Spelade
-
James English, The Anything Goes Show. James talks to Jane about her life before and after her Lottery win at the tender age of 17 and all the pressures that have come with it.
You can check out all Audio & Video episodes on iTunes and my YouTube page, James English - Anything Goes Podcast Show https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkdiBNdMSiQeT8aD7gXWgvA/videos?view_as=subscriber
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
Anything goes with James English Ep/97 The story of reformed criminal Stephen Gillen. Stephen Gillen, a reformed high security category A prisoner involved in organised crime that ended up costing him a 17 year prison sentence. Stephen had a very troubled upbringing in Ireland before moving to London and that's when his life of crime began. Stephen was in and out of prison all his whole life and battled with his own demons everyday that eventually led him to having addition problems with Drugs. After receiving 17 years in prison Stephen decided to use his time inside to turn his life around and has worked relentlessly to become a better person and it worked as Stephen is now a successful entrepreneur in the areas or business and life mastery and travels the world doing charity work. Stephen Gillen’s website www.stephengillen.com This episode is sponsored by HIF kitchens https://www.hifkitchens.co.uk/?fbclid...
You can contact James English on his social media platforms ⬇️⬇️ http://instagram.com/jamesenglish2 http://twitter.com/jamesenglish0 http://Facebook.com/Jamesenglish11
You can check out all video episodes on my YouTube page, James English - Anything Goes Podcast Show https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkdiBNdMSiQeT8aD7gXWgvA/videos?view_as=subscriber
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
James English, The Anything Goes Show. Ep 39.
James speaks to Joe about his upbringing and his 20 year fight for freedom for the crime he didn’t commit where 6 members of the Doyle family where Killed. Joe escaped from prison 4 times to protest his innocence and while on the run from one of his escapes he handcuffed himself to the front gates at Buckingham palace.
Follow me on social media 🔽🔽🔽
http://instagram.com/jamesenglish2
http://twitter.com/jamesenglish0
http://Facebook.com/Jamesenglish11
You can check out all Video episodes on my YouTube page, James English - Anything Goes Podcast Show https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkdiBNdMSiQeT8aD7gXWgvA/videos?view_as=subscriber
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
In 1996 Darren Barden was at home on a Monday night when there was a knock on the door. He was stabbed 20 times by two men and his best-selling book "Let's skip to the good bits", documents a 20-year journey to get his life back.
This is a very candid interview about the consequences of knife crime and Darren talks very honestly about what the attack did to him and his family.
He now uses his experiences to inspire other people.
Darren's book is here :
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Lets-Skip-Good-Bits-Courageous/dp/1527221628/ref=sr_1_1?crid=1TJH46APX2PE8&dchild=1&keywords=darren+barden&qid=1599304180&sprefix=darren+barden%2Caps%2C152&sr=8-1
Darren's youtube channel and podcast :
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7YtScSpLgttKJ2BengPmSw
Change your life, put down your knife campaign :
https://www.facebook.com/groups/668677394003375
-
“You can only get a bollocking if you're listening.” This was the advice given to Kevin Gleeson who went to Military prison. We talk about how he went from being last at cross country in school to joining the Royal Marines. He talks about life as a marine, what he did when he went AWOL and life inside Colchester military prison.
-
Lee Ryan was a car thief from Leicester who stole cars for various people, including arms dealers in overseas countries. He also stole vehicles for various crime-related work. We talk about the logistics of stealing cars and how that's changed from the nineties when he was at the height of his criminal career. He was dubbed by the press as the “lotto lag.”When he was in prison, he prayed and asked God to make him a multi-millionaire. He won 6.5 million quid on the lottery and as his cellmate predicted, things did not end well...
-
This is part of 2 of a chat with ex-bank robber Vinnie Bradish.
We talk about prison violence and the differences between different category prisons, getting out of prison after a long term sentence, and trying to adapt to a more normal life. And we hear what Vinnie is doing now and it's fascinating...
www.conversationswithcriminals.com
-
Anything goes with James English Ep/103 Britain’s most notorious bank robber vinnie Bradish tells his story. As one half of the notorious Bradish brothers, Vinnie typically celebrated one of his many successful armed robberies with a smile for the camera and a bottle of champagne in his hand. They spent their loot on cars, Caribbean holidays and drugs. But after spending many years in prison, Bradish one of Britain’s most prolific bank robbers, claimed to have learned the error of his ways and has now tried to turn his life around. The Bradish brothers have allegedly robbed over 200 banks and his brother Sean was given a life sentence after robbing a bank on day release from prison.
You can contact James English on his social media platforms
http://instagram.com/jamesenglish2
http://twitter.com/jamesenglish0
http://Facebook.com/Jamesenglish11
You can check out all video episodes on my YouTube page, James English - Anything Goes Podcast Show https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkdiBNdMSiQeT8aD7gXWgvA/videos?view_as=subscriber
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
The small town of Ballygar was shocked when 73 year old bachelor farmer William Mannion was found stabbed to death on his kitchen floor. A local youth was responsible. He was brought to trial, found guilty and received the mandatory life sentence.
