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Really - 10 weeks????

(52 Posts)
Newatthis Fri 11-Jun-21 22:44:41

A teenager has been jailed for 10 weeks - yes 10 weeks -after a 'sickening' video of him kicking a 78 year old pensioner into a river went viral online . What's even more sickening is that the teenager has only been jailed for 10 weeks. He was filmed kicking the 74-year-old into the River Mersey in Warrington before running away, leaving his victim struggling in the water until two teenage girls pulled him out of the river.Unbelievable short jail sentence!!! The poor man is now afraid to go out and enjoy his hobby.

halfpint1 Sat 12-Jun-21 12:57:48

What he did was totally unacceptable and violent. At 19
I feel he can be helped out of this behaviour rather than
pushing him into a life of criminal/bad behaviour that he'll
learn in prison
As he gave himself up there's something there to be worked
on, I don't know how but maybe some kind of 'Boot Camp'
with no phones and basics that the youth of today need.
Some tough realisation of life with some hope thrown in.
The general public is only going to carry on paying if he
continues along this line, either for stays in prison or the
criminal damage he inflicts.

Callistemon Sat 12-Jun-21 13:06:12

Talullah

Callistemon

He just pushed him in.

As you do

Didn't mean to sound callous. I was answering question in previous posts that had asked if there had been any conversation between the two before he ended up in the water. Which there hadn't been. I need to clarify my comments, obviously

Apologies, Talullah
I misunderstood but see what you meant now.

BlueBelle Sat 12-Jun-21 13:06:20

Having read the story now on line it appears the 19 yr old who was 18 at the time of attack, was in care from the age of 8 has ADHD and is a heavy cannabis user NONE of this excuses him in any way but maybe adds an explanation as to the ‘action without thinking’ he seems shocked and sorry so I can only hope it’s been a huge wake up call as to learning how to deal with his spontaneous reaction to situations I hope he can get some help and the poor old chap who is suffering from fear and probably flashbacks needs help too

Lucca Sat 12-Jun-21 13:06:59

Callistemon

^He just pushed him in.^

As you do

With respect I think poster meant it as in “he simply went up and pushed him in with no warning”. Rather than “he only pushed him”.
Actually it seems he kicked him in.

Whilst I agree with how hideous an action this was and that the young man should bear serious consequences, I feel positively sick to hear sentiments like “public humiliation”. “Bring back the birch” expressed on here.

Lucca Sat 12-Jun-21 13:07:46

So sorry,I see that Tallulah already explained.

Doodledog Sat 12-Jun-21 13:41:08

henetha

I only know this, and I'm certainly not saying we should return to old barbaric punishments, but - throughout my fairly long life I have seen the erosion of many of the old punishments alongside the decline in behaviour generally.

I'm not sure that this is true.

I grew up in the 70s, and they and the 80s were times when life was a lot more violent than now, and from what I understand it was the same in the 50s, and probably before that too. Children were routinely hit by parents and teachers, the police were violent towards both children on the street (the 'clip round the ear' that is held up now as a deterrent) and in police stations towards prisoners/suspects. Football violence was endemic. There were riots across the country. Strikes were broken up with batons and horse charges, and Belfast was riven with sectarian violence which also happened on the mainland.

You only have to look at the number of people who were hanged to see that capital punishment was not a deterrent against murder, and when physical punishment was carried out by the state it was not a deterrent either. It wasn't in school, for that matter. I remember boys boasting about being caned, and the same ones were punished time after time. It didn't help anything, as can be seen by posts on social media 'old school' groups where men in their 60s and 70s remember the way in which some teachers were sadistic and how it just encouraged a culture of anti-authoritarianism.

I don't in any way condone the actions of the young man in the case we are discussing, but I agree that brutal punishments are not the answer.

May7 Sat 12-Jun-21 13:46:22

Good post Doodledog
My thoughts entirely.

Galaxy Sat 12-Jun-21 13:48:59

Yes I agree doodledog. Hasnt violent crime gone down as far as I know. I think there were periods of time where life was very dangerous.

Namsnanny Sat 12-Jun-21 13:53:15

yggdrasil

What was the pensioner's hobby, and was he 74 or 78?

