Like all prisoners none of them have any say on current affairs the ruling can be considered a bridge a actual step, i read in the papers recently it is not possible to maintain the prison population with no time limit, this country is in very bad debt and getting even more so America will be billing us for their help in the 2 gulf wars and Afganistan soon, with costs of £75,000 per cat A prisoner per year to keep how long can it go on for, though i believe jeremy will win his freedom the road gets tough from here on.
I also read the papers this morning and on page 4 of The Times staring at me was a photograph of Julie and Jeremy-when will the nightmare end for her? As far as the recent ECHR judgement is concerned I believe the British government cannot appeal so will either have to comply or withdraw from the jurisdiction of the court altogether. Maybe we could ship all 49 prisoners involved off to Norway and pay them a sum per head:good riddance I say.
http://youtu.be/01mTKDaKa6QReading Jeremy's reaction to the judgement I came across this snippet of how he used to spend Christmas at the White House. My attention was drawn to one sentence in particular:
" Every year, Sheila and I would do a Christmas raid on the presents underneath the tree this went on for a few years from when I was about 6 and Sheila about 10.
She would come and get me out of bed and we would go down stairs in the middle of the night. Sheila would be the ‘lookout’ and, being the smallest I would sneak into the pile of presents. I would usually plunge into the presents right in the middle, trying not to disturb the pile too much. From there I would un-tape some of the presents and pull out chocolates from them and eat one or two passing some to Sheila. It was great fun - we would spend ages giggling and thinking that no one would ever know we had been in the middle of the presents eating the chocolates. Sheila would pull me out of the pile by my legs when I was done and we would both have chocolate all around our faces, go back to bed and come down in the morning like it with bits of tinsel and pine needles in our hair. Looking back, it must have been so obvious that we had been eating chocolates from our Christmas raid in the night but we really thought Mum and Dad didn’t notice. The best memories of Sheila and Christmas were the times we spent together decorating the tree. Sheila was very artistic and loved to put the decorations on carefully and the tree would look simply magnificent, even if we did have to put the baubles quite high because our cat, Thomas, would get hold of them."
Now I don't give a toss about Jeremy meeting the mother outside Williams and Griffins in Colchester,a mother whom he would later kill and express the sentiment to Julie "I'm glad she's dead" as he stuffed the heartfelt letter June wrote to be read after her death into the glove compartment of his car. I personally don't have any doubts as to Jeremy's guilt and I'm sorry about the distress caused to the relatives which you can see here:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23247525
However we do live in a Christian country which is why as prisoners get older they should be accorded more dignity and privacy,hence the Bastoy move. It's such a pity we have ended up in this situation whereby Jeremy is relying on pity and sympathy when he showed none to his five victims,the last of which he roused in the middle of the night just as Sheila did to him in yesteryear.