The Real Peaky Blinders | Infamous Gangs Of Birmingham (True Crime Documentary) | Real Stories

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This is an episode of "Gangs of Britain" and is from 2013, not 2021.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 80 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/MonsieurMcGregor πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 17 2021 πŸ—«︎ replies

Mentioned the peaky blinders twice, literally two lines about them. Bot?

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 19 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/SenorNZ πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 17 2021 πŸ—«︎ replies

The gentleman on the right looks like a skinny pissed off Dr. Phil.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 19 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/Thelongwayaround πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 17 2021 πŸ—«︎ replies

Well, I’m still sad that Polly died.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 17 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/Grillvante πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 17 2021 πŸ—«︎ replies

The hosts of this are awful.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 2 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/BenZino21 πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 17 2021 πŸ—«︎ replies

I think the guy at 5:42 could have done voice over work for Brick Top (Alan Ford) in Snatch

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 1 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/out-on-a-farm πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 20 2021 πŸ—«︎ replies
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real stories tapes true crime is your new true crime podcast fix in our first season we'll explore suspicious deaths at a california hospital and a skydiver landing dead on a suburban driveway with a bag containing guns drugs and night vision goggles to join our investigation search and subscribe to real stories tapes true crime on apple podcasts spotify or wherever you find your podcasts [Music] gangs in the early 20th century turned britain's race tracks into battlegrounds a birmingham gang called the brahma gems were the top dogs and built up a criminal network reaching far beyond their city the brahmajims made fortunes from racetrack extortion and beat their rivals mercilessly to protect their territory over 80 years later in 2003 another birmingham gang kills innocent bystanders and shocks the nation but behind the guise of a random shooting lies a complicated vendetta between two gangs where rivalry ego loyalty to the gang that weighs even the love of their own family we're going to be looking at the gangs of britain's second city birmingham old and new and see how gang crime has evolved and the steps taken to tackle it we'll be following the stories of two landmark gang attacks and two courageous individuals who put their lives on the line to bring the culprits to justice [Music] [Music] in the 19th century birmingham was known as the city of a thousand trades unlike manchester based solely around cotton goods birmingham had a wide variety of specialized skills producing anything metal from buttons and buckles to jewelry steam engines and guns like most cities in the uk birmingham's gangs were territorial often being named after the areas they came from i'm walking in what was once the gun quarter in the 19th century that was the name of a gang from here others were called the white house gang from aston the garrison's lane 10 archers bishop riders and then there were the peaky blinders [Music] during the 19th century the population of birmingham swelled from 74 000 to over 630 000 there was overcrowding back-to-back housing filth and poverty gang fights were commonplace but then birmingham underwent vast redevelopment people moved out of the congested centre to newly built estates in the suburbs [Music] early in the 20th century one of the birmingham gangs known as the brahmajam hammers began to spread from the streets of birmingham to around the country and this was all because of one lucrative business horse racing the english have always had a passion for the sport only the wealthy could afford to buy race horses to breed them and to race them but anyone could afford to bet on them after the first world war racecourses were the only legal gambling places with an annual turnover approaching 500 million pounds they became the playgrounds of choice for a liberated generation [Applause] [Music] but the bulging satchels of the bookmakers attracted criminal gangs wanting a piece of the action and the brahmajums wanted the biggest slice i've come to meet a former member of the mets flying squad police historian dick kirby dick gary delighted to meet you so i suppose the first question is you know what did the brahmajams uh see in racecourses well why were they here well they saw an awful lot of money in those days before the first world war practically anybody could set up as a bookmaker there were no real rules and regulations and uh the bookmakers just paid out if they could afford it uh and if they didn't they hired bodyguards to protect them from enraged punters who wanted their winnings [Music] race courses were prey to gangsters fraudsters pre-card tricksters but there was also pure hooliganism local historian carl chin has made a study of the racetrack gangs blokes would go up to somebody and say hey to a bookie you're the