The little boy watched the assailant wash his hands in a nearby stream before leaving, then clung to his 23-year-old mother’s body until they were found.
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Officers who arrived at the scene had to prise him away.
‘It was an incredibly high-profile case. A mother and her young child walking on Wimbledon Common in the middle of the day – you don’t expect that sort of thing to happen. There was huge public sympathy,’ forensic scientist Angela Gallop tells Metro.
Police quickly sealed off Wimbledon Common and began one of the largest murder investigations the Metropolitan Police had ever seen. Three incident rooms were set up, while helicopters, mounted officers and forensic teams combed the area.
Witness appeals went out almost immediately through television bulletins and newspapers, triggering a media frenzy. The nation was shocked by the brutality of the broad daylight attack.
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André Hanscombe took his son Alex back to Wimbledon Common with detectives as part of their investigation (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
Appeals for witnesses went out almost instantly and André spoke to the media as police desperately tried to find clues of who killed Rachel (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
In a race against time to find the killer, detectives and psychologists worked with Alex for months, trying to glean information as his anxious father André Hanscombe watched on, fearful of the long-term effects of repeated questioning.
Behind the scenes, the heartbroken dad was desperately trying to keep life as ‘normal’ as possible for his traumatised son.
‘Literally hours after the event, I kept as close to the routine Rachel and Alex shared together as I could,’ André explains, as he shares never-before-seen pictures of Rachel and Alex.
‘I was blessed to have two incredibly loving parents who cared deeply about me,’ says Alex (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
André says that keeping life for Alex as normal as possible would have been very important to Rachel (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
Rachel and André had dreams about moving to France and having more children together (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
Rachel was a real nature lover, says André (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
‘That would have been important to her and was important to me. My aim was building a routine he could rely on, from having the same bowl of cereal for breakfast, having a walk, and doing ordinary things – even going back to parks that looked almost identical to the place where the attack took place.’
Now 36, Alex adds: ‘But at the same time, in many ways that was impossible, we couldn’t return to our home, which was surrounded by reporters and because there was a killer on the loose.
‘We were staying temporarily with family and friends, until ultimately we were tracked down and moved to another country, where we lived in rented accommodation, ready to pack up and move on in a moment’s notice.’
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With DNA testing at the time fruitless, police struggled to find concrete leads.
Colin Stagg spent 13 months in prison on remand awaiting trial for the murder of Rachel (Picture: PA)
In September 1992, Colin Stagg was arrested after viewers of Crimewatch said he resembled the photofit of the killer. He was released but arrested again in 1993 and later charged with Rachel’s murder. After spending over a year in custody, the case collapsed at the Old Bailey in 1994.
Years passed with no answers. Meanwhile, there was more violence.
Police were investigating a series of sexual attacks that became known as the Green Chain rapes, carried out across parks and open spaces in south-east London between 1989 and 1993.
Then, in November 1993, Samantha Bissett, 27, and her four-year-old daughter Jazmine were found murdered at their home in Plumstead, south London.
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Samantha Bissett and her four-year-old daughter Jazmine whose bodies were discovered at their flat in Plumstead, south London in November 1993 (Picture: PA)
It was one of the most shocking cases detectives had ever encountered.
Retired Detective Sergeant Roger Boydell-Smith, the exhibits officer at the time, remembers the moment he entered the flat.
‘My detective superintendent put his arm around me and said, “Roge, brace yourself, son, because this is the worst one I’ve ever seen”.’
Recalling what he saw for Netflix documentary The Murder of Rachel Nickell, Roger says: ‘When we walked in, it became apparent that Samantha had been possibly stabbed to death in the hallway, dragged through to the living room and placed on a large cushion in a star formation, and she’d been mutilated.’
The detectives then found four-year-old Jazmine dead in her bed beneath a duvet, suffocated and sexually assaulted.
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‘I’ve dealt with lots of murders in my career. This one was horrific. It does affect you emotionally,’ Roger tells Metro.
The police took hundreds of fingerprints but were unable to find any that could not be eliminated as belonging to family or visitors. There was no DNA or other clues.
Moving to France with his son was a ‘turning point from the heart,’ says André (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
‘Alex always had a huge appetite for life, and I want people to know that, and to know that he’s doing well.’ (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
They soon drew potential links with Rachel Nickell’s murder 16 months earlier – young mothers, extreme violence, multiple stab wounds while children present – but the Nickell investigation team rejected the idea, says Roger.
‘It’s extremely rare that strangers attack members of the public. Children being present is even rarer. He’s probably done something similar before.
‘We couldn’t fathom out how, within a gap of 16 months between the Wimbledon common murder and the Plumstead murder, two different people could carry out such ferocious, audacious crimes. So was it possible that the same person committed both?’
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At the time, Colin Stagg was still awaiting trial and the investigation team were convinced they had man who killed Rachel.
