Wednesday 29 January 2014

Health problems and thick hair in modern humans linked to 'remnants of Neanderthal DNA'

Findings: A range of health problems including diabetes and Crohn's disease have been linked to NeanderthalsGetty

A range of health problems including diabetes and Crohn's disease have been linked to Neanderthals, a study has revealed.

Remnants of Neanderthal DNA in the genes of non-African modern humans are also associated with smoking behaviour and thick hair, as well as tough skin and nails.

Between 2% and 4% of the genome, or genetic code map, of Europeans and Asians is believed to be a legacy of interbreeding between ancient Homo sapiens and Neanderthals.

The two were separate human subspecies who co-existed on Earth for thousands of years until the Neanderthals became extinct around 30,000 years ago.

Indigenous people from sub-Saharan Africa, whose ancestors did not migrate out of the continent to breed with Eurasian Neanderthals, carry little or no Neanderthal DNA.

A new DNA comparison study has now shone a spotlight on important aspects of Neanderthal inheritance.

Scientists compared genetic variants in the DNA of 846 people of non-African heritage, 176 people from sub-Saharan Africa, and the toe bone of a 50,000-year-old Neanderthal woman.

A near-complete reconstruction of the Neanderthal's genome was published last year.

The team identified some areas of the modern non-African genetic code that were rich in Neanderthal DNA while others looked like Neanderthal-free zones.

A number of variants inherited from Neanderthals were linked to diseases, especially autoimmune disorders.

Crohn's, which causes inflammation of the gut, lupus and the liver disease biliary cirrhosis are all problems triggered by an over-zealous immune system.

In addition, one genetic variant, or "allele", was associated with smoking behaviour, specifically in Europeans.

Professor David Reich, from Harvard Medical School in the US, who led the study reported in the journal Nature, said: "Now that we can estimate the probability that a particular genetic variant arose from Neanderthals, we can begin to understand how that inherited DNA affects us.

"We may also learn more about what Neanderthals themselves were like."

Among the discoveries was the fact that Neanderthal ancestry could be seen in genes for keratin filaments, a fibrous protein that lends toughness to skin, hair and nails.

This may have helped provide the newcomers from Africa thicker insulation against the cold European climate.

"It's tempting to think that Neanderthals were already adapted to the non-African environment and provided this genetic benefit to (modern) humans," Prof Reich said.

The "desert" regions that contained far less Neanderthal DNA than average were associated with male fertility.

This suggests that the two sub-species were sufficiently far apart to put them "at the edge of biological incompatibility", according to the professor.

Ancient modern human and Neanderthal populations apparently found it hard to breed successfully after 500,000 years of evolutionary separation.

The team is following up the research by testing for Neanderthal mutations in a biobank containing genetic data from half a million Britons.

Professor Chris Stringer, a leading expert in human origins at London's Natural History Museum, said the findings added a new twist to the debate over how early modern humans related to Neanderthals and Denisovans, another subspecies cousin from Siberia.

He did not think it undermined current thinking about our ancestors' African origins.

"The genetic data also show there are thousands of DNA changes that are unique to Homo sapiens, and these distinctions are likely to have accumulated during the several hundred thousand years since Homo sapiens separated from the Neanderthal and Denisovan lineages as they evolved in Africa and Eurasia, respectively," he said.

"Our genetic heritage is still largely from a recent African origin, despite the interbreeding with other human populations that undoubtedly occurred."

A parallel study in the journal Science suggests that up to a fifth of the Neanderthal genome may have survived in modern human populations.

This was despite the fact that the proportion of Neanderthal DNA in any one individual is low, around 2% to 4%.

The US scientists, from the University of Washington, Seattle, compared ancient and modern DNA sequences in 600 present-day humans from Europe and East Asia.

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Campbell's Bluebird Roars Back To Life

The Sunbeam 350hp which broke the world land speed record in 1924 burst into life again after a lengthy restoration. 5:00pm UK, Wednesday 29 January 2014

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Weather: MoD May Join Flood Relief Efforts

Specialist vehicles could be deployed by the Ministry of Defence to bring sandbags and extra help to areas hit by severe flooding. 11:09pm UK, Wednesday 29 January 2014

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Cameron Refuses To Rule Out Tax Cut For Rich

David Cameron avoids answering questions about whether the Government is going to cut the 45p rate for high earners. 4:50pm UK, Wednesday 29 January 2014

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Peers Back Ban On Smoking With Child In Car

The Government is defeated by 222 votes to 197 as the House of Lords considers new measures to ban smoking in cars. 8:50pm UK, Wednesday 29 January 2014

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Terror Raids: Woman On Attempted Murder Charge

The woman was charged following a counter terror operation

Tweet Email A woman has been charged with attempted murder after a counter terror operation involving searches at three London addresses.

Kunta Patel, 36, from Stratford, east London, is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on Thursday to face the charge, which follows an investigation by the Metropolitan Police's Counter Terrorism Command.

A Scotland Yard team searched two properties in Wyatt Park Road in Streatham Hill, south London, on Saturday, as well as a third property where Ms Patel was arrested.

She was charged on Wednesday night after police were granted a custody extension by magistrates.

Ms Patel and a 19-year-old man were arrested under the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001, which was part of the then-Labour government's response to the September 11 attacks in New York.

Many of the act's measures do not specifically relate to terrorism.

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Missing Student 'Fell In River After Drinking'

CCTV shows Megan Roberts running down a street with a group and bumping into a cycle rack but she is missing from later footage. 5:54pm UK, Wednesday 29 January 2014

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McLaren Pair Killed In Crash Near F1 Base

Two members of staff are killed when their sports car collides with a van close to the Formula One team's factory. 10:16pm UK, Wednesday 29 January 2014

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Carney Warns Of Risks Of Scots Independence

Britain's top banker warns that Scotland would have less independence than other countries if it splits from the UK. 6:10pm UK, Wednesday 29 January 2014

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Corrie's William Roache Was 'Perfect Gent'

The on-screen wife of Roache's character Ken Barlow says he was the "perfect gentleman" and describes him as "lovely". 5:34pm UK, Wednesday 29 January 2014

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MPs should put their own House in order

According to the Public Accounts Committee, Her Majesty is being let down by her advisers, who have allowed the household reserves to decline to around

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Royal Family doesn't need a Disney makeover

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Is Valérie Trierweiler really cut out to do a Diana, Princess of Wales?

After her very public split from President Hollande, the former French first lady’s trip to India made for superb PR, but becoming a charity campaigner takes a big commitment

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Prince Charles turns royal barman as he pulls a pint in a pub

The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall enjoy a pint of self poured ale at The Bell pub in Purleigh, Essex 4:20PM GMT 29 Jan 2014

The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall tried their hands at pulling pints today as they chatted to regulars at The Bell pub in Purleigh in Essex.

The visit to the pub, which dates back to the 14th century, was part of a day-long trip around Essex with visits to the High House Production Park in Purfleet and the Palace Theatre in Westcliff-on-Sea.

The royal couple toured High House Production Park where students from South Essex College, where they watched teenagers learning how to light a music performance and make sure the sound levels were right.

Later today they will finish their tour at the Palace Theatre in Westcliff-on-Sea to celebrate the 450th anniversary of the birth of William Shakespeare.

Source: APTN

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'Deirdre' to give evidence in Bill Roache trial

Coronation Street actress Anne Kirkbride arrives at Preston Crown Court  Photo: Getty Images By Claire Carter, and agencies

7:41AM GMT 29 Jan 2014

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Anne Kirkbride, who plays Deirdre Barlow – the onscreen wife of Bill Roache in Coronation Street, is expected to give evidence in his trial today.

Other members of Roache’s on-screen family including Chris Gascoyne - his son Peter Barlow in the ITV show – are also expected to give evidence.

Roache, 81, denies two counts of raping a 15-year-old girl in east Lancashire in 1967, and four indecent assaults involving four girls aged between 11 or 12 and 16 in the Manchester area in 1965 and 1968.

On Monday he was cleared of one of the seven historic sex allegations against him when the judge ordered the jury to return a not guilty verdict on a single count of indecent assault.

Roache, of Wilmslow, Cheshire, has previously told Preston Crown Court he did not commit any of the offences.

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He told a jury that he did not remember meeting any of the people who made allegations against him, and denied that he was a man "willing to take sexual risks" during the 1960s.

Roache conceded having cheated on his wife Anna Cropper, but said he was "not interested in gratuitous sex ,and certainly not with under-age people".

He told the court: "I have no interest in people under age and I have no interest in imposing myself on people."

Roache was born in Ilkeston in Derbyshire and went to the nearby Rudolph Steiner School where his grandfather had donated part of his property for its grounds.

