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24-02-17, 16:28 | #1 | |
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Parole DENIED AGAIN For Notorious Prisoner Charles Bronson
Notorious Inmate Charles Bronson asks Coronation Street Actress Girlfriend to Marry Him >
Charles Bronson's Fiancée Insists She Will Marry Her 'Gentle Giant' IN PRISON as She Insists Their Relationship is The 'Real Deal' and Not a Publicity Stunt
In love: Britain's most violent prisoner Charles Bronson, 64, proposed to Paula Williamson by serenading her with a personalised version of the Frank Sinatra classic My Way from a HMP Wakefield pay phone Charles Bronson's fiancee today revealed she will marry her 'gentle giant' inside jail as soon as possible despite the 'huge risk' of only having met him four times. Britain's most violent prisoner, 64, proposed to Paula Williamson by serenading her with a personalised version of the Frank Sinatra classic My Way from a HMP Wakefield pay phone. They are getting married even though though they met for the first time last September - and only three times since then. Their only physical contact has been 'kissing through bars' and she now has a 'ritual' of seductively eating a banana in front of Bronson 'for his viewing pleasure.' The former Coronation Streetactress, 36, denies that she is marrying Bronson as a publicity stunt to relaunch her career. She told ITV's Good Morning Britain: 'He's a gentle giant and he is a gentleman. He's very, very caring. He's never hurt a woman, he's never hurt a child. 'He's the first to admit his crimes, but he has served his time for those crimes. He's served fourteen years over his time for those crimes.' She added: 'I do know Charlie and this is the real deal. I'm very excited to be his fiancée because I'm in love with the man. That's the god's honest truth.' The dangerous inmate proposed to his girlfriend by serenading her with a personalised version of the Frank Sinatra classic My Way. Couple: The former Coronation Street actress, 36, denies that she is marrying Bronson as a publicity stunt to relaunch her career. Paula said she completely understands why people would question why she's marrying Britain's most notorious prisoner - but says it is the 'real deal' Campaign: In 2014 Bronson changed his surname to Salvador in honour of artist Salvador Dali - he is up for parole later this year and Miss Wiliamson wore a supportive wristband today Bronson popped the question to his former Coronation Streetactress on Valentine's Day in a telephone call from HMP Wakefield to her home in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire. Sparkler: Bronson, who has been married twice and engaged three times, is believed to have saved up for the ring he gave his fiancee He had a diamond cluster ring delivered before asking her 'Do you want to be my missus?'. The 64-year-old sang 'Our Way', altering some of the lyrics, and sang: 'We've lived a crazy life and travelled in and out of darkness. But more, much more than this, we did it our way.' Paula said she completely understands why people would question why she's marrying Britain's most notorious prisoner. Paula said: 'Yes, Charlie's the first to admit that he's done a lot of terrifying things and I'm aware of those things. 'However, the Charlie that I know is not the same person that's committed all those offences while he's been incarcerated. 'He is that person, he's committed these offences and he's made these mistakes, but he's a different character now. He's 64-years-old and he's 14 years over the tariff he should be. He's up for parole this year anyway.' Paula - an actress who has had small parts in Emmerdale and Coronation Street - insists the engagement is not a publicity stunt: 'No, not at all, not at all. I can [have a normal marriage with him] when he's released. We don't know yet [when that will be] - he's got a parole hearing later this year. If I was doing it for any kind of publicity reasons, I wouldn't get married to Britain's most notorious prisoner, it would make no sense. 'I can understand that they [the public] would think that [this is complete madness]. This is going to brand me now. I'm branded now. I love him. 'I've not deliberately sought him for that [publicity] reason. I wrote to him because I connected with him with a book I read that he'd written called Broadmoor. It was about his time and I found his spirit phenomenal and very inspiring.' Lifer: Bronson (top, the last time he was freed), (and in 2004), has spent much of his time in jail in solitary confinement due to his history of violence - he may never be released from jail. Quizzed on why she'd choose this relationship over one with someone not in prison, Paula said: 'If only I could have met him outside of this situation how wonderful that would be. However, he is where he is and I've met him and I can't deny chemistry, I can't deny when you fall in love with somebody, I cannot deny that. I'm taking a huge risk here - I've been sacked from one of my jobs already [because of this relationship]. I'm promoting Charlie's cause.' Britain's 'most violent prisoner' Charles Bronson is said to have proposed to his actress girlfriend Paula Williamson when she visited him at HMP Wakefield last week, pictured Of the lack of intimacy, Paula insisted: 'Not every couple are intimate for a long time. We can't kind of comment on that as an entirety. It's the real deal. I left drama school in 2005 and I've been working as a jobbing actress, a lot of my work isn't just TV it's other things, but now because I'm known as Charlie Bronson's fiancée that's going to tarnish certain things.' Speaking of the wedding itself, Paula said: We'll get married in prison, within the prison chapel, depending on where he is at that point. 