Minggu, 08 Januari 2023

Westminster Accounts: MPs earn £17.1m on top of their salaries since the last election - with Tories taking £15.4m - Sky News

MPs have earned £17.1m on top of their salaries in this parliament, with around two-thirds of the money going to just 20 MPs.

As part of Westminster Accounts, a joint project between Sky News and Tortoise Media to shine a light on how money works in politics, we found the majority of the extra earnings went to Tory politicians - a total of £15.2m - while Labour MPs earned an additional £1.2m.

All MPs are paid a base salary of £84,144.

Read more:
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Transparency in politics often feels like it falls short - we want to shine a light on that
Westminster Accounts: Following the money
How to explore the database for yourself

Former prime minister Theresa May received the most on the list, earning £2,550,876 since the session began in December 2019.

Meanwhile, Labour's shadow foreign secretary David Lammy topped his party's list with additional earnings of £202,599.

The debate over second jobs dominated 2021 after former Tory MP Owen Paterson became embroiled in a lobbying scandal that eventually led to his resignation.

MP earnings

Other high-profile cases of MPs staying within the rules but earning thousands for outside work emerged, and demands for reform began to ring from all corners of the Commons.

Some changes are due to come into effect later this year, with MPs to be banned from taking on work as political or parliamentary consultants from March.

One source involved in drafting the new rules suggested this could impact the second jobs of around 30 MPs.

But they will not prevent others from earning significant amounts for speeches, TV appearances and legal work.

As mentioned, Mrs May has accrued the most in the past three years with a lengthy list of speaking engagements.

Her single biggest pay cheque came from Cambridge Speaker Series, who gave her £408,200 for six talks in California, as well as flights and accommodation for her and a member of staff.

Mrs May was able to earn £38,000 from MPSF for a talk she gave virtually.

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How you can explore the Westminster Accounts

Perhaps most notable, however, is the money she received from the World Travel and Tourism Council for a speech she gave in November.

Her entry in the register of members' interests makes no mention of the fact this £107,600 speech was delivered in Saudi Arabia - a country she blocked ministers and officials from visiting for a period while she was prime minister following the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Mrs May has said the money she earns goes into a company called the Office of Theresa May Limited, from which she pays herself a salary of £85,000 a year. The rest of the cash, she says, goes to support her charitable work, though it is not known how much, and to pay for other activities as a former prime minister.

MPs are not required to make public their charitable donations, but Mrs May does carry out extensive charitable work - including for diabetes groups.

Despite repeated requests for comment about her earnings, no response has been received from Mrs May.

The next highest paid MP for work outside of parliament was Sir Geoffrey Cox, who totted up £2,191,387 from nine different law firms and a local Conservative association.

Sir Geoffrey Cox pictured when he was attorney general. Pic: UK Parliament
Image: Sir Geoffrey Cox pictured when he was attorney general. Pic: UK Parliament

There was controversy last year when the former attorney general was found to have earned over £800,000 from the law firm Withers for his work on an inquiry into corruption in the British Virgin Islands.

His earnings from Withers have now risen to over £1.8m in the past three years.

In a statement, Sir Geoffrey said: "A barrister retained to advise in a case is no more to be personally identified with the purposes and views of his client than a plumber with the views of his customer or a doctor with those of his patient.

"Therefore, there is no conflict of interest between my work as a barrister and my role as a member of parliament. On the other hand, I frequently put my experience and understanding of the law at the service of my constituents in helping them to resolve their individual problems in my regular advice surgeries."

The former attorney general added: "Private practice as a barrister is certainly no more time consuming and demanding than the role of attorney general. If it is possible to carry out the role of an MP while also the senior law officer, it is certainly possible to do so while continuing selective practice at the Bar."

The third spot in the list of parliament's biggest earners is taken by another former prime minister, Boris Johnson.

The Uxbridge MP has rocketed up the earnings rankings, declaring more than a million pounds in earnings since he stepped down from office last September.

Almost all of his declared earnings since the last election came from just four speeches in October and November last, one of which in New York was paid at a rate of around £32,500 per hour.

