Manchester City closed the gap to Arsenal to six points after their 3-0 win over Chelsea, with both Gary Neville and Pep Guardiola highlighting City’s advantage
The Catalan manager and Gary Neville reckon that extra preparation time could prove crucial, with Arsenal occupied by their Champions League quarter-final against Sporting CP this week. The north London outfit hold a one-goal lead heading into that encounter as they host their Portuguese visitors at the Emirates.
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Gary Neville reckons City will be sensing an opportunity. “We have an enormous game next Sunday, one that will define the Premier League season,” he said on Sky Sports.
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“Man City smell blood. They’re heading into a free week to prepare for a monstrous clash that Pep Guardiola will relish on Sunday afternoon.”
After the triumph over Chelsea, Guardiola recognised the additional time between fixtures has already delivered benefits for City. “We have long weeks now, being out of the Champions League,” he said.
“We are more fresh, training everybody, people understand more what to do. That’s the reality.”
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City’s players appear determined to shift their focus swiftly to Arsenal following their victory over the Blues. Goalscorer Jeremy Doku was emphatic that his side would be ready to take on the Gunners.
“First of all, recover, then just analyse Arsenal again, think about what my task is going to be, look at their weaknesses and strengths and believe that we did it already,” he said.
“They will come with hunger. They don’t want to just give it to us so we have to go and take it. Trust me, we’ll be well prepared.”
Addressing the significance of the upcoming clash, he added: “If you win this game, it is a big punch towards them. If you lose, it’s in their hands and we have to wait for them to lose.
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“But if we win, it’s in our hands and I prefer to have it in my hands.”
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Megan will pay for her crimes, says Coronation Street boss (Picture: Danielle Baguley/ITV)
So Megan Walsh (Beth Nixon) survived the Grim Reaper’s big, swinging scythe in Coronation Street’s murder week, but according to Corrie boss, Kate Brooks, that doesn’t mean she’ll get away with her heinous crimes.
Megan’s grooming and sexual abuse of Will Driscoll (Lucas Hodgson-Wale) has been going on for a long while, with her utilising her position as his teacher and sports coach to keep it under wraps, which she’s done to conceal affairs with previous students.
When the perfectly precocious Sam Blakeman (Jude Riordan) discovered what was going on, Megan launched a campaign of psychological torture against him so brutal that the youngster turned to drugs as she attempted to destroy his much-prized academic record.
Though Sam eventually told all about Megan’s abuse, leading to Will’s family learning of her true nature, she’s managed to remain at arm’s length of the law.
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With a deeply brainwashed Will refusing to admit the truth to the police, and Megan terminating her pregnancy, the only piece of physical evidence that would prove her guilt was lost.
Megan’s abuse of Will has had quite the ripple effect (Picture: Danielle Baguley/ITV)
‘Megan and Will, there’s a bit of a journey to go on with that story. So obviously she’s been exposed, but Will at this point, he believed it was love. He believed it was all genuine,’ Kate said.
‘Scales fall from his eyes and Tim Metcalfe’s (Joe Duttine) going to be so instrumental in kind of making him realise what’s gone on and how unacceptable and how wrong it was.
‘Obviously, there are soap Gods, and as in soap God’s law, there’ll be some kind of retribution for Megan. She cannot get off of this scot-free. We will go down the proper channels. Whether it goes on to plan or not, I cannot say, but it goes down quite a very big path.’
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Megan’s showdown with Maggie had disastrous consequences (Picture: Amy Brammall/ITV)
So that’s it then, Megan will pay for what she’s done. Surely that can’t fix the carnage she’s left in her wake though, right?
‘It’s showcasing that, Megan’s actions have not just directly impacted Will and the Driscolls, Sam’s also collateral damage. People’s trust has been absolutely dismantled because of this woman’s perpetual lie,’ Kate said about the lingering effects of Megan’s reign of terror.
Speaking on the future of the Driscoll clan, Kate said: ‘It’s about the family falling apart, but then kind of building themselves back up again as they try desperately to kind of repair the damage that Megan’s done. Will will be quite badly affected by what he’s been through with Megan. It does go a bit dark.’
