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Banned
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Chorley
Posts: 581
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Chorley
Posts: 581
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Contract Killers
Imagine if you really hated someone sooooo badly, that you either feared or found that they were a serious problem in your life and you were fortunate enough to have several thousand pound at your disposal and the opportunity came to hire a [Hit man] - Contract Killer - and pay them a price to kill that person. It is a real experience for some people when the pressures in life get to an all time high and someone is making your or someone you care about's life absolute hell. There are, [Guns for hire] out there. Many people who choose to live their lives as killers for a special price. Or sometimes, it can be some thug with barely no money, who will be offered many, many thousand pound, but all they have to do is KILL ONE PERSON.
Here is an article whereby a man picked the wrong [Hit man] and paid the ultimate price
Son jailed for plot to kill mother's partner
By Telegraph Reporter
Last Updated: 1:42am BST 08/08/2007
An Oxford-educated writer was jailed for six years yesterday for plotting the death of his mother's toy boy lover over a £100,000 inheritance.
Charles Hills has been treated for mental health problems
Charles Hills, 51, wanted Flavio Rosa, a handyman who was 30 years younger than his mother Maria, to be killed "by any method possible".
Hills had lost patience with the wrangles over his mother's will. In it, she had left him her £100,000 Algarve villa, but stipulated that Mr Rosa should be allowed to live there for the rest of his life.
Hills's mother died in 2002 when she was in her 80s.
He tried to hire a hitman for £15,000 but the men he arranged to meet to carry out the murder turned out to be undercover officers.
Hills, a former journalist, who has written for the New Statesman and Guardian newspaper, kept a journal in which he said he had "vague thoughts of hiring a hitman".
Yesterday, Hills, of Clapham, south London, was jailed at the Old Bailey for six years for two counts of soliciting to murder Mr Rosa.
Judge David Paget, QC, told him: "The irony of this case is that the legal action succeeded about a month ago when the will was declared invalid. However, you were not prepared to let the legal system take its course."
The judge said that soliciting to murder was a serious offence but noted that Hills had said he had "given up" on the scheme when he thought he could not do it.
Hills, who has been treated for mental health problems, was also jailed for another 12 months, to run consecutively, for assaulting a doctor last year.
Det Insp Craig Turner, of the Metropolitan Police, said: "He used his intelligence to plan a murder, employ counter surveillance methods and avoid actions that would make it hard for a police investigation.
"Without doubt, had we not stopped Hills he would have met someone willing and capable of carrying out his plan."
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