Bare-knuckle boxer Callum Kerr was handcuffed by police on board the Jet2 flight, but died a short time after.
20:46, 25 Jun 2026Updated 21:44, 25 Jun 2026
An airline has released a statement after a boxer died after he was restrained by passengers on board a chaotic flight.
Father-of-three Callum Kerr and his girlfriend had boarded the Jet2 flight from Larnaca in Cyprus to Manchester, England on June 21.
Witnesses told how he became ‘disruptive’ during the flight after reportedly drinking alcohol beforehand.
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Police said officers were called to Manchester Airport at 2.25am on Monday, June 22, after reports of a man ‘behaving aggressively towards passengers and crew’.
It was reported he had been restrained by others passengers before police boarded the aircraft.
Police boarded the flight to find Mr Kerr ‘being restrained by passengers and aircrew at the rear of the plane’, reports the M.E.N..
The force said officers used handcuffs to detain him, but ‘quickly identified he was unresponsive, through the provision of first aid’.
CPR was commenced and he was taken to hospital, where he died on Tuesday afternoon (June 23).
Mr Kerr, from Warrington, was 35 and a father-of-three.
In an update issued on Thursday, Greater Manchester Police said it had made a mandatory referral to police watchdog the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC).
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In a statement, the force said two reports of an assault – on a passenger and a member of cabin crew – were made.
Jet2 has now issued a new statement following the incident.
A spokesperson said: “We are aware that a customer has sadly passed away, having been taken to hospital earlier this week.
“We would like to offer our sincere condolences to the customer’s friends and family. As investigations are ongoing, it would be inappropriate for us to make any further comment at this time.”
Mr Kerr has now been formally identified. In a statement issued through police, his family said: “Callum was a family man, father to three beautiful young children, a lover of sport and with a heart of gold.”
GMP said the IOPC was ‘investigating the actions of our officers’, while detectives from its Major Incident Team were investigating the circumstances on the flight.
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Mr Kerr was not under arrest. No arrests have been made.
The police watchdog said its investigation would ‘look at the actions and decision-making of the officers involved to understand the events surrounding the man’s death’.
The Wimbledon 2026 draw has taken place and Serena Williams has discovered who her first round opponent will be
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Wimbledon is fast approaching and the return of tennis legend Serena Williams awaits for eager tennis fans with time to still bag a ticket or two to watch her play on the iconic grass courts with Seat Unique.
It comes as Williams received a surprise wildcard entry ahead of her return to the Grand Slam circuit after four years away from the sport she has helped shaped for decades. The seven-time women’s singles winner at SW19 has not played since she lost to France’s Harmony Tan four years ago.
The former Wimbledon champion, 44, has been given a wildcard after not playing competitively since the 2022 US Open. Her opponent Maya Joint, 20, went out in round one on her main-draw debut last year and has won one of her last 14 matches.
Elsewhere, British number one Emma Raducanu, seeded 30th, is set to face Croatia’s Antonia Ruzic but is a fitness doubt after missing practice with a shin injury. She could meet top seed Aryna Sabalenka in round three.
In the men’s draw, Jack Draper plays sixth seed Taylor Fritz. Novak Djokovic starts his bid for a record 25th Grand Slam title against Wu Yibing, while defending champion Jannik Sinner opens against Miomir Kecmanovic. Carlos Alcaraz misses out with a wrist injury. Women’s champion Iga Swiatek begins her defence against Taylor Townsend.
Wimbledon 2026 is just around the corner and Seat Unique has tickets on sale now with VIP access.
When is Serena Williams playing?
Serena Williams is scheduled to play on day two of Wimbledon and will launch her long-awaited Wimbledon singles return against Australia’s world number 53 Maya Joint in the first round.
The seven-time champion at the All England Club has been handed a wildcard for her comeback at 44, having not played a competitive match since the 2022 US Open.
