Sabtu, 26 September 2020

Sir David Attenborough: Naturalist gives Prince George a fossil at royal screening - BBC News

Sir David Attenborough has attended a private viewing of his new documentary at Kensington Palace, hosted by the Duke of Cambridge.

During his visit, the naturalist gave Prince George a fossilised giant tooth from an extinct shark.

The young prince looked captivated as he handled the tooth of a carcharocles megalodon, a shark that was once a sea predator.

Sir David and Prince William both campaign on environmental issues.

The event was held in the palace grounds to allow for social distancing.

William and the veteran broadcaster watched A Life On Our Planet, in which Sir David reflects on the defining moments of his life's work and the devastating changes he has witnessed.

Sir David, 94, chatted to the Duke and Duchess and their three children, Princes George and Louis, and Princess Charlotte, after the screening.

He was interviewed by Prince William at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in 2019, where he warned humanity needed to act fast to prevent parts of the natural world being annihilated.

The couple and Sir David have worked together on the environment - including on the Earthshot Prize, a cash reward for solutions to environmental problems.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

The giant shark tooth given to Prince George was found by Sir David during a family holiday to Malta in the late 1960s.

It was embedded in the island nation's soft yellow limestone, and is about 23 million years old.

Carcharocles megalodon is believed to have grown up to 15 metres in length, twice the length of the great white shark.

David Attenborough: A Life On Our Planet is released in cinemas on Monday and on Netflix on October 4.

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2020-09-27 00:26:01Z
52781086190557

Sir David Attenborough: Naturalist gives Prince George a fossil at royal screening - BBC News

Sir David Attenborough has attended a private viewing of his new documentary at Kensington Palace, hosted by the Duke of Cambridge.

During his visit, the naturalist gave Prince George a fossilised giant tooth from an extinct shark.

The young prince looked captivated as he handled the tooth of a carcharocles megalodon, a shark that was once a sea predator.

Sir David and Prince William both campaign on environmental issues.

The event was held in the palace grounds to allow for social distancing.

William and the veteran broadcaster watched A Life On Our Planet, in which Sir David reflects on the defining moments of his life's work and the devastating changes he has witnessed.

Sir David, 94, chatted to the Duke and Duchess and their three children, Princes George and Louis, and Princess Charlotte, after the screening.

He was interviewed by Prince William at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in 2019, where he warned humanity needed to act fast to prevent parts of the natural world being annihilated.

The couple and Sir David have worked together on the environment - including on the Earthshot Prize, a cash reward for solutions to environmental problems.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

The giant shark tooth given to Prince George was found by Sir David during a family holiday to Malta in the late 1960s.

It was embedded in the island nation's soft yellow limestone, and is about 23 million years old.

Carcharocles megalodon is believed to have grown up to 15 metres in length, twice the length of the great white shark.

David Attenborough: A Life On Our Planet is released in cinemas on Monday and on Netflix on October 4.

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2020-09-26 23:27:38Z
52781086190557

Sir David Attenborough: Naturalist gives Prince George a fossil at royal screening - BBC News

Sir David Attenborough has attended a private viewing of his new documentary at Kensington Palace, hosted by the Duke of Cambridge.

During his visit, the naturalist gave Prince George a fossilised giant tooth from an extinct shark.

The young prince looked captivated as he handled the tooth of a carcharocles megalodon, a shark that was once a sea predator.

Sir David and Prince William both campaign on environmental issues.

The event was held in the palace grounds to allow for social distancing.

William and the veteran broadcaster watched A Life On Our Planet, in which Sir David reflects on the defining moments of his life's work and the devastating changes he has witnessed.

Sir David, 94, chatted to the Duke and Duchess and their three children, Princes George and Louis, and Princess Charlotte, after the screening.

He was interviewed by Prince William at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in 2019, where he warned humanity needed to act fast to prevent parts of the natural world being annihilated.

The couple and Sir David have worked together on the environment - including on the Earthshot Prize, a cash reward for solutions to environmental problems.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

The giant shark tooth given to Prince George was found by Sir David during a family holiday to Malta in the late 1960s.

