
Police ‘increasingly concerned' for missing Northwich woman
Rachel Booth, 38, from Northwich, was reported missing on Saturday.
She was in the Barnton area of Northwich before a more recent sighting at around 3.50am around five miles away at the Sandiway garage on the A556 road.
A water park in Delamere, less than two miles away from the petrol station, said it was closed on Sunday due to a police investigation in the surrounding area.
Ms Booth is described as 5ft 9ins, of a slim build, with blonde hair and is believed to be wearing black leggings and a black top.
Inspector James Wilson said: 'We are currently conducting a number of inquiries to trace Rachel and we are becoming increasingly concerned for her welfare.
'Anyone who has seen Rachel since she was reported missing is asked to contact us. The same goes for anyone who has any information on her whereabouts.
'We would also like to appeal directly to Rachel to get in touch to let us know you are OK.'
The Wild Shore Delamere Park watersports centre said in a statement it is closed 'due to ongoing police investigations in the surrounding area'.
The statement added: 'This incident is unrelated to Wild Shore – however we wish to help as much as possible – so we will be closing the site until further notice.'
Anyone with information is encouraged to get in touch with Cheshire Police by calling 101 or on the force's website quoting IML-2136439.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
18 hours ago
- The Independent
Police responses to missing people must change after teenager death, couple say
A couple have said police must change how they deal with missing person reports to better protect those at risk of harm following the suicide of a teenager who was reported missing several hours before he died. Jason Pulman's mother, Emily Pulman, told police her missing son was transgender, had self-harmed, had previously attempted to take his own life and could have boarded a train around 11 hours before he was found dead, aged 15, in Hampden Park, Eastbourne, in April 2022. An inquest into his death later found Sussex Police had responded inadequately to his going missing, one of several failings which contributed to Jason's death. Mrs Pulman and her husband, Mark Pulman, are now taking legal action against the force over an alleged breach of human rights, claiming it should have acted sooner given that Jason posed 'a heightened risk of suicide'. Speaking to the PA news agency, Mr Pulman, 50, said he still feared the police had not learned from Jason's case and were too 'stubborn' to change. He said: 'Our police force seems to think 'we'll just pop round, and grab a photo and have a quick look around the bedroom, then we will go back to the station and make a decision on what to do'. 'It's not good enough.' In court documents filed at the High Court by law firm Bindmans, Nick Armstrong KC, for Mr and Mrs Pulman, said that on April 19 2022, Mrs Pulman rang police at around 9.45am and told police the teenager was missing. Jason was graded as 'medium' risk, and the call handler also noted that there was 'no suicide intent believed', contrary to what Mrs Pulman told them, Mr Armstrong said. An officer did not access the report until around 1.30pm, and after Mrs Pulman had contacted police twice more to tell them Jason was believed to be travelling to London, most likely by train. The officer maintained Jason's risk as medium, did not contact British Transport Police (BTP) and 'did not even speak to Mark or Emily or attempt to do so', Mr Armstrong added, with no further actions raised as 'urgent'. While BTP were alerted at around 6.15pm, this was after Jason was spotted by a train guard, who later told an inquest he would have attempted to intervene had he known Jason was at risk. A Sussex Police officer did not attend the family home until around 7.30pm, and around an hour later, Jason was found dead in Hampden Park by a member of the public. Mr Armstrong said calls to Sussex Police are graded by a call handler, with the first officer attending the scene then reassessing the level of risk. He added that the force's policy states the first attending officer plays a 'pivotal role' in setting the pace of the investigation, and that 'golden hour' principles of finding missing people apply. As well as a missing persons policy, Mr Armstrong said a call could be graded as 'grade one' where there 'is, or is likely to be, a risk of danger to life'. Mr Armstrong said: 'Jason was at real and immediate risk of life-threatening harm. 'He exhibited a number of characteristics, and fitted a profile, which the defendant knew or ought to have known represented a heightened risk of suicide.' He continued: 'Generally, there was a serious delay of, in the end, nearly 11 hours, during which little if any effective action was taken. 'The defendant's action was in all respects slow, and strikingly casual, given the scale of the vulnerabilities and risks being reported. 'Had there been a reasonable response, there was a real prospect of a different outcome.' Mr Pulman told Jason's inquest that he made more than 100 calls to organisations, including train operators, hospitals and hostels after Jason went missing, to circulate his details and images. But many organisations would not take the information as he was not a police officer, and it took more than an hour for a hospital to agree to take Jason's description. HE told PA the system used is 'not good enough for people with mental health conditions' as it is 'too black and white'. Mrs Pulman, 39, said that changing how police respond to missing person reports would be an indicator of learning, as missing teenagers currently 'fall through the cracks' and reports are perceived as 'flippant'. She said: 'The beginning of the process is where it all went wrong.' She continued: 'If they are not admitting to the failings that happened for Jason, then they're admitting that there is nothing wrong with their system, which isn't the case.' She added: 'Kids Jason's age have so many markers of worry and stuff they are going through, which systems made all those years ago cannot cater for.' Following Jason's inquest, Sussex Police said it had introduced contingency measures for checking reports are resourced and graded appropriately. It also said that a multi-agency group had been launched to 'put measures in place to ensure vulnerable children with complex mental health needs'. In response to the High Court claim, a spokesperson said: 'Our sincere condolences remain with Jason's family following their tragic loss; however, we are unable to comment further whilst legal proceedings are ongoing.'


