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Krays gun licence could fetch thousands at auction

Krays gun licence could fetch thousands at auction

BBC Newsa day ago
Several items connected to notorious London gangsters the Kray twins are to come up for auction.A gun licence issued to gangster Ronnie Kray, letters his twin Reggie wrote from prison and their brother Charlie's ring are being auctioned by Bearnes, Hampton and Littlewood in Exeter.They are being sold by Dean Buffini who is the stepson of the twins' brother Charlie Kray.He has decided to sell the items after the death last year of his mother Diane, who was Charlie Kray's partner for 27 years.
The lots include a four-page letter which Reggie Kray wrote to his mother Violet Kray from Brixton prison in 1969.He told his mother he enjoyed seeing her and his father on their recent visit and "I liked that suit you was wearing, it's a nice colour."He described life in prison including watching the Des O'Connor Show and suggested his mother use honey in her tea rather than sugar, because "its good for your health".He told her he was "going to do a few yoga exercises now" and listen to Radio Luxembourg and would think of her when he was in church.
He also discussed a visit from a woman believed to be called Coral or Carol who may be Carol Skinner, or "Blonde Carol" who rented the flat in Hackney where Reggie Kray killed Jack "The Hat" McVitie in October 1967.Reggie, who died in 2000, signed off the letter to his mother "Keep smiling. God bless you. All my love."Another letter going under the hammer is a four page letter Reggie wrote from Parkhurst Prison on the Isle of Wight to Ronnie in 1982.He told his twin brother prison rule limited his correspondence "so I will not be able to write to you often".
An18ct gold diamond ring that belonged to their older brother Charlie is expected to fetch between £3,000 to £4,000.It is being sold together with a photograph of Charlie Kray wearing the ring at a family wedding.The auction also includes three photographs featuring Ronnie Kray, Reggie Kray's first wife Frances Shea and 1958 receipts from the Krays' Double R Club in east London, as well as business cards for the club and The Kings Arms in Shoreditch.Lots also include letters of condolence to the twins after their mother's death.
Auctioneer Brian Goodison Blanks said there was "an interest in crime" and The Krays had a major impact on London's history and culture in the 1960s."These are historical pieces and historical documents. There is an interest in the darker side of history".He said the collection was difficult to value but the whole set is expected to fetch more than £10,000, with the gun licence alone estimated at about £5,000 to £8,000.The auction will be held on 12 and 13 August.
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Coronation Street legend Helen Worth makes rare public appearance at West End event
Coronation Street legend Helen Worth makes rare public appearance at West End event

The Sun

time3 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Coronation Street legend Helen Worth makes rare public appearance at West End event

CORONATION Street icon Helen Worth made a rare public appearance opposite a Broadway legend. Helen, who rose to fame playing Gail Platt on Coronation Street, stepped out in London to support West End legend Dame Elaine Page and Broadway star Bernadette Peters. 4 4 4 The two musical theatre icons hosted the West End Woofs show at St Paul's Church in Covent Garden. The event sees Elaine and Bernadette come together in the massive list cat and dog adoption event. The stars bring together the best of West End talent and their four-legged friends to work with animal shelters and rescue groups to benefit their important work. Elaine shared a series of photos showing her famous friends, including Corrie's Helen, speaking outside the church in support of the fundraising event. "Thank you to all who came today," she captioned the post. The powerhouse divas first hosted the event in a virtual setting in 2020, before hosting their first live event in 2023. It was a rare public appearance for Helen who confirmed last year she would be leaving the ITV soap for good after 50 years on the cobbles. Helen filmed her final scenes late last year, as her character Gail bid farewell to her friends and family for a new life in the South of France after tying the knot with new husband Jesse Chadwick. It was an emotional exit for Gail whose final episode aired on Christmas Day with many stand-out moments. Her on-screen daughter Sarah, told her: 'I know you're the backbone. Gail Platt leaves Coronation Street for a new life in France after 50 years on the cobbless 'I know there's lots you don't tell me because you want to protect me. Don't feel you have to carry them just because you're the only daughter. 'Look after yourself. Choose happiness. You know you've always been my favourite.' Before her Corrie exit Helen received a prestigious television award acknowledging long career and contribution to television. She was honored at the North West Royal Television Society awards in Manchester in November 2024. Taking the award she told the audience: "To receive an award, in Manchester, in the north west, the home of Coronation Street, is an absolute joy. "I've done 50 years, I don't know how I did it! 'It just flew by and I never actually thought about it and then one day someone told me I'd been here 50 years and I thought 'I think it's time I left' and that was it really. "I know why I stayed - it was simple - because of all the wonderful people who work on Coronation Street." 4

