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It felt like a criminal offence just listening to Nigel Finch's speech

It felt like a criminal offence just listening to Nigel Finch's speech

Times11 hours ago
Nigel Farage's Summer of Crime is now into its third week, and we've reached the point in the plot where the boss recruits the other members of the gang, Ocean's Eleven style.
This was his third press conference on as many Mondays, all done behind his no-longer brand new 'Britain is Lawless' lectern. It's not hard to work out why he's doing it. Capturing the attention of the British public in the month of August is one of the easiest heists out there. You just have to say something, anything, and, for want of an alternative, people will listen.
Unfortunately, one of the first things Farage had to say was to urge the TV news channels that had shown up to please, please broadcast the press conference in full, because, yes, they might be about to discuss an extremely controversial crime that had allegedly happened recently in which court proceedings are very much currently active, but, don't panic, they absolutely definitely wouldn't be committing any sort of contempt of court.
Sadly, they did panic. Sky News and others chose almost this exact moment to play it safe and cut away, an editorial decision that would prove to be utterly vindicated, but we'll get to that in a bit.This time, he brought with him his two newest recruits. Yes, Farage has managed to once again break into the Tory vaults and this time he'd managed to bundle in to the awaiting getaway vehicle none other than the Leicestershire and Rutland police and crime commissioner Rupert Matthews.
Matthews bounded onto the stage, a former Conservative MEP, and an instant fully ambulant answer to the rarely asked question: 'Where has Harry Enfield's Tory boy been hiding for the last 30 years?' But Tory boys are straight from Reform central casting these days.
'We need to cut the dark heart of wokeness out of policing,' he said.
It was far from the only attack of the morning on woke, wokeness, the wokerati and the general scourge of the wokes. If the press conference felt poorly attended, it may have been because, while they spoke, a chap called 'wokes' was batting for England at the Oval, one-handed, with his arm in a sling.
The other new recruit was an extremely no-nonsense looking woman called Vanessa Frake, the former head of security at Wormwood Scrubs and the author of a best-selling book called The Guv'nor, about her three decades in the prison service. She is now Reform's 'prisons tsar'.
You can't help but be impressed by people like Frake, who've seen and done it all. There should be more of them in politics. But you also don't need to be all that impressive to say the things she had come to say. That it's just no good running the prison service into the ground, so that you have to release criminals early because you've got nowhere to keep them.
• Reform UK appoints Rose West's prison governor as justice adviser
She has not been in Reform UK for long, but it's clear she'll go far. She's already concluded that the solution is more money, for more prison officers and more prisons. She would, she said, 'like to see supermax prisons from America, over here'. This would, of course, cost tens of billions, which Reform UK don't have because they've spent everything they don't have many, many times over, but who's counting? Certainly not them.
They saved the very best 'til last. George Finch is already something of a celebrity, after being appointed leader of Warwickshire county council two weeks ago, at the ripe old age of 19. His victory speech, of sorts, a fortnight ago, was surprisingly impressive. This was not. Finch had been brought in to discuss the shocking case of the alleged rape of a 12-year-old girl in Nuneaton, over which two men have been arrested and charged.
Once someone's been arrested and charged with this sort of crime, and so will almost certainly face a jury trial, what you can and can't say about them, so as to not prejudice that jury, is quite a tricky area. It's also exactly the kind of thing that that sort of people who, for example, run local councils should know.
What you can't do is go on live televison and say that you begged the police to release to the public more information about 'the criminal', because 'the criminal' is not a 'criminal', not until he's been convicted by a jury, in a fair trial, which he won't get if people like the leader of his local council just casually call him 'a criminal' on telly.
It's quite a long time since I took my media law exam for journalists, indeed I would have been about Finch's age, but I'm pretty sure you can't just refer to people who are in the criminal justice system and currently progressing toward trial as 'the criminal'.
Fortunately for Finch, despite standing in front of a whole row of TV cameras, he wasn't actually on live television at this point, because they'd all very wisely cut away, fearing he might say exactly the sort of thing he just had.
Ninety-nine per cent of Finch's speech is simply untranscribable. It felt like an offence just to listen to it. Thankfully, I'm confident I'll have forgotten it all within 48 hours. If not, I'm worried I could be arrested for brain libel.
Where do you go from here? There's still half of Farage's six-week Summer of Crime to go. They have their own crime commissioner now, too. What crimes will he commission next?
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Nightmare neighbour dubbed the 'human wrecking ball' by a judge has been freed from prison under Labour's early release scheme
Nightmare neighbour dubbed the 'human wrecking ball' by a judge has been freed from prison under Labour's early release scheme

