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On the evening of June 24, 2008, a young father opened the door of his sister's Leeds home to a woman asking for someone named "Michelle". Moments later, Adam Chadwick was fatally shot by three masked men in what appeared to be a targeted and deliberate attack.Seventeen years on, his murder remains unsolved.Despite several arrests, media appeals and a £12,000 reward, the key to this case may lie with the unknown woman who knocked on the door that night - a woman whose identity remains a mystery.If you have any information about this case, no matter how insignificant you think it might be, please contact West Yorkshire Police's Homicide and Major Enquiry Team via 101 or via the link below quoting 'Operation Pimento':Report it | West Yorkshire PoliceAlternatively, Crimewatch can be contacted anonymously on 0800 468 999.Join my Patreon community at patreon.com/britishmurders for exclusive perks, including early access to ad-free episodes, bonus episodes and content, exciting giveaways, and welcome goodies!Follow me on social media:Facebook | British Murders with Stuart BluesInstagram | @britishmurdersTikTok | @britishmurdersJoin the private Facebook group:British Murders Podcast - Discussion GroupVisit my website:britishmurders.comIntro music:David John Brady - 'Throw Down the Gauntlet'davidjohnbrady.comDisclaimer:The case discussed in this podcast episode is real and represents the worst day in many people's lives. I aim to cover such stories with a victim-focused approach, using information from publicly available sources. While I strive for accuracy, some details may vary depending on the sources used. You can find the sources for each episode on my website. Due to the nature of the content, listener discretion is advised. Thank you for your understanding and support. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Send us a textEpisode 185For nearly six years, the Yorkshire Ripper terrorized the north of England. Thirteen women murdered, seven more brutally attacked. And for much of that time, the man leading the hunt was George Oldfield—one of Britain's most respected detectives.But this is not just the story of a killer. It is the story of a mistake, one that cost lives and shattered reputations.In 1979, with the public gripped by fear and the investigation at a standstill, a package arrived at West Yorkshire Police. Inside was a cassette tape, its contents chilling. A man with a heavy Wearside accent taunted the police, mocking their failure to catch him, signing off with a sinister warning:"I'm Jack. I see you're still having no luck catching me.'' Tick, tock, tick, tock.Oldfield was convinced. This was their man. The Ripper. For months, the full force of British policing turned its attention to the Northeast, ignoring leads that pointed elsewhere. And while they searched for a phantom, Peter Sutcliffe kept killing.This is the story of how a hoaxer fooled the police, how an entire investigation was derailed, and how George Oldfield, a man who gave everything to catch a monster, became the case's 14th victim.Download Here https://www.buzzsprout.com/259571/episodes/16778207-george-oldfield-the-14th-victim.mp3?download=trueSupport the showInsta@justpassingthroughpodcastContact:justpassingthroughpodcast@gmail.com
A man arrested for burning a copy of the Koran in Bradford will not face charges, following intervention by the Free Speech Union. The man arrived in Britain as an asylum-seeker and, ironically, he was fleeing religious persecution in a Muslim majority country. After he uploaded a video of himself burning a Koran in a symbolic stand for freedom of speech and against Islamic extremism, West Yorkshire Police reacted swiftly – not to protect his right to protest, but to arrest him on suspicion of committing a criminal offence. The FSU intervened immediately, instructing a solicitor and covering our member's legal fees. After several months, the police have now told him they'll be taking no further action. Freddie Attenborough, our Digital Communications Director, has written about the case at length for The Conservative Woman. We are encouraging our supporters to write to their MP to encourage them to support an amendment tabled by The Opposition to scrap Clause 18 of the Employment Rights Bill. Clause 18 is a dangerous escalation in speech policing, disguised as a way to ‘protect' vulnerable workers. It will force British businesses to monitor customer conversations or risk being sued for ‘third-party harassment'. Next, two recent stories from Cardiff University could serve as a parable for all that's going wrong in British higher education. Either that, or a “Go Broke, Go Woke” parody. In story one, the university has announced plans to cut 400 academic jobs. In story two, there's now a mandatory EDI module for all first-year Cardiff students. In other words, at the same time as the university is trying to get rid of academics who could teach students to think critically about received wisdoms, it's somehow found the money to help EDI zealots impose them as dogma. The module provides a comprehensive guide to EDI-speak. Out, for example, go such “microaggressions” as complimenting somebody on their English. Also out are any idioms with an offensive ‘origin story'. We end the episode with a round-up of forthcoming FSU events. ‘That's Debatable!' is edited by Jason Clift.
This week we fact check JD Vance's extraordinary Munich speech, and remember the movie of the Band's last concert; including Abortion in Scotland; the rise of the AFD; Islamic organisations in Australia support anti-semitic nurses; the BBC, LGBT sailors and the importance of gender pronouns over death; why manufacturing is a sexist word; Trumps Ukraine error; Iain McWhirter on Keir Starmers troop promise; Online hate speech in Germany; Margaret Brennan on how Free Speech leads to Nazism; Japan goes nuclear; Dr Who goes Woke and Broke; French taxpayers pay for training to talk to plants; Christianity Today accepts $1.8 million USAID money; West Yorkshire Police and Diversity Officers; Christians killed in Nigeria and the Congo; Feedback and Is the Resurrection for Real? with music from The Band, Eric Clapton, the Cox Family, Van Morrison, Bob Dylan, and Joni Mitchell
Send us a textThis week, we're stepping out of the fire station and into the fast-paced, high-pressure world of policing with a truly extraordinary guest.Ben Pearson has spent the last 19 years fighting crime on the front lines as a member of the elite Roads Policing Unit of West Yorkshire Police. As a key figure in Channel 5's hit series Police Interceptors, Ben has been at the center of some of the most intense and dangerous moments imaginable—chasing down criminals at high speeds, arresting murderers, rapists, and violent offenders, and bringing justice to some of the toughest cases out there. His career has been defined by courage, precision, and a relentless drive to serve and protect.But Ben's story is about so much more than what you see on TV. It's a journey that takes us behind the badge, offering an intimate look at the reality of life as a police officer—the highs, the lows, and the toll it can take. After years of dealing with fatal collisions, witnessing unspeakable tragedies, and losing his parents, Ben found himself fighting a battle he never saw coming. His mental health deteriorated under the weight of trauma and loss, and he discovered just how unprepared the system was to help those who serve in such high-stakes roles.connect with Ben HEREBen's Youtube HEREWe only feature the latest 200 episodes of the podcast on public platforms so to access our podcast LIBRARY, every Debrief & document CLICK HEREPODCAST GIFT - Get your FREE subscription to essential Firefighting publications HERE A big thanks to our partners for supporting this episode.GORE-TEX Professional ClothingMSA The Safety CompanyPATROL STORE UKIDEXHAIX Footwear - Get offical podcast discount on HAIX HEREXendurance - to hunt performance & endurance 20% off HERE with code ffp20Lyfe Linez - Get Functional Hydration FUEL for FIREFIGHTERS, Clean no sugar for daily hydration. 80% of people live dehydrated and for firefighters this costHibern8 - a plant based sleep aid specially designed to promote a restful night's sleep and awaken you feeling refreshed and energisedPlease support the podcast and its future by clicking HERE and joining our Patreon Crew
Sick of serial killers? Join the BTC for a deep dive into the dark world of deception. We're untangling the web of lies in two of the most horrifying hoaxes ever concocted. From fake kidnappings to manufactured massacres, prepare to be shocked, appalled, and maybe a little bit entertained. A special thanks to this week's guest host, Rachel Bauman!You can check out the Not Fade Away podcast here!Research links below! ABC 7 - "Sherri Papini"ABC News - "Sherri Papini's ex-husband reflects on living under hoax, years after learning about her phony kidnap plot"Record Searchlight - "Sherri Papini still making plans for future after 2016 kidnapping hoax sent her to prison"The Hollywood Reporter - "Sherri Papini Kidnapping Hoax Docuseries Set at ID"NBC News - "Sherri Papini, who faked her own kidnapping, is released from federal prison""Sherri Papini" (Youtube)The Times - "I knew the Yorkshire Ripper tapes were fake. But I was just a woman"The Independent - "Wearside Jack: I deserve to go to jail for 'evil' Ripper hoax"The Standard - "Killer revealed 35 years later: Woman bludgeoned to death was not Yorkshire Ripper victim"The Yorkshire Post - "The Yorkshire Ripper Files: Who was the hoaxer Wearside Jack?"Wearside Jack Tapes AudioThe Times - "John Humble, 'Wearside Jack', obituary"The Telegraph - "John Humble, Yorkshire Ripper hoaxer dubbed 'Wearside Jack' who taunted the police with letters and a tape recording disastrously sending the murder inquiry down a blind alley - obituary"Biography - "Peter Sutcliffe"All That's Interesting - "The Sickening Story Of Peter Sutcliffe, The Yorkshire Ripper Who Brutalized 13 Women In 1970s England"Luxury London - "The Long Shadow: The true story of 'Wearside Jack' and the Yorkshire Ripper"Daily Mail - "Transcripts: Wearside Jack's letters and tape"The Independent - "Families of Yorkshire Ripper victims receive police apology for language used during investigation"West Yorkshire Police - "Death of Peter Sutcliffe: Statements from Chief Constable John Robins on behalf of West Yorkshire Police"
Making his way through his schooling whilst battling with dyslexia, Ben first worked in a motorcycle dealership before joining the police was suggested to him by customers. Eventually going on to serve 19 years with West Yorkshire Police as a beat cop and later into the Road Traffic Unit, Ben featured on multiple seasons of Police Interceptors. Unfortunately, these years of service came at a cost to Ben's mental health, and he was medically retired from WYP, and now spends his time helping others through his brand 1965 PTSD Awareness. Follow This Podcast To Be Notified Of New Episodes, Visit Our Social Media Platforms & YouTube Channel For More Bonus Content, And Listen Live To Our Radio Station: Listen Live: https://www.forceradio.live/ Visit Our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@forceradiohq
Born in 1962, Keith Dobson was one of three children His family came from a humble background.He is from Gateshead, his parents were proud and hard working. His father worked for the CEGB (Central Electric Generating Board) and his mother was at home bringing up the family. She insisted that the family didn't reside in a Council House or receive free school dinners, despite the fact they had relatively modest means.In 1977 Keith joined the Army and despite his lack of school acumen he went to the Army School, where he obtained the qualifications to undertake his trade as a member of the Signals.In 1982 Keith was deployed to the Falklands. He talks in detail of his experiences as he prepared to be deployed.He recounts the support displayed by members of the public as they make their way to Southampton to board the QE2. However, his hopes of boarding the QE2 were quickly dashed when he was directed to travel with secure equipment on a cross channel ferry all the way to the South Atlantic.Keith describes the moment he drives off the “Landing Craft” with his team. It was 3am and pitch black! The memory of water entering the vehicle will stay with him forever.During the war Keith was charged with putting electricity and hot water into the compounds that were being occupied by Argentinian prisoners. It was during this he became aware to the Sir Galahad.The tragedy of war became more real on 6th June 1982. His OC, Major Michal Forge and Staff Sgt Joe Baker were travelling in a Gazelle helicopter when HMS Cardiff dispatched a sea dart. The missile brought down the helicopter, killing the occupants.At the conclusion of the war Keith went to South Georgia to collect marines and the bodies of those who had fallen. He regrets not visiting the grave of Ernest ShackletonWhen they returned home the soldiers were searched by the RMP for war trophies.Having concluded the search Keith exited the building and was unexpectedly met by his mum. They hit the town! When he returned home he received a welcome from the entire street and a CV party was held.In the early 90s Keith left the military and moved to civi street, this lasted a couple of years before he joined West Yorkshire Police. He subsequently transferred to Essex and whilst at Brentwood he received a call from Sir Alan Sugar!Keith transferred to the Metropolitan Police as a Superintendent and was posted to Enfield. He then moved to SO20 which was part of the counter terrorism wing.At the conclusion of his service Keith took up a role connected to policing and is now a published author. His book “Crossing The Line” is available from Amazon Waterstones and WH Smiths We discuss the mechanics of writing a book and the pitfalls of English grammar rules!Listen to his story Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
God befuddles the elites with God's most simple truthsThe delusion persists. We see it expressed through the babbling of a man claiming that a straight man can be attracted to a “trans” “woman” who still has a penis and he's still 100% straight because “trans” “women” are real women, no matter their anatomy. Multiple examples of the powerful and wise destroying our world are explored in this episode, including discussion of how Harvard is encouraging grad students to sign up for food stamps. What does God's Word say? Daniel warned Nebekenezer that the King would be made insane.Episode 1,025 Links: Inversion Blender Goes to "High" SettingHarvard University Encourages Grad Students to Sign up for Food Stamps There are 200 unused tiny homes sitting in a locked storage lot in SODO. There are homeless camps outside the lot and we're trying to get answers about why these highly-touted shelters are sitting vacant. This video is not a joke. It isn't satire. It isn't parody. It's Canadian political influencer Mark Slapinski saying what he'd like to do to unvaccinated people. It's appalling and it needs to be called out.UK: A mother in Leeds captured terrifying footage of West Yorkshire Police brutally arresting her 16-year-old autistic daughter for "homophobia." She told Reduxx that her child was in custody for 20 hours despite not knowing what the charges were.OMG! Two days ago we find out Best Buy won't let whites participate in its management training program, now we learn the retail giant discriminates against Christians. WTH?!?Kari Lake milks a cow in Iowa and turns to New York Times reporter and says: "You know there are only two genders, right?" NYT Reporter *shrugs* Kari Lake: "The New York Times should try to milk a cow and then try and milk a bull and see how that goes." Antiracism as racism: In 2020, the Los Angeles Unified School District described standing still in line and talking without raising one's hand as "white middle class norms" which black students should not be expected to comply with under the system's disciplinary policies.A straight man can be attracted to a [so-called] “trans” “woman” who still has a penis and he's still 100% straight because trans women are real women and it doesn't matter what's in their pants4Patriots https://4patriots.com Protect your family with Food kits, solar generators and more at 4Patriots. Use code TODD for 10% off your first purchase. Alan's Soaps https://alanssoaps.com/TODD Use coupon code ‘TODD' to save an additional 10% off the bundle price. BiOptimizers https://magbreakthrough.com/todd Use promo code TODD for 10% off your order. Bonefrog https://bonefrog.us Enter promo code TODD at checkout to receive 10% off your subscription. Bulwark Capital http://KnowYourRiskRadio.com Find out how Bulwark Capital Actively Manages risk. Call 866-779-RISK or visit KnowYourRiskRadio.com Patriot Mobile https://patriotmobile.com/herman Get free activation today with offer code HERMAN. Visit or call 878-PATRIOT. RuffGreens https://ruffgreens.com/todd Get your FREE Jumpstart Trial Bag of Ruff Greens, simply cover shipping. Visit or call 877-MYDOG-64. SOTA Weight Loss https://sotaweightloss.com SOTA Weight Loss is, say it with me now, STATE OF THE ART! Sound of Freedom https://angel.com/freedom Join the two million and see Sound of Freedom in theaters July 4th. GreenHaven Interactive https://greenhaveninteractive.com Digital Marketing including search engine optimization and website design.
Victoria's Mushroom Poisoning Mystery is the talk of the nation along with the Madiltas. The Voice debate continues to have a poisonous effect with no advocates labelled conspiracy theorists. A Tim's News Explosion with a mushrooming cloud. I enjoy a Hard Solo during this show since Teal Independent Kylea Tink wants the new alcoholic drink banned for tasting too much like regular Solo. Matilda Mania has taken hold in Australia with the Australian national women's soccer team reaching the semi-finals of the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup. Anthony Albanese is taking to the National Cabinet a proposal for a public holiday if the Matilda's win the cup claiming it will actually improve economic activity. Erin Patterson the chef of the deadly Beef Wellington with Death Cap mushrooms that killed 3 of her lunch guests claims she bought the mushrooms from a local supermarket and an Asian grocer. During a protest against Melbourne's all-ages Drag Expo a pro-groomer activist said he was fine promoting Yumi Stynes's Welcome to Sex book and teaching anal sex to 11-year-olds. Yumi Stynes is still playing the victim showcasing all the abuse she's received about her filthy book. After the release of the Sofronoff inquiry exposed the misconduct of ACT DPP Shane Drumgold 7 News Spotlight again interviewed the man he prosecuted Bruce Lehrmann who is looking to sue the ACT Government. Brittany Higgins's former employer Senator Linda Reynolds claimed Higgins never claimed she was raped and Reynolds never got her Carla Zampatti coat back that Higgins wore out of the office that night. Pauline Hanson has removed Mark Latham as NSW One Nation Leader following a takeover of the NSW party executive. Latham intends to mount a truth defence in the defamation case brought against him by Independent MP for Sydney Alex Greenwich for Latham's tweet reply to Greenwich calling him a disgusting human being. Tony Abbott and Jacinta Price have spoken about how sick they and others are by Welcome to Country ceremonies. We shouldn't be welcomed to our own country. RMIT University's FactLab verdict is the Uluru Statement from the Heart is 1 page, not 26 and that Western Australia's scrapped Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act does not do the same thing as the Voice. The ABC also claimed a viral TikTok video of an Aboriginal last telling a white lady to get off Aboriginal land was taken out of context. The ABC has shut down all but 4 of its X accounts citing more toxic interactions that are becoming more prevalent on X. X CEO Linda Yaccarino told CNBC they will resume suppressing the reach of controversial accounts. US Attorney-General Merrick Garland has appointed a friendly Special Counsel David Weiss from his Justice Department to investigate Hunter Biden's crimes. West Yorkshire Police have been in damage control after 7 of their officers arrested a 16-year-old autistic girl in her own home on a homophobic public order offence because she said one of their officers looked like her lesbian nana. The police decided not to charge the girl after holding her for 24 hours, her mother is planning to sue the police. Rishi Sunak's latest effort to deter illegal boat arrivals is to house them in offshore barges like the Bibby Stocklam. But again the activists are finding ways to sabotage this latest attempt at border control. Email: me@timwilms.comMessage: https://t.me/timwilmsWebsite: http://timwilms.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/wilmsfrontMinds: https://www.minds.com/timwilmsGab: https://gab.com/timwilmsTelegram: https://t.me/wilmsfront Support the Show:Membership: http://www.theunshackled.net/membershipDonate: https://www.theunshackled.net/donate/ Other Unshackled Links:Website: https://www.theunshackled.netFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/TUnshackledTwitter: https://twitter.com/Un_shackledGab: https://gab.ai/theunshackledTelegram: https://t.me/theunshackledMinds: https://www.minds.com/The_Unshackled Music and Graphics by James Fox HigginsVoice Over by Morgan MunroSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
An outbreak of legionella bacteria has forced all migrants to leave the government's Bibby Stockholm barge. Plus: Hugh Grant speaks out about everything wrong with the British media; and a controversial video of an arrest made by West Yorkshire Police has gone viral. With Michael Walker and Aaron Bastani.
An outbreak of legionella bacteria has forced all migrants to leave the government's Bibby Stockholm barge. Plus: Hugh Grant speaks out about everything wrong with the British media; and a controversial video of an arrest made by West Yorkshire Police has gone viral. With Michael Walker and Aaron Bastani.
Tommo is joined by veteran of the West Yorkshire Police force Dave Manson, writer of the blog Men in Mind. After suffering with huge failures in his own mental health and lack of support from co-workers and hierarchy. Part Two episode! @Meninmindblog @kent_CBD PROMO CODE: GRANITEZERO 10% off Green Beret Coffee @greenberetcoffeeco PROMO CODE: GZPODCAST10 10% OFF
Tommo is joined by veteran of the West Yorkshire Police force Dave Manson, writer of the blog Men in Mind. After suffering with huge failures in his own mental health and lack of support from co-workers and hierarchy. This is the first instalment of a two part episode! @Meninmindblog @kent_CBD PROMO CODE: GRANITEZERO 10% off Green Beret Coffee @greenberetcoffeeco PROMO CODE: GZPODCAST10 10% OFF
Fifteen year-old Khayri Mclean was stabbed to death walking home from school in Huddersfield. His mother Charlie pleaded for an end to knife crime, as his teenage murderers were sentenced to life. Jovani Harriott, 17, and Jakele Pusey, 15, stabbed Khayri after ambushing him outside North Huddersfield Trust School last year. They will serve at least 18 years and 16 years respectively. Nick Robinson spoke to reporter Annabel Deas, who interviewed one of the murderers when he was 11, and Alison Lowe, Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime in West Yorkshire. Justin Webb spoke to Sophie Simpson, Co-founder of Conscious Youth – she knew Khayri and is good friends with his mother - and AJ, who's 15 and attends Conscious Youth session. (Image, Khayri McLean, Credit, West Yorkshire Police)
David Atherton is a journalist and broadcaster and a prolific tweeter. His regular updates and commentaries on the clash between Islam, our Western freedoms and the impact of uncontrolled immigration have made him a voice of reason. He joins us to discuss the latest grooming gang trial that is simply the latest of regular instalments of an ongoing attempt to punish these Muslim Pakistani rape gangs. And with the BBC now producing documentaries on forced marriages we need to ask what is the cost to our society of uncontrolled immigration. So join us this episode as David covers all of this and much more. David Atherton is a London-based journalist and broadcaster. He writes for 'The European Conservative', and a number of leading publications as well as being a regular on national TV and radio stations, as well as his popular Twitter account on social media. Follow Dave on Twitter: https://twitter.com/DaveAtherton20?s=20 The European Conservative: https://europeanconservative.com/ Interview recorded: 5.5.23 To sign up for our weekly email, find our social media, podcasts, video, livestreaming platforms and more... https://heartsofoak.org/connect/ Please subscribe, like and share! Transcript (Hearts of Oak) Hello, Hearts of Oak, and welcome to another interview coming up in a moment with David Atherton, who I followed for many years @DaveAtherton20. And I think I started following him because of his exposure of the grooming gangs and willing to stand shoulder to shoulder with Tommy for what he is doing. Anyone who does that is a brave individual and seeks truth more than position or fame. So I think that was why, we haven't met before. So first time we met on the interview, always good fun doing it that way. You never know how things will go. We had a great conversation. We look into, obviously, some of the more recent cases of groups of Muslim Pakistani men who have been part of rape gangs going through the legal system and being prosecuted. All historic, but they're also more current. But this is historic the one we looked at from 2000 to 2006, 11 men jailed, or 11 men about to be jailed, being charged. Only three of them with the first name Muhammad. And we also look at the failure of the authorities to deal with this. Turning a blind eye, council leaders, police, politicians, all turning a blind eye. Basically not wanting a race war, a religious war. So we go into that and then we end up looking at immigration and how that is the, part of driver behind this, that clash that we have between Islam and the freedoms we have in the West and those from Islamic nations and that incompatibility that we are finding with the freedoms that we, have had, still have. So I know you'll enjoy David's expert thoughts on this as I have over the last few years. And it's wonderful to have David Atherton with us today. David, thank you so much for your time. (Dave Atherton) Pleased to be here. Thanks a lot for the invite. Not at all. I enjoyed following your Twitter feed that people can see there @DavidAtherton20 and they can follow that. So I wanted you on for a while, but sometimes things take longer than expected. But thank you for coming on. Before we get on to some of the topics that you have been posting on, could I ask you maybe just take a moment and introduce yourself to our viewers? Yeah, sure. No problems. I spent most of my life in recruitment. So I've always had a real job, so to speak. And funny enough, it was when the smoking ban came in in 2007 that I became quite politically active. I always had an opinion, but then I became politically active about trying to get it reversed, or at least amended to a certain extent. That took me into writing about it. I've got a lot of invites for TV and radio to defend smokers' rights. Last night I was on talk TV. That came up in conversation and it's still one of the things I talk about. And from then on, you know, I was asked by Raheem... Kassam. Yeah, one and only Raheem to write with a commentator, then he took me with him to Breitbart, and here we are today, journalist and broadcaster. So yeah, I can't forget Raheem's name. You picture him in the head there. So that's my background. And one of the things that I've, you know, I think politicians think far too short term. They want an instant fix, you know, to the problem so they can get re-elected. And they completely fail to see the world ahead of them. Where will mass immigration take us into the future? I'm not suggesting that all immigrants are bad, certainly not. The vast majority are perfectly decent people who make a contribution to this country. But unfortunately, there are certain sectors of the community that don't. And this needs to be pointed out, it needs to be discussed. But without being called gammon, racist, bigot all the time. Yeah, that does come up. So, well, let's, I think the focus probably, and was our initial focus whenever we launched and then COVID tyranny all took over. But was on the culture clash that we see, the clash with Islam and our freedoms in the West, and the clash from other cultures that aren't suited to a Western lifestyle through all types of restrictions on freedom, restrictions on women's position, restrictions on right to choose and change religions, all of that. So that was certainly want to be our focus and then we get thrown a COVID curveball and the focus. But one of your, maybe we'll start on one of the ones recently is this here, 11 men charged in Rochdale grooming investigation. And this is a story we see time and time again. I always have interested that the BBC covered this, but they didn't cover it. It's not a proper story to them. It's a, oh, we'll put it in the Manchester section. So it's not on their main, because they think 11 men getting arrested for rape, basically more or less weekly, isn't an issue. But this is between 2000 and 2006 at Greater Manchester. This is obviously a story that you see regularly and you report on regularly and highlight. Tell us about this. Right, indeed. Right, well, obviously, you know, for 30 years, you know, Pakistani heritage, rape gangs, they were either protected, ignored, or covered up by the establishment, and by the establishment I mean by the Labour Party, social services, and local councils particularly, actually, will cover things up. Yeah, so what I'll do is I'll try and dig out a quote in the wake of the 2015 jailing of 22, Pakistani heritage rapists, where a moderate imam commented that they actually, local imams actually encouraged the girls, sorry, encouraged the men in the congregation to go out and rape white girls because they wore short-sleeved shirts and mini skirts and things like that. No, it actually says they deserve to be treated like filth. This was published in the Telegraph. This was published in the Telegraph. But anyway, moving on from here, one of the Greater Manchester Police. Rochdale's in the Greater Manchester Police Area. And the Greater Manchester people were put in special measures and Maggie Oliver fought valiantly to get these girls justice from the Greater Manchester Police. I think we have now turned a corner in the sense that the councils won't be allowed to get away with this. They're probably the main offenders, because the Labour Party, 90% of Muslims vote Labour. It's their core vote they don't want to lose. For example, Kim Ledbetter, the Batley and Spen MP, she spent her time talking about the Batley grammar school teacher. She was talking about Palestine in Parliament, you know? You know, what's that got to do, you know, what's that got to do? Because all her constituents are Muslims and they are, by and large, most of them are anti-Semitic. So I look upon this as a positive, positive thing. That girls, women now, obviously women now, are feeling bold and brave enough to go to the police. And report their past rapes and full marks to the police for actually following through and arresting these people and investigating the cases. So I look upon that as being quite positive now. And I must say, the people we have to thank for that, for keeping it in the public eye, are people like Tommy Robinson. I had no idea. I remember, I think it was 2007, I think, you know, Nick Griffin is not my cup of tea. He really is a genuine, foul, nasty fascist, you know. But, you know, when he was accused, when he was up in court, he was accused of citing racial hatred because he suggested that there were white girls being raped by Pakistani heritage men. And I thought, well, mate, you've really done it now, haven't you? You deserve every single year you get for that, mate. Oh, but you're right. Again, it was Tommy Robinson. I dismissed what he said at the time, it was 2006, 2007, whatever it was. But when Tommy Robinson formed the EDL and he brought it to our attention, There's a video of him from 2011 on BBC's Newsnight been interviewed by Jeremy Paxman, and he said the same thing in I thought, Tommy mate. You're gonna be in trouble, you know and then we move onto 2013 when the Xerof cell I mean God you're gonna give the guys full credit, practicing Muslim director of public prosecutions in the Northwest, he brought to trial the Rochdale rapists, and they were all jailed. And you've got to pay tribute to the guy. You've got to be fair here. He was the person, I think, who moved the Titanic around, or the ocean liner around. And it was not a figment of our imagination, and it moved on. And there was a Alexis Jay report of 2014, you know, really makes your hair curl. I'm surprised the government appointed a vi that was so blunt, so blunt about what was going on there. And there's an article also in the BBC that one of the local women who voted community leaders said that the whole of the community knew what was going on in Rotherham, but they turned a blind eye. The Imams, the Muslim establishment, the local councils knew exactly what was going on. They turned a blind eye. Yeah, we see that time and time. I will get on that in a bit, but two things pick up. One was, I love when you watch Tommy with someone who, I mean, Tommy is very much like Nigel Farage and that Nigel would be horrified to have the same sentence, but actually they're individuals who are Marmite and yet they are lovable characters. You put Tommy with someone and actually he's such an infectious personality that if you put someone who disagrees verbally, then if they give him 10 minutes after that, they would actually see him quite differently because he is a warm, hospitable, friendly person. And that goes in, and he's not doing it out of hatred, but he's doing it out of concern for country. Sure. Well, he grew up in Luton, he went to school with other Pakistani heritage children. Some were his mates and some were nasty bullies and pieces of work, you know, who beat you up nicked your wallet and took your lunch money. You know, he saw some of the women who did marry some of the Asian men and they lost contact with their family, you know, they were forced to wear burqas and hijabs and what have you. He saw what cultural devastation that was happening. And it's all too difficult to mention publicly. I think what the government is doing here is, we talked about different cultures here. I think, I always like pointing out on Twitter, you know, I always like to ask the question, why do you think Britain is a relatively rich country and countries like Afghanistan and Pakistan and what have you are relatively poor countries? They can never answer the question. The answer is, we went through the enlightenment in the 17th century, whereby logic and facts and truth overrose superstition and religion. And it led us to free speech, free inquiry, and led to scientific and intellectual developments. And from 1215 Magna Carta, we believe in the rule of law. I've seen lots of Asian men turn around and say, If this was reversed, if white men were raping Muslim girls, they wouldn't bother going to the police. They'd go round mob handed and give the geezer a good spanking. You know, we want the rule of law, we want to go to the police, we expect the police to look into it for us, and justice take its course, you know, and that's how you get a civilised society. You know, their culture seems to be based around mob rule, you know, who's got the biggest baseball bat. Yeah, and with those 11 men, another aspect, I'm intrigued to know your specific thoughts on this, but out of the 11, three of them were of course with a lovely name Muhammad. Only three actually this time. But how, because I see it actually as probably even more of the religious influence. Because of Islam historically spreading by the sword, because of Muhammad having sex slaves, because that was the norm. So it very much being rooted in Islam but also the added view of women in a Pakistani culture context, but that is predominantly from an Islamic heritage. So how do you put, because again, I'm intrigued that, who's the home secretary, it wasn't, not Priti Patel, Suella Braverman, that she has talked about Pakistani gangs, Pakistani individuals, but yet is still afraid to use the word Islam. And I think everything should be on the table to have a proper discussion. Well, indeed. Well, my analysis of the Pakistani-Asian Muslim community is 80% decent, moderate people. They might be a little bit more conservative than us. They might not be pro-LGBT. There was a survey done in 2016 where they found that 52% of Muslims in this country would like to see homosexual acts made criminalized and people jailed, 52 percent. But 80 percent, by and large, rub along, moderate, decent, some are actually quite liberal people. What you got from there on is the 20 percent extremist nutters or whatever you want to call them. And unfortunately, from what I can see of the Islamic community, is the 20 percent tail wags the 80% moderate dog. You know, I was reading about a mosque in Glasgow, there was a battle between the moderates and extremists. And of course, the extremists won. And they won by going around and physically intimidating people and beating them up and things like that, you know. And, you know, you carry on your campaign, we're going to do you sort of attitude. So the problem we have is, is this permeates throughout throughout the whole religion. For example, to give you an example, from the Bible, Leviticus says something along the lines of, man shall not lie down with a woman as he does with a man. It's an abomination. So the Bible is full of quotations about justifying slavery, justifying killing gay people and what have you. We ignore it. We come from the Enlightenment and we believe what goes on in the home, privacy in your own home and club or whatever, is your business, not religions or the states. Now with the Koran, from what I can work out, is, do you know what I mean by abrogated or unabrogated? Yep, yep. The later verses override the earlier verses, the violent verses override the peaceful, which is a real bummer for Muslims. Sure, indeed, yeah. Well, indeed, yeah. From what I can work out, the Koran in its current form will never be abrogated, it will never be changed, it will not have new interpretations or things ignored. It is the final word of God and has to be done to the letter down to the last full stop. You know, it can't be changed. And the Qur'an says that us Kafirs, us infidels, are second-class citizens. It is quite straightforward in saying that you can do what you like to people who are non-Muslims. Because it's written in our book. And that includes rape, slavery, and everything else. And until you convert to Islam, you have no choice but to pay, at the best pay extra taxes. Jizya I think they call it, don't they? And so this is what we're up against. It's a fund, you know, the minority of fundamentalists who rule the public space on Islamic spaces. And, you know. The government knows that. Did you see Robert Jenrick's, Jenrick speaks recently, comments? No, no. Okay, the immigration minister. He said the far right, oh blimey. The far right is something we should not, we should listen to, some of the far right, excuse any paraphrasing here, should be listened to and not private or made private or marginalised. And he actually said, these people who had different cultures to us. No, he sounded like Tommy Robinson on an average day. Right, it's amazing how terms are used and never defined and that's where the confusion, but actually just another spot, of course, if we had an issue with Orthodox Jews running around killing and raping on the basis of Leviticus or something then that would be an issue, but you're right that doesn't happen. It is the problem with Islam and the understanding the basis does seem to be historically in Islam. But this is another, and this is an issue I think my frustration and anger is against the Muslim Pakistani community but also is against the English system. And here your story, Rouhan Adil when age 15 filled himself raping a schoolboy, shared photos of paedophiles online and the police found hundreds of pictures, and he got sentenced to 28 months detention in a young offenders institution of which he will serve half because that's what happens to those who rape children. So he will serve just over a year and I'm amazed that the English legal system thinks that raping children is punishable by a one-year sentence. That's where I think we've got, because if the sentences were huge, if people were locked away for life, then actually that would be a deterrent. A year isn't really a deterrent, is it? No, it's not. No. Um, someone, someone like that should be in jail for what he's like. You probably take his age as mitigation. I would have given him five, six years. personally speaking. If he was 18 at the time I would have given him... 10, 15 years if I've been the judge. And also as well, you know, I really, maybe I ought to do some research, maybe some research here as well, but I always get the impression white people get treated more harshly than the Asian people. I just get this impression, you know, when you were abused multiple times, you know, a 13 year old girl, you know, maybe literally hundreds of of times. There was a one about the greater Manchester which I've forgotten her name now. But she had 177 Asian names, I say Asian, it's interchangeable with Pakistani heritage. And she had 177 names on her phone and she went to the police. You know, her mother went to the police to report it. And they did absolutely nothing. You know, when you're being gang raped by 177 people or possibly up to 177 people and you're 13 years of age, that is 20 years in prison, at least. And, you know, if you're coming out in 10 years, I'll probably give you 30 years for that as well. You know, I don't know whether the judge is being culturally sensitive or whether they think the girls were, to a certain extent, culpable for the wrong behaviour? I don't know. It is just completely unacceptable. And also, one thing I noticed as well, a lot of them get let out a lot earlier as well. There's one guy who was given 20, he was a gang rape leader who was given 20 years, he was let out after five. You know, I just don't know how this is going on. And I'll tell you what, you know. When they do come out of jail, they still don't think they've done anything wrong, some of them anyway. Maybe a majority still think we haven't done anything wrong. Well, that's this. So I wonder, actually, and I'm I'm not someone who is for capital punishment. I believe that life is sacrosanct. So I set that aside. But I do think that actually jail has to be a deterrent, but it has to be rehabilitation. And if someone has not been rehabilitated, then I don't see how they can be let back into society. So I actually think if you cannot, if you do not know whether someone will actually not carry out raping children once again then I think they can be released and that means they need to be held until it can be said that actually they're no longer a danger to society. Although they should go through physical or chemical castration. Yep, yep, yep. I think it has to be looked at and how the conversation to the British public because it's to let someone, we've, the legal case we have been involved in with Liz. I mean, her perpetrator, rapist, was in the open prison after something like three years. Ready to be released. An open prison where you're free to come and go and the individual is raping children. It doesn't connect at all. That is not a punishment. No, that is not a punishment. You know, for example, date rape, for example, you know, assume there's sort of two Europeans, you know, involved in date rape. You know, he said, she said sort of type of thing. Most get five, six years for that. That's two adults. I don't want to be a rape apologist or whatever and minimise the crime. But you know, there's obviously some degree of cooperation, as it were, obviously went back to somebody's place. And, you know, of course the geezer deserves five, six years. But, you know, when you're doing that, you know, you're feeding a 12, 13 year old alcohol and drugs and you're your mates are coming around and, you know, in some dirty little flat above a kebab shop, you know, that's got to be as far worse, worse crime, you know? Yeah, yeah. I want another video you'd reposted was about Oldham, council leader. So let's play this lovely individual. I've just had local elections, but really if you're a UK viewer, you get what you put in. And if you don't go and vote, don't engage, then actually you get individuals like this who are happy for children to be raped but let's just play this 30 second clip. Let me play it oh bless Emily I know let me play her... (video plays) Our publication of that report two weeks ago, I spoke to a number of victims and they came forward and rang me that week the victims that were referenced in the report but also other victims of CSE and Oldham and speaking to those people and how it has affected their lives. You can't say it's destroyed their lives because the people I spoke to, it hasn't, but it has had an impact into adult life. Oh, well, that's rape apologist. It hasn't, it hasn't destroyed their life? And the thing I can't get around is, if you are men, women will obviously were built differently, I will not even to get into the gender conversation. But I thought as a woman that she, when she saw the stories, when she met with these girls that she would be horrified because, and yet she seemed to say, being raped as a child does not destroy your life. Where do you go with that? Whenever that's what our politicians believe. You know, it's an overused cliché, mic drop time, you know, but, I'm sorry, that is just so offensive and revolting and disgusting. You know, it really renders me speechless on this one. You just, you know, what the hell are you saying, darling? You know, you know. To my mind, you know, if I was Keir Starmer, I'd suspend her for that. And make her come out with a full apology. I've got an idea for a letter. Thank you very much for that one, Peter. You know, you cannot say that. I believe she has slightly retracted that. One of one of her fiercest critics on Twitter, Roger, I think his name is. She has backtracked on that to a certain extent, but really, she should be banished from polite society for the rest of her career for that. She should not be holding any positions of power or authority. She should retire. She should be suspended. should be fired and disappear into the distance and never heard of again. If only, I think probably Sir Keir Starmer will get down on his knee instead to the to the rapist and that's what his response seems to be to crime. This was interesting, you'd put this post up and it's looking at the crime index for cities in Europe and you said does anyone see a correlation? Now, I do see a correlation, and actually number 20 doesn't come in there, which is number 20 is Brussels, which is, of course, 30, is it 30% or 35% is Islamic. And then we've got the beautiful city of Bradford there in the UK at the top and all in between. But to me, actually, it connects the dots of mass immigration, changing cities, and also very high Islamic populations, and our politicians are wondering, why is crime going up? Sure, absolutely. You know, we're back to cultural differences here, whereby we, one of the reasons I believe Europe has, and America has advanced so much, is we've learned to cooperate at a non-family level. The reason, you know, the Middle East and parts of Asia, that the reason they employ a family because they're the only people they can trust. I'm sure we all nick pens and elastic bands from work, but we'd never think of defrauding the company of a substantial amount of money. Most employees in this country want to do the best for their company because they get a pay rise and things like that. We've amongst ourselves at a business level and it's worth to a certain political level as well have learned to engage with each other and just trust each other. Now it's one of the reasons why in Scandinavia that the government spend so much of their money because the people actually trust their government and the civil servants to spend their money properly. But we've learned cooperation. That's the reason why places like Somalia and Afghanistan and Pakistan and places like that, they're always fighting each other. It's clan warfare. They haven't learned to cooperate as a society. Obviously this is a conversation that politicians don't want to have and you see snippets of it, certainly with the grooming gangs, with the rape gangs you see papers putting it out, as a story I remember the Daily Mirror I think did a massive like 18-month investigation in Telford, they put out a story and it seems to be more entertainment than actually solving an issue, it's simply they get an exclusive story, they're happy to talk about rape on their front page and a couple of pages inside, it maybe does it for a day or two, and then it moves on to whatever. Coronation or the weather or something else. And I'm wondering, I mean, are you more positive that actually we will address this as a society? Because these cases, they're still happening more or less every other week. I believe we are actually in the present sense, we are addressing it to a certain extent. I had a guy from LBC in touch with me a couple of weeks ago, and he wanted to do a piece on grooming gangs. And put me in touch with a couple of people and did a five-minute segment for the Nick Ferrari show. So I was able to point him in the right direction. You mentioned the Daily Mirror there and the BBC are covering it to a certain extent. I think they have no choice. This is where social media, particularly Twitter and Facebook, have done such a good job, and GETTR, that you can actually go out there and report on it and let people know. And so I look upon that as a positive sign here. But the thing about the BBC, and what I noticed about the LBC report, and probably Sky as well. And GB News have touched on it as well, I know Charlie Peters has. GB News is quite different. I'll leave GB News to one side if I can. But if you look at the Sky News articles and the LBC article and Daily Mirror article, they talk about grooming gangs, but they don't talk about the ethnicity. You notice that? They don't say, oh, well, you know, well, this needs to be disproportionately, you know, Asian or whatever. They don't mention it. Let's go to the story of how they were raped and what have you. GB News is quite, and Talk TV to a certain extent, are really quite different. When I was on Talk TV last night, I mentioned I got into broadcasting from Defending Smokers' Rights. We had somebody from Ash actually not smoking a health one last night, and it was the first time she's had three people who were against her and disagreed with her. You get on the BBC and ITV like I've done, you know, even the cameraman hates you know, you know, and this is, you know, I've been in touch with Charlie on a couple of matters. And I get the impression he's a genuine guy who wants to do good. And it's really the fact he will go out and call spades, spade shovels and things like that, and tell it how it is. I think it's great news to GB News' credit, and to him personally. You know, and Talk TV, you listen to some of the phone-ins, some of the phone-ins on Talk TV. And so, you know, they know that if you want the screen to light up with phone calls, we're going to talk about immigration today, you know. I don't know if you've seen it, but Talk TV, they've got this screen and there's a room for about 100 phone calls or something like that. And when there's somebody waiting to come on hold, you know, it lights up. And I imagine it'll be great if the whole screen goes white, you know. And I can't believe, you know, some of the language that some of the callers use that go on unchallenged. I'm really, really quite impressed, actually. We've been invaded. They're changing our culture. They don't fit in. I don't think their religion is what we're looking for in this country. I can't believe how much free speech is allowed these days. I think that has changed in that narrative as well. And where I think these people got their ideas was from social media. For example, I was chatting to a producer last night, a presenter of Talk TV, and he said, well, I've never heard of Dave Atherton, how come he's got 58,000 followers? He's not a celebrity, which is true. It's true, isn't it? I got it simply because I've covered immigration on Twitter. That's the reason I've got so many followers. I've been nobbled by Twitter. I posted a Halal slaughter. I put a sensitive marker over it. I didn't go out as it was. Some lefty reported me and now I'm completely nobbled. My impressions are down 80% now. I'm trying to get that reversed. I've tried and I've tried. Anyway, that's by the by. If I had been nobbled, I'd probably have 70,000, 80,000 followers by now. I can just about maintain it at 58,000. The point I'm making here is I think social media and particularly Twitter was crucial in getting the message out and you know that people could see for themselves what was going on. No completely and you have those numbers because people want news and they find you're putting it out so where else do they go? I want to end on one or two of the immigration stories but when you talk about people phoning in and being angry at what immigration has done and the change. And this is one of them. This is Yasmin Mohammed. Very good in what she does. And this is a video of her. I think it's her talking about forced wedding when she was at her forced wedding, she was so disassociated. She didn't really know what was happening and crying and talk about the trauma, the millions of women. And then Emily talks here about the BBC touching on, I think BBC do it for entertainment, but anyway, the forced marriage unit nowadays is over a thousand cases a year. And I would actually love the government to actually go and focus where this is, because I remember just one, I remember my older son in his class, they had a special class, none of the parents were told, and it was about FGM. So I've got my child, my boy being told about it, what has that got to do with him absolutely zero one it should be the girls and two should be the girls from Islamic backgrounds or Asian backgrounds where it happens, like Somalia where it's what 90% or whatever but the, It seems as though our government is wasting resources because they're so scared to be called racist or Islamophobic. Well, they could have stopped FGM in one fell swoop by prosecuting both parents and sending them to jail. You know, it's a case of, you know, you can't make an omelette without cracking some eggs. You know, I'm sorry, if there's got to be five or six parents who've got to go to jail for allowing their daughters to be FGMed. So be it. If they've got to go to care while they're in jail, so be it. Because that would stop at one fell swoop, FGM in this country. And another thing we need to do is, we've got to stop chain migration. Get the mother-in-law in as well, that kind of thing. Also, I think we should, it was Saeed, the Times journalist, Matthew Saeed. He's of Pakistani heritage. He's suggesting that cousin-cousin marriages should be made illegal. And you have to stop, you know, arranged marriages from Pakistan. That has to stop. And you wonder why it's not illegal already. That's the scary thing. Yeah, I think when it comes to genetic births, genetic deformities from birth, 38% come from the Pakistani heritage community. It should be stopped. I'm sorry, arranged marriages are now finished. You can't have any more. I'm pretty sure this needs to be fact-checked. But I still think even in arranged marriage that there are basic requirements for the English language. If there are not, you can't speak English, you can't have a conversation in English, you're not allowed to come into this country. You know, basically, you know, I think something like 59% of marriages in Bradford are with cousins. And it's basically to keep the wealth into the family. That's the reason they do it. And actually, one of the Islamic sects, Tablighi Jamaat, 80 million, I think, out of New Delhi. And actually, in those marriages, actually, the woman does not even attend her own wedding, because she's a woman. So her father attends the wedding on her behalf. She has zero right. And that is the same in the UK for typically up in Dewsbury. That's typically the amount and the government could stop that in an instant. Sure. I know. But you know what will happen, won't you? You know, if we clamp down on in any shape or form, they know they will be out on the streets, you know, vandalizing stuff and being violent. They're going to have to send the riot police in, possibly even the army. No Home Secretary wants to do that, so they appease them. I'm pretty sure you saw the Wakefield 14-year-old boy who's scuffed at Koran. By the way, the people from the mosque, went knocked on her door and threatened her. You know, and, you know, and they obviously the boy, the autistic boy had death threats. And she thought the only way to get out of this is go to the mosque, put a silly veil over her head and, you know, prostrate herself. And did you see the audience? No, no, I missed that. I didn't see no. It was packed to the rafters of middle age and elderly Asian men sitting sitting cross-legged on the floor. Talk about intimidating, intimidating environment, you know, and she had a grovel and apologize and things like that. The thing that really, really stuck in my craw was the chief inspector for the West Yorkshire Police there condoning everything that had happened, you know, because he knows if he'd gone after the people who threatened the autistic boy, you know, the whole of the community will be after him. Whole of the community will be be after West Yorkshire police. This is violence and intimidation, which one day