A Harrogate businessman who sexually assaulted a woman in the street has been spared prison.
Paul Harper, 41, touched or “groped” the young woman on an intimate part of her body while the victim was walking hand in hand with her boyfriend in Harrogate town centre, York Crown Court heard.
Harper, a married father-of-three, denied the offence but a jury found him guilty following a trial.
He appeared for sentence yesterday for his inexplicable and “predatory” act which occurred at night, in a crowded street “in the middle of Harrogate”, in August 2021.
The court heard that Harper, of Hollins Lane, Hampsthwaite, “brazenly” walked off after the bizarre act, leaving the Harrogate woman “aghast, shocked and distressed”.
Prosecutor Michael Morley read out a statement from the victim, who described the dramatic effect the incident had had upon her.
She said she found the experience “shocking” and described Harper’s behaviour as “outrageous, disgraceful and predatory”.
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She couldn’t understand what she had done “which had attracted this man’s attention” and said she had been treated like an “object”. It made her feel “less secure” in a town where she had previously felt safe. Mr Morley said:
“She regarded Harrogate as a fairly safe town and never felt there were problems there, but she feels less safe in her home town now…and upset that her parents saw the state she was in (when she returned home).”
The victim said her “outrage and bewilderment” had been compounded by the fact that incidents such as this in Harrogate and elsewhere appeared to be “commonplace” now, or “just one of those things girls have to deal with”.
She had undergone therapy since the incident to deal with feelings of “anxiety and sadness”.
Defence barrister Helen Chapman said Harper’s business and his employees would suffer if he were sent to jail. He was a man “of some means” and his family were dependent upon him.
Community order
Judge Simon Hickey told the disgraced businessman:
“In a crowded street in the middle of Harrogate, you decided to (sexually assault) a young woman…then you brazenly walked off, leaving that woman aghast, shocked and distressed that she could go out in a public street and still be molested.
“You said at trial, ‘I’m not some seedy guy who goes around imposing myself on young (women)’. I’m afraid that’s precisely what you are and that’s why you decided you could grope a woman when she was simply holding her boyfriend’s hands.”
The judge said he had noted the “significant” effect the attack had had on the victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons.
However, he said he wasn’t going to lock Harper up, “although many women may feel that that’s exactly what should happen to you”.
Mr Hickey said he could veer away from a jail sentence because of the effect this would have on Harper’s family.
Instead, Harper was given a two-year community order and placed on the sex-offenders’ register for five years. He was also given a 10-year restraining order banning him from contacting the victim.
In addition, he was ordered to complete up to 43 days of a sex-offenders’ group work programme, 80 hours’ unpaid work and a 55-day rehabilitation course. He was also made to pay £3,135 prosecution costs.
Ex-Harrogate guest house owner ordered to repay £140,000 for role in cannabis racketAn elderly Harrogate guest house owner who played the role of “facilitator” in a half-a-million-pound cannabis racket has been ordered to repay over £140,000 to the public purse.
Yoko Banks, 72, rented out three properties to a London-based Albanian drug gang, which set up large-scale cannabis factories harvesting “industrial” amounts of the highly potent skunk variety in some of Harrogate’s most desirable and affluent residential streets.
Banks, who was constantly in touch with the drug conspirators during their operation but played no active part in the cultivation process, was jailed for three-and-a-half years in August 2021 after she admitted three counts of being concerned in the supply of cannabis.
Her six co-conspirators Andi Kokaj, 23, Visar Sellaj, 33, Kujtim Brahaj, 50, Indrit Brahaj, 27, Bledar Elezaj, 36, and 31-year-old Erblin Elezaj, were jailed for a combined 22 years for various offences including drug supply and cannabis production.
Today, the disgraced former guest-house owner appeared for the final confiscation hearing at Leeds Crown Court under the Proceeds of Crime Act following a protracted case due in large part to Banks’s own “complex web” of properties and assets and what the prosecution described as her reluctance to co-operate with the financial investigation.
Cannabis farms
Prosecutor Martin Bosomworth said that it was agreed by both the prosecution and defence that Banks had benefited from the drug racket to the tune of £142,330.
He said it was agreed by both parties that the amount available to her was £565,347 – essentially half a million in assets or properties.
