Bubble Lipped Baboon Stabs Man To Death for Bumping Him: UPDATE: Sentence cut, was to be released in 2018

Johnny99

Senior Reporter
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=502309&in_page_id=1770 Teenager jailed for life for stabbing to death stranger who bumped into him at bus stop
By DAVID WILKES
Last updated at 00:51am on 15th December 2007

An innocent commuter was stabbed to death by a teenager after accidentally bumping into him at a bus stop, a court heard yesterday.
Patterson
PattersonsmithPA_468x304.jpg
Smith
Timothy Smith, 38, had stepped back to read the electronic timetable.

In doing so, he blocked the path of Rickell Patterson, then 16, who was cycling along the crowded pavement on his BMX bike.

Enraged, Patterson pulled out a kitchen knife and plunged it into Mr Smith's chest before riding off, leaving him bleeding to death in front of dozens of onlookers.

Patterson (left) used a 3in kitchen knife to stab Timothy Smith (right) once in the chest after he accidentally bumped into his bicycle

The 3inch blade punctured a lung and vein. Mr Smith, a freelance journalist, died later that day in hospital.

At Nottingham Crown Court yesterday, Patterson, now 17, was sentenced to life and ordered to serve a minimum of 14 years in jail after being convicted of murder. Good thing those limey's are tough on crime. Whatever happened to life in prison meaning LIFE IN PRISON?
Last night Mr Smith's family called for tougher sentencing for knife crime.

His brother Chris, 42, said: "Every time I look at a knife, a small knife, an ordinary knife, I wonder was it like this?

"It haunts me. He was touched by pure evil that day and we are the ones serving the life sentence.

"This is the reality of knife crime, this poison, what it leaves behind and destroys.

"Where is the real deterrent, the penalty for carrying knives?"

The jury heard that Mr Smith was waiting at the bus stop in Nottingham after visiting a library on the evening of May 1.

After the collision with the bike, a scuffle broke out and Patterson told him: 'You got in the line of fire', then pulled the knife.

Frances Oldham QC, prosecuting, said Mr Smith "appeared not to understand what he was supposed to have done" when Patterson confronted him. I'm sure the guy figured that "sorry mate" would cover it but not for a nigger.

Patterson, a part-time computer student, slapped Mr Smith around the face, knocking his sunglasses off, before stabbing him once.

Patterson, of St Ann's, Nottingham, later threw the knife away and burned his blood- stained clothes.

But the next day, he handed himself into police.

He said he acted in self-defence after Mr Smith "went crazy".

He also claimed he carried the knife to defend himself against youths from rival estates in the city.

Sentencing, Mr Justice Teare told Patterson: "Nothing he did justified any action from you, let alone his death.

"This was a senseless and unprovoked act on an innocent and unsuspecting member of the public."
 
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So many reasons to despise niggers, it is hard to narrow it down. The criminal impulsiveness of niggers is hard to fathom for whites. Bump into a nigger and it may turn and kill you over this seemingly small matter. This is what makes them so dangerous. Very few whites understand this aspect of nigger behavior. When dealing with niggers, you must understand the encounter can turn lethal in a second and you must be prepared to fight for your life when it happens!! Most whites don't realize the danger until it is too late. Niggers are dangerous animals just like leopards and they can kill you over nothing at all!! Feral monkeymen must be watched at all times when they are around!! However, there is no more deadly creature on this earth than a white man who has been awakened to the dangers of niggers!!! That indeed is a creature to be feared, especially by niggers!!

Gman
 
Rickell Patterson
Probably freed already.

Killer who stabbed man with kitchen knife has sentence cut for a second time​

Rickell Patterson was only 16 when he committed the crime

By Jon PritchardDeputy digital news editor
  • 15:59, 8 FEB 2018
  • Updated16:01, 8 FEB 2018



A man who was jailed as a teenager for the murder of a journalist could be free this year after winning a sentence cut from a judge.

Rickell Patterson, now 27, was only 16 when he brutally stabbed former Rutland Times reporter Timothy Smith to death in Upper Parliament Street in May 2007.

Mr Smith, originally from Darlington, had been waiting at a city centre bus stop when Patterson rode past through a crowd, sparking an altercation.

The killer, from St Ann's, pulled a kitchen knife from his pocket and stabbed Mr Smith in the chest.

In December 2007, he was sentenced to a minimum of 14 years for the murder, but later saw that cut to 12 years after an appeal in 2008.

Due to time spent in custody before sentencing, he was due to apply for parole next year, but has today (February 8) seen that brought forward.

In a review at the High Court, Mr Justice Langstaff said Patterson had made “exceptional progress” and deserved nine months off his minimum term.

A photo of Rickell Patterson when he was jailed in December 2007

A photo of Rickell Patterson when he was jailed in December 2007 (Image: Nottinghamshire Police)

The decision means the killer, who had no previous convictions when he stabbed Mr Smith, will be able to apply for release towards the end of this year.


Ruling on the case, the judge said he had never seen such positive progress in a person during their time in prison, even before sentencing.

But Patterson had continued to do well following what was described as a “one-off” offence, committed in a “specific set of circumstances”.

He had already been transferred to open conditions, pending release on temporary licence, and had strong family support, the judge continued.

He had worked behind bars as a listener for troubled inmates, a mentor and an equalities representativ
Timothy Smith, who was murdered by Rickell Patterson

Timothy Smith, who was murdered by Rickell Patterson (Image: Nottinghamshire Police/PA Wire)

He had done so much positive work on reducing the risk that he might pose on release that there was nothing at all left for him to do.

“All the reporting officers speak of the successful and positive completion of these programmes, and of the progress he continues to make,” he said.

“It is clear in my view from the evidence before me that his progress has resulted in a significant alteration in his maturity and outlook since the commission of the offence, and a significant reduction in the level of risk posed to public safety.

“He has demonstrated progress and behaviour of a consistently positive nature in more than one institution.”

The judge cut his 12-year minimum term by nine months. When the term expires, the Parole Board will then decide whether he should be released.
 
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