Sunday, 28 February 2021

Caught: Scum On The Run Who Tricked Way Into OAP's Home

A heartless burglar, who preyed on an octogenarian by tricking his way into her home to steal, has finally been locked-up again.

Peter Kerrigan, 33, was on the run after escaping from a secure mental health facility in 2015, after a burglary conviction.

He avoided capture for five years, despite a national manhunt to trace him, but was finally caught after being identified on a doorbell camera.

Kerrigan, of Queens Crescent, Kentish Town pleaded guilty at Wood Green Crown Court to the Hampstead distraction burglary and escaping custody.

He received four years imprisonment.

Kerrigan absconded the Homerton facility in March, 2015 and remained free until he was caught after posing as a council labourer on March 17, last year to enter the OAP's home.

During the burglary the victim caught Kerrigan in her bedroom looking through her purse.

He fled without stealing any of her property.

Fortunately, the victim had a doorbell, which recorded Kerrigan's arrival and entry into the address.

An investigation was launched by officers from the Metropolitan Police's Central North Basic Command Unit (BCU). 

With an image of the suspect and forensic evidence left behind at the scene, detectives were able to identify Kerrigan.

On Thursday, July 2 Kerrigan was arrested in Camden after being identified by officers.

DC Stacey Whitaker, who led the investigation, said: “Distraction burglary is extremely upsetting and traumatic for those involved therefore it is only right that Kerrigan – who has a history of offending - has received this sentence. 

I’d like to thank the local community for providing vital information regarding the whereabouts of Kerrigan which led to his arrest.”

Saturday, 27 February 2021

Police Smash £1/4m Cannabis Farm

Police have smashed a huge cannabis-growing operation in west London after responding to suspect activity around a building.

Officers were called to the Hillingdon property at 9.36am on Wednesday, January 27 after the suspicious activity report.

When they entered the property, they found approximately 5,000 plants, along with growing equipment.

One room alone had 1,800 plants.

The plants are thought to have had a street value of around a quarter of a million pounds.

They have now been recovered and an investigation is underway to establish the circumstances of the find.

Police Sergeant Crystal Govers, of the West Area Basic Command Unit, said:"Drugs have a devastating impact on communities and individuals and we will do everything we can to remove them from the streets.

"We will act upon intelligence from members of the public and would urge anyone who is aware of suspicious activity in your area to report it to the police as soon as possible."

Anyone with information is asked to call police on 101 or tweet @MetCC. If you have information about this specific incident quote CAD 1677/27Jan.

You can also provide information anonymously to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Friday, 26 February 2021

Drunken Farmer Posed As Cop On Wimbledon Common

A drunken farmer repeatedly posed as a police officer on Wimbledon Common, even attaching a flashing blue lamp to his 4x4 during a bizarre obsession last summer, a court heard.

Marc Peter Dailly, 58, left his 142-acre property, which is also home to his wife’s horse livery stables, and drove up the A3 to the common in south-west London.


Yesterday at Wimbledon Magistrates Court Dailly, of Slough Farm, Telegraph Lane, Claygate, Esher pleaded guilty to three counts of impersonating a police officer on June 24; July 15 and July 19, last year.


He also pleaded guilty to using his Mitsubishi Shogun, which was fitted with a blue warning beacon, contrary to the Road Vehicle Lighting Regulations, on July 19.


The prosecution dropped an offensive weapon charge of possessing a police-style baton, submitting it was part of the main three impersonating offences.


Prosecutor Mr David Roberts told the court the alarm was raised on July 19: “Police were called to reports of the defendant driving a vehicle on Wimbledon Common, claiming to be a police officer.


“The police officers say he was drunk, slurring his words and produced a card, claiming to be a police officer.


“There were two other earlier incidents when a parks officer warned the defendant about having a vehicle with a flashing light.”


The arresting officers describe Dailly - who also has a background in veterinary farming - as “driving erratically and at speed.”


Mr Roberts explained: “The defendant introduced himself as ‘the Chief Inspector’ and admitted he had ‘one or two’.


“He was also in possession of a police-style baton that the Crown Prosecution Service say is part of the charge of impersonating a police officer.”


Dailly was separately prosecuted for drink-driving at three times the limit and last year was fined £500 and disqualified for two years.


