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Horror ‘Beastie House’ report sparks calls for Scottish child protection overhaul

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Daily Record

“How many other children out there are being left in danger right now?”

Scotland faces calls for a child protection overhaul after a report highlighted how a monstrous paedophile ring was allowed to wreck young lives for years. MSP Paul Sweeney slammed the social work operation in Glasgow after the “Beastie House” abusers were enabled to reign at a filthy flat in the city, despite 25 glaring opportunities for meaningful intervention.

He has called for “real accountability” for the many decisions that led to effective blindness to the most serious harms being inflicted on three defenceless kids. And the Children First charity is now asking if the nation’s child protection system is fit for purpose, given the way children were failed.

Sweeney was shocked at the revelations that showed the victims were being closely monitored by social workers during all the years they were raped and tortured. But the kids were allowed to remain in their dire homes – where they were systematically and inhumanly abused and shared out among the vile group.

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The care system designated to help them somehow failed to escalate their cases to bring removal from their abusers. Sweeney said the independent report, commissioned by Glasgow’s Child Protection Committee, should signal a shake-up that challenges the accounts and excuses given by adults suspected of abuse.

He said: “This harrowing report lays bare a catastrophic, systemic failure of child protection in Glasgow. To think that there were 25 missed opportunities to rescue these vulnerable children over 16 years is a devastating indictment that must shake our public services to the very core.

“The system completely failed in its most fundamental duty: to listen to, protect, and defend the three children from these seven beasts who were hiding in plain sight.“ The MSP said the findings should not be regarded as historic errors or allowed them to be “brushed off” with hollow promises of “lessons learned”.

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He added: “There must be real accountability for the institutional blindness that allowed this horrific abuse to persist for so long. How many other children out there are being left in danger right now?

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“We need to know exactly why these red flags were repeatedly ignored, why agencies failed to communicate, and who is being held responsible for these potentially fatal lapses in judgement.”

Drug addicts Iain Owens, 46, Elaine Lannery, 40, Lesley Williams, 43, Paul Brannan, 42, Scott Forbes, 51, Barry Watson, 48, and John Clark, 48, were all found guilty of monstrous abuse, including rape, following a harrowing trial at the High Court in Glasgow in 2023.

The Daily Record revealed the “learning review” documented many glaring red flags that would indicate a high risk of abuse. Attacks on children were allowed to escalate for 16 years between the birth of one victim in 2007 and the jailing of the gang of seven for a total of 93 years in 2023.

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Children at the centre of the case were known to authorities from infancy. Agencies were visiting on a weekly, sometimes daily basis but critical information was not meaningfully analysed and shared. Kids were repeatedly kept off the Child Protection Register, despite missing school presenting with chronic headlice and begging food from people living near the dingy flat where they lived in Govan.

Primary school-age children were made to eat dog food and abuse each other while molesters egged them on. One child was put in a microwave and a locked fridge and freezer. But social workers repeatedly suggested they had warm and loving interactions with adults who were caring for them

Colin Anderson, independent chair of Glasgow’s Child Protection Committee, admitted the case was the worst he had encountered in 50 years. And he said the learnings from it may lead to an overhaul of a system that can incidentally facilitate the prolonging of abuse – even when kids are subjected to drug abuse, neglect and violence.

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The “keystone” concern identified in the report is to listen to children – both in what they say and the non-verbal language that should have screamed of abuse to the many professionals who downplayed the risks or looked the other way. Despite the severity of the case, Mr Anderson said he could not guarantee such failings may not happen again.

He said: “There was a culture whereby rather than focusing on the children rather than listening to the children taking evidence from the children that they listened to the adults, that’s something that rang right across this report.”

Mr Anderson said protection strategies like Scotland’s GIRFEC (Getting It Right For Every Child) and The Promise had helped many kids – but admitted the children in this case were appallingly failed. Horrors that emerged from the review include a four-month-old child being removed from the child protection register in 2007 despite a health visitor warning of “significant” ongoing risks.

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The damning report listed 13 “practice and organisational learnings” – demanding that more focus is placed on the words and demeanour of children. The report states the re-referral of children to Scottish Children’s Reporter Administration in 2019, demonstrated a prompt and effective of the legal framework.

But it adds that a decision not to refer in 2018 was “seriously flawed”, given it came after “concerns about the children being dirty and having headlice and being late or absent from school.” Mary Glasgow, Chief Executive of Scottish charity Children First said: “Child protection work is complex and the consequences of getting it wrong are devastating.

