"IAN TOMLINSON WITH BOTH HANDS IN HIS POCKETS THUMPED TO THE GROUND FROM BEHIND BY WEAPON WEILDING PIG HARWOOD".
HARWOOD - A SHADY ULTRA PIGGISH "BEHIND THE BACK" DOUBLE ATTACKER OF IAN TOMLINSON. HARWOOD BRUTALLY LASHED TOMLINSON'S LEGS PRIOR TO LUNGING AT HIM FROM BEHIND. ALL WE'VE HAD SO FAR ARE RELATIVELY VANILLA VERBALS THAT TOMLINSON WAS "PUSHED". AND THE REST!!
------ Er "nobody is on trial" ... even though Tomlinson died a few minutes later. Cops reckon he was drunk and today one Cop Inspector said a drunk is someone who is your best friend one minute and your attacker big time just a "split second later". Anyway nobody is on trial eh?? Maybe the pig witness had well-boozey cops in mind but given Harwood's stone cold sober propensities what does it matter. Ah but of course it matters because somebody is on trial - Tomlinson IS ON TRIAL. No mention in the INQUEST news reports of "ASPS' - this in the item of weaponry that DELROY SMELLIE so described using when he was on trial for smashing and thrashing female protester Nicola Fisher in April 2009. Curious that this sinister "ASP" description has so far been air-brushed from the Inquest cop witnesses vocabulary. As indeed it has also been from journalistic reportage. ASP silence reigns. Its batons all round old chap! In the same vein Tomlinson was merely "pushed" to the ground not smashed, thumped or thrown. ------------- -- ------
OPERATION VANILLA IS WELL UNDER WAY.
2 Comments:
An Asp is a pole that extends when flicked open as used by Smellie, A Baton is solid as used by Harwood, Like the pig commets that's orginal did you come up with that?
Anyway Moving to the ASP and the BATON situation. If you Google images for ASP you get websites with numerous supplier illustrations of ASP BATONS - they appear to jointly be so-categorised. Quite why BATONS are called ASPs is curious - is it because ASP has more sinister and so intended connotations? PIG is to categorise HARWOOD for his brutality re his attack o Tomlinson. A minority of police officers have so behaved approaching 200 years - witness the 1833 death of Constable Culley.
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