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Topics - Lil angel

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1
Fun, Games And Silliness / Super
« on: May 11, 2024, 05:58:26 PM »
There was a Super Bowl football game between the big animals and the little animals. The big animals were crushing little animals. At half time the coach made a passionate speech to rally the little animals.  At the start of the second half the big animals had the ball. The first play, the elephant got stopped for no gain. The second play, the rhino was stopped for no gain. On third down, the hippo was thrown for a 5 yard loss.  The defense huddled around the coach and he asked excitedly, "Who stopped the elephant?"

"I did," said the centipede.

"Who stopped the rhino?"

"Uh, that was me too," said the centipede.

"And how about the hippo? Who hit him for a 5 yard loss?"

"That was me as well," said the centipede.

"SO WHERE WERE YOU THE FIRST HALF?" demanded the coach.

"Well," replied the centipede, "I was having my ankles taped."

2
THE TOP SEVEN THINGS OVERHEAD ON THE WISE MEN'S JOURNEY TO BETHLEHEM:
 
7 - Man, I'm starting to get a rush from this frankincense!

6 - You guys ever eat camel meat? I hear it tastes like chicken.

5 - You know, I used to go to school with a girl name Beth Lehem.

4 - What kind of name is Balthazar anyhow?  Phoenician?

3 - Hey, do you either of you know why "MYRRH" is spelled with a "Y" instead of a "U"?

2 - Okay, whose camel just spit?

1 - All this staring at a star while riding a camel is making me woozy.

3
THOU SHALT NOT SKIM FLAVOR FROM THE HOLIDAYS

I hate this time of year. Not for its crass commercialism and forced frivolity, but because it's the season when the food police come out with their wagging fingers and annual tips on how to get through the holidays without gaining 10 pounds. You can't pick up a magazine without finding a list of holiday eating do's and don'ts. Eliminate second helpings, high-calorie sauces and cookies made with butter, they say. Fill up on vegetable sticks, they say. Good grief. Is your favorite childhood memory of Christmas a carrot stick? I didn't think so. Isn't mine, either. A carrot was something you left for Rudolph.

I have my own list of tips for holiday eating. I assure you, if you follow them, you'll be fat and happy. So what if you don't make it to New Year's? Your pants won't fit anymore, anyway.

> About those carrot sticks. Avoid them. Anyone who puts carrots on a holiday buffet table knows nothing of the Christmas spirit. In fact, if you see carrots, leave immediately. Go next door, where they're serving rum balls.

> If something comes with gravy, use it. That's the whole point of gravy. Pour it on. Make a volcano out of your mashed potatoes. Fill it with gravy. Eat the volcano. Repeat.

> As for mashed potatoes, always ask if they're made with skim milk or whole milk. If it's skim, pass. Why bother? It's like buying a sports car with an automatic transmission.

> Do not have a snack before going to a party in an effort to control your eating. The whole point of going to a Christmas party is to eat other people's food for free. Lots of it. Hello? Remember college?

> Under no circumstances should you exercise between now and New Year's. You can do that in January when you have nothing else to do. This is the time for long naps, which you'll need after circling the buffet table while carrying a 10-pound plate of food and that vat of eggnog.

> If you come across something really good at a buffet table, like frosted Christmas cookies in the shape and size of Santa, position yourself near them and don't budge. Have as many as you can before becoming the center of attention. They're like a beautiful pair of shoes. You can't leave them behind. You're not going to see them again.

> Same for pies. Apple. Pumpkin. Mincemeat. Have a slice of each. Or, if you don't like mincemeat, have two apples and one pumpkin. Always have three. When else do you get to have more than one dessert? Labor Day?

> And one final tip: If you don't feel terrible when you leave the party or get up from the table, you haven't been paying attention. Reread tips. Start over. But hurry! Cookie-less January is just around the corner!

