logo
Police helicopter had 'near miss with drone' near Lakenheath

Police helicopter had 'near miss with drone' near Lakenheath

BBC News04-04-2025

A police helicopter was forced to abandon a mission when the pilot reported coming dangerously close to a drone.The chopper had been sent to assist at RAF Lakenheath, in Suffolk, following reports of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) in the vicinity.Flight data indicated the aircraft climbed steeply and made a series of sharp turns while over the nearby town of Newmarket in November. The National Police Air Service (NPAS), which operates the Airbus H135, would not comment as the incident was still under investigation. However, a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to police revealed the helicopter withdrew "due to a drone coming close to them".
NPAS confirmed that the helicopter, understood to have the registration G-POLJ, had been sent to the area on 22 November following reports of drone sightings.The US Air Force said a number of unmanned aerial systems had been spotted in the vicinity of RAF Lakenheath, RAF Mildenhall in Suffolk, RAF Feltwell in Norfolk and RAF Fairford in Gloucestershire.NPAS has video footage of the incident but would not release it on national security grounds, following a series of FOI requests. What is known as an Airprox notification was sent following the incident.These are submitted when a pilot or air traffic personnel identify a near miss in which the safety of the aircraft involved may have been compromised.
'Emergency evasive action'
The near miss incident was detailed in an FOI request to Norfolk and Suffolk Police, made by Stuart Onyeche.This disclosed a log entry which stated: "NPAS is withdrawing due to a drone coming close to them."The logs contained 35 notifications related to drone sightings reported to local police between 22 and 27 November.They contained reports, mostly from members of the public, which described drones making three loops of an undisclosed perimeter and another doing loops around Feltwell. Sightings were also reported at Bodney Camp, another military installation, and were seen moving in the direction of Sandringham and a nearby Center Parcs.
One log entry also described a man who "grabbed the drone, got back in the car and roared off at speed", although the date when this happened was unclear.The final entry stated: "Informant said that he has spoken to ex-USAF service men, and he now believes that a UFO/spaceship was captured by the US military during the early 80s."Mr Onyeche, who said his work was aviation related, told the BBC the incident "raises obvious safety concerns for the public on the ground from the risk of collision above". He added: "The public are being kept in the dark about what happened, so we are being left to join dots and speculate."Suffolk Police referred the BBC's inquiries to the Ministry of Defence.
Scepticism
Ian Hudson, a drone commentator and analyst, extracted data from the flight tracking website ADS-B Exchange. He said it showed G-POLJ taking off from North Weald Airfield, in Essex, at 22:13 GMT on 22 November. It arrived at RAF Lakenheath 23 minutes later before turning southwest towards Newmarket. The chopper then climbed steeply before making a series of turns.The BBC was able to reproduce his findings.The flight path "appears to be a search or pursuit over Newmarket", and there were reservations within the drone community about the presence of drones in the skies above the airbases, Mr Hudson said."There is scepticism about drone sightings at night as often there are mis-identifications," he added.
Investigations into the sightings were led by the Ministry of Defence Police. An MOD spokesperson said: "We take threats seriously and maintain robust measures at defence sites."In February, the i-Paper published an analysis of open source data which indicated three people, linked to Russian military intelligence, had been in the area during and leading up to the sightings.The BBC has not been able to verify these reports.
Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'El Chapo' brother of ex-Liverpool footballer thinks jail sentence was too long
'El Chapo' brother of ex-Liverpool footballer thinks jail sentence was too long