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Joint, 20, exited in the opening round on her main-draw debut at Wimbledon last year and has won just one of her last 14 matches.
How to get tickets to Wimbledon Day Two?
Tickets are available on both Centre Court and Court No.1 on day two with the chance to see Williams in action thanks to Seat Unique. Tickets start from £2,435 and are given access to the debenture facilities at SW19 however you will still need to pay for food and drink on the day.
The cheapest available tickets are the VIP Debenture on Court No.1 available for £2,435 while the Centre Court tickets are priced at £3,029. Fans will experience unparalleled views of either court as well as access to the Debenture facilities on the day.
Alternatively, fans can keep checking Wimbledon’s official ticketing page for other ticketing options too. It currently states the Wimbledon Public Ballot for The Championships 2026 is closed, but additional tickets can sometimes appear later if returns are processed or more inventory is released.
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Another alternative is the Keith Prowse hospitality site which also offers Wimbledon hospitality packages, but states ‘Wimbledon 2026 hospitality is already now 90% sold out’. There is the option of going via The Queue as well which is due to open on Sunday (June 28) but ticket availability is extremely limited and even more limited if we wish to get tickets for Centre Court and Court No.1.
There is of course the option that Wimbledon’s coverage is available to watch live on BBC across BBC One, BBC Two and iPlayer as well. Wimbledon 2025 delivered plenty of drama, with Jannik Sinner lifting the men’s singles trophy after beating Carlos Alcaraz in four sets.
One Trustpilot review of Seat Unique gave a five-star rating, saying: “Booking Wimbledon debentures was pretty seamless. They contacted me a week before to transfer the tickets into the MyWimbledon account, they appeared on the Wimbledon App, all with no problems.”
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However, another reviewer wrote: “Booking system is fine but customer service is patronising and slow. Not the greatest VIP experience”
While another five-star review praised the customer service over their Wimbledon ticket purchase. It said: “This is a follow up to an initially frustrating experience in a significant purchase for Wimbledon tickets for July, 2023.
“After sharing my frustration, I immediately received a response from Seat Unique both via email and telephone with the details I was requesting as well as an easy way to contact a designated person to answer any other outstanding questions.
“I do not have the tickets in hand due to the nature of the event, but we are excitedly awaiting, and Seat Unique did a great job of responding to allay my concerns. Appreciate the quality customer service.”
However, back home, her pets have gone awol with a concerned Katie suggesting they may have been ‘stolen’.
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This comes days after Lee claimed one of her eight cats had died, which has not been confirmed by the reality star herself.
Two of Katie’s sphinx cats, Eilleen and Doris, disappeared earlier today, with one returning home of its own accord while the latter remains missing.
Sphinx cat Doris has gone missing or been ‘stolen’ (Picture: Katie Price/Instagram)
She posted a plea for anyone in the area to be on the lookout and return Doris to Arun Vets in Storrington if she is found.
‘I came to Dubai Wednesday, and my cats were home Tuesday night,’ she wrote on an Instagram Story. ‘I live in a private area and my cats don’t just disappear.
‘Whoever has them return them. They are my babies.’
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Several hours later, Eilleen ‘walked through the door’, with a video shared of her drinking water as the UK heatwave continues.
In the last update, Doris was apparently still missing, although this was several hours ago.
Eilleen had also gone missing but has since returned (Picture: Katie Price/Instagram)
She’s pleaded for them to be returned (Picture: Katie Price/Instagram)
Katie then returned to her usual posting, promoting CBD oil and sharing a snap of her and Lee’s hands, calling him ‘the best husband’.
‘Completes me in every f**ked up way,’ she wrote. ‘Met my perfect match and nothing will defy us!’
She then posted a picture of ‘mini me’ daughter Princess, who was sporting long blonde curls. Still no update on Doris’ whereabouts.
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Katie Price’s pet tragedies
November 2017
One of her horses was killed on the A24 after it broke loose from its field.