Angela Gallop and Roger Boydell Smith both worked on the case (Picture: Netflix)
‘For us to suggest that they might have got the wrong man didn’t go down very well,’ remembers Roger.
Prior to the murders of Samantha and Jazmine, an artist’s impression of the Green Chain rapist was distributed widely across Southeast London’s public places and police stations.
A member of the public reported a man called Robert Napper and the police went to visit him at his Plumstead bedsit.
He was cooperative and gave his details, but failed to attend a later appointment to provide samples. Napper was eventually ruled out, partly because he was thought to be taller than the assailant.
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‘That was a catastrophic decision because he went on then to murder the Bissetts,’ says Roger. ‘He could have been caught quite easily. The officers involved will have to live with that for the rest of their lives.’
Robert Napper was responsible for a series or rapes across South London as well as the three murders (Picture: PA)
When evidence from Samantha’s flat was later re-examined it revealed a shocking discovery – one of the prints inside was Napper’s.
He was arrested and inside his tiny bedsit, detectives found a padlocked red toolbox containing knives, a book about methods of strangulation and an map of London what was covered in markings and doodles – one of which was very near the spot where Rachel was killed.
Napper was later convicted of the killings of Samantha and Jazmine on the grounds of diminished responsibility and detained indefinitely at Broadmoor Hospital in 1995.
Tragically, one woman who never saw justice served was Samantha Bissett’s mother.
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Maggie Morrison, 53, collapsed at her home in Stonehaven, Aberdeenshire, 48 hours before Napper was convicted. Her husband Jack said she’d died of a broken heart.
‘Samantha was an only child, and her mother, Margaret, never recovered from the loss of her only grandchild and her only daughter,’ says Roger.
‘It’s just very, very sad case. So many lives were ruined.’
Following Napper’s conviction, the independent police watchdog found a “catalogue of errors” in the investigations, concluding missed opportunities that allowed the killer to remain free.
Meanwhile, Rachel’s murder remained unsolved and Alex and André – now living in France to keep Alex safe while the killer remained loose – started to accept that they would never get answers.
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‘I had some familiarity with France but moving there meant losing our home, leaving behind family and friends – in short, everything that was our life. It was a turning point decision made from the heart,’ remembers André.
‘Rachel and I had dreams about moving to France and having more children together. She was a real nature lover, so [for me and Alex] to be out there enjoying the changing seasons, being able to walk in bare feet and pick the fruit from the trees – she would have loved to share those moments with us.
‘It was idyllic – or, it would have been idyllic in any other circumstances, which was unbearably bittersweet.’
In 2002, forensic scientist Angela Gallop, who worked on high profile cases including James Bulger, Princess Diana and George Harrison, was asked to review the evidence in Rachel’s case.
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It took police more than15 years to solve Rachel’s murder (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
It was painstaking work. Evidence had to be re-analysed in conditions that eliminated any risk of contamination.
‘We thought – right, we’ve got to make our technique more sensitive. We need to do something slightly different,’ she tells Metro. It took two years, but they ended up with a DNA profile that they could feed it into the database – and matched with Robert Napper.
‘We went back to the crime scene, looked at all the samples and items that were collected, and noticed that there was a cast of a footwear mark on the muddy ground,’ recalls Angela. ‘And we thought – that’s interesting.’
The cast mark was smaller than Napper’s shoe that had been kept in evidence. So the team analysed the boggy ground in the glade where Rachel’s body had been found.
‘We discovered that if you press foot down on the on the ground, and then lift the shoe, the mud closes around it. So when you then cast the mark, it will be smaller than the shoe that made it.’
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They also found paint flakes in Alex’s hair that matched paint from a toolbox containing knives and other weapons that had been found in Napper’s flat.
It was enough to see the killer finally brought to justice for Rachel’s murder.
In January 2016, Robert Napper, then 42, pleaded guilty at the Old Bailey to the manslaughter Rachel Nickell. He remains in the high-security psychiatric facility Broadmoor Hospital today.
34 years on from Rachel’s murder, Netflix are releasing two titles based on her story – the three-part drama series The Witness, starring Kerry Godliman and Claire Rushbrook, and a documentary, The Murder of Rachel Nickell.
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Alex and André have been involved in both, with the dramatisation being based on Alex’s memoir, Letting Go.
Alex wrote a memoir about his life following his mother’s murder, called Letting Go (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
André contributed to the documentary and worked as a consultant on the dramatisation, alongside Alex (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
Talking about his early childhood, Alex says: ‘I have memories of both my parents together, some very early memories. I was blessed to have two incredibly loving parents who cared deeply about me, went the extra mile for me and were willing to suffer for me.
‘My mother suffered to protect me in her last moments, and my father suffered to protect me from there. Our relationship hasn’t always been easy, but nothing has ever been able to take away the love I have for my father, and I believe nothing ever will.’
