NewsBeat
London Tube strikes: Which lines are disrupted by tomorrow’s walkout?
Commuters in London are being hit by fresh wave of disruption as Tube strikes disrupt the capital’s transport network once again.
Drivers belonging to Aslef are not taking part in the strike, meaning most Tube lines are expected to remain running, although services are likely to be reduced.
The Overground, Elizabeth line and DLR will still be running, but services are expected to be very busy, with crowding likely throughout the day.
Tuesday’s strikes brought travel disruption for thousands of commuters, with most lines partially or fully suspended at some point during the day.
Commuters squeeze into busy train carriages during April strikes
Getty
Passengers travelling to Heathrow faced major disruption, as the Piccadilly line was partially suspended and the Elizabeth line and GWR experienced delays due to a points failure at Slough.
Anonymised mobile data from Virgin Media O2 indicated that many people chose to stay home.
Footfall in the City of London dropped by 16%, and Westminster saw an 11% decline compared to a typical Tuesday.
Londoners were forced to brave the wet and windy weather as they sought alternative ways of getting around the city.
Thursday’s forecast is looking a little more promising, with light rain showers expected throughout the day.
The Standard has put together a full breakdown of which lines are expected to be affected.
Tube lines facing total or partial closures
- Circle Line: No service expected across the entire line.
- Piccadilly Line: No service expected across the entire line.
- Central Line: No service between White City and Liverpool Street.
- Metropolitan Line: No service between Baker Street and Aldgate
Lines operating on a reduced service
- Bakerloo Line
- District Line
- Hammersmith & City Line
- Jubilee Line
- Northern Line
- Victoria Line
- Waterloo & City Line
Services running as normal
- Elizabeth Line
- London Overground
- DLR
- London Buses and Trams
Transport for London is warning passengers of a limited Tube service before 6.30am on strike days. Customers are advised to complete their journeys by 9pm.
Normal service is expected to run on Wednesday, June 3, and Friday, June 5.
NewsBeat
Retiring Ken Doherty on toughest foes, celebrity tales, greatest matches and snooker scandal
Ken Doherty will no longer compete on the professional snooker tour, but it’s fair to say he has made the most of his 36 years taking on the best players on the planet.
The 56-year-old confirmed on Wednesday that he is hanging up his cue when it comes to the professional game, still to play in seniors competition, but stepping away from the main tour he joined in 1990.
‘It’s been coming for a while,’ the 1997 world champion told Metro. ‘I was sad initially that I’m not going to be competing on the main tour anymore, but it’s probably relief as well. The time is right.’
One of the finest players in the world for much of the 90s and 00s, Doherty’s game started to slip after 20 years on tour and he says he has been hoping to rediscover the magic for a long while now.
‘I was trying to search for something, thinking maybe things will improve,’ he said. ‘I played with a new cue to maybe get a bit of confidence, but no, it’s just not there anymore.
‘You just come to realise you can’t play the way you used to and it becomes frustrating. You feel a bit embarrassed sometimes with your performances and I don’t want to go through that again.
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‘I’ll say thank you, I’ve had a great time, great memories. I’m delighted to have won the things I’ve done. Disappointed to lose some of the matches and finals that I’ve lost, but winning the World Championship was the greatest day of my life as far as being a snooker player’s concerned. And to do it with a £2 cue and against one of the greatest of all time was the icing on the cake.’
The 1997 World Championship win over Stephen Hendry was one of six ranking titles on Doherty’s CV, but he had a number of other close calls in big events.
Two more Crucible finals, three at the UK Championship and two at the Masters, with the Darlin of Dublin experiencing the vast difference between winning and losing those huge matches.
‘When I won it in ’97, I came home on an open-top bus, 250,000 people lining the streets. Then the following year after losing in the final to John Higgins, came back to Dublin airport the next day and I had to get a f***ing taxi home! That’s the difference between winning and losing in a final! But that’s life.’
Crafty Ken duked it out with legendary names for years, experiences that will live for him forever.
‘Playing all the greats: [Ronnie] O’Sullivan, [John] Higgins, Hendry, Jimmy [White], [Steve] Davis, playing all those great players, some of the greatest players that will ever play the game, that was a joy,’ he said.
‘That was a joy to compete against them and play them in big matches. And overcome them, not all the time, but I did overcome them through my career, I beat them all.’
The most testing opponents are of little surprise, with Doherty saying: ‘Stephen and Ronnie, John Higgins and Williams, they were the toughest.