The fourth spot went to another Tory MP, Fiona Bruce, who earned £711,749 from her own law firm on top of her salary.

Fiona Bruce. Pic: UK Parliament
Image: Tory MP Fiona Bruce. Pic: UK Parliament

In a statement to Sky News, Ms Bruce said: "Much of the sum declared is in fact tax paid directly to HMRC on my behalf which, to be scrupulously correct, I have declared though not personally received."

She added: "Examination of my entries shows the limited hours I spend in the law firm; this limited time does not detract from my commitment to my constituents."

Fellow Conservative Sir John Redwood came in fifth, earning £692,438 with the majority coming from his "global strategist" role at investment firm Charles Stanley.

And sixth place is Foreign Office minister Andrew Mitchell with £464,232 - over £100,000 of which was paid from advising investment bank SouthBridge on "African matters". Mr Mitchell's earnings were accrued while he was on the backbenches. He resigned from all his outside interests when he returned to government in October.

Other notable names in the list include former chancellor Sajid Javid, who has earned £361,566 from advising banks on the global economy and giving speeches.

Conservative MP Sir Bill Wiggin has made over £250,000 as an asset manager - running four funds, all based in the tax havens of the Caymans and the island of Bermuda, while ex-transport secretary Chris Grayling, known for granting a £14m ferry contract to a company with no ships, is now making £100,000 a year advising a ports and shipping business.

Only two Labour MPs made it into the top 20 earners, one of which is David Lammy, who has declared income from more than 40 different sources - the most of any MP on our list.

David Lammy
Image: Shadow foreign secretary David Lammy

The shadow foreign secretary has listed at least 30 speaking and training engagements since December 2019, worth around £100,000, as well as more than £87,000 for a radio programme on LBC.

Sky News approached both Mr Lammy and the Labour Party to ask whether his work would qualify as an "exemption" from Sir Keir Starmer's planned ban on second jobs, but no response was received.

However, Mr Lammy has in the past made an impassioned defence of his work on his radio show, saying: "Why am I here? Why am I pleased to be here? One because I am the only black presenter on LBC. It's important for my constituents - I love the fact they approach me and can hear me putting views that they agree with out there into the public."

Jess Phillips is the only other Labour MP in the top 20, ranking at number 19 with £162,838 of external earnings that come from a range of places - including almost £65,000 for an advance on a book, £25,000 for appearing on Have I Got News For You, and just shy of £30,000 for columns in the Independent.

Outside earnings for the Liberal Democrats totalled £171,000 - but £159,758 of that has been earned by party leader, Sir Ed Davey, who is the 21st highest earning MP.

He earns £5,000 a month as a political consultant for Herbert Smith Freehills and £37,984 as an asset manager for solar projects.

Commenting on the Westminster Accounts findings on MPs' earnings, Hannah White, director of the Institute for Government, said the party affiliation of those receiving the most outside income showed why reform has been slow.

She told Sky News: "When you look at the data, it is very clear that there is a party pattern to which MPs are getting outside earnings."

"I think that points to one reason why there hasn't been a big incentive to sort this out in this parliament.

"[It explains] why it has been the case that although parliament decided that it wanted to put some restrictions on outside earnings, really the changes that have been made are pretty minimal, and there's no real incentive on the ruling Conservative Party to push their MPs to change something like that".

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2023-01-08 08:31:40Z
1732146801

'Little progress' in tackling barriers to participation in sport - MPs - BBC

A woman running on a treadmill in a gym

There has been "little progress" in recent efforts at tackling barriers to participation in sport and physical activity in England, says an influential group of MPs.

In a report, the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee (PAC) said it was "not convinced" the government's approach is effective.

It claims the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) "lacks compelling vision for integrating physical activity into everyday life".

The PAC scrutinises the value for money of government contracts and spending.

The cross-party group of MPs says that a refocusing of strategy by funding agency Sport England in 2015 on local-based efforts to target the least-active "shows some signs of working".

But it adds "disappointingly" it has "not yet resulted in meaningful change in national rates".

The MPs said: "Despite Sport England spending an average of £323m of taxpayers' money each year since 2015, the percentage of active adults increased by only 1.2% between November 2016 and November 2019.

