SHANE: The True Story of One of the Most Dangerous Prisoners in Britain

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SHANE: The True Story of One of the Most Dangerous Prisoners in Britain

SHANE: The True Story of One of the Most Dangerous Prisoners in Britain

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The court heard they had been married for eight years. Things turned bad when Rewers, 39, started drinking heavily after he set up a company buying and selling cars. He admitted: “One of the lads said, ‘You get free chocolate gateau and biscuits,’ so I said, ‘Put my name down’.” It left Evans with a seven-year prison sentence. A three-year driving ban starts when he is freed halfway through the jail term. Bardhosi failed a roadside breath test and was later found to have 79 micrograms of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath, just over double the legal limit. He had neither insurance nor a driving licence. After the hearing, councillor Tony Harper, chair of Nottinghamshire County Council's Adult Social Care and Public Health Committee, said: "We welcome the custodial sentence of two care workers for the verbal abuse of an elderly victim in 2018.

The discovery was made in March last year and police officers granted bail to Evans, of Moor Street, Mansfield . At that time, before he found God, the thought of getting out and killing them was what got him through. A REFORMED Middlesbrough man once classed as one of the most dangerous prisoners in Britain has told how finding God has changed his life. I WAS born on December 12, 1980 in Middlesbrough. I grew up an only child until my mum moved us both to Peterlee to escape family problems.Jasmine Kumar, mitigating, said that Phair had "ten pints of alcohol." He accepted that there was no provocation. The judge added: "With your problem with drugs, you have started to get help and acted in a very positive way and helping cure others as well." But Jamie Stevenson, 39, kept on committing the offences, taking a large amount of items from House of Fraser and Boots. On one occasion, a shopper was pushed over as she tried to halt him. Reverend Paul Cowley, who runs CFEO, is there volunteering; so too is Emmy Wilson, who led Emmett's transformative service at Exeter, all those years ago. More than 50 inmates have indicated an interest in coming to today's session, which is a high number. "Perhaps they thought they were signing up for an engineering class or something," the chaplain wonders. Tomasz Rewers once made 50 calls when she went to church and later said "she didn't deserve to be alive," Nottingham Crown Court heard.

This behaviour pattern was a surprise to both inmates and officers alike. The realisation that both I and the prison officers were equal human beings caused my attitude towards them to completely change. I no longer thought of them as the system itself, but realised they were just representatives and ordinary men doing their jobs. The more I tried to control the crying, the more I was unable to do so. I had not cried about anything for many years and it was totally out of character for me. I served eight years and nine months of my sentence mainly in segregation, not only because of my violent attitude towards my fellow prisoners, but because I had completely turned my anger and frustration towards the officers as they represented "authority". Ndricim Bardhosi faces a return to Albania after his appearance of Nottingham Crown Court (Image: Getty / Nottingham Post) Judge Stuart Rafferty QC told him: "For a long time, you were playing the role of peacemaker. What it was or what he said, I don't know. Your assault - cowardly - was from behind."

I was trying to be the baddest and hardest man around,” he said. “I didn’t care if I got life. I didn’t care about anything or anyone. I just wanted to maintain the reputation I had created.”



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