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Fight for Justice: English and Jamaican Fake Wills
Indigo
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Fight for Justice: English and Jamaican Fake Wills
By None
Current price: $6.99


By None
Fight for Justice: English and Jamaican Fake Wills
Current price: $6.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
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This book by Daddy Dan is based on facts and evidences that happened over twenty-one years, from 1979 to 2018. In this book, we have the two deceased Mrs. E, who passed away in England in 1979, and Mr. R, who passed away in Jamaica in 2013 under suspicious circumstances whilst on holiday in Jamaica. Mr. R and Mrs. E came to England after the wild rush in the 1940s. From Jamaica, Mr. R came first and sent for Mrs. E to join him in England, leaving four children behind in Jamaica: three boys and one girl, which we will not use the names for legal reasons at this point. In 1959, the couple got married, worked and bought a house in England, had six more children, and send for the other four children, making a full house of ten children. Up to this point, I can remember my childhood was a happy one. Our home was like a fairy tale, so there were twelve people living in the house until the trouble started when the two eldest-we will call D2 at this time-got put out the house in 1977. The marriage broke down, and Mr. R and Mrs. E got divorced. Mr. R left after the court case to live in Jamaica for ten years.
This book by Daddy Dan is based on facts and evidences that happened over twenty-one years, from 1979 to 2018. In this book, we have the two deceased Mrs. E, who passed away in England in 1979, and Mr. R, who passed away in Jamaica in 2013 under suspicious circumstances whilst on holiday in Jamaica. Mr. R and Mrs. E came to England after the wild rush in the 1940s. From Jamaica, Mr. R came first and sent for Mrs. E to join him in England, leaving four children behind in Jamaica: three boys and one girl, which we will not use the names for legal reasons at this point. In 1959, the couple got married, worked and bought a house in England, had six more children, and send for the other four children, making a full house of ten children. Up to this point, I can remember my childhood was a happy one. Our home was like a fairy tale, so there were twelve people living in the house until the trouble started when the two eldest-we will call D2 at this time-got put out the house in 1977. The marriage broke down, and Mr. R and Mrs. E got divorced. Mr. R left after the court case to live in Jamaica for ten years.



















