Friday, October 31, 2014

Environmental health officers find filthy conditions at Redcar takeway 'Mario's'


A takeaway boss has been ordered to pay £1,800 after environmental health officers found filthy conditions in his kitchen and food storage equipment by a toilet.


Mohammed El Sayed admitted seven offences under the Food Hygiene Regulations concerning his former business, Mario’s in Redcar High Street.


The 35-year-old appeared at Teesside Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday following an investigation by Redcar and Cleveland Council.


Janine Morgan, who prosecuted the case for the council, told magistrates that officers used emergency powers to close the business and protect the public.


She said that during an inspection on January 13 last year, environmental health officers found a pizza tray stand stored next to a toilet.


Pizza ovens, fryers and a kebab spit were filthy, food was being stored on the floor and there was no soap for employees to wash their hands or disinfectant materials present, she said.


El Sayed admitted: failing to keep the premises and equipment clean and in good repair; failing to protect food from contamination risks; failing to effectively train food handlers; failing to maintain adequate personal hygiene standards; and having no food safety management procedures in place.


In mitigation the court heard that El Sayed, of Breckon Road, Middlesbrough, was struggling financially and earned very little but he accepted responsibility for the offences.


Taking his circumstances into consideration he was fined £160 for each offence, and was also told to pay £600 towards the council’s costs and a £20 victim surcharge.


Mario’s closed permanently in June 2013 and it is understood that the shop is being refurbished for new tenants.


Speaking after the hearing Steve Goldswain, the council’s Cabinet member for community safety, said: “This case underlines how seriously we take any flouting of food hygiene laws. The health of the public is always of paramount importance and any establishments operating in unclean environments will be dealt with effectively.


“Our officers will continue to do all they can to protect public health when visiting and inspecting food premises.”



Man was left with fractured jaw after early hours Stockton attack


A MAN was left with a fractured jaw after he was viciously punched and kicked after a night out in Stockton.


Dean Mortimer, 20, had been speaking to his victim outside the Wobbly Goblin pub in Stockton town centre - before being invited to the nearby casino on Chandlers Wharf Bridge Road in the early hours of May 4 this year.


Outside the casino, Mortimer was caught on CCTV punching his victim in the face, and repeatedly punching him while he was on the floor, Teesside Crown Court heard.


Mortimer kicked him “two or three times” to the head and chest, before being dragged away by friends - only to return to his victim, who had staggered to his feet, and deliver another knockout blow.


Prosecutor Emma Atkinson said: “The victim had taken his wallet out of his pocket to find his key - a group of men, including the defendant, commented on the amount of money he had.


“The victim had about seven or eight pints of beer and described himself as drunk. He said he was going to the casino and invited the group to go with him.”


Miss Atkinson told the court that in the casino car park, another man patted the victim’s pocket, before he felt a blow to the left side of his head and fell to the floor.


“He saw the defendant running at him and he began kicking him and punching him. He believes he may have lost consciousness,” continued Miss Atkinson.


“He then managed to stagger to his feet when others dragged the defendant away. But he returned and punched the victim again and knocked him to the floor.”


A victim impact statement read to the court heard that the victim had needed a metal plate inserted in his fractured jaw, and has had ongoing dental problems.


He is also suffering from anxiety and stress, is frightened to leave the house, and has lost money because he has had to go on sick leave.


Mortimer, of Albert Road, Fairfield, Stockton, had pleaded guilty to one count of inflicting Grievous Bodily Harm.


He had previous offences for battery in 2012 - involving kicking at a woman’s head, spitting on a woman, and pushing a woman against a wall.


Mitigating, Graham Silvester told the court that Mortimer had told police he was acting in self defence - and that he had been intimidated by the victim because he was bigger than him.


That was rejected by Judge Howard Crowson, who saw CCTV footage which showed Mortimer was the larger man.


Mr Silvester said: “He accepts that he went over the top. He says he was intimidated, but accepts that he struck first and that the victim had not put up his hands to fight.


“He does feel remorse for what he has done. He said he wishes it had never happened.”


Sentencing Mortimer to 20 months imprisonment, Judge Crowson said: “You do have a history which suggests you lose you temper.


“The film showed you are a bigger man than him. You persisted in beating him even after you had been pulled away by your friends.


“It is important that people in the wider community know that these crimes end up with prison.”



Thursday, October 30, 2014

Halloween 2014 events: Find a spooky night out in Teesside


It's the spookiest time of the year, and there's a scary amount going on for Halloween across Teesside.


We've looked at the best days - and nights - planned for October 31, with everything from a tribute to the Rocky Horror Picture Show to terrifying woodland walks.


So whether it's something for the kids to enjoy, some highbrow theatre on the big screen or just the chance to dance the night away, there's an event for everyone this Halloween.


Some of our best-known parks and beauty spots are being transformed, while Middlesbrough's most popular clubs are also joining in the fun.


Search the map below for our pick of the best ways to spend your Halloween, if you're on mobile you can load it directly in Google Maps.


Head to the Gazette's Facebook page to share your days and nights out with our readers or see more events happening on Friday 31 October in Teesside.



No action taken following arrest over fake jobs at Yarm pub


An investigation into reports of a fraudster offering jobseekers fake jobs at a Yarm pub has been closed, police said.


Around 10 potential victims of a scam came forward after applying for apparently non-existent bar jobs advertised for the Union Arms, on Yarm High Street.


The pub had no connection to the job adverts, which were placed in Middlesbrough JobCentre in September last year.


A number of job hunters spoke to the Gazette and the police after applying for the jobs and subsequently discovering they were not real vacancies, fearing they had handed over their personal details to a scammer looking to commit identity theft.


Cleveland Police investigated the claims but say the probe has now come to an end.


One of those who came forward was 27-year-old Stephen Grafton, of Middlesbrough, who said at the time he was “disgusted” to discover the job he was so pleased to be offered did not exist.


Stephen, who is now in a full-time job, said: “When it all happened and I went to the JobCentre in Middlesbrough. They told me it had been passed over to the police by them and I should go to the station to report it myself.


“I went, and a few days later I received a voicemail from the police fraud department saying it was being investigated and someone had been arrested.


“It’s a shame to hear it has been dropped.


“I suspect no fraudulent crime was committed as he was caught before any damage could be done to us.”


A 29-year-old man from the Middlesbrough area was arrested on suspicion of fraud before being bailed pending further enquiries. He was later released without charge.


A Cleveland Police spokeswoman said: “An investigation was undertaken and a man was arrested in connection with the incidents.


“The evidence was presented to the Crown Prosecution Service and it was decided that the man should be released without charge.”



Vaccum cleaner thief and street attacker Robert Wright avoids jail


A street attacker and vacuum cleaner thief has avoided a jail term again - despite spending time allowed to prove he could keep out of trouble behind bars.


Judge Michael Taylor gave Robert Wright six months to keep his nose clean when he appeared at Teesside Crown Court in April, deferring his sentence for stealing the appliance and repeatedly punching a man in the street until yesterday.


Wright had admitted the theft and assault and despite 62 previous offences including robbery and dishonesty, Judge Taylor told him: “If you keep out of trouble and hold down a job I’ll not send you to prison”.


But Wright, 32, has since spent “more time in custody than on the streets” and the court heard he was due to stand trial for burglary earlier this week.


The prosecution in the burglary trial offered no evidence, with the charges against him dropped. However, he was sentenced to 14 days jail for obstructing a police officer.


Mr Rod Hunt, defending Wright, said his period of deferment had been spent in custody and requested a short sentence “to see if that will give him some self-discipline”.


Sentencing him to six months in prison, suspended for 18 months with supervision and £80 costs, Judge Taylor said: “I maintain the view I expressed on the last occasion. There must come a time in your life when you turn the corner.”



Man who sent 32 intimidating messages to witness is spared jail


A MAN who sent intimidating text messages to a witness in a court case against him has escaped jail.


Michael Brown, 43, was charged with racially aggravated use of threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour after an incident of public disorder at Sainsbury’s, on Bankfields Road, Eston.


He knew a witness who worked at the store, and sent her a total of 32 messages in April this year, calling her a “grass” and threatening her, Teesside Crown Court was told.


Brown, of Barley Hill Close, Eston, had already been given a community order at Teesside Magistrates Court for the racially aggravated offence - and appeared at court to be sentenced for intimidation on Thursday, after Judge Michael Taylor had deferred sentencing in August.