Daily Mail
20 hours ago
- Daily Mail
How a three-star migrant hotel in Barbican became a living nightmare for locals: Blazing mattresses and a TV hurled from windows... and no fewer than 41 'guests' charged with 90 offences ranging from rape to sexual assault, robbery and bag snatching
Woken by police to be told that his car had been damaged, Ufuoma Odoh wasn't prepared for the scene that confronted him. The Volvo XC40, parked on the street around the corner from his London flat, was missing its rear windscreen – smashed by a television hurled out of the window of a nearby hotel room. In the past, such loutish antics were the preserve of rich, drug-addled rock stars. Today, it's just part of the day-to-day reality of living alongside one of the many hotels now given over to asylum seekers. Because, as 49-year-old Mr Odoh discovered, the free board and lodging laid on courtesy of the British taxpayer is absolutely no guarantee of good behaviour. 'At first, police searched the first two floors of the hotel, discovered no TVs were missing, and closed the case,' the council worker explained of the incident last month. 'Then the manager found a TV missing on the fourth floor and called the police, who arrested the person who did it. They took him to the police station and questioned him, but they claimed there was not enough proof as nobody had seen him throw the TV out of the window. I said, 'But the manager told you he did it. Is that not enough?' They insisted it wasn't.' When Mr Odoh complained to the Home Office about what had happened, he was told that he should take the matter up with his insurers. Rather than make a claim and push up his premiums, he has now shelled out £750 of his own money to make good the damage. And Mr Odoh is far from alone in counting the cost – financial, emotional and more – of living next to migrant lodgings. Last weekend, The Mail on Sunday revealed the shocking scale of serious crime committed by asylum seekers living in hotels in communities across Britain. An audit of court records found that of occupants at 70 hotels – just a third of those used – a remarkable 312 had been charged with 708 criminal offences. Most shocking of all was the finding that one hotel alone – the three-star Thistle City Barbican in London – had seen 41 migrants listed at the address charged with more than 90 offences in the past year alone. Today, a closer analysis of those crimes paints a worrying picture of the real-life impact of placing asylum seekers – including those who have crossed the Channel in small boats – in the heart of towns and cities. Charges brought include rape, arson, sexual assault, affray, actual bodily harm, strangulation, robbery, theft and shoplifting. Knife crime and drink and drug offences are commonplace, as are attacks on police officers going about their duties. Those accused of the crimes are all men, with the vast majority aged in their 20s and 30s. Many of those convicted are dealt with by means of suspended or community sentences. In a number of cases warrants have been issued for arrest after defendants failed to attend court hearings. Financial penalties and costs were also often waived because the defendants were found to have 'no means'. Given that the London hotel has recently also been identified as a hub for illegal working, some will regard that as a particular irony. Only last month, pictures emerged of migrants, who are not permitted to work, riding off in Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats jackets to deliver food, while electric bikes were seen outside. And, of course, as Mr Odoh, who lives near the hotel, discovered, the records only show offences that come to court. This week those who reside and work near the property told how day-to-day life in the area has been blighted by constant disturbances and antisocial behaviour. 'This area is very, very dangerous,' said Bledar Qirjo, who runs the Greek Grill Point restaurant. 'My customers won't come after 9pm because they feel scared. They see people standing outside the hotel smoking, screaming, hanging around this place. 'They come inside and order me to bring them what they want and demand a discount. Sometimes they leave £1. Sometimes they just take it. What can I do in front of my customers? I cannot run after them.' Other residents told of police being called around the clock and of seeing items including burning mattresses thrown out of the hotel's windows. The threat of harassment by groups of men was a repeated concern. At the Corner Bar in the nearby King Square estate, the landlady recalled how two weeks ago two young women sought refuge in her premises to get away from residents of the hotel, who were filming them on a camera. 'We have been over to the hotel loads of time,' the woman, who asked not to be named, said. 