Wednesday, February 5, 2014

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 6 February, 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.



Wealthy Thornaby businessman and wife cleared of swindling relative, 90, out of £100k


A wealthy businessman and his wife - who were jailed after being found guilty of defrauding an elderly relative - have been cleared by top judges.


Richard John Pennock was locked up for three years and Angela Pennock for 18 months at Teesside Crown Court in January last year, after they were found guilty of swindling 90-year-old ex-serviceman George Spann out of £100,000.


But their convictions have now been quashed by judges sitting at London's Criminal Appeal Court, who said they were 'unsafe'.


Lord Justice Aikens said it was 'not in the public interest' for there to be a retrial, because the Pennocks have served the majority of their sentences and Mr Spann's memory had deteroriated due to Alzheimer's disease.


The court heard Mr Pennock, 66, a multi-millionaire, and his wife, 47, both of Chancery Rise, Thornaby , had met Mr Spann - her great-uncle, who lived in New Zealand - once when he was visiting the UK.


In 2009, he decided to move to the UK and Mrs Pennock went over to New Zealand to help him with the move.


He then lived with them for a short time when he first arrived.


Mr and Mrs Pennock helped the former Royal Marine with his financial arrangements and, the court heard, joint bank accounts were set up in his and Mr Pennock's names.


The couple later bought a bungalow in Bute Close, Thornaby, for Mr Spann and Mrs Pennock's father to live in, using £100,000 of Mr Spann's money and £135,000 of their own cash.


Mr Spann was not named on the title deeds of the property, but retained a financial interest in the bungalow because of the money he had contributed.


Problems began in April 2010, when there was an argument between Mrs Pennock and Mr Spann and she alleged he had been aggressive.


Mr Pennock gave Mr Spann written notice to leave the property and to pay what he described as 'rent arrears' arising from a tenancy agreement which had the pensioner's rent set at £450-a-month.


Following this, Mr Spann told a social worker what had happened and there was evidence given at trial that Mr Spann was unaware he had contributed towards the bungalow's purchase.


The couple later transferred the title of the property into their daughter's name and the court heard that, at that stage, their lawyers said they made an attempt to repay the £100,000 to Mr Spann through their solicitors.


However, proceedings against them had already started by then and their solicitors would not keep hold of the money for a long period of time.


The prosecution case at trial was that the couple had committed fraud by abusing their position of trust in relation to Mr Spann and acting against his financial interests by exposing him to risk.


Mr and Mrs Pennock each denied two counts of fraud, but were convicted by the jury on a majority verdict of 10-2.


However, their convictions were quashed by the Appeal Court judges, who said mistakes in the phrasing of the charges and the trial judge's directions to the jury rendered them unsafe.


Lord Justice Aikens said that, as Mr Pennock was a joint account holder with Mr Spann, there was no illegality when he transferred the £100,000 for the house purchase.


He also said that the trial judge should have directed the jury that the law meant Mr Spann's financial interest in the property was in no way affected by the transfer of the title into the name of the Pennocks' daughter.


Clearing both Mr and Mrs Pennock of any wrongdoing , the judge said: "We are drawn to the conclusion - albeit, we must admit, somewhat reluctantly - that we have to allow these appeals and quash the convictions.


"If the particulars of the offence had been more carefully drafted and had concentrated on the use of the money to purchase the property, things may have been otherwise, but it did not."


Sitting with Mr Justice Wyn Williams and Judge Brian Barker QC, the judge also ruled that the couple should not face a retrial.


He added: "They have both served a considerable part of their sentences, Angela Pennock has served the entirety of the custodial part of her term and Richard Pennock is about two thirds of the way through.


"Furthermore there would, in our view, be considerable difficulties if it was contemplated that Mr Spann were himself to give evidence in a trial which would take place later in 2014, in circumstances where, in 2012, he already had considerable difficulties with memory and was in the early stages of Alzheimer's.


"In these circumstances, we have come to the conclusion that it is not in the public interest that there be any retrials."


Lawyers for Mr and Mrs Pennock told the court steps have been taken to repay the £100,000 to Mr Spann.



The Angry Left


101511_9931 The American left has never had it this good with two terms of an uncompromising leftist in the White House dedicated to its agenda, making and unmaking laws at a whim, siccing the IRS and Federal prosecutors on his political enemies and transforming the country at a breathtaking pace.


Obama is what generations of the left have worked toward. This is the flicker of hope they kept alive throughout the Nixon years, Carter’s collapse and the long stretch of Reaganomics. This is what Bill Clinton robbed them of by gauging his actions against the polls instead of blasting full steam ahead regardless of what the public wanted.


So why is the left so angry?


Watch MSNBC or browse any left-wing site and you see a level of anger that would make you think that Al Gore had just conceded or Nixon had just won reelection. There’s more anger in the privileged circles of the left than in the political rearguard of the Tea Party.


That anger trickles from the top down. Obama’s interview with Bill O’Reilly was yet another opportunity for the most powerful man in the country to blame a vast right wing conspiracy. A day doesn’t pass without another email from Obama, his wife, Sandra Fluke or Joe Biden warning that without another five or ten dollar contribution, the “right” will take over America.


The left has unchallenged control over the government, academia and the entertainment industry and yet it talks as if the country is 5 seconds away from Sarah Palin marching into Washington D.C. at the head of an army of Duck Dynasty fans to outlaw abortion.


The apocalyptic political paranoia and the uncontrolled outbursts of rage haven’t changed much since 2003. Ten years later, the ideologues in power still act as if George W. Bush is serving out his fourth term. Every day on MSNBC, a stew of conspiracy theories about oil companies, Israel, the Koch Brothers, Wal-Mart and Karl Rove leaves a slimy trail across the television screen.


On the internet, manufactured outrage has become the only progressive stock in trade. Did Jerry Seinfeld say that he values humor over racial quotas? He’s a racist. Did an ESPN magazine out a compulsive liar who also happened to be pretending to be a woman? Lock him up. Did Mike Huckabee say something that could be misinterpreted with enough ellipses and out of context “Twitterized” quotes? Before you know it, he’s a sexist pig.