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Will will suffer in the aftermath of Megan’s reign of terror… (Picture: Amy Brammall/ITV)
…as will Sam (Picture: ITV/Danielle Baguley/Shutterstock)
As for Sam?
‘Getting him across the Megan story and having him be another victim of her manipulation felt like a really interesting way of telling the story. But as a result of that, his mental health has been really, really damaged by everything that’s happened – by the manipulation, by the fact that he wasn’t believed, by the fear that he felt every time he was with Megan.’
So while Megan will face the music eventually, the scars she’s inflicted on Weatherfield will remain for a long while after she does.
The murders of four women involved in prostitution can still be solved according to Police Scotland’s head of major crime
Scotland’s most senior detective has vowed to bring the killers of four women to justice and urged people with information on their murders to finally come forward and “lift that burden.”
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Seven women involved in prostitution were murdered between 1991 and 2025 but in only three cases has there been a conviction including that of Iain Packer two years ago for the death of Emma Caldwell.
However the murders of Diane McInally in 1991, Karen McGregor in 1993, Leona McGovern in 1995 and Jackie Gallagher in 1996, remain unsolved and unresolved.
DCS Paul Livingstone Head of Major Crime at Police Scotland says unsolved cases are constantly being reviewed and any new information on the four murders will be acted on
He also appealed for anyone holding back on the killings to finally come forward and break their silence.
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He added: “What I do believe is that taking a life must bear a significant burden on an individual. And I can only imagine that knowing about someone taking a life who hasn’t yet faced justice must also put a similar sort of burden on those people.
“If there’s anybody out there that suspects or knows or believe that someone’s responsible, tell us, let’s help you lift that burden and we’ll take action on the information that you give us.
“Please don’t sit on it. Don’t let it eat away at you. I would urge them to come forward.
“It could be that final piece in a jigsaw that gives families much needed answers, gives them justice that they and victims deserve.”
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All seven victims worked Glasgow’s notorious city-centre red light district known as the Drag to feed their drug habits.
DCS Livingstone was speaking out in the latest episode of the Clyde 1 podcast Beware Book about the seven murders.
The title refers to a diary at a drop-in centre in Glasgow where women logged dangerous clients’ names.
Three men stood trial separately for the murders of Karen, Leona and Jackie but were cleared.
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In Diane’s case two suspects, now dead, were arrested but the charges later dropped. The men acquitted of Karen and Jackie’s murders are also now dead.
However DCS Livingstone says that doesn’t mean the cases are closed and further investigations can still be carried out for other potential suspects
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He also acknowledged the “pain and the distress” suffered by the families of the four women over the years.
The police chief added: “I’d like to actually reassure those victims and their families, we haven’t forgotten about you, or their loved ones. The obvious common factor is that unresolved status, and therefore there’s a feeling of disappointment around someone not being held accountable for their loved one’s death and ultimately brought to justice.”
DCS Livingstone also wants to improve relationships and contact with the families of the four women.
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He added:”I understand that they’ll feel let down because ultimately no one has ever been convicted or held accountable for the death of their loved ones.”
DCS Livingstone highlighted the “cold case” conviction in 2019 of restaurant worker Zhi Men Chen for the 1997 murder of Tracey Wylde as an example of what can be achieved.
The young mum who was involved in prostitution was found dead in her flat in the Barmulloch area of Glasgow Chen, 44, was identified as a suspect when a DNA sample he gave to police after his arrest for another crime matched a sample found in Tracy’s flat.
Yesterday two of the four families welcomed the possibility of finally getting justice.
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Alice Wilson, mother of Jackie Gallagher, said:”I just wish that this person was caught. I know it’s been a long time but somebody must know something and end this misery for me.”
Meanwhile Dolly Glover, aunt of Diane McInally, added: “I think it would put everybody at ease if they could just find somebody. You just never know. Somebody might remember something that will come to them.”
Margo Lafferty was also one of the seven murdered women.
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The 27 year old’s body was found in a Glasgow city-centre lane in 1998 and a 21 year old man was convicted of her murder in 2001 following a retrial.
A Police Scotland spokesperson said: “If anyone has any new information that could assist in the investigation of any unresolved homicide, please contact Police via the non-emergency number 101, alternatively, you can call Crimestoppers in confidence on 0800 555 111.”
