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Park killers sentenced to life in prison

by Violet June 9, 2025
written by Violet

Two men have been sentenced to life in prison for the murder of a 30-year-old who was fatally stabbed in a park.

Daniel Larman and Kieran Okocha-Sleight, both aged 21, were found guilty by a jury in January for the murder of Tommy Boom on 18 July last year in Semilong Park, Northampton.

Larman must serve a minimum of 24 years before being eligible for parole, while Okocha-Sleight must serve at least 21 years.

In a victim impact statement read to the court, Kevin Boom, Tommy's father, said: "No sentence will ever bring Tommy back, but we hope his death raises awareness of the consequences of knife crime."

Boom family
Tommy Boom was killed on 18 July 2024

The court heard the men had arranged to meet a woman in Miller's Meadow, just after midnight, to sell her drugs.

When they arrived, Larman stood in front of the woman while Okocha-Sleight sat beside her on a bench, the court heard.

Moments later, Mr Boom and another man approached and questioned their presence in the park.

Larman then pulled out a large hunting knife from his waistband and when Mr Boom told him to put it down, Larman lunged at him, stabbing him twice.

Emergency services were called, but Mr Boom died at the scene.

'All pride and joy has gone'

During their trial, both defendants claimed Mr Boom had been the aggressor and had been armed with a knife.

These allegations were rejected by the jury.

Both were sentenced at Northampton Crown Court on Monday.

Mr Boom's family described their ongoing grief and the loss felt by his young daughter and niece in impact statements read to the court.

His father Kevin Boom added: "All the pride and joy his life had given me has gone. It has been replaced with rage, anger and hatred for the way his life ended."

His mother Joanne said: "My head knows that he's gone, but my heart will not accept it. Instead, I lay flowers where Tommy is laid to rest."

His younger brother Billy said: "I wish I had known that my last conversation with my brother was truly my last.

"I will make sure [the children] know him through us."

June 9, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

Loft Lines raided as part of immigration enforcement

by Robert May 21, 2025
written by Robert

The Home Office has arrested almost 150 people during immigration enforcement raids at workplaces across Northern Ireland since July 2024, new figures reveal.

BBC News NI understands 36 people were arrested at the Loft Lines complex in the Titanic Quarter in Belfast.

The Graham Group is one of the main building contractors on the site.

It is understood that those arrested did not work for the company.

BBC News NI put a number of questions to the Graham Group about the raid but a spokesperson said they would not be issuing any response.

Getty Images

Figures released by the Home Office show that between 5 July 2024 and 31 May 2025, 113 visits resulted in 148 arrests. This marked a 48% rise compared to the year before.

The department said it was part of "a drive to combat illegal working" with a particular focus on tackling employers facilitating illegal working, often subjecting migrants to squalid conditions and illegal working hours below minimum wage.

Restaurants, nail bars and construction sites have been among the thousands of businesses targeted.

Getty Images
Nail bars were among the businesses targeted

Minister for Border Security and Asylum, Dame Angela Eagle, said the government was "committed to tackling illegal working as we intensify our enforcement efforts to disrupt organised immigration networks at every level".

"There must be no hiding place from the law and these figures demonstrate our determination to curb immigration offending and disrupt unscrupulous employers," she added.

"Under our Plan for Change, we are laser focused on fixing our immigration system and securing our borders once and for all."

BBC News NI understands that a major co-ordinated operation reported in March, took place at the Loft Lines development.

Offences ranged from breaching visa conditions to illegal entry in the UK with no permission to work.

Loft Lines is a three-block apartment development located at Queen's Island in the docks area of the city, on land which used to form part of the Harland and Wolff shipyard.

The majority of the 778 apartments will be privately owned and rented out to tenants, but up to 20% of the properties will be constructed as social, affordable homes.

Developers

The lead developers of the site are Lacuna Developments and Watkin Jones Group PLC, while Graham Group are leading on construction.

