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Boy and man charged over attempted murder
Boy and man charged over attempted murder

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Boy and man charged over attempted murder

A 17-year-old boy and a 47-year-old man have been charged in connection with an attempted murder after a man suffered serious injuries. Thames Valley Police has been investigating an incident in Holmanleaze, Maidenhead, at 13:40 BST on Friday. The man and boy, both from Maidenhead in Berkshire, were charged with one count of grievous bodily harm. The teenager was also charged with possession of a knife in public, said the force. Both have been remanded in police custody and are due to appear at Reading Magistrates' Court on Monday. Police said the victim, a man in his 30s, was in a stable condition in hospital. You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram. Thames Valley Police

Boy and man charged over Maidenhead attempted murder
Boy and man charged over Maidenhead attempted murder

BBC News

time3 days ago

  • General
  • BBC News

Boy and man charged over Maidenhead attempted murder

A 17-year-old boy and a 47-year-old man have been charged in connection with an attempted murder after a man suffered serious Valley Police has been investigating an incident in Holmanleaze, Maidenhead, at 13:40 BST on man and boy, both from Maidenhead, were charged with one count of grievous bodily harm. The teenager was also charged with possession of a knife in public, said the have been remanded in police custody and are due to appear at Reading Magistrates' Court on Monday. Police said the victim, a man in his 30s, was in a stable condition in hospital. You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Police say they need more money to fulfil Labour promises on crime – are they right?
Police say they need more money to fulfil Labour promises on crime – are they right?

The Independent

time7 days ago

  • Business
  • The Independent

Police say they need more money to fulfil Labour promises on crime – are they right?

Leaders of six major police forces, including Sir Mark Rowley, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, have warned Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, against a repeat of 'the retrenchment we saw under austerity.' They say that without more money, Labour's missions of halving knife crime and halving violence against women and girls will not happen. An article in The Times warning that 'without investment there will be no restoration of the prevention-focused neighbourhood policing' was signed by Sir Mark, Gavin Stephens, the chair of the National Police Chiefs' Council, and the chief constables of Merseyside, the West Midlands, Greater Manchester and West Yorkshire. At the same time, Sir Mark has joined privately with the heads of MI5 and the National Crime Agency to warn Shabana Mahmood, the justice secretary, that her plans to release prisoners early could be a 'net detriment to public safety.' They say they would need 'necessary resources' to contain the risks to the public of the early release of dangerous criminals. Are these just bids in spending negotiations? The negotiations for the spending review on 11 June are still under way, with the Home Office and Department of Justice two of the departments that have yet to agree their budgets for the next four years with the Treasury. It is not unusual at this stage of the discussions for interest groups to support their departments' demands for more money with blood-curdling warnings of the terrible consequences of failure to secure the funds they want. That said, the police have a strong case on both fronts. Labour made manifesto promises on crime that cannot be delivered on the cheap, and the early release scheme is bound to increase the risk to the public, however marginally. No wonder the negotiations are going badly. It is reported that 'some' secretaries of state are refusing to deal with Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the Treasury, who is traditionally in charge of spending discussions – they are insisting on taking their case directly to Rachel Reeves, the chancellor. Will Reeves give them the money? In the immortal words of Liam Byrne, the last chief secretary to the Treasury in a Labour government, 'there is no money'. The spending 'envelope' – the total – has been set and the announcement on 11 June is only on how it will be divided between departments. To make matters worse, Reeves already has to find additional money since her last checkpoint, which was the spring statement in March. Then, just to stay within her fiscal rules, she announced savings of £5bn a year from the welfare budget. Since then, the world economy has been threatened by Donald Trump's trade war, and government borrowing has been higher than expected. On top of which, the prime minister has just announced a U-turn, restoring winter fuel payments to an unspecified number of pensioners, and Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, this week confirmed that the government was considering lifting the two-child limit on universal credit payments. It is hard to see how Reeves can make her sums add up without more tax rises in the Budget in the autumn. Will we go back to the 'austerity' era for the police? The most frightening word in the police chiefs' article was 'austerity'. Labour is well aware that George Osborne's spending cuts to non-protected departments (anything that isn't health, defence or schools) were damaging to the Conservatives in the 2017 election. Police numbers fell by 8 per cent between the end of the last Labour government in 2010 to 2017. Theresa May responded to that disastrous election by reversing the trend: numbers had recovered by the election last year. It seems unlikely that police budgets will be squeezed on 11 June by anything like what happened in the Osborne years – and the memory of how Labour used police cuts as a campaign issue against the Tories ought to guarantee that 'austerity' on that scale does not happen again.

