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



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.


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.



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



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



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.


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.



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, Friday 17th 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.



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.”



Boro goalkeeper Connor Ripley hailed by Peter Beardsley


Geordie legend Peter Beardsley’s charm offensive towards Boro has continued today as he heaped praise on Under-21 keeper Connor Ripley.


Boro’s giant stopper was one of six changes made by Paul Jenkins’ for last night’s Barclays Under-21 Premier League Second Division showdown at Victoria Park, replacing Joseph Fryer between the posts.


And Ripley put on a dazzling display to inspire Boro to a dramatic 2-1 win over Newcastle, extending the Teessiders’ unbeaten run to eight games and sending Boro’s young guns top of the table.


Ripley made a string of saves to keep Boro in the match, including an acrobatic stop to tip Kevin Mbabu’s thunderous strike over the bar.


Boro's Bradley Fewster and Newcastle's Alex Gilliead


Before the match Beardsley, now Under-21s coach at Newcastle, admitted he would love to see Boro get promoted this season.


And after the match it was Boro’s Ripley, who has featured for England’s Under-19s, who received the Geordie legend’s praise.


“We battled hard but we haven’t played anywhere near we can”, Beardsley told the club’s official site.


“Overall a draw would have probably been a fair result, but to be fair to Middlesbrough they took their two chances and good luck to them.


PA


Peter Beardsley

“(Ripley) made one brilliant save from Kevin Mbabu. It was a fantastic save.


“Jak (Alnwick) has done the same for us in the past and when you get an experienced goalkeeper who knows the game, it makes a massive difference.


“That’s their job but when it’s against you, you’re disappointed.”


Boro Under-21s next game is at Arsenal on Friday.



Mayor Ray Mallon first to attend scene after man collapses in Middlesbrough town centre


Middlesbrough Mayor Ray Mallon was first on the scene when a man collapsed in a busy town centre street.


At around 10.55am, police were called to reports of a man lying in the middle of Albert Road, Middlesbrough, just outside Teesside Magistrates Court.


Witnesses reported how the first person to tend to the man was Middlesbrough Mayor, Ray Mallon.


Wendy Vickerman, 51, said: “I was behind a white Ford Fiesta going down Albert Road next to the Magistrates Court when the car in front stopped.


“I could see there was a man in the street lying on his front face down in an awkward position.


“A man in the car in front jumped out like Robocop and I thought, ‘I know them braces’.


“He was straight out and on the floor with the man checking he was breathing and everything.”


After the incident, Mr Mallon said: “I was driving along Albert Road and must have been just behind the incident as it happened.


“The injured man was lying in the road and clearly in considerable pain, but he was still conscious and was able to talk to me.


“We dialled 999 and waited with him until help arrived at the scene.


“I simply did what I would expect any member of the public to do in similar circumstances - and I would like to thank those members of the public who also stopped to offer assistance.”


Albert Road was closed for a short time to allow access to the emergency services.


Police, fire and ambulance crews had arrived within 15 minutes.


The man was conscious and breathing but he had suffered minor injuries to his leg.



Teen arrested in Hemlington following manhunt for man armed with bow and arrow


A teenager has been arrested by police following a manhunt for a person armed with a bow and arrow.


The 19-year-old was arrested on suspicion of possessing an offensive weapon in a public place and is now in police custody.


As reported officers launched a manhunt on Cass House Road in Hemlington following reports of the incident.


A Cleveland Police spokeswoman said they were called at 11.20am this morning. She confirmed that the bow and arrow was not a toy.


Officers conducted an area search for the man and he was found in nearby Doxford Walk.



Lloyds staff on Teesside facing months of uncertainty over job cuts


Lloyds staff on Teesside could face months of uncertainty over their futures, following the bank’s announcement of massive job cuts.


The process to shed 9,000 staff from the payroll and close 200 branches will not begin until next year - and could take up to three years, bosses have confirmed today.


Customers’ wishes will be ‘taken into consideration’ when deciding which branches to keep open, the bank has confirmed.


The group said it would target closures in town centres where it currently has more than one branch.


Lloyds has branches across Teesside, including three in Middlesbrough.


The bank says it will invest in remote advice services for customers, while they will increasingly be expected to use online banking or self-service facilities within branches, instead of dealing with staff face-to-face.