‘They were the ones I loved to have battles with, funnily enough, even though they were the toughest. Whether it be at the Masters or the UK or the World Championship, playing those guys at those championships, they were great occasions. And that’s what I miss. Those big, big matches against the big players.
‘I think the best one was I played Ronnie in the final of the Irish Masters at Goffs [in 1998]. He beat me, he played really well. The atmosphere was electric, it was just amazing.
‘But of course he failed a drugs test, there was marijuana in his system, so he had to hand me the trophy and the cheque for an extra 30 grand. It was the most expensive joint that he ever smoked in his life! He never spoke to me for about six months afterwards.’
Outside of the most obvious nightmare foes, Doherty remembers one of his punditry colleagues being a serious test.
‘I tell you who was really tough and he was such a clever player who I loved playing against, because it was a battle of strategies, was Alan McManus,’ he said.
‘He was he was such a wonderful player, he knew every inch of the snooker table. They called him Angles because his safety was was second to none, he was brilliant. It was a great battle of mind games against him, he was a quality player.
‘Although he won the Masters, which was great, he doesn’t get the proper recognition that he probably deserves. But he was a top player for a long, long time.’
The 1997 Sheffield final will never be topped, but there are plenty of other contests that stick in the mind of the Irishman.
‘There’s a few finals,’ he remembers. ‘I beat John [Higgins 9-8] from 8-5 down in Malta in the final. And then both got so drunk we got thrown off the plane and we’re on the front pages and the back pages when I got home!
‘The Williams World final that I lost 18-16 in 2003, the semi-final against Paul Hunter from 15-9 down to to win 17-16. That was probably one of the greatest matches and greatest comebacks I’ve ever had. The UK final I lost 10-9 to Williams. That was in the same season, 2002-2003. He pipped me in two of the major finals that year. There’s been lots of great matches.’
Don’t worry, getting thrown off a plane with John Higgins the morning after the 2006 Malta Cup final does not pass by without explanation, as the two created a little slice of scandal.
‘We went out to a nightclub,’ said Doherty of hitting a Maltese town with Higgins after edging him in the final. ‘I got back at 5 o’clock in the morning. The taxi was already waiting for me outside the hotel when I staggered back in to to get my cue and suitcase.
‘I came downstairs, got into the taxi, we were driving to the airport and John was staggering up the road and he was on the same flight as me, the 7 o’clock flight.
‘I checked in and went up to the hotel bar and had another drink. Then John was last to check in, he made it and had another drink with me and then we got on the bus. His cue got stuck in the doors, and everybody started laughing, including me, but you know what my laugh is like, I don’t think people appreciated my laugh at 7 o’clock in the morning.
‘He was last on the plane. I managed to get on and sit down and the captain stopped him as he was staggering up the stairs and said he’s not travelling. I got up to defend him and say, “oh, he’ll be okay, just let him sit down, he’ll be fine.” But he said, “no, he’s not travelling and neither are you. You’re getting off with him!”
‘We got on a flight to Heathrow that night and there were three paparazzi waiting for us as soon as we get off the plane! We were on the front and back pages. Rock n roll.’
Some of that night in Malta might be a haze, but snooker has provided unforgettable moments away from the table for the Dubliner.
‘I think one of the favourites was when Alex Ferguson rang me up and invited me to Old Trafford to parade the trophy,’ he recalls. ‘First of all, I told him to f**k off because I thought it was one of my mates winding me up! He says, “Kenny, this is Alex Ferguson, and I’m not going to f***ing ask you a second time!”
‘So I got there and he took me down to meet the players. Eric Cantona came over and shook my hand. I went out on the pitch and my legs were like jelly carrying the cup. All the United fans singing “there’s only one Kenny Doherty” and all the West Ham fans in the away end singing “there’s only one Ronnie O’Sullivan!”
‘Playing a frame with George Best, shaking Muhammad Ali’s hand at the Sports Personality of the Year in 1999.
‘The Edge, tapped me on the shoulder once, when I was talking to Bono after one of their concerts. I was with Michael Stipe and Roger Taylor. The Edge says, “Ken, Ken, you wouldn’t do me a favour, would you? You wouldn’t come over and say hello to me mother and her two friends?” She had no interest in talking to Michael Stipe, Roger Taylor or Bono, but her and her friends absolutely loved snooker.’
As his professional playing days come to an end, there is a tinge of disappointment of how it has come about.
