Won’t be long love until Helen Mirran stars in a film based on you. On a seperate note during the armed robberies how did you manage to run with your high heels
Life is always like that though. And for most of us those single moments are positive things, for example the night I met the woman who became my wife I had intended to go home a lot earlier, there were also various other circumstances that happened to come together that night as well. I think for most of us those moments tend to be a lot more positive than Linda's example.
I don’t believe in “that one moment” thing with people. I’m sure she believes that going to that party changed her life, but I think it’s a collection of decisions and mindset that will set the course. Either way, she’s had an interesting life. I would watch that movie………. If it was done by Scorsese
Not everyone that goes to prison is evil. Myra Hindley was pure evil and even people who have committed other crimes look down on people that lure and murder children. The lowest of the low. It made me happy that Linda gave her a slap.
Not trying to defend a child abuser and killer but I always found it funny that in prison some people still establish a moral hierarchy and think they are better than someone else. Have you ever spoken to a victim of armed robbery?
@jmc3893 , there's even a moral hierarchy among thieves, with house burglars being looked down on as the worst of the worst. And among burglars themselves there's a hierarchy. I know one who feels somewhat better than others because "I've never burgled a council house, only people who can afford it".
It never fails to amaze me how the life of an abused child is worth less than money. Pedophiles get let off with short sentences time and again when its a scientific fact that they cannot be rehabilitated. I've more respect for a good old fashioned bank robber than a child abuser.
@@redbird9658 sorry let me just move this rock out the way I’ve been living under…yes it’s the audacity to sing after the crimes she committed I understand. not sure why I had to explain that for you😂
@@Leanbean4 because so many people just want to disagree and patronise each other on comments sections all the time. It's like they need the conflict 😂
@@SW-fn7cl for real bro😂 as soon as I read it I was like he’s wanting me to not know that information JUST so you can then try make me look dumb for your own self pride??
@@mediterraneandiet2483 I don't know about that. I have seen plenty of people wrongly convicted and not publicly share their "bitterness or resentment". The DeJesus brothers are a perfect example of that.
There's an old offence of being involved in (can't remember exact wording) but it basically says if you know, and they can prove you know but refuse to say, you're found guilty of murder. Basically like the current conspiracy charge or similar Seen a few people in for it towards the end of their tariff, we're talking 20 years but even if the person who did it finally admits it, its too late you still do the time and stay on life license
Fantastic videos!!!! The honesty of people you interviewing and their story is a life lesson! Most of them really touched me. They make me wanna do more good in life and to benefit others… Often the result of our actions come so late that whatever we commit them for is not relevant anymore… people just want to be happy and lost the thread how to do that… Please keep it up!
@Black Coffee Now a bank robber smacking a multiple child killer is respect worthy. Maybe you endorse Hindley’s behaviour and are sympathetic towards nonces?
I don’t think you can compare the two at all, she also regrets her crimes, Myra didn’t regret hers and she helped in the rape torture and murder of little kids mate.
I appreciate her sense of humour after what must have been a disturbing life. Note to self avoid parties for criminals coming home from jail. I’d be bound to fall in love with the bad guy!
It fascinates me that most of the men telling these stories say that they wanted to prove something. They wanted to be the best of the best. Linda got into what she did because the police lied about murdering the man that she loved and she was suffering from grief. I'm not saying that makes it ok. Being around a person who was a criminal would have made the transition pretty easy, it was a world that she understood. But it's interesting that the reasons for getting directly involved seem so very different for her vs. the other men that have been interviewed.
I know it's sad her first partner got shot dead but the guy spent his life robbing people at gun point. Taking everything that people have. Whether he was shot lawfully or not you can't cry victim when he was treating people with violence his whole life. Sooner or later the scales balance out. Love is a powerful thing though. Intriguing interview to listen to, thanks for the insight!
Yeah but at the same time during those times would he get employed by anyone who knew he went to prison? Even now people struggle and some of them do try , but then give up and turn back to crime. I liked one quote from documentary on jail systems '' i am judged for the rest of my life by the worst day of my life''. To say people had it coming just feels off.
I think it was the fact that they lied about how and why he got shot. I think she would have been cool if he got shot by a victim or If the police did it because he was posing a threat. In those instances I see her chalking it up to the game, the cost doing business. But that was not this.
@@iSugarHeart Precisely... And do any of us have any insight into her husband's upbringing? Probably not. I'd wager that he had a pretty difficult childhood and felt crime was the only thing he could resort to. I'm not going to waste people's time by listing a bunch of criminological theories now, but any of them could fit to him when we don't know his backstory. (also spent the day revising criminology so I don't rly wanna start talking about it again now lol)
the amount of people wishing the best for her are quick to forget that she's killed a man point blank and forget about all the lives affected by her actions. but yeah, she seems fucking lovely 🙄
She's done her time, though. She can show remorse without being outright. During her time in prison she could've come to terms with what she did and now (forgive me if this doesn't sound right) doesn't feel the need to any more.
We have all done things that we are not proud of are we all meant to walk around every second of the day showing remous for those things? No we keep that shit to our self's and just continue on with life the best we can
First, I like her! She seems like someone’s straight shooting grandma. Second, crooked cops killed her first husband, and those same crooked cops probably put her in jail the second time around. It never fails to amaze me at how justice really isn’t blind.
Her first husband was an armed robber. Who gives a shit that he got wasted? It's not as if he didn't deserve it. And her being innocent of the murder she was convicted for is only her version of events. Presumably there was enough evidence at the time to convince a jury that she was guilty.