Daily Mirror

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

'El Chapo' brother of ex-Liverpool footballer thinks jail sentence was too long

A man sentenced with his ex-Liverpool FC footballer brother lost his appeal against the jail term he considered too harsh - Jonathan Cassidy likened himself to drug baron 'El Chapo' A man who likened himself to drug baron 'El Chapo' has lost an appeal against his sentence. Jonathan Cassidy played a leading role in an international drug plot which saw cocaine imported from the Netherlands and used to supply users across north-west England, Birmingham and Leeds. He ran the racket with younger brother Jamie, a former Liverpool FC footballer, and business partner Nasar Ahmed. Together, the operation dealt with 356kg of the drug, worth around £26million, with £10million in cash changing hands in the space of three months, Manchester Crown Court heard last year. In court, prosecutors said Cassidy had sent an associate a picture of the actor who played drug lord Joaquin Guzma, AKA 'El Chapo' in the Netflix TV series Narcos. He also joked they had the same birthday. ‌ ‌ Jonathan Cassidy was slapped with a sentence of 21 years and nine months in March last year. He admitted importing drugs, conspiring to supply drugs and conspiring to transfer criminal property the previous month. His lawyers lodged a claim that the sentencing judge gave him insufficient credit for his guilty pleas and that not enough weight was given to mitigating factors. But three judges dismissed the challenge in a ruling published on Monday. Lord Justice Fraser, Mr Justice Hilliard and Mr Justice Constable said they were 'not persuaded' that the sentence was 'manifestly excessive or reached after an error of principle'. They also dismissed an appeal bid brought by Cassidy's co-defendant, Nasar Ahmed, who admitted the same offences and received the same jail term. Cassidy played a 'leading role' in drugs importation and the buying and selling of class A drugs while Ahmed acted as a middleman and 'facilitator', transferring vast sums of cash to buy and sell on drugs, prosecutor Richard Wright KC told Manchester Crown Court. After the encrypted EncroChat network used by Cassidy and Ahmed was compromised by law enforcement agencies - Cassidy used the name 'WhiskyWasp' - Cassidy travelled to Dubai in July 2020 and inquired with estate agents about purchasing a villa with a budget of £2.3million, including a £22,000 bed. He travelled back to the UK in October that year, but was arrested upon his return. ‌ The EncroChat data showed Cassidy had imported cocaine for the first time in early March 2020. This was a whopping 194kg of the drugs and was imported into the country in blocks embossed with snowmen, Liverpool Echo reports. Cassidy was sentenced alongside his younger brother, Jamie Cassidy, a former Liverpool football prodigy who played alongside Jamie Carragher and Michael Owen in the Liverpool side that won the FA Youth Cup in 1996. Jamie Cassidy received a sentence of 13 years and three months for conspiring to supply drugs and conspiring to transfer criminal property, after prosecutors said he was 'drawn in' to crime by his older brother. Speaking after their initial sentencing in February last year, detective constable Marc Walby from Greater Manchester Police's serious organised crime group said: "Jonathan Cassidy and his colleagues got far too comfortable with their encrypted phones and began bragging about their personal lives, but this just confirmed what we already knew about them. Ironically, it was this bravado and these messages which have landed them in jail for a long time." Dismissing Jonathan Cassidy and Ahmed's appeals, Lord Justice Fraser said that both knew 'what their conduct had been and the degree to which it was unlawful'. He continued that despite defendants in other EncroChat cases being given greater credit for guilty pleas, there was 'no one single 'EncroChat discount'' that should be applied.

Former West Ham star Dimitri Payet has contract ripped up leaving him unemployed after shocking abuse claims
Former West Ham star Dimitri Payet has contract ripped up leaving him unemployed after shocking abuse claims

Scottish Sun

time7 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Former West Ham star Dimitri Payet has contract ripped up leaving him unemployed after shocking abuse claims

DIMITRI PAYET had his contract ripped up to leave him unemployed. It comes just weeks after shocking abuse claims against the ex-West Ham man. 4 Ex-West Ham man Dimitri Payet had his contract in Brazil terminated Credit: Getty 4 Ex-lover Larissa Ferrari made shocking abuse claims against the married footballer during their alleged affair Credit: Payet, 38, joined Brazilian side Vasco da Gama on a two-year contract in August 2023. However, the club announced the decision to cut the deal short. They wrote on social media: "Vasco da Gama announces that, in a friendly manner, it has reached an agreement to terminate the contract with midfielder Dimitri Payet early. "The club thanks the athlete for the professionalism, dedication and respect demonstrated throughout his time at Sao Januario, and wishes him success in his next challenges. "For Vasco, Payet played 77 matches, scored eight goals and contributed 16 assists. "Thank you, Payet. This is Vasco." Payet hit headlines in April when his ex-lover alleged he subjected her to "physical, moral, psychological and sexual violence" during a seven-month affair. The "lonely" married footballer was accused of forcing Larissa Ferrari to film degrading videos, SunSport revealed. Brazilian lawyer Ferrari, 28, also said the former French international Payet made her partake in a fake wedding and wear a ring to 'prove her love'. She claimed he made her drink her own urine and water from the toilet, and lick the floor - plus showed SunSport photos of her bruises. Premier League cult hero Dimitri Payet rolls back the years as he humiliates opponent with unique 360-nutmeg The mum-of-two said: 'He's a sick monster. I was scared for my life, and I'm still scared." Payet denied "physical and psychological violence" in a statement to the police in Brazil, adding that everything was consensual and proposed by his accuser. The playmaker has four children with his wife of nearly 20 years, Ludivine, who remained in France after he joined Vasco da Gama in Rio de Janeiro in 2023. Before that, he had six-and-a-half years with Marseille, joining the French side for £25million following an impressive 18 months with West Ham. 4 Payet spent two years with Vasco da Gama in Rio de Janeiro Credit: Getty

