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Reply to: Murderer welcome to stay in the UK
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Previously on "Murderer welcome to stay in the UK"
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I'm surprised Stephen Lawrence wasn't posthumously convicted of assaulting the bloke's knife-carrying hand by throwing his chest at it.
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Originally posted by Mailman View PostYou know you cant do that cause you will be infringing his human rights!
Mailman
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Surely this guy is a threat to disorder...what after having murdered someone?
If France can flout the EU rules, so can Blighty!
Mailman
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Originally posted by wendigo100 View PostIs that true? Is there an EU law against deporting anyone between EU countries?
This is reaffirmed under directive 2004/38/EC.
While some may not like such laws, others perhaps (myself included) find it nice to know that they can't be thrown be out of a country simply because their pension may be 10 quid short of the average, or because they happen to get a few parking tickets.
Unfortunately while the UK seems to slavishly follow such rules various other countries seem to give them no more than mere lip service.
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Originally posted by Ruprect View PostLooks more like a daily mail reader to me
Personally I question the system that lets a murderer out after only 12 years. Anyone giving odds on the time to next offence?
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Originally posted by thunderlizard View PostHe's been in the UK from age 6; did the stabbing at age 15; been in prison up to age 26.
Yes it's possible he came over from Italy as a 6-year-old apprentice murderer, waiting for his chance. But more likely I think, that it was growing up in Britain that turned him into a killer; in which case it wouldn't be fair on the Italians, or him, to deport him there.
Personally I question the system that lets a murderer out after only 12 years. Anyone giving odds on the time to next offence?
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Originally posted by Troll View PostSeems to be quite a few Gruadian readers on here lately
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Originally posted by thunderlizard View PostHe's been in the UK from age 6; did the stabbing at age 15; been in prison up to age 26.
Yes it's possible he came over from Italy as a 6-year-old apprentice murderer, waiting for his chance. But more likely I think, that it was growing up in Britain that turned him into a killer; in which case it wouldn't be fair on the Italians, or him, to deport him there.
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Originally posted by thunderlizard View PostHe's been in the UK from age 6; did the stabbing at age 15; been in prison up to age 26.
Yes it's possible he came over from Italy as a 6-year-old apprentice murderer, waiting for his chance. But more likely I think, that it was growing up in Britain that turned him into a killer; in which case it wouldn't be fair on the Italians, or him, to deport him there.
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He's been in the UK from age 6; did the stabbing at age 15; been in prison up to age 26.
Yes it's possible he came over from Italy as a 6-year-old apprentice murderer, waiting for his chance. But more likely I think, that it was growing up in Britain that turned him into a killer; in which case it wouldn't be fair on the Italians, or him, to deport him there.
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostThe law is the law. He was an EC citizen who had lived here for 10 years.
End of story. That is what the "Rule of law" means.
As for the law being an ass, that's another story.
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Originally posted by Methuselah View PostHe is an EU citizen, so one part of the EU can't just deport him to another part of the EU.
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Originally posted by TheFaQQer View PostSurely his life is only in the UK because he's been in prison here for 11 years?
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