Talking about Mr Steiner, he said: "He had an interesting philosophy about education - that school should be a place of fun. Handcrafts, dancing, painting... there was no discipline; it was not needed either."

He then went to boarding school in North Wales before joining the Royal Welsh Fusiliers, suffering an accident which permanently damaged his hearing in the mid 1950s.

The trial continues.

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Drunk man mistook female police officer for stripper

Paul Harbord soon realised his mistake when the officer arrested him Photo: Alamy By News agencies

10:24AM GMT 29 Jan 2014

A drunk man ended up in court after a 'doing a Del Boy' and mistaking a female police officer for a stripper, a court heard.

Paul Harbord, 27, was in a pub with his friends after an all day drinking session when the police officer walked in to investigate their 'rowdy' behaviour.

One of his friends had told him to expect 'entertainment' - and Harbord thought the WPC was a stripogram dressed in a police outfit.

Harbord shouted: "Look, here is one of the strippers and began to dance in front of her and whipped her with a bar towel", a court was told.

He soon realised his mistake when the officer arrested him, but he still refused to believe she was not a stripper until they arrived at a police station.

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Men charged with stealing discarded food from a supermarket bin

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Man charged with stealing discarded food from a supermarket bin

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'Dierdre' tells court Bill Roache was always 'perfect gentleman'

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'Deirdre' tells court Bill Roache was always 'perfect gentleman'

Anne Kirkbride, a stalwart of the ITV soap as Deirdre Barlow, is called as a character witness for the actor who is accused of a series of sex assaults

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If touching a woman's bottom was an offence 40 years ago then half the country would be in jail, says Dave Lee Travis

DJ Dave Lee Travis arrives at court Photo: Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP By News agencies

1:21PM GMT 29 Jan 2014

Dave Lee Travis has told a court that if touching a woman's bottom had been an offence 40 years ago "half the country would be in jail".

He claimed it was a 'different world' in the 1970s "which is a fact".

The DJ denies 13 charges of indecent assault and one of sexual assault.

He told the court: "Put any person on the stand and ask them about those days and they will say it was flirtatious, you could touch someone on their shoulder and they wouldn't get arrested for it.

"You could put your arm around someone's waist and it wasn't misread as an attack.

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"If patting someone's bottom was an offence in the 70s, half the country would be in jail by now."

The 68-year-old said he was insulted not to be considered a sex symbol in his heyday claiming he was "fair to middling".

But he conceded: "I never said I was a sex symbol, you're right, I'm a big cuddly hairy bear."

The DJ did concede he was "no angel" when questioned about "falling into temptation".

Travis claims he is the victim of a "witch hunt" and that he was "mad as hell" about the allegations.

Wearing a dark suit and lilac shirt, he became visibly agitated when cross examined by the QC, who suggested he was "a liar".

"Oh my god," he said. 'I understand it's your job to belittle me and tell the jury what a terrible person I am, but oh, I will not stand for that."

Travis insisted he had "nothing to apologise for" and had done "nothing to warrant his trial".

"I have no idea why they

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Life beyond the prison gates

Prison education is unlikely to be a vote winner, but if we are to have a positive effect on the lives of young offenders, we need to address several issues, says Stieve Butler

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Men charged with stealing discarded food from supermarket bin

which involves people taking discarded supermarket food Photo: Alamy By Miranda Prynne, News Reporter

2:27PM GMT 29 Jan 2014

Three men are due to stand trial next month after they were allegedly caught stealing food from dustbins behind an Iceland store.

The Crown Prosecution Service claimed there was a “significant public interest” in prosecuting Paul May, Jason Chan and William James for taking the discarded food, The Guardian reported.

Mr May, 35, a freelance web designer, is expected to argue that he has not done anything illegal by claiming mushrooms, tomatoes, cheese and Mr Kipling cakes which had been thrown away and would have ended up as landfill.

He will tell the hearing on February 3 the food had been disposed of and he needed it to feed himself.

The trio were arrested in October when a passer-by alerted police after seeing the men scaling a wall at the back of the supermarket in Kentish Town, north London.

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Officers intercepted the three men, who all live in a squat in north London, as they left with a bag and trolley containing £33-worth of food.

The case will highlight the issues around “skipping”, which involves people taking discarded supermarket food which is destined for landfill, and once again focus attention on the large amount of waste produced by UK stores.

It may also raise awareness of the growing number of people struggling to feed themselves as living costs increase.

The three men were initially arrested for burglary but have been charged under a little known section of the 1824 Vagrancy Act after being caught in “an enclosed area, namely Iceland, for an unlawful purpose, namely stealing food”.

They were held in a cell for 19 hours before being released, May told The Guardian, and the items were returned to the Iceland store.

Lawyers for the three men asked the Crown Prosecution Service to consider dropping the case, but were told the case would go ahead, because “we feel there is significant public interest in prosecuting these three individuals.”

Frozen food firm Iceland has said its staff had not called police about the three men allegedly stealing from its bins.

The retailer said the store is next to a police station and that officers had attended "on their own initiative".

It has asked the Crown Prosecution Service to explain why charges are being brought.

A statement on the Iceland website said: "The store in question is next door to a police station.

“Iceland staff did not call the police, who attended on their own initiative. Nor did we instigate the resulting prosecution, of which we had no knowledge until the media reports of it appeared yesterday evening.

"We are currently trying to find out from the Crown Prosecution Service why they believe that it is in the public interest to pursue a case against these three individuals, and will comment further when we are more fully informed."

 Law and OrderNews »UK News »Retail and Consumer »Food and Drink »Crime »

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Missing student probably fell in river during night out, police reveal

Megan Roberts, 20, who is missing after becoming separated from friends after a night out in York Photo: PA By Martin Evans, Crime Correspondent

2:42PM GMT 29 Jan 2014

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Megan Roberts, the university student who has been missing in York for almost a week, probably fell in the city’s River Ouse while drunk, police have said.

Detectives hunting for the missing 20-year-old said there was no evidence of foul play and all the indications were that she had met with a tragic accident.

Superintendent Phil Cain also stressed there was nothing to suggest that the York St John University student’s disappearance was in any way connected with the case of Claudia Lawrence – the university chef who went missing in York in 2009 and who police believe has been murdered.

Speaking close to the Lendal Bridge, over the swollen River Ouse in York, Mr Cain said: “The strongest and most probable line of inquiry being pursued by police is that Megan, affected by alcohol, has entered the river.”

He added: “On balance, this presents as a group of young friends on a night out that is likely to have ended in tragedy.”

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Miss Roberts, who is from Wetherby, West Yorkshire, and lived in the Clifton area of York, was last seen in the early hours of Thursday following a night out.

But it was only when family and friends realised earlier this week that she was missing that the alarm was raised.

North Yorkshire Police have studied CCTV footage and interviewed Miss Roberts' friends in an effort to trace her last movements.

Today a police diver was scouring the river bank close to the Lendal Bridge, near where Miss Roberts was last captured on CCTV.

There had been suggestions that Miss Roberts had expressed some concern about being followed by a stalker shortly before she disappeared but the police said there was “no evidence to indicate foul play”.

Miss Roberts worked as a barmaid at the Lamb and Lion Inn in York during the summer and its manager described her as “very police and friendly”.

In a prepared statement Mr Cain said: "Megan Roberts has now been missing for almost a week. Her disappearance was reported to police by her mother on Monday 27 January 2014 after she had not been in contact with a family or friends for a number of days.

“Understandably there have been growing and grave concerns for her safety which has triggered a great deal of police activity, and interest from the media and the public.

“Some of that activity has played out on social media and has led to a number of theories about her fate including potential links to the Claudia Lawrence case.

“It is very important, not least for Megan’s family and friends, to deal with the facts as they currently present. Those facts are based on evidence resulting from a variety of police enquiries to date.

“It has been established that Megan was one of a group of young adults - all of who were friends - who had been drinking for several hours prior to leaving Popworld night club around 2.10am on Thursday 23, January.

“All in the group including Megan were heavily affected by alcohol. That group whilst together were widely spread out as they made their way from Popworld across Lendal Bridge to McDonalds.

“Having separated, part of the group ran down Tanners Moat, in front of The Maltings public house towards the river looking for the others.

“Megan through the effects of alcohol was the last in the group and bumped into some of the cycle racks as she followed others. CCTV evidence doesNOT show Megan running back up the same street with the others to rejoin the main group.

“All members of the group concerned have been traced and spoken to at length by the police. There is nothing at this stage to indicate that any member of that group of friends or anybody else is directly responsible for Megan’s disappearance.