It says something deeply disturbing about a progressive readership that eats up hate and doesn’t react to anything positive. The rash of fake hate crimes feeds into that same perverse need for an enemy to hate and fight. The left used to pretend that it wanted to do something positive, but now that it has the power, it can’t stop searching for someone to hate instead.


The left is more comfortable being angry than being anything else; it finds it easier to rally the troops against something than for something so that even its triumphs only lead to more anger. The MSNBC tweet about an interracial Cheerios commercial was revealing of a deeper problem within the left. It was assumed that the MSNBC audience wouldn’t care about an interracial ad unless it could somehow pretend to “spite” the right by watching it.


Obama’s awkward stumble from cause to cause, letting the old Bush policies run on Autoplay unless a crusade kicks in, as it eventually did on gay marriage and illegal immigration, is indicative of the problem with the left’s governing style. It cares less about gay marriage or legalizing illegal aliens than it does about stirring up conflict.


That is another reason why the left began neglecting some of its bread and butter issues after Obama won. Aside from the need to protect its own man, it wasn’t really all that interested in closing Gitmo, gay marriage or opposing the War in Iraq. The things it wants to do are never as important to it as its obsessive need to feel that it is fighting against the right.


For all the Obama Worship, the left is more united by hatred for Sarah Palin or Ted Cruz than by its support for its own leaders. It derives its identity more from the things that it is against, the middle class, the country, the businessman, the white male, than from the things that it is for.


The left’s sense of self is strongest when it is attacking, not when it is inspiring, when it is destroying, not when it is building.


Deprived of an external enemy, its ideologues carve out narrow orthodoxies and denounce each other for violating them. When the right and the center have been purged, the purges of the left begin and don’t end until there is nothing left except one tyrant-guru and his terrified minions.


The small scale bloodsport documented in the outward reaches of feminism by The Nation in its article “Feminism’s Toxic Twitter Wars” as transgender rights activists denounce Eve Ensler for excluding them by using the word “Vagina” and black feminists denounce white feminists for ignoring their concerns is typical.


When all enemies to the right have been eliminated, the left doesn’t find peace. Its ideology is a weapon, its gurus are egomaniacs and its followers joined to fight. When it wins in an arena, whether it’s academia or entertainment, the winners begins warring against each other proving that even in an ideological vacuum its ideology remains a destructive force whose followers would rather denounce and destroy, than educate and enlighten.


As a victorious parasite writes its own obituary, a successful left is a threat to its own existence and the only thing saving the left from a violent disintegration is the right.


Hating the right is the only thing that keeps the left together. When it doesn’t have Nixon to kick around anymore, it dissolves into a wet puddle of goo. If it didn’t have Sarah Palin, Ted Cruz, Mitt Romney and every other figure who took his turn starring in their grim theater of the Two Minutes Hate, it would revert back to the petty infighting of a thousand minor eccentric causes.


The left needs to believe in a vast right-wing conspiracy. It needs the Koch Brothers, Karl Rove, Evangelical Christians, AIPAC, oil companies, defense contractors and every other element of its conspiracy theories to keep its followers focused on the “real” threat instead of purging each other for tone policing, insufficient privilege checking and any other outrage of the week.


Like the Salafists shooting and shelling each other in Syria, the ranks of the left are filled with dogmatic and intolerant fanatics whose only goal in life is the absolute victory of their point of view. Their mutual fanaticism and aggrieved sense of victimhood gives them more in common with each other and that very commonality is the source of their mutual hatred. Only they can understand each other well enough to truly want to kill each other.


It isn’t hope that animates the left’s leaders and thinkers, but the darker side of human nature. That dark side is why the left’s victories end in tragedies, why the red flags are painted with blood and why when its followers have run out of enemies to kill, they turn on each other and destroy their own movements with firing squads, gulags and guillotines.


Hate is the force that gives the left meaning.


*


Don’t miss Ann-Marie Murrell‘s video interview with Daniel Greenfield on Robert Gates’ Revelations Confirm Horowitz’s “Party of Defeat,” Abandoning Iraq, How Americans Died For a War Obama Didn’t Believe In, The Release of Terrorist Lawyer Lynne Stewart, and much, much more:


Part I:


Part II:


To sign up for The Glazov Gang, Click here.


Freedom Center pamphlets now available on Kindle: Click here .



Hamas to protect Abbas if he faces death threat in US framework deal


Khaled Meshaal with Mahmoud Abbas


Hamas has affirmed that it would protect the Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas if he faced death threats for refusing the framework deal proposed by the US Secretary of State John Kerry, the Gaza based newspaper Al-Resalah said.


The newspaper reported the prominent Hamas leader in Gaza Mosheer Al-Masri saying: “If Abbas says no to Kerry’s plan, the resistance would surely protect him as it protects anyone who loves their land and maintains the principles and fights for them.”


Similar to what happened with the late Yasser Arafat when he denied a peace deal with the Israeli occupation, several mass media reports and analysts warned Abbas may be disposed of should he refuse Kerry’s framework deal.


Meanwhile, Al-Masri reiterated that there is no reason for anyone to concede the Palestinian principles under any circumstances. “The tract of liberation and the establishment of a state have high costs and that must not be undermined by any Israeli threat to any individual,” he said.


About Hamas’ position towards the negotiations with the Israeli occupation, Al-Masri said: “Hamas is completely against the negotiations with the occupation and it is to strongly face any concessions regarding the rights and principles of Palestinians.”


The New York Times previously published the terms of Kerry’s plan, which appeared to be full of concessions he is trying to persuade the PA to accept.


The ongoing round of negotiations between the PA and the Israeli occupation resumed last July brokered by the White House.



RNLI launch sea rescue after teenager threatens "Neknomination" pier jump

5 Feb 2014 20:08

The RNLI launched a sea rescue amid fears a teenager was planning to jump off Saltburn pier as part of social media craze Neknominate




Saltburn


A sea rescue was launched amid fears a teenager was planning to jump off Saltburn pier as part of controversial online drinking prank Neknominate.


