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Woman arrested after Palestine Action rally denies assault charges in court

Woman arrested after Palestine Action rally denies assault charges in court

Lavina Richards, 37, of Hackney, north-east London, appeared before a judge at Westminster Magistrates' Court on Wednesday charged with two counts of assaulting a police constable in the execution of their duty.
Richards is accused of assaulting two Metropolitan Police officers at the Trafalgar Square march on Monday when several protesters clashed with police, resulting in 13 arrests for offences including assaulting an emergency worker, obstructing a constable and breaching Public Order Act conditions.
Richards, who appeared in the dock wearing a large black T-shirt, pleaded not guilty on both counts.
District Judge Briony Clarke told her the case will be listed for trial at City of London Magistrates' Court on December 12.
She was granted bail until the trial date.
A handful of pro-Palestine activists stood outside the court waving a Palestinian flag, and sat in the public gallery during the hearing in support of Richards.
Another six people were charged following the rally, including Liam Mizrahi, 25, of no fixed address, who faces one count of a racially aggravated public order offence.
Eleanor Simmonds, 31, also of no fixed address, was charged with assaulting an emergency worker and was bailed to appear at Croydon Magistrates' Court on July 25.
Bipasha Tahsin, 21, of Pinchin Street, Tower Hamlets, was charged with assaulting an emergency worker. She was bailed to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on July 8.
Matthew Holbrook, 59, of Somerhill Road, Hove, Tom Jubert, 40, of Chippendale Street, Hackney, and Hafeza Choudhury, 28, of Berkeley Path, Luton, were charged with breaching Public Order Act conditions and were bailed to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on July 21.
The protest had initially been planned to take place outside the Houses of Parliament, but the location was changed early on Monday morning when Scotland Yard imposed an exclusion zone.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said in a statement on Monday afternoon that she has decided to proscribe Palestine Action and will lay an order before Parliament next week which, if passed, will make membership and support for the protest group illegal.
Belonging to or expressing support for a proscribed organisation, along with a number of other actions, are criminal offences carrying a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison.
The decision comes after the group posted footage online showing two people inside the base at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire.
The clip shows one person riding an electric scooter up to an Airbus Voyager air-to-air refuelling tanker and appearing to spray paint into its jet engine.

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If Zohran Mamdani can do it, left must believe it can make it anywhere
If Zohran Mamdani can do it, left must believe it can make it anywhere

The National

time35 minutes ago

  • The National

If Zohran Mamdani can do it, left must believe it can make it anywhere

A campaign ran exclusively on the principles of socialism and equality with a peppering of pro-Palestine views for good measure just out-manoeuvred an absurdly embedded former governor; a well-oiled political machine with millions in Super PAC funding behind him – it's absolutely spectacular. I don't want to get ahead of myself, but from the land that just inflicted another four years of Donald Trump on global stability, it is something to be excited about. As we watch the national security of virtually every country across the globe being tossed around the most incompetent men to ever exist like a hot potato, a victory of this proportion for the grassroots is massive. Zohran Mamdani didn't just beat Cuomo. He beat him with 43.5% of first-place votes to fly past the political gatekeepers, a message to the ruling class that should send shockwaves through them. People are tired of being ruled by the same people offering the same answers to problems that only ever worsen – and that warning transcends the borders of the United States. READ MORE: UK nations unite against Labour's 'inadequate' devolution approach This isn't just a New York story that those of us desperate for a glimmer of hope are clutching to. It's a warning shot for every political establishment coasting on carefully curated political apathy. Mamdani's campaign was a grassroots spectacle, rooted in genuine empathy. Not media-trained empathy but the kind that compels action. He knocked doors, used public transport and held public meetings in church halls and community centres. He spent every day of his campaign speaking to voters and sharing in their stories. Not in the self-serving way that we're used to politicians exploiting for optics – using paid actors and actresses to parade as working-class mums for campaign videos – but because he knew that the solutions to broken systems were found in the people they impact. He listened and he empowered the community he seeks to serve – and that is worth more electorally than any pretty penny donated from any giant corporation. As Cuomo has just found out. What's most exciting for me about this is the messaging Mamdani ran his campaign on. There was no pandering to the uprising of the right wing, just firm, socialist principles. Rent controls, free public transport, taxing the wealthy, social housing, publicly owned grocery stores. Good politics in service of everyday people rather than hollow policy that seeks to serve only the rich and powerful. There was no dream-selling or empty promises either, just genuinely well-thought-out ideas crafted from the people power that fuelled his campaign. A platform that dared to centre ordinary people rather than appease the donors and influencers who sashay in and out of Manhattan cocktail bars without the slightest inkling of what the typical New York experience looks like. And it worked. Cuomo threw everything possible at him – especially money. Money that he used to smear Mamdani's intentions and credentials at every opportunity. He, of course, in desperation, dog-whistled accusations of antisemitism over pro-Palestine views, which Mamdani in response used to craft the most successfully unifying campaign seen in years. READ MORE: SNP MPs join Labour rebellion in bid to kill off benefit cuts There's something deeply human and hopeful about voters choosing that, particularly among the never-ending doom and gloom that seems to be occupying our news feeds day in and day out. It's something really powerful that should rattle even the most cynical among us. The voting system helped. While Mamdani led the first-choice votes and Cuomo lagged, it was second-choice votes from progressives who supported candidates like Brad Lander that ultimately put Mamdani out in front. A masterclass in how to build a progressive movement. Alliances formed across backgrounds and belief systems rather than an individualistic approach. In a climate where we are all being urged to turn against one another, the success of this uniting force for good might well be the hope we've been waiting for. It's hard not to draw the comparison with Scotland. Our own politics is, famously, dominated by a stagnant establishment, one increasingly distanced from the reality outside of Westminster's gold-encrusted walls. A man-made cost of living crisis, the likes of which has not been seen in decades, with a generation of young Scots watching their future dissolve into the same old broken Westminster policies, the same old establishment parties and the same old excuses. 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There's work to do still with incumbent Eric Adams fighting his re-election from an independent standpoint and loopholes for Cuomo to snake through yet but for now, there's hope for the entire world – of a kind that has been absent for too long.

