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14.03.2023 - 22:19 / etcanada.com
Gary Glitter is back in prison.
The New York Times reported on Tuesday that the former glam rock star was sent back behind bars on Monday for violating the terms of his probation in the U.K.
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Glitter had only just been released from prison last month, after serving half of a 16-year sentence for sexually abusing three young girls.
The remainder of his sentence was to be served under probation, and he had been fitted with a GPS tag, along with other restrictions.
“Protecting the public is our number one priority,” the British Ministry of Justice said on Tuesday. “That’s why we set tough license conditions and so when offenders breach them, we don’t hesitate to return them to custody.” The statement did not specify what the singer, whose real name is Paul Gadd, did to violate the terms of his release.
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The musician, whose real name is Paul Gadd, was arrested in 2012 amid an investigation into accusations of sexual abuse by longtime BBC host Jimmy Savile.
Gadd was convicted in 2015 on one count of attempted rape, four counts of indecent assault and one count of sexual intercourse with a girl under the age of 13.
As a musician, his most famous song was “Rock and Roll Part 2”, which had been commonly played at professional sports matches, and was prominently featured in the 2019 film “Joker”.
The oft-rumored ‘Reba’ reboot has yet another clue
Glitter was found to have been looking at girls in leotards and short skirts in ballet shoes and others doing gymnastic exercises. Glitter later claimed he was only watching the videos because of his interest in the performing arts. However, parole officers believed it showed Glitter could still have an interest in young girls.
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Joe Leydon Film Critic Just a skosh more than a decade after Fede Alvarez’s carnage-crammed “Evil Dead” reboot jump-started the horror franchise spawned by Sam Raimi’s low-budget 1981 cult favorite, writer-director Lee Cronin has delivered his own imaginatively scary take on the “Book of the Dead” mythos with “Evil Dead Rise.” A kinda-sorta sequel, it offers incontrovertible evidence that predatory and possessive bogeymen are just as frightful when their hunting ground shifts from a cabin in a dark corner of the woods to a gone-to-seed apartment building in downtown Los Angeles. Said building — aptly described by one holdout resident as a “condemned dump” — just happens to have been built on the site of a long-closed bank that evidently shuttered before certain mystical merchandise could be retrieved from its vault. Specifically, we’re talking about yet another Book of the Dead: an ancient tome with a binding of human skin that can serve as an entryway for savage supernatural creatures eager to infect and forage in our world. This particular edition was locked away along with some 1923-era vinyl recordings of a clergyman’s warnings about the dangers of even glancing between the covers. Trouble is, all it takes is an earthquake, and a curious adolescent living with his family several stories above the buried material, for all hell to break loose.
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Gary Glitter will now die behind bars after being recalled to prison just weeks after his release, the former head of Scotland Yard's Paedophile Unit has said. Mike Hames predicted the 1970s glam rocker, real name Paul Gadd, would now spend the rest of his life in jail as he will always represent a danger to children. The Probation Service confirmed on Monday that the 78-year-old paedophile was being recalled to prison following a breach of his licence conditions.
The family of a murdered teenager said they are "delighted" their loved one’s knife killer has been kept behind bars. John Wilson – who stabbed 17-year-old Michelle Stewart to death in the East Ayrshire village of Drongan in 2008 – has been refused parole but can reapply in just eight months' time.
Gary Glitter will likely spend the rest of his life in prison after being recalled to jail, the former head of Scotland Yard’s Paedophile Unit has said. Mike Hames said disgraced 1970s pop star Glitter, real name Paul Gadd, would always represent a danger to children and a return to custody was appropriate. The Probation Service said on Monday that Glitter was being recalled to prison following a breach of his licence conditions.
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Gary Glitter has been recalled to prison for violating the terms of his licence, according to the Probation Service. Glitter had reportedly tried to access the dark web on his smartphone. After completing half of a 16-year prison sentence for sexually assaulting three schoolgirls, the musician, whose real name is Paul Gadd, was released in February.
Gary Glitter has been sent back to prison after breaching his licence conditions, the Probation Service has said, just weeks after the paedophile pop star was freed from jail. The disgraced 78-year-old was released from Dorset’s HMP The Verne in February after serving just half of his 16-year sentence for sexually abusing three young girls. But footage filmed by another prisoner at his bail hostel emerged this weekend showing Glitter – whose real name is Paul Gadd – using a smartphone and talking about accessing the dark web, which allows users to access illegal and violent content.
freed automatically halfway through a fixed-term sentence and was subject to licence conditions. On Monday, the Probation Service said Glitter had been recalled due to a breach of his licence conditions. A spokesperson said: “Protecting the public is our number one priority.
The Sun. The Probation Service has tonight confirmed he has ‘been recalled to prison after a breach of his licence conditions’ a spokesperson said. He was caught in a photo published by the newspaper asking how to avoid detection when web browsing on a smartphone.
Paedophile Gary Glitter has been recalled to prison following an alleged breach of his licence conditions.The 78 year old, who had a string of chart hits in the 1970s, had been freed in February after being jailed in 2015 for sexually abusing three schoolgirls. He left HMP The Verne – a low security category C jail in Portland, Dorset – following eight years behind bars, having served half of his 16-year sentence.
16 years in prison in 2015 after he was found guilty of sexually abusing three young girls, all of whom were under the age of 13, The Post previously reported. This time, he allegedly was caught trying to “access the dark web on his phone,” according to The Daily Mail.Glitter, who was born Paul Francis Gadd, was released in February after only serving half of his sentence.He was recently spotted in a bail hostel in the United Kingdom, where he was allegedly typing, “how to avoid detection when web browsing” on a cell phone, according to the Daily Mail.The outlet reported that Glitter will head back to the clinker on Monday because he breached the conditions that were agreed upon when he was initially released just last month.
Gary Glitter is back behind bars for breaching his bail agreement, a month after he was released from prison early.Glitter, whose real name is Paul Gadd, was jailed for 16 years in February 2015 after being found guilty of sexually abusing three young girls between 1975 and 1980.He was sentenced for attempted rape, four counts of indecent assault, and one for having sex with a girl under 13. During sentencing, Judge Alistair McCreath said he could find “no real evidence” that Glitter had atoned for his crimes.Last month, Glitter was freed from prison after serving half his 16-year sentence.
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