What is not understood is why YOU are so obsessed with brown people and on a crusade???
- Prior to domicile in the UK, we lived abroad with permits to carry.
- Like cancer, we know no discrimination between color, race, creed, rich, poor, the good, the bad, the bold, the beautiful, the ugly.
- Unlike cancer, that eats away slowly, we don't have time, interest, or patients — we prefer legal, instant karma*.
- Here today, gone today. It's very efficient and does not cost the taxpayer.
* Unlike other areas of the globe, the UK does not have a legally enshrined "stand your ground" law—so it's a case of bend over, mate, and take one up the aris for good ol' England.
How a funfair kiss led to Jack Woodley being killed by a sick mob of 10
Surrounded and preyed upon by a pack of ten bloodthirsty teenagers, Jack Woodley never stood a chance as he curled up on the ground and braced himself for a frenzied attack as he walked home from the funfair.
Punched, kicked, stamped upon and fatally wounded with a Rambo knife, the 5ft 7in, 10st 8lb victim was completely defenceless as the vicious gang murdered him 'like zombies attacking an animal' in front of horrified onlookers on October 16 2021.
Tragically, it was these 10 animals against one. Jack was hunted down and stabbed in the back during an 80-second attack while making his way home from the Houghton Feast funfair, in Houghton-le-Spring near Sunderland.
All of the killers, who can now be named after turning 18,
were handed life sentences with the following minimum terms:
- Calum Maddison, 17 years
- Blaine Sewell, 13 years and five months
- Sonny Smith, 15 years
- Grant Wheatley, 15 years
- Lewis Rose, eight years
- Tyler Brewis, 13 years
- Rhys Wear, 10 years
- Leighton Mayo, 11 years
- Joe Lathan, 11 years
- Clayton Owen, 11 years
The BS semantics of the term, 'life sentence' (in this instance, specific to the UK)
All ten individuals convicted of the murder of Jack Woodley in Houghton-le-Spring, UK, received life sentences in August 2022, with minimum terms ranging from eight to 17 years, depending on their role and age at the time. The judge specified different minimum terms to reflect each youth's degree of involvement, personal circumstances, and likelihood of rehabilitation. All these sentences met the UK's mandatory requirement for life imprisonment in murder cases, but with varying tariffs (minimum periods before Parole Board review).
In the UK, a "life sentence" means the convicted person is subject to that sentence for the rest of their life. However, it does not always mean being in prison for life:
- The judge sets a minimum term (the "tariff") that must be served in prison.
- After serving the tariff, the offender can apply for parole, and if released, will spend the rest of their life "on licence" in the community.
- If licence conditions are broken or new crimes are committed, the person can be recalled to prison at any time.
- Only in the most severe cases is a "whole life order" imposed, requiring the person to spend their entire life in prison without parole. In the Jack Woodley case, none of the defendants got a whole life order given their ages and specific circumstances; instead, each received a life sentence with a set minimum term.
Thus, while each person found guilty of Jack Woodley's murder received a life sentence, the actual time each must serve in prison before possible parole ranges between 8 and 17 years, followed by lifelong supervision
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