bookie oh give us ten bob for poor old freddy's just come out to nick alfred i didn't come out to nick alff's just going into it give us ten bob or else even cruder if you don't give me a pound i'm gonna turn you upside down right so a lot of bookmakers hired minders tough boxers it was knight rules see and so whether you were bookmakers or punters if gangs came along and preyed upon you you were struggling and the gang that posed the greatest danger and controlled the most race courses was the brahmagems according to a 1922 police report the brahmajims were mostly made up of convicted thieves of the worst type these men they're not your run-of-the-mill fighter who comes out the pog perhaps on a saturday night he's had a few too many and him and he's broke down the road about a fallout and that was set to they were really violent nasty men who enjoy violence [Music] [Applause] the gang charged bookmakers as much as 50 percent of their profits for the privilege of being left unmolested in turn some of the bookies began to use the gang services to dissuade winning punters from pressing their claims for payment like many of these early gangs the group centered around one strong individual and for the brahmajam hammers that man was billy kimber and he carried a fearsome reputation [Music] billy kimber was born in 1892 in aston the son of a brass founder handsome well-built and charismatic he became the teenage member of the peaky blinders known for their sharp dress kimber soon graduated to the bruma gyms the largest gang throughout the 1920s and 30s he was a lion of a man he was fearless he said but he wouldn't fight with knives he'd only fight with his fists so he had he was a violent man i'm not excusing that but he had must have had charisma to control all this [ __ ] when he was 18 he had a conviction for assault and served time in birmingham's winston green prison it was here that kimber met fellow gang man george brummie sage who introduced kimber to the idea of racetrack extortion this union would transform the fortunes of billy kimber and the brahmajums turning the gang from a group of ruffians into an organized money-making enterprise george brownie sage was one of his principal lieutenants and between them had formed alliances with the leeds mob and the eu toxic boys so they became very very strong and what's more kimber became very wealthy the expanding railway network enabled kimber's brahmajans to travel to race meetings across the country doncaster in york utoksiter down to newbury and across the new market what they did they brought in an organized protection racket instead of the kind of ad hoc arrangements that have been there before when gangs have just come in willie nearly helped her skeleton and scare people yeah so i think for some of the bookmakers the controller billy kimber was welcome because they knew what they were getting and they would keep the other guys in the other yeah so they keep the others away and what it would be billy kimber then would say the five best pitches at ascot or epsom he would be in with the book young 10 bob in the pound so for every 50 quid the book is made billy kimber got 25 quid then he and his men would control all the other rackets so they would also like add the buckets of water so after each race when the bookies got the sponge to clear the writing and chalk on their boards they would have to pay half a crown for the bucket of water half a crown for the sponge half a crown for the shore so you add it up that might be a bookie who is paying perhaps for each race ten bubba race six sevens eight races between three and four pound a day if there's 30 or 40 bookies at the course it's a good for you bob coming in but despite these huge profits the brahmajams set their sights on even more now their goal was to expand their territory and take over the most lucrative race courses of all the ones in the south gang crime in birmingham has changed since the 1920s and 30s instead of running a money-making enterprise across the country like the bramagens now gangs battle over respect and territory [Music] one of the oldest and bloodiest feuds in recent years has been between two black gangs the johnson crew named after a cafe in johnson street and the burger bar boys it's juvenile name taken from the fast food outlets in the lazelle's district master gang's menace its members carried out some of the most savage incidents of gang violence in the city [Music] these are the areas they command the a34 is like the unofficial boundary the front line between the two gangs the johnson crew tend to be based in the northeast around aston the burger bar boys to the west lazelles winston green hansworth and the burger bar was right here [Music] i've come to meet crime reporter ahmed basi a journalist who has reported on birmingham's gangs for many years just behind us is where the burger bar used to be from which the burger bar gang took their name right so it's been redeveloped yeah it's all become offices and apartments and stuff now but for a long time it was known as the burger bar just uh tell me a bit about why gang started in birmingham well originally the gang certainly the black and asian gangs started off as could say almost vigilante gangs there was a big problem with skinheads and the right wing in certain parts of birmingham and these gangs formed essentially to look after their own communities but in 1981 tensions exploded in vicious race riots heavy-handed policing only inflamed the aggression on the streets as groups of young