Monday, 9 June 2014

West London Sex-Pest Hunted By Police


Police hunting a West London sex-pest have released this CCTV image of the suspect, who has been approaching lone women in the street.
The incidents have taken place in the Earls Court and Kings Road areas between April 13 and 29.
The first offence happened on April 13 at approximately 4:35pm in Philbeach Gardens, Earls Court.
The 23 year-old female victim was walking home when the suspect approached her then grabbed her and sexually assaulting her before running off.


The second offence happened on Sunday April 27 at 9:10am in Longridge Road, Earl's Court.
The 23-year female victim was walking home when the suspect approached her. He grabbed her bottom and legs and ran off.


On Monday April 28 at 1:40pm the suspect struck again, this time in Hammersmith near the Queens Head public house, Brook Street.
The 28 year-old female victim was walking her dog when the suspect became verbally abusive towards her.


On Tuesday April 29 at about 8:45pm the 19 year-old female victim was walking along the King's Road, Chelsea when the suspect came up behind her and grabbed her bottom.


The suspect is described as a black male, approximately 5ft 5ins to 5ft 7ins, aged between 25 to 30 years. He has a London accent and short dark hair.


If you have any information please contact Notting Hill CID on Kensington 020 8246 0148 or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. 

Sunday, 8 June 2014

Knife-Wielding Mugger Stabbed Prostitute To Death

"Cold Blooded": Farooq Shah

A knife-wielding midnight mugger is facing a life sentence for murdering a pregnant prostitute he stabbed twice in the chest as he cycled around east London looking for victims.
Farooq Shah, 21, of Station Road, Forest Gate had robbed a vulnerable victim less than an hour earlier then targeted 24 year-old Romanian Mariana Popa – the mother of a six year-old child who had only been in the UK a few weeks.
He was convicted at Woolwich Crown Court of murdering Mariana in Ilford Lane, Redbridge, shortly before midnight on October 28, last year.
He was also found guilty of a knife-point mugging in nearby Upton Park the same night, when he robbed a partially-sighted man in his fifties, and will be sentenced on June 27.
Detective Inspector Darren Richards said: "This was a cold-blooded, senseless murder by a man who went out that night, armed with a knife, intent on using it to commit serious injury to someone.


"He had already threatened and robbed a vulnerable man with a knife earlier that night, and he was hanging around the Ilford Lane area, looking for another victim.
“He killed Mariana because she was there, because he thought he could get away with it.
“In doing so, he has deprived a young daughter of her mother. Our thoughts and condolences are with the family and friends of Mariana."


Stabbed To Death: Mariana Popa
The murder investigation was launched by officers from the Homicide and Major Crime Command after police were called by the London Ambulance Service at approx 00:15am on Tuesday, October 29, to reports of a woman injured in Ilford Lane, near the junction with Loxford Lane.


Officers attended and she was treated for a stab injury and she was taken to an east London hospital where she died at 01:53am.
The post-mortem examination ascertained that she died from shock and haemorrhage and stab wounds to the chest.


Mariana, who has a six year-old daughter, had been spoken to by police three times that night and she had been issued with a caution for soliciting.


CCTV footage proved critical in this case, and approximately 400 hours was reviewed over the course of the investigation.
Police recovered the footage from a number of cameras along the road, one of which had actually caught the murder taking place.
It shows Mariana walking along with a man on a bicycle, when he is seen to take a knife from his back pocket and stab her twice in the chest.
He then makes off towards Loxford Lane on his bike, while Mariana manages to make her way to a nearby shop where she collapsed.


Through the footage, detectives were able to trace the attacker to an area around St. Francis Way.
During door-to-door enquiries on November 6, officers discovered a bicycle matching the description of that seen in the CCTV footage.
Shah was inside the flat and, finding he fitted the description of the murderer, he was immediately arrested. 


At the address, police found a bag belonging to Shah that matched one worn by the murderer in the footage; they also recovered a Samsung Galaxy phone which Shah had given to his friend, who was present at the flat. 


Enquiries revealed that the phone had been taken during a knife-point robbery in Harold Road, Upton Park, at approx 11.00pm on the night of October 28.
CCTV footage had already shown that the murderer had been travelling from that direction to Ilford Lane.
That victim was partially sighted, but crucially was able to describe his assailant's distinctive thick beard.