we will pay the price. We've got two ways of going here. We're going to have to go through a period of civil unrest, or we're all going to have to bend the knee to Sharia law. There is no middle ground here. There's no compromise. There's a guy, his surname is Salih, and he heads up the Five Pillars Fundamentalist media site. And people on Twitter were saying, oh, isn't it wonderful that these Muslims are going into Christian churches and preaching and things like that. And someone asked him, well, can you ever see a Christian priest, a vicar or priest being allowed to go to a mosque? And he put one word. Never. It's always one way, it's always one way. But no, you're, I just, one, I think on the FGM and then we'll finish on immigration, but the FGM, I actually think that it's not just actually children should be in care for a while while the parents are in jail. Actually, the children should be taken away. It is better for the children not to be cut up with knives and blades. So whatever the alternative is, is better than child abuse. So I think they should be completely removed. And if that means thousands of children removed from families. But you're right, it will be riots, religious race riots, everything will get burned down. They'll accuse the Home Secretary of, I don't know, folding the page of a Quran, and therefore they can kill her. We see what happens across the world. So yeah. Well, absolutely. This is one of the reasons the government is so pathetic and weak, is they fear the civil unrest repercussions. Well, let's end up on immigration. There are a load of different stories, but this, I thought this was Noah's Ark, but no, it's not Noah's Ark, it's the immigrant ark. Barge to house 500 male migrants off Dorset Coast, says government, and this was last month. But it gives you an idea of what we're facing, because when the government said they were going to house migrants on boats, I thought they were just taking the mick, but no, this thing has come on. They'll need maybe a hundred of these, but 500 male migrants will be housed in this barge, poor people in Dorset that will see this. And it's coming in the coming months. And the vessel, which is currently in Italy, to break from Italy, there must be only one vessel in the world that can host them, but it will be significantly cheaper than hotels. Obviously, if we need to bring boats from Italy to put people in who are illegally coming in the country, we have a problem. And yet, the government don't seem to want to address the problem. They're just going to get barges. And I guess we'll have hundreds of these off the coast. Sure. It's sticking plasters rather than cures, isn't it? And until, well, the long-term solution for this is, we need to go to maybe an American style of public administration, whereby the top civil servants are appointed by the government. That doesn't seem to work that badly, in a sense. So what happened was, six migrants had had enough of Britain, and they got back on the ferry to go back to France. And they were dragged back by the police and brought back to Britain. Because the permanent second, yeah, this is the reason why, the permanent secretary, Matthew Rycroft, or one of his officials, they have a gentleman's agreement with France. They won't return people. And so when Suella Braverman was told by a civil service, we can't send them back. To my mind, Rycroft should have been fired on the spot. But any civil servant, if he doesn't have the authority, primary legislation should be done in a day for that to be done. Three line whip, 80 majority, whatever it is. We have the right to hire and fire anybody in the civil service. And anybody who was in the way should be fired on the spot, over you go. And I'm sorry, Macron, I'm sorry, this might sound a little bit over the top, but if we're returning migrants back to France and they didn't need a Royal Navy escort, so be it. You know, I'm sorry, to my mind what Macron is doing, this is a punishment beating for leaving the EU. And quite frankly, Macron can learn how to behave like a civilised human being, or he needs to be taught. And I'm sorry, I think longer term, there is an existentialist threat to this country from terrorism and other social ills, which in five years' time we'll be bitterly regretting what we did. And this needs to be addressed immediately and with robust matters. And quite frankly, if the whole of the Home Office needs to be fired and we've got to start from the beginning again, so be it. It has to be done. And if we've got to find volunteers to man the border force boats. And also as well, one of the first things I would do if I was Home Secretary, the RNLI, the Royal National Lifeboat Institute, have... what's the word I'm looking for? If due to their actions somebody dies, they can't be accused of corporate manslaughter. They have no legal immunity from what they do. And the first thing I would do is I'd take that legal immunity away. And so if you do make a mess of things, you're going to jail for corporate manslaughter. And that would stop the RNLI boats a split second. Also, these are practical short-term solutions. And so you look, the people in the Border Force, you're staying in port. I'm sorry. We can go out to France, you go to the camps, you hand out leaflets saying, we're not going to pick you up anymore. And that's the end of the thing. And I'm sorry, Macron doesn't like that, too bad mate. Well, let's end just on a picture, which kind of connects with the RNLI, although I don't think Macron can behave like a grown up. I think that's impossible, but I'll let you keep your fingers crossed, David. This was a lovely, lovely poster. 80 years ago, we stopped an entire German army crossing the English Channel. Now we can't stop an effing dinghy. Love it. That is through the RNLI, which have become basically a... Do you want to, for our non-UK viewers, for US viewers, do you want to just let them know what the RNLI is and what it's become? Right. Yeah. The Royal National Lifeboat Institute is a civilian fleet of boats, which is entirely paid out of charitable organizations, and the people are volunteers, but the chief executive earns 180,000 pounds a year, whilst the people who are risk their lives on the sea barely get their expenses covered. They have to give up work, they live self-employed, they lose money. And if they get a 999 call equivalent to a 911 call, they're expected to drop what they're doing, jump in the boats, and rescue the people concerned. In fact, there was actually one guy who was getting married and he got a bleep, but just as he was about to put the ring on her finger, but he had to go. So I believe also there are quite a few RNLI people who actually resigned in protest, over being sent out to pick up migrants in the middle of the sea. It might be 10%, but it is. But the whole point is, like in America, we have this woke culture, the ESG woke type culture, whereby Professor Matthew Goodwin reckons about 16% of the population, the sort of the degree-educated people, you know, the bon passant thinking people, you know, who believe in ultra-liberal policies. And there's nothing at the moment us plebs can do about it, despite the fact that 85% of people oppose it. In Britain, something like 60-70% of people are opposed to immigration still, at the numbers and what have we. You know, the vast majority of people don't mind genuine refugees, you know, fleeing. We don't mind that. The Ukrainians is a good example. They are genuine refugees. But we really do object to all the people who are coming over here freeloading economic migrants. Oh, by the way, let me quote, I don't think I mentioned it, but in Sweden, A research company interviewed refugees who had been given asylum in Sweden because they were fleeing persecution, oppression, wars and what have you. They've asked the question, have you returned home at all? 79% have returned home, gone back to their home country on vacation. 79%. You know, if that's not the biggest sign that, you know, the government are mugs, aided and abetted by the liberal and woke classes, and these people are pathological liars. I've just got, you know, chances, and what have we. I know you have to be stupid, naïve or a complete idiot. Yeah. Well, on that, I think we'll finish up. Before we go, Peter, can I just quote to you very briefly? I managed to find it as we've been talking. Here we are, yeah. I'll just quote you the attitudes that some Muslims have in this country. In 2018, seven men were jailed for raping and pimping out girls from the ages of 11 to 15. Dr Taj Hargey, the imam of Oxford Islamic Congregation, said it was, quote, "bound up with religion and race", adding, quotes, "In mosques around the country a different doctrine is teached" One that denigrates are women who treat whites with particular contempt. "Men are taught that women are second-class citizens, little more than chattels or possessions over whom they have absolute authority." "Their dress code from mini skirts to sleeveless tops is deemed to reflect their impure and immoral outlook." "According to this mentality, these white women deserve to be punished for their behaviour by being exploited and degraded." End of quote. I've seen some things that Tariq has put out and he does seem to be trying to highlight some of that, but it's wonderful. Well, it isn't wonderful, but it's good when you hear the community discussing the problem and hopefully others will wake up to that. Well, David, it's been good to meet you at long last. It happens regularly, but thanks for coming on. I know that if people are not following you they certainly can do, @DaveAtherton20 go and follow David on Twitter.
Part 2Colin discusses his move to West Yorkshire Police and his views on drugs and tactics used to bring burglars to justice.Colin discusses his return to the South of England and joining Surrey Police where he worked with Sir Mark Rowley. However, Colin was so unhappy in Surrey Police he returned to the Metropolitan Police. Colin worked with esteemed detectives such John Sweeney who had previously been the SIO on the Keith Blakelock murder.Colin discusses how he became involved in the investigation of the murder of Milly Dowler and the subsequent conviction of Levi Bellfield. We discuss how Martin Clunes played Colin in the dramas Manhunter and Nightstalker, and how Paul Gascoigne met Colin and Martin at Good Morning Britain.We discuss the relationship between the Police and press and how it was destroyed by senior Metropolitan Police leaders during the arrest of journalists under the banner of Op Elveden . with the police and the lack of research carried out by media including the BBC during the recent interview Elon Musk.Colin works closely with Revelation Films who produce The Real Manhunter and has several projects in the pipeline which will be released at a later date. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
West Yorkshire, 2004.Chris Gregg is now at the height of his career - a detective chief superintendent establishing West Yorkshire Police's elite Homicide and Major Enquiry Team.The next few months are busy.But at the back of his mind is unfinished business: tracking down Wearside Jack, the Yorkshire Ripper hoaxer from nearly 30 years previously.Chris has failed to persuade senior officers to re-investigate the case over the years.Now he is the senior officer and what he says goes.But scientists tell Chris the letters are destroyed and the tape can't be found.Somewhere lost in a police storeroom is a tiny fragment of evidence - just two centimetres large - which offers one final hope of identifying the hoaxer.Will new science be able to match this with the man behind the deadly deception of the 1970s?This episode is part 3 of 3. Written, presented and produced by Robert Murphy. To watch video clips with Chris, to see evidence from the case or to learn more, go to: https://robertmurphy.substack.com/about This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit robertmurphy.substack.com/subscribe
March 1978. Britain's biggest manhunt. West Yorkshire Police detectives are desperate to find the man who has killed seven women. The man nicknamed ‘The Yorkshire Ripper.'Det Con Chris Gregg is a rookie officer in the incident room when a letter arrives, claiming to be from the serial killer.The handwriting is spidery. The language is taunting.Chris doubts that it is from the genuine killer, but a series of catastrophic coincidences persuade the lead investigator, Asst Ch Constable George Oldfield, that it has been penned by the murderer.Then, in a moment of pure policing drama, Chris Gregg is summonsed along with the team to hear George Oldfield reveal a new development.This episode is part 1 of 3. Written, presented and produced by Robert Murphy. To watch video clips with Chris, to see evidence from the case or to learn more, go to: https://robertmurphy.substack.com/about This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit robertmurphy.substack.com/subscribe
Leanne Tiernan wordt voor het laatst gezien door haar vriendin als ze het verlaten bos van Houghley Gill in loopt. 9 Maanden later wordt haar lichaam gevonden… Hierdoor wordt een van de meest uitgebreide moordonderzoeken door de West Yorkshire Police gestart. Maar hoe wordt een hondenhalsband - Het Bewijs - dat deze zaak oplost?Meer true crime podcasts luisteren op Podimo? Probeer nu een maand gratis via https://go.podimo.com/nl/hetbewijsVerteller: Sanne LangelaarVertaling: Andrea HuntjensMontage en Mixage: Jeroen SturingProductie: Anne Janssens & Gaby van SchaijckZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
On the 14th of January 1996, a fire was reported at Burley Train station close to Leeds. When emergency services arrived it was found that it was a woman's body that had been set alight. The woman was 20 year old Deborah Wood who had been missing since she was last seen on the 4th of January in Leeds city centre. There were many odd features about this murder and some links that would later become apparent. Deborah's murder is still unsolved and her family need answers. Important information provided by:https://www.leeds-live.co.uk/news/leeds-news/deborah-wood-murder-police-issue-19627614https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leeds-55652919https://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/news/crime/police-investigating-1996-murder-leeds-woman-doused-petrol-and-set-alight-launch-fresh-appeal-3101165https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/kill-sister-brother-question-murder-14209819https://www.examinerlive.co.uk/news/west-yorkshire-news/women-girls-brutally-murdered-west-25088855https://www.crimeandinvestigation.co.uk/crime-files/john-taylor-killer-in-the-woodsIf you know anything about any of the murders discussed in today's episode please contact West Yorkshire Police on 101.Music by: dl-sounds.comFollow the Unseen Podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-unseen-podcast/id1318473466?uo=4Follow the Unseen Podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0xWK7Mu3bTP6oziZvxrwSK?si=QxvyPkZ2TdCDscnfxyeRawFollow the Unseen Podcast on Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-unseen-podcastJoin our Facebook group https://www.facebook.com/unseenpodFollow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/theunseenpodFollow us on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/theunseenpod/Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/theunseenpod?fan_landing=trueSubscribe to 10 Minute True Crime: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/10-minute-true-crime/id1591474862
Serial Killer Peter Sutcliffe The Yorkshire Ripper DocumentaryPeter William Sutcliffe (2 June 1946 – 13 November 2020) was an English serial killer who was dubbed the Yorkshire Ripper (an allusion to Jack the Ripper) by the press. Sutcliffe was convicted of murdering 13 women and attempting to murder seven others between 1975 and 1980.[2]: 144 He was sentenced to 20 concurrent sentences of life imprisonment, which were converted to a whole life order in 2010. Two of Sutcliffe's murders took place in Manchester; all the others were in West Yorkshire.Sutcliffe initially attacked women and girls in residential areas, but appears to have shifted his focus to red-light districts because he was attracted by the vulnerability of prostitutes and the perceived ambivalent attitude, at the time, of police to prostitutes' safety.[3][4] He had allegedly regularly used the services of prostitutes in Leeds and Bradford. After his arrest in Sheffield by South Yorkshire Police for driving with false number plates in January 1981, Sutcliffe was transferred to the custody of West Yorkshire Police, which questioned him about the killings. He confessed to being the perpetrator, saying that the voice of God had sent him on a mission to kill prostitutes. At his trial, Sutcliffe pleaded not guilty to murder on grounds of diminished responsibility, but he was convicted of murder on a majority verdict. Following his conviction, Sutcliffe began using his mother's maiden name of Coonan.The search for Sutcliffe was one of the largest and most expensive manhunts in British history, and West Yorkshire Police was criticised for its failure to catch him despite having interviewed him nine times in the course of its five-year investigation. Owing to the sensational nature of the case, the police handled an exceptional amount of information, some of it misleading (including the Wearside Jack hoax recorded message and letters purporting to be from the "Ripper"). Following Sutcliffe's conviction, the government ordered a review of the investigation, conducted by the Inspector of Constabulary Lawrence Byford, known as the "Byford Report". The findings were made fully public in 2006, and confirmed the validity of the criticism of the force.[5] The report led to changes to investigative procedures that were adopted across UK police forces.[6] Since his conviction in 1981 Sutcliffe has been linked to a number of other unsolved murders and attacks.
True Crime Podcast 2023 - Police Interrogations, 911 Calls and True Police Stories Podcast
Serial Killer Peter Sutcliffe The Yorkshire Ripper DocumentaryPeter William Sutcliffe (2 June 1946 – 13 November 2020) was an English serial killer who was dubbed the Yorkshire Ripper (an allusion to Jack the Ripper) by the press. Sutcliffe was convicted of murdering 13 women and attempting to murder seven others between 1975 and 1980.[2]: 144 He was sentenced to 20 concurrent sentences of life imprisonment, which were converted to a whole life order in 2010. Two of Sutcliffe's murders took place in Manchester; all the others were in West Yorkshire.Sutcliffe initially attacked women and girls in residential areas, but appears to have shifted his focus to red-light districts because he was attracted by the vulnerability of prostitutes and the perceived ambivalent attitude, at the time, of police to prostitutes' safety.[3][4] He had allegedly regularly used the services of prostitutes in Leeds and Bradford. After his arrest in Sheffield by South Yorkshire Police for driving with false number plates in January 1981, Sutcliffe was transferred to the custody of West Yorkshire Police, which questioned him about the killings. He confessed to being the perpetrator, saying that the voice of God had sent him on a mission to kill prostitutes. At his trial, Sutcliffe pleaded not guilty to murder on grounds of diminished responsibility, but he was convicted of murder on a majority verdict. Following his conviction, Sutcliffe began using his mother's maiden name of Coonan.The search for Sutcliffe was one of the largest and most expensive manhunts in British history, and West Yorkshire Police was criticised for its failure to catch him despite having interviewed him nine times in the course of its five-year investigation. Owing to the sensational nature of the case, the police handled an exceptional amount of information, some of it misleading (including the Wearside Jack hoax recorded message and letters purporting to be from the "Ripper"). Following Sutcliffe's conviction, the government ordered a review of the investigation, conducted by the Inspector of Constabulary Lawrence Byford, known as the "Byford Report". The findings were made fully public in 2006, and confirmed the validity of the criticism of the force.[5] The report led to changes to investigative procedures that were adopted across UK police forces.[6] Since his conviction in 1981 Sutcliffe has been linked to a number of other unsolved murders and attacks.