black youths began to take the law into their own hands it kind of empowered a lot of the young black kids and that they thought well hang on we've rioted we've managed to put the police on the back foot you know we can show some force when we want to eventually as the right-wing threat dissipated they kept that organization together and it became more of a criminal network as drugs died coming into the community they used those bonds and those links they had um and directed towards criminal efforts instead right so they're making money out of drugs but along with drugs comes profit and territory becoming a wedge which split the black gang into two the johnson crew and the burger bar boys when drugs came it became a case of you know who can make the money make the most money and that's that's what caused the main split people who were friends originally became sworn enemies as crack cocaine swept through the city's poorest neighborhoods money poured into the gangs the rivalry escalated and so did the violence in 2002 a series of tip for attack shootings between the johnsons and the burger bar boys began when johann martin was shot in the middle of west bromwich high street in broad daylight 24 year old johann martin was a leading member of the burger bar crew [Music] he happened to be spotted by two female members of a gang which is affiliated to the johnson crew now they not only let members of the johnson crew gang know that johan martin was there they also said that he was trying it on with them in effect right and within about 15 minutes of the phone call being made to johan martin's killers they were there on the scene in a car the car parked up next to johann's car and shot at johan while he was sat in his car on the high street but this is unusual isn't it for girls to go that far to be part of the gang and become the perpetrator that was a first in a lot of ways for them to actually take part actively in a murder it was a new thing people hadn't seen that before but there would be more and now that girls were gang members they too could become targets for rival gangs on the night of january the 2nd 2003 events would spiral out of control in one of the most callous slayings the city had ever seen in the 1920s and 30s the most powerful gang from birmingham were called the brahmajams they were led by a charismatic gangster called billy kimber the bromajims took control over many of the country's lucrative race tracks they traveled to race meetings across the country coming south to the big events with the most money to ascot and epsom this is what they would have looked like at the time this photograph was taken in 1919 sharp suits buttonholes boaters but in contrast to their elegance these are sort of weapons they would have used hammers and blades flick knives cut throats bottles and if all else fails revolver a pretty formidable arsenal but keeping control of the race circuits far away from home turf was always going to be tricky in the south the bruma gyms faced tough competition from a major italian crime family called the sabinis the tracks in the south were run by the italian mob and the italian mob uh was run by charles darby sabini who had got four brothers george joe fred and harry boy and they were all chris and harry boy he was chris and harry boy yeah and they were all a very tasty bunch darby sabine had boxed as a middleweight and he always had a fully loaded automatic in his back pocket the brahmajan boys came up against the sabinis many times this rare photograph shows both gangs posing for camera later they became locked in tit for tat scraps until the violence reached a peak when derby sabini shot at billy kimber kimber decided to call a truce he went to meet sabine but one of sabine's men a particularly violent man called alfie solomon shot kimber billy kimber was found outside sabine's flat with a bullet in his side and alfie sullivans uh later stood trial for his attempted murder but was acquitted uh after everybody lost their memory including kimber including kimber who refused to give evidence anyway it was the code i guess and i guess he didn't want the police involved with anything no then just weeks later at the derby meeting in epsom the sabinis attacked an associate of kimbers with a mallet and bottle for kimber and the brumjam boys this was a step too far their retaliation would be brutal on the first day of the epsom derby in 1921 the birmingham boys decided to ambush the sabinis they left the race meeting early in a sharabang and hid in wait for them at yule a few miles from epsom [Music] and this is where the attack took place right so this is the london road yes and our mob would have parked up here because they would have anyone coming from epson would have had to go back that way to london correct right what happened was a car was parked in this turning here yeah anticipating the arrival of the italian mob and as soon as the car shot out to block the way the birmingham boys jumped out and went to work [Music] that attack was incredibly vicious wasn't it it was a scene of carnage the people in the houses around here were apparently screaming with terror because the birmingham boys were equipped with guns with hatchets house bricks iron bars knives and they really went to work the whole of the road here was littered with bodies there was no one who was left standing one of them had three fingers cut off on the gang that they thought were their adversaries the italian mob but then they discovered all too late that it wasn't the italian mob at