The court heard Dailly has had personal struggles and read a letter from his wife before bailing him until April 8 for a pre-sentence report.

Thursday, 25 February 2021

Santander Manager Accused Of £179K Fraud

A Santander manager, accused of raiding the bank accounts of “mostly elderly and vulnerable customers” of £179,900, appeared in court for the first time yesterday.

Charlotte Mills, 33, of Titchener Close, Bicester, Oxfordshire appeared on bail at City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court.


She is charged with one count of fraud by abuse of position between June 30, 2015 and December 1, 2019.


She gave no indication as to plea, but her legal representative indicated she would make admissions to a lower amount.


The customer service manager was bailed to appear at Inner London Crown Court on March 25 after the magistrates refused jurisdiction due to the seriousness of the case.


Prosecutor Mr. David Roberts told the court: “She defrauded mostly elderly and vulnerable customers.”

Wednesday, 24 February 2021

Nineties Pop Star Finley Quaye Smashed Bus Door During Fare Row

Troubled 90’s pop star Finley Quaye has notched up yet another conviction - this time for throwing a metal road sign through a glass bus door during a fare row.

Now living in the modest Abercorn House Hostel, 28-30 Bute Gardens, Hammersmith the 46 year-old Brit Award-winner appeared today at Westminster Magistrates’ Court.


Edinburgh-born Quaye, whose hits include ’Sunday Shining’ and ‘Even After All’ got into a row with the driver of the bus in Hammersmith and threw food all over the interior.


He pleaded guilty to causing £249.14p worth of criminal damage on June 17, last year and was bailed until March 3 for a pre-sentence report.


The court heard Quaye, who has multiple alcohol-related convictions, tried to use his card to pay the fare, but there was a disagreement.


He started shouting and swearing at the driver and after throwing around the food, exited the bus and walked around to the drivers’ side to continue the row.


Quaye picked up a metal road sign and threw it through the glass door of the bus, damaging it completely.

Tuesday, 23 February 2021

Brothers Deny Attacking Their Gay Couple Pals During Boozy Night Out

Marc Palmer-Elder
Two brothers turned on their gay couple friends during a violent Saturday night out in London’s West End - hospitalising the victims who were both viciously punched in the face, court heard.

One victim was also repeatedly kicked and stamped on by the pair, with one brother mockingly offering gay sexual favours to make the injured man ‘feel better’ during the drive home, the jury were told.


Marc Palmer-Elder, 24, of Faraday Road, Slough and Shaun Palmer-Elder, 23, of Wren Wood, Welwyn Garden City both deny the allegations at Southwark Crown Court.


Both brothers have pleaded not guilty to inflicting grievous bodily harm on Peter Burdon-Kirkwood in Carlton House Terrace, near The Mall on August 11, 2019.


Marc alone has pleaded not guilty to inflicting grievous bodily harm on Tristan Christian on the same occasion and Shaun also denies a count of causing criminal damage to Mr. Burdon-Kirkwood’s mobile phone.


Wannabe model Mr Christian told the jury all four drove from Slough to Central London for an enjoyable night out - drinking on the way - but the brothers were spoiling for trouble in the pub.


He estimated Marc finished half a bottle of rum during the journey and shared the rest with the others.


“The mood changed once everyone had a drink…There was a lot more aggression in the way they were coming across and talking.


“It seemed like they were looking for some sort of trouble.”


He told the jurors the brothers showed off to some girls outside they had stolen a bottle of alcohol from the pub and then began fighting with some friendly passers-by.


Shaun Palmer-Elder

“It came from the boys, it was not provoked. They were giving a whole attitude, a vibe and they wanted a fight and they got a fight.”


“Marc then started throwing glass bottles down the road towards these guys, while there were people walking in the road. I was disgusted.”


He said Marc also threw a punch at a random Romanian rickshaw driver. “Marc punched one of the Tuk Tuk drivers in the mouth and his mouth instantly started bleeding.”


When the police turned up Mr Christian admits he lied to the officers to get his friend off the hook.


All four friends then started walking back to their car. “Marc hit Pete out of nowhere, his nose had popped.


“There was so much blood from one person, I’d never seen before, you only see that in films. His nose burst with blood gushing out, it was so shocking.