“It takes significant time, expertise and resources to get it right. We have to ask ourselves if we have a child protection system that is fit for purpose and if we are prepared to invest properly in what it takes to keep children safe?”

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Glasgow said much of what is highlighted in the report, commissioned by Glasgow City Council, has been flagged in similar reviews, over decades. She added: “As this review emphasises, too often professionals and services focus on the adults and overlook the needs and rights of the children. Professionals must be curious, vigilant and inquisitive when worried about a child’s behaviour, whatever it looks like.

“Behaviour should never be interpreted as ‘bad’ but seen for what it is – an indicator that something is wrong.”

An NSPCC Scotland spokesperson said the report highlights the “critical importance” of professional curiosity and scrutiny – rather than being fobbed off by the lies of abusive adults.

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The spokesperson said: “It is utterly heartbreaking that the children were subjected to such appalling abuse over such a prolonged period. While those convicted of these crimes are responsible for their actions, it is devastating that these children were not protected by others involved in their lives.

“This review highlights the critical importance of professional curiosity and scrutiny. It underlines the need for professionals to ask probing questions, not to take things at face value, share and connect information effectively, and carry out robust assessments to fully understand the impact of adult behaviour on children.”

The spokesperson said focus must remain on the child – speaking and listening to them, recognising signs of distress, and understanding what their behaviour and physical presentation may be telling us. They added: “There is significant learning for all agencies and organisations from this case, and at the NSPCC we are committed to taking the time to fully consider the report and its recommendations.”

Glasgow City Council stated an improvement plan is being worked in, which will focus on listening to children – both verbally and non verbally. The Scottish Government has been asked to comment.

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Plymouth Live: Cordons in place after ‘explosive device’ found near busy road

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Plymouth was one of the most heavily bombed British cities during World War Two.

More than 50 bombing raids were carried out on the city between 1941 and 1944, killing about 1,178 civilians.

Official records estimate that at least 2,820 bombs were dropped on Plymouth, with about 10 per cent failing to detonate, leaving unexploded ordnance scattered across the area.

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GOP senators warn FISA program may lapse after intel pick backlash

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GOP senators warn FISA program may lapse after intel pick backlash

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans are warning the White House that a critical surveillance authority is likely to lapse this week amid bipartisan backlash over President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the nation’s intelligence community.

Sen. Tom Cotton, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and Sen. Chuck Grassley, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, sounded the alarm over the weekend after a failed procedural vote to extend the program.

The senators in a letter urged Secretary of State Marco Rubio to prepare “for a potential significant gap in foreign intelligence collection” if the authority expires. Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, set to lapse June 12, allows agencies including the CIA, National Security Agency and FBI to collect communications from foreign targets overseas without a warrant.

Efforts to secure a long-term extension of the program already faced hurdles because of bipartisan concerns that the program can incidentally collect Americans’ communications. Privacy advocates and some lawmakers have been pushing to create a new warrant requirement before those communications can be searched.

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Senate leaders from both parties appeared to be nearing agreement on a long-term extension. But the effort collapsed after Trump selected federal housing finance regulator Bill Pulte to serve as acting director of national intelligence.

“I know how important this tool is. Why the president would throw this live hand grenade of Bill Pulte in 10 days before this is due to expire, I’m not sure,” Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said on ABC’s “This Week.”

Pulte pick upends bipartisan deal

Early Friday morning, after senators spent the night debating separate immigration legislation, seven Republicans joined nearly all Democrats in blocking a long-term extension of the surveillance authority.

Democrats and several Republicans registered their opposition to Trump’s selection of Pulte, arguing the federal housing finance regulator lacks the experience needed to oversee the nation’s 18 intelligence agencies.

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“The naming of Pulte to that position, although the timing arguably wasn’t the best, I still don’t think it ought to derail something that’s this important,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said.

Thune has expressed concern over Pulte’s pick, saying the nation’s top intelligence post should not be “weaponized” and that the job should be filled by “professionals.” Cotton, who rarely strays from supporting Trump and a leading advocate for the surveillance authority, declined to endorse Pulte, saying only that he had “no observations on the matter.”

“He’s not qualified for the long-term position,” Republican Sen. James Lankford, another member of the Intelligence Committee, told “Fox News Sunday.” “That’s been clear on this. He has no national security background.”

Both Republican and Democratic senators skeptical of Pulte pointed to his record at the Federal Housing Finance Agency. In the role, he’s been linked with criminal referrals over allegations of mortgage fraud by public officials Trump sought to punish, including New York Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat; Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif.; and Lisa Cook, a board member of the Federal Reserve.

