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Bus driver stabbing: Derek Thomas killed in 'frenzied attack'

Bus driver stabbing: Derek Thomas killed in 'frenzied attack'

BBC Newsa day ago

A man murdered the father of his former partner in a "frenzied" knife attack after an argument with his ex, a court has heard.Kamar Williams, 34, stabbed bus driver Derek Thomas, 55, from Stoke Newington, north-west London, who was on his way home from work, his Old Bailey trial was told. He denies murder.Prosecutor Anthony Orchard KC said that on 30 July Mr Williams had been out looking for Mr Thomas's daughter Carron, who was his former girlfriend, but had failed to find her.A WhatsApp discussion to sort out domestic arrangements after their break-up had become abusive and "tempers appeared to become frayed," Mr Orchard said.
'Easier target'
The same night as the messages were sent, Mr Williams was allegedly driving his van near the Thomas family home when he saw Carron's father carrying a bag of shopping, on his way home from work.Witnesses described seeing a man stop his van in the middle of the road, get out, and attack Mr Thomas before returning to his vehicle and driving away.The bus driver, who worked for Go-Ahead London, had been stabbed five times with a large knife.He was pronounced dead at the scene, in Northwold Road, Stoke Newington, less than half an hour later.Mr Orchard said: "The breakdown of the defendant's relationship with Carron Thomas appears to have been the trigger for [the defendant's] actions.""He went out looking for Ms Thomas but was unsuccessful. He decided on an easier target, her father."There can be no doubt the attacker was the defendant. Mr Thomas was struck by the knife on five occasions in what was a frenzied attack."Mr Thomas must have been terrified."The defendant made a "determined attempt to avoid arrest" in the weeks after the attack before being arrested on 26 August at the Notting Hill Carnival, the court heard.
Mr Williams, of Cuba Street, Tower Hamlets, east London, also denies a charge of having an article with a blade or point.The trial, which is expected to last four weeks, continues.

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PSNI chief warns rioters ‘we will arrest you'
PSNI chief warns rioters ‘we will arrest you'

The Independent

time8 minutes ago

  • The Independent

PSNI chief warns rioters ‘we will arrest you'

