
Tenerife chaos as 200 squatters win battle to camp out in huge abandoned hotel
Squatters who have been occupying the Callao Sport Hotel in Tenerife since the middle of February won't be evicted anytime soon following unsuccessful legal proceedings brought by its owner
Squatters have taken over a hotel in Spain and are now illegally subletting it, according to the enraged owners.
Since February 17 as many as 200 people have been living in the Callao Sport Hotel in Tenerife. The hotel, which is located in one of the most prosperous tourists area of the Canary island, has 92 rooms and luxury facilities which have been occupied ahead of the high holiday season.
All rooms in the hotel are now illegally occupied, Canarian Weekly reported, with people living in the reception, gym, kitchens and spa massage cabins. Neighbours have complained about noise from the hotel, which has been badly damaged by the newcomers.
The reception area has been reported as being ransacked, while the owners claim they're being slapped with utility bills that have tripled since the occupation began. Those owners have now suffered a major judicial setback, with a court rejecting their request to have the squatters immediately evicted.
Carmen Margarita, the sole administrator of the company that owns the hotel, shared her frustration in a radio interview. 'This is not just squatting, it's a criminal operation. People are making money from leasing out what is not theirs, and nothing is being done to stop them," she claimed. "People come and go all the time. Just the other day, a couple showed up in a Mercedes A-Class. This isn't about vulnerable people in need of shelter, this is systematic exploitation.'
Local reports suggest that at least 50 rooms were initially occupied, but this figure doubled to 100 in just a fortnight, and now reportedly stands at 200. There have also been complaints about disturbances such as noise, lights being left on all night, and a rising sense of insecurity in the area, with some suspecting criminal networks are cashing in on the situation.
One worried resident, Pedro, voiced his concerns on COPE Radio in Tenerife. Pedro revealed that there have been numerous reports of theft in the area, with looters targeting the complex and dismantling furniture and materials to sell online. According to Pedro, the authorities have intervened multiple times due to the theft of objects and machinery from the hotel, and it's alleged that three individuals are leading these illicit activities, including charging for room usage.
Residents have expressed their unease and frustration with the situation, stating that "the Guardia Civil have done nothing". This incident is the latest in a series of squatting incidents in hotels.
Earlier this year a group of squatters took over a former hotel building in Majorca, vowing not to leave. The BelleVue resort in Alcudia, Spain, which dates back to the early 1970s, is a thriving holiday village with 17 blocks of over 1,400 apartments and studios. However, one of the buildings has been overrun by squatters ahead of its planned reopening to tourists later this year.
Around 50 people are believed to have occupied the Neptuno II building, placing padlocks on the apartments they're living in. One squatter told the Majorca Daily Bulletin at the time: "We are not here for fun. We are here because there are no flats to live in. It is impossible to pay the rents," another added. The squatters have declared their intention to remain in the building until they are forcibly removed.
Meanwhile, back in January, police were on high alert when 30 squatters seized control of a hotel in Cala Bona, allegedly wreaking havoc in the reception area by smashing windows and defacing the walls.

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Scottish Sun
3 days ago
- Scottish Sun
Crufts-winning trainer who fed dog steak & salmon banned from driving for two years
The conviction could have an impact on her job OFF THE ROAD Crufts-winning trainer who fed dog steak & salmon banned from driving for two years Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A DOG trainer who boasted about giving her pet a pampered lifestyle has been banned from driving for two years. Julia Ashton, 59, who has won awards at dog shows including Crufts, told how she had a lifelong love of animals. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up She revealed her pug Mr Darcy feasted on steak, organic chicken and salmon and had a wardrobe of designer clothes. Ashton, of Newmilns, Ayrshire, was nabbed by traffic cameras as she drove her Mercedes Benz e-Class car through roadworks on the M74 near Lesmahagow, Lanarkshire. She was found to have been been the wheel while disqualified and having no insurance in December last year. Sheriff Siobhan Connelly gave her a two-year driving ban and placed her under supervision for a year at Lanark Sheriff Court. A hearing was told that the conviction could have an impact on her job. Alanah Campbell, defending, said: "She is a self-employed dog trainer and is likely to lose her employment as a result of this. "It is unlikely that this will be repeated again in the future and she understands that she will be disqualified from driving for a long period of time." Sheriff Connelly told Ashton: "Your driving record causes me concern and it is a matter of concern that you did not adhere to the rules and drove. "Holding a driving licence is a privilege and you need to comply with road traffic regulations. "Given the nature of the offence the appropriate disqualification period is three years but I will modify that to two years." A charge which alleged she had been speeding on the motorway was dropped by prosecutors. Ashton had earlier told how she spoiled her pet. She said: "Mr Darcy is certainly up there with the most pampered pets in Scotland. 'He gets plenty of steak, plenty of exercise, plenty of attention - what more could a dog ask for? I've had dogs all my life. 1 Julia Ashton outside Lanark Sheriff Court "I grew up with a menagerie of animals, from rabbits and ponies to cats, chickens and guinea pigs. "I'm very used to having pets around and knowing how they like to be treated. People sometimes laugh at the life of luxury Mr Darcy has but having a dog is a serious matter."


