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9forme

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  1. how about. its time to walk away ally. cant get any shorter and to the point than that.
  2. fook celtic, rangers first, sooooooooo win the league for me
  3. i would say people wanting him to remain after the end of the season, are probably the beasts wanting to keep him to fook us up.
  4. he said "we're going to beat them" on radio scotland.
  5. not a Whooooooshhhh!!!! just puting it out there again lol
  6. we where looking at the girl lol is this you coming out or was it a typo lol
  7. GARRY Faulds, boyfriend of Laura Colquhoun, threatened the 53-year-old victim with a blowtorch to make him reveal bank details. Facebook Laura Colquhoun in model pose A TEENAGE glamour model and her thug boyfriend are facing jail for trying to blackmail an amateur photographer. Laura Colquhoun, 17, and Garry Faulds, 21, bound and assaulted their victim in his own home. They threatened to tell his bosses at a council he had been photographing underage girls. He has never been charged with any such offence. The victim photographed Colquhoun several times and told the jury she had performed a sex act on him. He was beaten, bound and threatened with a blowtorch by a masked thug who invaded his home. And last night, the intruder and his teenage model girlfriend were facing years behind bars for the brutal extortion plot. The victim told a High Court jury: “When I walked into the hall there was a guy in a balaclava with the eyes cut out. He was wearing a blue jumpsuit. Facebook Laura Colquhoun and Garry Faulds “He tried to overpower me. I fell backwards. “I was screaming ‘Help!’ I was shouting as loudly as I could.” The victim said he was struck repeatedly and his arms, legs and mouth were bound with gaffer tape. The masked man then threatened him with the torch to force him to reveal his bank details. The 53-year-old victim was a senior council employee – and, at the time of the attack, a keen amateur glamour photographer. For more than a year, he had been enjoying photo sessions with Laura Colquhoun, a 17-year-old aspiring model, at his Edinburgh home. He told the court he paid her £150 per session, and she regularly performed a sex act on him. But the payments were not enough for Colquhoun or her scar-faced boyfriend Garry Faulds, 21. They decided they could make far more from brutality and blackmail. And when Colquhoun returned to the victim’s home on August 23 last year, she took Faulds with him. He was dressed in a boiler suit and balaclava mask. Colquhoun got him into the house, and prosecutors said they punched the victim to the ground, bound him and dragged him into another room. Faulds poses in online photo with a banner for a notorious Rangers hooligan gang Faulds used the threat of the blowtorch to terrify the man into revealing passwords to his computers and bank accounts. And he and Colquhoun told him they would destroy his reputation if he did not obey their commands. Faulds, a member of an Orange flute band, told the victim he was a member of the Loyalist UDA, who could cause him serious harm. And he threatened to tell the man’s employers that he had been taking illegal photos of underage girls. The court heard that the victim has never been charged with any such offences. Faulds tried in vain to log on to the victim’s online bank account, then forced him to call his bank to try to get a new access code so the account could be unlocked. The attempt failed. The vicim claimed he had a gun held to his head during the phone call. He told the court: “It looked real enough. It didn’t look like a toy.” But the jury found there was not enough evidence to support the claim that a firearm was used, and deleted the allegation from the charge. Facebook Colquhoun in model pose with boyfriend Garry Faulds The man claimed that Faulds also sat for a time in silence, “presumably just to frighten me”. He added: “I must say it was quite effective.” He also recalled that Faulds called him “a vile man”. Faulds and Colquhoun used the victim’s stolen bank card and PIN number to withdraw £100 from a cash machine. They also robbed him of approximately £800 in cash, photographic equipment, a set of keys, a Royal Bank of Scotland smart card and smart card reader. At one point, the court heard, Colquhoun spoke to Faulds while he was wearing the mask, asking him: “What are we going to do now, Garry?” A few days after the attack, the victim went to his employers and told them what had happened. Police were called, and Faulds and Colquhoun were quickly arrested. They both denied robbing, assaulting and threatening to extort cash from the victim. Neither gave evidence. The jury of nine women and six men took two hours and 40 minutes to find both accused guilty. Colquhoun wept, shook and sucked her thumb as prosecutor David Taylor told the court she had no previous convictions. The court heard that Faulds has a record for minor offences. Temporary judge Paul Arthurson QC deferred sentence on both accused for reports. He told them: “You have been convicted of a serious offence which will almost inevitably result in prison sentences.” Faulds, a prisoner at Low Moss jail near Bishopbriggs, was remanded in custody to await sentence. Colquhoun was granted bail. Both will return to court on April 4 to learn their fate.
  8. toxic all over it, came from there. http://billmcmurdo.wordpress.com/blog-2/
  9. Kicking Tyres Dave King’s latest intervention in Rangers’ affairs is as welcome as a fart in a spacesuit. His call for fans to boycott the club in terms of buying season tickets – and his ridiculous idea to drip-feed monies to the club – is a blatant attempt to destabilise Rangers. King’s statement is a smoke and mirrors job for me and the club has had to shoot down in flames a newspaper’s assertion that the South African-based businessman had offered a £1 million loan interest free to Rangers. It could be reasonably argued that if Dave King does intend to invest in Rangers, his latest pronouncements have a good chance of driving the share price down. A cynical ploy it could be argued. I noticed that King mentioned he had lost £20 million at Ibrox previously. As I recently blogged, there is some dispute about this. However, if it is true it is a pretty self-damning example for King to use, given that he was a director in that previous regime which ended in the sale of the club for a shiny pound to a certain Craig Whyte. Hardly the best track record for success – “I lost £20 million of my own dough so let me have another go!” I have nothing personally against Dave King. I previously blogged of his potential to be a unifying figure at Ibrox. Sadly, he has become a divisive figure and is feeding Rangers-haters with every doom and gloom pronouncement he makes. Yes, there is a need for a short-term injection to help the club through a potential shortfall in income. In response up stepped Sandy Easdale with an interest-free loan while non-shareholder King is dreaming up schemes to hold the club to ransom and strangle cash flow. No doubt King’s comments will be met with glee by the fifth column in the Rangers support. I don’t propose – unlike some – to speak for other fans but I find his ideas to be nothing less than a crude concept of extortion which would hold the club in thrall to the whim of fans. In short, yet another attempt at fan power – otherwise known as mob rule. I have no doubt some fellow fans will share my repulsion at this power grab by a man who talks big but doesn’t get put his wallet where his mouth is. As far as I am concerned, King is nothing but a tyre kicker and we will never see the colour of his money. My message to Dave King is simple: Butt out or match Sandy Easdale pound for pound and give Rangers an interest-free loan.
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