'They say, 'Once they are off the premises, we don't care.' They hang around the square, drinking all day. Kids are scared to walk about on their own.' The latest revelations come amid Britain's worsening small-boats crisis, as well as fast-rising tension in communities that are home to migrant hotels. Protests in Epping, Essex, first began outside the Bell Hotel nearly two weeks ago, after 38-year-old Ethiopian asylum seeker Hadush Kebatu was accused of sexually assaulting a schoolgirl within days of arriving in the UK on a small boat. He denies the charges. Dozens of anti-migrant protesters then descended on another hotel in Canary Wharf after false rumours were circulated that it was being used to house those relocated from the Bell. After last summer's race riots, there are fears in government that the protests may spread further. Currently, 32,000 asylum seekers are housed in hotels at a cost of £3 billion per year. The 460-room Thistle City Barbican opened its doors to migrants in November 2021, having signed an 'exclusive use contract' with the Government. Accounts show that the deal has brought in more than £10 million a year for the hotel, which is part of the Clermont Hotel Group. Yesterday, a spokesperson said they were unable to comment on the goings-on at the property because it 'operates under a private booking'. When it used to cater for paying customers, much was made of its location – the property is situated in upmarket Islington and is close to the Barbican Centre, the Museum of London and the City. But nowadays, its proximity to popular and wealthy areas of the capital has facilitated activities other than sightseeing – something that the case of Algerian asylum seeker Hocine Bougueroua exemplifies with depressing clarity. Precisely when the 34-year-old arrived in the UK is unclear, but by last November he was living in the hotel and taking advantage of its location to pursue a life of crime. CCTV footage captured him 'at work' at a city centre pub: bearded, burly and dressed in a cap and puffa jacket, he could be seen swigging his drink and waiting for an opportunity to steal a bag that its owner had briefly left on the floor by the bar. Checking the coast was clear, he then picked up the bag – which appears to contain a laptop – and hurriedly left the premises. All in a matter of seconds. It was clearly a well-worked routine and one that earlier this year brought him to the attention of City of London police. Having linked a number of his crimes, they first arrested Bougueroua in January, when he was charged and then bailed by the court. Undeterred, he carried on stealing bags until he was arrested a second time a month later, when he was held on remand. Venues targeted included The Jugged Hare, half a mile from the hotel, The Lord Raglan and the Barbican Centre – both a mile away. The total value of items stolen came to more than £10,000. He was also caught using stolen credit cards and in possession of crack cocaine, cocaine and diazepam. He pleaded guilty to a string of offences and in May was sentenced to 24 weeks' imprisonment. Under current rules that see sentences served dramatically reduced, and taking into account time spent on remand, Bougueroua will by now have been released from prison. Only sentences of 12 months or more trigger automatic deportation for foreign nationals, meaning by now he will be free to pursue his asylum claim – and get back to stealing bags in pubs. A Home Office spokesperson said: 'While it remains our long-standing policy not to comment on individual cases, we are determined to take swift and decisive action to remove failed asylum seekers, foreign national offenders, and other immigration offenders. In this Government's first year in office, over 35,000 such individuals have been returned, including 5,179 foreign criminals, an increase of 14 per cent compared to the previous year.' Records of other offences linked to migrants at the hotel give a flavour of the disorder they have brought to the area. Particularly galling is the extent of damage inflicted on the property itself – damage that taxpayers will ultimately have to pay for – resulting from numerous cases of criminal damage, arson with intent to danger life and assault. Meanwhile, two men at the hotel have been charged with serious sexual offences, including a 29-year-old who was accused last autumn of sexually assaulting a woman on a train and then attacking two police officers. In a separate case, a 47-year-old was charged with sexual assault and the oral and anal rape of a man. Both cases were sent to the Crown Court and are understood to be proceeding. Another man was charged with harassment and the 'intentional strangulation' of a woman. There have also been a number of incidents involved the assault of police officers – male and female. Hamza Selha, 37, admitted assaulting two police officers last November, damaging a police cell, racially or religiously aggravated assault and criminal damage. He was given a community order and ordered to do 200 hours unpaid work and to abstain from alcohol for 120 days. Then there have been thefts, burglaries and robberies, including two shoplifters at Selfridges, in Oxford Street, earlier this year and another who stole £590 worth of goods from Tesco. The youngest of those to face criminal charges is aged just 18. In April, the