Wales Online
27-05-2025
- Wales Online
North Wales man jailed for 17 years over role in £31.6m drugs plot
Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info A North Wales dad's involvement in a £31.6m drugs plot was revealed by the contents of a Sports Direct bags. Raymond Kinnear, and his son Nathan, were jailed for nearly 25 years, after police discovered a huge haul of 45kg of cocaine inside Raymond Kinnear's Audi. He had left the vehicle parked inside an industrial unit at a business park, a court heard. The 63-year-old enlisted his son, estate agent Nathan Kinnear, to provide "backup" during his criminal activities, as well as booking hotel rooms and providing Sports Direct and Aldi bags for life, which were used to store the illicit substances, reports the ECHO. Their arrests led to the dad being identified as the EncroChat user "ViperBat" and a Rolex watch being seized from his caravan. Liverpool Crown Court heard Merseyside Police attended Liver Industrial Estate in Aintree at around 10.45pm on June 18 last year and searched a unit which "appeared to be under the control of a bathroom company". However it had in fact been subleased by Raymond Kinnear around two months earlier on April 28, 2024. His grey Audi A4 was found parked within the premises, with 70 vacuum sealed blocks of high purity cocaine, weighing a total of 45kg and alone worth more than £1.5million, being located in several Sports Direct bags for life which had been left inside the vehicle. Nicola Daley, prosecuting, described how investigations subsequently established he had been in contact with his son throughout that afternoon before the dad drove to Merseyside from his caravan at Abbey Farm in Llangollen, Denbighshire. Nathan Kinnear and his girlfriend had meanwhile visited a Sports Direct store in order to purchase eight bags which were "consistent with" those which would later be used to hold the drugs. (Image: Google Maps) The 23-year-old also booked a room at the Travelodge at Stonedale Retail Park in Croxteth where his father would stay the night. The two men would visit the hotel together in order to check in before stopping at a BP petrol station and then travelling onwards to the industrial estate, with the son leaving his Mercedes C-Class parked nearby before his partner collected both shortly after 10pm and drove them to an Esso garage. Nathan Kinnear would be arrested at her home on Scarisbrick Road in Norris Green in the early hours on June 19 after attempting to flee from officers by jumping from an upstairs window, with the keys to the unit being found inside his car. The location in question was labelled a "safe area" where the drugs could be packaged and stored before being transported onwards after trucks had earlier completed deliveries to the site. Monies totalling £4,700 were subsequently seized from the top shelf of a wardrobe in his bedroom at his mum's home on Satinwood Crescent in Melling, with a further £250 located on the window ledge. PCs visited Raymond Kinnear's caravan later the same day and recovered a "high value" Rolex watch and around £30,000 of cash. A series of WhatsApp messages and calls between the father and son would ultimately reveal they had been involved in a series of similar movements of drugs or cash over the course of the previous six months. This scheme saw Kinnear senior liaise with others in order to arrange collections or drops off using passwords such as "Dumbo" and "blue". Nathan Kinnear was meanwhile recruited to perform "administrative" tasks such as providing "strong bags" from Aldi to store the cocaine and similarly booking stays at the same Travelodge hotel under his girlfriend's name. He was also captured by ANPR cameras travelling in convoy with his dad before and after several of these events, which occurred on March 1, March 9, April 23, April 29 and May 17. Including the seized 45kg, the Kinnears were linked to the supply of a total of 211kg of cocaine during this period. This quantity was said to have a wholesale value of between £6.19million and £7.96million, rising to between £18.9million and £31.6million if sold at street level. Raymond Kinnear's arrest meanwhile led to him being identified as the user of the EncroChat handle "ViperBat" before the encrypted communications platform was infiltrated by French police during 2020. Detectives were able to attribute this account to him due to references in messages to his co-defendant son, his daughter and his Hyundai i40 car. This saw him plot with fellow service users to store both cocaine and ketamine in a flat while using vehicles with hidden compartments in order to transport their wares in secret. Kinnear was also instructed by "Bush Tern" to collect £100,000 in cash from Bolton on one occasion in May of that year. "Notorious Bonsai" thereafter contacted him in order to arrange for a kilogram of cocaine to be dropped off near to the Asda supermarket in Walton. He was meanwhile paid £250 by "Elephant Gate" in order to "pick up some paper from Childwall" on May 30 2020, while he was shown to have used his daughter's car in order drop off a quarter of a kilo of