The rescue came after the youth posted that he planned to jump into the rough seas.


The RNLI lifeboat at Redcar was sent by Humber Coastguard at 5pm yesterday after Cleveland Police passed on reports of the threat.


When the teams on scene couldn’t find the teenager further investigations revealed that he was at home.


Neknominate involves ‘necking’ a drink while performing a stunt - and then nominating someone else to do the same.


Humber Coastguard watch manager Bev Allen said: “The craze of neknominate is spreading virally through Facebook but before accepting your mission please just stop and think about what you are doing.


“If you have been drinking, your judgement will be impaired and you will be more likely to be overcome by the cold, dark sea. Your acceptance of the dare is highly likely to be life threatening.”



Family and friends pay touching tribute to soldier Codie Richardson

5 Feb 2014 19:31

Hundreds of mourners turned out for an emotional tribute to soldier, Codie Richardson, who was killed in a car crash




Family and friends of Private Codie Richardson gathered at Norton Rec to launch balloons and chinese lanterns in memory of the soldier who died with a colleague in a car crash near Catterick


Hundreds of mourners turned out for an emotional tribute to a young Stockton soldier who was killed in a car crash.


Friends, family and well-wishers gathered at Norton Park tonight for a lantern vigil in honour of Codie Richardson, whose life was cut short when the car she was travelling in hit a tree in Catterick, North Yorkshire, on Saturday.


The driver of the car, Codie’s colleague and friend, Mark McKeen, 23, from Northern Ireland, died at the scene.


Codie was taken to Darlington Memorial Hospital, where she died from her injuries.


The night skies above Norton village were lit up with dozens of lanterns in memory of 20-year-old Codie, and trooper McKeen, who were both Privates with The Royal Dragoon Guards, based at Catterick Garrison.



It is believed they were travelling back to camp from the supermarket when their Seat Ibiza left the road and crashed into a tree on Leyburn Road.


Hundreds of lilac balloons-for Codie’s favourite colour - were released to celebrate the lives of both serving soldiers while candles and cards littered the park grounds where Codie would often visit with Norton TA cadets.


Codie’s mum, Carol Muir, who lives on Norton Avenue, has been inundated with kind words and messages since losing her “shining star” and said she has been touched by the support her family has received from the Norton community.


Mrs Muir, 48, said: I am completely overwhelmed by the amount of people who have came out to remember Codie. I am speechless, to see so many. If she could see us now I know she would be laughing at us trying to get the lanterns to light.


“I really would like to thank each and every person for taking the time to think of Codie tonight. I am extremely proud, and I know she would be too.”


Codie went to Frederick Nattrass Primary School, in Norton, Albany Secondary School, also in Norton, and Stockton Riverside College, where she completed a three-year pre-uniform service before joining the Army at 18.


Yougest sister Casey, 15, held a banner in respect of her sister who she “always looked up to”.


Stood watching the lanterns take to the sky with best friend Shannon, 15, she said: “This just shows how loveable and repected my sister was. I can’t believe how many people are here. I am very happy and proud to see so many people paying their respects. Codie was the most amazing person and she deserves to be remembered forever.”


Animal lover Codie, was keen to learn to ride to horses since joining the Cavalry Regiment and was enjoying regular lessons.


Her body will be carried in a horse-drawn carriage to her military funeral - which will be held at St Michael’s Church on Imperial Crescent, Norton, on Tuesday at 1.45pm.



The day's news in pictures: February 5 2014

5 Feb 2014 17:49

The day’s biggest stories from the UK and around the world in pictures.





Chris Radburn/PA Wire


Logan Matthews,10, meets a penguin at Keech House Hospice in Luton with handler Barbara Marquez from Amazing Animals after a suprise visit was arrange by Rays of Sunshine Children's Charity who grant wishes for seriously ill children in the UK. The Penguins were brought into the hospice by Amazing Animals to fulfil a wish for 10 year old Logan who receives day support at the hospice.

The flooding and storms in the South East of Britain continue to dominate the news today, and the weather in the USA is little better.


Prince played a secret gig in Camden, and two houses have been flattened by an explosion in Clacton.




Whinney Banks assault: Four people released on bail after 'wooden implement' attack

5 Feb 2014 17:00

Three men and a woman are released on police bail after being addressed as part of investigation into attack on Gerard Williams






Four people arrested in connection with a serious assault in Middlesbrough have been released on bail.


Gerard Williams was discovered with potentially life-threatening injuries in Whinney Banks a week ago.


The 42-year-old dad-of-three from the area had suffered a fractured skull, arms and legs.


He was taken by ambulance to James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough.


A subsequent police press conference heard that officers believed a "wooden implement" had been used in the attack.


Mr Williams' condition was yesterday described as “stable”.


Three men, one in his late teens and two in their forties were arrested .


The younger man was held on suspicion of conspiracy to commit wounding and the two older men were held on suspicion of wounding.


Then a 23-year-old woman was arrested at an address in Middlesbrough.


Detectives were questioning her on suspicion of conspiracy to commit wounding.


All four have now been bailed pending police inquiries.


Mr Williams was found near a path at the end of Weatherhead Avenue, where it meets Acklam Road, at 7.45pm on Thursday.



Redcar motorist accused of causing motorcyclist's death following alleged hit-and-run crash

5 Feb 2014 16:15

Gary Thompson charged with failing to stop and failure to report the crash on the A171 in the village of Cloughton, near Scarborough






A motorist from Redcar appeared in court this afternoon following an alleged hit and run crash in which a motorcyclist died.


Gary Thompson, 37, is accused of causing the death of Lee Harris, 39, by careless driving.


Thompson is also charged with failing to stop after the accident on A171 in the village of Cloughton, near Scarborough, while driving his black Citroen C3 car.


He faces a third count of failing to report the crash which happened around 6pm on July 27 while he was driving from Scarborough to Whitby, the court heard.