Judge Rachim Singh ordered Banks, of Scargill Road, to pay back the full benefit amount of £142,330 and gave her three months to pay on pain of 12 months in prison.
It comes just two months after one of Banks’s co-conspirators, Andi Kokaj, was made to pay back just £1 at the same court. The nominal fee was ordered due to the Albanian national’s apparent lack of means, his relatively “minor” role in the audacious drug plot and his limited financial gain.
Mr Bosomworth said the gang had converted three of Banks’ properties on Alexandra Road, Woodlands Road and Somerset Road near Harrogate town centre into cannabis farms with potential yields of up to £456,000.
They made an estimated £345,000 from the highly sophisticated enterprise in which they dug a trench outside one of the properties to install high-speed broadband so they could keep a check on the premises on internet-enabled security cameras.
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Their hugely lucrative plot finally unravelled when police were called to a five-bedroom villa owned by Banks in September 2020 after reports of a “disturbance” in the street involving what appeared to be two rival gangs vying for the cannabis farm.
The gang were able to watch the police drug raid live on the internet after rigging up a superfast broadband connection linked to cameras at the property, where officers found a crossbow at the front door.
‘Complicated accounts’
Last year, Banks failed in her bid to have her conviction quashed after earlier admitting her guilt.
At a previous adjourned confiscation hearing, Mr Bosomworth said that Banks owned a string of “highly marketable” properties in some of Harrogate’s most desirable areas.
He added, however, that her “complicated accounts and property empire” were proving to be a major sticking point in the ongoing financial investigation.

Leeds Crown Court. Picture: the Stray Ferret.
On that occasion, Banks – who was due to be released from New Hall women’s prison on New Year’s Eve, halfway through her jail sentence – claimed she had no money because it had been frozen in her bank account.
Mr Bosomworth said that Sellaj, the gang’s ringleader, had made £438,000 from the cannabis-cultivation enterprise and that he had £76,000 in the bank which he could pay back into public coffers.
At a contested financial confiscation hearing in May last year, it was found that Indrit Brahaj had jointly benefited from the criminal enterprise to the tune of £133,328. In his case, a confiscation order of £24,082 was made.
Kujtim Brahaj was found to have benefited to the tune of £1,194. The judge made a nominal confiscation order of £1 in his case due to limited financial means.
Banks, who had previous convictions for health-and-safety offences through her work, was due to be paid at least £12,000 a month in rent for allowing the gang to use the three properties and was also receiving “high” deposits, said Mr Bosomworth.
Ringleader Sellaj’s financial confiscation proceedings have been adjourned for a full-day hearing on a date to be fixed. This will determine the amount of cash available to him and how much he must pay back.
Ripon and Knaresborough men spared jail after TikTok fightTwo men who staged a fight in a layby for TikTok viewers have been spared prison despite one of them brandishing a machete in front of onlookers.
William Fuller-McMillan and Rivers Wilson, both 22 and from Ripon and Knaresborough respectively, were armed with weapons when they turned up for the pre-arranged fight near Ripon racecourse, York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Lewis Kerr said it appeared the fight had been arranged between Wilson and another named man following an “issue” with a young woman.
The fight was set for a layby on Boroughbridge Road, Ripon, on December 17, 2021, when people turned up in several cars “armed with weapons” in the dark hours to witness the shocking scenes.
Mr Kerr said videos of the fight were circulated on the internet as it was happening, and witnesses called police.
Onlookers who witnessed the “prolonged” dust-up said it was initially a “fair fight, one-on-one”, between Wilson and his rival, with punches being thrown by each man.
But then Wilson “took the upper hand, kicking (the other man) several times” and there was kneeing during the fight, along with “grappling and grabbing”, causing injuries ostensibly to both men.
The court heard that at some points during the skirmishing, someone drove a dark Mercedes at people at the scene.
Mr Kerr said that by the time the fight ended, Wilson appeared to be holding a baseball bat, although he was never charged with this.
Fuller-McMillan then brandished a machete and threatened another man with the weapon.
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Mr Kerr said although the knife wasn’t actually used, there was the “potential for serious disorder”.
He said the entire incident was a “staged fight on TikTok”.
Wilson, of Princess Close, Ripon, was arrested and initially charged with affray. He denied the allegation and was due to face trial on Tuesday, January 3, but admitted an alternative charge under the Public Order Act before a jury was sworn in.