The latest episode of Beware Book is available on the Rayo app, Apple, Amazon Music and Spotify.
Langley Castle, a 14th-century fortress in Langley-on-Tyne built in 1350, opened its doors to guests in the spring of 1986 following its purchase by American MIT professor Dr Stuart Madnick.
A friend of Dr Madnick’s had spotted an advert for the property in Country Life magazine, and while in the UK on business, he decided to visit, immediately falling in love with the castle.
Dr Stuart Madnick (centre), owner of Langley Castle and Baron of Langley since 2007, when he reunited the castle with a title stripped away by the Crown in the mid-18th Century as punishment for its owners’ Jacobite sympathies (Image: Langley Castle)
Dr Madnick said: “He had no idea what to do with it, at that point, but decided several months later.”
To celebrate its ruby anniversary, 40 community ‘knights’—individuals recognised for their dedication to charity, youth work, parish service, or the promotion of tourism in Northumberland—will be honoured at a special event at Langley Castle.
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Each of the ‘knights’ has been invited to the official celebration and will be asked to ring a bell to represent each year of the castle’s 40-year journey as a hotel.
The bell toll will be announced by Hexham Town Crier, and all 40 knights will then ring their bells together in unison.
13 members of staff will be presented with long service awards during the anniversary event, with the longest-serving employee having worked at Langley Castle for 32 years.
Langley Castle has a history as a family home, army barracks, girls’ school, and a site for medieval banquets.
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It spent nearly 500 years roofless and unoccupied after a fire.
Dr Madnick eventually secured the title of Baron of Langley in 2007, restoring the historical connection to the property.
In 2022, he also acquired a medieval seal belonging to either the first or second Baron of Langley, found by a metal detectorist.
The seal is now on display in the castle’s reception area.
It did away with a large chunk of the narrative from Emily Brontë’s original 1847 novel – to many readers’ outrage – and focused more on the tragedy and yearning between central characters Cathy Earnshaw (Margot Robbie) and Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi).
The movie’s bold provocation, including songs on its soundtrack by Charli XCX as well as explicitly sexual imagery and scenes of BDSM, saw it labelled ‘less Wuthering Heights, more Fifty Shades of Grimm’ and ‘lurid and wildly over-sexed’, as well as ‘luminously feral’.
The film’s official synopsis describes it as ‘a passionate and tumultuous love story set against the backdrop of the Yorkshire moors, exploring the intense and destructive relationship between Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw’.
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The adaptation of Emily Brontë’s novel provoked a big reaction and made millions at the box office (Picture: Warner Bros. Pictures via AP)
Now fans can make their own minds up (or start the first of those ‘100,000%’ guaranteed rewatches) from the comfort of their own sofas, after Wuthering Heights was added to HBO Max on Friday – and NOW in the UK as well.
Adopted as an orphan sibling but treated poorly by Cathy’s father (a grotesque Martin Clunes), Heathcliff runs away when he thinks he has been rejected by Cathy after she sets her cap at wealthy new neighbour Edgar Linton (Shazad Latif) in a bid to save the family from poverty.
But his return years later sets a string of devastating events in motion.
The film’s cast also includes Adolescence’s award-winning star Owen Cooper as the young Heathcliff, Alison Oliver, Oscar nominee Hong Chau, Charlotte Mellington and House of the Dragon actor Ewan Mitchell.
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Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi’s casting as Cathy and Heathcliff (pictured) caused a fair bit of consternation as well (Picture: Warner Bros. Pictures)
‘Best movie ever. 100,000% would watch so may more times,’ insisted Evany on review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes, while Joanna agreed, adding: ‘The story is powerful, emotional, and unforgettable. It really pulls you in with its intense characters and deep love story, making it a film that stays with you long after watching.’
Celcilia said that the film ‘transported me to a different time, social class, and a tug and pull love story. I enjoy the classic Emily Brontë love story and this adaptation is cinematic and raw if nothing else’, giving it a full five -star review.
Other fans appreciated the tear-jerking nature of this adaptation, with Charley saying their girlfriend was ‘bawling her eyes out’ and Kimmie writing, ‘Loved it, so emotional!’ as another fan admitted to tears and said they were ‘blown away by their acting and the chemistry between Jacob and Margot’.
