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societySee all
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Woman investigated over husband’s use of assisted dying clinic wanted to argue case in court

A woman who was under police investigation for accompanying her husband to an assisted dying clinic in Switzerland said she wished her case had gone to trial so she could have proved her innocence in front of a jury.Louise Shackleton, 59, spent 10 months under investigation for assisting a suicide before North Yorkshire police announced this week that the Crown Prosecution Service had decided it was not in the public interest to prosecute her.She handed herself in to police on legal advice after she returned to the UK from a Dignitas clinic in Zurich where her husband, Anthony, died last December.She said that while she was relieved her adult children would no longer have to worry about her, she wished she’d had a chance to make her case in open court.“It wasn’t a relief for me, I would have actually preferred to go to trial

about 12 hours ago
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Penalties for unpaid carers in benefits scandal must be halted, says Ed Davey

Penalties imposed on thousands of unpaid carers who fall foul of the discredited carer’s allowance benefit rules should be suspended until the government has fixed the system, the Liberal Democrat leader, Ed Davey, has said.A Guardian investigation last year revealed hundreds of thousands of unpaid carers were landed with huge debts – and in some cases prosecuted for fraud – after being inadvertently trapped by chronic failures in the benefit’s design and administration.Although the government promised a year ago to reform carer’s allowance, there is increasing impatience among campaigners over the lack of progress and concern hundreds of unpaid carers are being hit with fresh repayment demands each week.“It cannot be right that the government is still hounding carers for repayments, long after this scandal was exposed and even after we secured an independent review, but before anything has been done to put things right,” Davey said.An independent inquiry into carer’s allowance headed by the disability policy expert Liz Sayce was ordered by the government in December

about 16 hours ago
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Campaigners urge CPS to reconsider charges against partner of woman who died by suicide

Domestic abuse charities and campaigners have urged police and prosecutors to reconsider criminal charges against a man who was found by a coroner to have driven his partner to suicide after an alleged decade of physical and mental abuse.At an inquest into the death of 32-year-old Georgia Barter in Walthamstow, east London earlier this month, assistant coroner Dr Shirley Radcliffe recorded a verdict of unlawful killing.“On or around 5 April 2020 [Georgia] had been assaulted by her long-term partner, who had been violent towards her on a number of occasions during their relationship,” Radcliffe said.“There was clear evidence of her being an individual with a psychiatric history of post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety and depression which had been exacerbated by her partner’s behaviour.”The inquest heard that although her former partner, Thomas Bignell, had previously been arrested on several occasions, and had contact with at least four different police forces, he was never charged with any violent offences against Georgia

about 17 hours ago
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Labour’s housing hypocrisy: councils serve almost 200 households with no-fault eviction notices

Labour-run councils in England have used a legal loophole to issue almost 200 households with no-fault eviction notices since the party was elected on a promise to ban the practice, a Guardian investigation has found.Scrapping these orders, known as section 21 evictions, was one of Keir Starmer’s main pledges before last July’s general election but, more than a year later, they remain lawful.Local authorities cannot normally carry out no-fault evictions. These are permitted if renters have an assured shorthold tenancy, a type of rental agreement offered by private landlords.However, some councils have been able to sidestep this through arm’s length companies set up to manage their housing stock

1 day ago
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Chemical linked to low sperm count, obesity and cancer found in dummies, tests find

A chemical linked to impaired sexual development, obesity and cancer has been found in baby dummies manufactured by three big European brands.Dummies made by the Dutch multinational Philips, the Swiss oral health specialists Curaprox and the French toy brand Sophie la Girafe were found to contain bisphenol A (BPA), according to laboratory testing by dTest, a Czech consumer organisation. Philips said they had carried out subsequent testing and found no BPA, while Sophie la Girafe said the amount found was insignificant.All three dummies were marketed as either “BPA- free” or “natural rubber”.BPA is a synthetic chemical used in the production of plastics, but it has a structure similar to the female hormone, oestrogen, which it mimics in the bodies of humans and other animals

1 day ago
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Youth clubs are essential parts of the community | Letters

John Harris is right to suggest that youth clubs tackle the issues of loneliness, phone addiction and isolation increasingly affecting young people (Britain’s youth clubs have been quietly decimated. What’s most revealing is that few seem to care, 12 October).I see this every day in my role as CEO of the youth charity OnSide. Whether it’s watching a teenager celebrating with their youth worker after scaling the climbing wall or proudly sharing a meal they’ve cooked in the centre’s kitchen with their friends, our network of youth clubs – known as youth zones – build the real-life connections and social skills that teenagers need to thrive.Austerity led to the closure of hundreds of youth clubs and the loss of thousands of youth workers, which devastated communities

2 days ago
cultureSee all
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From After the Hunt to the Last Dinner Party: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

2 days ago
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The Guide #213: Should we mourn the demise of TV channels?