drugs beside a pub on Altway in Aintree in June 2020. Kinnear's criminal record shows four previous convictions during the 1980s, including receiving three years in 1988 for causing death by reckless driving. Jason Smith, appearing on his behalf, previously said: "He is 63 years of age, and he has had to accept that a significant period of the latter part of his life will be spent serving a custodial sentence. "That will have an impact on him. More important is the impact on his family. They will suffer. There is an 87-year-old mother who he would have wished to spend time with, and she would have wished to spend time with him. This involvement in criminality deprives them both of that opportunity. (Image: Merseyside Police) "The person who suffers most is that one he has brought to the table. He has to suffer the shame and responsibility for his son being in the dock with him. He accepts full responsibility for involving Nathan in what took place. "His role has been set out. At times, it is a delivery role. At times, it is a role involving far more important logistics. He was working under the direction of others higher up in the chain. He is now aware of the consequences of being involved in offending such as that." Nathan Kinnear has no previous convictions. Paul Becker, defending, told the court: "A number of people attend on behalf of him today, including his mum, his partner and his sister. You can sign up for all the latest court stories here "I would ask the court to bear in mind his age. He may have been naïve as to the extent of the operation and the scale of criminality. He may have placed too much trust in his father and the things that he was expected to do for his dad." In relation to his client's role, Mr Becker said: "It may have been moral support, it may have been a show of strength. We cannot say. He must have been helping. What that help was is speculation. He was not an organiser, but someone who his father trusted. "His school days were not easy, but, in fairness to him, he enrolled at Hugh Baird College in a tiling course and then construction before pursuing surveying at John Moores University, before covid struck and remote study proved to be a real struggle. He went on to train with Summit and worked on a nationwide rail project before he had a nasty chainsaw accident. He retrained and worked as an estate agent until his arrest. "He was looking for approval from his dad. It is very difficult to say no to a parent who is expecting a particular response. The defendant accepts that he made serious errors of judgement. "His 89-year-old grandfather sadly passed away a few days ago. The defendant is loved by members of his family. It is clearly going to be a long sentence for a 23-year-old. I would ask your honour to give him some hope for the future and not to crush his hopes." Raymond Kinnear, who appeared in the dock wearing a white shirt and tie with short grey hair, admitted two counts of conspiracy to supply cocaine and one of conspiracy to supply ketamine. He was handed 17 years behind bars this morning, Tuesday. Nathan Kinnear, who wore glasses and a navy blue suit over a white shirt and pale blue tie, as well as sporting short brown hair, pleaded guilty to one charge of conspiracy to supply cocaine. He stood with his head bowed as he received seven years and four months. Sentencing, Judge Neil Flewitt KC labelled the scheme an "operation on the most serious and commercial scale" and added: "It is clear that Raymond Kinnear was very close to those involved in the importation of the drugs. Raymond Kinnear's role was to collect the cocaine, to store it in an industrial unit rented for that purpose, to divide it and to deliver it to those further down the chain of supply. "For that work, Raymond Kinnear was well rewarded. In addition, he involved his son Nathan in his offending. Nathan Kinnear played a part in the conspiracy on each occasion that Raymond Kinnear was involved in the distribution of class A drugs. "There are some important differences in their situations. Nathan Kinnear's role was clearly subordinate to that of his father. It involved booking accommodation, giving his father lifts, sourcing bags in which to carry drugs and providing backup when his father delivered the drugs. "I have read a letter from Raymond Kinnear and accept that he is genuinely remorseful for involving his son in his offending and for the upset caused to his wider family. It is notable that there is no expression of remorse for the impact on those whose lives have been blighted by the drugs distributed by him and his conspiracy." Judge Flewitt meanwhile said of Nathan Kinnear: "It is clear that he is a young man who is highly regarded, and he has the potential to make something of his life. I accept that Nathan Kinnear was drawn into this offending by his father as a result of naivety and an eagerness to please. "Nonetheless, he can have been in no doubt as to the seriousness of the enterprise in which he was involved. Nathan Kinnear was still a young man when he committed the offence. There are grounds to believe that he will develop and, upon release, realise his full potential." Find crime figures for your area