Scarborough Magistrates sent Thompson for trial at York Crown Court.


Thompson, of Salcombe Way, was granted unconditional bail until the plea and directions hearing on February 27.


He spoke only to confirm his name, address, and age during the two minute hearing.


Mr Harris, a warehouse manager, of The Green, Newby, Scarborough, was certified dead at the scene of the accident by paramedics.


The Citroen car was found abandoned at the scene by police who then launched a search of the area.


Thompson was arrested on foot at 9.30pm, three and a half hours after the collision, further along the A171 towards Whitby.


There was no indication of plea and Kathryn Reeve, prosecuting, did not object to unconditional bail being extended.


The accident happened outside The Flask Inn in Cloughton.


Mr Harris was riding his black Honda back towards Scarborough when tragedy struck on a series of bends in the road.


The road was closed until midnight while police examined the scene and the vehicles.


A police search involving tracker dogs was made of the adjoining Harwood Dale Forest following the crash.


Traffic Sergeant Pete Wood, of the Roads Policing Group at Scarborough, said at the time: “This is an extremely tragic incident and we are doing everything we can to investigate the circumstances of the collision, as well as support the man’s family who are devastated by what has happened.”



German official meets anti-Zionist orthodox Jews



A senior official in German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s office has met with representatives of the anti-Zionist orthodox Jewish group Neturei Karta.


Members of the anti-Zionist orthodox Jewish group Neturei Karta (file photo)



According to reports, a department head in the German chancellor’s bureau met with four members of the group in Berlin last week.



The members of Neturei Karta said the meeting was aimed at denouncing the Zionist exploitation of Judaism for political reasons and telling the world that the apartheid regime of Israel has never presented and will never present the Jewish people.



Neturei Karta is an international organization of orthodox Jews dedicated to the propagation and clarification of Torah Judaism.


Associate Director of the group Rabbi Yisroel Dovid Weiss said previously that the group stands in solidarity to oppose Israel, saying, “the whole… Israel is an occupation, against the Torah.”


Earlier on Monday, EU Ambassador to Israel Lars Faaborg-Andersen said that Israel will face “increasing isolation” if the talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority (PA) fail.


The presence and continued expansion of Israeli settlements in occupied Palestine has created a major obstacle for the efforts to establish peace in the Middle East.


More than half a million Israelis live in over 120 illegal settlements built since Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories in 1967.


The United Nations and most countries regard the Israeli settlements as illegal because the territories were captured by Israel in a war in 1967 and are hence subject to the Geneva Conventions, which forbid construction on occupied lands.


MOS/HJL



You are not poor in Gujarat if you earn Rs 11


NEW DELHI: Narendra Modi is using Rs 10.80 a day as the limit to identify the poor for providing the subsidy beneficiaries.



Finance Minister P Chidambaram rejected the BPL by Gujarat government saying, “If BJP can reject Rs 32 figure, how can they claim Rs 11 figure.”


Latching on to the BPL criteria of people earning below Rs 10.80 daily found on a Gujarat government website, Congress lashed out at BJP’s Prime Ministerial candidate, asking him to apologise to the poor for “insulting” and making a “mockery” of them.


AICC Communication Department Chairman Ajay Maken also reminded Modi and his party that BJP had made a big issue of Planning Commission’s Below Poverty Line (BPL) figure of Rs 32 and Rs 28 a day in urban and rural areas and had described it as a “joke”.


He asked if pegging earning below Rs 32 per day is a joke then how can the Modi government fixing the BPL limit to Rs 10.80 be described.


He also released a copy of the website page of Gujarat government regarding the BPL critieria for consideration of families to be covered under the Antodaya Yojana in the state, which said that under the scheme those families, whose members’ average monthly income is Rs 324 in rural areas and up to Rs 501 in urban areas in a month are covered.



World in Pictures, February 5 2014: worker rights and David Lee Travis

5 Feb 2014 15:34

Eye catching pictures from events at home and around the world.






Today's world in pictures features flood damage in Dawlish, a Spanish cargo ship crashing into a jetty, and a genocide trial.



Gary Havelock thanks supporters after Farewell Meet reprieve

5 Feb 2014 14:10

BSPA announced ERC at Coventry will now take place two days later, leaving former Redcar Bears captain Havvy to enjoy his big night



Picture by Peter Reimann


Gary Havelock


Teesside speedway legend Gary Havelock has thanked everyone who supported him after a clash of dates between his Farewell Meeting and the Elite Riders’ Championship was averted.


The Eaglescliffe-born former world champion was left with the prospect of having a much lower crowd and fewer top riders to invite after the prestige Elite Riders’ Championship was switched to Friday, March 21 – the night his own big night is taking place at Poole.


But the British Speedway Riders’ Association decision to move their meeting so it could be shown live on TV provoked a massive internet backlash from fans, which was reflected in the mainstream press.


Now the BSPA has announced the ERC at Coventry will now take place two days later, leaving former Redcar Bears captain Havvy to enjoy his big night as planned.


The BSPA statement read: “We have agreed to move the ERC to this slot (March 23) which leaves the March 21 date clear for Gary Havelock’s Farewell at Poole.”


Havvy, who still lives in Marton, was naturally overjoyed.


He said: “I’m delighted. I was getting ready for a massive fight which now isn’t going to happen, so the next six weeks are going to be much more stress-free.


“Now I can get down to planning again instead of fighting a fight we didn’t want to have.


“The support I’ve had has been fantastic and I’m so grateful to yourselves (the Gazette), the Bournemouth Echo and the online bloggers who highlighted my plight. But first and foremost I want to thank the fans who have shown their support - it’s been overwhelming.


“I’ve even had people telling me that they were never my biggest fan and weren’t going to attend my meeting, but because of what I’ve had to put up with this week, they’re going to be there!”