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Republicans will need to garner some Democratic support to pass any extension of the surveillance authority in the Senate. But a breakthrough appears difficult so long as Pulte remains in the position, which Trump said last week would only be temporary.

“I don’t see any path to convincing enough Democrats,” Warner said on CNN’s “State of the Union” when asked if renewal was possible with Pulte in the position.

A key surveillance tool

The current reauthorization debate is hardly the first time that lawmakers have grappled with the fate of the surveillance program, particularly after a flurry of revelations about government misuse of the vast trove of intelligence it collects.

The topic in recent years has scrambled predictable partisan alliances, with Democratic critics of the Trump administration uniting with skeptics of government power on the right in voicing concerns about Section 702’s renewal.

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In 2024, for instance, those divisions nearly caused the program to lapse. The Senate barely missed its midnight deadline that year before approving by a 60-34 margin legislation to reauthorize Section 702 that was subsequently signed by then-President Joe Biden.

A spokesperson at the Justice Department did not immediately return messages seeking comment Monday about the national security concerns that would be created if the program lapses. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence referred inquiries to the White House, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“America faces real threats from foreign adversaries, terrorists, cyber actors, and hostile intelligence services,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said on social media Sunday. “Section 702 remains one of our nation’s most effective tools for identifying and disrupting those threats before they reach our shores.”

Cotton and Grassley said they believed Democratic leaders would not support another short-term extension of the surveillance authority and urged Rubio to prepare contingency plans. They said Trump should consider an executive order to prevent a disruption in intelligence collection.

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Cotton and Warner had said they were close on a bipartisan deal on a long-term extension and could still move quickly should a change occur before Friday. Still, the bill would likely need to go through the House — and the two chambers so far have disagreed on a separate issue regarding central banking digital currency.

“If we go dark next week, right before the World Cup FIFA games, and the 250th anniversary, that would be the most grossly irresponsible thing I’ve seen Congress do in my 22 years in office,” Texas Republican Rep. Michael McCaul said on ABC’s “This Week.”

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Noah Donohoe may have ‘lost touch with reality’ prior to death, inquest is told

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Belfast Live

However, jurors also heard a statement from a second expert who concluded ‘there is no psychiatric explanation for Noah’s disappearance or death’

It is possible Noah Donohoe “had lost touch with reality and was in a psychotic state” as he travelled through Belfast on the night of his disappearance, a psychologist’s statement that was read at the inquest into his death has said.

However, jurors at Belfast Coroner’s Court also heard a statement from another expert who concluded “there is no psychiatric explanation for Noah Donohoe’s disappearance or death”.

The 14-year-old had been planning to meet with school friends at Cavehill after setting out on his bike on Sunday June 21, 2020.

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He was captured on CCTV cycling through the city centre and then towards the north of the city. In the final clip, the last footage of Noah before he disappeared, he is seen riding the bike naked.

His naked body was found in an underground water tunnel on June 27, six days after he left home.

A postmortem examination found the likely cause of death was drowning.

On Monday, the court heard a statement from Dr Louise Bowers, forensic psychologist, dated October 2021.

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Among the items Noah had in his possession when he left home in June 2020 was the self-help book 12 Rules for Life, by the author Jordan Peterson.

Dr Bowers said Noah was “totally obsessed” with the 12 Rules for Life book which clearly had a “profound impact on Noah and almost certainly influenced some of the changes” seen in the days of June 2020, but alone is not enough to explain “troubling behaviour” before his death.

She said Noah was “adored by his mother” and the pair had a “strong attachment to each other”.

He also “did not have a history of mental health difficulties” and no evidence he was experiencing any mental disorders, with “no history of self-harming behaviour or suicidal ideation”.

Dr Bowers said it is possible Noah had some “traits of autism spectrum disorder (ASD)” but concluded he was a “quirky young man with some obsessional traits” that would not have met the threshold for diagnosis.

She described Noah as a “reasonably well-adjusted 14-year-old” but his mother had reported in the days before his death he had become “weepy, his mood was low, had become more affectionate physically and verbally towards her”.

He had become “extremely introspective” and “rejected offers” from his friends to talk, being “awake in the middle of the night and searching for things that at times had dark themes”.

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While Dr Bowers found no events in Noah’s life that may have triggered depression, the illness can develop “without warning in children who were previously well-adjusted”.

She said it is “possible Noah was experiencing some symptoms of depression in the run-up to his disappearance”.

The psychologist also ruled that Noah was “showing signs of psychological disturbance before he left his house” which became “much more concerning” on departure, and then showed “increasingly disturbed behaviour as he cycled through the city of Belfast”.

