logo
Mum's crane equipment death avoidable, court told

Mum's crane equipment death avoidable, court told

Yahoo25-04-2025

The death of a woman who was pushing a pram when she was struck by a crane loaded on a trailer could have been avoided if the equipment was safely secured, a court was told.
Rebecca Ableman, 30, was with her two-year-old daughter beside the B1050 in Willingham, Cambridgeshire, when she was hit in September 2022.
Kevin Miller, 70, of King's Lynn in Norfolk, denies causing death by dangerous driving.
In a document prepared for the ongoing trial, industry expert Keith Silvester said that had Mr Miller "secured the log grapple in a central position using a ratchet strap... the incident would not have occurred".
Peterborough Crown Court has heard how Mr Miller was on his way back to King's Lynn docks after transporting scrap metal to Network Rail depots on 22 September.
The jury heard how the crane boom and grab had shifted to the left of the trailer and was hanging over the side when Miss Ableman was hit in Willingham.
She had left a farm shop in Station Road with her daughter Autumn when she was struck by the moving lorry just before 11:15 BST.
Miss Ableman died from head and brain injurie three weeks later.
Mr Silvester, the technical manager of ALLMI, the trade association for the lorry loader industry, said the company's role was "to promote the safe use of lorry loaders" and to "try and raise standards".
He explained that ratchet straps were typically used to secure loads to vehicles, and that "the strap will prevent movement".
Prosecutor William Carter asked Mr Silvester: "If the boom and grapple had been strapped down, none of that would have happened?"
He responded: "Yes."
The trial continues.
Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Mum killed by loose crane equipment, trial told

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lefty nonprofits are openly fueling LA riots by handing out ‘F–k ICE' protective gear
Lefty nonprofits are openly fueling LA riots by handing out ‘F–k ICE' protective gear

New York Post

time6 hours ago

  • New York Post

Lefty nonprofits are openly fueling LA riots by handing out ‘F–k ICE' protective gear

LOS ANGELES — Leftwing non-profit groups are openly helping to fuel anti-ICE riots here by handing out 'F–k ICE' packs with protective equipment — as protesters continue to take over downtown every night and engage in rolling battles with cops, federal agents and National Guard troops. Chilling footage revealed one unidentified group handing out a truckload of face shields and other riot gear to protesters in downtown Los Angeles. The 'F–k ICE' packages — which include goggles, facemasks, gloves and a phone number for 'jail support' — are being assembled and distributed by a non-profit called Operation Healthy Hearts. Advertisement 7 Grassroots organizations are making and distributing 'F–k ICE' PPE kits operationhealthyhearts/Instagram It's just one of several organizations that started as grassroots community aid agencies, but have been waded into politics and thrown their weight behind left wing street protests. At least one group received federal funding before the Trump administration turned off the spigot. Advertisement '[The federal government] cut off our funding for other reasons, so we really have nothing left to lose,' LA Poverty Department COO Pamela Miller told The Post. That group, an arts nonprofit that operates the Skid Row History Museum & Archive, allowed another organization to use their building to distribute PPE packages for protesters on Monday. Among the items available at the museum were anarchist pamphlets that advocate for setting cops cars on fire, burning down police precincts and targeting banks and ATMs as part of 'direct action' against police. 7 Groups are also handing out pamphlets explaining how to evade police. Jared Downing/ NY Post Advertisement 7 Groups were seen handing out truckloads of riot gear to protesters in Los Angeles Monday afternoon FOX11 The pamphlets also include instructions on how to thwart police anti-riot tactics. Miller, however, dismissed the violence that has overtaken LA every night as 'a few knuckleheads doing stupid s–t.' 'The immigrant community is important. And they are vulnerable. [ICE] say we want to get rid of the criminals. Then where are they going? To churches, to schools,' Miller said. 'They're targeting people who can't protect themselves.' Advertisement She added: 'We want to support people's rights to stand up to authoritarian takeover, and however many knuckleheads are doing stupid s–t, that doesn't make us want to back away from standing up for our neighbors' rights.' 7 Operation Healthy Hearts is one of the groups making the 'F–k ICE' kits. operationhealthyhearts/Instagram 7 The LA Poverty Department also handed out PPE kits in the wake of the protests that have impacted the Los Angeles community. operationhealthyheartshomegurlswap/Instagram Los Angeles has been a bed of chaos since protests against ICE descended into scenes of chaos by day and looting by night, with tensions intensifying as President Trump ordered thousands of National Guard troops and hundreds of Marines into the city to restore order. LA Poverty Department was handing out PPE in the midst of that with the help of another community group, the Mutual Aid /Social Therapy (MAST), which describes itself as 'a decentralized project that uses the principles of mutual aid to put the tools of the psychological disciplines in the hands of the people.' But rather than focusing on spreading therapy practices, the group has been passing out goggles and gear to help protesters evade teargas and rubber bullets, while stoking anti-law enforcement sentiment on social media. Like the other groups, Operation Healthy Hearts generally organizes community service like food drives for the homeless on LA's Skid Row, but in addition to creating the 'F–k ICE PPE' packs has a long history of pumping out leftwing rhetoric on its social media — and has been denouncing law enforcement since protests started Friday. 7 A volunteer who handed out PPE kits, Alexandra Pierce, said, 'Police are attacking journalists and protesters. We need people to look out for each other.' AP Advertisement 7 Protests broke out in LA Friday after ICE raided numerous workplaces across the city, hauling off those who are suspected illegal immigrants. AP 'Police are attacking journalists and protesters. We need people to look out for each other,' said Alexandra Pierce, a volunteer for the group who was handing out PPE kits in the middle of protests on Tuesday. 'I want to help people in need, and I just feel very passionate about the politics of this and want to help protect people any way I can,' she added. Another group that has been advertising the 'F–k ICE' kits, Mutual Aid Los Angeles Network (MALAN), says it's a central information network for aid groups and non-profits — including MAST and Operation Healthy Hearts. Advertisement Operation Healthy Hearts only just received its tax-exempt nonprofit status last month, and bills itself as a homeless outreach group that runs food banks and helps provide public health resources to the homeless population. MALAN was founded in March 2020 in the heat of the COVID-19 pandemic, but also has a history of throwing its weight behind partisan leftwing causes on social media, including anti-Israel protests. Protests broke out in LA Friday after ICE raided numerous workplaces across the city and hauled off suspected illegal immigrants. Advertisement Demonstrators then tried to pre-empt ICE arrivals at other locations and block their efforts, and picketed a downtown detention center where detainees were being held. But ICE says many of the people they arrested in their raids are known criminals with alarming rap sheets — including some with convictions for violent attempted rapes, and even murder. Some of the protests quickly turned violent, with city streets being left littered with burning cars by days and looters ransacking storefronts by night.

