ExecLine
- 09 Aug 2011 14:58
Let's hear it for a new web site. Hopefully, one that goes viral:
http://catchalooter.tumblr.com/
They say:
Collating all images of looters from the London Riots.
Get me on @CatchaLooter.
If you recognise anyone, contact Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111, or preferably via
https://secure.crimestoppers-uk.org/ams.form.anonymous.asp
This site does not support vigilante action; merely using social media to collate all images in one place.
Use CTRL mouse wheel to zoom up the browser pictures, and email me on CatchALooter@gmail.com
ExecLine
- 11 Aug 2011 15:17
- 41 of 101
Just as we thought...
ie, Light sentences.
11 August 2011
Nottingham district judge hits out at riot sentences
A district judge dealing with cases relating to disorder in Nottingham has said people should speak to the government if sentences seemed lenient.
Tim Devas, district judge at Nottingham Magistrates Court, also told Craig Cave, 26, of Burrows Avenue, Beeston, to "sort his life out".
Cave was found guilty of obstructing the police and was fined 60.
Mr Devas went on to ask Cave if he now felt ashamed about being one of the "hundreds of yobbos" arrested.
'Scum' tag
Addressing Cave at Nottingham Magistrates' Court, Judge Devas said: "Let me give you a piece of worldly advice. Get a life, sort yourself out.
"Don't you feel ashamed that you are now counted among the hundreds of yobbos arrested and now considered as scum by the public?"
He went on to address the court in general, saying: "If there are any criticisms of sentences handed down by the courts, if you want anyone to blame, then go and speak to the government.
"Do not blame the judges or the magistrates who do their jobs professionally and abide by the guidelines set down."
So far, 105 people have been arrested and 42 have been charged after two nights of disorder in Nottingham.
The arrests include an 11-year-old girl who admitted criminal damage and attempted criminal damage and was given a nine-month referral order.
Three remand courts have been working extra hours to process those in custody.
Bernard M
- 11 Aug 2011 15:46
- 42 of 101
Stop their benefits
Send them to prison
Evict them, and their family from their council house and throw them in the gutter where all of them belong, whether they are black, white, yellow, homosexual, hetrosexual.
HARRYCAT
- 11 Aug 2011 16:00
- 43 of 101
Not sure throwing them in the gutter is going to solve anything.
At least sending them on a one way mission to a distant planet would solve quite a few problems, not least they would contribute to our knowledge of distant galaxies.....very distant ones.
mnamreh
- 11 Aug 2011 16:05
- 44 of 101
.
Bernard M
- 11 Aug 2011 16:15
- 45 of 101
Other countries in the world do without a free givaway benefits system, and do not have what you suggest. Lived in Thailand since 2000 no gangs of out of work Thai's preying on the rest of the population. Well maybe just a few bar girls.
Utter tripe MN
mnamreh
- 11 Aug 2011 16:26
- 46 of 101
.
Bernard M
- 11 Aug 2011 16:26
- 47 of 101
PM: Rioters Face Eviction From Council Homes
Yes out with the scum
Bernard M
- 11 Aug 2011 16:31
- 48 of 101
The UK is seen as a pussy nation with P.C. gone mad, and no punishment to fit the crime, a true namby pamby country. Imagine these yobs in Saudi it would be the gas chamber for many of them.
mnamreh
- 11 Aug 2011 16:32
- 49 of 101
.
mnamreh
- 11 Aug 2011 16:32
- 50 of 101
.
Bernard M
- 11 Aug 2011 16:33
- 51 of 101
Build a jail on the moon for them.
skinny
- 11 Aug 2011 16:36
- 52 of 101
Man on the moon - don't get me started.........
In The Land of the B
- 11 Aug 2011 17:13
- 53 of 101
put them in a room with haystack and fred and leave them there forever
no worse punishment on the planet
Bernard M
- 11 Aug 2011 17:15
- 54 of 101
lol.
aldwickk
- 11 Aug 2011 17:48
- 55 of 101
Don't be to hard on them , just Fred .
aldwickk
- 11 Aug 2011 17:55
- 56 of 101
MN
Some of your post's are sounding like this ......... lol
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RpSv3HjpEw
mnamreh
- 12 Aug 2011 06:56
- 57 of 101
.
