
Driver, 22, killed after horror three-car smash
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A MAN has died after a horror collision involving three vehicles.
Cops rushed to the scene on Stratford Road and Ladypool Road in Birmingham just before 11.50pm on Friday evening.
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The horror smash involved a black Audi, blue Vauxhall and a parked vehicle.
The driver of the Vauxhall, a 22-year-old man, tragically died after being taken to hospital.
His family are being supported by specialist trained officers.
Three other people were also taken to hospital with injuries.
Cops have urged anyone with information to call 101 quoting log 5875.
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A man has died following a collision on Stratford Road and Ladypool Road in Birmingham
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Scottish Sun
25 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Our mum is UK's most infamous female gangster…we played with sawn-off shotguns at 3 & she hid dad's grisly death from us
Both Neil and Mel admitted they became 'reckless' to help them cope with their unique and tragic situations FLESH & BLOOD Our mum is UK's most infamous female gangster…we played with sawn-off shotguns at 3 & she hid dad's grisly death from us Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) WHEN Neil Calvey was just nine months old his dad walked in from work, sliced open a sack of used bank notes and poured them over his head. Baby Neil sat playing with thousands of pounds as his jubilant dad took a picture to put in pride of place on the mantelpiece. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 13 Linda Calvey had the two children with her first husband Mickey Credit: Supplied 13 Neil and Mel lost their dad and then mum Linda was jailed Credit: Mirrorpix 13 Linda Calvey with baby Melanie Credit: Supplied 13 Mickey Calvey, pictured with newborn son Neil, was shot dead when the kids were seven and four Credit: Supplied It may sound far-fetched, but as the son of Mickey and Linda Calvey - two of Britain's most notorious armed robbers - that is not his most outrageous story. Now for the first time Neil and his sister Melanie are opening up about their childhoods which were moulded by untold riches, but also crime, violence and loss. Mickey was shot dead in a failed armed robbery when the kids were aged just seven and four. So mum Linda decided to continue with the family business and became the most notorious female gangster in British history - The Black Widow. She was the first woman to be charged with gangland murder in Britain and was convicted of shooting dead her lover Ronnie Cook and jailed for life. This meant Neil and Mel had lost both their mum and dad to their lives of crime. Now in a new BBC podcast they reveal what it was like to live a childhood as the kids of prolific armed robbers. Neil says: 'When my dad got killed and my mum went to prison, it was like falling into a black hole. You just don't know which way to turn.' Mel adds: 'I was angry. I'd already lost my dad, then I lost my mum. I told her that. I was about 14, and I asked her, 'Why did you do that to us?' I was bitter for years. 'It was like drinking a poison that festered in me. It's like I walked into a party at 14 and didn't leave until I was in my forties. 'Black Widow' killer Linda Calvey reveals moment she slapped 'most hated woman in UK' as she tells of time behind bars 13 Linda has told all ion the new podcast Credit: BBC 'I was reckless. For years I was just on another planet.' One of Neil's earliest memories is playing outside aged just three-and-a-half with what turned out to be a real sawn-off shotgun. He says: 'I thought it was just another toy gun; I'd found it behind the sofa. I was outside running around with it when one of the neighbours knocked on the door. My mum just said, 'Oh, he's got loads of guns.' She thought it was a toy, but it wasn't.' Life of extremes Neil remembers the good times and being able to enjoy the fruits of his parents' ill-gotten gains, but he concedes it was a life of extremes. He explains: 'I suppose it was a little bit different from the norm. I mean, my mum and dad used to be called Bonnie and Clyde by my friends. 'We had some really good times, when we were having it good it was really, really good. Lovely houses, lovely clothes, nice cars. 