How was it then, that 17 years later, the same man would be able to kill another elderly resident of Ballygar, Nancy Nolan (84) in a senseless and motiveless crime? This week, we look at the murders committed by Thomas Murray in East Galway and how life sentences in Ireland don't really mean life.
Our podcast Promo this week is from the new podcast Holocaust: Lost Voices which brings you stories you may not have heard from the darkest chapter of Europe's history. Be sure to subscribe today!
Find us on Facebook or Twitter!
With thanks to our supporters on Patreon! If you would like to support the podcast, head on over to Patreon.com.
Theme Music:
Quinn’s Song: The Dance Begins by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Sources:
Tom Connolly, Detective: A Life Upholding the Law (Dublin: O'Brien Press, 2015) Purchase here
Barry Cummins, Lifers (Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 2004) Purchase here
The Olden Report, http://www.justice.ie/en/JELR/OldenReport.pdf/Files/OldenReport.pdf (April 2001)
“Man jailed for murder committed while on day release” in The Irish Times https://www.irishtimes.com/news/man-jailed-for-murder-committed-while-on-day-release-1.1119595 6 December 2000
Ciaran Tierney, “Convicted murdered is questioned about taxi driver killing” in The Irish Times https://www.irishtimes.com/news/convicted-murderer-is-questioned-about-taxi-driver-killing-1.317571 13 July 2001
Martha Kearns, “Prison chief warned murderer would 'kill again'” in The Irish Independent https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/prison-chief-warned-murderer-would-kill-again-26079544.html 7 July 2001
Lorna Higgins, “Family of murdered woman believe gardai talking to the wrong man” in The Irish Times https://www.irishtimes.com/news/family-of-murdered-woman-believe-gardai-talking-to-the-wrong-man-1.1128374 30 November 2002
Declan Tierney, “New Leads in 20 year old murder” in The Connacht Tribune http://claregalway.info/nuacht/news/2017/12/new-leads-20-year-old-murder/ 14 December 2017
http://www.citizensinformation.ie/en/justice/criminal_law/criminal_trial/types_of_sentences.html#le06e6
Conor Gallagher, “New 12-year minimum sentence for murder to be set” in The Irish Times https://www.irishtimes.com/news/crime-and-law/new-12-year-minimum-sentence-for-murder-to-be-set-1.3490994 10 May 2018
Parole Bill (2016) https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/bills/bill/2016/29/
“Sentence Review Group” The Irish Times https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/letters/sentence-review-group-1.44488 30 April 1996 -
Anything goes with James English Ep/223
Football Superstar to Alcoholic - Everton Player Billy Kenny Tells His
You can contact James English on his social media platforms ⬇️⬇️
http://instagram.com/jamesenglish2
http://twitter.com/jamesenglish0
http://Facebook.com/Jamesenglish11
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
On Saturday, January 13, 2007, 28-year-old Catherine Marlow went into the office to catch up on a backlog of work. When she failed to turn up for a prearranged lunch, friends grew alarmed. Local police followed a trail of blood from the office reception area to find Catherine’s body in a shower cubicle. Scotland Yard was called in and a major homicide investigation launched. Was the killer someone known to Catherine? Or a random stranger off the street? And what was the motive for this brutal attack? Scotland Yard detectives were determined to find the answers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
It's the Swinging Sixties, and in Bromley, Kent, a newly married woman is slaughtered after inviting an unexpected guest in for a cup of coffee. But with no murder weapon and no fingerprints, police struggle to find the culprit...until they see a familiar name on a Christmas card written to the victim... We join Margaret Pereira, the first woman on the Scientific staff at the Metropolitan Science lab, as she pieces together the evidence to solve the mystery of the Bromley Bride murder. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
We tell the story of the biggest train heist ever in Wyoming, USA- the Cowboy State. This legendary hold up took place in June 1899, when masked bandits burst onto an overland train in the dead of night to rob its lucrative cargo, a crime thought to be linked to Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
-
In February 2011, police on patrol in Blackheath, London, spot a burning car half-hidden up a quiet lane. When the fire is put out and they’re able to investigate, they discover the burned body of a young man in the boot. With no way to identify him from the charred remains, they set about tracing the vehicle registration and find it belongs to a young man called Gagandip Singh. Gagandip told his family he went to a party the night before, but he didn’t come home and hasn’t been seen since. Is the body in the car the missing Gagandip? Or has he committed a terrible crime and fled the scene? DCI Damian Allain knows that the next 24 hours will be crucial to finding the killer. What they uncover is a chilling tale of a love triangle, a honey-trap, and a plot for revenge taken too far. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
In 1891, just three years after the serial killer known as Jack the Ripper carried out his horrific crimes in Whitechapel, another sadistic murderer began targeting sex-workers in a different area of London. The Lambeth Poisoner had killed four young women before Scotland Yard detectives began to suspect murder. This time they were determined that the prolific killer would not escape justice. The task of catching the poisoner eventually fell to one of Scotland Yard's star detectives, as Inspected John Bennett Tunbridge began the most challenging and high-profile case of his career. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
Larry Lawton served 11 years in some of the toughest prisons in America for stealing over $18M in diamonds. But since then, he’s also become the only ex-con in US history to be sworn in as an honorary police officer! He is also the only ex-con to ever be recognized by the United States Congress for helping young people and law enforcement agencies with The Reality Check Program he founded. Larry is the author of Gangster Redemption: How America’s Most Notorious Jewel Robber Got Rich, Got Caught, and Got His Life Back on Track, a book that chronicles his life and his experiences behind bars.
