There were some interesting conversations, but as I'm sure you will understand. I can't and never will divulge. He did say that when his career is done, he will write a book and he'll be legally allowed to do that.
my brother has been to prison 4 or 5 times. when asked to sum it up he simply said "its just boring" luckily he got a job repairing the fixtures in the cells whenever they got trashed by a cellmate losing the plot so it relieved the boredom a bit.
Must depend on what category prison you're in, no? I'd imagine category A to be a far more unpleasant option than the rest.
lad i worked with for 15 years hadnt been inside. but he slowly spiralled into a life of petty crime. eventually he got caught on cctv and sent away for 18 months. and by the time he was up at court for his third offence he was already back inside a second time with his trial on video. he realised doing time was no big deal and simply not enough of a deterrent to keep him on the straight and narrow. whereas up until then, the pictures his brother had painted (a regular previous guest of her majesty) had previously scared him off.
In the early 70s my younger brother had a fascination with cars, other people's cars, after getting 2/3 slapped wrists from the courts and no longer being a juvenile, a local judge gave him three months that he served in Strangeways. On his return home he retrieved his 100 key keyring and lobbed it into the River Hull - that once was enough for him.
Questioning the length of time it takes to strangle and rape is an unnecessary debate. It serves no purpose and I find it quite disturbing that during a court case, posters theorise on the events of what everyone agrees is a horrific crime that touched the hearts of the people of Hull. Just edit it yourself you heartless ****.
Not really, it's about establishing the degree to which he was compos mentis whilst committing the act. That can make a difference as to whether or not he can submit a plea of insanity, or even whether he serves any sentence in a prison or secure mental health unit.
It didn’t take long for you to get back to being a ****ing silly **** did it. Go on **** off again, you are one **** no one will miss. Pathetic.
What did I say to cause offence? Where was I provoking people? You'd look good in court, wouldn't you. Somebody comes along and makes a legal point, dispassionately, and you respond with foul language and insults
I don’t know wether or not this bloke has committed this heinous crime. That is for the court to decide and we will find that out in due course. This is a Libby R.I.P. thread and I don’t think we should use it for trading insults. It’s extremely disrespectful. If convicted of these crimes I would support any measures such as hard labour for those type of offenders that would make their time in prison hell on Earth. It wouldn’t make up for the dreadful hurt they have caused families such as Libby’s but no one could say they didn’t deserve it.
Anybody who thinks prison is a cakewalk has only a superficial idea of what prison life is actually like. Without naming anybody, I know somebody very well who spent two years in prison for an accidental death. Not only did he have to live with his crime, but he said the psychological impact of not being able to do something as simple as going for a shower or making a sandwich when he wanted made him cry on an almost nightly basis. The things inmates get for "good behaviour" don't reflect on the life inside a prison. You're controlled and quashed from wake to sleep, in a building with people less psychologically stable and far more dangerous than you (depending on who you are of course). You don't see your family, your hygiene regimen is knackered and boredom sets in pretty quickly, which of course is the point. You wouldn't pity people in prison, for obvious reasons, but don't for one second think that "oh they get a roof over their head, three meals, telly etc" and that makes it a piece of piss. You get those things in psychological wards and I can tell you, does it **** make it any easier. You try sleeping when the person two doors down spends most of the night going from laughing to crying to screaming to laughing over and over for hours on end.
some people arent built for prison like the person you mentioned. to others its a piece of piss - a cake walk to use your expression. and to others a welcome change from willy booth and doorways.
Aye would you wanna be released today from prison straight out and homeless? Or in with mates you’ve made and three meals and some structure to your life?