Connect with us

News

PSNI policy protects criminals, says victim

Published

on

PSNI policy protects criminals, says victim
BBC Liz and Catherine McSherry sitting on a sofa - Liz has short red hair - wearing a black top and cream blazer. Catherine has brown hair in a ponytail with a fringe - wearing a black top. BBC

Liz and Catherine McSherry said the PSNI changing its policy is a welcome step

The victim of a man convicted of voyeurism has said criminals are being protected by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) not releasing mugshots.

Catherine McSherry welcomed the force’s plans to change its policy on custody images and said it was a “positive step”.

Unlike many police forces in the UK, the PSNI does not routinely issue mugshots of serious offenders after sentencing.

Chief Constable Jon Boutcher has said the PSNI will begin releasing the images “in line with the custom and practice elsewhere”.

Advertisement

The PSNI said the “logistics of how we do that are now being worked through”.

Catherine’s step-brother Christopher was found guilty of six charges of voyeurism and one of unauthorised computer access.

The 35-year-old, from Portadown in County Armagh, was sentenced to 100 hours of community service, 18 months’ probation and a sex offences prevention order.

The judge said it was one of the worst cases of voyeurism seen by the court.

Advertisement

Catherine said victims felt “ignored and not taken seriously” when no mugshot was issued.

“I think it can be very validating for victims to have an actual mugshot taken of their perpetrator rather than just smiling photographs of them in their day-to-day life,” she said.

“I think it stops people being desensitised to the fact that this was a crime that was committed.”

Her sister, Liz, described the lack of custody photos as “a further failure” towards victims.

Advertisement

“Why are the PSNI protecting the criminal more than the victim? The whole system feels to me set up to protect perpetrators and not victims,” she said.

In April, the PSNI announced it was reviewing its policy.

It came after families whose loved ones were killed by drunk drivers questioned why police would not release photos of the offenders.

Internal emails seen by BBC News NI showed confusion among PSNI staff over the policy.

Advertisement
PA Media PSNI chief constable Jon Boutcher wearing police uniform - he has white short hair and is looking into the camera as he is speaking at a presser. PA Media

Mr Boutcher said logistics to facilitate publishing mugshots were being looked at

Mr Boutcher was asked for an update on the review at a recent Policing Board meeting.

He he said he had reviewed the policy.

“I have reviewed it. In short, we will be publishing photographs of people convicted of certain serious crimes where there is a policing purpose to do that,” Mr Boutcher said.

Catherine said the change was “definitely positive” and “a long time coming”.

Advertisement

“I think I speak for many other victims when I say that it would help massively, not just sexual abuse cases – any kind of criminal activity,” she added.

Former senior PSNI officer Jon Burrows also welcomed the move as a “positive, albeit long overdue step”.

He said he hoped the change would bring the PSNI “into line with UK-wide practice”.

“It is vital that justice is seen to be done and releasing the mugshots of those convicted of certain crimes will improve confidence in the justice system, encourage victims to come forward and send a clear message to perpetrators that actions have consequences,” he said.

Advertisement

“Given the epidemic of violence against women and girls, it is really important that those convicted of such crimes are included in the release of post conviction photographs.”

In a statement a PSNI spokeswoman said that the police “will be publishing photographs of people convicted of certain serious crimes where there is a policing purpose to do that”.

She emphasised logistics were being worked through but there was “no definite timeline for this at present”.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

News

Boy’s killing in China sparks Japanese fears

Published

on

Boy's killing in China sparks Japanese fears
Getty Images Chinese paramilitary police officers march past the entrance of the Japanese embassy in Beijing on 19 September 2024.Getty Images

Security has been stepped up outside Japanese schools and official buildings in China

The killing of a Japanese schoolboy in the Chinese city of Shenzhen has sparked worry among Japanese expats living in China, with top firms warning their workers to be vigilant.

Toshiba and Toyota have told their staff to take precautions against any possible violence, while Panasonic is offering its employees free flights home.

Japanese authorities have repeated their condemnation of the killing while urging the Chinese government to ensure the safety of their citizens.

The stabbing of the 10-year-old boy on Wednesday was the third high-profile attack on foreigners in China in recent months.

