Given that we now know just about everything about the increasingly less suspicious suspect in the Joanne Yates case, even down to his taste in literature, at least that's pretty much killed off the excuse that the law forces the MSM to produce crime reports stripped of any mention of actual criminals.
Hey, if it's legal to have Professor Louis D'Crus on to talk about how the suspect's taste in fine wine makes him just like Harold Shipman, I think the MSM can stretch to mentioning a few details about a guy who guns down a cop in front of twenty witnesses.
Hey, if it's legal to have Professor Louis D'Crus on to talk about how the suspect's taste in fine wine makes him just like Harold Shipman, I think the MSM can stretch to mentioning a few details about a guy who guns down a cop in front of twenty witnesses.
3 comments:
I can't help comparing the wall to wall speculation extruded by the media about Mr Jefferies, with the utmost discretion they are showing in recealing background information, and local colour, pertaining to the suspects arrested for the murder a few days ago of the teenage Sierra Leonian in Peckham.
The bland statement that 'Trident was investigating' was the clue that gave the game away...
Yep, whenever I see that line I switch off. After all, if the BBC won't show an interest, why should I bother?
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