Saturday, 7 June 2014

Dead Man Unidentified: E-Fit Issued



Police have released this e-fit of an unidentified man, who was found dead in the grounds of a disused building in Lower Addiscombe, Croydon.
The body was found at 6 Morland Road at 3.05pm on Thursday, May 8 and the death is being treated as non-suspicious.


The man is described as black, of medium build, 5ft 8ins to 6ft tall, with short black and grey hair and a full black and grey beard. 


He was wearing a black v-neck sweater, brown shirt, blue denim jeans with a brown belt and black lace-up boots. He also had with him a dark green t-shirt. 


His clothes appeared clean and it did not appear as if he had been sleeping rough.
A small black bag was found near to his body. 


Enquiries have led police to believe that the male was living in rented accommodation and recently lost his job. 


Police are particularly interested in any landlords who had a tenant matching the description who has recently gone missing or not paid the rent. 


Anyone with information is asked to please call Croydon Missing Persons Unit on 020 8649 0016 or 101.
All calls with be treated in confidence.

Friday, 6 June 2014

Violent Groper Hunted By Police


Police are hunting this man – suspected of grabbing the same woman's breasts and buttocks within a week.
Metropolitan Police officers have made a public appeal for assistance in tracking-down 39 year-old Italian Gianluca Certo.
He also slapped the woman across her face several times during the incidents in Cricklewood Broadway, Cricklewood on April 16 and 23.
Certo is described as white, 5ft 7ins tall, of a medium build with short black hair and brown eyes.
He may or may not currently have facial hair. 


He is known to have links to London area, but it is possible he may have travelled outside the local area or even the country. 

Officers would ask anyone who knows of his whereabouts not to approach him, but to contact police either by 999 or Crimestoppers, anonymously, on 0800 555 111. 

Thursday, 5 June 2014

Nightclub Bouncer Had Cache Of Illegal Weapons In Luggage After Far East Holiday


A nightclub bouncer was caught at Heathrow Airport with a cache of illegal weapons in his luggage after a “trip of a lifetime” to Thailand.

Ashley Otter, 28, of Pendderi Road, Bynea, Llanelli, Dyfed had two stun guns, two knuckle dusters and a telescopic baton in his holdall, which he bought at a Bangkok market on the last day of his trip.


He pleaded guilty to two counts of possessing a prohibited weapon; two counts of possessing an offensive weapon and one count of importing a weapon on January 30.


Otter received twelve months imprisonment, suspended for a year, ordered to perform 200 hours community service and pay £150 costs.


Isleworth Crown Court Judge Martin Edmunds QC told the first-time offender: “If you found someone trying to bring them into a nightclub you would have confiscated them and called the police.”


Prosecutor Mr. James O'Connell told the court Otter arrived in the evening on a flight from Bangkok via Delhi and was asked by customs officials whether he was carrying cigarettes or weapons.


“He said he had one stun gun in his bag and when his holdall was searched the other items were found.


“He said he bought some gifts for friends on his last day and was aware they could not be purchased in the UK.”


Otter's lawyer Mr. Gerald Mohabir said: “He is mentally scarred and mentally contrite. He's a good egg that took a hard-boiled decision on holiday.


“On what he thought was the trip of a lifetime he bought these items at a market where they were not illegal.


“As soon as he passed customs he realised the decision was stupid and he was extremely nervous.


“He was not trying to smuggle them in for a nefarious purpose.”

Wednesday, 4 June 2014

Boyfriend Sentenced For St. Valentine's Day Hotel Room Assault



A Peterborough man spat at and kneed his distraught girlfriend twice in the face when a romantic Valentine's Day night at a Hyde Park hotel turned sour during a drunken row.

Self-employed home improvements contractor Robert Rough, 30, of Crowhurst jealously quizzed ex Rebecca Slater about her behaviour at a recent works Christmas party then attacked her in their fifth-floor room at Bayswater Road's Double Tree Hilton Hotel on February 15.


“We are not sending you to prison,” bench chairman Jeffrey Manton told the tearful father-of-one at City of Westminster Magistrates Court today. 

“You kneed someone in the eye, you spat at them and verbally abused them.


