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  • THE CANADIAN PRESS 2023-04-12
    DUKAS_191422244_PAP
    THE CANADIAN PRESS 2023-04-12
    Nanaimo MLA Sheila Malcolmson looks on during a press conference about crime reduction while at the Provincial Court of British Columbia in Nanaimo, B.C., Wednesday, April 12, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito (FOTO: DUKAS/PA PHOTOS)
    The Canadian Press/PA Images

     

  • Seuls sont les indomptes
    CHLINT_054263
    Seuls sont les indomptes
    Seuls sont les indomptes
    Lonely Are the Brave
    1962
    Real David Miller
    Kirk Douglas
    Michael Kane.
    Collection Christophel © Joel Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Seuls sont les indomptes
    CHLINT_054262
    Seuls sont les indomptes
    Seuls sont les indomptes
    Lonely Are the Brave
    1962
    Real David Miller
    Kirk Douglas
    Michael Kane.
    Collection Christophel © Joel Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Les annees Difficiles
    CHLINT_041542
    Les annees Difficiles
    Les annees Difficiles
    Anni Difficilli
    1948
    Real Luigi Zampa
    Milly Vitale.
    Collection Christophel © Briguglio Films

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • L espion de la derniere chance
    CHLINT_024179
    L espion de la derniere chance
    L espion de la derniere chance
    Spion fur Deutschland
    1956
    Real Werner Klingler
    Martin Held
    Walter Giller.
    Collection Christophel © Berolina

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Le carrefour de la mort
    CHLAFP_022157
    Le carrefour de la mort
    Le carrefour de la mort
    Kiss of Death 1947
    directed by Henry Hathaway
    Victor Mature
    Richard Widmark
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © Twentieth Century Fox

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Le carrefour de la mort
    CHLAFP_022153
    Le carrefour de la mort
    Le carrefour de la mort
    Kiss of Death 1947
    directed by Henry Hathaway
    Victor Mature
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © Twentieth Century Fox

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La Scoumoune
    CHLAFP_020494
    La Scoumoune
    La Scoumoune
    1972
    Real Jose Giovanni
    Jean Paul Belmondo
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © DANON / FOX / LIRA

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La Scoumoune
    CHLAFP_020493
    La Scoumoune
    La Scoumoune
    1972
    Real Jose Giovanni
    Jean Paul Belmondo
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © DANON / FOX / LIRA

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Il etait une fois en Amerique
    CHLAFP_018633
    Il etait une fois en Amerique
    Il etait une fois en Amerique
    Once upon a time in America
    1984
    Real Sergio Leone
    Collection Christophel © Ladd Company / Embassy International Pictures

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Rio Bravo
    CHLAFP_013242
    Rio Bravo
    Rio Bravo
    1959
    Real Howard Hawks
    Walter Brennan
    Ricky Nelson
    Dean Martin
    Collection Christophel © Armada Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Rio Bravo
    CHLAFP_013241
    Rio Bravo
    Rio Bravo
    1959
    Real Howard Hawks
    Walter Brennan.
    Collection Christophel © Armada Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Rio Bravo
    CHLAFP_013238
    Rio Bravo
    Rio Bravo
    1959
    Real Howard Hawks
    Walter Brennan.
    Collection Christophel © Armada Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Rio Bravo
    CHLAFP_013236
    Rio Bravo
    Rio Bravo
    1959
    Real Howard Hawks
    Walter Brennan.
    Collection Christophel © Armada Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • L Arme a l oeil
    CHLAFP_012970
    L Arme a l oeil
    L Arme a l oeil
    Eye of the needle
    1981
    Real Richard Marquand
    Donald Sutherland.
    Collection Christophel © Kings Road Entertainment

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    DUKAS_176683315_EYE
    Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
    Police say specialists headhunted for lucrative missions, sometimes delivering several kilograms at a time.

    Gangs are headhunting highly skilled drone pilots to make Amazon Prime-style deliveries of drugs, weapons and even condiments such as tomato ketchup to prison cell windows.

