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  • "
    lisa401 wrote:
    wallydown wrote:
    anonEmouse wrote:
    wallydown wrote:
    anonEmouse wrote:
    I hope that when he gets into general population in prison, he is made to become some real hard gangsta's **** and that he is passed around to fellow inmates for their pleasure. Maybe this wil teach him a lesson he deserves. I hope he does real "hard time" they should just hang him and be done with the low life scum.
    How does it come to the point that every crook is apparently gay.that all of a sudden Turner will be Mr Bigs boyfriend? Get real for crying out loud, if I were in prison for 50 years i couldnt fancy another bloke ,you have a very distorted view of how life is
    Wally down said:How does it come to the point that every crook is apparently gay.that all of a sudden Turner will be Mr Bigs boyfriend? Get real for crying out loud, if I were in prison for 50 years i couldnt fancy another bloke ,you have a very distorted view of how life is

    I did not mention or imply that every crook is gay, you need to "get real" I said that I hope they make him his b i t c h, which is another way of saying slave or servant, its just your mind that led you to think that!! or is it the case that he who denies something so vehemently has something to hide!! Tinged with a touch of guilt maybe!! lol

    But I think you will find that if ever you did go to prison or maybe you have, that homosexuality is rife especially amongst long term prisoners. And you may not fancy another man but that does not mean other prisoners will not force themselves on you! It doesn't mean they are "gay" its just that there are no other options for sexual contact. I studied psychology and part of my degree course was on criminal psychology. So I do not have a distorted view on how life is, it sounds to me you are extremely naive.
    You studied criminal psychology,yeah right and you still come up with the stupid conclusion that 'he could be passed around for other cons pleasure' ? what absolute nonsense is that? What 'pleasure' ,i read correctly what you wrote. This isnt the dark ages and you shouldnt believe everything you see on tv programmes or in films ,the reality is a pretty boring existance i would assume and judging other people when you are probably just as bad is probably not what cons do because they are hardly a moral crowd anyway
    It looks as if someone (anonEmouse) has been watching too many TV crime dramas! You seem to have a skewed idea of what prison life entails. As Wallydown says, most of the inmates just want to get on with their lives, the last thing they need is to cause trouble otherwise they will lose remission and/or parole.
    Another troll, flaming people.

    You must obviously be another consummate expert on prison life. Been there yourself have you? or know someone that has experienced life in a long term prison?

    I would say until you have or can speak from experience please keep you inane comments to yourself.

    There seems to be a few people on here that like to tell others how, what and why people do things, with no actual knowledge themselves. ie, me supposedly watching TV crime dramas.

    It also takes away from the posts themselves as all I wanted to point out is that this low life scum who took that poor young girls life deserves some of his own medicine and hopefully he will get it where he is going.
    So I would respectively point out that unless you have something constructive to say or an opinion about this thread, please stop flaming people. Can't you think of something original to say about the subject we all are posting about or are you some attention grabbing person with low self esteem, that feels they have to post something, even if it is utter drivel! Just to get a response from someone. Are you that lonely?

    My thoughts and condolences go out to Emily's family and hope they can get some closure now."
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Emily Longley trial: "All Talk Turner", the cash-rich thug who thought he was a celebrity

Emily Longley trial: "All Talk Turner", the cash-rich thug who thought he was a celebrity Emily Longley trial: "All Talk Turner", the cash-rich thug who thought he was a celebrity

Elliot Turner fancied himself as some form of celebrity in the bars and clubs in the affluent areas of Bournemouth and Poole.

Dubbed ''All-Talk Turner'' by his friends and described as full of ‘gangster bravado’ by his own father, Turner led the life of a supposed playboy with money, girls and drink around the clock while boasting of the cash he had.

But the flash lifestyle hid an immature, manipulative, jealous and violent young man who could not handle rejection - especially from women and, in particular, from Emily Longley.

Turner ran with a crowd of other young men - many of them from wealthy families - who called themselves The Firm.

They spent time drinking £180 bottles of Grey Goose vodka around the millionaires' enclave of Sandbanks or the wealthy area of Clanford Cliffs.

Turner was often spotted pulling up in his black Mini Cooper and told anyone who would listen that he had had affairs with reality TV stars and even spent time in the Priory clinic to kick a cocaine habit.