Advertisement

In a statement issued to the BBC, electronics giant Panasonic said it would “prioritise the safety and health of employees” in mainland China in the wake of the latest attack.

Panasonic is allowing employees and their families to temporarily return to Japan at company expense, and is offering a counselling service as well.

Toshiba, which has around 100 employees in China, has urged its workers “to be cautious of their safety”.

The world’s biggest car manufacturer Toyota, meanwhile, told the BBC it was “supporting Japanese expatriates” by providing them with any information they might need on the situation.

Advertisement

Japan’s ambassador to Beijing has also urged the Chinese government to “do its utmost” to ensure the safety of its citizens.

Meanwhile on Thursday, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida called the attack “extremely despicable” and said Tokyo had “strongly urged” Beijing for an explanation “as soon as possible”.

Some Japanese schools in China have contacted parents, putting them on high alert in the wake of the stabbing.

The Guangzhou Japanese School cancelled some activities and warned against speaking Japanese loudly in public.

Advertisement

Some members of the Japanese expatriate community in China have told the BBC they are worried about their children’s safety.

One man, a 53-year-old businessman who has lived in Shenzhen for nearly a decade, said he would be sending his daughter back overseas to university earlier than usual.

“We always considered Shenzhen a safe place to live as it’s relatively open to foreigners, but now we are all more cautious about our safety,” he said.

“Many Japanese people are deeply concerned, and numerous relatives and friends have reached out to check on my safety.”

Advertisement
Getty Images The Japanese flag flying at half-mast outside the Japanese embassy in Beijing on 19 September 2024.Getty Images

Japanese communities across China are mourning the killing in Shenzhen

Chinese officials in Shenzhen said they were “deeply saddened” by the incident and had started installing security cameras near the school by Thursday morning.

“We will continue to take effective measures to protect the life, property, safety and legal rights of everyone in Shenzhen, including foreigners,” they were quoted as saying in the Shenzhen Special Zone Daily on Friday.

An editorial in the state-affiliated newspaper lambasted the suspected killer, saying “this violent behaviour does not represent the quality of ordinary Chinese people”.

On Friday, locals began laying flowers at the gate of the Japanese school in Shenzhen.

Advertisement

“It is really sad. It shouldn’t be like that,” a Shenzhen local told Singaporean news outlet The Straits Times.

Another, a retired teacher, said: “This child, no matter which country he is from, is the hope of a family, and of a nation.”

‘Isolated incident’

CCTV A passport-style photo of Hu Youping. She has shoulder length brown hair and is wearing a red turtle neck jumper and a black jacket.CCTV

Chinese national Hu Youping died trying to restrain a knife attacker who was targetting a Japanese woman and her son in Suzhou in June

As Shenzhen reels from the killing, more details have emerged from various news reports and official sources.

Advertisement

The incident happened at around 08:00 local time (00:00 GMT) on Wednesday outside the boy’s school, the Shenzhen Japanese School.

The boy – who Chinese police named only as Shen – was stabbed in the abdomen. He later died from his injuries in the early hours of Thursday morning.

The assailant, a 44-year-old man surnamed Zhong, was arrested on the spot.

He had a criminal record, having been arrested for “damaging public infrastructure” in 2015 and “interfering with public order” in 2019, according to state-controlled media in Shenzhen.

Advertisement

An eyewitness said the suspect did not attempt to conceal his face when carrying out the attack.

“He didn’t run away, but just stood there and was apprehended by the local police guarding the school,” the witness told Japanese public broadcaster NHK.

Chinese authorities have not revealed the exact motive, but have repeatedly called the stabbing an “isolated incident”, as they did for two previous incidents this year.

In June, a man targeted a Japanese mother and her child in the eastern city of Suzhou. That attack was also near a Japanese school and led to the death of a Chinese national who had tried to protect the mother and son.

Advertisement

It prompted the Japanese government to request about $2.5m (£1.9m) to hire security guards for school buses in China.

Earlier in June, four American teachers were stabbed in the northern city of Jilin.

