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Reform UK gets first police and crime commissioner after Tory defection

Reform UK gets first police and crime commissioner after Tory defection

Yahoo2 days ago
Reform UK has announced its first police and crime commissioner after a defection from the Conservative Party was unveiled at a press conference.
Rupert Matthews, who holds the post in Leicestershire and Rutland, was introduced on Monday as having joined the party from the Conservatives.
Before being elected in 2021, he served two years as as a European Parliament member for the Tories. He told the event at the Reform UK headquarters in Westminster he had been a Conservative member for more than 40 years.
Mr Matthews was quick to turn his fire on modern crime policy, where he said police officers were all too often working with 'one hand tied behind their back'.
He said: 'I daily face a fight against crime. I see ordinary, hard-working people burgled, robbed and mugged. Shoplifting is getting out of control. Anti-social behaviour is turning too many of our town centres into an apocalyptic wasteland of lawless Britain.'
Mr Matthews said the 'dark heart of wokeness' needed to be removed from the criminal justice system. He said politicians in Britain had taken inspiration from 'Lebanon and Libya' for their policies.
He said: 'It's almost as if they've looked at countries like Lebanon and Libya, the policies that have led to them becoming failed states and thought 'that looks good, let's try that here in Britain'.'
He continued: 'The self-serving, self-entitled liberal elite who have let our country down time after time after time, are now on notice. Their day is almost done. Be they Conservative or Labour governments, everyone knows our politicians have failed us all.
'They have let this country down. They have let the British people down. Enough. Now is time for Reform.'
The party also announced retired prison governor of Wormwood Scrubs, Vanessa Frake-Harris MBE, had joined the party and would be contributing to its law and order taskforce. Ms Frake-Harris, who joined the prison service in 1986, detailed increases in escapes, attacks on prison officers and increases of drugs, weapons and mobile phone finds in the last year.
She said: 'Successive governments, Conservative and Labour, have driven the prison service to its knees. Through lack of investment, support and an unwillingness to allow people who know what they are doing to get the job done.'
She continued: 'Our prisons are in a crisis caused by Labour and the Conservatives. What have their solutions been? They have let out 10,000 prisoners out of jail early. To let criminals out of jail before they even serve their full sentence is a disgrace.'
A Labour spokesperson said: 'It's farcical that Farage can't say what his policies are, how much they would cost, or how they would even work. Reform aren't serious and don't have a clue as to how they would address the challenges facing working people.'
The Conservative Party has been approached for comment.
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Interactive map reveals where half of London's police station front desks will shut as Met releases bombshell list

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Girlfriend of suspect arrested in killings of abandoned Tennessee baby's relatives is related to the victims. Here's what we know about the case
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CrimeFacebookTweetLink Follow As the weeklong manhunt for the suspect in the killings of four relatives of a baby found abandoned in Tennessee came to an end on Tuesday, police revealed the suspect's girlfriend is related to the victims. Austin Robert Drummond, 28, was arrested Tuesday morning in a wooded area in Jackson after multiple people reported sightings of him, according to Police Chief Thom Corley. The bodies of James M. Wilson, 21; Adrianna Williams, 20; Cortney Rose, 38; and Braydon Williams, 15 were found July 29 in Tiptonville, a town in northwest Tennessee's Lake County. The baby daughter of Wilson and Adrianna Williams had been found abandoned in a car seat near the Dyer County community of Tigrett, about 40 miles northwest of Jackson. 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Investigators began searching for a 'dark-colored minivan or a white mid-size SUV' witnesses said had left the baby there. Hours after the baby's abandonment, the sheriff's office announced four people – later identified as the baby's relatives – were found dead in Tiptonville. Drummond was wanted in connection with the four deaths. He was issued warrants charging him with four counts of first-degree murder, one count of aggravated kidnapping, four counts of felon in possession of a firearm, and one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony, the TBI said. During the manhunt, he was captured on a resident's camera system in Jackson Sunday night, police there said, and a vehicle associated with him was found unoccupied in that city. While Drummond was still on the run, Union University locked exterior doors to all buildings and Jackson Christian School was placed on lockdown Monday afternoon as authorities investigating the case searched a wooden area in Jackson. Multiple calls of sightings came in around 8:00 a.m. local time on Tuesday, allowing police to place more resources in that area. An additional citizen's call at 8:57 a.m. led to Drummond's arrest by three nearby officers at 9:05 a.m., Corley said. 'A couple of' firearms were recovered, the TBI director said, adding he could not say whether they were used in the killings. Three people were arrested during the manhunt for Drummond, TBI said. Dearrah Sanders, 23, was taken into custody Monday on warrants charging her with accessory after the fact to first-degree murder, accused of assisting Drummond after the killings of the baby's relatives, TBI said. The same charges were also filed last week against Tanaka Brown and Giovontie Thomas, both 29. Brown is also charged with tampering with evidence, according to the TBI. Authorities have not specified precisely what the three are accused of doing to help Drummond. Investigators believe Drummond has connections to the Vice Lords gang and they suspect he may be getting help from its members, the law enforcement source said. The Vice Lords is a gang whose members have been involved in murder, drug trafficking, and other violent crime, according to the US Justice Department. Prosecutors say the gang has members and offshoot groups in Illinois and throughout Tennessee. Drummond had just gotten out of prison last year, and at the time of the killings he was out on bail after being charged with trying to kill someone while he was incarcerated, authorities have said. The suspect's criminal history dates to July 2013, when authorities said the then-16-year-old robbed a Circle K convenience store in Jackson just after midnight. Drummond pulled out a pistol, pointed it at a store employee and demanded the money in the cash register, according to court documents. He was convicted in 2014 of aggravated robbery and sentenced to 10 years in prison, records show. After the trial, an incarcerated Drummond called his father and made threats against the jurors and the robbery victim, District Attorney Jody S. Pickens, who serves an area including Jackson, told CNN on Monday. For that, Drummond in 2015 pleaded guilty to several counts of retaliation for past action and was sentenced to a further three years in prison, making a combined 13 years, according to Pickens and court records. The district attorney's office strongly opposed Drummond's parole in a letter to the state's board of parole regarding his upcoming hearing in July 2020, calling him a 'dangerous felony offender.' Drummond's attorney in the attempted murder case, Drew Farmer, declined to comment on details in that case and would not say whether he was representing Drummond in the charges related to last week's killings. Drummond did not receive parole and was released from Northwest Correctional Complex in Tiptonville in September 2024, having served just under 11 years counting pretrial time served and credits from the Tennessee Department of Correction, according to Pickens and court records. The suspect then faced charges relating to his time in prison – first with an arrest on drug charges the same day he was released from prison – and then with the attempted murder charge later that year, according to TBI records. 'He made bond,' and he was 'out on bond on those charges' when the four bodies were found last week, according to the district attorney for Dyer and Lake counties. Goodman didn't provide details about the attempted murder charge, except to say the alleged incident 'took place inside the prison.' CNN has asked Goodman for further details. In a statement to CNN, the father of James M. Wilson said: 'I hate that someone has taken my son from all of us. He really was a good young man. He was an exceptional father. He would stop and help anyone.' 'This has left a huge hole in our family. No amount of justice will ever be able to replace our son,' said Matt Wilson. CNN's John Miller, Chris Boyette, Cindy Von Quednow and Josh Campbell contributed to this report.

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