4
Fun, Games And Silliness / The priest
« on: March 30, 2024, 11:25:54 AM »
The elderly priest, speaking to the younger priest, said, "You had a good idea to replace the first four pews with plush bucket theater seats.  It worked like a charm.  The front of the church always fills first now."

The young priest nodded, and the old priest continued, "And you told me adding a little more beat to the music would bring young people back to church, so I supported you when you brought in that rock 'n' roll gospel choir. Now our services are consistently packed to the balcony."

"Thank you, Father," answered the young priest. "I am pleased that you are open to the new ideas of youth."

"All of these ideas have been well and good," said the elderly priest, "But I'm afraid you've gone too far with the drive-thru confessional."

"But, Father," protested the young priest, "My confessions have nearly doubled since I began that!"

"Yes," replied the elderly priest, "And I appreciate that. But the flashing neon sign, 'Toot 'n Tell or Go to Hell' canNOT stay on the church roof."

5
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12792589/protesters-Israeli-flags-Hamas-Jewish-Campaign-Against-Antisemitism-march.html

Tommy Robinson is arrested and escorted by more than a dozen police from Campaign Against Antisemitism march after he was told to stay away by organisers - as thousands gather in central London waving Israeli flags and holding 'Hamas made me Jewish'

    The protest will involve a 90-minute march starting at the Royal Courts of Justice
    READ: Palestine protesters defy hate speech warning with anti-Semitic banners

By Dan Woodland and Matt Strudwick

Published: 13:31, 26 November 2023 | Updated: 16:09, 26 November 2023

Tommy Robinson has been arrested today as he joined thousands of protesters who gathered in London during an anti-Semitism march despite being told by organisers to stay away.  The English Defence League founder was seen being escorted away from the march by police after arguing with officers for around 10 minutes outside Soho coffee shop opposite the Royal Courts of Justice.   The Met Police has been in frequent contact this week with the march's organisers who had raised concerns that Mr Robinson attending would 'cause fear for other participants'.

Scotland Yard arrested Mr Robinson after he refused to leave the area when asked to by police officers. He claimed to be there 'as a journalist' but his arrest was not due to this, the Met Police said.   A large group gathered outside the Royal Courts of Justice for the rally organised by  the volunteer-led charity Campaign Against Antisemitism.  The organisers have said it is the largest demonstration against anti-Semitism since 1936, with 104,000 estimated to be here.  'The same view has been voiced by others,' the Met Police wrote on X.

'As a result, he was spoken to and warned on more than one occasion that his continued presence in the area was likely to cause harassment, alarm and distress to others.  He was directed to leave the area but refused to do so. We'er aware that the man had suggested he was in the area as a journalist. This was not a relevant factor in his arrest.'

Prior to his arrest, the Mr Robinson said: 'Met Police attempting to intimidate me and stop me from reporting on the antisemitism march happening today in London. Absolute disgrace @metpoliceuk.'

BBC journalists defied bosses to attend the march with 'a large proportion of Jewish staff' said to have been in attendance.  Earlier this week senior managers at the broadcaster caused fury when they allegedly banned staff who work in news, current affairs or factual journalism or are senior leaders from attending the march.  A BBC insider told MailOnline 'every Jewish member of staff I know thinks it's a deplorable decision'. 

One member of staff, who felt nervous about going, told MailOnline: 'If I don’t go I’m letting my family and friends down. And for what? To uphold guidelines that have left Jewish colleagues feeling insecure.'

One BBC employee, who did not want to give his name, said: 'I’m here as a proud Jew but scared of living in Britain right now.  The same view has been voiced by others,' the Met Police wrote on X.

'As a result, he was spoken to and warned on more than one occasion that his continued presence in the area was likely to cause harassment, alarm and distress to others.  He was directed to leave the area but refused to do so. We'er aware that the man had suggested he was in the area as a journalist. This was not a relevant factor in his arrest.'

Prior to his arrest, the Mr Robinson said: 'Met Police attempting to intimidate me and stop me from reporting on the antisemitism march happening today in London. Absolute disgrace @metpoliceuk.'

BBC journalists defied bosses to attend the march with 'a large proportion of Jewish staff' said to have been in attendance.  Earlier this week senior managers at the broadcaster caused fury when they allegedly banned staff who work in news, current affairs or factual journalism or are senior leaders from attending the march.  A BBC insider told MailOnline 'every Jewish member of staff I know thinks it's a deplorable decision'. 

One member of staff, who felt nervous about going, told MailOnline: 'If I don’t go I’m letting my family and friends down. And for what? To uphold guidelines that have left Jewish colleagues feeling insecure.'

One BBC employee, who did not want to give his name, said: 'I’m here as a proud Jew but scared of living in Britain right now.  I’ve seen nothing in writing but the general feeling is BBC staff are banned from attending this today. Which is shocking. I’m worried I’d get sacked if I gave my name.  I’m worried about living in Britain right now. But I’m here to defy that and show my support. We are scared. We are worried.'

The man in his 40s, who lives in north London, added: 'It’s pretty surreal the numbers here. It’s also pretty surreal that in Britain we need a demonstration against anti-Semitism.  That’s sad in itself but also a sign of where we are.'

The group of a few thousand has been seen waving Israeli and Union flags and holding placards reading 'Never Again Is Now' and 'Zero Tolerance for Antisemites', while other posters read 'Rape is not resistance' and 'Hamas made me Jewish'.  Today's march comes after 18 demonstrators were arrested in the capital yesterday during a rally calling for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza with anti-Semitic banners and placards on display throughout the march.  Today's event, organised by the charity Campaign Against Antisemitism, will see protesters carry out a 90-minute march starting at the Royal Courts of Justice.  Boris Johnson, Rachel Riley, Vanessa Feltz, and Coronation Street star Maureen Lipman are also in attendance at the march. Mr Johnson visited Israel earlier this month alongside Australia's former prime minister Scott Morrison and warned 'we face a huge terrorist threat'.

The former prime minister told GB News: 'Whatever the rights and wrongs of what Israel has done, or is doing, I think that the anti-Semitism we have seen in some of the marches around Europe has really confirmed for me the absolutely human necessity for Israel to exist.'

Ms Lipman thought the turnout was 'amazing' and said it was 'great to come and show support'.  She told MailOnline: 'We dont want to be here for why we are here, but we have to be here.  As the Jewish community, we’re in shock. There has been a terrible reckoning. It has frightened all of us.  We’re in total shock still. David Baddiel is right, Jews don’t count. That’s why we have to march.'

Posting ahead of the event Jewish office manager Ryan Coleman, 55, has attended to support Israel.  He said: 'The right against anti-semitism is real. I have friends who have been abused in the street purely for being Jewish.  This is against hate. This is about being part of society in a peaceful way. I think it's going to send out a very strong message.  Tommy Robinson is not welcome here. He is a disgrace.'

Paul Redman, 32, has travelled from his home in Wembley. The builder said: 'The support will be amazing. We are fearful as Jewish people in this country and that's horrific. It's scary right now.'

A spokesperson for Campaign Against Antisemitism said: 'Week after week, central London has become a no-go zone for Jews.  We have witnessed mass criminality, including glorification of terrorism, support for banned terrorist organisations such as Hamas, and incitement to racial or religious hatred against Jews.'

They added: 'The sad truth is that Jews do not feel safe in our capital city.  Britain is known for its tolerance and decency, and we know that the people of this country stand with the Jewish community in this difficult time.'

Yesterday thousands of pro-Palestine protesters flooded the streets of Central London shouting a 'from the river to the sea' chant with children as young as five joining in.  Anti-Semitic banners and placards were on display as Met Police officers made arrests after issuing a hate speech warning which saw Arabic-speaking officers deployed to watch for offensive chants and images in the crowd.  'From the river to the sea' is considered to be highly inflammatory and some claim it's a call for Israel to not exist with signs at the protest displaying the same phrase.  Police distributed leaflets at the protest to warn attendees about what language and behaviour will not be tolerated but one protester said 'the leaflet from the police is a waste of time.  I don't know anybody who has read it or took the slightest bit of notice'.