Locals living in one of Britain's most famous tourist towns with two million visitors a year say its high street is in 'decline' as shops lay vacant for 15 years
Locals living in one of Britain's most famous tourist towns with two million visitors a year say its high street is in 'decline' as shops lay vacant for 15 years

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Locals living in one of Britain's most famous tourist towns with two million visitors a year say its high street is in 'decline' as shops lay vacant for 15 years

More than two million visitors make a pilgrimage to Stratford-upon Avon every year as they pay homage to the birth place of the most celebrated playwright in history. The medieval market town is beautifully adorned with quaint gift shops and cobblestoned streets, and surrounded by the smell of freshly made fudge. Every summer, crowds of literature fans from across the world queue up outside William Shakespeare's Birthplace museum and the Royal Shakespeare Theatre is packed out as actors take to the stage. From looking at the busloads of international tourists queuing patiently to enjoy Stratford's 800-year history, this bustling town is the last place you would imagine to be in 'decline'. But there is a side of the town locals are less proud of. A host of high street names have shut down, while Turkish barbers and vape shops have popped up, rough sleepers have set up bases on vacant shopfronts, and gangs of yobs roam around wearing balaclavas. One woman, speaking anonymously to the Daily Mail, even opened up about how she was recently sexually assaulted by a man wearing a balaclava in the town centre, and now fears walking alone at night. Meanwhile, cafe workers worry business has fallen, as locals say hardly any shops are lasting. A large Debenhams has sat empty on the high street since 2020, while a derelict BHS has been closed and decaying for more than 15 years. Since the beginning of last year alone, Jack Wills, Fraser Hart, The Body Shop and independent shops such as Wilfred's Sweet Shop have permanently closed. Cafe Rouge, Bella Italia and Edward Moon are just a number of the restaurants that have also shut doors. Last month, the shutters were pulled down at the town's Poundland store. Just a week ago, the town's Pizza Express closed its doors. Mustafa Dogan, owner of the Fresh Baguette Bar, told the Daily Mail: 'The price of everything has gone up now, it's become a luxury for people to eat out. It's not like before, you can't go and get something to eat without worrying. 'The High Street, in my eyes, is struggling. Technology is not helping, it is damaging for us. 'You go to the shops and you buy mayonnaise, it's £1, you go online, it's 80p. What would you do? You buy online. 'That's the main hiccup. 'The rents are so high, and people are buying online. '100 per cent, businesses on the high street are struggling. It's in decline. 'Covid and technology are definitely playing a big part. It's a package of everything.' Explaining that area now feels unsafe, he said: 'It's a bad look to have homeless people outside shops on the main high street. 'It's not just that, it's become fashion for the youngsters to wear balaclavas. 'I don't know why they are doing it. They are wearing them and riding the electric scooters. 'I'm afraid respect is out of the window now. 'My brother-in-law has got two teenage daughters, and they don't go out. It's not safe. 'We are lucky to live here, compared to say Coventry or even Leamington. But even here is not safe. 'You have groups of teenagers taking stuff from shops and just walking away. People don't react because there is nothing they can do. 'I don't think it puts tourists off, this town is a town you visit for one or two days. So they come, see the town, and go. 'But for locals it's a different story.' Urging for more to be done to crack down on antisocial behaviour, he said: 'There is no respect anymore. They don't respect the police or anyone. 'We need to get more police on the street and give the police more powers. 'The High Street needs more policing. 'But it's not just here, it's the whole country, the system is not right. 'We have a friend who grew up here. When she was a teenager everyone used to know each other. Now she says you don't know your neighbours, and you don't feel safe at all. She doesn't walk through town alone at night. 'It's a very touristic place and they put a lot of money to put nice flowers etc. to make it look good. But yet you've got all these problems. 