Acrimonious ties

Eyes are now on the Chinese authorities and how they will assure Japanese communities that they are safe in China, while ensuring this does not turn into a major diplomatic crisis.

Advertisement

Ties between the two countries have long been acrimonious. For decades the two sides have clashed on a number of issues, ranging from historical grievances to territorial disputes.

Some have pointed out that the stabbing happened on the anniversary of the notorious Mukden Incident, when Japan faked an explosion to justify its invasion of Manchuria in 1931, triggering a 14-year war with China.

A former Japanese diplomat said Wednesday’s attack in Shenzhen was the “result of long years of anti-Japan education” in Chinese schools.

While diplomatic relations may often be strained, economic cooperation has always had a parallel steady existence, according to Japanese diplomats who have spoken to the BBC.

Advertisement

But the fact the attack took place in the cosmopolitan tech hub of Shenzhen may make both sides nervous.

Top Japanese firms in China warning their staff may raise questions about their presence there and what that might mean for economic relations between Tokyo and Beijing.

Additional reporting by Chika Nakayama in Tokyo and Kelly Ng in Singapore.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Money

IHT receipts continue to rise as speculation mounts ahead of Budget

Published

on

IHT receipts continue to rise as speculation mounts ahead of Budget

The Treasury collected £3.5bn in inheritance tax receipts between April to August, latest figures from HMRC published this morning (20 September).

This is £300m higher than the same period last year.

Another record-breaking year for IHT receipts is being predicted and experts believe this upward trajectory will continue year on year and hit £9.7bn in 2028/29.

However, there are rumours that IHT will be increased next month when the new Labour government unveils its first Budget.

Advertisement

The current £325,000 nil rate band has been at that level since 2009.

The residential nil rate band was introduced on a phased basis between 2017 and 2020 and potentially gives an additional £175,000 nil rate band (making a total of £500,000) subject to certain rules.

Nucleus technical services director Andrew Tully, said: “The ever-increasing IHT tax take may give the government food for thought as we approach next month’s Budget.

“Changes could be made such as scrapping or updating the rules on agricultural land and business relief.

Advertisement

“Currently, a person can claim up to 100% relief on the inheritance of agricultural land if it is being actively farmed.

“This could be reduced, or certain limitations placed on the maximum value of the relief.

“There could be a tightening of qualifying criteria for business relief, perhaps relating to unlisted shares and AIM portfolios.

“Although that could be difficult to implement and may not tie in with the desire to increase investment in the UK.”

Advertisement

Shaun Moore, tax and financial planning expert at Quilter, is calling for the IHT system to be simplified to make it easier for people to gift during their lifetime.

He said: “The complexity of the current system often leads to confusion and inequities.

“A simpler system could help reduce the administrative burden for both taxpayers and HMRC, while also making it fairer.

“Similarly, increasing the gifting threshold would encourage earlier wealth transfer, reducing future IHT liabilities, and could boost consumer spending.”

Advertisement

The number of families being caught out by tax bills after death on gifts made in lifetime has been surging, according to figures from HMRC obtained recently by wealth management firm Evelyn Partners show.

Tax Partner at professional services and wealth management firm Evelyn, Laura Hayward, said: “The number of estates that paid IHT on gifts made less than seven years before death more than doubled from 590 in 2011/12 to 1,300 in 2020/21, according to the data.

“Meanwhile, the total sum of IHT paid on gifts also more than doubled from £101m in 2011/12 to £256m in 2020/21 – an increase of 153% in monetary terms and 119% in real terms.

“The data suggests the average tax charge payable by beneficiaries on lifetime gifts was £171,186 in 2011/12 and £196,923 in 2020/21.

Advertisement

“That suggests some very significant tax bills are being delivered to unprepared beneficiaries after their generous relative has died, and this might be another reason for those contemplating making big lifetime gifts to start the seven-year clock ticking sooner rather than later.

“Even if the gifter were to pass away within seven years, there is a chance the IHT bill could be reduced by taper relief.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

The dodgy details of private equity’s ‘dividend recaps’

Published

on

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Earlier this summer, the private equity firm 3i paid itself over €1bn with money one of its companies had borrowed, helping bring the volume of these so-called “dividend recapitalisation” to a new record.

