Crimes and Misdeeds Committed
| Crime/Misdeed | Detail |
|---|---|
| Domestic abuse | Girlfriend Larraine Rossiter. |
| Assault | Placed on probation for assault with instructions to undergo anger management |
| Career deception | Lied about getting his MBA. |
| Theft | Bianca's tank top that had Miranda's DNA so it wouldn't be tested against Ethan Cambias' blood type and so that Ryan could keep the Cambias fortune. |
| Poisoned | Greenlee with an anti-psychosis drug when she was his sister-in-law. |
| Domestic abuse | Slapped Maggie Stone during an argument. |
| Assault | Bobby Warner. |
| Murder | Edmund Grey. |
| Murder | His brother, Braden Lavery. |
| Murder | Steve, a bodyguard hired to protect Greenlee and Lily. |
| Kidnapping | Greenlee and Lily (and later Kendall) and forced them into a cave. |
| Hostages | Held Greenlee, Kendall and Lily at gunpoint and forced them into a mine where he locked them behind an iron gate. |
| Kidnapping | Arrested for the kidnapping of Adam Chandler III. Later proved innocent. |
| Killed | Shot and killed Terry McDermott while defending Lily. |
Read more about this topic: Jonathan Lavery
Famous quotes containing the words crimes and, crimes, misdeeds and/or committed:
“The judges did the punishing, the criminals paid for their crimes and I, free of responsibilities, removed from judgment and from punishment, I ruled, freely, in an edenic light.”
—Albert Camus (19131960)
“Those who are incapable of commiting great crimes will not easily suspect others of doing so.”
—François, Duc De La Rochefoucauld (16131680)
“The misdeeds of ordinary men can be buried with them, and their lives described in half-truths that are really half-lies. But not a public man. Particularly not this one.”
—Anna Quindlen (b. 1952)
“We might make a public moan in the newspapers about the decay of conscience, but in private conversation, no matter what crimes a man may have committed or how cynically he may have debased his talent or his friends, variations on the answer Yes, but I did it for the money satisfy all but the most tiresome objections.”
—Lewis H. Lapham (b. 1935)