Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Justice?
The comments following this story make interesting reading
http://
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by sir.prize. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.it is what one would expect, the comments that is. he got a long jail term, good, perhaps that will hold as a deterrent to other bent police, however
it's unlikely Philpott will ever come out, he will be 71 by the time parole would be possible, but most people in the know believe he won't ever come out.
it's unlikely Philpott will ever come out, he will be 71 by the time parole would be possible, but most people in the know believe he won't ever come out.
not exactly mastermind...
He told his wife he had earned extra money on overtime and that his police pension was paying out, the court heard.
The detective was caught after regularly paying cash into automatic banking machines which triggered a security alert, Paul Greaney QC said.
When he was arrested, he told police he found bags of cash in a ditch by the M62 motorway.
Simon McFadden, of Darfield Place, Harehills, Leeds, maintains he knew nothing about his brother's alleged activity.
The jury was told large amounts of cash, along with mobile phones that contained messages about drug deals, were found at Simon McFadden's terraced home during a search.
He told his wife he had earned extra money on overtime and that his police pension was paying out, the court heard.
The detective was caught after regularly paying cash into automatic banking machines which triggered a security alert, Paul Greaney QC said.
When he was arrested, he told police he found bags of cash in a ditch by the M62 motorway.
Simon McFadden, of Darfield Place, Harehills, Leeds, maintains he knew nothing about his brother's alleged activity.
The jury was told large amounts of cash, along with mobile phones that contained messages about drug deals, were found at Simon McFadden's terraced home during a search.
And Philpott is on licence for life even if he is released after 15 years, or whatever the Parole Board decides after that. All life prisoners are. That means that if they commit another offence at any time, they are recalled to jail. Someone serving a fixed term, such as the policeman, and released, is only on licence for the remaining length of the original term.
You always get these outraged comments when someone has been tried and sentenced for manslaughter.
People get all het up because in their heads it was murder
After all anybody who kills someone innocent and young recklessly - well that's murder isn't it?
I do think 23 years is quite a long sentence - it is about the most serious case imaginable but the maximum sentence is 16 years which is what his brother got
http:// www.cps .gov.uk /legal/ s_to_u/ sentenc ing_man ual/sup ply_cla ss_a_dr ugs/
Seems we may not have quite the full story - presumably he was also sentenced for other offences as well
People get all het up because in their heads it was murder
After all anybody who kills someone innocent and young recklessly - well that's murder isn't it?
I do think 23 years is quite a long sentence - it is about the most serious case imaginable but the maximum sentence is 16 years which is what his brother got
http://
Seems we may not have quite the full story - presumably he was also sentenced for other offences as well