Fuller-McMillan, of Stockwell Drive, Knaresborough, admitted using a bladed article to threaten. The two men appeared for sentence on Wednesday.
Previous convictions
The court heard Fuller-McMillan had a previous conviction for threatening to damage property. He was convicted of that offence in June last year and received a community order.
Wilson had four previous convictions for 12 offences, the last of which in 2019 resulted in a 22-month jail sentence in February 2020.
Barrister Patrick Palmer, for Wilson, said his client earned good money in construction and had stayed out of trouble since the incident in Ripon.
Nicholas Hammond, for Fuller-McMillan, said his client had moved away from Ripon following the incident and had since set up home with his partner and worked full time as a joiner.
He said Fuller-McMillan was at the scene to support his friend Wilson and his actions were down to a “lack of maturity”.
Judge Simon Hickey described the staged fight in Ripon as a “disgraceful incident”.
He told the defendants:
“In the darkness, you all decided you were going to have a fight. You all attended in several motor cars armed with weapons.
“Any member of the public going past would have been very upset and perturbed by what then occurred.”
Fuller-McMillan was given a 22-month prison sentence, but this was suspended for 18 months because of his “impressive” character references and the fact that he had stayed out of trouble since the incident. As part of the order, he must complete 150 hours’ unpaid work.
The judge told Wilson that although he had been involved in a “nasty piece of violence”, he was “impressed that you and your co-accused are both working and keeping out of trouble”.
Wilson was fined £500 for the public-order offence and ordered to pay a statutory surcharge. Both men were ordered to pay £185 prosecution costs.
Harrogate solicitor jailed after breaching restraining order
A solicitor who rammed his car into his wife’s home in Harrogate and subjected her to “mental torture” has been jailed for breaching a restraining order designed to protect her.
Richard Wade-Smith, 66, was spared jail in September after he admitted harassment causing fear of violence, damaging property and drink-driving.
That followed an unrelenting harassment campaign against his now-former partner which culminated in the incident on Boxing Day 2021 when Wade-Smith, who was drunk, rammed his Nissan Qashqai into his wife’s home in Slingsby Walk.
On that occasion, Wade-Smith received a three-year community order with a rehabilitation programme and restraining order banning from contacting the victim or going anywhere near her property.
It was hoped that a non-custodial sentence would enable him to “rebuild his life”, but within four days of it being imposed, he went to his wife’s house and knocked on the door.
Restraining order breach
Barrister Kelly Sherif, who was prosecuting at the initial sentence hearing, said it was about 8.15am on September 19 when Wade-Smith’s wife heard a knock at her door. Wade-Smith walked off but about two hours later he returned, knocked on her door again and called her name.
The named victim went to the door, but Wade-Smith, a former “high-powered” lawyer, walked off again.
A neighbour called police and Wade-Smith was arrested. He was charged with two counts of breaching a restraining order and remanded in custody.
He admitted the offences and was due to be sentenced in October, but Judge Sean Morris adjourned the case to look into the possibility of new hostel accommodation as an alternative to jail.

York Crown Court.
Wade-Smith, of no fixed address, appeared for sentence at York Crown Court today.
The court heard that under the terms of the restraining order, Wade-Smith was supposed to go straight to Harrogate Borough Council’s offices to seek emergency accommodation following his release from custody in September.
However, Brooke Morrison, prosecuting at today’s adjourned sentence hearing, said there had been a delay in releasing him from custody which meant that when he was freed, the council offices had closed for the day and there was no room for him at any hostels in Harrogate.
He had slept rough on his first night of freedom and failed to get in touch with the council the following day, which meant that his request for hostel accommodation was turned down.
The lawyer slept in an expensive hotel for “one or two nights”, but then got drunk and ended up sleeping on the street.
He claimed that while sleeping rough he had been robbed of his credit cards and woke up in hospital.
He said that with “nowhere else to go”, he headed for his former marital home.
Too drunk to get out of car
Wade-Smith, who had worked for various law firms in Yorkshire and latterly ran his own legal service from Wedderburn House, was nearly twice the drink-drive limit when he rammed his car into his wife’s home on Boxing Day.
His wife was woken by a terrible “smashing” noise which she initially thought was an “explosion”.