André adds: ‘ People saw those headlines about a tragedy, a small nearly-three-year-old child, what he saw that day, and headlines saying he may never talk again from the trauma he suffered.
‘I know that the most important thing to Rachel would be his recovery, and of course it was the most important thing to me as well, having suffered abuse as a small child.
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‘Alex always had a huge appetite for life, and I want people to know that, and to know that he’s doing well.’
A scene from The Witness, starring (L to R) Jahsaiah Williams as Alex, Eleanor Williams as Rachell , and Jordan Bolger as André Hanscombe (Picture: Courtesy of Netflix)
However, Alex believes his mum never got the justice she deserved.
‘For 33 years, the police have washed their hands of their responsibility and their failure to do their job to serve and protect,’ he says. ‘They failed to take the killer off the street years before the attack on my mother and me.’
A Met Police spokesperson told Metro:
‘We are deeply sorry for the failings in the investigation into Rachel Nickell’s death.
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‘We accept that we should have done more to identify Robert Napper as a suspect, which could have prevented a number of serious attacks by him.
‘Since Rachel’s murder, the Met has overhauled how it investigates homicides, including better training of detectives, new forensics techniques and closer work with the Crown Prosecution Service.’
Both the drama series The Witness and documentary The Murder of Rachel Nickell will be available to watch on Netflix from Thursday, June 4.
Linda Emmeline Baggley was a reserve RUC constable who died in 1976, 10 days after being shot while on foot patrol with a colleague in the Waterside area of Derry.
Families of people killed in the Troubles have come together in a service of “remembrance, devotion and love” in Co Derry.
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The Baggley family were among those who attended the service at Newbuildings Methodist Church near Lisnakelly.
Linda Emmeline Baggley was a reserve RUC constable who died in 1976, 10 days after being shot while on foot patrol with a colleague in the Waterside area of Derry.
Kenny Donaldson, director of victims’ group Seff (South East Fermanagh Foundation), said the service was “a wonderful representation of remembrance, devotion and love”.
“The Baggley family were foremost in our thoughts with Lorraine sharing a family reflection concerning the upcoming 50th Anniversary since the cruel murder of Linda who passed away on June 2 1976 after having been shot and seriously injured a number of days previously,” he said.
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“Linda was aged just 19 years and was a Reserve RUC GC Constable, just two years earlier her daddy, William, who was also a Reservist Constable, was also murdered in Londonderry (just 100 metres separated the brutal crimes).
“Scripture lessons were read by Gillian McElholm, daughter of Michael McGinley who was murdered by the UDA/UFF in the Annie’s Bar attack, 1972, and Jennifer Millar, daughter of Charles McNaul who was murdered by the Provisional IRA, also in the city.
“And prayers were also read by Seff’s north west-based staff; Michael McKeegan, son of Lance Corporal John McKeegan who was murdered by the Provisional IRA; and Lara Burns, daughter of Robert Burns who was murdered by the IPLO.”
Children from the Newbuildings Primary School sang a number of songs and read prayers.
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Part of the prayers read by the children included: “We also appreciate the responsibility on our shoulders to both carry forth the torch of remembrance but also to build a new society – a new Northern Ireland and a united community.”
Mr Donaldson, who closed the service, said Seff’s mission is the “recalibration of attitudes concerning how society divides”.
“We are clear that the religious denomination someone happens to be born into (or not) or where someone stands on the constitutional question, is not the fundamental division,” he said.
“Rather the core basis for division is where people stand on the issue of violence, in the context of the Northern Ireland Troubles – those who used, justify or seek to explain away violence are of one tribe, and those who do not are part of the other tribe.”
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Seff’s memorial quilt exhibition will be hosted at the Newbuildings Methodist Church until Wednesday.
Breaking the cycle: Why prevention and rehabilitation are critical to safer communities
When I became Police and Crime Commissioner, I made a clear commitment to tackle not only crime itself but the root causes driving offending, addiction, anti-social behaviour, and repeat victimisation.
That commitment sits firmly at the heart of my Police, Crime, and Justice Plan 2025-2029 and my ambition to build communities that are safer, stronger, and more resilient to alcohol and drug-related crime and disorder.
Breaking the cycle (Image: Supplied)
It was this determination that led me to establish the Criminal Justice Policy Roundtable, bringing together policing, prisons, probation, health, housing, universities, charities, and people with lived experience to confront some of the biggest failings and pressures within our criminal justice system.
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The Roundtable was never designed to be a talking shop.
It was created to challenge outdated thinking, drive practical reform, and identify evidence-led solutions that cut crime, reduce reoffending, and better protect victims and communities.
It was meant to add value to the excellent partnership working that exists around the Local Criminal Justice Board that I chair.
Because the reality is stark: we cannot arrest our way out of addiction.