A young woman was reportedly holding a hand-drawn placard which read 'stop doing what Hitler did to you' making a comparison between Israel's strikes on Gaza and the Holocaust perpetuated by the Nazis.  The police also arrested a man on suspicion of inciting racial hatred by carrying a placard with Nazi symbols on it.  Another man was arrested on suspicion of supporting a proscribed organisation after he was filmed wearing a green headband with Arabic writing, imitating the ones that Hamas wear.  Police posted on X, formerely known as Twitter, to say that when he was stopped by officers, 'multiple headbands' were found on him and he was arrested.  Campaign Against Antisemitism wrote on X yesterday: 'Today, London once again saw scenes of racism against Jews and calls for intifada on our streets.   Tomorrow, London will be a different city. One of tolerance and decency.'

6
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12786431/Oscar-Pistorius-WINS-bid-freedom-Paralympian-released-jail-shooting-girlfriend-Reeva-Steenkamp.html

Oscar Pistorius WINS his bid for freedom: Paralympian who shot dead Reeva Steenkamp ten years ago is set to be released from jail after Christmas and will undergo therapy for 'anger and gender-based violence'

    Paralympian repeatedly refused to admit he callously killed Reeva Steenkamp
    The Blade Runner, 37, killed Steenkamp in the early hours of Valentine's Day 2013
    He will have to undergo therapy for 'gender-based violence' as part of his parole

By Shekhar Bhatia

Published: 11:15, 24 November 2023 | Updated: 13:09, 24 November 2023

Murderer Oscar Pistorius was granted his freedom today after winning his bid for parole.  The Paralympian, who turned 37 this week, has repeatedly refused to admit he callously killed Reeva Steenkamp during an angry and violent outburst and has stuck to his claim that it was an accident.  His failure to come clean despite his murder conviction led Reeva’s grief-stricken mother to brand him ‘a liar who I hate so much.’

But whether Pistorius is a ruthless killer or made a terrible mistake on Valentine’s Day 2013 was not a consideration for parole officers, who allowed him back into public life after hearing he had served more than six-and-a-half years in custody of his 13-year sentence.  But the Blade Runner will still have to spend Christmas behind bars as psychologists and welfare officers assess him before his release on January 5 2024.  A representative of Steenkamp's mother, June, said outside the hearing that he has to undergo community service and 'therapy for gender-based violence.'

Rob Matthews, who sat beside Steenkamp's in-court lawyer Annade Theart-Hofmeyer, said: 'The conditions are correctional supervision. He is required to attend therapy for anger issues.'

He added that Pistorius was not allowed to leave the Waterkloof district, where he will be staying with his uncle Arnold in a palatial mansion, and his parole will last until September 5 2029.  Department of Corrections spokesperson Singabakho Nxumalo told reporters: 'Parole does not mean the end of the sentence. It is still part of the sentence.  It only means the inmate will complete the sentence outside a correctional facility.'

Asked by MailOnline if the sentence might appear soft to the world, Matthews said: 'If those are the rules then we need to question the rules not those who have interpreted the rules.  if the rules are too lenient, then that is what we should address.'

Pistorius was brought from his cell at 8am at the 84-year-old Atteridgevale prison in Pretoria to hear his fate and was said to be ‘confident’ as he entered the room, after his previous appearance before them in March had been rejected.  Today his legal team, led by Conrad Dormehl, argued that he had served sufficient time and that there had been official blunders on time served on his tariff.  Reeva's mother June refused to attend the hearing, saying in a statement that was read out by Matthews: 'I simply cannot muster the energy to face him again at this stage.'

'I do not believe Oscar's version that he thought the person in the toilet was a burglar.  In fact, I do not know anybody who does. My dearest child screamed for her life. I believe he knew it was Reeva.'