“That individual tried to defuse the situation by going outside with you for a cigarette, but you went back and had another go and you can imagine how frightening that was for the individual who went to hospital with bruising and swelling.


“This could have effected someone's eyesight for the rest of their life through your one drunken action.”


Prosecutor Miss Niki Powell told the court: “Police were called after staff received complaints from other guests and when the officers arrived Mr. Rough was in the lobby with his suitcase and was detained.


“He had been in a relationship with Miss Slater for a year and they had been arguing in the lobby and continued arguing in the room.


“She had been at a works do and Mr. Rough was asking her what she had been doing at the party and who she was with at the party and she was pushed against a wardrobe.”


The night manager came to their room to investigate the commotion, but Miss Slater assured him everything was fine and the pair went outside for a cigarette.

“When they returned Mr. Rough attacked her, pushing her to the floor and deliberately kneeing her twice in the right eye and spat at her while verbally abusing her.”


Rough pleaded guilty to assault on the basis of pushing Miss Slater, claiming the kneeing was accidental, but after a Newton hearing during which the visibly upset victim gave evidence the court ruled it was deliberate.


She said the pair had enjoyed a meal and were both drinking when the romantic mood soured. 

“He was becoming aggressive in the foyer and I did not know why and he followed me up to the room screaming and shouting and calling me names.”


He was calling me: 'slag' and everything and he was questioning me about my Christmas party and what time I got in.


“Rob attacked me, he smashed my head against the wardrobe. It was quite forceful. I had roses that Rob threw all over the room.


“He shoved me onto the bed and then shoved me onto the floor by force. He was on top of me, holding me down.


“He was manhandling me, he's a lot bigger than me. He was abusing me, spiting in my face, calling me names.


“He's then kicked me twice in the face,” added the tearful and petite Miss Slater.


Rough's lawyer Mr. Tom Flavin said: “This is an isolated incident that was unfortunate and regrettable. A temporary loss of self-control that was completely out of character.


“There was no pre-meditation, it resulted out of an argument and Mr. Rough left the incident when he was asked to do so.


“These offences occurred through drink and both Mr. Rough and the complainant had a large amount to drink that night and since this offence he has not touched alcohol.


“He is aware how serious this is and doesn't want a repeat in the future and in his pre-sentence report interview he was ashamed and emotional and is deeply ashamed and deeply regrets the incident.”


Rough was placed on a two-year community order, which includes a domestic abuse programme, was ordered to pay £500 compensation to Miss Slater, £195 costs and a £60 victim surcharge.


An indefinite restraining order was also made against Rough, prohibiting him having any contact with Miss Slater and visiting her Peterborough home.

Monday, 2 June 2014

RMT Branch Secretary Cleared Of Picket Line Intimidation

Not Guilty: Mark Harding

A London Underground tube driver, who was picketing Hammersmith station during RMT industrial action, was cleared today of  intimidating a strike-breaking trainee manager who claimed he was branded a "scab".

RMT official Mark Andrew Harding, 51, of Gomm Road, Rotherhithe was standing outside the station with two fellow strikers at 5.47am on February 6 when graduate trainee Gareth Robert Scott, 25, crossed the picket line.

Prosecutor Mr. Sam Roarke told City of London Magistrates Court: "The Crown's case is that Mr. Harding used intimidation to compel Mr. Scott not to do his job."

The prosecution, brought under the Trade Union and Labour Relations Act, was an important one for the RMT and the conviction of branch secretary Harding would have been very damaging.

Union activists saw the prosecution as politically-motivated and it became something of a cause celebre for the movement, with union leaders, plus 15 MP's issuing a statement calling for the end of "anti-union laws."

Mr. Scott told the courtroom, which was packed with RMT supporters: "One gentleman approached me, made a beeline for me. 

"As I approached the station he came very close to me at a fast walking pace.

"At one point he was approximately five inches from my face, he was very close.

"When he got up close to me he shouted at me: 'Can you respect the picket line?'

"I avoided the gentleman and made my way towards the gates and he started shouting that I was a scab.

"He was shouting: 'You are a scab. What happens when your job is on the line?'

Strike Breaker: Gareth Scott
"I felt really shaken and frightened. i was concerned about what he was going to do. I was concerned he would follow me into the station.