“He kind of ran up to Pete and jumped and punched him straight in the face and popped his nose and burst his cheek.


“He still wanted to fight, to hurt anyone and was shouting loads of abuse, like: ‘He’s faking it. He’s a pussy’.


“I spoke to Shaun at the time Marc punched me. As I turned my head he’s punched me so hard I instantly heard this crack and spat out blood and knew my jaw was broken and heard it disconnect.


“It’s horrible that my friend could have done that and he was saying I couldn’t speak if it really was broken.”


When Mr. Burdon-Kirkwood tried to call an ambulance Shaun stopped him, said the witness. “He took Pete’s phone out of his hand and kind of snapped it.”


As the victims tried to get away the injured Mr. Burdon-Kirkwood was struck again, the court heard.


“Marc, again running, jumped and hit Pete again, a very forceful hit and he fell and hit the kerb and was lying lifeless, he was unconscious,” explained Mr. Christian.


“They saw that as an opportunity to kick the life out of him, kicking him, stamping.”


All four returned to the car and during the journey to Slough, Shaun made mocking comment to the injured Mr Burdon-Kirkwood, the jury were told.


Mr Christian said: “He was sitting behind Pete and saying: ‘Do you want me to touch you? Do you want me to do oral to you?’


“That was entertainment to them they were smiling at this point and happy with what they achieved.


“Me and Pete spent the next two days in A & E with serious injuries and I’ve got metal plates in my lower jaw.”


The trial continues and is expected to last four days.

Monday, 22 February 2021

Thames Marina Boss Fails To Have Tenant Assault Case Dismissed

Threats: Djurberg
The flamboyant boss of a luxury Thames marina, who screamed at a boat owner: “I’ll break your f***ing head,” while waving a heavy-duty roofing tool, failed to have the case thrown out today.

Myck Djurberg, 60, had already whacked 52 year-old Dutch IT consultant Klaus Beversluis across the back of the head with a pair of gardening gloves.

He appeared at Wimbledon Magistrates Court, where he was told being locked-up was still a potential option, and was bailed until April 1 for sentencing.


Businessman Djurberg lives in a landmark £13m Swiss chalet at Hampton Riviera Boat Yard, Hampton Court Road, Richmond and is in dispute with Mr. Beversluis, who rents out his three boats via Airbnb.


He was convicted in his absence earlier this month of assaulting Mr. Beversluis and using threatening behaviour towards him on May 8, last year.


After failing to attend the trial a warrant was issued for Djurberg’s arrest and he surrendered himself to the court the following day.


His hopes for a re-trial were dismissed by District Judge Timothy Godfrey, who announced: “This application is ill-founded. There’s no good reason for me to re-open proceedings.


“In my view these offences are serious enough for a community sentence. I’m not saying there should be a custodial sentence, but if you refuse to do a community sentence custody would be an option.”


Mr. Beversluis was upset by a £5,500 service fee and Djurberg’s order to evict the victim’s caretaker when he walked into the marina office at 10am.


He told the trial: “The second I came in he leapt up from behind his desk and almost ran towards me, shouting: ‘Get out of here! Get out of here!’


“He shouted at me and I said I could not get out and wanted to clarify the matter.


Tenant: Beversluis

“He came up towards me and grabbed the nearest thing to him, which were a pair of heavy-duty gardening gloves, raised them and hit me on the back of my head and I also got a bruise on my arm.


“I got a smack on my head as I was trying to get out of there.


“He hit me across the back of the head with as much force as as he could muster and the back of my head was red the next day, it did sting, but did not draw blood.”


Mr. Beversluis fled the office, but was pursued by Djurberg, the court was told.


“I turned around and Myck Djurberg came out of the office and had grasped a weapon that I had seen before,” he added.


“It is called a lead dresser. It is a very heavy roofing tool, roofers use to hit lead flashing around chimneys.

“He had it raised up high and said he would break my f***ing head in.


“I had no doubt he would use it. I was absolutely terrified and ran away as fast as I could.


“It’s heavy enough to cave someone’s skull in, in my opinion.


“I suppose it has effected my confidence. It shook me up tremendously for a while and I had medical advice for increasing my anti-depression and anti-anxiety medication.”


