A court has heard how Samuel Field became ‘paranoid’ and accused Martin Glynn, 93, of an “imagined conspiracy”
Abigail Hunt and Olivia Bridge Reporter in Live News Network
19:06, 06 May 2026Updated 19:15, 06 May 2026
A 40-year-old man who tortured an elderly pensioner over a period of 24 hours is facing jail time for his murder.
Samuel Field launched a harrowing attack on his so-called friend in September 2024. Martin Glynn, who was 93 years old when he was assaulted, was punched, kicked, stamped on and strangled in the vicious attack that lasted hours at Field’s Desborough home, Northamptonshire Police said.
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Tragically, Mr Glynn never regained the ability to walk after the horrific assault and passed away three months after on Boxing Day.
A court also heard ‘paranoid’ cannabis user Field made several voice recordings about a conspiracy during the vicious assault, reports the Daily Star.
On Wednesday, police announced that a jury at Northampton Crown Court took less than four hours to find Field guilty of murdering the elderly man after an 11-day trial.
In the prosecution’s opening statement last month, Adrian Langdale KC informed the court how Mr Glynn was fit and healthy enough to undertake a journey of over two hours, utilising multiple buses, to the defendant’s home in Gold Street, from his own home in Northampton, on September 19.
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Mr Langdale had told the jury that Field was “effectively torturing” his friend of nearly 20 years while experiencing paranoia induced by cannabis.
The prosecutor stated that by 4.22pm that afternoon, Mr Glynn was “sprawled helplessly on the living-room floor” and the attacks continued as Field interrogated Mr Glynn about an “imagined conspiracy”.
In recordings made by Field, the court heard him discuss a conspiracy that “everyone is in for him” and accused Mr Glynn of giving a key to his home to an Irish traveller.
Mr Langdale had stated that Field was “effectively torturing and interrogating” as he attempted to coerce Mr Glynn into confessing, only calling an ambulance approximately 28 hours after the assault commenced.
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Field, previously of Gold Street, Desborough, is set to be sentenced on May 29.
Following the verdict, deputy senior investigating officer Detective Sergeant Megan Scotney, from the East Midlands Special Operations Unit, said: “Samuel Field described Mr Glynn as his best friend of almost two decades.
“Only Field knows why he attacked Mr Glynn that day, but I am pleased the jury has seen him for what he truly is – a dangerous, violent man.”
Greater Manchester Police (GMP) announced via social media today, Wednesday, May 6, that they are trying to trace the family of a man named Alan Ross.
Officers said the 78-year-old died on Sedgefield Drive in Bolton on April 30.
The force said there are no suspicious circumstances surrounding his death and urged anybody with information to contact the Police Coroner’s Office in Bolton.
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A spokesperson, via social media, said: “Police are appealing for the public’s help to trace the family of Alan Ross, 78, who died on Sedgefield Drive, Bolton on 30 April.
“There are no suspicious circumstances surrounding his death.
“Anyone with information should contact the Police Coroner’s Office in Bolton on 0161 856 4687.”
Once the police have the details that they need, they will be passed along to the Coroner’s Office to let full cause of death be established.
Bayern Munich players, coaching staff and fans at the Allianz Arena were in disbelief after they were denied a penalty for a handball by Joao Neves in their Champions League semi-final second leg against Paris St-Germain.
Trailing the holders 1-0 on the night and 6-4 on aggregate, the German side’s players surrounded referee Joao Pedro Silva Pinheiro at the half-hour mark when Vitinha rifled a clearance against his own team-mate Neves’ arm inside the box.
But Pinheiro waved away the Bayern protests with the video assistant referee (VAR) also not intervening, leaving social media wondering why a spot-kick was not given.
According to BBC Sport’s Football Issues Correspondent Dale Johnson, it was due to a little-known exemption within the handball law.
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According to the laws of the game, it is not a handball if “hit on the hand/arm by the ball which has been played by a team-mate (unless the ball goes directly into the opponents’ goal or the player scores immediately afterwards, in which case a direct free-kick is awarded to the other team)”.
“It covers when the ball is unexpectedly hit at you by a team-mate, even if your arm is away from your body, the law says you should not give away a penalty,” said Johnson.
“When Vitinha blasts the ball clear, could Joao Neves think the ball would be hit straight at him?