Wade-Smith was so drunk that police had to help him out of the car, which was damaged along with the front of the semi-detached home.
The incident followed months of marital discord in which Wade-Smith falsely accused her of being unfaithful and forced her to flee the house.
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Wade-Smith, a Cambridge law graduate, had been in a relationship with the victim for about 22 years, but in 2021 his behaviour changed after he started drinking again.
He would “disturb (his wife’s) sleep”, waking her in the middle of the night and demanding she “answer questions” of a personal nature, said the prosecution.
In November last year, she started receiving nasty messages on a “daily basis” from Wade-Smith. On one occasion inside the house, he told her:
“If you don’t go now, I’ll kick you down the stairs.”
Wade-Smith was said to have been suffering from psychosis and “hypermania” after becoming bipolar in middle age.
Defence barrister Ayman Khokar said that Wade-Smith “wasn’t in his senses” when he went back to the victim’s home and breached the order.
‘Re-triggered trauma’
Judge Morris, the Recorder of York, told Wade-Smith it was his “own fault” that he was now facing a jail sentence.
He said although it was true that he had only knocked on his wife’s door, it had “re-triggered the whole trauma of the past and that is why it has caused this (victim) very serious distress”.
He added:
“She is in a bad way because of you, and it is a form of mental torture.”
Wade-Smith was given a 10-month jail sentence, but he will only serve half of that, less the time he had already spent on remand, before being released on prison licence.
The judge ordered that the restraining order would remain in place indefinitely.
Man jailed for lewd act near children’s play area in Harrogate’s Valley GardensWarning: this article contains details some people may find upsetting.
A sexual predator has been jailed for over two years for performing a lewd act near the children’s play area in Harrogate’s Valley Gardens.
Kevin Payne, 67, was under a strict court order not to go anywhere near children’s play parks following previous convictions for child-sex offences.
But on June 12 he parked his car outside Valley Gardens and made his way to a wooded area near a children’s play area, York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Brooke Morrison said a passer-by spotted Payne performing a lewd act in woods overlooking the play park.
Payne was “startled” by the passer-by, who spotted him through a gap in a hedge and shouted over to him as Payne ran away.
Ms Morrison added:
“The passer-by gave chase and (as) he followed Payne, he took a number of pictures of him before apprehending him and keeping him there until police arrived.”
Payne was arrested and admitted breaching a sexual-harm prevention order, which prohibited him from going within 100 metres of any recreational area where there may be children present.
However, he denied a separate charge of outraging public decency by behaving in an indecent manner, namely performing a lewd act.

The play area in Valley Gardens.
Payne, from Bradford, was due to face trial today but admitted the offence at the last minute.
Ms Morrison said Payne committed the offences in Harrogate while under investigation for downloading indecent sexual imagery online.
He was arrested for those offences in December last year after police monitoring officers paid him a routine visit to check he was complying with the sexual-harm prevention order following a previous jail sentence for child-sex offences.
Payne handed over his mobile phone on which police found internet searches for sexual images of children and an indecent photo of a child rated Category A – the worst kind. They also found six images of extreme pornography, namely bestiality.
Payne admitted making an indecent image of a child and possessing six extreme-pornographic images following his arrest and was recalled to prison to serve the remainder of a six-month jail sentence imposed in June last year for making indecent images of children.
He was released from prison in January this year and went on to commit the offences at Valley Gardens in June.
40 years of crime
The Crown proceeded to sentence on all matters today as the prosecution outlined Payne’s 40-year criminal history, which comprised 51 previous offences including many for indecently exposing himself in front of young girls and making indecent images of children.
His rap sheet also included voyeurism, kerb-crawling, engaging in sexual activity in the presence of a child, serious violence, harassment, public disorder, and breaching court orders.
He had been given extended prison sentences in the past for child-sex offences as various judges deemed him a dangerous offender.
Defence barrister Derek Duffy said Payne “did not intend to be seen by anybody” in Valley Gardens when he carried out the lewd act.
He said Payne had rented accommodation in Bradford before being remanded in custody, but he had since lost that and intended to live with a friend in Harrogate upon his release from jail.
He added that Payne — formerly of Ling Park Avenue, Bingley, but currently of no fixed address — was a retired man who had lost all contact with his family and was a “rather despondent” figure.
