READ MORE: 'Keys, phone, knife' - We must change blade culture to save livesĬhapman, of Woodchurch in Wirral, is only weeks into a life sentence with a minimum term of 48 years after firing 12 shots from a Skorpion sub-machine gun at a group of people in front of the Lighthouse pub in Wallasey Village on Christmas Eve last year.Ĭhapman was intending to kill gang rivals Kieran Salkeld and Jake Duffy, who were seriously wounded, but he instead claimed the life of "wholly innocent" beautician Elle Edwards, 26, who was struck twice in the head.Įlle's dad, Tim Edwards, slammed Chapman as a "scumbag" and said the photo was a "picture of a coward". Last week, the ECHO revealed how a trigger-happy thug in prison for gun violence shared images of killer Connor Chapman, 23, grinning through a cell window. Many of the videos are harmless enough, some show the realities of prison food, others show prisoners dancing and singing.īut when such content involves a ruthless murderer who is serving life, the seriousness of the problem ramps up. The reality is a quick search on Instagram, TikTok or other social media networks can unearth a vast array of content obviously recorded by serving prisoners. According to the letter of the law no inmate should have an unauthorised mobile phone behind bars anywhere in the UK prison estate.
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