In Today's Papers

Friday 20 May 2005

Posted: 20 May 2005 | Subscribe Online


By Simeon Brody, Maria Ahmed, Derren Hayes and Amy Taylor

Care in community patient convicted of killing policeman

A man with paranoid schizophrenia was convicted yesterday of stabbing a police officer to death as the officer tried to arrest him.

Glaister Earl Butler attacked DC Michael Swindells on a canal towpath in Birmingham last year.

Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health Trust who were caring for the man at the time of the killing are to carry out an internal inquiry.
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An independent inquiry will also be carried out by the Birmingham and Black Country Strategic Health Authority.

Source:- The Guardian Friday 20 May 2005 page 6

Girl knocked out in ‘happy slap’ craze

A woman whose teenage daughter was beaten unconscious in a “happy slapping” attack has denounced the craze as “sickening.”

Becky Smith, 16, lost consciousness and suffered temporary paralysis when she was attacked by teenagers near her home in Manchester 10 days ago in the new pattern of random assaults recorded on mobile phone cameras.

Source:- The Guardian Friday 20 May 2005 page 12

Woman in court over dead baby

A woman charged with trying to conceal the birth of a child after a baby’s body was found in a house in Merthyr Tydfil appeared in court yesterday.

Ann Mahoney, 63, was released on conditional bail.

Source:- The Guardian Friday 20 May 2005 page 12

Happier without hoodies

Bluewater, the Kent shopping centre, claims a 22.6 per cent rise in visitor numbers since it introduced its ban on hooded tops last week.

Source:- The Guardian Friday 20 May 2005 page 12

Fake gun boys ‘risk being shot by police’

The increasing use of imitation firearms by teenagers has created the risk that police will shoot a youngster “in the not too distant future”, a police chief said yesterday.

Alan Green, the deputy chief constable of Greater Manchester, said forces could not ignore the rising number of young people carrying realistic-looking firearms.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Friday 20 May 2005 page 7

Several leads on Piano Man

Social workers investigating several leads on the identity of the Piano Man after several leads appeared to go cold in France and Canada.

The National Missing Persons Helpline has received more than 700 calls from people suggesting possible names for him.

Source:- The Times Friday 20 May 2005 page 9

Climbie rebukes

None of the police officers involved in the Victoria Climbie case before she was murdered will lose their jobs, Scotland Yard said.

Six officers who worked for the child protection teams at Brent and Haringey received rebukes after tribunals for alleged neglect of duty.

Source:- The Times Friday 20 May 2005 page 9

Pupils weaned off junk food by bribe on an iPod

Schools in Glasgow are rewarding pupils who choose healthy school dinners with iPods and Xbox game consoles.

The scheme works like a supermarket loyalty card with children accumulating points for buying healthy food.

Source:- The Times Friday 20 May 2005 page 11

Right-to-life hearing

Doctors should not be able to withhold treatment because the NHS cannot afford it, the Disability Rights Commission told the Court of Appeal yesterday.

The group put its views to judges hearing the Leslie Burke right-to-treatment case on the day after the government warned of “serious implications” for NHS resources if the patient is allowed the right to decide.

Source:- The Times Friday 20 May 2005 page 26
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Teenager taped racist threats in police van

A police officer was secretly recorded by a Kurdish teenager racially abusing and threatening him in the back of a police van.

The constable was recorded telling the 16-year-old boy that he would “smash his Arab face in”.

Source:- The Times Friday 20 May 2005 page 32

Met chief is against drug review

The Metropolitan Police commissioner urged ministers not to toughen the law on the possession of cannabis.

Sir Ian Blair said if the drug were moved from Class C back up to Class B then possession should be enforced only with a fixed-penalty notice.

Source:- The Times Friday 20 May 2005 page 34

Scottish news

Failed health board killed off at cost of £80m

NHS Argyll and Clyde health board is to be closed after racking up nearly £80 million of debts.

Responsibility for health services in the area are to be divided between neighbouring NHS Greater Glasgow and NHS Highland. The executive is to write off the debts and foot the bill for staff redundancies.

Source:- The Herald Friday 20 May

Highlands move to suspend council house sales

More than half of the council-house tenants in the Highlands might have the right to buy their homes suspended to help tackle a housing crisis.

The suspension, if granted by the executive, could last for five years. The executive has yet to approve any such designation in Scotland, although South Ayrshire and East Renfrewshire councils have applied.

Source:- The Scotsman Friday 20 May

Turn back the clock now in care for elderly

Health professionals and unions want to see the return of Nightingale wards at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary to prevent recent cases where older patients have died because of alleged neglect.

Nurses have said they no longer have time to care for older patients as they are now expected to carry out duties once the responsibility of junior doctors. Their calls have come after NHS Lothian announced plans for an independent inquiry into care at the hospital following the deaths of three patients.

Source:- The Scotsman Friday 20 May

Welsh news

Baby in the attic case: Mahoney appears in court via video link

A woman was charged with trying to conceal the birth of her own child for over fifty years in court yesterday via a video link.

Anne Mahoney, 63, from the Gurnos estate in Merthyr Tydfil was arrested earlier this month in connection with the discovery of a baby’s body in the attic of a house.

Another hearing was scheduled for June and Mahoney was released on conditional bail.

Source:- Western Mail Friday 20 May

School children must be encouraged to complain urges commissioner’s report

None of the 22 local education authorities in Wales have arrangements to help children make complaints the children’s commissioner for Wales Peter Clarke has warned.

His comments come in a new report in which he calls for education bosses to try harder to listen to children’s complaints.

Source:- Western Mail Friday 20 May
 


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