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Judge Simon Hickey described Payne’s latest offences in Valley Gardens as “quite revolting” and told him:
“You are, worryingly, 67, and you are still committing offences of this nature. Fortunately, the children were not to see what you did.”
Payne was given a 27-month jail sentence but will only spend half of that behind bars before being released on prison licence.
He was ordered to sign on the sex-offenders’ register for 10 years and the judge ordered that the sexual-harm prevention order would remain in place.
Mr Hickey said the named witness who chased and detained Payne would be paid £150 from the public purse for his “very-public-spirited” actions.
Two men jailed for vicious attack in Ripon
Two middle-aged men were jailed today for a vicious attack on an innocent man who suffered a broken eye socket which required facial-reconstruction surgery.
Gavin Hewson, 45, and Charles Neate, 55, punched the victim repeatedly at a block of flats in Ripon which left him “covered in blood”, York Crown Court heard.
They were arrested and charged with causing grievous bodily harm but denied the offences. However, a jury found them guilty following a trial in November.
Prosecutor Nicola Hoskins said the two men went to the apartment block in St Marygate apparently looking to “sort out” another man but ended up attacking his neighbour, who was named in court.
The victim had been watching TV with his partner when they heard someone shouting the name of their neighbour who lived in the opposite flat.
When he went outside to ask them to be quiet and go away, he was attacked by the two men, resulting in a fractured eye socket, swollen eyes and a suspected broken nose.
His partner called police as other people outside flagged down a passing police car and alerted officers to the attack.

York Crown Court
Two officers followed a “trail of blood” from the apartment block’s communal door to the victim’s flat and advised him to seek medical attention.
He was treated at Harrogate District Hospital and kept in overnight due to the extent of his injuries. He later had facial-reconstruction surgery.
Hewson and Neate claimed they weren’t even at the apartment block but were found guilty as charged. They appeared for sentence today.
Ripon man had 13 previous convictions
Ms Hoskins described the attack, which occurred on August 2, 2020, as “prolonged and persistent”.
Hewson, of Maple Walk, Ripon, had 13 previous convictions for 20 offences including battery, assault occasioning actual bodily harm and disorderly behaviour.
Neate, of Aysgarth Walk, Richmond Hill, Leeds, had 110 offences on his record including many for serious violence and previous convictions for assault with intention to rob, public disorder, affray and carrying a blade.
David McGonigal, for Hewson, said the father-of-two had a well-paid job but accepted he had a problem with drink-related violence.
He said Hewson could lose his job and his home if he were jailed.
Robert Mochrie, for Neate, said his client had been struggling with his mental health for years following a family tragedy.
But judge Sean Morris, the Recorder of York, said the attack at the apartment block was “far too serious” for anything other than an immediate jail sentence.
He told the defendants:
“Both of you have had serious tragedies in your lives and they were deeply unpleasant…but think about all the unpleasantness, the upset, the fear, that you have caused in your lives to other people.
“And on this night, I’m quite satisfied that the pair of you were going to these flats in order to sort somebody out.
“You weren’t after this (victim)…but it turned nasty very quickly upon your unfortunate victim who had nothing to do with you and came out simply to ask you to be quiet…and both of you set about him.
“You beat up a purely innocent man just for the hell of it.”
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He told Neate:
“It is right to say that your offending was tailing off somewhat…but back it’s come with a vengeance.”
Jailing him for three years, the judge described Neate as a “very violent man indeed”.
Hewson was jailed for two-and-a-half years because his track record for violence wasn’t as bad as Neate’s.
Both men were also given a five-year restraining order, banning them from contacting the victim and his partner and going to St Marysgate in Ripon.
Harrogate man jailed for three years for ‘savage’ attackA Harrogate man has been jailed for three years for a “savage”, unprovoked attack on a neighbour who was left with a fractured eye socket, broken nose and cracked ribs.
Richard Banks, 45, sidled up to the victim in the street and asked him for a cigarette, York Crown Court heard.
The victim, a professional man who was out walking his dog, invited him into his flat in St Mary’s Avenue, Harrogate, but soon felt “uncomfortable” because Banks, whom he barely knew, was “overfamiliar” with him, said prosecutor Rachel Landin.
He asked Banks to leave which he did but returned later that day. When the victim opened the door, Banks, a long-time drug user, “barged in and began shouting”, said Ms Landin, adding:
“He attacked (the victim), knocking him to the floor and repeatedly kicking and punching him to the torso and head.”