'We've spoken about [who will be there]. I believe there's about ten guests allowed and there'll be a selection of Charlie and I's family friends.' The couple exchanged letters while Bronson was engaged to his former partner Lorraine Etherington, secretary of the Charles Bronson Art Foundation which raises money for charity by promoting his drawings. He proposed to her in 2015 but the couple later split and it is believed he did not meet Miss Williamson until after the end of that relationship. Bronson, who has been married twice and engaged three times, is believed to have saved up for the ring despite previously getting 'knock-off versions' for his partners. The notorious prisoner and former bare-knuckle boxer was first jailed in 1974 and has spent a total of 41 years in prison, having had his sentence increased previously for attacking fellow inmates and taking people hostage. The actress has appeared in several British soaps and said they are a 'perfect match' Miss Williamson, pictured appearing as a stripper on Emmerdale, said she had been in relationships with 'both men and women' in the past but 'none come close to her love for Charlie' The pair are said to have been together for five months and are 'determined to make the relationship work' despite him being in prison. Bronson – whose life was made into a 2009 film starring Tom Hardy as the prisoner - has been married twice before, first to Irene Bronson, whom he divorced in 1977 after a five-year marriage. The couple had one child - Michael - who was born in 1970. Bronson then married Fatema Saira Rehman, a Bangladeshi-born divorcee, in 2001 after the pair had corresponded after she saw a picture of him in a newspaper. He briefly converted to Islam during the second marriage, which ended after four years. Asked about whether their marriage would go the same way Paula said: 'I am a different person to what she is'. Quote:
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02-03-23, 08:55 | #2 |
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Re: Charles Bronson:Notorious Prisoner's Public Parole Hearing After Wife KILLS Herse
Charles Bronson: UK's Most Notorious Prisoner
Charles Bronson: Public Parole Hearing Due For Notorious Prisoner Bronson's hearing is due to take place on 6 and 8 March at the Royal Courts of Justice in London. BBC 2 MAR 2023 A public Parole Board hearing for Charles Bronson is due to take place in early March. A panel will decide whether the 70-year-old, who is one of the UK's longest serving prisoners, is fit for release. So who is Bronson and why has he been in prison for so long? Who is Charles Bronson? Charles Bronson Bronson has had a film made about him and several books have been published during his time in prison The notorious prisoner was born in Luton, Bedfordshire, in December 1952 as Michael Peterson. He was convicted of armed robbery in 1974 and earned a reputation as a violent and dangerous inmate. The former bare-knuckle boxer changed his name to Charles Bronson during a brief spell of freedom in the 1980s, but now uses the name Charles Salvador. He chose the name as a homage to the Spanish artist Salvador Dali. Charles Bronson/Charles Salvador artwork Inside Front, the last artwork he produced under the name Charles Bronson, sold for about £1,000 While in prison, Bronson has created a number of artworks and many have been sold, with some proceeds donated to charity. In 2014, a sale of 200 of his pieces raised more than £30,000 at auction. He has had several books published, including ones about his prison fitness regime and his time at Broadmoor Hospital. A film starring Tom Hardy, released in 2009, also dramatised Bronson's time in prison. Why has he been in prison for so long? He was last released from prison in 1987, but returned not long after due to robbing a jewellery shop Bronson was first jailed aged 22 in 1974 for armed robbery and wounding. Since then he has only had brief spells out of prison and is believed to spend much of his time in solitary confinement. He has become notorious for attacks on prison staff and other inmates. In 1975 he attacked a fellow prisoner with a glass jug and in 1985 he carried out a three-day rooftop protest. In 1994, Bronson held a prison librarian hostage and demanded an inflatable doll, a helicopter and a cup of tea as ransom. Four years later, he took three inmates