"Nearly two in five adults in England still do not meet the Chief Medical Officer's guidelines for recommended activity."

The committee report also says:

  • Hopes for a boost to grassroots sport from London 2012 "failed to materialise", with the proportion of adults participating at least once a week falling in the first three years following the event
  • Sport England's spending data "is not sufficiently granular to assess how well it targets spending at the least active"
  • The DCMS has applied "some, but not all" of its learning from the 2012 London Olympics to the hosting of the 2022 Commonwealth Games, with no mechanisms in place to monitor the long-term participation legacy from the Birmingham event
  • Sport England "recognises the fragile financial position of some leisure providers, but lacks understanding of the support the sector may need. Leisure facilities also face longer-standing challenges" and the DCMS "should urgently review the condition of leisure facilities".

Dame Meg Hillier MP, chair of the committee, said: "After the short-term financial boost there's been precious little to show by way of legacy, even in my immediate area of East London where the 2012 Games were held.

"Resets since 2015 have not begun to bring the levelling-up benefits intended.

"More waste, more loss of desperately needed public money. As the cost-of-living crisis bites hard, DCMS must set out what it will do differently to achieve change where it has not succeeded."

In a statement, a government spokesperson said it had "made the nation's health and fitness a priority, and people's activity levels were at all-time highs before the pandemic".

They added: "Through the pandemic we provided £1bn to support leisure sectors such as public pools and leisure centres, as well as grassroots and professional sports, and we continue to drive up participation, particularly for under-represented groups.

"Activity levels for young people have now returned to pre-pandemic levels and we continue to work with Sport England to invest in sport for all, having recently announced £320m for schools and more than £260m to build or upgrade thousands of grassroots facilities.

"We will shortly be publishing a new sport strategy setting out our ambition to continue to increase activity rates."

A Sport England spokesperson said: "Activity levels were at record highs across England before the pandemic - participation in sport and activity continues to recover.

"Sport England invests public money responsibly and transparently, recording and publishing data on all grant recipients - including location data right down to postcode level.

"This is all clearly available online, with information on where every pound that we spend goes."

Hitesh Patel, of the Sport for Development Coalition, said: "The inquiry calls for a more compelling vision for grassroots participation in sport, and nowhere is this more evident than across [our] growing UK-wide network of charities and organisation, using sport to address key societal issues."

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2023-01-08 00:01:31Z
1720872991

Sabtu, 07 Januari 2023

PM Sunak welcomes 'valuable' talks with health leaders - BBC

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, and Health Secretary Steve Barclay take part in a roundtable meeting of senior health service officials in Downing StreetNo10 Downing Street

Rishi Sunak found a meeting with health leaders to tackle the pressures in the NHS "highly valuable", Downing Street has said.

The prime minister, health secretary and Treasury ministers met health experts from across England on Saturday to discuss "crucial challenges".

Reports have emerged of patients spending days on trolleys because of shortages of beds in some hospitals.

On Wednesday, Mr Sunak promised to cut NHS waiting lists within two years.

Following the Downing Street talks, a government spokeswoman said the prime minister and his health ministers "found today's discussions highly valuable for sharing ideas and best practices that could be spread nationwide to improve care for patients throughout the country".

The spokeswoman added that Mr Sunak "expressed his deep gratitude to the health and social care experts who attended today's forum - and to the wider workforce they represent for all their hard work and dedication especially during the pandemic".

Representatives from the public and private sectors attended Saturday's forum, alongside chief executives and clinical leaders of NHS organisations, local areas and councils from across the country, plus medical and social care experts.

Amanda Pritchard, chief executive of NHS England, and Sir Chris Whitty, chief medical officer for England, also took part in the meeting.

The spokeswoman reiterated that Mr Sunak has made it one of his top five priorities to reduce NHS waiting lists and said that "the government is investing a record amount in the health service, including in recruiting a record number of doctors and nurses".

She added: "Next steps will be set out in due course."

Labour said patients deserve "more than a talking shop" and the Lib Dems said the meeting was "too little too late".

