
Letter: Lord Blair of Boughton obituary
Together, and with colleagues, we worked to reopen once 'buried' difficult child abuse investigations, and to try and track down suspected perpetrators in residential care. With the probation service he introduced successful reparatory justice initiatives.
He was a model of a new style of police leadership: personally and professionally open and engaging with colleagues.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
Moment woman arrested for murdering ex-partner on Christmas Day after seeing him on Tinder
This is the moment a woman who murdered her ex-partner on Christmas Day after spotting him on Tinder was arrested by police. Footage released by Staffordshire Police on Wednesday (30 July) shows officers arresting Kirsty Carless, 33, later that same day, as a Christmas tree can be seen in the background. The 33-year-old took a taxi to Louis Price's parents' home in Norton Canes and stabbed him in an attack that was 'fuelled by cocaine and alcohol', Stafford Crown Court heard. He was later discovered with a single stab wound to the chest on the conservatory floor and pronounced dead at 3.43am. Carless, of Cannock, was found guilty of murder, possession of an offensive weapon in a public place and assault a person thereby occasioning them actual bodily harm. On Thursday (31 July), she was sentenced for life with a minimum of 25 years.


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
Schoolboy who killed fellow pupil had become ‘obsessed' with weapons, trial told
A schoolboy who stabbed a fellow pupil to death on their lunch break 'wanted to show he was hard' and had become 'obsessed' with weapons in the weeks before the killing, prosecutors have told a jury. The 15-year-old is on trial accused of murdering Harvey Willgoose, also 15, who was killed at All Saints Catholic High School in Sheffield on February 3. The defendant, who cannot be named, has admitted manslaughter but denies murder, saying he lost control and does not remember what happened. Giving his closing speech to jurors on Thursday, prosecutor Richard Thyne KC said the stabbing was 'purposeful aggression, likely explained as an act of retribution, getting back at Harvey for something'. The trial has heard the two boys fell out several days before Harvey's death after taking opposite sides in a dispute between two other boys. Mr Thyne said the defendant had ordered the hunting knife he used to kill Harvey before that incident, and was someone with an 'unhealthy interest in weapons' who had talked about 'shanking' someone when he was 13 years old. He told jurors the boy's internet searches showed 'not just someone with a growing fascination with weapons, but someone who really wanted to own them'. Mr Thyne said: 'You may think the searches aren't conducted by someone who has a specific and deep rooted fear of someone, but by someone who's become obsessed.' He told the court the defendant had also researched rage rooms and, just over a week before the fatal stabbing, searched 'waiting for someone to swing so I can let out my anger'. Mr Thyne said this was echoed in the defendant's behaviour on the day he stabbed Harvey, and showed CCTV clips from the school which he said showed him trying to provoke Harvey, who remained 'peaceful'. The trial has heard evidence from another pupil who said Harvey told him the defendant had been acting like he had a knife under his jumper that morning, but Harvey had thought he was bluffing. Mr Thyne said: 'It's just a tragedy Harvey didn't realise (the defendant) reaching for, or indicating he had, a knife in (a science lesson), was genuine.' He told the court that in footage of the fatal attack on Harvey, the defendant could be seen unzipping his coat, putting his hand in his pocket, and taking out the knife. 'He was acting with thought, with purpose and knew exactly what he was doing,' he told jurors. The prosecutor said the school's headteacher had told police that after the stabbing, the defendant had told him he knifed Harvey 'once, maybe twice'. Mr Thyne said: 'This proves the lie when he says he can't remember. He knew then, just as he knows now, exactly what he'd done.' The prosecutor added the defendant was 'motivated by wanting to show he was hard, sending out a message about who he was, someone not to be messed with'. Starting his closing address to the jury, Gul Nawaz Hussain KC, defending, said the defendant 'snapped' after years of bullying and 'an intense period of fear at school'. He told jurors: 'Tragically, Harvey was a combination of being the final straw that broke (the defendant) and the unintended face of a series of threats of violence and bullying he had suffered in recent months. 'We say he suffered a loss of control which resulted in horrific and tragic consequences.' he trial continues.