all it was their own associates from the north the leeds gang one of the leads men heard somebody running behind him and this was one of the birmingham boys holding a hammer and he looked to see if the birmingham boy was gaining on him and suddenly realized that he was one of their allies and he said to to this chap you made a bloomer we're from leeds and straight strangely enough the birmingham boy replied my god i hope not anyway if you are get into the bushes because there's no holding this slot and there'll be murder done today and it was just by a gracious dispensation of providence that there wasn't after their disastrous ambush the brahmajam's made off in a bright blue shadow bank not the most inconspicuous of vehicles if you've got the police after you and it wasn't long before police sergeant joseph dawson spotted it parked up outside here which was then a pub known as the georgian dragon why the gang of 28 after committing such a terrible crime and knowing that the police were after them decided to come in and have a drink here i have no idea i can only assume they were thirsty the attack at yule had been so violent and bloody that the police first thought it had been a shin fein operation and issued firearms to their officers so following the attack it was here to the georgian dragon that the birmingham boys came and it was in this garden that they sat down to uh refresh themselves after their exertions celebrating absolutely and it was sergeant dawson who came walking in here and upon having heard that they had come from birmingham and uh seeing the state of their clothing which was absolutely splattered with blood sergeant dawson uh courteously uh asked the uh the members of the birmingham boys to consider themselves under arrest what do they think they they rose as one all 28 of them and the plucky sergeant dawson drew out his revolver and said i shall shoot the first man who tries to escape right and immediately they uh they calm down so how long did dawson hold them before he had reinforcements uh i should think it was quite quick but it must have seemed like an eternal scene okay dawson was able to hold them at gunpoint until the flying squad arrived and arrested them [Music] nowadays competition between the gangs in birmingham forces them to stick to their own turf which they defend tooth and nail along with a juvenile notion of respect after the murder of burger bar boy johan martin his brother nathan street named 23 began planning his revenge against the johnson crew he found a willing recruit in marcus ellis known as e-man martin also recruited michael gregory another gang member known as chunk chunk had the task of coordinating the hit he bought a pay-as-you-go mobile and purchased a getaway car a red ford mondeo from the dealer in northampton in the afternoon of new year's eve 2002 the car was brought back to birmingham a window tinter was hired to darken the car's glass all the gang needed now was an opportunity and it arrived in the early hours of the 2nd of january 2003. one of the burger bar boys sony sims was at a party at the uni seven hair salon in aston now a hardware store sims spotted several of the johnson crew at the party he relayed constant updates on his mobile to gregory and the burger bar boys in the mondeo and now made their way towards the salon [Music] the woman who ran the hair salon had had this new year's day party for the last few years it was well known so they tagged along you know and the party by all accounts was you know a normal affair there was nothing unusual about it until the early hours of the morning when people reported that the atmosphere started getting very dark there was rumors around that there's going to be trouble something's going to happen [Music] the car pulled into position not far from the party [Music] inside was marcus ellis in the front passenger seat with a nine millimeter pistol behind him nathan martin had a mach 10 machine gun michael gregory put the car into gear and set off sims guided the attackers into position [Music] it was about four o'clock in the morning the place was winding up people were piling out the back and uh basically just getting some fresh air [Music] so the party spills out onto the street the red mondeo comes around the back here and stops just over there by this salon [Music] nathan martin pulls out a mach 10 and opens fire within a split second 23 empty cartridges are spewed out from the machine gun charlie nellis was the first to die hit three times leticia shakespeare four times charlene's twin sister sophie their cousin sheryl shaw and friend leon harris were all injured you know what hits me here right he must have been four foot away when he opened up with the mac he was so close that witnesses actually could point you know in court they actually said the shape of the gun they saw his finger on the trigger it was that close you know they could make out you can see it there's not much space here you know the car comes through here yeah girls must have stood there there would have been people you know milling around here there would have been you know only a little bit of space for that car to come through and on both sides there would have been people and it was literally a case of sticking the gun out the window and pressing the trigger and then they put their foot down and straight out that way which then gets them onto the sort of main routes in and out of birmingham and then you're on to the motorway junction so you know they seem to have made a clean gut away as