Friday, 11 May 2012

Justice for Longley

*Warning The following article contains profanity*




Is justice really so difficult to get these days? How long will it take to convict a psychopathic stalker who murdered his girlfriend in cold blood? In today's world, the politically correct hope to portray Elliot Turner as an innocent victim, driven to rage by his girlfriend's careless actions. The reality paints a bleaker mosaic. With credible witnesses coming forth, high shelves of mounting evidence and the Turner family's feeble attempt to deny all charges, it may be months before any punishment is given. Taking so long to convict a blatant murderer is an injustice to Emily's spirit, her family, friends, communities, countries, everyone.

From the day the trial began, Elliot Turner's infatuation for Emily shone through. "Elliot was obsessed with Emily. He spoke about her a lot and rang her a lot too. I do not feel she cared about him as much as he did about her," Emily's closest friend Carla Simons says. It's an elaboration on Mr. Turner's unhealthy obsessive, lustful desire for attention. Placing anyone on a pedestal is a dangerous game. In Francis Scott Fitzgerald's brilliant novel "The Great Gatsby," Jay Gatsby suffered from his idealism of Daisy Buchannan with his life. Mr. Turner's idealism has left an effluvium of innocent blood on his hands. More witnesses have come forth to testify; Luke Ashford, a friend of Elliot's also stood before the jury. "Turner had sent him a text on the night before Longley's lifeless body was found that read 'hello darling, meet mrs mallet'." http://tvnz.co.nz/world-news/emily-longley-trial-murder-accused-s-mate-slept-teen-4854260. He further mentions, on the night she was murdered, Mr. Turner, engulfed with rage said ( in a haughty manner) "that bitch is going down tonight." http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/emily-longley-murder-model-had-809733. Is anyone really going to be audacious enough to express that all of this is one great misunderstanding? His incessant threats to murder were just for a 'larf.' The unwonted texts sent out were just a great misunderstood joke. Well Mr. Turner, here's some news with more news for you. Everyone forgot to laugh. You missed the mark.

Elliot Turner's rather lame attempt at defending himself has opened up many onerous occasions, from just before his arrest, remarking "It is weird. God works in mysterious ways," to a more feeble in depth account in Court. "I wouldn't say it was very hard but it was quite hard. She was kneeling on my bed and from that position I pushed her down on to the bed and she went backwards. She was flat on her back and I then pressed down on her neck. All together I held her neck for about five or six seconds at most." http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2142199/Emily-Longley-trial-Elliot-Turner-held-girlfriends-neck-5-6-seconds-died.html#ixzz1uVlGS4tq. Before continuing further, here is what Mr. Turner really means. "With considerable force, I pushed her onto the bed. I then proceeded to strangle her, until she stopped breathing." Withing today's shamble of a justice system in the United Kingdom, anyone on trial for a major crime is able to present an argument that its not their fault for their own actions, and escape punishment. Journalist Peter Hitchens discusses the imperative need for a "code, you can expect that people who rob, kill , cheat rape or destroy will be deterred by stern laws, and caught and punished if deterrence fails. Also that people who break the law will get no advantage out of it." http://hitchensblog.mailonsunday.co.uk/2008/06/why-weak-justic.html
Presented with such a great opportunity to digress away from the shambolic justice system which has surfaced in recent time, it's time Mr. Turner is sentenced accordingly. He is not the victim here and a fabricated story of Emily lashing out at him in a crazed fit of hysteria is not an adequate reason for taking her life. Grabbing someone to "calm them down" without thinking about hurting or killing them is not thoughtfully considerate; they are malign. http://www.odt.co.nz/news/national/208886/longley-murder-accused-expressed-no-sadness

It's a damning wall of cold hard facts vs a gushy whiff of slipstream sentimentalism. Against every piece of evidence-- friends, family, police recordings, retrieved documents information, forensic analysis-- against Elliot Turner and (in the wider circumstance) his parents, Leigh and Anita, there is nothing but denial. Explicitly asked if he in any way is responsible for Emily's murder, Elliot says "No, I don't believe so." The Turner family is either trying to seek small pittances of sympathy from the public or have just topped themselves up with arrogance for $4.95.


Leigh Turner told Anita "He fucking strangled her." Seized computers at the household indicate Elliot was searching methods for "death by strangulation" and "how to murder someone and get away with it." Elliot's mother, Anita worked with Leigh to remove vital evidence from the room Emily's lifeless body was in and prolonged calling paramedics to hide or destroy any evidence which could link their beloved "victimised" son to the trial. If the Turner's want to continue denying their involvement in any type of wrong doing, they can do so. Making such a bold claim though is precarious and absurd in the face of mounting evidence against them. Had they believed their names could get cleared, without any convictions for murder or perverting the course of justice, no effort would be made the cleanse the bedroom, no criminal es searches will have been made and more than anything, Emily Longley's dead body would not be in the bedroom, with Elliot Turner's DNA underneath her skin or bearing classic signs of asphyxiation.

Time has run out for Elliot Turner and his parents. A prison cell must be prepared for them now. His parents are guilty of destroying vital evidence and perverting the course of justice. Elliot is guilty of murdering an innocent young woman. Ominous warning signs were shown early on by Mr. Turner in front of friends and likely around family too. A life sentence for murder is not harsh. Its due punishment for taking someone's life. Every action of his, leading up to and including the murder had a malicious, psychopathic intent; a young man, idealistic and over paranoid about his girlfriend cheating on him (despite being a promiscuous womanizer himself). Bring Justice for Emily Longley. It'll bring rest to an agonising period in her friends and family's lives and make society a little more delectable, with a murderer and his accomplices behind bars.




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