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EXCLUSIVE 'Adrenaline junkie' mother-of-four, 48, doubled the height of her tandem sky dive jump before she plunged 15,000ft to her death with instructor

EXCLUSIVE 'Adrenaline junkie' mother-of-four, 48, doubled the height of her tandem sky dive jump before she plunged 15,000ft to her death with instructor

Daily Mail​6 hours ago

An 'adrenaline junkie' mother of four killed in a skydive tragedy decided to double the height of the jump minutes before taking off, MailOnline can reveal.
Belinda Taylor, from Totnes in Devon, fell 15,000ft to her death alongside instructor Adam Harrison in a 'tragic accident' at Dunkeswell Airfield, in Devon.
But the 48-year-old had only planned a 7,000ft jump when she arrived at the centre last Friday before changing her mind at the last minute.
Her grieving boyfriend Scott Armstrong, who has described her as 'an adrenaline junkie and an adventurer', had bought the skydive experience for her as a present.
He said: 'The plan was to do a 7,000ft jump, but at the last minute she said she wanted to do a 15,000ft one, so I paid the extra money.
'I found Belinda and the instructor lying there, still together, both clearly dead. It was a horrific sight.
'I miss her so much. I'm so lost without her. She meant the world to all of us and we'll never forget her.'
Operator Skydive Buzz advertises jumps from 7,000ft, 10,000ft and 15,000ft - with the company's website proudly claiming: 'No one jumps from higher in the UK!'
Devon and Cornwall Police and the British Skydiving Board of Inquiry are both investigating the cause of the accident.
Meanwhile Ms Taylor's son Elias, 20, said she had become more 'adventurous' after meeting her new boyfriend Mr Armstrong.
Elias, a university student who lives in west London, described his mother, 48, as 'selfless', telling MailOnline: 'She really just put everyone above herself. It's really difficult for [younger sister] Emily as she was the one living there with mum.
'I spoke to her a week before it happened. It's kind of weird thinking about it now, but at the time obviously she was saying how the jump would take place on Friday 13th and all those things.
'You don't really expect what happened to happened. She was mentioning it in a jokey way.
'It's all still a bit of a shock. Recently she had Scott and two of his kids, and looked after them. She was getting more adventurous with him, kayaking and stuff, looking to have that excitement and have more fun.
'She talked for ages and ages, and always wanted to have a chat. She was such a positive person.'
Belinda Taylor's grieving partner Scott Armstrong has paid tribute to her on Facebook
He added: 'We just want answers about what happened and how it could have happened.
'We want as much information as possible - we feel like it would help us be at peace.'
Her eldest son Connor Bowles has said: 'On Friday, June 13, our family lost our mum Belinda Taylor.
'She was a mother of four children, three adult boys and one teenage girl, and a grandmother to two young children.
'She was a selfless woman who wanted only the best for others and especially her loved ones.'
Her tandem partner Mr Harrison from Bournemouth had worked as a skydiving instructor since September 2020.
The 30-year-old, who has been described by his sister as 'wonderful', was also training as a chiropractor.
In a tribute, Mr Harrison's sister Amy Harrison extended her condolences to Ms Taylor's family.
She said: 'Adam had built a sterling reputation as a professional instructor and we take comfort in knowing that he would undoubtedly have done everything in his power to avert any crisis.'
A statement from Skydive Buzz posted on Facebook said: 'We are heartbroken to confirm that an incident occurred on Friday, resulting in the tragic loss of two lives.
'Our deepest condolences go out to the families, friends, and everyone affected by this devastating event.
'As per standard procedure, the relevant authorities were contacted immediately, and the appropriate investigation protocols were initiated without delay.
'A British Skydiving Board of Inquiry will now investigate the accident.
'Once complete, a report – including conclusions and any recommendations – will be submitted to the coroner, the police, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), the British Skydiving Safety & Training Committee (STC), and other relevant bodies.
'Safety is, and always has been, our top priority. We are fully cooperating with the investigation and continue to uphold the highest possible standards in everything we do.'
It comes after a separate skydiver was feared to have taken her own life in a 10,000ft fall from the sky in Shotton Colliery, Co Durham.
Emergency services were called to the scene at Dunkeswell Airfield on Friday at about 1pm
Jade Damarell, 32, an experienced parachutist who had accomplished more than 400 jumps, died instantly after hitting the ground during a jump at the base.
Police quickly ruled out any suspicious circumstances and were understood to have discovered notes disclosing her intentions.
MailOnline understands that Ms Damarell, from Caerphilly, south Wales, had broken up with her boyfriend the day prior to taking to the skies.

