Question Author
'If you carry on behaving the way you have over the last few years you will be spending the majority of that future behind bars.
'You are very very fortunate you do not face a murder charge.
'You are also an intelligent articulate man capable of doing hard work - but have a grossly irresponsible streak.' [The judge]
What did our hero see? He saw an argument in which a man hit a woman once. Now, there is no evidence that he thought he was hitting a drug dealer; he is not some public hero trying to rid the streets of drugs. He is a thug, evidently with a record of such violence [see the Judge's sentencing remarks]
And what would this drug dealer; a claim made by the defence; have been prosecuted for? Assault occasioning actual bodily harm? That's all that the case discloses, at best. And is he in a fit state to remember the events or to give proper instructions in his defence, given his reported injuries, and thus fit to be tried for abh? And what penalty would he face, given the unlikely course that he was prosecuted?
And why does the Mail call him the "victim" in inverted commas? By what stretch of the imagination is someone who suffers grievous bodily harm, at the hands of a man who pleads guilty to the assault, not the victim of the assault? What else is he? The accomplice ? The inverted commas are to suggest he is not truly a victim, but merely a so-called victim.