It was embedded in the island nation's soft yellow limestone, and is about 23 million years old.

Carcharocles megalodon is believed to have grown up to 15 metres in length, twice the length of the great white shark.

David Attenborough: A Life On Our Planet is released in cinemas on Monday and on Netflix on October 4.

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2020-09-26 23:19:47Z
52781086190557

Boris Johnson's enemies spread false rumours about a split from Carrie - Daily Mail

Boris is besieged: Johnson's enemies spread false rumours about a split from Carrie and friends mutter about his health, as the PM faces rebellions from the Chancellor, Tory MPs - and even his own children

  • Carrie Symonds was pictured enjoying a holiday in Italy without Boris Johnson
  • Tory MPs are in revolt over economic devastation caused by coronavirus laws
  • People are talking about the state of his mental, physical and financial health 

They were the pictures which ratcheted up an already febrile atmosphere on the Tory backbenches – Boris Johnson’s girlfriend Carrie Symonds enjoying a holiday in Italy without the Prime Minister.

‘We thought – uh-oh, trouble at t’mill,’ said one Tory MP. ‘He’s got enough to worry about without a break-up as well.’

Rumours of a split are dismissed by the couple’s friends, who blame Boris’s growing legion of political enemies for spreading the claims to ‘destabilise’ him. It comes at a time when Tory MPs – and even his own Chancellor – are in revolt over the economic devastation caused by Covid laws, as mutterings grow louder about the state of the Prime Minister’s mental, physical and financial health.

‘For God’s sake, she is surely allowed to go on holiday?’ says one. ‘And he is quite busy, you know. Imagine what they would have said if he had taken the time off to be with her.’

The pictures of 32-year-old Ms Symonds relaxing at the £600-a-night Grand Hotel Tremezzo on Lake Como carried uncomfortable echoes for some MPs of Princess Diana posing in front of the Taj Mahal in 1992, sending a signal to the world about her doomed marriage to Prince Charles.

Boris Johnson¿s girlfriend Carrie Symonds was pictured enjoying a holiday in Italy without the Prime Minister

Boris Johnson’s girlfriend Carrie Symonds was pictured enjoying a holiday in Italy without the Prime Minister

But while Diana engineered the situation to her own advantage, insiders say that Ms Symonds – who was pictured with their four-month-old son, Wilfred, strapped to her front – was just enjoying a private break with friends after a gruelling few months.

Even Boris’s closest allies do not, however, dispute that the Prime Minister is caught in a vortex of professional and personal problems which are without precedent in recent political history.

So far this year, he has endured a ruinously expensive divorce, a brush with death and then fatherhood at the age of 56 – all while battling the lingering after effects of coronavirus, trying to limit the damage inflicted by the pandemic and preparing for a possible No Deal Brexit at the end of December.

No 10 was furious over a briefing last weekend which described Mr Johnson as having ‘misery etched on his face’ because he was weighed down by the financial burden of supporting six children and missing his ex-wife, Marina Wheeler.

A former adviser to Mr Johnson, who has remained close to Ms Wheeler, is being blamed for the ‘brutal and personal’ attack, with one source claiming they had already ‘confessed and apologised’.

While the claim that the Prime Minister was struggling to get by on his £150,000 salary was greeted with scepticism, there is no doubt that he has paid an emotional price for his divorce, with his four children with Ms Wheeler struggling to varying degrees to accept his relationship with Ms Symonds.

Tory MPs are in revolt over the economic devastation caused by Covid laws, as mutterings grow louder about the state of the Prime Minister¿s mental, physical and financial health

Tory MPs are in revolt over the economic devastation caused by Covid laws, as mutterings grow louder about the state of the Prime Minister’s mental, physical and financial health

One source said: ‘It must be painful for Boris to have finally made it to No 10 without his children being around. The contrast with Tony Blair, who was always posing with his kids on the steps of No 10, is stark. It is deeply unfair, because he has worked so hard to provide for them.’