February 2018
Katie’s dog Queenie was hit by a car near her home. She blamed a delivery driver for leaving the gate open.
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November 2018
Katie claimed the family’s pet chameleon, called Marvin, died from a broken heart after her children, Junior and Princess, moved in with her ex-husband, Peter Andre.
February 2020
Her Alsatian Sparkle died after escaping and being hit by a car.
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July 2020
Princess’ puppy Rolo suffocated when getting caught up in the mechanism of an electric-powered chair.
November 2022
Her Pomeranian, Sharon, was hit by a car and killed.
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June 2023
Her dog Blade was run over on the same stretch as road as Sharon.
August 2025
Doris gave birth to a premature kitten, which did not survive.
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Katie’s history with pets is an incredibly tragic one, with at least eight animals known to have died in her care.
Peta even weighed in, going so far as to offer £5,000 in exchange for signing a ‘legally binding agreement promising never to acquire another animal’.
In response to the open letter, Katie’s rep told the MailOnline: ‘Kate has asked PETA many times to have a conversation with her directly, but instead they continue to play the narrative out in the media.
Katie is currently with husband Lee Andrews in Dubai (Picture: Katie Price/Instagram)
‘If they want to have a direct conversation with Kate they can get in touch.’
Katie has continued to keep animals, including her four cats, although Lee recently claimed one of the cats had died.
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During a Cameo, he said: ‘She’s got five Sphynxes actually. One has just passed away.
‘Sorry, eight Sphynxes, five dogs. Eight Sphynxes, now seven, one passed away.’
Katie herself has not confirmed the loss of another cat, other than Doris going missing while she’s away.
Metro has reached out to Katie’s team for comment.
I thought growing up in New Zealand would have prepared me to cope with the UK’s heatwave – but this week I learned nothing could have.
I was raised in New Zealand, a sub-tropical island situated in the middle of the Pacific Ocean where the sun blazes for 2,000 hours annually. It’s renowned worldwide for its relaxed summer lifestyle and stunning beaches.
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Two years ago I abandoned it all and relocated to London, and like an idiot I assumed my upbringing would adequately prepare me for the UK’s summer.
This week’s heatwave has delivered a harsh lesson: regardless of how hot and wretched you feel, you can invariably feel hotter and considerably more wretched.
Despite growing up in a nation that most regard as some kind of summer paradise, I have never in my entire life encountered heat like this. The past few days have felt like attempting to live inside an air fryer and I am that tiny crumb that keeps getting fried repeatedly until it’s an unidentifiable husk.
To compound matters, if you need to venture outside for any reason you must squeeze yourself onto a bus where the windows rarely open, in order to get yourself below ground to a train that hasn’t been modernised for nearly a decade, where the most you can hope for is a gust of grimy tunnel air drifting through the carriage when the doors part.
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I had to traverse the city yesterday with a suitcase, and by the time I reached my destination I had perspired what felt like half of my body weight, my shirt was drenched through and I was on the brink of tears. I would have wept had I felt I could afford to lose any more moisture without shrivelling up entirely — and that is a sensation I never once encountered back in New Zealand.
One of the factors that makes heatwaves in the UK so particularly savage is the infrastructure. Not only are homes constructed to retain as much heat as possible, but in London, where towering buildings line both sides of the street, it feels as though the heat becomes trapped between the pavement and the sky, bearing down from every direction.
There is simply no escaping it, and even once the sun has dipped below the horizon, the oppressive warmth remains utterly unbearable.
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There is also a notable shortage of places to cool down. I have never previously lived more than a 15-minute drive from a beach, yet in London the options are limited to either squeezing onto a packed train to the coast alongside a thousand other equally desperate and sweaty people, or heading to one of the lidos.
In recent weeks I have attempted both approaches, and each offers only fleeting respite.
