logo
Blackwood rogue driver blasted as ‘complete menace'

Blackwood rogue driver blasted as ‘complete menace'

Craig Searles, 40, was jailed after he caused two crashes in the Blackwood area.
The defendant committed the second offence whilst he was subject to a suspended prison sentence for growing drugs in Newbridge.
That was imposed two years ago after police found 61 plants with a potential street value of £75,000 in a cellar at a property in the town.
Searles' first driving offence took place on April Fools' Day in 2023 when he hit a grandmother and her passenger with his BMW 118d.
He ploughed into them while speeding at a roundabout in Pontllanfraith and then left the scene after abandoning his car.
The driver sustained a fractured rib and whiplash injuries and her passenger also suffered from whiplash.
The second happened when he crashed into a van while at the wheel of a Fiat Punto when he was high on drugs in Cefn Fforest.
Searles collided with the vehicle on August 8 last year when he had a cocaine derivative in his blood.
The defendant, of Maes Y Garn Road, Oakdale, Blackwood admitted causing serious injury by careless driving and drug driving.
His best mitigation was his guilty pleas, Cardiff Crown Court was told.
Kirsten Murphy representing the father-of-one said: 'The defendant is entirely realistic that he will be receiving an immediate custodial sentence.'
His class A drug use at the time had been 'out of control'.
Miss Murphy added that her client was 'desperate to get his life back on track'.
Judge Paul Hobson told Searles: 'You have an appalling driving record – you have been a complete menace behind the wheel.
'You have three previous convictions for dangerous driving as well as previous convictions for drink driving and driving whilst disqualified.
'On April 1, 2023, you caused serious injuries.'
The defendant was jailed for 18 months and told that the time he has already spent remanded in custody would count towards that sentence.
Searles was banned from driving for 42 months and will have to sit an extended driving test.
He will also have to pay a victim surcharge following his release would could be after serving 40 per cent of the prison term.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Disgraced police worker who leaked confidential information to her drug-dealing boyfriend is jailed for almost three years
Disgraced police worker who leaked confidential information to her drug-dealing boyfriend is jailed for almost three years

Daily Mail​

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Disgraced police worker who leaked confidential information to her drug-dealing boyfriend is jailed for almost three years

A police administrator has been jailed for almost three years after leaking confidential information to her drug dealer boyfriend. Lucy Langmead, 44, started a relationship with 37-year-old Daniel Cozens in 2020 while working for South Wales Police, and began providing him with police intelligence. Langmead, who is pregnant with her fourth child, accessed the police computer system numerous times to obtain information on Cozens, his family and friends, and also to satisfy her own 'morbid curiosity' about cases in the news. At Cardiff Crown Court, Judge Tracey Lloyd-Clarke handed Langmead and Cozens sentences of two years and 11 months and one year and eight months respectively. A police investigation was launched after a community support officer was approached while on foot patrol in Pontypridd in 2021 by a woman who Langmead had informed of an investigation into her boyfriend. The court heard the woman told the officer she thought they were looking into him because 'I have a friend who works in the courts, and she told me he was being watched'. The woman and her boyfriend later approached another officer, questioned the number of police patrols, and mentioned information that could only have been obtained from the police systems. Langmead, from Tonteg, Pontypridd, and Cozens, from Treforest, pleaded guilty to a series of offences, including conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office between May 23, 2021, and February 25, 2022. The judge said that throughout training and every time the system is accessed, users are warned about misuse, with every access logged. Addressing Langmead, the judge said: 'From the outset you knew you were committing criminal offences and appeared to do so partly from idle curiosity and partly to elevate your status - in other words you were showing off - including to offenders. 'This was a very serious breach of trust that is placed in police employees. 'You have, by your actions, done serious harm to policing and the public interest.' She said Cozens's offending was 'significantly less serious' because he did not work for the police. The judge said there had been 'no financial reward' for either of them, but it had put them in 'good standing' among offenders they were assisting, with one disposing of drugs he was dealing after a tip-off. Langmead had also accessed records to satisfy her curiosity, including the case of Logan Mwangi, a five-year-old whose body was discovered in a river near his home in Sarn. 'Logan Mwangi was a five-year-old child who had been murdered and whose body had, at that time, recently been found in a river,' Judge Lloyd-Clarke said. 'There was a lot of publicity around his death, and you could only have been continuing to access the file to satisfy your own morbid curiosity.' Langmead pleaded guilty to 13 offences of securing unauthorised access to computer material and five offences of unlawful disclosure of personal data. Cozens pleaded guilty to being concerned in the supply of a controlled drug of class C (Benzodiazepines), being concerned in the supply of a controlled drug of class C (Pregablins) and possession of a controlled drug of class B (cannabis). Both will serve up to half their sentences in prison, with the rest on licence. Langmead resigned from South Wales Police in May 2022. Chief Superintendent Bella Rees, head of professional standards at South Wales Police, said: 'Police officers and staff have access to personal and private information and it is both a public expectation and a legal requirement that information should be treated in the strictest confidence, properly protected and used for legitimate policing purposes only. 'Accessing confidential police information without a legitimate policing purpose is an abuse of position and, as this case demonstrates, will be treated robustly.' John Griffiths of the Crown Prosecution Service said: 'Lucy Langmead had the complete trust of her employer in having access to sensitive information and she betrayed that trust. 'Her actions could have placed criminal investigations at risk. 'Daniel Cozens used his relationship with Langmead to try to gain an advantage over the police in his criminal behaviour. 'However, the audit trail from the police computer systems led investigators to them, and together with other evidence allowed the Crown Prosecution Service to present a strong case to the court and ensure these defendants were brought to justice.'