He went on to discard his rucksack and laptop, before the rest of his clothing, in what Dr Bowers described as a “sequence of unusual and perplexing behaviour”.

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She ruled that a postmortem examination of Noah’s body made it unlikely to be caused by taking drugs or alcohol or a head injury.

She said symptoms of a psychotic episode include hallucinations, delusions and confused and disturbed thought.

While 14 “would be very young to be having a first psychotic episode” and it is practically “unheard of” for a psychotic episode to instigate so quickly and be so dramatic, the psychologist said there was “something ritualistic” about how Noah discarded his possessions and that “religious and philosophical themes” can be present in delusions.

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“It is possible Noah had lost touch with reality and was in a psychotic state leading him to believe he was being instructed to behave in these unusual ways,” her statement read.

The inquest then heard two statements from Dr Seena Fazel, a consultant psychiatrist.

In his first statement in November 2021, Dr Fazel ruled that Noah’s death was “likely suicide”, but in a statement from March 2026, given after he had seen further material, the doctor concluded “there is no psychiatrist explanation for Noah Donohoe’s disappearance or death”.

In his first statement, Dr Fazel said Noah’s “mood was lower and more unstable in the days before his disappearance”, potentially indicating an “acute episode of low and unstable mood which lasted a few days”.

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In his revised statement based on new material – which amounted to more than 700 pages including another psychiatrist’s interview with Ms Donohoe and transcripts of Noah’s friends’ evidence to the inquest – along with discussion with other psychiatrists analysing Noah, Dr Fazel said he does “not think it was suicide on the balance of probabilities”.

He said Noah’s “changes to mental state were probably not consistent with an acute episode of low mood”, adding: “I do not think there were any mental health conditions prior to his disappearance.”

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West Ham owner David Sullivan ‘believed he had sex with 16-year-old girl’ when he was in 40s

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West Ham owner David Sullivan 'believed he had sex with 16-year-old girl' when he was in 40s
David Sullivan denies allegations of ‘improper conduct’ towards women (PA Wire)

David Sullivan has been accused of ‘preying on teenage models’ in an explosive Panorama episode.

The 77-year-old resigned as West Ham joint-chair and has vowed to sue the BBC ahead of the ‘impending publication of serious historic allegations’.

BBC’s Panorama reported Sullivan admitting to paying for sex in the 90s with a girl who, he says, he believed was 16 or 17 years old at the time.

It only became illegal to pay for sex with a 16 or 17-year-old in 2003.

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The allegations come from seven models, in their late teens or early twenties at the time, seeking work at his Daily and Sunday Sport titles.

One using the name Florence claims Sullivan penetrated her after promising to make her one of his ‘regular girls’.

Then, aged 20, she tried to make excuses, including that she was on her period, before he manoeuvred her into a bedroom and started having sex with her, she said.

‘This is the bit that will haunt me forever,’ she said.

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‘He lifted his pinky in the air – his little finger – and he went, it’s all right, I’ll only put it in a little bit.’

She was in ‘pure panic mode’, Florence said, and she is ‘99.999999%’ sure that she was telling him: ‘I don’t want to, I don’t want to.’

‘I don’t know whether it was a whisper. It wasn’t a scream,’ she said.

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Florence said she panicked and said her boyfriend was outside, but Sullivan was undeterred, saying: ‘It will only take a minute and he never has to know.’

His lawyers say Florence’s account is ‘implausible’.

Blow job or no job

Panorama alleges Sullivan earned the nickname ‘No job/blow job’ – after allegedly asking models to perform oral sex in return for modelling in his papers.

The Guardian once quoted him as saying: ‘I’ve always said what’s the point in owning a sweet shop if you can’t eat a few sweets.’

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Sacha another model claimed she remembered being summoned to his mansion for a business meeting.

She said she was surprised by how scruffily dressed the businessman was when she met him, finding him in ‘flip-flops’ and a scruffy t-shirt.

‘But when he asked me to come and sit next to him, I’m like, what is going on? Like, that’s not part of the job interview. So I walk over, I put my bra back on… and I sat as far away as I could get.’

She said she told him: ‘If you think I’m going to sleep with you to get in the paper, you’ve got another thing coming.’

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‘He looked very shocked as I said that,’ she continued. ‘And then said, what, not even a blow job?”

Shocked, she said she replied: ‘No, definitely not.’

Sullivan, who made his fortune from pornography, claims he is now facing ‘a small number of improper conduct claims’ after meeting ‘thousands of women’ in the adult industry.