Despite the hellish temperatures, there are certain things I genuinely adore about London when the sunshine arrives. I find it enormously endearing how the entire city collectively abandons its composure and descends upon whatever scrap of grass is available, clad in bikinis and board shorts, making the most of the warmth in the full knowledge that it simply cannot last.
The heat also appears to serve as a great leveller — spirits lift all round, and the otherwise insufferable train commute becomes marginally more bearable when the woman beside you tilts her handheld fan in your direction, or the man across from you offers a sympathetic grin as perspiration trickles down his brow. It also presents a fine opportunity for small talk — something the British have elevated to something of a refined art form, and one I am still endeavouring to master.
Every person I speak to, from the barmaid to the nail technician, has an opinion on the weather or a handy tip for keeping cool.
It is this perspiration-soaked camaraderie that makes the oppressive heat almost worthwhile — though, if I’m being honest, I’d still rather be lounging on a beach somewhere.
The NHS places will allow people to get more affordable dental treatment
A Cambridgeshiredentist is opening up 1,000 new NHS places. In September 2024, MyDentist in St Neots relocated to a bigger location in Tebbutts Road, following a £1.5 million investment.
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Through the relocation, the dentist has been able to double its number of dental surgeries from five to 10 and improved wheelchair and disabled access. In the last two years, more dentists have been employed and more surgeries have been opened. As a result, it is offering 1,000 more NHS places to people.
Charlotte Anthony, practice manager at MyDentist St Neots, said: “I’m so delighted that we have been able to increase our number of surgeries and open up greater NHS availability for the community of St Neots.
“With our recent enhancements and expanded services, we’re well placed to deliver a higher level of dental care and provide an even more exceptional experience to our community. In a climate where accessing NHS dentistry remains a challenge, we’re really pleased to have been able to recruit new dentists and ultimately expand our NHS capacity.”
Octavia Bentley, MyDentist area development manager added: “We know that accessing dental care in this region is difficult, which is why we’ve been working very hard to expand our total number of surgeries so that we can recruit more clinicians and ultimately, increase the amount of NHS dentistry we can deliver to our local community.
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“Since opening the new practice in 2024, our aim has been very clear – to meet the needs of our patients and our team here in St Neots both now and in the future and increasing our NHS capacity is a clear demonstration of this.”
New patients will be accepted as NHS patients dependent on availability. Anyone who is interested can register their interest on the practice website.
More than 30 long-serving colleagues have notched up a jaw-dropping 1,100 years of service between them.
Meet the 30 long-serving colleagues from Asda stores across Northern Ireland who have notched up a jaw-dropping 1,100 years of service between them.
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Their milestone moments were recognised this week at Asda’s annual Big Celebration Event at Belfast’s Stormont Hotel, which this year welcomed 37 colleagues from stores across Northern Ireland.
An impressive 21 colleagues celebrated 25 years, three reached 30 years, seven colleagues clocked up 35, with six standout stars hitting an incredible 40 years with the retailer.
They include Helen Gault, a warehouse colleague, who marked four decades with Asda Ballyclare.
Helen said getting to know colleagues and customers was a highlight: “I’ve loved being part of the team at Asda Ballyclare for the last 40 years. One of the best parts of the job has been working alongside familiar faces, getting to know new colleagues, and having a wee chat with our wonderful customers.
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“Over the years, I’ve seen enormous changes in the way we work, especially with advances in technology. Retirement isn’t something I’ve thought about too much yet – I’m happy doing what I do and enjoying every day.”
Cash office colleague Lesley Clarke works at Asda Newtownards and is also incredibly proud to be celebrating 40 years with the firm: “It’s been a privilege to work alongside so many fantastic colleagues and serve our customers over the years. I’d like to thank Asda for this recognition and for being such an important part of my journey.”
Michael McFadden, Senior Director for Asda Northern Ireland, added: “It’s fantastic to be able to recognise so many long-serving colleagues across Asda NI. Their commitment over so many years has played a huge part in shaping our stores and supporting our local communities. Events like this are a great opportunity to say thank you and celebrate the contribution they continue to make every day.”