Marske defender Matty Crossen planning to return to Northern League action after suffering stroke

5 Feb 2014 14:05

Matty Crossen has made such an encouraging recovery from his stroke that he is already thinking about getting back out on the pitch




Marske defender Matty Crossen


Marske defender Matty Crossen says he will definitely return to playing Northern League football despite suffering a stroke.


The 23-year-old’s world turned upside down last November when he was rushed to James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough after falling ill at work.


He underwent an emergency blood clot extraction after feeling pins and needles in his head and numbness in his arm, and was told by doctors to call time on his playing career.


But he has made such an encouraging recovery that he is already thinking about getting back out on the pitch with the blessing of his physicians, most likely next term.


“You never think something like that is going to happen to you, and when it did I couldn’t believe it,” said the pacy right-back.


“I just thought I would keep on playing football and you feel untouchable, basically. Since it’s happened I’ve realised how fortunate I am.


“Football isn’t everything, your health is most important.


“But when I was told I would have to retire from playing, I couldn’t accept it.


“I’ve grown up around the game. You’re a long time retired and I absolutely love it.


“I don’t want to rush things, but I will definitely return to Northern League football when I’m fully recovered and the time is right.


“And I want to come back better than I was before.”


Crossen has joined in with Marske’s warm-ups for the last few weeks and is doing daily cardio work to build up his fitness.


He is feeling fine physically but said he still has to think about certain words before he can express them, although that is expected to return to normal given time.


“The physios have been round my house and I have had checks on my heart and brain and they have all come back positive really,” the former Billingham Synthonia player explained.


“The doctors have said they have been very surprised by my recovery - they couldn’t believe it really. They didn’t say it was a miracle, but they said for anyone my age it doesn’t really happen.


“They said I’m fine to come back and they are happy for me to come back.”


Crossen is still in the dark about why he suffered a stroke in the first place but is keen to put it behind him.


“The hospital were a bit taken aback by it and they can’t find the cause why it happened, that’s the thing,” he said.


“They thought it might have been my heart or my head but it’s neither of them, and it certainly hasn’t been passed down through the family.


“I got a knock on the nose playing football a couple of weeks before it happened, and I think that might have been something to do with it.


“Whatever it was, I want to put it behind me and move on.”


And he is equally keen to repay Marske and all of his well-wishers for their support by making a playing return.


“I’ve had great support from everyone I know and it has spurred me on really,” he said.


“Everyone in the Northern League has been brilliant.


“All of the clubs have been in touch on Twitter or through our chairman and fans have been approaching me at games asking how I’m doing.


“Everyone has just been really helpful and Marske have been tremendous,” he added.


“They have organised a Casino Night for me at the Riverside Stadium on March 1, which will raise funds for the stroke unit at James Cook.


“Everyone at the club has rallied around and wants it.


“It’s a sell-out, and it’s fantastic what they’ve done for me.”



Middlesbrough taxi driver caught with thousands of counterfeit DVDs and CDs

5 Feb 2014 12:50

Trading standards officers recovered 2,476 discs at an address linked to David Anthony Masih, who sold them for £1 or £2 each






A taxi driver is waiting to learn his fate after being caught with thousands of counterfeit DVDs and CDs.


David Anthony Masih, 49, was found to have dodgy discs in the boot of his taxi. Many more, including porn, were later found at a Middlesbrough address linked to him.


Teesside Magistrates’ Court was told how cases containing CDs and DVDs were seized from the boot of a hackney carriage in June 2012.


An investigation was launched by Middlesbrough Council's trading standards department and a sample selection of discs were sent to the British Recorded Music Industry (BPI) for examination.


Liam O’Brien, for Middlesbrough Council, said the BPI investigator concluded that all of the discs were infringing copies of copyright works.


They included reggae, dance and R&B CDs. Films included Treasure Buddies, Cars, Jimmy Grimble, The Incredibles and Rise of Planet of the Apes.


The court heard how a search warrant was executed at an address in Kildwick Grove, Park End, Middlesbrough in August 2012.


Trading standards officers found cases containing a large number of discs.


In total, 2,476 discs were recovered. Of these, 11 contained pornographic material.


Masih, who gave his address in court as Stamford Street, Middlesbrough, was due to go on trial at Teesside Magistrates’ Court yesterday.


But on the day of trial he pleaded guilty to 13 offences including possessing goods with a false trademark for sale or hire and possessing an article which infringed copyright.


Dominic Tate, representing Masih, told the court that it was “a crude ad-hoc operation” and the discs were not particularly high quality.


He said Masih would sell them for £1 or £2 each normally to family members but also to members of the public, sometimes at car boot sales.


Mr Tate said there was no evidence of large quantities of cash being made. He was just trying to make some extra money, the court was told.


Magistrates told Masih they wanted a pre-sentence report before considering what to do with him. His case was adjourned until February 18 and he was granted bail.


After the case Councillor Charlie Rooney, Executive Member for Regeneration and Economic Development, said: “This prosecution sends out a strong message to anyone involved in these illegal businesses.


“Trading on the reputation of large companies without making any contribution to production and distribution costs, or to the public purse, is unacceptable. We will continue to take action when they are brought to our attention.”



Miracle baby born with part of brain outside her skull thriving despite being given little hope

5 Feb 2014 12:20

Parents of tiny Faith Martin were told she had the rare condition encephalocele - a neural tube defect affecting around one in 5,000 UK births





A miracle baby born with part of her brain outside her skull is thriving despite doctors giving her little hope for survival.


Tiny Faith Martin, now aged three months, was never expected to breathe on her own when born and doctors explained to her heartbroken parents that they wouldn’t intervene if she couldn’t.


It was during a 17-week pregnancy scan at Middlesbrough’s James Cook University Hospital her mum Jessica Williams, 20, and partner Aaron Martin, 21, were told that their baby girl had the rare condition encephalocele - a neural tube defect affecting around one in 5,000 UK births.


Encephalocele is described as a sac-like protrusion of the brain and the membranes that cover it through an opening in the skull.


It happens when the neural tube does not close completely during pregnancy.