On one hand, this demonstrates how much value private equity firms can create for their investors. 3i paid just €130mn for a controlling stake in the Dutch retailer Action back in 2011, and since then it has extracted about €4.5bn from the company through eight dividend recaps.

Advertisement

The company has been able to keep borrowing to chuck money back to its owners thanks to a huge increase in its earnings over the past decade (Bryce wrote a great post on how big a deal Action is for 3i here). Here at FT Alphaville we’ve been somewhat sceptical of the private equity investment case, but this is a clear winner.

On the other hand, companies borrowing more and more money purely to pass it on to private equity owners isn’t really a good look, and can cause problems further down the line.

This is particularly pertinent given that MainFT is reporting that private equity firms are pushing for changes to loan docs that would allow them to pay themselves even bigger dividends. (remember when private equity barons insisted back in 2023 that they would “go back to investing in the old-fashioned way” and rely more on operational nous than leverage? Good times).

All this is why FT Alphaville was so intrigued to spot this paper by Abhishek Bhardwaj, Abhinav Gupta and Sabrina Howell in our weekly round-up of research published by NBER, which put some number on the general vibes around dividend recaps.

Advertisement

It argues that the strategy:

. . . lead to misaligned incentives and moral hazard problems for GPs, causing them to pursue activities that diverge from the interests of fund investors, company employees, and pre-existing creditors.

Here’s how the study worked: Across the sample of about 47,000 US leveraged buyouts by 1,200 private equity firms between 1995 and 2020, the researchers found almost 1,600 dividend recaps. They then paired this with data on loans, fund returns, payrolls and bankruptcies.

Bhardwaj, Gupta and Howell found that dividend recaps mostly happen at larger, healthier companies. This makes sense, as it’s a lot easier to get creditors to feel comfortable with this kind of financial milking when they can see solid cash flows coming in.

Once you adjust for that, dividend recaps massively increase the danger of bankruptcies:

Advertisement

. . . The causal analysis paints a picture in which new debt induced by cheap credit increases firm risk, consistent with theories predicting agency problems of debt. We focus first on the firm. We show that dividend recaps increase the chance of bankruptcy, for example by 31pp in the following six years. This is large relative to the sample mean of 1.3%.

On the other hand, if a company survives, dividend recaps also appear to increase the chances “exceptionally good outcomes” — ie strong revenue growth and IPOs. That might be because dividend recaps make companies more of a binary bet, and encourage it to go for broke. From the paper:

Having realized good returns from the targeted portfolio company, the GP may encourage its managers to take more risk because the investment’s payoff has become more call option-like.

However, turning to returns, the researchers found that dividend recaps were positive for the returns of individual deals, but seemed to be negative on a fund’s overall returns. Here’s their explanation for this weird phenomenon:

At the fund level, we show that dividend recaps decrease the fund’s cash-on-cash multiple and public market equivalent (PME) return measures. There is no effect on IRR, consistent with bringing cash flows forward in the fund’s life. What might explain a positive effect on deal returns yet a negative effect on fund returns? We show that dividend recaps dramatically increase short-term distributions paid out to the fund, which could incentivize the GP to raise a new fund on the basis of good interim returns, consistent with Gompers (1996) and Barber and Yasuda (2017). Indeed, dividend recaps sharply increase the chance of launching a new fund.

These results suggest that dividend recaps are used to benefit GPs by enabling early distributions and new fundraising. In turn, they may focus their effort more on the new funds. Consistent with this, we observe that dividend recaps cause lower returns for subsequent LBOs within the fund and reduce number of new LBOs pursued, relative to funds of the same vintage.

So what about the impact of people that work at companies that have done a dividend recap?

Advertisement

You’ll probably be entirely unsurprised to learn that they are “largely negative”, even for companies that survive and thrive despite leveraging up to make payments to the private equity owners.

We find a large negative effect on wage growth of-53%, relative to a mean of-4%. This is driven by declining payroll, especially at the left tail (i.e., the worst performers among survivors). There is a negative albeit insignificant effect on employment growth, driven by greater chances of being in the tails of the distribution, with a significantly lower chance of modest positive employment growth.