“A range of other police enquiries, including investigating theories described on social media sites, have been undertaken by a range of police resources including detectives. The results of which does NOT indicate that Megan’s disappearance is the result of any criminal activity.

“Consequently the strongest and most probable line of enquiry being pursued by police is that Megan, affected by alcohol, has entered the river. Clearly we will not be in a position to definitively to confirm this to be the case until Megan is found.

“The possibility still exists that Megan is elsewhere safe and well, but realistically given the passage of time, such a possibility is increasingly remote.

“I emphasise that there is no evidence to indicate foul play of criminality and certainly NO evidence to link Megan’s disappearance to the Claudia Lawrence case.

“On balance, this presents as a group of young friends on a night out that is likely to have ended in tragedy.

“Our primary emphasis will centre on the continual search of the river and the surrounding area using specialist search resources.

"We continue to support Megan’s family with specially trained officers.”

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'Get medieval' on rioters, says Boris Johnson

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The police should “get medieval” on troublemakers to avoid a repeat of the 2011 riots, Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, has said as he backed plans for the first water cannon on the British mainland.

Mr Johnson said he believed the police should have access to all the tools and weaponry they may need to quell any future riots, but predicted water cannon would be used “vanishingly rarely”.

He said it was unlikely that cannon would have been deployed in the 2011 riots - which caused up to £300 million of damage - and suggested that “assertive” policing would have been more effective in stopping trouble which flared in Tottenham in the wake of the police shooting of Mark Duggan.

“You get medieval immediately on these people and you come down much harder, and you don’t allow a mentality to arise of sheer wanton criminality,” Mr Johnson told members of the London Assembly.

“I don’t think a water cannon would have made a blind bit of difference in Tottenham. We would never have got the machines there in time, and it was a question of nipping it in the bud.”

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The Mayor’s reference to “medieval” treatment is a partial quotation from a torture scene in the ultra-violent 1994 film Pulp Fiction, directed by Quentin Tarantino.

Mr Johnson added that a situation which developed later in the riots in Croydon, south London, when a family-run furniture shop and other premises became the focus of rioters and arsonists, could have been helped by water cannon.

Members of the committee raised concerns about the risk of injuries from water cannon and about the police using “military” weapons.

Mr Johnson said: “They are not military weapons. They would not be much use in warfare and I’m not aware of any regiment that deploys water cannon.

“The police already have access to much more violent means of crowd control. If you look at a baton round, it’s no joke if you get that in the eye.”

Mr Johnson has asked Theresa May, the Home Secretary, to licence the use of water cannon for the first time, and the Metropolitan Police have asked the Mayor to approve funding for three second-hand water cannon from overseas.

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News of the World journalist: I turned to drink and drugs to self-medicate stress of phone hacking

Dan Evans tells trial he started hacking phones when he was at the Sunday Mirror and continued after he joined the NotW and former editor Andy Coulson knew all about it

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Phone hacker tried to do a deal with police to save his own skin, trial hears

Andy Coulson, left, and Dan Evans arriving at the Old Bailey on Tuesday Photo: ANDY RAIN/EPA By Martin Evans, Crime Correspondent

6:46PM GMT 29 Jan 2014

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A former News of the World reporter, who has admitted phone hacking, described in court how he sought a deal with police to avoid being prosecuted for his role in the scandal.

Dan Evans, 38, initially lied about his phone hacking activities, after he was accused of attempting to listen to the voicemail of interior designer Kelly Hoppen.

In civil proceedings in August 2011 he claimed his Nokia phone had been faulty, something that was described in court as the “sticky keys defence”.

But just months later, he changed his story, admitting his role in hacking and agreeing to cooperate with police in a bid to seek immunity from prosecution.

Mr Evans, who appeared as a prosecution witness, claimed Andy Coulson, the News of the World’s former editor, knew about his phone hacking activities.

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He told the jury: “I did not broadcast it because that would have been crass but everybody knew.

“The truth is that Andy Coulson knew exactly what was going on on his watch.”

Mr Evans said he was sorry he had lied about hacking initially, claiming he had been a “very frightened man” who had not known what to do at the time.

The Old Bailey heard how Mr Evans had told his lawyers: “My ultimate goal is that there is not evidence against me and prosecution.”

He also told police that he had wanted to “look his children in the eye” and get back on the “right path in life”.

Earlier in the trial the jury was told how Mr Evans had hacked the phone of James Bond actor, Daniel Craig and had recorded a message from Jude Law’s girlfriend Sienna Miller, telling him she loved him.

He had told the court that after playing the tape in the News of the World office, Mr Coulson became animated and declared it “brilliant”.

But under cross-examination from Mr Coulson’s barrister, Timothy Langdale QC, Mr Evans was forced to admit that he had been “paraphrasing” when describing the incident.

Mr Langdale said: “Yesterday you told this court Mr Coulson, when you played the voicemail message of Sienna Miller, to you said, ‘Brilliant’. Is that truthful evidence?”

Mr Evans replied: “That is truthful. The exact word may be paraphrasing.”

Mr Langdale said: “You have got a bit of a habit of doing that.”

Pressed about why he had initially lied about the hacking of Miss Hoppen’s phone, Mr Evans said he had been “toeing the line” but added: “I bitterly regret I did not take a braver course of action at the time.”

Mr Evans joined the News of the World in 2005 after being poached from the rival tabloid the Sunday Mirror.

The former tabloid reporter, who has been in therapy for the last 18-months, claimed he had turned to drink and drugs to “self-medicate” amid the stress of phone hacking.

He told the court: “The secret made me unhappy. Carrying an enormous secret and delving into the lives of people who did not deserve it made me unhappy.

The court has heard that he has admitted conspiracy to hack phones at the Sunday Mirror between February 2003 and January 2005, and the same offence at the News of the World between April 2004 and June 2010.

He also pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office between January 2008 and June 2010, and perverting the course of justice by giving a false statement in High Court proceedings.

Mr Coulson, 46, from Charing, Kent, denies conspiring to hack phones and conspiring to commit misconduct in a public office.

Seven defendants, including former Sun and News of the World editor Rebekah Brooks, deny all the charges against them.

 Phone HackingNews »UK News »Crime »Martin Evans »



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Cameron faces Tory revolt over human rights laws

Foreign criminals must be banned from using European human rights laws to avoid deportation, MPs will demand on Thursday Photo: ALAMY By James Kirkup, Political Editor

10:00PM GMT 29 Jan 2014

Foreign criminals must be banned from using European human rights laws to avoid deportation, MPs will demand on Thursday as David Cameron faces one of the biggest rebellions of his premiership.

Almost 100 Conservative MPs will push the Prime Minister to curb the power of judges to block deportation when foreign criminals have a family link to Britain.

The prospect of such a large backlash increased the pressure on Downing Street to do a deal with the back benches as Tories tried to blame the Liberal Democrats for blocking a compromise.

Senior Conservatives on Wednesday sought to present a tougher line on human rights, as Theresa May, the Home Secretary, proposed a new law to allow terrorist suspects to be stripped of their British citizenship even if it left them stateless.

Chris Grayling, the Justice Secretary, also pledged to resist “European law mission creep”.

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Meanwhile, Mr Cameron signalled he was increasingly frustrated by the Lib Dems and had no wish to repeat their partnership after the next election, saying: “I’m not looking for another coalition, I’ve done coalition, I’ve got the T-shirt.”

MPs will debate the Immigration Bill on Thursday, and more than 40 Tories could defy Mr Cameron by backing a demand to reinstate rules preventing Romanians and Bulgarians working in the UK.

Although support for a rebel amendment on the issue was said to be fading, the row over foreign criminals continued.

A total of 104 MPs have backed an amendment to restrict the ability of foreign criminals to invoke Article Eight of the European Convention on Human Rights – which gives the right to a family life – when contesting deportation.

Ministers insist that the amendment, tabled by Dominic Raab, a backbencher, is impractical and unnecessary because the Immigration Bill itself contains measures to restrict Article Eight cases. To avert a major revolt, ministers were on Wednesday night considering trying to prevent Mr Raab’s amendment coming to a vote.

The Home Office has tabled dozens of amendments to the Bill and made changes to the debate timetable.

On Wednesday Mr Cameron warned his MPs that they risked delaying the Immigration Bill, which overhauls rules dealing with migrants’ access to public services and makes it harder for illegal immigrants to get bank accounts and driving licences.

One Cabinet minister told The Telegraph: “I have a lot of time for what Dominic is trying to do, but No 10 isn’t quite there yet.”

On Wednesday night a Downing Street source insisted Mr Cameron had “great sympathy” for Mr Raab’s objectives, but suggested that the Lib Dems were resisting tougher deportation rules.

