R231's Posts
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JEdwards:English pls |
JEdwards:are you high. . . . . whats your frigging problem |
this guy is not serious |
190_@:are you tired of playing with your toys alone ![]() |
come back when you are 18 at least you have 4 more yrs to work on your fatness ![]() |
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bunmioguns:she is bsy shopping for husband ![]() |
primark no get my size |
Goldieluks:true pinkrex:Not really i guess African mentality is different in marriage, there is nothing like my money. its our money and any sensible man will make use of that opportunity to srt a small business with whatever they have available even if it involves working from home. as for the kids, what happened to nursery, nanny, daycare or even house help pinkrex:why does one have to resign tho its not like there is no alternatives |
remain make i put on ma dancing shoes |
kizito96:says who ![]() |
omega25red:abi o ![]() |
i see ![]() |
school dey for holiday |
KnowAll:first of all £1000 is about 270k in nigeria secondly, how would he be earning 1k a month and live in £850 flat. . . . . . . come be real there is no excuse for what he did at all. . . . . . . |
hermosa:its the same story and the same 11yrs old didn't you read it well go bck and read it or see below [b]The youngest looter was an 11-year-old boy who arrived at court in North London accompanied by his mother [/b]clutching a mobile phone in each hand. He was convicted of an unrelated offence only last week and is yet to begin his punishment. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2024396/London-riots-2011-looters-court-Primary-school-worker-postman-dad-boy-11.html#ixzz1Ui7VIQpC |
BRITAIN’S youngest rioter was bundled into court by his mother yesterday as the scum shaming the nation were brought to justice. The arrogant 11-year-old looter, in a track suit and carrying two mobile phones, slouched in the dock. He admitted stealing a £50 bin from a department store smashed up by a mob and, when asked if he understood the proceedings, muttered:“Yeah”. In his second court appearance in less than a week, the boy was among the first rioters brought to book after four days of violence and destruction. Others included a primary school worker, a postman, a charity worker and a lifeguard who burst into tears when he was sent to prison. The 11-year-old, dragged to Highbury Corner Youth Court by his furious mother and aunt, was part of a 30-strong mob in Romford, Essex, that went on a rampage as rage spread across London on Monday night. Steven Davies, prosecuting, told the court: “Against a backdrop of serious violence, police saw the youths approaching shops and looting them. “They saw that Debenhams had its windows broken and saw the defendant lean in, take a £50 waste bin and run off with it.” He was grabbed by officers and lamely told them he was “taking it to pass on to a friend,” said Mr Davies. His mother claimed she had wanted to “keep him safe” and not let him get into trouble, said Vicky Thompson, defending. The boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, admitted theft. A more serious charge of violent disorder was dropped. It emerged he was making his second appearance at the same court for theft in just seven days. He was freed on bail on condition that he meets officials from a youth offending team three times a week and never leaves his home without an adult relative. He will be sentenced at a neighbouring court at a later date. Moments after was released, the boy appeared to breach the bail conditions by strolling on to the street on his own. His angry aunt chased him down, grabbed him by the scruff and led him back inside. District Judge James Henderson told the boy he was still too young to be given a custodial sentence. “You have to be 12,” said the judge. “The law does not even allow you to wear a tag.” As other rioters appeared in court, the Prime Minister announced the start of Britain’s battle back against lawlessness and said water cannon would be available at 24 hours’ notice. A determined Mr Cameron vowed: “We needed a fightback, and a fightback is under way.” He summed up the mood of the nation when he condemned the rioters, saying: “There are pockets of our society that are not just broken but frankly sick.” Following his calls for rioters to “face the full force of the law,” most of those charged were remanded in custody. At a special sitting of Manchester Magistrates’ Court two men were jailed within hours of being arrested for rioting in the city centre on Tuesday. Around 100 were dealt with by magistrates in London, ready to sit all night to ensure the guilty were punished as quickly as possible. Primary school worker Alexis Bailey, 31, admitted burglary after he was caught red-handed by police at a Richer Sounds store in Croydon, south London, on Monday. Bailey was challenged by riot squad officers and surrendered before he could loot any property, Highbury Corner Magistrates’ Court was told. The £1,000-a-month teaching assistant was bailed to Crown Court for sentencing. Bench chairman Melvyn Marks told him: “Because of the nature of this offence in the middle of a very violent riot our powers of punishment are not enough.” Bailey, who lives with his mother in Battersea, south London, refused to comment. The tough stance was welcomed by MPs who called for harsh sentences for the rioters. Conservative MP Mark Reckless, of the Commons Home Affairs Committee, said: “I’m pleased to see that most of the rioters seem to be being denied bail. I want to see them punished severely.’’ He added that Parliament or the planned directly elected police commissioners should set sentences, rather than the Sentencing Council quango. Conservative MP James Clappison, also a member of the Commons Home Affairs Committee, said: “My idea of sentencing is deterrent, which means that for anyone involved in any way in rioting, custody is the starting point.” Lifeguard Aaron Mulholland wept in the dock as he was remanded in custody charged with looting a mobile phone shop in Camberwell, south London, early on Tuesday. Mulholland, who works at a Peckham health club, sobbed as his lawyer told Tower Bridge Magistrates’ Court when seeking bail that he had “learnt his lesson” after a night in custody. Charity volunteer Barry Naine, 42, who works with the homeless, was also remanded in custody at the same court charged with looting a Primark store in Peckham on Monday. http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/264282/Mother-drags-rioting-son-11-into-court
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pereze:just cus some stupi.d yobs are looting ![]() na wa oh |
hmmmm |
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now u no fit answer again |
if she is cute and not too old ![]() btw i am married so its late now ![]() |
hear me baby, shay make we enter corner sharp sharp ![]() |
why you wan steal am ![]() 2CatWoman:hahahaha |
yea rite |
panties turn you on ![]() so what happens when you pass victoria secret store ![]() hmmm. . . . . you prolly pee on yourself ![]() |
search on GOOGLE.COM ![]() |
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oo, no bring your own wahala hia |
wetin concern you ![]() |
Hertsnite:you keep chatting shi.t all over the place nigerian kids have sense more dan dat maybe less dan 5% nigerian. . . . . . not stupi.t 50-50 |
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