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Nightmare neighbour dubbed the 'human wrecking ball' by a judge has been freed from prison under Labour's early release scheme

A neighbour from hell who tore the roof off the home of the people living next door in a war over a garden fence has been released from prison after serving just three months of a four and a half year sentence. Mark Coates, 57, was branded a 'human wrecking ball' by a judge after he tore the tiles and chimney pots off his £450,000 home before throwing them to the ground. After he had finished destroyed his own roof he moved over to his neighbours and began demolishing their property. The wrecking spree was the culmination of a bitter seven year boundary dispute over the location of a garden fence. In March, Coates who was dubbed 'Britain's worst neighbour', was sentenced to four years and four months behind bars after he was found guilty of causing more than £200,000 of damage to the homes. But now Coates, a father-of-five, has been freed under the Government's controversial early release scheme. His victims, David Greenwood, 70, and Janice Turner, 66, claim their lives were made 'hell' by Coates and say they are now 'living in fear' and 'have lost all faith' in the British justice system. Coates, who vowed in court never to stop pursuing the case, is living with his family just a few miles away from the pair. The couple said the move made a 'complete mockery of the British justice system' and had put enormous stress on them. Mr Greenwood, a mechanic, said the early release scheme, introduced by the Government last year to ease pressure on prisons, was a charter which favoured criminals over their victims. 'It's an absolute farce,' he said. 'This wasn't some piffling sentence for shoplifting. This was a serious crime which wrecked our home in an attempt to totally destroy our lives. 'It's a disgrace he has been freed from prison. We are devastated and it has put enormous stress on us. 'He is under a curfew at night but we live in fear of what he might do during the day. It's taking a huge toll on us. 'The early release scheme is a move that favours criminals over their victims and completely undermines the authority of UK courts. 'It's absolutely ridiculous. Why would the Crown Prosecution Service and the police bother to bring cases against criminals if they're just going to be freed?' Coates was sentenced to four years and four months behind bars at Lewes Crown Court in March. After a trial he was found guilty of two counts of criminal damage where he caused £200,000 worth of damage to the two properties in Robertsbridge, near Hastings, East Sussex in June 2024. The 57-year-old father-of-five smashed a hole through the roof of his semi-detached home before clambering out. He then began tearing off the tiles and chimney pots off the £400,000 home before throwing them to the ground. When he had largely destroyed his own roof he moved over to his neighbours' home and began tearing the tiles from their home. Ms Turner, 66, called police but was left crying in the garden as she watched Coates start to demolish her home. Video of the incident, captured by police, showed Coates armed with a hammer methodically smashing up the roof of both homes. A two hour police stand-off ensued before Coates was finally arrested and taken into custody. Residents living close to the victims said the dispute had had a massive effect on the whole community and branded Coates 'one of the worst neighbours in Britain.' Sentencing him, Recorder Ben Williams KC sentenced Coates said the destruction of the two homes was a clear 'revenge attack' on his neighbours. He said Coates had fallen on the houses 'like a human wrecking ball' which had left the couple upset and traumatised. The incident happened on June 10 last year and brought to an end the long-running dispute between the neighbours which started when a fence panel fell down. When a new fence separating their two gardens was erected the two neighbours disagreed over where the boundary was. Lewes Crown Court heard that, after years of litigation, the case had eventually gone to the High Court. The warring neighbours had been warned by High Court judge, Mr Justice Morgan, that persisting in the row could result in financial ruin for one or both of them before a ruling was made against Coates. Coates was found in contempt of the High Court, handed a £475,000 court bill and was ordered to sell his home to pay for the huge sum. As a result his property was to be sold to reimburse the victims' legal fees as well as to pay for the damage caused to their property. But just three days before he was due to hand over the house keys, Coates decided to cause massive damage to the properties. Ms Turner said Coates smashed most of the tiles off his own roof before clambering onto her roof and starting the same. She said: 'He was picking some of them up and throwing them into the garden and towards me. I was standing by my greenhouse and I felt debris from the roof go past my face.' She said when the hole was big enough to climb through Coates clambered out onto the roof. The 66-year-old added: 'He completely removed the best part of the roof at the rear of my property.' A video, captured from a police body-worn camera, shows officers trying to reason with Coates and coax him down from the roof. But he told officers: 'I've had this house stolen off me by a judge and corrupt police. I'll cause as much damage as I can to devalue the house.' He told officers his aim was to cause as much damage as possible to ensure a jury trial in crown court where he said he would expose 'corrupt' officials who had fraudulently deprived him of his home. In mitigation Richard Body, defending, said Coates was a dedicated family man who had a previous good character. He said: 'However he has an aspect of his character that is stubborn which is how he has got himself into this very unfortunate position.' Coates, who was cleared of two counts of causing fear of violence or harassment, was handed an indefinite restraining order not to approach the victims. In September 2024 - three months after the attack - Coates was jailed for 16 months for contempt of the High Court which had to be served separately to the criminal conviction. Mr Greenwood said: 'Mr Coates was also serving a sentence of 448 days in prison for civil contempt and was not due to be released from that sentence until December 2025. 'He was then due to start his criminal sentence so should still be in prison. Remission and the early release scheme do not apply to sentences for breaches of orders of the civil courts.' He believes the release of Mr Coates from prison is unlawful. He said: 'He has served just a fraction of his civil sentence and none of his criminal sentence. It's a total joke. No one - neither the police, courts or prisons - seem to know what they're doing.' A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: 'Offenders released on Home Detention Curfew are subject to strict conditions and will be sent back to prison if they break the rules.'

