
Tory MP Patrick Spencer charged with two counts of sexual assault
The Crown Prosecution Service said on Tuesday that Spencer, the MP for Central Suffolk and North Ipswich, had been charged over two alleged incidents at the Soho private members' club in August 2023.
Frank Ferguson, the head of the CPS special crime and counter-terrorism division, said the allegations involved two separate women.
Spencer, 37, will appear at Westminster magistrates court on 16 June.
Ferguson added: 'The Crown Prosecution Service reminds all concerned that criminal proceedings against this defendant are now active and that he has the right to a fair trial.
'It is extremely important that there should be no reporting, commentary or sharing of information online which could in any way prejudice these proceedings.'
Spencer was first elected to parliament last year with a majority of 4,290.
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Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Lucy Connolly to walk FREE: Tory Councillor's wife who was jailed last year for 'racist' Tweet during the Southport riots is being released from prison in a matter of hours
Lucy Connolly is set to walk free from prison in just a matter of hours after being jailed for writing a racist tweet during last summer's riots. The mother and former childminder has spent more than nine months behind bars after admitting making the inflammatory post on X in the wake of the Southport attacks in July last year. Connolly, who is also the wife of Tory Councillor Ray Connolly, pleaded guilty to a charge of inciting racial hatred and was handed a 31-month sentence in October. The post, which she later deleted, said: 'Mass deportation now, set fire to all the f****** hotels full of the b******* for all I care... if that makes me racist so be it.' She has been serving time at HMP Peterborough and had an application to have her sentence reduced rejected in May. But, the Daily Mail can now reveal that Connolly is due to be released on Thursday. The news will come as a huge boost to her husband and 12-year-old daughter as well as campaigners calling for her release. Connelly's imprisonment had prompted allegations that she was a victim of 'two-tier justice', with claims that those with right-wing views are treated more harshly than others in the UK. Connolly's X post was made just hours after killer Axel Rudakubana murdered three young girls and attempted to murder 10 others at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on July 29, sparking nationwide unrest. She was arrested on August 6, by which point she had deleted her social media account. But other messages which included other condemning remarks were uncovered by officers who seized her phone. The Southport atrocity sparked nationwide unrest, with several people - including Connolly - jailed as a result. Her tweet was viewed 310,000 times in three-and-a-half hours before she deleted it. She later pleaded guilty to distributing material with the intention of stirring up racial hatred at Birmingham Crown Court and was sentenced to 31 months in prison in October. In May, she had an appeal against her sentence refused by three Court of Appeal judges at the Royal Courts of Justice. In a written judgment, Lord Justice Holroyde, said: 'There is no arguable basis on which it could be said that the sentence imposed by the judge was manifestly excessive. 'The application for leave to appeal against sentence therefore fails and is refused.' He added that the principal ground of appeal 'was substantially based on a version of events put forward by the applicant which we have rejected'. Connolly argued she had been 'really angry' after the Southport attacks, but hours after posting the rant on X realised it was not an acceptable thing to say, so deleted it. She also said that news of the Southport murders had triggered her anxiety caused when her baby son, Harry, died as the result of a hospital blunder 13 years earlier. At her appeal case, Adam King, representing Connolly, asked if she had intended for anyone to set fire to asylum hotels or 'murder any politicians'. She replied: 'Absolutely not.' Naeem Valli, for the prosecution, told the court the post was a reflection of her attitude towards immigrants. At the time Mr Connolly told of the pain of his wife's long imprisonment, saying: 'The 284 days of separation have been very hard, particularly on our 12-year-old girl.' Connolly's case later became international news, with US officials saying earlier this year they are keeping tabs on developments over their 'concerns' about free speech. A State Department spokesman said in May: 'We can confirm that we are monitoring this matter. The United States supports freedom of expression at home and abroad, and remains concerned about infringements on freedom of expression.' It came after political commentator and Trump ally Charlie Kirk was made aware of Connolly's ordeal after a visit to the UK and vowed to get the US State Department involved in the process. Appearing on GB News, Kirk said: 'I am going to try and get the US State Department involved. I'm going to bring this up to Marco Rubio. I'm going to send him a text.' Kirk had been in the UK for a debate at the Oxford Union on Monday when the case of Mrs Connolly was raised. He later appeared on GB News, during which he said: 'I'm sorry, speaking as a citizen not on behalf of the US government, is this a way that a liberal democracy and ally of the United States acts? Kirk continued: 'I just find it so outrageous that she is now going to jail for two and a half years for a deleted social media post that she apologised for. As you guys (the UK) have birthed free speech to the world, you are now becoming a totalitarian country. 