David Sullivan, Chairman of West Ham United, and his fiance Ampika Pickston watch during the English Premier League football match between West Ham United and Leeds United at the London Stadium, in east London on May 24, 2026. (Photo by Henry NICHOLLS / AFP via Getty Images) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or 'live' services. Online in-match use limited to 120 images. An additional 40 images may be used in extra time. No video emulation. Social media in-match use limited to 120 images. An additional 40 images may be used in extra time. No use in betting publications, games or single club/league/player publications. /
David Sullivan and his fiancée Ampika Pickston were at the London Stadium to watch West Ham’s relegation on the final day of the Premier League season (AFP via Getty)

In his own statement, Sullivan branded the allegations made against him as ‘defamatory’ and ‘false’, and said he plans to sue the BBC for libel.

‘I have recently become aware that factually incorrect and entirely false, decades-old allegations concerning my personal life are due to be broadcast and published,’ Sullivan said.

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‘The false allegations levelled against me have been sensationalised by the media. After a lifetime spent building businesses in the adult industry in which I have met thousands of women, it is sadly inevitable that a small number of improper conduct claims are being made against me. I categorically deny these claims.

‘I am a private man, and those who personally and professionally know the real David Sullivan, not the caricature invented by the tabloids, know exactly who I am and what I stand for. I am absolutely not the person the media has decided to paint me as.

WOLVERHAMPTON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 03: West Ham United fans hold up No More BS Just resign flags featuring caricatures of Karren Brady and David Sullivan as they protest against the ownership during the Premier League match between Wolverhampton Wanderers and West Ham United at Molineux on January 03, 2026 in Wolverhampton, England. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)
West Ham fans protested against David Sullivan throughout last season (Getty)

‘I have not been provided with any proper explanation as to how these individuals or their claims were independently verified or assessed for credibility prior to publication. I believe that the entire process has been fundamentally unfair and completely lacking in any due impartiality. I will be suing the BBC for libel, along with any other media outlet that repeats any libellous allegations.

‘None of these allegations relate to my more than 30 years in football; West Ham United has been one of the greatest passions and privileges of my life. I care deeply about the club, its supporters, its players, its staff, and its future. At what is already a challenging and important time for the club, I refuse to allow personal matters concerning me to become an unnecessary distraction or a source of instability.

‘Therefore, after very careful consideration and with a heavy heart, I have decided to resign as Joint-Chair and Director of West Ham United FC with immediate effect.’

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Cambridgeshire construction company enters liquidation after nearly 19 years of trade

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Cambridgeshire Live

A liquidator has been appointed

A Cambridgeshire based company has entered into liquidation after nearly 19 years, according to the London Gazette. D & L Groundworks Limited, specialising in construction and civil engineering, based in Whittlesey, entered liquidation in April.

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A Winding-Up Notice was published in the London Gazette on April 8. A liquidator has been appointed.

The Gazette states that it is a ‘Creditors’ liquidation. Molly Monks of Parker Walsh has been appointed as liquidator of the company for the purposes of the voluntary winding-up.

Companies House confirmed that the business is now in liquidation. Documents show that the company, of Peterborough Road, Whittlesey, was registered in June 2007.

The company previously traded under the name ‘DLP Groundworks Ltd’. It has two current listed directors: Lesley Jane Page and Darren Michael Page, both of Peterborough Road.

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A notice on London Gazette states: “At a General Meeting of the Members of the above-named Company [D & L Groundworks Limited], duly convened, and held at Suite C, Victoria House, Bramhall, Cheshire SK7 2BE on 1 April 2026 at 10.00 am the following resolutions were passed by the Members as a Special resolution and as an Ordinary resolution:

“That the Company be wound up voluntarily and that Molly Monks (IP No. 19830) of Parker Walsh, Suite C, Victoria House, Bramhall, Cheshire SK7 2BE be appointed Liquidator of the Company.”

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Parents warned social media reforms won’t be ‘one and done’ as tech pace surges

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Ministers will soon announce new online safety measures for youngsters, including a possible ban for under 16s for apps like Facebook, Instagram and TikTok – but it won’t be the end of the issue

Liz Kendall has warned the public that upcoming plans to crack down on kids’ social media usage will not mean the issue is “one and done”.

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The Technology Secretary said she wants to protect kids from “harms and risks” online but also to prepare them for a life that will involve technology in some way in the future.

Keir Starmer will soon announce new online safety measures for youngsters, which is expected to include a ban for under 16s for apps like Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.