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Across the country, courts are overwhelmed, prisons are overcrowded, and reoffending rates remain far too high.
Meanwhile, communities continue to suffer the consequences of repeat offending, acquisitive crime, anti-social behaviour, violence, and exploitation linked to drugs and alcohol.
Behind many offences lie deeper problems: addiction, trauma, mental ill-health, homelessness, domestic abuse, and social exclusion.
If we fail to address those drivers, we simply trap people in a revolving door of offending, custody, and crisis while communities continue to pay the price.
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The Roundtable examined these issues head-on.
One major focus was women in the criminal justice system.
Many women who offend are themselves victims of abuse, exploitation, and trauma.
Short prison sentences often fail to rehabilitate and instead worsen instability, break family ties, and increase the risk of reoffending.
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The report calls for stronger trauma-informed support, earlier intervention, improved diversion schemes, and community-based alternatives that tackle the causes of offending while maintaining accountability and protecting the public.
Housing and homelessness were also identified as major drivers of repeat offending.
People leaving prison without stable accommodation are far more likely to relapse into addiction, become involved in crime again, or fall into exploitation and rough sleeping.
That is why the Roundtable recommended stronger “through-the-gate” support and far better coordination between housing, probation, healthcare, and treatment services.
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The discussions also highlighted the enormous impact addiction has on crime and anti-social behaviour.
Around half of acquisitive crime is linked to drugs, while addiction continues to fuel violence, disorder, and repeat offending.
The Roundtable explored innovative approaches including Drug Testing on Arrest, recovery-focused treatment pathways, and diversion schemes designed to break the cycle of addiction and crime before more victims are created.
None of this is about being soft on crime.
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It is about being smarter, tougher, and more effective in reducing crime long-term.
Every prevented relapse, every avoided reoffence, and every person successfully supported into recovery means fewer victims, fewer crimes, and safer streets.
The Criminal Justice Policy Roundtable was created to drive action, influence national debate, and deliver practical change that improves public safety and strengthens communities.
And this report is only the beginning.
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You can read the full Policy Roundtable Evaluation Report and explore the recommendations in more detail by using the following link: https://bit.ly/PolicyRoundtableEvaluation.
Fresh testing has found that the children’s sand kits contain tremolite asbestos, which can cause severe lung diseases if inhaled
Rachel Vickers-Price UK and World News Reporter and Josie Clarke
02:36, 01 Jun 2026
Two further children’s sand kits widely available across the UK have been pulled from shelves after a consumer group discovered they contained asbestos.
One of the two latest recalls was marketed as a Montessori sand art tray, sold via Amazon Marketplace and TikTok Shop. The product is designed as a hands-on learning tool to develop fine motor skills, encouraging youngsters to draw in the sand using pencils supplied in the kit or with their fingers.
Testing by Which? revealed that the sand contained the banned substance tremolite asbestos — a dangerous naturally occurring mineral that can become airborne and trigger severe lung diseases if inhaled, even at minimal levels of exposure.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified all forms of asbestos as carcinogenic to humans. Any products containing asbestos, including trace amounts, are banned from sale in the UK.
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A second sand art tray examined by Which? was purchased from TikTok Shop and was also found listed by three separate sellers on Amazon Marketplace, reports the Mirror.
Which? revealed the product remained available on both platforms until May, despite the identical item having been subject to a recall by the Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS) in March owing to asbestos contamination.
The OPSS has since updated the original recall notice to incorporate Amazon and TikTok Shop. Which? researchers also discovered tremolite asbestos in the GL Style Sand Bottle Art Heart or Stars set, purchased from Asda and bearing the brand name RMS International Limited. However, the consumer group also identified what seemed to be the identical kit available on eBay from three private sellers.
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More than 39 recall notices have been issued by the OPSS since November concerning asbestos-contaminated sand products. The problem has also resulted in the closure of schools and parks, most recently in North East England. It is understood the affected toys contain sand sourced from particular quarries in China, where naturally occurring asbestos is present.
Sue Davies, head of consumer rights policy at Which?, said: “It is outrageous that online marketplaces are selling products which may expose children to asbestos, especially when some of these products had already been recalled by the OPSS. Seemingly innocent items like toys and craft kits can have serious health consequences if there are not proper checks to make sure they comply with safety laws.
“The Government has published proposals that would require online marketplaces to exercise due care in preventing, identifying and removing dangerous products sold through their platforms, an area where regulation is currently far too limited.
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“Ministers now urgently need to introduce legislation that makes these duties sufficiently robust and properly enforceable. The longer the Government delays taking action, the greater the risk that more dangerous products will reach consumers.”
A spokesman for Amazon said: “Customer safety is our top priority and we are taking this issue very seriously. We are in the process of removing all products in this category across our store while we investigate further, and as a result the highlighted items have been removed.”
Asda confirmed they initiated a complete product recall immediately upon learning the product had failed testing. They urged customers who had purchased the item to stop using it immediately and return it to their nearest store for a full refund.
A spokeswoman for eBay said: “We swiftly removed the items identified by Which? and are conducting further sweeps to identify similar listings.”
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TikTok confirmed the product identified during the investigation had already been removed from TikTok Shop.
ROME (AP) — Danish cyclist Jonas Vingegaard won the Giro d’Italia on Sunday, becoming the eighth male rider to win all three Grand Tours.
Vingegaard, who rides for Team Visma-Lease a Bike, ended the three-week race with an overall advantage of 5 minutes, 22 seconds over second-place Felix Gall. Jai Hindley finished third, 6:25 behind.
“It’s amazing. It’s something I’ve dreamt of my whole life and to now be able to do it, it’s something special,” an emotional Vingegaard said in his first interview as Giro winner. “I’m lost for words.
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“It was a really special day, with so many people on the side of the road, so many spectators, it was really incredible. To get the honor to wear the maglia rosa in the streets of Rome is something special. With these last three weeks, it’s just such a nice way to end this race.”
After crossing the line in Rome, the 29-year-old Vingegaard embraced his wife and two children, who were wearing replicas of his maglia rosa — the leader’s pink jersey.
“Yeah, that’s even nicer, it also gives me tears in my eyes, they’re always there for me,” said Vingegaard, who has celebrated his five stage wins at the Giro by kissing the photo of his family that is on the handlebar of his bicycle, before kissing his wedding ring.
Vingegaard also carried his children with him to the podium, where he was presented with the Trofeo Senza Fine (Trophy With No End).
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Having dominated his first Giro — living up to his billing as pre-race favorite — Vingegaard will turn his attention to the Tour de France as he attempts to become the ninth man to complete the Giro-Tour double in the same year.
However, there he will face cycling’s top talent Tadej Pogacar. The Slovenian, who skipped the Giro to focus on adding to his four Tour titles, became the first man in 26 years to do the Giro-Tour double when he achieved the feat in 2024.
Sunday’s largely processional final Giro stage, that ended with eight laps through Rome, was won by sprint specialist Jonathan Milan.
The 131-kilometer route started in Rome and then went out the sea before returning to the Italian capital for the finishing circuit.
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So relaxed were the riders that they were all seen sharing a box of sweets as they started the stage, before also being given glasses of Prosecco. They also all posed for team photos during the ride out to the sea.
Milan, who had seen other bids for stage wins end in disappointment earlier in the race, finally got his victory. The Italian edged out compatriot Giovanni Lonardi and French cyclist Paul Penhoët in a bunch sprint.
“I’m super happy to end this Giro in this way,” Milan said. “It’s beautiful. After three weeks that we were looking for this, winning the last stage in Rome means that we were keeping the head there, we never give up, we always keep fighting for the victory, we were always believing in it, we always believe in each other.”
The challenge will raise money for research into motor neurone disease (MND).
Doddie Weir’s wife and son will join former England rugby captain Lewis Moody on a gruelling 500-mile charity cycling challenge to raise cash for research into motor neurone disease (MND) this month.
Kathy and Hamish Weir will take part in the seven-day charity ride alongside the 2003 World Cup winner, who last autumn revealed he had also been diagnosed with MND.
Moody is raising money for the My Name’5 Doddie Foundation, founded by the Scottish rugby great and MND campaigner who sadly died in November 2022 aged 52 after a six-year battle with the disease.
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Moody said having Weir’s family alongside him will be “incredibly poignant and powerful”.
“Doddie did so much to change the conversation around MND, and in many ways this ride feels like continuing something he started,”
Moody added. “There’s a real sense of carrying the baton forward. Doddie inspired people because he faced this disease head on with unbelievable courage, humour and determination, and I think all of us involved in the ride feel a responsibility to keep pushing that fight forward.
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“When you see Kathy and Hamish there beside you, it’s impossible not to feel extra motivation.
This ride is about raising money, of course, but it’s also about showing the MND community that we’re still fighting, still driving awareness, and still refusing to accept that this disease cannot be beaten.”
The Lewis XV’s challenge will begin on Sunday June 14 at the northernmost Prem Rugby club, Newcastle Red Bulls, and will end at the Allianz Stadium in Twickenham, south-west London, on Saturday June 20 to deliver the match ball for the Gallagher Prem Rugby Final.
Moody and Kathy and Hamish Weir will be joined by a group of rugby stars during the challenge. “When you get diagnosed with something like MND, you very quickly realise how important people are.”
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Moody said. “This ride is about mates coming together, communities coming together, and hopefully showing people living with MND that they are not alone.
“This disease affects families everywhere and we need people to rally behind the MND community in the same way rugby people always rally behind each other.
