Trial of A Rent Boy Who Bled a 62 Yr Old Financially and Blood Wise


Ricardo PisanoRicardo Pisano denies murder and causing grievous bodily harm



Trials are not cool and I hate covering them. The reason for this is that is there is so much repetition and posturing from everyone involved that I would rather read about in the paper or the books that sometimes follows without all the bs.

As for justice that is just a throw of the dice. Our system of justice was not set up to punish all the guilty but instead is a filter that catches some and let go some for the sake of the water to get through.

The better you are at lying and the less witness’ you have against you the chances are you will be set loose. On the other hand if you are too honest and say what you mean and then speak it, chances are you will be hung on your own words.

This particular trial I am interest it in. It involves amazing cruelty to someone gay.  It involves

a self-confessed rent boy who bled a 62-year-old man dry financially and then murdered him before leaving him to “rot", a court has heard.
The body of Michael Polding was found by police in his Brighton flat on 16 July last 
year, nearly two months after his death.
He died from "blunt force trauma" to his chest, Lewes Crown Court was told.
Ricardo Pisano, 36, formerly of Methuen Street, Southampton, denies murder and causing grievous bodily harm.
Mr Pisano, who lived with Mr Polding, has admitted a charge of preventing the lawful and decent burial of a body.
Prosecutor Philip Katz QC told the jury that Mr Pisano had advertised himself in a gay magazine as a "rent boy" and met Mr Polding in December 2009.
He moved in with him at his home in Croydon, south London, and later followed him to Brighton.
"The prosecution say that really from the word go this defendant lived off Michael Polding financially," he said, adding that Mr Pisano had no job and no income.
"The Crown's case is that this defendant and other friends of his effectively bled Mr Polding dry financially and this defendant, while in this period, pretended to act as his carer and even godson.
"In fact, we say he abused and assaulted Mr Polding, resulting in a serious assault," he said.
"We say that he eventually killed him, and, having killed him, left him to rot."
After his arrest, Mr Pisano claimed in a police interview that he came home to their St George's Road flat to find Mr Polding had committed suicide by hanging himself from a banister.
"He said he tried and failed to revive Mr Polding and had then panicked," Mr Katz said.
"He said there were people in South Africa who wanted to kill him and his family and that was why he had been unable to tell anyone about the death of Mr Polding, and that was why he had to flee the scene and not tell anyone what happened."
The court heard that in late 2011 and early 2012, Mr Pisano and friends Emmett Friel and Hannington Obote started up a hair salon in north London under the name Fate.
"This money was effectively Mr Polding's and that was being frittered away," Mr Katz said.
After selling his Croydon flat, Mr Polding asked one of his sisters to take control of a "nest-egg" for him using part of the proceeds from the sale.
Mr Katz said that a couple of weeks before he died, Mr Polding asked his sister to transfer £500.
Later that day, he phoned her again asking for another £100.
Mr Katz said that in the background, Mr Pisano could be heard asking her to send £1,500.
She transferred the money and never heard from her brother again, the court heard.
The trial continues.

Adam Gonzalez
Sourcing and top picture by BBC

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