Harrogate College is hosting its first Afghanistan Day next Tuesday.
The college is seeking to shine a light on Afghan culture in a variety of forms. Artwork and traditional dress will be on display, and poems and songs will be performed throughout the day.
There will also be traditional Afghan food available for a small fee to raise money for women’s healthcare and education.
Afghan refugee Sabreyah Nowrozi is organising the festivities.
Sabreyah said:
“I think most people just know about the war and troubles we’ve had in Afghanistan, but this day will be a chance to show the other side and share information about our culture and the country’s positive qualities.”
Sabreyah is currently studying English for speakers of other languages (ESOL) at Harrogate college after being forced to flee the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2021.
She was captain of the Afghan women’s development football team, so was targeted by the Taliban which has banned all women from playing sports.
Sabreyah said her escape was fraught with danger due to the numerous Taliban checkpoints. She managed to flee with help from former captain of her team Khalida Popal, Leeds United F.C and a flight funded by Kim Kardashian.
She has since managed to continue her footballing career at Harrogate Town AFC Women.
Now with herself and her family settled in the UK, she has set her sights on a psychology course at the University of York.
Afghanistan Day on 13 June comes just before refugee week beginning June 19. The theme selected for this year is compassion.
If you are interested in booking a free place at Afghanistan Day click here.
Read more:
- Harrogate council wins £2.5m from government to house Afghan and Ukrainian refugees
- Harrogate College sets 2035 carbon neutral target
How Brazilian jiu-jitsu changed Harrogate instructor’s life
Brazilian jiu-jitsu changed the life of Harrogate instructor Lewis Matthews.
The 33-year-old has been practising the martial art for 17 years and owns the Gracie Barra club at The Zone on Hornbeam Park.
Lewis is a black belt grade one in jiu-jitsu and has competed in the British Open, where he won a silver medal just last month and has an ambition to achieve gold.
To get to this point, Lewis has had to make choices in his life from work to family life.
Despite having a steady job in construction which took him around the country, he decided to settle in Harrogate to pursue his love of jiu-jitsu.
‘It was something to do’
Lewis grew up in the village of Scackelton, a small village in the Ryedale district of North Yorkshire.
He started karate before he caught the jiu-jitsu bug after he went with his mum to Ampleforth College, where he was initially taking up swimming.
“It was something to do, really. I lived out in the sticks.
“My mum used to go this gym at Ampleforth College on a Friday. I used to go with her to go to the swimming and then there was a karate class on and I got signed up to that.”
To help himself get around, Lewis got a moped and began to go to the next village over to another karate class.
After finishing the session, he noticed more people turning up for another class – it was jiu-jitsu.
“I turned up, did the karate class and a couple of guys started piling in for this next class.
“I remember asking ‘what’s that?’ And they said ‘it’s jiu-jitsu’.”

Lewis (right) with coach and programme director, Jack.
Lewis was asked to stick around and join in the practice. From that moment, he started to take up the martial art as a hobby.
He left school and took up a joinery apprenticeship in Malton.
After completing his apprenticeship and a higher national certificate in construction at college, he took a career break and went travelling to South America.
At this point, he was a blue belt in jiu-jitsu – the first belt in the martial art – and he continued to practice and compete on his travels.
When he returned to the UK, he worked his way up to become construction manager at a firm in Leeds.
It was here that Lewis had a sliding doors moment.
‘I’ll leave my job before I leave jiu-jitsu’
After tendering a project for Bettys and Taylors at its factory in Starbeck, he allowed himself more time to commit himself to jiu-jitsu at the club in Harrogate – which was part time.
“That project allowed me to put the time in here on an evening.
“I was so close [to the club], I had never been so close before. I had always had to dot around to different clubs wherever I was working.
“But because I was two-and-a-half years in Harrogate, I was there every day and would come here on a night.”
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Lewis demonstrating jiu-jitsu. Picture: Gracie Barra Harrogate.
After he finished working in Starbeck, his wife became pregnant.