South Africa allows convicts to be considered for release when they have served half of their sentence and the parole officers were told there had been a blunder in calculating the actual time the killer had served.  It was claimed he was wrongly ruled ineligible for early release from prison when he last applied for release in March and that the lengthy legal cases surrounding him had led to an error.  The double-amputee athlete, who broke barriers by competing on carbon-fibre running blades at the 2012 London Olympics, shot Reeva multiple times through a closed toilet cubicle door in his home in the South African capital, Pretoria, in the predawn hours of Valentine's Day 2013.  His claim that he shot her in the belief that an intruder had entered his home while he slept, was ultimately dismissed by Pretoria judges after he had been cleared of murder and found guilty of culpable homicide.  His conviction was upgraded to murder and he was ultimately sentenced to 13 years and five months in prison after a series of appeals by prosecutors.  Pistorius' case and his parole eligibility had been complicated by appeals by prosecutors, who first challenged his culpable homicide conviction and then a sentence of six years for murder, which they called shockingly lenient.  The Supreme Court of Appeal eventually ruled in 2017 that Pistorius should serve South Africa's minimum sentence of 15 years for murder, but took into account the year and seven months he had already served for culpable homicide when it delivered the 13 years and five months sentence.  However, the court made an error by not counting another period Pistorius had served while his murder sentence was being appealed, meaning he was in fact eligible for parole in March when he was told at his first hearing that he would only be eligible in August 2024.  Pistorius' lawyers took his case to the country's Constitutional Court. The decision to give Pistorius the parole hearing today was effectively an admission of the appeal court's blunder and helped to set him free.  It is likely the athlete will return to live with his uncle Arnold in his mansion, set in one of the most exclusive suburbs of Pretoria where the detached houses are occupied by government ministers, millionaire businessmen and CEOs of Johannesburg’s biggest companies.  As if to welcome him home today, Christmas greetings and a giant crucifix were placed on the mansion for the deeply religious killer.  Pistorius was born with a congenital condition that led to his legs being amputated below the knee when he was a baby, but he took up track and won multiple Paralympic titles on his running blades.  He is the only amputee to run at the Olympics and his London appearance resulted in huge fanfare.  Known as the 'Blade Runner,' he was at the height of his fame when he killed Steenkamp months after the London Olympics.  Her mother June told Mail Online: ‘I hate him. I want to hurt him. He is a liar and he murdered my daughter.’

Reeva’s father Barry passed away in September having fought a ten year battle to get Pistorius to admit his guilt.  June was represented by Rob Matthews, whose daughter Leigh was kidnapped and murdered in 2004 and is an anti-gender violence campaigner.  Matthews said shortly after the parole hearing: 'What's really important in these parole processes is equal consideration is given to the input from the offender and input from the victims.  I have to believe that the victim statement was definitely taking into considerations. I'm of the opinion that the parole board certainly listened to the statement.'

When asked if he believed Pistorius had served enough time behind bars, he said: It's such a difficult question. We want to live in a country where there are rules and regulations that are evenly applied across the board without fear or favour.  If those are the rules, and Pistorius has met the requirements, then so be it.'