"I was working as an incident station supervisor to cover the strikes. I was told to cover the shift as there was no supervisor that day."

The industrial action caused travel chaos across the capital for thousands of commuters and was brought in response to plans to cut the numbers of station staff.

Mr. Scott, who has since abandoned his career with the London Underground called the British Transport Police (BTP) from the station office.

"I was really worried about having to work there that day and be subject to abuse and similar taunts.

"When I got home I got really worried about what would happen next."

Mr. Scott entered counselling as a result and says the incident played a part when weighing up wether to stay with London Underground.

"It was an invasion of my personal space," he explained. "I have not experienced anything as confrontational as that on the Underground.

"I expected to be able to attend work without being called names."

He denied that as an up and coming manager he was "point scoring" against the union to impress his bosses.

Harding admits he challenged Mr. Scott, but simply said: "I'm asking you to show solidarity and not cross the picket line."

He did not give evidence, but was backed by fellow RMT striker Sean McKenzie, who was on the phone with the defendant while picketing King's Cross Station during the incident.

"I could hear him trying to convince someone not to go into Hammersmith Station. He was quite calm and respectful."

When asked if he heard Harding shouting or calling anybody a 'scab' Mr. Mckenzie replied: "I'm quite shocked and relatively appalled by the suggestion.

"He did not shout, he was calm, he did not use the word 'scab' or any other derogatory term."

Harding was picketing Hammersmith Underground Station with his brother Jim and customer services assistant Steve Hardwick, who told the court: "There was no shouting at all, that's the truth.

"He wasn't called a 'scab' at all."

Harding pleaded not guilty to intimidation during a trade dispute, namely used, without legal authority, violence or intimidation towards Mr. Scott.

Sunday, 1 June 2014

Chelsea FC Fan Fined For Celebrating On Hallowed Turf


A Chelsea FC fan, who ran onto the pitch where his late father's ashes are scattered after his team hit the goal that put them through to the Champions League semi-final, has been fined.

Mark Warboys, 39, of Windsor Close, Witham, Essex told Hammersmith Magistrates Court: “I enjoy my football, I'm passionate about my football.”


He pleaded guilty to entering the playing area during the Chelsea v Paris Saint-Germain match at Stamford Bridge on April 8 and was fined £320, with £85 costs and was ordered to pay a £32 victim surcharge.


Prosecutor Miss Helen Clutton told the court: “After Chelsea scored a goal he ran onto the football pitch and was detained by stewards and then the police.


“In his own words he said emotions were high and he got carried away.”


Chelsea striker Demba Ba had just hit the second goal in a 2 – 0 win minutes from the final whistle, which clinched the home's team's progress in the competition.


Warboys told the magistrates: “Emotions were running high that night. My dad's ashes were spread on the pitch there in 1989 and he has got a memorial plaque there.


“I go there regularly with my son. I'm a member and my son is a member as well.”


When told he could be made subject to a three-year football banning order, which would prevent him attending any matches Warboys added: “I would be very upset, but I would accept it gracefully.”


The magistrates did not make any football banning order.  

Saturday, 31 May 2014

Teacher At Private Primary School Caught Drink-Driving After Hockey Club Celebration


A PE teacher at a private primary school was caught driving in the early hours at nearly double the drinks limit after attending his hockey club's end of season celebrations.

James Figgis, 28, of Highfield School, Highfield Lane, Liphook, Hampshire claims he was looking for a better place to park and sleep for the night after the alcohol-fueled dinner in central London.


He pleaded guilty at Hammersmith Magistrates Court yesterday to driving his VW Golf in Hurlingham Road, Fulham on April 13 with 67 microgrammes of alcohol on his breath – the legal limit is 35.


Prosecutor Miss Helen Clutton told the court: “He was seen driving at 3am with no lights on and that is why he was stopped and it was apparent he had been drinking that night.”


Figgis' lawyer Mr. Ben Holden said: “Mr. Figgis lives in Hampshire, he is a teacher at a school and he was in London to have an end of season meal with his hockey club and intended to sleep in his car afterwards.


“It is something he has done on many occassions in the past and leaves his keys in the boot and has a sleeping bag in the car and sleeps in the passenger seat, that was his intention.


