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Aldi shoppers angry as supermarket removes free-from range

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Aldi shoppers angry as supermarket removes free-from range

Aldi originally introduced their dedicated Free From section as a trial in January 2025 and it was reported to have been stocked in 300 of around 1,000 UK stores.

However the supermarket has now confirmed that the trial has ended as shoppers found their favourite products reduced or gone entirely from shops.

Gluten-free shoppers and coeliacs, those with an autoimmune condition that means they cannot eat gluten, lashed out at the brand online.


The History of Aldi


Some said they were “devastated” at the news while one even suggested it should be “compulsory” for supermarkets to sell gluten-free products.

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However, the budget giant claim they are “committed” to ensuring customers with dietary requirements will still be able to buy what they need and that they engage with key allergy charities.

An Aldi spokesperson said: “Last year we introduced dedicated Free From sections in selected stores as a trial.

“Whilst this trial has now come to an end, we are still committed to ensuring customers can get everything they need at Aldi and shoppers can still find products suited to speciality diets on our shelves.

“We continue to engage with key allergy charities to ensure that we’re supportive of speciality diets wherever we can.”

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Gluten-free shoppers and coeliacs - those with an autoimmune condition that means they cannot eat gluten - lashed out at the brand onlineGluten-free shoppers and coeliacs – those with an autoimmune condition that means they cannot eat gluten – lashed out at the brand online (Image: Kennedy News and Media)

Commenters have taken to TikTok to share their concerns with some branding the end of the trial as ‘absolutely absurd’.

One said: “This is messed up. Some people need this to live. They can’t do that I swear.”

A second complained: “Nooo it was the only bread I had liked and could stomach.”

A third added: “Absolutely absurd, that really sucks if they’re getting rid of it.”

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A fourth agreed and said: “This is a disgrace! It’s so limited in most stores for basics like pasta, bread etc without taking away options.”

However, one said: “It is a shame, but as a business they probably weren’t making any profit.

“I don’t think they gave it long enough though because hardly any of my gluten-free friends knew Aldi had gluten-free food.”

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how a trusted US media covered politics in the 1970s

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how a trusted US media covered politics in the 1970s

This month marks the 50th anniversary of a much-revered classic of American cinema, All The President’s Men.

The 1976 movie starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman was an adaptation of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s 1974 book of investigative journalism detailing their two-year unravelling of the Watergate conspiracy. The shocking scandal brought down a president and profoundly shook Americans’ trust in government.

On June 17 1972, operatives working for President Richard Nixon’s Committee for the Re-election of the President (often satirically referred to as CREEP) were caught breaking into the Democrat party’s national headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washington. The subsequent attempted cover-up eventually led to the resignation of Nixon and many in his administration going to jail.

The book and film led to several words and phrases entering the popular lexicon, including “deep throat” as shorthand for informants, the expression “follow the money” and of course the use of the word “gate” tacked on at the end of a word to denote a scandal. The film is probably the most famous movie about journalism ever made and helped shape the public’s view of who journalists were and how they functioned.

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In many ways it’s strange to see an America where the media were so trusted. At the time a significant majority of Americans held the view that if the Washington Post or New York Times printed something, then it must be true. This is in contrast to today where trust in the US media is at an all-time low.

Woodward and Bernstein’s success was partly helped by the fact that the news cycle was a lot slower. Newspapers only went to print once or twice a day, so journalists had valuable time to check sources, look at records and discuss what they were doing with colleagues and editors.

Crucially, if they weren’t sure of the merits of a story, it was easier to shelve it for the next day. The current 24-hour news cycle makes this much more difficult. Journalists are under constant pressure to publish as soon as possible, leaving far less time for verification and reflection. Speed is rewarded over accuracy and the competitive scramble to be first can mean stories go out before they are fully formed.

The funding model is also fundamentally different. Many local newspapers were owned by families who lived in the cities where they were based and had been there for generations (in the case of the Washington Post with Katherine Graham). They often had a personal stake in the community.