Conservative ministers also want to back an amendment that would allow the Government to intervene if European migration levels become “excessive”. The Lib Dems were refusing, arguing it was potentially illegal under EU law.

One potential deal would see the parties voting on different sides to symbolise the growing distance between the two parties.

 ConservativeNews »Politics »UK News »David Cameron »Crime »

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Wimbledon wedding just a wind-up, confesses Andy Murray

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A quiet morning for the British Davis Cup team in San Diego was enlivened on Wednesday when Andy Murray woke up early – probably as a result of post-Melbourne jet-lag – and decided to take part in a Twitter question-and-answer session.

As usual, Murray’s answers were heavily infused with his dry sense of humour. Yet that did not prevent an ironic comment about his wedding plans from provoking a burst of excitement on social media, websites and rolling news channels.

Asked by one fan: “When are you going to get married

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Medals awarded to three generations of the same family are to be sold at auction

Wednesday, 29th January 2014 See today's front and back pages, download the newspaper, order back issues and use the historic Daily Express newspaper archive.

News UK World Showbiz Royal Weird Science & Tech Health Nature Property Retirement Scotland Sunday WWI Pictures Galleries Sport Football World Cup 2014 Transfer news Tennis Rugby Union Golf Cricket F1 & Autosport Horse Racing Boxing Other Sport Comment Columnists Express Comment Beachcomber Cartoon Finance Personal Finance City & Business The Crusader Entertainment Films Books TV & Radio Theatre Music TV Listings Fun Horoscope Offers Top 10 Facts Puzzles Competitions Bingo Life & Style Health Life Diets Garden Food & Recipes Cars Travel Style Saturday S Magazine EXPRESS.CO.UK Sitemap Site Archive Contact Us Advertising Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Terms & Conditions Design by Netro42 Daily Star OK! Magazine new! Magazine Star Magazine Health Lottery Channel 5 Northern and Shell Copyright ©2014 Northern and Shell Media Publications.
"Daily Express" is a registered trademark. All rights reserved.

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Boy, 14, records heartbreaking goodbye message before jumping to his death

unhappy with the colour of her hair’ Bankers in shock as man plunges to death from JP Morgan skyscraper Tweet Share this Print Email 0Comments Add Your Comment Your Name: Comment: 1000 characters remaining Post Comment Most Read Stories Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho thrilled to see Arsene Wenger remain at Arsenal 1

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Dancer Michael Flatley reveals terror of raiders stealing £200k rhino horn from his home

Michael and his wife were extremely distressed. A notorious traveller gang from Limerick are suspected of carrying out the raid

A source

A source said: “Michael and his wife were extremely distressed. A notorious traveller gang from Limerick are suspected of carrying out the raid.

“The horn will be worth tens of thousands on the black market.” Illegal dealers can sell rhino horns for up to £300,000 in Asia, where they are prized for their use in Chinese medicine.

No one was hurt in the raid but the family were shaken.

Flatley, who also created the Irish dance show Riverdance, spent £30million restoring 18th century Castlehyde.

A source said: “This is something he never expected.

“He bought the horn as a collector and is devastated. But he is more devastated at his and his family’s life being put at risk.”

Police appealed to the public for information about the raid.

Related articles Man charged over black rhino horns Swansea's Garry Monk has kit bag stolen by thieves Miley Cyrus' home burgled on the day before her birthday Valuable rhino horn stolen from Riverdance star's Irish home Tweet Share this Print Email 0Comments Add Your Comment Your Name: Comment: 1000 characters remaining Post Comment Most Read Stories Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho thrilled to see Arsene Wenger remain at Arsenal 1

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Football club blonde repeatedly 'burst in on players stripping for games'

Wednesday, 29th January 2014 See today's front and back pages, download the newspaper, order back issues and use the historic Daily Express newspaper archive.

News UK World Showbiz Royal Weird Science & Tech Health Nature Property Retirement Scotland Sunday WWI Pictures Galleries Sport Football World Cup 2014 Transfer news Tennis Rugby Union Golf Cricket F1 & Autosport Horse Racing Boxing Other Sport Comment Columnists Express Comment Beachcomber Cartoon Finance Personal Finance City & Business The Crusader Entertainment Films Books TV & Radio Theatre Music TV Listings Fun Horoscope Offers Top 10 Facts Puzzles Competitions Bingo Life & Style Health Life Diets Garden Food & Recipes Cars Travel Style Saturday S Magazine EXPRESS.CO.UK Sitemap Site Archive Contact Us Advertising Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Terms & Conditions Design by Netro42 Daily Star OK! Magazine new! Magazine Star Magazine Health Lottery Channel 5 Northern and Shell Copyright ©2014 Northern and Shell Media Publications.
"Daily Express" is a registered trademark. All rights reserved.

View the Original article

Three-year-old boy crushed to death by runaway portable cabin

Toxic’ websites drove my girl Tallulah Wilson to kill herself Devoutly religious parents face jail after baby's rickets death Woman commits suicide after being

View the Original article

British taxpayers will fork out £400m to feed and house asylum-seekers

ed up he is!!!! Doesn't matter WHAT the law is, if that other traitorous SH!T may doesn't have firms prosecuted!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Share Your Opinion? Post Comment Most Read Stories Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho thrilled to see Arsene Wenger remain at Arsenal 1

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Friend of missing student tweeted 'probably gonna get murdered tonight' after 'creepy guy' followed them on night out

1EmailPolice searching river for missing Megan Roberts as texts and tweets from her an pal Rockie Thorley reveal both were worried by attentions of "creepy" man 



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The Queen has to realise there is no free ride - just like residents of Benefits Street

1EmailMirror columnist Alison Phillips says Her Majesty can't expect the hard-pressed taxpayer to subsidise her spendthrift household without something in return



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Will there finally be justice for Ricky Tomlinson and the Shrewsbury 24?

1EmailReal Britain columnist Ros Wynne-Jones is glad to hear that the Government must finally release official papers about the men's imprisonment in the 1970s



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Two more British brothers die fighting against Assad regime in Syria

Haunt: Regents Park Mosque, London

A second pair of British brothers have died fighting for jihadists in war-torn Syria.

The unnamed fanatics, in their 20s, are originally from West London but their bodies have not been repatriated. Their deaths emerged last night after fellow Londoners Akram and Mohamed Sebah, 24 and 28, were also killed and hailed as

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Our duty to refugee women is to care - not lock them up and treat them like criminals

1EmailMirror columnist Ros Wynne-Jones joins former child detainee and campaigner Meltem Avcil on an emotional return to the Yarl's Wood immigration removal centre



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Atos boss accused of 'living in a parallel universe' after claiming hated benefits assesor is popular with public

1EmailJoe Hemming was savaged by a cross-party committee of MPs after claiming that the public was 'satisfied' with the controversial private contractor's performance 



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Human rights laws allowed 600 foreign criminals to dodge deportation and remain in Britain last year

1EmailRecord numbers of convicted villains claim their right to a home life would be breached if they were sent home while others say they would be killed



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Malala's autobiography launch in Pakistan halted after Taliban threaten to attack bookshops

1EmailPolice in Pakistan have stopped campaigning schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai, shot in the head by the Taliban, from launching her autobiography there over security fears



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Royal Navy ship helps US Coast Guard crack £300million cocaine smuggling operation

300million drug smuggling operation in the Caribbean.

The Royal Fleet Auxiliary Naval Support Ship, RFA Wave Knight was on
patrol when US authorities asked for help in intercepting a
speedboat loaded with cocaine.

The operation on January 22 led to the seizure of a 1.25 ton cargo of cocaine
with a UK wholesale value of over

View the Original article

Megan Roberts missing: Recap as police hunt continues for student not seen in five days

Off12:13 am

We are now closing the live blog.

Thanks for following.

For the latest news on Megan's disappearance visit here.

5:56 pm

With darkness falling, it now appears the dive teams have left the river.

The York Press is reporting that police divers left the water at about 4.20pm.

Members of the public were watching as the divers made their way out of the water.

More searches are expected to be carried out tomorrow.

4:11 pm

Police hunting for the missing university student say there is "nothing to suggest" a stalker or any other criminal activity was responsible for her disappearance.

Officers searching for Megan Roberts have now ruled out any criminal activity, and are continuing to focus on the River Ouse in York.

Superintendent Phil Cain said: "We are exploring with friends who are aware of a Twitter message, which was commenting around a male in a bar where Megan was at the time.

"Friends are convinced there was nothing to suggest Megan was being stalked at that stage. We do not believe that is connected to Megan's disappearance.

"At this moment in time there's no suggestion of any criminality whatsoever and we are treating this as a missing from home."