Asked about the UK mirroring an Australian-style ban, Ms Kendall said the UK’s consultation has looked at a wider range of issues, including how kids can partner with strangers on gaming sites, addictive design features like infinite scrolling or AI chatbots.

But she continued: “Technology is developing so fast. Anybody in this world who thinks that it is one and done will be wrong because the technology is always changing.

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“So I’m acutely aware of the need for government – any government – will have to be continually looking at these issues in the years to come because this technology is traveling so fast.

“My objective is to give kids the healthiest possible start online; to protect them from harms and risks; to prepare them for the future because they are going to be on this.”

Ms Kendall spoke to reporters on Monday after giving a speech on artificial intelligence at the Science Museum. She said she wants society to embrace the opportunities tech can bring but admitted she must tackle the public’s fears, including the impact of social media on kids and the AI threat on entry-level jobs.

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“We actually want to seize the opportunities of tech and AI and people won’t do it if they think their job’s at risk or their children are at risk, so it is because I can see this massive potential for AI to cure diseases,” she said.

Over the weekend, Ms Kendall launched the Early Careers Jobs Alliance – led by union and AI experts – to understand how entry-level jobs could change due to AI. It will at first focus on digital and tech jobs before expanding to other industrial strategy sectors, with the first report published this autumn.

An AI bootcamp scheme will also be rolled out across England to provide a path to work for young people who are at risk of becoming unemployed and out of education and training.

In a speech at the Science Museum, Ms Kendall admitted young people have the most fears about suffering due to AI. She said: “A clear majority of the public think AI will reduce more jobs than create or enhance them.

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“These concerns are particularly acute among young people, with only one in 10 believing the benefits of AI will be shared fairly across society. A key driver of this is the potential impact of AI on early job and career opportunities. Those of us who believe in the immense potential of AI to improve people’s lives must take these concerns seriously.”

After her speech, Ms Kendall added to reporters: “Bottom line is. Talent is everywhere, opportunity is not. I have always believed the only way we succeed as individuals and as families and as a country is if we can draw on the talent of everybody.

“And I will not rest until we break down those barriers to success. AI has got some incredible potential, and I want kids in Wigan and Westminster and Bournemouth and Birmingham and Blackburn to all have these chances to succeed. That is my mission, and I am determined to deliver.”

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Former Footballer of Year hits out at ‘verbose’ GAA chief over Ger Brennan ban

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Dublin star Jack McCaffrey has defended suspended manager Ger Brennan, saying his 12-week ban was ‘overly harsh’

Jack McCaffrey believes former Dublin teammate Ger Brennan only spoke publicly about his 12-week suspension due to ‘a particularly verbose member of the GAA hierarchy’.

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Dublin boss Brennan will be permitted to return to his touchline role at Kingspan Breffni on Sunday when the 2023 All-Ireland winners face Cavan in a crucial Round 2B encounter.

Last week, Brennan released a statement via his legal representative addressing various comments made by GAA President Jarlath Burns during media appearances on Tuesday.

Brennan took issue with what he described as ‘insulting’ remarks from Burns regarding the disciplinary process, stating the entire episode had made him feel ‘disenfranchised, undervalued’ and experiencing ‘a lack of belonging to the association’.

At Monday afternoon’s announcement of PTSB’s new sponsorship of the PTSB Dublin club leagues and championships, former Footballer of the Year McCaffrey suggested Brennan conducted himself ‘really admirably’ throughout the ‘overly harsh’ suspension and maintained his silence until he felt forced to respond, reports the Irish Mirror.

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“I think Ger has acknowledged and apologised and held his hands up early doors,” McCaffrey observed. “And probably felt that his punishment was overly harsh and pursued his appeals, as far as I could see, quietly. And was unsuccessful in them. And then didn’t say a peep really – until he did. Which I think was prompted by a particularly verbose member of the GAA hierarchy talking about it.

“And I think Ger has every right (to feel aggrieved). He was punished, he accepted his punishment. Why do people still need to keep having a pop off him in the media over it? Sorry, that might be a mischaracterisation of what happened but I do have a huge amount of sympathy for Ger in feeling that he was overly, harshly punished.”

McCaffrey stated he didn’t believe the severe sanction imposed on Brennan, in contrast to the lack of action taken against Donegal manager Jim McGuinness for a relatively similar incident in the Kerry game, represented ‘an anti-Dublin thing’.

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“I don’t think it means that everybody should get a 12-week ban, two wrongs don’t make a right in that instance,” McCaffrey remarked, while recalling the 12-week ban handed to his former Dublin teammate Diarmuid Connolly after an incident involving a linesman in 2017.

