable weather, it had snowed the night before and so we had to snowshoe in.... Me in my turtleneck dress and all schlepping my equipment up the unplowed driveway that no car could navigate. We get into the cabin and the deponent is an elderly lady in the last stages of terminal cancer. Her hospital bed was set up in the living room (warmest room in the house). I set up my equipment by the wood burning stove and noticed the morphine drip and thought to myself "Oh, great. Here comes a bunch o' garble." She mustered for the afternoon. As it turns out, she spoke like a Rhodes scholar. Despite her backwoods existence, she was the most eloquent speaker I have ever had the pleasure of recording. Very poignant as I'm taking down the testimony and realizing that these were probably some of the last words she would ever speak and, truly, the value of my career of being a record-keeper came into focus. Her attorney informed me she passed away a few days later.

3) Another country job had me going out to a foothills ranch with the attorneys to take a deposition in a dog-caused injury case. So the testimony goes on and on, blah, blah, blah. The depo finishes and the attorneys go out to the driveway to talk a bit about the case and I pack up my equipment to go home. I exit with my stuff, am walking to the car, when the dog in question rounds the corner and enthusiastically jumps on me. Oops! Well, there goes the defense. Luckily, I worked with large horses and my dog at home was a St. Bernard and this was a small-ish Aussie-sized dog, so it was kind of like being slammed by nothing for me. I kind of recall getting a call later not to transcribe my notes as the case had been settled.

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We have A LOT of out-of-town clients in Las Vegas. (The Vegas Valley's second biggest industry is retirement and so a lot of expert witnesses from snowy climes move here). It is always funny when a Friday depo is scheduled because the attorneys will often arrive in the office with suitcases and golf clubs sometimes with wives or girlfriends in tow and sometimes not....yeah, right, a work weekend. And sometimes they take the slogan of "What happens here stays here" a little too literally. Especially the southern attorneys who, for some bizarre reason, think that most Las Vegas court reporters stripped their way throught reporting school and are looking for a Sugar Daddy attorney to occupy their weekend. (Truth be told, of the hundreds of reporters here I've only met one that did work the pole and she is disgusted by the "How about we go out for drinks?" dialogue that sometimes ensues as she left that behind at the club and is now a happily married mother of three) They'll often say "And send me over a cute reporter." "Yes, sir. We'll send you our best." That is the cue for my office to either send me (I'm cute, but a greying rather pudgy sr., college-educated medical/legal and can run circles protocol and manners-wise around most) or to send my fellow reporter who, admittedly, bears a striking resemblance to Captain Kangaroo.
(I swear, though, the more I work with attorneys the more I want to raise goats.....)

Anyway, enough blathering.... Court reporters *never* are supposed to speak during work (unless asked for readback) and so we tend to go on and on when given a chance to finally opine....

I'm sure somebody else out there has some interesting snippets to share....
 
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It looked like it was destined for the oven though... But it probably loses something after a trip through 400°!

Sorry I'm a bit behind my computer crashed and it's been a rough week getting it back together.
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Sorry I haven't been on here in a while, I was so exhausted from the poultry show, I was sore all over for a few days!! Tyler I am SO SORRY about your dog! That just breaks my heart!
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Ok, that makes more sense.
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I use those galvanized poultry founts. I got my heated bases for them off of Amazon - sounds about like what you're talking about. They have a thermostat that turns them on when it gets below 35° and off when it goes above. With the metal waterers there's no worry of melting anything but the ice.
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Well, as I'm sure you seen in other posts of mine, I like to say that "in my previous life, I did construction". So the story behind that is we were working on a two story room addition at a home in Glendale CA. It was a really big addition. Downstairs was a large family room and a 3-car garage. There was to be a fireplace in the family room. Upstairs was 3 bedrooms and 2 baths. Anyway we were framing the second floor. We had cut a hole in it for the chimney flue. We left the hole open 'cause if you do construction long enough you never walk anywhere without looking at the ground - keeps you from stepping on nails and dozens of other hazards. Well the owner had gone up to inspect our work and he was worried that someone might fall through the hole so he put a piece of plywood over it. If one of us had done that, we would have tacked it down with nails but he just laid it over it.
All day the next day we were walking back and forth over it, with the wood shifting a little each time but no one noticed. I stepped on it when it was right on the edge and fell straight-leg to the concrete floor below. I was laying there looking up trying to figure out how I ended up laying on the first floor concrete - the piece of plywood had flipped over and re-covered the hole! The guy I was working with said he turned around and suddenly I wasn't there - he saw no hole either. He went looking for me and found me on the ground. He helped me up and took me to the hospital where my dad and step-mom worked. He helped me walk in and they took some x-rays then the doctor came out and told me I had broken my back! Turns out I had not only broken my back in five places ("short ribs"), I also fractured another vertebrae, fractured the top of both femurs, and broke my pelvis socket on one side!
Over the next day or two every doctor in the hospital would come in my room, ask me to wiggle my toes, and poke me with pins. The next time my doctor came in, I told him what was going on and asked him to tell me what was up - why all the attention? He said all the medical books they had said that if you broke four of the short ribs, maybe you could walk again, maybe not, but if you broke five of them, you definitely couldn't walk. He said "You walked in here and we can't figure out why." I told him I hadn't read any of those books so I didn't know I wasn't supposed to be able to walk. He said "Well you're very lucky; it's a miracle." I told him he was half right - there is no such thing as luck so it must have been a miracle!
Anyway after a couple of years of rehab, workmen's comp paid for me to go to school for electronics. So you could say I fell into the computer business!
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Edited for spelling.
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Hi Ron, Welcome back! So far so good using the water heater with the plastic 1 gallon waterer. Nothing has melted at all.