Ninja sword owners offered £5 compensation to hand in blades
Ninja sword owners offered £5 compensation to hand in blades

Telegraph

time21-05-2025

  • Telegraph

Ninja sword owners offered £5 compensation to hand in blades

Owners of ninja swords will be paid a minimum of £5 to surrender their weapons – but only if they can prove they were bought before the end of March. Some could even recoup the full value of the blades, if they can provide police with receipts as well as showing they were bought before a legal ban was announced. The Government said on March 27 that the 14 to 24-inch weapons would be prohibited from Aug 1, as part of Ronan's law, a package of anti-knife crime measures. Ministers are legally obliged to run surrender schemes when proscribing weapons and have tightened the rules in an attempt to prevent the Home Office being scammed by people offloading swords bought after the ban was announced. Owners who wish to remain anonymous will be able to leave their weapons in 37 Home Office-funded surrender bins and will not receive compensation. The bins have been specially designed to take ninja swords and placed in locations where 45 per cent of knife crime in England and Wales takes place. An anti-knife crime campaigner is set to drive a fortified 'amnesty van' across the country to encourage young people to hand over the illegal weapons ahead of the ban taking effect. Faron Paul will tour London, the West Midlands and Greater Manchester in July to help get rid of dangerous blades. The surrender bins and the tour are designed to make it easier for owners of the weapons to hand them in, after concerns that many would be reluctant to take swords into police stations. Mr Paul became a campaigner against knife crime after being stabbed 18 times in two separate attacks. One incident left him in a coma and with severe nerve damage, for which he needed years of rehabilitation. Through his charity FazAmnesty, he has taken more than 8,000 knives from the streets of London. Illegal to possess or sell The Aug 1 ban will make it illegal to possess, manufacture, import or sell ninja swords. Anyone caught in possession of a ninja sword in private after that date will face six months in prison, rising to two years under new measures in the Crime and Policing Bill currently before Parliament. It is already an offence to carry such a weapon in public, punishable by up to four years in jail. The crackdown is the final part of the anti-knife measures named after Ronan Kanda, 16, who was attacked and killed by two teenagers in a case of mistaken identity close to his home in Wolverhampton in June 2022. His killers had bought a set of swords and a machete on the internet. Ninja swords – which have a blade between 14 inches and 24 inches long with one straight cutting edge with a tanto-style point – have been linked to the surge in knife crime. There were more than 50,000 knife offences in England and Wales in the past year, close to the record high of 2019. Dame Diana Johnson, the policing minister, said: 'This Government is taking a different approach to tackling knife crime – one rooted in partnership with those who have first-hand experience of this devastating crime. 'We are committed to halving knife crime within a decade as part of our Plan for Change – and that demands bold, radical action. 'That is why we formed the Coalition to Tackle Knife Crime, not as a talking shop, but as a genuine working partnership and these new initiatives are a direct result of that collaboration. 'I'm deeply grateful to Faron Paul and Sandra Campbell for their leadership in driving them forward. 'We know that young people involved in crime can have complex pasts and often deep-rooted mistrust in authority, and I truly believe it's this kind of collaboration that will save young lives.'

Japan's knife ownership law comes into focus after UK bans ninja swords
Japan's knife ownership law comes into focus after UK bans ninja swords

South China Morning Post

time17-05-2025

  • Politics
  • South China Morning Post

Japan's knife ownership law comes into focus after UK bans ninja swords

Britain's ban on ninja swords has sparked a debate in Japan on knife ownership and whether a similar law should be introduced to curb crimes involving such weapons. One expert on Japanese swords says ninja swords, like those owned by criminals in the UK , are rarely used in knife attacks in Japan. From August 1, possession of curved, single-edged blades between 35cm (12.5 inches) and 61cm in length with a pointed 'tanto' tip will not be allowed in the UK. Individuals who are convicted of possessing such weapons, which are typically marketed online as ninja swords, may face up to two years in jail. The law will also tighten the sale of bladed weapons, with stiff punishments for companies having such weapons on their retail websites and any person selling them to individuals below 18. It was introduced as Ronan's Law, after 16-year-old Ronan Kanda, who was killed with a ninja sword near his home in Wolverhampton in 2022 by two boys, who also had a machete with them. Announcing the law in March, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: 'We are acting with urgency to bring forward measures to prevent deadly weapons from getting into the wrong hands and will continue to do whatever is needed to prevent young people being killed on our streets as part of our mission to halve knife crime over the next decade.' There were nearly 50,000 knife offences in Britain last year.

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