Matthews read a statement from June to media outlets shortly before the hearing, which read: ‘I do not know to what extent this behaviour still exists or were evident during his time of incarceration, but I am concerned for the safety of any woman should this not have been addressed in his rehabilitation.  I do not know which rehabilitation programs were attended by Oscar while incarcerated, but I sincerely hope that his rehabilitation included psychotherapy to deal with his temper and abusive behaviour towards women.  I also hope that specialist criminologists were engaged to assist in compiling a psychological profile that would assist in determining his risk for recidivism. At this time, I am not convinced that Oscar has been rehabilitated.  Rehabilitation requires someone to engage honestly with the full truth of his crime and the consequences thereof. Nobody can claim to have remorse if they are not able to engage fully with the truth. If someone does not show remorse, they cannot be considered to be rehabilitated.  If they are not rehabilitated, their risk of recidivism is high. I am informed that an inmate’s remorse and the extent to which they are rehabilitated are taken into consideration at the time of making a parole decision.  It is my earnest wish that no one should be subjected to gender-based violence. I hope that parole board panels will evaluate an inmate’s rehabilitation by considering his/her engagement with the truth in determining the presence or absence of remorse.  My dear Barry left this world utterly devastated by the thought that he had failed to protect his daughter and therefore in his role as father, as he perceived it.  The only hope he had left, was that Oscar would find it in himself to eventually tell the full truth. It is my hope that parole decisions treat the safety of women as the most important consideration by exercising their power judiciously.  The pain caused by the dastardly murder of Reeva, did not only include emotional trauma. It also included trauma that manifested physically as became evident in the accelerated deterioration in health for both Barry and myself.  When Reeva died, I was a "young" 67 and Barry 70-years-old. I can confirm that our lives were gravely impacted physically, emotionally and financially.  Should it be decided that Oscar is sufficiently rehabilitated, it is my wish that the parole policies and procedures of the Department of Correctional Services be applied consistently in his release.'

Mrs Steenkamp's lawyer Annade Theart-Hofmeyr presented the statement to the hearing.

How the 'Blade Runner' murderer came to fight for his freedom

1986

Oscar Pistorius is born without a fibula bone in either of his lower legs, which were both amputated below the knee when he was 11-months-old. Six months later he learned to walk on fibreglass pegs.

2003

Pistorius starts sprint training to help rehabilitate his knee after he injured it playing rugby.

2004

The athlete wins his first Paralympic gold as he races to victory in the Athens 200m. He also claimed a bronze medal in the 100m.

2008

Pistorius wins three golds in Beijing - for the 100, 200 and 400m, setting a world record.  In the same year he is banned from able-bodied competitions as the IAAF Council say his prosthetics give him an unfair advantage.

2012

Becomes first double amputee to compete at Olympics, reaching the semi-finals. In the 4x400 relay his team reaches the finals but does not pick up any medals.  In the same year he goes on to win two golds in the Paralympics.

2013

February 14 - Pistorius arrested at his home in Pretoria after shooting dead girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

February 15 - Pistorius appears before the Pretoria Magistrates' Court where he bursts into tears as prosecutors announce they intend to pursue a charge of premeditated murder.  Pistorius bursts into tears as he is charged, denying murder 'in the strongest terms'.

February 19 - Reeva Steenkamp's funeral is held in Port Elizabeth. Pistorius appears in court for the first day of his bail hearing. Prosecutor Gerrie Nel says Pistorius fired four shots through a bathroom door, hitting Steenkamp three times. His defence reads a statement by Pistorius in which he says he thought Steenkamp was an intruder.

February 21: Global sportswear manufacturer Nike suspends its sponsorship contract with the athlete.

August 19 - The day on which Steenkamp would have turned 30, Pistorius appears in the Pretoria Magistrate's Court before magistrate Desmond Nair to have the state's indictment served on him.  He is charged with premeditated murder and possession of unlicensed ammunition. The state publishes its list of 107 possible witnesses.

2014

February 14 - On the anniversary of Steenkamp's death, Pistorius posts a tribute to her on his official website, saying: 'No words can adequately capture my feelings about the devastating accident that has caused such heartache for everyone who truly loved and continues to love Reeva.'

March 3 - Oscar Pistorius pleads not guilty in court to murder and three gun charges.  Later, neighbour Michelle Burger, the first witness called by the prosecution, tells the court she heard 'blood-curdling' screams before the sound of four gunshots on the night the Olympian killed his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp.

March 10 - Pistorius vomits repeatedly in the dock as he hears graphic details of the injuries sustained by the girlfriend he fatally shot.

April 8 - Pistorius breaks down in tears and howls while describing how he shot girlfriend Ms Steenkamp, forcing the court to adjourn.

