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-- [NEWS] Youth Charged Over Sex Attacks


Posted by AssyrianTrancer on Aug-19-2005 16:18:

[NEWS] Youth Charged Over Sex Attacks

A TEENAGER has been charged over a series of sex attacks in Melbourne's northern and eastern suburbs over the last three months.

The 19-year-old Broadmeadows student was formally charged in an out-of-sessions court hearing tonight with 29 offences stemming from six alleged attacks.
The charges include seven counts of rape, 10 of abduction, two of assault with intent to rape, six of indecent assault, three counts of theft, and aggravated burglary.

Police allege he followed a 37-year-old woman into her house in Carlton last Wednesday, and confronted her in her hallway in front of her three-year-old daughter.

He allegedly demanded money from her and forced her to go upstairs to her bedroom, where he threatened her but ran away after he was disturbed by the woman's other daughter, aged five.

Victoria Police's sexual crimes squad searched the teenager's home and car early today and took some items.


The youth was arrested and interviewed at St Kilda Police complex and agreed to a DNA test, police said.
"It is the police case that forensic evidence will be used to identify him to all other matters, other than the Carlton matter," Detective Sergeant Paul Tierney said.

Det Sgt Tierney told the hearing tonight the youth allegedly forced his way into the car of a woman parked in a Hawthorn lane on June 29 after asking to use her mobile phone, then sexually assaulted her.

He allegedly sexually assaulted three other women, a 45-year-old walking her two dogs in Coburg on May 5, a 21-year-old walking home in Brunswick on May 15, and a 45-year-old walking home after shopping in Fitzroy on May 23, after dragging them into nearby parks.

Police also allege that on April 24, the youth grabbed a 17-year-old woman walking in Coolaroo, told her he was carrying a knife and sexually assaulted her.

Det Sgt Tierney said police had collected DNA samples from all the alleged attacks, except the Carlton home invasion.

Police at the Melbourne Custody Centre hearing tonight opposed bail, saying the teenager was an "unacceptable risk to the community".

Bail justice David Dodd remanded him in custody to face Melbourne Magistrates Court on August 22.


Posted by AssyrianTrancer on Aug-19-2005 16:20:

Attacks

He Attacked 2 Many Women He Should be Locked Up


Posted by Shakka on Aug-19-2005 17:01:

While 19 is technically a teenager, I wouldn't stress that fact. A 19 year old is technically and legally an adult and should face charges as such.


Posted by AssyrianTrancer on Aug-19-2005 17:08:

Tru

Thats True


Posted by ilya49 on Aug-19-2005 18:07:

quote:
17-year-old woman



lol


Posted by occrider on Aug-19-2005 19:10:

Re: Attacks

quote:
Originally posted by AssyrianTrancer
He Attacked 2 Many Women He Should be Locked Up


Lol too many? What's the cutoff?


Posted by George Smiley on Aug-19-2005 19:13:

Re: Re: Attacks

quote:
Originally posted by occrider
Lol too many? What's the cutoff?

Normal women: 1
Chav women: as many as you want!


Posted by occrider on Aug-19-2005 19:19:

Re: Re: Re: Attacks

quote:
Originally posted by George Smiley
Normal women: 1
Chav women: as many as you want!


quote:

CHAV
The press in Britain has recently been having fun mocking a group for which pejorative descriptions have been created such as �non-educated delinquents� and �the burgeoning peasant underclass�. The subjects of these derogatory descriptions are said to be set apart by ignorance, fecklessness, mindless violence and bad taste.
To illustrate the last of these, critics point to their style of dress: a love of flashy gold jewellery (hooped earrings, thick neck chains, sovereign rings and heavy bangles, which all may be lumped together under the term bling-bling); the wearing of white trainers (in what is called �prison white�, so clean that they look new); clothes in fashionable brands with very prominent logos; and baseball caps, frequently in Burberry check, a favourite style. The women, the Daily Mail wrote recently in a characteristic burst of maidenly distaste, �pull their shoddily dyed hair back in that ultra-tight bun known as a �council-house facelift�, wear skirts too short for their mottled blue thighs, and expose too much of their distressingly flabby midriffs�.
This upsurge of popular distaste towards one group may be evidence for a cultural shift back towards a class-ridden British society�at least the fear that it might be so is causing some alarm in liberal circles. Critics point to the copying of the style by many younger television celebrities as a further dumbing-down of that medium. Much of the attention is due to the experience of a Web site, which was intended to be humorous but which was infiltrated by extremists who threatened to turn it into a hate site.
From a linguistic perspective the most interesting aspect is the wide variety of local names given to the type. Scots call them neds (often said to be an acronym of �non-educated delinquents�, but that�s a folk etymology, given credence by being mentioned as fact during a debate in the Scottish parliament in 2003; it�s actually from an abridged form of the given name Edward, which was attached to this group in the period of the teddy-boys, who dressed in a version of Edwardian costume), while Liverpudlians prefer scallies (a term of long-standing for a boisterous, disruptive or irresponsible young man); Kev is common around London (presumably from the given name Kevin, common among this group and popularised through the portrayal on his television show by the comedian Harry Enfield of an idiotic teenager with that name). Other terms recorded from various parts of the country are smicks, spides, moakes and steeks (all from Belfast), plus bazzas, scuffheads, stigs, skangers, yarcos, and kappa slappers (girls who wear Kappa brand tracksuits, slapper being British slang for a promiscuous or vulgar woman).
The term that has become especially widely known in recent weeks, at least in southern England, is the one borrowed for the name of the Web site, chav. A writer in the Independent thought it derived from the name of the town of Chatham in Kent, where the term is best known and probably originated. It is also commonly said that it's an acronym, either from �Council House And Violent� or �Cheltenham Average� (the word being widely known in that area). As usual, we must treat supposed acronymic origins with the greatest suspicion; these examples are definitely recent after-the-event inventions as attempts to explain the word, though very widely known and believed.
But it seems that the word is from a much older underclass, the gypsies, many of whom have lived in that area for generations. Chav is almost certainly from the Romany word for a child, chavi, recorded from the middle of the nineteenth century. We know it was being used as a term of address to an adult man a little later in the century, but it hasn�t often been recorded in print since and its derivative chav is new to most people.
Other terms for the class also have Romany connections; another is charver, Romany for prostitute. Yet another is the deeply insulting pikey, presumably from the Kentish dialect term for gypsy that was borrowed from turnpike, so a person who travels the roads.
Did chavi die out, only to be reinvented recently? That seems hardly likely from the written and anecdotal evidence, and many correspondents report that it is well known to them as a spoken term in various parts of the country; what we�re seeing is a term that has been in active but inconspicuous use for the last 150 years suddenly bursting out into wider popular use in a new sense through circumstances we don�t fully understand.
http://www.worldwidewords.org/topicalwords/tw-cha2.htm


Now what you said makes sense.



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