Darkest Mysteries Online - The Strange and Unusual Podcast 2023
Serial Killer Peter Sutcliffe The Yorkshire Ripper DocumentaryPeter William Sutcliffe (2 June 1946 – 13 November 2020) was an English serial killer who was dubbed the Yorkshire Ripper (an allusion to Jack the Ripper) by the press. Sutcliffe was convicted of murdering 13 women and attempting to murder seven others between 1975 and 1980.[2]: 144 He was sentenced to 20 concurrent sentences of life imprisonment, which were converted to a whole life order in 2010. Two of Sutcliffe's murders took place in Manchester; all the others were in West Yorkshire.Sutcliffe initially attacked women and girls in residential areas, but appears to have shifted his focus to red-light districts because he was attracted by the vulnerability of prostitutes and the perceived ambivalent attitude, at the time, of police to prostitutes' safety.[3][4] He had allegedly regularly used the services of prostitutes in Leeds and Bradford. After his arrest in Sheffield by South Yorkshire Police for driving with false number plates in January 1981, Sutcliffe was transferred to the custody of West Yorkshire Police, which questioned him about the killings. He confessed to being the perpetrator, saying that the voice of God had sent him on a mission to kill prostitutes. At his trial, Sutcliffe pleaded not guilty to murder on grounds of diminished responsibility, but he was convicted of murder on a majority verdict. Following his conviction, Sutcliffe began using his mother's maiden name of Coonan.The search for Sutcliffe was one of the largest and most expensive manhunts in British history, and West Yorkshire Police was criticised for its failure to catch him despite having interviewed him nine times in the course of its five-year investigation. Owing to the sensational nature of the case, the police handled an exceptional amount of information, some of it misleading (including the Wearside Jack hoax recorded message and letters purporting to be from the "Ripper"). Following Sutcliffe's conviction, the government ordered a review of the investigation, conducted by the Inspector of Constabulary Lawrence Byford, known as the "Byford Report". The findings were made fully public in 2006, and confirmed the validity of the criticism of the force.[5] The report led to changes to investigative procedures that were adopted across UK police forces.[6] Since his conviction in 1981 Sutcliffe has been linked to a number of other unsolved murders and attacks.
Again we're heading to the 1990s, 1994 to be exact. A 13 year old head's out late in the evening to pick up some cornflakes for breakfast, and CCTV captures her in the supermarket. But when she doesn't turn up for her paper round the next morning, the alarm is raised but it is 5 long months before there are any answers. This is the murder of Lindsay Rimer.Lindsay Rimer was murdered somewhere in the Hebden Bridge area, West-Yorkshire, on or around the night of the November 7th, 1994. If you have any information on Lindsay or her murder, please contact West-Yorkshire Police on 0845 6060606, or if you want to remain anonymous you can call crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.If you need SupportUK - The freephone, 24-hour National Domestic Abuse Helpline 0808 2000 247United States of America - For anonymous, confidential help, 24/7, please call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 (SAFE) or 1-800-787-3224 (TTY).Europe - here is a link to a database of national domestic abuse helplines available in 46 European countries. https://ec.europa.eu/justice/saynostopvaw/helpline.htmlFollow us on our instagramIf you enjoyed this episode don't forget to share it with your friends! If you're listening on Spotify, please drop us a rating and if you're on Apple Podcasts, we'd love it if you could leave us a review!
For 35 years, from 1984 until 2019, Yorkshire-born Carol's voice was silenced by her father and West Yorkshire Police and Child Protection Units. She struggled to fight for justice and, while raising two children alone, to get her predator father sent to prison for twenty years by Judge James Jameson QC. Elliot Appleyard groomed Carol from birth, after telling her mother he believed ‘all fathers should break their daughters in' when Carol was a toddler. Because of Carol's fight with the authorities, that continues to this day and despite chronic post-traumatic stress, her father is in prison where aged 73, he is unlikely to see the light of a free-day again or create more victims. HELLOFRESH LINK click: https://bit.ly/ShaunAttwood_HelloFres... to get 60% off your 1st box + 25% off for 2 months using my code SHAUN60. Limited offer ending by the end of September. * Terms & Conditions: This offer entitles you to 60% off your first box, and 25% off your next eight boxes when ordered in consecutive weeks during your first two months as a HelloFresh customer. Offer valid until the 15th of December (“Offer Expiry Date”). HelloFresh reserves the right to amend or withdraw this offer at our complete discretion with no prior notice or liability to you. See the website for full T&Cs. If you arrive too late for the Flash sale, use SHAUN60 for 50% off your 1st box. ROCKETMONEY: https://rocketmoney.com/shaun Don't fall for subscription scams. Start cancelling today at ROCKETMONEY: https://rocketmoney.com/shaun Go right now - https://rocketmoney.com/shaun - it could save you THOUSANDS a year. Carol's YouTube: YT: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCet1...
I had such an interesting conversation with Rob Wilson, founder of Angels of Freedom."Bringing a caring LGBT+ scene to a compassionate cityThe Angels of Freedom is a community based initiative organised by volunteers and supported by Leeds City Council, British Transport Police and West Yorkshire Police.Our aim is to provide visible support for the LGBT+ community based in the Freedom Quarter area of the city every Friday evening. Our volunteers provide conversations on support & social groups, activities and events in Leeds, along with just being a friendly approachable face on the bar scene for anyone wanting a chat."The featured track on this episode is aptly named and is about the city, "Leeds" by Moses Rubin. Moses has produced an EP entirely devoted to Leeds.https://www.angelsoffreedom.org.uk/https://www.instagram.com/leedscc_lgbt/https://www.facebook.com/LeedsLGBTAngelshttps://twitter.com/LeedsLGBTAngelshttp://www.mosesrubinmusic.com/http://www.mosesrubin.bandcamp.com/https://mosesrubin.bandcamp.com/track/leedshttps://www.facebook.com/mosesrubinmusichttps://www.instagram.com/moses_rubin/https://twitter.com/moses_rubin
Laura continues her conversation with Meirion Jones, who along with Liz MacKean, investigated Jimmy Savile when they worked for the BBC. Together they lifted the lid on Savile's prolific and serial sexual offending behaviour targeting the most vulnerable in society. Meirion takes us behind the scenes of his and Liz's complex BBC Newsnight investigation, including how the BBC shut down the investigation and the subsequent cover up by the BBC, the health service, the West Yorkshire Police and the Crown Prosecution Service. Laura and Meirion discuss the scale of Savile's offending, the ecosystem that supported and enabled him and what the lessons are from this case. Trigger warning: This case is deeply disturbing, and this episode is a difficult listen but an important conversation. Listener discretion is advised. You can follow along on Laura's Instagram @crimeanalyst TikTok @crimeanalystpod and Twitter @thecrimeanalyst. #VictimsMatter #CrimeAnalyst #Expert #TrueCrime #Podcast #Grooming #SexOffender #Behaviour #Pedophile #Investigation #BBC #Misogyny #JimmyllFixIt #JimmySavile #Netflix Clips https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hrc_uQnVRdU https://open.spotify.com/episode/0BvDdrbIy5cgXgZ2SnSae5?si=7MEpS2eaSuGEilnsvA04TQ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TaGJCvq-Oec Article https://www.theguardian.com/media/2017/aug/20/liz-mackean-obituary Thank you to my sponsor Storyworth: Give all the “fathers” in your life a meaningful gift you can both cherish for years to come - StoryWorth! Right now, for a limited time, you can save $10 on your first purchase when you go to StoryWorth.com/crimeanalyst Leave a Review If you want to support my work and Crime Analyst and if you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review here: https://www.crime-analyst.com/reviews/new/
PLUS, it was bout time, we got to the third 'Star Wars' series to hit 'Disney+', and the first spin-off from 'The Mandalorian'. That's right people, we looking at 'The Book of Boba Fett'. AND, our Audible book of the week, is the third outing for Jack Carr's James Reece. And things get crazy f'sure, in 'Savage Son'. This week: - Epstein's buddy, Jean Luc Brunel found dead in prison cell!?! - West Yorkshire Police develop SmartWater, as a domestic abuse deterrent - Ukraine's top military officials flee front line! - Harry of Sussex, won't bring kids to UK, cause he's scared of violence!?! - Tate Britain is to commission a new mural to serve as positive dialogue on Rex Whistler's work - Hilary Clinton paid her former lawyer Michael Sussmann to "infiltrate" servers belonging to Trump Tower, AND the White House REVIEWS & RECOMMENDATIONS - TV: Book Of Boba Fett - S1 - thoughts Watch the review: HERE! https://youtu.be/-rwBCGEr6bo AUDIBLE - Savage Son by Jack Carr Watch the review: HERE! https://youtu.be/I2KYAAszoBo *(Music) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/eftv/message
It began in the Summer of 1975, although no one knew it at the time. The first attacks left their victims grievously injured with skull fractures, lying in pools of blood as the mysterious stranger fled into the West Yorkshire night. No one paid it much attention, not even when the first bodies began to appear, their heads caved in with a ball-pean hammer. They were only prostitutes after all, young women whom polite society looked down upon. It went on this way for years, until the body of a virtuous 16-year-old was found. Then the cries of the people became too loud for the West Yorkshire Police to ignore and they were forced to act. What followed was one of the most extensive investigations in the UK's history, and one of its bloodiest, as they sought to capture the elusive man known as The Yorkshire Ripper. Support a good cause and help rescue an animal in need https://tinyurl.com/DOARescue Follow me on Instagram, MeWe, and Patreon @ IanTotten-Author Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/The-Deathcast-102690125566672 Twitter @CorpseCreek Find my books @ https://tinyurl.com/Totten-Books The Deathcast is a Production of Corpse Creek Publishing Visit the official website: https://www.corpsecreekpublishing.com #truecrime #UnitedKingdom #Yorkshire #YorkshireRipper #Murder #TheDeathcast #truecrimeaddict #truecrimefiend #Truecrimepodcast #Sutcliffe #PeterSutcliffe
It began in the Summer of 1975, although no one knew it at the time. The first attacks left their victims grievously injured with skull fractures, lying in pools of blood as the mysterious stranger fled into the West Yorkshire night. No one paid it much attention, not even when the first bodies began to appear, their heads caved in with a ball-pean hammer. They were only prostitutes after all, young women whom polite society looked down upon. It went on this way for years, until the body of a virtuous 16-year-old was found. Then the cries of the people became too loud for the West Yorkshire Police to ignore and they were forced to act. What followed was one of the most extensive investigations in the UK's history, and one of its bloodiest, as they sought to capture the elusive man known as The Yorkshire Ripper. Support a good cause and help rescue an animal in need https://tinyurl.com/DOARescue Follow me on Instagram, MeWe, and Patreon @ IanTotten-Author Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/The-Deathcast-102690125566672 Twitter @CorpseCreek Find my books @ https://tinyurl.com/Totten-Books The Deathcast is a Production of Corpse Creek Publishing Visit the official website: https://www.corpsecreekpublishing.com #truecrime #UnitedKingdom #Yorkshire #YorkshireRipper #Murder #TheDeathcast #truecrimeaddict #truecrimefiend #Truecrimepodcast #Sutcliffe #PeterSutcliffe
In 2008, nine-year-old Shannon Matthews was reported missing by her mum, Karen Matthews. Less than a year after Madeleine McCann went missing, the country was on high alert and the West Yorkshire Police quickly deployed officers in the search for Shannon; did she run away, was she abducted or was something much more sinister at play? Listen in to find out. Follow us on Instagram @conversationstodiefor
Visit our website https://psycho-killer.co for exclusive videos, photos, articles, and transcripts.Bob Taylor retired as Detective Chief Superintendent of West Yorkshire Police with an unprecedented 100% clear-up record. In a career spanning 31 years, Taylor and his team were responsible for putting some of Britain's most evil criminals behind bars. That's why his officers called their guv'nor 'Crimebuster'. Taylor cut his teeth on the Yorkshire Ripper investigation. Then he tracked down some of the country's most notorious psychopaths and murderers, before becoming head of operations at the elite National Crime Squad, the UK's answer to the FBI.In this exclusive interview with Simon Ford, Bob Taylor talks about the Ripper enquiry, the shoe-fetish killer Christopher Farrow, the interrogation of psychopath Michael Sams, and the chilling case of the sadistic serial rapist, Clive Barwell.