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There were still press barons, for instance William Randolph Hearst. The Orson Welles film Citizen Kane was based on his life story. But even at their most powerful, these proprietors operated within a media ecosystem where credibility was the currency that kept readers buying.

The media was funded by sales and advertising, giving journalists the freedom to work on a story. Today, by contrast, there is a focus on chasing clicks with articles either made up of lists or with clickbait headlines designed to be shared across social media.

How the press shaped the national agenda

The early 1970s was a world where the press were just as important – if not more so – than TV in shaping the national agenda. While commentators and columnists such as Walter Winchell had always been celebrities, the film established the idea of journalists as household names in their own right.

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This has arguably been problematic in some ways as it could be claimed that it encouraged a more ego-driven approach to reporting, where the journalist-as-hero narrative risks making the story about the person covering it rather than the subject itself.

It was also an environment where the media still focused on the idea of reporting the news rather than making it. Today many media platforms explicitly market themselves as investigative journalism and see their role as setting the agenda. More traditional outlets see this as the media becoming too activist and ideological. There are proponents on both sides of the debate; All The President’s Men seems to take the view that the media report the news and the public decide how to interpret it.

However, the film’s very existence complicates that position. Woodward and Bernstein did not merely report events – they led the debate. The question of whether the press should be a mirror held up to power or a force that actively shapes political outcomes is still ongoing.

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It’s worth noting that 1976 also saw the release of Network. This movie was entirely fictional and told the story of a broadcaster, played by Peter Finch, who has a mental breakdown live on air. He becomes “the mad prophet of the airwaves”, telling his audience to shout out of the window: “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it any more!”

While All The President’s Men served as a monument to what the press had achieved and what it could and should be, Network, though billed as outrageous satire at the time, has proven a significantly more accurate prediction of the future.

In the film the TV network is owned by a vast corporation with financial interests in several other areas. While Woodward and Bernstein are professionals doing their job, they do it largely without animosity. Their goal is to uncover the truth of the Watergate conspiracy, not to bring down the president. Network predicted a world where profit is everything and media and politics are fundamentally adversarial, with reporters aiming to make their audience as angry as possible.

Fifty years on, the question is not which film got it right (all the evidence suggests Network). It is whether the world All The President’s Men celebrated was already vanishing, even as audiences and critics were praising it.

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Bentley car attacked in The Boat Yard, Bawtry, Selby

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Bentley car attacked in The Boat Yard, Bawtry, Selby

North Yorkshire Police is investigating an incident of criminal damage that occurred in The Boat Yard, Bawtry Road, Selby.

It happened at about 11pm at the Boat Yard when unknown offenders causing “significant damage” to the front passenger side window of a white Bentley.


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Police are appealing for information of any suspicious activity or CCTV covering this area at the time in question.

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Anyone with information to help the investigation is asked to email Molly.grace@northyorkshire.police.uk

Alternatively, you can call North Yorkshire Police on 101 and ask for Molly Grace or contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 or via their website.

Please quote reference 12260066858 when passing on information.

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Musicians from West Lothian schools hit the right notes at Spring Concert Series

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Daily Record

Over 200 young people and 24 staff performed to audiences of over 300 people across two nights at Inveralmond Community High School in Livingston before the Easter break.

Talented musicians from schools across West Lothian hit all the right notes at the annual Spring Concert Series.

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Over 200 young people and 24 staff performed to audiences of over 300 people across two nights at Inveralmond Community High School in Livingston before the Easter break.

The number of West Lothian schools represented increased to 33 this year, with the number of student performers also increasing.

Bands performing included the West Lothian Schools Big Band, West Lothian Schools Brass Band, West Lothian Schools Junior and Senior Pipe Bands, West Lothian Schools Concert Band, West Lothian Schools Wind Ensemble and the West Lothian Schools Junior and Senior String Orchestras.

READ MORE: Councillors agree to sale of ten acre site in the heart of West Lothian town

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Both shows featured fantastic performances from all our young musicians, and lots of really positive feedback from the delighted audience.