Judge Taylor had told him on that occasion that he would either give him community work or “send him to prison”.


Mitigating for Brown, who had admitted intimidation, Zoe Passfield told the court that since the last hearing he had found work as a labourer.


He had also worked closely with the probation service to deal with his drinking.


And the court had received a note from his victim, which said she had known him for a few years and understood he had a problem with alcohol.


It read: “He’s not a bad lad. I don’t want him going to jail. He’s probably learned his lesson by now.”


Judge Taylor said: “Witness intimidation is a very serious matter, and this is something that crosses the custody threshold.


“However, the Magistrates Court, in their wisdom, have already sentenced you for the racially aggravated offence and sent you to Crown Court to be sentenced for intimidation.


“You could have gone to prison, but I have heard that you have now found work and that you are looking to deal with your drinking. In this case, I can suspend your sentence.”


He gave Brown a six month jail term, suspended for 12 months.



Muggers steal boys' bikes in Stockton park


TWO teenage boys were mugged in a Stockton park and had their bikes stolen.


The boys, aged 13 and 14, were in Newham Grange Park yesterday at about 7.05pm when they were approached by three males and threatened.


The offenders left the park heading towards the A1027 with the two bicycles.


They are described as being in their late teens, wearing dark sports clothing. One was wearing a blue Adidas hooded top.


Police are appealing for any information or witnesses to the incident to contact DC Christopher Pringle at Stockton CID via the non-emergency 101 number.



Compensation on way for hundreds of Redcar savers despite collapse of local credit union


Compensation worth £200,000 is on the way for hundreds of Redcar savers despite the collapse of a local credit union.


Payments have now been made to more than 800 members of Redcar and Cleveland Money Tree and Glen Credit Union (Redcar & Cleveland CU), said the Financial Services Compensation Scheme.


As reported, more than 800 members had around £200,000 with the credit union but their money was protected by the FSCS.


The payments were in the post just days after the Redcar-based credit union was wound up on Friday.


People with up to £1,000 will receive a letter to get cash over the counter at their Post Office while anyone with more than £1,000 will get a cheque.


The FSCS had promised to pay back members within a week.


Mark Oakes, head of communications, said: “FSCS protects people when authorised financial services firms go bust. So I’m pleased to confirm FSCS payments have now been made to members of Redcar & Cleveland Credit Union. It is good news for those members.”


FSCS protects savings up to £85,000, which covers 98% of people in the UK with bank, building society or credit union accounts.


Since 2001, FSCS has protected more than 4.5m people and paid out more than £26bn.



Teen remanded in custody over charges relating to Hemlington crash in which dad Andrew Corfield died


A man has has been remanded in custody after being charged with causing death by dangerous driving following a crash in Middlesbrough in which dad-of-three Andrew Corfield died.


Jake McCabe, 18, of Cramlington Close, Hemlington, appeared at Teesside Magistrates’ Court today on six charges, including causing death by dangerous driving, causing serious injury through dangerous driving and aggravated vehicle taking.


Other charges were driving without an appropriate licence, using a vehicle without insurance and failing to report an accident.


Floral tributes laid at the scene of a serious road crash in Hemlington VIEW GALLERY


The dad-of-one spoke only to confirm his name, address and date of birth.


Alice Corfield, 17, from Hemlington, who was a passenger in Mr Corfield’s car remains critical but stable in James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough.


Police, ambulance and fire crews were called to a two-vehicle crash involving a silver Ford Fiesta and a silver Hyundai Santa Fe on Cass House Road near the junction with Fordyce Road at 7.30pm on Tuesday.


McCabe was remanded in custody to appear at Teesside Crown Court on Thursday, November 13.



Woman hit by bus in Stockton town centre remains in critical but stable condition in hospital


A WOMAN hit by a bus in Stockton town centre remains in a critical but stable condition in hospital.


Hannah Baxter, 32, from Thornaby, was hit by the bus at Maxwell’s Corner, in Stockton town centre, on October 21.


A spokeswoman for Cleveland Police said she is in a critcal but stable condition at Newcastle’s Freeman Hospital.


It was the second time in just over a month that a pedestrian was involved in a collision with a bus on the high street.


“Bubbly and loving” Kelly Marie Evis, 28, died in hospital 15 days after being hit by a bus on Stockton high street on Monday, September 15.


Cleveland Police, the Great North Air Ambulance and the North East Ambulance Service attended the scene of Tuesday’s incident.


Crews from Stockton Fire Station were also called but were stood down on their arrival.


Police are still appealing for witnesses to contact PC Martin Tramner, of the Cleveland and Durham Specialist Operations Unit, on 101 quoting incident CVP-14-185761



Work on schemes costing £1m set to begin after 49-strong list of projects in Redcar and Cleveland approved


Work on schemes costing £1m is set to begin after a 49-strong list of projects in Redcar and Cleveland was approved.


In January, the borough council earmarked £2m to be spent on “public realm” improvements.


After workshops and consultations were held, lists of projects - ranging from short-term, high priority schemes to longer term proposals - were drawn up.


And now the council’s Cabinet has recommended work starts on phase one of the programme - 49 schemes costing a total of just over £1m, ranging in scale from tree planting and extra waste bins to the largest individual amount, £100,000 on new shelters for Saltburn Promenade to replace ones swept away by the December 2013 tidal surge.


In Redcar, the list includes £65,000 of new paving in Station Road, fencing for the Locke Park tennis and basketball courts (£20,000) and improvements to the High Street pedestrianised area, including new street furniture, a loudspeaker and electronic information boards (£30,000).


Smaller scale projects across the borough include tree planting, lighting, fencing, street furniture installation, path and road resurfacing, new residents’ car parking bays, playing field improvements and landscaping schemes. Speed reduction schemes are proposed for the western end of Broadway, Dormanstown but they may be grant funded.


The wards set to benefit are Coatham, Loftus, Dormanstown, Kirkleatham, Longbeck, Newcomen, St Germains, West Dyke, Zetland, Eston, Grangetown, Normanby, Ormesby, South Bank, Brotton, Guisborough, Hutton, Lockwood, Saltburn and Skelton.


A report to the Cabinet said 452 possible projects were originally identified but would have cost £14.2m - “way beyond the current committed budget of £2m.” It added: “It is proposed to deliver as many of the 49 projects, estimated at a cost of just over £1m, as funding availability and procurement procedures allow. It is then proposed that further consultation takes place with members to set the priorities for the remaining projects from the medium, long and further investigation categories, over the next nine months, which will then make up phase two of the programme.”


Councillor Helen McLuckie, Cabinet member for highways, planning and transport, said the list was a “working document” that could be subject to change “depending on circumstances and deliverability.”


She added: “Delivering schemes like this is not an exact science.”


Council deputy leader, Councillor Sheelagh Clarke, said: “It’s excellent that we are doing so much to upgrade the borough.”



South Bank house went under the hammer for £1... but sold for quite a bit more


The front of the house VIEW GALLERY


A South Bank house which went under the hammer for £1 eventually sold for quite a bit more.


When Gazette photographer Katie Lunn arrived, she had to step carefully over missing floorboards to photograph the interior of the three-bedroom mid-terrace.


Even so, the property on South Terrace, which was set to go under the hammer for just £1 with Agents Property Auction (APA) eventually sold for £19,125.


Speaking about the property, APA’s principal auctioneer Richard Francis said, “it needs work, but it has so much potential”.


The home was described as having a spacious entrance hall, living room, kitchen and bathroom/WC to the ground floor, along with three good sized bedrooms to the first floor.


The auctioneer’s website said the house could appeal to the property developer and buy-to-let investor.


Once refurbished, they estimate the house could generate a monthly income in the region of £340–370 (£4,440 per year).


Ahead of yesterday’s auction, Mr Francis said there was a chance someone could pick up a real bargain.


“A starting price of just £1 is fantastic for a property like this,” the auctioneer said.


“We are anticipating a lot of interest in this property and we eagerly await the outcome of the auction.”


The auction took place at the Marriot Hotel, Gosforth Park, Newcastle-upon-Tyne.


Bidders, both at the hotel and over the phone, showed great interest in the cut price home.


Eventually the sale went to an unnamed telephone bidder for £19,124 above the starting bid.



Spurs loan star Milos Veljkovic could make Boro debut at Rotherham


Aitor Karanka has revealed he is planning to unleash Serbian new boy Milos Veljkovic.


