Urban75 Home About Offline BrixtonBuzz Contact

24 Hours in Police Custody

the abortion line is kinda odd addition


no ones ever had a kid whilst their partner is in jail

sure the hails comments section is having a field day
Why is it odd? They already had another child to think about and couldn't afford another one.
Maybe the mother felt she couldn't cope with being a single parent?
People have kids in all kinds of situations, doesn't mean everyone would choose to.
Seemed like a rational decision.
 
he still got a light sentence that he should of for what quite clear intended gbh

and has 121 grand for his trouble

not bad for 22 months
 
Adam White had obviously never watched an episode of 24 Hours in Police Custody though or he'd have known NO COMMENT. Even the police were trying to shut him up.

I will watch it later on demand. But did he not have a solicitor in with him? Any decent solicitor tells you to make no comment...
 
I will watch it later on demand. But did he not have a solicitor in with him? Any decent solicitor tells you to make no comment...

if you told the police at the scene of the accident
you already pretty fucked :facepalm: as well
 
What I took from it is that a bad thing happened, he was targeted and victimised, and so he lashed out. But in pursuit of that over an extended period of time and distance, his righteousness declined, to the point of the impact.

By that point he was acting in a way in which he endangered countless people with nothing to do with the situation. But even though he was shaken up, and crap at keeping his mouth shut, by the time of the crash scene conversations, he was seemingly at the stage of minimising his responsibility, reframing his narrative, and making some conscious efforts to present his actions in the most positive light. He appeared to be chasing approval whilst simultaneously avoiding accountability.

Everything that happened from the police station onwards seemed to feed into a persecution complex. Every thought expressed or action explained seems to be a way of demonstrating how life is unfair, the bad guys get everything handed to them whilst the good guy comes last, etc. Heavy Tony Martin vibes for sure, but with notes of Rittenhouse and Dryden, and hints of incel/MRA whininess, that sort of thing.

He went too far, and was fortunate that bystanders weren't hurt. He could have either shrugged his shoulders and taken his medicine, or just STFU and made the cops do all the running around. But he hasn't - he's portrayed himself as a forever-victim and denies he has any agency. Not sure that going to be good for him in the longer run.
 
Sprinting after them out the house seems such a weird reaction to me especially if you're saying you're terrified.
Either way, couldn't help but feel a bit sorry for him but the stronger emotions were dispair and anger at the state of the wannabe criminals. No hint of any remorse for lives of crime, no suggestion of ever going straight. Revelling in it. And bringing kids into the world with no care as well.
 
as an aside if one of them had died would we be championing the fella


for killing someone who attacked his castle


a few miles away

without the slightly wanky " well if you attacked my car/missue/house/kids" bravado ballocks

he should of just joined the police he is daft enough
 
What I took from it is that a bad thing happened, he was targeted and victimised, and so he lashed out. But in pursuit of that over an extended period of time and distance, his righteousness declined, to the point of the impact.

By that point he was acting in a way in which he endangered countless people with nothing to do with the situation. But even though he was shaken up, and crap at keeping his mouth shut, by the time of the crash scene conversations, he was seemingly at the stage of minimising his responsibility, reframing his narrative, and making some conscious efforts to present his actions in the most positive light. He appeared to be chasing approval whilst simultaneously avoiding accountability.

Everything that happened from the police station onwards seemed to feed into a persecution complex. Every thought expressed or action explained seems to be a way of demonstrating how life is unfair, the bad guys get everything handed to them whilst the good guy comes last, etc. Heavy Tony Martin vibes for sure, but with notes of Rittenhouse and Dryden, and hints of incel/MRA whininess, that sort of thing.

He went too far, and was fortunate that bystanders weren't hurt. He could have either shrugged his shoulders and taken his medicine, or just STFU and made the cops do all the running around. But he hasn't - he's portrayed himself as a forever-victim and denies he has any agency. Not sure that going to be good for him in the longer run.
I note you've positioned yourself with the prosecution rather than the defence.
 
Why is it odd? They already had another child to think about and couldn't afford another one.
Maybe the mother felt she couldn't cope with being a single parent?
People have kids in all kinds of situations, doesn't mean everyone would choose to.
Seemed like a rational decision.

the mental gymnastics of spending 50 grand in defence of a fella who basically admitted on camera to trying to kill 2 people before getting council
is not worth thinking about
 
watch i can understand the anger about the consequences

but go back and watch the first 5 minutes of the cops on the scene

telling him to shut the fuck up and then the change in his story under interview

without a solicitor... :facepalm:

that and him still seeing his self as a victim after trying to kill 2 people


he got a go fund me at Mad money now he has been compensated for his troubles
 
Three plus one rules of police interviews:

1. Get a solicitor
2. Get a solicitor
3. Get a solicitor

3A listen to what your solicitor says.

Mind you, the last time I looked it wasn't the old bill who decided on charges or who sentence...
 
Seen a few people sharing this petition about this. Is it me or does it appear to have no aim?...what does 'Justice for Adam White' mean? :confused:

 
Three plus one rules of police interviews:

1. Get a solicitor
2. Get a solicitor
3. Get a solicitor

3A listen to what your solicitor says.

Mind you, the last time I looked it wasn't the old bill who decided on charges or who sentence...
And if you can't afford a lawyer, and don't trust the duty solicitor/public defender, just get a glove puppet with a voicebox programmed only to say SHUT THE FUCK UP
 
Three plus one rules of police interviews:

1. Get a solicitor
2. Get a solicitor
3. Get a solicitor

3A listen to what your solicitor says.

Mind you, the last time I looked it wasn't the old bill who decided on charges or who sentence...


police suggest the charges to the cps and they confirm it


he put himself into charge without police assistance, they cannot just lose bodycam footage

not sure what justice he wants.. atm he appears to have served time and is getting a donated generous payday
 
And if you can't afford a lawyer, and don't trust the duty solicitor/public defender, just get a glove puppet with a voicebox programmed only to say SHUT THE FUCK UP
Not with the 'new' caution. Prepared statement plus no comment 85% of the time...the 15% and actually writing the prepared statement is why you need a brief...
 
The bit that got me was, ' my car was pristine' , ' it was my pride and joy'. If I had gone into a rage and caused life threating injuries on someone , albeit a burglar, I'd have been fucking in tears, not concerned about my car.
 
Back
Top Bottom