Doherty has been playing on an invitational tour card in recent years and he has no issue with that no longer being offered, but feels he could have been informed earlier than he was.
‘I don’t think the option was there anyway. They weren’t going to give me a card, so they sort of made my mind up for me, you know?’ Doherty said of retirement.
‘It would have been nicer to find out a little bit earlier, then I could have maybe planned something at the World Championship. The timing could have been a bit better, but it is what it is. I’m happy.’
Doherty’s final match proved to be a 10-5 defeat to Patrick Whelan in the first round of World Championship qualifying, which felt like the end even before the decision was made.
‘I think after this year’s World Championship I knew anyway,’ he said. ‘I tried to practice to have a good year and a decent run, but it just wasn’t there. I felt this could be my last game.
‘I knew it was coming, but I was putting it off, hoping, but in the end I probably could have done it a few years ago.
‘It’s just my love for the game, I wanted to keep on and keep searching for something and that will never die, your love for the game.
‘I’ll still play snooker because I love it and I will play exhibitions and I’ll still do shows and I’m still playing the seniors and I love that as well, but it’s not as much pressure, I can just relax. The time is right.’
Doherty will never be far from big time snooker, as a prominent pundit and commentator on major tournaments and still ready to play seniors events.
He remains and will continue to be one of the sport’s most popular figures and greatest ambassadors, and someone snooker should be grateful for.
‘Well, listen, it’s given so much to me, it really has,’ he said. ‘It changed my life and I’m just so humbled by the amount of support that I’ve had over the years, and not just from fans all over the world, but also the snooker community themselves.
‘I will cherish that. I’ll always try to promote the game as best as possible and I’ll continue to do that.’
MORE: Future of snooker’s Q School under review but ‘important role’ will remain
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NewsBeat
All the stars joining Celebrity Gogglebox 2026 cast including Strictly finalist
Celebrity Gogglebox is back with a fresh batch of famous faces to comment on the week’s TV.
Joining the Channel 4 line-up this series are the likes of former Love Island star Olivia Attwood and Strictly Come Dancing runner-up George Clarke.
The series returns this Friday, with other showbiz names including Gladiators stars Harry Aikines-Aryeetey and Matt Morsia, as well as Chariots of Fire star Nigel Havers.
Attwood, 35, is set to appear alongside her mother Jennifer, in a duo she described as ‘chaotic but in the best possible way’.
The ex-Islander added: ‘It’s not often that we agree on things, which I think the viewers may find entertaining.
‘My family are huge fans of the show so it’s a real honour to be a part of such an iconic British programme.’
Meanwhile, bodybuilder Morsia, who is best known as Legends on Gladiators, said: ‘Everyone knows how good I am at being on TV, but turns out I’m even better at watching it.
‘Wow. Absolutely incredible sofa performance.
‘I had a great time on the show and I need to say a massive thank you to Gogglebox for literally paying me to watch TV. What a time to be alive.’
His co-star Aikines-Aryeetey, who competed alongside Clarke in the 2025 series of Strictly, said: ‘Filming Celebrity Gogglebox was pure fun from start to finish, just a proper night-in full of laughs, brilliant TV, and plenty of unexpected moments.
‘It was a really enjoyable experience and great fun to be part of.’
All the stars joining Celebrity Gogglebox
- Olivia Attwood
- Harry Aikines-Aryeetey
- Matt Morsia
- Nigel Havers
- Julian Clary
- George Clarke
- Max Balegde
Clarke said filming Gogglebox gave him an excuse to tease his sofa partner and fellow content creator Max Balegde.
‘He reacts to everything, so you’re never bored. It’s so easy to get into as well, you just sit there, say exactly what you’re thinking, and before you know it, we’ve gone completely off track,’ he said.
Elsewhere in the line-up of Celebrity Gogglebox newbies, comedian and actor Julian Clary said of his contributions: ‘I do like to think my commentary brought a certain level of refinement to proceedings, and Nigel managed to stay awake, although there is an unsightly stain on my sofa.’
While the series goes out this summer, Channel 4 will confirm additional famous faces to take up their sofas for national telly.
The cast members set to return include Vernon Kay and Paddy McGuinness, Shaun Ryder and Bez, Roman and Martin Kemp, Ashley Banjo and Perri Kiely, Nick Grimshaw and niece Liv, the Mangans, as well as Rylan Clark and his mother Linda.