Meanwhile, the group announced a 41% rise in underlying profits for the third quarter to £2.2bn.


A spokesperson told the Gazette today there could be closures ‘where there are overlaps of branches in urban locations.’


“We are still going through the process of identifying the branches that will be affected.


“There is no specific regional focus. Wherever our customers want the branches to be, we will take that into consideration.


“Redeployment is our first option,” they added.


The group has confirmed more than 90% of Lloyds and Bank of Scotland customers would continue to have a “useable branch” within five miles of their home.


Three years ago Lloyds, which is 25% owned by the taxpayer after being rescued during the financial crisis, pledged to keeping total branch numbers at the same level but now says the commitment has expired.


Finance director George Culmer said of the pledge to keep branches open: “That was a specific commitment we made over the last planned period. We won’t be able to commit to that going forward.”


Branches of TSB are not affected by the announcement.



Bodies of man, woman and two teenage girls found at Bradford house: latest updates


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The Editor



Chris Styles


Editor, The Gazette



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Chris was appointed editor of the Gazette in January 2012. He is also a former Gazette news editor. Chris has more than 20 years experience as a journalist and has previously worked in senior positions in Newcastle, Exeter and Nottingham.




Jonathon Taylor: Boro late show proves something special is brewing on Teesside


It probably shouldn’t have come as a surprise.


Sitting in the stands at Victoria Park last night with 88 minutes gone, I was ready to click “send” on a match report that dissected Boro Under-21s first defeat since August.


But then James Husband rose highest to head Emmanuel Ledesma’s deep cross past Jak Alnwick in the Newcastle goal.


Were the Geordies Steaua Bucharest or Basel in disguise?


They could well have been, as Callum Cooke drilled home a dramatic late winner seconds later to send Boro Under-21s top of the league in extraordinary fashion - leaving Peter Beardsley’s Magpies totally despondent.


It may not have quite been on the same stage as Boro’s remarkable road to Eindhoven in 2006 but for a second it felt like Cooke had fired the Teessiders into the UEFA Cup final all over again.


But should it have come as a surprise?


Boro's Bradley Fewster and Newcastle's Alex Gilliead


Less than a fortnight ago, trailing 3-1 at Reading on the back of a miserable 80 minutes, Boro’s young guns looked set to lose their first game since the opening day at Derby County.


But Cooke - who is fast becoming Boro’s very own Massimo Maccarone - scored late to give Paul Jenkins’ side a chance.


Then step up Dael Fry, who showed the composure of a seasoned striker to coolly lob the Royals goalkeeper and spark scenes of jubilation on the Boro touchline.


Hang on, didn’t Boro’s Under-21s score another late goal at Gateshead last week? It wasn’t Cooke again was it? You bet it was.


But scoring late goals is no fluke. Under Sir Alex Ferguson for the best part of two decades, Manchester United were the kings of the late show. It became something of a norm, a tradition, an inevitable twist in the tale.


Massimo Maccarone celebrates scoring the winner for Boro in the UEFA Cup Semi-Final against Steaua Bucharest


It’s a nice trait to have and Boro’s Under-21s are understandably oozing confidence right now. Sitting top of the table, they are the talk of Rockcliffe Park - and first-team head coach Aitor Karanka must be rubbing his hands together with glee.


Many of these youngsters are already knocking on the first-team door. Teesside’s pool of talent is getting deeper every week.


With Boro’s first-team also sitting comfortably in the play-off positions and fans rightly harbouring hopes of a first return to the Premier League since 2009, the Teessiders’ young guns are desperate not to be a mere side show this season.


Promotion to the Premier League for Karanka’s men would naturally grab the headlines, but promotion for Boro’s Under-21s would also be a magnificent achievement.


It’s early days in both races, and there will be many twists and turns left before next May. But isn’t it nice for Boro fans to take real pride in both its senior stars and upcoming starlets dazzling on the national stage?


Middlesbrough manager Aitor Karanka Middlesbrough manager Aitor Karanka


Last Tuesday’s defeat at Wolves for Boro took the shine off what has been a good start to the season for the first-team, but it was business as usual on Saturday as Karanka’s warriors went toe-to-toe with promotion contenders Watford.