April 9 - Giving evidence for a third day, Pistorius tells how his girlfriend 'died while I was holding her', describing how he put his fingers in her mouth to try to help her breathe and put his hand on her hip to try to stop bleeding from one of several gunshot wounds.

June 30 - After a month-long break, the murder trial resumes when mental health experts state Pistorius was not suffering from a mental illness when he killed girlfriend Ms Steenkamp.

September 12 - Pistorius found GUILTY of culpable homicide of Steenkamp. Also found guilty on one firearm charge of firing a gun in a restaurant.

October 21 - Pistorius sentenced to a maximum of five years in prison, with a three-year suspended term for firearms offences.

2015

March 13 - Bid to block prosecutors from appealing verdict in favour of murder conviction blocked

October 20 - Pistorius is allowed out of prison after just one year to spend the remainder of his sentence under house arrest.

December 3 - The Supreme Court of Appeal convicts him of murder, saying his testimony was 'vacillating and untruthful'.

December 8 - Pistorius is released on bail pending sentencing, and remains under house arrest.

2016

March 2 - Pistorius, now 29, loses his final bid to appeal his murder conviction.

July 6 - He is sentenced to six years in jail for murder.

August 14 - South African media reports say Pistorius is put on 24-hour suicide watch.

September 15 - Prosecutors say they will petition the Supreme Court of Appeal for a tougher sentence for Pistorius, having described the six-year term as 'shockingly lenient'.

November 14 - Prison authorities say Pistorius has been transferred to a prison adapted for disabled inmates just outside Pretoria to serve the rest of his sentence.

2017

November 3 - The appeal court adjourns to consider its ruling after prosecutors argue that Pistorius's jail term is too short, while defence lawyers say the judge handed down a fair sentence.

November 24 - The Supreme Court of Appeal in Bloemfontein more than doubles Pistorius's sentence of six years to 13 years and five months.

2018

March 28 - South Africa's highest court rejects Pistorius's leave to appeal, ending the long legal battle over the killing.

2021

November 29 - Prison services say Pistorius has been temporarily moved to a detention facility in the southern city of Gqeberha, formerly Port Elizabeth, as part of his parole process, having become eligible for early release a few months earlier, after serving half his sentence.

2022

July 1 - Prison services say Pistorius has met with Steenkamp's parents as part of his rehabilitation process.

2023

March 31 - Pistorius is denied parole, with a South African judge ruling he has only served six years - less than the 'minimum detention period' required to qualify for early release.

November 24 - Pistorius' second bid for freedom is successful, as he's told he can leave prison in early January 2024.

7
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12652801/inside-killers-flower-moon-harrowing-true-story-martin-scorsese-film.html

'Inside the harrowing true story behind Martin Scorsese's Killers of the Flower Moon'

    Killers of the Flower Moon sees director Martin Scorsese team up with Di Caprio
    It tells story of the Osage tribe, who became wealthy thanks to oil on their land

By Harry Howard, History Correspondent and Raven Saunt For Dailymail.Com and Zac Campbell