Passionate fans vowed they would ‘watch so many more times’ (Picture: Warner Bros. Pictures via AP)
What did Metro’s film critic think?
Our senior film reporter Tori Brazier awarded Wuthering Heights four stars out of five…
Lilia also shared that, having not read the book, she was ‘devastated’ by the film’s ending – although it does diverge somewhat from the original’s – while Abra’s review warned that it was ‘very sex heavy and not true to the book’, but felt if you could get past that the movie was ‘enjoyable’.
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Others had no time for it at all though, with Joe seething: ‘Worse [sic.] movie I have seen in a long time. Didn’t even come close to the book!!’
Critics were similarly divided, with The Daily Beast describing Fennell’s adaptation as ‘a fleetingly recognisable tale of love, desire, obsession, regret, bitterness, and ire that, at every turn, plays as florid, horny, juvenile fanfiction’.
However others dismissed it as ‘fanfiction’ (Picture: Warner Bros. Pictures via AP)
‘With a chemistry-free central romance between the bizarrely uninteresting Heathcliff and Cathy, this film self-deflates,’ complained Kevin Maher of The Times, while Little White Lies’ Hannah Stong called it ‘a half-remembered story dressed in a beautiful gown that seems destined for TikTok fan edits and Pinterest mood boards rather than soul-stirring emotional catharsis’.
However, the BBC’s Caryn James argued: ‘If you embrace the film’s audacious style and think of it as a reinvention not an adaptation, this bold, artful Wuthering Heights is utterly absorbing.’
And in a five-star review, The Telegraph’s Robbie Collin called the movie ‘a bosom-heaving, gasp-inducing thrill ride’, adding: ‘Style over substance? Not at all – it’s more that Fennell understands that style can be substance when you do it right.’
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Wuthering Heights is streaming now on HBO Max and NOW (with a cinema membership) in the UK.
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Following Alex Scott’s corner from the left, Evanilson’s header appeared to be going wide, only for Colombia international Lerma – who spent five seasons as a Bournemouth player – to inadvertently nod the ball over his own goal-line, despite the best efforts of Eagles goalkeeper Dean Henderson.
John claims the NHS has refused to operate on the growing “watermelon-sized” hernia that leaves him unable to work
A man living with a “watermelon-sized” hernia says he has been left unable to live a normal life after finding a lump that has led to a draining health battle. John Burden says he now has to rely on PIP and Universal Credit to get by.
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The 61 year old from Weymouth in Dorset, says his ordeal began in October 2022 when he woke up with a small golf ball-sized lump in his stomach. After being rushed to hospital, fluid was drained and he was initially told to return once he had lost weight.
However, John claims that despite losing nearly 20kg, he was repeatedly told by the NHS that he needed to lose more weight before surgery could be considered. Over time, the hernia continued to grow, eventually reaching the size of a watermelon and leaving him reliant on XXXXL clothing to cover it.
He says the condition has left him unable to work as a shop fitter or drive. He says this is forcing him to rely on Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payments (PIP) to get by.
In recent months, John says the hernia has begun rupturing, causing severe bleeding and repeated A&E visits, including one incident that required a blood transfusion. He claims he is still being told further weight loss is needed before surgery could be considered.
“It causes me pain at night, I can’t drive any more, and I haven’t been able to work in three years,” he said. “All I want is to have the hernia removed so I can get my life back.”
John now believes his only option is to raise £4,500 for surgery in Lithuania. He says a specialist has agreed to treat him, including travel and accommodation costs.
He first noticed the lump around three and a half years ago, shortly after recovering from pneumonia. After being admitted to hospital and having fluid drained, he claims he was told to return once he had lost weight, but says he was repeatedly turned away on follow-up visits despite his weight loss. John has since dropped around 20kg to 114kg, but says the condition has continued to worsen.
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In 2023, he became unable to work due to the condition and began claiming benefits. By late 2025, the hernia had grown significantly and began rupturing, leading to multiple emergency hospital admissions.
He said: “I was projecting blood 10 feet across the floor. The ambulance came and they couldn’t stop it. I had to have a blood transfusion.”
Despite this, he claims consultants have not offered surgery. He says he was later sent for a liver scan, which came back normal, but received no further update.
