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Newton Aycliffe Knife Angel to coincide with blade surrender

Newton Aycliffe Knife Angel to coincide with blade surrender

BBC News19-05-2025

A blade surrender scheme has been announced to coincide with the arrival of the Knife Angel - a sculpture which highlights the devastating effect of knife crime.The 27ft (8m) statue, made from 100,000 seized blades, will officially be installed in Newton Aycliffe in County Durham on 1 June.Durham Police has announced a month-long scheme on Monday where members of the public can safely surrender knives at the front counters of the Durham City, Bishop Auckland, Peterlee, and Darlington police stations.Its arrival would be "particularly poignant" after one of the town's teenagers, Jack Woodley, was fatally stabbed in 2021, officers said.
The 18-year-old was attending a funfair in Houghton-le-Spring when he was attacked by ten other teenagers and stabbed.The ten teenagers were found guilty of murder and sentenced to life with minimum terms of between eight and 17 years.It is the first time the Knife Angel, which began touring the country in 2018, has come to County Durham.
The Durham Police force area has one of the lowest rates of knife crime in the country, a spokeswoman said.Newton Aycliffe Neighbourhood Sgt Andy Boyd said: "Even in an area with relatively low knife crime, we cannot afford to ignore it. "One injury, one death, is one too many."The surrendered knives will be donated back to the British Ironworks Centre, the creators of the Knife Angel, police said.An accompanying Durham Police campaign to raise awareness of "the pointless risk, choice, legal consequences and emotional impact on loved ones" of carrying a knife, will see educational programmes also being delivered in schools across the county.
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Sports Direct-owned gym blames former model's heatstroke sauna death on 'alcohol use and medication' as it fights £100k lawsuit by her actress daughter
Sports Direct-owned gym blames former model's heatstroke sauna death on 'alcohol use and medication' as it fights £100k lawsuit by her actress daughter

Daily Mail​

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  • Daily Mail​

Sports Direct-owned gym blames former model's heatstroke sauna death on 'alcohol use and medication' as it fights £100k lawsuit by her actress daughter

A gym owned by Sports Direct has blamed an ex-model's sauna death on alcohol and medication as it battles a £100,000 lawsuit brought by her actress daughter. Mileva Brooks, 75-year-old mother of TV comedy actress Milanka Brooks, died after suffering heatstroke at an Everlast gym in Cheltenham in August 2022. Her daughter, who starred in TV sitcoms Benidorm, The Windsors and My Family as well as satire Black Mirror, is suing the Sports Direct-owned gym chain at London's High Court. A coroner's inquest in September 2023 found the pensioner died three days after being rushed to hospital when other gym users alerted staff that she had collapsed in the sauna and was experiencing breathing difficulties. But in their defence to the action lodged at London 's High Court, Fitness Ltd deny any blame. And they claim Mileva Brooks 'had a documented history of substance abuse, including but potentially not limited to alcoholism, along with medical conditions consistent with the use of prescribed medication'. Milanka, 41, found fame starring in a number of TV sitcoms after being cast in multi award-winning BBC1 sitcom My Family in 2000 after graduating from drama school. She had a regular role in ITV's Benidorm, playing Johnny Vegas' fiancée Ionela, as well as portraying Princess Svetlana in Channel 4's Royal family parody The Windsors and Nigel Planer's wife Elena in 2014 BBC2 comedy Boomers. She then found success in a high-profile role as a blue-faced alien crew member, Elena Tulaska, in the multi-Emmy Award winning Black Mirror episode called USS Callister in 2017. She has described her mother Mileva as her 'best friend in the world'. Mileva collapsed and died after using the sauna at the Everlast gym, in Henrietta Street in Cheltenham, on August 26 2022, having joined the gym six months earlier. Roland Wooderson, assistant coroner for Gloucestershire, recorded a narrative verdict after an inquest in 2023. She said the former model had 'died from the effects of heatstroke' after being 'found unresponsive in the sauna of the gym'. He had earlier heard medical evidence that Mileva's body temperature was 39.2C when measured by paramedics attending the scene. According to legal documents filed at London's High Court, Ms Brooks is now suing the gym's owners, claiming 'damages in excess of £50,000, but limited to £100,000'. The action comes in her role as administrator of her mother's estate for 'personal injury and consequential losses' and under the Fatal Accidents Act 1976. But in a defence now lodged with the court by Natalie Green for Sports Direct, the company claims the staff at the gym did nothing wrong. Ms Green said: 'The deceased had a documented history of substance abuse, including but potentially not limited to alcoholism, along with medical conditions consistent with the use of prescribed medication.' She added that a post-mortem had found traces of the antidepressant lorazepam and epilepsy drugs clobazam and lamotrigine in Mileva's system. The barrister said there had been a sign outside the sauna stating conditions of safe use, including: 'Do not use the sauna if you suffer from epilepsy.' She added: 'The defendant replies upon the totality of the said signages' content, in particular the full list of conditions mandating non-use of the sauna, which include those relating to prior alcohol use and or medication impacting on the advisability of sauna use. 'By the publication of such guidance to its members, the defendant acted reasonably in the discharge of its duty of care. 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Sacked police officer: ‘I saved a drowning woman. I feared they'd arrest me for it'
Sacked police officer: ‘I saved a drowning woman. I feared they'd arrest me for it'