In case you ever read this Linda, Janet from Lincoln passed away last August, quickly and peacefully, aged 74 :( We both know what a remarkable lady she was, whose story will never be told !
I'm always curious what Maryana looks like. I love this series. I wish Ladbible would do a small video of the crew that assemble these great videos. Putting a face to a voice, so to speak.
Well she had everyone fooled. It’s very sad. Her entire life turned into a rather dark way. Crime hurts everybody. It’s hard to explain to people who are often entertained by it all. Gangland is truly a damaging environ. The shit she would had been initiated into would had been damaging. The respect is not earned without killings and extreme depravity.
Moral of the story, always listen to your gut, never second guess your gut instincts. 15:22 Had she listened to her gut and paid heed to her instinct of not wanting to go that party, her life could’ve been much different.
Wow what a story. You can tell she is a really nice person who went down the wrong path due to bereavement. I don't think she murdered her second partner.
He was her boyfriend and he was on weekend release when it happened. I was told that it had to happen because she'd spent his money while he was banged up and it was only a matter of time before he found out. I can't tell you if it's true or not.
Yeah it doesn't she lost years of her life behind bars and she managed to make good out of a bad life. Unless you think 2 decades of your best years behind bars is worth money when your in your later years
Maybe when he got ugly he hit her, who knows. Clearly she had become desensitized at that point to the fact that armed robbery is seriously wrong. Or maybe she never really understood how bad it actually is until she was already skin deep in it.
How bizarre that the prison went through the palaver of finding an inmate to do Hinley's hair. It's the last thing you'd have thought people were entitled to.
“She paid a hitman, Daniel Reece, £10,000 to kill Cook. However, he lost his nerve at the last minute and Calvey picked up the gun herself, shooting the victim at point blank range, whilst he knelt in front of her.[5] She spent 18 and a half years in prison for the murder of Cook and had also previously served three and a half years for an earlier robbery.” Only from Wikipedia but we’re only hearing her side of the story here
haha people are sheep, they see 16 minutes and they're like "oh I hope the best for her, hope she has a peaceful life" not thinking about the people that have been affected by her actions. it's crazy.
@@Moncherelouis it has references. Sources. She eventually married the bloke sent down for marrying her second husband. Wiki is an encyclopedia - it isn't a source
Now, I have respect for her. She seems down to earth and I can understand her rage that made her decide to become a criminal, when they murdered her husband, even if he was a criminal himself, so well, the odds of him meeting a bitter, unfair end was pretty high. I'm guessing the second boyfriend was either another criminal being killed for revenge, or someone killed him to get revenge on her, so yeah. Like, it's sad, but it's a hazard of the profession. The other grandpa gangster, that one with strong sociopathic narcissistic tendencies and hates to be called for what he is, a gangster, has zero morals and extorted innocent people, that one I don't. At all. Actually, her life seems to be a life full of losses. She lost all the 3 men she loved the most. She lost almost 3 decades in prison (I think? I don't know how many years she had to serve). Lost precious time with the kids she loves so much. Lost so much time she could've done something good for herself, with her life. But it's strange how she naturally attracted respect and deference from the men who worked with her, and even in prison, though. I thought she was gonna say they didn't respect her much or tried to take advantage of her because she was a woman but even hardened criminals such as one of the Kray Brothers respected her. She attracted chivalry lol. I don't think many criminal women can say they had men offering bonuses from their own bounty!! One thing I don't understand. Why was a cold-blooded child murderer getting her hair done in prison and why it had to be done by someone she knew? Was it part of a deal she made with the police? Like, "I want some prison benefits if you want me to talk" ? Or do all the prisoners get to have their hair colored by someone they know if they want to?
Must of been hard for her to be forced to do that evil myra hindleys hair .... why the hell was that myra being allowed to have her hair done in the first place...the only thing she deserved was a death sentence...
@Pappy - well, Paps... Pappalappadingdong, Pap Smear, Pappington Bear (idk what I'm saying) What's the haps, Paps? You AREEE, the weakest link. GOODBYE.
She paid a hitman, Daniel Reece, £10,000 to kill her husband, Ronnie Cook. However, he lost his nerve at the last minute and Calvey picked up the gun herself, shooting the victim at point blank range, whilst he knelt in front of her
Amazing lady I really enjoyed her story and she is inspiration younger ladies and girls can learn a lot from her. My sister was into these kind of men she is amazing and really interesting thank you for sharing
it's fascinating that she had so much respect from everyone, everywhere she went. it must've been hard, but to me it doesn't sound like she wasted her life at all. it sounds almost like some sort of karmic path she had to go through. i'm not pro crime but it doesn't sound like she had an agenda either. it's weird when your family wants you to meet a criminal lol like how was she going to judge that this is actually nothing good for your future?
A lot of poor communities look out for eachother even if they're not criminals, because they all receive the same kind of scorn and fuckery from the police and society at large.
@@bhuvi402 The official story on how her second husband got killed is quite substantially different. From Wikipedia; "She paid a hitman, Daniel Reece, £10,000 to kill Cook. However, he lost his nerve at the last minute and Calvey picked up the gun herself, shooting the victim at point blank range, whilst he knelt in front of her."
@@bhuvi402 If you can't tell what she's lying about you need too do some studying And learn the street life you won't make it anywhere in life if you cant tell if someone is lying and you well get over on Constantly
@@robertjoseph5206 lmao shutup😂 this isn't a gangter movie, and that person isn't a lie detector. they asked a simple question. answer it or dont, no need for the wannabe 'street life' lesson💀
@@robertjoseph5206 Tell us then Einstein, what did she lie about? Sure we need to do some 'studying' but might as well learn from the master here right.