Police administrator jailed for leaking information to drug dealer boyfriend
Police administrator jailed for leaking information to drug dealer boyfriend

The Independent

time2 days ago

  • The Independent

Police administrator jailed for leaking information to drug dealer boyfriend

A police administrator has been jailed for almost three years after leaking confidential information to her drug dealer boyfriend. Lucy Langmead, 44, started a relationship with 37-year-old Daniel Cozens in 2020 while working for South Wales Police, and began providing him with police intelligence. Langmead, who is pregnant with her fourth child, accessed the police computer system numerous times to obtain information on Cozens, his family and friends, and also to satisfy her own 'morbid curiosity' about cases in the news. At Cardiff Crown Court on Tuesday, Judge Tracey Lloyd-Clarke, the Recorder of Cardiff, handed Langmead and Cozens sentences of two years and 11 months and one year and eight months respectively. A police investigation was launched after a community support officer was approached while on foot patrol in Pontypridd in 2021 by a woman who Langmead had informed of an investigation into her boyfriend. The court heard the woman told the officer she thought they were looking into him because 'I have a friend who works in the courts, and she told me he was being watched'. The woman and her boyfriend later approached another officer, questioned the number of police patrols, and mentioned information that could only have been obtained from the police systems. Langmead, from Tonteg, Pontypridd, and Cozens, from Treforest, pleaded guilty to a series of offences, including conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office between May 23 2021 and February 25 2022. The judge said that throughout training and every time the system is accessed, users are warned about misuse, with every access logged. Addressing Langmead, the judge said: 'From the outset you knew you were committing criminal offences and appeared to do so partly from idle curiosity and partly to elevate your status – in other words you were showing off – including to offenders. 'This was a very serious breach of trust that is placed in police employees. 'You have, by your actions, done serious harm to policing and the public interest.' She said Cozens's offending was 'significantly less serious' because he did not work for the police. The judge said there had been 'no financial reward' for either of them, but it had put them in 'good standing' among offenders they were assisting, with one disposing of drugs he was dealing after a tip-off. Langmead had also accessed records to satisfy her curiosity, including the case of Logan Mwangi, a five-year-old whose body was discovered in a river near his home in Sarn. 'Logan Mwangi was a five-year-old child who had been murdered and whose body had, at that time, recently been found in a river,' Judge Lloyd-Clarke said. 'There was a lot of publicity around his death, and you could only have been continuing to access the file to satisfy your own morbid curiosity.' Langmead pleaded guilty to 13 offences of securing unauthorised access to computer material and five offences of unlawful disclosure of personal data. Cozens pleaded guilty to being concerned in the supply of a controlled drug of class C (Benzodiazepines), being concerned in the supply of a controlled drug of class C (Pregablins) and possession of a controlled drug of class B (cannabis). Both will serve up to half their sentences in prison, with the rest on licence. Langmead resigned from South Wales Police in May 2022. Chief Superintendent Bella Rees, head of professional standards at South Wales Police, said: ' Police officers and staff have access to personal and private information and it is both a public expectation and a legal requirement that information should be treated in the strictest confidence, properly protected and used for legitimate policing purposes only. 'Accessing confidential police information without a legitimate policing purpose is an abuse of position and, as this case demonstrates, will be treated robustly.' John Griffiths of the Crown Prosecution Service said: 'Lucy Langmead had the complete trust of her employer in having access to sensitive information and she betrayed that trust. 'Her actions could have placed criminal investigations at risk. 'Daniel Cozens used his relationship with Langmead to try to gain an advantage over the police in his criminal behaviour. 'However, the audit trail from the police computer systems led investigators to them, and together with other evidence allowed the Crown Prosecution Service to present a strong case to the court and ensure these defendants were brought to justice.'

