logo
Otley Run pub crawl crossbow attack raises route safety fear

Otley Run pub crawl crossbow attack raises route safety fear

BBC News09-05-2025

People living near a popular pub crawl route have called for it to be recognised as an official event so that it can be made safer, after two women were injured in a crossbow attack.The victims, aged 19 and 31, were hurt on the route of the Otley Run in Headingley, Leeds, on 26 April. Both have since been discharged from hospital.At a meeting on Thursday night, politicians and residents called for stricter crowd control and suggested pubs could be asked to pay a fee towards extra policing.Dale Ellis, who lives nearby, said about 4,000 people took part in the pub crawl each weekend and visitors' behaviour was "progressively getting worse".
The 19-stop pub crawl has been around for decades and regularly attracts thousands of revellers, often wearing fancy dress.Last month, the three-mile route became the target of a violent attack in which two women were injured.The key suspect, Owen Lawrence, 38, was later arrested and died in hospital of self-inflicted injuries.
While the Otley Run had already been the subject of regular discussion among residents, April's attack brought safety issues as well as "easy access" to crossbows into sharp focus.However, speaking to the BBC on Saturday, people on the pub crawl argued the current issue to debate was a rise in misogynistic views online.A meeting held at St Michael Church in Headingley on Thursday was initially called to address community concerns, but was dominated by discussion of the pub crawl.Insp Carl Robinson from West Yorkshire Police told the meeting one police officer and one police community support officer would be allocated to the Otley Run each weekend as a minimum, often with requests for more.
Ms Ellis, who attended the meeting, said she found those numbers "crazy"."We have about 4,000 people coming every weekend and we've been told that we have two police officers," she said.She said she was unable to have her nieces and nephews to stay because she "can't explain to a nine-year-old why Batman is punching Spider-Man and shouting horrible things at him"."I think we are very, very lucky that something like what happened two weeks ago hasn't happened before," she said."I want people to have a lovely time and that's not what we are trying to stop."But she said she wanted to "address the responsibility of the council, the police, the lack of resource and funding that we have to be able to police the situation better and make everyone safer".
In the past, the Otley Run was mainly frequented by locals and students.But it quickly grew in popularity, with a huge surge in visitors reported following the end of the coronavirus pandemic.Now people from all over the country come to take part and residents said they often had to deal with noise, litter and crowds blocking the pavements and their front doors.Lesley Jeffries said she usually avoided picking up her grandchildren or going about her daily tasks on a Saturday."You just don't want to be around it," she said."Most of the people on the Otley Run are having fun but they don't see you, they don't see an old lady walking along with her shopping."I've had my shopping knocked out of my hand, not in malice but just because they are shouting at their mate up the road."Residents like Ms Jeffries and Ms Ellis said they hoped the Otley Run could be recognised as an event to better protect those taking part.
However, as it was not a recognised event, bringing in event laws to monitor it would be challenging, MP for Leeds Central and Headingley, Alex Sobel, told the meeting.Sobel acknowledged the size of the Otley Run had "got out of hand", adding: "We need to look at the laws we have and tightening them, bringing more control to the Otley Run."Sobel said one possibility would be to introduce a fee to be paid by the businesses and used to fund policing and support safety."What would be best is if the pubs themselves voluntarily started to pay into a fund, to show willing," he said."There are 17 of them on the route, we know how much money, more or less, they make on a Saturday, it would be a very small amount of profit to contribute towards the policing of the event."
Leeds councillor Jonathan Pryor agreed that venues needed to accept responsibility for keeping people safe."I think we want to be really clear that the incident that happened in Headingley a few weeks ago isn't down to them at all, it's down to that individual that did it," he said."But at the same time we need to make sure the venues across the area are playing their part in keeping people, who come and do the Otley Run, safe."
Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Two dead after car falls 300ft off cliff at beauty spot
Two dead after car falls 300ft off cliff at beauty spot

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Two dead after car falls 300ft off cliff at beauty spot

Two people have died after a car plunged 300ft off a cliff at a beauty spot. Police, ambulance crews, firefighters and the Coastguard rushed to the scene at Alum Bay in the Isle of Wight just before 7.30pm on Friday. Hampshire Police said in a statement at the time: 'We're currently at the scene of a serious incident in Totland. 'We were called at 7.21pm this evening after a car, which was being driven along Alum Bay New Road, left the road, came off the cliff top and came to rest in the water below.' Pictures of the aftermath show the grey vehicle submerged in water. A member of the Coastguard can be seen searching the shore around the car, which had its bonnet and roof crumpled. A man was hauled to shore and given CPR. On Sunday, police confirmed to Isle of Wight County Press that both victims have been pronounced dead. A spokesman said: 'Formal identification has yet to take place, but their next of kin have been notified. 'As part of the ongoing investigation into the incident, on behalf of the coroner, officers have been carrying out enquiries at an address on Arctic Road, Cowes.' Detectives were carrying out searches at an address in Cowes earlier on Sunday.