“Of course, this could be overridden by deliberate handball, but in the context of this situation, a penalty would not be expected to be awarded.”
In a statement tonight, Lisburn North Cllrs Gary Hynds and Pat Catney said: “Councillor Catney and I were informed after our committee meeting this evening, and we immediately went to Hillview Avenue together to speak with police and local residents.”
“Hillview Avenue is a great area with many good people and families living within it, including elderly residents and personal friends of mine.
“I want to thank the PSNI and council staff for acting quickly and professionally in what is a very difficult situation. I hope the situation is resolved as soon as possible and that residents can return safely to their homes.”
In an update issued on Wednesday evening, the UKHSA said “the risk to general public remains very low”
Tom Burnett Content Editor
20:53, 06 May 2026Updated 20:54, 06 May 2026
Two people who returned independently to the UK from the cruise ship MV Hondius that was hit by a hantavirus outbreak have been told to self-isolate, the UK Health Security Agency has said.
In an update issued on Wednesday evening, the UKHSA said “the risk to general public remains very low”, adding that neither of the two individuals who have been asked to self-isolate had reported symptoms.
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The organisation said: “They are receiving advice and support from UKHSA and have been advised to self-isolate.
“UKHSA are supporting a small number of individuals identified as close contacts of those on the boat. They are being offered support and are also self-isolating. None are reporting any symptoms. The risk to the general public remains very low.”
The statement continued: “UKHSA is working closely with the FCDO, the Home Office, and Border Force to trace further individuals who may have been on the same flight as a confirmed case, in order to carry out public health risk assessments and ensure appropriate precautionary measures are in place.”
Dr Meera Chand, deputy director for epidemic and emerging infections at UKHSA, said: “Our thoughts are with all those affected by the hantavirus outbreak onboard the MV Hondius.
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“It’s important to reassure people that the risk to the general public remains very low.
“We are standing up arrangements to support, isolate and monitor British nationals from the ship on their return to the UK and we are contact tracing anyone who may have been in contact with the ship or the hantavirus cases to limit the risk of onward transmission.
“UKHSA will continue to work closely with government partners to offer all necessary support.”
Hantaviruses are a family of rodent-bourne viruses, with each strain tied to a specific host species.
It’s spread when people come into contact with infected droppings, saliva, urine or nesting materials, but is extremely rare, and rarely passed from person to person.
The incubation period for this illness is generally two to four weeks, according to the government, but can range from as little as two days to as long as eight weeks.
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Hantavirus is avirus transmitted by infected rodents causing severe respiratory and hemorrhagic diseases in humans. (Credits: Getty Images)
What are the symptoms?
Early symptoms of hantavirus are similar to the flu, and include headaches, dizziness, chills as well as abdominal problems like diarrhoea, vomiting and nausea.
If it progresses into Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome, patients can experience headaches, dizziness, chills and abdominal problems like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea.
If you develop Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome, initial symptoms will include intense headaches, back and abdominal pain, fever or chills, nausea, and blurred vision.
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If the disease progresses, later symptoms include low blood pressure, acute shock (lack of blood flow), internal bleeding, and acute kidney failure, according to the CDC.
Hantavirus can be fatal, so it’s important to keep an eye on symptoms if you believe yo
A retired police officer said the case was “particularly striking” and opportunities to take action were overlooked
A mum feels her son “could still be here” if more had been done to help him after he was stabbed. Following a review into his death four years after the incident, the mum said she was left “dumbfounded” and “shocked” he had “received so little support”.
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The man, referred to under the pseudonym Joe in an Oldham Safeguarding Adults Board report, was found dead in a wooded area of Oldham in September 2024. He was 27 years old when he died.
Following his death, the board commissioned a review led by David Mellor, a retired police officer which was published in April 2026. The purpose of the review is to look at whether any lessons needed to be learned.
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Mr Mellor said the case was “particularly striking” due to “the rapid disengagement by services from working with Joe” in the months before he died. He also said “abuse in the form of suspected cuckooing and financial abuse and self-neglect may have contributed to [Joe’s] death”.
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Cuckooing is where vulnerable people are exploited by a criminal gang or individuals to use the property for criminal purposes such as drug-dealing, hiding weapons and other criminal activities
In response, Dr Henri Giller, the independent chair of Oldham Safeguarding Adults Board, said all partner agencies “have committed to act in response” and the board will be “closely monitoring progress to ensure that the learning from Joe’s circumstances leads to meaningful and lasting change across Oldham’s safeguarding system to reduce the risk of similar incidents occurring in the future.”