Kimi Antonelli led George Russell in a Mercedes one-two in first practice at the Austrian Grand Prix.
The Italian headed Russell by just 0.04 seconds and Oscar Piastri’s McLaren was just 0.117secs off the pace in third. Team-mate Lando Norris was seventh fastest after missing three-quarters of the session with a hydraulics problem.
Max Verstappen, running a major aerodynamic upgrade on the Red Bull, was fourth, 0.281secs behind Antonelli.
Lewis Hamilton, winner of the last race in Spain and with an engine upgrade in his Ferrari, was 0.665secs off the pace. The seven-time champion did not sound happy with his car in the brief radio transmission that was broadcast.
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Briton Arvid Lindblad was sixth for Racing Bulls, and behind Norris Alpine’s Franco Colapinto was eighth, ahead of Swede Dino Beganovic in Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari.
Briton Oliver Bearman completed the top 10 in the Haas.
The weekend is a potentially important one for Ferrari in terms of proving whether they can continue their challenge to Mercedes.
The team have been careful to say that the engine upgrade introduced in Austria is not enough to close the gap to the Mercedes on power.
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But the question is whether, in tandem with the aerodynamic development introduced in Spain, it is sufficient to allow them to compete with Mercedes on a power-sensitive circuit such as this, on which they have not yet been competitive this season.
McLaren chose not to run a new rear wing that had been scheduled to be used after deciding it needed further preparation work.
The wing is in the style of the ones introduced by Ferrari and Red Bull, meaning it opens into straight-line mode by rotating around an axis, rather than flipping open from the front in the manner of a traditional drag reduction system (DRS) overtaking aid.
Briton Luke Browning had his second consecutive outing for Williams in his role as reserve driver, in Carlos Sainz’s car. He ended up 18th fastest, two places and just over 0.3secs behind regular race driver Alex Albon, which team boss James Vowles described as “a good effort”.
The body of a man has been pulled from a river in Peterborough. Police were called to the River Nene at around 2.10pm yesterday (June 25). Police attended, along with the fire service and the body was recovered a short while later by the fire service.
Cambridgeshire Police confirmed that there are no suspicions circumstances surrounding the man’s death.
A spokesperson for the Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue Service said: We were called at 2.17pm to assist police colleagues with an incident on Oundle Road in Peterborough. Crews from Dogsthorpe, Stanground and Yaxley attended.”
Newsom also said the U.S. government should own a stake in artificial intelligence companies. His proposals, outlined in a Substack post, aligns him with the Democratic Party’s populist left, and he argued that urgent changes are needed to prevent the elite concentration of wealth and power from undermining democracy.
“It’s time for an economic reset for America,” Newsom wrote.
The governor announced his agenda a day after an influential health care union in California pledged to go forward with a ballot measure that would impose a one-time 5% tax on the assets of billionaires living in the state as of Jan. 1, 2026.
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Newsom opposes that measure, as do many of the liberal interest groups that typically favor higher taxes. They fear it would drive billionaires out of California, eroding the state’s tax base over the long term for a one-time influx of cash. A technology mecca, California has more billionaires than any other state — a few hundred, by some estimates.
“You may not be able to pick up and move to Texas or Florida to shelter your income from taxation, but I promise you that billionaires can, and do,” Newsom wrote. “Wealth is movable, and it shops for the state with the lowest taxes. The fight belongs at the federal level, where this broken system was created in the first place.”
A minimum tax on large net worths
Newsom said the solution is a new national tax policy, rather than a state-by-state system. He proposed a minimum tax on anyone with a net worth above $100 million. He also wants to make it illegal for the wealthy to borrow against their stock portfolios to fund their luxury lifestyles tax free.
Newsom said there should be new rules for inheritance taxes, warning that “the transfer of wealth among the ultra-wealthy will lock in a permanent American aristocracy of inherited wealth.” And he wants to raise corporate tax rates to where they were before President Donald Trump’s first-term tax cut.