Senior doctors have said the NHS is on a knife-edge, with long waits for emergency care, routine operations, GP appointments and care for patients when they are discharged from hospital.

High levels of flu and Covid, a wave of strike action and a cost-of-living crisis are also putting huge pressure on the health service.

A modern browser with JavaScript and a stable internet connection are required to view this interactive.

On Monday, health unions have been invited to meet Health Secretary Steve Barclay to discuss pay for 2023-24 from April - but union leaders say the government must act on the current pay dispute for this year, and the talks will not stop planned strikes in January.

Speaking to the BBC's Today programme on Saturday, Royal College of Nursing General Secretary Pat Cullen said the pay increase nurses would receive in 2022-23 was "fundamental" to the ongoing dispute.

"We'll of course go to the meeting... but it's sadly not what's going to prevent strike action that's planned for 10 days' time," she said.

Asked about earlier comments in which she appeared to suggest the union would consider lowering its pay increase demand from 19%, and about reports it would be prepared to accept 10%, she called on Mr Sunak to meet her "halfway".

"I have put out an olive branch to get us to the table," she said. "The ball is now firmly in the prime minister's court. He needs to come to the negotiation table with me and he needs to put money on that table, and it needs to be about the current year."

The government says it has organised all-day NHS Recovery Forum on Saturday to focus on how to "share knowledge and practical solutions" across different regions of England.

Downing Street said the aim was to tackle "the most crucial challenges" faced by the health service, such as delayed discharge and emergency care.

A spokesperson said: "We're bringing together the best minds from the health and care sectors... We want to correct the unwarranted variation in NHS performance between local areas, because no matter where you live you should be able to access quality healthcare."

But shadow health secretary Wes Streeting said: "Health experts have been sounding the alarm for months about the crisis the NHS is facing, so why has it taken so long for Rishi Sunak and Steve Barclay to decide to listen to them?"

Chief Medical Officer for England Chris Witty takes part in a roundtable meeting of senior health service officials in Downing Street
Number Ten

The government in England has already announced plans to roll out virtual ward beds so that more people can be treated at home, a new service to save thousands of ambulance call-outs to people who have fallen, and more funding to improve emergency care and adult social care.

More than 90 diagnostic hubs, housed in venues such as football stadiums and shopping centres, have also been opened to reduce the queues for tests, checks and scans.

The hubs enable GPs to refer patients for procedures like MRI and CT scans without the need for a hospital visit.

The government says it wants 40% of all diagnostic activity to take place in the hubs by 2025. It also aims to eliminate 18-month waits by April 2023 and 12-month waits by March 2025.

Although two-year waits for routine treatment have shrunk since the pandemic, experts say there is still a mountain to climb before the numbers of patients waiting longer than a year start coming down.

More than seven million people are currently on a hospital waiting list for a non-urgent operation or treatment in England - one in eight of the population.

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2023-01-07 22:45:50Z
1725640361

PM Rishi Sunak meets health leaders over NHS pressures - BBC

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, and Health Secretary Steve Barclay take part in a roundtable meeting of senior health service officials in Downing StreetNo10 Downing Street

The prime minister, health secretary and Treasury ministers are meeting health experts to help tackle crucial challenges facing the NHS in England.

Reports have emerged of patients spending days on trolleys because of shortages of beds in some hospitals.

Rishi Sunak has promised to cut long waiting times for routine operations within two years.

Labour says patients deserve "more than a talking shop" and the Lib Dems say it is "too little too late".

Representatives from the public and private sectors are attending Saturday's forum at Downing Street, alongside chief executives and clinical leaders of NHS organisations, local areas and councils from across the country, plus medical and social care experts.

Amanda Pritchard, chief executive of NHS England, and Sir Chris Whitty, chief medical officer for England, are also taking part in the meeting.

Senior doctors have said the NHS is on a knife-edge, with long waits for emergency care, routine operations, GP appointments and care for patients when they are discharged from hospital.

High levels of flu and Covid, a wave of strike action and a cost-of-living crisis are also putting huge pressure on the health service.

A modern browser with JavaScript and a stable internet connection are required to view this interactive.

