yiddo2786
Steed Malbranque
TWO YEARS THREE MONTHS
Dante Lauder-Hawkins, 22, of Exmoor Street, Ladbroke Grove, London, was described as “posturing and goading, remaining somewhat behind the front of the group”.
WTF??
Get less for rape
What the fudge?
TWO YEARS THREE MONTHS
Dante Lauder-Hawkins, 22, of Exmoor Street, Ladbroke Grove, London, was described as “posturing and goading, remaining somewhat behind the front of the group”.
WTF??
Get less for rape
The difference here is you no doubt reacted to something that happened at a football game.
These guys though have gone way out of their way just to look for a fight. Its about intent.
Have to agree. If they met for a fight at a busy train station where innocent people could be involved then that's a different matter. How many times are there fights at football nowadays anyway? It's all away from the stadium - 10-30 blokes together.but they are fighting with people who want to fight - not attacking innocent people - surely its worse if you start this stuff at a stdium with the potential of getting innocent people involved or hurt ?
two sets of blokes want to have a fight, whilst it's not something you want to happen, they're grown men, they know the physical risk of what they are doing - what damage has been done to justify a 3.5 year sentence ?
fudging ludicrous sentances. Geezer standing at the back got two years for waving his arms about.
Dante's pique.TWO YEARS THREE MONTHS
Dante Lauder-Hawkins, 22, of Exmoor Street, Ladbroke Grove, London, was described as ÔÇ£posturing and goading, remaining somewhat behind the front of the groupÔÇØ.
Serious question for those who may know.
Saw green street hooligans a while back, and honestly thought, nah this ain't really happening... it's just a game. People surely wouldn't take it that seriously.
Then i read stuff like this and I become even more confused. How real is this? Probable number of people involved per club? Does it really escalate to this level very often?
Here in the states its quite a foreign idea to fight alongside others for any respective team or club so i generally have no idea what to think.
Nowadays it's mostly confined to small-scale organised rucks away from the ground and police. It happens a lot more than people know - just doesn't grab media headlines much anymore. Some spontaneous fighting might happen on the the way/back from a game but rarely as police are on top if things. Football hooliganism has been going on for decades - even our first game against the Gooners (then Woolwich at the time I think) had some crowd trouble. Started on a large scale in the 60s and reached its peak in the late 70s/early 80s when hundreds could be involved in fights on the terraces.Serious question for those who may know.
Saw green street hooligans a while back, and honestly thought, nah this ain't really happening... it's just a game. People surely wouldn't take it that seriously.
Then i read stuff like this and I become even more confused. How real is this? Probable number of people involved per club? Does it really escalate to this level very often?
Here in the states its quite a foreign idea to fight alongside others for any respective team or club so i generally have no idea what to think.
fudging ludicrous sentances. Geezer standing at the back got two years for waving his arms about.
Serves him right for being an aggressive dingdong. If he acted like a reasonable and considerate human being then he wouldn't be going to jail. fudge him, he deserves it. I hate yob culture so hopefully this will send out a message that you can't go around being aggressive and looking for trouble without repercussions.
2 1/2 years for "being seen trying to break off a young tree to use as a weapon"
fudging ridiculous.
What a brick choice of weapon
i wonder when we can expect to see the police bust in to the Gypsy sites that were on that documentary on tv the other week and arrest all the men involved in that ?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.