They will be joined by Mo Gilligan and Babatunde Aleshe, Denise Van Outen and Johnny Vaughan and finally Vicky Pattison and Pete Wicks.
Celebrity Gogglebox on Channel 4 at 9pm on Friday.
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NewsBeat
Historic cannons from the American Revolution arrive at Georgia museum
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — A museum in Georgia’s oldest city on Wednesday welcomed a truckload of treasures from the earliest period of U.S. history — 17 cannons that experts believe sank to the bottom of the Savannah River during the American Revolution and remained undiscovered for nearly 240 years.
Workers carefully hoisted the big guns one-by-one from the back of a truck and wheeled them inside their new home at the Savannah History Museum, which will put them on display just in time for the Fourth of July celebration of America’s 250th birthday.
“They look brand new,” said Andrea Farmer, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers archaeologist who was part of the team that researched and preserved the cannons. “They could pretty much be fired if someone wanted to.”
The artifacts were discovered in 2021 when a dredge scooping sediment from the riverbed as part of an Army Corps project to deepen Savannah’s shipping channel pulled up a cannon in its metal jaws. The crew soon dug up two more.
In the course of just over a year, a total of 19 cannons were hoisted from the location just downstream from Savannah, which is where Georgia was founded in 1733 as the last of Britain’s 13 American colonies.
After being pulled from the river, most of the cannons left Georgia for several years to undergo cleaning and preservation work at a Texas lab.
One of the Revolution’s bloodiest battles was fought in Savannah
Archaeologists initially assumed the cannons likely dated to the Civil War. But further research indicated they’re likely almost a century older and sank during the buildup to the American Revolution’s bloody siege of Savannah.
Savannah was under British occupation in the fall of 1779, when colonists planned an attack to retake the city with help from French allies.
When French ships carrying troops were spotted off the Georgia coast, British forces scuttled at least six ships in the Savannah River downstream from the city to block the French vessels.
The land battle that followed was one of the bloodiest of the war. British forces killed nearly 300 colonial fighters and their allies, and wounded hundreds more.
The Savannah History Museum sits right next to the battlefield. Its staff on Wednesday hoisted the cannons, weighing up to 1500 pounds (680 kilograms) apiece, onto custom display mounts that staffers likened to giant wine racks.
The cannons will be part of a new exhibit on Savannah’s role in the American Revolution, which is scheduled to open Fourth of July weekend, said Samantha Moss, the museum’s curator.
“Our great team has been prepping for months — building mounts and planning how we can safely display these very large, very special artifacts,” she said.
Cleaning the crusty cannons took years
Each of the iron cannons emerged from the river covered by a thick crust of mud and minerals.
Two were left in that raw state and put on display at the museum. The other 17 were sent to Texas A&M University, which has a lab that specializes in preserving underwater artifacts. Its staff spent years painstakingly cleaning the big guns and coating them in paint and wax to prevent rusting and corrosion.
“A lot of them have scour marks on the side from anchors or dredging, so there’s some scarring on the cannons,” said Chris Dostal, a professor of nautical archaeology who leads Texas A&M’s Conservation Research Lab. “But most of them look pretty exceptional.”
Most of the cannons arrived with wooden plugs still sealing their bores, which remained packed with cannonballs and gunpowder charges.
Dostal said radiocarbon dating of the wooden stoppers placed them roughly in the late 1700s. His team shared the cannons’ measurements and other details with experts in London, who concluded three of them were very likely forged by the British military.
The rest appeared to be of French design but bore no telltale markings. Dostal said he suspects those guns may have been cast in America around the time of the war.
Other artifacts found with the cannons included pieces of anchors and a portion of a ship’s bronze bell. Like the cannons, none of them bore engravings indicating which ship they came from.
That means many details of the cannons’ origins remain a mystery.
“You don’t have all of the information,” Farmer said. “You’re trying to piece it together as best as you can.”
NewsBeat
The moorland village near Consett with a 900-year-old church
Edmundbyers sits a few miles west of Consett on the edge of the North Pennines, just inside the County Durham border with Northumberland, and with a population of fewer than 200 people it has the feel, in the words of one visitor, of a place that has resisted the modern world almost entirely.
“It is in a wonderful location,” wrote one cyclist who stopped here on the Coast to Coast route, describing it simply as “a small village surrounded by moorland.”
That understatement does it justice.
