
Bristol man plans to leave city after numerous van break-ins
In the eight years Mr Kennedy-Hall and his wife have lived in their current home, he said every vehicle they owned had been broken into at least once. On one occasion their car window was smashed for a £5 vape pen that was left on the front seat.
A recent Freedom of Information request submitted to Avon and Somerset Police found there were 516 recorded instances of thefts from vehicles in April in the area the force covers.That is up from 445 in the same month last year. In 2024 an average of 15 such incidents were reported to police every day.
Mr Kennedy-Hall believes the police are either "unable or unwilling to fix the issue".He said he no longer reports each break-in."When I had the £7,000 worth of tools taken I phoned them. They said they were going to come out, check neighbours' CCTV, check the van [but] no one came out," he said."They don't have enough people to deal with it and it's an everyday occurrence for them so they just don't seem to bother with it anymore."Insp Terry Murphy, from Avon and Somerset Police, said: "Ultimately, all the time we are having to make tough decisions every day, prioritising what we have to do."That means sometimes people's trust and confidence in the police can be affected."
How can you protect your vehicle?
To help protect vehicles, especially work vans, police advise:Closing windows, locking up and setting the alarm every time you leave the vehicleParking in busy areas with CCTV coverage whenever possibleParking with the doors to the cargo bay close against a wallAdding permanent marking or using recognised forensic marking or etching kits to make tools identifiableKeeping an up-to-date list of tools, including serial numbers
However, Insp Murphy said a government initiative known as the Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee, which aims to strengthen relations between the police and communities, has seen nine new officers join his team, meaning they can prioritise vehicle crime more."I do think that investment in policing needs to improve," the chair of Avon and Somerset Police Federation Tom Gent said."We see police officers who want to be out there policing, dealing with crimes like that, and [we see] their frustrations and experience police officers leaving the service because they're frustrated because the haven't got enough time and support to go out and deal with those crimes."Mr Kennedy-Hall said he planned to move out of Bristol."I won't stay in the city more than another year," he said."It's got to the point where it's ridiculous."I'd rather commute in and work that way, rather than staying where I am now."
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The Independent
2 minutes ago
- The Independent
National Guard members arrive as Washington's new law-enforcement reality starts taking shape
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'How we got here or what we think about the circumstances — right now we have more police, and we want to make sure we use them,' she told reporters. The tone was a shift from the day before, when Bowser said Trump's plan to take over the Metropolitan Police Department and call in the National Guard was not a productive step and argued his perceived state of emergency simply doesn't match the declining crime numbers. Still, the law gives the federal government more sway over the capital city than in U.S. states, and Bowser said her administration's ability to push back is limited. Attorney General Pam Bondi posted on social media that the meeting was productive. The law allows Trump to take over the D.C. police for up to 30 days, though White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt suggested it could last longer as authorities later 'reevaluate and reassess." Extending federal control past that time would require Congressional approval, something likely tough to achieve in the face of Democratic resistance. About 850 federal law enforcement officers were deployed in Washington on Monday and arrested 23 people overnight, Leavitt said. The charges, she said, included gun and drug crimes, drunk driving, subway fare evasion and homicide. The U.S. Park Police has also removed 70 homeless encampments. People who were living in them can leave, go to a homeless shelter or go into drug addiction treatment, Leavitt said. Those who refuse could face fines or jail time. The city and Trump have had a bumpy relationship While Trump invokes his plan by saying that 'we're going to take our capital back,' Bowser and the MPD maintain that violent crime overall in Washington has decreased to a 30-year low after a sharp rise in 2023. Carjackings, for example, dropped about 50% in 2024 and are down again this year. 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She watched with open concern for the city streets as Trump finally got his military parade this summer. Her decision to dismantle Black Lives Matter Plaza earlier this year served as a neat metaphor for just how much the power dynamics between the two executives had evolved. Now that fraught relationship enters uncharted territory as Trump has followed through on months of what many D.C. officials had quietly hoped were empty threats. The new standoff has cast Bowser in a sympathetic light, even among her longtime critics. 'It's a power play and we're an easy target,' said Clinique Chapman, CEO of the D.C. Justice Lab. A frequent critic of Bowser, whom she accuses of 'over policing our youth' with the recent expansions of Washington's youth curfew, Chapman said Trump's latest move 'is not about creating a safer D.C. It's just about power.' 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He has declared states of emergency on issues ranging from border protection to economic tariffs, enabling him to essentially rule via executive order. In many cases, he has moved forward while the courts sorted them out. Bowser's claims about successfully driving down violent crime rates received backing earlier this year from an unlikely source. Ed Martin, Trump's original choice for U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, issued a press release in April hailing a 25% drop in violent crime rates from the previous year. His recently confirmed replacement candidate, former judge and former Fox News host Jeanine Pirro, brushed aside the data to argue that violent crime remains a significant issue for victims. 'These were vibrant human beings cut down because of illegal guns,' she said. ___ Associated Press writers Alanna Durkin Richer in Washington, Jonathan J. Cooper in Phoenix and Ali Swenson in New York contributed reporting.