Jessica, who is also mum to Logan, one, and lives in Whinney Banks, Middlesbrough, said: “I went for my first scan and they said that there was a problem.


“We didn’t know what to think and the consultant came to see us. I was in shock.


“They knew straight away that the skull hadn’t fused together properly and that there was a hole in the back of her skull.”


Because prospects for babies with this condition are often catastrophic - many not surviving and some left with lifelong brain damage and other neurological problems - many parents choose to terminate the pregnancy.


Jessica said: “The consultant said that he thought that she was going to be severely disabled.


“All along we were told it was the part of the brain that controlled breathing that was affected.


“We were told that most babies that they knew of had died from it.


“They said that a termination was completely up to us and did we want to go away and think about it.


“But if there was any chance at all then we wanted to give it to her.


“We never gave termination a thought.”


The pair met with a consultant at Newcastle’s Royal Victoria Infirmary (RVI) who offered the pair some hope.


Jessica said: “He said that he’d seen much bigger and see the baby be OK in the end.”


To avoid any damage to the protrusion Jessica had planned a Caesarean section birth.


However Jessica’s waters broke on October 13 and the C-section was brought forward. “She cried straight away - and a couple of minutes later there was another cry.


“The consultant said he was happy enough to let her be left with us on the ward. I always clung onto the hope that she would be OK.”


The pair were sent home with their new baby the day after with weekly visits to a nurse-led clinic planned.


Faith has a MRI scan four days after she was born. “It went from being the ‘breathing part’ of her brain to ‘a part’ of her brain,” says Jessica,


However the protrusion grew and by December it was 21cm in diameter from 6cm at birth.


Caring for her was difficult, says Jessica, as her protrusion was painful when touched.


Jessica said: “She was in a lot of pain and had to be put on her side.”


An operation was booked at Newcastle’s RVI for January 10 when she was three months old to remove the protrusion - which contained excess brain fluid and dead brain matter - and have a shunt fitted to redirect any further fluid build up to her stomach.


Faith now needs MRI scans every six months and checks to make sure she’s developing as expected.


Jessica said: “We came home and she’s been fine and she’s been doing everything at three months that she should be doing and she will lead a totally normal life.”


She added: “It proves that doctors can be wrong as this outcome just wasn’t an option for her.


“She’s quite a determined little thing. She’s our little miracle.”


A spokeswoman for South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust said: “We give women as much information as we possibly can to help them make informed choices and we will support them in every way possible, whatever they decide to do.”



When They Were Young: The answers to our talented Teessider quiz

5 Feb 2014 11:45

We asked you who this successful dozen were - here's the answers






How did you get on?


We described yesterday how all 12 went on to excel in their chosen fields - and asked you to identify them.


The answers are in the gallery above.



Man still in hospital after being found outside Normanby pub with head injury

5 Feb 2014 11:25

33-year-old man arrested on suspicion of assault following the incident on Sunday has since been released on bail






A man remains in hospital after being found outside a Teesside pub with a head injury.


Police attended The Tiger pub area of Normanby just before 11pm on Sunday.


The 38-year-old man was taken to James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough by ambulance.


He remained in hospital yesterday for observation.


A 33-year-old man who was arrested on suspicion of assault following the incident has since been released on bail.


Speaking after the incident one man at the pub said it was believed trouble flared after a group of men and women left the premises.


It is thought police were attending an medical emergency at another Normanby pub when a passer-by alerted them that someone was in trouble and they went to the Lambton Street pub.


The area was sealed off for a time while investigations were carried out.


Cleveland Police ask anyone who was in the area at the time or who has any information regarding the incident to contact DC Laura Fox of Middlesbrough Major Crime Team on the 101 police non-emergency number or Crimestoppers, anonymously, on 0800 555111.



Watch: Middlesbrough-born writer Angela Readman talks about winning Costa Short Story Award

5 Feb 2014 11:20

It was the second time the former Ormesby Comprehensive and Marton Sixth Form pupil had been shortlisted for national contest




Angela Readman


It's second time lucky for Teesside-born author and poet Angela Readman.


The Middlesbrough-born writer has been named winner of the 2013 Costa Short Story Award.


As reported, it was the second time the 41-year-old had been shortlisted in the final six of the national writing contest.


She said: “I didn’t even consider the idea of winning, I was just so proud to be among the final six.


Angela’s short story, The Keeper of the Jackalopes, was chosen from more than 1,400 entries.


A shortlist of six stories was selected by a panel of judges and then made available on the Costa Book Awards website for the public to download and vote for their favourite.


“I’m in shock and still waiting for it to sink in,” said Angela, who is originally from Middlesbrough but now lives in Newcastle.


“It’s amazing to me that people voted for my story.


“Given the calibre of the shortlisted stories I just didn’t consider winning.


“I’m so grateful.”


The announcement was made at the prestigious Costa Book Awards ceremony in central London.


Angela was presented with a cheque for £3,500 by Costa managing director Christopher Rogers.


The former Ormesby Comprehensive and Marton Sixth Form pupil has previously won The Essex Poetry Prize, and The Mslexia Poetry Competition.


She is now working on a collection of short stories titled, Don’t Try This at Home.



Winning run ends but Tees Valley Mohawks retain pride

5 Feb 2014 10:40

Steve Butler says his Tees Valley Mohawks can still hold their heads high after battling bravely against Reading Rockets



Karen Brown


Jorge Ebanks in action for Tees Valley Mohawks


Their winning streak came to an end, but coach Steve Butler says his Tees Valley Mohawks can still hold their heads high.


Their trip to reigning EBL National League Division One champions and National Cup winners Reading Rockets was always going to be tough.


The absence of Ike Attah and Acho Anyigbo struggling with flu made it even tougher.


But Butler’s men battled bravely and pushed their hosts all the way before going down 100-90.


The sides slugged it out in the first quarter which saw Reading take a slender 22-20 lead with captain Jorge Ebanks and in-form Jerome Narcisse doing most of the damage for the Mohawks.