    HMP Manchester governor Rob Knight (red tie) and Greater Manchester Police assistant chief constable John Webster ( cap, right) outside the jail as GMP carry out Operation Avro at prison establishments around the county to try and prevent the conveyancing of banned items into prisons via visitors and by drones.
    Police officers at HMP Manchester - known more widely as Strangeways prison - as part of Operation AVRO.
    The chief inspector of prisons’ report recently branded Strangeways as squalid and the most violent in the country with with organised crime gangs and widespread supply of drugs into the Victorian jail.
    Manchester, UK. 23 October 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • 'I could not get through the script without crying': Adrien Brody talks to the death row survivor who he's playing on the London stage
    DUKAS_176258249_EYE
    'I could not get through the script without crying': Adrien Brody talks to the death row survivor who he's playing on the London stage
    In ?1?982 Nick Yarris was wrongly convicted of a murder he didn't commit? and spent 22 years in prison. Here, he and the Oscar-winning actor Adrien Brody - back on stage for the first time in 30 years - reflect on bringing Yarris's life story to the theatre.

    Adrien Brody and Nick Yarris photographed together in London ahead of the staging of the play "The Fear of 13".

    Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©Antonio Olmos info@antonioolmos.com +44 771 729 6351 www.antonioolmos.com

     

  • 'I could not get through the script without crying': Adrien Brody talks to the death row survivor who he's playing on the London stage
    DUKAS_176258250_EYE
    'I could not get through the script without crying': Adrien Brody talks to the death row survivor who he's playing on the London stage
    In ?1?982 Nick Yarris was wrongly convicted of a murder he didn't commit? and spent 22 years in prison. Here, he and the Oscar-winning actor Adrien Brody - back on stage for the first time in 30 years - reflect on bringing Yarris's life story to the theatre.

    Adrien Brody and Nick Yarris photographed together in London ahead of the staging of the play "The Fear of 13".

    Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©Antonio Olmos info@antonioolmos.com +44 771 729 6351 www.antonioolmos.com

     

  • 'I could not get through the script without crying': Adrien Brody talks to the death row survivor who he's playing on the London stage
    DUKAS_176258248_EYE
    'I could not get through the script without crying': Adrien Brody talks to the death row survivor who he's playing on the London stage
    In ?1?982 Nick Yarris was wrongly convicted of a murder he didn't commit? and spent 22 years in prison. Here, he and the Oscar-winning actor Adrien Brody - back on stage for the first time in 30 years - reflect on bringing Yarris's life story to the theatre.

    Adrien Brody and Nick Yarris photographed together in London ahead of the staging of the play "The Fear of 13".

    Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©Antonio Olmos info@antonioolmos.com +44 771 729 6351 www.antonioolmos.com

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224443_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224439_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224440_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224442_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224441_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224438_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • 'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    DUKAS_161224444_EYE
    'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
    Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.


    Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.

    He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.

    By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.

    Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.

    Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
    He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
    Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
    He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.

    28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk

    © Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297618_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297626_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297615_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297543_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297544_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    DUKAS_160297622_EYE
    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
    12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.

    Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.

    Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Parsons Media / eyevine.

     

  • Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction.
    DUKAS_143891663_COY
    Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction.
    EXCLUSIVE. Coleman-Rayner
    Los Angeles, CA, USA. September 11, 2022
    Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction. The Full House actress, 58, was sentenced in August 2020 to serve two months behind bars for her part in a college bribery scandal that centered on Bella, 23, and her sister Olivia Jade, 24, being admitted to USC under false pretenses. She entered a correctional facility in Dublin, California, in October that same year and was released on December 28 and ordered to undergo 100 hours of community service plus pay a $150,000 fine. Her husband of 24 years, designer Mossimo Giannulli, 59, later served five months behind bars for his involvement. For her outing on Sunday September 11, 2022 Lori wore a chic gray cardigan, pink Free City sweat pants and designer slippers. Bella was wearing jeans, trainers and a beige sleeveless jacket over a white T-shirt.
    CREDIT MUST READ: Coleman-Rayner
    Tel US (001) 310-474-4343 - office
    www.coleman-rayner.com