far as they were concerned you know it was a job done yeah yeah the police traced the car within two hours they found it four miles away burnt out much of the dna and forensic evidence destroyed but at the scene of the crime the police found 37 cartridge cases fired from three weapons the mach 10 a spanish llama pistol and another weapon never recovered what at first appeared to be an indiscriminate slaughter would unfold into one of the largest criminal investigations that the west midlands police force had ever undertaken the bodies of two young girls lay motionless on the ground innocent targets gunned down in the never-ending tit-for-tat war between birmingham's two major gangs the burgabar boys toasted the success of their attack with champagne to them it had been a huge success as it had been carried out on their rival gang's turf the callous and casual nature of their drive-by shooting killing leticia shakespeare and charlene ellis horrified birmingham and shocked the nation i went to see latisha's mother marcia who had to go and identify her daughter only hours after the shooting as soon as i went into the room i could see um leticia she had a hair piece on that day and i could see that was like snitched to one side i thought with the sister's teacher so i came round um to have a look and she was there on the bed but her eyes were wide open really i've never seen her eyes that wide open yeah um and i still couldn't absorb that she was dead i still thought she was alive i said no she's alive but eyes are open she's got to be alive and when i was walking around and looking and when i looked because the eyes were so open you could see like where like the blood shot like this initially just just killed her she didn't have time to even close her eyes um that aura stopped with me for about four weeks i kept having nightmares um panic attacks um just couldn't i thought no that hasn't happened i didn't really think it happened you can't believe it you just can't take it in when something like that happens can you no i couldn't it appeared that the two girls had become accidental victims because the gun used in the attack was notoriously inaccurate very rare to have been found on the street it's a military issue machine gun fires off more than you know 200 rounds a minute it's known on the streets actually as the spray and prey because it's so hard to control i mean even proper marksmen find it difficult to control a back tent so to imagine that in the hands of you know a young kid who's probably never fired a gun before he would have been all over the place [Music] although the murders of charlene ellis and letitia shakespeare had all the appearance of an indiscriminate shooting the girls were not shot entirely by accident so they came down here expecting to shoot whoever belonged to the johnson crew exactly yeah so were the girls part of that crew they weren't part of the crew but it's it's it's very difficult for anybody who lives in a particular area not to associate with gang members you know gang members maybe people that you went to school with people that you grew up with people that you know you may even like doesn't it you know doesn't mean you're a part of that gang or condone what they do yeah i know as i was growing up it was if you walked with the prostitute you were classed as a prostitute if you walk with someone who was stealing you was classed as still so it's about knowing that if you're going to walk around with that type of person you can have that same label they probably didn't care if they did shoot women in that johann martin's murder involved women essentially he was set up by women and that even subconsciously kind of changed the rules it made women a fair game that night a fundamental shift had taken place in the birmingham underworld women had become legitimate targets in the turf war between the two main gangs even though leticia shakespeare and charlene ellis were innocent just to be associated with a gang was enough to make them a target the submachine gun the killers used in the attack they now called a unisex weapon young women seem to be key roles in violent crime a lot of them are being used to carry weapons bullets a lot of gang members are using them as debts for other gangs drugs rape a lot of women have been involved the murder of the innocent girl shocked everyone witnesses could point the finger of guilt but no one would talk it didn't take too long to identify the culprits yeah they must have had an idea who was they would have had a very fair idea around the word on the street it was such a outrageous murder you know of girls innocent girls that people who wouldn't maybe talk to the police wouldn't go to the police but would find a channel to let the police know you know as a journalist people were telling me who was there and within about 48 hours people like myself had a fair idea who the killers were but of course the problem for the police was well how do we prove it where's the evidence the inquiry into the new year's day party shootings would be one of the biggest the west midlands police ever launched they had to penetrate a wall of silence witnesses were just too scared to come forward it would take some extraordinary courage from some extraordinary individuals to bring it down the case of the brahmajans was much easier to handle having fled the scene of the botched attack the gang stopped off here at what was known as the george and the dragon only to be apprehended by sergeant dawson he held the entire group at gunpoint until