“If people can donate, come out and support us along the route, or simply help spread the word, it genuinely makes a difference. We want this to feel like something the whole rugby community is part of.”
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Paul Thompson, director of fundraising at the My Name’5 Doddie Foundation, said: “Lewis has already inspired so many people through the way he has approached his diagnosis, and this challenge is another example of that courage and leadership.
“This is about much more than rugby. It’s about friendship, family, resilience and communities coming together behind a common cause. Every mile ridden and every pound raised will help us continue accelerating research towards effective treatments and, ultimately, a cure for MND.”
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HONOLULU (AP) — Authorities in Hawaii have charged a 36-year-old man with murder in the killings of three people in a remote community known for its eclectic, communal lifestyle.
Jacob Daniel Baker was charged with counts of first- and second-degree murder Saturday, the Hawaii Police Department said in a news release.
Baker remained jailed without bond Sunday and police said his first court appearance was scheduled for Monday. It was not immediately known if Baker had an attorney who could speak for him.
Charges in the killings came two days after police apprehended Baker following a manhunt on Hawaii’s Big Island, where the three victims were found in the rural Puna community known for its tropical landscape and free-spirited residents.
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Robert Shine, 69, was found dead Monday partially submerged in a cement pond, according to police. The second victim, a 79-year-old man, was discovered Tuesday a few hundred feet away. Friends identified him as Chitta Morse.
Police found the third victim, 69-year-old John Carse, late Tuesday at a property 19 miles (31 kilometers) from where the other two bodies were located.
Police have not given a suspected motive for the killings. Hawaii Police Chief Reed Mahuna has said investigators found no connections among the victims other than that two of them lived near each other.
In addition to the murder charges, Baker also faces counts of burglary, auto theft and criminal damage to property.
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The killings left residents on edge in Puna, a community set amid lush jungle and barren lava fields where people seeking to live off-grid commonly trade work for lodging.
Puna resident Stephen Shaffer said that Baker had worked for his ex-wife, climbing coconut trees on land where she grows fruit, in exchange for a place to live. After several months, Shaffer said, his ex-wife sought a restraining order against Baker, saying she felt threatened by him.
Donald Hyatt, a friend of Shaffer’s ex-wife and of two of the men killed, said Baker left the cabin where he had been living months ago. Hyatt said that Baker recently returned claiming “squatter’s rights” and threatened Shaffer’s ex.
Just days before the killings, two women had requested temporary restraining orders against Baker, saying he had threatened and harassed them, according to court records. A judge denied both applications, saying there was not enough proof of harassment.
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Court records showed Baker named in 20 other cases in the past two decades, many of them traffic infractions. In most of those cases, Baker had no attorney and represented himself.
The Scottish estate is said to be a ‘cherished home’ for the Royal Family.
Rosie Shead and Eilidh Farquhar Trainee Trends, Showbiz and Lifestyle Writer
00:01, 01 Jun 2026
King Charles has highlighted the importance of Balmoral to the Royal Family, saying is holds a “uniquely special place” in their hearts. Located in Aberdeenshire, the estate has been in the Royal Family since 1852 when it was purchased by Queen Victoria and her husband Prince Albert.
Writing in foreword in a new 80-page guidebook, the King describes the Scottish estate as a “cherished home” of his family, that boasts a “precious, almost sacred, surrounding landscape” along with “startling individuality”.
Over a century ago, Queen Victoria fell in love with the Highlands of Scotland and decided to build a castle on the land. Over the decades, Balmoral has been used as a summer retreat for the Royal Family, with many kings and queens adding their own stamp to the castle and its grounds.
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Balmoral also became the property where the late Queen Elizabeth II spent her final days in 2022. After serving as the sovereign for 70 years, Queen Elizabeth passed away on September 8, aged 96.
Writing in the new paperback guide, Charles wrote: “Balmoral has been the cherished Scottish home of my family since the estate was purchased by Prince Albert, my great-great-great-grandfather, in 1852.
“With its buildings of startling individuality, which never fail to fascinate, and its precious, almost sacred, surrounding landscape, it is a place where there is constant change, yet everything remains unaltered, with a sense of timelessness which refreshes the soul.
“Since my earliest childhood, it has held, and continues to hold, a uniquely special place in the hearts of my family and myself, and my late mother particularly treasured her time at Balmoral. It was here, in these most beloved of surroundings, that she chose to spend her final days.”
Concluding, he added: “Whatever the circumstances in which you are reading this book, I hope that you, too, will be inspired by the rich complexity of the architecture and share in the magic of the surrounding countryside, whose ‘wild and majestic’ landscape has been the source of inspiration and enjoyment for so many.”
Alongside the foreword, the guidebook opens with an image of a watercolour of the Scottish castle, which was painted by Charles in 1989.
In the past, the only part of the Balmoral that was open to the public to visit was the ballroom, which is home to a different exhibition every year.
