
Teenagers discover human remains on Lancashire beach
A spokesman for the force thanked the "teenagers who reported this to us for their assistance and to the members of the public for their patience while our officers carried out their duties".Officers have appealed for anyone with information about the remains to contact them.
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The Guardian
18 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Nicola Sturgeon says facing criminal inquiry was like ‘mental torture'
Nicola Sturgeon has described the time she faced criminal investigation over her ex-husband's alleged fraudulent activities as 'like a form of mental torture'. In an excerpt from her upcoming memoir, Frankly, the former first minister of Scotland vividly recounts the despair she felt when police raided their Glasgow home in April 2023 and arrested her partner, Peter Murrell, over misuse of party finances. Murrell, a former Scottish National party (SNP) chief executive, was initially released but then charged in 2024 with embezzlement in relation to £660,000 of party donations. His case is ongoing. Sturgeon faced police questioning but was never charged and has since been exonerated of all wrongdoing. In March this year, she was told she faced no further action in Police Scotland's fraud inquiry. In her book, excerpts of which were published in the Times on Friday, she describes her shock over the police raid in April 2023, the 'utter disbelief that … police were in my home, that they had a warrant to arrest my husband and search the house'. She felt creeping anxiety and dread in the weeks after Murrell's arrest, waiting for police to question her, and when they did arrest her, she was 'horrified and devastated, though also relieved in a strange sort of way. 'At least the ordeal of waiting was over.' Sturgeon had stepped down from her post just months earlier in February 2023, citing burnout. After her police interview in June, she was released pending investigation and sought refuge at a friend's home in the north-east of Scotland. The arrests had made her feel as if she 'had fallen into the plot of a dystopian novel'. Investigations into her actions as party chief continued for more than a year, and she says she felt frightened despite knowing she had done nothing wrong. 'I retain both faith in and respect for our country's criminal justice system. However, none of that changes this fact: being the subject of a high-profile criminal investigation for almost two years, especially having committed no crime, was like a form of mental torture.' She writes that she felt 'overwhelming' relief when authorities informed her this year she was no longer a suspect. The excerpts also offer a window into the veteran politician's thoughts on parenthood and the deep grief she felt upon having a miscarriage in 2010, at the age of 40. She had never had any great desire to be a parent, and that when she did fall pregnant she was 'deeply conflicted' due to her work. 'In my stupid, work-obsessed mind the timing couldn't have been worse. By the Scottish election, I would be six months pregnant. It may seem hard to believe now, but even in 2010 it wasn't obvious how voters would react to a heavily pregnant candidate,' she wrote. But she knew her husband, Peter, would be overjoyed to be a father and he was 'ecstatic' to learn the news, she wrote. However, upon telling doctor about noticing 'spots of blood', she had an urgent appointment at Glasgow Royal Infirmary the following day. 'I think I'd known in my heart what the outcome would be, but I was still hoping for the best,' she wrote. After four days of 'constant agony, the most excruciating pain I have ever experienced', the pregnancy 'passed'. 'I had the presence of mind to call Peter into the bathroom and, together, we flushed our 'baby' down the toilet,' Sturgeon said. 'We later resolved to try again, but I knew then that we had lost our one chance. 'Later, what I would feel most guilty about were the days I had wished I wasn't pregnant,' she wrote. 'There's still a part of me that sees what happened as my punishment for that.' She writes that she had been expecting a baby girl whom she would have named her Isla. 'I do deeply regret not getting the chance to be Isla's mum.' Sturgeon announced in March this year she would stand down as an MSP at the next Scottish parliament election, expected in 2026. Frankly will be published on Thursday 14 August.


The Sun
19 minutes ago
- The Sun
Britain has become a country in which secrecy flourishes and free speech is under threat… JD Vance is right
Cry freedom BRITAIN has become a country in which secrecy flourishes and free speech is under threat. So we owe thanks to US Vice-President JD Vance for pointing this out to Foreign Secretary David Lammy yesterday. Vance has been a long-standing critic of the UK's creeping attacks on cherished freedoms. The sweeping new Online Safety Act has already seen political speech censored online. Attempts by the authorities to cover up the background of suspects accused of horrific crimes, or cops going mob-handed to make arrests over ' hurty tweets ', are other depressing examples. At his meeting with Lammy, Vance warned against governments becoming too keen to censor opinions which they don't like, or they disagree with. He is right that this is a 'very dark path' indeed... and one which we continue down at our peril. No, minister The resignation of Homelessness Minister Rushanara Ali is symptomatic of Labour's first year in power. Sir Keir Starmer at least acted quickly to get Ali to fall on her sword. Her position was untenable from the moment we learned she had booted out one group of tenants on the basis the house was being sold — only to soon rent it to somebody else for a jacked-up sum. The PM can't personally be blamed for that woeful misjudgment. But he has now lost a homelessness minister over housing; an anti-corruption minister over allegations of corruption; a health minister over a WhatsApp scandal; and a Transport Secretary over fraud claims in a previous job. Ministerial resignations are part and parcel of governing. VANCE ONSLAUGHT Trump's No2 blasts UK over free speech & attacks Europe on immigration But to have so many in barely a year is more than just embarrassing for the PM. It makes an outright mockery of his solemn promise to 'end the chaos'. More delivery THE scandal of migrants being allowed to work openly and illegally on the black market has been going on far too long. The Sun's expose of migrants in asylum hotels breaking the law by working for the likes of Deliveroo and UberEats has finally led to a crackdown by the Government. Hundreds of arrests have been made across the UK in the last week. But there are still plenty of e-bikes parked up outside the scores of taxpayer-funded hotels nationwide. The raids must continue.


The Sun
19 minutes ago
- The Sun
Gardener wrongly accused of making bomb threat to school over Welsh accent mix-up
A GARDENER was wrongly accused of making a bomb threat to a school — when the receptionist misunderstood his Welsh accent. James Morgan asked if any of the primary children would be 'back home or in school' as he worked nearby. But owing to his quick speaking and thick accent, the receptionist thought he said 'bomb in school', a court heard. She told the head, who called 999. Police evacuated Badbury Park Primary in Swindon in February. Staff and nearby residents were allowed back six hours later after the all-clear. The city's crown court heard Morgan, 36, rang to ask if he had time to litter-pick in a nearby park before children left school. Prosecutor Nicholas Mather said the receptionist heard Morgan say 'bomb in the school' before hanging up. But Morgan said he ended the 31-second call after it became apparent that she could not make out what he was saying. A jury took two hours to find Morgan, of Marlborough, Wilts, not guilty of intentionally communicating false information. Hot air balloon crashes into UK primary school at international festival 1