Watkin Jones PLC declined to comment.

Lacuna Developments have been approached for comment by BBC News NI.

The development has previously been criticised for blocking the view of Belfast's Titanic museum as the apartments are being built in front of it.

BBC News NI understands that 30 of the individuals arrested elected to leave the UK voluntarily.

Five have been placed on immigration bail and are now required to report regularly to the Home Office.

A 16-year-old boy was also being supported by local authorities.

The individual arrested on suspicion of immigration offences has been bailed pending further investigation.

May 21, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

Why can't Stilton make Stilton?

by Logan May 13, 2025
written by Logan

The famous blue cheese it gave its name to is known throughout the world, but despite years of local protests, the Cambridgeshire village of Stilton is still not allowed to produce it.

The history of Stilton is more controversial than you might think. A battle over what the name can and can't be applied to has been rumbling for years.

So, as a former MP raises the subject again, what's in a name and what could the future hold for this fought-over foodstuff?

How did Stilton cheese get its name?

Getty Images
One historian believes the cheese originated in Stilton in the 18th Century

It was thought that the famous cheese was named after the village of Stilton, just south of Peterborough, not because it was made there, but because it was sold at The Bell Inn there.

However, some historians have claimed the cheese did, in fact, originate in the village in the 18th Century.

In 2011, Stilton resident and local historian Richard Landy claimed to have documents that could potentially prove the cheese was first produced there.

Mr Landy told the BBC at the time: "I stumbled across a reference to a recipe on the internet that had been sent to Richard Bradley, the first professor of botany at Cambridge University.

"This recipe was not only earlier than any previous recipe that had been published, but it also says that the cheese was produced in the village of Stilton."

The conversation continues to this day, with residents and a former MP calling for a change in the law to allow the cheese to be made in the village.

What rules prevent it from being made in Stilton?

Getty Images
Current rules mean Stilton can only be produced in Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire

A row about the origins of Stilton and who can make it has been rumbling for years.

The Stilton Cheesemakers' Association achieved Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) status for blue Stilton from the European Commission in 1996.

This meant that only cheese produced in three counties – Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire – could be called Stilton.

Despite Brexit, the legal protection continues.

Stilton is one of just a few products that enjoy this status. Many English regional cheeses, such as Lancashire, Red Leicester and Double Gloucester, are not protected.

What other foods have protected status?

Getty Images
If your pasty is not from Cornwall, it is not a Cornish pasty

While Stilton continues to have special protection, it is not the only British food or drink product to enjoy this.

Scotch Whisky, for example, can only be produced, unsurprisingly, in Scotland, and even within that there are tightly controlled regions.

For instance, Campbeltown whiskies can only come from a specific part of the Kintyre peninsula, while Islay whiskies must be from the island of the same name.

And although you can find a pastry-encrusted snack of meat, potato and vegetables almost anywhere these days, a true Cornish Pasty must originate from Cornwall.

The same applies to another famous meat and pastry product. If your pork pie is not from the Leicestershire town, it cannot be called a Melton Mowbray.

Similarly, if your oyster does not come from Pembrokeshire, then it does not qualify as a Pembrokeshire Rock Oyster.

What is the Stilton Cheese Rolling Festival?

Getty Images
Groups of four are tasked with rolling the cheese at the event

The annual cheese-rolling event in the Cambridgeshire village dates back to the 1950s.

The tradition was started by four publicans who were thinking of ways to generate income after Stilton was bypassed by the A1 in 1959, Adam Leon, one of its organisers previously told the BBC.

The event was paused for seven years because organisers said it was no longer seen as "cool", but it returned in 2024.

You would be forgiven for thinking a cheese-rolling festival would involve the dairy product itself.

However, 12in (30cm) sections of an old telegraph pole are painted to look like a cheese.

To participate, all teams must consist of four members, and the "cheeses" must be rolled by hand.