3:09 pm

We understand an area near Lendal Bridge on the River Ouse in York has been sealed off by police.

A marine unit has been scouring the river all day as part of the search for missing Megan.

Lendal Bridge is just a few hundred metres from where she was last seen in Popworld bar in the city centre.

1:11 pm

North Yorks Police are not expecting to give any more media updates today.

It is understood CCTV footage will only be released if they feel it will help the case.

Meanwhile, the police marine unit, including divers, continue to search the River Ouse in York

12:10 pm

Here's a picture of the police searching the River Ouse today from BBC reporter Danny Savage.

Police looking for missing student Megan Roberts focusing on river in centre of York. pic.twitter.com/FercQA0uN8

— Danny Savage (

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Joanna Dennehy murders: Two men accused of helping serial killer will not give evidence in their defence

Two men accused of helping serial killer Joanna Dennehy will not give evidence in their defence, a jury heard yesterday.

Dennehy, 31, has admitted murdering three men and dumping their bodies in ditches.

Her alleged accomplices Gary Stretch, 47, and Leslie Layton, 37, are currently on trial.

Karim Khalil QC, acting for Stretch, told Cambridge Crown Court his client would not take the stand to give evidence.

Layton, who is represented by Christopher Morgan, made the same decision.

Closing the prosecution case, Andrew Jackson read out a telephone conversation Stretch made while in prison.

He called his ex-partner Julie Gibbons, who is the mother of his three children.

In it Ms Gibbons asked why Dennehy "did it."

Stretch responded: "Well she’s just that way, she’s just that way I suppose. You know what I mean, she's off her head."

Ms Gibbons said: "So why didn't you run a mile?

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City banker shot in leg outside train station feared he would bleed to death

1EmailBroker Robin Clark, 44, was attacked by a hitman early last Friday morning in the car park of Shenfield railway station in Essex



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Cash-strapped Ministry of Defence expected to hand over military bases to private firm

Deepcut Barracks in Surrey: Due to close in 2016

The cash-strapped Ministry of Defence is expected to hand all its bases over to a private firm as military bosses struggle to balance the books.

The MoD owns 230,000 acres of land - including barracks, homes, military bases and airfields - managed by 2,500 staff.

But defence ministers facing an eight per cent cut in their

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Madeleine McCann: UK Police Fly To Portugal

A Scotland Yard team is in Portugal days after authorities there received a request for help with interviewing three suspects. 1:30am UK, Wednesday 29 January 2014

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Madeleine McCann detectives arrive in Portugal to discuss possible arrests

Detectives investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann have arrived in the Algarve to begin talks with their Portugese police counterparts about possible arrests By Keith Perry

12:33AM GMT 29 Jan 2014

Scotland Yard detectives investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann are set to arrest three men in Portugal, it was reported last night.

The Scotland Yard team arrived in the Algarve to begin talks with their Portugese police counterparts, the Mirror reported.

Kate and Gerry McCann are being kept informed after learning of the developments in the effort to solve the six-year riddle of their missing daughter.

A source told the Mirror that Kate and Gerry, both 45, of Rothley, Leics, were cautiously hopeful about the latest move.

He said it was necessary for the British police to make a request to the Portuguese authorities in order to conduct their investigations. It is still not known whether the Portugese police will co-operate with the proposed arrests.

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The breakthrough follows a cold-case UK review involving searches of mobile phone data at the time Madeleine disappeared.

Scotland Yard said it was unable to comment on the reports.

 Madeleine McCannNews »Crime »Law and Order »

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Tuesday 28 January 2014

Boy, 16, held in murder probe as teenage girl found dead

By David Barrett, Home Affairs Correspondent

1:00PM GMT 25 Jan 2014

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A 16-year-old boy is being questioned by murder squad detectives after the body of a teenage girl was found in an upmarket commuter belt town.

The 17-year-old victim, who was discovered in a flat above a Sainsbury’s Local shop in Oxted, Surrey, was believed to have been stabbed.

Sources said the teenagers knew each other but their exact relationship remained unclear.

Paramedics attended the scene in Amy Road, Oxted, on Friday evening but the girl was pronounced dead at the scene, and police immediately launched the murder investigation.

The entrance to the flats, a three-storey 1930s mansion block, was blocked by a police cordon and forensics officers wearing white boiler suits were seen entering the property.

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A spokesman for Surrey Police said the 16-year-old was being held on suspicion of murder.

On social media websites it was reported the victim had been stabbed but police refused to be drawn on how the girl died.

The family of the teenager have been informed of her death and were being comforted by family and friends.

One neighbour, who refused to be named, said: “It’s a very unusual occurrence in a place like Oxted.

“It’s shocking and sad a young girl has lost her life.”

The police spokesman said: “A murder investigation has been launched by the Surrey and Sussex Major Crime Team following the death of a 17-year-old girl in Oxted.

“Officers were called to an address on Amy Road at around 5.20pm on Friday after the body of a girl was discovered at the property.

“A 16-year-old boy has been arrested on suspicion of murder and is currently in police custody.

“We are unable to give details of cause of death until we have post-mortem examination results.”

A post mortem examination will be carried out by a Home Office pathologist in the next few days.

 CrimeNews »UK News »David Barrett »Law and Order »Mobile »

In Crime



View the Original article

Drugs charges for 'Benefits Street' residents

By Jasper Copping

1:57PM GMT 25 Jan 2014

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Several residents from the street on which Channel 4's Benefits Street was filmed have been charged with drug offences.

Among them is Black Dee, whose real name is Samora Roberts, who has featured prominently in the show.

The 32-year-old has been charged with conspiracy to supply a class B controlled drug, conspiracy to supply a class A controlled drug, crack cocaine, possession of a Class A controlled drug, diamorphine and possession of ammunition of a firearm without a certificate.

The charges follow a series of raids by West Midlands Police last June, on a number of addresses in James Turner Street, in the Winson Green area of Birmingham.

The raids followed concerns raised in the local community, police said.

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Following the warrants, a number of people were arrested and Class A and B drugs were recovered by officers.

After ongoing enquiries, seven people were charged on Wednesday with a number of offences and all have been bailed to appear before Birmingham Magistrates' Court on February 6.

In addition to Ms Roberts, other residents of James Turner Street to be charged were:

- Tina Thomas, 46, charged with conspiracy to supply Class B drugs (cannabis) and possession of ammunition without a certificate.

• Charlene Wilson, 29, charged with conspiracy to supply Class A drugs (crack cocaine) and Class B drugs (cannabis) and possession of diamorphine.

• Ian Wright, 38, charged with conspiracy to supply Class A drugs (crack cocaine) and conspiracy to supply Class B drugs (cannabis).

• Monique Walker, 28, charged with conspiracy to supply Class A drugs (crack cocaine).

• Marvin Scott, 37, charged with conspiracy to supply Class A drugs (crack cocaine).

In addition, Omari George, 20, of Dora Road, Handsworth, was charged with conspiracy to supply Class A drugs (crack cocaine) and Class B drugs (cannabis).

 CrimeNews »UK News »TV and Radio »Jasper Copping »Law and Order »

In Crime



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St Lucia yacht murder: Four men charged with Roger Pratt's death

By Raf Sanchez, Washington

8:07PM GMT 25 Jan 2014

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Four young St Lucian men have been charged with the murder of British yachtsmen Roger Pratt.

The 62-year-old retired consultant was beaten and left to drown and his wife, Margaret, was injured when robbers attacked their yacht last Friday.

One week after the killing police brought the first murder charges against four men arrested nearby in the southern port of Vieux Fort.

The government named them as Richie Kern 21, Kervin Devaux 31, Fanis Joseph, 21, and Jeromine Jones, 21. All are from the shanty town of Bruceville.

They appeared briefly before a district court in Vieux Fort to face charges of murder and robbery on Friday and are due back in court on February 4.

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22 Jan 2014

A spokeswoman for the St Lucian prime minister, Kenny Anthony, said: "It is very encouraging to see that information provided by the local community has led to arrests and to charges.

"We will be monitoring this case carefully and hope it will serve as an example that this kind of activity is unacceptable and will not go unpunished."

A post-mortem examination concluded that Mr Pratt's killers beat him with their fists until he was knocked unconscious and then let him drown in the harbour.

The St Lucian government has been anxious to see a swift prosecution in order to reassure the British and American visitors upon whom the island's tourist economy depends.

