Friday 22 July

    By Amy Taylor, Maria Ahmed and Simeon Brody

    Judges quash two “shaken baby”
    verdicts

    Two people jailed in so-called “shaken baby” cases
    have been cleared by the Court of Appeal, while a third has had his
    murder conviction reduced to manslaughter.

    The judges held that the presence of three features of
    “shaken baby syndrome” did not automatically lead to a
    conclusion of unlawful killing or injury.

    Source:- The Independent, Friday 22 July 2005, page
    10

    Judges criticise caravan site ban

    John Prescott was urged by the Court of Appeal to reconsider his
    refusal of planning permission for a traveller’s caravan park
    because of resident’s fear of crime. The case involved
    Woodside Caravan Park in Hatch, Bedfordshire.

    Source:- The Independent, Friday 22 July 2005, page
    12

    BNP two deny stirring race hate
     
    Leader of the British National Party, Nick Griffin, 45, pleaded not
    guilty to four race-hate charges alongside activist Mark Collett,
    24, from Leeds who denies eight similar charges.
     
    Source:- The Times Friday 22 July 2005 page 23 

    Street attack
     
    A woman had her baby induced almost a month early after two hooded
    and masked youths punched her in the stomach in an attack near
    Forest Gate, London.
     
    Source:- The Times Friday 22 July 2005 page 23

    Under-age drinking now a bigger risk than
    drugs

     
    Drink-fuelled sex is posing a greater danger to children’s
    health than drugs, according to a report from Ofsted.

    The report said that while pupils’ knowledge and
    understanding of drugs had improved most identified alcohol and
    tobacco as their greatest threat.

    Source:- The Times Friday 22 July 2005 page 28

    A thousand London children are being sexually
    exploited
     
    At least 1,000 children in London are being forced into
    prostitution or trapped in relationships with older men where they
    exchange sex for drugs or housing, a Barnardo’s report
    claims.

    A failure by social workers to recognise when young men are being
    sexually exploited is partly to blame as is a mistaken belief by
    professionals that young people are taking part in prostitution
    voluntarily.
     
    Source:- The Times Friday 22 July 2005 page 28

    “Children at risk” after Meadow judgement
     
    The decision to strike off Sir Roy Meadow over evidence he gave at
    the Sally Clark trial was unjust and could put children at greater
    risk of abuse and murder, according to the Lancet.

    The journal’s editor said that trainee paediatricians are now
    less likely to seek a career in child protection, while those
    already working may weaken their conclusions about alleged child
    abuse to avoid GMC intrusion.
     
    Source:- The Times Friday 22 July 2005 page 31

    Mandatory life sentence review

     
    An inquiry into the law on murder could close the loophole that
    allows some killers, such as men angry with unfaithful partners, to
    exploit defences such as provocation.

    The Home Office/Law Commission review will take between 18 months
    and 2 years.
     
    Source:- The Times Friday 22 July 2005 page 32
     
    Widow of 80 locked up in row with PC drummer
     
    A widow aged 80 was locked in a police cell after complaining about
    the noise of drumming coming from a community centre.

    The woman was arrested after snatching a stick from one of the
    samba drummer’s hands and allegedly hitting him with it when
    he ignored her pleas to keep the volume down.
     
    Source:- The Times Friday 22 July 2005 page 35

    Girl, 12, guilty of drink-driving

     
    Britain’s youngest drink driver was sent to a young offender
    institution. The girl, 12, took her father’s car last
    Christmas and was found to be almost twice the legal drink-drive
    limit. Since then she has appeared in court regularly and was
    detained for four months for causing alarm, harassment and
    distress.
     
    Source:- The Times Friday 22 July 2005 page 35

    Sex attacker, 15

     
    A 15-year-old with learning difficulties was jailed for five years
    at Teesside Crown Court for at least two years of sex attacks on
    two girls aged seven and eight.
     
    Source:- The Times Friday 22 July 2005 page 35

    Asylum centres plagued by racism and abuse, inquiry
    finds

     
    A subculture of racism, casual violence and abuse existed at the
    government’s immigration detention centre at Oakington, an
    official inquiry confirmed.

    A government watchdog also revealed that the policy of deporting
    asylum seekers with “manifestly unfounded claims”
    before they could appeal had led to the wrong decision being made
    in at least 147 cases.
     
    Source:- The Guardian Friday 22 July 2005 page 9

    Scottish newspapers

    Razing flats ‘bid to gentrify area’

    HOUSING chiefs were accused yesterday of planning to wipe out a
    community in a £5 million scheme to demolish tower blocks and
    “gentrify” one of Glasgow’s most deprived areas.

    Residents claim they were not consulted over plans to raze 1,100
    high-rise flats, which mainly house asylum seekers, in
    Sighthill.

    The Scotsman, Friday 22 July 2005

    Welsh newspapers

    Jilted boyfriend stabbed former lover’s son

    A jealous boyfriend was jailed for stabbing his former
    lover’s son in revenge at her splitting up with him
    yesterday.

    Stephen Gibbs, 29, stabbed the 11-year-old five times with a
    kitchen knife. Cardiff Crown Court heard how he had tried to kill
    himself by jumping of a multi-storey car park.

    Source:- Western Mail, Friday, 22 July

    New scheme aids social careers

    Swansea council has created a new apprenticeship scheme to get
    young people to start a career in social care.

    The scheme is being run in partnership between the council’s
    services for older and disabled people and the Employment Training
    Centre.

    Source:- Thisissouthwales, Friday, 22 July

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