The entire incident was captured on Mr. Beversluis’ camera and played during the trial, including a still of Djurberg holding the tool.


Mr. Beversluis even bought a replica of the tool and brought it to court to show the magistrates.


“There was no need to to hit me or in my view pick up a deadly weapon and threaten to hit me in the head,” he told the court.


Djurberg was questioned by police the next day and claimed he was scared and asked the victim to leave, but he wouldn’t.


He denied hitting the victim with the gloves and said his tenant elbowed him in the chest and his mind was blank about what else may have happened.


Djurberg said the object in his hand was a pencil case and denied using the threatening words.

Sunday, 21 February 2021

Pig's Head Ex Jailed For Stalking

A jealous woman, who sent a pig’s head to the restaurant owned by her ex-partner’s new girlfriend, has been jailed for fifteen months.

Tia McBean, 33, was a constant nuisance, shouting and screaming outside her ex-boyfriend’s address, phoning him and his girlfriend repeatedly and ordering unwanted pizzas and taxis.


She also made an offensive comment on a Trip Advisor online review of the Brixton restaurant as she continued flouting restraining orders, prohibiting contact with the couple.


The single-mum, of Besson Street, New Cross pleaded guilty at Woolwich Crown Court to seven breaches of a court-imposed restraining order between May 7, 2019 and March 7, last year.


She also pleaded guilty to stalking ex-boyfriend Oralton Robinson - the father of her child - and his new girlfriend between November 5, 2018 and March 8, 2020.


McBean also admitted one count of harassing and one count of sending offensive communications to another woman between July 31 and August 6, last year.


She further pleaded guilty to the racially-aggravated criminal damage of a door at Mr Robinson’s address.


Judge Ruth Downing told her: “Matters reached a very, very unpleasant stage when you sent to her restaurant in Brixton a package that a staff member opened that had a pig’s head inside.


“That really was gratuitous spite and the victim was particularly upset, seeing that item in a box.”


McBean has been locked-up since last August for continuing to flout court orders and her lawyer James Hasslacher said: “This is a tragic combination of unstable personality disorder, dealing with a pregnancy and break-up of a relationship.


“Mr Robinson himself has a conviction for assaulting Ms McBean. This was a toxic relationship.”


The judge told McBean, who will be released from custody in mid-March: “Adults should be able to bring a relationship to an end without fear of reprisals.


"There has been attendance to properties you were banned from, where you made a disturbance to the annoyance of neighbours and the complainants and there was criminal damage.”

Saturday, 20 February 2021

Carer Jailed For Claiming For Holidaying Somalian Dad

Bromley Magistrates' Court
A council-funded carer, who continued claiming nearly £10,000 for looking after her father when he was visiting his native Somalia, has been jailed for twelve months.

Suban Hashi, 35, submitted time sheets on six separate occasions while her dad was out of the country during a four-year fraud.


The Royal Borough of Greenwich prosecuted Hashi, of Charles Grinling Walk, Woolwich, who they paid to look after her father after he suffered a stroke.


She is also the £500 per-month paid carer of her sister, who has Down’s syndrome.


“This is public money,” said Bromley magistrate David Stitt. “She knows how to fill a form in to claim for her sister.”


Hashi, who was due to start receiving Universal Credit benefit at the end of the month, was also ordered to pay £5,000 compensation to the council when she is released from prison.


“You have pleaded guilty to seven counts and these offences were committed over several years from 2014 to 2018 while your father was outside the country,” the magistrate told her.


“This has crossed the custody threshold.”


Hashi pleaded guilty to six counts of fraud by false representation, namely providing false information on care time sheets between March 1, 2014 and August 28, 2017.


She also pleaded guilty to one count of dishonestly failing to disclose information between May 15 and August 11, 2018, namely that she had not provided personal care to her father.


Prosecutor Mr Michael Haggar told the court: “The defendant was employed to provide care to her father and payments were made by the Royal Borough of Greenwich.


“She did not provide care when her father was out of the country for periods of time and made false claims on her time sheets that she was looking after her father when she wasn’t.”


The council’s loss was £9,712.


The first-time offender was questioned by the council on February 17, last year. “She believed she did not act dishonestly.


“This is fraudulent activity over a sustained period of time, four years,” added the prosecutor.


Hashi’s lawyer Mr Shupai Malianga said: “There has been a lot of confusion, but she puts her hands up.


“She pleads guilty because she has benefitted from something she should not have benefitted from.


“This is not someone who has calculatingly taken this chance and regarded her father as her employer.”


Magistrate Mr Stitt added: “At the end of the day it is her that’s taken the money and benefitted from it and has to repay the local authority.


“Where is the money? Did she put it in a savings account.”


The court heard the excess payments were spent on day-to-day living expenses and Hashi has no savings to pay compensation.

Friday, 19 February 2021

Hell Of A Fine For Porsche Drink Driver

A Porsche-driving digital economy investment expert has been hit with a huge £32,000-plus fine after being caught behind the wheel while over the drinks limit.

Jan Helle, 45, a partner with ArmaPartners, based at The Shard, received the penalty after his income was calculated.

He appeared at Wimbledon Magistrates' Court where he pleaded guilty to driving the black three-litre car in Dell Walk, New Malden, south-west London on December 3, last year with excess alcohol in his breath.

He had 40 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath.

The legal limit is 35.

Helle, who lives in a £3.7m house in Coombe Hill Road, Kingston-upon-Thames was formerly employed by industry giants Morgan Stanley, having graduated from the London School of Economics.

He also has a Masters degree in International Management.

Helle was fined £32,967, with £85 costs and a £190 victim surcharge.

He was also disqualified from driving for twelve months.

Thursday, 18 February 2021

Actress Turned Movie Producer Cleared Of Hitting Boyfriend

Not Guilty: Randall
An actress turned film producer, who has worked with some of Hollywood’s biggest stars, will not stand trial for attacking her boyfriend, currently on the run from police.

Nice-born Adriana Randall, 34, was accused of drunkenly “swinging punches” at 37 year-old Jean Francois Mondin at his £1.3m apartment.


She always denied the allegation, insisting she acted in self-defence, and at Wimbledon Magistrates’ Court - on the day of the trial - it was announced the Crown Prosecution Service had “discontinued” the case. 


Randall was arrested and charged with assaulting Mondin - heir to luxury beauty and skincare brand Guinot - at his apartment overlooking Battersea Park on December 17, last year.


During an earlier hearing prosecutor Norleen Iba told the court officers were called to the apartment in Cascade Court, Sopwith Way.


“The incident was at the home address of the complainant and the defendant was drunk and there had been an argument.


“The complainant went into the kitchen and she followed and started swinging punches and slaps, cutting the cheek and eyebrow of Mr. Mondin.”


Randall, now living at a £2.7m flat in West Halkin Street, Belgravia claims her ex-boyfriend is mentally-ill and suffering Post Traumatic Stress Disorder as well as abusing drugs.


In a separate prosecution Paris-born Mondin - son of Guinot founder Jean-Daniel Mondin, 73, - was charged with drug offences, but jumped bail last November and is still wanted.


He was charged with possessing Class C tranquilliser Xanax and cocaine at his home on October 27, but failed to attend Wimbledon Magistrates Court on November 26 and a warrant was issued for his arrest.

Happier Times: Randall & Mondin


Guinot boasts it is the ’No.1 beauty salon in France’ and has opened a parlour in Ascot to kick-start a chain of luxury franchises in the UK.


Actress Randall - whose family live in Monaco - appeared in 2015’s ‘Experimenter’ alongside Hollywood stars Winona Ryder and Peter Sarsgaard; ‘The Price of Desire’ a biography starring Orla Brady and 2016’s ‘The Call Up’ a Sci-Fi thriller.


In 2016 she was a producer on ‘Triple 9’ an action crime thriller starring Kate Winslet; Chiwetel Ejiofor; Casey Affleck and Woody Harrelson.


As a producer she made 2017’s ’Tulip Fever’ starring Judi Dench, Christoph Waltz and Tom Hollander.


She is the executive producer of 2015’s mystery thriller ’Strangerland’, starring Nicole Kidman, Joseph Fiennes and Hugo Weaving.


Randall debuted as a producer on 2014’s ‘Wish I Was Here’, a comedy drama, starring Zach Braff and Kate Hudson.

