>Det Gda Gibbons said that, altogether, 11,043 calls had been made, lasting a total of 7,757.6 minutes or 129 hours.
“He handed in a psychological report, which he said showed that Greene was a fundamentally good person, who had got lost.
He said that he had been hit by a realisation as soon as he went into prison and had to share a multi-occupant cell. Greene has now made efforts to address his addiction”
Hmm fancy that.
Had a mate who worked with the ECAS crowd who provide the 999 service for a while. She said the amount of heavy breathing calls they’d get was unbelievable.
“Fuck the guards and up the dubs” ….what a line
Seems he got more time in jail than someone caught with CP on their computer. Make these sentences make sense
Why would you be arsed? Surely after the first 5000 or so it gets a bit boring?
> Det Gda Gibbons said that, altogether, 11,043 calls had been made, lasting a total of 7,757.6 minutes or 129 hours.
So the hard limit is 11,042 nuisance calls before anything will happen.
> Judge Martin Nolan remarked that he was sure the emergency services were happier now Greene was in prison. “I should keep him in custody because he’s a menace, isn’t he?” he asked.
Well yes, that’s the point of your job. You’re meant to do that to violent criminals and nonces too, for what it’s worth.
He should’ve got a job at a call centre. His addiction would’ve earned him money.
Waster
Now we just need Keith to get jailed for the same reason down here in cork
Pointless sending him to jail. He can easily get a phone in jail and carry on calling
**“Fuck the guards, Up the Dubs”**
Dublin’s answer to *céad míle fáilte*
I know this is a US tv legal thing but wonder who he called for his ‘one’ phone call
I wonder how many people died or were adversely affected because this (literal) waster took up valuable emergency services time..
I trained up as a community first responder. Our group go to 999 medical emergencies, Dublin Fire Brigade attend in order of medical priority so we try bridge the gap in assessing triage. There’s more hand holding than anything, nothing I can do for a stroke etc. I wouldn’t put my bib on if his details came through, would ignore it.
We are volunteers so we work around our own jobs, family, hobbies etc, he needs 2 full time paid EMT for 11,000, absolutely crazy.
He needs to provide 1,000 hours voluntary hours in the community, idle hands and all that.
Waster
hang on a sec….. if you are sole occupant of an apartment (owned) and you go to jail, can you rent out the apartment when in jail? one might potentially profit while receiving free lodging…
i was just wondering… no intentions!
That averaging about 45 calls per day?!?
Roughly 30 mins of being continuously on the phone to 999 every day!!
definition of a total waste of oxygen, a fucking loser to the highest degree.
Give him a job answering phones damm it.
>He also had 20 other previous convictions, which included public order and criminal damage convictions
No way?
Who’d have thought.
Somebody get that man a call centre job.
“I should keep him in custody because he’s a menace, isn’t he?” – judge arsehole Nolan
“He also had 20 other previous convictions, which included public order and criminal damage convictions”
“He imposed a three-year sentence and suspended the final 20 months” Obviously arsehole Nolan didn’t think he was that much of a menace despite him having 20 previous convictions.
25 comments
Wow, that man had a lot of free time
lunatic.
>Det Gda Gibbons said that, altogether, 11,043 calls had been made, lasting a total of 7,757.6 minutes or 129 hours.
“He handed in a psychological report, which he said showed that Greene was a fundamentally good person, who had got lost.
He said that he had been hit by a realisation as soon as he went into prison and had to share a multi-occupant cell. Greene has now made efforts to address his addiction”
Hmm fancy that.
Had a mate who worked with the ECAS crowd who provide the 999 service for a while. She said the amount of heavy breathing calls they’d get was unbelievable.
“Fuck the guards and up the dubs” ….what a line
Seems he got more time in jail than someone caught with CP on their computer. Make these sentences make sense
Why would you be arsed? Surely after the first 5000 or so it gets a bit boring?
> Det Gda Gibbons said that, altogether, 11,043 calls had been made, lasting a total of 7,757.6 minutes or 129 hours.
So the hard limit is 11,042 nuisance calls before anything will happen.
> Judge Martin Nolan remarked that he was sure the emergency services were happier now Greene was in prison. “I should keep him in custody because he’s a menace, isn’t he?” he asked.
Well yes, that’s the point of your job. You’re meant to do that to violent criminals and nonces too, for what it’s worth.
He should’ve got a job at a call centre. His addiction would’ve earned him money.
Waster
Now we just need Keith to get jailed for the same reason down here in cork
Pointless sending him to jail. He can easily get a phone in jail and carry on calling
**“Fuck the guards, Up the Dubs”**
Dublin’s answer to *céad míle fáilte*
I know this is a US tv legal thing but wonder who he called for his ‘one’ phone call
I wonder how many people died or were adversely affected because this (literal) waster took up valuable emergency services time..
I trained up as a community first responder. Our group go to 999 medical emergencies, Dublin Fire Brigade attend in order of medical priority so we try bridge the gap in assessing triage. There’s more hand holding than anything, nothing I can do for a stroke etc. I wouldn’t put my bib on if his details came through, would ignore it.
We are volunteers so we work around our own jobs, family, hobbies etc, he needs 2 full time paid EMT for 11,000, absolutely crazy.
He needs to provide 1,000 hours voluntary hours in the community, idle hands and all that.
Waster
hang on a sec….. if you are sole occupant of an apartment (owned) and you go to jail, can you rent out the apartment when in jail? one might potentially profit while receiving free lodging…
i was just wondering… no intentions!
That averaging about 45 calls per day?!?
Roughly 30 mins of being continuously on the phone to 999 every day!!
definition of a total waste of oxygen, a fucking loser to the highest degree.
Give him a job answering phones damm it.
>He also had 20 other previous convictions, which included public order and criminal damage convictions
No way?
Who’d have thought.
Somebody get that man a call centre job.
“I should keep him in custody because he’s a menace, isn’t he?” – judge arsehole Nolan
“He also had 20 other previous convictions, which included public order and criminal damage convictions”
“He imposed a three-year sentence and suspended the final 20 months” Obviously arsehole Nolan didn’t think he was that much of a menace despite him having 20 previous convictions.
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