 Central America and the CaribbeanNews »Saint Lucia »UK News »Crime »Raf Sanchez »

View the Original article

A death in St Lucia and the dark side of paradise

The murder of Roger Pratt on his yacht in St Lucia was a chilling reminder of the risks involved in the journey of choice among couples looking for the trip of a lifetime

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Teenage girl found dead was stabbed

Police at the murder scene in Amy Road in Oxted, Surrey Photo: Ian Whittaker/INS News Agency By Claire Carter

10:09AM GMT 27 Jan 2014

A 17-year-old girl who was found dead at a building died after being stabbed, a post mortem has revealed.

A 16-year-old boy has been sectioned under the Mental Health Act after being arrested on suspicion of murder.

Police launched a murder investigation after the body was discovered at a flat above a cycle shop in Amy Road, Oxted, Surrey, at about 5.20pm on Friday.

Officers confirmed a post mortem revealed the teenager had died from a stab wound.

Claire Pridgeon, Detective Chief Inspector at Surrey and Sussex Police, said: "This is a tragic loss of a young girl's life and our thoughts are with her family at this extremely difficult time.

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07 Mar 2013

"Specialist officers are supporting the family and will continue to do so throughout the investigation.

"This is being treated as an isolated incident and the local community will be provided reassurance by the Tandridge Safer Neighbourhood Team, who will be out in the area speaking to residents.

"The investigation is a complex one and inquiries will continue at the address on Amy Road for the coming days. I would like to thank local residents for their support so far."

The boy remains on police bail and has been transferred to a secure hospital.

 CrimeNews »UK News »Law and Order »

In Crime



View the Original article

Jude Law arrives at phone-hacking trial

Jude Law arrives at the Old Bailey, in London, to give evidence at the phone-hacking trial of former News of the World and Sun editor Rebekah Brooks. 11:26AM GMT 27 Jan 2014

The actor was greeted at the Old Bailey by a crowd of television cameras and photographers.

After arriving in a silver Mercedes, Law, wearing a grey suit with a white shirt and dark tie, walked quickly into the court building.

He has been called to give evidence for the prosecution in the trial of former News of the World and Sun editor Rebekah Brooks.

Brooks, 45, of Churchill Oxfordshire, is accused of conspiring with others to hack phones, misconduct in a public office and pervert the course of justice.

She denies all the charges against her along with six other defendants in the case.

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Source: PA

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Two-year-old girl 'fell through gap in barrier' from fourth floor

Jurors were told details about the death of Ryaheen Banimuslem at the North Bank apartments, in Sheffield city centre Photo: ROSS PARRY AGENCY By Agencies

1:27PM GMT 27 Jan 2014

A two-year-old girl fell to her death from the fourth floor of an apartment block after a maintenance worker failed to replace a glass panel he had removed from a barrier, a jury has been told.

Jurors were told details about the death of Ryaheen Banimuslem at the North Bank apartments, in Sheffield city centre, as the trial opened of maintenance worker Robert Warner, 45.

Bryan Cox QC, prosecuting, said Ryaheen had been playing in an outdoor garden area on the fourth floor of the block with her mother and others when she strayed along a walkway.

At the end of the walkway, Mr Cox told Sheffield Crown Court, there was a gap in the barrier because a glass panel had been removed by Warner.

''She made her way along the walkway to the point where the panel had been removed,'' the prosecutor told the jury of seven men and five women.

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''She passed through the gap in the barrier and fell to her death.

''There was nothing to prevent her from walking or running off the end of the walkway, as she plainly did.

''This accident was caused by the defendant's negligent conduct.

''In essence, the prosecution contend that he removed the barrier from the walkway and failed to replace it.

''He did nothing to prevent access to the walkway thereby creating a very dangerous situation.

''He did nothing to warn of the obvious dangers.''

Mr Cox said Warner had removed the panel some days before the tragedy.

He said he did this to replace another panel which had been smashed in in a more prominent position on the barrier.

Mr Cox told the jury how Warner "stood to gain financially" from replacing one panel with another.

The prosecutor said this was because the defendant submitted an invoice to ARIM (Allsop Residential Investment Management) - the firm which managed the building - claiming he had bought a glass panel.

Mr Cox told the jury how Ryaheen was born in Iraq but moved to the UK in 2011 as her father was studying for a PhD in material physics at Sheffield University.

She died almost instantly from her injuries when she fell on June 27, 2012, the jury was told.

Warner, of Shirehall Crescent, Shiregreen, Sheffield, denies a single charge of manslaughter by gross negligence.

The trial, which is expected to last about three weeks, continues.

 Law and OrderNews »UK News »Crime »

In Law and Order



View the Original article

Weatherman Fred Talbot charged with sex offences

Former weatherman Fred Talbot faces a string of sex offence charges Photo: PA By Miranda Prynne, News Reporter

3:34PM GMT 27 Jan 2014

Former television weatherman Fred Talbot has been charged with a string of sex offences following a police investigation into claims of historic abuse during his teaching days.

The 64-year-old, who was a regular on the floating weather map in Liverpool's Albert Dock for ITV's This Morning, is accused of nine counts of indecent assault and one count of buggery.

The charges relate to the alleged sexual abuse of five men, three of whom claim they were under 16 at the time, Greater Manchester Police said.

Six counts of indecent assault involve one victim who attended a school in Newcastle.

The other offences relate to three victims who attended Altrincham Grammar School for Boys where Talbot used to teach biology

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The buggery charge also involves a former Altrincham pupil.

Talbot, of Bowdon, Altrincham, was charged after he reported to Bury police station this afternoon to answer bail.

He is due to appear at Manchester Magistrates' Court on February 11.

The veteran broadcaster is accused of committing the offences between 1968 and 1983, when he quit education to launch his television career.

All the alleged victims were aged 19 and under.

Talbot was arrested twice last year as part of the police investigation into claims he abused youngsters while working a teacher.

He was first questioned last April over allegations of indecent assault and inciting a child to commit gross indecency involving four other pupils.

He was also held on suspicion of indecent assault in relation to alleged offences carried out at schools in the North East where he was a trainee teacher in the 1960s.

He was rearrested in December after answering bail.

Nazir Afzal, chief crown prosecutor for CPS North West, said: "We have carefully considered all the evidence gathered by Greater Manchester Police in relation to allegations from five complainants that Fred Talbot sexually assaulted them between the 1960s and 1980s.

"Having completed our review, we have concluded that there is sufficient evidence and it is in the public interest for Mr Talbot to be charged with 10 sexual offences relating to five complainants, three of whom were under 16 years of age at the time."

In a statement, Greater Manchester Police said: “Fred Talbot, of Langham Road, Bowden, has been charged with nine counts of indecent assault and one count of buggery.”

It went on: “The charges relate to the sexual abuse of five victims, three of whom were under 16 at the time.”

 CrimeNews »UK News »Law and Order »

In Crime



View the Original article

Baby dies of rickets from vegetarian mother

Couple told they could face jail after admitting manslaughter of their son Ndingeko, who died from rickets after his parents insisted on strict eating regime as part of their religion

View the Original article

Fears grow for university student missing for five days

Megan Roberts was last seen at the Popworld bar on George Hudson Street in York Photo: PA By Miranda Prynne, News Reporter

8:09AM GMT 28 Jan 2014

Police are searching for a missing university student whose disappearance five days ago after a night out with friends has been described as “very out of character”.

Fears are growing for Megan Roberts who was reported missing by her mother on Monday morning after concerned friends raised the alarm.

The 20-year-old student at York St John University, who is originally from Wetherby, West Yorks, vanished on a night out in York city centre last week.

She was last seen at about 2am on Thursday in Popworld bar on George Hudson Street about a mile from the home of university chef Claudia Lawrence whose disappearance almost five years ago remains a mystery.

After leaving the bar the group “went their separate ways” and Miss Roberts never returned home.

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There has been no sign of activity on the usually “prolific” Facebook user’s profile since last Wednesday night.

A North Yorkshire Police spokeswoman said: “Nobody has heard from Megan since, which is very out of character and officers are very concerned for her safety.

"Police are appealing for anyone who has seen Megan since the early hours of Thursday morning or knows where she is now, to contact them urgently.

"They are also appealing to Megan herself to contact her friends, family or the police to let them know she is safe."

Friends tried phoning and texting the art history student but after receiving no reply alerted her mother Jackie Roberts.

Ms Roberts wrote on Facebook: “Anyone with any info please get in touch. We’re worried sick.”

Miss Roberts’ friend Rockie Alanah Thorley wrote on Facebook yesterday: “Her phone has been off since Wednesday night. We all assumed she went home for the weekend or went to see her ex and her phone had died.

“When all her friends spoke last night and realised nobody had got in touch we became concerned as it is very out of character for her. So we contacted her mum.

“She then didn’t turn up to her lecture this morning and we reported it. It’s been discovered that it is likely she didn’t go to her own house on Wednesday night.”

Others discussed her disappearance on Twitter.

