And your earnings used to be assessed here too, but you all complained to much, like I said before be careful what you wish for.Byker28i said: ↑
Lots of countries have speeding fines that vary according to salary or wealth and speed. Germany, France, Austria and the Nordic countries. Finland regularly hands out huge fines and wasn't a Mercedes SLR driver fined $1m in Switzerland for driving at 180?
What a surpriseRochdale council had set up an investigation, with a judge leading it, to investigate accusations of a cover up of Cyril Smith's activities at Knowle View School. That investigation has just been stopped following a request by GMP. That means although GMP are investigating over twenty cases of abuse there, nobody is now actively investigating a possible cover up in this specific case.
Those sentencing remarks are pretty damming.Have you read the sentencing remarks of Mr Justice Sweeney?
http://www.judiciary.gov.uk/judgments/r-v-rolf-harris/
I also find the quote near the bottom interesting tooThose sentencing remarks are pretty damming.
Were they aware of any of this, didn't they do anything to protect their daughter![]()
the 13 year old was a friend of Harris's daughter Bindi - most parents let their daughter go to friends houses for sleep overs and stuff , which is how it allegedly started.
I would assume , as is common in abuse cases, that she didn't tell her parents because she feared that she wouldn't be believed and/or she feared the consequences - its not unusual for abuse victims to believe that its their fault they are being abused ... a fiction that the abuser nourishes as it enables his offence
Anyway, Bill Wyman? I seem to recall that prosecution must start within one year of her 16th birthday, so thats the end of that, as it is common ground what happened was with consent.
You're familiar with what's common in abuse cases?
the 13 year old was a friend of Harris's daughter Bindi - most parents let their daughter go to friends houses for sleep overs and stuff , which is how it allegedly started.
I would assume , as is common in abuse cases, that she didn't tell her parents because she feared that she wouldn't be believed and/or she feared the consequences - its not unusual for abuse victims to believe that its their fault they are being abused ... a fiction that the abuser nourishes as it enables his offence
yep - some of us are educated enough to read books - in this case the info comes from Paul Britton's two books "the jig saw man" and "picking up the pieces" about his work as a forensic psychologist - as one of the foremost in his field he has dealt with numerous abuse cases working with both abusers and the abused, and is eminently qualified to say what is common in such cases.
i understand that,but having worked on a few cares in most cases someone knew or suspected something was wrong,but turned an blind eye to it all
Ah...more Google. I see.![]()

/ Off to check the posting historyYou gotta love an edit! Just a b****r when people see it before and after!![]()
Ah...more Google. I see.![]()
Sigh - it would be really nice if you stopped making every thread personal.
if you don't believe that the behaviours I've mentioned are typical of abuse cases , why not discuss that like an adult, rather than trying to turn every thread into an argument ?
Ah...more Google. I see.![]()
Oh I don't doubt the sentiment, merely the source.
oh and just in case anyone else is silly enough to believe the above - see the attached proof that I do actually own the books concerned.
(now if we've quite finished - maybe we could return to the actual topic under discussion)
You read it in a book, hardly makes you an expert Pete.
I`ve read Stalingrad, does not make me an expert on the battle.
The Germans should not have been so obsessed with Moscow and should have gone straight for the oilfields down south. Hitler should not have pulled troops to avenge Heydrichs death, he should have issued winter clothing and antifreeze. But all that is irrelevant compared to the work done at Blethchley Park.
http://www.gloucestercitizen.co.uk/...-transferred/story-21342156-detail/story.html
To be transferred to Leyhill Open Prison allegedly.
I doubt that very much
Having never broken the speed limit in any of those countries, I'll have to take your word for it. However, just because they do it doesn't mean it's "right". I can't argue with a sliding scale for speed, but a dangerous driver is a dangerous driver regardless of his personal circumstances.
If you travel to any other country you need to be aware of their rules and abide for them, but let's not get into speeding automatically is dangerous driving.
I'm not thinking so much that Wyman would be investigated for Mandi smith - so much as that someone who sleeps with one underge girl might be suspected to have done the same with others and thus be a likely target for Yewtree.
Also with regard to the charges against Harris - he says that they had a consensual affair after she turned 18 and she made the charges up after it ended badly - she says he had regularly been raping her since she was 13 and she was afraid to say no. If the court found him guilty on those charges it stands to reason that they didn't believe his version.
Why? He meets the criteria.
What is this criteria?
How does he meet this criteria?
What is this criteria?
How does he meet this criteria?
Just a guess obviously, but id say theyve taken his age into account, hes not necessarily a flight risk, very unlikely to offend again etc
Guys it was rhetorical question, but thanks anyway
You are welcome, it didnt look like a rhetorical question tbh![]()
Just a guess obviously, but id say theyve taken his age into account, hes not necessarily a flight risk, very unlikely to offend again etc
While he was obviously a perv and deserved his sentence. I can't help thinking about all the multiple thousands of others like him, who over the years who have got away with the same thing.
Prior to the WW1 no one would even have cared.... after WW2 they would have only worried about not being caught and any scandal that might ensue, they would have not cared a hoot about the young person involved. Even twenty years ago young totty was seen as a perk of being a celebrity.
Samuel Pepys thought that the younger they were the "safer" they were. and at 3 pence a go on London bridge, not even worth hiding from public view. while he was at it.
Young people and women have always been targets, and they still are. We need this attitude to change and for them to be safe. Catching the Harris's of this world is just like polishing the tip of an iceberg, It should not make anyone feel safer.
Interesting figure, where's the source for that please?Very true,in some country men think their right to marry a young girl,the consequence over 74000 die last year alone due to this belief![]()
Interesting figure, where's the source for that please?
Is that the estimated number of abortion related deaths each year (from the 2004 report UNFPA. 2004. State of the World Population: The Cairo Consensus at Ten: Population, Reproductive Health and the Global Effort to End Poverty. New York: United Nations) http://www.unfpa.org/swp/2004/pdf/en_swp04.pdf
There's a report by the Population institute that states:
Child brides are young and under pressure to provetheir fertility, making them more likely to have early and frequent pregnancies.In many nations,adolescents (15-19) account for almost 20% of all births, amounting to 14 million births each year.
In Bangladesh, 100% of women aged 20-24 with at least five children had been married before they were 18. Such high fertility rates among child brides are largely due to a lack of access to family planning and contraceptive methods. In many areas, child brides encounter substantial resistance when seeking family
planning services. Consequently, adolescents account for at least 25% of the estimated 20 million unsafe abortions and nearly 70,000 abortion-related deaths each year.
The international centre for women has some interesting research on this: http://www.icrw.org/child-marriage-facts-and-figures
but I've yet to find such a definitive figure for deaths.