If I were to look at all of the tatts as an evaluator of the wearer's attitude, I might, might, feel justified in calling the authorities. Nazi symbols, "prison tatts" and such do not make the best impression. I would like to know how he approached the crew, was he aggressive from the get go, with yelling and such, or did it start out calm and escalate? Did he go out without his shirt with the express purpose of showing his ink to intimidate? Did he approach them with his hand on his waistband in a way that looked like he might pull that barely seen gun out of his waistband?n5wd wrote:And here's a larger set of the same images, courtesy of our English bretheren.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... attoo.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
State of Maine laws on Right of Way for utilities are such that the crew is not allowed to just show up and start cutting, there must be notice, unfortunately notice can be an ad in the notices part of whatever the official newspaper for such use is in that community, something on the order of "Notice is hereby given to the residents of Little Road from Big Road to Main Street in Presque Isle, that tree removal will be taking place from March 15th to March 23rd 2014."
If a resident objects to the removal, the crew is supposed to back off and leave and let the legal department of the utility hash it out, so this sounds to me like a little bit of revenge on the part of the crew.
Of course there is also the fact that Maine is an unlicensed open carry state, so someone, particularly on his own property, just carrying a gun in the manner depicted should, in an ideal world, elicit exactly no response at all.