“He has had a few drinks and learned there was a classic car rally in Fulham the next morning and the roads where he was parked would be full and it would take him a long time to get away the next morning.


“He learned that if he drove over Putney Bridge he could park in a residential area, but was stopped by the police three hundred yards after setting off.


“It does seem to be a stupid error by Mr. Figgis. He was not trying to sneak home and dodge the police.


“He is a teacher at an independent primary school and has been there for three years and is looking to pursue a teaching career.


“A conviction like this is going to be on his record for the rest of his life because of his career, working with children.


"He lives at the school and there are no local buses or train links and the disqualification is going to cause a detriment to his private life when trying to visit friends and family in Guildford and London.”


Figgis was fined £405, with £85 costs and ordered to pay a £40 victim surcharge and disqualified from driving for eighteen months.

Friday, 30 May 2014

Top Personal Trainer Caught Sleeping Off Booze In Car

Hammersmith Magistrates Court

A personal trainer at an exclusive club, who needs his driving licence to visit clients at their country estates, was found by police passed out behind the wheel of his car while over the drinks limit.

Lonan O'Herlihy, 24, of Westwood House, Heathfield Avenue, Ascot, Berkshire had left the engine running for warmth and the lights on after pulling over for a kip in a petrol station parking area.


He pleaded guilty at Hammersmith Magistrates Court (pictured) to being in charge of a vehicle while over the alcohol limit - an offence that does not result in automatic disqualification – and was fined £200, with £85 costs, ordered to pay a £20 victim surcharge and was given 10 penalty points on his licence.


The court heard O'Herlihy's Audi R8 was parked in the forecourt of Tesco's, New King's Road, Fulham at 3.30am on April 10.


“The defendant was slumped over the steering wheel and he told police he was using the car to keep warm and admitted he had a few drinks that night,” said prosecutor Miss Helen Clutton.


He gave a breath-test reading of 50 microgrammes of alcohol – the legal limit is 35.


Oxford-educated O'Herlihy, who resides in a £2.5m property, and was chosen for the university's rowing and tennis teams while studying at Malvern College, is employed by Belgravia's White Room Fitness.


“I was parked and trying to sleep,” O'Herlihy told the court. “I was asleep in a parking spot and I had been there for two hours.


“I do use my car for work, I'm a personal trainer and in marketing and many of my clients are in country houses, where I spend a couple of days a week.”

Thursday, 29 May 2014

Duo In Court For Dealing In £1.1m Worth Of Stolen Pharmaceuticals

In Court: City of London

A company director and a pharmaceutical dealer, accused of handling £1.1 million worth of medicinal drugs stolen from a lorry nine years ago, have appeared at City of London Magistrates Court.

Vincent Quigley, 67, of Daleside, Thornhill, Dewsbury and Kenyan-born Mahmoud Azizi, 56, of Princess Court, Bryanston Place, Mayfair will appear at the Old Bailey on June 16.


Quigley is charged with one count of handling and one count of receiving stolen goods on or before October 16, 2007, namely 1,620,000 Comtan tablets; 510,000 Lopressor tablets and 480,000 Femara tablets.


He indicated a not guilty plea to both charges and was bailed unconditionally.


The tablets, which had been stolen in 2005, were traced to a warehouse in Yorkshire on October 16, 2007 by a private detective hired by the loser, Swiss-based Norvartis International.


Comtan is prescribed to patients with Parkinson's Disease; Lopressor is for the treatment of high blood pressure and Femara is for breast cancer patients.


Canadian citizen Azizi was extradited from Vancouver and appeared in custody charged with one count of receiving stolen goods on October 16, 2007, namely medicinal products belonging to Norvartis International.


He was bailed on condition he provide a £250,000 surety, surrender his passport, not apply for any travel documents, reside at his recorded address and report three times a week to Marylebone Police Station.


However, this decision was immediately appealed by the Crown Prosecution Service and Azizi will remain in custody until a crown court bail hearing.



Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Cocaine Courier Jailed For Smuggling Drugs In His Stomach

Cocaine: Gatwick Airport 

A convicted drug dealer, who was caught smuggling £23,000 worth of cocaine he swallowed before boarding a flight from Peru, has been jailed for three years and four months.