The Championship is a funny league and there will be shocks. Wigan’s victory at leaders Derby on Saturday said it all - four points from a tough week which also included trips to Brighton and Wolves is nothing to be sniffed at.


But off the pitch, what is clear is that there is a real confidence surrounding Rockcliffe Park right now. From the senior side down to the youth set-up, there’s a calmness, a confidence and a buzz. It could be a special year for Middlesbrough Football Club.


Last night’s late show should not have been a surprise.


It may not have grabbed the same headlines of Steaua Bucharest and Basel eight years ago, but it was the latest in a run of events that suggests something special is brewing on Teesside.



Billingham Stars boss: One of the worst displays I have seen


General manager Allen Flavell said Billingham Stars produced one of the worst performances he has seen during his time at the club as they were humbled 8-1 by Blackburn Hawks.


Blackburn boast the best attacking line in the league in Jared Owen and brothers Luke and Adam Brittle.


But the way the Ultimate-Windows Stars failed to deal with them and were unable to get going themselves left Flavell desperately disappointed.


Blackburn danger man Luke Brittle helped himself to a hat-trick, Owen struck twice and Adam Brittle played a part in five of the Blackburn goals.


Richard Hughes, Chris Arnone and Pavel Slovik were also on target for the Hawks while Billingham’s only goal came from Callum Davies.


Flavell said: “I think it’s one of the worst games I’ve seen us play.


“We were just chasing shadows and we didn’t seem to be playing with any passion or pride. I’m not happy at all.


“It’s really disappointing from where I’m standing and it’s got to be addressed.”


Home side Blackburn were far superior from the opening face-off and took a third minute lead when Hughes put the loose puck away.


Owen doubled the lead five minutes later, finishing a two-on-one breakaway high into Billingham keeper Mark Watson’s net.


The Stars were unable to capitalise on a power play following a five-minute major penalty, and Blackburn went 3-0 up at the end of the first period when Luke Brittle was allowed to skate through and score unopposed.


Blackburn captain Arnone punished a Billingham penalty when he scored the Hawks’ fourth early in the second session and Luke Brittle got his second of the game less than a minute later before completing his hat-trick with less than half an hour played.


Billingham’s nosedive continued from the resulting face-off as Owen went straight up the ice to make it 7-0, which served to finally jolt the Stars into life as their man-of-the-match Davies scored the goal of the game to belatedly put the visitors on the scoresheet.


Flavell’s side were visibly more interested in the third period despite the game being over and both teams picked up roughing penalties as Billingham forward Luke Brown dropped his gloves to take on Hawks player Rick Ravey.


The Stars conceded again with two minutes remaining however as Slowik notched his first Blackburn goal to round off a disastrous journey down the M62 for the outclassed visitors.


Flavell added: “We didn’t seem to play with any sort of intensity.


“The lads were looking for everyone else to do the puck-carrying for them, and it took a nasty hit on Scott Ward to spark them into life.


“Mark Watson got exposed way too many times in our goal and we just can’t afford to do that.”


Billingham - and Flavell in particular - will be looking for a vast improvement on the Blackburn horror show at Ice Sheffield on Sunday when they play Sheffield Steeldogs in a British Challenge Cup clash (face-off 5.30pm).



'Boro U21s are top of the league by merit' insists coach Paul Jenkins


Boro’s young guns are top of the table by merit and have an inner confidence that they will not lose football matches, according to boss Paul Jenkins.


The Under-21s rose soared to the summit of the Barclays Under-21 Premier League Second Division in dramatic fashion as two late goals helped them to a 2-1 win over Newcastle last night.


Trailing to a first-half strike by Geordie youngster Adam Campbell, Boro’s youngsters looked set to lose their first game since August - but late strikes from James Husband and Callum Cooke turned the game on its head.


Victory in the Tees-Tyne derby means Boro’s Under-21s are now on an eight-game unbeaten run - and are three points clear of rivals Arsenal in the league table.


The Teessiders head to North London on Friday for a top-of-the-table clash - and Jenkins admits the spirit within Boro's ranks is clear to see.


It’s going to be another immensely tough game on Friday but we’re top of the league on merit”, Jenkins said.


“We are top because of the quality that we’ve produced, certainly in the first few games. There is a great resilience in the team, a strong team spirit and a togetherness.


“This group of players have a confidence about them that they’re never going to lose football matches and even when we’ve gone behind we’ve just continued to keep going. The fitness levels have been really good.


“The boys are in a really good position at the moment and we’ve proved that sometimes we don’t play well but we come away with results.”


Boro winger James Husband battles it out with Newcastle's Kevin Mbabu


Boro were far from their best last night at Victoria Park, and Campbell’s first-half strike looked set to hand the Geordies the three points as the Teessiders toiled in front of goal.


Jenkins admitted he was disappointed with his side’s overall display - but believes the introduction of Callum Cooke on 65 minutes changed the game.


“I was disappointed really, I thought we started the game well with the wind in our faces, yet we had a good 15 minute spell where we had some good play and had opportunities. Then we got pegged back a little bit and found it difficult to get out of our half and Newcastle pressed us.


“We conceded a goal which took the wind out of our sails a bit, so coming in at half-time I just felt we had worked on training in moving the ball quickly and not dwelling on the ball, but we started doing things we hadn’t set out to do.


“In the second half we didn’t get on the front foot and didn’t get hold of the ball, but as the game wore on we started to play again and started to have some belief.


Graham Bell/MFC Paul Jenkins


Paul Jenkins

“We had a couple of opportunities and we came alive with 30 minutes to go. We had the opportunity and a great delivery from Manu (Ledesma) put Husband in to score a header, and at that point if you’d asked me I’d be happy with a point.


“Then low and behold we get another opportunity and Callum Cooke did what he did last week (at Gateshead), came on and really changed the game for us. I thought he was really good and set the tempo for us, and again smashed one in the back of the net.


“Sometimes you see other managers being involved in stuff like that but yet you never think it’s going to be yourself involved in it. I’d have been quite happy to come away with a point after being behind for so long yet I was delighted we secured three points.


"It’s put us top of the league and three points clear going into Friday’s game against Arsenal.”



12-year-old girl suffers serious injuries after car flips on A19 at Norton


A young girl sustained serious injuries after the car she was travelling in flipped on the A19.


The 12-year-old girl suffered a fractured spine and internal injuries in the single-vehicle smash last night.


She is today in a stable condition in Middlesbrough’s James Cook University Hospital.


Emergency services were called to the A19 northbound at the A139 at Norton at 10.40pm.


The car, a Citroen Picasso, left the road, collided with “road furniture” and then flipped onto its roof.


There were four people in the car at the time, two other young girls aged 12 and 13, and the car’s 44-year-old male driver.


The other 12-year-old sustained cuts to her forehead and bruising to her stomach and neck. The 13-year-old suffered an injury to the back of her head and bruising, and the driver sustained cuts to his hand.


All four occupants, from the Whitley Bay area, were taken to James Cook University Hospital. The three with minor injuries were later discharged.


Police are now appealing for any witnesses to the crash to come forward. They should contact PC Craig Wren on the non-emergency number 101, quoting reference number 189876.



Review: Sam Smith at the 02 Academy Newcastle


Sam Smith is the man of the moment - and fresh from clearing up at last week’s MOBOs the 22-year-old Londoner proved why.


Newcastle’s 02 Academy was the perfect venue for an intimate gig.


Saturday night’s sold out show felt like a rare close-range glance at Sam to who such performances may not always be as possible in the future. A watershed of sorts.


Relaxed and likeable, Sam gave an endearing look into his life and personality.


Despite MOBO cool factor he chatted about pouring his emotions into his album after ‘drunk dialling’ the object of his affection, his female diva influences such as Whitney Houston and revealing the first single he bought as being by Amy Winehouse.


To kick off the third night of his UK tour he launched into his first E.P. Nirvana and then skillfully crooned through his debut album In The Lonely Hour.


Leave Your Lover and current chart topper I’m Not The Only One were boosted by the soulful on-stage band and a funky trio of backing singers.


Pretty live strings added magic to Sam’s beautiful ballads - including his breathy cover of Whitney Houston’s How Will I Know which is now a YouTube favourite.


But there was also plenty of fun to balance out the love songs - Sam dedicating Earth, Wind and Fire’s September to his mum.


