bmd
Island in the stream.
I'll let you know when he drops his autobiography.
There's a flow to PR! It's: Mixtape, Marriage to Z lister, erm... other stuff and then autobiogaphy. Otherwise, it's not going to be very interesting.
I'll let you know when he drops his autobiography.
He had incorporated a record company a few weeks earlier but his light burned too fast, too soon. And too fucking loud.There's a flow to PR! It's: Mixtape, Marriage to Z lister, erm... other stuff and then autobiogaphy. Otherwise, it's not going to be very interesting.
Damned auto correctYou spelt cunt wrong, Cyril.
Well I guess that could count as a happy ending I guessAn actual update is that the gunman was charged with three offences of possessing imitation firearms with intent to cause fear of violence. In court he claimed a voice he had heard in his head since childhood had told him to 'disturb the peace' that morning so police would arrest him and give him the treatment he needed. However that jury trial folded when he became unwell, he later changed his plea to guilty and was detained in a psychiatric hospital.
As a result of the incident on 21 April 2020, Truth or Dare Records record producer Michael Alunomoh (also known as Flexing Mike) of Marina Point East, Chatham, eventually pleaded guilty to three counts of possessing firearms with intent to cause fear of violence. On 29 June 2022 at Maidstone Crown Court, he was detained under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act 1983, the court having previously heard he had responded well to treatment for bipolar disorder at the Allington Centre, a low level psychiatric unit in Dartford.
Michael Alunomoh claimed a voice in his head told him to 'disturb the peace' that morning so police would arrest him and give him the treatment he needed. He denied that he wanted to scare people or that he had aimed the imitation guns anywhere other than into the air. The court was told that he had telephoned police the previous evening saying he was not happy and that 'something was wrong'. When interviewed by police, he had described how he was 'controlled' by the voice in his head, but would only be told to help, not hurt anyone.
Michael Alunomoh told police he had been diagnosed with schizophrenia in Nigeria about a year or two before he came to the UK in 2013. The court was told three psychiatrists had all agreed Alunomoh was suffering from a mental health condition. His eventual release will be determined by the doctors responsible for his care.
As a result of the incident on 21 April 2020, Truth or Dare Records record producer Michael Alunomoh (also known as Flexing Mike) of Marina Point East, Chatham, eventually pleaded guilty to three counts of possessing firearms with intent to cause fear of violence. On 29 June 2022 at Maidstone Crown Court, he was detained under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act 1983, the court having previously heard he had responded well to treatment for bipolar disorder at the Allington Centre, a low level psychiatric unit in Dartford.
Michael Alunomoh claimed a voice in his head told him to 'disturb the peace' that morning so police would arrest him and give him the treatment he needed. He denied that he wanted to scare people or that he had aimed the imitation guns anywhere other than into the air. The court was told that he had telephoned police the previous evening saying he was not happy and that 'something was wrong'. When interviewed by police, he had described how he was 'controlled' by the voice in his head, but would only be told to help, not hurt anyone.
Michael Alunomoh told police he had been diagnosed with schizophrenia in Nigeria about a year or two before he came to the UK in 2013. The court was told three psychiatrists had all agreed Alunomoh was suffering from a mental health condition. His eventual release will be determined by the doctors responsible for his care.