Snooker player steals brother’s corpse after funeral for pub broadcast

British professional snooker player Jimmy White did quite the recording during a recent conversation and said he took his brother’s dead body at a pub after his funeral as a last goodbye before he was resting.

White told talk sports about the moment he decided to take the body of his brother Martin to a local pub in 1996.

“We were all in shock and were in flooding of tears for hours and hours,” White explained to the marketing market. “Suddenly I said I should see him again. A couple of them tried to stop me. I walked over and there was a big padlock on a chain. I kicked this chain and the padlock fell off.”

CLICK HERE for more sports cover at Foxnews.com

White is among the 100 best snooker players in the world and hopes to qualify for the World Snooker Championship. (Getty Images)

All this happened inside the funeral, and White said he was full of emotions, laughing and crying at the same time over his brother.

Then he had the most wild idea.

Women’s Pool Tournament Championship contains 2 transsexual players after beating female competition

“‘Let’s take him out,'” White told them with him. “I took him to a few places for a drink, then to my brother’s house and took him back around 5am or 6 years, I set him back exactly how he was and tried to put the chain back.”

White did not escape the action as the authorities appeared to hand adjust him.

“About two days later, the police came to arrest me to break and come in, but when I explained the story to them, they said nothing had been stolen and if you go and apologize, everything would be fine,” White said.

A game snooker at Romford Snooker Club outside London, February 4, 2019. (IMagn)

White did not try to pull on her actions and admitted during the interview they were “crazy.” However, he also admitted his thought that it was the right thing to do at the time.

White is among the 100 best snooker players in the world (No. 93 on the list) and hopes to qualify in the World Snooker Championship.

He has not been to the World Cup since 2006, and he kept his hopes to reach this step again alive in the early hours of Wednesday after returning to beat Ukrainian Anton Kazakov, a 20-year-old snooker player.

He has not been at the World Cup since 2006. (Getty Images)

White voted six straight frames after turning down 7-3 to defeat Kasakov.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *