Thursday, 29 November 2012

Paul Hudson wanted by Sussex Police for prison recall

crime reporter,essex(weastar times/Ebc/WP/ times):::A 24-year-old man from East Sussex is being sought by police after breaching his licence conditions following his release from prison.
Paul Hudson from Vale Road, Seaford, was originally sentenced to three years in prison for burglary, assault and breaching a suspended sentence.
Hudson could be living in the Rainham or Maidstone areas of Kent and is wanted for recall to prison.
He is not believed to pose a threat to the public, Sussex Police said.
Police ask anyone who has seen Hudson to contact them.

bournmouth raper suspect Dean Goodwin jail for life in 1st case


crime reporter,bournmouth(weastar times/Ebc/WPA man has appeared in court and then jail for life charged with attempted murder and sex offences in Dorset and Hampshire.
Dean Goodwin, 62, of Poole(bournmouth), was arrested by armed police in the town on Tuesday after attacks on two women in Poole and Andover.
He faces 11 charges including attempted murder, rape, robbery, false imprisonment and sexual assault.
Bournemouth magistrates remanded him in custody to appear at Winchester Crown Court on 6 December.
A 62-year-old man has been jailed for life with  1st  charges  action being taken by police investigating ..for rest of charge court hearing in next month (6th december).
other gang member will charge soon by new refugee and illegel &border control unit countrywide.

John andrew a child rapist jailed in by norfolkk(Great Yarmouth )court

child crime reporter,norfolk(weastar times/Ebc/WP):::A 55-year-old man has been jailed for 16 years for raping two girls.
John andrew, of George Street, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, pleaded guilty to 10 counts of rape and charges relating to indecent images of children.
He attacked the two girls during the mid-1990s and in 2011, Norwich Crown Court heard.
Norfolk Police said andrew "terrible offences" involved "vulnerable girls". He has been placed on the sex offenders register for life.
Detectives discovered indecent images and films on a computer hard drive and a number of memory sticks belonging to andrew.
'Enormous courage'
Police said a number of images were of Level 5 - the highest classification.
As well as the rape offences, he admitted one count of making an indecent photograph of a child and three counts of possessing indecent pictures of children.
Det Con Nikki Clarke, who led the investigation, said: "andrew committed these terrible offences against two vulnerable young girls who until recently had been too scared to come forward and we would like to commend them for the bravery they have shown.
"By pleading not guilty, until he changed his plea on the first day of trial, andrew forced the victims to believe they would have to relive the ordeal in court: this has proven an immensely stressful experience.
"It has taken an enormous amount of courage on their part, and we hope such a sentence will give them a sense of closure and that they can now move on positively with their lives."

Peterborough City Hospital's strain of PFI repayments

Peterborough City Hospital
unuse most modern hospital..pic courtesy Ebc
health crime reporter,cambridge(weastar times/Ebc):::A hospital built under the private finance initiative (PFI) has saddled a health trust with crippling repayments, a report has found.
Peterborough City Hospital opened in 2010 to combine services on one site.
A National Audit Office (NAO) report found repayments - totalling £41.6m in 2011 - placed a "considerable strain" on Peterborough and Stamford NHS Trust.
The trust needs to cut spending by £64m by 2017. The union Unison said it wants a full inquiry into the project.
The report added that doubts over the trust's ability to meet repayments without services suffering had been raised but ignored before construction began in 2007.
The hospital was officially opened by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge on Wednesday,

Start Quote

It has been acknowledged that our PFI payments are unaffordable”
Dr Peter ReadingInterim chief executive of hospital trust
'Critical financial position'
Amyas Morse, head of the NAO, called for "urgent action" from the trust, the Department of Health and regulators to "get the trust back on its feet".
He added: "The trust board's poor financial management and procurement of an unaffordable PFI scheme have left the trust in a critical financial position.
"The board developed and enthusiastically supported an unrealistic business case built on over-optimistic financial projections.
"The regulatory and approval processes did not work in this case and did not ensure affordability."
Last year, the trust faced a deficit of £46m, which is expected to rise to £50m this year.
This is as a result of the PFI scheme, past financial failings and other changes affecting the hospital's income.
The capital cost of the scheme as a proportion of turnover was the largest in the NHS, at 142%.
Monitor, the regulator of foundation trusts, raised concerns about the scheme's affordability before it was approved.
But neither the trust board nor the Department of Health addressed these concerns fully, the NAO said.
'Went badly wrong'
Dr Peter Reading, interim chief executive of the hospital trust, said the board acknowledged shortcomings but had put in place "new structures and systems to improve our financial forecasting".
He said the trust was on track to deliver £13.2m cost savings in 2012-13.
"It has been acknowledged that our PFI payments are unaffordable," he said. "As the majority of the board members who approved the project to build our hospital are no longer in post, I cannot speak on their behalf about the decisions taken at the time."
Dr David Bennett, Monitor chief executive, said the organisation had queried the affordability of the PFI scheme from the start, "but the trust went ahead with the PFI anyway".
"Once the financial situation at Peterborough became clear, Monitor took regulatory action, and we continue to work closely with the trust, along with commissioners and the Department of Health, to turn around its financial performance."
A Department of Health spokesman said it the case was an example of where "PFI policy went badly wrong".
Tracey Lambert, from Unison, said: "A hospital which originally cost £310m will end up costing the taxpayer £1.6 billion.
"Even mortgage finance at 6% would be far cheaper than the soaring cost of PFI.
"But to make sure we get a change of policy, we want to expose to public view just what was done in Peterborough, who signed off the deal and who rubber-stamped it."

Sally McGrath murder trial: Jury goes out


crime reporter,cambridge(weastar times/Ebc/WP/crime journal):::
A jury in the trial of a man accused of murdering a woman over 30 years ago has retired to consider its verdict.
The body of Sally McGrath, 22, was found in woods near Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, in March 1980. She had gone missing eight months earlier.
Miss McGrath was last seen alive on 11 July 1979 at a Peterborough hotel with Paul Taylor, jurors at Chelmsford Crown Court have been told.
The former soldier and builder, 60, of Fareham, Hampshire, denies murder.
He has been on trial for the past eight weeks.
When Miss McGrath's body was found it was badly decomposed and police at the time could not recover any forensic evidence.
Mr Taylor, known as Barry, also denies three counts of rape, one attempted rape, a serious sexual assault and an indecent assault relating to three different women.

Brighton seperet motorcycle lane may use from next year after seperet bike roads develope.

staff correpondent(weastar times/Ebc):::Motorcycles and scooters are to be allowed to use new seperet bike lane  across the country soon which start from  Brighton for a 12-month trial period.
Riders will be able to use the A23 from Carden Avenue to Preston Drove and the A259 from Saltdean to the Ovingdean roundabout.
The trial, which is to begin in the summer, has been approved by Brighton and Hove City Council's transport committee.
Previously the Brighton and Hove Bus Company has supported the idea.
Councillor Ian Davey, chairman of the transport committee, said: "Motorcyclists have been asking to be allowed to use these two bus lanes for many years so I am pleased that we have reached agreement for this year-long trial, and I hope that it is successful.
"It will be monitored carefully by road safety officers and the results will be reported to a future meeting."
There will also be a public information campaign, the council said.
its mentioned that seperet bike road structure will develope under national roads&highway insfustructural  development law which effect from 2013 january.


THE ROYAL ENGLAND QEEN+HM+L+S+E2 visits Windsor hospice 25 years after opening it

Nigel Millward meets the Queen
 very popular smily alltime THE  ROYAL ENGLAND QEEN+HM+L+S+E2 visit a hospital in barkshire
THE ROYAL correspondent,barkshire(weastar times/Ebc/WP)::: THE QEEN+HM+L+S+E2
Patients and staff chatted to the monarch during her visit to Thames Hospicecare in Windsor.
The hospice cares for adults with life-limiting illnesses. It was THE QEEN+HM+L+S+E2 third visit to the Hatch Lane hospice having opened an extension in 2002.
THE QEEN+HM+L+S+E2 unveiled a plaque marking the anniversary and accepted flowers from 11-year-old Lucy Doyle.
Patient Nigel Millward, 52, from Maidenhead, recalled meeting the Queen 22 years ago while he was an equestrian judge.
Mr Millward had been a jump judge at the Windsor Park Equestrian Club and had shook  THE QEEN+HM+L+S+E2 hand during a meeting "on a cold, horrible day".
Former medical director Sue Duncan worked for the hospice for 25 years before retiring in October. She first met THE QEEN+HM+L+S+E2 10 years ago, when she showed her around a newly-opened building.
She said: "She was brilliant, she spent ages with the patients.
"I can't tell you, it's just lovely to see, it's such a small thing but it makes a big difference."

black nigro Sex crime offender worked at hospital!!!

child crime reporter(weastar times/WP/Ebc):::a convicted child sex criminal do  job in a hospital.who is refugee ...recent investigation publish...

new national crime protection unit for refugee and illegel people control continue investagation such this kind of crime countrywide...

