Are they legally married -- helicopter crash/newlyweds?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Their pilot looked old enough to be in the grave himself. I'm guessing he had a heart attack while flying.

Gerald Green Lawrence has been identified as the pilot in the helicopter crash that killed 2 newlyweds near Uvalde, Texas, just an hour and a half after the wedding.


It’s always good to guess in cases like this.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I remember something about you have to consumate the marriage to make it legal. In the recent case of the newlyweds who died after the ceremony on a helicopter ride, would they be legally married? This could impact who inherits their property.

Just a curiosity.


You’re taking Outlander way too seriously.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Their pilot looked old enough to be in the grave himself. I'm guessing he had a heart attack while flying.

Gerald Green Lawrence has been identified as the pilot in the helicopter crash that killed 2 newlyweds near Uvalde, Texas, just an hour and a half after the wedding.


It’s always good to guess in cases like this.



Dude was 76 years old and a Vietnam war vet. It's not all that hard of a stretch to go there. He shouldn't have been in the cockpit. Even Sully was only 57 and he retired that same year.
Anonymous
The helicopter pilot looks suspiciously like Stan Lee.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Their pilot looked old enough to be in the grave himself. I'm guessing he had a heart attack while flying.

Gerald Green Lawrence has been identified as the pilot in the helicopter crash that killed 2 newlyweds near Uvalde, Texas, just an hour and a half after the wedding.


It’s always good to guess in cases like this.



Dude was 76 years old and a Vietnam war vet. It's not all that hard of a stretch to go there. He shouldn't have been in the cockpit. Even Sully was only 57 and he retired that same year.


STFU, you know nothing about his health.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I remember something about you have to consumate the marriage to make it legal. In the recent case of the newlyweds who died after the ceremony on a helicopter ride, would they be legally married? This could impact who inherits their property.


They may have consumated the marriage in the back of the helicopter. In fact, this may have been what caused the pilot's heart attack.


You go sit in the corner now.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I remember something about you have to consumate the marriage to make it legal. In the recent case of the newlyweds who died after the ceremony on a helicopter ride, would they be legally married? This could impact who inherits their property.

Just a curiosity.


You have to file the legal paperwork. Consummation hasn't figured into marriages--I dunno the Middle Ages.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is so sad. Helicopters freak me out, I can’t imagine ever riding in one unless it was life or death.


I feel like small planes and helicopters have an equal amount of accidents but the helicopter ones are far more visible because they're rarer to see and they fly closer to land.

Either way - it is creepy especially right after the billionaire owner of the Leicester City team died in a fiery helicopter crash last week.


I work on helicopter crashes for work. No way would I ever get in one


Oh, me too! Hello, fellow paranoid person.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I remember something about you have to consumate the marriage to make it legal. In the recent case of the newlyweds who died after the ceremony on a helicopter ride, would they be legally married? This could impact who inherits their property.

Just a curiosity.


You have to file the legal paperwork. Consummation hasn't figured into marriages--I dunno the Middle Ages.


I know a couple that annulled on the basis of the marriage being unconsummated after ten months. Here in MD almost twelve years ago. Young, religious couple with no prior partners. H was low drive or possibly closeted even to himself.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I remember something about you have to consumate the marriage to make it legal. In the recent case of the newlyweds who died after the ceremony on a helicopter ride, would they be legally married? This could impact who inherits their property.

Just a curiosity.


You have to file the legal paperwork. Consummation hasn't figured into marriages--I dunno the Middle Ages.


I know a couple that annulled on the basis of the marriage being unconsummated after ten months. Here in MD almost twelve years ago. Young, religious couple with no prior partners. H was low drive or possibly closeted even to himself.


It can figure into divorce based on certain state laws. But it has no bearing on dissolution of assets if there was no legal contract of marriage in place first.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I remember something about you have to consumate the marriage to make it legal. In the recent case of the newlyweds who died after the ceremony on a helicopter ride, would they be legally married? This could impact who inherits their property.

Just a curiosity.


You have to file the legal paperwork. Consummation hasn't figured into marriages--I dunno the Middle Ages.


I know a couple that annulled on the basis of the marriage being unconsummated after ten months. Here in MD almost twelve years ago. Young, religious couple with no prior partners. H was low drive or possibly closeted even to himself.


But it was and would have remained a legal marriage had they not pursued an annulment or divorce.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I remember something about you have to consumate the marriage to make it legal. In the recent case of the newlyweds who died after the ceremony on a helicopter ride, would they be legally married? This could impact who inherits their property.


They may have consumated the marriage in the back of the helicopter. In fact, this may have been what caused the pilot's heart attack.


Asshole!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I remember something about you have to consumate the marriage to make it legal. In the recent case of the newlyweds who died after the ceremony on a helicopter ride, would they be legally married? This could impact who inherits their property.

Just a curiosity.


You have to file the legal paperwork. Consummation hasn't figured into marriages--I dunno the Middle Ages.


I know a couple that annulled on the basis of the marriage being unconsummated after ten months. Here in MD almost twelve years ago. Young, religious couple with no prior partners. H was low drive or possibly closeted even to himself.


But it was and would have remained a legal marriage had they not pursued an annulment or divorce.


Exactly. Also annulment is a Catholic thing not a legal thing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is so sad. Helicopters freak me out, I can’t imagine ever riding in one unless it was life or death.


I feel like small planes and helicopters have an equal amount of accidents but the helicopter ones are far more visible because they're rarer to see and they fly closer to land.

Either way - it is creepy especially right after the billionaire owner of the Leicester City team died in a fiery helicopter crash last week.


I work on helicopter crashes for work. No way would I ever get in one




BS. If you were NTSB you'd have been required at some point to have familiarization training for type.

Not too mention I've never met an investigator who'd say such a stupid blanket statement as you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is so sad. Helicopters freak me out, I can’t imagine ever riding in one unless it was life or death.


I feel like small planes and helicopters have an equal amount of accidents but the helicopter ones are far more visible because they're rarer to see and they fly closer to land.

Either way - it is creepy especially right after the billionaire owner of the Leicester City team died in a fiery helicopter crash last week.


I work on helicopter crashes for work. No way would I ever get in one




BS. If you were NTSB you'd have been required at some point to have familiarization training for type.

Not too mention I've never met an investigator who'd say such a stupid blanket statement as you.


There are more people than investigation teams and paper pushers - engineers, crash scene disposal, repair crew.
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