Welcome back Marlon King

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Royal With Cheese
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Re: Welcome back Marlon King

by Royal With Cheese » 04 Aug 2010 16:12

sandman The fact he's been in trouble before would suggest he isn't the best at learning from his mistakes. This isn't a second chance it's a third.


Not quite......


The Guardian since the age of 17 the Jamaica international has found himself in the dock on no less than seven previous occasions involving 13 offences. They feature dishonesty, drink driving and other motoring offences, and violence against women.

Only one, receiving a stolen £30,000 BMW, resulted in a prison sentence – 18 months reduced to nine on appeal. Apart from some community penalties, the other punishments were fines.

King's first brush with the law was in December 1997 at Camberwell Youth Court when he was convicted of wounding another footballer. At the time he was playing for a local Dulwich side. His victim was part of a St Thomas's Hospital team.

Magistrates heard how he grabbed his opponent round the neck and, as the referee booked him, returned to the attack with a head-butt and a punch in the face, fracturing his cheekbone. He was given an 80-hour community order and ordered to pay £250 compensation.

Two years later, at Tower Bridge Magistrates' Court, he was fined a total of £240 for two counts of theft and two of fraudulently using a tax disc.

In 2002 he was brought before Camberwell Green Magistrates for driving with excess alcohol and while uninsured. He was fined £650, ordered to pay £40 costs and disqualified from driving for nine months.

A week later at Greenwich Magistrates' Court he received a six-month community rehabilitation order and was ordered to pay £100 compensation for criminal damage and attempting to obtain property by deception. Later that year, at Inner London Crown Court, he was jailed for receiving the BMW Cabriolet.

A year after that he was at Bow Street Magistrates' Court for two counts of common assault. The court heard how a cab driver had called police about a "disturbance" in Berwick Street, Soho. When officers arrived they saw King chasing two women along the road with a belt and buckle wrapped round his right fist.

One of them explained he had attacked them for "no apparent reason", punching her in the face and causing cuts and swelling. He was fined £1,000, and ordered to pay £500 compensation as well as £100 costs.

His last court appearance was in 2005, again at Bow Street, when he was convicted of threatening behaviour. This involved him approaching a woman near Leicester Square, and again for "no apparent reason" spat at her. He was fined £300, and ordered to pay £500 compensation and £55 costs.

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Royal Rother
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Re: Welcome back Marlon King

by Royal Rother » 04 Aug 2010 16:39

He's just been unlucky.

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One Beer is never enough.
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Re: Welcome back Marlon King

by One Beer is never enough. » 04 Aug 2010 16:41

Royal Rother He's just been unlucky.


No, he's just sh!t at being a crim. :)

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Re: Welcome back Marlon King

by sandman » 04 Aug 2010 16:59

Royal With Cheese
sandman The fact he's been in trouble before would suggest he isn't the best at learning from his mistakes. This isn't a second chance it's a third.


Not quite......


The Guardian since the age of 17 the Jamaica international has found himself in the dock on no less than seven previous occasions involving 13 offences. They feature dishonesty, drink driving and other motoring offences, and violence against women.

Only one, receiving a stolen £30,000 BMW, resulted in a prison sentence – 18 months reduced to nine on appeal. Apart from some community penalties, the other punishments were fines.

King's first brush with the law was in December 1997 at Camberwell Youth Court when he was convicted of wounding another footballer. At the time he was playing for a local Dulwich side. His victim was part of a St Thomas's Hospital team.

Magistrates heard how he grabbed his opponent round the neck and, as the referee booked him, returned to the attack with a head-butt and a punch in the face, fracturing his cheekbone. He was given an 80-hour community order and ordered to pay £250 compensation.

Two years later, at Tower Bridge Magistrates' Court, he was fined a total of £240 for two counts of theft and two of fraudulently using a tax disc.

In 2002 he was brought before Camberwell Green Magistrates for driving with excess alcohol and while uninsured. He was fined £650, ordered to pay £40 costs and disqualified from driving for nine months.

A week later at Greenwich Magistrates' Court he received a six-month community rehabilitation order and was ordered to pay £100 compensation for criminal damage and attempting to obtain property by deception. Later that year, at Inner London Crown Court, he was jailed for receiving the BMW Cabriolet.

A year after that he was at Bow Street Magistrates' Court for two counts of common assault. The court heard how a cab driver had called police about a "disturbance" in Berwick Street, Soho. When officers arrived they saw King chasing two women along the road with a belt and buckle wrapped round his right fist.

One of them explained he had attacked them for "no apparent reason", punching her in the face and causing cuts and swelling. He was fined £1,000, and ordered to pay £500 compensation as well as £100 costs.

His last court appearance was in 2005, again at Bow Street, when he was convicted of threatening behaviour. This involved him approaching a woman near Leicester Square, and again for "no apparent reason" spat at her. He was fined £300, and ordered to pay £500 compensation and £55 costs.


Should of remembered that. I read a similar article when he was convicted. You would hope that the football world will ignore his whining about how much he's changed but I'm sure there will be another manager who is stupid enough to think they can change him though.

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Hoop Blah
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Re: Welcome back Marlon King

by Hoop Blah » 05 Aug 2010 11:06

If the state won't lock him up for longer, and he's still good enough to do the job, then I'm not sure why he shouldn't be able to carry on his career.

He won't earn half as much, or play as high a level, as he would if he had a clean record and was reliable as well as gifted.

If he was a window fitter or dustman, would you be so bothered about him going back to work once he was out on the street again?


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Re: Welcome back Marlon King

by Dirk Gently » 05 Aug 2010 11:16

That Guardian article loses all credibility 17 words in....

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Re: Welcome back Marlon King

by Skyline » 06 Aug 2010 12:09

He's now on a mission to try and clear his name:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-10890109

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Re: Welcome back Marlon King

by Gav » 06 Aug 2010 13:12

Dirk Gently That Guardian article loses all credibility 17 words in....


:lol: :lol: :lol:

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