
Men who fought outside shop in machete-wielding 'frenzy' jailed
Brandon Dean, 23, also received a 10-month sentence after admitting affray. At a hearing on 30 May, another defendant, aged 20, from Harpurhey, who police have not named, received a nine-month prison sentence and a 12-month suspended sentence after he was convicted of possessing a bladed article in public.
'Incredibly violent'
The court heard CCTV captured the men entering the shop at separate times "calmly going about their business", police said.Once outside, "words were exchanged" and Wilson pulled out a machete.The footage showed the men running around the street wielding the machetes and one man throwing a bottle at the other group before they all ran off.No one was seriously hurt over the incident which the force said "happened at midday in broad daylight and left witnesses feeling distressed".Det Insp Kathryn McKeown said: "This sentence sees four incredibly violent and dangerous men taken off our streets. "Running around in broad daylight attempting to attack each other with machetes is shocking and frightening for residents going about their everyday life."This knife-wielding frenzy could have resulted in someone losing their life and has no place whatsoever on our streets."
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
29 minutes ago
- The Independent
Gunmen kill at least 13 people in a mosque shooting in northwestern Nigeria
Gunmen attacked a mosque in northwestern Nigeria on Tuesday morning, killing at least 13 people during morning prayers, local authorities said. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack in the town of Unguwan Mantau, in the state of Katsina, but such attacks are common in Nigeria's northwestern and north-central regions where local herders and farmers often clash over limited access to land and water. The attacks have killed and injured scores — last month, an attack in north-central Nigeria killed 150 people. The prolonged conflict has become deadlier in recent years, with authorities and analysts warning that more herdsmen are taking up arms. The state's commissioner, Nasir Mu'azu, said the army and police have deployed in the area of Unguwan Mantau to prevent further attacks, adding that gunmen often hide among the crops out in farms during the rainy season to carry out assaults on communities. He added that the mosque attack was likely in retaliation for an action Unguwan Mantau townspeople who over the weekend ambushed and killed several of the gunmen in the area. Dozens of armed groups take also advantage of the limited security presence in Nigeria's mineral-rich regions, carrying out attacks on villages and along major roads. The farmers accuse the herders, mostly of Fulani origin, of grazing their livestock on their farms and destroying their produce. The herders insist that the lands are grazing routes that were first backed by law in 1965, five years after the country gained its independence. Separately from the conflict between farming and herding communities, Nigeria is battling to contain an insurgency against Boko Haram in the northeast, where some 35,000 civilians have been killed and more than 2 million displaced, according to the United Nations.


Telegraph
30 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Confidence in police plummets to record low
Victim satisfaction with how police handle crime in England and Wales has dropped to a record low, a new survey has suggested. The number of people who reported seeing officers regularly on the beat in their neighbourhood was also at its lowest level since records began, while confidence in the criminal justice system continued to decline. The findings have been published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) who used data from its long-running annual crime survey of people aged 16 and over. Some 51 per cent of respondents, who had been a victim of crime in the 12 months to March this year, said they were either very or fairly satisfied with how the police handled the matter. That was down from 55 per cent in the previous year, and the lowest figure since this question was first asked in 1992. Satisfaction rose steadily between 2006/07 and 2013/14 to a peak of 75 per cent, but has since been on a general downward trend. The ONS found differences in victim satisfaction in how crimes were dealt with by crime type, ranging from 62 per cent for domestic burglary and 58 per cent for violence, to 41 per cent for bicycle theft and just 26 per cent for theft from the person. Younger people were also less likely to be satisfied with the police response than the elderly. The proportion of incidents where the victim was satisfied with how the police dealt with the matter was higher when the offender was charged (95 per cent) compared with when no action was taken (36 per cent), and where the victim was kept informed by the police (77 per cent) compared with where the victim was not kept informed well (19 per cent). On the topic of police visibility, 11 per cent of respondents in the year to March reported seeing officers or community support officers on foot patrol in their local area once a week. This was down from 12 per cent in the previous year and is the lowest since this question was first asked in 2006/07, when it stood at 26 per cent. The figure peaked at 39 per cent in both 2009/10 and 2010/11, since when it has been on a continuous downward trend. People living in urban areas were more likely to report high police visibility (13 per cent) compared with rural areas (four per cent), while those aged 65 to 74 (four per cent) and 75 and over (seven per cent) were less likely to report this compared with other age groups. Some 49 per cent of all respondents gave their local police a positive rating in 2024/25, unchanged on the previous 12 months but down from 62 per cent a decade earlier. People from ethnic minorities were more likely to rate their local police positively than white people, while those who were aged 55 to 64 (44 per cent) and 65 to 74 (43 per cent) were less likely to provide a positive rating compared with other age groups. When asked whether they were confident the criminal justice system as a whole was effective, 48 per cent of survey respondents said they had confidence, down from 50 per cent the previous year and the lowest figure since 2012/13. Confidence rose from 38 per cent in 2008/09 to peak at 54 per cent in 2015/16, since when there has been a gradual decline. People aged 16 to 24 were more likely to report being confident in the effectiveness of the criminal justice system (61 per cent) than all other age groups, while people born in the UK were less likely to be confident (43 per cent) than those born outside the country (65 per cent).


The Guardian
30 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Misper review – mystery, melancholy and murder in a faded seaside town
Here is a solid first feature debut from director Harry Sherriff, an atmospheric crime drama set in a gloomy, decaying seaside town, with an eerie depiction of grief experienced by those who exist within the margins of the life of a murdered girl. The film follows Leonard (Samuel Blenkin), a meek hotel concierge who has a boyish crush on his charming 25-year-old colleague Elle (Emily Carey). Dressed in a red raincoat with short dark hair and a wry smile, Elle's character is very much reminiscent of Jordana Bevan in Richard Ayoade's 2010 film Submarine, as is the dry sardonic humour peppered into the script. Leonard and Elle's exchanges are awkward yet sweet, teetering on the edge of a true connection. That is, until Elle doesn't show up to work one day and reports of a missing person trickle through the town. The hotel staff are rattled by Elle's disappearance and when news breaks that her body has been found, this chilling bereavement subtly upends their lives. Misper (an abbreviated term used by the police to refer to a missing person) is stylistically compelling in its atmosphere building. There is an unsettling sense of staleness that runs throughout the film, characterised by the beige, stained walls of the old-timey, mostly vacant hotel, and Leonard's expression, which is permanently set in a sunken, shell-shocked gaze. 'I feel like I'm in a horror film,' he says, as he attempts to schedule an appointment with a therapist over the phone. This empty hotel is a prime site for horror and although Misper dabbles in the genre with some nightmarish flashes of Elle haunting Leonard after her death, it doesn't go all the way. Nor does it follow the pathway of a crime drama, refusing to offer up the salacious details of Elle's death in the true crime manner (though there a brief yet frightening visit by a 'fan' of the dead girl). The nature of Elle's murder and the profile of her killer are pushed into the periphery. What is at the forefront is the bafflement, melancholy and looming sense of dread that the hotel staff are faced with as they attempt to grapple with a return to normality. In the film's final moments, a crew is shooting a crime drama series based on the events of Elle's death and disappearance, six months after it happened. The bleak misery remains but drifts into the eeriness of the uncanny. Misper screened at the Edinburgh film festival