After three games on the bench the on-loan Spurs man could get some pitch time at Rotherham on Saturday.


The highly-rated Serbian Under-21 central defender or holding midfielder, 19, joined the club a fortnight ago, initially until January.


He was an unused substitute at Brighton, Wolves and then Watford last weekend but could soon make his Boro debut.


“I hope I can give him a chance soon,” said Karanka. “Milos is a young lad and he is training very well with us but it is difficult when you arrive in a team where all the players are playing well.


“It is hard to give him an opportunity when that is the case but I told him if he keeps working in the same way the chances will appear for him.”


Veljkovic has featured twice as a sub in the Premier League for Spurs and also twice in the Europa League this term.


“So he is capable of playing in this team,” said Karanka. “I said to him that Ryan (Fredericks) and Ken (Omeruo) are good examples for him.


“Both didn’t play at the beginning and when they got their chances they took them and kept playing in the first 11.


“Milos knows this and he’s training well. He’s ready.”



Coroner tells grieving dad of Billingham man struck by car in Dubai: 'No words of mine can give you any comfort'


A coroner yesterday thanked a grieving father for his dignity following the death of his son.


After ruling on the death of popular Billingham man Gavin Duffy, acting Teesside assistant coroner Malcolm Donnelly told his dad Mike: “No words of mine can give you any comfort.”


Quantity surveyor Gavin, 29, died after being struck by a car in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) city in the early hours November 23 last year.


An inquest heard how, due to the limited evidence made available to the British Embassy, some questions would remain unanswered.


Addressing Mr Duffy’s father, Mike, Mr Donnelly said: “When people die abroad it is complicated because my jurisdiction only extends to the United Kingdom.


“Mr Duffy had been out for a meal and as he got out of a taxi he has been struck by a motor vehicle.


“I don’t have the power to check these details in any way, such as imposing sanctions; it’s outside my jurisdiction”


Mr Donnelly described how following the incident, a 31-year-old Brazilian driver had been imprisoned for four months and had been told to pay 200,000 United Arab Emirates dirham (£33,760) in blood money to Mr Duffy’s family.


The inquest heard how a post-mortem examination was carried out in Dubai which found that Mr Duffy had died from “multiple injuries”.


However, due to the embalming process carried out on Mr Duffy’s body in the UAE, a British forensic pathologist was unable to establish some details after Mr Duffy’s body was repatriated to the UK.


Mr Donnelly said: “When your son was returned, there had been a post-mortem carried out in Dubai. A separate forensic post-mortem was carried out here by Dr Jennifer Ruth Bolton at the RVI in Newcastle.


“The post-mortem was complicated because your son had been embalmed as can happen when people die abroad.”


Mr Donnelly told the inquest that Dr Bolton was therefore unable to be sure if ethanol found in Mr Duffy’s system had been a result of the embalming process. Therefore Mr Donnelly said the ethanol found in Mr Duffy had, “no evidential value”.


Reading from the British post-mortem, Mr Donnelly said Mr Duffy had suffered injuries “consistent with having been caused by a road traffic incident”.


He continued: “It is likely that Mr Duffy was instantly unconscious with death a short time afterwards.”


In his closing remarks, Mr Donnelly said: “In so far as our being able to ascertain what happened, we’re dependent on the information provided by the embassy.


“It is an unusual conclusion that reflects what we know .


“What I want to be careful of is to record a conclusion that does not reflect badly on Gavin.


“Accidental death possibly implies that Gavin was putting himself in a situation that was a risk but there’s no evidence of that.


“The conclusion I’m going to reach today is that he died as a result of injuries consistent with having been struck by a motor vehicle.”


Addressing Mr Duffy’s father, Mr Donnelly said: “That is of no comfort to you, sir, and I do not pretend for a moment that it is. No words of mine can give you any comfort.


“It must be astonishingly difficult for you, I thank you for your dignity.”


Speaking shortly afterwards, Mr Duffy’s father spoke briefly and said: “The people of Teesside have been wonderful and that has kept us going.”



Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Thursday 30th October, 2014.


You can contribute to the live blog by posting your comment below, and you can also tweet us @EveningGazette to share breaking news stories, pictures and opinions.


Our Teesside breaking news live blog begins at 07:00am every weekday and is updated throughout the day and into the evening.



Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Billingham man died after being struck by a motor vehicle while in Dubai an inquest has heard


A coroner yesterday thanked a grieving father for his dignity following the death of his son.


After ruling on the death of popular Billingham man Gavin Duffy, acting Teesside assistant coroner Malcolm Donnelly told his dad Mike: “No words of mine can give you any comfort.”


Quantity surveyor Gavin, 29, died after being struck by a car in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) city in the early hours November 23 last year.


An inquest heard how, due to the limited evidence made available to the British Embassy, some questions would remain unanswered.


Addressing Mr Duffy’s father, Mike, Mr Donnelly said: “When people die abroad it is complicated because my jurisdiction only extends to the United Kingdom.


“Mr Duffy had been out for a meal and as he got out of a taxi he has been struck by a motor vehicle.


“I don’t have the power to check these details in any way, such as imposing sanctions; it’s outside my jurisdiction”


Mr Donnelly described how following the incident, a 31-year-old Brazilian driver had been imprisoned for four months and had been told to pay 200,000 United Arab Emirates dirham (£33,760) in blood money to Mr Duffy’s family.


The inquest heard how a post-mortem examination was carried out in Dubai which found that Mr Duffy had died from “multiple injuries”.


However, due to the embalming process carried out on Mr Duffy’s body in the UAE, a British forensic pathologist was unable to establish some details after Mr Duffy’s body was repatriated to the UK.


Mr Donnelly said: “When your son was returned, there had been a post-mortem carried out in Dubai. A separate forensic post-mortem was carried out here by Dr Jennifer Ruth Bolton at the RVI in Newcastle.


“The post-mortem was complicated because your son had been embalmed as can happen when people die abroad.”


Mr Donnelly told the inquest that Dr Bolton was therefore unable to be sure if ethanol found in Mr Duffy’s system had been a result of the embalming process. Therefore Mr Donnelly said the ethanol found in Mr Duffy had, “no evidential value”.


Reading from the British post-mortem, Mr Donnelly said Mr Duffy had suffered injuries “consistent with having been caused by a road traffic incident”.


He continued: “It is likely that Mr Duffy was instantly unconscious with death a short time afterwards.”


In his closing remarks, Mr Donnelly said: “In so far as our being able to ascertain what happened, we’re dependent on the information provided by the embassy.


“It is an unusual conclusion that reflects what we know .


“What I want to be careful of is to record a conclusion that does not reflect badly on Gavin.


“Accidental death possibly implies that Gavin was putting himself in a situation that was a risk but there’s no evidence of that.


“The conclusion I’m going to reach today is that he died as a result of injuries consistent with having been struck by a motor vehicle.”


Addressing Mr Duffy’s father, Mr Donnelly said: “That is of no comfort to you, sir, and I do not pretend for a moment that it is. No words of mine can give you any comfort.


“It must be astonishingly difficult for you, I thank you for your dignity.”


Speaking shortly afterwards, Mr Duffy’s father spoke briefly and said: “The people of Teesside have been wonderful and that has kept us going.”



Politics behind socialist clothes bank branded 'shameful' by Stockton's Tory MP James Wharton


Stockton’s Tory MP James Wharton has become embroiled in a row with organisers of a clothes bank - outside his constituency.


Mr Wharton, MP for Stockton South, said there was “more than a hint of party politics” about the launch of the County Durham Socialist Clothes Bank “six months before an election”.


“This is as much about making statements about politics as it is about doing good things,” he told a local TV news station.


“I welcome one, I’m not convinced about the other.”


But his comments have landed him in trouble with the Durham Unite Community, whose members coordinate the clothes bank.


Unite Community is a non-industrial section of the Unite union “created to empower people outside the labour market to use the trade union values of solidarity and collective action to improve their own and others’ situations”.


Members said Mr Wharton had “shamed himself” with his comments.


Said a spokesperson: “To seek to undermine the huge amount of voluntary effort spent by our members getting the clothes bank up and running in order to score cheap political points is unacceptable.


“Helping out fellow human beings in times of need, as our members are doing through the clothes bank, is something that politicians of all parties should be applauding rather than cynically trying to denigrate their efforts in the way James Wharton MP has done.”


Mr Wharton told the Gazette he did “support all well intended community efforts”, but said he wondered why “they also need to issue highly political press releases to go with them”.