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The need is especially urgent as artificial intelligence threatens to displace workers and further concentrate wealth, he wrote.
“We need to ensure every American owns a stake in the future being built by AI through a national public equity fund that takes a major stake in the new economy,” he wrote. “Simply, as artificial intelligence reshapes the country, every American should own a piece of the future it builds.”
Revenue generated by his proposals could be used to retrain workers, fund universal child care, make college free and increase funding for health care.
‘Money buys influence’
Newsom, who has drawn attention as one of Trump’s most high-profile political antagonists, is getting an early start on laying out a policy framework for his potential White House bid months before the midterm elections, which have typically marked the informal start of overt presidential campaigning.
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The embrace of a wealth tax by Newsom, a moderate on tax policy despite his liberal reputation, signals a notable shift in the political landscape since Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren struggled to get traction in her 2020 campaign, which she largely centered around a 2% levy wealth tax.
Newsom portrayed the nation’s tax code as a corrupt system built to help an elite few.
“Money buys influence, and influence rewrites the rules,” he wrote. “Those rewritten rules funnel even more wealth to the few. Under this weight, democracy itself starts to buckle.”
“Newry, Mourne and Down District Council has stopped publishing the officer reports that underpin its decisions”
A council has been criticised on transparency concerns that its agendas “shrank by 99%” with missing reports on its website.
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The data problem at Newry, Mourne and Down District Council has surfaced as officers’ reports have “stopped publishing” with ratepayers unable to readily view public documents.
The local authority has said that the issue is a four month technology glitch it is yet to fix, but a concerned social media platform ‘Council Watch’ claims it has been an undemocratic change since the new year.
A spokesperson for Council Watch said: “Newry, Mourne and Down District Council has stopped publishing the officer reports that underpin its decisions.
“The change happened in January. No councillor voted on it. No public notice was given.
“The only clue is in the file sizes. Every agenda file on the council’s website shrank by over 99%. A search of the council minutes has found not a single mention of the change.”
Calculations on word counts by the local online watchdog show claims of a dramatic decline in committee agendas such as planning (Dec 2025) at over 110k words to under 1k (January 2026).
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Other committees are also claimed to follow a similar downsizing pattern.
The agendas available on the council website usually provide a list of the topics for debate, decision and noting.
These included attached reports from officers detailing the issues at hand, but they have now seemingly been removed.
The Local Democracy Reporting Service checked the agendas on the council website from January this year with the reports not appearing to be available.
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In February the LDRS was told by the council’s democratic services: “For accessibility reasons, after each committee the full agenda meeting pack is removed and replaced with a plain agenda.
“Full meeting packs will remain available on request.”
Agendas from previous years still have reports available on the council website online with the local authority now claiming a system error with its documents.
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A council spokesperson said: “An update was placed on our website to inform users after the issue arose in March 2026: ‘Meeting Agenda – Newry, Mourne and Down District Council we are working to resolve this matter as soon as possible.’
“At present some of the PDF documents generated by our committee management system are not accessible on the website.
“We are working to resolve this, and in the meantime copies of previously held meetings can be provided upon request by contacting the council (democratic.services@nmandd.org/ telephone: 0330 137 4006).”
The spokesperson added:”Newry, Mourne and Down District Council committee and council meetings are held in an open and transparent manner.
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“While the majority of meetings are held in public, there are occasions where certain items are discussed in closed session due to their sensitive or confidential nature, with any decisions arising from these discussions always being reported during the open session.”
The victims were “terrified by the invasion” and the mother now feels “extremely unsafe in her own home”
13:37, 26 Jun 2026
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Two West Belfast men were sentenced today over a drunken and “terrifying” flat incursion while armed with knives.
