SOLD: 1997 Saturn SL2
SOLD
1997 Saturn S-Series 4 Dr SL2 Sedan
| Color | Dark Green |
|---|---|
| Mileage | 120,000 |
| Condition | Clean/Good |
SOLD
| Color | Dark Green |
|---|---|
| Mileage | 120,000 |
| Condition | Clean/Good |

Dell Schanze is now criticizing Utah leaders and the entire city of Draper, in the fallout of his stunt in that city more than a year ago.
Schanze maintains his innocence, and last night on KSL NewsRadio’s “NightSide Project,” he blamed Governor Huntsman.
Dell Schanze: “The governor needs to be fired because he should have stepped in and done something. The justice system is a complete sham because it never should have made it to court. And of course Draper City should lose its ability to be a city because they’re complete bumbling incompetent idiots.”1
Let’s examine the chain of events:
Dell Shanze, owner of the now defunct Totally Awesome Computers, was sentenced in court today.
The charges stem from a charge of lying to police (which he was found guilty by a jury earlier this year) surrounding the events that transpired when he (admittedly) sped through a Draper neighborhood and was chaseed down by angry residents. Shanze, being threatened with a large rock, pulled a firearm from his pocket and held it by his side — or so goes Dell’s story.
When questioned by police, Shanze denied “brandishing” a firearm.
Webster.com Definition: bran·dish
Pronunciation: ‘bran-dish
Function: transitive verb
1 : to shake or wave (as a weapon) menacingly
2 : to exhibit in an ostentatious or aggressive manner
A jury of his peers thought otherwise and found him guilty of lying to police, not guilty of using a firearm in a fight, and Schanze pled guilty to speeding — the charge that spawned all the problems.
According to the Associated Press:
WEST JORDAN, Utah (AP) — A judge on Wednesday sentenced Dell Schanze to probation for a year on his May conviction on charges of lying to officers about a confrontation with neighbors.
Schanze will also have to pay about $550 in fines and could face 180 days in jail and $1,850 in additional fines if he breaks probation.
Judge Royal Hansen also ordered Schanze to attend a course that teaches people how to make appropriate decisions. …
Dell also has a page in Wikipedia that’s worth a read.