It is not only the Royal Family who have taken up residence in the castle as prime ministers are traditionally invited to stay with the Firm at Balmoral during the summer. It is said that Harold Wilson even joined members of the family for riverside picnics on the estate as he “got on like a house on fire” with Queen Elizabeth II.
The new guidebook, written by journalist and historian Mary Miers and titled Balmoral, shares some insights into the recent changes that have been made to the property. For instance, the King has introduced more furniture, carpets, paintings and objects, many from the Royal Collection, into the castle.
Meanwhile, outside the wrought-iron gates in the Queen Mary’s garden were remodelled in 2023 to celebrate the centenary of its creation, with Charles and Camilla cyphers included to mark their coronation. It is also noted that the King decided to replace the ballroom lawn with an intricate maze to reflect his interest in geometric patterns.
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Ms Miers said: “Balmoral will forever be associated with Victoria and Albert’s love affair with the Highlands, but there’s so much more to the story, which I hope this guidebook reveals.
“Now that Balmoral is more publicly accessible, it’s possible to appreciate how central the Prince Consort’s interests in architecture, design, landscaping and estate management were to its creation, and how effectively the King, who shares these passions, has added a new layer of interest and style, while preserving and enhancing the original.”
Graham Platner’s wife called the media reports that her husband had previously exchanged sexually explicit text messages with several women “shameful” over the weekend, the latest controversy to hit the Maine Democrat’s whirlwind Senate campaign.
Platner, an oyster farmer and combat veteran, posted a video taken by his wife, Amy Gertner, who reportedly told his campaign of the text messages last year. In the five-minute video, Gertner avoided speaking directly about her husband’s reported texts, dubbing the broader coverage as “gossip” and saying that “being married is hard.”
“I find it really shameful that there’s a group of media outlets and people who are willing to spread gossip,” she said in the informal, selfie-style video where she walked along a road. “No marriage is perfect, and I don’t want a perfect marriage. I want my marriage.”
Platner is seeking the Democratic nomination for one of the most closely watched Senate races as Democrats hope to defeat longtime Republican Sen. Susan Collins in the party’s efforts to win control of the narrowly divided Senate. The Maine primary is June 9.
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Genevieve McDonald, a then-campaign staffer for Platner, told the The Associated Press that the candidate was “sexting multiple women while married” and that “the campaign tried to assess that as an election vulnerability.”
Platner told reporters Sunday that what McDonald had said wasn’t true. Asked if he was confirming that the text messages didn’t exist, Platner replied, “I’m confirming that what Genevieve McDonald said in The New York Times is not true.” Platner didn’t provide any specifics. He was referring to a Times story that names McDonald Saturday, after The Wall Street Journal first reported the story.
Gertner had told the campaign in August about the messages, which she had discovered on his phone last year, to make sure they weren’t a liability to the campaign, according to the Wall Street Journal. Platner’s campaign team reportedly decided that the texts were private and being handled by the couple, who were married in 2023. The two are in counseling, Gertner has said.
Platner told reporters that he and Gertner spoke with the campaign about their marriage, but reiterated that McDonald’s claims were false.
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Platner’s campaign on Sunday did not specifically confirm the text messages to the AP, but issued a statement from Gertner saying the disclosure of the conversations she had with a campaign aide was a betrayal that “deeply hurt.”
“I trusted this person with the most private chapter of our lives — the early days of our marriage before any campaign was on our mind,” she wrote.
It’s not Platner’s first controversy
Platner, who has never held public office, has a gruff, less buttoned-up approach on the campaign trail, fashioned a platform around economic equality and has already had to navigate statements that surfaced from his past.
The candidate had a tattoo recognized as a Nazi symbol, which he said he didn’t realize until he was several weeks into the campaign. There’s also been much attention on his former Reddit posts, which were dismissive of military sexual assaults and used homophobic slurs, for which he has apologized.
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Platner’s campaign weathered those earlier revelations in what had been considered one of the most competitive Democratic primaries before Gov. Janet Mills dropped out of the race in late April due to a lack of campaign funds. Mills, a two-term governor, had been seen as one of the Democrats’ top 2026 recruits when she entered the Senate race before her campaign fizzled out.
Platner has still pulled support from big-name Democrats, including Sens. Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Ruben Gallego as well as U.S. House Rep. Ro Khanna. The latter is scheduled to rally with Platner on Friday, and so far, it appears he hasn’t lost any endorsements with this latest texting revelation.
Two Democratic senators on Sunday declined to directly address the topic when pressed by reporters. Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy told CBS’ “Face the Nation” that Platner had served his country and community, but “also made mistakes and he has admitted that.”
On CNN’s “State of the Union,” New Jersey Sen. Andy Kim sidestepped, too. “With any campaign in the country, the character and the transparency about the different candidates is going to come out,” said Kim, “and the voters are going to decide what they ultimately think.”