My life is not perfect, I´m not near the life I want my life to be, but I´m so glad I have this life I could have ended up on the streets. It does not takes much, one wrong move, wrong friends, timing, and your life can be over.
I'd love to see evidence or a body language expert react to this. With all due respect, I have a gut feeling that she's lying. Either she's protecting people, concealing details, or possibly making it all up. I just don't know why I think that.
Good onya Linda your right when you look back on it crime doesnt really pay i done 34 years in and out of jails in Australia armed robberies drugs etc etc, It was a wasted life but i had a lot of fun along the way . But i would never cross that line again . at 64 now i work hard on construction sites and enjoy my grand kids on weekends . . Good luck in your future
I met Linda in the 90's in the kitchen of Holloway Prison, she was in charge of the salad section. Very nice lady she made a deadly Caesar salad. So funny looking back now that they actually allowed me in that place to work. lol
@@deepwhateverThey might have done some questionable things but some of them are charismatic, there persona and "vibe" about them is likeable in a lower sense. I used to know someone who robbed banks and shops etc. a proper mans man, tough, charismatic and clever up until he was arrested in 2003 for manslaughter. I would never of thought he killed someone or at least be involved in something like that, yes he robbed stores, but killing is on a whole 'nother level. Hope the guy keeps his prison wallet puckered every night.
She paid a hitman, Daniel Reece, £10,000 to kill Cook. However, he lost his nerve at the last minute and Calvey picked up the gun herself, shooting the victim at point blank range, whilst he knelt in front of her. shes cold as ice dude....
Be a good sensible citizen all your life, work, pay your taxes, pay your bills, tow the line and no one will remember you. Become a gangster, rob banks, intimidate, organize hits etc and you're treated like a celebrity, hang with the cream of society and politicians, and remembered for decades. Funny how that works.
It's amazing how others have the ability to dramatically alter the trajectory of our lives. There's something about this woman ✨, thank you for sharing with us Linda!
I wanted to hear something that made me like her but honestly, I just can't help but just feel very sorry for her. Sad how people can't see right and wrong and either way make the wrong choices. I suppose it's just in them to do the wrong thing isn't it. Sad.
@9:30 "as we walked in my house, the door got kicked in and a gunman ran in, and he (her boyfriend) was shot dead". The logistics of this statement make zero sense whatsoever. Present tense 'as we walked in', as they're 'walking into the house' the 'door got kicked in'. 'as we walked in' not 'after we were inside the house'/once we were in and the door was locked' etc. She cant even lie straight, not even after 18 years of trying to fabricate her innocence
The problem is that once you decide to go into a public building with any offensive weapon, you've essentially signed your right to being alive away. The police only did their jobs, they did nothing wrong.
It's weird how different the comments are on this video compared to the other minutes with gangster videos. Double standards apply even to gangsters ig. Police aren't held to the same disgust as this woman is, because even if they murder, they're the police.
my nans carer worked for kray brothers went to jail for them as a hitman. when my nan passed away we found letter from him telling my nan things hes done and asking for a clean slate by having the job as a carer. he set a man on fire. he tried fleeing the country but got refused entry to US silly he bought a one way ticket and tried to join the mormins.
So true. A relative of mine, their neighbour is a supposed former Gypsy, claims he was a bare knuckle fighter and also knew the Krays. But from talking to him, you know he's a Billy B*llshitter so all of it could be made up. He showed me a picture of him at the funeral of one of the Krays but of course, thousands of people showed up in the streets, doesn't mean he actually knew them. He wasn't in funeral attire, just stood in the street, proved nothing to me, lol!
I'm guessing they had solid evidence like gun powder on her hands and clothes and that's why they sent her to prison for murder. I don't know if I believe she didn't do it
@Mike Tython because she's writing a book about herself and many criminals don't want to be perceived as morally reprehensible even if they did do morally reprehensible things
@Mike Tython no, the book is called 'the black widow' referring to her becoming a criminal after the police shoot her extremely violent first husband. Shes vague about what he did that day on purpose (couldve taken hostages for all we know.) That's her entire explanation for becoming violent herself and doing all the crime. She blames it on that relationship, even though its clear she had no moral compass to begin with. She can't just write 'I killed my next husband myself' in part 2 of the book. This book is her redemption arc and her side of the 'story'. She's probably a sociopath herself.
When the husband was robbing people at gun point and they enjoy other pples money it was rosy,but when the husband was shot you feel it,there is no big crime and small crime, the pain felt is the same,there is no way to colour this white,am glad she has changed though
Police back then were corrupt way more than most would believe, I grew up in the east end in the 90s and the police were hated by everyone because of the way they treated people based on being from there, pure discrimination whether you was a criminal or not, you just have to do some research on the matter and you'd see how bad it really was.
I was in 7 armed robberies working in a bank. Yes it traumatised me and my staff…….I grew up in the east end with a poor education and I didn’t turn to crime…..she could have walked away.
My gran spent time in jail with a woman called the black widow murderer. She killed her husband and child and everyone in the prison feared her…until my gran beat her ass for stealing her food🤣
She seems like an incredible person. I really respect her for what she became in the end. Glad she spoke about police. Many of them are much worse than the criminals, and that needs to be made aware.
You can order Linda's new book here: linktr.ee/thegamehb
No we can't! She just said that crime doesn't pay!
@@rafflesxyz4800 🤣🤣🤣🤣I'm hollering
th-cam.com/video/88yQhk7kd6E/w-d-xo.html
.
