Teen girls bash sexual predator with bats after despicable abuse
Teen girls bash sexual predator with bats after despicable abuse Fri, 23 Jul 2021, 11:25AM
Brenton George Healey, 34, of Mildura, pleaded guilty in the County Court of Victoria to 14 charges. (Photo / Supplied)
Teen girls bash sexual predator with bats after despicable abuse Fri, 23 Jul 2021, 11:25AM
Warning: This article deals with sexual abuse. Helplines can be found at the bottom of the page.
Two teenage girls stormed the house of a sexual predator and beat him up with his own bats until he begged them, I ll do whatever you want.
Brenton George Healey, 34, of Mildura, pleaded guilty in the County Court of Victoria to 14 charges, including two counts of supplying addictive drugs to a child and two counts of sexual penetration of a child aged under 16, between March and June last year.
Teenage girls beat Snapchat paedo with bats after he begged for sex acts
dailystar.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailystar.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
For the Record, July 13, 2021
havredailynews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from havredailynews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Times-Picayune of George W. Healy, Jr s book,
A Lifetime On Deadline. Sunday afternoon Moe Waldron of the Times threw an open-house farewell for the press and victory celebration for the defendant at Mom s Good Eats. Terry and Leonard Flettich, Jeff and Nina Sulzer, Jerry Cohen, Hugh and Paula Aynesworth, Mike Parks, Jim Phelan, Bill Block and his young and pregnant wife, Judy, John Mourain, Rosemary and Jud James, Doc Queeg of the UP and perhaps twenty others were there, including some of the local newspaper fellows, who were indulging in a goodly share of drunken crowing over the local editorializing. It got a bit thick after a while and I could not help commenting that although the editorials were indeed called for and appropriate, it was surprising that the papers had been able to restrain themselves for a period of two years, since they now asserted, We don t think that charges ever should have been preferred against Mr. Shaw . . . and We have had to bite our tongue in th
by Charlotte Allen Print this article
John Caldwell Calhoun (1782-1850), the South Carolina senator who was slavery’s most vociferous defender (he called it a “positive good”) and whose espousal of state “nullification” of federal laws is said to have led directly to Southern secession and the Civil War, is probably today’s most canceled U.S. historical figure. A statue of Calhoun in downtown Charleston, erected by Confederacy sentimentalists during the late 19th century and standing 115 feet tall in its longest-lasting version, was one of the first of the many Confederate monuments in the South to be toppled during the race-related urban turmoil of the summer of 2020. Meanwhile, in 2017, Yale University, from which Calhoun graduated with high honors in 1804, renamed a residential college that had been named after him in 1933.