
Two arrests and birds seized in Bradford in cockfighting probe
Two men have been arrested and several cockerels seized from six properties in Bradford in connection with an investigation into animal fighting.One man was arrested on Wednesday on suspicion of causing an animal fight to take place and taking part in an animal fight, while another man was arrested on suspicion of being present at an animal fight, according to West Yorkshire Police.The RSPCA confirmed its officers had joined police as warrants were carried out at six addresses in Bradford and two addresses in Burton-upon-Trent and Warrington as part of the investigation.A "number" of cockerels were removed during those operations and placed into the care of the RSPCA, a spokesperson said.
"The warrants are part of an ongoing investigation led by the police," they added.
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Scottish Sun
12 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Shops close down and streets patrolled by cops as thousands of travellers gear up for 2nd day of Appleby Horse Fair
Cops were seen patrolling the streets in numbers as the festivities continued REIN-ING IT IN REIN-ING IT IN Shops close down and streets patrolled by cops as thousands of travellers gear up for 2nd day of Appleby Horse Fair Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THE historic Appleby Horse Fair has left shops and roads closed as a second day of rowdy celebrations continues. The Gypsy King, Tyson Fury, joined thousands of revellers yesterday for the first day of the fair. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 8 The small town has been left effectively shut down as the festival continues Credit: NNP 8 Shops and businesses across the town have closed until the fair ends Credit: NNP The celebrations have seen thousands of travellers descend on the town, riding horses through the small streets. Cops have been spotted patrolling the streets and roads have been closed to traffic. Pictures from yesterday's celebrations show horses being ridden in the River Eden as part of a longstanding tradition. Tens of thousands of travellers have arrived in the small town for the event, lining the roads nearby with cars, vans and caravans. Campsites have been set up to accommodate all the visitors, quickly filling with hundreds of caravans. The six day event features traditional music, dancing, horse riding, market stalls and horses for sale. Carts and wagons have been pulled through the town by horses as the busy event continues to unfold. Residents in nearby villages have complained of anti-social behaviour at past events. 8 Locals have previously lodged complaints about the fair Credit: NNP 8 Horses are exercised in the nearby River Eden Credit: NNP 8 Horses are also ridden through the streets, bought and sold Credit: NNP The roads of the small town and surrounding area have been lined with travellers arriving to join the festivities. Today, as the celebrations continued locals have shut their shops and roads are being patrolled by cops. Signs have been left on doors up and down the busy high street reading "closed" with the whole town effectively shut down. A huge police presence is in the area for the second day in a row with officers on standby ahead of potential chaos and violence. RSPCA officers and Blue Cross volunteers are also present, keeping an eye on the welfare of the horses being exercised, bought and sold. During the 2021 event seven people were arrested. Travellers and their families have been descending on the town for the fair for 340 years. The event falls on the first weekend of June and is recognised as the largest of its kind in Europe. Huge queues have formed along the busy country lanes and town life has ground to a standstill as the fair continues. 8 Police and RSPCA officers are patrolling the streets Credit: NNP 8 Massive campsites have been set up to accommodate the visitors Credit: NNP


The Sun
12 hours ago
- The Sun
Shops close down and streets patrolled by cops as thousands of travellers gear up for 2nd day of Appleby Horse Fair
THE historic Appleby Horse Fair has left shops and roads closed as a second day of rowdy celebrations continues. The Gypsy King, Tyson Fury, joined thousands of revellers yesterday for the first day of the fair. 8 8 The celebrations have seen thousands of travellers descend on the town, riding horses through the small streets. Cops have been spotted patrolling the streets and roads have been closed to traffic. Pictures from yesterday's celebrations show horses being ridden in the River Eden as part of a longstanding tradition. Tens of thousands of travellers have arrived in the small town for the event, lining the roads nearby with cars, vans and caravans. Campsites have been set up to accommodate all the visitors, quickly filling with hundreds of caravans. The six day event features traditional music, dancing, horse riding, market stalls and horses for sale. Carts and wagons have been pulled through the town by horses as the busy event continues to unfold. anti-social behaviour at past events. 