the flying squad arrived 26 of the 28 stood trial at guilford the sizes but they were so boisterous they had to be shackled uh wrist and ankle answer each other as well because they were issuing threats to everybody in the cult anyway 23 of the uh the gang were convicted i did they reward dawson they did the commissioner um uh highly commended uh sergeant dawson and also rewarded sergeant dawson with a sum of five pounds which when you consider that a police constable's wages uh at that time was about four quid a week a fiver was well worth having not too bad the brahmajums all received sentences between nine months hard labor and three years imprisonment but they would soon be back to their old tricks and racetrack violence would reach such a pitch that the authorities had no choice but to drive the gangs out of horse racing for good the new year's day murders of 2003 cast a two-year long shadow of silence across the city the police knew who the four gang members were but now they had to find the evidence to convict them witnesses were too scared to come forward you know there was probably about 100 people here at that party and yet nobody not not a single person came forward to give a written statement which shows you know that the kind of extent on the distrust here we've got a major murder people are shocked angered yet they still find it very difficult to actually make that step and go to the police after tens of thousands of man-hours having collected 1 300 statements and recovered 40 vehicles for forensic analysis the police managed to find enough evidence to bring the four gang members to call what happened in the trial what was the atmosphere like in the courtroom it was a very tense atmosphere and a very intimidating atmosphere gang members particularly from the burger bar whose members were in the dock would turn up at court and quite blatantly and brazenly intimidate witnesses i mean it got to the point where people would shout things out while a witness was giving evidence and you could see the visible effect on the witness you know the witness would climb up after being spoken to people in fact were prepared to be sent down for contempt of court rather than yeah rather than talk to uh you know to the jury yeah people were being you know followed as they left the courtroom including myself and um i was followed a couple times back to my car i mean by that stage i'd written so so much about the gangs that they were probably aware that you know there's a reporter in there who seems to know a lot about us and it got to the stage where i was you know being escorted back to my car with a police officer but there was one witness who had the courage to speak out his name wasn't given he gave his evidence behind a curse and his voice was electronically distorted and there was a bit of a delay from what he said to be being relayed out to the courtroom i mean the whole courtroom was cleared nobody was allowed in there the defendants couldn't see who this witness was uh you know they went to unprecedented lengths to protect this witness i think that a lot of the measures they introduced had never been seen in the british court before right and it was on this witnesses testimony really that the whole case hinged because he was the only guy who named names as in he said i saw him in the car i saw him in the car i saw him shoot the gun and i saw him in the car not only did the witness give a detailed description of the killers he also saw sims outside on his mobile but would he be believed one of the unique things about this witness was he was a gangster himself and he made no bones about it he told the court i am a member or have been a member of the johnson crew i am a criminal i you know he was currently in jail when he was giving evidence um which brought up all kind of legal problems you know the defense were claiming how can we believe the words of a gangster but the cps and the police i suppose were desperate you know this was all they had yeah his testimony was strong you know all be it came from the mouth of a convicted gangster yeah clearly the jury believed mr justice goldring convicted marcus ellis nathan martin and michael gregory of killing charlene ellis and leticia shakespeare they were jailed for 35 years rodrigo sims was given 27 years [Music] while the brahmajims were away in jail the sabinis stayed in control and had many violent fights with other london gangs [Music] but soon the brahmajums were out again terrorizing the racetracks in 1925 the home secretary declared that something had to be done to break the gangs under chief inspector frederick nutty sharp the flying squad began to target race meetings with just 12 officers the flying squad personnel had to be pretty tough to to deal with the various gangs you have people like fred sharp who joined the police in 1911 who was extraordinarily brave because on one occasion about 40 of some of the worst thugs from the italian mob all surged onto the racetrack and sharp walked onto the racetrack completely single-handedly and said clear off and just one of them demured and collected a right-hander from sharp put him on his back and the rest of them fled and that was happening all the time didn't the flying squad have these rather grand armored cars in arriving as well well these were old tenders which had been purchased from the royal flying car after the first world war and they were enormous and ungainly and they had these bedstead periods yes that's why they became known as the bedsteads because of the