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Epsom Derby: Council agrees new anti-social behaviour powers
Epsom Derby: Council agrees new anti-social behaviour powers

BBC News

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • BBC News

Epsom Derby: Council agrees new anti-social behaviour powers

Police have been granted more powers to tackle anti-social behaviour ahead of the Epsom and Ewell Borough Council has adopted a Public Space Protection Order (PSPO) for the whole borough, which will allow police officers to fine people being harassing, threatening or order, granted at a council meeting on Tuesday, is designed to give officers powers to tackle anti-social behaviour without the need to immediately resort to Tommy Pearson, borough commander for Epsom and Ewell, said: "Our main aim is to keep the community safe from harm and limit the impact as much as possible. "There are small pockets of anti-social behaviour in the area around the racecourse and we have been doing a lot of work with the local community to target it in the area around the Derby." More than 25,000 people are expected for Ladies Day on Friday, and 35,000 people for Derby Day on Down racecourse said it contributes £64m to the economy each year through the Epsom Derby and other the terms of the PSPO, which lasts for a minimum of three years, police officers will be able to fine anyone harassing or intimidating members of the public or being abusive, if they do not stop when asked to. Officers will also be able to fine people wearing clothing designed to obscure their identity for the purpose of committing crime or anti-social Shanice Goldman said: "This will allow an early intervention which can avoid arrests and criminalisation of people who are usually good, law-abiding citizens."This is a once a year event that everyone should be able to enjoy, including local residents."

Child sex offender caught when he tried to join police
Child sex offender caught when he tried to join police

Times

time15-05-2025

  • Times

Child sex offender caught when he tried to join police

A child sex offender who preyed on young girls seven years ago was caught by detectives when he brazenly applied to join the police and submitted a DNA sample as part of his application. Reinaldo Goncalo Bertoni Filho was arrested after applying to be a police community support officer (PCSO) with the British Transport Police (BTP) in September last year, police revealed. The 41-year-old was asked to provide a sample as part of the vetting process and it matched DNA obtained following two separate sexual attacks on children in Ewell and Claygate in 2017. The first incident took place on July 10 on a footpath in Ewell, where the 15-year-old victim was sexually assaulted. A male DNA profile was obtained from her clothing, which was

Surrey sex offender caught through DNA in PCSO application
Surrey sex offender caught through DNA in PCSO application

BBC News

time15-05-2025

  • BBC News

Surrey sex offender caught through DNA in PCSO application

A man has admitted sexually assaulting a 10 year-old girl and a 15-year-old girl in Surrey after being caught while trying to become a Police Community Support Officer (PCSO).Reinaldo Goncalo Bertoni Filho, 41, assaulted the two girls in Ewell and Claygate in 2017, approaching both on foot before cornering and attacking them, Surrey Police Bertoni Filho, of Askew Road in London, was caught after DNA samples as part of his PCSO application were flagged as matching samples from the two will be sentenced at Guildford Crown Court on 25 July having pleaded guilty to sexual assault by penetration on Tuesday and sexual assault of a child under 13 at an earlier hearing. A Surrey Police spokesperson said Goncalo Bertoni Filho first cornered and sexually assaulted a 15-year-old girl on 10 July, 2017, while she was cycling in Hogsmill Open Space in victim escaped after biting him on the elbow and scratching his face, causing him to run off, and reported the attack to a Bertoni Filho then later attacked the 10-year-old girl while she was walking alone in Claygate Common on 17 August, girl said that a man had jogged past her then turned, grabbed her and pinned her against a tree before assaulting kicking him in the stomach, escaping and telling a family friend, they later tracked down and confronted Goncalo Bertoni Filho while he was out family friend challenged him before chasing him on foot and punching him, knocking a single headphone out of his Goncalo Bertoni Filho later applied to be a PCSO with the British Transport Police in September 2024, DNA from the earbud and from the clothes of his first victim matched samples from his Sgt Adele Robertson paid tribute to both victims for their added: "Goncalo Bertoni Filho was a dangerous sexual predator who targeted young girls on their own in isolated areas with the sole purpose of committing a sexual offence against them."His audacity at applying to join the British Transport Police as a PCSO defies belief, but it was this which ultimately led to being identified."

Epsom Derby Day public space protection order passed by council
Epsom Derby Day public space protection order passed by council

BBC News

time08-05-2025

  • BBC News

Epsom Derby Day public space protection order passed by council

Anyone arrested for anti-social behaviour on Epsom Derby Day will face a £100 fixed penalty notice, a council says. The Derby Festival begins on 6 June, with the Derby itself being run on 7 & Ewell Borough Council is to impose a public space protection order (PSPO), which could be in force for up to three years across the district, in time for the festival. The order applies to anyone harassing or threatening others, or continuing to drink alcohol after being ordered to stop by a police officer, community support officer or council officer. The council voted through the order on Goldman, chair of the crime and disorder committee, said: "The PSPO is a new tool specifically for the Epsom & Ewell area which will allow police and appropriate council staff to address anti-social behaviour effectively, without immediately resorting to arrests."I hope this order will ensure a more enjoyable experience for everyone on the day, as well as a safer environment in the borough."

