Talk:October 2011

For the whole "Was he in jail during Halloween" issue: In MOST States (Virginia is included in this) they do NOT typically consider the arrest date and the release date when they say how long people have been in jail/prison. So, it is possible that Chris was arrest on the 28 and got out the 31 spending "two days" in jail. Though if how we learned that he was in jail was via Chris himself saying he was in jail for two days... he may have very well took his arrest date as Day 1 and the 29 as Day 2. We've seen Chris's day-math before and it's very possible that "Two days" for Chris was the when he went in the 28th and came out the 29th. But if we got this information about 2 days in jail via some court document, it's very very possible he was in the 28th and got out the 31st. Just thought I'd add some information regarding Indays vs Outdays in jail/prison. --4Macie 07:42, 8 November 2011 (PST)
 * The two things that finally led me to remove it were that (I know both are pretty pedantic and horrible) 1) I wouldn't necessarily consider spending part of a day in jail to be the same as spending "the day" and 2) like you're saying, there's some ambiguity regarding how long '2 days' is depending upon the source. It's seems to me that it's just a matter of interpretation, so if you want to add it back, I won't complain. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Freecell (talk • contribs) 07:53, 8 November 2011 (PST)