Rabu, 05 Juli 2023

Police seize £130m worth of cannabis in UK-wide crackdown - BBC

A handout photo issued by the National Police Chiefs' Council showing cannabis plants seized as part of operation Mille.PA Media

Police have seized up to £130m worth of cannabis plants and arrested almost 1,000 people in the UK's largest ever crackdown on organised crime.

More than 180,000 plants were discovered in raids across England and Wales in June.

Officers also seized 20 firearms, £636,000 in cash and 20kg of cocaine, with a potential street value of £1m.

The operation has been described as the "most significant" of its kind ever run across UK law enforcement.

Operation Mille targeted what law enforcement believe is a cash cow for organised crime gangs (OCGs) who are also involved in other offences such as money laundering, Class A drug smuggling and violence.

Cannabis is a Class B drug, not Class A like heroin or cocaine, but large-scale cannabis cultivation is seen as a key source of illicit income for criminal gangs.

The aim of the month-long operation was to disrupt OCGs by taking out a key source of their revenue, apprehending those involved and gathering intelligence on how the networks operate.

Steve Jupp, the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) lead for Serious and Organised Crime, said the operation had "successfully disrupted a significant amount of criminal activity".

"We know that organised networks involved in cannabis production are also directly linked to an array of other serious criminality such as Class A drug importation, modern slavery and wider violence and exploitation," he said.

"The intelligence gathered will also help inform future law enforcement across the country."

Around 11,000 officers from all 43 police forces in England and Wales, as well as the National Crime Agency and Immigration Enforcement, co-ordinated over 1,000 warrants in June.

Of those arrested, more than 450 people have since been charged.

"Cannabis-related crime is often thought to be 'low level', however there are clear patterns around the exploitation and violence organised crime groups are using to protect their enterprises," Mr Jupp added.

"We also frequently find that cannabis production is just one aspect of their criminal operations and that they are complicit in wider offending which blights our communities."

The NPCC is a body which brings leaders across police forces in the UK together to set policy direction.

A handout photo issued by the National Police Chiefs' Council showing a gun seized in Operation Mille
PA Media
Cash seized as part of Operation Mille
PA Media

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2023-07-06 03:18:26Z
2217314543

Conservative warns of climate change 'vacuum and silence' - BBC

Wind farmReuters

Conservative MP and ex-climate adviser Chris Skidmore has warned of a "vacuum and silence" in government on climate change.

The ex-minister said a lack of vision from ministers could allow "climate detractors" to set the agenda.

His comments come as internal documents suggest the government is set to break its climate funding pledges.

No 10 insists it will meet the £11.6bn spending target aimed at developing nations dealing with climate change.

But, government papers seen by the BBC say the UK will struggle to meet its 2026 deadline for providing the funding.

Last week, Lord Zac Goldsmith resigned as a minister, accusing Rishi Sunak of "apathy" over climate change.

Asked about the resignation at a conference in central London on net-zero policies, Mr Skidmore did not echo Lord Goldsmith's scathing criticism.

However, he said the government had "got to keep on making the case, and at the moment there is a vacuum and silence".

He said politicians needed to "provide a vision" to voters adding "that is what is needed at this time".

"That's the challenge, because otherwise that space will get filled.

'World leader'

"It will either get filled by the Labour Party with their green industrial policy, or it will get filled by the climate delayers and detractors who then dominate the front pages of the Telegraph and the Mail.

"If you're not willing to show leadership, someone else will."

A government spokesperson responded: "We can be proud of the UK's record as a world leader on net zero. We are going far beyond other countries and delivering tangible progress whilst bringing down energy bills with hundreds of pounds coming off bills.

"With a new department dedicated to delivering net zero and energy security, we are driving economic growth, creating jobs, bringing down energy bills, and reducing our dependence on imported fossil fuels.

"The UK is also cutting emissions faster than any other G7 country and attracting billions of investment into renewables, which now account for 40% of our electricity."