The crowd loved one of Sam’s latest offerings, Restart: an upbeat, catchy number which has a feel of 80s soul to it.


Money on my Mind was also fantastically morphed into Ce Ce Peniston's Finally.


As well as the touching dedication to his mum, he name checked another in his set - writer and producer Jimmy Napes A.K.A James Napier who also seems to have the magic touch.


He is jointly responsible for writing for many of Sam’s tracks such as Lay me Down and other hits such as Clean Bandit’s Rather Be: the most streamed song of 2014. A partnership sure to produce more brilliance in the future.


Sam rounded off a performance of understated cool with chart favourite Stay With Me - and was given an ovation by the crowd who stamped their feet in approval.


The stamp of approval for a truly memorable gig.



Norton photographer's hen-sational wedding snap scoops couple £1,000


When Sarah Mayhew and Mike Craddock got married they never imagined their wedding photography would later bag them a £1,000 prize.


But that is exactly what happened when their wedding photographer, Norton’s Gary Walsh, scooped the Olympus/Master Photographers Association’s Wedding Photographer of the Year Award.


Gary’s unusual shot captured the happy couple in front of a hen house that once belonged to Sarah’s great grandparents.


And it was enough for Gary to walk off with the prestigious prize, with Sarah and Mike winning £1,000 for being the inspiration behind the photograph.


“I’ve been fortunate to win many awards over the years, but it was really nice to see Sarah and Mike win £1,000 for being such wonderful subjects,” said Gary.


“It was one of many I took on the day but so many clients visiting my studio were talking about it that I decided to enter it into the competition. I’m glad I did.”


Bride Sarah, from Ingleby Cross near the Cleveland Tontine, said: “We asked Gary for some special photographs featuring the hen house as it’s quite an unusual structure.


“It was given to my great grandparents, Tom and Sarah, who I’m named after, as a wedding present in 1906.


“As my wedding ring had belonged to my great-grandmother we thought it would be quite fitting to include it in our photography.


“As for the bright yellow, we wanted our wedding day to feel really celebratory – buoyant in fact, and be bursting with colour.


“The dress code was bows, bow-ties, braces, and all things bright and beautiful! You don’t get much brighter than yellow.”


Gary’s photograph beat stiff competition from hundreds of photographers all over the UK to net the prizes.


It is currently on display at his Gary Walsh Photography, Norton High Street studios. Visit www.garywalsh.co.uk for more information.



Relief for Teesside motorists with Newport Bridge set to reopen tomorrow


Motorists are expected to rejoice tomorrow as Newport Bridge reopens - bringing the “daily nightmare” commute to a close.


A large tunnel-style scaffold has been constructed which will enable motorists to once again use the A1032 road which crosses the bridge while the remaining repairs and repainting take place.


There will be a 17.5 tonne weight limit throughout the works – this will prevent use by some heavy goods vehicles but buses will be unaffected.


Access for cyclists and pedestrians will be maintained throughout.


Newport Bridge has been closed since the end of July.


It was set to reopen at the start of September but this date was delayed after damage was discovered to the structure.


Stockton Council then said the bridge would reopen on October 6 but later announced two further set backs.


Speaking previously, Andy McDonald, MP for Middlesbrough, said the local economy is being “significantly damaged” due to the major delays.


“Motorists know that maintenance work has to be carried out and that inevitably causes disruption; it’s simply unavoidable.


“But this has gone on for much longer than first anticipated.”


“I am sure that (the reopening) will be a great relief to everyone who has been caught up in the congestion,” he added.


“The sooner we get back to normal the better.”


Gazette readers have also posted their own reactions to the closure of Newport Bridge.


Christopher Hackworth posted: “I live up near Peterlee and work in Boro town centre, the commute during non-school time was approx 60 minutes, it’s about 90 minutes a day now.”


Chris Quincey blasted: “Pathetic. Takes me between on average 90 minutes each way to travel 17 miles to Trimdon. Lost so much time at work and wasted gallons of fuel. You arrive at work late, irate and frustrated.”


And Jamie Parker posted: “Absolute joke 45 minutes to do a ten minute journey from Billingham to Acklam every morning...get your act together.”