Banks took hold of a knife in the kitchen and threatened to kill the named victim, who ran to the front of the house and shouted for help from a window. Ms Landin said:
“He wasn’t sure where (Banks) had gone, so he picked up a bread knife and went into the street.
“He encountered (Banks) again who renewed his attack, punching (the victim) repeatedly to the face.”
Fractured eye socket
Passers-by witnessed the horrific attack and called police who arrived to find Banks standing over the “confused” victim, who was lying helpless after being knocked to the ground and banging his head on the pavement.
The victim, who was concussed, still had the knife in his hand, but police said there was no threat posed by him and the blade was confiscated without a struggle.

York Crown Court
He was taken to Harrogate District Hospital where he woke up “not knowing what was going on and in a lot of pain”.
He was transferred to York Hospital for surgery and specialist treatment to a fractured eye socket and broken ribs and nose, as well as cuts, bruises and scratches all over his body.
Banks, who bizarrely appeared “more focused” on the victim’s dog, was arrested in the street and charged with wounding.
He denied the offence, falsely claiming self-defence, but was found guilty following a trial at the Crown Court in July.
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He appeared for sentence yesterday after being remanded in custody.
Ms Landing said the victim had to have surgery to rebuild his shattered eye socket by inserting titanium plates.
He had continued to suffer from impaired and blurred vision since the attack on December 28, 2020, and been receiving optical treatment.
He had been working in IT but had had to change his job due to the computers exacerbating migraines brought on by the attack. His vision impairment would be permanent.
The victim described the attack as “random and unprovoked”. He had become “very paranoid (and) extremely nervous” when out in public.
He had been prescribed anti-depressants and sleeping tablets and didn’t feel safe at home, which was close to where Banks lived. He added:
“I find it really hard to leave my flat, even to walk the dog or go to the shop.
“I have uncontrollable panic attacks.”
The side of his face was “numb for the best part of a year, causing problems eating”.
11 previous convictions
Banks, of St Mary’s Avenue, had 11 previous convictions for 21 offences including public disorder, damaging property and drug-related offences including cultivating cannabis in 2013, possessing cocaine in 2014 and possession of crack and heroin in 2018. He recently received a suspended prison sentence for dealing heroin and cocaine.
His barrister Nick Cartmell said Banks was “hysterical, crying (and) wasn’t in his right mind” when he was arrested for the attack in St Mary’s Avenue.
But judge Simon Hickey said Banks had shown no remorse and described the attack as “savage, nasty and persistent”. He told Banks:
“The victim is…frightened to go out; he’s frightened to shop; he has to rely on people. (There is) permanent disruption to his sight and he’s very conscious about the (titanium) plate in his face.”
He said although Banks had mental-health issues, a three-year jail term was “the least” sentence he could impose for “this savage beating of this man in his own home and outside in the street”.
Banks will serve half of that sentence behind bars before being released on prison licence.
Three-month jail term for ‘confused’ man found with bayonet in Kirk HammertonA man was caught wandering the streets of the Harrogate district with a bayonet after he went looking for spies he thought were bugging his home.
Christopher Graham, 58, from Harrogate, was found with the large, sheathed military-style blade in Kirk Hammerton after his daughter called police saying she was concerned for her father’s welfare, York Crown Court heard.
She told police her father’s mental state had “deteriorated in recent days, to the extent that he thought his [home] was being bugged”, said prosecutor Brooke Morrison.
Graham left his house “saying he was going to kill [the people he thought were wiretapping his home]”, she added.
Police went looking for him and eventually received reports of a man matching Graham’s description looking “disorientated and confused” at a local petrol station.
Officers found him on York Road, Kirk Hammerton, where he appeared “quite confused, had no shoes or socks on and was attempting to hitchhike”. Ms Morrison said:
“He was picked up by police and found to be carrying a bag which contained, among other items, a sheathed bayonet [blade].”
He was taken in for questioning and told officers he had become “more and more anxious in recent days”. The prosecuting barrister added:
“He said he had forgotten the knife was in his bag and didn’t realise he had it with him.”
Graham, of Butler Road, Harrogate, was arrested and charged with carrying a bladed article in public. He admitted the offence, which occurred on September 25, and appeared for sentence today.