Mr Skidmore is one of the Conservative party's keenest advocates for pursuing net-zero policies - plans that ensure the UK is not adding to the total amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

Last year, he was commissioned by then-Prime Minister Liz Truss to review the government's delivery of net zero to ensure it was "pro-growth and pro-business".

Mr Skidmore, who is standing down as an MP at the next general election, told the Institute for Government event that having voted against the government on fracking In October, he had been "fully prepared to be sacked" from his climate role.

However, the following day Ms Truss resigned, "and I was left in post," he said.

Addressing the same conference, Labour's shadow energy secretary Ed Miliband said climate change was a "great threat" but also provided a "great opportunity".

He argued that changing the UK's sources of energy would ensure the country was not "at the mercies of the Putins of this world". The UK has been trying to decrease its reliance on Russian oil and gas since the invasion of Ukraine last year.

Last month, Labour watered down its pledge to invest £28bn a year in green industries. The party says it will ramp up investment over time, if it wins the next general election.

Mr Miliband said his party was still committing to a "significant sum".

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2023-07-05 17:55:03Z
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King Charles receives Scottish Crown Jewels in honour marking coronation | ITV News - ITV News

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  1. King Charles receives Scottish Crown Jewels in honour marking coronation | ITV News  ITV News
  2. King Charles Coronation LIVE | Scotland Honours King Charles III With Second Coronation | LIVE  CNN-News18
  3. Protesters chant 'not my king' as King Charles arrives in Edinburgh  The Independent
  4. The Honours are authentic symbols of Scottish nationhood and identity | HeraldScotland  HeraldScotland
  5. King Charles III has coronation ceremony in Edinburgh, Scotland  The Washington Post

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2023-07-05 17:59:23Z
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Selasa, 04 Juli 2023

No money for birthday gifts as the NHS turns 75 - BBC

BBC producer Claire McAllister with partner John after the birth of baby Christopher

BBC Scotland's office in Edinburgh has had a lot to thank the NHS for in recent weeks.

My colleague, political editor Glenn Campbell, has been missing in action recently - spending a week in hospital after a serious pothole incident on his bike.

It involved paramedics, A&E and a trauma team, but thankfully he is on the mend.

At about the same time our health producer Claire McAllister found herself in high dependency at the end of a rather complex pregnancy.

Again staff were amazing and delivered an adorable bundle of premature joy - and mother and baby are doing fine.

It got me thinking, what would those experiences have been like 75 years ago when the NHS was born?

And I wonder what a future NHS will look like, for a baby born in 2023.

Clearly the health service is still doing an incredible job in increasingly difficult circumstances.

But Covid and its aftermath have really tested a system which has been struggling for many years - and the warnings from the experts about the future are bleak.

The two biggest challenges are how to pay the soaring bills, and how to find enough people with the right skills to meet demand?

Big bills to pay

Future of a free NHS

Earlier this year, BBC Scotland commissioned a poll to find out your views on the health service. Most people who responded said they expected the NHS to remain free at the point of need in 10 years' time and believed that the highest earners should be the ones to pay for it.

In Scotland this year's health and social care budget is £19bn. That is far more than is spent on education, the justice system and transport combined - but it is still not enough.

Already, taxpayers earning over £43,662 pay an extra penny in the pound, with the money going directly to the NHS, raising £129m in Scotland.

But to put that into context, the cost of this year's pay increase awarded to nurses, paramedics and other healthcare workers is more than £500m.

Huge advances in medicine and technology in the past 75 years mean many people can be cured of disease or live comfortably with quite complex medical conditions.

That's a cause for celebration but at the same time, health board budgets can't always stretch to offering the most expensive drugs or investing in new buildings or equipment.

Demand on the NHS is now much greater than when the service was being built.

In spite of some world-leading public health policies, Scotland remains a profoundly unhealthy nation.

A third of adults are now obese, and a quarter drink at harmful or hazardous levels.

About a fifth of the population lives in poverty.

More and more of these people will need help with complex combinations of illnesses, including heart disease or cancer, in the coming years.