Northern Ireland's police chief has warned 'bigots and racists' behind three nights of disorder in the region that his officers will be coming after them. Jon Boutcher said a young girl who was the victim of an alleged sexual assault in Ballymena at the weekend, an incident that triggered protests that descended into violence in the Co Antrim town, had been 'further traumatised' by the rioting since Monday. Forty-one officers have been injured in the unrest, which had resulted in 15 arrests by Thursday evening. Mr Boutcher, who met the girl's family on Thursday, delivered a stark message to the rioters as he spoke to the media in Belfast after a meeting with his oversight body, the Northern Ireland Policing Board. 'Stop this violence,' he said. 'We will come after you. We will arrest you. We will prosecute you successfully. It is not in any way a way for a civilised society to behave and it must stop now.' He said the family was 'mortified' by the disorder. 'This girl's family and this girl want it to end. Our communities want it to end. We need it to end. So please don't come out on the streets tonight. If you do, we will police you and we will deal with you through the criminal justice system.' After the warning, gatherings in several towns proceeded largely without any major disturbance by 9pm on Thursday. A significant police presence had been deployed to Ballymena and Portadown but there was no initial repeat of the violence of previous nights. Police said a separate protest in east Belfast also ended early in the evening. The riotous behaviour earlier in the week saw vandalism, vehicles burned and arson attacks on a number of properties across several towns. Petrol bombs, fireworks, masonry and a hatchet were among items thrown at officers. Police responded with water cannon, dogs and plastic baton rounds in an attempt to disperse crowds during riots in Ballymena. Mr Boutcher said: 'I want to specifically mention the 41 police officers who've been injured. Each of those officers have put themselves in harm's way to protect our communities. 'And I want to send a very clear message to all our diverse communities: we stand absolutely shoulder to shoulder with you. We are here to protect you. 'We are your police service, and these bigots and racists will not win the day. This will be policed properly. We will deal with this – and we all know that in this room – but let's call an end to it now.' The PSNI chief said the initial lawful and legitimate process before unrest broke out was done in a way that was responsible and empathetic to the victim. However, he said the protest was subsequently 'hijacked' and turned into 'wanton, disgraceful criminal behaviour that is absolutely race motivated'. The chief said the service was under-resourced and needed to be funded 'properly' rather than 'disgracefully'. However, he said his officers would still bring people to justice: 'We've put our public order inquiry team together, we'll be releasing images of those responsible. We will be going after them.' Mr Boutcher said 80 public-order officers from Scotland came to the region on Thursday to support policing efforts. The head officer described how PSNI members helped evacuate foreign national families who were hiding in attics and wardrobes in their homes in Ballymena as rioters went on the rampage on Monday night. He said the families targeted had done nothing wrong. 'They are not criminals. They contribute positively to society here and are well integrated,' he said. 'Fire Service colleagues described how they went to the scenes to stop arson attacks at those addresses, and how they, in all their years in the Fire Service, have not seen levels of violence to that level, and told me specifically and directly of the bravery, the courage of a very thin green line of police officers that without doubt, in my view, saved lives that night.' Earlier, a judge warned that courts will deal 'robustly' with those involved in violence in Ballymena. District Judge Nigel Broderick warned that young people who got involved were risking a significant custodial sentence as three teenagers faced rioting charges at the town's magistrates' court on Thursday. Michael Elliot, 18, of Lanntara, Ballymena, and two youths were the first defendants to appear in court since the sustained violence erupted in the Co Antrim town on Monday. Meanwhile, two other teenage boys who were arrested during the disorder have been released on bail to allow for further police inquiries. Secretary of State Hilary Benn described the scenes as 'mindless racist thuggery' while Stormont Justice Minister Naomi Long said it has been a 'three-day festival of hate and destruction' which needs to stop before someone loses their life. Thirty minutes from Ballymena, a leisure centre in Larne was subjected to arson after temporarily being used as an emergency shelter for those in urgent need following disturbances in the town earlier in the week. Communities Minister Gordon Lyons, who highlighted the use of the building in a social media post, said all those who had been staying at the leisure centre are in the care of the Housing Executive and have been moved out of Larne. Northern Ireland's First Minister Michelle O'Neill said Mr Lyons should resign over his social media post while the leader of the opposition in the Northern Ireland Assembly SDLP MLA Matthew O'Toole said he would refer the Communities Minister to the standards commission. Mr Benn also asked the minister to 'reflect upon his words' and 'not upon his position'. Mr Lyons has resisted calls for his resignation and said he would 'strongly hit back at any notion' that he had publicly revealed the facility was being used to house immigrant families who had been affected by violence in Ballymena.

As violent thugs riot & ‘turn UK town into Iraq', locals claim unchecked migrants have been ‘dumped on their doorstep'
As violent thugs riot & ‘turn UK town into Iraq', locals claim unchecked migrants have been ‘dumped on their doorstep'

The Sun

time18 minutes ago

  • The Sun

As violent thugs riot & ‘turn UK town into Iraq', locals claim unchecked migrants have been ‘dumped on their doorstep'