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John has since contacted specialists in Lithuania, who he says are willing to operate. According to one local NHS foundation trust’s website, there are rules around surgery for people who are overweight – although John’s own trust says it is unable to comment on his case.
University Hospitals Dorset NHS Foundation Trust’s website says: “People with a body mass index (BMI) over 30 have an increased risk of developing serious problems both during and after surgery. These problems include infection, delayed wound healing, increased pain, and increased risk of needing further surgery on the joint.
“The operation is often more difficult, and it may take longer to get back on your feet and return home. For people with a BMI of 40 or over, the risks increase further. Your surgery may need to be delayed until your BMI is below 40.”
A spokesperson for Dorset County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust said: “We’re not able to talk about individual cases due to patient confidentiality, but we would encourage Mr Burden to get in touch with our patient experience team so they can look into this on his behalf.”
A gambling addict defrauded his friends in an elaborate con. Scott Clode abused the trust of fellow sports club members in Cardiff – some of whom he had known for many years – to steal tens of thousands of pounds.
Cardiff Crown Court heard the 33-year-old targeted people he knew from Radyr cricket club and Llandaff squash club. He defrauded eight victims of a total of £41,320 and there was another “victim” who chose not to support a prosecution, the court was told.
Clode bowed his head low in the dock as he heard how his crimes had caused panic attacks, financial struggles, and “massive humiliation” for people who had considered him a close friend.
Prosecutor Abdallah Barakat said the defendant told lies about a “mystery shopper” scheme offered by a market research agency called Retail Active. He claimed he was acting as a “platinum ambassador” but in reality the firm had no knowledge of his actions.
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“He would invite victims to send him money so they could get vouchers from businesses that worked with Retail Active,” said Mr Barakat. “He would do so on the false pretence that they would be reimbursed the money they’d paid.
“Mr Clode told them they would be reimbursed within weeks as long as they used the vouchers and they photographed and reviewed their experiences.
“They just had to send him the reviews and photos, which he would then send to Retail Active. Soon thereafter they would get a refund, he told them.
“He had fabricated the scheme to obtain money to fund his gambling addiction. Once the victims realised what had happened he apologised in a group chat and stated that he was suffering with a gambling addiction.”
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One of the victims, Simon Walters, had known Clode for 15 years through the cricket club. In 2023 the defendant sold him the con that he could enjoy an expenses-paid holiday as long as he reviewed his experience.
Mr Walters parted with more than £15,000 and received £10,000 worth of Tui holiday vouchers from Clode. “The vouchers were genuine and some victims did benefit from the experience of those vouchers,” said the prosecutor. “But they would never have done it in the first place had they known they would not be reimbursed.”
In a victim impact statement Mr Walters said: “It was all very convincing at the time. My wife told me to trust her and not my mate. It caused me massive humiliation and I feel betrayed by Scott. It’s affected my confidence in people.
“If he’d told me he was in a couple of thousand pounds’ debt and needed help we would have got together and helped him. It’s the detail and planning and deceit that really annoy me.
“When my mum was on her deathbed he was asking how she was. In his next breath he was asking about Tui vouchers.”
Another Radyr cricket club member, Rhys Lloyd, had been friends with the defendant for 14 years. He sent Clode £11,000 and received around £7,000 worth of vouchers with no further reimbursement.
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Karl Ford, a cricketer who was swindled into paying Clode for Tui vouchers, said: “I had sleepless nights and panic attacks. I had to go into my overdraft for the first time. Words such as ‘voucher’ now trigger me and take me back to the scam.”
The court heard some victims did not receive vouchers at all. One described losing savings for a house. Another said they had lost money meant to cover their wedding, adding: “I have not told my family out of embarrassment.”
“Falling for such a scam is something I had only heard about in the media,” said one victim. “I always questioned how people could fall for it. Now I understand anyone could be tricked by someone like Scott Clode.”
Clode, of Heol Seddon in Danescourt, pleaded guilty to eight counts of fraud from between June 2023 and November 2024. He had no previous convictions.
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His barrister Ieuan Callaghan pointed to six of Clode’s loved ones who were sitting in the public gallery to support him. “His family and friends paint a picture that, aside from this addiction, he is a really good person,” he told the court.