8 8 8 The roads of the small town and surrounding area have been lined with travellers arriving to join the festivities. Today, as the celebrations continued locals have shut their shops and roads are being patrolled by cops. Signs have been left on doors up and down the busy high street reading " closed" with the whole town effectively shut down. A huge police presence is in the area for the second day in a row with officers on standby ahead of potential chaos and violence. RSPCA officers and Blue Cross volunteers are also present, keeping an eye on the welfare of the horses being exercised, bought and sold. During the 2021 event seven people were arrested. Travellers and their families have been descending on the town for the fair for 340 years. The event falls on the first weekend of June and is recognised as the largest of its kind in Europe. Huge queues have formed along the busy country lanes and town life has ground to a standstill as the fair continues. 8 8 8


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Appleby Horse Fair police catch drivers high on cocaine and cannabis as they arrest 49 and RSPCA probe animal cruelty cases at Europe's biggest gypsy gathering
Europe's largest gypsy gathering has seen a spate of drug drivers stopped by police, with the RSPCA also probing animal cruelty accusations. Police have revealed there were 49 arrests in the days leading up to the fair opening and drug driving had been 'a theme'. The RSPCA is also investigating reports of animal cruelty, including two ponies being abandoned by the roadside in a Cumbrian village close to where Appleby Horse Fair is underway. A member of the public also reported a horse being beaten and anti cruelty investigators have launched a probe. Cumbria Police Superintendent Daniel St Quintin, Gold Commander for the fair, said: 'The most serious arrests we had yesterday were two drug drivers. 'That seems to be a theme this year where we are catching quite a few drug drivers, either for cannabis or cocaine and they are getting dealt with accordingly.' The arrests generally relate to drug and drink driving, drug possession and low level public order and anti-social behaviour offences. Police said the arrests were not limited to travellers, with some local people also arrested. Cumbria RSPCA chief inspector Rob Melloy, said: 'Unfortunately there are still a minority of people that come here who will abuse the animals and run the horses far too much and work them too hard, but that is what we are here for, we are here to try and find those guys and stop them. 'We have had a couple of ponies that have been dumped and we have an ongoing investigation into a horse that was being hit inappropriately. 'A member of the public saw the horse being hit and reported it, resulting in the investigation. We have managed to save that horse basically.' The incidents are understood to have occurred in outlying villages in the Appleby area over the last week. Up to 10,000 travellers and 30,000 other visitors are arriving in Appleby-in-Westmorland as locals prepare for disorder which often accompanies the event. The picturesque town has a population of 3,000 for 51 weeks of the year - but this all changes in the first week of June thanks to the annual event which began in 1775. In the days leading up to the fair on the banks of the River Eden, travellers have been accused of smashing up a cricket pavilion, racing carriages along village streets, threatening locals with a penknife and fouling footpaths with human excrement. But MailOnline also found a softer side to the event today, with four-year-old Jimmy Cole posing for a photograph with his miniature Shetland pony called Rolo. Jimmy was riding the 'flashing lane' where travellers ride their horses on a country road behind Fair Hill, alongside thundering ponies three times the size of his. His father, also called Jimmy, who travelled up from London, said: 'He's only four but he's got a great understanding with Rolo. He's four years old and a miniature Shetland so he won't grow much bigger. 'We're all enjoying Appleby, especially young Jimmy. He loves horses but Rolo will always be his favourite. They've been on the flashing lane, but Rolo is not for sale.' Meanwhile Scarlett Tipton, 17, from Stockport, Greater Manchester, was putting her pony Duchess through her paces on the streets of the town. Scarlett said: 'I love coming to Appleby, I'm here every year with my family. Duchess is loving the flashing lane this year, it's been great fun. I just wish the rain would stop.' MailOnline also spoke to fortune teller Melvina Smith, who has been attending Appleby for 30 years. She said: 'The fair has changed so much over the years. 