Why is this a relevant question??
Have I missed something?

Lucca Sat 12-Jun-21 14:00:16

He liked fishing.

Namsnanny Sat 12-Jun-21 19:36:17

Thank you Lucca I still don't understand why his exact age or hobbies matters though!

Callistemon Sat 12-Jun-21 20:21:55

Lucca

He liked fishing.

So a 74 year old, or possibly 78 year old may have been fishing peacefully by the river when a young man aged 18 comes along and decides it might be fun to kick him into the river.
A 15 year old filmed the attack.

Then along come two other young people, both girls, who rescue the old man.
The pair ran off afterwards but could be seen later looking at the footage together and laughing.

The man, who was rescued from the water by some young girls nearby, suffered a cut to his nose and was shaken up by the shock of the assault and the effect of the cold water, the CPS said.

Bridgeman and the boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, handed themselves in a few days later.
In a victim personal statement, the man's wife said her husband believed he could have drowned and since the attack has become aggressive, depressed and is reluctant to go out.

Well done to those girls.
They are a credit to their generation.

However, the effects of this on the victim and his family will last longer than ten weeks.
The sentence is a joke.

Gwyneth Sat 12-Jun-21 20:44:58

This case has some similarities to the poor French child who was pushed/thrown from the balcony of I think the Tate gallery in London? The perpetrator had mental health problems and was not receiving the supervision he should have been receiving. Clearly the teenager in this case needs help and his behaviour monitored so that there is less of a chance of committing further offences of this nature. What happened to this elderly gentleman is really frightening. There should also be more research into the long term effects of cannabis particularly in relation to those who already have mental health problems.

greenlady102 Sat 12-Jun-21 20:49:10

it occurs to me that he might have thought the bloke was a friend of his....mistaken identity? I mean a silly thing to do to a friend as a joke but not like just randomly pushing an old man in the river

Boogaloo Sat 12-Jun-21 21:38:11

Watching this kid get a good thrashing in public would make me very feel very good.

The gentleman could have hit his head and drowned - or drowned without hitting his head. The shock could have given him a heart attack. It could have been my dad who couldn't swim and was deathly afraid of falling into water. So it was attempted murder in my book.

As an elderly person I would be more than willing to attempt murder on the thugs myself - as long as they were rendered as helpless as his victim had been.

Reading some of these comments I can see why England has become what it has. Shame on you!

Galaxy Sat 12-Jun-21 21:44:04

Yes shame on us for not displaying violent tendencies.

Callistemon Sat 12-Jun-21 22:29:21

I've just had a good idea ......
Can he swim?

farview Sat 12-Jun-21 22:29:32

Maybe..if everyone thought what if the victim was my father,or another loved one...feelings would be different ...not quite so PC!!!!!!

Doodledog Sat 12-Jun-21 22:40:11

farview

Maybe..if everyone thought what if the victim was my father,or another loved one...feelings would be different ...not quite so PC!!!!!!

That's why we have the rule of law, rather than vendetta and blood feuds.

Galaxy Sat 12-Jun-21 23:07:55

Nothing to do with PC I dont like any violence or those who seem to relish it.

rafichagran Sat 12-Jun-21 23:26:59

No excuses at all for the thug that pushed that man in.
The sentence was far to lenient, but I would not like to see birching bought back, and people baying for blood and revenge are wrong.

Lucca Sat 12-Jun-21 23:30:36

rafichagran

No excuses at all for the thug that pushed that man in.
The sentence was far to lenient, but I would not like to see birching bought back, and people baying for blood and revenge are wrong.

Exactly.

maddyone Sat 12-Jun-21 23:30:53

Absolutely NO to the birch.

What the answer is to this casual violence I have absolutely no idea.

Lucca Sat 12-Jun-21 23:31:16

Namsnanny

Thank you Lucca I still don't understand why his exact age or hobbies matters though!

Nor do I, I was just answering the rather strange question

AmberSpyglass Sat 12-Jun-21 23:32:03

Seriously, everyone who is advocating corporal punishment is more disgusting than the troubled young man who’ll hopefully now get the care and support he needs. What’s wrong with you?!