Each team member has to roll the cheese at least once during the race, which takes place on on a course of about 30m (100ft) in length.

Typically, people have taken part wearing fancy dress, and in the past teams of nuns, Smurfs and even a tribute to rock band Kiss have participated.

Could Stilton ever make Stilton once again?

Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Shailesh Vara said that making the cheese in the village would "benefit Stilton" and the surrounding communities

Former Conservative MP for North West Cambridgeshire, Shailesh Vara, is one of the people who have been voicing their opinions on the cheese's origins.

Mr Vara, who lost his seat to Labour's Sam Carling in July 2024, said: "Stilton cheese was historically made in the village, and I know there has been a bit of dispute about that.

"But the historical evidence that I have seen in the case that the cheese was made here."

He added that Mr Leon, described by Mr Vara as a "local entrepreneur", had started "making efforts to make sure that we start making cheese locally again".

He said: "I am in conversation with Adam and the villagers have my support, and whatever conversations they want to have with me, I am always available."

According to Mr Vara, now the UK has left the European Union there is less protection on where Stilton can be produced.

"That protection is no more, so we can now start making cheese. I am looking for it to be made again," he added.

The UK Protected Food Names Association, however, maintains that English law protects Stilton, and that any change would undermine the cheese-making industry.

May 13, 2025 0 comments
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Market

Trial date set for stab death murder accused

by Alexander April 29, 2025
written by Alexander

A trial date has been set for a man accused of stabbing a woman to death at a tower block on Merseyside.

Rebekah Campbell, 32, died in hospital after she was found badly injured at Knowsley Heights in Huyton on 15 April.

Michael Ormandy, 34, from Litherland, has been charged with her murder and appeared via videolink from HMP Liverpool at Liverpool Crown Court earlier.

He was refused bail and must remain in custody until a plea hearing on 7 July. A provisional trial date has been set for 6 October.

In a tribute last week, Ms Campbell was described by her family as "a happy young woman with her whole life ahead of her".

"Rebekah was our everything," they said, adding: "She had a genuine heart of gold. If it meant putting herself out to help someone, she wouldn't hesitate.

"We are so proud of her. She was a support for vulnerable people and would use her own experiences to make other lives better."

April 29, 2025 0 comments
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Economy

Domestic abuser choked teenager and burnt her hair

by Louis April 21, 2025
written by Louis

A man who choked his teenage girlfriend until she was unconscious and burned her hair during a "nasty" campaign of domestic abuse has been jailed for more than four years.

Ryan Black, 40, subjected his 18-year-old partner to regular attacks and controlled her bank card, Newcastle Crown Court heard.

The woman said she was having to find herself again after Black "stripped" everything away.

Black, of Farne Terrace in Walker, Newcastle, had denied any wrongdoing but was found guilty of coercive control and intentional strangulation.

Black and the young woman began a relationship in August 2022 which started well but deteriorated whenever he drank alcohol, prosecutor Sam Faulks said.

He regularly physically and verbally attacked her and when she tried to leave he took her phone and bank card from her, the court heard.

Examples of the "common" violence included him picking her up and slamming her to the ground at a bus stop on one occasion and biting her face on another.

He also regularly used her bank card, the court was told.

'Anxious and frightened'

In January 2023 he strangled her until she passed out, Mr Faulks said.

When she woke she found him crying and saying he could have killed her so she had to comfort him, the court heard, which was a regular occurrence after his attacks.

He strangled her again in July 2024 when she had the "temerity to bring up his behaviour towards her", Mr Faulks said.

The relationship finally ended when he singed her hair while trying to set it alight with a cigarette lighter, but even then, when she was on a bus fleeing from him, he threatened to kill her family and burn her house down.

In a statement, the woman said she had been severely impacted by the abuse and was still seeking medical help and counselling.

She said she had lived on "eggshells" around Black and was always "anxious and frightened" of what he might do.