He hit back: “There are six months to go until the election and sadly it appears the unions are going to be fighting a particularly nasty and personal campaign.


“Hijacking good causes to launch their attacks is particularly shameful.


“All I can ask is that if any of the left wing unions issue statements about me which concern or worry anyone in Stockton South then people who read them consider contacting me for the truth before drawing conclusions.”



Socialist clothes bank branded 'shameful' by Stockton's Tory MP James Wharton


Stockton’s Tory MP James Wharton has become embroiled in a row with organisers of a clothes bank - outside his constituency.


Mr Wharton, MP for Stockton South, said there was “more than a hint of party politics” about the launch of the County Durham Socialist Clothes Bank “six months before an election”.


“This is as much about making statements about politics as it is about doing good things,” he told a local TV news station.


“I welcome one, I’m not convinced about the other.”


But his comments have landed him in trouble with the Durham Unite Community, whose members coordinate the clothes bank.


Unite Community is a non-industrial section of the Unite union “created to empower people outside the labour market to use the trade union values of solidarity and collective action to improve their own and others’ situations”.


Members said Mr Wharton had “shamed himself” with his comments.


Said a spokesperson: “To seek to undermine the huge amount of voluntary effort spent by our members getting the clothes bank up and running in order to score cheap political points is unacceptable.


“Helping out fellow human beings in times of need, as our members are doing through the clothes bank, is something that politicians of all parties should be applauding rather than cynically trying to denigrate their efforts in the way James Wharton MP has done.”


Mr Wharton told the Gazette he did “support all well intended community efforts”, but said he wondered why “they also need to issue highly political press releases to go with them”.


He hit back: “There are six months to go until the election and sadly it appears the unions are going to be fighting a particularly nasty and personal campaign.


“Hijacking good causes to launch their attacks is particularly shameful.


“All I can ask is that if any of the left wing unions issue statements about me which concern or worry anyone in Stockton South then people who read them consider contacting me for the truth before drawing conclusions.”



Boosbeck pensioner remains in a critical but stable condition after 'vicious' attack in home


A pensioner remains in a critical but stable condition after a “vicious” attack in East Cleveland.


The man, named locally as 66-year-old Harry Campbell, was found with serious head injuries in his flat in Brookside, Boosbeck, at about 8.50pm on Saturday.


He was taken to James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough.


Two men aged 37 and 40 were arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and have been bailed pending further inquiries.


Police say Mr Campbell, a retired welder, had not been seen since about teatime on Friday.


Four police officers and two police cars remained outside the property near Boosbeck High Street last night.


A police cordon remained in place outside the garden gate of the property.


A man was attacked in Brookside, Boosbeck on Saturday night and is critical in hospital. VIEW GALLERY


A female neighbour, who did not wish to be named, said: “It should not have happened. Harry is an elderly man. It’s very shocking.”


Neighbour Peter Leng, 32, who lives with his mum and dad, said: “My mam actually found him on Saturday night.


“I’ve known Harry for years. Everyone in the block knows Harry. He is all right, he is kind, very kind.


“We normally look after his dogs - he has two greyhounds.


“My mam found him, she was very shocked. We haven’t seen him yet, we’ve been advised by the police not to go and see him.”


Detective Inspector Matt Murphy-King said: “This elderly and vulnerable man has suffered a vicious and sustained attack resulting in life threatening injuries.


“We believe the incident was a targeted attack and would like to reassure the community that such incidents are very rare.


“In response to what has happened we have increased high visibility patrols in the area and we would like to urge any members of the local community who may have information which could assist our investigation to speak to those officers.


“I have a dedicated team of detectives, crime scene investigators and other police resources who are working tirelessly and are determined to bring those responsible to justice.”


Mr Campbell was taken to James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough where his condition was last night described as “critical”.


Police are appealing for anyone who saw anything or anyone suspicious in the Brookside area between Friday teatime and Saturday evening to contact Det Insp Matt Murphy-King on 101 or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.



'I've lost my dad, my role model, my hero': Devastated son in tribute to Hemlington man who died in crash


The son of a Hemlington man who died in a car crash has paid tribute to his “role model and hero”.


Owen Corfield said his dad Andy was the “kindest and most loving man he has ever met”.


Mr Corfield, 39, was driving a Ford Fiesta when it was involved in a serious crash on Cass House Road last night.


A 17-year-old female passenger, thought to be Mr Corfield’s daughter Alice is in a critical condition at Middlesbrough’s James Cook University Hospital.


An 18-year-old local man has been arrested on suspicion of theft of a motor vehicle, causing death by dangerous driving and failing to report the collision. He remains in police custody.


Owen posted an emotional tribute to his dad on Facebook today.


He said “I still can’t get my head round it, I’ve lost my dad, my role model my hero. There’s no words to describe how I’m feeling right now and why this happened to the kindest most loving man I have ever met in my life.


“You were only just saying to me how proud you were of me getting my new job and calling me a “docker mong”. I will always love you, you will never be forgotten.


“Hope you’re having a Jack Daniel’s up there with Jack and the rest of the family lots of love your oldest son Owen.”


Mr Corfield, the creator of Boro Pat - a popular X-rated spoof of Postman Pat, and his wife Lisa lost their third child, Jack to cot death in 1995 aged just five weeks old.


He went on to raise money for charity in memory of his late son.


Mr Corfield, a married dad and grandad, also leaves daughter Amy.


Floral tributes were left at the scene of the crash.


Floral tributes laid at the scene of a serious road crash in Hemlington VIEW GALLERY


One read: “A part of Hemo’s soul died here. What a waste of life.”


Another said: “Your memories will never fade kid.”


One Hemlington resident said: “Everyone was out on the front and saw what happened.


“It was really horrible.


“It looked like the lad was going too fast and as soon as the crash happened, he got out of the car and jumped over a back fence and ran off.


“It is a horrible day for Hemlington.”


Another resident, who said she had lived in Hemlington for more than 40 years, said: “We heard three loud bangs, and came outside. We’re not right next to the road so we didn’t know what had happened at first.


“You see young lads driving up and down here all the time, speeding. But nothing has ever happened like this.”


The accident is the second fatal collision in less than a week in Middlesbrough.


Grandmother-of-seven Linda Warren, 60, was killed in an accident on Saltersgill Avenue last Thursday.


A 19-year-old has been arrested and bailed on suspicion of dangerous driving in connection with the incident.



Families left distraught after thieves steal items from graves at Stockton cemetery


Families have been left distraught after callous thieves stole “sentimenal” items from graves.


Sometime between 7pm on Saturday, October 25, and 10am on Sunday, October 26, a number of items were stolen from three graves at the cemetery on Durham Road, Stockton.


Cleveland Police say three solar fairies, two solar powered black lanterns around 7ins in height and a 2ft silver lantern were stolen.


The fairies are described as around 5ins tall and in various colours of pink, green and blue. The bases are marked with V.Elliott E12.


A force spokeswoman said: “The families have been left distraught as the items are very sentimental.”


Anyone who may have information regarding the thefts or those responsible is asked to contact PC Andrea Lloyd on the non-emergency number 101 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.



Major investigation into how 12-year-old child was left blind after shocking neglect by parents


A major investigation is being held into how a 12-year-old boy was left blind in one eye due to the shocking neglect by his mum and stepdad.


Gillian Hendry and Craig Dick, both 34 and from Thornaby, were jailed last month for the appalling poor care of the boy and his two-year-old sister.


The boy went blind in his left eye from cataracts because they failed to take him for hospital appointments that could have saved his sight.


He also became increasingly crippled with arthritis until doctors called in social services so they could treat him.


A serious case review has now been launched by Stockton-on-Tees Local Safeguarding Children, the body responsible for overseeing child welfare across the borough.


Such investigations are held when a child has died or suffered serious injury where abuse or neglect are known or suspected to have been a factor.


They typically look at the contact the family had with a number of authorities such as social workers, police, school, and health services.


Hendry and Dick were living on benefits in Teesdale Terrace and the conditions of the property were described by police and social workers as dirty and infested with flies with one of the bedrooms having been used as a toilet.


Hendry was jailed for two-and-a-half years and Dick for two years and two months after they pleaded guilty to two charges of child neglect.


The two children have since been rehomed and are “doing well”.


Teesside Crown Court was told that doctors had become concerned and contacted social workers about the about the boy’s welfare after he repeatedly missed appointments.