Anyigbo played the first four minutes of the quarter but then had to sit out the rest of the half as his body wasn’t up for the demanding test.


Reading star man Josh Wilcher found his range but with Alex Greven doing the same at the other end of the court, Mohawks went into the locker room just four points adrift.


The third quarter was a strange affair as Reading battled but committed a number of fouls.


Mohawks seized the moment and went into the lead at 61-60.


They were playing some great basketball but just as it looked like they were taking over the game, Reading stepped up and finished the quarter strongly to lead by five points.


The Rockets started the final session brightly with 11 unanswered points, leaving the Mohawks 16 down within minutes of the start.


A few choice words from the coach refocused the Mohawks and a good run saw the lead cut to five points.


But that was as close as it got as Reading hit the pressure-free throws to win by 10 points.


“I’m really proud of the guys to keep battling,” said Butler. “Reading are a great team but we had them beaten.


“If some decisions had gone our way we know that result was ours for the takings.


“We went to the line 16 times which is acceptable but for Reading to go to the line 36 times, to me the decisions at one end aren’t the same decisions at the other end.


“That is 20 what I call free points which, for a team of Reading’s capabilities, is going to make them very tough to beat.”


Ebanks was in fine form, hitting 30 points, while Greven contributed 24 and Narcisse continued his good form by hitting 20 points.


Those three will be the key to Mohawks getting back to winning ways, according to Butler.


“My first five are really gelling together well now,” said the coach.


“I just need my bench to step up and get me valuable points, rebounds etc. If this happens then we will be very tough to beat in any game.”


Mohawks II’s winning run also came to an end when they lost 89-61 away to Birmingham Mets in Division Three (North).



Darlington boss Martin Gray joins investors as club forges ahead

5 Feb 2014 10:35

Martin Gray, who is masterminding the club’s climb up the football pyramid, has invested a sum of his own money into the club




Darlington boss Martin Gray


Darlington manager Martin Gray, who is masterminding the club’s climb up the football pyramid, has invested a sum of his own money into the club.


Following their demotion down the leagues following administration, Gray led Quakers to the Northern League title last season, and now they are in the play-off places in the Evo-Stik League Division One North.


They are on a winning run and now Gray has pledged his cash as well as expertise to the club, which is planning to return to Darlington from their current ground share in Bishop Auckland.


They will need a ground of a certain standard if they are to climb back towards the Football League. Gray said: “My heart has always been in Darlington FC and I’m proud to offer some financial support to sustain the club and help it to get back home to Darlington.


“With a home ground in the town, the club can really push on and make the most of the commercial opportunities that being back in Darlington will bring.”


Fans and businesses have pledged to invest more than £35,000 during a fundraising drive.


A further £75,000 payment has come from Premier League Fulham after ex-Quaker Dan Burn made his debut for the Londoners.


A further, smaller sum could come from the sale of another ex-player, Michael Smith, from Charlton to Swindon.


Gray added: “Darlington fans and local businesses know all too well how hard recent times have been with the football club.


“Many have lived through three administrations and are determined that the club, now fan-owned, will never be in that situation again.”


Next Saturday Quakers host Curzon Ashton, one of their main rivals for promotion, on Saturday.



Chemical distribution firm Applied Graphene Materials invests in new import facility

5 Feb 2014 10:00

Applied Graphene Materials is expanding after raising £11m on stock exchange




Jon Mabbitt, CEO of Applied Graphene Materials


A Teesside company that processes "wonder material" graphene is more than doubling its workforce - after raising £11m on the stock market.


Shares for Wilton Centre-based Applied Graphene Materials (AGM) tripled within days of the company making its debut on AIM (Alternative Investment Market) in November, leaping from 155p to a high of 471p.


Graphene is expected to revolutionise the fields of manufacturing and electronics. Microscopic amounts of graphene are needed, and AGM owns the intellectual property on technology that can make a tonne a year from scratch.


Now the company will use that injection of finance to grow its lab and office space - and increase its staff from 10 to 25 with high-spec roles for scientists, engineers, business developers and production operatives.


Graphene, a one-molecule-thick layer of graphite, is 100 times stronger than steel yet six times lighter, and conducts electricity 20 times better than copper.


It’s extremely thin and lightweight but also strong and transparent, and is already being developed for use in a variety of ways from electronics and new types of solar panels to body armour, non-stick pan coatings and flexible touchscreen displays for mobile devices.


AGM’s process is “proprietary, scalable and cost-efficient” bosses say - and it’s already working with the likes of Dyson and Proctor & Gamble on commercial uses for the material.


Jon Mabbitt, chief executive officer of AGM, said: “Many industries have recognised the significant qualities graphene possesses. We have seen considerable interest from blue-chip businesses which have recognised the advantages of our production process, enabling us to continuously produce graphene cost efficiently on a commercial scale.


“Applied Graphene Materials is now well positioned to meet the growing global appetite for graphene as a wonder material of the 21st century.”


Wilton Centre site director Steve Duffield said AGM’s successful commercialisation of a concept, that may revolutionise the way many products are made in the future, was a “very impressive example of innovation to emerge from the Wilton Centre”.


“We are very proud to have been able to support the group as it has expanded from its beginnings with a few employees, to becoming a business that requires multiple laboratories and office space.”


AGM has been based at Wilton for two years and wants to capitalise on forecasts for demand for graphene to increase tenfold from 40 tonnes to 400 tonnes, with market growth for graphene products due to hit $195m by 2018.



US recruited ‘gangs, criminals’ for wars



The Untied States military recruited “gang members and criminals” to fight its “illegal wars” in Iraq and Afghanistan, said a Marine combat veteran of the Vietnam War.




More than 800 US soldiers are under criminal investigation for fraudulent kickbacks they received during the Recruiting Assistance Program, which began in 2005 with the aim of increasing recruitment for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.


“The current investigation of military recruiting in front of the United States Senate brought to light a lot of failures of America’s military,” Gordon Duff, a senior editor of Veterans Today told Press TV on Tuesday.


