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Four in court charged with murdering man in Exmouth

Four in court charged with murdering man in Exmouth

BBC News2 days ago

Four men have appeared in court charged with murder after the death of a 24-year-old man in Exmouth.The man was pronounced dead from a stab wound on Saturday after reports of an assault in the garden of a property in Ashfield Close, Exmouth.Zac Davies, 23, of Hawthorn Grove, Exmouth, Dylan Chadwick, 23, of Cambourne Avenue, St Helens, and Ben Mason, 23, of no fixed abode, Exmouth, appeared at Exeter Magistrates Court. Thomas Ward, 24, of Russell Walk, Exeter, appeared via video link from Newquay Police Station.They were all remanded in custody to appear at Exeter Crown Court on Thursday.

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Drug dealer who ran over and killed 'respected' man thinking his prone body lying in the road was a 'Halloween prank' is jailed
Drug dealer who ran over and killed 'respected' man thinking his prone body lying in the road was a 'Halloween prank' is jailed

Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

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Drug dealer who ran over and killed 'respected' man thinking his prone body lying in the road was a 'Halloween prank' is jailed

A drug dealer who ran over and killed a 'loyal' and 'respected' man after thinking his body lying in the road was a Halloween prank has been jailed. Karl Twyford, 29, knocked down Steve Day, 67, shortly before 10pm on October 30, 2021, in Sutton Bonington, Nottinghamshire. Mr Day, a keen motorcyclist, was walking in the village at the time he was run over. He suffered catastrophic injuries to his chest and head and died at the scene. At Nottingham Crown Court, prosecutor Esther Harrison revealed Twyford saw an 'obstacle' as he drove down the road in his silver Ford Ranger. She said: 'He said he did not know what it was and by the time he saw it he was unable to avoid it and drove over it. He said he thought it was a Halloween prank.' Miss Harrison said other people had stopped and saw Mr Day's body lying in the road, but Twyford made impact and drove on. She said: 'A witness was driving her car with a passenger and she saw something lying in the road and realised it was a person. 'She said he was laying on his back in the road with his hand over his chest and she slowed down and maneuvered around it. 'The defendant's silver Ford Ranger followed and drove over Mr Day causing catastrophic injuries to the chest and head. That vehicle stopped, reversed back and then drove off.' Twyford handed himself into police two days after the horror collision. There is no suggestion as to why Mr Day was lying in the road at the time. When police searched Twyford's home in Kegworth, they found three rooms set aside for growing cannabis and nearly a kilo of the Class B drug - worth £11,000. High purity cocaine worth £2,000 was also discovered. Following a retrial earlier this year, a jury took just an hour to unanimously find Twyford guilty of causing the death of Mr Day by careless or inconsiderate driving. The 29-year-old also pleaded guilty to charges of possession with intent to supply drugs and production of cannabis. Richard Thatcher, mitigating, said Twyford, now of Ashbourne in Derbyshire, works as a self-employed bricklayer and became a father in October last year. He said: 'He has perhaps matured and now has something of a family life. He made money (from drug dealing) but that does not mean he had an extravagant lifestyle.' In a victim impact statement read out in court, Mr Day's wife Gina said she was 'distraught and empty' without her husband, calling him a 'well-respected' man in Sutton Bonington where he had lived for almost four decades. She said: 'As his wife I am so distraught and empty. He had so much more living to do, he loved life, especially walking in Cornwall and Scotland with his dogs and loved motorcycling. 'He was kind, loving, loyal and would help anyone. He loved village life and was well known and respected in Sutton Bonington where he had lived for 38 years. He was my life and it will be so hard without him.' Judge Michael Auty KC jailed Twyford for four-and-a-half-years. He received a nine-month sentence for causing Mr Day's death and three years and nine months for the drug offences. The judge also disqualified him from driving until he passes a further test following his release. Judge Auty said: 'Steven Day's wife, Gina, describes her husband as a happy, kind and loving man who enjoyed life to the full. 'That does not surprise me because I have seen photographs of him which reveal a smiling gentleman utterly at peace with the world. 'Precisely why it was that you did not see him or slow down must be, as the jury found, inattentiveness and tragedy followed. You then panicked and left the scene leaving Mr Day.'