The finale of each concert was joint performances of all the ensembles performing together, with the Brass Band, Big Band and Pipe Bands performed Carnival de Paris by Dario G on the first night, and the Wind Ensemble, Concert Band and String Orchestras coming together for Viva La Vida by Coldplay.

Rehearsals will begin again in September, and parents/carers of current ensemble members should look out for an email early this term asking them to complete an existing members registration form for next session.

Any instrumental pupils not currently in an Area Ensemble should talk to their instructor if they are interested in joining one next session.

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The Area Ensembles are open to any young person living in West Lothian who plays an instrument to the required standard for the ensemble. Please contact ims@westlothian.gov.uk for more information.

READ MORE: Affordable watersports for children on ‘West Lothian Riviera’

Don’t miss the latest news from the West Lothian Courier. Sign up to our free newsletter here.

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Nine dead in another school shooting in Turkey

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Nine dead in another school shooting in Turkey

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — A student opened fire on two classrooms at a middle school in Turkey on Wednesday, killing nine people and wounding 13 others, the interior minister said, in the country’s second such shooting in two days.

The 14-year-old gunman was killed. He arrived at the school armed with guns believed to belong to his father, a retired police officer, Kahramanmaras provincial Gov. Mukerrem Unluer said. He was carrying five firearms and seven magazines.

The motive of the attack wasn’t immediately known. It was not clear whether the gunman was killed by police or killed himself.

Six of the 13 people wounded were in serious condition, Interior Minister Mustafa Ciftci said.

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The attack came a day after 16 people, mostly students, were wounded when a former student opened fire at a high school in nearby Sanliurfa province. The assailant later killed himself.

Until this week, school shootings were rare in Turkey.

State-run broadcaster, TRT, identified the latest shooter as Isa Aras Mersinli and said his father was detained for questioning.

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Turkish authorities imposed a ban on the broadcast of “traumatic” images from the shooting, warning media organizations to limit coverage to statements from officials.

Parents rushed to the school in Kahramanmaras’ Onikisubat district after hearing reports of an armed attack, NTV television reported.

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Two men given banning orders for tailgating at Manchester City and Arsenal cup final

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Manchester Evening News

The two men are the first to be sanctioned under the new law

Two footy fans have been issued a banning order after breaking a new tailgating law at last month’s Carabao Cup final at Wembley.

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The new law on unauthorised entry to games came into effect during the match between Arsenal and Manchester City on March 22.

The legislation makes any attempt to enter a stadium without a valid ticket punishable by a fine and a Football Banning Order.

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Wembley Stadium have confirmed that Kamal McEwan, from London, had been given a three-year banning order and fined £471 for unauthorised entry, making him the first to be sanctioned under the new law.

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Alex Clark, from Waltham Cross, became the second when he was also given a three-year banning order and a £1,862 fine for unauthorised entry and possession of a Class A drug.

Both rulings were confirmed at Willesden Magistrates’ Court on April 10, the stadium release said. A third man is due to appear in court on May 1.

Wembley Stadium Director Mark Lynch said: “The swift arrest and convictions of these individuals at the Carabao Cup final demonstrate this new legislation is already having a real and immediate impact.

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“Previously, there were no specific criminal penalties for those trying to enter the stadium without a ticket, placing significant pressure on our crowd safety teams. This new legislation now closes that gap and ensures offenders are dealt with appropriately.

“These cases send a clear message that any attempt to gain unauthorised access to football matches will not be tolerated and will result in firm action including large fines and lengthy Football Banning Orders.”

Chief Inspector Pete Dearden, of the Metropolitan Police Service, added: “Our officers acted quickly and decisively at the Carabao Cup final, and these convictions demonstrate that antisocial, dangerous and criminal behaviour at football matches will be met with firm enforcement action.

“We will continue to work closely with sport venues, the FA and other partners to ensure football matches remain safe environments for fans, families and staff, and to prevent the minority who seek to cause harm or disruption from doing so.”

