The 'Snapchat Queen' who filmed her boyfriend's death
15 replies, posted
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-44798829
Oh boy for once it's even worse than the headline makes it sound. She arranged for a rival lover to have him killed, and Snapchatted the attack.
What in the fuck is wrong with some folks
I'd almost venture to say it's good that people have such an obsession with fucking social media... I mean, you don't need much for a conviction when the dumbass records the shit themselves.
some places haven't left the middle ages even though they have guns and cellphones and cars.
Considering this incident happened in west London, you could better say that some people just prefer to retreat to previous centuries for their moral actions.
You obviously haven't spent much time in London lately.
What a fucking degenerate, and all those involved
Nobody is even talking about the worst part:
She posted the image of her dying boyfriend on Snapchat with a warning that that was what happened when people messed with her. She used an expletive instead of the word "mess".
She used the word 'frick', and maybe even worse like d*mn or h*ll
social media is a pox
Fatima Khan was instead charged with joint enterprise murder, with an
alternative of manslaughter or conspiracy to cause grievous bodily harm.
At the end of her four-week trial, the jury cleared her of murder, but found her guilty of manslaughter by a majority verdict.
seems like the semantics of burglary and robbery. Idk if they have it as good as they do in the US but I hope they don't go easy on her sentence because she is a woman.
he said places AND people. As in it can be both or one of the two.
her face looks like she is midway through having a stroke
Was she given a manslaughter charge due to some kind of insanity angle? How was what she did any less than common purpose premeditated murder?
Women tend to receive lighter treatment within the justice system at virtually all levels.
>There are far more men than women in prison. One explanation for this is simply that they are inherently more prone to violence, crime or drug-use.
But that attitude might conceal important facts, or even alternative explanations. 29% of male first-time offenders were sentenced to custody. For women, that figure was 17%. Men have a 62% chance of being bailed, while for women that figure is 80% and on average men serve 53% of their sentence but women serve 5% less than that.
The average length of the sentence, whatever the plea, also suggests that there may be some issues in the criminal justice system. Once in prison, men are likely to continue to suffer discrimination. A much-publicised scheme addressing the need to take away prisoner privileges applies only to men.
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