In this final episode, Laura analyses the letter writer and tape maker as well as the behavioural profile of someone who would act in this way. Laura discusses the apology issued by West Yorkshire Police in November 2020 as well as the learning opportunities from this case in terms of future early identification, intervention and prevention of serial offenders and killers. Most importantly, Laura re-centers and remembers the victims in the final episode of the podcast series documenting this much needed re-investigation. You really won't want to miss this. #Podcast #TheForgottenVictims #TrueCrime #CrimeAnalyst #Leadership #Police #SerialKillers #WomenMatter #HerNameWas Wilma McCann Emily Jackson Irene Richardson Debra Schlesinger Patricia ‘Tina' Atkinson Jayne McDonald Jean Jordan Yvonne Pearson Helen Rytka Vera Millward Josephine Whittaker Barbara Leach Marguerite Walls Jacqueline Hill Barbara Ann Young Elizabeth Parravicini Carol Wilkinson #HerNameIS The unnamed prostitute attacked in 1969 The unnamed 19-year-old typist Gloria Wood Rosemary Stead Maureen Hogan The unnamed prostitute in Doncaster Yvonne Mysliwiec Anna Rogulskyj Olive Smelt Tracy Browne Marcella Claxton Maureen Long Marilyn Moore Ann Rooney Dr Upadya Bandara Maureen ‘Mo' Lea Theresa Sykes Go Fund Me Link to the Women's Memorial Garden The council have now agreed to create a Memorial Garden for the victims, survivors, and families, which is fantastic news. Funds are still required however. If you would like to donate to the Memorial Garden, please follow Richard McCann @ICanInspire on Twitter for the latest information. Serial Stalkers and Domestic Abusers Campaign https://www.laurarichards.co.uk/featured/terrorism-begins-at-home-its-time-to-join-the-dots/ Sign the Petition https://www.change.org/p/boris-johnson-prime-minister-stop-serial-perpetrators-and-stalkers-abusing-multiple-women Sources http://nyenquirer.uk/death-sir-lawrence-byford-obit/ https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/b07pdd7r https://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/yorkshire-rippers-forgotten-victims-who-23606766 https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/yorkshire-ripper-hammer-attack-survivor-11041112 https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2010/apr/18/ronald-gregory-obituary https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1360087/yorkshire-ripper-peter-sutcliffe-taxpayers-money https://www.westyorkshire.police.uk/news-appeals/death-peter-sutcliffe-statements-chief-constable-john-robins-behalf-west-yorkshire Sponsors A huge thank you to my sponsor Best Fiends: Download the 5 star-rated puzzle game, Best Fiends FREE today on the App Store or Google Play. Leave a Review If you want to support my work and Crime Analyst and if you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review here: https://www.crime-analyst.com/reviews/new/
Visit our website https://psycho-killer.co for exclusive videos, photos, articles, and transcripts.Michael Benneman Sams was one of life's losers, a little man with big, bad ideas. He snatched his victims and held them to ransom locked in a wheelie bin. Birmingham estate agent Stephanie Slater walked free when her employers paid £175,000. Julie Dart, a teenager from Leeds, wasn't so lucky. She escaped from the wheelie bin, triggering Sams's silent alarm. He murdered her before she could break out of his workshop in Newark, Nottinghamshire, and dumped her body in a field in Lincolnshire. But the police caught up with Sams. His ex-wife and son had long memories. When they recognised him on BBC Crimewatch they were quick to turn him in. Sams, now 79, will die in prison.This podcast features an exclusive interview with Senior Investigating Officer, Detective Chief Superintendent (retired) Bob Taylor of West Yorkshire Police.The Six O'clock Knock is a Psycho Killer production.Transcript[MUSIC] Hello and welcome to the Six O'Clock Knock. I'm Simon Ford, a journalist and broadcaster. And I'm Jacques Morrell a former major crime detective who just can't hang up his boots!Put us together and what have you got? A series of insightful, provocative and challenging new ‘takes' on cold cases and landmark investigations. Jacques spent 30 years on the force, and I've spent as long chasing scoops and scribbling in courtrooms. About a year ago we shook hands, sat down and started comparing notebooks. And I can honestly say that deciphering Simon's shorthand is the most difficult piece of detective work I've ever done.Read more: https://bit.ly/michael-sams-transcript
Visit our website https://psycho-killer.co for exclusive videos, photos, articles, and transcripts.Part 3 of a three-part British true-crime documentary seriesJohn Samuel Humble killed nobody, but he had blood on his hands, and he knew it. He was the hoaxer who pretended to be the Yorkshire Ripper. Dubbed Wearside Jack by the newspapers, his infamous ‘I'm Jack' tape sent the Ripper investigation on a wild goose chase, during which the real killer, Peter Sutcliffe, claimed more victims. One of them, Jayne MacDonald, was a 16-year-old school leaver walking home from a night out. Humble said he goaded detectives with the intention of spurring the enquiry. His plan failed spectacularly. Like many hoaxers, he thought he was safe under a cloak of anonymity, but he reckoned without the determination and long memories of West Yorkshire CID.This podcast features an exclusive interview with a member of the Yorkshire Ripper incident room, Detective Chief Superintendent (retired) Bob Taylor of West Yorkshire Police.The Six O'clock Knock is a Psycho Killer production.TranscriptMusic] This podcast contains descriptions of death and violence that some listeners may find upsetting. Hello and welcome to the Six O'clock Knock the true crime podcast where we look at old cases through a modern lens and draw our own unique conclusions I'm Simon Ford a writer and broadcaster with more than 20 years in the business and I'm Jacques Morrell I spent 30 years as a major crime detective with an expectation to ask those awkward and yet obvious questions I felt a few collars in my time and whilst I've hung up my boots my yearning for the truth is as strong as ever so the two of us got together decided to do some sleuthing and make podcasts from our enquiries we call it the Six O'clock Knock because that's when a detective likes to pay their suspect a visit first thing in the morning when they're least expecting it this podcast is about a Six O'clock Knock that was 25 years in the making it showcases the kind of dogged police work and dedication to duty that mean criminals always need to be looking over their shoulders and it shows how advances in forensic science coupled with determination professional pride and long memories mean there is no hiding place for criminals especially those who think just because of the passage of time that they've got away with it [Music] we're going back into the story of Peter Sutcliffe the Yorkshire Ripper and one of the most bizarre and baffling aspects of that case the letters and tape recordings sent to assistant chief constable George Oldfield by a man purporting to be the Ripper as soon as Sutcliffe confessed the whole charade was exposed as a wicked hoax the senior detectives on the Yorkshire Ripper case were faced with the realization they'd pinned their hopes on a wild goose chase a wild goose chase which diverted precious resources and cost three women their lives so how was the hoaxer able to enthral the leading detectives George Oldfield and dick holland and why did they ignore other avenues of investigation in their pursuit of a phantom [Music] it started with the letters George Oldfield received the first postmarked Sunderland in march 1978. Dear Sir I'm sorry I cannot give my name for obvious reasons I am the Ripper I've been dubbed a maniac by the press but not by you you call me clever and I am you and your mates haven't a clue that thought were in the paper give me fits and not bit about killing myself no chance I've got things to do my purpose is to rid the streets of them [ __ ] my one regret is that young lassie MacDonald did not know because change routine that night up to number eight now up to seven but remember Preston 75 get about you know you are right I travel a bit you probably look for me in Sunderland don't bother I'm not daft just post a letter there on one of me trips not a bad place compared with chapel town and Manningham and other places one horse to keep off the streets because I feel it coming on again sorry about that young lassie yours respectfully Jacques the Ripper might write again later I'm not sure last one really deserved it [ __ ] getting younger each time all slot next time I hope what has failed never again too small close call last one the second was sent to the editor of the daily mirror newspaper dear sir I've already written to chief constable George Oldfield a man I respect concerning the recent Ripper murders I told him and I'm telling you to warn them [ __ ] I'll strike again and soon when the heat cools off about the MacDonald lassie I didn't know she was decent and I'm sorry I changed my routine that night up to number eight now you see a seven but remember Preston 75. easy picking them up don't even have to try you think they'd learn but they don't mostly young lassies next time try an older one I hope please haven't a clue yet and I don't leave any I'm very clever and don't think I'm looking for me fingerprints because there aren't any and don't look for me up there in Sunderland because I'm not stupid just pass through the place not a bad place compared to chapel town and Manningham can't walk the streets for them [ __ ] don't forget to warn them I feel it coming on again if I get chance sorry about lassie didn't know yours respectfully Jacques the Ripper might write again after another one's gone maybe Liverpool or even Manchester again too hot here in Yorkshire bye I have given advanced warning so it's yours and their fault the writer threatened to kill an old [ __ ] in Manchester or Liverpool Oldfield thought the murder of vera millward the Ripper's ninth victim in Manchester in May 1978 was the Ripper making good on his grim promise almost a year later a third letter dated the 23rd of march 1979 confirmed this suspicion in Oldfield's mind again it was postmarked Sunderland dear officer sorry I haven't written about a year to be exact but I haven't been up north for quite a while I wasn't kidding the last time I wrote saying the hall would be older this time and maybe I'd strike in Manchester for a change you should have took aid that bit about her being in hospital funny the lady mentioned something about being in the same hospital before I stopped a [ __ ] and wears the lady won't worry about hospitals now will she I bet you wondering how come I haven't been to work for ages well I would have been if it hadn't been for your cursed coppers I had the lady just where I wanted her and I was about to strike when one of your curse and police car stopped right outside the lane he must have been a dumb copper because he didn't see anything he didn't know how close he was to catching me to tell you the truth I thought I was coloured the lady says don't worry about the coppers little did she know that bloody cop has saved her neck that was last month so I don't know when I'll get back on the job but I know it won't be a chapel town too bloody hot there maybe Bradford's manning him might write again if up north chat the Ripper PS did he get letter I sent the daily mirror in Manchester the writer claimed Vera millward had had treatment at the Manchester royal infirmary the hospital next to where she was murdered both Oldfield and his number two dick holland were convinced this information could only have been divulged by vera to her killer what they didn't know or chose to ignore was that newspapers in Manchester had been told as much by vera's common law husband the story was out there for anyone with a mind to read it Oldfield was being taken in by the person writing those letters an investigative team was brought together in Sunderland to find the letter writer and nailed the Ripper there were other tantalizing similarities whoever wrote the letter had the same blood group as one found at one of the Ripper murder scenes June in the Pennine foothills is compensation for the bitter months of winter summer transforms the bleak landscape swathes of green cloaked the moors and the parks of Leeds in Bradford become a playground of wide lawns and leafy groves sergeant Megan Winterburn walked through the sunlight of a June morning to her job at Leeds central police station Milgarth was a seven-story brick fortress the lower floors were windowless those above them were little more than slits this brutalist block house was home to the Ripper investigation in the summer of 1979 the incident room already took up two floors one floor was the incident room itself the floor beneath was empty except for the pit props supporting the weight of the paperwork above assistant chief constable George OldfieldRead more: https://bit.ly/wearside-jack-transcript
Visit our website https://psycho-killer.co for exclusive videos, photos, and articles.Part 2 of a three-part British true-crime documentary series‘Wicked beyond belief', is how the trial judge summarised the character of Peter William Sutcliffe. Between 1975 and 1980 he murdered 13 women and attempted to murder seven others. The north of England was gripped by fear during a reign of terror the police were unable to terminate. Simon Ford joins former major-crime detective Jacques Morell in an examination of Sutcliffe's life and crimes. Sutcliffe (who changed his name to Coonan in prison) slipped through the net nine times before being caught almost by accident. Simon asks Jacques: would today's policing methods have stopped the Yorkshire Ripper sooner?This podcast features an exclusive interview with a member of the Yorkshire Ripper incident room, Detective Chief Superintendent (retired) Bob Taylor of West Yorkshire Police.The Six O'clock Knock is a Psycho Killer production.Transcript[Music]This podcast contains descriptions of death and violence that some listeners may find upsetting. Hello and welcome to the Six O'clock Knock the true crime podcast that re-examines historical cases through a modern lens I'm Simon Ford a writer journalist and broadcaster and I'm Jacques Morrell an author and former major crime detective in case you're wondering the Six O'clock Knock is police jargon for a dawn raid 6 am being the time a suspect is most likely to be at home and off guard it's the time when we make an arrest on our terms it could be a knock at the door or sometimes we'd go in with a sledgehammer or a battering ram we used to call that the enforcer in this podcast we're going back to the 1970s and a series of murders and attacks on women that transfixed the north of England the perpetrator was one Peter William Sutcliffe or to give him the title chillingly bestowed on him by the press at the time the Yorkshire Ripper when Paul's teacher asked him about his three favourite things the ten-year-old would say Leeds united David Bowie and going on round with our Alan this Thursday morning Paul was in his element cramming a doorstep jam buddy into his mouth and wrapped up against the autumn chill he was riding shotgun on Alan's milk float never mind that Leeds had lost to Manchester united last Saturday never mind that Art Garfunkel was keeping David Bowie off number one he was Starsky and Alan was Hutch the electric float hummed down Scott Hall Avenue the empty milk bottles jingling like sleigh bells Alan slowed to take the right turn into the Prince Phillip playing fields it was hard to see in the fog and the milk floats headlights dimmed unpredictably Alan stopped outside the caretaker's house lit an embassy and jumped out Paul clambered down beside him hoping the caretaker might say hey up and slip him a packet of sweet cigarettes the red-tipped candy sticks were a treat but Paul was collecting the football cards inside he was desperate to get his idol Leeds midfield hotshot Peter lorimer it was then he noticed something on the grass someone's left a guy out he shouted dashing into the mist shh hissed Alan how many bloody times it was twenty to eight Paul ran over to where the object was lying anticipating a Guy Fawkes effigy like the ones his mates touted round the back streets before bonfire night then he came racing back Alan noticed his expression had changed something made the older brother freeze the bones of Paul's face had rearranged themselves to make room for two enormous eyes it's a body was all he said [Music] the dead woman was Wilma McCann she was 28 and mom to four children all under nine she was the first woman killed by the Yorkshire Ripper although there had been three other assaults on women earlier that year which bore the hallmarks of Wilma's murder crushing blows to the head with a hammer in addition Wilma had been stabbed in the chest and throat there's no memorial to the victims of the Yorkshire Ripper but there should be between October 1975 and November 1980 Sutcliffe murdered 13 women in Leeds Bradford Huddersfield and Manchester he attacked a further seven women who survived but who bore the scars mental and physical for the rest of their lives to say nothing of the families devastated by Sutcliffe he said he targeted sex workers some of his victims were others were not when he was caught Sutcliffe seemed to be attacking women in general his victims did have one thing in common they were all alone vulnerable and unable to defend themselves before we get into it here are the names of the women who died and those we know who survived the first to be murdered was Wilma McCann then Emily Jackson Irene Richardson Patricia Atkinson Jane MacDonald Jean Jordan also known as Jean Royal Yvonne Pearson Helen Rytka Vera Millward Josephine Whittaker Barbara Leach Marguerite Walls and Jacqueline Hill the victims who survived include Anna Rogulskyj Olive Smelt Tracey Brown Marcella Claxton Maureen Long and Marilyn Moore we've decided not to dwell on Sutcliffe's crimes the failure of the police to catch him is well documented first and foremost in the Byford report commissioned in the immediate aftermath of the investigation it was excoriating instead we're going to look at the lessons learned from the Ripper's five-year reign of terror and how they've helped shape modern policing here in the united kingdom the improvements that have been made and we're going to pose the question in the spirit of the Six O'clock Knock how would a modern investigative team approach the inquiry at its key stages [Music] we know that Sutcliffe was interviewed nine times by the police but somehow managed to evade the dragnet in the words of one detective Chris Gregg we had the fly on the flypaper why was Sutcliffe allowed to go free; free to kill again on multiple occasions Jacques I'm wondering when you joined the police in the 1980s was the Yorkshire Ripper mentioned at training college for example and if so what did people say I don't remember much being said by colleagues about the case I worked in the midlands and my training was in Coventry the Yorkshire Ripper case certainly hadn't found its way into the police training manuals although by the time I worked on my first murder case there had been changes to the incident room procedures I also joined in 1985 when the police and criminal evidence act was new I guess that what I'm trying to say here is the outdated attitudes of 1970s policing was changing the way murder squads were formed though still meant it was potluck how good those senior detectives were going to be the families of murder victims should get a golden service every time in 1970s Yorkshire this was still a long way off [Music] a working man's weekly wage in 1977 was about 50 pounds a little over 400 pounds in today's money which meant the crisp new fiver Peter Sutcliffe paid Jean Jordan for sex that October Saturday night would be worth about 40 quid in 2020. Little did Jean who also used the surname royal know she was about to become the fifth woman to be killed by the Ripper Sutcliffe had chosen Manchester because as he later told police things were hotting up a bit in Leeds and Bradford on wasteland near to Manchester's southern cemetery Sutcliffe smashed Jean ten times over the head with a hammer but he was disturbed by a courting couple hid her body and fled the scene [Music] later he realized the brand new five-pound note could be traced back to his pay packet so the next weekend Sutcliffe slipped away from a family party and returned to the scene of the crime when his search for the incriminating banknote proved fruitless he directed his rage at Jean Jordan's body stabbing wildly he found a broken pane of glass and slashed open the stomach of the week old corpse the stench he later told detectives made him vomit then in an attempt to confuse his pursuers he tried unsuccessfully to sever the head with a hacksaw tony fletcher one of the first investigators on the scene thought some ghoul had dug up a body from the nearby cemetery but an examination of the injuries provided an even more shocking explanation the woman's half-severed head was pulped and her face unrecognizable she'd been intimately mutilated with a 10-inch sharpened screwdriver described at Sutcliffe's trial as a most wicked agent a coil of intestine was wound around her waist her clothes and belongings had been strewn over the surrounding area as if a pack of animals had been at work in fact it was the work of just one animal Peter Sutcliffe Manchester CID had a Ripper murder on their hands on the 15th of October two weeks after the murder an allotment holder came across Jean Jordan's handbag in it was the fiver the banknote which both Peter Sutcliffe and the Ripper inquiry knew could be used to trace him down via his employer Clarke's haulage Sutcliffe later told police I read about the note being traced to a Shipley bank I knew Clark's got the wage money from a Shipley bank and that a local inquiry would be made and by some miracle I escaped the dragnet Jacques was it a miracle that Sutcliffe wasn't detected at this point it's difficult to say how close they were but in 1977 they had their best chance to catch him in that year there were four murders three in west Yorkshire and the one we described in Manchester there was a really good line of inquiry in the first murder that year they had officially confirmed they had a serial killer the west Yorkshire chief constable appointed his most senior detective assistant chief constable George Oldfield and more significant if not ironic it was the Manchester murder that produced the best opportunity to date the Manchester team knew they were onto something the five-pound note had been part of a delivery of new notes from the bank of England to Leeds just four days before Jean Jordan's murder the chances of a Read more: https://bit.ly/yorkshire-ripper-transcript
Laura highlights key points from The Sampson Review, an internal review of the West Yorkshire Police incident room, which was undertaken by Deputy Chief Constable Colin Sampson from Nottinghamshire Police. Laura also discusses New Scotland Yard’s review by Commander Nevill as well as former Superintendent Keith Hellawell’s Review and his subsequent interviews with PS, which led to a further confession. You won’t want to miss this. #Podcast#TheForgottenVictims#TrueCrime#CrimeAnalyst Sourceshttps://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/b07pdd7rhttps://www.execulink.com/~kbrannen/byfdsamp.htmhttps://secretlibraryleeds.net/2019/07/12/report-into-the-investigation-of-the-series-of-murders-and-assaults-on-women-in-the-north-of-england-between-1975-and-1980/https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4373896/Peter-Sutcliffe-questioned-prison-17-attacks.htmlhttps://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/yorkshire-ripper-hammer-attack-survivor-11041112 http://leedsunsolvedmurders.blogspot.com/p/mary-bateman-city-centre-1969.html http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/36649.stmhttps://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/yorkshire-ripper-tamworth-judith-roberts-15776868 Thank you to my sponsors Apostrophe and Ana Luisa. If you want to support my work and Crime Analyst please check out my sponsors: Apostrophe I have a special deal for my lovely listeners: Save $15 off your first visit with a board-certified dermatologist at www.Apostrophe.com/CRIMEANALYST when you use my code CRIMEANALYST. This code is only available to my listeners. To get started, just go to www.Apostrophe.com/CRIMEANALYST and click Begin Visit, then use my code CRIMEANALYST at sign up and you’ll get fifteen dollars off your dermatology visit! Ana Luisa Check out Ana Luisa’s website www.analuisa.com/crimeanalyst as they have so many cool necklaces, earrings, bracelets, rings and earcuffs.Buy yourself or someone you love a treat and use my code CRIMEANALYST for 10% off.