Shortly after Mr Johnson became Conservative leader last year, he caused mystification in the Commons after he was seen sprinting from the Despatch Box at 12.45pm and running straight out of Parliament. It later emerged that he was frantic because he was late for lunch with his daughter.

The private angst comes as he faces the extraordinarily complex challenges of the Covid pandemic, with tribes of rebellious Tory MPs managing to make the Government’s 80-strong majority look uncomfortably slim.

Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the backbench 1922 Committee, has led the opposition to Ministers ‘ruling by decree’ over Covid regulations, while Chancellor Rishi Sunak is making increasingly muscular objections from within the Cabinet to the restrictions.

In the run-up to his decision last week to impose a 10pm curfew on pubs and restaurants, Mr Johnson was forced to mediate between Mr Sunak, who fears the restrictions are causing irreparable damage to the economy, and the pro-lockdown lobby led by Health Secretary Matt Hancock and Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove.

At a Covid ‘quad’ meeting on Friday, September 18 – Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab is the other member – Mr Sunak effectively blocked Mr Johnson when he proposed a two-week ‘circuit-breaking’ lockdown.

While No 10 and No 11 both deny the Chancellor implied that the issue was a ‘resignation matter’, his opposition was sufficient to force, at a subsequent meeting last Sunday, the idea of a 10pm curfew as a compromise measure. When the issue was put to the full Cabinet on Tuesday, resistance flared again when Business Secretary Alok Sharma and Environment Secretary George Eustice suggested that it would be safer to taper the curfew with last orders at 10pm, rather than force everyone on to the streets at the same time.

Aline Nassif, a former colleague from Ms Symonds¿ time working as a media adviser to John Whittingdale when he was Culture Secretary, joined Ms Symonds in Italy

Aline Nassif, a former colleague from Ms Symonds’ time working as a media adviser to John Whittingdale when he was Culture Secretary, joined Ms Symonds in Italy

But Mr Gove insisted that there should be a strict 10pm ‘guillotine’.

Complicating Mr Johnson’s decisions are the different tribes of increasingly fearless Tory backbenchers, who – despite being unable to bitch and plot in now-shuttered Commons bars – are using private messaging sites to share their frustrations.

One tribe, which calls itself the ‘Common Sense’ group, has held meetings with Chief Whip Mark Spencer to express anger at the ‘control freakery’ exerted over the Prime Minister by scientific advisers such as Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty.

The 50-strong membership, which includes former Transport Minister Sir John Hayes and former Chancellor Lord Lamont, told No 10 that it was being too ‘passive and reactive’ in the crisis.

As one former chief whip says: ‘My advice to Boris and No 10 is to treat the views of the chairman of the 1922 Committee with at least the same level of respect as they accord to those of any scientist, medic or special adviser on this matter. They need to reverse-ferret as soon as possible.’

The Common Sense group have also complained about the lack of legislation to tackle the problem of Channel migrants, and urged Ministers to be more ‘anti-woke’ on issues such as the ban on Rule, Britannia! at the Last Night of the Proms and ‘unconscious bias training’. Some Tory MPs fear that the combination of political and personal problems could even lead to Mr Johnson quitting before the next election.

As one MP, who was alarmed by the pictures of Ms Symonds holidaying alone, says: ‘Would even Churchill have been able to cope without Clementine?’

Some MPs also make unsubstantiated claims that Ms Symonds, an environmental campaigner, ‘interferes’ in the running of the country by marching into ministerial meetings to thrust Wilfred into his arms and being ‘more interested in badgers than Brexit’.

But her friends paint a picture of a young woman adapting to life in an intense public gaze, who needs to escape the pressures of No 10 by relaxing with trusted friends.

She was joined on her Italian holiday by feminist campaigner Nimco Ali, who has been at her side throughout her time in Downing Street, and Aline Nassif, a former colleague from Ms Symonds’ time working as a media adviser to John Whittingdale when he was Culture Secretary.