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
‘No discussion' on how to prevent future incidents after inmate death
A coroner has raised multiple concerns after a restrained prisoner died, including that there had been 'no discussion' among healthcare and prison leaders on how to prevent similar incidents. Azroy Dawes-Clarke, 28, from Romford, east London, was an inmate at HMP Elmley on the Isle of Sheppey, Kent, when he died after suffering multiple cardiac arrests on November 10 2021. He had tied a ligature around his neck before officers intervened and began a restraint which 'escalated unnecessarily', jurors concluded by majority in an inquest at Kent and Medway Coroner's Court, Maidstone, earlier this month. In the record of inquest, jurors also found that officers showed a 'deeply concerning lack of care and compassion' during the incident. Handcuffs were wrongly applied to the father-of-four which may also have played a contributing factor in his death, the inquest heard. Following the conclusion, Ian Brownhill, assistant coroner for Kent and Medway, raised multiple concerns in three separate prevention of future deaths reports, including that there had been 'no discussion' among 'various parties involved' on learnings or how to prevent a similar incident. In one report, sent to the health and justice secretaries, Mr Brownhill wrote: 'As the jury noted, communication between attending prison staff, healthcare professionals and paramedics was confused. 'There was confusion as to who had command and control of the medical emergency, which public body took primacy and the difference in roles and responsibilities. 'Those attending the scene did not establish any sort of communication strategy or command structure. 'During prevention of future deaths evidence, there remained a lack of clarity and consistency as to how such a situation would be avoided if a critical medical emergency eventuated in a custodial setting again.' The coroner added in another report, that 'despite the severity of the incident', there has been 'little (if any) dialogue between leaders of the various parties involved'. He said: 'Formal complaint processes, safeguarding processes and risk reporting mechanisms had been used, but there was no discussion about how to learn from this specific case or how to avoid a reoccurrence. 'During prevention of future deaths evidence, responses were inconsistent as to how to avoid other difficulties during a major medical emergency in a prison setting.' 'Despite the severity of the incident which occurred in this case, it appeared that there still remains confusion as to which public body would have primacy in an acute medical emergency in a custodial setting,' he added. In a third report, the coroner said that officers present during the incident had 'different training with regard to first aid and basic life support.' 'During the course of the inquest, evidence was heard that whilst all uniformed prison officers would have regular training in respect of control and restraint, not all had recent (if any) training in first aid or basic life support. 'Some of the officers who gave evidence were unclear as to the correct response to a cardio respiratory arrest during physical restraint,' he wrote. The coroner also noted that, during the completion of paperwork, many of the prison officers were 'unclear' what their role would be in conveying a prisoner who lacked capacity to consent to their conveyance to hospital in a medical emergency. He added: 'Answers in respect of handcuffing prisoners for the purpose of conveying them to hospital in a medical emergency varied. 'Answers in respect of the legal framework which applied when prison officers are involved in care and treatment of a prisoner (the particular issue in the present case being the conveyance to hospital and the decision to dress him) were inconsistent or incomplete.' The three reports are being sent to different recipients including the governor of HMP Elmley, the chief executive of South East Coast Ambulance Service, the chief executive of Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust and the director general and chief executive of His Majesty's Prison and Probation Service. In the record of inquest, jurors found: 'The ability of the paramedics to perform their duty of care to Mr Dawes-Clarke during the restraint was limited by their placement and lack of visibility from outside the cell. 'Furthermore, it was inappropriate for the paramedics to approve thehandcuffing of Mr Dawes-Clarke having had no training in mechanical restraint to give such advice.' Bodyworn footage, released to the PA news agency, shows officers singing and joking about the size of the handcuffs they needed for Mr Dawes-Clarke while he groaned on the floor. The inquest heard that a prison officer holding the deceased described him as a 'bucking bronco' in his police interview and had said that he had been making 'loud animal noises'. After the inquest concluded, Azroy Dawes-Clarke's sister said he died 'restrained, neglected, and dehumanised' as officers looked on and 'did nothing'.