Officials were stopped from enterting the couple’s Thornaby home in August 2013 and when they later returned with police, found that pair had hurriedly tried to tidy the mess.


Colin Morris, the independent chairman of the Stockton-on-Tees Local Safeguarding Children Board, said the review began in June.


“We are aware of this very sad case and a serious case review is already well under way having been initiated in June,” he said.


A Stockton Council spokesman said: “Along with a number of other agencies, we are fully participating in a Serious Case Review which has been initiated by the Stockton-on-Tees Local Safeguarding Children Board and is overseen by two independently appointed, experienced professionals.


“The boy and his sibling are settled in appropriate placements and are doing well.”



Tesco under criminal investigation by Serious Fraud Office over accounting irregularities


Tesco has formally been placed under criminal investigation by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) following its discovery of a £263 million hole in profit expectations.


The group said that in light of the SFO probe, a separate investigation by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has been closed.


It comes after a probe for Tesco by accountants Deloitte and law firm Freshfields found the accounting error was worse than first thought and that the supermarket had been overstating its earnings for years.


In a statement, the group said: "Tesco confirms that it has been notified by the Serious Fraud Office that it has commenced an investigation into accounting practices at the company.


"Tesco has been co-operating fully with the SFO and will continue to do so.


"Tesco has been notified by the Financial Conduct Authority that, in light of the SFO investigation, its investigation will be discontinued."


The SFO confirmed that its director David Green QC "has opened a criminal investigation into accounting practices at Tesco plc".


It said that as the investigation was under way it could not provide further details.


The SFO is responsible for investigating and prosecuting serious and complex fraud and corruption.


The FCA confirmed that it had "decided to discontinue its own investigation with immediate effect".



UK weather: Is Britain set to suffer the worst winter in 100 years?


Britain could be set for the coldest winter for 100 years.


That's the claim of some weather experts as many parts of the UK woke up to a icy pinch in the air this morning.


So dust off the winter woolies, stock the cupboards with food and put a spade in the boot of the car – just in case.


Because while we might have enjoyed an unusually mild autumn, some scientists claim we should prepare for a freezing winter – predicting record low temperatures, Arctic blizzards and icy gales that could cripple the country.


And snow could hit parts of Britain in a matter of days, with many forecasters predicting the white stuff to arrive in November. It comes just after the National Grid warned that a cold winter could take Britain to the brink of blackouts on several particularly dangerous days this year.


Weather experts claiming to have studied air flows in the upper atmosphere say a jet stream that usually holds extreme weather over the North Pole is weak this year.


And that could mean the gates are open to a freezing influx of air that could engulf the UK - similar to what happened in 1947 when average temperatures plummeted to -2.7C.


The worst of the weather is predicted to arrive around the middle of November and could again mean nightmare travelling conditions on the roads and chaos at British airports.


Readings so far this year point to similar conditions to the winter of 2009/10 – the coldest for 31 years – it is claimed.


James Madden, forecaster for Exacta Weather, told the Daily Express: "The worst case and more plausible scenario could bring something on a similar par to the winter of 2009/10, the coldest in 31 years, or an event close to 2010/11 which experienced the coldest December in 100 years.”


“In addition to this the Siberian snow cover is also well ahead of schedule and is another strong signal for a harsh winter based on previous studies."


News of a harsh winter has inevitably sparked talk of a white Christmas.


The last official white Christmas was in 2010, when snow was widespread across Northern Ireland, Scotland, parts of Wales, the Midlands, north-east and far south-west England.


BetFred makes it 7-1 for there to be a white Christmas in London and Birmingham, 6-1 for Belfast, Liverpool and Manchester and 4-1 for Edinburgh.


Met Office experts have warned that forecasts are less accurate the further in the future they look.



Cross country champion Greg Jayasuriya keeps up winning ways


Last year’s overall champion Greg Jayasuriya (Middlesbrough and Cleveland) won the senior men’s race in the second round of the North Yorkshire South Durham Cross Country League at the challenging Filey course.


Jayasuriya repeated his win from the first round in Acklam, finishing over a minute ahead of Lewis Rogers (Loftus and Whitby).


Leading the way with an emphatic victory in the Under-20 men’s event was Matthew Bailey (Middlesbrough AC), finishing more than seven minutes ahead of his nearest rival.


Highest Tees finishers in the senior women’s race were Carolyn Ollis (Middlesbrough and Cleveland) who ran well to finish third, and Kath Aspin (New Marske Harriers) who was fifth.


Grace Cuff (Middlesbrough AC) and Hazel Costello-Webster (Middlesbrough and Cleveland) ran strong races to finish second and third respectively in the Under- 20 women’s event.


In the Under-17 men’s race there was a clear win for Jay Ferns (Loftus and Whitby) from Hassan Ben-Tiba (New Marske) with Billingham’s Callum Martin fifth.


Josh Cowperthwaite took the top position in the Under-15 boys’ age group from team-mate and training partner Josh Allen in second. Callum McDonald of Billingham was fifth.


Libby Hedger (Middlesbrough AC) was second in the Under-15 girls’ race and the New Marske pairing of Eli Barnbrook and Frances Bell finished in fourth and fifth places.


The youngest boys’ age groups - Under-13 and Under-11 - saw a pair of 1-2-3s for Tees athletes.


Daniel Gunn (New Marske Harriers) won the Under-13 boys’ race ahead Daniel Currie (Middlesbrough AC) with club- mate Dominic Shipman third.


Billingham’s Will Simpson won a close Under-11 race from Adam Wanless (Middlesbrough AC) and Benjamin Johnson (Middlesbrough AC).


Gabrielle Marsh (Billingham) was second in the Under-11 girls’ event.



Middlesbrough College's new site safety simulator uses parts from Wilton's Boiler 6


SEMBCORP Utilities UK has donated tens of thousands of pounds worth of equipment to a key safety training simulator at Middlesbrough College.


The industrial giant, which has sites around the globe - including Wilton - has given parts from Teesside’s old Boiler 6 to the £12m STEM Centre being built by Middlesbrough College.


Sembcorp bosses say the Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths training centre will ‘play a vital role’ in bridging industry’s ‘critical’ skills gap.


The new STEM centre is currently taking shape on the Middlehaven site, with doors due to open in 2015.


It will play a vital role in meeting the needs of employers across a wide range of sectors, by training future engineers and delivering bespoke training programmes for workers already in industry.


Boiler 6 – a coal-fired unit at Wilton Power Station - was decommissioned recently, after more than 60 years’ service.


Now the parts will operate the STEM Centre’s simulated COMAH site – Control of Major Accident Hazards – and operational procedures will be in force to raise awareness and develop the important safety behaviours required in industry.


The simulator will create a ‘real’ working environment, teaching trainees to prevent and mitigate the effects of major accidents involving dangerous substances, such as chemicals, petroleum gas and explosives.


George Ritchie, Sembcorp Senior Vice President for HR, said the donation demonstrated the company’s commitment to the centre and showed the level of support for the “massive leap of faith” the college is taking on behalf of the region and its employers.


He said: “It’s a critical time for industry on Teesside and the STEM Centre will play a vital role in bridging the skills gap, not just locally but right across the region providing traineeships, apprenticeships, higher apprenticeships and bespoke training for companies.


“It was very fortuitous that Boiler 6 closed recently and a lot of equipment had become surplus to requirements.


“It seems only right that we donate it to the STEM Centre where it will be used to help train the engineers of the future.”


The donation includes equipment from pumps, valves and pipework to fasteners, instrumentation, controls and racking.


It will assist in delivering first-class training across disciplines from advanced manufacturing, digital warehousing and logistics and process and engineering.


Courses will be available for students of all abilities, from entry level to HND and apprenticeships.


Zoe Lewis, principal and chief executive, said: “We’re overwhelmed by the generosity shown by the management team at Sembcorp, it’s beyond all expectations.


“We can assure them that the equipment will be put to good use.


“The STEM Centre is a natural progression of the relationship we’ve had with the area’s industry for many years – we’re just taking it to another level to guarantee that the Tees Valley remains an engineering skills hotbed.”


Employers keen to find out more about staff training, apprentices or even how they can get involved in working with the STEM Centre once the doors open next year are asked to contact Middlesbrough College on 01642 333322 or email icp@mbro.ac.uk



Badger Hill Primary help Send a Cow in fundraising effort


Children at Badger Hill Primary School in Brotton have raised more than £850 - by reading books.