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Plan for 170 homes slammed as locals say ‘stop building homes on green fields’

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Cambridgeshire Live

Redrow Homes plans to submit a planning application for up to 170 new homes in Hauxton village, prompting residents to voice concerns about development on agricultural land

Readers of CambridgeshireLive have been weighing in on proposals for new housing, with many expressing concerns over the local impact, loss of green spaces, and whether the development will genuinely serve the needs of the community. Others have questioned how such schemes gain approval and what obligations developers must fulfil if construction begins long after planning permission is initially granted.

Property firm Carter Jonas has been appointed by developer Redrow Homes South Midlands to submit a full planning application for land situated south of High Street in the village of Hauxton, with proposals for up to 170 new homes.

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Hauxton is a small village lying approximately five miles from Cambridge. While a formal planning application is yet to be lodged, full planning permission will be sought for up to 170 homes, along with access routes, open space and associated infrastructure. A screening opinion request has already been submitted to South Cambridgeshire District Council to determine whether an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) will be required for the proposed development.

The new homes are earmarked for a 12.44 hectare site currently used as agricultural land. A significant proportion of the site is intended to be retained as open space, with new properties concentrated in development parcels across the central and western sections, while the eastern portion would be preserved as public open space. The proposed site sits adjacent to existing residential properties, allotments and Hauxton Primary School. According to a screening letter, pedestrian and cycle access would be provided via High Street, with a potential connection to Jopling Way currently under consideration.

One reader, Feelgood66 comments: “Right next to the line and east west rail will be, plus shutting off the road permanently. Like the road near me.”

Calumen Nomen says: “Ah, Hauxton’s turn to get ruined. Only fair that all should suffer.”

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While over on our Facebook page, Tai S writes: “It feels that whatever developers propose, it seems to get rubber-stamped, under the last government and this one. One thing I learned from dealing with developers was this: they only need to build in accordance with the planning regulations in effect at the time the project was approved. So, if something was approved in 2014, but didn’t get built until now (as is often the case), the developers only need to apply the environmental/social features and conditions from 2014. This is how they get around installing solar, green spaces, providing lots of play areas, preserving nature and adding water-retention features and other blue/green building-infrastructure elements.

“I wouldn’t mind so many estates if they a) included long term, affordable family homes with gardens (like the 1930’s semi I was lucky enough to grow up in), b) included all modern eco fittings; heat pumps, solar panels, green roofs/walls, triple glazed windows etc and c) the developers were forced to create an adjacent conservation area equivalent to the size of the built-up area. The costs are high, but if the developers can’t afford to implement them, let them eat brick dust.

“Additionally, if buy to let, greedy landlords, second homes and housing bought up as capital were clamped down on, we would actually have enough existing housing stock for requirements, but that requires government will that doesn’t exist. Sadly, the ideal home-building scenario with people and the environment put first, as opposed to corporate profits, won’t happen and even if it did, without the government investing heavily on a national scale in energy, water, public transport and education infrastructure (which hasn’t happened in Cambridge while the developers concrete over everything) then the new urban areas are bound to fail as places worthy of being treasured as ‘home’.”

David M pleads: “Stop building on green fields – use other sites.”

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Carolyn R adds: “Soon, there won’t be any green spaces left; the ones that are left will be covered in solar panels.”

Marvin H comments: “This is about private equity money flooding the property market. We have enough housing stock in this country; the majority of it is simply not accessible to the majority of people who desperately need it. House prices in places like Cambridge are out of reach for the majority of people. Rental properties in places like Cambridge are out of reach for the majority of people. “

Are you happy to see more homes being built? Comment below or HERE to join in the conversation.

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Grieving daughter says mum murdered in France ‘made life feel better’

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Daily Record

Dawn Kerr, 56, was found dead at a property in Les Pequies on February 6 last year, with her husband’s body also found.

A grieving daughter has said she hopes to help create “a society free of domestic abuse” after her mum was murdered in France.