'Then you had the flip side which was the polar opposite. As a kid growing up you were either at the top of the tree or at the bottom. There was no in between.' Mel was just 13 when she went on a spending spree to Hamley's toy shop with money she found under Linda's bed. While dad Mickey was in-between armed robberies, he was a stay-at-home dad to Mel and Neil. I was bitter for years. It was like drinking a poison that festered in me. It's like I walked into a party at 14 and didn't leave until I was in my forties. I was reckless. For years I was just on another planet Melanie Calvey Mel says: 'I remember coming home from school one day and he was in prison, and I come home and I didn't know he was coming out. 'So I ran up and give him a hug and he said, 'I'm going to cook dinner tonight, what do you want? Paella or Spaghetti Bolognese? That was his two dishes he was really good at [sic].' But the family's kitchen table where the kids would eat their dinner doubled up as the planning desk for Mickey and his cronies. And it was one of those plans that went wrong and ended in Mickey's death - he was shot by police during a botched robbery in early December 1978. But Neil and Mel were oblivious to their father's death, with mum Linda deciding not to tell them until after Christmas. 13 Linda attending the inquest into Mickey's death in 1979 Credit: Alamy 13 The children didn't go the funeral of their father Credit: Alamy 13 Linda with Neil and Mel at the book launch for Black Widow at The Blind Beggar pub Credit: Supplied They didn't even go to their dad's funeral. Mel says: 'I was staying with my mum's brother and his wife, and looking back now it sort of makes sense, every time the news came on they kept turning the telly off.' Neil's recollection is hazy, but at the inquest into Mickey's death a nurse who got to him after he had been shot said his last words were: 'Tell my wife and kids that I love them.' Neil says: 'That broke my heart. It still does to this day.' Jailed for murder Linda wasn't to stay alone for long. She soon became romantically involved with one of Mickey's associates, Ronnie Cook. He showered Linda with gifts and luxury holidays, but she says he became controlling and she turned down his marriage proposal. Linda picked up where her husband Mickey had left off and became part of a gang organising a series of post office robberies in which she claimed to have made more than £1million. Her first conviction in 1986 resulted in her being sentenced to seven years imprisonment, of which she served about three years - half her sentence. And around 18 months after being paroled she was found guilty of the murder of her ex-lover Cook by shooting him in the head, meaning she was heading back to prison for an even longer stretch. I thought it was just another toy gun; I'd found it behind the sofa. I was outside running around with it when one of the neighbours knocked on the door. My mum just said, 'Oh, he's got loads of guns.' She thought it was a toy, but it wasn't Neil Calvey She spent time in prison alongside some of Britain's most infamous female killers including Moors Murderer Myra Hindley and Cromwell Street killer Rose West. Linda was behind bars for 18-and-a-half years for Cook's murder - meaning Neil and Mel spent much of their childhood and early adult years without both parents, which had a profound effect on them both. She was released on parole in 2008, and she and the kids had a lot of catching up to do - and a lot of animosity to overcome. Neil reflects: 'It was a great life when it was nice, but when it went wrong it went properly wrong. 'I think we've had rows. I've said, 'Why didn't you ever think of me and Mel? You were thinking of yourself, your kudos, I'm Linda Calvey, I'm a big gangster girl'.' Mel adds: 'I got angry that she'd done that, I've got to be honest. I'd already lost my father and now I'm losing my mother. So I was very angry over it.' 13 Linda was jailed for murdering lover Ron Cook 13 Mel admits she went off the rails after her mum was jailed Credit: Supplied 13 Neil. pictured with mum Linda, turned to alcohol Credit: Supplied Reckless Neil and Mel said they turned to drugs and alcohol to help them cope with their unique and tragic situations. Neil says: 'Over the years with my mum going away and ending up with the murder and stuff I found myself turning to alcohol and other dependents to try to numb my mind. 'My mind was racing all the time, it would never let things go.' Mel adds: 'I was quite a handful, I'd gone quite wayward because of how my life had been. 