@@rafflesxyz4800 can't lie I just had a little pee laughing at that 🤣😂🤣😂
Won’t be long love until Helen Mirran stars in a film based on you. On a seperate note during the armed robberies how did you manage to run with your high heels
Mad how much meeting one person or that one moment can change the entire course of your life completely
But some people just have it in them,they would go down the same path regardless.
Destiny
Life is always like that though. And for most of us those single moments are positive things, for example the night I met the woman who became my wife I had intended to go home a lot earlier, there were also various other circumstances that happened to come together that night as well. I think for most of us those moments tend to be a lot more positive than Linda's example.
I don’t believe in “that one moment” thing with people. I’m sure she believes that going to that party changed her life, but I think it’s a collection of decisions and mindset that will set the course. Either way, she’s had an interesting life. I would watch that movie………. If it was done by Scorsese
Yes dangerously. Very dangerously.
Not everyone that goes to prison is evil. Myra Hindley was pure evil and even people who have committed other crimes look down on people that lure and murder children. The lowest of the low. It made me happy that Linda gave her a slap.
Not trying to defend a child abuser and killer but I always found it funny that in prison some people still establish a moral hierarchy and think they are better than someone else. Have you ever spoken to a victim of armed robbery?
@jmc3893 , there's even a moral hierarchy among thieves, with house burglars being looked down on as the worst of the worst. And among burglars themselves there's a hierarchy. I know one who feels somewhat better than others because "I've never burgled a council house, only people who can afford it".
@@jmc3893true
@@elgee6202even gang members look down on people who victimise women and children
Hence the saying, honour among thieves
It never fails to amaze me how the life of an abused child is worth less than money. Pedophiles get let off with short sentences time and again when its a scientific fact that they cannot be rehabilitated. I've more respect for a good old fashioned bank robber than a child abuser.
What an irrelevant comment
@@branthall1787 you must be a nonce
Looked at the abstracts of some studies and it has a depressingly high failure rate that goes up as time goes on. I wish I could unlearn that.
@@branthall1787 irrelevant to you maybe lol pedo sympathiser ?
@@branthall1787 I think he’s guilty of something that’s why he wrote the comment
The fact she just slapped Myra Hindley in the face for singing what an absolute beast😂
Tbf hearing that made my day just a little bit better lmao, Hindley was a monster
@@redbird9658 sorry let me just move this rock out the way I’ve been living under…yes it’s the audacity to sing after the crimes she committed I understand. not sure why I had to explain that for you😂
...for someone like you that think slapping people is cool.....not for the regular mind people.
@@Leanbean4 because so many people just want to disagree and patronise each other on comments sections all the time. It's like they need the conflict 😂
@@SW-fn7cl for real bro😂 as soon as I read it I was like he’s wanting me to not know that information JUST so you can then try make me look dumb for your own self pride??
"Dont go to that party" gives me chillsss man. its crazy how a simple thing can change our lifes!
"Don't go to that party" was a brilliant answer lol
Like a nice full circle round off to a movie.
th-cam.com/video/TU3Td2xnFVI/w-d-xo.html
Tbh I just thought she was going to say that
Huh, so this is what Debroah Meaden has been up too in her spare time.
Pmsl what i thought when saw thimn nail !
Hahahahahahaha I always wondered how she made her fortune 😂
Hah!
🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂
She seemed very calm for someone given 18 years for a murder she says she didn’t do.
I would imagine you also would have a calm demeanor about such topics if you’ve been involved in criminal activity for a long time
@@henloworld514 The lack of any bitterness or resentment is because she is likely guilty.
@@mediterraneandiet2483 I don't know about that. I have seen plenty of people wrongly convicted and not publicly share their "bitterness or resentment". The DeJesus brothers are a perfect example of that.
There's an old offence of being involved in (can't remember exact wording) but it basically says if you know, and they can prove you know but refuse to say, you're found guilty of murder. Basically like the current conspiracy charge or similar
Seen a few people in for it towards the end of their tariff, we're talking 20 years but even if the person who did it finally admits it, its too late you still do the time and stay on life license
@@TheIrishFoley shut up & dance!
The men who worked under Linda sounded like proper gents. Respecting her as the leader, wanting to give her part of their cut, it's kind of sweet.
Of course she's charismatic and fascinating. But I don't believe for a moment that she didn't kill that man.
A lot of (smart ) sociopaths are charismatic.
I don't think she would of done it in her own house lol
She could have had someone do it
Motive?
Fantastic videos!!!! The honesty of people you interviewing and their story is a life lesson!
Most of them really touched me. They make me wanna do more good in life and to benefit others…
Often the result of our actions come so late that whatever we commit them for is not relevant anymore… people just want to be happy and lost the thread how to do that…
Please keep it up!
Dear Linda,
Wishing you lots of strength (although I believe you have plenty already)!
Thank you for sharing your story so candidly!
this Lady slapped Myra Hindley. She may have done things in her past . But slapping Myra Hindley she has my respect
@Black Coffee Now a bank robber smacking a multiple child killer is respect worthy. Maybe you endorse Hindley’s behaviour and are sympathetic towards nonces?
I hope that's true
I don’t think you can compare the two at all, she also regrets her crimes, Myra didn’t regret hers and she helped in the rape torture and murder of little kids mate.
@@SteakBoss1 👏👏👏
she shot and killed a guy point blank.
I appreciate her sense of humour after what must have been a disturbing life. Note to self avoid parties for criminals coming home from jail. I’d be bound to fall in love with the bad guy!