The woman said she was "finding it hard to find" herself again having been "stripped away" by Black.

Judge Robert Spragg said Black was "nasty" towards the significantly younger woman and posed a high risk to future partners.

He was jailed for four years for his abuse and a further four months for breaching a suspended prison sentence imposed for other offending.

A restraining order banning him from contacting her was also made to last indefinitely.

April 21, 2025 0 comments
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Market

Living hell for 'forgotten' skin patients

by Alexander April 10, 2025
written by Alexander

"It's taken a big toll on my life," says Elle Jones, 19, reflecting on her severe eczema.

The office worker from Devon describes days bedridden with "excruciating" pain and chronic itching, while waiting up to 18 months for NHS treatments.

But she says the emotional impact is the worst part, making her feel "trapped, hopeless" and afraid of never being "free" from her skin disease.

Miss Jones is one of thousands of people across the country who are waiting a year or more to see a dermatologist due to pressure on services caused by increased urgent skin cancer referrals and a shortage of specialist doctors.

"I've missed out on work, school, college," says Miss Jones, adding she has "spent a long time hating myself".

Elle Jones
Miss Jones says she suffers excruciating itching and pain

One in 10 people in the UK has eczema and one in five children, according to the National Eczema Society.

It is often lifelong and incurable.

Miss Jones says her life got "dark" when she experienced a severe flare-up at college in 2021, describing it as a "never-ending tunnel because there's just no light there".

"You're stuck in pain and agony," she says.

"Your skin is always red… bleeding all the time… I couldn't even recognise myself.

"It's soul-destroying."

She says steroid and moisturiser creams prescribed by her GP "just made me burn and itch", so she was referred to see a dermatologist.

However, 12 months later she was still waiting, when she moved home to Devon from college.

She then waited a further 12 months for light therapy, and 18 months at the same time for skin allergy patch testing in summer 2024.

Elle Jones / BBC
Miss Jones recalls "dark" times when she "couldn't stop crying" with red skin

Patch testing results showed several skin reactions, so she cut out make up, hair and nail products, but nothing helped.

The longest wait for dermatology treatment in her area in north Devon is two years, according to NHS data published for January, with overall waits in the country longer than the England average.

Miss Jones is now trying an immunosuppressant drug which she says makes her "sleep all weekend".

Her hunt for successful treatment continues.

She says she has learned to accept her condition, stay positive and "keep fighting".

'The forgotten many'

Inflammatory skin disease patients often face long waits because departments are inundated with growing skin cancer referrals, which are the highest of any NHS urgent cancer referrals.

These diagnoses are prioritised, with waiting time targets set by the government.

Coupled with that, a shortage of dermatologists is adding pressure.

Some patients also report long waits for non-life threatening skin cancer treatments and follow-ups.

Waiting times to receive treatment across NHS dermatology departments in England are longer than they were before the Covid-19 pandemic.

NHS data from the beginning of the year, shows 43% of patients waited longer than the NHS target of 18 weeks at the start of 2025.

About 9,000 people had been waiting for one year or more.

Patient handout
Some patients have spent hundreds of pounds on private care for acne

Three of the most common inflammatory skin diseases are eczema, psoriasis and acne, which can cause permanent scarring.

Some patients try treatments through their GP for years before being referred to a consultant and some are admitted to hospital with repeated infections.

Consultant dermatologist Dr Toby Nelson who practises in Cornwall and Devon, describes these patients as "the forgotten many".

He says: "You can't say skin cancer shouldn't take priority over these other patients, but at the moment there does seem to be a significant imbalance.

"Some are in a living hell."

Dr Nelson says more are turning to private healthcare to be seen quickly.

But some of them face further disappointment, as newer "transformative medicines" can only be prescribed by the NHS, he adds.

He advises people on waiting lists to make healthy life choices with things like sleep, alcohol and smoking "as skin disease is rarely just related to the skin".