Recruitment riddle

Glenn Campbell

Workforce is the second fundamental issue that the NHS in Scotland faces.

The pensionable population of Scotland is expected to rise by 35% by 2043, yet over the same time period the working age population is expected to decrease by 3% and the number of children to decrease by 22%.

There are already significant NHS vacancy rates and a critical shortage of social carers.

I was shown a presentation slide the other day that suggested three in every 20 primary school children in Scotland will have to choose a career in the NHS, just to keep up with the current demand.

Attracting NHS workers from overseas is one option - but at the same time many homegrown clinicians are looking abroad for more rewarding opportunities as the health service struggles to retain existing staff.

Meanwhile, thousands of people are languishing on record waiting lists, wondering whether the NHS is really providing the safety net they were promised, from the cradle to the grave.

Free in future?

Private healthcare

It is extremely difficult to see how policy makers can maintain the type of service we've become used to.

And while most people in our BBC poll wanted the NHS to remain free at the point of use, 43% said they would be likely to pay for private treatment if they faced long waits.

In the past year almost 10% had already done so.

But First Minister Humza Yousaf has been clear that he does not want a two-tier health service and that it must remain true to its fundamental principles.

These are issues the whole of the UK faces but many of the professional bodies and unions have been critical of the Scottish government for promising more than is realistically achievable.

And the spending watchdog said the government needs to be honest with the public about what its priorities are, and what the NHS can afford.

So there are plenty of difficult and potentially unpopular decisions to be made.

Do you raise taxes, cut other public spending, or even charge people for elements of care?

If not, the reality is cutting back on some of the services the NHS provides.

It is a big birthday for the NHS but celebrations are likely to be muted - while the hard work goes on.

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2023-07-04 22:00:08Z
2193406948

Captain Sir Tom Moore: Charity stops donations and payments - BBC

Captain Sir Tom MooreReuters

The Captain Tom Foundation is no longer taking donations or making payments due to an ongoing inquiry into its finances.

The Charity Commission is looking into the foundation amid concerns his family may have profited from using his name.

Capt Sir Tom Moore's daughter and husband used the charity's name on a planning application for a building later used as a spa.

The foundation and Hannah Ingram-Moore have been contacted for comment.

The Army veteran walked 100 laps of his Bedfordshire garden at the start of lockdown, raising £33m for NHS Charities Together.

Capt Sir Tom, who was born in Keighley in West Yorkshire and died in 2021 aged 100, carried out the fundraising walk at his home when Covid restrictions were first introduced in 2020.

Capt Sir Tom Moore
Getty Images

After he became a national figure, his family set up a separate charity in his name.

In a statement on the Captain Tom Foundation website, the charity said its "sole focus...is to ensure that it cooperates fully with the on-going statutory inquiry by the Charity Commission".

"As a result, the Captain Tom Foundation is not presently actively seeking any funding from donors. Accordingly, we have also taken the decision to close all payment channels whilst the statutory inquiry remains open," it said.

The statement said when the inquiry concludes it "will be in a better position to make a decision in relation to its future".

When the inquiry was launched in June last year, the Charity Commission said "concerns have mounted" over the charity and independence from a business run by Capt Sir Tom's family.

Hannah Ingram-Moore
PA Media

Hannah Ingram-Moore is the youngest of Capt Sir Tom's two daughters and lived with the Army veteran at the family home in Marston Moretaine, Bedfordshire.

It has emerged the Ingram-Moores requested planning permission for a Captain Tom Moore Building, which was "for use by occupiers... and Captain Tom Foundation", according to documents submitted to Central Bedfordshire Council in August 2021.

The local authority granted permission for the single-storey structure to be built on the tennis courts at the Grade II listed home, as first reported in The Sun.

Then, in February 2022, the family submitted revised plans for the already partly constructed building, which called it the Captain Tom Moore Building.

The plans included a spa pool, toilets and a kitchen, which the Design & Access and Heritage Statement said was "for private use".