WITH petrol bombs lighting up the night sky and fireworks crackling over head, Ballymena was ablaze once again. Balaclava-clad thugs hurled bricks, rocks and bottles — anything they could get their hands on — against a barricade of police Land Rover Tangis standing in their way. 12 12 Riot officers blocking access to Bridge Street retaliated with water cannon and baton rounds. But the dense crowd that had gathered outside Dreams department store only seemed more excited by the nightmare spectacle, whooping and taking pictures with their phones as spy drones hovered overhead. This was the third night of anti- immigration protests in Northern ­Ireland and residents said it was a flashback to the worst days of the Troubles, when sectarian violence caused regular clashes with police. Terrified Karen Portas, 54, said: 'I haven't seen anything like it since the 1970s and 1980s. I was scared for my life last night. 'I felt like I was living in Iraq with everything smashing and burning. 'The noise started at around ­midnight. I looked out of my window and saw a load of boys in balaclavas wielding baseball bats. 'These were young boys, just 14 to 15, but they were setting fire to houses without a care for who was inside — setting fire to homes owned by white people — and the police didn't do a thing, so it's no wonder the young people are not scared of them. 'When they unleashed the water cannon, they started cheering like they were at a water park.' 'The lid came off' Karen, who is retired on medical grounds, lives in the Clonavon Terrace area of Ballymena, which became the focus of the carnage this week. Rioting erupted after a young girl was allegedly sexually assaulted by two 14-year-old boys, who were charged with attempted rape and then asked for a Romanian translator when they appeared at Coleraine Magistrates' Court. Homes TORCHED & missiles thrown at cops as riots break out in UK town over 'sex attack' A peaceful protest began on ­Monday night then turned ugly as locals complained they were having foreigners and migrants 'dumped' on their doorstep in record numbers. A total of 15 officers were injured during clashes and four homes — including those of the alleged perpetrators — were attacked that night. On Tuesday, more officers were injured and more homes set alight as the violence spread to other towns. Gangs of feral masked teenagers returned to the streets on Wednesday, their mindless antics streamed across countless channels on social media. Cradling her dog TJ as she stood on the shattered glass outside her home, Karen said tensions with the Roma community lay behind the appalling scenes. She said: 'I understand the anger. If it was my daughter that had been attacked, I don't know what I would do. 'People feel the Government is sending migrants here without any fact-checking. 'There are lots of Roma people now and the women and children are lovely, in my experience. 12 12 'It's the men that are the problem. They put their furniture in the street and the way they leer at you when you walk past is disgusting. 'My daughter tells me they've opened brothels and girls are trafficked here to work in them. "There's a garage down that alleyway where they drink and take drugs and make noise throughout the night. It's not acceptable, and this used to be a lovely place to live. 'But I'm one of the only Irish ­people left here now.' Ballymena was still littered with riot debris on Wednesday, after many newcomers from Bulgaria, Poland and the Philippines decided to flee. Smashed and boarded-up windows, gutted ­terraced houses and the charred outlines of torched cars could be seen across town, showing how the chaos had ­escalated. Cowering residents had taken to sticking Union Jacks to their doors, some even placing signs such as 'Filipino lives here', to deter further attacks. As rumours spread that Unionist paramilitaries were behind the rampage, Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn condemned what he termed ' racist violence '. But DUP councillor Lawrie Philpott insisted the clashes were an inevitable reaction to years of unchecked migration. He told The Sun: 'Protest is the wrong word. It was a gathering of about 5,000 people from across Northern Ireland who wanted to show their disgust at what is going on. 'The pot has boiled and it went bang — the lid came off. The issue is that you can't find affordable housing to live in and when you go to the government to ask for help, you're given the brush-off. And this all stems from Westminster. 'If someone arrives here as an illegal immigrant or as a legal migrant, they will be given priority as the system will bend over backwards to find them housing. 'That's wrong and this is simmering across the whole of the province and across the UK. 'I see this going like a domino and it is mob rule and thuggery, but this is not racism. People feel they have nowhere else to go and what do you do when you're stuck in a corner? You come out fighting. 'I'm a Ballymena man and this used to be 100 per cent British. The demographic started to change just five or seven years ago and people are angry.' Situated in County Antrim, 25 miles north west of Belfast, Ballymena was where Unionist firebrand Ian Paisley, who died aged 88 in 2014, grew up. His spirit lives on with Union Jacks lining almost every street ahead of the annual marching parade season, which starts next month. The region is known as Northern Ireland's equivalent of the Bible Belt, where Protestantism is the dominant religion and 'drugs, the devil and debauchery' are abhorred. Pensioner Trevor Boyd, 77, was handing out Christian leaflets on Wednesday. He said: 'I'm here to tell people that Jesus loves everyone no matter where you are from. 'Ballymena is a good town and while there has always been tension between Protestants and Catholics, I have never seen anything like this in my life. 12 'The issue is there have been a lot of people ­moving into the area who are not working and the numbers have escalated in recent years. People think that's because of migrants crossing the Channel and it makes them angry. It became a bomb ­waiting to go off. 'It is like Southport in England. It just took this particular incident to start an explosion.' 'They're scared' Butcher Martin Scullion, 59, slammed the government in ­Westminster. He said: 'They're out of touch with what is going on here. The English don't give a flying toss about us. 'If they had their way, they'd get rid of us. 'The older generation and youngsters can't come out on the streets because they're scared of being molested and touched. "I'm not being racist, but it's getting worse. "I've heard there are gangs of Roma ­gypsies heading this way and filling up cans with fuel from the petrol ­station. "I don't know what they're planning, it's scary. 'I've run this butcher's shop for ten years and it was a different place back then. It was grand, you knew everybody. Last night was terrifying. We saw houses burning and people smashing the doors and throwing big rocks. Kristine, relocated from the Philippines 'You don't know who is on the streets now. 'I've had potatoes stolen from the shop and when the thief is arrested they say, 'I don't speak English'.' Baker Kristine Landicho, 40, lives in Ballymena with her husband Elizer and son Prince, 11, having relocated from Philippines capital Manila. She said: 'Last night was terrifying. We saw houses burning and people smashing the doors and throwing big rocks. "We've only been here for seven months. Before this it was quiet here and people were nice, but this week was scary. "The first night it was locals attacking the houses and the second night it was people from all over Northern Ireland. 'The second night was the worst because there were so many cars and houses on fire. 'They think we are all the same and they don't like mass migration. Luckily, they didn't attack our house. "I'm worried they will come for us again tonight. But as long as we are safe, we will keep living in Northern Ireland.' 12 12 12