Having lived with his family until his early 20s, the review said Joe “survived a serious stabbing incident which took place when males armed with knives entered the family home in June 2020”. Joe’s mum said he “never got over it” and “was reluctant to discuss the incident because she felt that he did not wish to relive it”.
According to Joe’s aunt, Joe had been trying to protect his mum and his two younger siblings. Described by his family as a “lovely lad” who was “pleasant, caring, and helpful”, the stabbing incident left him “tortured” and “started taking drugs to blot things out”.
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The mum said she “eventually stepped away from supporting her son as it became ‘pointless’ because he would spend any money she gave him on alcohol and drugs and would pawn any phone she bought him”.
Over time, she said her son’s behaviour changed and he became “such an angry person” and on one occasion, he barricaded himself in his flat. The mum said an arrest in July 2024 was the “nail in his coffin” as bail conditions isolated him from family support, adding this isolation “tipped him over the edge”.
The family criticised local services over their response to their son. The review said his aunt “was very upset to read of the difficulties Joe experienced in the last few months of his life when several agencies closed his case and she felt that opportunities to make safeguarding referrals were missed”
His mum also said she “felt angry because she felt that if Joe had received the support he needed “he could still be here”.
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The review said Joe had moved out of the family home following the stabbing incident “after a series of reported familial domestic abuse incidents in which he was perceived to be the perpetrator”. When receiving support, he was described as “angry and aggressive” and his GP planned to refer him for an autism spectrum assessment and in 2023 he was imprisoned for common assault and obstructing police.
In 2024, staff at the Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust believed Joe “may be experiencing a first episode of psychosis” but the case was later closed. Before he died, the review said Joe was de-registered by his GP and attended the Royal Oldham Hospital “in considerable distress on several occasions”.
Mr Mellow said: “There were indications that he was being financially exploited but opportunities to make safeguarding referrals were overlooked. With hindsight, the risks to Joe appeared to be escalating but this was not recognised by the various agencies with which he came into contact in the months before he died.”
An inquest will be held to look into Joe’s death. A total of 16 recommendations have been made to local service providers, the Sanctuary Trust, and the Probation Service while good practice was found in six areas.
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Dr Henri Giller, the Independent Chair of Oldham Safeguarding Adults Board, said: “On behalf of Oldham Safeguarding Adults Board, I would like to extend our sincere condolences to Joe’s family and friends. We are profoundly sorry for their loss and are grateful to Joe’s mother and aunt for their valuable time and insight and the courage they showed in contributing to this review.
“This review was undertaken to identify learning that can help prevent similar tragedies in the future. The review highlights examples of committed and compassionate practice by individual professionals, but it also identifies significant shortcomings in how risk was recognised, how services responded to non engagement, and how effectively agencies coordinated their safeguarding responses.
“The review reinforces the need for more trauma informed practice, stronger professional curiosity and challenge and strengthening of responses to adults experiencing homelessness, exploitation, and self neglect.
“The Board are taking the findings of the review seriously and have accepted all its recommendations in full. Our priority is to learn from this case.”
More than five years after receiving final court approval, a massive $2.67 billion antitrust class-action settlement involving Blue Cross Blue Shield is finally entering its payout phase.
Eligible claimants could begin seeing money deposited into their bank accounts within days, as the distribution process is scheduled to begin in May, according to the settlement website.
The settlement comes from a long-running lawsuit that accused Blue Cross Blue Shield and its affiliated insurers of violating antitrust laws by limiting competition in the health insurance market. Plaintiffs argued that the Blue Cross Blue Shield system was structured to reduce overlap among its regional plans, thereby restricting competition in certain parts of the U.S. As a result, the lawsuit claimed it was harder for rival insurance companies to enter those markets. This lack of competition may have reduced consumer choice and contributed to higher healthcare costs for customers in some regions, according to the allegations.
Blue Cross Blue Shield has denied any wrongdoing in the case but agreed to settle the lawsuit, with the final agreement approved in October 2020. To receive payment, claimants were required to file before the deadline, which closed in November 2021.
