🚨 UPDATE: 8 people charged in Sex Ring “Underground Bunker” for Paying adults to Rape their Children and Pets — Ages 3-16. Trial delayed as mom pleads guilty and flips on co-defendants
In Bibb County, Alabama, eight suspects ran a sex trafficking ring out of an underground bunker where children as young as 3 were drugged, bound, and raped with adults paying to abuse them.
Animals were also targeted.
Rebecca Brewer and mother of some of the victims, pleaded guilty to sexual torture and nine counts of first-degree kidnapping. As part of the deal she agreed to testify against the other seven defendants.
The trial for the remaining suspects has been delayed while the case expands, including a federal investigation into at least one of them.
These monsters turned their own kids and pets into victims for profit.
How long will it take for every last one of them to face real justice?
This is Callum Peacock. He battered his girlfriend with a golf club, threw bleach and paint at her, and burned a memorial shirt of her deceased grandmother but has avoided an immediate prison sentence.
The 19-year-old defendant, from St Helens, subjected his partner to a cruel three-hour ordeal inside their home.
Police officers arrived at the flat to find the victim covered in white paint and curled up in a ball on the bathroom floor.
She was audibly sobbing and shrieking through a hole in the door, which was still smouldering and smoking.
During the assault, the teenager hit her with a broom handle and a golf club before putting her in a chokehold from behind.
When she tried to hide in the bathroom, he smashed the door with the golf club and used an aerosol and a lighter to set fire to it.
He then threw dumbbells and a bottle of bleach at her, causing the liquid to splash onto her body.
In what was described in court as an extremely selfish act, he took hold of a memorial t-shirt featuring a photograph of her deceased grandmother.
He set fire to the garment right in front of her while telling her that her nan would rot in hell.
The attack came just two days after another incident where he struck his girlfriend with a hammer following an argument.
Following his arrest, he openly threatened his victim in front of police officers, stating that he was going to smash her face in when he got out.
But he has now walked free from court after a judge handed him an 18-month imprisonment suspended for 18 months.
The court heard he had already spent nearly five months in custody on remand, which the judge noted was the equivalent of a nine-month sentence for a teenager with no previous convictions.
He was also given a five-year restraining order and a rehabilitation activity requirement of up to 20 days.
Another kick in the teeth, metaphorically speaking to the brave young woman who endured his cowardly attacks.
The justice in this country cares more about the accused than the victims.
@Kscott_94@BelTel 3 protesters cause they're not interested in peaceful protests
They're only interested in rioting and disturbing the lives of regular folk
An appeal from the family of Monday's victim Stephen Ogilvie
Take note Musk, Yaxley-Lennon, Lowe, Farage and loyalist paramilitaries
Violence is not wanted in Northern Ireland
This is how Belfast looks on my femicide map.
Each of the ~1,000 pins is for a woman or girl murdered in Belfast between 1900 - 2025.
Almost all of them murdered by men and mostly by the type of men who were strolling around Belfast tonight wrecking their own city. /1
Madonna has always danced and dressed to shock. She has always pushed boundaries.
Then she got old.
Some men can’t handle Madonna continuing to Madonna whilst getting older. So they use words like “slutty” - to describe a fully clothed woman wearing a Dolce and Gabbana corset and tights.
What these men reveal is that they think a woman should make herself invisible as she ages. Because for these men - a woman being sexually attractive to THEM is what gives HER validity.
They will probably happily consume porn where the women are selected to appear to be underage and see nothing wrong with that because “she chooses to do it” and they can ignore the sexual exploitation of the women they participate in. They perceive “ownership” of these women the moment they click on their screens and these women must behave according to the rules men hold in their minds about women being hairless, wrinkle-free, submissive and sexually complaint.
These men do not measure themselves on the same scale or to the same standards as the women they judge. They can be obese, balding and in their fifties, masturbating to horrendous porn scenarios involving young girls gang raped - but a woman who has “crossed over” into a middle-age wilderness where they no longer wish to use her for their sexual fantasies should disappear from their view.
These men are afraid of older women. They hate them. They particularly hate the ones who insist on being seen. Because women getting older are a challenge to the porn set woman who the men feel they can scroll through, use and discard until the next time. By contrast a woman with wrinkles and aching joints is real - she might say no. She might say “fuck off and tidy yourself up you flatulent potato”.
