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Watch: Moment suspected gas explosion rips through Derbyshire house

Watch: Moment suspected gas explosion rips through Derbyshire house

Independenta day ago

Watch the moment a suspected gas explosion rips through house on a street in Derby.
Footage from a nearby home on Eden Street shows a huge blast rip through the terraced property on Tuesday (10 June), with a car driving along the road getting hit by a massive plume of smoke.
A man remains in hospital with serious injuries following the explosion. A dog was also injured and was rescued overnight by search teams, before being passed into the care of a vet.
Derbyshire Police confirmed that residents from 14 properties would have to stay away from their homes overnight for 'safety reasons'.
A joint police and fire investigation into the cause of the explosion began on Wednesday (9 June).

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Dad, 25, played on phone as he was quizzed over death of baby girl from ‘violent shaking,' murder trial hears
Dad, 25, played on phone as he was quizzed over death of baby girl from ‘violent shaking,' murder trial hears

The Sun

time37 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Dad, 25, played on phone as he was quizzed over death of baby girl from ‘violent shaking,' murder trial hears

A FATHER played on his phone in a "good mood" while being quizzed by cops over the death of his baby daughter, a court heard. Thomas Holford, 24, is accused of shaking his baby girl to death. 2 2 The five-week-old baby was rushed to Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother Hospital after the ordeal at her home in Ramsgate, Kent. Everleigh Stroud remained there in a vegetative state until she died over a year later in 2022 - aged 14 months. Her dad had been living with her 16-year-old mum at time and pleaded guilty to manslaughter in November last year. He denies murder and causing actual bodily harm. Everleigh's injuries, which ultimately led to her death in hospital on May 27, 2022, included catastrophic brain haemorrhages and multiple bone fractures. Jurors heard that while it is accepted by Holford that he inflicted them, he disputes the prosecution case that he intended to kill Everleigh - or cause her really serious harm. Holford also denies a charge of assault causing actual bodily harm. Canterbury Crown Court heard that mum Casey Stroud had left Everleigh in Holford's care while she went to stay with a friend on the night of April 20 to celebrate her birthday. When she returned, on the morning of her 17th birthday, she found her daughter grey in colour with marks on her face. While Everleigh was rushed to hospital, Holford was questioned by police in the family living room. But jurors heard that he was "very relaxed" and in "quite a good mood" while detailing the events of the previous night. He repeatedly used his phone, and at one point in a conversation, the first-time dad asked a sergeant to pick a game for him to download from his app store. PC Darren Smith, who recorded his interactions with Holford on his body-worn camera, told the court: "When he entered the room he seemed to be in quite a good mood. "He didn't seem to be showing any emotion. He was quite easily conversing with me." The court heard - and watched the footage - of Holford describing having fed Everleigh two or three times during the night and settling her to sleep. Holford said he recalled hearing her "whimper", but thought she was just dreaming. The dad said he didn't see any bruises on his daughter until a "very upset" Casey had woken him. He also referred to his low mood and an upcoming appointment with the community mental health team. Asked by prosecutor Eloise Marshall if the defendant's demeanour had changed during their conversation, PC Smith replied: "Not to any drastic amount." Ms Marshall then asked: "What was he actually doing while you were talking to him?" The officer responded: "Mainly playing on his mobile phone." In much of the footage, Holford could be seen holding the device between his hands. At one stage, Holford recalled how he feared he had swaddled Everleigh "quite tightly" when she whimpered. He then told PC Smith: "It's weird. Before I had a kid, I just thought 'kids are just kids'. "Then, you have a kid and it's like, 'Woah, step back'. It puts everything into perspective, doesn't it? "Before, I didn't feel like I had a purpose. I wasn't working. But now I feel everything has just fallen into place." Holford also revealed that he had smoked cannabis at around 10am the previous day, and would use it daily in the morning for a stomach issue. A small amount of herbal cannabis, along with a grinder, was found in the "untidy and crammed" bedroom he had shared with Casey and Everleigh. Holford was arrested and taken to Margate Police Station. PC Smith told the jury he heard the defendant "speaking freely" of how he was often told by his girlfriend on waking that he had been "verbally aggressive" towards her - but had no knowledge of doing so. Sgt Benjamin Patterson also gave evidence about his interactions with Holford, who he described as being "very interested in his phone, very relaxed and distant". During cross-examination, Holford's barrister, Jo Martin KC, suggested the dad's presentation could have been "a delayed reaction", which PC Smith agreed could be the case. However, when she suggested Holford had been talking "randomly" while in the custody cell, PC Smith replied: "He was calm the whole time I was with him. I couldn't work out his mindset at all. "Over the whole day, he was on a level. I don't remember seeing any emotion - something that seemed strange considering what had happened." Jurors also heard that in visits to the family home by health workers on March 30 and April 6, Casey said Holford was doing most of the night feeds so she could rest. It was also noted that he "really helped out" and was happy to do so. The trial continues.