Edmundbyers has evidence of prehistoric settlement from the Neolithic era, a 12th-century church that hid its stone altar from the Archbishop of Canterbury, a pub whose regulars have been coming for 40 years, and what is believed to be the oldest continuously running youth hostel in the North of England.
A name with roots in Old English
The village name itself tells a story. Edmundbyers derives from the Old English “Eādmund’s bur,” meaning Edmund’s dwellings, a combination of the personal name Edmund and “bur,” the dialect form of bower, meaning a dwelling or shelter.
An early record of the name lists the village as simply “Edminber.”
The first written mention of Edmundbyers appears in the Boldon Book, the survey commissioned by the Bishop of Durham in 1183, where it is recorded that “Alan Bruntoft holds Edmundbires for his service in the forest.”
By around 1382, the land had passed to Durham Cathedral, held by the Prior.
The church that hid its altar
The oldest building in the village is St Edmund’s Church, tucked into the western edge of the settlement with views over the fells.
Built around 1150, possibly on the site of an earlier pre-Norman structure, it is Grade II listed and contains evidence of Saxon architecture in its walls.
Inside, one of the church’s most remarkable features is its stone altar, hidden from authorities when such Catholic furnishings were banned by Archbishop Grindal in 1571 during the Reformation, and only rediscovered and reinstated when the building was restored in the 1850s.
Two Saxon-type grave covers are built into the walls of the porch, and the list of rectors displayed inside the church begins with Richard de Kirkeby in 1275.
Edmundbyers Cross, visible near the village, is one of only three wayside crosses remaining in its original position in County Durham, and the only known example on the ancient route between Stanhope and Edmundbyers.
The last witch of County Durham
One grave in the churchyard of St Edmund’s draws more curious visitors than any other.
Elizabeth Lee, who died in 1792 at the age of 87, is reputed to have been the last in a long line of witches said to have lived in and around Edmundbyers. She appears to have lived a full life, born around 1705, married to a John Lee who died in 1771, and regarded with deep suspicion by her neighbours for decades.
In death, she remained a figure of fascination.
Her grave has been visited for generations by those interested in the darker threads of Durham’s history, and in 2021, she was the subject of a commissioned poem for Durham Literary Festival.
(Image: Getty)
The ghost at Low House
A few steps from the church stands Low House, the building that has served as Edmundbyers Youth Hostel since it opened on April 1, 1933, making it one of the oldest continuously operating hostels in the North of England.
The building itself is far older, dating back to around 1600, when it was built as the Miners’ Arms to serve workers in local pits and mineral workings.
Today it is independently run, sleeping up to 31 guests across six rooms, with a bar serving locally brewed beer, a self-catering kitchen and a campsite in a walled garden.
It also reportedly comes with a ghost.
Ann Elliot, who was murdered on the moor and buried at St Edmund’s in 1785, is said to haunt the building. Visitors report nothing more alarming than a sound night’s sleep.
Derwent Reservoir
Two miles south of the village, Derwent Reservoir stretches across 1,000 acres of moorland and woodland on the Durham-Northumberland border.
Opened in 1967, it is one of the larger inland bodies of water in England and the main water supplier for much of Tyne and Wear.
The reservoir is a country park managed by Northumbrian Water and is free to visit, with a circular walk of around nine miles covering the full perimeter.
Red squirrels have been spotted in the surrounding trees, and the resident birdlife includes goldeneye, goosander, great crested grebe and, in winter, visiting flocks of teal and widgeon.
(Image: Sarah Caldecott)
One Tripadvisor reviewer described the circular walk as outstanding, writing: “The paths are well defined and you can soon lose the crowds. Parking is free of charge, and there is a cafe. Well worth a visit.”
Edmundbyers also sits on the Coast to Coast cycle route, and the 18-mile Derwent Reservoir cycling circuit, taking in the reservoir, Blanchland and the surrounding moors, starts and ends in the village.
The Derwent Arms
The village pub, the Derwent Arms on the village green, holds a Tripadvisor rating of 4.5 from 124 reviews, with visitors praising the home-cooked food, local real ales and six en-suite bedrooms.
One recent reviewer wrote: “Such a welcoming pub in a beautiful setting. The food was superb, freshly cooked, generous portions and reasonably priced.”
Another added: “Lovely warm atmosphere, great beer, fantastic food. Exactly what you want when you come off the moors.”
The pub is open for food throughout the week, and the six rooms make it a practical overnight base for walkers and cyclists exploring the wider Derwent Valley.