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Eligible participants are expected to receive payments that vary widely based on individual circumstances. Earlier estimates suggested the average payout will fall between $300 and $333 per valid claim, though final amounts will vary.
Blue Cross Blue Shield customers who filed claims in the $2.67 billion antitrust settlement are set to receive a payment (Getty/iStock)
The total settlement fund is reduced to roughly $1.9 billion after legal fees and administrative costs are deducted. From that remaining pool, payments will be calculated based on factors such as how long a claimant was enrolled in a Blue Cross Blue Shield plan and the amount of insurance premiums they paid between 2008 and 2020.
By the end of the filing period, approximately 6 million claims had been submitted nationwide. Those claims will determine how the settlement funds are distributed, with payout amounts expected to vary depending on factors such as the type of coverage, how long someone was enrolled and the amount of premiums paid during the eligible period.
“This settlement ends a long-running legal challenge to the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association license agreements and related rules,” a company spokesperson said in a 2024 statement upon reaching the agreement. “We deny the allegations made in the lawsuit. However, to reach a settlement and put years of litigation behind us, we have agreed to make some operational changes and a monetary payment to the provider class involved in the case.”
“Our members and health care provider partners can rest assured that Blue Cross and Blue Shield companies continue to be strong and ready to deliver exceptional services. We remain committed to providing access to affordable, high-quality care and improving the health of the communities we serve, just as we have for 90 years,” the statement concluded.
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The Independent has contacted Blue Cross Blue Shield for comment.
Aurelien Tchouameni is on Manchester United’s radar ahead of the summer, and the French midfielder has reportedly been embroiled in a spat at his current club Real Madrid
Manchester United transfer target Aurelien Tchouameni has reportedly had a training ground ‘fight’ with Real Madrid team-mate Ernesto Valverde. Tchouameni was previously linked with a move to United before he opted to sign for Real in 2022.
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Ahead of this summer, United’s interest is still there and the Reds are understood to view him as one of nine midfield targets they are considering. While United consider their options in the transfer market, reports from Spain have claimed Tchouameni and Valverde came to blows in a training ground incident.
Spanish outlet Marca has claimed Ernesto Valverde and Tchouameni had a physical exchange during a heated training session. It claims they pushed each other on the pitch and carried on their intense dispute in the changing room.
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It was reportedly triggered by a foul during a training session, which led to both players coming together in an explosive row. Both players are said to have raged at each other in front of stunned team-mates.
With Real out of the Champions League and the Copa del Rey, and seemingly out of the La Liga title race, tensions in the Spanish capital are as high as they can be.
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Carreras, who left United in 2024, responded this week to claims he was slapped by Rudiger during a training session. He did go on to insist the drama was over, with other reports stating Rudiger apologised.
Mbappe has also been at the heart of drama, having allegedly raged at one of Real Madrid head coach Alvaro Arbeloa’s staff members. The World Cup winner was then snapped on a luxury yacht with his girlfriend, in the week leading up to Real Madrid’s El Classico clash with Barcelona.
These incidents emphasises the high pressured, tense environment currently absorbing the club. In and amongst the chaos, Tchouameni has been linked with a summer move to Old Trafford.
With United looking to sign a replacement for the outgoing Casemiro, the ex-Monaco midfielder could yet head for the red side of Manchester. United are also understood to be willing to part with Manuel Ugarte as they look to raise funds.
While Kobbie Mainoo has signed a new deal at the club, as many as three midfielders have been tipped to arrive this summer. Nottingham Forest’s Elliot Anderson, Adam Wharton of Crystal Palace and Newcastle United ace Sandro Tonali are three others who are admired.
United booked their place in next season’s Champions League by overcoming Liverpool 3-2 at Old Trafford. One more victory for Michael Carrick’s side will also see the club finish third in the Premier League.
Sky Sports, HBO Max, Netflix and Disney+ with Ultimate TV package
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Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.
Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.
A rat was filmed inside the Greggs on Ferguslie Walk in Paisley earlier this week.
A Greggs store was forced to close temporarily this week after a rat was caught on video inside the bakery. A passing member of the public spotted the rodent inside Greggs on Ferguslie Walk in Paisley after it had closed earlier this week.
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The woman filmed the rat during its escapades as it rummaged through a bin cage and was spotted combing through the bakery‘s supplies. She captured the pest as it scurried along the shop floor from the street outside the store, filming through the window.