hostage at Belmarsh Prison in London. Then 12 months on, he took a prison education worker hostage for 44 hours at HMP Hull and was sentenced to a discretionary life term, with a minimum of four years. A hearing in 2017 refused Bronson parole He received a further two-year jail term in 2014 for holding a prison governor in a headlock at HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes. In 2017 he was refused parole while an inmate at HMP Wakefield in West Yorkshire. A year later, he was cleared of trying to seriously harm a prison governor. During his trial, Bronson admitted he had been a "very nasty man" in the past, as he described to the jury how during his time in prison he had held 11 hostages in nine different sieges - including governors, doctors, staff and, on one occasion, his solicitor. In a documentary being aired by Channel 4, Bronson said he could "taste freedom". He said: "The system have labelled me for so many years untameable, untreatable, unpredictable, dangerous, blah, blah, blah. I've had every label you can think of. "But at the end of the day, what people don't realise, since George, my son, has come into my life, I've changed and... George has got me the best legal team in the world... I'm coming home, I'm definitely coming home." What will happen at the hearing? In 2020 Bronson won a court case arguing for a public parole hearing and in 2022, rules were changed to allow such hearings to take place. In December, the first public hearing occurred. It was regarding Russell Causley, who murdered his wife Carole Packman in Bournemouth in 1985. The board decided Causley was fit for release and he has since been freed. The Parole Board's duty will be to decide whether Bronson presents a danger to others. If the risks are deemed low, he could be released on a life licence.
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09-03-23, 06:17 | #3 |
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re: Parole DENIED AGAIN For Notorious Prisoner Charles Bronson
Charles Bronson Public Parole Hearing 7 MAR 2023
Charles Bronson asks for freedom at parole hearing. Son says he has 'not done himself any favours' BBC 9 MAR 2023 A hearing has taken place to decide if one of the country's most infamous prisoners, Charles Bronson, should be released after nearly 50 years behind bars. The 70-year-old, also known as Charles Salvador, didn't hold back as he made a bid for his release from prison at a parole hearing. Bronson was given 15 minutes to make an opening statement saying, "First of all, it's no secret I have had more porridge than Goldilocks and the Three Bears, and I'm sick of it". Charles Bronson, one of the UK's longest-serving prisoners, has "not done himself any favours" during his parole hearing, his son has said. The 70-year-old, who is currently at HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes, has been in prison for much of the last 50 years. A Parole Board panel is deciding whether he can be released. His son George Bamby, who lives in Devon, said: "I think he deserves a chance to prove himself." Luton-born Bronson is being held at a specialist close supervision centre in the prison. Three parole judges - who have not been publicly named - are considering his case at HMP Woodhill while members of the press and public watch proceedings on a live stream from the Royal Courts of Justice in central London. Speaking to the BBC, Mr Bamby said Bronson had "been a really naughty boy over the years" Speaking to the BBC, Mr Bamby said: "I'm not sure he has done himself any favours during the parole hearing with swearing and cursing. "But Charlie is sat there in front of three people there in prison, authority figures again, and every time he sits down with them he is promised this and he is promised that and I think he's just so frustrated and fed up with the system. "I think it is just pure frustration with Charlie - he's been in so long." "He thinks they are making an idiot out of him and just won't ever let him out." Mr Bamby said his father had "been a really naughty boy over the years and he has done some really bad things and I think he should have been locked up for a long time". "Having said that, I don't think he should have been locked up for 49 years. There are a lot of murderers, child killers and all sorts of people walking the streets. "He's never murdered anybody, he's never hurt a woman or a child. He has been violent in prison - the majority of the violence he has done in prison has been against the system and against authority figures." He said his father had "not been in any trouble" in recent years and "deserves to get out". "He is 70 years old now, he is an old man, he wants to get out and do his art work. He is not going to be a harm to anybody," he added. Bronson's first conviction was in 1974 when he was 21 and was jailed for seven years for robbery, aggravated burglary, assault with intent to rob and possession of a firearm. Born Michael Peterson, he changed his name to Charles Bronson in the 1980s as an alias dreamed up when he went into boxing.