(Image: Inn Hospitality Group)
Getting there
Edmundbyers is on the B6306, approximately eight miles west of Consett and 17 miles south west of Newcastle.
The village is also served by a bus route between Shotley Bridge and Blanchland.
The nearest postcode for the village centre is DH8 9NL.
NewsBeat
Lee Andrews LIVE: Katie Price going to jail, court and police in bid to free her husband
Three weeks on from when Lee went ‘missing’ after failing to arrive in the UK for a joint interview with Katie, here is what we know.
Last night Katie shared a video filmed inside a car where she discussed the effects of CBD oil. The view from the car appeared to show that the star was warmer climes in a foreign country, which would line up with the recent snaps taken of Katie at Gatwick Airport with a huge suitcase and her engagement ring firmly on her finger.
She revealed on Facebook that she is set to travel to Dubai to try and visit him in prison, but added: “I don’t know if I’m going to see Lee or I’m not when I get there and it’s a really weird feeling.”
Lee told Katie he was in Al Awir prison, also known as “Dubai Alcatraz” in a brief phone call last week, as he claims he was detained after being mistaken for a spy. It has not been confirmed by Dubai authorities that he is in prison, or was in fact charged with espionage.
While he has allegedly been in prison, he has unfollowed and followed Katie – the only person he follows on Instagram. His account also followed a woman dubbed “biker babe” who used to be on a millionaire matchmaker site, but she appears to have ultimately blocked his account.
The phone call about Lee’s whereabouts came after he’d been “missing” for almost two weeks, with Katie telling fans that her husband had been “kidnapped” and she had to get Interpol involved after as he was being taken to a “black site”.
Since this ordeal began in May, Katie has faced criticism for using Lee’s alleged arrest as a PR stunt to promote her CBD oil collaboration and her music. She has also been met with sympathy from fans who believe she had no involvement and is being “conned” by her husband.
NewsBeat
Henry Nowak’s death raises more questions about UK policing and race
She continued: “I have seen horrific examples of footage like Henry Nowak’s death, where you see police handcuffing people when they are in moments of vulnerability, when they are on unwell, when there are in moment of crisis, against the guidelines which are set out for use of force… and unfortunately the disproportionate people who are on the receiving end of that tend to be the people of colour.”
NewsBeat
California bank suspect identified after being shot dead by FBI as details emerge of hostage ordeal
Man who held 10 people hostage identified
The man who held 10 people hostage in a California bank building while threatening to detonate explosives has been identified as Anthony Scott Searle-Sharris.
Searle-Sharris was a 41-year-old who served in the U.S. Army but had an extensive violent history, authorities said.
He was discharged for the Army for going AWOL, officials added.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 18:18
Ten hostages held during incident
Ten people were held hostage in the Chase Bank building after a suspect barricaded himself inside and said he had explosives on his body, authorities confirmed during a press conference Wednesday.
“We are incredibly relieved to report that all of the hostages involved have been safely recovered,” Bakersfield Assistant Chief of Police Jeremy Blakemore said.
Five of the hostages were tied up by the suspect, but all 10 were released without harm.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 18:12
Bakersfield Police to hold press conference
The Bakersfield Police Department is set to hold a press conference starting at 10 a.m. local time.
Authorities said additional information would be released as it becomes available.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 17:59
SWAT team swarmed building overnight, brought a man out
About 50 SWAT members swarmed the building where a suspect was holding people hostage overnight and brought a man outside, according to a report.
Witnesses told NBC LA that they saw SWAT members enter the building around 2:30 a.m. before bringing a man — possibly the suspect — outside.
Video seen by the outlet showed officers escorting a group of about seven people out of the building.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 17:32
Details about the suspect remain unclear
Authorities said the suspect who held multiple people hostage in California overnight was killed — but have shared few other details about him.
The suspect reportedly entered a building that houses Chase Bank and a school district office around 1 p.m. Tuesday and claimed to have a bomb.
Bakersfield police then responded to the hostage situation and were able to negotiate the release of two people late Tuesday.
The suspect was reportedly barricaded inside the building with several hostages. Authorities have not said how many people were held hostage.
Authorities have not shared the name of the suspect or a potential motive.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 17:15
Suspect was killed in ‘officer-involved shooting’ with FBI
The suspect holding people hostage in a California building that houses a bank was killed in an “officer-involved shooting,” police said.