2 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on the Republicans: ‘So much greed and hypocrisy and duplicity’

2 days ago
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Laurence Fox’s libel claim over racism accusations to go to retrial

2 days ago
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Blue plaque to be unveiled at home of Thomas the Tank Engine creator

3 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel: ‘Trump’s inner circle knows how dangerous the incessant misinformation from Fox News can be’

3 days ago

Campaigners urge CPS to reconsider charges against partner of woman who died by suicide

about 17 hours ago
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Domestic abuse charities and campaigners have urged police and prosecutors to reconsider criminal charges against a man who was found by a coroner to have driven his partner to suicide after an alleged decade of physical and mental abuse.At an inquest into the death of 32-year-old Georgia Barter in Walthamstow, east London earlier this month, assistant coroner Dr Shirley Radcliffe recorded a verdict of unlawful killing.“On or around 5 April 2020 [Georgia] had been assaulted by her long-term partner, who had been violent towards her on a number of occasions during their relationship,” Radcliffe said.“There was clear evidence of her being an individual with a psychiatric history of post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety and depression which had been exacerbated by her partner’s behaviour.”The inquest heard that although her former partner, Thomas Bignell, had previously been arrested on several occasions, and had contact with at least four different police forces, he was never charged with any violent offences against Georgia.

After her death, Bignell was investigated again by the Metropolitan police, and a file was passed to the Crown Prosecution Service, but no charges were brought.DCI Jim Mitchell, from the Met’s north-east command unit, said: “As part of an investigation following Ms Barter’s death, the Met investigated all available lines of enquiry and provided a detailed file of evidence to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).“Ultimately, it was deemed there was insufficient evidence to pursue this case.We appealed this decision but it was upheld.”It is understood that the force is now taking time to review the coroner’s findings.

In order for the CPS to consider charging Bignell, a file of evidence would again have to be referred to it by a police force.Domestic abuse campaigners have now urged the Met to ask the CPS again to look at the case, and for prosecutors to bring the case before a criminal court.At an inquest, there is no criminal due process and nobody is convicted or acquitted.It has a different burden of proof to criminal courts, with findings made on the balance of probabilities, rather than the criminal threshold of beyond reasonable doubt.Bignell has not been charged with or convicted of any criminal offences in relation to his alleged violence towards Georgia or her death.

Frank Mullane, the chief executive of Advocacy After Fatal Domestic Abuse, a charity that is supporting Barter’s family, said: “Although the standards of proof are different for the criminal court and the inquest court, nonetheless, the inquest concluded that Georgia was unlawfully killed.“Therefore, if the CPS, subsequent to the inquest, decides not to review its decision not to bring charges, the family – and indeed society – is owed a clear explanation as to why.”The charity is calling for a new law that would assist juries to recognise the causal relationship between domestic abuse and suicide, with the new offence attracting a similar sentence to manslaughter.“These matters underwent rigorous scrutiny by experienced prosecutors,” a CPS spokesperson said previously.“Several offences were considered on our initial review of the evidence presented by police, but we concluded our evidential test for prosecution was not met.

“Following this, at the request of the family, two separate reviews of the case were conducted by specialist prosecutors who too concluded there was not a realistic prospect of conviction.”Karen Ingala Smith, co-creator of The Femicide Census, said: “It has been long understood that one of the vital cornerstones of reducing – let alone ending – men’s violence against and abuse of women, is that the men who perpetrate that abuse must be held to account.“Figures now suggest that women’s deaths by suicide are greater than those where a man directly acts to kill a woman.Until the criminal justice system catches up, hundreds of men who have caused women’s deaths are at liberty to subject woman after woman to levels of abuse that make them feel that the only escape is to end their lives.”She added: “How can it be that despite the deaths of hundreds of women in the intervening years, there hasn’t bean a man found guilty of manslaughter by causing a woman’s suicide since 2017?“With Georgia Barter, there was evidence of years of abuse, Georgia’s lifeless body and now a coroner’s finding that she was unlawfully killed.

Yet Thomas Bignell walks among us.“You can’t convince me that his current or next partner is not at risk.The failure of the CPS to hold him to account is inexcusable.”Andrea Simon, director of the End Violence Against Women Coalition, said: “We’re pleased that the justice system is beginning to recognise the impact of domestic abuse in victims’ suicides, but we need to see perpetrators being held accountable.“Male violence and abuse has a devastating and wide-reaching impact on victims’ lives, which can continue long after the relationship ends.

In fact, when a woman leaves an abusive partner, we know that abuse can often escalate,“It’s imperative that we don’t have a closed-off route to prosecution for suicides caused by domestic abuse,It must be recognised with the seriousness and gravity it warrants,”Pragna Patel, from Project Resist, which runs a Suicide is Homicide Campaign for change in the criminal justice system, said: “Bringing these kinds of charges and these kinds of cases has proved incredibly difficult for many families, and actually many struggle to get the police investigation off the ground,“Grieving, families, who are absolutely traumatised, searching for answers, are then having to cope with having to do their own investigations, which should be the responsibility of the state.

”Patel’s organisation is campaigning for all deaths where a person is suspected to have been a victim of domestic abuse to be treated as homicides at the outset.“In Georgia Barter’s case, clearly, there’s been an unlawful killing ruling, which should lead to a thorough reconsideration on the part of the police and the CPS,” said Patel.