southstand1882
Mitchell Thomas
I say let him out. NOW
Thoughts?
Thoughts?
Sgt Nightingale was given the pistol, a Glock 9mm, as a gift by Iraqi soldiers he helped train in 2009.
It was shipped back to the UK by military authorities when he left the country that year. His family say that a brain injury he subsequently suffered on a charity run in Brazil affected his memory, contributing to his failure to have the weapon decommissioned, as he had planned. The weapon and the ammunition were found during a search of his Service accommodation because of a complaint that had been made about another SAS soldier.
The ammo was always the thing for me, a trophy of war I could understand although a Glock 19 is hardly a keepsake especially with 300 bullets. Looks more like a psycho waiting to happen.
Memory loss + army training and access to a weapon and ammo.. dangerous for his family, visitors.. no wonder a colleague reported it.
I say let him out. NOW
Thoughts?
If the guy broke the law then why should he be released?
Everyone of us breaks some law every day, he should not have got a custodial sentence for an oversight.
He's not some heat carrying chav scumbag.
How did this ever get to court? Bewildering.
Sgt Nightingale was given the pistol, a Glock 9mm, as a gift by Iraqi soldiers he helped train in 2009.
It was shipped back to the UK by military authorities when he left the country that year. His family say that a brain injury he subsequently suffered on a charity run in Brazil affected his memory, contributing to his failure to have the weapon decommissioned, as he had planned.