Despite law enforcement doing every thing they could and can to help Jay Justice and the Justice Crime Family, the DA’s office has finally figured out, unlike Par and his band of Merry Suck ups.and potential sheriffs in waiting. Those vanity lights Jay put on Par’s Jeep, which he doesn’t even have anymore, really bought him a lot, didn’t it? One has to wonder if, when Jake Burson wrote the family of the victim to virtually f-off Par told him or it was just more “tacit approval”.
See, they’ve all been at this so very long that they don’t have to talk about it, text about it, nada, nunca, nothing. they just know what to do to protect their buddy.
Jake Burson wouldn’t have gotten t o where he is if he wasn’t a totally ‘compliant” person. I am sure Daddy Burson ran a tight ship and that constant competition with his brother (which is only natural) taught him to be very crafty just like the rest of the family. One has to wonder, however, what it was that ended that McNamara/Burson love affair about two years ago when the “together” pics stopped. Was it a moral dilemma? Hmm.
I don’t think these men have moral dilemmas. I think they can sense when someone is “done”, however. They sense Parnell is “done”, and this is just the, “there, there, old man” phase where we have to run out the clock so Par can get his money and retire and pretend he was really a Marshall to no one there.
Jay Justice and his family also are being investigated by the FBI and a few other FEDERAL agencies and they all know it so Jay can just shove those vanity lights right up his fat self because that card has expired.
What does that tell you?

Jay Justice, former chief of the Downsville Volunteer Fire Department, was placed on felony probation in April 2018 after he pointed an AR-15 rifle at two teens who were visiting his daughter at 1 a.m. at their Robinson home in 2016.
In a motion to revoke Justice’s probation, the DA’s office claims Jay Justice committed a new offense since he was placed on probation by making false or misleading statements to the Texas A&M Forestry Service by submitting names of people who were not active firefighters with the Downsville Volunteer Fire Department “with the intent to obtain property, namely money,” with a value of $2,500 or more but less than $30,000.