'It used to be a calm place where you could come to relax. These days it's so much busier and it's sad that there's so much trouble now. You see a lot of bad behaviour, which is mostly down to drink.' Ms Smith, from Blackpool, Lancashire, bills herself as a 'true born gypsy' who reads palms and tells fortunes. She added: 'My mother and her mother before her had the gift and it's been passed down to me.' It comes after footage posted on social media yesterday showed a line of travellers on horse-drawn carriages are seen galloping down a road causing traffic to come to a snail's pace. In a video titled 'Appleby 2025 so far', a toddler is seen being held by his mother on the back of a horse. Travellers have also been washing their horses in the River Eden as part of a long-held tradition to prepare them for sale and to cool them off. Billed as the largest traditional gathering of the community in Europe, the annual fair features horse riding, horse trading, traditional music, dance performances and shopping stalls. A special police task force has so far dealt with offences of burglary, criminal damage, racist abuse, knife crime and faced a torrent of criticism after finding it necessary to handcuff a 10-year-old boy. Also present is the RSPCA - which is keeping an eye out for anyone failing to treat their animals with respect. Cumbria RSPCA chief inspector Rob Melloy, said: 'Unfortunately there are still a minority of people that come here who will abuse the animals and run the horses far too much and work them too hard. 'But that is what we are here for, we are here to try and find those guys and stop them. 'We have had a couple of ponies that have been dumped and we have an ongoing investigation into a horse that was being hit inappropriately. 'A member of the public saw the horse being hit and reported it, resulting in the investigation. We have managed to save that horse basically.' The incidents are understood to have occurred in outlying villages in the Appleby area over the last week. Cumbria police said 49 arrests had been made in the area during the run-up to the fair. Superintendent Daniel St Quintin, Gold Commander for the fair, said: 'The most serious arrests we had yesterday were two drug drivers. 'That seems to be a theme this year where we are catching quite a few drug drivers, either for cannabis or cocaine and they are getting dealt with accordingly.' The arrests generally relate to drug and drink driving, drug possession and low level public order and anti-social behaviour offences and involved a mixture of those living in the region and visitors. Boxing champ Tyson Fury sparked excitement that he might be on his way to the fair when he posted an Instagram video riding a horse and trap. But he later confirmed he had just been seen taking a ride around Knutsford in Cheshire for scenes filmed for his Netflix show. Ahead of the fair, a surge in crime around quaint Kirkby Lonsdale in Cumbria caused anxiety among locals ahead of the fair starting today. Local sporting venue, Kirkby Lonsdale Cricket club, has seen its pavilion smashed up, as no windows remain in the wooden structure. Cumbria Police say three 10-year-old boys - only just within the age of criminal responsibility - were arrested over the attack as part of the wider Appleby Fair policing operation. There were also problems at Woodclose Park caravan site where police investigated reports of criminal damage and the racial abuse of a security guard. It was reported that a group of traveller children had been abusive to staff and when asked to leave the park's reception set off fire extinguishers All the complaints led the police to visit the makeshift camp in a layby at the town's Devil's Bridge where dozens of caravans congregated ahead of the fair in Appleby, which is 40 miles away. A field has been handed over by the town for the travellers to graze their horses as a safety measure to make sure they aren't causing a hazard tethered on roadside verges. In an earlier incident police detained and handcuffed two traveller children after a penknife was produced in front of a shocked local on a riverside path. The police action in the layby at Kirkby Lonsdale was captured on video by the boys' mother, showing one of her sons in tears tethered by the wrist to a policeman. The mother posted: 'Our boys were put in handcuffs on the basis of false allegations! Pure abuse of power and provoking behaviour! Bullying 10-year-olds! 'You wouldn't see them doing this to anyone other community! And they wonder why our children are afraid of them, this could of been handled in a completely different manner!' William Lee, from Blackpool, was furious at the intervention of Cumbria Police, posting videos of the confrontation on social media. Mr Lee posted: 'We're on the way up to Appleby on our holidays as we have done for generations these these police have been to a several times as we've been travelling we all feel very intimidated and picked on can everyone please share this post thank you.' In one video he says: 'We are gypsy people stopping at Fell End and hurting no one. Other vehicles are parked on common land and they are not going to check them out, they are just checking gypsy vehicles. Is this racism?' Locals said they have never seen so many Gypsy, Roma and Traveller (GRT) people descend on the town so early. For years the town was the focus of the pre-fair gathering but in the recent past locals have fought back, closing down services and pubs and shutting off the places where travellers would usually set up camp. One Kirkby Lonsdale local told MailOnline: 'They seem to have descended on us this year and have come earlier and in bigger numbers than we have seen before. 