'This is the strongest possible evidence yet for two tiered justice in Britain today,' says Patrick Christys

'This is the strongest possible evidence yet for two tiered justice in Britain today,' says Patrick Christys

'This is the strongest evidence for two tiered justice'

GB News
Patrick Christys

By Patrick Christys


Published: 24/10/2024

- 08:43

Updated: 24/10/2024

- 15:18

Isaac Donkoh, known as Young Driss, has been let out of prison

We might have the strongest possible evidence yet for two-tiered justice in Britain today. It emerged that Isaac Donkoh, known as Young Driss, has been let out of prison.

He was locked up in 2019 after enlisting four boys under the age of 18 to attack a 16-year-old boy. He then filmed the victim, who was threatened with a machete, and was told that Donkoh would cut him up and he attempted to pour boiling water over the boy's head.


The boy's parents were called, and that 16-year-old was forced to beg them for £1,500 so that he could be released.

He even boasted about shooting people and other crimes in a music video.

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He was sentenced for kidnap and false imprisonment, GBH and perverting the course of justice.

But because of Labour, it meant that two of his four offences made him eligible for the early release.

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So now, naturally, he's back out on the streets. It doesn't really seem fair, does it?

When you have people like Peter Lynch, who was sentenced to two years and eight months despite not committing a violent offence during the summer riots, and who apparently took his own life behind bars.

I have called for there to be an inquiry into the incredibly harsh sentence handed down to Mr Lynch, not least by a judge who previously allowed a woman who killed a cyclist and a man who admitted committing a sexual act with a child to walk free.

However, today, GB News came into possession of this extract from the House of Lords records, which reveals that the Justice Minister, Lord Ponsonby made this admission about people locked up: "This was a particular situation where maybe the judges felt that even people who were of previous good character needed to be made an example of."

Well, that is an astonishing admission about potentially biased judges and one that needs to be investigated.

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Did this apply to people like Lucy Connolly, who was jailed for 31 months for inciting racial hatred?

Now she was a childminder with no previous convictions who did tweet something foul about asylum seekers.

I'm not condoning what she said, but did this apply to Peter Lynch, who has now died? The judiciary, the Justice Minister and Keir Starmer have serious questions to answer.

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