'I'm going to bring this up to Marco Rubio. I'm going to send him a text. This should be mentioned. It's not new.' Connolly's sentence was recently brought under the spotlight again last month after a man who abused a first class cabin crew on a flight from London was jailed for just 15-months. Recruitment tycoon Salman Iftikhar, 37, was flying in first class when he launched a vile tirade of abuse towards Virgin Atlantic staff on a flight from London Heathrow to Lahore in his homeland of Pakistan. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said the sentence was evidence of 'two-tier justice', given Connolly was jailed for more than double his sentence. Mr Philp told the Mail last month: 'Iftikar was sentenced to only 15 months in prison last week for threatening an air stewardess with gang rape and for racially aggravated harassment. Iftikhar has multiple previous convictions. 'Yet Lucy Connolly got 31 months for a far less serious offence - a prosecution Lord Hermer personally authorised. 'This is two-tier justice in action. 'I have today referred the case to the Attorney General Lord Hermer for review under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme. 'We'll now find out if Hermer is willing to take action to fix Britain's two-tier justice problem.'


Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Moment Cycling Mikey confronts two 'mobile phone thieves' on e-bikes before they start filming and taunting him
Controversial vigilante Cycling Mikey filmed himself confronting two suspected mobile phone thieves before they began taunting him. The Youtuber, whose real name is Michael Van Erp, uploaded footage of the tense confrontation to social media, showing him tailing a pair of e-bike riders after a supposed theft in Chiswick. One of the men, who is seen wearing a black helmet and a balaclava, suddenly stops his bike, realising he is being pursued by the vigilante cyclist. 'Oi, boi, no way? Oi, it's Cycling Mikey!' he tells the other man, before racing over to Van Erp. 'Wagwan Mikey,' the man repeats, seemingly taunting Van Erp, who appears initially shocked after being recognised by the pair. The controversial cyclist then brandishes an item from his pocket and waves it at the supposed thieves, warning them 'I'm going to call the police now'. 'Why are you hiding? Horrible little thieves,' Van Erps adds as he backs up against a nearby wall, before dishing out a final jibe as they drive away: 'I will finish you.' The suspected thieves later published their own footage of the encounter, with the caption 'Cycling Mikey pulls out a flicky' - a flicky is often used as slang to refer to a flick knife. However the Youtuber later confirmed was merely a Sharpie pen rather than any weapon and insisted he has never carried a knife. Van Erp told LBC: 'I don't carry a knife and never have. You can just about see it my own video - it's a rounded black plastic object. I don't think you could hurt anyone with it. 'Amusingly it's a Sharpie, but there's nothing sharp about it, just a rounded plastic pen. Mind you, they do say the pen is mightier than the sword! 'Despite my dislike of those suspected thieves, I would not wish any harm on them or anyone else.' A Metropolitan Police spokesperson said: 'We are aware of footage circulating on social media which appears to show an incident in Gunnersbury Avenue, Chiswick, on an unspecified date. 'No arrests have been made at this stage. 'Anybody who witnessed the incident is urged to contact the police by calling 101, or 999 in an emergency.' Van Erp has gained national notoriety for his videos in which he rides through London with his GoPro and attempts to catch drivers on their phones. The road safety warrior claims to have caught more than 2,000 offenders since first strapping on his 'helmet-cam' back in 2006. Van Erp routinely catches motorists committing road offences, including using their mobile phones behind the wheel - and even once caught a driver inhaling nitrous oxide. After recording, he sends his videos to the Metropolitan Police, and after they take action, he posts his videos on to his YouTube channel. According to his X account, he has reported 2,280 drivers since 2019, which has resulted in 2,649 penalty points, £165,000 in fines as well as 35 disqualifications from driving.


Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Britain's most targeted shop: Robbed, set on fire, ripped off and forced to tackle thieves herself. The luxury boutique owner who refuses to shut after astonishing crime wave
Preyed upon by fraudsters, rocked by Hollywood-style heists and nearly blown up by a petrol bomb - this is the luxury handbag store fighting for survival in Cheshire's Golden Triangle. Christine Colbert, 58, has suffered a series of 'catastrophic' setbacks which have routinely threatened to destroy Dress Cheshire, the beloved boutique she set up in the celebrity enclave of Prestbury back in November 2018. In the last five years, she has fallen victim to the notorious 'Kardashian of Cheshire' handbag fraudster, lost £430,000 worth of stock in two separate heists and suffered £10,000 in damage when the building next door was blown up by arsonists. On one occasion, she even had to take matters into her own hands by wrestling a shoplifter to the ground after they stuffed one of her Louis Vuitton handbags in an Aldi bag before brazenly walking out the front door. Speaking exclusively to the Daily Mail, Ms Colbert said: 'I have felt like a target, a massive target. It's made me very anxious and more nervous... I've had some very, very dark days.' She added: 'As a business, we've been rocked absolutely to the core through all of these unfortunate events. We're not sitting there feeling sorry for ourselves, but it's just been catastrophic. You couldn't write it.' Dress Cheshire suffered its first major burglary in March 2024 when four men scaled the back of the building, ripped out a window and drained the company of £180,000 worth of handbags in a terrifying heist. In the same month, she turned 'Miss Marple' to help bring down Jack Watkin, the self-proclaimed 'rich kid of Instagram' who conned victims including Ms Colbert out of thousands of pounds in an elaborate designer handbag scam. Watkin, who befriended Ms Colbert in September 2020 and became a regular visitor to her shop, defrauded her out of £44,000. The scammer, who described himself as the 'Kardashian of Cheshire', persuaded people to invest huge sums - which he claimed was to buy and sell luxury handbags - but stole the money to fund his millionaire lifestyle. Luxury handbag seller's five years of hell 2020: Christine Colbert is befriended by Jack Watkin, a man who would go on to defraud her and others out of tens of thousands of pounds. March 2024: Dress Cheshire suffers its first major burglary as four men scale the back of the building and take £180,000 worth of handbags and stock. March 2024: Ms Colbert turns 'Miss Marple' to help bring down Watkin, luring him into a trap before police arrest him. August 2024: The building next door to Dress Cheshire is blown up in an arson attack, leading to £10,000 in damage to her shop. June 2025: Dress Cheshire suffers a second major burglary. This time £250k worth of handbags are stolen after thieves tunnelled their way in. Through all this time, Ms Colbert has had to fend off petty thieves and credit card scammers who have tried to bleed her accounts dry. Then in August 2024, two months after the first major burglary, the building next door to Dress Cheshire was blown up in an arson attack, which left the shop moments away from being destroyed in a gas explosion. Recalling the terrifying moment to the Mail, she said: 'Somebody petrol bombed next door and nearly blew us up. At like midnight, the police were banging on my door and I looked out the bedroom window and it was police blues and twos. I was thinking "what now?" because it had only been within weeks of the first burglary, and I answered the door in my dressing gown. And she said, "It's Dress Cheshire". 'And I said, "Don't tell me we're being burgled again." She said it wasn't us directly but the shop might catch fire if we don't get the gas turned off.' Unfortunately, this was just the latest in a string of 'traumatic' incidents for Ms Colbert. On June 8 this year, she was forced to watch a group of brazen thieves steal £250,000 worth of luxury handbags after tunneling through her shop. Three intruders circumvented Dress Cheshire's sophisticated security set-up by identifying the 3ft wide chimney stack as a weakness. Having smashed their way through, one used a duvet cover as a giant pouch to steal the highly sought-after pre-owned bags from brands including Chanel, Gucci, Dior, and Louis Vuitton. Live CCTV footage showed the skilled thieves ransacking the shop, where bags valued at as much as £30,000 were snatched. The second heist coincided with the start of Watkin's trial in June. Ms Colbert said: 'I knew June was going to be a horrendous month. I didn't anticipate the heist, who could. 'Because of the arson next door, that led to the heist because that building has been unoccupied since then and boarded up. So they took advantage of that situation and were going in and out.' When asked if she feels like the unluckiest business owner in Britain, she said: 'Well, yes and no. My cup's always half full... but I feel like I've definitely had my share of bad luck and it has been horrible. 