"In some situations this will improve your skin disease on its own," he says.

Ben Varco
Ben Varco says he is back to his hobbies after costly treatment

Like Miss Jones, Ben Varco, 24, from St Austell in Cornwall has been suffering behind closed doors.

"It's draining both mentally and physically," he says.

"You feel embarrassed to go out."

Mr Varco, a wine cellar worker, says he was referred to dermatology on the NHS in July 2024 for severe acne but nine months later has heard nothing.

"I feel kind of ignored, like it's not really taken seriously," he says.

Private care has cost him more than £1,000 to date.

Liam Garner, 19, sought private treatment following a severe eczema flare up in 2024.

The teaching assistant from Cornwall says: "I get it all over – the itch leads to bleeding… Moving can hurt and it keeps me up at night.

"I was off work for two months and had horrible anxiety."

Both young men needed help from their families to pay for treatment.

Patient handout
Skin conditions can impact on everyday activities like sleeping and exercising

Skin disease can also affect patients' mental health with 98% of those surveyed for the All Party Parliamentary Group on Skin's 2020 report saying it affects their emotional and psychological wellbeing.

Andrew Proctor, chief executive of the National Eczema Society, says: "We don't understand why people with eczema and other inflammatory skin conditions are being treated as second-class citizens by the NHS."

'Workforce shortage'

In September 2024 a British Association of Dermatologists (BAD) workforce report warned of a "particularly concerning" situation for dermatology services, stating: "It is clear that demand for our services is outstripping the capacity of our workforce to deliver care."

Meanwhile a benchmark NHS dermatology report in 2021 highlighted a "severe workforce shortage caused by a long-term restriction on the number of new dermatology training posts".

Maia Gray/@its_just_acne
Maia campaigns to show people they are not alone with skin problems

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson says the NHS is "broken and it is unacceptable that patients have been left waiting in pain".

They say it has delivered an extra two million appointments sooner than planned, and some of those were in dermatology.

The spokesperson adds the department will publish workforce plans this summer – to ensure the NHS can deliver the care patients need.

A spokesperson for the Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust says it is difficult to recruit and it faces pressure from some of the highest skin cancer rates in the UK.

"We are working to transform the way we deliver care to reduce our waiting lists," they add.

'Super clinic'

Dr Carolyn Charman, clinical vice-president of BAD says the NHS must build on innovative skin cancer diagnostic schemes, which are key to relieving pressure.

She says there are "real opportunities to counteract the challenges" using digital technology, patient images and artificial intelligence.

She adds patients who are suffering while waiting should contact their hospital team and seek advice from reliable sources online such as BAD's website.

At the Royal Cornwall Hospitals Trust, patients like Mr Garner and Mr Varco wait for up to 12 months routinely, despite a raft of new measures.

A spokesperson says: "We have implemented many innovations to proactively respond to the increasing demand."

These include "super clinics" where one specialist supervises multiple resident doctors and specialist nurses and a community imaging service run by healthcare assistants.

Katie Mackie/@mackies_moments
Katie says she has been desperate enough to go to A&E for flare ups

Some patients are using social media to help each other cope.

Katie Mackie, 28, and Maia Gray, 30, are "skin positivity influencers" from London.

Miss Mackie campaigns for charity Changing Faces after a "mentally draining rollercoaster ride" with eczema and wants others to know "things do improve".

"Tell people what you're going through, don't isolate yourself," she says.

"There is also free therapy and charities who can offer support."

Miss Gray who has had acne for 17 years, adds: "I think it needs to be highlighted that loads of people are struggling mentally with this.

"My message is whatever your skin condition is, continue to live life."

April 10, 2025 0 comments
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Innovation

'My son could so easily have been another Nottingham killer'

by Jamie April 2, 2025
written by Jamie

Two men with paranoid schizophrenia stabbed members of the public in separate attacks weeks before Valdo Calocane's killings in Nottingham – and all were under the care of the same NHS trust, the BBC has found.