The Independent
2 minutes ago
- The Independent
The president's DC takeover once again lays bare the Trump-Fox feedback loop
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From the moment Trump rode down that golden escalator and announced his first White House run in June 2015, he has enjoyed a symbiotic relationship with the conservative cable giant. While there have been bumps in the road -- whether it was his 'soft ban' during the Dominion election fraud lawsuit or his on-again/off-again friendship with owner Rupert Murdoch -- Trump and Fox have remained inextricably linked over the past decade. (The president is suing Murdoch and The Wall Street Journal, which the conservative media mogul owns, for $10 billion over an article about a 'bawdy' birthday letter Trump allegedly sent deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein in 2003. Trump has denied that he wrote the letter, calling it a 'fake thing.') 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While there was a revolving door between the conservative channel and the administration during Trump's first term, the president has outright used Fox News as a staffing agency during the second go-round, hiring roughly two dozen former network employees. The optics of the Trump-Fox feedback loop were on full display during Monday's presser. Alongside the president was one-time Fox & Friends Weekend host Pete Hegseth, who now leads the Pentagon, and Jeanine Pirro – the former Fox News star whom Trump recently installed as the US attorney overseeing Washington. At one point, the president even made sure to boast about Pirro's television ratings during her time on The Five. 'The murder rate in Washington today is higher than that of Bogota, Colombia, Mexico City, some of the places that you hear about as being the worst places on Earth,' Trump grumbled at one point, showing bar charts and graphics he got directly from Cain's show. 'Fox's website then completed the loop-de-loop with a story titled, 'Trump claims DC crimes trounce stats from notoriously violent cities worldwide,'' Stelter noted in Wednesday's edition of his newsletter, Reliable Sources. 'I found it unintentionally funny that the writer asked the White House for copies of the charts and citations... when Fox was the source to begin with. (The right hand didn't know what the other right hand was doing.)' The president, meanwhile, appeared to set the loop in motion on Tuesday when he posted to his social media site about the late-night attempted carjacking of former DOGE staffer Edward 'Big Balls' Coristine, suggesting that he would 'FEDERALIZE this City' if the 'Violent Crime' continued. While pictures of a bloodied 'Big Balls' may have been the catalyst behind the president's anger in the beginning, he was apparently spurred into action by his Fox friends on TV, according to Axios. Cain, of course, was far from alone in pushing the president to take further action in Washington while fearmongering over the crime in the city. In fact, Jeanine Pirro joined her old colleague Laura Ingraham on Wednesday night, and the two of them appeared to be in favor of Trump taking federal control of the city. 'I support him totally… If that's what we need to do to get it done, that's what he should do. And I support the president,' she told Ingraham. 'Fox News' programming often shapes Trump's actions, and that appears to have been the case here,' Gertz said. 'For months now, Trump's MAGA allies have been urging him to take a firmer hand over Washington D.C., but the tipping point for him to act was apparently an overwrought segment on his favorite TV channel.' In recent months, the president has also been swayed by the network's personalities to support Israel's military strikes against Iran, with Fox News host (and Homeland Security Advisory Council member) Mark Levin playing a key role. Gertz also noted that Trump's recent demand that Intel fire its chief executive and his insults of Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) were in response to Fox coverage. Additionally, just weeks before his second inauguration, Trump cited a retracted Fox News report about the New Orleans terror attack to insist that he'd been proven right that 'the criminals coming in are far worse than the criminals we have in our country,' falsely suggesting the assailant was an undocumented immigrant. In the end, it was confirmed that the suspect was born in the U.S. and that he didn't cross the southern border shortly before the New Year's attack. Still, in some ways, the Trump-Fox feedback loop isn't quite as pervasive as it appeared during the first term. But as Gertz explains, the main reason for this is that Fox News and the Trump administration are essentially a single unit now. 'Trump seems to be posting about Fox shows and taking advice from its on-air personalities less frequently than he did in his first term. He no longer needs to instruct federal officials to run their agencies the way Fox is telling him to because those officials are often former Foxers themselves — 23 of his appointees previously worked for the network,' he said. 'First-term Trump would take Fox host Pete Hegseth's advice over senior Defense Department officials — in his second term, Hegseth is the Defense Secretary,' Gertz concluded. 'Former Foxers are also running or helping to run the Justice Department, FBI, State Department, Transportation Department, and intelligence community.'


BBC News
3 minutes ago
- BBC News
Bins set alight on Liverpool street 'infested with rats'
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