Wednesday, 17 February 2021

Mark On Her License: Lady Clementine Caught Speeding Again

The wife of Liberal Democrat peer Lord Marks narrowly avoided a driving ban today as a magistrate told her: “You have a flagrant disregard for obeying speed limits.”

Lady Clementine Medina Marks, 53, like her husband, a qualified barrister now has three speeding convictions and 11 penalty points on her license - one point short of an automatic six-month ban. 


The mother-of-five was today fined a total of £1,250 for two speeding offences in her black three-litre diesel Mercedes and received a total of eight penalty points.


“Having looked at all the circumstances the bench are minded not to disqualify today and will be putting points on the defendant’s license,” announced the magistrate Vanessa Weguelin.


“We have taken into account your guilty plea to both of these matters.


“You have a flagrant disregard for obeying speed limits and that’s totally unacceptable and we take a very serious view of it.


“You need to be extremely careful about your driving, red lights, speeding, especially in Central London, where there are many 20mph zones.


“We take this very, very seriously.”


Lady Marks must also pay £100 costs and a £125 victim surcharge. “Your lawyer said you have substantial savings.” 


She has two addresses on the court record, a £3.5m apartment in Sloane Street, Belgravia, plus a £4.3m flat in Queens Gate Gardens, South Kensington.


The couple also own an £8m eighteenth century mansion in Binfield Heath, near Henley-on-Thames and five years ago were involved in a planning battle with South Oxfordshire District Council to build another huge property on their estate.


“Don’t tell me she hasn’t got any money. She lives in Queens Gate Gardens and she’s got a house in Oxfordshire,” Ms Weguelin told her lawyer. 


Regarding her income Lady Marks had told the court via her lawyer, Julian Hunt: “We spend everything we have,” admitting the couple have “several thousands” in savings.


Lady Marks, who appeared in court wearing black trousers and a burgundy cardigan caught speeding at 84mph in a 60mph zone, forty-two minutes after midnight in the early hours of June 18, 2019 on the M4 motorway near Heston Services, Brentford.


She was also caught speeding at 58mph in a 50mph zone on November 18, 2019 along the southbound carriageway of the A34 in Wytham, Oxfordshire.


Asking not to impose a lengthy ban Mr. Hunt told the magistrates: “This married lady lives in rural Oxfordshire with her husband and she has five children and there is little public transport.”


He asked for a short ban, submitting anything longer would effect her ability to run her busy household and visit her father, 90, who lives near Athens.


The court heard her youngest child, aged fifteen, attends boarding school and the rest of her children, aged 24, 22, 21,19 are in full-time education with the only one who can drive, a daughter, away at medical school.


“These matters have been adjourned for some time and this lady’s had this hanging over her mind for over a year now,” added the lawyer.


“Her husband is a lawyer himself and he has not been well. In 2019 he had a pulmonary embolism and was in hospital for a week.


“She does everything basically in running the family house.


“Her father lives near Athens and she visits him regularly. There is very little public transport out there and as he needs a UK license to drive out there and manage his carers.”


Her father recently suffered heart failure and needed a hip replacement after falling and suffering a fracture.


“This a very isolated family in Oxfordshire and there are no staff in the house,” added Mr. Hunt. “This is a family that have high expenses at the moment and are managing, just.”


The magistrate added: “It’s important you contact your insurance company to inform them you now have eleven points.”


Lady Marks’ husband, Jonathan Clive Marks, 68, Baron Marks of Henley-on-Thames is a former barrister and life peer in the House of Lords.


The Harrow and Oxford-educated QC was a committee man with the Liberal Democrats, having failed to win a seat as an MP and MEP.


He was Chair of the Liberal Democrat Lawyers Association from 2001 to 2007 and following his peerage became the party’s Shadow Justice Secretary.


Lady Clementine - known socially as Medina Marks - holds a company directorships with Westness 1000 Ltd. and Garsington Opera Enterprises.

Tuesday, 16 February 2021

Audacious Online Pervert Finally Caged

A pervert who flouted his suspended sentence and continued downloading sick child pornography has been caged.

Martin Sparks, 47, of Maldon Walk, Redbridge, obtained over two hundred images despite dodging immediate imprisonment for an earlier identical offence.

At Snaresbrook Crown Court he received two years and four months’ imprisonment. 