The funds have been raised as part of the Read to Feed campaign organised by the Send a Cow charity, which raises money to enable families in Africa to develop sustainable smallholdings.


Youngsters were determined to raise the £750 needed to provide a cow by being sponsored to read - but just before the school’s Harvest Service they were close, raising £687.


But a collection during the service raised a further £175 which meant they ended up with £862 in total.


Heather Rowe, headteacher, said: “The children are celebrating not only being able to Send a Cow, but some sheep, goats and chickens too.


“They have learned lots about African countries, food fairness and the lives of some children in Africa as part of their research for their Harvest Festival.”


“We are very proud of them.”



Hartburn road racer celebrates successful comeback season


COmeback kid Tom Leonard has paid tribute to his supporters after ending a hugely successful season on a high note.


The Hartburn bike ace returned to the saddle for the first time in 12 years this season, dedicating his comeback to his close pal, former racer and Gazette writer Andy McGladdery, who was tragically killed in a road crash.


And he brought the season down on his Buff Headwear Thundersport 500 Championship campaign with a trio of victories and a second place.


That excellent run of results confirmed his second place finish in the final championship standings.


“It was all looking a bit grim after qualification,” he admitted, “a lowly 12th position and the worst grid position of the year at a circuit that’s short, intense and tiring.”


But in each of the opening day’s races he carved his way through the pack to the front and emerge a clear victor by more than a second.


On day two he continued his great form with another win and a second.


“This is a fantastic way to end the season, finishing on such a high and proving we’ll be a force come next year,” said Leonard.


“The final race on the Sunday was scrappy and both the other riders I was dicing with were up to some crazy tricks round Gerards Bend.


“I’d like to thank all who have supported and followed us during the year, and especially those who have made commitments both financial and time wise, it’s been great and couldn’t have happened without these key characters.


“Particular thanks to my crew who have kept me focused and not let me lose sight of the reasons of our desicion to compete again.”


It was also a cracking weekend for Stockton’s Colin Mooney who wrapped up second place overall in the Seniors Cup.


He stormed to four class victories to make it a great weekend for Teesside.


Mooney will also be competing in next year’s series and, like Leonard, be eager to go one place better.


Young Jak Liddle from Middlesbrough has learned much and progressed well in his first full season of racing, although his final weekend was marred by a crash which caused burns to his elbows and side.


He’s a tough cookie though and now he’s looking forward to a season on Supersport 600 machines in 2015.



Trials ace Guy Kendrew keeps up his good form


Faceby's Guy Kendrew continued his excellent form this season by taking the runner-up spot in Eboracum MC’s Colonial Trial.


The event may no longer have national status, but the name alone assures a first class entry.


The three-lap moorland course at Hill House, Farndale, certainly brings the best out of riders and Beta UK rider Ian Austermuhle held off a strong challenge from British expert champion Kendrew and rising young star Dan Peace, the British A class champion.


A cold wind kept the rain at bay and Austermuhle lost his only two marks first lap on sections three and four.


After that he remained feet up.


Former Redcar Cubs speedway rider Kendrew and Peace lost ground on the fifth and ninth where Peace, unluckily, dislodged a flag on the first lap.


Mark Harrison topped the ever growing intermediate class entry from Pete Sharp who hit trouble on the eighth section with six marks lost.


Lealholm’s Alistair Jackson produced his best - and most consistent - riding for some time to nail a strong A class entry, pushing Middlesbrough rider Alan Williams into the runner-up berth with Mark Coulson third.


Results


Expert: Ian Austermuhle (Beta-uk.com) 2, Guy Kendrew (Beta) 13, Dan Peace (Gas Gas UK) 17.


Intermediates: Mark Harrison (Gas Gas) 23, Peter Sharp (Beta) 27, Gary Collinson (Gas Gas) 32.


Clubman A: Alastair jackson (JTG) 14, Alan Williams (Montesa) 17, Mark Coulson (Gas Gas) 21, Alan Carr (Gas Gas) 25.


Clubman B: Mark Summer (Beta) 3, Dave Wardell (Beta) 5, Bryan Kendra (Gas Gas) 7, Wayne Alderson (Sherco) 9.


Clubman B Over-40: Mick Orange (Fantic) 6.


Youth A: Jack Peace (Gas Gas UK) 45.


Youth B: Zac Collinson (Feetup Gas Gas) 18, Henry Jackson (Gas Gas) 61, Jake Eley (JTG) 87.


Youth C: Sam Charlton (Gas Gas) 30, Claire Collinson (Beta) 78.



Tees rally crew chase trio of national titles


Tees crew Chris Roe and Bob McKenzie have won their race against the clock to be ready for this weekend’s MEM Malton Forest Rally.


Driver Roe, from Redcar and his Skelton navigator go into the event on Sunday challenging for three ANCC Championship titles. But they’ve had their work cut out getting their Vauxhall Nova ready after suffering a number of problems in the Trackrod Rally last time out.


“It’s been a race against time to get the car ready after finding a differential fault on the car after the last round, coupled with a damaged engine mounting and a few other problems meant we had plenty to sort before the event,” explained Roe.


“But having rebuilt the damaged diff and repaired all the other problems, we are ready to head out to fight for championship honours.


“We’re still in with a chance of fighting for not just the (1400cc) class championship but the forest championship and the overall championship as well.


“At the start of the year and my first full season in the driving seat did I think I’d be in this position at the end of the year?


“No not at all! We have performed far better than I’d expected for our first season.


“At the start of the year we had no plans in place other than just doing a few events but as the year progressed we have built up a championship challange. Whatever happens from here on in we can surely be pleased with how the year has gone, and hopefully we can maintain the challange to the end.


“We have been seeded as 1400 class runners for this weekend but if there are long straights then we are sure to struggle with gear ratios as we are still gathering funds to repair our damaged gearbox from Croft.”


Ollie Mellors (Proton Satria Neo) is the top seed but Billingham businessman Peter Stephenson (Ford Focus) is likely to be a challenger.


Stages in Langdale, Cropton and Gale Rigg forests will be used, and the event will be based at Adderstone Field in Dalby Forest.



Recycling guru Max McMurdo special guest at Redcar and Cleveland Business Forum


Recycling guru and rising TV star Max McMurdo got a taste of Teesside when he was guest speaker at a packed business networking event.


Max – star of Channel 4’s Shed of the Year, and Kirstie’s Fill Your House For Free – was special guest at the Redcar and Cleveland Business Forum.


And to make sure he got a real taste for the town, Redcar ice-cream family the Pacittos sent along some of their famous lemon top.


“It’s delicious, I can see why it’s a big hit,” said Max.


The free business forum is a monthly event organised by Redcar and Cleveland Council’s Enterprise Team, a group providing free advice and support to more than 250 companies across the borough.


More than 100 businessmen and women took their seats at the event at Tuned In to hear Max share details of how he went from design student to car designer and eventually entrepreneur before appearing on TV’s Dragons’ Den, where he secured £50,000 of investment from Deborah Meaden and Theo Paphitis.


Owner of highly-successful furniture upcycling company ‘reestore’, Max set up his business in 2003 after being concerned about mass consumption in the economy.


Famous for his bathtub sofas, shopping trolley chairs and the Formula 1 wheel coffee table, Max’s innovation has inspired a generation of designers, crafters and ‘upcyclers’ – those who give new life to unwanted items.


Cllr Mark Hannon, Redcar and Cleveland Council’s cabinet member for economic development, said: “It was a fantastic event and it was reassuring for many people there that Max, for all his success, faces the same challenges as any entrepreneur.


“The business forum, which is held each month, is part of a raft of free help and support being provided by the Enterprise Team, and is a great example of how the local authority is playing a key role in job creation across the borough by supporting local businesses.”


Max, who’s about to start filming for George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces, said: “As an entrepreneur, with all the challenges that brings, it’s easy to focus on the negative, but those brave enough to be in business should always believe in what they are doing.


“I think about giving up at least once a year – always February for some reason – but then I’ll come up with a new idea and my enthusiasm returns and off I go again.


“Sometimes I find running a business the most stressful thing in the world but then other times it’s incredibly rewarding - the positives definitely out way the negatives overall though!”


The Enterprise Team is made up of skilled business coaches, and is focused on helping companies in Redcar and Cleveland to achieve their goals, including moving premises, increasing their turnover, improving profitability and reaching more potential customers.