teenager was accused of stealing more than £40,000 in cash from a business premises in south-west London, having robbed a man of the keys. It is hardly surprising that businesses and residents alike have been badly affected by the hotel's change of use. One cafe owner, who asked not to be identified, said: 'I'm paying tax, my rent is £30,000 a year but the customers are not coming because of the hotel for the refugees. Before, when this was a normal hotel, I had too many customers. Now, my business is going downhill. The people are always making trouble and people don't want to walk down here. They are always sitting, eating, drinking and smoking outside the hotel and they throw everything on the road. I'm constantly cleaning outside my shop, every day.' Speaking from her flat opposite the hotel, hospitality worker Skye Jones, 24, told how she was often subjected to unwanted attention from men hanging around the hotel. She said: 'I have experienced it in the morning. They will congregate around outside. It's not ideal. It makes you feel unsafe. The police are always here. 'My flatmates have said they feel very uncomfortable walking back home past the hotel. The main thing for me is the safety aspect. It's just not safe.' Mum-of-three Emma Andrews, 37, agreed, saying she would regularly see men from the hotel 'sit and ogle all the young girls' playing in the park. She said: 'Another mum and I had to call the police the other day as a guy was walking around off his face. He kept trying to approach a mum in the park. They are approaching people all the time. I won't walk the dog here any more.' As for local resident Nikki Bulley, she won't let her two boys – aged three and five – play in the park without being part of a large group. 'On the day of the King's Coronation, I had a christening for my son,' said the 33-year-old. 'And someone threw a lit mattress out of a window at the hotel. We had the fire brigade here and lots of drama. I had family come from all over for the day and they probably thought 'Where does she live?'. The hotel needs to be shut down.' A simple enough plea. But, given the state of Britain's borders and the Labour Government's stalling attempts to control them, one that looks unlikely to be resolved any time soon.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Famous missing person 'found alive' after cops discover woman with amnesia... but now they've lost her AGAIN
Virginia police believe they have finally found a woman who has been missing for over a decade - but the person they think is her has disappeared again. Kathryn Bene Griffin was 43 years old when she went missing from Portsmouth, Virginia, on January 7, 2012. She was last seen by a family member at the barbershop she worked. Police said she left work on a brown bicycle and was wearing blue jeans, a plaid jacket and a black smock. While Griffin's family continues to search for the now 57-year-old woman, Portsmouth police have revealed she may be a 'living Jane Doe' authorities found in Wayne County, Michigan. The woman, who was going by the name ' China Black' in 2018, lived in an adult foster home at the time as she needed help with amnesia and couldn't remember her true identity. Black, who had also gone by the names Joynez Johnson and CJ Jones, was a double amputee and was also missing her left pinky finger. She said she lost her memory in 2014 when was hit by a drunk driver after leaving a McDonald's on Woodward Avenue near Wayne State University. 'It's frustrating that you wake up in the hospital and you don't know who you is,' Black told news station Local 4 in 2018. She had been taken in by the Beyond Boundaries adult foster care home and had lived there for at least four years at the time of the interview. Now, Portsmouth Police believe Black may actually be Griffin, but they have been unable to locate her. Cops reportedly made the connection after an unidentified person saw pictures of Griffin and Black on social media and sent in a tip to the police department. Authorities believe Black is still in the Wayne County area and are hoping to collect a DNA sample from her in order to compare it to Griffin's mother's DNA. 'I work lots of unidentified remains cases. This is my first living Jane Doe,' Michigan State Police Detective Sgt. Sarah Krebs said. 'I feel really badly for her. I feel like there's got to be someone out there who knows exactly who she is and we've just got to give her her name back.' In 2023, Griffin's mother, Linda Archie, spoke out about her daughter's disappearance. 'It's been a long, agonizing 11 years. I'm hoping that somebody, now, will come forward with more information,' Archie told WAVY. 'I'm getting older now and I would like to know where my child is.' Archie told The Virginian-Pilot at the time that Griffin is a mother of three. She said that she hopes the family can be reunited. 'She's a granddaughter, she's a mother, she's a sister, she's a cousin. And she is loved,' Archie said. 'She is missed. And we would really so much like to know where she is. If anything has happened to her, what? And who?'