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When Pamela Dalton and her family moved into their three-bed semi in Redditch, the last thing they expected to find was a treasure trove of missing items at the back of their garden, but experts have now confirmed the horde is, in fact, part of the mythical Last Place On Earth.


Prof. Justin Roache, Head of Oceanography at Swindon University, told us, “This is undoubtedly the last place you’d expect to find someone of my qualifications, but I’ve been looking for some notes I’d mislaid and found them here. Proof if proof were needed.”


The police have been regular visitors to the garden, having recaptured several most-wanted who thought no-one would think of looking for them there. Det. Supt. Peter Banks explained, “As soon as this place was identified, we were all over it. Not just criminals hiding out in the shrubs, but stolen goods over by the fence. I think I even spotted the Met’s reputation on a compost pile, albeit somewhat tarnished.”


For the Dalton family, these are turbulent times, and interest in the garden is undoubtedly proving intrusive, although Pamela thinks the fuss will soon die down. “Because people are now looking here before anywhere else, it’s no longer the Last Place, and so the area is shrinking. Which is a shame because we’d got used to not having to look far for anything we’d lost.”


At that moment, she took a call from a Government official who just wondered if anyone had spotted the Prime Minister’s credibility. Pamela politely explained it was never likely to be in the Last Place in the first place. “You can’t lose what you never had.”


As his cabinet colleagues got drunk, Chancellor Rishi Sunak took a few photos on his phone, politely sipped his water and whispered to himself ‘Soon’.







Convicted criminals across the country have strongly suggested we should 'completely scrap' the criminal justice system.


Ben, who received a five year sentence just last week, is heading up the campaign: 'Its nothing to do with the fact I've just been convicted - that's complete pure coincidence. I've been thinking for ages we should just get rid of the criminal justice system entirely. I'm definitely right because all my mates agree. Pick-pocket-Paul backs me up, and so does Half-Inch-It-Ian. Whether I committed the crime or not is neither here nor there.'


Ben's mates have said they are 'horrified' at the current system which is 'fundamentally flawed' but couldn't really explain how. They are calling for Ben's immediate release and exoneration, saying that despite the mountain of evidence that he did commit a crime, scrapping the system entirely would override that.


This has prompted a number of other campaigns, with burglars unanimously voting to scrap security cameras, cyber criminals demanding we scrap firewalls and murderers proposing we scrap forensic pathologists.





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