Ms Nassif is now the global head of communications for Bechtel, the American construction giant responsible for UK infrastructure projects such as Crossrail. One friend said: ‘All of these whispering campaigns are just plain nasty. Carrie is a young woman and a relatively new mum. It seems to all be being done to upset Carrie, which in turn upsets Boris. It’s baffling that anyone would do this to her.’

They argue that becoming ‘First Lady’ has been a shock to her. The friend added: ‘She might have been involved in politics for some time but finding yourself in the limelight isn’t easy for anyone.

‘This time two years ago nobody knew who she was. Being caught taking her holiday is something Carrie took on the chin but there is a certain mystery surrounding how she and her friends were found.

‘She clearly had no idea that there were any members of the paparazzi around. Women tend to do their hair if they know they will be seen.’

After arriving home from Lake Como last Thursday, the couple spent Friday together in their No 10 flat, and were planning to spend this weekend together with Wilfred and dog Dilyn.

The friend concluded: ‘She and Boris are very happy together. The only time they’re not really together is when he is off working as the Prime Minister.’

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2020-09-26 21:01:13Z
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London anti-lockdown protest sees 16 arrests and nine police officers injured - Metro.co.uk

Anti-lockdown protest turns violent in Trafalgar Square, London, on September 26, 2020
Protesters and police were left bloodied and bruised after protests in London turned nasty (Picture: REX)

Clashes between police and coronavirus conspiracy theorists in London today left two officers in need of hospital treatment for head injuries.

Anti-lockdown demonstrators were pictured with blood streaming down their faces after violence erupted at the rally at Trafalgar Square this afternoon.

The Metropolitan Police said 16 people had been arrested and nine officers had sustained injuries.

Thousands of people massed in Trafalgar Square on Saturday carrying a variety of signs, flags and placards to take part in a ‘we do not consent’ rally – with none appearing to wear face coverings or to social distance.

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Members of the crowd threw bottles at police and chanted ‘pick your side’, while officers used batons against them.

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Demonstrators accused the Government of ‘tyranny’ for implementing sweeping emergency measures to control the spread of the disease.

Some compared a potential Covid-19 vaccine to ‘cyanide’ and others held placards with a quote by Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels, who said: ‘If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, eventually people will believe it.’

According to the Johns Hopkins University coronavirus tracker there have been nearly 32,700,000 cases and almost 1 million deaths worldwide, less than a year since the disease started spreading.

A woman falls as police move in to disperse protesters in Trafalgar Square in London on September 26, 2020, at a 'We Do Not Consent!' mass rally against vaccination and government restrictions designed to fight the spread of the novel coronavirus, including the wearing of masks and taking tests for the virus.
A woman falls as police move in to disperse protesters (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)
A injured man arrested by police during the demonstration. Police and demonstrators clash at the ?We Do Not Consent? protests against Lockdown, Social Distancing, Track and Trace & wearing of face masks at Trafalgar Square.
Protesters accused the Government of ‘tyranny’ over emergency measures to stop the spread of the virus (Picture: SOPA)
Police hitting protesters with batons during the demonstration. Police and demonstrators clash at the ?We Do Not Consent? protests against Lockdown, Social Distancing, Track and Trace & wearing of face masks at Trafalgar Square.
Police used batons against protesters while demonstrators pelted bottles at them (Picture: SOPA)
A protester holds up an anti-Bill Gates placard in Trafalgar Square in London on September 26, 2020, at a 'We Do Not Consent!' mass rally against vaccination and government restrictions designed to fight the spread of the novel coronavirus, including the wearing of masks and taking tests for the virus.
A demonstrator holds up an anti-Bill Gates placard after the billionaire’s foundation donated millions towards developing a vaccine (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)
Anti-lockdown protest in Trafalgar Square is shut down by police after crowds ignored social distancing rules. Thousands gathered for 'Unite for Freedom' COVID conspiracy theorist demonstration believing the pandemic is a hoax and demand no further lockdowns, no social distancing, no masks, no track and trace, no health passports, no mandatory vaccinations and no 'new normal'.
Demonstrators were pictured with blood streaming down their faces (Picture: Alamy Live News)

One woman was pictured holding a sign saying ‘a hug a day keeps the Covid away’ while another suggested the UK is about to be hit by a second wave because it ‘fits the political agenda’.