The scheme offers Redcar and Cleveland businesses at least 12 hours of free, tailored support and in the last year more than 250 companies have been helped, leading to the creation of more than 150 jobs.


The business coaches have also held scores of free pre-start workshops, enabling hundreds of residents to realise their dream of running their own business or exploring the possibility of self-employment.


To find out more about the Enterprise Team visit http://ift.tt/1xDeXqA or call the team on 01642 438500.



Turn Down for What?


971827692 On the way to the airport the other day, my Uber driver, an elderly Russian chap, turned on a Top 40 radio station. Not being one to complain, I actually sat and listened to the lyrics. The song blasting through the speakers of the late-model Honda Civic was titled “Habits.” The singer, a young, presumably wealthy Swede named Tove Lo (actual name: Tove Nilsson), warbles about her need to visit sex clubs, do drugs, “binge on all my Twinkies, throw up in the tub.” She laments that she “drank up all my money.”


Why? Well, she explains, “You’re gone and I gotta stay high all the time.”


The next song featured a rapper named Lil Jon screaming loudly at the listener that it is “Fire up that loud, another round of shots. … TURN DOWN FOR WHAT!” Translation: We’re drunk and crazed, and we won’t stop being drunk and crazed. The music video, as described by creator Daniel Kwan explores, “this other universe where dudes are so pumped up on their own d***s — and they’re so into their testosterone — that the way that the show that is by breaking s*** with their d***s.” The video, which shows a young man crashing through ceilings and into furniture as his erect penis swivels wildly in his pants, currently has nearly 130 million views on YouTube.


No wonder Tove Lo needs to stay high all the time.


The end of Western civilization, it turns out, comes with both a bang and a whimper. The bang: endless sex, animalistic, primal, without strings. As Adam Levine whines, “Baby, I’m preying on you tonight, hunt you down, eat you alive, just like animals, animals, like animals.” In 1971, according to the National Survey of Young Women, 30.4 percent of young women aged 15-19 living in metropolitan areas reported having premarital sex. By 1979, that number was 49.8 percent. Today, 62 percent of young women overall have had premarital sex according to the Centers for Disease Control.


In 1950, men’s median age of first marriage stood at 22.8; today, it stands at 28.2. More people having sex younger, and without commitment is not a recipe for societal happiness.


Thus the whimper. In a culture in which emotional connections are degraded to the level of bovine rutting, is it any wonder that 9.2 percent of Americans — some 23.9 million people — have used an illicit drug in the past month, and that nearly a quarter of those aged 18-20 have done so? Or that nearly a third of men over the age of 12 and 16 percent of women have participated in binge drinking in the last month?


From what are these people running? Drugs and alcohol are an escape — but we are the most prosperous society on the planet. We are wealthier and healthier than any nation in history. So why the angst?


That question sticks in the craw of the materialists of the secular left, who insist that endless supplies of Soma and government-sponsored sex, complete with Malthusian belt — to borrow terms from Huxley — should bring happiness. Obviously, it doesn’t. America’s suicide rate recently hit a 25-year high. Suicide has surged among the middle-aged, those aged 35-64, jumping 30 percent from 1999 to 2010.


Turn down for what? For survival. Or we could just keep going to sex clubs, throwing up in the bathtub and drinking up all our money. After all, isn’t that what freedom from consequences — our God-given pursuit of happiness, according to the left — is all about?


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Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Wednesday 29th October, 2014.


You can contribute to the live blog by posting your comment below, and you can also tweet us @EveningGazette to share breaking news stories, pictures and opinions.


Our Teesside breaking news live blog begins at 07:00am every weekday and is updated throughout the day and into the evening.



Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Berkeley’s Jihad Against Bill Maher


Maher 726 This whole Bill Maher controversy is as illuminating as it is entertaining. Bill Maher was a darling of the Left when he was criticizing Christianity, but now that he has turned his gimlet eye to Islamic supremacism, the foes of free speech have turned against him with venom. Maher is scheduled to give the fall commencement address at the University of California-Berkeley, but Muslim students there have begun a petition drive to get him canceled.


The Daily Californian reported Sunday that



the Change.org petition was authored by ASUC Senator Marium Navid, who is backed by the Middle Eastern, Muslim and South Asian Coalition, or MEMSA, and Khwaja Ahmed, an active MEMSA member. The petition, which urges students to boycott the decision and asks the campus to stop him from speaking, has already gathered more than 1,400 signatures as of Sunday.



Anticipating that this petition would be outed as the fascist endeavor it is, Navid explained: “It’s not an issue of freedom of speech, it’s a matter of campus climate. The First Amendment gives him the right to speak his mind, but it doesn’t give him the right to speak at such an elevated platform as the commencement. That’s a privilege his racist and bigoted remarks don’t give him.” The campaign against Maher is called “Free Speech, Not Hate Speech.”


“Free Speech, Not Hate Speech”: this is the mechanism that today’s Leftist and Islamic supremacist authoritarians are using to shut down any free and open discussion of how Islamic jihadists use the texts and teachings of Islam to justify violence and oppression. This slogan was thrown at me last May when I spoke at Cal Poly; I responded (as you can see toward the end of this video ) by pointing out that “hate speech” is in the eye of the beholder, and the one who is granted the power to determine what is or isn’t “hate speech” has been given extraordinary control over the public discourse, such that any opinions disliked by the ruling elite can be stigmatized and ruled out of bounds by means of this label.


Anyway, this was predictable: now that Bill Maher, despite his impeccable Leftist credentials, has dared to criticize Islam, he is “racist and bigoted,” and must be denied a platform. The reality is that anyone and everyone, no matter who they are and what they have done, is targeted in exactly the same way by Islamic supremacists and Leftists. They are determined that there be no genuine public debate about Islam and violence (and Islamic violence). They are determined to tar those who deviate from the “Islam is a religion of peace” line with smear labels that will make the broadly uninformed majority shun them and be intimidated into thinking that it is wrong to question the mainstream line.


There is no free speech, no free debate, no honest discussion about these issues in American academia today, or in the mainstream media. Maher is so prominent that he has shaken the Left’s stranglehold preventing public discussion of these issues, but they are circling the wagons now, and either Maher will be driven out of the circles of the enlightened elites, or will stop talking about this altogether. My money is on the latter.


There is, however, just a small chance that this targeting of Maher will bring mainstream attention to this neo-fascist effort to destroy the freedom of speech altogether and stifle public debate about jihad and Islamic supremacism.


Certainly the controversy itself has drawn mainstream attention: MSNBC had Ibrahim Hooper of the Hamas-linked Council on American-Islamic Relations on to discuss whether Berkeley should cancel Maher, and Hooper promptly likened Maher to “the grand dragon of the KKK.”


The way that Leftists and Islamic supremacists operate in order to demonize and destroy anyone who dares speak the truth about Islam and jihad is on full display during Hooper’s MSNBC appearance: first, they claim that someone who points out that Islam has doctrines encouraging violence and supremacism is “calling all Muslims terrorists” and charge him or her with racism and bigotry. Then they proceed as if those charges are already established as true, and demand that the truth-teller be denied a platform, canceled from speaking engagements, etc., because of this racism and bigotry.


The next step, if the Islamic supremacist campaign to get Maher disinvited from Berkeley succeeds, will be to use their victory as evidence of the correctness of their claims, when in fact it is only evidence that many event organizers and public officials don’t like controversy and will make whatever concessions they need to make so as to avoid it. If the campaign succeeds, then a few months from now, when Hamas-linked CAIR is trying to get Maher canceled from some other event, “Honest Ibe” Hooper will say, “The University of California at Berkeley was so disgusted with Maher’s bigotry that they canceled his planned appearance as their fall commencement speaker…”


Then a few more cancellations, and it will look as if all decent folk are shunning Maher out of disgust with his “hatred,” when all that is really going on is the victory of Hamas-linked CAIR’s intimidation and smear tactics.


Now what is needed is a public discussion of how Hamas-linked CAIR and other Islamic supremacists are trying to stifle free discussion of the jihad threat, and smear and destroy everyone who dares discuss that threat honestly. How about it, MSNBC?


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Illegal Voters Tipping Election Scales?

Matthew Vadum is an award-winning investigative reporter and the author of the book, "Subversion Inc.: How Obama’s ACORN Red Shirts Are Still Terrorizing and Ripping Off American Taxpayers."



lkj Voting by illegal aliens and other non-citizens is so prevalent throughout the nation that it gave us Obamacare, according to a disturbing new study.