'I was quite reckless, a lot of drugs, a lot of drinking. I just didn't care about nothing.' I was quite reckless, a lot of drugs, a lot of drinking. I just didn't care about nothing Melanie Calvey Despite the pain, there are also moments of reconciliation. Neil adds: 'I might have been angry with the situation, but I never blamed my mum. I'd still choose her. And my dad. It's just a shame how it all went.' Mel agrees: 'I'd still choose them, but I'd want it to be a different way. 'I used to be envious of my friends whose parents had jobs, mortgages, dinner on the table. That's what I wanted. A normal life. 'I never had that. So if I could have them back again, that's what I would want.' Listen to Gangster: The Black Widow on BBC Sounds from August 8. Linda is the author of Life Inside and Black Widow, both available now 13 Linda became the UK's most notorious female gangster after her husband was shot Credit: Mirrorpix


Glasgow Times
29 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Motorist, 81, pressed accelerator in error and hit retired couple, inquest told
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Western Telegraph
41 minutes ago
- Western Telegraph
Motorist, 81, pressed accelerator in error and hit retired couple, inquest told
Stephen Burch and Katherine Burch, both 65, had no time to react as Humphrey Pickering failed to negotiate a sharp bend and lost control of his powerful Audi A8 automatic car. The former vicar and charity worker, from Alcester, Warwickshire, suffered multiple injuries and were pronounced dead at the scene of the collision in the popular North Wales seaside town Beaumaris. Ex-librarian Mr Pickering, from Colwyn Bay, also died at the scene in Alma Street, as his car went on to collide with the front of a house on the afternoon of August 28 last year. He was not wearing his seat-belt and sustained fatal chest injuries. The Air Ambulance was called following the accident in Alma Street (Leon Marshall/PA) Caernarfon Coroner's Court heard that Mr Pickering had earlier tried to pull slowly out of a tight parking space off the seafront near to the Bulkeley Hotel, to allow enough room for his wife, Margaret, to get into the vehicle's passenger side. An eyewitness told the court the grey Audi suddenly 'lurched forward' and the driver 'appeared to panic' before the car 'shot off down the road'. CCTV footage showed the Audi initially accelerate 'abruptly' into a group of four pedestrians, knocking down two people who escaped with minor injuries. Meilir Hywel, forensic collision investigator for North Wales Police, said Mr Pickering's car continued to accelerate on Alma Street and narrowly missed colliding with two vehicles. Mr Pickering then lost control of the Audi on a 90 degrees right bend. Pre-crash data recovered from the vehicle showed the accelerator pedal was repeatedly pressed and the brake pedal was not activated. The Audi reached a speed of 55mph, in a 20mph zone, in the seconds before the collision, the court heard. The accident happened on the seafront at Beaumaris on Anglesey (Alamy/PA) Mr Hywel concluded the sudden acceleration was because of 'pedal misapplication in applying the accelerator instead of the brake pedal in error'. He said: 'He was then unable to correct his error while driving a powerful vehicle.' One of Mr and Mrs Burch's three children, Sarah Packwood, told the inquest her parents were both of 'deep Christian faith'. Her mother was a talented musician and baker who 'always put others first' and was 'passionate about serving her community', while her father 'actively shared his faith throughout his life' and was an 'avid sports fan'. She said her family has raised concerns about the age of Mr Pickering and his ability to drive a brand new powerful vehicle. Mr Pickering's daughter, Helen Baxter, said the father-of-two was an 'active member of the community' who was 'out in the garden every day in all weathers' and had 'good' mental agility. She said Mr Pickering was a librarian in Oldham before he set up his own business in automated library services, which led to him working around the world. She said he had five holidays booked for 2024 'which was normal for him as he loved to travel'. Senior coroner for north-west Wales, Kate Robertson, said she was satisfied the 'most likely explanation' for the collision was the 'pedal missapplication which has led to a sudden and unintended acceleration'. She told both families: 'There are no words that I can say that will ease the pain and suffering you will no doubt be feeling, have felt and will continue to feel, but you have all acted with huge dignity. 'I am incredibly sorry for your loss in these tragic circumstances.'