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Wild Cats

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Alternative Ulster - Featuring interviews with Christy Dunne, "Mad Dog" Johnny Adair, Sam "Skelly" McCrory, Joe Doherty, Billy "Buffalo" Clare, Wayne Hart

Some of the most infamous and influential names within these criminal circles appear on screen for the first time including Paul Ferris, Eddie Richardson, Dutch Raja and Arran Coghlan If you like the idea of spending 7 hours binge-watching aging brutish British men talking about a bit of the old ultraviolence of the good, old days, you’ve got your fix right here. But, according to ex-East End mobster Danny Woollard, he met his match when West Ham's infamous Inter City Firm (ICF) stormed a fight night he was headlining. Andrew Frain, 41, known as “Nightmare”, became infamous in 2000 after being exposed as a Chelsea Headhunter – a notorious gang of football hooligans – in a BBC documentary by undercover journalist Donal MacIntyre. Live by the Sword - Featuring interviews with Phil Berriman, Steve "Nipper" Ellis, Dominic Negan, William "Billy" Lobben,

A weighty undertaking

Essex - Featuring interviews with Eddie Blundell, Billy Blundell, Lew Yates, Andy Swallow, Steve "Nipper" Ellis, Sandy Percival A notorious Reading hooligan has been jailed for three-and-a-half years for threatening an assault victim with violence if he did not drop charges. Frankie Fraser, Eddie Richardson, David Fraser, Freddie Foreman, Billy Frost, Albert Donoghue, Jimmy Tippett, Lenny Hamilton The court heard Mr Mullen and his family had to be moved out of their home and into protective police custody during the case because of the danger they were in. The series was broadcast on Discovery's Quest channel in the UK in April 2014 (S1) and July 2015 (S2). Both have been released on DVD by Revelation Films Episodes [ edit ]

One of the most feared men in the country was sent running by West Ham's notorious football hooligan firm during a boxing fight, a former gangster has claimed. Jimmy ‘The Weed’ Donnelly, Arthur Donnelly, Paul Massey, Sean Keating, Bernard O’Mahoney, Wayne Barker, David Fraser, Paul Ferris Birmingham - Featuring interviews with Albert Chapman, Patsy Manning, Don Tear, Joe Egan, Sharif Cousins, "Zimbo" Moore, christopher brayford London - Featuring interviews with 'Mad' Frankie Fraser, Eddie Richardson, David Fraser, Freddie Foreman, Billy Frost, Albert Donoghue, Jimmy Tippett, Lenny Hamilton He was jailed on Tuesday after being hired by two other men to “lean on” a taxi driver who had been severely beaten up outside a pub in Norwich.

Carry me home feet first

In fact I'm pretty sure they would have welcomed a set too with any firm and no doubt would have given them a hiding to boot.” Crime pays. And it really began paying out in the run-up to the millennium, as numerous old lags started getting their pensions topped up from the proceeds of true-crime merchandising. After decades of seeing their dark power half-inched by punks and football hooligans, former East End gentlemen were reclaiming their 'Sixties appeal as shotgun-toting clothes horses and pop culture icons - lending their mugs to photo shoots, magazine columns and bestselling autobiographies. And, of course, movies: for better or worse, the Britcrime genre was also reactivated in the 1990s, a mixed legacy the UK film industry still hasn't shaken off. That is partly testament to the high quality of its service. The lads at Cribb’s are not angels; when church or crematorium doors close behind the last mourner, they slouch against the limousines, chatting and smoking. They are too hardened to be very curious about the deceased: “Who they were, how they died, I’m not interested in that,” Mr Cambridge said. Yet their respect for the bereaved is impressive and unfeigned. And sometimes it goes deeper. “When they bring children in, no one likes it,” said Mr Cambridge. While bringing a laden hearse through Lavender Hill Cemetery, in north London, one rainy afternoon, your correspondent noticed Mr Cambridge, at the wheel, quietly raise his peaked cap. Outside was a patch of tiny graves, decorated with penny windmills, strings of tinsel and sodden cuddly toys.

Tracey had no qualms about keeping her father’s corpse in the house: “In the hospital he asked me to take him home, so what could I do?” All the same, Billy was going to have a less traditional send-off than his wife had. “He didn’t want horses,” said Mr Redwood, prompting a discussion of the dead Bullards’ marriage. “He loved her, but God she hated him,” said Tracey, laughing fondly. The mourners then clambered aboard and the cortege set off at the 30-miles-per-hour speed limit. But it was not fast enough for a couple of bikers, who roared past on the inside. “Foreigners, probably,” muttered Paul Topp, an old-timer at Cribb’s, driving the lead limousine. “You’d not have seen that years ago. Everyone used to stop, bow their heads, take off their hats. There’s no respect now.” Kim Mullen had multiple cuts to his head and nose, fractures to the left arm and wrist and injuries to his left eye, and it was some time before he recovered. Netflix has both complete seasons of Gangsters – Faces of the Underworld. Typical of British TV, there are only six episodes in the first season and eight in the second. The show is essentially two interweaved documentaries. Season 1: Gangsters – Faces of the UnderworldAfter his release in 2004 he moved from Reading to Essex. He had previously lived in Granville Road, Southcote.

As his neighbours moved to Essex, Mr Redwood’s calling maintained his prominence in an increasingly diffuse society. “This is what everyone knows me for,” he said. It helped that most self-respecting East Enders know Cribb’s. Founded in the late 19th century, it is one of the oldest and, after a decade of rapid growth, now the biggest of the family-owned undertakers that once stood on every East End high street. This platform has allowed Mr Redwood to develop some handy sidelines. In each episode, current and former gang members and active criminals are interviewed by presenter and former member of the Essex Boys gang, Bernard O'Mahoney. Many episodes concentrate on cities around the UK: London, Liverpool, Glasgow, Manchester, Birmingham. Other episodes focus on how individuals became involved in crime and miscarriages of justice. Series 2, Ep 3, travels to Ireland.AN armed robber known as The Whale, he blamed his life of villainy on childhood abuse he suffered in Dublin care homes. Gantley turned his

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