In the video, which was shared to Facebook, a person behind the camera can be heard retching, reports Glasgow Live. Another person is heard to say: “Oh my god, look at that, they must be in that shop.”
Greggs closed the Paisley branch after the “disgusting” video circulated online but it has since reopened.
A spokesperson for Greggs said: “We take all matters of food hygiene extremely seriously and have strict procedures in place across all of our shops.
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“Our shop on Ferguslie Walk in Paisley was temporarily closed for a short period earlier this week, but has now reopened.”
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President Donald Trump got the first major political scalps of his second term on Tuesday when five state legislators in Indiana who resisted his push to redraw the state’s congressional map lost their primaries.
It’s the latest example of Trump exacting revenge on Republicans whom he sees as crossing him. He’s already pushed Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) out of Washington and into retirement. Many of the Republicans who voted to impeach or convict him either lost their primaries or preemptively retired to save the embarrassment.
And May represents the perfect opportunity to make two Republicans who criticized Trump in the past pay.
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President Donald Trump has endorsed a primary challenger against Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) after Cassidy voted to convict Trump in 2021. (Getty)
The first comes in Louisiana. Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) always faced an uphill battle after he voted to convict Trump for the president’s actions on January 6. But Cassidy had just been re-elected in 2020, meaning he was on borrowed time.
Now the bill comes due. Trump made Cassidy, a gastroentrologist, bend the knee when he nominated Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist who had spent years promoting lies about public health, to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. Cassidy relented and voted to confirm Kennedy, spending much of his time since trying to avoid questions about Kennedy.
That did not work. Instead, Trump endorsed Rep. Julia Letlow (R-La.) in the Louisiana primary. In addition, Cassidy faces former Rep. John Fleming in the primary.
To boot, Louisiana also changed its law. Previously, Louisiana had an open “jungle primary,” wherein the top two vote-getters advanced into a runoff regardless of party affiliation.
President Donald Trump has endorsed Rep. Julia Letlow (R-LA) in the U.S. Senate primary against Cassidy. (Getty)
On May 16, each party has a primary and then the top two vote earners advance to a June 27 runoff if neither candidate wins a majority.
This puts Cassidy at a structural disadvantage. A former Democrat, he can no longer rely on crossover voters who might admire him for standing up to Trump or his work with Joe Biden on the bipartisan infrastructure bill. Even then, he probably lost plenty of goodwill by saddling up to Trump as much as he has.
The second state where Trump seems more than get his pound of flesh comes in Louisiana’s neighbor Texas. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) is not as Trump-critical as Cassidy.
A University of Houston Hobby School of Public Affairs poll showed that Paxton narrowly beats Cornyn 48 percent to 45 percent with only seven percent of respondents saying they are unsure. That’s a stunning number for a four-term incumbent senator, former attorney general and former Texas Supreme Court justice like Cornyn. But it’s a sign of where the party has moved in Texas.
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Moreover, Trump has withheld his endorsement of Cornyn, despite the fact Trump knows that Paxton opens the door for James Talarico, the telegenic baby-faced Bible-quoting seminarian Democrats chose as their nominee, winning the seat in the Lone Star State. Trump’s brain might know Cornyn is the right choice. But his heart is with Paxton.
Lastly, there’s Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky. Massie has been the biggest thorn in Trump’s side in the lower chamber. He led the charge to release files related to Jeffrey Epstein, voted against the One Big, Beautiful Bill last summer and opposed making Mike Johnson speaker. Trump has endorsed former Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein in the race.
Despite the baggage of his primary opponent, Trump has refused to endorse Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas). (Getty)
But so far, it looks like Massie pull it off. Plenty of voters in the district like the fact he is idiosyncratic like his fellow Kentuckian Sen. Rand Paul.
And cutting loose Republicans and cleavng them could have unintended consequences.
Trump excommunicating Tillis to be an own-goal since former Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper leads Trump-endorsed former Republican National Committee chairman Michael Whatley. And Tillis helped push out Kristi Noem as Homeland Security Secretary and forced the Department of Justice to–at least temporarily–back off of its probe into Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
Trump has shown a stunning level of party discipline. And he’s a transformational figure in the Republican Party. But doing so will have consequences that will reverberate long after he leaves.
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