'For the people that live here it's like what about safety?' The cafe also blasted landlords for not allowing empty buildings to be used as community centres while they lay vacant. They said several community members had offered to use some premises to bring in tennis tables and the like to bring young people together until another occupier is found, but these proposals were rejected. Meanwhile, a local passing through the High Street told the Daily Mail about a recent harrowing experience in November last year. She said: 'In November, I was walking by the canal and I was sexually assaulted by a man with a balaclava. 'I reported it to the police but they never did anything. They said they could not identify him because he had a balaclava. 'Now I never walk down there. It is not safe at all. 'And even on my way to work during the day I make sure to walk a route where there are CCTV cameras around. 'It's a shame really. 'The police do have some patrol points around the centre and they say "feel free to come and talk". 'I do have questions but what is the point. What are they going to say. I reported it and they did nothing.' When the Daily Mail visited the town on Tuesday, private neighbourhood police called 'My Local Bobby' were patrolling the area, and told of how they looking to crack down on any shoplifting and antisocial behaviour. They are said to be hired jointly by businesses across the centre. Later in the afternoon, they were seen having a word with a group who seemed to be causing trouble. Just down from the High Street, along the quaint Henley Street where Shakespeare's Birthplace Museum stands in its magnificent architecture, tourists are lined up waiting to get in. And while the thoroughfare has kept its old town character intact, right opposite the museum sits an empty restaurant. A few yards down to the left is an empty jewelers. And around the corner is a souvenir shop which advertises vapes. Greenhill Street, 300 yards away, sits in a derelict state, with boarded up shops and restaurants, and the only remaining shops two mini marts and a Turkish barbers. A Paperways store has been left decaying and unoccupied on the road for at least ten years. And at the other end of Henley Street, by the main junction that connects to the High Street, is Bridge Street. From afar, it is picture perfect with its floral arrangements hanging from shopfronts and planters along the road. But at a closer look, it is a street in disrepair. The old BHS remains empty, as does a Halifax, in front of which rough sleepers have stationed themselves. The Poundland sits closed and a man sits begging tourists outside the Sainsbury's next door. The town centre is adorned with historic buildings and beautiful floral arrangements but also has rows of empty stores One local, speaking outside the closed Paperways store said: 'I was born here. 'And I've seen it change a lot and not for the better, let's put it that way. 'This street, it's terrible. And then if you go down the high street, there's lots of empty shops just sitting there. 'There's only one bright part to this town left and it's the big jewelers. 'I don't know why it's gotten like this. 'There was the old Debenhams then it was going to be changed to a hotel but it's just been empty for some time. There were going to build flats but it's sitting there. 'It's an eyesore. 'The BHS was beautiful, but it's been empty for years too. 'This is not the Stratford I grew up in. 'Paperways here has been empty for years and years. 'If you go from here to Birmingham you go past a place called Digbeth. Up here on this road, it's a bit like Digbeth. 'Let's just say I wouldn't walk down here at night in the dark. 'I think police see a lot of sleeping in doorways, a lot of antisocial behaviour in the town. 'Stratford not like it used to be.' Barry the Butcher, on the High Street, is a family-run business that has been running for over 35 years and is one of the longest lasting stores on the street. Jake Field, 23, who has worked at the butchers since a teenager said: 'The High Street has definitely changed. Massively. 'For locals it's a lot quieter now, there's not many shops for them. 'It's only really tourist shops. 'I think this is probably the the longest running shop. 'All the ones that open up don't really last. New ones keep opening up and closing. 'The change has more or less been since Covid happened. People are coming out less, it's easier to just order online. 'We do high quality meats. You've got to do high end quality products to keep going in this climate otherwise people will just go to the supermarkets. 