Laura highlights key points from The Sampson Review, an internal review of the West Yorkshire Police incident room, which was undertaken by Deputy Chief Constable Colin Sampson from Nottinghamshire Police. Laura also makes a very disturbing discovery about the case, which makes a lot of things make sense – and not in a good way. You won’t want to miss this. #Podcast#TheForgottenVictims#TrueCrime#CrimeAnalyst Sourceshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LcFtS9wpoF0https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/b07pdd7rhttps://www.execulink.com/~kbrannen/byfdsamp.htmhttps://secretlibraryleeds.net/2019/07/12/report-into-the-investigation-of-the-series-of-murders-and-assaults-on-women-in-the-north-of-england-between-1975-and-1980/ Thank you to my sponsors Stamps.com, Ana Luisa and Daily Harvest:Stamps.com @Stamps.ComWith my promo code, CRIMEANALYST, you get a special offer that includes a 4-week trial PLUS free postage and a digital scale. No long-term commitments or contracts. Just go to www.stamps.com click on the Microphone at the TOP of the homepage and type in CRIMEANALYST. Ana Luisa Check out Ana Luisa’s website www.analuisa.com/crimeanalyst as they have so many cool necklaces, earrings, bracelets, rings and ear cuffs.Buy yourself or someone you love a treat and use my code CRIMEANALYST for 10% off. Daily Harvest @DlyHarvest www.dailyharvest.com and enter promo code crimeanalyst to get twenty-five dollars off your first box!
On this week’s episode of Life and Lessons, you’re going to hear a conversation I had with Ben Pearson.Ben was in West Yorkshire Police for 19 years, ending up in the force's traffic unit, where you might have seen him on Channel 5’s Police Interceptors.A series of life events caused Ben to eventually leave the police, for the benefit of his own mental health, and he now spends his time helping to create conversations about mental health – and the impacts of policing. He’s also the author of the book Handcuffed Emotions, and is working on a second book, Hotel Tango 23, which is out later this year. In the next hour, you’re going to learn: What checks the police are really making when they’re behind your car, and what plays into the decision to pull you over How a police chase really unfolds, and the countless observations and considerations that go into the act of stopping a fleeing car The real-world mental health impact of being in the police, and having to deal with death and destruction day after day What Ben is doing to change the mental health narrative in the police, to help others who are going through the things that he has already experiencedAnd so much more.This conversation is a really interesting one but also a really important one.On the other hand, I got to ask all of the questions I’ve always asked to a traffic police officer, who has pursued and stopped countless cars and criminals.But on the other hand, to hear Ben’s story, the things he has been through, and the reflection he has taken from those challenges, is really important and has to be heard.Ben PearsonHandcuffed Emotions on Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Handcuffed-Emotions-Police-Interceptors-Darkness/dp/B08P1H4735Twitter: https://twitter.com/bs_pearsonYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCX0bqYPwTWt1PTnD7_BqUPg/featuredSean SpoonerInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/spoonersean/Twitter: https://twitter.com/spoonerseanJoin My Newsletter: https://seanspooner.co.uk/emailPatter: https://patter.co.uk/Make sure that you're subscribed to Life and Lessons on whatever platform you use for podcasts. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On the 7th November 1994, 13 year old Lindsay Jo Rimer set out from her home in the West Yorkshire town of Hebden Bridge. It was around 10pm and she was heading to the Spar Supermarket to buy some cornflakes. It was around a 10 minute walk and CCTV showed she purchased these at 10:22pm. The next morning, Lindsay didn't turn up for her paper round and her family realised she had never returned from the shop. A huge missing person investigation was launched but 5 months later the worst was discovered. Lindsay had been murdered. Her case is still unsolved to the present day. Important information provided by: https://www.findmypast.co.uk/ - contemporary news articles. http://www.hebdenbridge.co.uk/features/lindsay-rimer.htmlhttps://www.halifaxcourier.co.uk/news/crime/mystery-still-surrounds-murder-hebden-bridges-lindsay-rimer-26-years-after-her-disappearance-3028061https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leeds-39704774https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/apr/12/sister-of-murdered-lindsay-jo-rimer-appeal-21-years-after-disappearancehttps://www.thesun.co.uk/news/2150331/lindsay-jo-rimer-murder-arrests/https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/crime/man-held-murder-hebden-bridge-schoolgirl-lindsay-rimer-1994-1181752https://www.examinerlive.co.uk/news/west-yorkshire-news/advances-dna-technology-close-net-13853084https://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/news/15219322.the-body-of-lindsay-jo-rimer-13-was-found-on-april-12-1995-a-bradford-man-was-arrested-on-suspicion-of-her-murder/https://truecrimeengland.wordpress.com/2019/05/28/the-murder-of-lindsay-jo-rimer/If you know anything about the Murder of Lindsay Jo Rimer please contact West Yorkshire Police at 01924 334 604 or Crimestoppers at 0800 555 111. Music by DL SoundsFollow the Unseen Podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-unseen-podcast/id1318473466?uo=4Follow the Unseen Podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0xWK7Mu3bTP6oziZvxrwSK?si=QxvyPkZ2TdCDscnfxyeRawFollow the Unseen Podcast on Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-unseen-podcastJoin our Facebook group https://www.facebook.com/unseenpodFollow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/theunseenpodFollow us on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/theunseenpod/
At 9:45 am on the 6th October 1974, West Yorkshire Police received a phone call. A man had been seen wandering naked through the streets of Ossett, covered in red paint. Little did the people in the street know that that naked man had committed the one of the most heinous crimes in their history. Logo and Promo by: DD All music in this Episode was written and performed by: Nicolas Jeudy / Dark Fantasy Studio
For five years, Peter Sutcliffe, known as the Yorkshire Ripper, hunted and killed defenceless women, mutilating their bodies with hammers and screwdrivers. But could his murder spree have been stopped earlier? In the wake of the Ripper's death this month, award-winning Daily Mail crime writer Stephen Wright talks to retired Detective Chief Superintendent Chris Gregg, who joined the Ripper investigation as a rookie policeman in the late 1970s - and witnessed the cruel hoaxes and fatal police errors that allowed Sutcliffe to remain at large. In powerful and poignant testimony, the respected ex head of CID at West Yorkshire Police discusses the ‘Life on Mars' culture in the force at the time of the Ripper murders, and the harrowing stories of Sutcliffe's victims. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The ICMAP boys are back and straight into the action with a brand new season premiere (or episode 7, for the benefit of those with an appreciation for all things linear). This week, and would you believe it with the previous week’s global announcements of his passing, Tom and Ben make their way through back alleys, dark streets and the red light districts of ‘Ripper Country’ - taking a deep dive into the brutal case of Peter Sutcliffe, better known as The Yorkshire Ripper. It’s January 2nd, 1981 – the South Yorkshire City of Sheffield slowly comes to a close. Children are put to bed, workers are clocking out, friends, loved ones and even perfect strangers are toasting and cheering to the bright hopes of a New Year and all the potential it has to offer. As last orders are called, they spill out to the streets from within the pubs and clubs and wander off home without a care in the world. This is Sheffield, this is South Yorkshire, they don’t carry the worries of their neighbouring regions, they don’t fear the dreaded Yorkshire Ripper as they wander off into the night... Sergeant Robert Ring is on routine patrol with a colleague. He sees a woman in a car with a man and suspects a sex worker and client encounter. The sex worker tells Sergeant Ring that the man in her car is her boyfriend. Ring thinks he remembers her for prostitution offences. The man in the car says his name is Peter Williams. He adds that he’s desperate for the toilet. Ring allows him to go behind a nearby storage tank. The police meanwhile find the car’s license plates are false. And Peter admits that so is the name he has given. He says he’s really Peter Sutcliffe. He’s detained overnight. Police notice Sutcliffe’s physical similarity to the Ripper Profile. His blood test shows he’s blood group B, one of few the indisputable forensic details and relatively rare in the general population. Later that night, Sergeant Ring returns to the scene of the arrest where he finds that the individual didn’t empty his bladder behind the storage tank, but had instead emptied his pockets of a knife and ball-peen hammer...So just how did Sutcliffe avoid detection/capture despite being interviewed by police nine times? What were his motivations behind his 5-year rampage? Why did a Polish Gravestone come under scrutiny? How many mistakes did the West Yorkshire Police make? And which system would you play - the ‘one M’ or the ‘three M’?Tune in, and all will be revealed!**Please kindly give the show a rating and review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you find us in your ears at the moment. It helps us so, so much and will make it easier for other potential listeners to find us. Thanks for your support. Until next time!**Watch ICMAP on YouTube HERE https://www.youtube.com/icouldmurderapodcastFollow ICMAP on Instagram HERE https://www.instagram.com/couldmurderapodFollow ICMAP on Twitter HERE https://twitter.com/CouldMurderAPodSupport ICMAP on Patreon HERE https://www.patreon.com/couldmurderapod
In recent years the popularity of UK Wresting has soared. With shows every weekend around the country drawing in big crowds of both young and old, the activity which is a mixture of both acting and sport is now highly popular in the UK just as it is in America and Japan. NXT UK is a professional wrestling television programme produced by WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment) arguably the biggest entertainment giants for wrestling. The show airs in the United Kingdom on BT Sport, Channel 5 and Paramount Network making overnight successes of some of the show’s stars. Films like Fighting With My Family based on the true-life success story of Saraya-Jade Bevis (Paige) who was signed to WWE and was the youngest ever Diva Champion at the age of 21 have been hugely successful. In recent months, however, wrestling has repeatedly hit the headlines for the wrong reasons; abuse by leading wrestlers and secondly safeguarding issues. Wrestlers, promoters, and other people in the industry were accused of sexual misconduct, with people using the hashtag #SpeakingOut as they shared their stories on social media. A wave of suspensions and sackings followed in the UK and the US, including big names from WWE. BBC journalist Jonathan Savage reported that West Yorkshire Police were "carrying out initial enquiries" into allegations of a number of cases of abuse reported by female wrestlers. Following this, many big names in the wrestling world from different organisations such as WWE and Elite Wrestling, both victims and the accused have been disclosed in recent publications Kelly Klein a professional female American wrestler wrote on Twitter: “I was raped by a now well-known wrestler when I was 18. I didn’t feel like I had support or sufficient proof. I believed my career would be over before it started." Impact Wrestling released Joey Ryan, Dave Crist and Michael Elgin following multiple sexual misconduct allegations shared on social media. WWE recently released Former British champion Gentleman Jack Gallagher over allegations of menacing advances at a New Years Eve party in 2014. The former cruiserweight wrote, "In 2014, at a New Year's Eve party, I met a young woman and my behaviour towards her was inappropriate. As this party was nearly six years ago and I had drunk quite a large amount of alcohol that night, unfortunately, I do not recollect what happened. I wish to make it clear that drinking is not an excuse for my behaviour that night. I want to express my deepest regrets, and I am genuinely sorry for the upset that I have caused." He continued. "This isolated incident is not reflective of my behaviour and attitude towards women. As a man, I know I can do better, and with the support of my wife, I have taken the time over the last few months to understand what I can do. But this is not about me, but about the women that come forward as part of the #SpeakingOut movement. I will continue to support women and this movement to the best of my ability." WWE released a statement on the allegations against the performers in the wrestling company. It said: "Individuals are responsible for their own personal actions. WWE has zero-tolerance for matters involving domestic violence, child abuse and sexual assault. Upon arrest for such misconduct, a WWE talent will be immediately suspended. Upon conviction for such misconduct, a WWE talent will be immediately terminated." UK wrestling star Matt Riddle is alleged to have abused Candy Cartwright, also a wrestler, in 2018, who claimed on Twitter that Riddle forced her to give him oral sex after choking her. Another UK wrestling star Jordan Devlin (WWE NXT UK Superstar) has also been named after allegations were made by Hannah Francesca. Francesca posted a series of tweets in which she alleged she was physically abused by someone in the industry and when she went to the promotion, she was told “One of my boys wouldn’t do that.” She included photos of her bruised body. WWE executives are reportedly getting together to discuss the influx of abuse allegations levied against NXT UK talent. Tom Colohue reports that WWE officials have called an emergency meeting to discuss the allegations against stars from the brand who have been accused of sexual, physical or mental/verbal abuse: https://411mania.com/wrestling/sexual-misconduct-allegations-el-ligero-mikey-whiplash-uk-wrestlers/ Labour MP Alex Davies-Jones raised the Speaking Out movement in Parliament during a debate on misogyny in sport and stated "The disturbing reality and lived experience for many female wrestlers is, more often than not, entrenched in misogyny," she said. "I have heard horrific tales from female wrestlers who were faced with threats of rape or sexual assault, all in the name of 'friendly banter', "I have also heard from women as young as 13 or 14 who, at the start of their careers, were the targets of vile behaviours that saw male wrestlers competing to be the one to take their virginity." Davies-Jones said the #SpeakingOut movement had left the wrestling industry "tainted with its harrowing stories of emotional and sexual abuse" and questioned what was being done when there was "no governing body to hold to account" and "Who should these young women turn to?" the MP asked, telling BBC Sport: "Wrestling has fallen through the gaps because it's not necessarily a sport." In September 2020 it was announced a group of cross-party MPs will launch the first ever inquiry into British Professional wrestling to consider how best to promote, support and improve the wrestling industry in Britain. The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Wrestling, co-chaired by Davies-Jones and Mark Fletcher MP will start taking evidence, written and oral, to inform a report due to be released in early 2021. Other MPs involved in the inquiry include Tonia Antoniazzi MP, Paul Bristow MP, Ruth Jones MP and Connor McGinn. Guidance on how to provide evidence to the inquiry can be found here. NXT UK’s Pete Dunne has posted about the situation, noting that he is “disgusted by what I’m reading. Well done to those speaking out. I really hope we can make British wrestling a better place and keep everyone safe. This is a huge eye opener and let’s hope it will force a big change.” Coach Relationships And Minors Another reg flag that came from the exposure in wrestling was relationships formed with younger athletes. As with recent exposures in the sport industry, with regard to British Gymnastics, Ballet and Swimming, coaching falls within a problematic loophole. It is illegal for teachers, care workers, doctors and youth justice workers to have sexual intercourse with 16 or 17-year-olds in their care. However due to a loophole, adults who hold a position of power over a young person such as coaches can legally have sex with someone of the age of 16 even in a position of trust such as this. Such position of trust formed with a coach prevents many young people speaking out for fear this will not only damage their career but that they may not be believed. It provides a dangerous shift in the balance of power. Coaches may have worked with individuals for years having formed close bonds not only with the trainee themselves but also family and friends of the individual. The NSPCC have been campaigning to change the law to be extended to include any adult who holds a position of power over 16 or 17-year-olds for many years. https://www.nspcc.org.uk/support-us/campaigns/close-the-loophole/ #CloseTheLoophole Wrestler Banks, whose real name is Travis Bligh, has been accused of emotional and psychological abuse during a relationship with a 17-year-old trainee, Millie McKenzie. Millie accused the then 30 year old coach Banks of being emotionally manipulative of her during a “secret one year relationship” when she was training under him. Banks, who was also released by the WWE's NXT UK promotion, gave BBC Sport a statement in response, saying: "I apologise again for the pain that was caused. This was an entirely consensual relationship but I recognise that what happened should not have happened. "I support the efforts being made by the Speaking Out movement to enable everyone in wrestling, and other sports also, to feel safe and never have to face a similar situation." Lucia Lee, 18, was another wrestler who came forward. In June 2020 she claimed young women were "slut shamed" and referred to as "ring rats", accused by male colleagues of having "slept their way on to shows". Speaking to BBC Sport, Lee said: "After my first match - I was 16 - there was a 30-something-year-old man backstage. Everyone congratulated me and he just sort of gave me a massive hug and whispered into my ear, 'your arse looked amazing during that match'. "If you speak up against someone that's on big shows, they can start going around to each individual promotion and saying 'don't book her, she's a troublemaker; don't book her she's a ring rat'." Many of the alleged victims blamed a 'locker room' culture in wrestling that allowed misconduct to happen with a lack of rules no one to check on you. Again due to the loophole, this will be another sport/activity which will allow young people to remain vulnerable. What happens next? It will be of interest to see in the coming months, what safeguarding measures are proposed to protect individuals going forward. In addition to the Biritsh Inqury, Equity, a trade union for entertainers, has suggested five pledges to regulate British wrestling, including safeguarding and 'dignity at work' policies, separate dressing rooms at shows and agreed transport and accommodation arrangements. Progress Wrestling told BBC Sport: "We've all got to be great for this industry to work and to prevent another Speaking Out movement happening. Because if we're on the same level, we're on the same page, it's going to be safer for everyone." Revolution Pro Wrestling CEO Andy Quildan said it wants "an independent body and we want to be held accountable". British Wrestling have confirmed they are working closely with the NSPCC. The link to this is here. We encourage anyone who has concerns about sexual abuse to get in touch. You can contact us by emailing aboutabuse@hjtalks.co.uk.
