Those young people on the street met up with George Dranichak who was not only a porn producer and spammer, but a self-professed pimp. That indicates the complete lack of respect he has for woman and explains some of his testimony. His penchant for and history of lying, though make it impossible to trust anything he says:

Yasni-Ergebnis für http://www.buzzbox.com/news/2011-01-27/stabbing:witness/?clusterId=3101292
Witness regrets 'stirring the pot' before fatal stabbing

Published On Thu Jan 27 2011




George Dranichak outside Ontario Superior Court on Thursday, Jan. 27, 2011, where he was testifying at the second-degree murder trial of Nicole Kish. She is charged with fatally stabbing his friend and colleague, Ross Hammond.


BETSY POWELL/TORONTO STAR
Betsy Powell Courts Bureau






Crown witness George Dranichak deeply regrets the way he and Ross Hammond reacted to a panhandler, agreeing with a defence lawyer’s suggestion that they were “stirring the pot” with their profanity.
He was testifying in Ontario Superior Court on Thursday at the second-degree murder trial of Nicole Kish, 24. Kish has pleaded not guilty to fatally stabbing Hammond, 32, early Aug. 9, 2007, after an altercation on Queen St. W.


“I don’t want to embarrass you, but there were some pretty rotten things said by you and Ross,” defence lawyer John Scarfe said in court Thursday. Scarfe then listed several nasty epithets as Dranichak, 38, sheepishly agreed those words were said.


“There isn’t a day I don’t regret, definitely regret getting those girls angry,” the witness said.
Dranichak has testified that a woman on a bicycle — a friend of Kish’s named Faith Watts — had approached him and Hammond, a work colleague he considered his best friend, at a bank machine on Queen and asked them for $20.


After Hammond suggested she sell herself for sex, the situation went from “zero to 100” in seconds, Dranichak said Thursday. Watts started screaming and a crowd of people, including some of her street friends, “materialized.”


“The impression on the street was you and Ross started this?” Scarfe said.
“We never laid a hand. We were attacked,” said Dranichak.


While Hammond was a consummate professional at the Internet marketing company where they worked, he could also be a “little stubborn” and “seemed to like having the last word,” Dranichak said. “Just like they didn’t want to be disrespected, we didn’t want to be disrespected.”
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