
404 🇬🇧🏴
32K posts





🚨 BREAKING: Rachel Reeves has joined TikTok to announce 5-15 year olds in England will receive free bus travel this summer

BREAKING🚨Bus driver dies after Battersea Bridge assault as murder probe launched gbnews.com/news/london-ne…










Eckert faces sack and FA ban, sporting director also under scrutiny, owner 'furious', fears sponsors will pull out and amgry players consider taking legal action. All of the explosive fallout from the #SaintsFC spying scandal here @talkSPORT talksport.com/football/42716…


First trailer for a documentary series about the trial of Michael Jackson. Releasing June 3 on Netflix.

Manchester Airport Brothers Retrial Update. A jury at Liverpool Crown Court has now spent eight full days deliberating the fate of two brothers accused of assaulting an armed police officer, despite multiple CCTV angles and bodycam footage clearly showing the incident. Mohammed Fahir Amaaz, 21, and Muhammad Amaad, 26, both from Rochdale, deny assaulting PC Zachary Marsden, causing actual bodily harm, in a chaotic confrontation at Manchester Airport’s Terminal 2 car park pay station on 23 July 2024. The jury was sent out shortly after 3pm on Tuesday 12 May. They have sat through each subsequent day, with only the weekend break, but so far they have failed to reach a 10-2 majority verdict, which Judge Neil Flewitt KC said he would accept last Friday. They were sent home again this afternoon and will resume tomorrow, Thursday 21 May. This retrial concerns only the charge involving PC Marsden. In the original 2025 trial, Amaaz was convicted of headbutting civilian Abdulkareem Ismaeil at a Starbucks in the terminal and assaulting two female officers, one of whom suffered a broken nose. The first jury could not agree on the Marsden count for either brother, forcing this second trial. Prosecutors described the brothers using a high level of violence in a frenzied 30-second attack. Multiple cameras and police body-worn footage capture the moment officers were dealing with Amaaz following the earlier disturbance, before both brothers joined the confrontation. PC Marsden, who was armed, said he feared for his life and for control of his weapon. The defence maintains the brothers acted in self-defence, claiming they feared for their lives and believed excessive force was being used. The unusually long time taken by the jury has triggered widespread anger among the public. If the jury remains unable to reach a verdict by the end of this week, the judge may declare a deadlock. That could lead to a third trial or the Crown Prosecution Service dropping the charge. Sentencing for Amaaz’s earlier convictions has been delayed while this matter continues. #UKNews #CrimeNews #Rochdale #Manchester





🇬🇧🇵🇱 "I can't breathe" were the last words of Henry Nowak as he was handcuffed by the British police while heavily bleeding. According to testimonies presented at Southampton Crown Court, 18-year-old Polish-British student Henry Nowak managed to tell neighbors, "I've been stabbed," and "I'm dying" when the police arrived at the scene and handcuffed him over false racism allegations from the man who attacked Henry first.









