Pages

Finally

The suspense was killing me
Two men charged with assaulting police officers after Manchester Airport brawl
It's taken nearly six months
Honestly, wheels of justice moving slowly is a common thing, but not charging these thugs when everything was nicely caught on camera, and when all the Soutport tweeters were fast tracked into prison around the same time, was not a good look
Two men have been charged with assaulting police officers following a brawl at Manchester Airport in July.

Mohammed Amaaz, 20, faces two charges of causing actual bodily harm, one charge of assaulting an emergency worker and one charge of common assault. Muhammed Amaad, 25, is charged with causing actual bodily harm.

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said no police officers will be charged.
And that's the kicker (No pun intended). Not only were these thugs members of the religion of peace, a copper kicked one of them when he was down, and suddenly the whole lot were limping. And in Manchester and surrounding areas, there are a lot of them to limp
Videos of the brawl were subsequently circulated widely online, stoking community tensions in Rochdale where the two defendants are from.
A cynical man might think the authorities were hoping this would just go away, if left long enough, and they wouldn't have to deal with another, mostly peaceful, BLM uprising
Fortunately, enough decent people kept the story in the public eye, with Reform even threatening a private prosecution
“We have concluded no charges should be brought against any officers. We examined potential offences of actual bodily harm, and common assault, and reviewed expert evidence in the form of an independent report from an expert in the use of police force, to inform this decision.
Also good news. While waiting for these thugs to be charged, I may have expected that if the CPS actually do bring charges, they may also be accompanied by a Derek Chauvin moment, with the coppers also been thrown under the bus in a vain attempt to appease the mostly peaceful Muslim mob
We now have specific charging decisions and the court proceedings must be allowed to progress without the prejudice or taint that can emerge as a result of misplaced commentary, speculation or the sharing of digital content.”
Too late. The public have had five months to share the videos, and share them they did, because it was starting to look like the thugs were going to get away with it. Now it just needs to be shared in court

So we just have to sit back and wait for the trial. And see how long their suspended sentances are going to be...

1 Comments:

A K Haart said...