One wrote: “I didn’t leave with her but she was with people when I left. I just don’t understand.”

Inspector Andy Farrar of North Yorkshire Police said officers were trying to trace Megan using CCTV footage.

He said: “At the moment it is purely a missing from home enquiry, there is nothing to suggest anything else. We are in the early stages of the investigation.

“We are searching the local area in relation to the places where she lives and who she was out with. We are doing the preliminary investigation and speaking to the last people she saw.”

 CrimeNews »UK News »Law and Order »

In Crime



View the Original article

Diplomat's home searched by specialist officers

and said the operation had been pre-planned and led by intelligence Photo: National Pictures / Hannah McKay By Claire Carter

8:28AM GMT 28 Jan 2014

The home of a British diplomat was raided by police specialising in chemical and biological threats.

Reports suggest the house was searched over fears it was being used to hide chemical weapons.

Officers searched the home and garden of Nicholas Sutcliffe, a first secretary to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), as well as the gardens of his neighbours.

Mr Sutcliffe, who has worked in Brazil and Cuba with the FCO, lives at the £650,000 four bedroom house in south London with his wife and four sons.

Reports suggest a 19-year-old man arrested under anti-terrorism laws following the raid and since released on bail, is one of Mr Sutcliffe's sons.

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Neighbours told the Daily Mail more than 30 officers including a satellite truck descended on the house on Saturday morning, sealing off the road in Streatham Hill and putting up forensic tents over areas they had dug in the garden. They described them wearing protective clothing and carrying breathing equipment, which police said was a precautionary measure.

A spokesman for Scotland Yard said residents were at no “immediate risk” and said the operation had been pre-planned and led by intelligence.

They said: "The searches are being carried out as a precautionary measure and are ongoing."

The teenager was arrested under the Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act, which covers people suspected of terrorism as well as aiding or abetting the overseas use or development of chemical or biological weapons.

A 36-year-old woman was arrested at her home in Stratford in East London in a linked operation under the same legislation on Sunday afternoon.

Mr Sutcliffe has been a first secretary since 2001.

His brother, Peter Sutcliffe, 49, told the newspaper: “James and George are my nephews and they are 19-year-old twins. I find it extraordinary police have made an arrest and I cannot believe either James or George have involvement in terrorism.”

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Great-grandmother, 76, shoplifted because she was 'bored of being old'

The mother-of-seven later claimed she only carried out the thefts to relieve her boredom as she was fed up of living on her own Photo: Alamy By News agencies

8:47AM GMT 28 Jan 2014

A great-grandmother suffering from arthritis embarked on a four year shoplifting spree because she was ''bored'' of being old.

June Humphreys, 76, used her bus pass to travel to town centres before hiding consumer commodities in her shopping trolley then sneaking out of stores without paying.

The OAP from Crewe, Cheshire was being treated for breast cancer and osteoarthritis but would strike at high streets across two counties.

Store detectives would catch her red handed, however she went back out shoplifting again.

The mother-of-seven later claimed she only carried out the thefts to relieve her boredom as she was fed up of living on her own.

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A probation officer said the old lady had as many shoplifting convictions as a teenage heroin addict.

Details of the offending OAP emerged at North Staffordshire Magistrates' Court where Humphreys was warned she will go to jail if she shoplifts again.

Probation officer Darren Vernon told the hearing: "She has travelled around Staffordshire and Cheshire on public transport and committed offences.

"She knows what she is doing is wrong, she says she is bored and needs to fill her time.

"The main reason for her doing this is boredom. She lives alone. She has seven children but the only one she has contact with lives above her.

"She has acquired the record of a heroin addict in his late teens."

Earlier the court heard Humphreys' offending took her to high streets in Stoke, Leek, Macclesfield, Stafford and Whitchurch and had convictions for shop theft in 2011, 2012 and 2013 and on January 14 this year.

In the latest bout of thefts, she pleaded guilty to stealing confectionery worth £2 from Iceland, theft of baby clothes worth £69 from BHS, stealing baby clothes worth £24.98 from B & M, and theft of a breast pump from Boots, all on January 6.

The pensioner also admitted stealing alcohol, coffee and confectionery worth £30.42 from an Aldi store and stealing two pairs of boots worth £94.50 from a shoe shop in Hanley, Staffs , a week before Christmas.

She was sentenced to one-month in prison suspended for 12 months, ordered to pay £45 costs and an £80 victim surcharge. Magistrates revoked a community order which had previously been imposed on her for theft.

Her lawyer Andrew Bennett said: "My client does not want to go to prison. She wants to stop doing this. She wants to stop stealing from shops."

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Bill Roache: I can't recall ever meeting those making sex assault allegations against me

William Roache has pleaded not guilty to two counts of rape and four counts of indecent assault Photo: Getty Images By News agencies

10:30AM GMT 28 Jan 2014

Coronation Street star William Roache has told a jury he cannot recall having ever met any of the people who have made sex assault allegations against him.

The 81-year-old actor swore on the Bible as he was called to give evidence from the witness box at Preston Crown Court.

Louise Blackwell QC, defending, asked Roache: ''Have you committed any of the offences with which you have been charged?''

''No I have not,'' Roache replied.

Miss Blackwell continued: ''Do you have any memory of being in the company of any of the people that have made the allegations against you?''

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''No, not one of them,'' Roache replied.

''Do you know any of them in any way?'' Miss Blackwell said.

''No,'' the defendant replied.

''Or of them in any way?'' Miss Blackwell continued.

''No,'' he said.

Roache has pleaded not guilty to two counts of rape and four counts of indecent assault involving five complainants aged 16 and under on dates between 1965 and 1971.

Roache said he was born in Ilkeston, Derbyshire, the son of a local doctor.

His early schooling was near his home, at the Rudolph Steiner School where his grandfather had donated part of his property for its grounds.

Talking about Mr Steiner, he said: "He had an interesting philosophy about education - that school should be a place of fun. Handcrafts, dancing, painting... there was no discipline; it was not needed either."

Speaking of the effect the school had on him, he said: "I did have an interest in things from beyond the sixth sense of the normal. Spiritual matters always remained interesting."

He next went to a boarding school in North Wales, which he enjoyed less at the time. It had a more traditional academic focus with "cold baths in the morning".

Roache said he was left-handed but the school made him right-handed.

He told the jury that he joined the Army after leaving school.

He was a member of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers and, in his five years of service, rose to the rank of captain, and spent two years in Oman.

In the mid-1950s he suffered an accident during live ammunition training with a mortar platoon which permanently damaged his hearing.

Roache said he felt an "obligation" to follow generations of his family who had gone into the medical profession but he was not adept at sciences.

"My mother had always been a keen amateur actress," he said. "She used to direct the amateur dramatic society in Ilkeston."

Roache won a drama prize as a youngster but initially felt he was too shy for acting, he said.

"But I did, at the age of 26, when I came out of the Army I thought I had to give it a go," he said.

"It was burning away in me."

Roache's first break on television was a lead role in Play Of The Week in 1959, he said.

Filmed at Granada Studios in Manchester, he said he had a "prestigious part" in Marking Time as a soldier who had an affair with a girl.

It caught the attention of Coronation Street author Tony Warren, who saw him perform in the studio.

"He said 'That is the person I want to play Ken Barlow'," he said.

His barrister, Miss Blackwell, asked if Coronation Street was "a new soap".

Roache replied: "I still don't like the word 'soap'."

Comparing it to the innovative kitchen sink dramas of the time, he said: "We were the first on television. It was highly prestigious, it was cutting edge. We were a drama and did it like that."

The actor said the series, filmed in black and white, was originally only commissioned for 11 weeks and that Sidney Bernstein, the head of Granada, did not believe it would work.

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Sex offence claims are 'nonsense', Dave Lee Travis tells jurors

Dave Lee Travis told a court the "nonsense" sex offence allegations against him would make it harder for women who had really been abused to get their cases heard

View the Original article

News of the World reporter told: 'Jump off cliff if you can't get stories', trial hears

A former News of the World reporter says he hacked phones after being told he "might as well jump off a cliff" if he could not come up with front page stories, the hacking trial at the Old Bailey is told

View the Original article

Andy Coulson became 'animated' after hearing Sienna Miller in hacked voicemail, court told

Coulson denies charge of conspiring to intercept communications but former News of the World journalist says he played former editor recording of hacked voicemail left by Miller on Daniel Craig's phone

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Police seek motorist caught on video attacking cyclist

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Police are hunting a motorist who was caught on video apparently assaulting a cyclist in a road rage incident.

The incident, which has gone viral on YouTube, shows the male driver of a high-powered Audi A7 pushing the man off his bicycle in central London during the morning rush-hour.