The Bakersfield Police Department specified that the suspect was killed in the shooting by FBI personnel, not a local officer.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 16:45
Road closures remain in effect as police warn of traffic delays
Several roads in Bakersfield will remain closed off on Wednesday, even as the hostage situation has concluded.
Police warned on social media that traffic closures are in effect between Truxtun Avenue and 18th Street, as well as between H Street and K Street.
“Motorists are encouraged to avoid the area for the next several hours and seek alternative routes. Delays are expected until sometime this afternoon,” police said.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 16:10
Suspect dead and hostages released
The suspect holding people hostage inside a Chase Bank building in California has been killed, and all of the hostages have been released, authorities said Wednesday morning.
The hostage situation concluded at approximately 4:20 a.m. with an officer-involved shooting involving FBI personnel, the Bakersfield Police Department said in an update.
All of the hostages were found uninjured. They received medical evaluation and treatment at the scene, police said.
Authorities have not shared how many people were being held hostage or the identity of the suspect involved.
Additional information will be released at a 10 a.m. press conference, authorities said.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 15:53
Road closures remain in place Wednesday
Several road closures in Bakersfield remained in place Wednesday morning.
Closures are currently in effect between Truxtun Avenue and 18th Street, and between H Street and K Street, police said.
“Please avoid the area if possible and allow extra travel time this morning,” police said.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 15:09
Number of family members gathered by the scene Wednesday morning
Family members were gathered waiting for their loved ones to be released from the hostage situation early Wednesday morning, CBS Mornings reported.
Two hostages had been released overnight, authorities said.
It was not immediately clear where the situation stood early Wednesday morning, and authorities have not said how many people remain trapped inside the building.
Isabel Keane3 June 2026 15:07
NewsBeat
BBC deletes Newsnight episode after Farage complains about ‘white cold rage’ misquote | News UK
Nigel Farage has a victory over the BBC after Newsnight misquoted the Reform UK leader’s response to Henry Nowak’s murder.
In the Newsnight episode last night the presenter Matt Chorley put it to Kemi Badenoch if she agreed the country should respond to the killing of the student with ‘white, cold rage’.
He then gets it wrong again, asking the Conservative leader ‘what is the risk if more people follow Nigel Farage’s appeal for ‘white, cold rage’?’.
But in reality, Farage actually said ‘pure, cold rage’.
A BBC spokesman confirmed they had deleted the entire episode.
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They said: ‘In an interview about the murder of 18-year-old Henry Nowak, we mistakenly quoted the Reform UK leader Nigel Farage as saying people should respond to his death with a “white, cold rage”.
‘To be clear Mr Farage actually said “pure, cold rage” as had been stated earlier in the programme and we apologise to him for this error. The programme has been removed from BBC iPlayer and BBC Sounds.’
Matt Chorley also apologised to the Reform UK leader, posting on X: ‘I owe Nigel Farage an apology. This was a mistake on my part, a misremembering of the quote. It didn’t change the content of the interview but I should have got the quote right. I apologise to Nigel Farage for this.’
It came after protests turned violent in Southampton last night as Tommy Robinson supporters tried to storm police lines, injuring 11 officers and a police dog.
(Picture: PA)
The student’s killer, 23-year-old Vickrum Digwa, told police attending the scene of the stabbing that he had been the victim of a racist attack, while Mr Nowak was handcuffed by police as he lay dying.
Speaking in Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday, Sir Keir highlighted the words of Mr Nowak’s father, who said: ‘We do not want his death to be used to create further division, hatred, or tension.’
Sir Keir said: ‘They’re the words of a grieving father who’s lost his son.
‘I think those words have resonated with people across the country. We must not allow this tragedy to be hijacked by anyone who seeks to divide us.’
Mr Farage argued that the UK has ‘two-tier policing’ and that officers are told to treat different ethnic groups differently.
He said: ‘Following the horrendous circumstances of Henry Nowak’s death, can I urge the Prime Minister to consider this: it is now clear to growing millions in this country that we are living under two-tier policing.
‘The instructions that are given to police officers from police bosses are clear and written down in ink. It says you must treat different ethnic groups in different ways.
‘Apart from the upset and the anger at the circumstances of his death, the anger that you saw spilling out in Southampton last night, which is in danger of getting considerably worse…
‘If the public lose trust in being treated fairly by the police, can he (Sir Keir) take some action, end this divisive practice of two-tier policing, and make sure that all British citizens are treated the same?’
In an interview set to air on Times Radio Mr Farage also said: ‘What you saw in Southampton last night is the beginning.