“I am reminded of an episode when I was playing, when one of our teammates got a 12-week suspension for touching an official, and it just became clear that a lot of people touch officials over the course of a season, from watching games, and yet don’t get 12-week bans.

“So I think that’s a case-by-case thing, it’s not an anti-Dublin thing at all. I’m a firm believer that anyone involved in the GAA at any level is doing it with the best intentions and doesn’t go out to treat anyone unfairly. I’d give everyone the benefit of the doubt there. But I can completely sympathise with Ger feeling very disappointed.”

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Dublin are desperately seeking to revive their Championship campaign following consecutive defeats to Leinster rivals Westmeath and Louth. Brennan has been absent from Dublin’s last four matches in total due to a suspension stemming from an incident during their National League clash with Galway on March 22.

“It’s just such a pity really,” said medical doctor McCaffrey, a six-time All-Ireland winner. “And I think Ger has behaved really admirably around the whole thing, in terms of just keeping the head down in so far as he could. And they got on with it as a group.

“I think particularly in a first season when you’re trying to find an identity as a gang with new players and everything like that, I just felt sorry for them having to deal with that. And I think Dean (Rock) in fairness has done a remarkable job. I’m sure he didn’t see himself in that role six months ago, 12 weeks ago even.

“I think they’ll have some regrets over it because it’ll have affected the year, and they’ll just need to kind of look back on it and obviously make sure it doesn’t happen again.”

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World Cup 2026: Marcus Rashford is ‘dead cert for me’ to start for England, says Theo Walcott

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Marcus Rashford

Former England winger Theo Walcott says Marcus Rashford is the Three Lions player he is “most psyched about” at the upcoming World Cup.

Rashford was left out of Gareth Southgate’s Euro 2024 squad and did not play for his country for 12 months between March 2024 and 2025.

Re-introduced by Thomas Tuchel, he has featured in every Three Lions squad under the German other than in June 2025 when a hamstring injury ruled him out.

A loan spell at Barcelona, where he scored 14 goals and registered 14 assists in 47 games for the La Liga champions, has revitalised the 28-year-old Manchester United forward’s career.

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He started England’s 1-0 friendly win over New Zealand on Saturday and while Tuchel said there were “no hidden messages” within his first-half line-up, Walcott believes Rashford has to start at the World Cup.

“Rashford this year has been outstanding,” Walcott said on The Wayne Rooney Show.

“I’ve watched him quite a lot. I found the love of watching Barcelona again and took more of an interest with Rashford going out there. It’s been great for him.

“He would be a dead cert to start for me. The way he’s played, that freedom, that enjoyment. We want to see that smile.”

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Rashford was England’s bright spark in the first half against New Zealand, creating five chances.

“Rashford’s going to be a major part of this tournament,” Walcott added. “I’m looking forward to watching him. Out of all the players, I’m most psyched about him.

“I think he’s brave to go abroad – it’s great when English players go. I wasn’t brave enough, but for him to do that shows good character.”

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New bake house to open in Shotley Bridge next week

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New bake house to open in Shotley Bridge next week

The Bake House, at 54 Ashfield, in Shotley Bridge will open its doors on June 19 under owner Stuart Martin, 39, who moved from Darlington to Consett ten years ago.

Stuart has worked in hospitality and catering since the age of 16 after attending catering college.

Stuart Martin, 39, originally from Darlington is the face behind the new Bake House in Shotley Bridge (Image: THE BAKE HOUSE)

Most recently, he taught catering to adult learners at Darlington College before a health scare five years ago led to a period in hospital and forced him to stop working.

He later established a community café at Lanchester Community Centre, which operated for three years and built up a strong customer base before he decided to pursue a new challenge.

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Stuart then decided to open The Bake House last summer and secured the keys to the premises in November.

Full renovations have been underway since November last year ahead of the set opening date June 19 (Image: THE BAKE HOUSE)

Since then, the building has undergone a full renovation and is now undergoing final preparations ahead of opening.

The business will sell homemade pies served with meat gravy and homemade mushy peas, alongside a range of traditional and changing pie flavours.

Customers will also be able to buy pastries, cakes, scones, bakery products, light breakfasts including bacon and sausage sandwiches, deli sandwiches and fresh barista coffee.

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Full renovations have been underway since November last year ahead of the set opening date June 19 (Image: THE BAKE HOUSE)

The business will initially employ a team of three, including Charles, who previously worked with Stuart at the community café, and Charles’ wife Brandy, who will work part-time.

