
'Brave' South Shields father and son shopkeepers stopped robbers
The pair entered the shop at about 20:00 GMT on 17 November and demanded money, prosecutor Ian Cook said.The shopkeepers, an adult father and son, were "showing some bravery" when they tackled and "got the better" of the robbers, Mr Cook said.
'Particularly unpleasant'
In statements read to the court, the shop owners said they were now fearful of future robberies and the risk that posed to their younger relatives who regularly worked there.They had also spent a lot of money installing new security measures including a £70 a month panic button alarm system, the court heard.In mitigation, the court heard both men were living in a hostel at the time, were fuelled by drink and were "deeply ashamed" of their actions.Recorder Peter Makepeace KC said it was a "particularly unpleasant" crime which had had an ongoing impact on the victims.He said the shopkeepers had shown "courage" but their fears for their younger workers were understandable.Both Robson and Brown were also made subject to restraining orders banning them from contacting the two victims or going to the shop for 10 years.
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Daily Mirror
2 days ago
- Daily Mirror
'I unknowingly handed my daughter to man accused of abusing kids at daycare'
An Australian father of three is searching for answers over the care given to his children after recognising an alleged sex offender as his daughter's childcare worker A father of three has told of his anguish after he realised he handed his little girl over to an alleged sex offender. It comes after outrage among hundreds of parents whose infants are now being tested for infectious diseases. The father from Melbourne, Australia, discovered the horrifying connection to the childcare centre his children attended in 2023 after hearing of the news on Wednesday. Joshua Brown, 26, who has been charged with more than 70 offences, worked at a total of 20 childcare centres over an eight-year period between January 2017 and May 2025. The horrified father recognised Brown as a male childcare worker during a police investigation that has since widened to dozens of families. He told AAP: "I dropped off my child into his hands a couple of times." The troubled father is 'desperate' for answers over the care given to his children in 2023 at Creative Garden Early Learning Centre in Point Cook, Melbourne. Authorities ordered infants from more than 20 centres to undergo tests for possible exposure to infectious diseases. He said: "I'm a bit worried, I (need) to find out everything." He said he saw Brown supervising his children in the classroom, "where I dropped my children". With two of his kids possibly at risk, he is seeking urgent clarity. Brown was arrested in May after police raided his residence in Melbourne's south-western suburb of Point Cook and allegedly found child abuse material. He has been charged with crimes including sexual penetration and attempted penetration of children under 12, producing child abuse material, and 'recklessly contaminating goods to cause alarm or anxiety'. The charges concern eight alleged victims aged between five months and two years, all enrolled at the Point Cook centre from April 2022 to January 2023. Authorities are now urging more than 1,200 affected families to have their infants screened, intensifying public concern about safety and accountability within early childhood settings. Education Minister Jason Clare for the State of Victoria has dismissed calls to ban men from childcare roles, citing separate allegations involving female staff. He told Channel Nine's Today Show: "I don't think that's going to be the solution here." One parent of a child who attended the Point Cook centre from 2021 to 2023 said the official response was a concern, adding: "There's a lot of stress, it's very distressing." Brown had no prior record with police before this investigation, held a valid working-with-children check, and faced no prior formal complaints. In response to the scandal, the state has launched an urgent child safety review, introduced a national register for early childhood educators, and announced a ban on phones in childcare facilities effective September. Calls are mounting for change, including mandatory CCTV in all early years settings and overhauled background checks for educators.

The National
2 days ago
- The National
Rage at Kneecap but not Chris Brown is Scotland's national shame
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That in itself should have been the end of him, he should never have worked in the music industry for another day in his life – but it wasn't. He did that to Rihanna – one of the most famous, powerful women in the entire world – and his career survived. It was only the beginning of a campaign of abuse that now spans the last 16 years. He smashed a window at Good Morning America when asked about the Rihanna incident. He physically attacked rapper Frank Ocean over a parking space. He was kicked out of rehab – a facility he was in by way of court order for anger management purposes – for throwing a rock through his own mum's car window. In 2016, he was arrested for pulling a gun on a woman after just months earlier being accused of beating a separate woman and taking her phone. In 2017, his ex-partner, Karrueche Tran, filed a restraining order detailing how he had physically beat her, threatened to kill her and went on to stalk her for years after they had parted ways. He has been sued multiple times for assault. A campaign of abuse spanning fans, employees, personal relationships – this isn't a smear campaign, it's a pattern. READ MORE: Arrests after brawl erupts at Chris Brown's Glasgow gig In 2018, he was sued for a violent sexual assault and settled the case privately. More recently, a 2022 lawsuit accused him of drugging and raping a woman on a yacht in Miami and in 2023 he was sued once again for allegedly hitting a man with a tequila bottle until he became unconscious – he was only just granted conditional bail for this incident in the last couple of weeks. This isn't reform, this is a pattern and it is one of a violent abuser who uses his power and resources to evade the consequences. And it's the fault, at least in small part, to the people who queued up to listen to him sing Forever because they couldn't resist the nostalgia. I grew up in the Chris Brown era. At one time I would have called myself a fan – I loved his early music. But since when did a few good songs supersede our fundamental morals? Or is it just that they're so flimsy we can pause them when the allure of nostalgia comes knocking and re-employ them afterwards? If it's the latter, then those morals never existed in the first place. Chris Brown is currently touring in the UK, while out on conditional bail (Image: PA) The fact that the majority of the crowd was women makes this even harder to swallow. Our subordination to misogyny and our refusal to deny it power is damaging to no one but our own gender. In fact, it depends on our subordination to thrive – and thriving it is. Brown's career should have ended in 2009. Failing that, it should have ended almost every year since with each passing allegation. Instead, he's selling out our national stadium, and that of other countries, to a baying audience of adoring fans as though the people he hurt don't matter. And what of the message this sends to survivors? If your abuser is famous enough, rich enough, talented enough, then your pain doesn't matter? If abuse can be excused for the rich and famous, it can be excused for the everyday person too. This isn't just about Brown. It's about a wider culture that rewards powerful men for being predators, and teaches young men that violating women and exuding rage will serve you well in life. Every time you stream one of Brown's songs, or buy tickets for his embarrassment of a tour or even share it on your social media, you're telling survivors, particularly those in your own life, that their abuse is forgettable and forgivable. It's not. READ MORE: David Pratt: In a dangerous era journalism needs to show some backbone again Brown won't notice you were at Hampden. He doesn't know your name, and he doesn't care that you like his music. But the women in your life who have survived abuse or lived in fear of a man like him do. 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And not even a month after our First Minister said that Kneecap shouldn't perform at TRNSMT. So, we draw the line at anti-genocide campaigns but not at campaigns of violent, misogynistic abuse? We need to give our heads a wobble. I don't think it's possible to separate the art from the artist. The artist is the art, whether we like it or not. It might not always be a comfortable realisation, but realistically, not being able to dance to a song you liked 15 years ago is hardly a sacrifice in the face of what Brown's victims have endured. If we want to be the kind of country we say we are, we need to do far better than this.


Scottish Sun
2 days ago
- Scottish Sun
Arrests for violence at Chris Brown's Hampden gig
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