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction.
    DUKAS_143891568_COY
    Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction.
    EXCLUSIVE. Coleman-Rayner
    Los Angeles, CA, USA. September 11, 2022
    Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction. The Full House actress, 58, was sentenced in August 2020 to serve two months behind bars for her part in a college bribery scandal that centered on Bella, 23, and her sister Olivia Jade, 24, being admitted to USC under false pretenses. She entered a correctional facility in Dublin, California, in October that same year and was released on December 28 and ordered to undergo 100 hours of community service plus pay a $150,000 fine. Her husband of 24 years, designer Mossimo Giannulli, 59, later served five months behind bars for his involvement. For her outing on Sunday September 11, 2022 Lori wore a chic gray cardigan, pink Free City sweat pants and designer slippers. Bella was wearing jeans, trainers and a beige sleeveless jacket over a white T-shirt.
    CREDIT MUST READ: Coleman-Rayner
    Tel US (001) 310-474-4343 - office
    www.coleman-rayner.com

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction.
    DUKAS_143891469_COY
    Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction.
    EXCLUSIVE. Coleman-Rayner
    Los Angeles, CA, USA. September 11, 2022
    Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction. The Full House actress, 58, was sentenced in August 2020 to serve two months behind bars for her part in a college bribery scandal that centered on Bella, 23, and her sister Olivia Jade, 24, being admitted to USC under false pretenses. She entered a correctional facility in Dublin, California, in October that same year and was released on December 28 and ordered to undergo 100 hours of community service plus pay a $150,000 fine. Her husband of 24 years, designer Mossimo Giannulli, 59, later served five months behind bars for his involvement. For her outing on Sunday September 11, 2022 Lori wore a chic gray cardigan, pink Free City sweat pants and designer slippers. Bella was wearing jeans, trainers and a beige sleeveless jacket over a white T-shirt.
    CREDIT MUST READ: Coleman-Rayner
    Tel US (001) 310-474-4343 - office
    www.coleman-rayner.com

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction.
    DUKAS_143891446_COY
    Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction.
    EXCLUSIVE. Coleman-Rayner
    Los Angeles, CA, USA. September 11, 2022
    Lori Loughlin and her daughter Bella Rose look carefree and happy as they are seen grocery shopping in LA ahead of the two-year anniversary of her jail conviction. The Full House actress, 58, was sentenced in August 2020 to serve two months behind bars for her part in a college bribery scandal that centered on Bella, 23, and her sister Olivia Jade, 24, being admitted to USC under false pretenses. She entered a correctional facility in Dublin, California, in October that same year and was released on December 28 and ordered to undergo 100 hours of community service plus pay a $150,000 fine. Her husband of 24 years, designer Mossimo Giannulli, 59, later served five months behind bars for his involvement. For her outing on Sunday September 11, 2022 Lori wore a chic gray cardigan, pink Free City sweat pants and designer slippers. Bella was wearing jeans, trainers and a beige sleeveless jacket over a white T-shirt.
    CREDIT MUST READ: Coleman-Rayner
    Tel US (001) 310-474-4343 - office
    www.coleman-rayner.com

    (c) Dukas

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037094
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037093
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037092
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Franck Overton.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037091
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Johnny Seven.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037090
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037089
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Franck Overton.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037088
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Michael Constantine.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037087
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Michael Constantine.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037086
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Franck Overton
    Michael Constantine.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037085
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Clifford David.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037084
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Johnny Seven.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037083
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Michael Constantine.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037082
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Clifford David.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • La rafale de la derniere chance
    CHLAFP_037081
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    La rafale de la derniere chance
    The Last Mile
    1959
    Real Woward W Koch
    Mickey Rooney
    Clifford David.
    Collection Christophel © Dear Film / Vanguard Productions

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

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