He was also handed an indefinite Sexual Harm Prevention Order (SHPO) and was placed on the sex offenders register indefinitely.

He pleaded guilty to five counts of breaching the SHPO, making indecent images of children (category A) and making indecent images of children (category B).

On Thursday, June 18, last year officers from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command executed a search warrant at Sparks’ home address.

He was still subject to a two-year suspended prison sentence and a SHPO, following a conviction in June, 2018 for making indecent images of children.

During the search of his address, officers seized a computer tower, which Sparks used to download the illegal images – this related to three of the breaches. 

Officers also found an electronic tablet, which was a breach due to it not being declared to his Public Protection Unit manager.

The remaining breach was for connecting to the home’s router to use the internet when he downloaded the images.

Sparks was taken to an east London police station. When searched in custody, two USB digital storage devices were found in his shoes.

A total of 233 category A (the most serious) child abuse videos and 17 category B images were found on the USBs.

Detective Constable James Cavenham said: “Sparks is now behind bars after committing the same hideous offence once again. 

The evidence we gathered against him meant he had no option but to plead guilty.

"Although this is not a contact offence, every single image contains a child who is a victim of an appalling crime and when people like Sparks seek these images out, they continue to generate a market for this type of abuse.

The Met will continue to relentlessly pursue and bring to justice those who download online images of child sexual abuse.”

Monday, 15 February 2021

Police Guns Raid

Two guns and thirty-four bullets have been seized following a firearms search warrant lead by the Metropolitan Police's Specialist Crime Command.

Detective Inspector Adam Seton said: “The Coronavirus pandemic has reduced violent crime significantly, but it has not stopped our tenacious officers from going out and protecting the public from those who seek to cause harm.

We will continue to pursue anyone involved in firearms offences. 

No global pandemic will stop Met officers from seizing weapons, guns and protecting Londoners.”

Shortly before 3.50pm on Tuesday, January 26 officers from the Specialist Crime Command executed a firearms search warrant at an address in Norbury Avenue, Norbury, south London.

At the premises two firearms and bullets were recovered.

A 51-year-old man was arrested at the scene for possession of firearms and taken into police custody.

Sunday, 14 February 2021

Ex-School Caretaker Gets 11 Years For New Charges

A disgraced former school caretaker, already locked-up for sex offences against under-age girls, has admitted further abuse.

John Lyon, 47, confessed to abusing four girls, aged between five and twelve years-old in north London between 1993 and 2013.

He received a sentence of eleven years imprisonment.

Lyon is currently also serving a sentence for sexually assaulting two girls between 2012 and 2013.

He pleaded guilty to three new counts of rape; three counts of sexual assault and three counts of indecent assault.

The new offences were reported to police in 2018 and 2019.

Detective Constable Keith Kimberley said: “I am in no doubt that this man is a dangerous sexual predator and he poses an ongoing threat to children.

He caused unforgivable trauma to the children he abused and the only appropriate way for him to spend the next years of his life is in prison and away from the general public.

As far as we can be sure of, Lyon offended over a period of two decades and my respect goes out to the victims and their families who were put through so much.”

Saturday, 13 February 2021

A&E Thug Caged For Nurse Attack

A hospital thug, who attacked a female nurse in A&E, has been locked-up.

Prince Isaac Walker, 32, rendered 36 year-old nurse Sarah Tappy unconscious as a result of the assault at Homerton Hospital, east London

He was arrested on January 22 and kept in custody until his appearance at Highbury Corner Magistrates' Court the next day.

Walker pleaded guilty to one count of assaulting an emergency worker and was sentenced to twenty-six weeks imprisonment.

In the early hours of January 21 officers were at the hospital when they were alerted that a nurse had been assaulted in the A&E department.

Officers quickly detained Walker, who was taken to an east London police station and was charged later that day.

The nurse lost consciousness following the assault and required treatment. 

Her injuries were not life threatening.

PC Kyri Soupashis, the investigating officer, said: “This was a needlessly vicious attack on an emergency worker simply doing her job. 

“I hope that the sentence handed down brings the victim a measure of satisfaction and that she is able to recover from what was a very frightening experience.

“There is no justification for assaulting the people who devote their working lives to helping and protecting others, something that Walker will have time to reflect on as he serves his sentence.”