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Ms Morrison said there was no evidence that Graham had taken the bayonet out of the bag while he was wandering the streets.
He hadn’t been taking his medication at the time and had been detained in hospital in the past for mental health issues. He was said to suffer from a chronic relapsing psychotic disorder.
The court heard he had 19 previous convictions for 42 offences, including burglaries and drug-related matters, most of which occurred in the 1980s.
His most recent conviction was in 2009 for an offence of false imprisonment for which he received an 18-month jail sentence.
Ms Morrison said Graham had a drug habit at the time of that offence.
‘No intention of harm’
Defence barrister Victoria Smithswain said Graham had been remanded in custody since his arrest and had therefore already served the equivalent of a four-month prison sentence.
Recorder Tahir Khan KC told Graham:
“It appears that you had not been taking your medication, as a result of which you became confused and were thinking negative thoughts.”
He said it was evident the bayonet blade was never brandished, adding:
“I am satisfied that you had no intention of harming anybody…
“I deal with you on the basis that this was an isolated lapse on your part because you had not been taking your medication.”
Graham was given a three-month jail sentence which triggered his immediate release from custody due to the amount of time he had already spent on remand.
Harrogate man claimed indecent pictures of children were to trap paedophilesA man who made thousands of indecent images of children told police he had downloaded the photos to try to “trap” another paedophile.
David Michael Rochford, 35, was arrested after police searched his home in Harrogate and seized several computer devices, York Crown Court heard.
Rochford told officers they would find indecent images on the devices but later claimed he had downloaded them to “lure” someone he believed to be a paedophile and that he had not viewed the illicit material, said prosecutor Brooke Morrison.
He maintained this pretence until he was sentenced yesterday for downloading more than 9,600 indecent images over a five-year period.
Some of the images, which included videos as well as photos, were rated Category A – the worst kind of such material involving the serious sexual abuse of children.
Ms Morrison said that Rochford, of Poplar Grove, told police he was “accessing (the images) because he wanted to trap somebody else who was a paedophile”.
Rochford told a probation officer the same thing after he admitted the offences, but the prosecution never accepted his claim due to the length of time he had been downloading the material and the sheer number of images involved.
When Rochford appeared for sentence, his barrister Daniel Ingham said his client was still “standing by” his dubious claim as to why the images were found on his computer.
But after Recorder Simon Jackson KC advised Rochford that he should reconsider his claim and confer with his counsel during a short adjournment, Mr Ingham said that Rochford now resiled from his far-fetched story and was prepared to be sentenced on the full facts as set out by the prosecution.
Rochford had already admitted three counts of making indecent images, including 147 rated Category A. In total, he downloaded 9,631 illicit images between 2014 and 2019.
The Crown moved straight to sentence and duly dismissed Rochford’s initial claim that he was engaging in a “scheme of entrapment”.
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Ms Morrison said that police raided Rochford’s home in June 2019. They seized a “large number” of devices including three laptops, a computer tower, hard drives and memory cards.
They found indecent images on seven of the devices, forensic analysis of which showed that Rochford had used “peer-to-peer” software as part of his online activities.
“He was interviewed and admitted having the material (but) said this was in order to lure a person he suspected of being a paedophile,” said Ms Morrison.
She said that Rochford had four previous convictions including for violence but nothing of a sexual nature.
Mr Ingham, for Rochford, said his client was a full-time carer for his mother, who was seriously ill and with whom he lived.
She said he had a past alcohol problem for which he was getting help and mental-health problems.
Recorder Mr Jackson KC said Rochford had initially admitted the offences “on the false premise that this was to trap another paedophile”.
He said the sheer number of images and the years-long period of offending showed there was “plainly a sustained pattern of downloading sexual images for your own sexual gratification”.
However, he said he had to bear in mind the delay in the case reaching court and Rochford’s caring responsibilities for his mother.
He said it was for those reasons that he could suspend the inevitable jail term.
Rochford was given an 18-month suspended jail sentence and placed on the sex-offenders’ register for 10 years.
He was also given a 10-year sexual-harm prevention order, mainly to curb his internet activities, and ordered to take part in a sex-offenders’ programme, complete a 20-day rehabilitation course and carry out 40 hours of unpaid work.