Medicaid cuts risk worsening Black maternal health crisis
Medicaid cuts risk worsening Black maternal health crisis

Yahoo

time20-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Medicaid cuts risk worsening Black maternal health crisis

Advocates are warning lawmakers that the proposed cuts to Medicare and Medicaid will leave millions of pregnant Black women at a heightened risk of death, worsening the maternal mortality crisis and its racial disparities. Last month, the House budget resolution proposed up to $880 billion in cuts to Medicaid over a decade, which would also lead to cuts to Medicare. But advocates say Medicaid is a vital resource for cutting into the maternal mortality disparities. 'We often see these cuts as: We're making sure that people who 'don't deserve' these programs are not getting it. But in actuality, it's disproportionately going to impact people of color, women of color,' Rolonda Donelson, Huber Reproductive Health Equity legal fellow at the National Partnership for Women & Families, told The Hill. While Medicaid finances about 40 percent of all births nationwide, more than 64 percent of births by Black moms are covered by Medicaid. Still, Black women are three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications than white women. Some of these conditions include preeclampsia, postpartum hemorrhaging and blood clotting. Eighty percent of those deaths are preventable, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. For Natasha Ewell, Medicaid allowed her to safely deliver her third child. When Ewell was pregnant with her son, she felt what many Black women feel: excitement, happiness — and worry. Ewell was over 35, so she was already a high-risk patient. Then Ewell unexpectedly lost her job, and with it, her insurance. Desperate for coverage, she enrolled in Medicaid. In her first trimester, Ewell was diagnosed with oligohydramnios, a condition characterized by low amniotic fluid. The results of oligohydramnios can be drastic, sometimes affecting fetal development or causing complications during labor and delivery. In some cases, oligohydramnios can cause stillbirth. When Ewell's doctor discovered her diagnosis, he scheduled her for weekly checkups to ensure both she and her son were healthy and safe. 'It was very important for me to have that insurance, because having to go weekly – I can't imagine the co-pays for that. And these were specialists that I had to see,' Ewell said. 'It would have been a scarier pregnancy. This condition, it wasn't like leaking or spotting. If my fluid was low, I didn't have ways to check that. I wouldn't have known.' Ewell eventually delivered a healthy baby — several weeks early via c-section — but she says without public health insurance she doesn't know if that would have happened. The proposed cuts, she said, have her increasingly worried for future mothers, as it could force them to make a decision: risk the pregnancy and potential financial devastation, or terminate. 'I cannot imagine not having my son here. Who are they to make me have that choice between having this wonderful, amazing young boy that loves robotics, that's going to be part of the next generation, and who knows what he's going to be able to do?' Ewell said. Medicaid's coverage of prenatal care is vital to closing the gaps in the maternal mortality crisis, said Stacey Brayboy, senior vice president of public policy and government affairs at March of Dimes. Medicaid's prenatal care can help cover not only screenings like Ewell needed each week, but can also help track pregnant people's cardiovascular health, risks for preeclampsia, high blood pressure and glucose levels — all chronic stressors that can cause preterm births. 'The idea is to look at how we decrease the effects of preeclampsia and preterm birth and look at a lot of other pregnancy related tests to your pregnancy journey,' said Brayboy. Not only could this help close the racial disparities in the maternal mortality crisis, but also the infant mortality crisis where Black babies are more than two times likely to die than their white counterparts. But Medicaid cuts could also rollback gains made in recent years to expand the insurance's coverage postpartum. March of Dimes was among several organizations that successfully advocated for Medicaid to expand postpartum care from 90 days to a full year. That's because deaths from heart conditions and mental health–related conditions are most common in the year following delivery. But at least 10 states have trigger laws, Brayboy said, which would eliminate the extended postpartum care. Brayboy is also concerned over what conditions may no longer be able to be studied with the proposed cuts. 'Those cuts are going to impact research, and research helps drive some of the policy changes,' said Brayboy. 'These Medicaid proposed cuts are going to roll back all the progress that we've made and have a ripple effect. It's not going to just be isolated cuts; this will go across the entire maternal health ecosystem.' There are members of Congress who are trying to create policies to cement research to end the Black maternal health crisis. Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) told The Hill she is working with Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) to build support for their Mommies Act. The act would expand Medicare cover for pregnancy, labor and postpartum services, along with directing the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to issue guidance encouraging community-based doula care. The Act would also increase Medicaid minimum reimbursement rates for maternal and obstetric services for people in underserved areas and establish a maternity care home model demonstration project. 'Policy determines who lives, who dies, who survives and who thrives,' Pressley, a member of the Black Maternal Health Caucus, told The Hill. 'I am not being hyperbolic when I say these layered crises created by policy violence and neglect are a death sentence for Black moms.' Pressley said the Black maternal health crisis is personal to her — her paternal grandmother died in the 1950s giving birth to her uncle. 'It was incredibly devastating and destabilising for our family. You talk about generational trauma — every woman in their reproductive years has been told that story,' said Pressley. 'I cannot believe my grandmother suffered a fate that was preventable in the 1950s and here we stand in 2025 with the same devastating disparate outcomes.' Advocates say most of the work to combat the Medicaid cuts must come from Congressional leaders. But Donelson, of the National Partnership for Women & Families, added that families must come forward too. 'I think it's important for people who get their insurance through Medicaid, or have benefited from Medicaid in the past, to call their members of Congress, write to their members of Congress, post on social media and make a lot of noise about how Medicaid has benefited them and their families and how this program is critical to their health care,' said Donelson. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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