Ring doorbell reign of terror sees 'UK's worst neighbour' jailed
Ring doorbell reign of terror sees 'UK's worst neighbour' jailed

Daily Mirror

time42 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

Ring doorbell reign of terror sees 'UK's worst neighbour' jailed

Drina Gray, 52, terrorised the young couple by smashing their Ring doorbells and regularly taking her dog to defecate on their doorstep in Wandsworth, south west London A nightmare neighbour who terrorised the couple living above her through their Ring doorbell has been jailed for more than three years. Drina Gray, 52, harrassed victims Ben and Emma - who do not want to give their surnames - "morning, noon and night", a judge said. Ben, 32, bought his first flat in Wandsworth, southwest London, in 2022. But when council tenant Gray moved into the flat below his the following April, his life changed. ‌ After reporting her for kicking her dog - which he says he caught on CCTV cameras - Gray launched into a "relentless" campaign that made Ben and his partner Emma prisoners in their own home. ‌ In the months that followed, Ben claims his neighbour smashed two Ring doorbells in less than a year, issued regular chilling threats via cameras and took her dog to dirty their doorstep. The product manager even lost his job at a startup company because of the lack of sleep he was getting due to Gray blasting loud music and hoovering the communal hallway in the early hours of the morning. Countless disturbing videos captured by Ben's cameras show Gray shouting, swearing and threatening him. After Gray was finally prosecuted for her campaign of hate and a judge ordered her into custody, she escaped from court and went on the run for weeks. She claimed that Ben had been using her as "bait" to make his 31-year-old partner Emma, who also lives at the flat, jealous after a break-up. ‌ But jailing her for 40 months, Judge Peter Lodder KC told her she had harassed the couple "morning, noon and night". "You made the lives of your neighbours hell," he said. "You persistently harassed them morning, noon and night. Despite orders being obtained to seek to prevent you from behaving in the way you did, you continued in your campaign. It may well be that you were under the influence of alcohol, but that is not an excuse - it's an aggravation. ‌ "It's no consolation at all to the people you were threatening with extreme violence. This was over a period of six months. You well knew what you were doing." Judge Lodder jailed Gray for 40 months after she admitted charges of harassment intended to put in fear of violence, two charges of criminal damage relating to doorbell cameras she smashed and a public order offence of using threatening words and behaviour towards Ben. A further charge of failing to comply with a community protection notice was dealt with by way of a two-year conditional discharge at Wimbledon Magistrates' Court in June. ‌ Ben, who claims he recorded "140" separate incidents of harassment over 18 months, has complained previously of the way Gray's case was dealt with by the authorities, including by the Metropolitan Police, Wandsworth Council and the court services. He claims that when Gray once threatened to "shoot" him and his partner Emma, who works in marketing, police took "13 hours" to respond. ‌ Court cases involving Gray were adjourned multiple times before she was finally sentenced for her offending. Prosecutor Dylan Bub, outlining the facts of the case, told the court: "The victim and defendant are neighbours - they live in the same block. The defendant moved into the bottom flat in April 2023. Since the defendant moved into her property, she engaged in a campaign of harassment against [Ben]." Mr Bub explained that though the first year passed without incident, Ben installed cameras at his property after Gray stole two parcels from outside his door. ‌ In May 2024, he said Gray broke the first of two Ring doorbell cameras - which cost £100 each - by punching it "repeatedly". Mr Bub told the court that after Ben reported Gray's harassment to police, she continued to make threats - including once threatening to burn his house down. Despite being issued a community protection notice, she broke it the same day. She was sent to court and the case progressed through various hearings, but at one point she even absconded and a warrant was produced for her arrest. ‌ But after she was eventually caught and brought before a crown court judge, the prosecutor said "no evidence" had been provided by police, and the charge was dropped. Ben told Kingston-upon-Thames Crown Court that Gray's abusive campaign had left him feeling "embarrassed, humiliated, numb" and even "suicidal". In his witness statement, written last December, he said: "To put it simply, this situation has completely taken over my life. What should have been a happy and exciting time for me - owning and living in my first home - has turned into a living nightmare. I don't feel safe in my own home anymore and live in a state of numbness caused by anxiety and depression. ‌ "Instead of being a place where I can relax and unwind, it's a place where I'm constantly on edge, waiting for the next abusive episode from Miss Gray. Every day I feel trapped, knowing she's right below me, ready to scream abuse at me, make threats and continuously taunt me and my partner. Her threats towards me are terrifying. She regularly shouts that people are waiting to 'break my legs' or 'cut my throat' [...]