'Throughout all of the frauds and the robberies, nobody really knew that I was dealing with Jack.' She added: 'Don't get me wrong, I think any one of those things could topple someone completely, and just have them thinking, I don't need this. But then also they're not going to knock me over. Absolutely no chance. 'Why would I allow these horrible individuals of all different categories that they are try and topple me, but don't get me wrong, I have felt like a massive target. 'We're a small business, we're not a big multi-million pound business. I've lost my own personal money here and people don't see that. 'I'm a northern girl. I don't come from a wealthy family. I just come from Northern grit. You just pick yourself up, dust yourself down and crack on. That's what my parents told me to do and that's what I've done.' In between the major heists and sickening fraud from a 'friend', Ms Colbert has also faced a terrifying credit scam from fraudsters posing as customers in her shop. Explaining how it works, she told the Mail: 'We've had people in trying to intercept our payment gateways. They literally try and keep us preoccupied whilst they make fraudulent payments in our card terminals. 'They blatantly walk in, they say they're going to buy a £5,000 bag, and then they try and use the machine for their own gain, and so not only steal the bag, but steal my money and empty my bank account at the same time.' She explained how they usually operate in pairs, with one talking to her and the other 'punching in' numbers to the card machine. The cunning plot sees the payment go through as a 'customer not present' transaction, allowing them to walk out with the bag before ringing their bank to say their card has been compromised in order to get a refund. Watkin posed as a millionaire on social media to persuade people – including his own father - to invest in his fake designer handbag business But this is a fraction of the fraud carried out by Watkin, a man who Ms Colbert thought was a friend before he rinsed her bank account. The 26-year-old former public schoolboy promised his victims - including Ms Colbert - a share of the profits if they loaned him cash to buy and sell expensive Hermes bags. But neither the handbags or any profit ever materialised and instead Watkin used the cash to fund his extravagant lifestyle. At one stage he spent weeks living at the five-star Dorchester Hotel, in London 's Mayfair, where rooms cost up to £3,000-a-night. Police said his bill topped £136,000 in just six months. He also paid more than £22,000 to travel around the capital in a chauffeur-driven Rolls Royce and regularly visited Harrods, where he 'scouted' for victims and spent almost £68,000. Ms Colbert spent three years trying to get back almost £44,000 she had loaned Watkin when she decided to take matters into her own hands in March 2024. With the help of Watkin's close friend, Hannah Jakes, 34, who was also defrauded of almost £100,000, the pair lured the fake millionaire, who was on the run from police, to a local pub with the promise of more cash. Ms Colbert revealed how she wore a 'large hat' as a disguise and hid in someone else's car in the car park of The Merlin public house, in Alderley Edge, Cheshire, so he would not recognise her. But as soon as the unsuspecting Watkin arrived Mrs Colbert swung into action and dialled 999. Minutes later detectives from Cheshire police swooped to arrest him. Watkin was convicted in June after Ms Colbert helped bring him down and and will be sentenced in September. But to her utter disbelief, while most of Watkin's victims have all been paid back, Ms Colbert remains more than £44,000 down. As of October last year, the Government made it a law that banking institutions had to repay customers who have been a victim of fraud where the bank could have stopped it. 'All the main banking institutions had signed up to this and as a result of Jack being actually convicted, they have repaid the victims - except the one bank that I sent money to Jack from wasn't signed up to the scheme, and they won't pay me back. 'So I brought everything to justice, everyone gets their money back and I have had a £300 cheque of a thanks very much for your hard work.' Ms Colbert opened her business up in Prestbury in November 2018 before going online during the pandemic. Along with Wilmslow and Alderley Edge, Prestbury makes up the so-called Golden Triangle of towns favoured by Cheshire celebrities and sports stars. Ex-Manchester United star Wayne Rooney and his wife Coleen used to live there until they moved to a £20million home they designed nearby. However the area has been frequently targeted by burglars including a gang who snatched more than 100 rare handbags worth over £1million when they raided a home in Alderley Edge in March.