Lloyd Iain Powell, 36, of  Greenfields, Sellindge, Ashford, Kent pleaded guilty to smuggling 303gms of the drug at Gatwick Airport on February 14.


Croydon Crown Court heard the cocaine had a purity of between 62% and 76% and a street value of £23,616.


He had flown in from Peru via Spain and x-rays taken by suspicious Border Force officers revealed suspicious contents within his stomach.


While detained at HMP High Down Powell developed deep vein thrombosis in his leg and is awaiting an operation.


He also remains on the prison's 'danger of self-harm programme'.


Powell's lawyer Mr. Nicholas Hamblin asked the court to pass a more lenient sentence, stating the defendant was not an organiser.


“It is a lesser role. There is an element of pressure involved,” he said.


When remanded in custody for a medical report Recorder John Bate-Williams told him: “This is inevitably going to be a custodial sentence.


“Any time you are serving now will be credited against the eventual sentence.”


The court ordered the cocaine to be forfeited and Powell must pay a £120 victim surcharge.

Tuesday, 27 May 2014

RMT Picket-Line Striker Accused Of Branding Management Trainee A "Scab"


Striker: Mark Harding
A London Underground tube driver, who was picketing Hammersmith station during RMT industrial action, intimidated a strike-breaking trainee manager he branded a "scab" a court heard last Friday.

RMT official Mark Andrew Harding, 51, of Gomm Road, Rotherhithe was standing outside the station with two fellow strikers at 5.47am on February 6 when graduate trainee Gareth Robert Scott, 25, crossed the picket line.

Prosecutor Mr. Sam Roarke told City of London Magistrates Court: "The Crown's case is that Mr. Harding used intimidation to compel Mr. Scott not to do his job."

The prosecution, brought under the Trade Union and Labour Relations Act, is an important one for the RMT and the conviction of branch secretary Harding would be very damaging.

Union activists see the prosecution as politically-motivated and it has become something of a cause celebre for the movement, with union leaders, plus 15 MP's issuing a statement calling for the end of "anti-union laws."

Mr. Scott told the courtroom, which was packed with RMT supporters: "One gentleman approached me, made a beeline for me. 

"As I approached the station he came very close to me at a fast walking pace.

"At one point he was approximately five inches from my face, he was very close.

"When he got up close to me he shouted at me: 'Can you respect the picket line?'

"I avoided the gentleman and made my way towards the gates and he started shouting that I was a scab.

"He was shouting: 'You are a scab. What happens when your job is on the line?'

"I felt really shaken and frightened. i was concerned about what he was going to do. I was concerned he would follow me into the station.
Breaker: Gareth Scott

"I was working as an incident station supervisor to cover the strikes. I was told to cover the shift as there was no supervisor that day."

The industrial action caused travel chaos across the capital for thousands of commuters and was brought in response to plans to cut the numbers of station staff.

Mr. Scott, who has since abandoned his career with the London Underground called the British Transport Police (BTP) from the station office.

"I was really worried about having to work there that day and be subject to abuse and similar taunts.

"When I got home I got really worried about what would happen next."

Mr. Scott entered counselling as a result and says the incident played a part when weighing up wether to stay with London Underground.

"It was an invasion of my personal space," he explained. "I have not experienced anything as confrontational as that on the Underground.

"I expected to be able to attend work without being called names."

He denied that as an up and coming manager he was "point scoring" against the union to impress his bosses.

Harding admits he challenged Mr. Scott, but simply said: "I'm asking you to show solidarity and not cross the picket line."

He did not give evidence, but was backed by fellow RMT striker Sean McKenzie, who was on the phone with the defendant while picketing King's Cross Station during the incident.

"I could hear him trying to convince someone not to go into Hammersmith Station. He was quite calm and respectful."

When asked if he heard Harding shouting or calling anybody a 'scab' Mr. Mckenzie replied: "I'm quite shocked and relatively appalled by the suggestion.

"He did not shout, he was calm, he did not use the word 'scab' or any other derogatory term."

Harding was picketing Hammersmith Underground Station with his brother Jim and customer services assistant Steve Hardwick, who told the court: "There was no shouting at all, that's the truth.

