Twenty-one convicted in West Midlands child sex abuse inquiry - BBC News dread to think what they must have been doing to warrant the length of those sentences - are they're still not long enough. Sick ********
it's just horrific. can't even start to imagine the horrors these kids must have gone through, and will relive for the rest of their lives.
Christ….what a motley set of scumbags. Amazing how many women are among them too. Hope they all rot in hell.
tbh if they were involved in sexual behaviour with kids under 12 what else do you need to know! The sentences on the face of it are quite long IF that’s a minimum. But if they are going to get time off the sentences should be longer.
Braverman at the weekend blaming the issue on asians & "woke culture". These lot all look like Guardian readers, not.
13 white men and 8 white women convicted and sentenced to significant sentences for abusing kids. And so many of them are married or related. Some serious issues for the psychologists to unpack there. Obviously our Home Secretary is in the media praising the police and deploring the criminals rather than being in the news for expenses fiddling and allegedly giving a speech to a far-right, Christian Fundamental group in the USA...
It is so wrong for a thread about evil perverted guttersnipes to be turned into a black or white thing. Shoot em all!
I didn't start it. The Home Secretary did. Rather than quote a reliable source, here is her mouthpiece: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-grooming-gangs-pledges-Suella-Braverman.html
And you wouldn't think it appropriate to know exactly what they've done before demanding longer sentences? Put another way, are all sexual offences alike?
Out of interest, what sexual act/offence with a child 13 & under do you think deserves only 28 months? Especially when they knew the extent others were going to
As sentencing law operates in this country, you would need to know the details of the offence in order to locate it at the correct point according to the revised sentencing guidelines on child sexual offences issued by the Sentencing Council in May of last year. A sentence which did not conform to the guidelines without good (and stated) reasons would be likely to be overturned on appeal. Gung-ho, macho proclamations about every sentence needing to be tougher are pointless, and not in accordance with how justice is dispensed in England and Wales.