Josef Easom-Cooper and Junior Dietlin injured six men in the stabbings in Nottinghamshire in 2023.

Within weeks, Calocane – who also has paranoid schizophrenia – stabbed to death Barnaby Webber, Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Ian Coates on 13 June 2023.

Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust has been criticised over its care of Calocane, and in response to the BBC's findings, apologised to those "affected for any aspects of our care that were not of the high standard our patients deserve".

Supplied
Ian Coates, Barnaby Webber and Grace O'Malley-Kumar were stabbed to death on 13 June 2023

On 9 April 2023, Easom-Cooper stabbed a worshipper who was leaving an Easter Sunday service at St Stephen's Church in Sneinton.

The BBC has spoken to his victim, a man in his 40s, who survived. He did not wish to be interviewed.

Easom-Cooper's mother, Shelly Easom, said that as a teenager, her son was under the care of child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) in Nottingham.

"I started to routinely go into his room and I would find knives… I found an axe, my kitchen knives would quite often be in his room," she said.

Shelly said she would take photos of the weapons, and inform police and mental health services whenever she came across them.

Family handout
Weapons found by Shelly in a search of her son's room

According to Shelly, things massively deteriorated when Easom-Cooper turned 18.

During the grips of a psychotic episode, he left Highbury Hospital – where he was due to be sectioned – to kill a friend before he was stopped.

In July 2022, he was sectioned by the hospital – run by Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust – for three months, but Shelly says she told staff he was not ready to be discharged.

"He was not OK when he was released," she said. "There was no way he was going to take his medication and I told them that… it was literally just a time bomb waiting to happen."

Easom-Cooper was placed in accommodation managed by a housing association, but Shelly said he was "unravelling" in the seven months he was there, and not taking his medication while under the care of the trust's community team.

Shelly remembers her shock and frustration when she learned about her son's knife attack.

"I just bloody knew this was going to happen," she said.

"I'm so sorry it happened. I really am. And as a mother, he's my son and he did that and that makes me feel quite ashamed."

Family handout
Shelly said mental health services had let down both her son and his victim

She said the stabbing could have been prevented if her son's paranoid schizophrenia had been taken more seriously.

"It's disgusting that it takes someone to either lose their life or be stabbed before somebody thinks 'oh, hang on a minute, maybe we need to do something here'.

"The mental health services in Nottingham have routinely and systematically let him down and also the victim," she added.

Easom-Cooper was sentenced to a hospital order in December 2023.

Rachel Price/BBC
Keith Grafton was walking home from a pub when he was stabbed by Junior Dietlin

Nine weeks before Easom-Cooper's attack, Junior Dietlin stabbed five "complete strangers" over a weekend in Nottingham and Mansfield in February 2023.

In what a prosecutor described as "a most odd and extraordinary case", Dietlin stabbed five men once in the right bicep and then ran away in separate attacks.

One of the men stabbed was former police officer Keith Grafton, who was walking home from a pub in Mansfield.

"Suddenly, [there was] a quick thump on my right arm… I know I've been stabbed straight away because I felt the knife going into my skin," the 71-year-old said.

Keith says his attacker then ran off before he could "get anywhere near him".

He said although the attack had not left any lasting injuries, he was now "very wary" about going out late at night.

Dietlin was sentenced to a hospital order, but Keith says he was "disappointed" Dietlin had not received a prison sentence.

Nottinghamshire Police
Dietlin stabbed five "complete strangers" in four days

The BBC has seen a report conducted by the trust into its contact with Dietlin.

It said during a four-week stay at Highbury Hospital in June 2022, Dietlin had been involved in violent incidents with staff and diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia.

The report said his family "could not express the wish that he remain in hospital a while longer".

It added that, after his discharge, he had taken his medication "very irregularly".