North Wales Live
27-05-2025
- North Wales Live
North Wales man jailed for 17 years over role in £31.6m drugs plot
A North Wales dad's involvement in a £31.6m drugs plot was revealed by the contents of a Sports Direct bags. Raymond Kinnear, and his son Nathan, were jailed for nearly 25 years, after police discovered a huge haul of 45kg of cocaine inside Raymond Kinnear's Audi. He had left the vehicle parked inside an industrial unit at a business park, a court heard. The 63-year-old enlisted his son, estate agent Nathan Kinnear, to provide "backup" during his criminal activities, as well as booking hotel rooms and providing Sports Direct and Aldi bags for life, which were used to store the illicit substances, reports the ECHO. Their arrests led to the dad being identified as the EncroChat user "ViperBat" and a Rolex watch being seized from his caravan. Liverpool Crown Court heard Merseyside Police attended Liver Industrial Estate in Aintree at around 10.45pm on June 18 last year and searched a unit which "appeared to be under the control of a bathroom company". However it had in fact been subleased by Raymond Kinnear around two months earlier on April 28, 2024. His grey Audi A4 was found parked within the premises, with 70 vacuum sealed blocks of high purity cocaine, weighing a total of 45kg and alone worth more than £1.5million, being located in several Sports Direct bags for life which had been left inside the vehicle. Nicola Daley, prosecuting, described how investigations subsequently established he had been in contact with his son throughout that afternoon before the dad drove to Merseyside from his caravan at Abbey Farm in Llangollen, Denbighshire. Nathan Kinnear and his girlfriend had meanwhile visited a Sports Direct store in order to purchase eight bags which were "consistent with" those which would later be used to hold the drugs. The 23-year-old also booked a room at the Travelodge at Stonedale Retail Park in Croxteth where his father would stay the night. The two men would visit the hotel together in order to check in before stopping at a BP petrol station and then travelling onwards to the industrial estate, with the son leaving his Mercedes C-Class parked nearby before his partner collected both shortly after 10pm and drove them to an Esso garage. Nathan Kinnear would be arrested at her home on Scarisbrick Road in Norris Green in the early hours on June 19 after attempting to flee from officers by jumping from an upstairs window, with the keys to the unit being found inside his car. The location in question was labelled a "safe area" where the drugs could be packaged and stored before being transported onwards after trucks had earlier completed deliveries to the site. Monies totalling £4,700 were subsequently seized from the top shelf of a wardrobe in his bedroom at his mum's home on Satinwood Crescent in Melling, with a further £250 located on the window ledge. PCs visited Raymond Kinnear's caravan later the same day and recovered a "high value" Rolex watch and around £30,000 of cash. A series of WhatsApp messages and calls between the father and son would ultimately reveal they had been involved in a series of similar movements of drugs or cash over the course of the previous six months. This scheme saw Kinnear senior liaise with others in order to arrange collections or drops off using passwords such as "Dumbo" and "blue". Nathan Kinnear was meanwhile recruited to perform "administrative" tasks such as providing "strong bags" from Aldi to store the cocaine and similarly booking stays at the same Travelodge hotel under his girlfriend's name. He was also captured by ANPR cameras travelling in convoy with his dad before and after several of these events, which occurred on March 1, March 9, April 23, April 29 and May 17. Including the seized 45kg, the Kinnears were linked to the supply of a total of 211kg of cocaine during this period. This quantity was said to have a wholesale value of between £6.19million and £7.96million, rising to between £18.9million and £31.6million if sold at street level. Raymond Kinnear's arrest meanwhile led to him being identified as the user of the EncroChat handle "ViperBat" before the encrypted communications platform was infiltrated by French police during 2020. Detectives were able to attribute this account to him due to references in messages to his co-defendant son, his daughter and his Hyundai i40 car. This saw him plot with fellow service users to store both cocaine and ketamine in a flat while using vehicles with hidden compartments in order to transport their wares in secret. Kinnear was also instructed by "Bush Tern" to collect £100,000 in cash from Bolton on one occasion in May of that year. "Notorious Bonsai" thereafter contacted him in order to arrange for a kilogram of cocaine to be dropped off near to the Asda supermarket in Walton. He was meanwhile paid £250 by "Elephant Gate" in order to "pick up some paper from Childwall" on May 30 2020, while he was shown to have used his daughter's car in order drop off a quarter of a kilo of drugs