Charles Bronson (prisoner): Difference between revisions
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==Film of Bronson's life== |
==Film of Bronson's life== |
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''[[Bronson (film)|Bronson]]'', a biopic of Bronson's life, produced by Vertigo Films, is scheduled for release on 13 March 2009. It stars [[Tom Hardy]] in the title role, and is directed by [[Nicolas Winding Refn]].<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.imdb |
''[[Bronson (film)|Bronson]]'', a biopic of Bronson's life, produced by Vertigo Films, is scheduled for release on 13 March 2009. It stars [[Tom Hardy]] in the title role, and is directed by [[Nicolas Winding Refn]].<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.imdb |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 17:18, 16 March 2009
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2009) |
Charles Bronson (born 6 December, 1952) is the adopted name of Michael Gordon Peterson, a Welsh criminal who has been referred to in the British press as the "most violent prisoner in Britain".[1]
Early life
Bronson was born Michael Gordon Peterson in the resort town of Aberystwyth in Wales. His parents, Eira and Joe Peterson, ran the Conservative club in Aberystwyth, and his uncle and aunt were mayor and mayoress of the resort town in the 1960s and 1970s. His aunt Eileen Parry, is quoted as saying "As a boy he was a lovely lad. He was obviously bright and always good with children. He was gentle and mild-mannered, never a bully - he would defend the weak."[2]
When he was a teenager, Bronson moved with his family to Merseyside, where he started getting into trouble. According to his aunt, he was "in da firm". Bronson later moved to Luton, which is often referred to as his home town, where he earned a living as a circus strongman. He married in December 1970 to Irene, with whom he had a son, Michael.
Boxing career and name change
Prior to being imprisoned, Bronson had a short-lived career in bareknuckle boxing in the East End of London, during which time he became an associate of Lenny McLean. It is stated on his website that, contrary to press reports, his name was changed by his fight promoter in 1987, thirteen years after his initial imprisonment and that his choice was not made in relation to the actor, Charles Bronson.[3] However, it has often been suggested Bronson changed his name by deed poll to be more in line with a "tough guy" image.
Life in prison
Bronson was jailed for seven years in 1974 for a bungled armed robbery, aged 17, during which he stole £26.18. His sentence has been repeatedly extended for crimes committed within prison, which include wounding with intent, wounding, criminal damage, grievous bodily harm, false imprisonment, blackmail and threatening to kill.
Bronson has served all but 4 of his years in prison in solitary confinement due to a number of hostage situations, rooftop protests, repeated attacks on prison staff and on other inmates. His dangerous behaviour has meant that he has spent time in over 120 different prisons, including Broadmoor high security psychiatric hospital.[2]
In 2000, Bronson received a discretionary life sentence with a three year tariff for a hostage-taking incident (see below). His appeal against this sentence was denied in 2004.[4]
Bronson has spent a total of just four months and nine days out of custody since 1974. He was released on 30 October 1988 and spent 68 days as a free man before being arrested for robbery, and then released again on 9 November 1992, spending 53 days as a free man before being arrested again, this time for conspiracy to rob.[2]
In 1999 a special prison unit was set up for Bronson and two other violent prisoners from Woodhill (HM Prison), to reduce the risk they posed to staff and other prisoners.[5]
He has not been allowed to mix with other prisoners since 1999.
Hostage incidents
Bronson has been involved in over a dozen hostage incidents, some of which are described below:
- Bronson took hostages and staged a 47-hour rooftop protest at Broadmoor in 1983, causing £750,000 of damage.
- In 1994, whilst holding a guard hostage at Woodhill Prison, Milton Keynes, he demanded an inflatable doll, a helicopter and a cup of tea as ransom. Two months later, he held deputy governor Adrian Wallace hostage for five hours at Hull prison, injuring him so badly he was off work for five weeks, although Bronson claimed it was "an accident".[2]
- In 1998, Bronson took two Iraqi hijackers and another inmate hostage at Belmarsh prison in London. He insisted his hostages address him as "General" and told negotiators he would eat one of his victims unless his demands were met. At one stage, Bronson demanded one of the Iraqis hit him "very hard" over the head with a metal tray. When the hostage refused, the 18-stone strongman slashed his own shoulder six times with a razor blade. He later told staff: "I'm going to start snapping necks - I'm the number-one hostage taker." He demanded a plane to take him to Cuba, two Uzi sub-machine guns, 5,000 rounds of ammunition and an axe. In court, he said he was "as guilty as Adolf Hitler". He said: "I was on a mission of madness, but now I'm on a mission of peace and all I want to do now is go home and have a pint with my son." Another seven years were added to his sentence.[2]
- Soon after the trial, Bronson once again escaped from solitary confinement, tied up prison teacher Phil Danielson with a rope and towed him round the jail for 44 hours (the teacher was not physically harmed during the incident.) Armed with two knives, he twice tried to harm himself during the siege, hitting himself over the head with a bottle and tearing a washing machine filled with water from its socket in an attempt to electrocute himself. It is said that this kidnap attempt by Bronson was all done because he wanted "two cheeseburgers with ketchup".