Respect to Linda, and thanks for sharing her story. The loss she has suffered is heartbreaking 😢
I feel sorry for the people she traumatised when she robbed them. They had to live with that shock and trauma.
Very true. I'm glad that she expressed her regret for what she did.
It fascinates me that most of the men telling these stories say that they wanted to prove something. They wanted to be the best of the best. Linda got into what she did because the police lied about murdering the man that she loved and she was suffering from grief.
I'm not saying that makes it ok. Being around a person who was a criminal would have made the transition pretty easy, it was a world that she understood. But it's interesting that the reasons for getting directly involved seem so very different for her vs. the other men that have been interviewed.
I know it's sad her first partner got shot dead but the guy spent his life robbing people at gun point. Taking everything that people have. Whether he was shot lawfully or not you can't cry victim when he was treating people with violence his whole life. Sooner or later the scales balance out. Love is a powerful thing though. Intriguing interview to listen to, thanks for the insight!
Yeah but at the same time during those times would he get employed by anyone who knew he went to prison? Even now people struggle and some of them do try , but then give up and turn back to crime. I liked one quote from documentary on jail systems '' i am judged for the rest of my life by the worst day of my life''. To say people had it coming just feels off.
A police officer isnt supposed to lie about his actions no matter who they are against.
I think it was the fact that they lied about how and why he got shot. I think she would have been cool if he got shot by a victim or If the police did it because he was posing a threat. In those instances I see her chalking it up to the game, the cost doing business. But that was not this.
@@iSugarHeart if you live by the sword, don’t be surprised when you die by it.
@@iSugarHeart Precisely... And do any of us have any insight into her husband's upbringing? Probably not. I'd wager that he had a pretty difficult childhood and felt crime was the only thing he could resort to. I'm not going to waste people's time by listing a bunch of criminological theories now, but any of them could fit to him when we don't know his backstory. (also spent the day revising criminology so I don't rly wanna start talking about it again now lol)
That was very interesting, but 100 percent she killed that dude, she has just lied about it so long she can't go back on it
I know right both of her boyfriends got shot 🤔
Thankyou random stranger for your informed decision on someone's guilt.....
@@psychosoma5049 Random stranger who has a lot more common sense and insight into a sociopath like her than you...
the amount of people wishing the best for her are quick to forget that she's killed a man point blank and forget about all the lives affected by her actions. but yeah, she seems fucking lovely 🙄
Nick, I agree. She's a wolf in sheep's clothing.
Lol
I bet your no older than 15
Wikipedia isn't a reliable source
So? People die every day..people make mistakes
Sad she says how her life was wasted in prison etc but not once does she show any remorse for the effect her choices have had on others.
She's done her time, though. She can show remorse without being outright. During her time in prison she could've come to terms with what she did and now (forgive me if this doesn't sound right) doesn't feel the need to any more.
@@humanoid_freak Bullshit. She's a textbook sociopath.
Please shut up. interesting how men love seeing women cry. Do you make these comment so under videos of ex male gangsters? Didn't think so.
she does show remorse. near the end. when you dont have the attention span for a 16 minute video, dont write judgemental comments.
We have all done things that we are not proud of are we all meant to walk around every second of the day showing remous for those things? No we keep that shit to our self's and just continue on with life the best we can
First, I like her! She seems like someone’s straight shooting grandma. Second, crooked cops killed her first husband, and those same crooked cops probably put her in jail the second time around. It never fails to amaze me at how justice really isn’t blind.
Her first husband was an armed robber. Who gives a shit that he got wasted? It's not as if he didn't deserve it.
And her being innocent of the murder she was convicted for is only her version of events. Presumably there was enough evidence at the time to convince a jury that she was guilty.
What sort twisted world is it when an armed robber is given respect.
Only amongst her own kind or those with an IQ lower than their shoe size.
A murderer even...
My friend has a family full of criminals, his nephew got locked up for conspiracy to rob a bank and he got his ass kicked left right and centre 🤣
Talk is cheap..... this evil woman does not tell the whole story. She is responsible for other innocent peoples deaths!
Cry
@@wys10 you got to be problematic....
@@Armojen you came here to listen to the story of an gangster, what the fuck were you expecting saint @user-lv1zo5vp9t ?
In case you ever read this Linda, Janet from Lincoln passed away last August, quickly and peacefully, aged 74 :( We both know what a remarkable lady she was, whose story will never be told !
Why don't you tell it for her? It sounds interesting.
I'm always curious what Maryana looks like. I love this series. I wish Ladbible would do a small video of the crew that assemble these great videos. Putting a face to a voice, so to speak.
Well she had everyone fooled. It’s very sad. Her entire life turned into a rather dark way. Crime hurts everybody. It’s hard to explain to people who are often entertained by it all. Gangland is truly a damaging environ. The shit she would had been initiated into would had been damaging. The respect is not earned without killings and extreme depravity.
Moral of the story, always listen to your gut, never second guess your gut instincts.
15:22 Had she listened to her gut and paid heed to her instinct of not wanting to go that party, her life could’ve been much different.
Wow what a story. You can tell she is a really nice person who went down the wrong path due to bereavement. I don't think she murdered her second partner.
She called him boyfriend yet said she had a third husband
He was her boyfriend and he was on weekend release when it happened. I was told that it had to happen because she'd spent his money while he was banged up and it was only a matter of time before he found out. I can't tell you if it's true or not.
"Crime doesn't pay."