TANKER
- 12 Aug 2011 08:17
- 58 of 101
the goverment should do a deal with african countrys to jail them in there prisons
they would jump at it
Bernard M
- 12 Aug 2011 09:27
- 59 of 101
Olympics girl, 18, trashed cop car
Full Story
By NEIL SYSON
Published: Today
A TEENAGE girl accused of wrecking a police car in the riots is a London Olympics ambassador.
Chelsea Ives, 18, was arrested after her parents allegedly saw her on TV during the mayhem in Enfield and called police.
Mum Adrienne, 43, said: "I have no regrets. I love my daughter but she was brought up to know right from wrong."
Chelsea is said to have hurled a rock through a shop window while rioting - then yelled excitedly to a friend: "This is the best day ever."
She was behind bars last night after parents Adrienne and Roger turned her in when they allegedly saw her on TV attacking a police car.
'Creative child' ... Chelsea Ives poses in SpongeBob vest
Adrienne said: "We've no regrets and would do the same again.
"My children have always been taught right from wrong. We were not being brave, it's what any right-thinking person would have done."
Well done decent parents and brave.
ExecLine
- 12 Aug 2011 09:56
- 60 of 101
POLICE FURY AS COURTS GIVE THUGS SLAPS ON THE WRIST
Friday August 12,2011
By Anil Dawar
SCOTLAND Yard chiefs yesterday took the unprecedented step of publicly voicing anger at slap-on-the wrist punishments being handed out to scores of rioters.
As magistrates sat through the night to deal with the huge number of cases coming before them, senior police met the Home Secretary to share concerns at the sentences being imposed.
Officers fear rioters will benefit from soft justice and be set free to continue terrorising the law-abiding public.
Jail terms are seen as a vital way of breaking up gangs, halting the momentum behind the riots as well as sending out a deterrent message to any more would-be rioters.
In an unusually frank interview yesterday, Met deputy assistant commissioner Steve Kavanagh voiced his unease at lax punishments.
He said: Some of us have been disappointed by some of the early sentences we have seen, especially those officers who have been on the front line facing the violence and disorder.
The Commissioner and Home Secretary have had positive discussions and totally agree about the need for sentences to reflect the crimes and the hugely devastating impact on the people of London.
In one outrageous case, state-funded IT student David Attoh, 18, from Hackney, east London, walked free from Highbury Magistrates Court after admitting stealing Burberry T-shirts.
Outside court the thief said the judge had originally handed him a 100 fine but waived it after hearing that he had spent two days in custody.
He said Forget the fine, and let me go, Attoh claimed after the hearing. The teenager then blamed the police for his crimes saying he was angry they did not show him enough respect.
Another youth was given only a conditional discharge by magistrates in Camberwell, south London, for helping a rioter escape the clutches of the police.
Meanwhile a judge fined yobbo Craig Cave, 26, just 60 for obstructing police battling with rioters.
But after handing out the fine at Nottingham Magistrates Court yesterday, Judge Tim Devas declared: If there are any criticisms of sentences handed down by the courts, if you want anyone to blame, then go and speak to the Government. Do not blame the judges or the magistrates who do their jobs professionally and abide by the guidelines set down.
Magistrates can only issue sentences of up to six months and have to refer more serious cases on for costly crown court hearings. Robbery, arson, public disorder, assaulting police officers and using offensive weapons carry maximum sentences greater than six months.
Some MPs fear magistrates are trying to rush through a backlog of cases rather than pass them on to already busy crown courts. Tory MP Roger Gale called for immediate steps to give magistrates the right to hand down longer jail terms. He said: It is a nonsense that magistrates courts have to refer cases on to crown courts because their own sentencing powers are inadequate.
A Ministry of Justice spokesman said: We have a clear message for those responsible for this wrongdoing and criminality you will feel the full force of the law.
If you are old enough to commit these crimes, you are old enough to face the punishment.