Conor Patrick Bradley, 35, of Altan Park, Dunmurry, was jailed for a year and he was told by Judge Gordon Kerr KC that he will spend a further 12 months on supervised licence on his release from custody.
Co-accused Michael Valliday, 27, of Albert Street, received a combination order of 60 hours unpaid work along with a two year probation order.
The judge said he was differentiating between the two defendants as Valliday had no previous convictions while Bradley had 23 entries on his criminal record which included offences of assault and possessing offensive weapons.
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Both defendants had previously pleaded guilty to charges of theft, two counts of common assault and possessing knives with intent to commit an indictable offence.
Prosecution barrister James Johnston said that at 9.10 am three “intoxicated” individuals entered the store and were verbally abusive towards staff and customers while stealing various items valued at £30.
The three males – which included Paul Valliday who is now deceased – made their way to The Mill apartment block also on the Crumlin Road.
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At 9.20am a man had just left the apartment when he encountered the defendants.
“They asked him to let them into the flats but he declined and heard one of them commenting ‘Shorty’s going to get ended today’. He noted one of them was dragging a tarpaulin and they had their hoods up or used masks to partially hide their faces. He made a report to police who started to task officers to the scene,” explained the prosecutor.
“Paul Valliday used his yellow handle knife to try and pry open the security door into the apartments area. Michael Valliday then used his large silver knife to try and do the same,” said Mr Johnston.
“For the next eight minutes all three take turns with their knives to force open the security door. They eventually give up and walk up the stairs to the second floor hallway where a Ring doorbell camera captures them again shouting out for ‘Shorty’ and trying to get into one of the flats.”
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The court was told a female was in her mother’s apartment and heard loud banging from outside their door.
She looked out the peep hole and saw the three men on the landing. She described them as the ‘skinny one’ (Michael Valliday), the ‘fat one’ (Bradley) and the ‘scruffy one’ (Paul Valliday).
She told police that she could see Michael Valliday had a kitchen knife in his hand and he was kicking her door and shouting: “Open the door. Where’s Shorty? Where is f***ing Shorty?”
The witness said Paul Valliday and Bradley then joined in kicking the door.
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Said Mr Johnston: “She tried to lock the door but they forced it open which knocked her back into a wall and onto the floor. As she lay on the floor Bradley pointed a knife to her face from about 12 inches and said: ‘Where’s Shorty’ Where’s Shorty?’
“She was crying and in fear of her life and she kept telling them that she didn’t know a “Shorty’ and they had the wrong flat. While Bradley held her down, the two Vallidays began searching the kitchen.”
The court was told the victim’s mother came out of her bedroom to see the three males with their hoods up standing in the hallway. Her appearance startled the intruders and this caused Bradley to say to his accomplices: ‘We’ve got the wrong house”.
She started shouting at them to get out of her house at which point Paul Valliday became aggressive towards her calling her a “f*t b***h’ and he lunged towards her with his knife but was held back by Bradley.
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“The three defendants then left the flat only to be accosted on the stairwell by police officers who had just arrived on the scene,” said Mr Johnston.
“A black handled knife was recovered from the ground beside Bradley. When police stopped Michael Valliday, a large silver knife dropped from his coat to the floor.
“Also in his coat police found various stolen items which he admitted taking from the Russell’s store, and a black balaclava.
“Paul Valliday was talking incoherently about ‘Shorty’ and a yellow handled knife and various stolen chocolate bars were recovered from him.”
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Mr Johnston said that CCTV from the apartment building showed the defendants in the stairwell with the knives in their possession. It also showed them shouting on the second floor landing for ‘Shorty’ and trying to get into another flat before police arrived and they were arrested.
“They were therefore caught red-handed,” added Mr Johnston.
In victim impact statements, the woman said the incursion into her mother’s flat with knives and threats “has traumatised her. She is now scared to stay there and feels scared for her mother’s personal safety”.
Her mother said she had been left “terrified by the invasion” and now feels “extremely unsafe in her own home”.
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