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Asylum seekers behind new grooming gang cases
Asylum seekers behind new grooming gang cases

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Asylum seekers behind new grooming gang cases

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In her latest audit, she accused public bodies of having used flawed data to dismiss claims about Asian grooming gangs as 'sensationalised, biased or untrue'. 'Instead of examination, we have seen obfuscation,' she wrote. 'In a vacuum, incomplete and unreliable data is used to suit the ends of those presenting it. 'The system claims there is an overwhelming problem with white perpetrators when that can't be proved.' Lady Casey also referred to 'examples of organisations avoiding the topic altogether for fear of appearing racist or raising community tension'. 'Flawed data is used repeatedly to dismiss claims about 'Asian grooming gangs' as sensationalised, biased or untrue,' she said. 'This does a disservice to victims and indeed all law-abiding people in Asian communities.' Lady Casey found that information on the ethnicity of abusers was not recorded in two thirds of cases. 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QUENTIN LETTS: Blimey, Kemi went for it. And a black woman saying anti-racism wasn't the most important thing fried her opponents' brains
QUENTIN LETTS: Blimey, Kemi went for it. And a black woman saying anti-racism wasn't the most important thing fried her opponents' brains

Daily Mail​

time31 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

QUENTIN LETTS: Blimey, Kemi went for it. And a black woman saying anti-racism wasn't the most important thing fried her opponents' brains

With Sir Keir Starmer on one of his foreign jaunts – it feels a bad time to be abroad – Kemi Badenoch seized the moment. The Government was abandoning another policy position, this time on the child-rapes scandal. Sir Keir was in a distant time-zone when the cave-in was announced to the Commons. The Tories ' response would normally have been made by Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp. Handsome lad but a touch blurty. Mrs Badenoch sensed an opportunity. Mr Philp was demoted to note-taker and his party leader replaced him at the despatch box. Blimey, she went for it. She tore into liberal queasiness about investigating gangs of 'Asian and Pakistani heritage men'. This was the phrase Whitehall had chiselled out of granite for the occasion. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, making the announcement, resorted to a hammy mixture of sad-voice, prickly self-defence and antiseptic precision. 'We want to put them behind bars,' she said of the offenders. Every consonant was accentuated. Mrs Badenoch didn't buy the tough-guy act. 'She speaks as if this was their plan all along but we all know it's another U-turn,' she murmured in her smoky voice. Yvette sounded squeaky by comparison. Labour MPs started stirring. A blowhard from Bracknell, name of Swallow, was reprimanded by Speaker Hoyle for 'bawling' at her. Mrs Badenoch was only energised. Another Labour figure itching and gurning and jawing and rolling her eyes throughout was Jess Phillips, safeguarding minister. Deputy PM Angela Rayner and Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson sat rigid. Lucy Powell, the Leader of the House who had once mocked Tory requests for an inquiry, sucked her gnashers. But Ms Phillips could not contain herself. She pulled faces to indicate that she thought opposition MPs were dim. She shrugged, laughed repeatedly and muttered asides to a neighbour. Mrs Badenoch sailed through it. She has a Nigerian Right-winger's contempt for Lefty hand-wringing. It fries her opponents' minds. You can sense their inner microchips overloading with the conundrum: a black woman saying anti-racism should not have been the predominant concern? Computer not recognise. The chamber filled with the smell of hot Scalextric wire as Lefties' synapses fused. She was angry that the absent Sir Keir just a few weeks ago dismissed calls for an inquiry as 'a bandwagon of the far-Right'. Yet now the nasal knight had done a reverse ferret, a volte-face, a gymnastic flip-and-twist whereby he was now facing in completely the other direction, arms held wide, grinning at his feat. 'An extraordinary failure of leadership!' she cried. Volume levels were rising. Mrs Badenoch relished it. Her eyes, behind their big glasses, bulged like two Rosey Apple boiled sweets. She hollered that Labour MPs voted three times to block an inquiry – 'three times!' – but were now professing delight that one would be happening. Her right arm sawed and stirred and jabbed and flew horizontally. We were almost in Margaret Hilda territory, although in place of Mrs T's blonde barnet the most noticeable thing here was the gap between Mrs Badenoch's front teeth and her pulsating denunciation of the Starmerites. 'What changed the Prime Minister's mind from thinking this is far-Right dog whistle politics to thinking it was something he must do?' And she wanted action against those in 'the police, local authorities, social service, or even the Crown Prosecution Service' who had put concerns about community ahead of stopping girls as young as ten from being raped. Even the CPS? Who can she have in mind? The following pupils appeared to be absent: Farage, N. (Clacton), Champion, S. (Rotherham) and, more surprisingly, Lowe, R. (Great Yarmouth). Jonathan Brash (Lab, Hartlepool) accused Mrs Badenoch of 'weaponising child rape to go after clicks'. A particularly damp Lib Dem, Josh Babarinde (Eastbourne), accused Mrs Badenoch of being 'party political'. In the Commons? That's the whole point of the place, poppet. Party politics is only despicable when it distorts justice. As we now can see.