Stuart said: “The response has been great, and really reassured us.

“I was quite apprehensive as two shops have closed on the street quite recently and I was worried it was going to be turning into a ghost town, but there has been interest in those vacant shops and I think it will all be okay.

“We have been dropping leaflets off in the local community and the response has been great. While doing the works we have left the door open and had so many people popping down to have a look at the progress or speak with us, so it is really reassuring.

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“I am not just really excited. I am not in this to make my millions, I am doing it because I love what we do and I think we are good at it.

The Bake House at Shotley Bridge will specialise in traditional homemade pies, with meat gravy and homemade mushy peas (Image: THE BAKE HOUSE)

The Bake House at Shotley Bridge is set to open on June 19 (Image: THE BAKE HOUSE)

“We had a strong customer base at the community café and were trusted there so we can’t wait to open here now and build the same thing.”

The Bake House will be open from 8am to 1.30pm Tuesday to Friday and from 10am to 1.30pm on Saturdays.

Takeaway service will be available, alongside a small indoor seating area, with outdoor seating planned in the future.

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Verdict that SAS killing of four IRA men was not justified is ‘illegal and irrational’

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Belfast Live

Both the UK government and military veterans involved in the 1992 operation are seeking to have findings from an inquest quashed, claiming a failure to properly consider the potential threat they posed

An inquest verdict that SAS soldiers were not justified in opening fire and killing four IRA men in a Co Tyrone village was illegal and irrational, the High Court heard today.

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The coroner failed to carry out the correct assessment before ruling that the use of lethal force at Clonoe in February 1992 was unreasonable, a judge was told.

Kevin Barry O’Donnell, 21, Sean O’Farrell, 22, Peter Clancy, 21, and Patrick Vincent, 20, died in the ambush just minutes after they had carried out a gun attack on Coalisland police station.

Both the UK government and military veterans involved in the operation are seeking to have the inquest findings quashed, claiming a failure to properly consider the potential threat they posed.

Joseph Aiken KC, representing the Secretary of State for Defence, argued: “The terrorists that the soldiers expected they would have to confront were among the most ruthless and dangerous members of a highly effective terrorist organisation.”

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Members of a specialist military unit opened fire when the men arrived at a church car park in a hijacked lorry with a heavy machine gun welded onto the back.

Twelve soldiers were in position and waiting for them at the scene.

At the time the SAS men insisted the use of lethal force was justified to protect their lives and those of their colleagues from the danger posed by the IRA Active Service Unit.

However, in February last year, coroner Mr Justice Humphreys found that their actions were not reasonable or justified.

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He identified no attempt made to arrest the four IRA men, even as they lay wounded.

According to the coroner, experienced soldiers lying in wait at the church would have known the IRA men needed to dismount the machine gun – improving the chances of making arrests.

And in that scenario the ability to arrest them would have improved.

Amid criticism from unionist and Conservative politicians at the findings, judicial review challenges have been brought against the outcome reached.

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Opening a case listed for a two-week hearing, Mr Aiken claimed the coroner’s approach involved “a significant legal error” in assessing the central issue of the Article 2 justification for opening fire.

Based on that alleged mistake, he contended the verdict was illegal, irrational, wrongly took some factors into account and did not properly consider other relevant issues.

It was unreasonable to suggest the soldiers did not honestly believe their lives were in danger when they confronted members of an IRA unit which had just fired an anti-aircraft machine gun and other weapons, the court heard.

Opening a case listed for a two-week hearing, Mr Aiken suggested a failure to “stand in the shoes” of the SAS men who used force at the scene.

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Instead, he argued, the legal test for self-defence and justification when faced with heavily-armed terrorists was incorrectly applied.

Mr Justice McAlinden was told events which led to the four men’s deaths unfolded in the space of two minutes.

Along with the 12 soldiers, there were also at least 10 IRA men, a lorry with a mounted anti-aircraft gun and other vehicles all at the scene.

“If you are assessing the express belief of a soldier and their decision-making… then you have to take into account exactly what else was happening at the point that decision was made,” Mr Aiken submitted.

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“There is an absence of consideration about the nature of the terrorist threat that the specialist military unit was dealing with on that night.”

Describing the attack on Coalisland RUC Station as part of a wider, sustained campaign of terrorism, the barrister insisted the incident was unlike other law enforcement scenarios.

“Given the opportunity, the terrorists involved would have tried to kill the soldiers,” he added.

“If we are right on any of these legal errors on the Article 2 justification assessment, then the (inquest) findings and verdict must be quashed.”

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The case continues.

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