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Conwy: Police search for owners as two dogs found in stolen car

Conwy: Police search for owners as two dogs found in stolen car

BBC News04-06-2025
Police are looking for the owners of two dogs that were found in a car believed to be stolen.The driver was arrested on suspicion of drug driving, theft and motor vehicle theft on the A55 near Colwyn Bay in Conwy, North Wales Police said.The pets were taken back to police headquarters before being collected by the kennels.Officers said they were working to identify the owners."The male driver was not able to give a proper account for the dogs so he was also arrested on suspicion of theft," police said."The dogs are currently being looked after by the team in our office in headquarters while we wait for them to be collected by our colleagues in the kennels."
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There is no situation where an intervention by Nigel Farage won't make things worse. He has, after all, made a career out of detecting, exploiting and exacerbating people's grievances and fears, a grim cycle that has delivered electoral success. The man is gifted in his insidious trade, if nothing else. Nowhere is this strategy more dangerously deployed than in issues of migration, race and crime, so often shamelessly conflated by the Reform UK leader with a studied and long-experienced hand. It is done almost instinctively. Once, he even blamed being late for a 'meet-the-Ukip leader' event in Wales on traffic jams on the M4 caused by immigration, rather than, say, the infamous bottleneck at Newport. Rather more grievously, his actions in the aftermath of the horrific Southport murders a year ago did nothing to calm tempers and stop the wild social media speculation that the person responsible was a Muslim asylum seeker who'd more or less just arrived in Britain, via a small boat. He plainly has no regrets and is approaching the disclosure of details concerning the rape of a 12-year-old girl in Nuneaton in the same reckless manner. He and his Reform UK colleagues on Warwickshire County Council are demanding, as Mr Farage did last year, that the immigration status of those involved be released by the police. The justification, once again, is that there is a 'cover-up' – a serious allegation made without foundation – and people are being denied the truth, presumably through some sense of misguided political correctness. Mr Farage implies, as he did last year, that this 'cover-up' – which he presumably sees as a deliberate attempt to deceive the public – only serves to create confusion and inflame feelings. 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If he cares about the cohesion of communities and the rule of law as deeply as he claims, Mr Farage should do his bit to keep the peace as well.

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