Bevendean Hillbilly
New member
This is not a kid scrumping apples. It's a burglar. If I went into someone's house and nicked their possessions and they caught me and punched me I wouldn't feel unfairly treated.
You would if you were a pikey.
This is not a kid scrumping apples. It's a burglar. If I went into someone's house and nicked their possessions and they caught me and punched me I wouldn't feel unfairly treated.
This is not a kid scrumping apples. It's a burglar. If I went into someone's house and nicked their possessions and they caught me and punched me I wouldn't feel unfairly treated.
It's not, and in fairness I probably agree that being punched is the least one could expect. The point I'm trying to make is in light of the hysteria over the Hither Green incident, it's still correct that the police got through the process of investigating an incident like this regardless of the emotive public response.
The point about scrumping is that there is a spectrum of crimes that people may commit and there is a spectrum of responses, the 'he was on their property so got what was coming' brigade seem to have a much more binary opinion on this.
It's not, and in fairness I probably agree that being punched is the least one could expect. The point I'm trying to make is in light of the hysteria over the Hither Green incident, it's still correct that the police got through the process of investigating an incident like this regardless of the emotive public response.
The point about scrumping is that there is a spectrum of crimes that people may commit and there is a spectrum of responses, the 'he was on their property so got what was coming' brigade seem to have a much more binary opinion on this.
Oh for a bit of common sense! Just get on and investigate something more important, like somebody parked on a double yellow line. Exactly who benefits from a possible prosecution in this case? - No-one.
If we set aside the fact that he was a criminal killed in executing another crime ,the death of a man should not be celebrated and the family are entitled to mourn. However, what's annoying everyone is the deliberately provocative nature of the mourning and the pathetic attempt to portray him as some kind of hero.
Common sense says the police have to investigate each incident in its own merit. Does anyone benefit from prosecutions?
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/live-hither-green-funeral-burglar-12472692
Updates: 'Threatening' mob of mourners charge towards journalists outside funeral of Hither Green burglar in "terrifying scenes"
The family have got the attention they were after, the press have got the story they were after. Everybody happy.Not a massive surprise.
I get why the press have turned up, but whatever everybody thinks of the bloke, it is nonetheless a funeral, and I imagine many people would find it intrusive to have dozens of journalists looking on and snapping away.
(Not nearly as intrusive as breaking into somebody's house of course. But still. It was always going to inflame the situation).
Talk about a celebrity send off, hope they all rot in hellhttps://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/live-hither-green-funeral-burglar-12472692
Updates: 'Threatening' mob of mourners charge towards journalists outside funeral of Hither Green burglar in "terrifying scenes"
Who takes eggs to a funeral?!
Oafs?
Funeral indirectly paid for by 90 year old residents of Kent/SE London?
I went to Portsmouth on the train this morning, so picked up a Metro. Vincent's father was working on a farm in Kent ( well more of an estate) owned by an elderly man. There seems to be a lot of doubt about the situation as the rich old farmer has recently changed his will.