aerial that could be raised or or lowered they were very conspicuous they were extremely conspicuous i mean after the the first time they made a arrest all of the underworld knew about them so they were used more as a preventative exercise where they were expecting trouble in 1932 the national bookmakers protection association was set up to make pitch allocation fairer and to finally eradicate the intimidation of bookmakers only a bookmaker approved by the bpa locally and by the chucky club can have a pitch and that pitch cannot be sold it has to be passed on that cuts out people like kimber coming and saying that's my pitch the brahmajams were once the greatest gang of their era but after the flying squad clamped down on racetrack gangs they moved off into more lucrative scams like nightclubs and casinos the now ageing brahmajims will pass their prime and losing their appetite for violence billy kimber their charismatic leader took one last shot at the sabini gang before fleeing to america gang violence at racecourses has never returned [Music] in birmingham 70 years later the murder of charlene ellis and leticia shakespeare was so shocking and created a standoff between the city's gangs [Music] so this was the tipping point between the two games you could say so it's certainly it's certainly awakened a lot of people in both gangsters think well hang on where is this going what's this leading to we're killing into some innocent girls we know we're exposing ourselves to the whole country to the whole world one of the most alarming aspects the case highlighted was the close into relationships between the victims and the gangsters who had shot them one of them was marcus ellis who was actually the half brother of charlene's so they were related they were related they were as strange as you could say they weren't you know they hadn't been brought up together but they were certainly aware of each other uh in fact charlene had bumped into marcus literally three two or three weeks earlier after after about 10 years having not seen each other and they exchanged phone numbers but despite this marcus ellis shot his half-sister charlene at point-blank range perhaps he was unable to see who she was or perhaps his loyalty to the gang far outweighed any feelings of love he had for a member of his own family how can we disentangle young lives from the gangland culture one way is education since the death of her daughter marcia visits schools to teach young children that they can choose to walk away from gangs so what is your approach with the kids well my approach to the kids is basically i'm here to give you as much information around violent crime so once i've given you the information it's down to you as an individual to make the right choice because you've got the information okay we might have all went to the same school but that doesn't mean that oh let's all go out and get a mac 10 machine gun and start going shooting who we want to so it's about moving yourself away and you know making the right choices in where you actually go yeah so what i do is basically have an education strategy in place to help young women to exit out of gangs because a lot of people get caught up in the crossfire because it's the mums of the dads or brothers because once you're in it's difficult to get out very hard because for the boys and the girls both um it's like the thing what's hard is that there's consequences once you've joined obviously you've seen a lot of things of course which can make a lot of people be put behind bars yeah so knowing that you can't just walk away and say okay i'm gonna live a normal life you're a threat to them a lot of people who i know have been injured in actually trying to exit out of gangs and if you look behind us this is a presentation what we did today this is what the pupils have absorbed because this is how they've responded in what they've heard just from today so they're very passionate so you know the message is being put out there you hit the kids quite hard don't you you've got two it's not a soft message no over here no it isn't because it's not a soft society what we're living in for age of the kids um the kids today was between years seven eight and ten but we've gone as low as year six which is primary school this is secondary so is the future good um the future's better with the right support and the right things in place you can clamp down some of it you can't do the whole lot but some of it since 2005 there's been a fall in the number of murders and firearm offences amongst gangs in birmingham the deaths of charlie and ellis and leticia shakespeare brought it home to everyone in britain the problems caused by gang feuds and the danger they pose when this level of violence spills out into everyday life [Music] so [Music] you
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Channel: Real Stories
Views: 270,622
Rating: 4.7315769 out of 5
Keywords: Real Stories, Real Stories Full Documentary, Real Stories Documentary, Full length Documentaries, Documentary, TV Shows - Topic, Documentary Movies - Topic, full documentary, full episode, Martin Kemp, Gary Kemp, documentary, knife crime, crime, gangs, gang, drugs, ross kemp, crime documentary, true crime, peaky blinders, real peaky blinders, real peaky blinders documentary, real peaky blinders story, real billy kimber, billy kimber death
Id: 7urznBqo0w4
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 46min 4sec (2764 seconds)
Published: Sat Apr 17 2021
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