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so Mike ampry is out of prison but not
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out of the woods not yet he might still
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lose his seat in Parliament for reasons
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I'll explain in this video U but there's
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also been quite a lot of outrage on
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social media in response to this
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sentence and his appeal to the Crown
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Court against his sentence um because uh
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if you haven't heard his uh sentence has
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now been suspended so it's still a 10we
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custodial sentence suspended for two
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years and so the effect of that is that
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he doesn't go to prison unless of course
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he breaks the terms or doesn't comply
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with the requirements um or he commits
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any further offense and then he's
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recalled to prison on this and any
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further offense that he may commit and
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so as I say there's been quite a bit of
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outrage on this because quite clearly we
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shouldn't really be uh condoning uh and
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allowing this sort of behavior without
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due punishment and that is the real key
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here but there is um there is a bit of a
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problem here and it's not really with
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what the judge has done and I'll explain
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why in this video um and also um before
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you leave this video I'm also going to
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link my Leonard friend Alan Robert
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Shaw's video in the description below
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he's got some thoughts on this as well
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do go and watch that do subscribe to his
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channel as well um but this has
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attracted quite a bit of uh commentary
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and let's go to what Robert genck said
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um there's there's a couple of things
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here uh one of which I'm going to very
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subtly disagree with but and I'm not
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quick to disagree or criticize but I
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will tell you why but the first bit is
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actually quite clear he says this weak
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sentence gives a green light to thuggery
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and violence deter matters um and I
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agree that it's a weak sentence um it's
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not necessarily wrong for the offense
00:01:37
that was charged but that's important
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for reasons I come back to in a minute
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but um it is a weak sentence for what he
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did um and I wouldn't I wouldn't go as
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far as to saying it gives a green light
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to thugian violence but what it what it
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does do is mean that if people commit
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this sort of act they should be able to
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expect that sort of a sentence where
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they don't actually go to prison um they
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just get a suspended sentence as long as
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they a clean history and all the factors
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are the same that the court considers
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Etc um but some people may then feel
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that that's that's what they'll get if
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they commit that sort of offense and I
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think that's wrong I don't I don't think
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that is enough of a deterrent but that's
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just my personal view but when we look
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at um what actually happened and I'll
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take the cps's summary of what happened
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because obviously it was prosecuted and
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so this is how they describe what
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happened Alison story here senior
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specialist prosecutor says uh this was a
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persistent assault by Mike amsbury which
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continued while the victim was on the
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floor offering no aggression and I've
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always said in my videos if someone's on
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the floor and you continue to punch them
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then that is quite clearly an increase
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in aggression by the offender the victim
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was alone and not part of a group and
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CCTV showed that he was not being
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threatening or aggressive toward Mike
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Asbury after the initial punch which
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knocked the victim to the ground Mike am
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fre struck the victim at least a further
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five times whilst he was on the
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floor the CPS will always seek to
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prosecute violent offenses in accordance
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with our legal test regardless of who
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the perpetrator is but I do have one
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criticism here and I'm not quick to
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criticize but I do have a criticism here
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and the judge picked up on this as well
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and that I can phrase as a question why