Woman charged with stabbing ex-boyfriend
Woman charged with stabbing ex-boyfriend

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Woman charged with stabbing ex-boyfriend

PRINCETON – A Mercer County woman has been charged malicious assault after allegedly stabbing her ex-boyfriend with what he called "a Rambo knife." Badia A. Miller, 51, of Bluefield was charged with a felony charge of malicious assault and misdemeanor domestic battery after Patrolman D.W. Lester with the Bluefield Police Department was dispatched to a College Avenue apartment June 3 about a reported stabbing. Lester found the victim standing his living room with a large knife wound below the center of his chest, according to the criminal complaint filed at the Mercer County Magistrate Clerk's Office. He told Lester that his ex-girlfriend, Badia Miller, had stabbed him and fled the scene in a Chevy Cruze sedan. The victim was transported to the emergency room on Princeton Community Hospital's Bluefield location. There he told Lester that he had been arguing with Miller about him sharing texts with other women and because she had taken his house key and refused to give it back, according to the criminal complaint. He asked her to leave several times because he was afraid his landlord would complain about her causing a disturbance and evict him. "She refused to leave and pulled out a knife that he described as 'a Rambo knife' stabbing him right below the center of his chest, near his sternum leaving leaving a laceration of about two centimeters deep, and four centimeters in length," Lester said in his report. "There was also a cut below the initial stab wound from where the knife was pulled out in (a) downward slashing motion." On June 4, Lester was patrolling College Avenue when he saw a black Chevy Cruze with a West Virginia license plate number matching one observed on city cameras when the stabbing occurred, according to the criminal complaint. Lester conducted a traffic stop and the driver identified herself as Badia Miller. She consented to a search inside her vehicle. "When doing so, I observed a pair of flip flops hidden under bags in the trunck with what appeared to be blood on both sides of them," Lester said in his report. A knife matching the one described by the victim was also found, Lester said. After being transported to the police department, Miller was read her Miranda Rights and agreed to be interviewed without a lawyer present, Lester said in the report. She called the victim an ex-boyfriend and someone she stayed with frequently. Lester then said they had been drinking and he began to touch her, "which made her upset." Miller stated that she bit the victim on the nose, which did not draw blood, and left shortly after, according to the criminal complaint. She stated that she left to get more alcohol for herself, but saw EMS and police at the scene when she returned to the house. She then said that she went her ex-boyfriend's apartment door and knocked, but there was no answer and did not further check on him. Lester said Miller was seen several times on video surveillance driving through the city, "which contradicted several of her statements." On June 4, Miller asked to speak again with detectives before she was arraigned by a magistrate, Lester said in the report. She said that she was drinking with her ex-boyfriend when they argued. "At this time she stated she pulled her knife and used it for protection but did not remember pulling it out of the sheath," Lester said. "She stated she didn't know she cut him until we advised there was something on the knife. After further evaluating the sheath, it is cut and the knife come out the end of it, so it could've been in the sheath when she stabbed him in the chest." Miller was arraigned before Magistrate Susan Honaker and remanded to the Southern Regional Jail on a $10,000 cash or surety bond, according to court records. Malicious assault is a felony with a possible term of two to 10 years in prison, according to the West Virginia Code. Domestic battery is a misdemeanor with a possible term of up to 12 months in jail.