“Recruiters were paid bounties to bring people in. These bounties of course were illegal,” he said.


Though the program helped the US Army meet its recruiting goals, it was also a ripe target for fraud. Because full-time uniformed Army recruiters were prohibited from participating, soldiers would be paid to get friends to join up and Army recruiters would receive a kickback.


“The recruiters would hire anybody off the street who could find any other person to bring in paying $7,000, $10,000 a head to drag the illiterate, the homeless, the mentally disturbed off-the-street gang members,” Duff explained.


“Thousands of gang members who were recruited and brought into the military formed criminal gangs across Iraq and Afghanistan and involved themselves in unspeakable crimes,” he added.


Duff said that while authorities now seek to punish those recruiters, they were simply doing what they were told.


“The illegal war had to be fought with gangsters, illiterate criminals, they had to be dragged in through somewhere, someone had to be paid to do it and now people don’t like the idea of it.”


The investigation, described as “one of the largest criminal investigations in the history of the Army,” was the subject of a Senate Homeland Security subcommittee hearing on Tuesday.


AT/HJ



'Massive move for me and Middlesbrough are a massive club': Lee Tomlin aiming to nail down place and help Boro reach play-offs

5 Feb 2014 09:40

Ambitious Lee Tomlin is determined to knuckle down and help his new teammates narrow the gap on the play-off zone




Lee Tomlin


Lee Tomlin is aiming to nail down a regular place in Aitor Karanka’s team and help the club finish in the top six.


The ambitious 25-year-old joined Boro late on deadline day from Peterborough on loan for the remainder of the season.


There’s a strong possibility that a long-term deal can be thrashed out in the summer but, in the meantime, Tomlin is determined to knuckle down and help his new teammates narrow the gap on the play-off zone.


Unfortunately, as a result of his third red card of the season, he is suspended and will have to wait until the Leeds game on February 22 to make his Boro debut.


Nonetheless, he’s delighted to be on Teesside.



“It’s a massive move for me and Middlesbrough are a massive club,” said Tomlin.


“It’s another step in the right direction for me in terms of my career. I’ve come to a team that plays football.


“I’m going to miss Peterborough, but that’s football. This is a massive club and it’s trying to get back where it should be and hopefully I can help that.


“Rockliffe Park is unbelievable,” he added. “Middlesbrough are the right team, the right club for me and the way they play is everything I want. I can’t wait, I’m just very excited.”


Tomlin admits it’s frustrating that he can’t play for Boro straight away but, including the Leeds match, he will be available for 15 Championship fixtures.


With regard to his ban, he said: “It’s just annoying, I would like to get involved straight away. I just want to play and try to help the team get to the play-offs.


“We’ve got everything to play for. If we get a few wins and a couple of teams slip up we’ve got every chance. You can never take your foot off the pedal.


“There are some very good Championship and Premier League players here. There’s a lot of experience and there are still quite a few games to go.”


Karanka has confirmed that Tomlin will probably play in the “No10” position behind the main striker – no doubt Danny Graham – though he can also play on the left or right of the attacking midfield trio.


“It’s my best position” he said, “so to get the best out of me would be for me to play in that hole behind the striker.


“I’d like to thread a few balls through for Danny and I’d also like to score a few goals myself. The way I play we should link up perfectly.


“We’ll have to wait and see where the gaffer wants me to play. The only thing I can do is show them what I can do when I get the chance.”



Teesside colleges braced for hundreds of thousands of pounds in cuts as spending review bites

5 Feb 2014 09:20

Middlesbrough College estimates policy will equate to a cut of almost £700,000 in its teaching budget next year






Teesside colleges are bracing themselves for hundreds of thousands of pounds in cuts to funding for 18-year-olds in full-time education.


For one college alone - Middlesbrough College - it will equate to a staggering £700,000 less in its teaching budget.


Two colleges in Stockton - Stockton Sixth Form and Stockton Riverside - stand to lose around £140,000 between them.


The Education Funding Agency announced plans in December to save £150m by paying 17.5% less for the full-time education of 18-year-olds than for 16 and 17-year-olds.


The agency said the cut would come into force for 2014/15, by which time, it argued, most 18-year-olds would not need “as much non-qualification provision within their study programmes” because they will have already benefited from two years of post-16 education.


It is estimated the move would affect 100,000 18-year-olds in UK colleges, plus those in sixth forms and studying foundation courses in universities.


But the cuts have been criticised by Teesside college chiefs and Stockton North MP Alex Cunningham.


Zoe Lewis, principal at Middlesbrough College, estimates the policy will equate to a cut of almost £700,000 next year.


She said the cuts “cannot be accommodated by delivering fewer teaching hours to those 18-year-old students - as the Government apparently envisages”, given that the college delivers to groups of mixed ages.


“This policy fundamentally misunderstands the reality of post-16 learning, particularly in communities with lower than average GCSE attainment levels where many students clearly take longer to reach their first level 3 qualification.


“The college is lobbying Government intensively with evidence of the impact on the local community here in Teesside and is working with local MPs and the principals of fellow colleges to ensure that the effects of this policy are properly understood.”


Joanna Bailey, principal at Stockton Sixth Form College, said: “Some 70 students at Stockton Sixth Form College enrolled in September aged 18. Each one of them has a different story about why they have needed to take three years to complete their qualifications at level 3 – usually through no fault of their own.


“The coalition has already cut college incomes by 15%. They should be helping colleges to nurture the talent of these young people, rather than bankrolling inefficient free schools and school sixth forms in areas where there is already a surplus of places.”


Labour MP Mr Cunningham was concerned the funding cuts will further disadvantage those already in need of the greatest support and will have a disproportionate impact for higher education institutions and general further education colleges.


He said: “It is important we realise that funding for 16 to 18-year-olds is already 22% lower than for pre-16 education, and these further cuts will serve only to exacerbate this discrepancy.


“Yet those 18-year-olds needing extra time at college to complete their courses are often in that position as a result of weaknesses elsewhere in the education system. Penalising colleges will not help to address this.”