Phoebe Bishop alleged murder: Details emerge about 'dead dogs' outside Gin Gin home
Phoebe Bishop alleged murder: Details emerge about 'dead dogs' outside Gin Gin home

Daily Mail​

time34 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Phoebe Bishop alleged murder: Details emerge about 'dead dogs' outside Gin Gin home

A haunting detail that emerged during the investigation into the alleged murder of Queensland teenager Pheobe Bishop was the discovery of dead dogs at the home of Tanika Bromley and James Wood where she was living. Pheobe, 17, went missing near Queensland's Bundaberg Airport about 8.30am on May 15 after booking a trip to WA to visit her boyfriend. Last Friday, officers discovered what were believed to be the teenager's remains near Goodnight Scrub National Park. The teen's housemates, James Wood, 34, and Tanika Bromley, 33, were charged with her murder, three weeks after she missed her flight and vanished. Police say they moved her body more than once. In the early days of the investigation, a stomach-churning stench came from the ramshackle Gin Gin house where Pheobe lived with Wood and Bromley, with neighbours saying as many as 11 of the animals had been discovered in the home. One local told Daily Mail Australia that they had been forced to close their windows and doors to block the smell of the rotting dogs as temperatures soared past 28C. Another neighbour said living next to Wood had become 'horrible' because the property became cluttered with rubbish and there had been noise from parties and a howling dog. Rumours of the dead animals quickly spread around the town and had an unsettling effect on locals. When Daily Mail Australia found James Wood living out of his car before he and his partner Bromley were charged with Pheobe's murder, an irate local even accused him of having a dead dog in the vehicle with him. 'There's a dead dog in the car,' the woman said. The dog in the car was alive, however, and was picked up from Bundaberg police station by Wood's parents after his arrest on Wednesday June 4. Wood had apparently made reference to the pup only days after Pheobe went missing, when he shared a Facebook post which mentioned 'One very lost sad little chonker puppa at home missing [Pheobe] like crazy'. But what was the explanation for the several dead dogs police found in the Gin Gin house? Last week, the truth behind the animals' deaths came to light when Wood admitted to a friend that the dogs were actually puppies that died of natural causes. In a text leaked to Daily Mail Australia, Wood was asked about it by a friend. Wood responded: 'They didn't get killed. There was 5 puppies out of a litter of 13 that contracted hookworm and passed before the treatment could work.' Puppies are particularly susceptible to hookworm, a intestinal parasite that affects dogs as well as humans. It's commonly inked to warmer climates and poor sanitation. Neither Wood nor Bromley appeared when the case of Pheobe's alleged murder was mentioned in Bundaberg Magistrates Court last Friday. They have not entered pleas and have been sent to jail on remand - Wood to Brisbane Correctional Centre, and Bromley to Brisbane Womens Correctional Centre. Dr Vincent Hurley, a criminologist at Macquarie University who was a NSW police officer and negotiator for 30 years, told Daily Mail Australia the pair would have to be housed in protective custody in order to prevent acts of 'convict justice' being carried out on them. 'In jail, those accused of murdering a child are held in even lower esteem than a police informant,' Dr Hurley said. 'Under the social norms of jails, they will have a target on their backs and hardened criminals will try to flog them within an inch of their life.' Dr Hurley also predicted that Bromley would have a more difficult time in a women's prison than her partner, Wood, in a men's facility. 'She'll be treated far worse than he will be,' he said. 'Some of the inmates will be mothers with children of similar ages to Pheobe.'

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