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30-03-23, 10:06 | #4 |
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Re: Notorious Prisoner Charles Bronson to Hear if Parole Board Will FREE Him TODAY 30
Charles Bronson Renews Bid For Freedom as He Claims He Hates Violence
BBC 30 MAR 2023 Britain's most notorious inmate Charles Bronson has claimed he now "hates violence" and has been a "model prisoner" for the last decade. In a voice note sent to Sky News, Bronson said he has "never been a danger to the public". He will learn on Thursday if he has persuaded the parole board to free him after 48 years in jail.
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30-03-23, 17:40 | #5 |
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Re: Parole DENIED AGAIN For Notorious Prisoner Charles Bronson
Parole DENIED AGAIN For Notorious Prisoner Charles Bronson
Charles Bronson: Notorious inmate loses latest bid for freedom BBC 31 MAR 2023 Notorious prisoner Charles Bronson has lost his latest bid to be freed from jail, the Parole Board has said. The panel said he had a "history of persistent rule-breaking", "lives his life rigidly by his own rules" and was not suitable for release. Bronson, 70, from Luton, was jailed aged 22 for armed robbery in 1974. Now one of the UK's longest-serving prisoners, he took part in one of the country's first public parole hearings earlier this month. Bronson, who changed his surname to Salvador in 2014, is currently held at HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes and has earned a reputation as a violent and dangerous inmate. In a document detailing the decision, the Parole Board said: "After considering the circumstances of his offending, the progress that Mr Salvador has made while in custody and the evidence presented at the hearings, the panel was not satisfied that Mr Salvador was suitable for release. "Nor did the panel recommend to the Secretary of State that he should be transferred to an open prison." Responding to the decision, Bronson's son George Bamby said: "I would have loved Charlie to have been released but completely respect the decision of the Parole Board." Bronson has had a film made about him and several books have been published during his time in prison The panel said psychologists instructed by Bronson's legal representative were "unequivocal in their view" that he no longer required secure placement at HMP Woodhill. "It is unclear whether the strong external controls of custody are mainly responsible or whether his attitudes have genuinely changed," the board said. "The panel could not be satisfied that Mr Salvador has the skills to manage his risk of future violence until he has been extensively tested outside of his current highly restricted environment. "In the particular circumstances of this case the panel observed that there is an identified pathway for Salvador in custody and the evidence supported such a move within a closed prison. "This is a pivotal point in Mr Salvador's sentence when his motivation to desist from violence is at its highest." A hearing in 2017 also refused Bronson parole Bronson has spent most of the past 48 years behind bars - apart from two brief periods of freedom during which he reoffended - for a string of thefts, firearms and violent offences, including 11 hostage-taking incidents in nine different sieges. Victims included governors, doctors, staff and, on one occasion, his own solicitor. Bronson was handed a discretionary life sentence with a minimum term of four years in 2000 for taking a prison teacher at HMP Hull hostage for 44 hours. Since then, the Parole Board has repeatedly refused to direct his release. Three parole judges considered his case during a hearing at HMP Woodhill, while members of the press and public watched part of the proceedings on a live stream from the Royal Courts of Justice in central London. Bronson is currently held in HMP Woodhill, a Category A prison in Milton Keynes Bronson told the panel he loved a "rumble" and enjoyed mass brawls in prison, but insisted he was now a reformed prisoner, had found solace in art and was a man of "peace". He likened his experience in front of the Parole Board to being on BBC programme, The Apprentice. The panel was told Bronson spent 23 hours a day in his cell with limited contact with other inmates. But it heard he would not cope with being released - even highlighting that he had never used a cash machine. Bronson told the Parole Board hearing: "Of the 50 years I have been in prison I have probably deserved a good 35 of it. "Because I have been very naughty. Not naughty-naughty but just naughty. "Give me a chance, a break, to prove to you people that I am just a normal geezer wanting to get on with his life."
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