Friday, 3 May 2019

What Don't You Understand?

Rosie Vincent told the hearing: "My brother was not a violent person. He was a father, he was a son, he was a brother. No one deserves to die."
Asked what she wanted to come out of the proceedings, she replied: "Will we ever truly understand?"
Doesn't seem like such a puzzle to me.
He said: "Through the patterned frosted glass I could see a white face. I opened it and it turned out to be a masked man wearing a white grey balaclava with eye holes.
"He pushed the door open pushed me back grabbed hold of my right hand and my right arm and pushed me down and away towards the kitchen.
"The other man behind him ran upstairs to the bedrooms.
"Then he started yelling ‘give me money give me money we know you have got money
"And I said 'we haven’t got any in the house, we are pensioners, we haven’t got any money', he said 'yes I know you have' and he pushed me into the kitchen.
...
A post-mortem was carried out shortly after the burglar's death on April 4 and was read to the court this morning.
In a statement Dr Simon Poole said: "I concluded from toxicology tests that results are consistent with use of both cocaine and heroin."
There. It's pretty simple to understand. Your parents raised a violent, drug-using criminal who finally ran up against someone who fought back. The coroner understands perfectly.
Mr Harris added: 'There has been a killing.
"I am satisfied that it is not an unlawful killing because of the state of the law and because of the circumstances."
See? It's more like vermin control.

The only sad thing (apart from the fact the poor victim will have to live in hiding for the rest of his life due to the incompetence of the shamelessly non-impartial police) is that he didn't get a chance to rid the world of his equally violent waste of oxygen accomplice.
Rose Lee, Vincent's mother, said: "Why couldn't that gentleman have just stood back like a normal person would have."
Translation: "Why could he have just given in and let my son rob him & his elderly disabled wife?"

Pretty easy to see the rotten apple didn't fall too far from the worm-eaten tree, isn't it?

6 comments:

  1. When it comes to the cult of the caravan utilising nomadic travellers, it is obvious that they are a single issue, tunnel visioned, conglomerate, who consider it their right to take advantage of others and ignore any law they disagree with. They know all about their rights, yet have little interest in, or respect for, their responsibilities. Other people are there purely to be victims of theft, fraud, and assault and they are not expected to fight back or retaliate, as that goes against the travellers sense of fair play.
    In life, Vincent was an evil parasite. In death, he was treated the way that travellers treat their dying animals, by being left to die in the street for someone else to clear up.
    The world became a (slightly) better place when he breathed his last, laying in the gutter, which was where he belonged.
    Later, I may tell you how I really feel.
    Penseivat

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  2. This is the real problem in Britain. It's not just that there's a lot of criminals, it's that there's a huge number of people - including some on the bench - who implicitly accept the idea that degenerate criminality is just another lifestyle option, you guys. Who are we to say that Persons of Robbery don't have the right to celebrate their unique culture?

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  3. "In life, Vincent was an evil parasite. In death, he was treated the way that travellers treat their dying animals, by being left to die in the street for someone else to clear up."

    With one difference. I'd feel pity for an animal, rather than satisfaction.

    "...who implicitly accept the idea that degenerate criminality is just another lifestyle option, you guys."

    And thanks to Common Purpose, there's more and more of them joining the ranks of the state every day.

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  4. I don't know where to start on this...........Vincent and his vermin family live on the borough I police......I have had dealings with him in the past.
    The other burglar that was in this house - Jeeves- has committed several burglaries since and is currently on the run from us. He got let off by the CPS for this crime but I don't know why. I thought he would be on borrowed time after leaving Vincent to die but whilst on the run he was being assisted by other members of this lovely "community".
    Most criminals I deal with know they are doing wrong and look on being arrested as part of the game. But gypsies don't. They get really angry when we interfere with their thieving ways and they think it's their right to take whatever they like. It's a mindset that will never change and only death or prison stops them doing it.
    Jaded

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  5. And was that Gypsy Rose Lee, by any chance?

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  6. "The other burglar that was in this house - Jeeves- has committed several burglaries since and is currently on the run from us. "

    Just like the second burglar that Tony Martin failed to deal with, then?

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