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Dawn Kerr, 56, was found dead at a property in Les Pequies on February 6 last year, with her husband’s body also found. French authorities ruled there was no evidence to suggest another person was involved in their deaths.

The prosecutor in charge of the case ruled the investigation as a murder suicide. The couple married in 2023 after moving to France, and had been described as “normal, lovely people” by their neighbours.

Her daughter Amanda has now paid tribute to her mum, branding her “one of those rare people who made life better and brighter just by being it”. She will now hike Mount Etna in Sicily on May 16 as she raises funds for Edinburgh Women’s Aid.

Amanda, who is from Musselburgh, told Edinburgh Live: “My mum was one of those rare people who made life feel better and brighter just by being in it. She was kind, optimistic, and deeply caring and also the most organised person anyone had ever met. She somehow managed to hold everything together while giving so much of herself to others, because she loved doing that.

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“As a mum, she set the standard for everything I hope to be, for my own daughter. As a friend, she had a way of making people feel like they were the only person in the room.

“She gave so much to the world around her. She fundraised constantly and did all of that while working two jobs and raising a family. People used to ask her if she had more hours in the day than everyone else.

“I honestly do not think it is possible to recreate the kind of person my mum was. She was rare, and I feel so proud and lucky to call her my mum and best friend. It’s an honour to me when people say I remind them of my mum.”

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Amanda – who runs marketing firm The Popular Agency – feels she is very much ‘her mother’s daughter’, with Dawn’s qualities and ‘being’ passed down and she will now be doing the climb on her mum’s 58th birthday. She said: “Everything I am doing now is rooted in what she showed me was possible. I always find myself asking ‘what would Dawn do’.

“It never mattered where you saw my mum, she was always happy to chat, she always had time for people and was always, always smiling and laughing. I’m excited for this climb, I’ve been training for 10 months and documenting it all on social media to raise awareness of the fundraiser, which I have raised just over £7,500 on two donation platforms.

“There is still so much snow on Mount Etna so the hike might be more difficult than I had originally thought, but I’m up for the challenge.”

Last year, Amanda and her brother Callum – who has appeared in Channel 4 soap Hollyoaks and One Piece on Netflix – urged people not to attend the funeral of Andrew Seale. In a statement shared online, the pair said: “In the absence of any evidence suggesting third-party involvement in the tragic death of our mother, Dawn Kerr, the prevailing hypothesis remains that of a murder-suicide. Our mother was killed by multiple blows to the head, and Andrew was found deceased by hanging.

“His injuries are consistent with self-hanging, and no defensive wounds were found on his body. There is also no evidence whatsoever of any third party’s involvement at this stage. While the official investigation is still ongoing, we cannot ignore the circumstances as they stand.

“For this reason, we must respectfully but firmly request that our mother not be included in any way in the funeral arrangements being made for Andrew. Please do not share photographs of them together.”

You can support Amanda with her fundraiser here.

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BBC to cut 2,000 jobs in major restructure

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BBC to cut 2,000 jobs in major restructure

The BBC is set to cut 2,000 jobs as part of a drive to reduce costs by 10 per cent over the next three years, sources have revealed.

It is understood staff were informed of the significant redundancies during an all-staff call held on Wednesday afternoon.

These cuts mark the largest reduction in BBC headcount in almost 15 years and coincide with former Google executive Matt Brittin preparing to take over as director-general next month.

The corporation has also recently unveiled plans to drastically downsize the team responsible for covering national occasions, such as royal events and State funerals, to a single staff member supported by freelancers.

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The BBC has previously said: “Over the last three years we have delivered more than a half a billion pounds worth of savings, much of which we’ve been able to reinvest into our output across the BBC.

“In a rapidly changing media market, we continue to face substantial financial pressures. As a result we expect to make further savings over the next three years of around 10% of our costs.

“This is about the BBC becoming more productive and prioritising our offer to audiences to ensure we’re providing the best value for money, both now and in the future.”