Mr Callaghan turned to the defendant, hunched low in the dock, and went on: “He is in a state of some distress. The victims’ statements have been difficult for him to listen to.
“He did not do this to live a lavish lifestyle. He really was driven by a gambling disorder which he had struggled with for years. In 2018 he was bailed out twice – first by his dad and then by his mum.
“In 2022, when he relapsed and these offences happened, he was treating the scheme as a payday loan without any interest to be paid by him.
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“He thought that by sending vouchers and promising things to these people – and many did receive genuine vouchers – he could pay them back from gambling winnings. It sounds ridiculous when you say it out loud – and it was – but that was the addiction he was going through.”
The barrister said a psychiatric report showed his client would not have committed the fraud if he did not have a gambling disorder. Clode has a new “well-paying” job in robotic process automation and has been making efforts to gradually repay the victims, Mr Callaghan added.
Judge Gregory Bull KC told the defendant: “You abused your close friendships at the sports clubs. Some people didn’t get vouchers at all and in other cases there were no reimbursements.
“The fraud had a devastating effect on more than one of your victims. They will find it hard to forgive you knowing you abused them in the way you did. You struck at their sense of security and feelings of integrity. This was a serious crime.”
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But the judge took into account the medical report and found Clode had a prospect of rehabilitation. “Prison would be damaging and set back the rehabilitation you have achieved so far,” he said.
Judge Bull imposed a two-year prison term suspended for 18 months. At this Clode exhaled deeply and became tearful while his loved ones in the gallery gasped and embraced each other.
Clode must complete 10 days of rehabilitation activity and 240 hours of unpaid work. A proceeds of crime hearing will be held in September to determine a financial penalty and compensation.
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Dr Blankshein said: “Through excavating and through the photogrammetry work that we did, we were able to build a picture of this coherent timber structure, not just bits of wood supporting a stone mound with a kind of timber platform underneath, but actually, the timber itself was the basis of the structure.
Cambridgeshire Police said the force is aware of antisocial behaviour and is working alongside partners to tackle it
Residents have raised concerns about antisocial behaviour in a Cambridge suburb. Some locals have said they would highly recommend Trumpington as a place to live and that it is the ideal location for families.
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However, some told CambridgeshireLive that “everything [in Trumpington] looks amazing” but that there are problems with antisocial behaviour.
Elif Gueu, 51, has lived in Trumpington for three years. She said she likes Trumpington because it is a “very multicultural place” where it is “peaceful” and people “respect each other”. She likes that she is not far from Cambridge city centre, but she does have some concerns about the area.
She said: “Sometimes there are some shouts and fights. There are some issues around here.” In one incident, in the last year, she said she was “shocked” because she said she saw “someone chained by police”.
A spokesperson for Cambridgeshire Police said: “Members of our Neighbourhood Policing Team are aware and are working with partners, including residents associations, housing associations and councils to tackle ASB.”
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Another lady, who wished to remain anonymous, said Trumpington is “very nice on the exterior” but “there is a lot of social discord beneath the surface and a lot of anti-social behaviour”. The resident of 10 years added: “A lot of the time you have got people doing things they shouldn’t be doing.”
She said that over time, Trumpington has seen some “violent incidents”, including a fire and vandalism. The lady said that “on the surface, everything looks amazing but you just have some problems from time to time.”
The spokesperson for Cambridgeshire Police continued: “We would encourage anyone who experiences anti-social behaviour where they live to report this to us, so we are able to build up an accurate picture of what is happening in an area and act accordingly.”
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On the other hand, others have said that they have not experienced this and that it is actually the ‘best place for for families to live in. Raneem Almutairi, 32, has lived in Trumpington for around eight months.
She said she thinks it is the “best area for families to live in Cambridge”. Raneem said she has heard of the concerns but she “feels safe”. “I haven’t seen anything or experienced anything myself”, she added.
Information about antisocial behaviour can be found on Cambridgeshire Police’s website, where it can also be reported.
– The Attenborough’s hawkweed or Hieracium attenboroughianum – the wildflower became the first living species in the UK and Ireland to be named after him. It was discovered more than 10 years ago in the Brecon Beacons but it took a decade for scientists to establish whether or not it was actually new.
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