Now buy my book in which I talk about all the crimes what I've done
@@Kameleonic exactly lol
Don't be THAT guy ffs😒
lool
Yeah it doesn't she lost years of her life behind bars and she managed to make good out of a bad life. Unless you think 2 decades of your best years behind bars is worth money when your in your later years
Her main concern for not wanting to go to the party was that he might be ugly, not that he did an armed robbery 🤦🏻♀️
Maybe when he got ugly he hit her, who knows. Clearly she had become desensitized at that point to the fact that armed robbery is seriously wrong. Or maybe she never really understood how bad it actually is until she was already skin deep in it.
How bizarre that the prison went through the palaver of finding an inmate to do Hinley's hair. It's the last thing you'd have thought people were entitled to.
gotta trust the person cutting your hair, especially if they're all criminals. If you don't, thats how you get whacked.
@@JsDs1020 stabbed you mean
It's a joke. They get TVs, Playstation's, Xbox's in their cells, get to play darts, pool etc in the prisons...
Exactly what I was thinking! Why does she deserve to 'have her hair done'?!
@@JsDs1020 whacked 😂
when she said “how do you sing when you did what you did” I burst out laughing omfg
Great interview 💯 🍿
Conveniently misses that part where she briefly marries the guy who was jointly sent down with her for the murder of her second husband
Oops
What an inspiration. And I totally understand how she ended up in crime. One traumatic experience after another.
“She paid a hitman, Daniel Reece, £10,000 to kill Cook. However, he lost his nerve at the last minute and Calvey picked up the gun herself, shooting the victim at point blank range, whilst he knelt in front of her.[5]
She spent 18 and a half years in prison for the murder of Cook and had also previously served three and a half years for an earlier robbery.” Only from Wikipedia but we’re only hearing her side of the story here
haha people are sheep, they see 16 minutes and they're like "oh I hope the best for her, hope she has a peaceful life" not thinking about the people that have been affected by her actions. it's crazy.
*Fine I'll do it myself*
ah yes wikipedia famous fir veiny completely reliable
She’s done Atwood and English..Unilad are late
@@Moncherelouis it has references. Sources. She eventually married the bloke sent down for marrying her second husband.
Wiki is an encyclopedia - it isn't a source
Now, I have respect for her. She seems down to earth and I can understand her rage that made her decide to become a criminal, when they murdered her husband, even if he was a criminal himself, so well, the odds of him meeting a bitter, unfair end was pretty high. I'm guessing the second boyfriend was either another criminal being killed for revenge, or someone killed him to get revenge on her, so yeah. Like, it's sad, but it's a hazard of the profession.
The other grandpa gangster, that one with strong sociopathic narcissistic tendencies and hates to be called for what he is, a gangster, has zero morals and extorted innocent people, that one I don't. At all.
Actually, her life seems to be a life full of losses. She lost all the 3 men she loved the most. She lost almost 3 decades in prison (I think? I don't know how many years she had to serve). Lost precious time with the kids she loves so much. Lost so much time she could've done something good for herself, with her life.
But it's strange how she naturally attracted respect and deference from the men who worked with her, and even in prison, though. I thought she was gonna say they didn't respect her much or tried to take advantage of her because she was a woman but even hardened criminals such as one of the Kray Brothers respected her. She attracted chivalry lol. I don't think many criminal women can say they had men offering bonuses from their own bounty!!
One thing I don't understand. Why was a cold-blooded child murderer getting her hair done in prison and why it had to be done by someone she knew? Was it part of a deal she made with the police? Like, "I want some prison benefits if you want me to talk" ? Or do all the prisoners get to have their hair colored by someone they know if they want to?
I don’t have respect for this calculated woman who caused a lot of grief to other people..
She IS doing an interview.
husband was "murdered" ... yeah right
Must of been hard for her to be forced to do that evil myra hindleys hair .... why the hell was that myra being allowed to have her hair done in the first place...the only thing she deserved was a death sentence...
She doesnt seem too angry about serving 18 years for a crime she didnt commit..
18 years is a long time to come to grips with it and realize that you were guilty of other crimes that should have gotten you that time anyways.
I don't believe her story, and for that reason, I'm out.
Jenny?
Okay Barbra Corcoran… can you for once put money into a business…. 🤣🤣
😂😂
@@Kameleonic do you only for opinions on people you've met?
@Pappy - well, Paps... Pappalappadingdong, Pap Smear, Pappington Bear (idk what I'm saying) What's the haps, Paps? You AREEE, the weakest link. GOODBYE.
She paid a hitman, Daniel Reece, £10,000 to kill her husband, Ronnie Cook. However, he lost his nerve at the last minute and Calvey picked up the gun herself, shooting the victim at point blank range, whilst he knelt in front of her
What was the motive ?
Interesting any source
She cooked him dinner and shot him in the back o head wile he was eating it, she barely saw a tenna in her life let alone 10 bags🤣
@@xnavigator1 do you even know what a gangster is apposed to a "gangsta", of course she came across a lot of money during her time
@@Elbowbanditest2003 what do you know.dya know her?
Amazing lady I really enjoyed her story and she is inspiration younger ladies and girls can learn a lot from her. My sister was into these kind of men she is amazing and really interesting thank you for sharing
it's fascinating that she had so much respect from everyone, everywhere she went. it must've been hard, but to me it doesn't sound like she wasted her life at all. it sounds almost like some sort of karmic path she had to go through. i'm not pro crime but it doesn't sound like she had an agenda either. it's weird when your family wants you to meet a criminal lol like how was she going to judge that this is actually nothing good for your future?
A lot of poor communities look out for eachother even if they're not criminals, because they all receive the same kind of scorn and fuckery from the police and society at large.