More to follow…

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Police officers charged after pregnant woman and unborn baby die in London crash

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Daily Record

Two Metropolitan Police officers face charges following collision in south-east London that resulted in deaths of 38-year-old woman and her unborn child

Two police officers have been charged in connection with the deaths of a heavily pregnant woman and her unborn baby after she was struck by a police vehicle in London.

The 38 year old woman lost her life after her car collided with an unmarked police vehicle on Eltham Road on October 17, 2024, and her unborn child could not be saved. The baby tragically died at the scene, while the woman subsequently passed away in hospital from her injuries, reports the Mirror.

PC Chris Johnson, 56, has been charged with causing death by dangerous driving, and former PC Danny Tomkins, 35, has been charged with dangerous driving. The charges follow an investigation into the fatal collision carried out by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC).

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PC Johnson is attached to the Metropolitan Police Taskforce, while former PC Tomkins was assigned to the same unit at the time of the tragedy. Both officers are due to appear before Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Thursday, May 28.

Acting Detective Chief Superintendent James Derham, who oversees policing in Greenwich, said: “Our thoughts remain with the woman’s family and friends, who continue to grieve the loss of her and her unborn child. This was a truly terrible and heartbreaking incident.”

“The IOPC have conducted a thorough and complex investigation and we have worked closely with them as their enquiries have progressed. Following that process, an officer and former officer have now been charged.

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“It is important that nothing is said that could prejudice the court proceedings that will now follow, so it would be inappropriate to comment further at this stage.”

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Trump threatens to fire Powell if the Fed Chair remains with central bank after his term ends

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Trump threatens to fire Powell if the Fed Chair remains with central bank after his term ends

Federal prosecutors made an unannounced visit this week to a construction site at Federal Reserve headquarters that is the focus of an investigation into a $2.5 billion renovation project, according to two people familiar with the visit.

Two prosecutors and an investigator from U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro’s office were turned away on Tuesday by a building contractor and referred to Fed attorneys, one of the people said. The two people familiar with the visit spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to publicly discuss an ongoing investigation.

Last month, during a closed-door hearing before a federal judge, a top deputy from Pirro’s office conceded that they hadn’t found any evidence of a crime in their investigation of the headquarters project.

The investigation has faced bipartisan opposition in Congress. It also has delayed Senate consideration of Kevin Warsh, President Donald Trump’s pick to replace Fed chairman Jerome Powell when his term ends May 15.

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THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

Federal prosecutors made an unannounced visit this week to a construction site at Federal Reserve headquarters that is the focus of an investigation into a $2.5 billion renovation project, according to two people familiar with the visit.

Two prosecutors and an investigator from U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro’s office were turned away on Tuesday by a building contractor and referred to Fed attorneys, one of the people said. The two people familiar with the visit spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to publicly discuss an ongoing investigation.

Last month, during a closed-door hearing before a federal judge, a top deputy from Pirro’s office conceded that they hadn’t found any evidence of a crime in their investigation of the headquarters project.

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President Donald Trump has again threatened to fire Jerome Powell if the Federal Reserve Chair decides to stay on the central bank’s governing board after his term as chair expires next month.

“Well then I’ll have to fire him, OK?” Trump told Fox Business in an interview that aired Wednesday when reminded that Powell has said he won’t leave the Fed while the Justice Department investigates a $2.5 billion renovation project at the bank.

Trump has for months wanted to remove Powell as chair of the Fed, saying he has been too slow in orchestrating interest rate cuts that would give the U.S. economy a quick boost. Powell has said the investigation is a pretext to undermine the Fed’s independence to set rates. A federal prosecutor last month admitted that the investigation into the renovations had turned up no evidence of a crime.

Powell’s term as Fed governor expires May 15, but his term as a Fed board member lasts until January 2028.

Trump has nominated former Fed official Kevin Warsh to succeed Powell. Yet Warsh’s confirmation has been delayed. Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican, has said he won’t vote to confirm any Fed nominees until the investigation is dropped.

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