I never said it was an illness I said it was what was probably going on in his mind. An obssesion to rape and kill. You cannot prevent people thinking this way until after they have exposed themselves and they are caught for some depraved act.I agree with you but is this considered an illness? Can you really prevent people thinking this way?
Bent failures all of them.It’s almost as if Johnson, Patel and Dick had got together to agree what they should say today. All three of them said they had ‘no words’. Odd that.
Some things have to be said.Just cleaned up the last couple of pages. We're aware the case has stirred up strong emotions, but let's try to keep the discussion as civilised as possible.
They're not obliged to answer, though. Plus the barrister wouldn’t write to anyone, unless he’s authored to litigate and got a huge pair of bollocks.If a defence barrister wrote to a police officer asking him to confirm that the murderer acted bravely in a pub fight for which he was commended they would have little choice but to agree.
@gordondaviesmoustache please correct me if I am wrong.
That is a totally different slant on how you are trying to portray it
All people named Wayne are wronguns..
The wider point here though is that people who commit serious crimes usually graduate to them from lesser crimes. How many times do you read about a murderer who has previous convictions for abh gbh etc etcYep confirmed it. If the parole board were as you describe then there would be a lot more convicted murderers in the news for killing again. Fortunately there isn't.
We incarcerate more people per 100,000 of the population than any other country in Western Europe but people like you still moan on that we have a weak justice system. Despite the fact that the sentence handed down today is a full life tariff, which I fully support.
Get a grip man, the way you see the world isn't in touch with reality.