Man ordered to pay £1 for role in £500,000 Harrogate cannabis racket
An Albanian drug conspirator involved in a half-a-million-pound cannabis racket in Harrogate has been made to pay back just £1 to the public purse and is apparently “nowhere to be found”.
Andi Kokaj, 23, was part of a London-based gang which conspired with former Harrogate guest-house owner Yoko Banks to set up three lucrative cannabis factories in affluent streets.
He was jailed for three years in August last year for being concerned in the production of cannabis.
At a financial confiscation hearing today at Leeds Crown Court, judge Tom Bayliss KC ruled that Kokaj would pay a nominal fee of £1 after the prosecution said he played a “minor” role in the criminal enterprise.
Prosecutor Michael Bosomworth said the gang had converted three of Banks’ properties on Alexandra Road, Woodlands Road and Somerset Road near Harrogate town centre into cannabis farms with potential yields of up to £456,000. The gang made an estimated £345,000 from the drug plot.
However, Kokaj, played a “lesser role” and was paid just £80 a day for his part in the conspiracy and so made a financial gain of £1,120, added Mr Bosomworth.
He said that Kokaj, from London but of no fixed address, had no assets.
Mr Bayliss KC duly made the nominal £1 order due to Kokaj’s limited financial means.
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Kokaj didn’t attend the confiscation hearing and the court heard he was “probably nowhere to be found”.
When he was sentenced last summer, he was told he would only have to serve half of the three-year sentence behind bars, less the time he had spent on remand, which means he is likely to have been released from jail.
Yoko Banks case adjourned again
Banks, 74, of Scargill Road, Harrogate, was also due to face financial confiscation today but her case was adjourned yet again for the service of financial documents setting out her complex web of assets and properties.
Earlier this year, the former B&B boss and property tycoon failed in her bid to have her conviction quashed after being convicted of three counts of being concerned in the production of cannabis.

Yoko Banks
The court heard the disgraced pensioner was the “facilitator” for the Albanian gang’s cannabis-cultivation enterprise.
Her six co-conspirators, Kokaj, Visar Sellaj, 33, Kujtim Brahaj, 50, Indrit Brahaj, 27, Bledar Elezaj, 36, and 31-year-old Erblin Elezaj, were jailed for a combined 22 years for various offences including drug supply and production of the highly potent skunk cannabis in August 2021.
Banks, who rented out her three properties to the gang to convert into cannabis farms, was jailed for three-and-a-half years and is due to be released from New Hall women’s prison in West Yorkshire on December 31, halfway through her sentence.
At a previous adjourned confiscation hearing, Mr Bosomworth said that Banks owned a string of “highly marketable” properties in some of Harrogate’s most desirable areas.
He added, however, that her “complicated accounts and property empire” were proving to be a major sticking point in the ongoing financial investigation.
On that occasion, Banks claimed she had no money because it had been frozen in her bank account. She said, however, that she had “a lot” of assets.
Ringleader made £438,000
Mr Bosomworth said that Sellaj, the gang’s ringleader, had made £438,000 from the cannabis-cultivation enterprise and that he had £76,000 in the bank which he could pay back into public coffers.
At a contested financial confiscation hearing in May, it was found that Indrit Brahaj had jointly benefited from the criminal enterprise to the tune of £133,328. In his case, a confiscation order of £24,082 was made.
Kujtim Brahaj was found to have benefited to the tune of £1,194. The judge made a nominal confiscation order of £1 in his case due to limited financial means.
The prosecution said that Banks rented out her properties to the “professional” drug gang for “industrial” cannabis production “in the expectation of significant profit”, though she had no part in the actual cultivation process.
Their mega-money plot finally unravelled when police were called to a five-bedroom villa owned by Banks in September 2020 after reports of a “disturbance” in the street involving what appeared to be two rival gangs vying for the cannabis farm.
Banks, who had previous convictions for health-and-safety offences through her work, was due to be paid at least £12,000 a month in rent for use of the three properties and was also receiving “high” deposits, said Mr Bosomworth.
Her final confiscation hearing was adjourned to January 6 next year to give her defence counsel time to provide evidence that some of the bank transfers to her account were “legitimate”.
Ringleader Sellaj’s financial confiscation proceedings were adjourned for a full-day hearing to determine the amount of cash available to him.