Overall, the results suggest that by making firms riskier, dividend recaps raise the specter of bad outcomes for workers — exit, bankruptcy, and significant wage declines — but also increase the chance that the firm experiences a good outcome for owners (IPO, large revenue increases).

Still, at a time when private equity firms are under immense pressure to return money to investors — they’ve now raised more money than they’ve handed back for six straight years — and rates are now falling, FTAV suspects that dividend recaps are going to boom even harder in the coming years.

As the paper concludes:

Advertisement

. . . Our analysis implies that rising CLO demand will increase opportunistic dividend recaps, with negative implications for portfolio company and stakeholders including employees, pre-existing creditors, and fund investors.

Source link

Continue Reading

News

Twelve miles of traffic following “serious” lorry fire

Published

on

Twelve miles of traffic following "serious" lorry fire
National Highways A CCTV image of the section of the M25. You can see a single-file line of traffic passing through the single open lane. Next to it are several large trucks and people in high-vis.National Highways

No causalities have been reported

Traffic is being delayed by about two hours on a section of the M25 after a “serious” lorry fire resulted in 12 miles (19.3km) of congestion, National Highways says.

On Friday morning, National Highways said two of three lanes on the clockwise carriageway between junction five, near Sevenoaks in Kent, and junction six, near Godstone in Surrey, had been closed.

Surrey Police said it was made aware of the incident at about 01:30 and Surrey Fire and Rescue Service said it left the scene at about 03:15 as the blaze had been extinguished.

Traffic monitoring site Inrix said one lane was still closed as of 10:00 but “severe delays” remained.

Advertisement
National Highways A CCTV image showing cars passing by the burnt load via two lanes. The burnt load is cordoned off with three people in high vis standing next to it.National Highways

Delays were still expected despite another lane being opened

Just after 09.15 National Highways said the lorry’s load had been removed and recovery of the vehicle could now commence.

Inrix explained that congestion had spread to the A25 through Sundridge, Oxted and Godstone.

Delays of about 45 minutes are also affecting traffic travelling westbound on the M26 leading up to the M25 at junction five, National Highways says.

It explained that resurfacing work was required and would be completed overnight.

Advertisement

National Highways said: “All lanes will be open throughout the day once recovery work has been completed.”

Surrey Fire and Rescue Service said it attended the incident along with Kent Fire and Rescue Service and there were no causalities.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Money

The Morning Briefing: IHT receipts rise as speculation mounts ahead of Budget and How to enter the international advice market

Published

on

The Morning Briefing: Phoenix Group scraps plans to sell protection business; advisers tweak processes

Good morning and welcome to your Morning Briefing for Friday 20 September 2024. To get this in your inbox every morning click here.


IHT receipts continue to rise as speculation mounts ahead of Budget

The Treasury collected £3.5bn in inheritance tax receipts between April to August, latest figures from HMRC published this morning (20 September).

This is £300m higher than the same period last year.

Advertisement

Another record-breaking year for IHT receipts is being predicted and experts believe this upward trajectory will continue year on year and hit £9.7bn in 2028/29.

However, there are rumours that IHT will be increased next month when the new Labour government unveils its first Budget.


How to enter the international advice market

The ebb and flow of the global economy means that, as some people migrate to the UK, others leave it, creating opportunities for international financial advice.

Advertisement

The new Labour government has confirmed that the current tax regime for non-UK domiciled individuals will be replaced with a residence-based test from 6 April 2025, so international advice firms can expect more enquiries.

If UK advice firms want to develop a global presence, how should they go about it?



Quote Of The Day

The complexity of the current system often leads to confusion and inequities.

-Shaun Moore, tax and financial planning expert at Quilter, comments on latest IHT receipts which hit £3.5bn as rumours of tax changes build ahead of October budget.

Advertisement


Stat Attack

New research from independent SME funder Bibby Financial Services (BFS) reveals that UK SMEs consider tax incentives and access to finance as two critical areas that need to be addressed by the Government to unlock growth.