On Monday, health unions have been invited to meet Health Secretary Steve Barclay to discuss pay for 2023-24 from April - but union leaders say the government must act on the current pay dispute for this year, and the talks will not stop planned strikes in January.

Speaking to the BBC's Today programme on Saturday, Royal College of Nursing General Secretary Pat Cullen said the pay increase nurses would receive in 2022-23 was "fundamental" to the ongoing dispute.

"We'll of course go to the meeting... but it's sadly not what's going to prevent strike action that's planned for 10 days' time," she said.

Asked about earlier comments in which she appeared to suggest the union would consider lowering its pay increase demand from 19%, and about reports it would be prepared to accept 10%, she called on Mr Sunak to meet her "halfway".

"I have put out an olive branch to get us to the table," she said. "The ball is now firmly in the prime minister's court. He needs to come to the negotiation table with me and he needs to put money on that table, and it needs to be about the current year."

The government says it has organised all-day NHS Recovery Forum on Saturday to focus on how to "share knowledge and practical solutions" across different regions of England.

Downing Street said the aim was to tackle "the most crucial challenges" faced by the health service, such as delayed discharge and emergency care.

A spokesperson said: "We're bringing together the best minds from the health and care sectors... We want to correct the unwarranted variation in NHS performance between local areas, because no matter where you live you should be able to access quality healthcare."

But shadow health secretary Wes Streeting said: "Health experts have been sounding the alarm for months about the crisis the NHS is facing, so why has it taken so long for Rishi Sunak and Steve Barclay to decide to listen to them?"

Chief Medical Officer for England Chris Witty takes part in a roundtable meeting of senior health service officials in Downing Street
Number Ten

The government in England has already announced plans to roll out virtual ward beds so that more people can be treated at home, a new service to save thousands of ambulance call-outs to people who have fallen, and more funding to improve emergency care and adult social care.

More than 90 diagnostic hubs, housed in venues such as football stadiums and shopping centres, have also been opened to reduce the queues for tests, checks and scans.

The hubs enable GPs to refer patients for procedures like MRI and CT scans without the need for a hospital visit.

The government says it wants 40% of all diagnostic activity to take place in the hubs by 2025. It also aims to eliminate 18-month waits by April 2023 and 12-month waits by March 2025.

Although two-year waits for routine treatment have shrunk since the pandemic, experts say there is still a mountain to climb before the numbers of patients waiting longer than a year start coming down.

More than seven million people are currently on a hospital waiting list for a non-urgent operation or treatment in England - one in eight of the population.

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2023-01-07 15:02:19Z
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Jumat, 06 Januari 2023

Met Police: London homicide figures fall in 2022 - BBC

Met Police car parked outside forensics tentPA Media

The number of homicides in London fell in 2022 while teenage killings were halved, the Met Police has revealed.

There were 109 homicides in the capital last year, down from 132 in 2021 and the lowest figure since 2014, police figures show.

Of those deaths, 14 were teenagers, down from 30 the previous year.

Met Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said each death was "one too many", as the force vowed to tackle violence affecting youngsters.

Of the 109 homicides in 2022, nine of those were shootings, while 69 were fatal stabbings.

Sadiq Khan and Sir Mark Rowley
PA Media

Speaking on Thursday during a visit to Box Up Crime, a boxing gym in Ilford, east London, which was set up to provide vulnerable young people with a path away from crime, Sir Mark vowed to bring offenders to justice.

"Although the number of homicides fell last year, we are not complacent," he said.

"Each and every homicide is devastating - these are victims, not just statistics.

"They all have families, friends and loved ones that were left behind when their lives were tragically cut short."

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan, who was also on the visit, said making London safer for everyone was his top priority and while homicide rates had fallen, the "level of violence remains too high".

The figures were released as the Met said it was increasing patrols in areas where children had been robbed of mobile phones and expensive clothing while on their way home from school, to help tackle crime affecting youngsters.

The force revealed recent figures showed that in Ilford more than a third of robbery victims were aged 18 or under.

Sir Mark said: "We're the police, we can suppress violence, we focus as hard as possible on arresting the most dangerous people... but we need partners like this to work with who can grab those kids at the right moment in their life and turn it around and give them purpose."