Boy did we have a close call today. I opened up the ducks pen and of course the chicken coop so everyone could have a get together again. The chickens enjoy going over to the pond and drinking the water.
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I noticed Sundae was a bit too close standing on the edge of the pond and the next thing I knew in she went.
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Luckily she had her right foot on the edge still. It looked liked she thought she could just walk on top of the water to the other side, Sunday loves to walk in water, when her left foot went down and part of her back side was in the pond. I ran so fast it wasn't even funny, except for John laughing at me once it was all over, I didn't get more than 3 steps really before she jumped back up onto the ground. She bolted away from the pond and sorta walked in a big circle a bit before she became her normal self again. I don't believe she'll be going near the pond again. That's the only thing that scares me about having the in-ground pond for the ducks. Whew.
 
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Wow, you do have some stories. I always thought being a court reporter was a cool job, I didn't think about you not being able to talk while your typing away. Boy, I'm miss talk talk talk and more talk away and try to get a word in if you can type of person. I don't think that would be a job for me for sure.
 
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Ok the last comments are pretty normal for someone who worked in a machine shop from 12 years old til 34 years of age (off and on) but that first comment is just creepy creepy creepy!!! Ewwwww!
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I mean I always figured a sense of humor could pretty much overcome anything but what the heck do you say to that?!!

Once while my Boss was introducing me to a client (remember in my day a woman in a machine shop was a rare thing indeed) the client turned to me, looked me up and down and then turned to my Boss and said "Gee if I had a pretty little thing like that working for me I'd be worrying about sexual harrassment suits for sure". To which I replied "Well it has been an issue but they let me off with just a warning."
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I've always had a smart mouth but growing up in a machine shop you kinda learn to laugh a lot of stuff off. I have to admit though, some of the crap I've had to deal with ain't so funny. But I've never had anyone say anything as creepy as the crying thing (course if you'd known me back then... um, nevermind, I'm gonna stop right there).

Oh my God Peep!!! You'd be a blast to have at a cocktail party! I bet you got a gazillion of those stories!!!
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Wow Ron! I have to admit I wondered a little about the construction to techy metamorphosis. Do you have big cages in your back too? The cages from my fusion are still in there and getting through security these days, at the airport, is a real treat!
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Sheryl I can't imagine you or I doing that job!
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Aubrey you can add that job to the list of things I've never done! In fact you can assume that any job that requires a person to be absolutely mute is something I've never done!!!
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Ok I was trying to think of all the jobs I've done and I can't remember them all but I'm trying. Machinist, Day Care Provider, Cocktail waitress, Singer, Short Order Cook, PC Board Stuffer then lead then supervisor, QC supervisor, Coin Op supervisor, Office Manager (payroll, AR, AP & HR), Cleaned houses and repos, Activity Director for the disabled, Art Model, Coordinator for Women's Resource Center (at SJSU), Accounting Manager (ok had a lot of jobs in management so I won't mention the rest of them individually), Substitute Teacher then Science Teacher, Real Estate Stager, Florist, Tutor, taught cardio and strength training, Photographer, oh I even tried working in a shoe repair shop and a plastics company once. I flopped at both those jobs! Plastics company was so boring I thought I was gonna die! And I apparently had no people skills at 17 so the shoe repair store job was a flop as well (one of the only jobs I've ever been fired from but he was right, I did stink at it).

Many of these jobs I held simultaneously. I was a workaholic from the time I started working at 12, also had to put myself through college and one of my grants was a work study grant so I pretty much took whatever job was available each semester. Was a single Mom for 14 years so there wasn't really a choice on who was gonna work a second or third job when money started getting scarce. That coupled with the fact that I am kinda hyper and have a lot of interests and weeeeelll, this is what happens.
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Please somebody else out there tell me this isn't as abnormal as it sounds to me right now!!!
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