Crime will be the next immigration. Politicians will be punished for it
Crime will be the next immigration. Politicians will be punished for it

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time38 minutes ago

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Crime will be the next immigration. Politicians will be punished for it

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Sadiq Khan has backed 'partial' cannabis decriminalisation, amid claims that policing the drug harms more than the substance itself. The way in which the Left tries to romanticise these criminals is if anything becoming more strident – we are told that in the wake of austerity and Covid, certain law-breakers are, deep down, troubled souls. Shoplifters and fare dodgers who are allegedly 'struggling with the cost of living' are the latest group to which any 'compassionate' society should turn a blind eye, the Left insist. This myth threatens to shake the foundations of our society by undermining the sacred principle that we are all equal under the law. There is only so far we can fall down this rehabilitation rabbit hole before triggering a crime surge. Labour is adamant that the Michael Howard school of tough sentencing has failed. It has opted to release offenders early and ignore our rotting prison estate. This is a terrible mistake. Even if prison isn't working in the sense that it isn't preventing ex-convicts from reoffending, policymakers should not use this as an excuse to avoid punishing those who break our laws. The answer to our failure to rehabilitate is not to allow criminals to escape punishment. In the most important sense, prison almost always 'works' by preventing somebody who is locked up from stealing or assaulting other people. True, rehabilitation can sometimes work wonders. I have spoken with ex offenders who have been transformed by such programmes. One woman, Sonia, told me of how the support of one charity helped her evade the 'revolving door back to prison'. But resource-intensive, bespoke rehabilitation is tricky to scale. In austere times, the temptation to roll out rehab on the cheap could prove overwhelming, and will end in failure. As veteran probation expert Mark Leech told me: 'There are prisoners that have done the courses so many times they could deliver them better than the tutors who deliver them.' Chasing a utopian ideal, with no idea how to make it work, let alone on a tight budget, is flirting with disaster. Efforts by some criminologists to discredit the policing approach known as 'broken windows' could also end badly. This concept, which clamps down on low-level crime such as graffiti and drug-taking on the basis that tolerating 'minor' disorder leads to a culture that promotes much more serious crime, helped flatten a vicious crime wave in 1990s New York. It has been trashed in recent years, amid complaints it is racist and based on 'bogus' evidence. I disagree. Broken windows could once again be a vital weapon against certain serious crimes, such as sexual offences. Police officers on the front line certainly seem to think so: as Matthew Barber, PCC for Thames Valley, says: 'You won't find many hardened criminals who didn't start doing things at a young age before getting steadily out of control. Fix those basics and you'll prevent an awful lot more serious crime down the road.' Though Labour politicians may be in denial, a slow-burning crisis is unfolding. There is a widespread sense of malaise, that law is breaking down. In Red Wall towns, Labour's 'levelling up' projects are being undermined by anti-social behaviour. In the cities, alarm at gang violence, as well as muggings and burglary, may yet nudge professionals to the Right. Labour's inability to tackle crime could cost it dear.

Hapless French cops get worse at preventing small boats from crossing Channel as they make mockery of £480m deal with UK
Hapless French cops get worse at preventing small boats from crossing Channel as they make mockery of £480m deal with UK

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Hapless French cops get worse at preventing small boats from crossing Channel as they make mockery of £480m deal with UK

HAPLESS French cops are getting even worse at preventing small boats crossing the Channel — despite demanding more money from British taxpayers. Police in Calais are making a mockery of the current £480million deal with the UK by stopping a lower proportion of illegal migrants this year, shock figures show. 6 6 6 It comes the day after The Sun told how officers refused to get their feet wet as an asylum seeker family struggled in water trying to reach a dinghy off Gravelines. Analysis of Home Office data, which details how many migrants France claims to have prevented from making the journey, reveals the three-year cooperation agreement has changed nothing. Since May 2024, there have been only two months in which French cops have stopped more migrants than the number arriving in the UK — last August and this January. Our research also found that in March, for every migrant caught or made to turn back, 2.36 were picked up by the UK Border Force. During seven days in late April, 1,312 migrants arrived, yet only 303 were stopped — a ratio of more than four to one. Overall, three of the French police's five least effective weeks have come since the start of 2025. Former Tory security minister Sir John Hayes yesterday said: 'These figures reveal what most people suspected — the French are half-hearted about what we're paying for them to do. 'Frankly, they've got enough people and resources to puncture every dinghy before it sets off. They should be doing all they can to stop these boats launching, not just standing around.' Downing Street admitted there was 'more to do' in stopping small boat crossings. But defending the France deal, Sir Keir Starmer's spokesman said: 'We have a stronger relationship with the French government. Ever closer cooperation is already bearing fruit but we do know that we need to go further and faster.' France counts arrests, dinghy captures, and finds of smugglers' gear like boats and life vests as 'preventions'. Scores of migrants board overloaded dinghies to make dangerous Channel crossing to UK - as French cops watch on It is set to change the law to allow 'taxi boat' interceptions at sea — but could demand more cash for a new elite police squad. However, militant police unions are blocking the measure and are instead instructing members to adhere to current guidelines that mean officers must stand back as soon as dinghies are in the water. It costs £41,000 a year for the UK to house and feed each illegal immigrant in one of 210 hotels or other private accommodation. 6 6 6 Had France stopped as many people as had arrived this year, 2,905 fewer migrants would have entered Britain between January and the end of May. That would have saved taxpayers at least £119million. Last week, The Sun revealed Britain's annual bill to keep migrants in hotels and look after them totals £4.7billion. That is the equivalent of every penny of tax from 582,000 workers, or all the workers in Manchester. More than 15,000 people have crossed so far in 2025 — up 42 per cent on this time year. The Home Office was approached for comment. BOUNCE CHECKS By Martina Bet REFORM UK claims taxpayers' cash is being 'explosively' blown on council waste — including trampolining for asylum seekers. Zia Yusuf recently stepped down as the party's chairman but has returned to lead its newly launched 'Doge team' — inspired by Donald Trump's Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency in the US. He told TalkTV: 'Some explosive things we've found councils spending money on. You can try taking asylum seekers and illegal migrants trampolining as an example.' Mr Yusuf last month said Reform could take the Government to court to prevent migrants being housed in areas where it now controls the local councils. And asked if the party's policy was to house migrants in tents, Mr Yusuf told the BBC: 'That's what France does.'

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