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Man seriously injured in hit-and-run crash in Reigate

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Wagner Group told British proxy to use KGB drama ‘as manual'
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time28 minutes ago

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Wagner Group told British proxy to use KGB drama ‘as manual'

The Wagner Group told a British proxy to use a TV drama about KGB spies in the US 'as a manual', a court heard. Dylan Earl, 20, has admitted orchestrating an arson attack on an east London warehouse and plotting to burn down Mayfair businesses, kidnapping their Russian dissident owner last year, following help from the Russian-backed terrorist group. On Thursday, jurors at the Old Bailey saw a chat between Earl, of Elmesthorpe, Leicestershire, and a Wagner Group contact identified by the handle Privet Bot on Telegram. The day before the arson attack, Privet Bot instructed Earl to watch the television series The Americans, about KGB agents undercover in the US, 'in order to understand work'. Privet Bot said: 'The idea is like that. You need to organise partisan cells in the country and in Europe and think of a name for your movement. We'll give you support... 'Watch this series. It will be your manual. You'll have a source of funding through organising arsons.' The court has heard how Earl allegedly roped in Jake Reeves, 23, from Croydon, London, to help recruit people to carry out the arson attack on the warehouse. Earl also revealed his plans to Ashton Evans, 20, from Newport, Gwent, on Signal, Snapchat and mobile phone messages, it is alleged. They had initially communicated about drug dealing, with Earl adopting the name of a notorious Russian 'hitman', the court was told. Mr Evans was allegedly aware that Earl had orchestrated the warehouse arson attack. Three days after the fire, which caused £1 million of damage, Mr Evans asked: 'Did you light it up?' the court was told. They went on to discuss the plot to burn down Hide restaurant and Hedonism wine shop in Mayfair, snatch the owner and hand him over to Russia. Earl warned there would be a 'good amount of heat after this' and it would be 'on every news channel and radio in our country'. Mr Evans allegedly replied: 'Yes, I can sort if there is a way we can do so without people getting hurt cause that's when the police will take very very serious - like [terror] level serious.' Stressing the need for security, Earl told him: 'It will be a huge thing and every single spy agency trying to find who did it so careful ok.' Mr Evans agreed that it would 'bring a lot of attention MI5 etc', the court heard. On April 1 2024, Earl asked Mr Evans to delete their chats and asked if he could make connections with the IRA or the Irish Kinahan crime family. Earl suggested he wanted to 'build a link' between the Kinahans and Russia, saying: 'We have direct connection to the Kremlin, we can do suin [something] big.' After his arrest, Mr Evans claimed he did not take the chat seriously, having jokingly told Earl: 'And this is all in mine craft, right?' He also claimed in a police interview that he was just stringing Earl along to get a refund for £300 of fake cocaine he had bought, the court was told. Earl and Reeves have pleaded guilty to aggravated arson of the east London warehouse and an offence under the National Security Act. The court was told that Reeves had revealed details of their plans to another contact, Dmitrijus Paulauskas, having described Earl as 'Russian mafia'. On the kidnap plot, Reeves allegedly told Mr Paulauskas that the idea was to 'get him sent back to Russia for imprisonment'. Paulauskas, 23, from Croydon, allegedly responded to Wagner Group activity on UK soil with glee, saying: 'I'm so f------ gassed cos that means the west has already have already u r allowed to call urself (sic) Russian now.' The defendant, who was later to claim that he took none of it seriously, allegedly responded to the warehouse attack by saying: 'Holy f--- so Wagner literally has UK gangs doing their work.' Shortly before their arrests, the men pondered why Earl – 'the Russian guy' – had not been on Snapchat for five days. Mr Paulauskas suggested he was busy in his job 'sabotaging UK'. Prosecutor Duncan Penny KC told jurors that by then Earl had been in custody for nine days. He said: 'The position is clear: Reeves told Mr Paulauskas about the plan to kidnap the target, who had sent money to Ukraine and who was to be sent back to Russia, and about the fact that the attack on the east London warehouse.' Mr Penny added that the realisation there was foreign interference by the Wagner group on British soil through the use of 'UK criminals as proxies', seemed to have been a matter of 'quite some pleasure' to Mr Paulauskas. Mr Evans and Mr Paulauskas have each denied two charges of failing to disclose information about terrorist acts, which they deny.

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