Stephen Miller meeting with ICE officials was the spark for LA protests and National Guard call-up: report
Stephen Miller meeting with ICE officials was the spark for LA protests and National Guard call-up: report

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Stephen Miller meeting with ICE officials was the spark for LA protests and National Guard call-up: report

White House aide Stephen Miller has repeatedly branded the Los Angeles protests an 'insurrection' after fierce backlash to immigration raids. California's leadership is now 'siding with insurrectionist mobs,' and Democratic officials are 'in open rebellion' against the government, according to Miller. But the far-right architect of Donald Trump's anti-immigration agenda appears to have himself lit the fuse, after reportedly rallying Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials to 'just go out there and arrest illegal aliens.' Late last month, Miller pressed ICE officials to ramp up arrests after following short of the president's ambitions for record-breaking daily deportations, according to The Wall Street Journal. Federal law enforcement officers needed to 'just go out there and arrest illegal aliens,' Miller told top ICE officials, according to WSJ, citing people familiar with the meeting. Rather than develop a list of targets for arrest, Miller told agents to raid Home Depot parking lots and 7-Eleven convenience stores, the newspaper reported. Miller 'eviscerated everyone,' according to recent reporting from The Washington Examiner. ''You guys aren't doing a good job. You're horrible leaders,'' Miller reportedly said. 'He just ripped into everybody. He had nothing positive to say about anybody, shot morale down,' an official told the outlet. Miller also allegedly bet that he and a handful of agents could arrest 30 people in the streets of Washington, D.C. 'Who here thinks they can do it?' Miller reportedly said. Days later, on June 6, ICE agents descended on a Home Depot in the predominantly Latino Westlake neighborhood of Los Angeles — kicking off a weekend of protests centered around a federal detention center in the city's downtown and in the nearby Paramount and Compton neighborhoods. The next morning, Border Patrol agents gathered in a gated industrial office park in Paramount, while word spread on social media that raids were imminent at another nearby Home Depot. Trump later signed a presidential memorandum deploying 'at least' 2,000 National Guard troops to Los Angeles, with U.S. Marines standing by, despite objections from Governor Gavin Newsom, who joined officials and other critics sounding the alarm that the administration is needlessly escalating unrest. Miller and Newsom have spent several days trading blows over X. In response to Newsom's renewed lawsuit calling on a federal judge to block the 'unnecessary militarization' of Los Angeles, Miller accused the governor of saying that ICE officers must withdraw from the state if they 'don't want to get assaulted or worse by insurrectionist migrant mobs.' 'The Governor's position is that Stephen Miller has no peer when it comes to creating bulls****, strawmen arguments,' Newsom's office replied. The Independent has requested comment from the White House. Miller — who is from nearby Santa Monica — routinely characterizes the city and greater Los Angeles area as a 'third-world nation' overrun by immigrants. 'A ruptured, balkanized society of strangers,' he said this week. 'Los Angeles is all the proof you need that mass migration unravels societies,' Miller said. 'You can have all the other plans and budgets you want. If you don't fix migration, then nothing else can be fixed — or saved.' In recent days, he has repeatedly accused state officials of criminal activity for supporting immigrant communities, claiming that the entire state has 'aided, abetted and conspired to facilitate the invasion of the United States' and is now supporting a 'violent rebellion' against the federal government. 'Los Angeles and California are demanding the nullification of the election results, of federal law, of national sovereignty, and of the bedrock constitutional command of one national government,' Miller said. Trump appointed Miller as a senior policy adviser during his first term, where he emerged as an influential driving force behind the several key policies, including a ban on travel to the United States from majority Muslim countries and a 'zero tolerance' policy to separate migrant children from their parents or guardians. After an election fueled by Trump's pledge for the 'largest deportation operation in American history,' Miller has become a fierce proponent of the administration's agenda in media interviews and in volatile confrontations with reporters as the president advances a more robust anti-immigration campaign. Miller has also endorsed the concept of 'remigration,' or forcible removal of immigrants and their families that has taken hold among Europe's far-right parties and emerged in the Trump administration's reorganization of the State Department.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store