And if illegal voting by non-citizens, who tend to support Democratic Party candidates and who heavily supported President Obama, could tip the scales in the 2008 congressional elections, it can do so again in congressional elections next week and in the presidential contest in 2016. In 2008 one report estimated that as many as 2.7 million non-citizens were registered to vote nationwide.


The academic report, to be published in the December issue of Electoral Studies , continues the ongoing demolition of the Left’s narrative that voter fraud is a figment of paranoid Republicans’ imagination. Democrats cling religiously to their mantra that voter fraud doesn’t exist or is of little consequence because they have difficulty competing electorally without vote fraud. Fraud helps Democrats eke out victories in close races, which helps to explain their vehement opposition to commonsense electoral integrity measures like purging dead people from voter rolls or requiring photo ID for voting.


The findings of Jesse Richman and David Earnest, two political science professors at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., confirm that voter fraud is commonplace and widespread, something that honest, as opposed to engaged or left-wing, scholars have known for years.


“In spite of substantial public controversy, very little reliable data exists concerning the frequency with which non-citizen immigrants participate in United States elections,” the authors write.


The academics got their data from the Cooperative Congressional Election Study (CCES) which contains what they term a “large number of observations (32,800 in 2008 and 55,400 in 2010) [that] provide sufficient samples of the non-immigrant sub-population, with 339 non-citizen respondents in 2008 and 489 in 2010.” Using CCES data from 2008, they tried “to match respondents to voter files so … [they] could verify whether they actually voted.”


Although non-citizen participation “is a violation of election laws in most parts of the United States, enforcement depends principally on disclosure of citizenship status at the time of voter registration,” they write. This new study “examines participation rates by non-citizens using a nationally representative sample that includes non-citizen immigrants,” a first in voting studies, they claim.


The authors found that non-citizens favor Democratic candidates over Republican candidates and that non-citizen voting probably changed 2008 outcomes including Electoral College votes and the partisan makeup of Congress.


“We find that some non-citizens participate in U.S. elections, and that this participation has been large enough to change meaningful election outcomes including Electoral College votes, and Congressional elections,” according to Richman and Earnest.


“Non-citizen votes likely gave Senate Democrats the pivotal 60th vote needed to overcome filibusters in order to pass health care reform and other Obama administration priorities in the 111th Congress,” the authors write.


In other words, non-citizen voters likely started America down the path to ruin by providing critical votes in Congress to promote President Obama’s catastrophic policy agenda.


Although “[m]ost non-citizens do not register, let alone vote … enough do that their participation can change the outcome of close races,” Richman and Earnest wrote in a recent oped in the Washington Post .


North of 14 percent of non-citizens in both the 2008 and 2010 samples reported being registered to vote. “Our best guess, based upon extrapolations from the portion of the sample with a verified vote, is that 6.4 percent of non-citizens voted in 2008 and 2.2 percent of non-citizens voted in 2010,” they write.


Non-citizens favored Democrats in 2008 and Obama won upward of 80 percent of the votes of non-citizens in the 2008 CCES sample. The authors write:


“[W]e find that this participation was large enough to plausibly account for Democratic victories in a few close elections … Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) won election in 2008 with a victory margin of 312 votes. Votes cast by just 0.65 percent of Minnesota non-citizens could account for this margin. It is also possible that non-citizen votes were responsible for Obama’s 2008 victory in North Carolina. Obama won the state by 14,177 votes, so a turnout by 5.1 percent of North Carolina’s adult non-citizens would have provided this victory margin.”


The authors’ paper is consistent with other credible reports of non-citizen voting. For example, Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler (R) unveiled a study in 2011 showing that almost 5,000 illegal aliens cast votes in the U.S. Senate election in that state in 2010.


Non-citizen voting, for better or worse, has been part of the American experience for a long time.


In the late 1700s and first half of the 1800s various states allowed non-citizens to vote. In some states individuals who intended to become U.S. citizens were allowed to vote but historically the alien suffrage movement has failed to get much of a foothold. By the mid and late 1800s states had largely outlawed voting by non-citizens. It has long been a crime for non-citizens to vote in national elections.


Non-citizens are allowed to vote in some elections in a handful of jurisdictions across the country. For example, Takoma Park, Md., a Washington, D.C. suburb burdened with an aging hippy population, has allowed non-citizens –including illegal aliens– to vote in local elections since 1992. But similar enclaves of Sixties radicals permitting non-citizen voting tend to have small populations and are few and far between.


Some left-wingers say that election fraud is justifiable because in a sense it compensates the poor for having little political power. Radical activists laid the foundation for illegal voting by non-citizens at the beginning of Bill Clinton’s presidency.


Marxist academics and activists Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven were the architects of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 which opened the door to an explosion of voter fraud across America. The NVRA, also called the Motor-Voter law, forces states to register to vote anyone applying to renew a driver’s license or obtain welfare or unemployment compensation benefits. State employees are now forbidden by law from asking would-be registrants for proof of U.S. citizenship.


The NVRA also compelled states to allow mail-in voter registration, which made it easy for left-wing activists to enter false names on the voter rolls without any kind of contact with a government official. States were also under orders not to purge important Democratic constituencies such as the dead and criminals from voter rolls for a minimum of eight years.


It is unclear how much fraud takes place as a result of mail-in voting. Such fraud, which takes place during the registration stage and the voting stage, has barely been examined by scholars.


But the Motor-Voter law, notes journalist John Fund, has “fueled an explosion of phantom voters.”


And that’s exactly what it was intended to do.


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Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Tuesday 28th October, 2014.


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Recap: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Monday 13th October, 2014.


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Recap: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Tuesday 14th October, 2014.


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Recap: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Wednesday 15th October, 2014.


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Recap: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Thursday 16th October, 2014.


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Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


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Boosbeck attempted murder: Two men arrested after pensioner is left fighting for life


A pensioner is fighting for his life after a “vicious and sustained attack” in an East Cleveland house.


The 66-year-old was found inside an address in Brookside, Boosbeck, with serious head injuries at around 8.50pm on Saturday.


Two local men aged 37 and 40 have were later arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and have been bailed pending further inquiries.


Police say the elderly man had not been seen since around teatime on Friday.


Detective Inspector Matt Murphy-King said: “This elderly and vulnerable man has suffered a vicious and sustained attack resulting in life threatening injuries. We believe the incident was a targeted attack and would like to reassure the community that such incidents are very rare.


“In response to what has happened we have increased high visibility patrols in the area and we would like to urge any members of the local community who may have information which could assist our investigation to speak to those officers or to contact us on 101.


“I have a dedicated team of detectives, crime scene investigators and other police resources who are working tirelessly and are determined to bring those responsible to justice.”


The man was taken to James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough where his condition remains critical.


Police are now appealing for anyone who saw anything or anyone suspicious in the Brookside area between Friday teatime and Saturday evening to get in touch.


Anyone with information is asked to contact DI Matt Murphy-King on the non-emergency number 101 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.



Durham seamer Graham Onions awarded benefit year


Durham have announced that seamer Graham Onions has been awarded with a benefit year in 2015.


The 32-year-old joined Durham’s academy in 2001 and made his first class debut three years later, going on to establish himself as one of the best bowlers in the country.


Onions won the LV County Championship title on three occasions and last year took 70 wickets to help secure the league crown for a third time in six seasons.


“I am really proud to have been granted a benefit year and I’m looking forward to sharing it with all the members,” Onions said.


“I have enjoyed some amazing moments with Durham. From signing my first professional contract, to making my home debut and winning the Friends Provident Trophy at Lord’s, then the three championship medals and recently the Royal London One-Day Cup.


“Playing for Durham means the world to me and and I always feel lucky to be representing the club I love.”


Onions has taken 371 first class wickets with best figures of nine for 67 against Nottinghamshire in 2012.


Also dazzling on the international stage, Onions will be best remembered for playing a key role as England reclaimed the Ashes in 2009.


Onions took two wickets with the first two balls of the second day’s play at Edgbaston and his form was rewarded with a place on the tour to South Africa.


There Onions defied the hosts’ hostile bowling attack in all five of his innings and ensured that England secured a draw in the series.


Durham chief executive David Harker said: “Graham is a great example of what Durham is all about.


“I’m delighted supporters will have an opportunity to recognise his contribution to the club over the years.”