Nottingham victim's parent complain about ‘offensive' IOPC meeting
Nottingham victim's parent complain about ‘offensive' IOPC meeting

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Nottingham victim's parent complain about ‘offensive' IOPC meeting

The family of a student killed in the Nottingham attacks have formally complained to the police watchdog over an 'offensive' meeting with one of its directors. Valdo Calocane killed Grace O'Malley-Kumar, Barnaby Webber and Ian Coates in a spate of attacks in the city in June 2023. He was sentenced to an indefinite hospital order after pleading guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility as a result of paranoid schizophrenia and three counts of attempted murder. It was announced in February that prosecutors, police and medical professionals would be scrutinised in the two-year inquiry, including the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC). Grace's father, Dr Sanjoy Kumar, said that an IOPC regional director had behaved inappropriately when the bereaved families met the watchdog in March 2024, including by starting the meeting with a prayer. 'I found it patronising and offensive,' Kumar told the Sunday Times. 'I didn't want a prayer, I wanted answers. I've lost my daughter and it was his job to give me the truth, not a prayer. 'There are plenty of places to pray and the IOPC isn't one of them.' The regional director at the meeting, Derrick Campbell, is now the watchdog's director of engagement, the newspaper reported. An IOPC spokesperson said: 'We can confirm we've received a complaint about one of our directors and we are dealing with it in line with our complaints and feedback procedure.' The watchdog previously prepared a report that concluded Leicestershire police officers had failed to properly investigate an assault on warehouse workers by Calocane which could have stopped his killing spree a month later. Three officers were due to face a misconduct meeting but the force postponed this. In March, the IOPC said it would reinvestigate whether Calocane's previous history and an outstanding arrest warrant were seen by officers before the investigation was closed down. The watchdog said it had made its decision 'after the force provided new evidence, which had not previously been available to the IOPC' and 'representations by the bereaved families which led to further inquiries with Leicestershire police'.

Migrants, lawyers, smuggling gangs and the French cash in – while Brits are left to foot the bill
Migrants, lawyers, smuggling gangs and the French cash in – while Brits are left to foot the bill

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Migrants, lawyers, smuggling gangs and the French cash in – while Brits are left to foot the bill

Gloom service THE Left has preached for years about how mass migration benefits the cultural and economic vitality of our nation. But it seems the main people it enriches are human rights lawyers, hotel owners, criminal gangs and the French authorities. 1 Official figures lay bare the eye-watering cost of Britain's broken borders, funded directly from the wage packets of hard-working taxpayers. French police, given £480million of your cash to stop people-traffickers, stand and watch as more and more people climb aboard small boats to cross the Channel. — nearly 3,000 more than at the very end of the Tories' time in office — are currently housed in 210 hotels at a cost of £4.7million a day. And that isn't even anywhere near the extent of the burden on taxpayers, as there are even more migrants being put up in non-hotel accommodation. There's little chance of the illegals among them being booted out any time soon, either. Lawyers claiming £1million a week in taxpayer-funded legal aid to mount endless appeals will see to that. Labour won power after pledging to ' smash the gangs ' and 'end asylum hotels'. Yet illegal migrant numbers — and the bill — keep on soaring. Patience is wearing thin. Sir Keir Starmer must stop the boats, or lose the votes of millions who supported him only last year. An easy call PARENTS are finding it increasingly difficult to protect their children from risks posed by smartphones. One in four kids spends more than four hours a day online and many secretly use social media during lessons and in bed. Hull residents react to migrants living in iconic hotel So it is a welcome step for ministers to consider a daily two-hour limit for under-16s and a 10pm watershed. But what are they waiting for? They can start in schools by giving teachers clear guidance — and power — to ban phones in classrooms. Not much cop They could save millions if they stopped sending officers to arrest law-abiding citizens who post 'hurty' comments on social media.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store