Officers were seen searching a man and confiscating a makeshift riot shield he was carrying.

At least three protesters had to be treated by medical staff at the protest, which moved from Trafalgar Square to Hyde Park.

Arrests were for a variety of offences including breaching Coronavirus regulations, assaulting a police officer, public order offences and violent disorder.

Speakers at today’s rally included conspiracy theorist David Icke, who addressed the crowd while protesters chanted ‘freedom’.

Piers Corbyn, the brother of former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, at a 'We Do Not Consent' rally at Trafalgar Square in London, organised by Stop New Normal, to protest against coronavirus restrictions.
Piers Corbyn, brother of former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, speaks to protesters (Picture: PA)
Police officer arguing with a protester during the demonstration. Police and demonstrators clash at the 'We Do Not Consent' protests against Lockdown, Social Distancing, Track and Trace & wearing of face masks at Trafalgar Square.
Police argue with a demonstrator at the anti-lockdown rally (Picture: SOPA)
A man with a bloodied eye during the demonstration. Police and demonstrators clash at the 'We Do Not Consent' protests against Lockdown, Social Distancing, Track and Trace & wearing of face masks at Trafalgar Square.
Demonstrators chanted ‘pick a side’ at police at Trafalgar Square (Picture: PA)
Thousands of people attend a rally at Trafalgar Square in London, Britain, 26 September 2020. Thousands of people turned out to attend the 'We Do Not Consent' rally to protest against new government Coronavirus restrictions.
Thousands attended the rally without wearing masks or socially distancing (Picture: EPA)
Police officer with out a face mask, holding a baton during the demonstration. Police and demonstrators clash at the 'We Do Not Consent' protests against Lockdown, Social Distancing, Track and Trace & wearing of face masks at Trafalgar Square.
Officers hold batons at the ready as the scene turns violent (Picture: REX)

Piers Corbyn, the 73-year-old brother of former Labour leader Jeremy, was pictured punching the air as he gave a speech to demonstrators.

Branding the protest as ‘not acceptable’, Mayor of London Sadiq Khan, stressed that large gatherings, including protests, were still banned to stop the spread of Covid-19.

He added: ‘The reckless and violent behaviour of some protestors has left hard-working police officers injured and put the safety of our city, which is at a critical moment in the fight against this virus, at risk. This is totally unacceptable.

‘We cannot let the sacrifices Londoners have made be undermined by the selfish behaviour of a small number.

‘Violence of this kind towards officers will not be tolerated and perpetrators will feel the full force of the law.’

He tweeted: ‘I urge all protestors [sic] to leave now. Large gatherings are banned for a reason – you are putting the safety of our city at risk.’

It comes after another anti-lockdown rally at Trafalgar Square last week which saw more than a dozen officers injured and 32 people arrested.

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After today’s event, Met Police Commander Ade Adelekan said there ‘appeared to be no effort by organisers to engage with crowds and keep those assembling safe from transmitting the virus’.

He added: ‘This lack of action voided the risk assessment submitted by event organisers the night before.

People take part in a 'We Do Not Consent' rally at Trafalgar Square in London, organised by Stop New Normal, to protest against coronavirus restrictions. PA Photo. Picture date: Saturday September 26, 2020.
Protesters claim coronavirus is a ‘hoax’, despite nearly a million people dying worldwide (Picture: PA)
Members of StandUpX, a community of people protesting vaccination and coronavirus (Covid-19) measures, gather at Trafalgar Square during a mass rally against wearing mask, taking test and government restrictions imposed to fight the spread of coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic, in London, United Kingdom on September 26, 2020.
A member of the anti-vaccination StandUpX group wears a creepy mask (Picture: Getty Images)
Police arrest a woman during the demonstration. Police and demonstrators clash at the 'We Do Not Consent' protests against Lockdown, Social Distancing, Track and Trace & wearing of face masks at Trafalgar Square.
Police arrest a woman during the demonstration (Picture: SOPA)
David Icke speakes at a Covid hoax, get up stand up protest, against vaccinations, 5G and other issues, in Trafalgar Square.
Conspiracy theorist David Icke addresses the masses (Picture: REX)

‘Therefore, today’s demonstration was no longer exempt from the Coronavirus regulations. In the interest of public safety, officers then worked quickly to disperse crowds.