Women were only referred to as birds or in Emily's case, as the volatile relationship hit the rocks, bitch or much worse.


Don't miss Tuesday's Daily Echo: Emily as her parents remember her and a profile of "evil, controlling" Elliot Turner as well as the full story of the case.


But many of his friends knew that Turner was a boaster and those who gave evidence in his trial all said they never took a word of what he said seriously - including his boast that he had killed Emily with a mallet a few days before he actually strangled her.

Elliot Turner was the son of a wealthy jeweller and he worked part-time for him at the shop the family owned in Bournemouth.

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Born in Birmingham in 1991, he moved south with his family in 2000 when they took over the shop from his grandparents.

University beckoned but he dropped out of Southampton Solent University after less than a term.

Parties and women back home were now the major part of his life.

He met Emily Longley in December 2010 and said the pair hit it off immediately and it appears the relationship worked at first, with both saying they loved each other.

But Emily was a young and vulnerable girl who had suffered from eating disorders and health and emotional problems in Auckland, New Zealand, where she had emigrated from Bournemouth with her family when she was nine.

She had returned to England eight months previously to study for a business national diploma at Brockenhurst College in Hampshire, and worked part-time at Top Shop in Bournemouth.

Very good-looking and with a bright and friendly personality, Emily attracted the attention of men and Turner was unable to handle it.

Soon after they got together, he was already showing signs of becoming obsessive and Turner had form in this department.

He had received a harassment warning letter from police in January 2008 when he was 16 telling him not to contact an ex-girlfriend after he bombarded her with texts and emails when she ended the relationship.

One friend told the trial that after a girlfriend left him, Turner said he wanted to suffocate her with a pillow.

The situation got worse when Emily returned to New Zealand to visit her divorced parents Mark and Caroline.

Turner was upset about pictures with other men she posted on Facebook and he became obsessed with the idea that his girlfriend should show him more ''respect''.

His fears multiplied when Emily was found out to be texting and seeing other men on her return to England.

Turner was now violently angry and even though he painted a picture of only looking out for Emily's best interests, the threats to kill her became almost daily.

Police found a note Emily had written to Turner when the pair were on holiday on the Isle of Man in late March which showed how Turner behaved towards her.

She wrote: ''I love you. Don't say you will kill me. Stop talking about your ex-girlfriend and stop being so constantly aggressive. Be more cool because that's so much more hot.''

He finally snapped when Emily went out dressed, in his words, like ''a whore'' on the evening of May 6.

He thought they had patched up their relationship a few days before and were boyfriend and girlfriend but Emily finally wanted out.

Fed up with his constant anger and questions, she threw drinks at him that night in the Cafe Shore bar and Turner assaulted her.

His friend Tom Crowe was the last person to see Emily alive and presciently he told one of Turner's neighbours he feared that Turner would kill her.

That night the pair rowed and Turner used a pillow to smother Emily - imprinting her make-up on the pillowcase - and then using his arms to strangle her.

His doting parents Anita and Leigh, whom Turner used for cash to fund his lavish partying, loved their son so much they tried to cover his crime.

Leigh destroyed Turner's letter confessing he had strangled her and Anita took the jacket from the bedroom where, the prosecution said, the letter was.

His mother even delayed calling an ambulance as Emily lay dead in the bed of the house in Queenswood Avenue, so that Turner could cover his tracks and allow the family to concoct a story.

But Turner had left too many clues and too many threatening text messages and told too many friends of his obsessions and violent thoughts.

The police were immediately suspicious and acted swiftly to get the evidence they needed to charge him.

The bugging of the family home that May and June was the most damning evidence as the three discussed what they would say to the police, with Elliot Turner leading the discussion and orchestrating the ''fabricating of evidence''.

It was a telling example of the arrogance of a young man who thought he could manipulate his parents, the police and his friends to get away with murder.

Elliot Turner's defence team tried to get the bugging evidence ruled inadmissible at the start of the trial but failed.

All three in the witness box were forced to listen to their scheming and they had little answer to the incriminating conversations that sealed their convictions.

Elliot Turner: the profiles

What the papers are saying about Elliot Turner

The Mirror: Spoilt coke addict terrorised women with jealous rages... then let mummy and daddy cover his evil tracks

The Sun: Photos that made jealous lover kill

The Mail: Playboy lifestyle of All Talk Turner

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