52%

Over half of SME leaders say they are more likely to make major investments now that the election has taken place, and

Advertisement

63%

say lower interest rates make them feel more confident about capital expenditure.  However, amid speculation that capital gains and inheritance tax rises could be announced as part of the Autumn Budget

87%

nine in ten (87%) SME leaders cite better tax incentives as a specific measure they’d like the new Government to implement. A further

Advertisement

81%

want access to low interest financing for business expansion and job creation.

Source: Bibby Financial Services



In Other News

Advertisement

FE Fundinfo has announced the release of its enhanced Factsheet Production solution. This automated system will streamline factsheet production and distribution to FE fundinfo’s network within a single workflow. It offers a user-friendly interface with a progress dashboard, supports approve/reject workflows, provides a comprehensive audit trail, and includes a 10-year archive.

With the capacity to produce up to 150,000 documents per hour and support for translations into 30 languages, it is scalable and compliant, enabling asset managers to efficiently manage their global operations.

Integrated into FE fundinfo’s comprehensive end-to-end platform, the Factsheet Production solution provides asset managers with a single, trusted source of data. This golden source enables connections with distribution networks, regulators and investors, ensuring the automatic dissemination of factsheets.

“Asset managers today are facing unprecedented challenges, from regulatory pressures to the need for process optimisation in a rapidly changing market,” said Joerg Grossmann, chief product officer at FE fundinfo. “Our enhanced Factsheet Production solution is designed to help meet these head-on.”

Advertisement

SimplyBiz has announced over 1,000 Defaqto Engage licences have been adopted by its member firms since an enhanced version of the financial planning system was added to its core membership package five months ago.

Forming part of SimplyBiz’s suite of market-leading technology solutions and designed to help advisers manage regulatory risk, increase efficiencies, and deliver better services to clients, Engage brings together a range of previously standalone modules, from risk profiling and cashflow modelling to pension, product, and platform switching, into a single comprehensive package.

Used by around 30% of UK advisers, Engage is powered by Defaqto’s data which covers more than 21,000 funds, platforms, DFM MPS, and products, with recommendations of £43bn going through the system annually.


Legal & General Group Protection has partnered with Vocational Rehabilitation specialist Ergocom to provide employees with the support they need following a Group Income Protection (GIP) claim.

Advertisement

It’s designed to help both the employer, and their employee understand what job roles the individual can do, and what is needed for them to continue working in a new role.

This service will be made available following a GIP claim, where the employee is ready to work, but due to personal circumstances, they can no longer fulfil their previous role and, as a result, will be supported to seek alternative options. This new service has the potential to include everything from individual assessment and detailed reporting, to coaching which helps the employee develop additional skills and confidence.

Ergocom’s Vocational Redirection Assessment will examine the employee’s vocational strengths, needs and career potential, considering any barriers or functional limitations to identify suitable, alternative roles.


Government borrowing in August highest since Covid (BBC)

Advertisement

Ministers and union leaders to hold crunch talks over workers’ rights plans (The Guardian)

Nike chief executive John Donahoe to step down (Financial Times)


Did You See?

The Financial Conduct Authority has launched an investigation into pure protection and it’s safe to say it’s pretty damning, writes Andrew Gething, managing director at MorganAsh.

Advertisement

Not only is the regulator ordering insurers and intermediaries to remove products that do not offer fair value, it’s weighing up action to address these issues, as well as not demonstrating good customer outcomes.

It’s a stark reminder of the regulator’s intent to enforce the Consumer Duty, which is now in full force. In fact, the FCA highlighted its commitment to engage with both GI and protection, as well as relevant trade bodies, to ensure its expectations are recognised and acted upon urgently.

A key shortcoming identified by the regulator was an inability by firms to demonstrate how they assess whether a product delivers fair value to all customers, including vulnerable or outlier groups.

Read the full article here.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

News

UK thunderstorm warnings: Heavy rain, lightning and hail mark end of warm spell

Published

on

UK thunderstorm warnings: Heavy rain, lightning and hail mark end of warm spell

The week is ending with a bang in the southern half of the UK as the warm spell concludes with lightning, hail and heavy rain.

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2017 Zox News Theme. Theme by MVP Themes, powered by WordPress.