UK to start returning some migrants to France within days under new deal
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LONDON, Aug 5 (Reuters) - Britain said it will begin implementing a deal to return some migrants who arrive on small boats to France within days, a key part of its plans to cut illegal migration, after a treaty on the arrangement is ratified on Tuesday. Under the new deal, France has agreed to accept the return of undocumented people arriving in Britain by small boats, in exchange for Britain agreeing to accept an equal number of legitimate asylum seekers with British family connections. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron announced the "one in, one out" pilot scheme on migrant returns last month. More than 25,000 people have come to Britain on small boats so far in 2025, and Starmer has pledged to "smash the gangs" of smugglers to try to reduce the number of arrivals. Starmer, whose popularity has fallen since winning an election landslide last year, is facing pressure to stop small boats from Nigel Farage's Reform UK party, which leads national opinion polls. In recent weeks in England, there have been a number of protests around hotels housing the asylum seekers who have arrived on small boats, attended by both anti-immigration and pro-immigration groups. French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said on X that the new agreement between the countries has a "clear objective" to break up the people-smuggling networks, although British interior minister Yvette Cooper would not say how many people would be returned under the scheme. "The numbers will start lower and then build up," she told Sky News on Tuesday, adding that the people returned would be those who had immediately arrived on small boats, rather than people already in Britain. Government sources previously said the agreement would involve about 50 returns a week, or 2,600 a year, a fraction of the more than 35,000 arrivals reported last year. Critics of the scheme have said that the scale will not be sufficient to act as a deterrent, but Cooper said that the agreement with France was just one part of the government's wider plan. The government has also targeted people smugglers with sanctions, clamped down on social media adverts and is working with delivery firms to tackle the illegal work that is often promised to migrants. A treaty on the scheme was signed last week but not previously announced ahead of Tuesday's ratification. Britain said the European Commission and European Union member states had given the green light to the plan.

Police warning as far-right groups organise more migrant hotel protests
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