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Fly-tipping pair caught on 'covert' CCTV dumping garden waste in layby

Fly-tipping pair caught on 'covert' CCTV dumping garden waste in layby

Yahoo11-04-2025

Council officers caught two women fly tipping thanks to covert CCTV placed near a layby.
The cameras had been erected following concerns over people dumping rubbish in Burntwood.
Lichfield District Council caught two women in the act as they unloaded garden waste out of a car into the layby.
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The vehicle was traced to Walsall where a woman admitted the offence and gave up her accomplice.
They were issued with fixed penalty fines which are set at £1,000 or £500 for early payment.
READ MORE: 'My son did not deserve this' - Mum of DPD worker bludgeoned to death by mob speaks out
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A spokesperson for Lichfield District Council said: 'Although we usually prosecute fly-tippers, in this instance fixed penalties were appropriate because it involved a relatively small quantity of garden waste.
'It means the offence can be dealt with quickly and a criminal record avoided. We have no doubt the two women will have learned from this and will dispose of their waste properly in the future.
'Our environmental health officers continue to deploy covert CCTV across Lichfield District to protect our communities from fly-tipping.'
A statement added: "Two women have been caught fly-tipping in Burntwood on covert CCTV deployed by Lichfield District Council.
"The CCTV, which was placed in a secluded layby by environmental health officers following concerns about fly-tipping, caught a car stopping and two women unloading garden waste from the boot.
"The vehicle was then traced to an address in Walsall, and the keeper questioned. She admitted the offence and environmental health officers used their powers to require her to name her accomplice.
"As an alternative to prosecuting them, the two women paid fixed penalty fines. The fixed penalty is set at £1,000 and reduced to £500 for early payment.
"The fines are retained by Lichfield District Council and go towards funding more enforcement activity."

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Now 31, Bishnoi runs his syndicate from behind bars - with dedicated Instagram pages and a cult-like following. "So while Bishnoi sits in jail, Brar handles the gangs," says Assistant Inspector General Chauhan. Securing BBC Eye's exchange with Brar took a year of chasing - cultivating sources, waiting for replies, gradually getting closer to the kingpin himself. But when we got through to Brar, the conversation cast new light on the question of how and why he and Bishnoi came to see Moose Wala as an enemy. One of the first revelations was that Bishnoi's relationship with Moose Wala went back several years, long before the singer's killing. "Lawrence [Bishnoi] was in touch with Sidhu [Moose Wala]. I don't know who introduced them, and I never asked. But they did speak," said Brar. "Sidhu used to send 'good morning' and 'good night' messages in an effort to flatter Lawrence." 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