These men believe that in real life they shouldn’t have to encounter an “ugly” female body with sagging skin and cellulite. They themselves may be balding, their arses are sagging and their bellies hang to their knees but they still believe they operate in an attractiveness economy where their dollars double in comparison to a woman of the same age. They can trade for a woman ten years younger.
So when a Madonna steps forward and carries on doing what she has always done it’s a bit annoying. She isn’t turning them on sexually so how dare she act in a sexual way?! They didn’t summon her and they can’t control her.
The fragility of these men is laughable. Madonna is clearly not fragile - she will perform as long as she can. She loves music and fashion. She’s doing what she thinks she can to maintain her brand. She has always been creative. I enjoyed watching her slightly unravel each day during Covid. She doesn’t know how NOT to be a performer.
I hope Madonna keeps running a little wild and unravelling into later life with abandon. It’s gloriously generous of her to get on stage and show us. She’s like a later life Mustang that men like these can’t throw a rope round. Good for her that she is.
Robert Gros made £27m selling useless gowns via the VIP PPE Lane, of course he never paid back a penny, he bought 2 mansions instead.
RT and see if we can make him as famous as Michelle Mone.
my kitten started choking again today (y’all who follow me know this mf STAY CHOKING😭) & thank god i know the cat heimlich because it’s one of the scariest things when your pet starts to choke.
so here’s my bi-monthly “you should learn the cat heimlich if you have cats” tweet
Four babies in 23 months almost kil*led her — but Ireland's law said she had no right to protect herself.
Mary May McGee was 24 years old when her doctor told her the truth no young mother should hear: another pregnancy would likely end her life.
She'd already survived pre-eclampsia. After her second child, she nearly died. During her third pregnancy, when she delivered twins, her body gave out completely. She slipped into a coma for four days.
Four children. Twenty-three months. Her body had been pushed beyond its limits.
Her doctor prescribed contraceptives — a diaphragm and spermicidal jelly — not for convenience, but for survival.
But in 1960s Ireland, that prescription was worthless.
Since 1935, contraception had been completely illegal. You couldn't buy it. You couldn't import it. Condoms, diaphragms, birth control pills — all banned under the Criminal Law Amendment Act.
When May and her husband Shay tried to order the contraceptives from the UK, Irish customs seized the package. Officials warned them: try again and face prosecution.
May's response was simple and defiant: "I was livid. I wasn't going to back down."
This wasn't about politics. This was about staying alive to raise her children.
In 1972, with support from their family doctor and the Irish Family Planning Association, the McGees took their case to court. The High Court rejected them.
They didn't stop.
On December 19, 1973, Ireland's Supreme Court ruled 4–1 in their favor, determining that married couples had a constitutional right to privacy in family planning decisions.
During the trial, Shay McGee was asked how he felt about his wife using contraceptives.
His answer was devastating in its simplicity:
"I'd prefer to see her using contraceptives than be placing flowers on her grave."
Not a political argument. Just a husband refusing to lose his wife.
Justice Gerard Hogan would later call it the court's "single most important decision" in its near century-long history — the spark that began Ireland's social revolution.
But revolutions move slowly.
Despite the 1973 ruling, real access to contraception took years. In 1979, the government finally passed legislation allowing married couples to get contraceptives — but only with a prescription and only for "bona fide family planning purposes."
The Minister for Health called it "an Irish solution to an Irish problem."
It wasn't until 1985 that condoms could be sold without a prescription. And not until 1993 — twenty years after the McGees' victory — that all restrictions were finally lifted.
The Sunday after their Supreme Court win, May and Shay attended Mass in Skerries. They were condemned from the pulpit.
They walked out and never returned.
May McGee never sought the spotlight. She didn't campaign for awards or make herself the face of a movement.
She simply refused to accept that the state could decide whether she lived or died.
And in doing so, she changed Ireland forever.
Her fight was deeply personal.
Her impact was profoundly national.
She stood up to both church and state — not to provoke, but to survive.
And she gave generations of Irish women something irreplaceable: the right to decide.