Dramatic moment drug dealer leads cops on high-speed chase through posh estate – before officers smash his windows in
Dramatic moment drug dealer leads cops on high-speed chase through posh estate – before officers smash his windows in

Scottish Sun

time12 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Dramatic moment drug dealer leads cops on high-speed chase through posh estate – before officers smash his windows in

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THIS is the dramatic moment a drug dealer raced ahead of cops in a high-speed chase before being cornered by officers. Connor Darwent, 27, led police on a terrifying five-mile pursuit after speeding away from officers and making his way across a historic country estate. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 4 The high-speed chase took officers through an historic manor Credit: SWNS 4 Connor Darwent, 27, was arrested after a five-mile police chase Credit: SWNS 4 The arrest is part of a county-wide crackdown on drugs in Lincolnshire Credit: SWNS The drug dealer had been stopped while driving on the A46 towards Lincoln in his powerful BMW 1 Series by cops as he was wanted on suspicion of supplying class A drugs. Police body camera footage shows the dramatic moment Darwent sped away from the police block, prompting other cops to chase after him. Despite having his tyres shredded by a police stinger, Darwent reached blistering speeds racing his BMW down the main road, in hot pursuit of officers. After breaking off from the tarmac, the drug dealer took the chase onto the historic grounds of the 17th century manor Doddington Hall. He can be seen careering down a dirt track, with cops appearing to ask if they could engage in "tactical content" before Darwent returned to the main road. Reaching the end of the rugged path, Darwent swings a hard right turn - taking him and officers into a large field of crops. Here, however, the advantage turned to the police, as the chasing officers managed to ram and immobilise the drug dealer's car, bringing them to a screeching halt. Then, the two officers can be seen quickly jumping out of their vehicles to arrest Darwent and the other male in his vehicle. They can be seen smashing in the windows of the drug dealer's car, forcing them to show their hands as backup arrives. The two officers then drag Darwent and the other man out onto the ground to be arrested. Ex-Arsenal starlet jailed over plot to smuggle £600k of cannabis into UK Following the incredible police chase on May 24, 2022, Darwent admitted conspiracy to supply class A drugs and dangerous driving. He was jailed for two-and-a-half years on Thursday, June 5. Darwent was a courier who made regular journeys between Coventry and Skegness to reload the lucrative "Abs line". Police say the drug line was worth up to £252,000 to the gang, who supplied around 5.8kg of cocaine to dealers and users. Three other members of the group were also sentenced after admitting conspiracy to supply class A drugs. Kirsty Reilly, 32, drove drugs from Coventry to Skegness and was jailed for three years. Sarah Makey, 47, received a 21-month sentence, suspended for 18 months, and was ordered to do 80 hours of unpaid work. Her husband Nathan, 48, dealt drugs and sent out marketing messages on his phone on behalf of the holder of the Abs line - Alistair Renwick. Renwick was jailed for nine years in April while Makey will be sentenced in August. Liam Tomkins, 25, was jailed for three-and-a-half years in his absence after failing to appear at court. 4 A number of drug dealers linked to the "Abs line" have been sentenced Credit: SWNS The arrests are part of a satisfying conclusion to a major operation launched by Lincolnshire Police. In an attempt to crackdown on organised crime, the police unit launched an operation to tackle eight separate drug lines that had brought crack cocaine and heroine into the county's coastal towns. More than 70 people have been arrested since the operation was launched in September 2022 - with a cumulative prison sentence of more than 120 years. Detective Inspector Will Tharby, of the Serious and Organised Crime Unit, said: "Drug dealing reaches far beyond those directly involved in the exchange of money for drugs. "Its ripple effects fuel antisocial behaviour, robbery, burglary, and violence-not just among those entrenched in the drug trade, but across entire communities. "Families, neighbours, and local businesses all feel the weight of drug-related crime, facing its disruptive and often devastating consequences. "We've dismantled a thoroughly harmful operation, taken drugs off the streets, and sent a clear message - criminal networks will not thrive in Lincolnshire's communities."

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