'I've been working here for 10 years now and the main difference I've seen is that because a lot of the locals were older, you see less faces that you know now. 'And then you've got more of the homelessness, the antisocial behaviour. 'There's definitely more of them now, outside empty premises. They used to hang around the Debenhams, there used to be quite a few around there, but I think they're blocked it off now. 'That's not what people expect or what they know Stratford for. 'You don't expect it to be that way. 'It's meant to be an affluent area but it's turning that sort of way.' Stratford-upon-Avon Town Council and Warwickshire County Council recognised the issues themselves and put forward a bid for Government funds to address it in June 2021. But at the beginning of 2023, the Government announced the bid was unsuccessful. Some locals the Daily Mail spoke to on Tuesday felt the local council should take more of a role in stopping oversaturation of the same types of stores and restaurants. They also pointed to the fact that an increasing amount of tourists and students visit the town as part of a tour and do not spend much money in the town itself. Roy and Sue McMaster, both 65, who live near Stratford said: 'We've lived here since late 70s so we've seen it change. We were here when the BHS was open and so on. 'It's become very much a tourist town now, it always was and continues to be. 'Every town has changed because of buying online etc, but the thing here is that it's all become coffee places and tea shops to attract tourists. 'They've opened up a Gail's too. 'Yesterday there were dozens of young students getting tour guides from different countries, many from Asian countries, but don't actually spend money here. 'They come here by coach, do all the tourist things, visit the museum and theatre, but don't spend. 'There's a lot of empty shops now. There's so many of the same things, it dilutes their profit and they can't survive. 'And there's the Turkish barbers. They say they're fronts for something else, but you don't know. In our small town nearby there's six or seven, but they're never busy.' They continued: 'I guess the one benefit here is that its Shakespeare's birthplace and you've got the theatre. 'If we were any other town we would be really struggling. 'A lot of people hold the town council responsible for planning permissions being given out to every store that wants to open. 'They just need to think carefully and ask, "do we need a sixth pizza place and another hotel?" 'This hotel has been shut for a long time. Debenhams they were going to build a hotel there but you don't need a hotel there. It fell through anyway.' Some businesses though have remained standing and say the town is still faring far better than other regions. Richard Bunn-Major, 56, manager at Music Matters, has been running his store for 27 years. While he acknowledged some shops have been left vacant for years, he thinks they are being replaced by high-end brands. He said: 'The Mercure has sat empty but was bought about two to three years ago and now work has begun. 'It's the chains that are closing down, Cafe Rouge, Pizza Express. Perhaps they are too big and realise they need to scale back. 'We've got two pizza places privately owned, so I guess it's tough competition. 'Gail's has opened recently where Jack Wills was. It seems like there are more high-end brands moving in. 'Jewellery brand Pragnells have bought up empty properties around the town to minimise the demise of the town so they can sell it to higher end brands.' Asked about the BHS that has stood empty for years, he said: 'There's been a lot of interest in it for years but never came to anything. 'The place is rotting it's falling to pieces it's an eyesore. 'I guess the business people are from out of town, probably London, and don't care.' However, he says their store has remained popular for 27 years and feels the area is 'so safe' that they don't have to worry about leaving their store door open. He said: 'Yes, you've got the general drug and drink people. 'But these kind of places of always attract that because of the tourism. 'You're always going to have that. 'I don't worry about them causing any issues though, occasionally you spot them trying to nick something but you can spot them a mile off. 'But we keep the door open. In about 20 years, we've not worried about anything. 'Generally speaking, I've lived here a long time and would say its one of the nicest places to live. 