The family, the report added, "felt they were in a good position to observe subtle changes" in Dietlin's behaviour "that indicated he was unwell", but when community staff visited, they concluded there were "no signs of psychosis".

Dietlin stabbed his first victim on 8 February 2023, and the report said he had been visited by staff for a medication drop the next day.

On 11 and 12 February, he stabbed four more people.

Two weeks afterwards, the trust conducted an "initial management review", from which they "did not identify any learning", according to the report.

In a statement, the trust said these reviews were "completed straight away to establish if there is any immediate learning while the full investigation is being completed".

Nottinghamshire Police
Calocane was sentenced to a hospital order in January 2024

Earlier this year, a review commissioned by NHS England into Calocane's care found major failings by the trust.

Dietlin's incident was highlighted among 15 in that report of patients "either under the current care of the trust or who had been discharged from the trust, perpetrating serious violence towards members of the community" between 2019 and 2023.

The independent review concluded the trust had an "absence of a robust approach to risk management".

Mr Grafton said he had not known Dietlin's history of mental health issues, nor that he had been previously sectioned.

He believes the decision to discharge his attacker into the community was "a big failing" by the trust, whom he blames for what happened to him.

"If they'd done their job properly, then it wouldn't have happened," he added.

PA Media
The Nottingham attacks caused shock across the city and beyond

Nottingham was brought to a standstill on 13 June 2023 in the wake of the attacks carried out by Calocane, who was sentenced to a hospital order in January 2024.

He had been sectioned four times in under two years before his attacks, but was discharged by the trust because he had "disengaged" from its community mental health team in September 2022.

It meant there was no contact between Calocane and mental health services, or his GP, for about nine months before the killings.

Details of Calocane's medical records were revealed in a BBC Panorama documentary and the NHS-commissioned report, which also stated that "the system got it wrong" with the triple killer.

Shelly said she felt the missed opportunities in Calocane's care mirrored her son's experience.

She added: "When I became aware of the facts, I thought that could have so easily have been Josef… I just remember thinking 'you know what? I'm glad he's in hospital'.

"Those poor people had their lives cut short in such hideous ways for no reason, just because we're not putting proper time and effort into making sure that people are well enough to walk the streets."

Marjorie Wallace, chief executive of mental health charity Sane, said the BBC's findings show that had the trust learned lessons from Dietlin and Easom-Cooper, then Calocane's killings could have been prevented.

"Their failings were failure to listen to the families, failure to watch the person… and the failures to protect both the patient and then the public by discharging them far too early when they are too ill," she said.

'Apologise to those affected'

Neil Hudgell, a solicitor representing the families of Calocane's victims, said the BBC's findings showed "that very little ever resonates as it should with mental health trusts, and potentially had they learned effectively enough over the years, the events of 13 June 2023 would not have happened".

"The families continue to rage at the incredibly sad and needless loss of the lives of their much-missed loved ones," he added.

In a statement, Dr Sue Elcock, deputy chief executive and executive medical director at the NHS trust, said: "I want to reassure people that following any serious incident, we carry out an investigation in order to identify any areas for learning and improvement.

"We apologise to those affected for any aspects of our care that were not of the high standard our patients deserve."

The statement added the trust had "a more robust patient discharge policy and a sharper focus on assessing and managing any risks patients may pose to others".

Dr Elcock added: "We have made significant changes to improve family engagement, and the involvement of patients and their families and our family liaison team is included in all considerations."

On Thursday, the government confirmed the public inquiry into the attacks was under way, and would report back within two years with recommendations to prevent similar incidents.

April 2, 2025 0 comments
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Economy

Nurse working for police charged over custody death

by Lauren March 31, 2025
written by Lauren

A former nurse, who was working with Thames Valley Police, has been charged with manslaughter following the death of a man in custody.

It follows an Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigation into the death of William Cameron, 38, after he was taken into custody at Loddon Valley Police Station, near Reading, in 2020.

