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Jack Dainty is served an ASBO
A TEENAGER who has caused havoc in Beaconsfield and other towns has been served an interim anti social behaviour order or ASBO.
Jack Dainty, 19, has been known to police for years and in 2008 was sentenced to a year in jail following an assault on a bouncer at Vodka Revolution bar in Maxwell Road.
The attack had left the man with a serious wound to the back of his head which was so deep that his skull was exposed.
Yet after it, people proporting to be associates of his left comments on this newspapers' website saying they would be back.
Dainty has been served the interim ASBO after he caused harassment, alarm and distress by being verbally and physically intimidating to people in Burnham, where he lives in Lent Green Lane.
He has been banned from entering certain roads in Burnham between 6pm and 6am daily, except for when travelling on a bus to work or college. He has also been banned from associating with Jack Donovan Hearn, Lawrence McLaughlin, John Appleton, Chad Robinson, Ashley Canavan or Joss Urbanski out of college.
Chief Inspector Paul Cook said that this was the first ASBO to be served in South Bucks for at least six months. He said he believed that incidents of antisocial behaviour were declining due to a change in approach by police who since June have been issuing yellow and then red cards to youths and letters to their parents for behaviour that is anti social, but not illegal. Currently fewer than ten people, all aged 13 to 18, are subject to the next step, voluntary anti social behaviour contracts, which police use before they issue ASBOs.
CI Cook said: "We are quite prepared to knock on the doors of parents and say this is the scenario that can happen to your son or daughter and this is the effect it can have in later life if you don't do something about it now."
CI Cook said: "Teenagers may think it's OK to walk home from school shouting and swearing, but they are only seeing life from their own perspective. They don't see it from the perspective of an 80 year old inside their home who is scared."
Police are also now making monthly visits to people who are repeatedly suffering as a result of anti social behaviour.
Youths who behave anti socially tend to come from homes where there is a lack of discipline, advice and support, CI Cook said, and when parents are approached by police they generally welcome the action they are taking.
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Suggestion to 'gangsta' dainty...dainty by name and nature....come in the white hart this friday anytime from 6 and start gobbing off...lets see how really 'gangsta' you are, ya pussi!
For goodness sake grow up!..you don't live in the Bronx you live in Burnham, South Bucks. No one is impressed or scared they just think you're a sad bunch of loosers.