This is University of Oxford - Carolyn Hoyle!
Talking about evasion and escape just related to "evading taxes" or "escape the death penalty" 🤣🤦♂️
https://t.me/PrisonBreakFacts
The only one time they write about prison break, they write this
After eleven years without executions St. Christopher and St. Nevis hanged 💩 a man in 1985, but then the next hanging 💩did not take place until 1998 and none have followed. The last execution in St. Vincent was in 1995, the same year that St. Lucia resumed executions after a lapse of nine years. None have been carried out since then, although in 2006 the Prime Minister of St. Lucia issued a statement to say that his government would seek constitutional reform ‘To ensure that the death penalty is enforced’.193 The execution of a man for murder in the Bahamas in 1996 was the first since 1984. Then further executions were carried out in 1998 and 2000, although none since. Following the fatal stabbing of a prison guard during a prison escape in January 2007, there have been public calls for the resumption of executions, supported by the Prime Minister. In both Dominica and Antigua-Barbuda, where the last executions were in 1996 and 1991 respectively, there is no indication that either island state is intending to abolish the death penalty. Indeed, since the last execution several men have had death warrants read to them in preparation for execution and have only been saved by decisions of the JCPC ....
Which is an epic fail! because the only time you talk about that, you talk about evasion + killed guard 🤣🤦♂️
Exactly like she did with Australia, ignoring such detail (not in the book, but in another document...)
https://t.me/DeathSentenceFAQ/229
Talking about evasion and escape just related to "evading taxes" or "escape the death penalty" 🤣🤦♂️
https://t.me/PrisonBreakFacts
The only one time they write about prison break, they write this
After eleven years without executions St. Christopher and St. Nevis hanged 💩 a man in 1985, but then the next hanging 💩did not take place until 1998 and none have followed. The last execution in St. Vincent was in 1995, the same year that St. Lucia resumed executions after a lapse of nine years. None have been carried out since then, although in 2006 the Prime Minister of St. Lucia issued a statement to say that his government would seek constitutional reform ‘To ensure that the death penalty is enforced’.193 The execution of a man for murder in the Bahamas in 1996 was the first since 1984. Then further executions were carried out in 1998 and 2000, although none since. Following the fatal stabbing of a prison guard during a prison escape in January 2007, there have been public calls for the resumption of executions, supported by the Prime Minister. In both Dominica and Antigua-Barbuda, where the last executions were in 1996 and 1991 respectively, there is no indication that either island state is intending to abolish the death penalty. Indeed, since the last execution several men have had death warrants read to them in preparation for execution and have only been saved by decisions of the JCPC ....
Which is an epic fail! because the only time you talk about that, you talk about evasion + killed guard 🤣🤦♂️
Exactly like she did with Australia, ignoring such detail (not in the book, but in another document...)
https://t.me/DeathSentenceFAQ/229