British Crime and Prison Quiz Book
127 pages
English

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127 pages
English

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Description

Will you be held at gunpoint and find yourself reaching for the panic button or will you be laughing all the way to the bank as you try to answer this quiz book's 450 testing questions cunningly prepared by former London gangster and nowadays best-selling celebrity author and film-maker Dave Courtney and ex-prison officer Jim Dawkins? Covering all aspects of the British underworld and the heroes and villains that have grabbed media attention and stirred up public interest and imagination, this book is as much an educational treasure trove as it is a quiz book. With a fitting foreword by Charles Bronson, this is definitely a quiz book with an encyclopaedic twist and is guaranteed to provoke hours of reminiscing and discussion about the daring escapades and notorious characters that have stamped an indelible mark on the British crime scene.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 11 mai 2011
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781908382153
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0300€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Title Page


THE BRITISH CRIME
AND
PRISON QUIZ BOOK


JIM DAWKINS AND DAVE COURTNEY

FOREWORD BY CHARLES BRONSON



Publisher Information


Apex Publishing Ltd
PO?Box 7086, Clacton on Sea,
Essex, CO15 5WN
www.apexpublishing.co.uk

Digital Edition converted and published by
Andrews UK Limited 2011-01-31
www.andrewsuk.com

Copyright © 2008 by Jim Dawkins and Dave Courtney
The authors have asserted their moral rights

British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that no part of this book is to be reproduced, in any shape or form. Or by way of trade, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition, including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser, without prior permission of the copyright holder.

Production Manager: Chris Cowlin
Cover Design: Andrew Macey
Printed and bound in Great Britain
Foreword

By Charles Bronson


When I was first asked to do this foreword, I thought: this is unusual - The British Crime and Prison Quiz Book! Jim Dawkins and Dave Courtney?! Someone’s having a laugh!
But then it hit me: this book is awesome, a complete one off, a masterpiece. And I said to myself: who better to do it than my old pals Jim and Dave? It is brilliant, absolutely magical. Dave an ex-villain and Jim an ex-screw - you just couldn’t make up a partnership like that. It’s unique - just fantastic; and I’m lucky enough to know both men very well.
I first met Jim in Belmarsh max secure jail on the high risk unit segregation wing. He used to lock me up. To me, he was a true diamond: a man who had a lot of morals and didn’t take liberties. He was a ‘one-off screw’ and all the cons respected him. But, as life goes on, we all move on with it. Jim left the job, walked away from the toe rags, and the rest is history.
All my ‘firm’ say the same as me: he’s a top geezer and we all admire the man. The courage it must have taken to tell the truth about the state of our prison system (in his best-selling, widely acclaimed autobiography, ‘The Loose Screw’, also published by Apex) is second to none.
Dave... Well, he’s just Dave: a complete one-off! A flash git, but a true man of his word. He’s stood by me through some serious shit, nothing has ever been too much for him. He is always in my corner and never has a bad word said about me. And he always spoils my mum and sister at the events and shows, and they love him to bits.
I am pleased Dave gave up the crime and moved on to an honest life. He has published twice as many books as Jeffrey Archer - and all Dave’s are bestsellers. So who’s the daddy?
This book could become a No 1 bestseller purely on the grounds of it being so unusual and unique. I believe it could easily become a collectors item as there is nothing quite like it, nor will there ever be again.
And it will certainly be a winner in our prisons. All 80,000 cons will want one, as will the screws, governors, judges, probation staff, solicitors, and probably even the Old Bill. It might even become a training manual!
This book is also historically accurate, and contains a wealth of information that will both shock and amaze you.
And I will end now by asking my own question...
Can anyone tell me where I buried my loot? I’ve been locked up for so long that I just can’t remember. If anyone can help, get in touch with me at www.freebronson.co.uk or write to me directly at:

Bronson 1314
C.S.C. (cage)
HMP Wakefield
West Yorkshire
WF2 9AG

Yours, in the name of madness,
Charles Bronson



Introduction

By Jim Dawkins


From its grim beginnings in around 1066, the mysterious world that exists behind our grey prison walls has been a subject that incites great interest.
From the better known images of the Victorian prisons - with their savage regimes and grim punishments - to the romantic images drawn from many near-mythical tales of infamous prisoners, prison life has long been a subject of great fascination. The rich and famous, top politicians and even members of royalty have been seen rubbing shoulders with people linked to the murky underworld of our prison system. Many well-known actresses have been romantically linked to members of the criminal underworld; and many famous actors and members of parliament are known to have spent time in the company of some of our most infamous criminals. And many ex-cons have themselves achieved celebrity status after retiring from their life of crime.
My own interest in our prisons was born in 1992, when - after leaving the army with no qualifications and finding myself in an alien world of mortgages, utility bills and having to pay for food - I entered the employ of HMP as a rather young and slightly naive prison officer.
Actually, I use the word ‘interest’ rather loosely. At the time, my only interest was in how to survive on the rather grim and frightening landings of Wandsworth prison for long enough to pick up my first pay cheque. I described in my first book and autobiography, ‘The Loose Screw’ (which details my rather colourful time as a Prison Officer) that stepping inside the grey, imposing walls of Wandsworth prison was like stepping back in time a hundred years. Nothing had changed from the images I had seen in old Dickensian films and books of old Victorian photographs.
The air was stale. The lingering stench of human waste gave testament to Wandsworth having no integral toilets and prisoners having to ‘slop out’ using the buckets in their cells. Prisoners all wore the same uniforms (which hadn’t changed much since Oscar Wilde’s incarceration there): blue and white striped shirts, thin blue denim jeans and black or brown prison shoes. Even in 1992, no prisoner was allowed out of his cell without his shirt’s top button done up and his shirt tucked into his trousers. Failure to comply with this rule was an offence that carried sentences ranging from three days solitary confinement to staff “attitude adjustment” sessions. (Those of you with any experience of prison life will understand exactly what I mean by the last statement.)
All together, I spent just over seven years as a Landing Officer in three of London’s toughest jails. Two of those were the old Victorian jails (Wandsworth and Wormwood Scrubs), and the third was the new flagship of the prison service, HMP Belmarsh.
During my time as an officer, I became fascinated by the daily routines in the prisons. Many of these routines had been standard for over a hundred years, carried out on the same landings on which I now worked. Prisoners had to endure ‘slopping out’, weekly showers in the bath house and twenty-three-hour lock-up.
The things I saw in prisons and courtrooms across the country, and the many different characters I met during my career, inspired me to become the first prison officer to document his experiences in an autobiography and, consequently, led to my researching and compiling this quiz book.
I hope you will be amazed by some of the facts you find here, and enjoy testing your knowledge or challenging your friends and family to a quiz night. This book is not biased towards either officer or inmate, and only contains documented facts about our prison system and some of the characters to have passed through it.
All the questions and answers have been thoroughly researched and are genuine facts, including those on the early days of our prison system. Some will test your knowledge of famous (and infamous) prisoners throughout history, literature penned by prisoners and prison-related films and television shows. Others focus on prison facts and figures, including prisoners’ entitlements, punishments and prison slang.
So, whether you’re a prisoner wanting to test your knowledge of the system in which you find yourself, a prison officer looking to brush-up for a promotion exam, or just a historian with a keen interest in our fascinating penal system: you will find this book invaluable.
I hope you enjoy it!

Jim Dawkins



Introduction

By Dave Courtney


Hello people. Just like Jim, I’ve long had an interest in British prisons. As long as I’ve been getting locked up in them for being a naughty boy, actually. In fact, the last time I saw Jim Dawkins, we were in the category A unit at HMP?Belmarsh and he was hitting me over the head with a truncheon ... Just kidding!
Seriously though, if you’d told me a few years ago that I’d be writing books with an ex-screw, I would have had you sectioned. But I got to tell you, Jim is no ordinary ex-screw.
Anyone who knows me will tell you I won’t work with any old muppet. I’ve always had a healthy respect for the military, and like to run my own affairs with that discipline and respect I describe in all my books (and Jim describes in his first book, ‘The Loose Screw’). Jim and I both learned to work this way while growing up on the streets of South London; a lesson that has served us both well, it would seem, in our two very different career paths.
I first met Jim when he was one of the screws on the Cat A unit in Belmarsh, and - although he was then The Enemy - I remember noticing he was somehow different to the rest. Don’t get me wrong - he was no pushover; he just seemed to be fair and unbothered about upsetting his colleagues as long as he did his job professionally. Th

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