'The only problem is that the local council don't see what potential is outside of the obvious. It's not all about Shakespeare. The river is beautiful. The market is not a local market, and most of us would agree it's terrible, and local stores are having to close for it.' Gill Darby, who lives nearby and has visited the town for decades said: 'It's nice compared with most other high streets, but I've seen it change over the years. 'Quite a few shops have gone. 'Most of the big stores and food places are put away from town in retail parks so now people just drive to them. 'BHS has just sat there for 16 years. I wish they could open, but they can't can they? 'It's all food now isn't it? It's all restaurants.' Matt Castle, 50, moved to Stratford in 2009 and works at the theatre. He said: 'A lot of shops have closed down, I think a lot more eating places have opened up similar to other places. 'There's not really a great variety of stores. And because rent is so expensive, the turnover of shops is very noticeable. 'I've suffered crime here myself. I had a bike stolen, it was locked up outside the theatre and somebody came with chain clippers and just took it. 'It happened about three years ago near Christmas time. 'So there is a bit of that. But I do feel it's safe here and I'm thinking of my kids who are becoming older teenagers and they can go out on their own and I feel fine. 'I have heard Stratford being referred to as a Shakespeare theme park.' For visitors however, they had a different experience of the town. Robert Beatty, 61, from Chester, said he visited Stratford-upon-Avon last month and loved it so much he has returned with his wife just four weeks later. He said: 'It's very nice, the only issue is the parking. 'We're lucky we're on the hotel down there so we can walk up. 'I came here about four weeks ago, and liked it so much we came straight back again. 'The high street itself is very very nice. We were in Wrexham last week, it was so run down, so looking at this it's completely different. 'Elsewhere you've got lots of retail parks coming up everywhere and shops just boarded up. 'This is completely different to where we live about five miles out of Chester. 'It's obviously more for visitors, but it's 100 per cent better than other high streets 'It's definitely good for the tourists. For the tourists it's absolutely lovely.' A Stratford-on-Avon District Council spokesperson, said: 'Stratford-on-Avon District Council remains committed to supporting the vitality of Stratford town centre amid broader retail market challenges. 'While factors such as national business rates and property ownership lie beyond the District Council's control, proactive steps are being taken through initiatives like the vacant high streets programme and support for diversified town centre uses. 'The District Council has worked with the applicants at both Debenhams and BHS to bring forward alternative uses for these large format stores and we continue to work with the owners to find new and suitable viable uses. Although some units remain empty, many are expected to be reoccupied as part of normal market cycles.' The council also addressed concerns about crime and antisocial behaviour, adding: 'A partnership approach is key to the town's success. The District Council collaborates with stakeholders, including the BID, which plays a vital role in promoting the town and supporting businesses - most recently through the introduction of "My Local Bobby". 'Community safety is a priority. The Council's 24/7 CCTV control room works in real-time with Warwickshire Police and local businesses to tackle crime and anti-social behaviour. In May, a Public Space Protection Order was introduced to address alcohol-related ASB, empowering police to intervene where necessary. 'In line with national trends, the District has seen an increase in rough sleeping. Stratford-on-Avon benefits from robust partnership working in relation to preventing and tackling rough sleeping. 'The District Council also works with partners to address rough sleeping, offering support and taking enforcement action where individuals cause harm or nuisance. It's important to note that not all individuals seen begging in the town centre are rough sleepers and do have their own accommodation.' Stratford-upon-Avon BID said: 'New businesses are opening up and vacancy rates are lower than the national average. Crime figures are lower than average. 'The town is home to many independent businesses and holds a number of vibrant events which has recently included the Motor Festival attracting 25K footfall and 150 Kate Bushes in the park last weekend. 'There's something for everyone in our town that has more to offer than some cities.'