As reported exclusively by the Gazette, the cost of the much-delayed project has spiralled from £1.6m to a staggering £4.1m - owing to the unforeseen damage on the 80-year-old Grade II structure.



Woman feared fight between her love rivals when both turned up at Stockton home


Violence flared when two love rivals turned up at a woman’s home at the same time, a court was told.


James Brown, 23, said that he had been invited to the woman’s home but there was already an unexpected caller at the house in Stockton - her baby’s father.


Prosecutor David Crook told Teesside Crown Court that as Brown hammered on the front door the other man shouted from the other side: “I’ve just come to see my son.”


Brown then smashed a window and he got inside, while the woman called the police fearing a fight between the men.


Brown was arrested as he had breached a restraining order banning him from contacting her or from approaching within 200 metres of her address.


The couple had been in a five year relationship since he was 13 but she ended it because of his alleged abusive behaviour.


Mr Crook said that the man arrived at 9.15pm on August 2 “somewhat drunk and belligerent” and Brown was at the door minutes later.


Brown’s behaviour in breaching the order left him spending three months in prison waiting to be sentenced.


Mr Crook said that the woman, who was in court, told him that she did not want Brown to go to jail for it.


She said that she did not want a restraining order on him,and she said that they had been contacting each other despite the original order which was imposed at Teesside Crown Court in March when he was sentenced for two offences of criminal damage at her home.


She said in a Victim Impact statement which was read in court yesterday: “I love James, I do really want him to be released.”


Duncan McReddie, defending, said that the woman had even been texting Brown when he was in the dock during the previous case.


Judge Howard Crowson said: “The reality is that she was encouraging a breach of that order not because of any fear, it was a choice that she made.


“It was of course your obligation to abide by my order, but you went there by invitation.


“You were angry to discover another man in the house and he was not entirely a welcome visitor. He was the father of the child and she had tolerated him being there. You lost your temper with her but she felt that there would be a fight between you and the other man but there wasn’t one.”


Brown, of Laurel Road, Stockton, was given a 12-month community order with supervision and 24 sessions of a programme Building Better Relationships after he pleaded guilty to breach of the order and affray. He was ordered to pay £60 court surcharge and the judge revoked the restraining order.



Driver cleared of causing accident that left Billingham dad paralysed from chest down


A woman accused of causing a accident which left a man paralysed from the chest down has been found not guilty of driving without due care and attention.


Dad-of-two Roger Farwell, 71, from Billingham, suffered a serious spinal cord injury when a car mounted the pavement of Kingsway, in Billingham, and hit him on November 16, 2013.


Mr Farwell had been attending to his wife, who had fallen down some steps at the side of the road, when the accident happened. Almost a year on he is still in hospital.


Secondary schoolteacher Faye Clarke, 40, was found not guilty of driving without due care and attention at a trial at Teesside Magistrates Court yesterday.


Mrs Clarke, of Scotter Road, Scunthorpe, had been driving a Ford Fiesta on the day of the accident, which collided with a Mini Cooper. The crash sent the Mini veering off the road and into the pedestrians. As well as Mr Farwell’s injuries, a 34-year-old man suffered a fractured arm and a 32-year-old woman suffered a fractured ankle.


Mr Farwell’s daughter, Michelle Noble, 39, of Billingham said: “It’s been very difficult over the past year with dad being in hospital with such a serious injury. It’s a relief that the criminal proceedings are now over.”


Norton-born Mrs Clarke had parked on double yellow lines while she went shopping with her mother, Jean Churchill, using a blue badge because of Mrs Churchill’s mobility issues.


Mrs Clarke said she had edged out slowly and was continually looking both ways between parked cars and tried to turn right.


Giving evidence, she said that instead of performing a three point turn in the road, she drove into a loading bay behind Billingham’s Boyes store, and “edged out”.


However, prosecutor Andrea Milsom alleged in court that Mrs Clarke had been distracted by the crowd of people gathered round Mr Farwell’s injured wife and “drove straight out onto the road”.


Faye Wilson, a nurse from Billingham who was driving the Mini, told the court her car was in the middle of the road, straddling both lanes of traffic, as she was passing parked cars on her left.


Giving evidence, she described seeing the Ford Fiesta pull out “at the last minute” and hit her car, which she claimed was travelling at around 20mph.



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.


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.