Grooming gangs inquiry must root out racists who turned blind eye to rape of young white girls – they MUST face justice
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Grooming gangs inquiry must root out racists who turned blind eye to rape of young white girls – they MUST face justice

IF there ever was a justification for holding a public inquiry it is surely the mass rape of under-age girls by gangs of men. Also, the failure for many years of police, social workers and other agencies to take the issue seriously. 5 5 5 The scale of the offending is extraordinary. A report by Professor Alexis Jay concluded that 1400 girls were abused in Rotherham alone between 1997 and 2013, yet the girls themselves were ignored -- or even blamed for their own abuse. That we are finally getting an inquiry is of little credit to this government, which for months until Keir Starmer's U-turn at the weekend had tried to belittle the scandal and, even worse, make out that those who called for an inquiry were pandering to extremists or as he put it: 'jumping on the bandwagon of the far right'. 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Cooper still can't quite bring herself to admit the truth, telling the Commons that 'Asians' had been found to be 'over-represented' among the suspects in abuse by gangs. For some reason she couldn't bring herself to be more specific than that. It is true that there are some on the Far Right who would love to make an issue of the grooming gangs scandal for their own ends. But they are somewhat outnumbered by those on the liberal-left who for years balked at the idea that an ethnic minority could be disproportionately involved in a serious form of crime. It is the latter who are far more influential in the legal justice system. Sadly, these people, who tend to dominate police constabularies, council social services departments and the judiciary, lack the insight to see that they are equally guilty of racism and prejudice as are the Far Right. For years, they were making decisions on whether or not to investigate sex offences or prosecute rapists on the basis of the colour and religion of the offenders. Bizarrely, people who bleat endlessly about the gender gap in company boardrooms, and other supposed injustices against well-paid professional women, turned out to be blatant misogynists when faced with the mass abuse of white working class girls. They treated them as worthless, whose welfare was to be cast aside in the cause of promoting racial and religious equality. Most Britons, needless to say, want justice to be meted out to offenders equally, regardless of race, religion, gender or sexual orientation. They reject utterly the notion that some groups of the population should, to borrow George Orwell's phrase, be more equal than others. They want the criminal justice system to deal with what is happening now, not be used as a tool to try to right injustices in the distant past through treating some groups more leniently than others. In spite of the child abuse scandal the Prime Minister, and many others on the Left, simply cannot stop themselves. The same attitude which prevailed in Rotherham, Rochdale, Telford and many other towns was there to be seen again during last summer's riots. Starmer, who had had little to say about riots in Leeds, sparked when Roma children were taken into care, or a machete fight on Southend seafront, lost no time in condemning anyone he thought he could blame for encouraging the riots which followed the Southport murders. Police withheld important information about the suspect behind the attacks, apparently out of fear it might encourage the Far Right. Racial tensions But if you want to encourage the Far Right there is no better way of doing so than to brush serious acts of crime under the carpet. For years the only people who were talking about the mass rape of white girls by men of Pakistani heritage were the British National Party. Indeed, the first I heard about it was in a BBC documentary filmed covertly to expose the BNP. It is vital that the racist attitudes of those who tried to excuse serious criminal activity are rooted out for good. I have to say that, like most viewers I suspect, I thought that rape gang allegations which featured in the programme were just a tall story made up to ramp up racial tensions. But they weren't. Much as I despise the BNP, the efforts of others to cover up the mass rape scandal handed the party the initiative. That is why we need an inquiry into the rape scandal, and why it must focus absolutely on the most important question: Why was there such a conspiracy of silence, and why did so many 'enlightened' people think it acceptable to turn a blind eye to gang rape. It is vital that the racist attitudes of those who tried to excuse serious criminal activity are rooted out for good. 5 5

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