Oh yay so I can now listen to a gentle grandmotherly voice with nice accent to put myself to sleep.... and also learn about crime. TH-cam has it all.
Love you Linda 💪🏻Thankyou for your honesty and strength
She’s lying a lot here. Which is a shame as people could learn a lot from her mistakes.
what are the lies she’s telling?
@@bhuvi402 The official story on how her second husband got killed is quite substantially different. From Wikipedia; "She paid a hitman, Daniel Reece, £10,000 to kill Cook. However, he lost his nerve at the last minute and Calvey picked up the gun herself, shooting the victim at point blank range, whilst he knelt in front of her."
@@bhuvi402 If you can't tell what she's lying about you need too do some studying And learn the street life you won't make it anywhere in life if you cant tell if someone is lying and you well get over on Constantly
@@robertjoseph5206 lmao shutup😂 this isn't a gangter movie, and that person isn't a lie detector. they asked a simple question. answer it or dont, no need for the wannabe 'street life' lesson💀
@@robertjoseph5206 Tell us then Einstein, what did she lie about? Sure we need to do some 'studying' but might as well learn from the master here right.
My life is not perfect, I´m not near the life I want my life to be, but I´m so glad I have this life I could have ended up on the streets. It does not takes much, one wrong move, wrong friends, timing, and your life can be over.
I count my blessings that’s for sure.
I'd love to see evidence or a body language expert react to this. With all due respect, I have a gut feeling that she's lying. Either she's protecting people, concealing details, or possibly making it all up. I just don't know why I think that.
She’s written loaddddds of books so there is a motivation
Good onya Linda your right when you look back on it crime doesnt really pay i done 34 years in and out of jails in Australia armed robberies drugs etc etc, It was a wasted life but i had a lot of fun along the way . But i would never cross that line again . at 64 now i work hard on construction sites and enjoy my grand kids on weekends . . Good luck in your future
I met Linda in the 90's in the kitchen of Holloway Prison, she was in charge of the salad section. Very nice lady she made a deadly Caesar salad. So funny looking back now that they actually allowed me in that place to work. lol
Yeah ok
When a person lies about a story multiple times they start to believe there own bs
*their
*their
*their
*thair
*Theiour
Without looking her up i know she is lying about her second husband, her story makes no sense at all!
I can see the evil in her eyes...
Facts
You have never seen evil
@@sdronesnl lmfao 🤣 dramatic much?
Her accent is gorgeous, the English gangsters have such an air of charisma to them
Robbing, selling drugs, killing..yeah...super charismatic people.
@@deepwhatever the best of em are people with a lot of charisma..
@@deepwhateverThey might have done some questionable things but some of them are charismatic, there persona and "vibe" about them is likeable in a lower sense. I used to know someone who robbed banks and shops etc. a proper mans man, tough, charismatic and clever up until he was arrested in 2003 for manslaughter. I would never of thought he killed someone or at least be involved in something like that, yes he robbed stores, but killing is on a whole 'nother level. Hope the guy keeps his prison wallet puckered every night.
Are you deaf?
Crime went up 80%in East london when the last kray brother went to prison, you do the maths
She paid a hitman, Daniel Reece, £10,000 to kill Cook. However, he lost his nerve at the last minute and Calvey picked up the gun herself, shooting the victim at point blank range, whilst he knelt in front of her. shes cold as ice dude....
Should have shot the hitman too tbh
Be a good sensible citizen all your life, work, pay your taxes, pay your bills, tow the line and no one will remember you. Become a gangster, rob banks, intimidate, organize hits etc and you're treated like a celebrity, hang with the cream of society and politicians, and remembered for decades. Funny how that works.
It is really quite thought provoking how just a couple of hours can alter the course of an entire lifetime .
Fascinating story 🙌
Tak!
It's amazing how others have the ability to dramatically alter the trajectory of our lives.
There's something about this woman ✨, thank you for sharing with us Linda!
“Don’t go to that party” 😂
i could listen to her voice all evening and fall asleep. :) she really has an asmr voice :D
I'd love to see a film about her as her story is really interesting and I'd love to see a female gang boss
It would be fantasized as any film and derail of what real people are like. They are just humans. Not glorified figures in reality.
so much respect for this women. She has been through a lot. So sad in a corrupt world..
What? She’s a criminal? She is the corrupt in the world lol.
💯💯
yeah she is such a big innocent victim :(.... All those crimes she did =((
I wanted to hear something that made me like her but honestly, I just can't help but just feel very sorry for her. Sad how people can't see right and wrong and either way make the wrong choices. I suppose it's just in them to do the wrong thing isn't it. Sad.
I mean she is a murderer
Times were very different back then. Her choices aren’t based on reality we live in today though. I liked her.
@9:30 "as we walked in my house, the door got kicked in and a gunman ran in, and he (her boyfriend) was shot dead". The logistics of this statement make zero sense whatsoever. Present tense 'as we walked in', as they're 'walking into the house' the 'door got kicked in'. 'as we walked in' not 'after we were inside the house'/once we were in and the door was locked' etc. She cant even lie straight, not even after 18 years of trying to fabricate her innocence
The problem is that once you decide to go into a public building with any offensive weapon, you've essentially signed your right to being alive away. The police only did their jobs, they did nothing wrong.
Bet you’re fun at parties
those random cutaways of their face are hilarious
Why is anybody celebrating with a crook who undoubtedly hurt many people. Why don't the good people who save lives get a look in.
Ethel the Frog - my fav Monty Python sketch!
Weird how everyone in the comments is praising her for being a "gangster" Lol
Thank you for being so honest
7 years for stealing working peoples wages. That’s a crime there
Are you talking about Linda or the bank lol.
Great story
She murdered a man who was kneeling in front of her….nuff said about the old bag
she 100% killed that guy😂
Right
@@CZA_Fortnite aye mate she did
this is a very embellished story in my opinion
It's weird how different the comments are on this video compared to the other minutes with gangster videos. Double standards apply even to gangsters ig. Police aren't held to the same disgust as this woman is, because even if they murder, they're the police.
And don't get me started on them murderous soldiers!
When is the movie coming out?
my nans carer worked for kray brothers went to jail for them as a hitman. when my nan passed away we found letter from him telling my nan things hes done and asking for a clean slate by having the job as a carer. he set a man on fire. he tried fleeing the country but got refused entry to US silly he bought a one way ticket and tried to join the mormins.
Liar
Krayfish 🦐
" don't go to that party " 🤣👌
Anyone that found this interesting have a listen to her audio book, fascinating stuff!
Thanks Chelsea.
Id love to hear it. Where can one find it ?
Most of what she says is complete fantasy.
On Audible, called the black widow. She narrates it and she isn't the most fluent speaker but I found it okay as was authentic 👌
@Black Coffee Now I actually meant the reading of the book... However who are we to decide whether something we have no idea on is true or not 🤔
16 min isnt long enough for stories like these
So proud of her
Always makes me laugh when these people name drop the Krays but in the countless books about the Krays none of these people are mentioned 😂
So true. A relative of mine, their neighbour is a supposed former Gypsy, claims he was a bare knuckle fighter and also knew the Krays. But from talking to him, you know he's a Billy B*llshitter so all of it could be made up. He showed me a picture of him at the funeral of one of the Krays but of course, thousands of people showed up in the streets, doesn't mean he actually knew them. He wasn't in funeral attire, just stood in the street, proved nothing to me, lol!
I'm guessing they had solid evidence like gun powder on her hands and clothes and that's why they sent her to prison for murder. I don't know if I believe she didn't do it
Was thinking exactly the same, must have been some solid evidence!
@Mike Tython because she's writing a book about herself and many criminals don't want to be perceived as morally reprehensible even if they did do morally reprehensible things
@Mike Tython she's drawing a line at murder, u know
@Mike Tython also she's a white soft spoken woman despite her prior convictions. not the type the police want to blame for murder without evidence
@Mike Tython no, the book is called 'the black widow' referring to her becoming a criminal after the police shoot her extremely violent first husband. Shes vague about what he did that day on purpose (couldve taken hostages for all we know.) That's her entire explanation for becoming violent herself and doing all the crime. She blames it on that relationship, even though its clear she had no moral compass to begin with. She can't just write 'I killed my next husband myself' in part 2 of the book. This book is her redemption arc and her side of the 'story'. She's probably a sociopath herself.
What a beautifully spoken, respectful, elegant woman. What a woman should be
So u are telling us that all woman should be like this woman who robbed banks and killed somebody for an easy life. You must be joking mate
Should do more interviews with female criminals! 🦹♀️🧛♀️
Love it 🔥👏🔥
Stunning and brave.
th-cam.com/video/TU3Td2xnFVI/w-d-xo.html
There arent that many you dolt
Rubbish female or male.
@@ChromeLuxx real simple - then don't watch.
Brilliant. We need way more women in these types of videos.
When the husband was robbing people at gun point and they enjoy other pples money it was rosy,but when the husband was shot you feel it,there is no big crime and small crime, the pain felt is the same,there is no way to colour this white,am glad she has changed though
what wrong en, she blames police for her husbands death so she does armed robberies? what a load of crap, hard to believe most of what she says
People do stupid things when angry
Police back then were corrupt way more than most would believe, I grew up in the east end in the 90s and the police were hated by everyone because of the way they treated people based on being from there, pure discrimination whether you was a criminal or not, you just have to do some research on the matter and you'd see how bad it really was.
@@ashtonmendonca1233 Like writing comments to stupid people who don't see she's a lying sociopath.
" Dont go to that party"!!! My God there are so many places i went or people I talked to that i wish i could just go back in time and undo....
my favourite bit of this interview is when she conveniently forgets about all the people inside the banks she traumatised!! Well done Linda!!
I was in 7 armed robberies working in a bank. Yes it traumatised me and my staff…….I grew up in the east end with a poor education and I didn’t turn to crime…..she could have walked away.
@@marymanning5150 did you have a loving family?
Doesn't sound like she forgot at all
Grow up it’s over in minutes
@@iskilii6877 someone has never had a gun pointed at them :)
In my experience females who associate in male spaces, as long as they have the skills there is never any judgment and respect is on par.
My gran spent time in jail with a woman called the black widow murderer. She killed her husband and child and everyone in the prison feared her…until my gran beat her ass for stealing her food🤣
That didn’t happen as your gran got battered
@@CEO786 it wast this woman if that’s what you mean. I’m from Scotland so it would’ve been a different jail
@JT pure lies
Yeah alright mate!
@JT really not lies tho mate. Just a family story that relates to the title of the video. What’s stuck up your arse?
The interviewer has got an incredibly alluring, gorgeous voice
She's Tracy from Birds of a Feather......
Wow the BEST interview - she is super interesting I need to read the book.
- I can relate - my Dad came from the east end - he was rough….
She seems like an incredible person. I really respect her for what she became in the end. Glad she spoke about police. Many of them are much worse than the criminals, and that needs to be made aware.
Agreed!
Thank you for telling about your life. I can't wait to get your book.