. "This situation has left me feeling broken - mentally, physically and emotionally. I feel like my life has been on pause for 18 months because of Miss Gray's actions. I've lost my peace of mind, my health, my job, and even the ability to enjoy my home. I just want to feel safe and normal again." Gray read a personal letter to the judge out in court, in which she apologised for her actions but also claimed Ben had used her as "bait" to make his partner 'jealous'. ‌ Her defence advocate, Tammy Sher, also told the court several car accidents had driven her to alcohol, and that she too has suffered from suicidal thoughts. But Judge Lodder said she "deserved" her sentence, telling her: "You were given many a warning. You chose to ignore these warnings and breach the notices that were served upon you. "I am aware of the consequences of your behaviour: [the victims] were frightened in their own homes, incapable of relaxing. You induced in them panic attacks and sleep deprivation. [Ben] lost his job, but fortunately obtained another. I can wholly understand why he says he became suicidal in his thinking and desperate, because you ignored council and court orders [...]. ‌ "You have 18 convictions for 40 offences. Your offending has been aggravated by alcohol. In my view, you deserve a sentence of 40 months' imprisonment." A spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police Service said: 'Drina Gray conducted herself appallingly, and we extend our sympathies to her victim, who endured an unrelenting campaign of harassment. 'The defendant admitted to numerous offences – including harassment and criminal damage – following a Met investigation. She awaits sentencing for these. 'Adjournments in case hearings are at the discretion of the courts. A charge of escaping from court on Wednesday, 26 March, was initially brought against Gray by the Met. However, this was later discontinued by the Crown Prosecution Service.' Cllr Aydin Dikerdem, a WBC Cabinet member for housing, said he accepted the authority could have acted faster following Ben's serious complaints about his neighbour.

Three people rushed to hospital after stabbing outside Tube station as police cordon off busy road
Three people rushed to hospital after stabbing outside Tube station as police cordon off busy road

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Three people rushed to hospital after stabbing outside Tube station as police cordon off busy road

Three people have been rushed to hospital after a stabbing outside a West London tube station. Officers and paramedics swarmed the scene on Station Parade outside Willesden Green Underground Station. London Ambulance Service also sent an incident response officer, a clinical team manager and paramedics from its tactical response unit, as well as trauma teams in cars from London's Air Ambulance. They treated two people for stab wounds and a third person for a head injury. The Metropolitan Police said four men, two aged 21 and one aged 20, were rushed to hospital with stab injuries. It added that a 20-year-old woman who reported breathing difficulties declined medical treatment at the scene. Officers have made no arrests so far, and a spokesperson it has 'no concerns' about an impact on the community. The road was sealed off for several hours as forensic teams combed the scene for evidence. Specialist CBRN (Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear) units were scrambled amid initial fears of a hazardous incident, but were later stood down when it was confirmed there was no chemical threat. The Met Police is now urging anyone with information to come forward. Anyone with information should call 101 quoting CAD 8601/22Jun, or contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111. A London Ambulance Service spokesperson said:'We were called at 9.02pm on Wednesday 25 June to reports of a stabbing on Walm Lane, NW2. 'We sent a number of resources to the scene, including ambulance crews, an incident response officer, a clinical team manager and paramedics from our tactical response unit. We also dispatched trauma teams in cars from London's Air Ambulance. 'We treated four people in total. We took two patients to a major trauma centre and another patient to a local hospital. The fourth person declined further treatment.'

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