In November 2022, Central Bedfordshire Council refused the retrospective planning permission for the revised plans.

The Captain Tom Foundation did not respond to the BBC's request for comment on the planning application, but told The Sun the trustees were unaware and "would not have authorised" the plans had they known.

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2023-07-04 17:13:45Z
2210643458

Women preyed upon by serving officers failed by police, BBC told - BBC

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Police forces are failing vulnerable women who say they have been sexually exploited by officers, the BBC has learned.

One woman says a detective pursued a sexual relationship in texts and repeatedly visited her home.

Evidence has been deleted in "botched" inquiries and out of 500 allegations of officers abusing their position, just 24 were charged, according to BBC data.

The Home Office said it was taking action to root out predatory officers.

Police sexual misconduct is under the spotlight like never before following the rape and murder of Sarah Everard by serving officer Wayne Couzens, and the uncovering of serial rapist David Carrick.

Now the BBC has learned that individual forces are failing vulnerable women in "botched" or delayed investigations which are taking years to complete and rarely leading to misconduct sanctions or criminal charges.

Women are being let down by forces whose officers have "preyed upon" them, says Dame Vera Baird, the former victims' commissioner.

"There couldn't be a bigger breach of confidence and faith."

Interviews with multiple former police officers and women, leaked documents and freedom of information request responses reveal:

  • A woman was repeatedly sent messages requesting sex - one asked for "no emotions though, just laughs, likes and plenty of shagging"
  • Cases the BBC has investigated involve women known to be rape and domestic abuse victims and an adult who was sexually assaulted as a child
  • An officer has faced 20 separate allegations, while another who faced nine was only given a final written warning
  • One force deleted footage of a woman claiming an inspector had raped her, while another failed to prevent a rape detective's phone being wiped following his arrest over claims he had sex with multiple victims

'Powerless'

Charlotte Smith, 28, says she has been stalked and harassed by a Warwickshire police officer over a two-and-a-half-year period.

She first met Det Sgt Paul Whitehurst when she was a young adult, known to the police as a potential victim of grooming.

Years later, she bumped into Whitehurst in a bar, at a time when she was facing an ongoing legal dispute with her ex-partner. She says he then persistently pursued a sexual relationship with her in WhatsApp messages seen by the BBC.

"I'd love to spend a night with you, in a real bedroom, hotel, whatever," read one message from the officer.

Text reads: "No emotions though, just laughs, likes and plenty of shagging"

After a relationship which lasted a number of months, Charlotte complained to the force in September 2020 about his conduct.

The officer then began visiting her home without invitation, despite Charlotte making further complaints to the force and sending him messages asking to be left alone.

One visit was recorded on a doorbell camera. Det Sgt Whitehurst is seen standing outside Charlotte's home at 22:45 in the evening, repeatedly pressing her doorbell.

Charlotte says she rang Warwickshire Police while hiding under the duvet of her bed but officers took 45 minutes to arrive at her home, and they didn't take a statement.

"There was no urgency," she says, despite having been told there were "red flags" placed on her address after previous visits.

Doorbell camera footage of Det Sgt Whitehurst outside Charlotte Smith's house

Whitehurst - who is 20 years older than Charlotte - was suspended last year. The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) recommended 18 months ago that he face a gross misconduct hearing, but this is yet to happen.

Charlotte says persistent harassment over two and a half years - despite her numerous complaints - has left her feeling powerless.

"He works in the anti-corruption and professional standards department [PSD], that's the place you complain to - so what hope have you got?" she says.

In a phone call with the BBC, Whitehurst denied abusing his position for a sexual purpose and said he did not regard Charlotte as vulnerable when he met her again.

He said the WhatsApp messages seen by the BBC were not "familiar" to him and the visit to Charlotte's home was made out of concern for her.

Warwickshire Police says the allegations are "extremely serious" but it cannot state what steps it has taken to protect Charlotte, because of ongoing investigations. These, it says, have to be completed before a gross misconduct hearing.