Telegraph

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Sacked police officer: ‘I saved a drowning woman. I feared they'd arrest me for it'

Four months before the arrest that led to his dismissal, Lorne Castle plunged into a freezing river in the middle of the night. In the centre of the in-flood River Avon a vulnerable elderly woman clung to a small outcrop. Police regulations dictate he should not enter the water, but Mr Castle ignored the rules to wade into the ice cold torrent, stripped off his stab vest, and began swimming into the current while trying to throw a life ring to the woman as her family watched from the riverbank. 'Do you know what was going through my mind at that time?' the officer told The Telegraph from his home on a quiet residential street in Bournemouth. 'If I hit her with the ring, or she attempts to get it and gets dragged away I'm up for manslaughter because professional standards will tell me 'you weren't supposed to go in. You were trying to be a hero'. 'That is the world we operate in.' Mr Castle rescued the woman from the water and was later awarded a national bravery award for his actions. Last week, after almost a decade working for Dorset Police, he was dismissed for gross misconduct for a momentary loss of self control while arresting a teenager with a knife who he 'failed to treat with courtesy and respect'. The 46-year-old father of three is now facing an uncertain future. His name and picture have been published widely and he no longer feels safe in the town he has made his home for the past two decades. He said: 'My wife, Denise and our daughters are now going to have to completely change our lives. I don't know if we can still live here. 'I don't want to be looking over my shoulder all the time. Dorset Police have put a target on my back and why? To get rid of an officer for doing their job?'' 'Police wokeness is terrifying' Since his dismissal, teenagers have been taunting officers in the town centre where the incident took place. One serving police officer said: 'Words of advice or warning would have been suitable. The state of wokeness in Dorset Police is terrifying. 'Numerous officers were telling us…when they were on foot patrol in the town centre at the weekend they had hoards of youths going up to them. '[They were] getting in their faces and mocking them with lines like, 'Ha ha I can do whatever I like and you can't touch me now or I'll just get you fired'.' Chris Amey, Mr Castle's former chief inspector who has since left the force, set up a Go Fund Me page to support his former colleague, raising almost £50,000 so far. The arrest itself took place on Jan 27 2024. Mr Castle was at the end of a 10-hour shift when the call about a violent masked offender came in. Rather than ignoring it as other officers might, he responded and within minutes had apprehended the suspect. At the time, he had no idea how old the individual was. The 15-year-old he detained was suspected of assaulting an elderly man while riding an e-scooter before getting embroiled in a fight with another youth outside a McDonald's. Earlier in the day, at the start of their shift, officers were warned that a large gang fight had taken place in the area and potential suspects were still at large. Just two years earlier, a 21-year-old teenager had been stabbed to death in the town centre by Lawangeen Abdulrahimzai, an asylum seeker and double murderer, in a row over an e-scooter. Police body-worn footage of Mr Castle's arrest of the teenager has been released by Dorset Police in recent days, in an attempt to quell the backlash and 'misinformation'. In the video, Mr Castle is seen holding the teenager on the ground while telling him to 'stop screaming like a b----'. A knife can be seen falling from the youth's pocket. A picture of the weapon obtained by The Telegraph shows it has a three-inch blade on one end and a Stanley knife on the other. 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He says he wants to make police officers 'crime fighters again' and warned specifically of the dangers of teenagers carrying knives. Mr Castle added: 'That is going to be difficult if you send the message that you are going to sack officers for arresting armed suspects.'

Tommy Robinson denies harassing two Daily Mail journalists
Tommy Robinson denies harassing two Daily Mail journalists

The Independent

time35 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Tommy Robinson denies harassing two Daily Mail journalists

Right-wing political activist Tommy Robinson has denied harassing two Daily Mail journalists. The 42-year-old, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court on Thursday to face charges over his alleged conduct towards the two reporters. He is accused of two counts of harassment causing fear of violence between 5 and 7 of August 2024. Robinson, from Luton, Bedfordshire, was released from prison on 27 May after he was jailed last October after admitting multiple breaches of an injuction made in 2021. The injuction had barred him from repeating false allegations against a Syrian refugee, who had successfully sued him for libel. The former leader of the now-defunct English Defence League had wrongly claimed in an online video that the Syrian teenager was a violent thug. He later repeated that false allegation 10 times, including during a rally at London's Trafalgar Square last year. The activist left HMP Woodhill after his 18-month sentence was reduced by four months at the High Court. He was filmed speaking on his X social media channel for around 20 minutes with longer hair and a bushy beard, and wearing a rosary around his neck, as he left the prison. Robinson is facing a separate trial in October next year over an accusation that he failed to provide the Pin for his mobile phone when stopped by Kent Police in Folkestone in July 2024.

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