"He wasn't called a 'scab' at all."

The trial was adjourned until June 2 when Harding will hear the verdict.

He has pleaded not guilty to intimidation during a trade dispute, namely used, without legal authority, violence or intimidation towards Mr. Scott.

Monday, 26 May 2014

Sister Batters Brother To Ground During Family's Day Trip To The Capital


Sibling violence broke out yet again during a Lowestoft family's trip to London, which ended with the sister battering her brother to the ground in front of a crowd of onlookers outside Victoria Station.

Voluntary charity worker Caole Ann Watlow, 28, of Whiting Road, Oulton pleaded guilty to assaulting Paul Shackell, 33, in Buckingham Palace Road on October 22, last year and was sentenced to nine months probation, which includes anger management sessions.


“This was a very unpleasant incident that lasted quite a long time,” bench chairwoman Valerie Gorter told Watlow at Hammersmith Magistrates Court. “We understand you and your brother have a history of aggression and conflict with each other that has to end now.”


Prosecutor Miss Helen Clutton said: “The victim is Miss Watlow's brother. They live in Suffolk and were visiting London on the day of the offence.


“They arrived outside Victoria Station and Miss Watlow accused her brother of taking her train ticket.


“The dispute attracted the attention of a security guard and members of the public who witnessed Miss Watlow pulling him onto the floor, hitting him and kicking him as he lay there without fighting back.


“Mr. Shackell sustained a cut above his left eye.”


The court heard Mr. Shackell was convicted of assaulting his sister in 2007 and 2008, on the first occasion punching her in the face several times and pulling her hair and a year later punching her in the forehead.


He was cleared of punching her in the face last year and Watlow herself was cautioned in 2000 for a street assault with a knife on her brother when he received grazes.


She told the magistrates: “Me, my mum and brother were picking up a family member and my brother was drunk and kept going on and on all the way there through the journey.


“I asked for the tickets back and he strangled me and that's when I over-reacted and hit him. I didn't pull him to the floor, he fell over.”


Watlow, who only admitted the offence on the day of the trial after initially pleading not guilty, was also ordered to pay £150 costs and a £60 victim surchage.

Sunday, 25 May 2014

Restraining Order Slapped On Ex After Abusive Texts

Henry: Abusive Texts

A Cambridge man, who bombarded his ex with abusive text messages during a twenty-four hour period two weeks after they split-up, has been slapped with a six-month restraining order.

Jobless Jeff Henry, 38, who lives with his grandmother in Fanshawe Road pleaded guilty at Hammersmith Magistrates Court to harassing Laura Flanagan between March 5 and 6 and was placed on probation for twelve months and ordered to pay £85 costs and a £60 victim surcharge.


The restraining order bans him from contacting Miss Flanagan and entering Clarendon Road and Dulford Street, Notting Hill, west London.


Prosecutor Miss Helen Clutton told the court: “Laura Flanagan had been in a relatonship with Jeff Henry for two years and they have two children and split-up two weeks before the offence.


“The victim spotted the defendant in the street on March 5 and he started shouting at her, calling her a 'd***head' and making her feel embarrased and she then received unwanted texts and phone calls from Jeff Henry.”


Police were called, but when the defendant was interviewed officers were unable to check his phone because he smashed it in anger.


However, evidence of the harassment was on Miss Flanagan's phone.


“She does send texts back to Jeff Henry and some are abusive, but not as abusive as the defendant's texts,” added Miss Clutton.


“He told police he did not intend to carry out the threats in the texts.”


Henry, whose children with Miss Flanagan are aged one and two years-old, told the court: “The last eight weeks have been very difficult for me. I have not seen my daughter, who has cystic fibrosis.


“I'm sorry, I did not mean it to get out of control, but I've supported Laura through thick and thin, I've lied for her in court so she can keep the children and and they don't go into care.


“Not seeing my daughter is killing me,” added Henry, urging the magistrates not to impose a restraining order, which would mean all child access would have to be via a solicitor or family court.


Bench Chairwoman Valerie Gorter told Henry: “The harassment by text was persistent behaviour. She asked you to stop and you didn't.


“They were prolific, but not really threatening texts and I think you did not fully appreciate the effect of these texts on your ex.”