Published: 10:09, 20 October 2023 | Updated: 10:22, 20 October 2023

This is the true story behind director Martin Scorsese's latest partnership with Hollywood superstar Leonardo DiCaprio, in the new film Killers of the Flower Moon, which was released in the UK on Thursday October 18.  In the town of Fairfax, Oklahoma, the fact that life was good for the Osage Indians in the late 1800s might have seemed to some like sweet justice.   For the reservation they had been shunted to decades earlier had turned out to be brimming with oil, and the tribe put it good use by building mansions, buying cars and sending their children to private schools.  But, by the time the 1920s came around, at least two dozen of them had been murdered by being shot, poisoned and blown up and no one knew who was responsible.  This is the true story behind director Martin Scorsese's latest partnership with Hollywood superstar Leonardo DiCaprio, in upcoming film Killers of the Flower Moon.  In what was the first major murder case of the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), agents ended up tracing the killings to a disgruntled group led by 'cattle king' William Hale, who was jailed for more than two decades for his part in the murders.  He had encouraged his nephew to marry into the Osage tribe as part of a plot to win their oil rights.   The new film about the spate of murders is based on author David Grann's book of the same name, which was published in 2017  Scorsese's drama, which will be released in October, received a rapturous nine-minute standing ovation when it premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on Saturday.  The Osage tribe had become stunningly wealthy after finding oil that earnt them more than $30million in annual revenue at the peak of the boom.   Subsurface minerals within the Osage Nation Reservation were tribally owned and held in trust by the government.  Mineral leases earned royalties that were paid to the tribe as a whole - with each allottee receiving one equal share also known as a headright.  But these headrights could only legally be attained by outsiders if they married into the tribe.  It was during this time that rancher Hale, a native of Greenville, Texas, encouraged his subservient nephew Ernest Burkhart to wed Osage member Mollie Kyle (later Mollie Burkhart).  Burkhart, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, and wife Mollie, played by Lily Gladstone, lived in Fairfax with Mollie's mother Lizzie Q.  Lizzie was a mother-of-four and in May 1921, the decomposed body of one of her other daughters, Anna Brown, was discovered in a remote ravine in northern Oklahoma.  She was found with a bullet hole to the back of the head but, because Brown had no known enemies, the case went unsolved.  Just two months later Lizzie herself died under suspicious circumstances from suspected poisoning, although no proof was ever found.  Then another member of the family, Lizzie's nephew Henry Roan, met a similar fate in January 1923 with Hale, played by Robert De Niro, fraudulently naming himself as the beneficiary of his $25,000 life insurance policy.  But deaths within the family did not end there.  In March 1923, another of Lizzie's daughters Rita Smith, along with Rita's husband William Smith, and their housekeeper Nettie Brookshire were all killed when their home was destroyed by an explosion.  And, following their deaths, Burkhart and Mollie inherited a fortune from her mother's and sisters' estates.  But the murders extended beyond the one family. It is estimated that 24 Osage Indians died in violent or suspicious deaths throughout the early 1920s with newspapers at the time branding it as a 'reign of terror.'  By this time, authorities had begun to grow suspicious and an alarmed Osage Tribal Council sought the help of the US Government.  Hale's name came up early in the investigation as the mastermind behind the killings.  The so-called 'King of the Osage Hills' was accused of bribing and intimidating others to do much of his dirty work as he sought to achieve money and power.  The murders subsided after Hale, along with accomplices including his nephew, were arrested in 1926.  Four FBI agents went undercover as an insurance salesman, cattle buyer, oil prospector and herbal doctor to uncover evidence.  Whilst the Osage locals had initially refused to talk to the authorities through fear of reprisals, the agents earned their trust.  Eventually, Ernest Burkhart talked and then others confessed.   Reporting on the gruesome killings in January 1926, the Daily Mail said: 'The wildest Wild West fiction is outmatched by the story revealed to-day by the arrest at Tulsa, Oklahoma, of wealthy cattle king, W.K. Hale, popularly known as the "King of the Usage Hills," his nephew, Ernest Burkhart, and six others.  'They are charged with conspiracy to exterminate a small tripe of Osage Indians in whom are vested oil allotment rights valued at £500,000.  For three years Osage territory has been the scene of a series of terrible murders.   Altogether twenty prominent Indians have been murdered, with the result that Mrs Mollie Burkhart, the Indian wife of the white nephew of "the King of the Osage hills," is now the sole possessor of the tribe's oil rights.  The Osage tribe is the richest in America.'

Hale was formally convicted for his involvement three years later, after the authorities proved that he had ordered the murders of Anna Brown and her family to inherit their oil rights; cousin Roan for his insurance policy and others who had threatened to bring him to justice.   He was paroled in 1947 after serving two decades of his sentence.  At the time, investigators also discovered that the killers had already started poisoning Mollie in what would have been the last piece of the crook's masterplan.  Fortunately, she recovered and divorced her murderous husband following the trial.

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