- In 2007, two members of prison staff at Full Sutton high security prison in the East Riding of Yorkshire were involved in a "control and restraint incident", in an attempt to prevent another hostage situation, during which Bronson (who now needs spectacles) had his glasses broken. Bronson received £200 compensation for his broken glasses,[6] which he claimed were made of "pre-war gold" and given to him by Lord Longford.[citation needed]
Second marriage and second name change
In 2001 he married again, this time to Saira Rehman, who had seen his picture in a newspaper and began writing to him. Rehman had visited Bronson just three times prior to their wedding.[7][8]
For a short time Bronson converted to Islam (Rehman is a Muslim) and wished to be known as Charles Ali Ahmed. However, he and Rehman have since divorced. Rehman has since written two books regarding her short marriage to Bronson, portraying him in a negative light. Bronson responded by claiming that she is an attention-seeker and that she would be nobody if it were not for her connection to him.
Occupations and projects
Whilst in prison, Bronson has developed an extreme fitness regime and regularly does 2,500 press-ups a day. In 2002, he published a book Solitary Fitness (ISBN 1-902578-12-0), detailing an individual training process with minimal resources and space.
For the past ten years, Bronson has occupied himself by writing poetry, producing pieces of art and has had eleven books published. He has won a record 11 Koestler Awards for his poetry and art.[9]
Current status
Bronson remains a "Category A" prisoner at Wakefield High-Security Prison where he remains in solitary confinement.[6] He was due for a parole hearing in September 2008, aided by the fact he had shown no sign of violence for the past seven years, but this was postponed when his lawyer objected to a one-hour parole interview, requesting a full day to deal with Bronson's case.[10] The parole hearing took place on 11 March 2009 [11] with the parole board's decision to be made within 7 days.
Film of Bronson's life
Bronson, a biopic of Bronson's life, produced by Vertigo Films, is scheduled for release on 13 March 2009. It stars Tom Hardy in the title role, and is directed by Nicolas Winding Refn.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.imdb
References
- ^ "Why are women drawn to men behind bars?". Denise Mina. The Guardian. January 13, 2003.
- ^ a b c d e "Bronson: 'Gentle boy' to terror inmate". BBC News. February 17, 2000. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
- ^ "About Charles Bronson". freebronson.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
- ^ "Judge praises Bronson, but rules he must stay in jail". The Daily Telegraph. April 3, 2004. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
- ^ "Special new unit for Britain's three most dangerous prisoners". The Independent. August 25, 1999. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
- ^ a b "Bronson gets payout from prison". BBC News. May 11, 2007. Retrieved 2009-03-12.
- ^ "New bride for Bronson". BBC News. June 1, 2001. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
- ^ "Lord Longford toasts madcap marriage of jailed Bronson". The Daily Telegraph. June 5, 2001. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
- ^ "The Koestler Trust". The Koestler Trust. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
- ^ "Statement from Charles Bronson in Wakefield Prison". freebronson.co.uk. August 6, 2008. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
- ^ "Jailhouse flick: Charles Bronson makes biopic from solitary". The Times. February 15, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
Bibliography
- "Bronson" by Charles Bronson (ISBN 1857825225)
- "Bronson" by Charles Bronson (ISBN 9781844546558)
- "Solitary Fitness" by Charles Bronson (ISBN 1844543099)
- "Loonyology: In My Own Words" by Charles Bronson (ISBN 1906358117)
- "The Good Prison Guide" by Charles Bronson (ISBN 1844543595)
- "Insanity: My Mad Life" by Charles Bronson (ISBN 1844540308)