In this episode, Larry gives an eye-opening account of the American penal system. He shares how his experiences in prison pushed him to work on prison reform which eventually led him to being named an honorary police officer. Larry’s smart and brutally honest approach makes for an educational and interesting episode that is bound to keep you hooked! -
Early in his career, the great Scotland Yard detective Robert Fabian pitched himself against a suave and daring cat-burglar. Robert Augustus Delaney was responsible for a one-man crime wave targeting London’s wealthiest homes in the 1920s. His exploits even gained the admiration of the police who were chasing him. But behind the glamorous exterior of the gentleman thief, lay the secrets of a dark past. For Fabian, capturing the elusive thief was an opportunity not just to put a master criminal behind bars, but also to make his own reputation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
In 2010 the body of young MI6 agent Gareth Williams was found locked inside a holdall. Scotland Yard was called in to investigate, but from the beginning it was clear that MI6 wanted detectives to keep their distance. Some claim that Gareth somehow climbed into the bag and died by accident...but that doesn’t explain how it got locked from the outside. Was Gareth Williams’ death the result of a foreign intelligence hit? And if so, how could Scotland Yard possibly investigate it without upsetting the most powerful espionage agencies in the world? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
-
From biker gangs to prison, Mahmood Fazal is a Walkley award-winning writer on a mission to advocate for the voices we don’t hear. After abandoning his role as the sergeant-at-arms of a Motorcycle Club, Mahmood has devoted his life to bare-knuckle stories that challenge our views on crime, violence, imprisonment and radicalisation.
Over 2 episodes Brent hears his story of redemption.
Part 2 drops next Monday
Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/theclink
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
-
In 1987, Brian McGrath disappeared. His wife, Vera, said he'd gone to Holland to find work. That he was abusive and delusional. But 6 years later, their eldest daughter Veronica told police that her mother, and her fiance at the time, had beaten Brian McGrath to death and buried and burned his body at their home in Coole, Co. Westmeath.
Who murdered Brian McGrath?
Find us on Facebook or Twitter!
With thanks to our supporters on Patreon!
Theme Music:
Quinn’s Song: The Dance Begins Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Additional Music: Allemande (Sting) by Wahneta Meixsell. Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Sources:
Barry Cummins, The Cold Case Files: on the trial of Ireland's undetected killers (Dublin: Gill and McMillan, 2012) Purchase here
Sandra Mara, Dead Men Talk (Dublin: Poolbeg Press, 2016) Purchase here
Veronica McGrath (with Yvonne Kinsella), Witness to Evil (Dublin: Hachette Books, 2011) Purchase here
DPP v Vera McGrath [2013] IECCA 12
“Vera McGrath gets 18 months for helping dispose of husband” in The Irish Times https://www.irishtimes.com/news/crime-and-law/courts/vera-mcgrath-gets-18-months-for-helping-dispose-of-husband-1.1821924 (5 June 2014)
“Vera McGrath sentenced to 18 months for helping to dispose of husband's body” in The Irish Independent https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/courts/vera-mcgrath-sentenced-to-18-months-for-helping-to-dispose-of-husbands-body-30333389.html (5 June 2014)
“McGrath sentenced for helping to dispose husband's body” from RTE.ie https://www.rte.ie/news/2014/0605/621781-vera-mcgrath/ (5 June 2014)
“McGrath convicted of murdering husband in cold case trial” in The Irish Examiner https://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/ireland/mcgrath-convicted-of-murdering-husband-in-cold-case-trial-466911.html (26 July 2010)
Natasha Reid, “McGrath told gardai 'I helped beat and bury my husband'” in The Evening Herald https://www.herald.ie/news/mcgrath-told-gardai-i-helped-beat-and-bury-my-husband-27956419.html (9 July 2010)
Brian Kavanagh, “First cold case murder verdict is overturned” in The Evening Herald https://www.herald.ie/news/courts/first-cold-case-murder-verdict-is-overturned-29125220.html(12 March 2013) - Visa fler