In this episode Brendan explores the multitude of different recruitment pathways forces across the UK have created, and asks whether they make sense? For example, you can now join West Yorkshire Police without ever speaking to a person, whereas other forces assess you against verbal presentations, interviews and in-tray exercises.Also, the results of a National Wellbeing Survey from Oscar Kilo. A further wake up call for the service and some good news!Join the Bluelight Police Recruitment Facebook Support Group by clicking on this link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1647413885546871/
The 2000 disappearance of teenager Leanne Tiernan from Bramley, Leeds, sparked one of the largest manhunts in West Yorkshire Police’s History. During the painstaking search, police officers visited more than 10,000 homes and scoured almost 40 drains. Leanne’s disappearance led to a first in British criminal investigation and unmasked a prolific sexual predator known locally as the Pet Man. PANDIA HEALTH - Thank you to Pandia Health for sponsoring this episode! Buy birth control online and get affordable pills, patch or ring delivered right at your door. $5 off with promo code: morbidology - https://www.pandiahealth.com/?Invite=morbidologyBALLSY - Thank you to Ballsy for sponsoring this episode! Stop buying lame Valentine's Day presents and get something for both of you to enjoy! 20% off with promo code: MORBID20 - https://ballwash.com/collections/gift-setsCULTS UNCOVERED -US Amazon: https://amzn.to/30E8nGBUK Amazon: https://amzn.to/2G8ctx7SHOW NOTES - https://morbidology.com/morbidology-the-podcast-33-Leanne-TiernanPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/morbidologyHimalaya +: https://himalaya.com/morbidologyPODCAST PROMO: True Crime and Wine TimeFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/truecrimeandwinetime/Twitter: https://twitter.com/teritruecrimeAudio Credit: -Ever Mindful, On My Way, Sincerely & Evening of Chaos by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Density & Time - Water Lillies
In this episode Susan is talking to Leona Deakin about her newly released book, Gone, the first of a series, featuring psychologist investigator and private detective Dr Augusta Bloom. The mystery to solve is where have four apparent strangers disappeared to and what is the game that has enticed them away? This is an addictive debut thriller with an ingenious hook that turns the missing person plot on its head. What if the missing people are the dangerous ones? No answers in this episode...you will need to buy the book to find out! About the Guest: Leona is an occupational psychologist living in Leeds with her family. She became inspired to write when creating crime scenarios working with West Yorkshire Police. Leona shares her journey to publication with Penguin Random House and the subject matter of her next three books in the series. Tune in to hear about her journey so far. No shortage of compelling subject matter here, Leona is certainly one to watch. Valuable Resources: Leona's current book Gone is available to order as a paperback or on Kindle through Amazon. If you can't wait for it to be delivered and have a Waterstones, Tesco or Asda nearby then they are also selling it. The second book is due to be published later on this year and the title for this one is Lost. About the Host: Susan is actively involved in promoting Yorkshire businesses with audio production and on social media. She has been living in Yorkshire for over 30 years. She is passionate about the county she has adopted as her home and she never ceases to be amazed at the wealth of talent ‘Inside Yorkshire’ and the tales that people have to tell. Contact Method for Inside Yorkshire Susan Baty-Symes www.insideyorkshire.co.uk susan@insideyorkshire.co.uk
BCB 106.6FM OUR TOP TEN RADIO SHOW ABOUT WEST YORKSHIRE POLICE
In Robinson v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police [2014] EWCA Civ 15 the Court of Appeal held that "the Caparo test applies to all claims in the modern law of negligence". By the time the case reached the Supreme Court that well-known three-stage test had been held to be of no practical application. How and why did this volte-face occur? And where does that leave lawyers and judges when deciding whether a duty of care is owed or not? Mark Cannon QC and Joshua Folkard discuss.
Ray Tough spoke about "The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper" on Monday 20 November 2018 at the Faculty of Law, as a guest on the regular Cambridge University Law Society (CULS) speaker programme. Ray is a crime historian and was a Detective Constable with the West Yorkshire Police during the Yorkshire Ripper investigation. Hear his perspectives on the investigation, which led to seminal cases like Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire. This event was kindly sponsored by Clifford Chance. For more information see the CULS website at: https://culs.org.uk
Ray Tough spoke about "The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper" on Monday 20 November 2018 at the Faculty of Law, as a guest on the regular Cambridge University Law Society (CULS) speaker programme. Ray is a crime historian and was a Detective Constable with the West Yorkshire Police during the Yorkshire Ripper investigation. Hear his perspectives on the investigation, which led to seminal cases like Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire. This event was kindly sponsored by Clifford Chance. For more information see the CULS website at: https://culs.org.uk
Ray Tough spoke about "The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper" on Monday 20 November 2018 at the Faculty of Law, as a guest on the regular Cambridge University Law Society (CULS) speaker programme. Ray is a crime historian and was a Detective Constable with the West Yorkshire Police during the Yorkshire Ripper investigation. Hear his perspectives on the investigation, which led to seminal cases like Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire. This event was kindly sponsored by Clifford Chance. For more information see the CULS website at: https://culs.org.uk This entry provides an audio source for iTunes.
Ray Tough spoke about "The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper" on Monday 20 November 2018 at the Faculty of Law, as a guest on the regular Cambridge University Law Society (CULS) speaker programme. Ray is a crime historian and was a Detective Constable with the West Yorkshire Police during the Yorkshire Ripper investigation. Hear his perspectives on the investigation, which led to seminal cases like Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire. This event was kindly sponsored by Clifford Chance. For more information see the CULS website at: https://culs.org.uk This entry provides an audio source for iTunes.
Ray Tough spoke about "The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper" on Monday 20 November 2018 at the Faculty of Law, as a guest on the regular Cambridge University Law Society (CULS) speaker programme. Ray is a crime historian and was a Detective Constable with the West Yorkshire Police during the Yorkshire Ripper investigation. Hear his perspectives on the investigation, which led to seminal cases like Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire. This event was kindly sponsored by Clifford Chance. For more information see the CULS website at: https://culs.org.uk
Ray Tough spoke about "The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper" on Monday 20 November 2018 at the Faculty of Law, as a guest on the regular Cambridge University Law Society (CULS) speaker programme. Ray is a crime historian and was a Detective Constable with the West Yorkshire Police during the Yorkshire Ripper investigation. Hear his perspectives on the investigation, which led to seminal cases like Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire. This event was kindly sponsored by Clifford Chance. For more information see the CULS website at: https://culs.org.uk
Ray Tough spoke about "The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper" on Monday 20 November 2018 at the Faculty of Law, as a guest on the regular Cambridge University Law Society (CULS) speaker programme. Ray is a crime historian and was a Detective Constable with the West Yorkshire Police during the Yorkshire Ripper investigation. Hear his perspectives on the investigation, which led to seminal cases like Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire. This event was kindly sponsored by Clifford Chance. For more information see the CULS website at: https://culs.org.uk
Ray Tough spoke about "The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper" on Monday 20 November 2018 at the Faculty of Law, as a guest on the regular Cambridge University Law Society (CULS) speaker programme. Ray is a crime historian and was a Detective Constable with the West Yorkshire Police during the Yorkshire Ripper investigation. Hear his perspectives on the investigation, which led to seminal cases like Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire. This event was kindly sponsored by Clifford Chance. For more information see the CULS website at: https://culs.org.uk This entry provides an audio source for iTunes.
Dr. Andrea Cullen has developed a radicalization framework, that uses a stepwise approach to radicalization. Organisations and staff such as West Yorkshire Police and Prevent Officers have implemented the outcomes of this work. Added to that Andrea has helped create a dedicated technical penetration testing lab, where industry and students can work on simulated attacks. Dr. Andrea Cullen on LinkedIn - Dr. Andrea Cullen Don't forget, to get in touch with me either try the contact page of the site or follow me on Twitter, where I can be found at @Jenny_Radcliffe
Mrs Robinson was 76 years old when she got between a drug dealer and two police officers attempting to make an arrest in Huddersfield town centre. She brought a claim for the injuries she suffered against West Yorkshire police but in this episode we do more than consider the basic tenets of negligence and ask how this area of law can and should intereact with society. Music from bensound.com
In the final part of the series, Adam's family talk about their determination to find his killers - and West Yorkshire Police provides an update on the case. For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
Adam Chadwick, a 20-year-old father, was gunned down in Leeds nearly a decade ago. His killers have never been caught. A wall of silence protects them to this day. LeedsLive takes a look at one of West Yorkshire Police's most infamous cold cases in the first of a three-part podcast series. For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
This Cup Of Tea show is fascinating conversation around policing at football matches, how it is changing and how it needs to change. Chief Superintendent Owen West of West Yorkshire Police has been working on the Enable project and wants football policing to become close to general event policing and away from the days gone by. Using examples from all his time at football matches, Owen talks through his vision for how supporters should be treated both home and away. Hosted by Gareth Roberts this is just short of 40 minutes for any match going football supporter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Help support the show! - http://www.patreon.com/dailyinternet #10 - New York governor pardons 9/11 Ground Zero worker facing deportation #9 - McDonald's hits all-time high as Wall Street cheers replacement of cashiers with kiosks #8 - The Queen reported to West Yorkshire Police for 'not wearing seat belt' #7 - Gingrich just admitted Trump was being dishonest about White House tapes #6 - White House Warns Reporters Not to Report on Instructions About Not Reporting on Today's Press Conference #5 - Finnish citizens given universal basic income report lower stress levels and greater incentive to work #4 - Coal King Sues HBO Over John Oliver's Show #3 - Ron Howard Steps In to Direct Han Solo Movie #2 - Teenage boys wear skirts to school to protest against 'no shorts' policy #1 - A sniper with Canada's elite special forces in Iraq has shattered the world record for the longest confirmed kill shot in military history Follow us on Social: Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ireadit Instagram: https://instagram.com/ireaditcast Twitter: http://twitter.com/ireaditcast E-mail: feedback.ireadit@gmail.com Voicemail: (508)-738-2278 Michael Schwahn: @schwahnmichael Nathan Wood: @bimmenstein
Europe and London in particular is still reeling from the latest terrorist atrocity. A Spaniard who runs a bar in London’s Borough Market has become one of the heroes of Saturday’s terrorist attack after a video emerged ......More than two days after the London terror attack in which seven people died and at least 48 people were injured, the fate of 39-year-old Spaniard Ignacio Echevarría, a Madrid native living in London, remains unknown. .. Spain’s Banco Santander has bought the struggling Banco Popular for one euro ...... A new undersea data cable being laid out by Microsoft, Facebook and Telefónica to improve connections between users in the US and Europe will reach the Spanish coast on June 12. A 13-year-old boy lost both his legs from the tibia down on Sunday, after being run over by a Madrid Metro train on Line 1. LIONEL Messi’s charitable foundation has helped more than 1,600 Syrian children go back to school. In the UK the General Election had been halted briefly after the London outrage. With Polling Day now upon us it looks to be a very tight result with difficult times ahead. The Prime Minister said the three attacks in the past three months were not directly connected but were linked by the 'the single evil ideology of Islamist extremism'. Internet giants have been shamed by figures showing that 15 child sex offences are now committed online every day.The rise of almost a half in such crimes over just one year highlights how paedophiles are exploiting the web to target vulnerable youngsters,....... West Yorkshire Police have said more than 100 victims are being supported in Keighley and Bradford, where a gang led by Arif Chowdhury repeatedly raped a 13-year-old. A nurse who murdered two patients and poisoned 19 more at an NHS hospital received £779,000 in legal aid to defend himself......In contrast. four in ten health trusts are planning to slash the number of routine operations they fund in an attempt to save money, a think-tank warns today. Finally, a teacher who was suspended over her sultry selfies has quit her job despite pupils defending her social media posts.
Europe and London in particular is still reeling from the latest terrorist atrocity. A Spaniard who runs a bar in London’s Borough Market has become one of the heroes of Saturday’s terrorist attack after a video emerged ......More than two days after the London terror attack in which seven people died and at least 48 people were injured, the fate of 39-year-old Spaniard Ignacio Echevarría, a Madrid native living in London, remains unknown. .. Spain’s Banco Santander has bought the struggling Banco Popular for one euro ...... A new undersea data cable being laid out by Microsoft, Facebook and Telefónica to improve connections between users in the US and Europe will reach the Spanish coast on June 12. A 13-year-old boy lost both his legs from the tibia down on Sunday, after being run over by a Madrid Metro train on Line 1. LIONEL Messi’s charitable foundation has helped more than 1,600 Syrian children go back to school. In the UK the General Election had been halted briefly after the London outrage. With Polling Day now upon us it looks to be a very tight result with difficult times ahead. The Prime Minister said the three attacks in the past three months were not directly connected but were linked by the 'the single evil ideology of Islamist extremism'. Internet giants have been shamed by figures showing that 15 child sex offences are now committed online every day.The rise of almost a half in such crimes over just one year highlights how paedophiles are exploiting the web to target vulnerable youngsters,....... West Yorkshire Police have said more than 100 victims are being supported in Keighley and Bradford, where a gang led by Arif Chowdhury repeatedly raped a 13-year-old. A nurse who murdered two patients and poisoned 19 more at an NHS hospital received £779,000 in legal aid to defend himself......In contrast. four in ten health trusts are planning to slash the number of routine operations they fund in an attempt to save money, a think-tank warns today. Finally, a teacher who was suspended over her sultry selfies has quit her job despite pupils defending her social media posts.
DigitalOutbox Episode 228 DigitalOutbox Episode 228 - Microsoft and Dropbox, Amazons Echo, Games Playback Listen via iTunes Listen via M4A Listen via MP3 Shownotes GCHQ's Robert Hannigan says tech firms 'in denial' on extremism Dropbox - We’re partnering with Microsoft Google CEO Larry Page Reorgs Staff, Anoints Sundar Pichai as New Product Czar Google releases redesigned Android Calendar app with contextual autocomplete and more visual content Malicious software campaign targets Apple users in China Samsung works with West Yorkshire Police force to deploy the Galaxy Note 3 Amazon Begins Extending Prime-Member Perks to Other Shopping Sites Amazon introduces Echo, a voice-controlled assistant for your home Jawbone launches 2 new 24/7 activity trackers: the UP Move and UP3, priced at $50 and $180 Games
Mansoor Abbasi is the Executive Director and co-founder of The Intercivil Society - a not-for-profit company that works to reduce poverty, protect the environment and improve community relationships. The Intercivil Society creates opportunities to help people improve their own situations, whether economic, social or environmental. Mansoor is experienced in training, group facilitation and dispute resolution – both community and workplace – with specific expertise in facilitating “difficult” conversations. He also works as a community projects advisor and as a consultant designing, delivering and project managing peace-building programs in conflict areas (where the focus is on strengthening civil society through developing intercultural community leadership, conflict management skills, capacity development and improving intercultural and interfaith dialogue and cooperation). Mansoor has worked with a range of partners and clients, including the European Parliament, West Yorkshire Police, UN Alliance of Civilizations, local and national governments and local community groups.