Lorry driver killed in M6 Staffordshire crash

staff reporter(weastar times/Ebc/WP):::The driver of a lorry has died in a crash on the M6 in Staffordshire.
Police were called to the incident on the southbound carriageway close to junction 12, near Cannock, shortly before 12:00 GMT.
Emergency crews discovered a heavy goods vehicle had left the road. A man in his 60s died at the scene.
The motorway was closed in both directions while the vehicle was recovered and the scene was examined. Police are appealing for witnesses.

Three arrests after Kirkharle jewellery shop owners tied up in raid

crime reporter,northhambria(weastar times/Ebc):::Three men have been arrested in connection with a raid during which a Northumberland couple were tied up and robbed.
Police said the man and woman's home in Capheaton was targeted by robbers armed with an axe in June.
Their jewellery shop in Kirkharle was later raided, Northumbria Police said.
A 47-year-old man from Manchester and two men, aged 48 and 28, from Durham have been arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit robbery.

Nine refugee arrests in dawn gun and drug raids in Merseyside

crime reporter,liverpool(weastar times/Ebc/WP):::Nine refugee people have been arrested in raids in Merseyside during a police crackdown on gun,gang, and drug,prostitution  crime.
Officers executed warrants at 15 addresses in Kirkby, St Helens, Knowsley and Fazakerley.
Eight men and one woman have been arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to supply Class A drugs. Thirteen of the addresses are residential homes.
Police said "a substantial amount of cash" had been recovered from a house searched in St Helens.
The operation, codenamed Operation Decade, is the culmination of a 12-month investigation.
Ch Supt Mike Cloherty, area commander for Knowsley, said the operation was set up after residents raised concerns about serious organised crime in their communities.

Jeremy Bamber's latest action against conviction fails


crime reporter,essex(weastar times/Ebc/WP):::Two judges in London rejected a judicial review application.
Bamber challenged a refusal by the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) to refer his case back to the Court of Appeal as a miscarriage of justice.
The CCRC, an independent body which investigates possible miscarriages, rejected Bamber's last appeal in April.
The decision on Thursday follows a single judge rejecting Bamber's application for permission to seek judicial review of the CCRC's decision after he studied the case papers in private.
Complex investigation
Bamber made a renewed application dealt with by Sir John Thomas, president of the Queen's Bench Division, and Mr Justice Globe.
Announcing the decision, Sir John said that having looked at the approach taken by the CCRC in the case he could not see "any way" in which a challenge could be made to the decision reached.
"It seems to me that a challenge is impossible to mount," he said.
The 51-year-old who is serving a whole-life term for the 1985 killings at a remote Essex farmhouse, has always protested his innocence.
In April, the CCRC said that despite a lengthy and complex investigation, it had not "identified any evidence or legal argument that it considers capable of raising a real possibility that the Court of Appeal would quash the convictions".
Bamber and two other killers have also started an appeal in the European Court of Human Rights against spending the rest of their lives in prison, claiming a breach of human rights.

Net refugee-illegel immigration to THE ROYAL ENGLAND falls by a new anti refugee law by LORDS EC.


refugee-illegel immgrant  crime reporter(weastar times/WP/guardian):::Net migration to THE ENGLAND has fallen by a quarter over the past year, from 242,000 to 183,000, the Office for National Statistics has reported.
The decrease is the first fall in the figures since the government set its target to reduce annual net migration to below 100,000 by the next LORDS executive meeting by immplement anti refugee and illegal immigration law.
Official statisticians say the fall of nearly 60,000 in the year to March 2012 has been driven by a reduction in the number of overseas students coming to study in Britain and a rise in the number of people leaving Britain with a definite job offer abroad.
The fall in immigration accounts for two-thirds of the drop. It is the largest fall in net migration for four years. Visa applications show the first signs that the official squeeze on family migration has begun to bite.
The quarterly migration figures also show for the first time that China is now the second most common country of origin for migrants coming to THE ENGLAND  from outside Europe &inside europe.
Home Office ministers welcomed the fall saying it was a "significant step towards bringing net migration down to the tens of thousands" but at least one migration expert said that the government will still reduce this  to meet its target by and within 2013.