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was this only charged as a single charge
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of common assault when for for many
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reasons I mean it didn't go as far as um
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you know breaking bones and things like
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that um but it could have been charged
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as a fry um my Lear friend Alan
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Robertshaw goes into a good description
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on a fry but essentially it involves two
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people and a third so one person
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directing the violence another person
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against whom that violence is directed
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and a third person of reasonable
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firmness that it may cause them to fear
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immediate harm and so the the judge
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question this in in going through this
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case today the judge questioned why this
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was not charged as a fry and obviously
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then it might may have been sentenced
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differently but the judge quite rightly
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said that he was not going to go behind
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uh the original charge and thus look at
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the case as it would have been looked at
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at the Magistrate Court by the district
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judge there and sentence it accordingly
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and the sentence the judge reached was
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the same in terms of the 10we sentence
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uh but then went on to suspend it
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because of mitigating factors now this
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is still a custodial sentence now that's
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a bit of an oxymore on him that he
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doesn't go to prison but it's still a
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custodial sentence because it is a
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sentence of 10 weeks custody orbe it
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suspended for two years and all that
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means is he doesn't go to prison and so
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long as he behaves for the next two
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years and complies with the requirements
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then he doesn't go to prison but that's
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not the end of the matter either because
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um there was also other requirements we
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go back to the CPS page I'll come back
00:05:00
to Robert genrich's Post in a minute um
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going back to the CPS page he was also
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ordered to complete 200 hours of unpaid
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work community service um undertake a
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12-month alcohol monitoring requirement
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which um I'll come back to in a second
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um complete an anger management course
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and Carry Out 20 days of
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Rehabilitation uh the alcohol bit was
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interesting going back to the Chester
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standard that reported on this today the
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judge raised the point that the
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probation service were disappointed that
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he only reduced his alcohol in take
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instead of removing it out of his life
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now just as an aside here um anyone
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who's ever in trouble with anything
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that's remotely related to alcohol would
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be best advised to abstain from alcohol
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completely and demonstrate that you've
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given it up completely to demonstrate
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that you you know you've seen the error
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of your ways um also I've heard many
00:05:47
barristers um advise that when someone
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is involved in anything to do with road
00:05:52
traffic matters that has a let's say a
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fast car or sports car or something like
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that that they either garage the car or
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they sell the car to demonstrate that
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they've seen the error of their ways in
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the way that they've been driving and
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they're taking steps to improve that and
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I've heard that reported to be very
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successful in court because it's a very
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powerful statement to say well I realize
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and recognize that using that car in
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that way is dangerous therefore if I get
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rid of the car it's demonstrative that
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I'm taking steps to improve things so in
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this case um the judge raised the point
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that probation was disappointed uh that
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he'd only reduce his alcohol intake
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instead of removing from his life
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completely um the judge then raised
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anger management issues ETC and so the
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judge then ordered that he's got a
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monitoring requirement for alcohol for
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12 months um but a 12-month alcohol
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abstinence order and anger management
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course but coming back to the second
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Point by Robert jich here he says it
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risks the perception of two-tier Justice
00:06:46
a court hearing aims Bri's appeal within
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72 hours uh when more serious cases are