Violent criminals denied freedom in apparent parole crackdown
Violent criminals denied freedom in apparent parole crackdown

Telegraph

time33 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Violent criminals denied freedom in apparent parole crackdown

Around 700 further dangerous criminals have been denied release from jail in an apparent toughening of approach by the Parole Board. Official data show that three-quarters of prisoners who sought parole in 2024/25 had their applications rejected by the board – the highest proportion for at least five years. It represents an equivalent increase of 700 in the number of prisoners who would otherwise have been previously freed from jail. Among high-profile criminals refused parole requests were the former pop star Gary Glitter, 81, who was jailed for 16 years for sexually assaulting three schoolgirls, and Ronald Evans, 83, known as the Clifton rapist for his sex attacks on women in Bristol. He is one of Britain's longest-serving prisoners, having spent over 50 years in jail. Glitter, whose real name is Paul Gadd, was judged to be a continued risk to the public after being recalled to prison for breaching his licence conditions by viewing downloaded images of children. Evans raped and murdered Kathleen Heathcote in 1964 before committing numerous sexual attacks in Bristol in the late 1970s. He was refused parole in December, having been released in 2018 only to be jailed again in 2023 for sexually assaulting a woman in London in 2022. The Parole Board is a quasi-judicial body responsible for deciding whether prisoners serving a life sentence or imprisonment for public protection can safely be released at the end of their 'tariff', the minimum period in custody set by the trial judge. It also decides whether fixed-term prisoners who have been recalled to prison for breaching their licence conditions are safe to re-release. Data published in the board's annual report showed it rejected nearly 13,000 applications by prisoners for parole last year – the highest number for at least five years. The 75 per cent rejection rate was up from 70 per cent in the previous year and the highest proportion in any of the past five years, according to publicly available data. Of the 17,165 decisions made by the Parole Board in 2024/25, 3,872 (23 per cent) were to release the prisoner, 501 (three per cent) were to recommend a transfer to open conditions, and 12,790 (75 per cent) were that he or she should remain in custody, according to the figures first revealed by Inside Time, the prisoners' magazine. The Parole Board has come under pressure from successive justice secretaries to take a tougher approach towards the release of offenders. The apparent hardening in its decisions contrasts with moves by the Government to allow thousands of prisoners on fixed-term sentences to be released early. It follows scandals including its decision – subsequently reversed – to release the black cab rapist John Worboys, and to free the double child murderer and rapist Colin Pitchfork, who was recalled to prison after breaching the terms of his licence. Lawyers specialising in parole cases suggested changes by Dominic Raab, the former justice secretary, could have played a part in the increasing rejection rate. He made the release test tougher for some prisoners, gave the secretary of state powers to block individual release decisions, barred probation officers and psychologists from making recommendations regarding releases and appointed more former police officers to the Board. Whilst some of the reforms have since been reversed, others are still in place. In a letter to the Ministry of Justice, sent in May 2022, the Parole Board said Mr Raab's changes would be likely to lead to fewer releases. In a warning that now appears prescient, it said: 'If our release rate reduced from 25 per cent to 20 per cent, it would increase the prison population by approximately 800 places per year.' One senior solicitor with experience of representing prisoners at parole hearings told Inside Time that Mr Raab's reforms may have had a 'chilling effect' on the willingness of the Parole Board to take a risk by releasing prisoners in borderline cases. The Parole Board denied it had become more risk-averse. The solicitor said the backlog of cases in the Crown Court may also be having an impact, because it means that more prisoners are facing parole hearings with unproven allegations hanging over them, making a release decision less likely. He added: 'There has been a huge amount of new Parole Board members in recent times, and they are just always more risk-averse when they start out.' A second solicitor who specialises in parole cases said other factors could include Government moves to increase the involvement of victims in the parole process. They suggested the 'crumbling' state of the probation service could also be to blame, as parole panels might be sceptical that there was adequate supervision in the community. A shortage of places on offending behaviour programmes in prisons could also mean prisoners are appearing before parole panels without having completed courses seen as essential to lower the risk they pose.

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