The force also revealed there had been 71 arrests for robbery across London since November.

"London is a fantastically safe global city. Of course no city's perfect, but if you look at crime rates... it's a safe place to live and work and enjoy yourself," the commissioner said.

Sir Mark was also asked about his plans to rebuild public trust in the force following a string of high-profile convictions of officers for serious offences.

He said: "I have got tens of thousands of men and women who are fantastic people, who care and want to make a difference.

"Sadly I've got hundreds I need to sort out and who shouldn't be in the organisation and as we do that you'll hear more.

"But I've got many, many more people who care about Londoners than some of those awful individuals that should never have been police officers."

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2023-01-06 09:50:05Z
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Fire crews tackle two large blazes in the West Midlands - BBC

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Dozens of firefighters have been tackling two large blazes in separate incidents in the West Midlands.

Crews were sent to a car workshop on Adderley Street in Deritend, Birmingham, after a severe fire broke out just before 02:30 GMT.

At the height of the incident, more than 50 firefighters tackled the flames.

In West Bromwich, about 40 were sent to a fire at a unit involving 60 tonnes of industrial waste rags.

Scrapyard fire
West Midlands Fire Service

The Birmingham fire, which started in a single-storey building, involved multiple vehicles, said the fire service.

As of 08:00 GMT, four crews and an aerial platform remained at the scene.

"The efforts of our crews meant that three neighbouring businesses were saved," said a fire service spokesperson.

Adderley Street, close to the city centre, was expected to remain closed until midday.

In West Bromwich, fire broke out on Bullock Street, off Kelvin Way, at about 02:00 GMT, with eight appliances and specialist equipment sent to the site.

A digger was used to remove the affected material from the building, with fire crews scaled down to four by about 05:00 GMT.

A fire investigation assessment concluded the fire was accidental.

Residents in both areas were asked to keep their windows and doors closed while crews continued to work.

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2023-01-06 10:10:39Z
1729696214

Sam Rimmer: Sharing birthday with killed son unbearable, mum says - bbc.co.uk

Sam RimmerFamily handout

A mum who shared her birthday with her son has said since he was killed, the day has become an "unbearable reminder" of how he was "cruelly stolen from us".

Sam Rimmer died after he was shot while standing with friends in Dingle, Liverpool, on 16 August 2022.

Speaking on what would have been his 23rd birthday, his mother said his death had "broken our family and we will never recover".

Four people have been arrested and released on bail over the shooting.

Merseyside Police said Mr Rimmer had been with a group of friends at 23:40 BST when two men on electric bikes drove into the cul-de-sac on Lavrock Bank in Dingle and began firing.

He was pronounced dead a short while later at hospital.

The force previously released CCTV images of two men they wanted to speak to about his death.

'Devastated and broken-hearted'

In a statement, Mr Rimmer's mother, who has not been named, said he "loved his birthday and the day was a special family occasion as he shared his birthday with me".

"Every birthday, Sam would say 'happy birthday Mumzy' and it breaks my heart to know I will never hear those words again," she said.

She said he had been "funny, caring and loyal", had an "infectious" laugh and was the "life and soul of every party".

"His birthday is an unbearable reminder that Sam was cruelly stolen from us and we will never hear him laugh again," she said.

She said he had been "due to be a father and he was so excited about having a baby boy".

Sam Rimmer
Family handout

She said that while it brought her family "comfort that a part of Sam will live on... the devastating reality is baby Sam will never feel his dad's arms around him or know how it feels to hear his dad's laughter".

"Sam's death has broken our family and we will never recover."

She added that her "devastated and broken-hearted" family would not rest "until justice is served".

Det Ch Insp Steve McGrath said although Merseyside Police had "made several arrests across Liverpool since the murder of Sam Rimmer, we know there's more to be done and our inquiries remain ongoing".

"It is vital that anyone who was in the area... comes forward with any information or footage that could help our investigation," he said.

"Our detectives will review any information you share with us, so please look back to that night and contact us immediately if you remember anything that could help us bring justice for Sam's family."

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2023-01-06 06:13:06Z
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