‘If we get large numbers of young white males who think the police are prejudiced against them, goodness knows where we go.’
As he was speaking in the Commons, the Reform leader was heckled by a number of MPs telling him to condemn the violence in Southampton.
Sir Keir replied: ‘I don’t believe there’s two-tier policing in this country. I’m really shocked that he pretends to have respect for Henry’s family and then acts in this way.
‘The grieving family have asked us not to respond in the way that the leader of Reform has responded. They’ve asked us not to. They have lost their son in the most appalling circumstance. They make a simple plea of us as human beings to please not exploit that. That is their plea to us.
‘We all need to reflect on those words of Henry’s father. My response, and the response of others to be fair, has been focused on the lessons to be learned, so we can deliver justice.
‘His (Mr Farage’s) response has been to appeal for rage, rage. That’s his response to a father who has lost his son and asked for that not to happen.
‘Exploiting this tragedy to create grievance and division would be wrong in any circumstances, but to do it when the family are expressly saying ‘please don’t’ is unforgivable. It shows exactly who he is.’
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NewsBeat
Worker bees build special wax cells that may help raise healthier queens, a study finds
NEW YORK (AP) — Scientists have identified a group of worker honeybees that are specially adapted to build their queen’s waxy abode within the hive.
Worker bees perform a myriad of jobs to keep up the hive, including collecting food, nurturing young bees and caring for the queen, who lays all the eggs. New research reveals that the honeybees responsible for crafting the queen’s home effectively run a fever to help melt and blend special chemicals into the wax.
“No one had ever thought that there might be a specialized group of workers that were building these queen cells,” said bee researcher Julia Bowsher with North Dakota State University, who had no role in the study.
These newly identified bees were younger and also had patterns of expression in their genes that made them uniquely suited to the task. The resulting peanut-shaped home was also distinct in its makeup, as it was made of softer wax with a higher melting point than the kind used to build worker bees’ homes.
Queens are raised eating royal jelly secreted from the glands of worker bees and scientists have long believed diet was the main key to making a monarch. The new findings, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, suggest that the queen’s environment might also play a role.
To test that theory, researchers raised baby queens in cups capped with either queen or worker wax. Despite eating royal jelly, the queens raised in worker wax were smaller and didn’t survive as well.
“For centuries, we believed ‘you are what you eat’ was the only rule for making a queen bee. Our study rewrites that rule to say ‘you are where you live, too,’” Kai Wang, a study co-author with the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, said in an email.
The findings offer a rare look inside the hive, but questions remain.
Honeybees pollinate and ensure the survival of crops such as blueberries, squash, watermelon and almonds. Further research is needed to learn more about the secret lives of queen cell-building bees and the exact combination of factors that produce the hive’s head honcho.
“I would really like to know more about the specific chemical composition of this wax and which active ingredients are directly affecting the growth of the queens,” Bowsher said.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
NewsBeat
Longsight Park in Harwood to security measures after damage
Councillors for Bradshaw and Harwood have agreed a funding arrangement with Bolton Council to upgrade security at Longsight Park’s entrance, Harwood.
The move follows an unauthorised encampment at the site earlier this month, which residents and volunteers said left behind rubbish, damage and human waste.
Councillors say the new measures are aimed at protecting the park and its arboretum from future incidents.
Cllr James Moller said: “Some people might complain it is a big lump sum of money, but it is money better spent on this, as the damage that they have done can cost thousands.
“It is just protecting assets in the area, and it is a good thing they are protecting these assets for the older generation and newer.”
The councillor said the cost of repairing damage could ultimately be greater than investing in prevention measures.
(Image: NQ)
He said councillors had agreed a 50/50 funding arrangement with Bolton Council to deliver the security improvements.
Cllr Moller added: “It costs the taxpayer more with damages than if we install this.”
The exact design of the new security feature has yet to be confirmed, although it is expected to involve a barrier at the park entrance.
The plans come after Bolton Council confirmed that the gate at the site had been damaged and that officers were reviewing security arrangements.
Earlier this month, eight caravans parked at Longsight Park before the council served a legal notice ordering those on the site to leave.
Following the encampment, volunteers described a major clean-up operation and raised concerns about damage to parts of the park and arboretum.
A Bolton Council spokesperson previously said neighbourhood services staff had attended the site to remove waste and that the council’s neighbourhood assets team had reviewed the quality of the gates on site.
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