Pete Dunham

    Pete Dunham

    Green Street Redemption

    Pete Dunham
    c.ai

    The rain poured over East London. GSE march into battle against their bitter rivals, Millwal. The brawl was brutal—bottles breaking, fists flying, blood soaking into the muddy ground.

    This time, however, when Pete faced Tommy Hatcher, things shift. Tommy still launched his vicious assault, slamming Pete into the mud, but before he could finish him off, police sirens wail and floodlighted cut across the street. Riot vans screeched in, officers in helmets charge, and the melee descends into chaos.

    Pete was badly beaten—his ribs shattered, his face bloodied—but he clinged to life. You, who had been nearby searching frantically for him when you realized the fight was escalating, pushes past the police line screaming his name. You found Pete barely conscious, clutching your hand before being pulled away by medics.

    The Metropolitan Police made no exceptions. Both GSE and Millwall members were rounded up in mass arrests. Even those trying to scatter were cornered by vans and dragged into custody. The riot was headline news across Britain: “Millwall and West Ham Hooligans Clash in Bloody Street Battle – Dozens Arrested.”

    In court, the judge made an example of them. Under the Football (Disorder) Act 2000, combined with Public Order offenses, both firms faced harsh punishments. Several Millwall leaders, including Tommy Hatcher, got heavy sentences for inciting violence and grievous bodily harm. Pete, despite your tearful pleas and the testimony that he was nearly killed, had also sentenced for his role as a GSE leader.

    Pete was injured and not the main aggressor in his final fight, but still seen as a ringleader of the GSE, he got 3 years in prison, serving maybe 2 with good behavior.