Inside the messy bedroom where a dealer was making illegal 'diet pills'
Inside the messy bedroom where a dealer was making illegal 'diet pills'

Wales Online

time2 days ago

  • Wales Online

Inside the messy bedroom where a dealer was making illegal 'diet pills'

Inside the messy bedroom where a dealer was making illegal 'diet pills' Kyle Enos bought a banned industrial chemical on the dark web from labs in China and used it to make 'diet pills' in a bedroom operation which spanned the globe Video footage has exposed the messy bedroom where a Maesteg man was using a banned chemical bought on the dark web to make illegal and dangerous 'diet pills'. Kyle Enos bought the industrial chemical from labs in China and mixed it with other substances to produce the tablets which he sold online in the UK and globally. ‌ When officers from Tarian - the southern Wales serious and organised crime unit - raided Enos's house in Maesteg they found two kilos of the chemical along with a pill press and packaging. ‌ The messy room where Kyle Enos made his 'diet pills' (Image: Tarian ) The chemical - 2,4-Dinitrophenol or "DNP" - is poisonous to humans and banned for human consumption in Britain. Don't miss a court report by signing up to our crime newsletter here The raid was captured on officers' body-worn video cameras. Article continues below Kyle Enos (Image: Tarian ) Cardiff Crown Court heard that the 33-year-old defendant shipped the pills to customers as far afield as Hawaii and Australia by disguising them as vitamins and minerals. He took payments in a variety of means including cryptocurrency. ‌ You can read more about the court case here. The pill press Enos used to make the tablets (Image: Tarian ) At the time the defendant was making and selling the tablets, Enos had only been out of prison for a matter of months after serving an eight year sentence for supplying the powerful opioid fentanyl online using the pseudonym "sovietbear". ‌ Such was the potency of fentanyl the defendant was selling that, following his arrest, police went through his contacts list and found four people on the database - including two in Wales - who had died. A batch of the chemical being mixed with cutting agents (Image: Tarian ) Kyle Enos, formerly of Newport but now of Station Road, Maesteg, had previously pleaded guilty to importing, acquiring or using a regulated substance without licence; supplying a regulated substance to the public without a licence, supplying a regulated poison by a person other than a pharmacist; and five counts of failing to comply with a serious crime prevention order when he appeared in the dock for sentencing. Article continues below With a discount for his guilty pleas the defendant was sentenced to three years in prison. He will serve up to half the sentence in custody before being released on licence to serve the remainder in the community.

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