
Two women die in sea incidents in Cornwall hours apart
The force said it had been alerted to the first incident at about 12:35 BST on Sunday following a report from the South Western Ambulance Service.RNLI lifeguards were already on scene.The body of the second woman was recovered from the water at about 16:21, police said.Officers said many people had flocked to the beaches in sunny weather.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Police seize £180k of Andrew Tate's Aston Martin supercar deposit
A total of £180,000 has been seized by Devon and Cornwall Police from Andrew Tate over a deposit he placed on an Aston Martin Magistrates' Court heard on Thursday the controversial British-American influencer paid the deposit for a special-edition Valhalla vehicle in 2021. The cash came from tax evasion and money laundering, the force said, which obtained account freezing and forfeiture orders under the Proceeds of Crime Act. Tate and his brother Tristan did not oppose the sum can be added to the £2.7m of funds seized from the brothers by the force in December 2024 after the same court ruled they failed to pay tax on £21m of revenue from online businesses. Some of the revenue in that case was directly linked by detectives to allegations of human trafficking that the brothers face in Romania. Sarah Clarke KC, on behalf of Devon and Cornwall Police, told the judge on Thursday that the funds used to pay the supercar deposit were the proceeds of tax and VAT evasion and money said funds deposited with Aston Martin originally came from a Coinbase cryptocurrency account, which had held multiple cryptocurrencies purchased with funds derived from the Tate brothers' business tax or VAT had been paid on the funds, she added. Det Supt Jon Bancroft, of Devon and Cornwall Police, said: "This latest judgement follows on from our applications made against the Tate brothers which resulted in a successful ruling in December 2024 and the forfeiture of nearly £2.7m of criminal funds."From the outset we aimed to demonstrate that Andrew and Tristan Tate evaded their tax obligations and laundered money. We succeeded in doing exactly that and we have succeeded again this week."People in Devon and Cornwall will benefit from the money seized and it will be reinvested to help prevent crime, aid victims and vulnerable people, and to boost good causes."He added the outcome showed how the police would continue to "relentlessly pursue all criminal funds without fear or favour".


The Sun
5 hours ago
- The Sun
Heartbreak as ‘bubbly' boy, 2, dies suddenly in his sleep after jumping and playing in cot with ‘no signs of illness'
HEARTBREAKING tributes have been paid to a two-year-old boy who died suddenly in his cot. Sebastian Griffiths, two, passed away at home in Treorchy, South Wales, on August 3 - with his parents Louise and Nathan, and siblings Brooklyn, eight, and Jessica, 16, devastated by the loss. The tragic tot was described as the family's "little prince". He had been playing and didn't show any signs of illness prior to his death. 1


Daily Mail
16 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Teen killer finally confesses to murdering sister-in-law and nephews, 1 and 4, after leaving chilling letter
A New Hampshire teen confessed to murdering his sister-in-law and two young nephews weeks after penning a chilling letter that read, 'I do not belong in this family'. Eric Sweeney, 19, fatally shot Kassandra Sweeney, 25, and her sons, Benjamin, four, and Mason, one, while living at their Northfield home. He shot his victims execution style with a bullet to the head using his older brother's gun. Sweeney initially faced first-degree murder charges and was scheduled to go on trial in September, however accepted a plea deal, admitting guilt to three counts of second-degree murder and one count of falsifying physical evidence. In June 2022, just two months before the brutal killings, Sweeney took the family's truck and left behind a harrowing note. 'I do not belong in this family. All I do is steal and lie and be irresponsible,' the note read in part, ending with, 'I love you big bro and sis bye.' Prosecutors cited the message as an early indication of emotional instability and growing conflict in the home. Kassandra and her husband, Sean Sweeney, were acting as Eric's guardians and struggled to manage his behavioral issues, which included lying, stealing, and breaking household rules, Assistant Attorney General Bethany Durand said during the Friday hearing. Police were called to the home twice, once after the stolen truck incident, and again less than two weeks before the fatal shootings, when the couple reported that Sweeney was making 'strange statements'. 'The situation had deteriorated to the extent that Sean installed a lock on the door of the master bedroom in order to keep the defendant out of that room,' Durand told Merrimack County Superior Court. On the morning of the killings, prosecutors said Kassandra had been recording and sending video clips to her husband of the boys playing and laughing, but just moments later, she and the children were dead. In one clip, the toddler giggles as a family dog plays with the tail of his brother's dinosaur costume. In another, both children wave at a groundhog outside the window, saying 'Hi, Dada' to the camera. 'The family was having a normal morning, with the boys playing and laughing with Kassandra while helping her to create video clips to send to their dad,' Durand said. 'There was no indication of any unknown person, intruder or danger inside of their home.' Family members sat quietly during the hearing, some wiping away tears (pictured), neither they nor attorneys for either side gave statements after court adjourned Sweeney initially told police he had been in his basement bedroom when he heard something break upstairs, followed by a man yelling and several loud 'pops'. He claimed he went upstairs and discovered the victims on the floor, took Kassandra's phone and car keys, and left the house. He later called his brother, who contacted law enforcement, NBC10 reported. Kassandra and Mason were found in the dining room, while Benjamin was discovered in the kitchen, each had been shot once in the head. Prosecutors said Sweeney used his brother's handgun, which had been kept in a locked safe under the couple's bed. Family members sat quietly, some seen wiping away tears during the emotional hearing Friday. Sweeney will be sentenced on October 3 where he faces 35 years to life in prison for each second-degree murder charge.