beside a pub on Altway in Aintree in June 2020. Kinnear's criminal record shows four previous convictions during the 1980s, including receiving three years in 1988 for causing death by reckless driving. Jason Smith, appearing on his behalf, previously said: "He is 63 years of age, and he has had to accept that a significant period of the latter part of his life will be spent serving a custodial sentence. "That will have an impact on him. More important is the impact on his family. They will suffer. There is an 87-year-old mother who he would have wished to spend time with, and she would have wished to spend time with him. This involvement in criminality deprives them both of that opportunity. "The person who suffers most is that one he has brought to the table. He has to suffer the shame and responsibility for his son being in the dock with him. He accepts full responsibility for involving Nathan in what took place. "His role has been set out. At times, it is a delivery role. At times, it is a role involving far more important logistics. He was working under the direction of others higher up in the chain. He is now aware of the consequences of being involved in offending such as that." Nathan Kinnear has no previous convictions. Paul Becker, defending, told the court: "A number of people attend on behalf of him today, including his mum, his partner and his sister. You can sign up for all the latest court stories here "I would ask the court to bear in mind his age. He may have been naïve as to the extent of the operation and the scale of criminality. He may have placed too much trust in his father and the things that he was expected to do for his dad." In relation to his client's role, Mr Becker said: "It may have been moral support, it may have been a show of strength. We cannot say. He must have been helping. What that help was is speculation. He was not an organiser, but someone who his father trusted. "His school days were not easy, but, in fairness to him, he enrolled at Hugh Baird College in a tiling course and then construction before pursuing surveying at John Moores University, before covid struck and remote study proved to be a real struggle. He went on to train with Summit and worked on a nationwide rail project before he had a nasty chainsaw accident. He retrained and worked as an estate agent until his arrest. "He was looking for approval from his dad. It is very difficult to say no to a parent who is expecting a particular response. The defendant accepts that he made serious errors of judgement. "His 89-year-old grandfather sadly passed away a few days ago. The defendant is loved by members of his family. It is clearly going to be a long sentence for a 23-year-old. I would ask your honour to give him some hope for the future and not to crush his hopes." Raymond Kinnear, who appeared in the dock wearing a white shirt and tie with short grey hair, admitted two counts of conspiracy to supply cocaine and one of conspiracy to supply ketamine. He was handed 17 years behind bars this morning, Tuesday. Nathan Kinnear, who wore glasses and a navy blue suit over a white shirt and pale blue tie, as well as sporting short brown hair, pleaded guilty to one charge of conspiracy to supply cocaine. He stood with his head bowed as he received seven years and four months. Sentencing, Judge Neil Flewitt KC labelled the scheme an "operation on the most serious and commercial scale" and added: "It is clear that Raymond Kinnear was very close to those involved in the importation of the drugs. Raymond Kinnear's role was to collect the cocaine, to store it in an industrial unit rented for that purpose, to divide it and to deliver it to those further down the chain of supply. "For that work, Raymond Kinnear was well rewarded. In addition, he involved his son Nathan in his offending. Nathan Kinnear played a part in the conspiracy on each occasion that Raymond Kinnear was involved in the distribution of class A drugs. "There are some important differences in their situations. Nathan Kinnear's role was clearly subordinate to that of his father. It involved booking accommodation, giving his father lifts, sourcing bags in which to carry drugs and providing backup when his father delivered the drugs. "I have read a letter from Raymond Kinnear and accept that he is genuinely remorseful for involving his son in his offending and for the upset caused to his wider family. It is notable that there is no expression of remorse for the impact on those whose lives have been blighted by the drugs distributed by him and his conspiracy." Judge Flewitt meanwhile said of Nathan Kinnear: "It is clear that he is a young man who is highly regarded, and he has the potential to make something of his life. I accept that Nathan Kinnear was drawn into this offending by his father as a result of naivety and an eagerness to please. "Nonetheless, he can have been in no doubt as to the seriousness of the enterprise in which he was involved. Nathan Kinnear was still a young man when he committed the offence. There are grounds to believe that he will develop and, upon release, realise his full potential."