‘However, I am very frustrated to see that nine officers were injured during clashes with a small minority of protesters.

‘This is especially saddening in light of the injuries sustained by officers last weekend.’

The Met said it had been engaging with organisers throughout the week to remind them of their legal obligations and explaining the events could be in breach of coronavirus regulations.

While protests are exempt from the ‘rule of six’ in England, organisers must submit a risk assessment and comply with social distancing.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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2020-09-26 21:08:00Z
52781084900981

BREAKING: Croydon shooting: Police searching 'four major crime scenes' - Sky News

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  1. BREAKING: Croydon shooting: Police searching 'four major crime scenes'  Sky News
  2. Croydon police shooting: Four crime scenes searched over Sgt Matt Ratana death  BBC News
  3. Tributes paid to 'much-loved' Met Police officer Matiu Ratana | ITV News  ITV News
  4. Croydon suspect 'in handcuffs' when police sergeant shot dead  LBC
  5. Cops lock down apartment block where they arrested sergeants’s ‘killer’ for having ammunition – but missed his  The Sun
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-09-26 19:54:23Z
52781083131607

Croydon police shooting: Death of officer Matt Ratana captured on CCTV, Scotland Yard reveals - Sky News

Four addresses are being searched by detectives investigating the fatal shooting of a police officer in a custody suite in London.

Metropolitan Police sergeant Matiu Ratana, 54, was killed in the early hours of Friday when a handcuffed gunman opened fire before turning the weapon on himself.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Stuart Cundy said the 23-year-old man arrested on suspicion of murder following the death at Croydon Custody Centre remained in critical condition in hospital.

Police line up in Croydon to pay respects to a colleague who was shot dead while on duty.
Image: Police line up in Croydon to pay respects to their colleague

"Due to his state, we are not yet able to speak to him," he said during a news briefing at Scotland Yard.

He said the gun used in the killing had been recovered from the custody suite.

"We also have the CCTV from that custody suite, which shows the events" he said.

"And we have body-worn video of our police officers who were involved in the circumstances surrounding the arrest of the suspect.

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"Our special investigators are carefully reviewing all of that footage, which will be considered alongside the accounts of the officers."

The four locations being searched are:

  • The custody centre where the shooting occurred
  • An area of London Road in Pollards Hill, south London, where the suspect was initially arrested
  • An address in Southbrook Road, Norbury
  • An address in Park Road, Banstead, Surrey

Enquiries at these locations include "rigorous forensic searches which are expected to take days to complete", police have said.

Pic: Metropolitan Police
Image: Sgt Ratana was looking forward to imminent retirement Pic: Met Police

Sgt Ratana, who died in hospital, has been described as "big in stature, big in heart, friendly, capable, a lovely man and highly respected by his colleagues".

Friends say he was looking forward to imminent retirement, which he would have become eligible for in two months.

No police firearms were fired and the case is not being treated as terror-related.

A murder inquiry was launched by the Metropolitan Police, and the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) watchdog also began an investigation.

- Ratana's first cousin, MP for Te Tai Hauāuru, Adrian Rurawhe​ said the family was devastated by the news
Sergeant Matt Ratana's cousin Adrian Rurawhe says his family in New Zealand has been left devastated by his death.

Prior to the shooting, the suspect had been arrested by regular officers following a stop and search, then handcuffed behind his back before being taken to the station in a police vehicle.

Sgt Ratana leaves behind a partner and adult son.

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2020-09-26 18:04:07Z
52781083131607