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Previously on "Good News You Can Now Marry Your Mother-in-law"
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Not as bad as yours, you might not have noticed but 4 paragraphs are identicalOriginally posted by vetran View PostI see your comprehension skills have not improved.
let me help you.
1.They announced plans to marry in 1997.
2. He was arrested in 1997 because the plan to marry would have been illegal. This could have happened when he applied to marry they ask about lawful impediment.
3. he spent 10 years getting the law overturned.
4. once it was legal he married her in 2007
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostReading that, he seems to have married her twice
I see your comprehension skills have not improved.
let me help you.
1.They announced plans to marry in 1997.
2. He was arrested in 1997 because the plan to marry would have been illegal. This could have happened when he applied to marry they ask about lawful impediment.
3. he spent 10 years getting the law overturned.
4. once it was legal he married her in 2007
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostReading that, he seems to have married her twice
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostMan marries his own mother-in-law after divorcing his wife and getting 500-year-old law overturned | Daily Mail Online
A man who married his own mother-in-law after divorcing his wife of eight years and getting a 500-year-old law overturned has said his relationship is 'stronger than ever'.
Clive Blunden, 65, and Brenda, 77, have been together for over 30 years and officially tied the knot in 2007.
But Clive, from Warrington, Cheshire, was arrested in 1997 after the pair announced their plans to marry.
The 65-year-old was told he could be sentenced to up to seven years in prison due to a 'lawful impediment', so the couple decided to change Brenda's surname by deed poll instead.
A man who married his own mother-in-law after divorcing his wife of eight years and getting a 500-year-old law overturned has said his relationship is 'stronger than ever'.
Clive Blunden, 65, and Brenda, 77, have been together for over 30 years and officially tied the knot in 2007.
But Clive, from Warrington, Cheshire, was arrested in 1997 after the pair announced their plans to marry.
Clive and Brenda first began dating in 1989, left, four years after Clive divorced from Irene Little, right, who previously said she felt her mother 'totally betrayed' her
The 65-year-old was told he could be sentenced to up to seven years in prison due to a 'lawful impediment', so the couple decided to change Brenda's surname by deed poll instead.
Clive then went on to work for the law to be changed, with a European Court overturning it ten years later, in 2005.
He told the Mirror: 'People thought we wouldn't last but we are stronger than ever. We're together 24/7 and there's a magic to it.'
[Edited to say: there's nowt so queer as folk ]
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Originally posted by vetran View PostJust move to Norfolk she could be your sister as well.
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Originally posted by northernladyuk View PostThat would be an upgrade for me.
Northerners.
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostMan marries his own mother-in-law after divorcing his wife and getting 500-year-old law overturned | Daily Mail Online
A man who married his own mother-in-law after divorcing his wife of eight years and getting a 500-year-old law overturned has said his relationship is 'stronger than ever'.
Clive Blunden, 65, and Brenda, 77, have been together for over 30 years and officially tied the knot in 2007.
But Clive, from Warrington, Cheshire, was arrested in 1997 after the pair announced their plans to marry.
The 65-year-old was told he could be sentenced to up to seven years in prison due to a 'lawful impediment', so the couple decided to change Brenda's surname by deed poll instead.
A man who married his own mother-in-law after divorcing his wife of eight years and getting a 500-year-old law overturned has said his relationship is 'stronger than ever'.
Clive Blunden, 65, and Brenda, 77, have been together for over 30 years and officially tied the knot in 2007.
But Clive, from Warrington, Cheshire, was arrested in 1997 after the pair announced their plans to marry.
Clive and Brenda first began dating in 1989, left, four years after Clive divorced from Irene Little, right, who previously said she felt her mother 'totally betrayed' her
The 65-year-old was told he could be sentenced to up to seven years in prison due to a 'lawful impediment', so the couple decided to change Brenda's surname by deed poll instead.
Clive then went on to work for the law to be changed, with a European Court overturning it ten years later, in 2005.
He told the Mirror: 'People thought we wouldn't last but we are stronger than ever. We're together 24/7 and there's a magic to it.'
[Edited to say: there's nowt so queer as folk ]
Leave a comment:
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Good News You Can Now Marry Your Mother-in-law
Man marries his own mother-in-law after divorcing his wife and getting 500-year-old law overturned | Daily Mail Online
A man who married his own mother-in-law after divorcing his wife of eight years and getting a 500-year-old law overturned has said his relationship is 'stronger than ever'.
Clive Blunden, 65, and Brenda, 77, have been together for over 30 years and officially tied the knot in 2007.
But Clive, from Warrington, Cheshire, was arrested in 1997 after the pair announced their plans to marry.
The 65-year-old was told he could be sentenced to up to seven years in prison due to a 'lawful impediment', so the couple decided to change Brenda's surname by deed poll instead.
A man who married his own mother-in-law after divorcing his wife of eight years and getting a 500-year-old law overturned has said his relationship is 'stronger than ever'.
Clive Blunden, 65, and Brenda, 77, have been together for over 30 years and officially tied the knot in 2007.
But Clive, from Warrington, Cheshire, was arrested in 1997 after the pair announced their plans to marry.
Clive and Brenda first began dating in 1989, left, four years after Clive divorced from Irene Little, right, who previously said she felt her mother 'totally betrayed' her
The 65-year-old was told he could be sentenced to up to seven years in prison due to a 'lawful impediment', so the couple decided to change Brenda's surname by deed poll instead.
Clive then went on to work for the law to be changed, with a European Court overturning it ten years later, in 2005.
He told the Mirror: 'People thought we wouldn't last but we are stronger than ever. We're together 24/7 and there's a magic to it.'
[Edited to say: there's nowt so queer as folk ]Tags: None
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