Sean Cregg, 35, who worked for Mountain Healthcare – a procured service provider for the force – has been charged with gross negligence manslaughter and a further charge under section 7 of the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974.

He is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 1 July.

Mr Cameron had been arrested and taken into custody on 8 January 2020 and died later that day in hospital.

The IOPC investigation began the same day and concluded in March 2021.

That month, it said it sent a file of evidence to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) to consider potential criminal charges.

"Following the referral, we received requests from the CPS for further material to assist with its decision-making," it said.

Malcolm McHaffie, head of the CPS special crime division, said: "It is extremely important that there should be no reporting, commentary or sharing of information online which could in any way prejudice these proceedings."

A police sergeant, who was also referred to the CPS, will not face charges, the IOPC said.

'Safety is priority'

A spokesperson for Mountain Healthcare sent its "deepest condolences" to Mr Cameron's family.

It added: "We cannot comment on the case given the ongoing legal proceedings.

"However, we can confirm that Mr Cregg has not worked in any of our services since the time of the incident in 2020 and is not employed by us in any capacity.

"Our priority continues to be the safety, dignity and wellbeing of the people our highly specialist teams support in custody, and this is underpinned by regular independent assessments confirming the excellence of our safety and training processes."

Thames Valley Police said: "It would be inappropriate to comment whilst there is ongoing legal proceedings, our thoughts remain with Mr Cameron's family and loved ones."

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March 31, 2025 0 comments
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Innovation

Police probe patient deaths during Covid pandemic

by Ivy March 30, 2025
written by Ivy

Police are investigating a Leicestershire NHS trust over three patients who died during the Covid pandemic.

Leicestershire Police has said it is looking into Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust (LPT) for offences relating to corporate manslaughter and gross negligence manslaughter regarding the deaths, which took place between September 2020 and July 2021.

The Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) said one of the deaths was believed to relate to a patient absconding from Bradgate mental health unit at Glenfield Hospital.

LPT told the LDRS it would be "inappropriate" to comment on "an ongoing police investigation".

A recent employment tribunal heard the patient, named only as Patient One in proceedings, was a new arrival on the Beaumont Ward of the unit in September 2020.

He was able to escape from the ward's garden, before taking his own life, the tribunal was told.

Safety concerns on the ward during Covid were at the heart of the case, with former consultant, Dr Mariam Benaris, claiming she was forced out of her role after blowing the whistle over her fears around patient safety.

The tribunal heard Dr Benaris and others working on Beaumont were concerned about the number of new admissions – who would have been at the start of the recovery and often had more complex needs – being concentrated in one ward, and the increased pressure they said this put on employees.

The trust told the tribunal the admissions ward was set up in response to NHS England's guidance in the early stages of the pandemic, adding it had conversations around controls to reduce risks relating to the new structure with mitigations being put in place.

It also denies its actions were intended as a detriment for the whistleblowing, saying Dr Benaris moved "voluntarily".

None of the three patients who lost their lives have been named by Leicestershire Police.

Confirming an investigation into "offences relating to corporate manslaughter and gross negligence manslaughter", a spokesman said: "The investigation remains ongoing. No charges have been brought at this time."

March 30, 2025 0 comments
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Global Trade

Asbestos discovery delays roadworks by three months

by Brooklyn March 30, 2025
written by Brooklyn

A construction company has apologised to residents for the "inconvenience" caused by a delay in the completion of roadworks following the discovery of asbestos.

Upgrade works on the fire station roundabout near Watermoor in Cirencester, along with the mini roundabout at the junction of Love Lane and Midland Roundabout, are to improve traffic and safety, and mitigate flooding.

The roadworks were due to be completed in the spring, but this has now been delayed by three months, meaning they will last until the end of July.

Bathurst Development, the company behind the roadworks, said had it known about the asbestos it would have factored its removal and disposal into the timing of the project.

March 30, 2025 0 comments
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