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Barreling forward Sunday, Platner posted a video on X from an event “happening now” where he entered a room to a standing ovation from ecstatic supporters.
Questions over whether additional controversial information about Platner could still surface have added to some Democrats’ anxiety over his chances in a general election against Collins, who has represented Maine in the Senate since 1997.
In October, after the revelation that he once had a Totenkopf tattoo on his chest and promptly had it covered, the AP asked him if other scandals were on the horizon.
Platner said he was expecting his opponents were “going to keep dragging things up.”
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“They’re going to keep making things up,” he said. “I fully expect people to just lie about me at this point.”
Voters are familiar with the couple’s struggles, including with infertility and traveling out of the country to afford IVF treatment, which they’ve discussed on the campaign trail.
In late April, Platner shared that Gertner had suffered a miscarriage, and he’s discussed his own mental health struggles and the role of his family and therapist in helping.
Former aide explains why she went public
McDonald initially worked on Platner’s campaign as his political director and resigned a few months later when his now-deleted Reddit posts began surfacing, saying she couldn’t stand behind him as a candidate. She later declined a severance offer from the campaign in exchange for signing a non-disclosure agreement.
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On Saturday, McDonald wrote on Facebook that Platner’s campaign had “demanded” she retract her statements she had made to The Wall Street Journal or his team would accuse her of violating the couple’s trust. McDonald wasn’t named in the newspaper’s article, but after that exchange, she said she made the choice to be publicly named in a New York Times story.
“His consultants greatly overestimate how much I do not aspire to be them,” she wrote on Facebook.
After resigning from Platner’s campaign, McDonald moved to help Democrat Jordan Wood’s congressional campaign in Maine’s second district. McDonald submitted her resignation from Wood’s campaign Saturday morning, according to Wood’s campaign.
Wood endorsed Platner after Mills dropped out.
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Bedayn reported from Austin, Texas and Kruesi reported from Providence, Rhode Island.
Fans have flooded social media with tributes to the Boogie Fever singer
Former child star Foster Sylvers has died aged 64. The musician rose to fame during the 1970s, performing alongside his family in their band The Sylvers.
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His brother, Leon Sylvers III, confirmed that Foster had passed away in hospice care after battling stage four pancreatic cancer. Following his death, his daughter Erin shared a photograph of her father on Facebook, writing: “Rest well, Daddy. I love you so much.”
Foster played bass for the family ensemble, which achieved chart success with tracks including Boogie Fever, Fool’s Paradise and Hot Line. This represents the second time one of the siblings has died from cancer, after Edmund’s death from lung cancer in 2004. Before that, the youngest brother Christopher, who never became part of the group, died in 1985 from hepatitis, aged just 18.
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The remaining Sylvers siblings are Olympia, Leon, Charmaine and James, who formed the original quartet known as Little Angels, alongside Joseph, Ricky, Angie and Pat. Throughout their career together, the siblings released 10 albums, all issued during the 1970s, and were regularly compared to the Jackson family.
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The debut album Foster contributed to, a solo project he recorded with his brother Leon, was released in 1973, when he was only 10 years old. Due to his considerable popularity, Foster appeared on multiple American television programmes, including American Bandstand and Soul Train.
Two years afterwards, he joined the family ensemble and took on shared lead vocal responsibilities with Edmund for their 1976 number one smash Boogie Fever. Come the 1980s, the outfit decided to adopt a new approach to stay current with the decade’s shifting musical trends. As a result, Foster took over lead singing duties for their 1981 success Come Back Lover, Come Back. The group officially disbanded four years on, with Foster later forming his own outfit, Hy-Tech, in 1989.
The band’s biggest commercial success was Boogie Fever, which dropped in November 1975. In the number, the protagonist describes how his partner has undergone a recent change and now “boogies” to disco while dining, viewing pictures, and the like. After concluding she has “boogie fever”, he rings a physician, only to find he has caught the condition himself, reports the Express.
While Edmund handled the bulk of the track, a 13 year old Foster had a notable presence in the bridge section. Since hitting the shelves, the record has featured in countless films and television shows including Despicable Me, Roll Bounce and the Stephen King miniseries The Stand.
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Following news of his passing, admirers flocked to social media in large numbers to honour the performer. One wrote: “RIP you were a great talent along with your siblings you will never be forgotten.” Another wrote: “I remember him performing with his older siblings. However, my favorite song of his was/still is “Misdemeanor”, with his sisters Angela and Patricia singing background and doing their choreographed dance steps (on Soul Train). R.I.P. Foster Sylvers.”
“Now that Balmoral is more publicly accessible, it’s possible to appreciate how central the Prince Consort’s interests in architecture, design, landscaping and estate management were to its creation, and how effectively the King, who shares these passions, has added a new layer of interest and style, while preserving and enhancing the original.”
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