A video of the incident has been watched more than half a million times since it was uploaded onto YouTube on last Thurday, when the incident took place.

A Scotland Yard spokesman confirmed detectives they want to speak with the motorist, who is seen lunging out at the male cyclist causing him to fall off his bike onto the road surface.

The cyclist has lodged an allegation of assault, he added.


The incident was recorded by a video camera mounted on the helmet of another cyclist.

“Police in Islington are investigating an allegation of assault on a cyclist which took place in Clerkenwell Road junction with Farringdon Road, EC1 on Thursday January 23 at around 9am,” said the Metropolitan Police spokesman.

“An altercation took place between a cyclist and a male occupant of a white vehicle.

“The cyclist was apparently assaulted causing him to fall off his bike. The cyclist rode off from the scene.

“At this stage no arrests have been made. Enquiries are continuing.”

The incident appeared to be triggered when the car pulled into a cycle-only box at traffic lights on busy Farringdon Road, which connects the City with Islington to the north.

The cyclist, wearing a black woolly hat and a dark overcoat, moves backwards to remonstrate with the driver for pulling too far forward and is heard to shout: “Cycle area.”

But the white car pulls away at speed when the lights change.

The video then shows the cyclist pedalling quickly to catch up with the car, and at the next traffic lights he pulls up alongside the Audi, leans closely to the driver’s window and swears loudly at the motorist.

The helmet camera, then facing the wrong way, does not show the driver emerging from the vehicle. But as the camera turns back towards the ongoing confrontation, the driver, who appears to be in his 30s or 40s and is dressed in a smart white shirt and chinos, swings at the cyclist with his right hand.

The cyclist falls over and the driver holds his right fist in a striking position, but the cyclist gets back on his bike and rides away.

The Audi’s number plate is clearly shown in the video but the police spokesman told The Telegraph that officers were looking into whether the number plate was genuine.

The 26-year-old cyclist who recorded the incident, whose name is Jude, said: "I pulled up and when waiting for the lights to change, the Audi pulled into the box relatively aggressively.

"It wasn't shown clearly in the video how close he was to the cyclist and how intimidating this would have been.

"In reality cyclists do not like being near cars, and so when this was pointed out by the cyclist - in my opinion as a safety measure as opposed to antagonising - it was shocking to see the disregard shown to the safety of the the cyclist."

He added: "I do not agree with the response of the cyclist in shouting through the window of the car, but in reality this looked like a case of red mist that everybody will have experienced at some point.

"When the passenger of the car got out and punched the cyclist I was shocked, as that level of violence was disproportionate to say the least."

Jude, a sports journalist, declined to give his full name because he has received threats on YouTube after posting the video. At the time of the incident he was reviewing the helmet camera for a sports technology magazine.

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Audi driver's attack on cyclist goes viral

Comments

A cyclist's helmet camera captures the moment a driver of a high-powered Audi A7 pushed another cyclist off his bicycle in central London during the morning rush-hour.

The altercation appeared to be triggered when the car pulled into a cycle-only box at traffic lights on busy Farringdon Road, which connects the City with Islington to the north.

Footage of the incident has been watched more than half a million times since it was uploaded onto YouTube last Thurday, when the incident took place.

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The 26-year-old cyclist who recorded the incident, whose name is Jude, said: "I pulled up and when waiting for the lights to change, the Audi pulled into the box relatively aggressively.

"It wasn't shown clearly in the video how close he was to the cyclist and how intimidating this would have been.

"In reality cyclists do not like being near cars, and so when this was pointed out by the cyclist - in my opinion as a safety measure as opposed to antagonising - it was shocking to see the disregard shown to the safety of the the cyclist."

He added: "I do not agree with the response of the cyclist in shouting through the window of the car, but in reality this looked like a case of red mist that everybody will have experienced at some point.

"When the passenger of the car got out and punched the cyclist I was shocked, as that level of violence was disproportionate to say the least."

Jude, a sports journalist, declined to give his full name because he has received threats on YouTube after posting the video. At the time of the incident he was reviewing the helmet camera for a sports technology magazine.

A Scotland Yard spokesman has confirmed detectives want to speak with the motorist. The cyclist has lodged an allegation of assault, he added.

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Police appeal for information on missing Megan

Police investigating the disappearance of missing student Megan Roberts, in York, appeal for information to help find the 20-year-old 3:45PM GMT 28 Jan 2014

Megan Roberts, 20, was last seen at around 2am on Thursday in the Popworld bar in George Hudson Street, having gone out with friends on Wednesday evening.

CCTV shows her later walking toward a bridge with a group of friends, but when they appeared on the other side of the river she was not among them.

The York St John University student has not been seen since.

Miss Roberts was reported missing by her mother on Monday morning after a friend raised concerns, North Yorkshire Police said.

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Dave Lee Travis: sex offence claims are 'completely insane'

Dave Lee Travis told a court the sex offence allegations against him as "lies, out and out" and expressed concern they would divert attention away from real victims By Agencies

3:57PM GMT 28 Jan 2014

Veteran DJ Dave Lee Travis told a jury the sexual offence charges against him were “completely insane” and would divert attention away from genuine victims of abuse.

The former BBC presenter denied allegations he was filmed groping a young female fan while presenting Top Of The Pops claiming it would have killed his career “stone dead”.

Travis, who is accused of indecently assaulting 10 women and sexually assaulting another, said he had no recollection of the incident in which he is accused of putting his hand up a teenager’s skirt during a live show in 1978.

He told jurors at Southwark Crown Court: “That is a completely insane claim, and it's especially insane because I've seen the video."

Asked by Stephen Vullo, defending, what the effect would have been on his career if he had done it, Travis said: "It would have killed it stone dead.

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“If I had been caught doing that in the Top Of The Pops studio I should have thought the book would have been thrown at me and I would have been out of the BBC.”

The 68-year-old said that as a presenter he was the "lowest of the low" compared to the show's director and production team and there was no way that the footage would have been adapted by them so the alleged assault could not be seen by viewers.

He said: “I would have no power whatsoever.”

Appearing under his birth name David Griffin, Travis, from Mentmore, Bucks, denies all the charges which date back to 1976.

He said: “Personally the one thing that's been going through my mind since this trial started is that I'm sorry about this trial being the way it is.

“I know this is only a lot of nonsense.

“I just feel that the women who really have been attacked, women who have been at home and been through mental abuse by their husbands or beaten up by anybody else or really attacked - because this has been going on with me - it makes it less likely that real problems are going to be looked at.”

He was questioned about the offences alleged to have taken place when he was working as a BBC DJ and Top Of The Pops host, as a broadcaster with Classic Gold radio and when starring in panto.

Travis said he took his job seriously and that, even though working in showbusiness was fun, "it is a business nevertheless".

He dismissed claims he assaulted a teenager in his Radio 1 studio during a live broadcast as “lies, out and out” and said he could not remember any such incident.

"I don't have to recall that as it never happened," he added.

He protested after being asked whether he had ever cheated on his wife, to whom he has been married since 1971, claiming it bore no relevance to the case.

But questioned further by Mr Vullo if he had ever "fallen into temptation", Travis admitted he had "once or twice".

“Of course, I'm human," he told the court.

"Consensual, if I might add."

Asked jurors to "think logically about it" he went on: “If these women supposedly are chasing after me because I was the pop star of the day, the question would have to be, why would I go and assault somebody?

"I don't like the idea of assaulting women in any way, shape or form."

Asked about claims that he put his hand up a woman's skirt in front of the organiser of a Norwich Union event he was working at, Travis said he "should be committed somewhere" if that had happened because it would have been bad for business.

He added: "It didn't, by the way.”

The court heard that he was alleged to have indecently assaulted a woman who was working as a stage hand on a pantomime he featured in.

He said: “I can only say what I know and the way I feel about things.

If I had sexually assaulted this girl in my dressing room, I would fully expect her to go and tell her boss and the boss would tell the person running the panto and that would immediately get me in big trouble."

He dismissed the idea that she would have decided not to complain because he was a celebrity.

He said: “You are never too big in this industry, you can be knocked over very quickly and I don't believe in taking risks with my business and I certainly don't believe in attacking young girls.”

He was also questioned about allegations that he grabbed the breasts of a female journalist who came to interview him at his house after asking if she would pose for photographs.

Asked if they were true he said: “No, of course not.”

He added: “I'm not likely to get somebody to agree to do a photograph with me if I'm putting my hands all over them. It's just not the way it works."

He also denied claims heard yesterday that he groped another journalist.

"After this I will never have an interview with a female again without somebody else sitting there with me," he said.

"It just breaks my heart."

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