'There have been problems caused by gypsy children in the town centre and closer to the camp they have set up in a layby.' One of the biggest concerns for locals - apart from the disruption, criminal damage, littering and occasional assault - is the welfare of the thousands of horses driven to Appleby to be traded in the streets. Last year two horses died at Appleby, one a three-year-old stallion and the other a Shetland pony, both deaths due to exhaustion and overworking. The RSPCA intervened in 438 cases in total. Local campaigners say stricter regulations need to be placed on the event with spot checks on animal passports. The Appleby Fair Communities Group said: 'There are no checks on horse passports, we know horses are traded but the authorities never spot check passports. We know horses are moved, but with no check on passports ever. ' Some of Appleby's pubs remain open, but many close down for the weekend, fearing trouble between rival traveller factions. One resident told MailOnline: 'My husband and I pack up for the weekend and leave town, it just isn't worth staying here. 'The town changed beyond recognition with horses being raced up and down the high street and tethered to every railing, it goes from being a peaceful country town into something from the Wild West. 'It's the small things that annoy you as much as the rampant disorder, there is always damage caused and the drunkenness and fighting that comes every year is scary. 'We're not alone in moving out, Lots of people do it just to escape the mayhem.' One of the 'small things' to annoy Appleby residents so far this year is that small wooden animals that were painted by local children have been pulled off the railings at one of the town's play parks. A local woman fumed: 'Why would they even touch this? That's pretty tragic really.' Travellers are also accused of digging up or sawing down stakes hammered into roadside verges with the aim of keeping horses and caravans from parking up. Pictures show a road into Appleby with traveller vehicles parked all the way along a grassy verge. Locals claim the posts hammered in by the local authority with signs nailed on making it clear parking was banned, have been uprooted. Cumbria Police has warned motorists to expect slow-moving traffic in the next two weeks because of the Appleby Fair. Detective Superintendent Dan St Quintin of Cumbria Police – Police Gold Commander for Appleby Horse Fair – said: 'Public safety is our number one priority for Appleby Horse Fair which is why we are encouraging all road users to be cautious and vigilant on the roads. 'Drivers need to be aware that the likelihood that they encounter slow-moving traffic is high so please pay extra attention when travelling around the county. 'I ask people to pay particular attention when driving on the A66, where there is the potential for fast-moving traffic to encounter slow-moving, potentially horse-drawn, vehicles. 'Please take extra care, be patient and plan ahead and set off early. Let's make sure everyone reaches their destination safely.' Caravans set up camp in a field for the annual Appleby Horse Fair on June 4 A traditional horse drawn caravan makes its way to the annuall fair Cumbria Police has warned motorists to expect slow-moving traffic in the next two weeks because of the Appleby Fair A local business park in Kirkby Lonsdale tried in vain to stop gypsies useing their car parks by blocking entrances with containers Caravans have also taken over a farmers field en route to Appleby 'There have been problems caused by gypsy children in the town centre and closer to the camp they have set up in a layby,' a local said Locals say they have never seen so many Gypsy, Roma and Traveller (GRT) people descend on the town so early The fair is held outside the town of Appleby, at the point where the old Roman Road crosses Long Marton Road, on Gallows Hill, which was named after the public hangings that were once carried out there. It was once thought the fair originated from a royal charter to the borough of Appleby from King James II of England in 1685, although more recent research has found the charter was cancelled before it was ever enacted. The gathering is sometimes known as 'the New Fair' because Appleby's medieval borough fair, held at Whitsuntide, ceased in 1885. The 'New Fair' began in 1775 for sheep and cattle drovers and horse dealers to sell their stock. By the 1900s it had evolved into a major Gypsy/Traveller event which brought families from across the UK and Europe. In its 250-year-history the fair has only been cancelled twice, the first in 2001 during the foot and mouth outbreak and the second in 2020 due to the Covid pandemic.