Offensive words and drawings spraypainted on car in Blackburn
Police have received a report after graffiti was sprayed on a car, which was parked in Ribble Street.
CCTV footage, seen by the Lancashire Telegraph, shows a black vehicle pull up to a red car. This was at around 5pm on Friday night (Jult 25).
A person, in a mask, gets out the car and proceeds to cover the vehicle in black spray paint.
Offensive words and phallic drawings cover the body and windows of the car, windscreen included.
The person then gets back into the black car, which reverses back down the street.
A police spokesperson said: 'A third party report has been made of graffiti being sprayed on a car which is parked in Ribble Street.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Man arrested after fiery 5-vehicle Gardiner crash in early July: police
A man has been arrested in connection with a fiery, five-vehicle crash that killed one person and injured several others earlier this month, Toronto police say. Police said they arrested a 26-year-old man from Caledon, Ont., after he turned himself in this week. He has been charged with dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing death and four counts of dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing bodily harm. Just after 5:30 p.m. on July 8, police were called about a multi-vehicle collision on the Gardiner Expressway near Lower Jarvis Street, Toronto police said in a news release Thursday. Three of the five vehicles caught fire following the crash. One of the cars that became engulfed in flames also flipped on its side against a highway barrier, police said. The driver of one of the vehicles, a 68-year-old man, was pronounced dead at the scene. Four people were also taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, while two others were treated by paramedics at the scene. The accused was scheduled to appear in court for a bail hearing on Tuesday, police said. Anyone with more information about the incident is asked to contact police or leave an anonymous tip with Crime Stoppers.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Police release video of alleged attempted abduction inside mall
The Fairfax County Police Department released video of an alleged attempted child abduction. (Credit: Fairfax County Police Department) Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
ICE arrests police officer in Maine saying he's in the country 'unlawfully'
The ICE arrest of a police officer in Old Orchard Beach, Maine, who the agency claims was in the country unlawfully, has sparked a days-long exchange of blame between the resort town's police department and DHS. ICE says agents arrested Jon-Luke Evans, a Jamaican national, on July 25 after he allegedly attempted to unlawfully purchase a gun. The attempted purchase "triggered an alert to ATF agents, who worked in coordination with ICE to make the arrest," ICE said. Evans allegedly told ICE he was trying to purchase the weapon as part of his employment with the Old Orchard Beach Police Department. ICE has strongly condemned the police department for hiring Evans, claiming that he entered the country lawfully on September 24, 2023, but overstayed his visa when he failed to depart a week later. MORE: ICE recruitment efforts upset some local law enforcement leaders "The fact that a police department would hire an illegal alien and unlawfully issue him a firearm while on duty would be comical if it weren't so tragic. We have a police department that was knowingly breaking the very law they are charged with enforcing in order to employ an illegal alien," said ICE ERO Boston acting field office director Patricia Hyde in a statement. But Police Chief Elise Chard says DHS had cleared Evans to work as a police officer. "In hiring Evans, our department and our community relied on the Department of Homeland Security's E-Verify program to ensure we were meeting our obligations, and we are distressed and deeply concerned about this apparent error on the part of the federal government," she said in a statement. "DHS informed the Police Department that Evans was authorized to work and had an Employment Authorization Document that did not expire until March 2030," she added. Chief Chard says Evans was hired as a part-time summer reserve officer in May and completed the standard hiring process, which included background checks, submitting immigration forms to DHS, and undergoing the standard training and physical agility tests as all full-time police officers. However, in a statement released by the police department, the police chief said that while reserve officers are issued a firearm, they are not allowed to bring the firearm home and are not allowed to purchase their own firearm to use as part of their employment. In the state of Maine, some noncitizens who are in the country legally are allowed to work as law enforcement officers. ABC News has not independently verified Evans' immigration status. DHS did not respond to a request for documentation that proved Evans was in the country unlawfully, nor did it respond when asked what kind of visa he was issued. "Usage of E-Verify does not absolve employers of their legal duty to verify documentation authenticity, and all employers should take necessary steps to effectively verify legal employment status. The Old Orchard Beach Police Department's reckless reliance on E-Verify to justify arming an illegal alien, Jon Luke Evans violates federal law, and does not absolve them of their failure to conduct basic background checks to verify legal status," DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement. Old Orchard Beach Town Manager Diana Asanza defended the police department's hiring practices. "Today, the Department of Homeland Security doubled down on its attack, but in doing so has thrown its own electronic verification system into question. If we should not trust the word of the federal computer system that verifies documents and employment eligibility, what good is that system?" she said in a statement. MORE: Millions of undocumented immigrants will no longer be eligible for bond hearings, according to ICE memo ABC News has reviewed documents released by the city that are part of the 153-page personnel file it says it compiled as part of the hiring process. A resume belonging to Evans purports to show his work experience going back to October 2020, when he said he was a teaching assistant at the College of Agriculture, Science, and Education in Portland, Jamaica. It also shows a four-month stint at a Waffle House in South Carolina from May 2022 to September 2022, over a year before DHS claims he entered the country lawfully. DHS did not respond to questions about the employment history. In his resume, Evans said he's a trained agricultural educator and was "seeking to transition my skills in problem-solving, critical thinking and environmental conservation to a career in law enforcement, where I can make a positive impact on society." Chief Chard said ICE had not alerted her about his arrest and that she learned about it through a press release. "Any insinuation that the Town and Department were derelict in our efforts to verify Mr. Evans' eligibility to work for the Town is false and appears to be an attempt to shift the blame onto a hard-working local law enforcement agency that has done its job," she said in a statement.