A 21-year-old jailed for her part in the summer riots is helping other youngsters stay out of trouble and says her actions were "wrong".Well, she didn’t get long, then, did she?
Alicia Smith served six weeks of a six-month jail sentence after pleading guilty to entering with intent to steal.Heh! Shocker…
So, what did the little cherub do?
The student, from South Norwood, was arrested on August 8 at Argos in Church Street, carrying ten packets of Hubba Bubba chewing gum she had stolen minutes before from a nearby convenience store.Not exactly the crime of the century, and certainly not motivated by hunger or grinding poverty, either!
The conviction cost Alicia her job as a La Senza sales assistant, but she has resumed her voluntary role as a teaching assistant at Educational Excellence, a tutorial college that specialises in getting youngsters "back on track".
What was the motivation?
It was after leaving the college in Brighton Road, South Croydon, during the early evening of August 8 that, Alicia said, she got caught up in the riots.Good grief!
"I had to pass through Croydon on my way home," she said.
"The bus stopped running at Croydon because of what was going on.
"Everyone was just getting caught up in the moment. It was not like I could not afford the gum; it was just there.
"Then the police started closing in."
The photography student was left stunned when she and her sister, a model who became a poster girl in the national media for rioters' privileged lives, were jailed.And has she learned her lesson?
"After we were arrested, I thought, OK, we are going to have to pay a fine," Alicia said.Oh, you’re quite right there, it should. You should have done the whole six months.
"But then we saw from prison what had happened; we knew that would reflect on us.
"My mother was expecting me home any minute – my main concern was my parents.
"Of course what I did was wrong – at the end of the day, that is someone else's property.
"But at the same time, the punishment should fit the crime."
Alicia says she is lucky in being able to do something constructive after her conviction.That’s a familiar refrain from people caught committing crimes, isn’t it?
She said: "I spoke to people inside who had lost their jobs due to their riot convictions.
"When you get out, they offer to put you on Job Seeker's Allowance, other benefits. It is like they want you to be a bum. But I did not want to be that person."
I see by the picture that she is a "youth".
ReplyDeleteWhat is it about Croydon?
ReplyDeleteShe's young and she worked in La Senza?
ReplyDeleteHubba Bubba, as they say...
An inspiring story, meriting quotes from the most uplifting passages of Literature, or not.
ReplyDelete"The punishment should fit the crime"
ReplyDeleteTraditionally rioting and looting is traditionally dealt with by shooting on sight. Is that what she meant.
Personally, I'm all for tradition.
Come off it.
ReplyDeleteThis is England you are talking about. No crime deserves six months there.
She wasn't storming the barricades. And i bet a lot of you would like to do that .
And on the same page of the Croydon Advertiser, the tearjerking story of Okori Oti, a 'man' who had to amass a 100,000 image collection of child porn because Daddy took him back to Bongo-bongo land as a boy.
ReplyDeleteAnd the judge bought the sob story and let him walk.
Do you think the judge lives anywhere near Mr Oti ? Or even on the same planet as him ?
Where is Croydon?
ReplyDelete"What is it about Croydon?"
ReplyDeleteI just can't put my finger on it..
"Traditionally rioting and looting is traditionally dealt with by shooting on sight. Is that what she meant.
Personally, I'm all for tradition."
:D
"She wasn't storming the barricades. And i bet a lot of you would like to do that ."
I'll pass!
"Do you think the judge lives anywhere near Mr Oti ? Or even on the same planet as him ?"
Not a chance in hell...
"Where is Croydon?"
I tapped it into Google Answers, and the browser took a sharp intake of breath, and told me I probably didn't want to go there...