00:06:51
being listed for 2028 um absolutely it
00:06:54
does it does risk the appearance of
00:06:56
two-tier Justice and um the disparity
00:06:58
between the two is massive but obviously
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those are two very different cases
00:07:02
different types of offenses and there
00:07:03
are only really two fairly small but
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good reasons why this heard so quickly
00:07:08
um one is that because it was a 10we
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custodial sentence obviously if it took
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longer than that to appeal the sentence
00:07:15
then there's no point appealing the
00:07:16
sentence so it would be heard relatively
00:07:18
quickly anyway and secondly because it's
00:07:20
an appeal from the magistrates Court to
00:07:22
the Crown Court that has to be done
00:07:24
within 15 business days I understand
00:07:27
that that was indicated immediately
00:07:28
because he applied for bail and Baal was
00:07:30
refused um that is another reason that
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it was heard so quickly but that's not
00:07:33
to say that I agree that that's right
00:07:35
and that's not to say that I agree that
00:07:36
it should be like that um it should not
00:07:39
have been because he's an MP in fact the
00:07:41
judge was quite clear today to say that
00:07:44
he's um sentencing him as a member of
00:07:46
the public rather than as an MP and that
00:07:48
works both ways rather than punishing
00:07:50
him more because he's an MP and rather
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than giving him any leniency because
00:07:54
he's an MP whichever way you think that
00:07:56
that should lean um the judge was clear
00:07:58
to say that he would sentence him as a
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member of the public but the bigger
00:08:03
problem here aside from how quickly this
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appeal Was Heard which many people will
00:08:07
disagree with and I'm not saying it's
00:08:09
right that it was heard so quickly in
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fact with the backlog in the system I
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think there are lots of other cases that
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were probably pushed aside to get this
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in I can only think that logically there
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were lots of other cases that would
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otherwise have been lined up to go to
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court to be heard today that weren't
00:08:25
because of this one but I'm not involved
00:08:27
in that so I can't really comment um but
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as to the charge itself um it does leave
00:08:31
a bit of a question mark as to why this
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was only prosecuted as a common assault
00:08:36
because if we look at what actually
00:08:38
happened again it's relatively serious
00:08:41
now thinking that a single punch I can't
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use too many descriptive words and
00:08:46
language on YouTube otherwise the video
00:08:48
gets flagged and banned but um a single
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punch can do extensive damage if you
00:08:54
know what I mean and so um this was not
00:08:56
just one either this was one that
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knocked him to the ground and then the
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video uh showed according to the CPS at
00:09:04
least a further five while he was on the
00:09:07
floor which I think should go I mean I'm
00:09:10
not a specialist I've done criminal work
00:09:12
but I'm not a specialist criminal Barr
00:09:13
but I both as a barister that has done
00:09:16
some criminal work you understand and as
00:09:18
a member of the public with the
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knowledge that I have as a barister if
00:09:22
that makes sense I think this should
00:09:23
have been charged more seriously I mean
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I would invite my colleagues to comment
00:09:28
they probably won't as whether this
00:09:29
should have been charged more seriously
00:09:31
than just a common assault but here we
00:09:32
are this is how it was charged the
00:09:34
district judge in the magistrates Court
00:09:36
um gave a 10we prison sentence and it's
00:09:39
been modified here subtly to have it
00:09:42
suspended and uh these additional
00:09:44
requirements and so actually looking at
00:09:46
this in the round you might think that
00:09:48
the 200 hours of unpaid work the 12month
00:09:51
alcohol abstinence monitoring
00:09:53
requirement and an anger management
00:09:55
course and 20 days of rehab is this
00:09:58
rehabilitative Justice at work um this
00:10:01
this could be something that actually U
00:10:04
puts somebody on the right track who is
00:10:06
otherwise angry out in the street and
00:10:08
punching people and it might actually
00:10:10
work and this might be something that we
00:10:12
should be looking to as a society again
00:10:14
let me know your thoughts to that in the
00:10:15
comments below or should it be
00:10:17
straightforward and just send to prison
00:10:18
to send a deterrent message out that if
00:10:20
you do this you go to prison let me know
00:10:22
what you think in the comments below but
00:10:24
why is he not out of the woods yet
00:10:26
because it is still a custodial sentence
00:10:29
even though it's been suspended which
00:10:30
means the recall petition is still
00:10:33
triggered and it's only 10% of the
00:10:35
constituents to vote to have him lose
00:10:38
his seat so again a recall petition is
00:10:41
triggered if an MP is convicted of an
00:10:44
offense in the UK and receives a
00:10:45
custodial sentence including a suspended
00:10:47
sentence or is ordered to be detained
00:10:49
other than solely for mental health um
00:10:51
suspended from the commons for 10 days
00:10:53
or 14 calendar days um convicted of
00:10:56
providing false information misleading
00:10:57
information Etc so the recall petition
00:11:00
is still triggered and it only takes 10%
00:11:02
of the constituency to sign the petition
00:11:04
and then they lose their seat and then
00:11:06
who can sign the petition anyone that's
00:11:07
registered at an address to vote signing
00:11:10
the petition to sign the petition you to
00:11:12
go to the allotted signing Place
00:11:13
petition officer will send the details
00:11:14
of the location and opening hours Etc so
00:11:16
you could look for that if you're in
00:11:17
that constituency so there there's a
00:11:19
broad outline of what happened today
00:11:20
don't forget to check out Al Robert
00:11:22
Shaw's video link below um more
00:11:24
discussion on AR Fray and this case in
00:11:25
general which I hope you find
00:11:27
interesting I'll link that below um let
00:11:29
me know what you think this this one
00:11:30
really is splitting the hairs and for
00:11:32
what it's worth I think that this is not
00:11:34
enough of a deterrent I think he's got
00:11:36
off lightly I wouldn't go as far as
00:11:38
saying this is a green light to thuggery
00:11:40
and violence but what it what what I
00:11:41
think it does do is it does send the
00:11:44
message that those that have a clean
00:11:45
record that do this kind of thing um
00:11:48
should expect not to go to prison orbe
00:11:50
they get a criminal record and a
00:11:51
suspended sentence Etc if everything
00:11:52
goes down exactly the way it did today
00:11:55
for them and of course I don't recommend
00:11:57
that I don't condone that I don't think
00:11:58
that's right right and nobody should do
00:12:00
that just to make all of that absolutely
00:12:02
clear but I do think this is not enough
00:12:03
of a deterrent I have to say what I
00:12:05
think just what I think let me know what
00:12:07
you think and as always thank you for
00:12:08
watching