Evidence deleted

All forces have their own internal professional standards teams which carry out investigations into officer misconduct - although cases can sometimes be conducted by the IOPC.

But BBC News has learned of crucial evidence being deleted relating to officers under investigation by their PSD.

One woman - a victim of child sexual abuse with complex mental health problems - told Bedfordshire Police officers that she had been raped by an inspector.

Her claims were recorded on police body-worn video during two separate visits to her home.

The BBC has learned that footage of both visits was later deleted. On one of these occasions, the inspector accused by the woman was in charge of the control room which handles callouts.

Dame Vera Baird, the former Victims' Commissioner and Solicitor General

The officer has always denied the rape allegation. He initially said his relationship with the woman was platonic before later admitting they had sex. Investigators found that his police radio GPS linked him to her home. An allegation that the inspector had previously sent racist messages was also uncovered as part of the investigation.

Bedfordshire Police says the deletion of the footage was an "administrative error" and that interviews with the woman took place in response - however, one expert says that these would have different value as evidence.

The force has paid a substantial settlement to the woman without making any admissions or apologising to her. The inspector was investigated for misconduct but faced no sanction and continues to work for the force.

The BBC has also been told that the Metropolitan Police "botched" an investigation into a detective inspector accused of having sex with multiple victims of rape.

Four women reported that the lead officer in a rape investigation team had had sex with them. All had previously reported being victims of rape or sexual assault.

Two former members of the Met's professional standards team say that forensic best practice was not followed, and the officer's phone was wiped by someone remotely after his arrest.

Since then, the detective inspector has been dismissed from the force on other charges.

New Scotland Yard, Central London
Getty Images

The Metropolitan Police declined to respond to the claims but said it had "matters to finalise" in relation to the officer - a number of years after first suspending him. It also declined to say whether it had re-investigated all rape cases he had dealt with. The Crown Prosecution Service concluded there was not enough evidence to charge him.

The BBC has received responses to information requests from 32 police forces in England, Wales and Scotland about allegations of "abuse of position for a sexual purpose".

The claims cover the past five years, although some forces were only able to provide figures from 2020 - when the complaint category was simplified.

We found out that 536 allegations have been made - but just 24 officers have been handed a criminal charge.

The figures also show that individual officers have faced as many as 20 allegations - while one who faced nine was only given a final written warning. Forces were also far less likely to uphold complaints than the IOPC.

Women are being "preyed upon by officers [who] they've called on to help them at a time of distress", according to Dame Vera Baird, the former victims' commissioner and former solicitor general.

She says change has to be immediate - and neighbourhood forces should be asked to investigate all complaints of officer sexual misconduct.

"Complaints should be going out to another force and not being done internally," she says. "Who is policing the police professional standard departments?"

Baroness Louise Casey

The IOPC says it has oversight of the police complaints system but that the responsibility lies with forces themselves to root out any abuse of position it describes as "serious corruption".

The National Police Chiefs' Council says the BBC's findings reinforce the work it is doing "to lift the stones and root out wrongdoers".

Baroness Casey led a review into the Met which found it to be institutionally misogynist. She does not accept that enough is being done.

"It's jaw-droppingly appalling that you have cases of really serious sexual allegations made against police officers that simply go on for years," she says.

"[Officers] think they're untouchable and frankly, they are. That's what's so terrifying."

In a statement, the crime and policing minister, Chris Philp MP, said a "zero tolerance approach" to officer abuse was needed.

He said the Home Office was acting to ensure "predatory individuals" were prevented from joining in the first place and reviewing the current police dismissals process.

Mr Philp added that a recent review into police vetting by a watchdog had recognised progress was being made and forces are pro-actively checking serving officers.

In November 2022, a previous report by the same body - His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services - also found that "in too many places, a culture of misogyny, sexism and predatory behaviour towards members of the public and female police officers and staff still exists."

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Have you had an experience of police misconduct? You can share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

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2023-07-04 05:00:46Z
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