At the same time, the club on Hornbeam Park, which Lewis founded with his friend Geoffrey Cumbus, had also grown while he was working on the project.
“It had become something that I was really passionate about. We had built a community with a lot people training.
“If I had continued to work for this company, I wouldn’t have been able to continue to do this.
“It was kind of a fork in the road. We’re going to have a family, so you can’t work all day and do jiu-jitsu all night anymore. Your next project might be an hours commute away. You won’t be able to get back to do all these classes that are two minutes from your current job.
“So, I handed my notice in.”
Lewis had already long been considering going full time at jiu-jitsu.
During the covid lockdowns, he was furloughed for eight-weeks and took time with his wife to consider what he wanted to do.
“We sat down in the garden and we wrote down what was most important to us if we were to do our perfect day.
“We wrote it down separately and told each other. It wasn’t having a massive expensive car and a flash holiday. It was time with each other, train jiu-jitsu, family and community. The things that we have already.
“I remember my wife saying at the time ‘you can’t continue to work two jobs and have a kid’. I looked at her and said ‘I’ll leave my job before I leave jiu-jitsu’. That’s when I decided to leave.”
Jiu-jitsu for everyone
The club on Hornbeam Park became affiliated with global martial arts organisation Gracie Barra in October 2017.
It forms part of a network of schools across the world offering the highest standard of BJJ instruction.
The Brazilian jiu-jitsu academy allows people to develop the martial art and earn belts as part of their development.
The belt grading is at the discretion of the jiu-jitsu professor – Lewis was awarded his black belt in December 2017.
Read more:
- How Pateley Bridge man won two league titles with Leeds United
- Knaresborough Town pair championing women’s football after remarkable season
- Harrogate cricket club captain aiming for success after relegation survival
Lewis took over the club fully after the covid pandemic and is now head instructor.
He takes pride in welcoming new people to the martial art.
“The good thing that we do here is that we teach people of all levels.
“You might get the 21-year-old who comes in. He goes to college and lives and breathes jiu-jitsu.
“Then you get the 40-year-old professional who has got two kids. He trains two nights a week and has got a mortgage, a wife, kids and a business to run.
“The 21-year-old might come in and kick his butt on the mat in a rolling session and think that he deserves to be a higher grade than him, but it’s all relative because their individual journeys are different.”
The club caters for all abilities and needs. It teaches self-defence, physical fitness but also offers a social element.
Techniques taught within BJJ focus not on striking, but on grappling and defending yourself, without the need to punch or kick someone.
But, for Lewis, jiu-jitsu is more than the martial art itself.
While he continues to compete in competitions, such as winning silver in the British Open last month in Coventry, and has ambitions beyond that – jiu-jitsu has always meant something more.
He said:
“It’s provided me with something through my life that’s kept me on a path all the time.
“We all have choices to make, don’t we? Every time we want to go for a beer, get drunk or buy that something that we don’t need.
“Jiu-jitsu has always been ‘you can do that or you can do this’. I want to do this more, so I’m not going to do that.
“It has kept me on a good path to where I am now.”
This is the fourth article in a series of Sporting Spotlight interviews. If you have any local sporting heroes who you think should be featured, contact calvin@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Concerns over ‘undemocratic’ planning meeting on Knox Lane housesQuestions have been raised over whether the planning process is democratic after a controversial housing application in Harrogate was deferred for a third time.
The 53-home proposal for Knox Lane was discussed at a planning committee meeting at the end of May, but councillors were told this week that residents were unhappy about the way it had been conducted.
The plans were recommended for approval, but councillors did not follow planning officers’ advice.
Instead they voted to defer it again because the developer, Jomast, had not carried out the land contamination report requested at the last meeting.
This week, nearby resident Adele Laura Wilson asked North Yorkshire Council‘s Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee why the report had been brought to the planning committee again by officers when the requested information was still not available.
She also said a motion was put forward at the meeting to reject the application, but officers advised them they needed to have planning reasons for turning the plans down otherwise the decision would be overturned at appeal, with costs to the council.
Ms Wilson added:
“That motion was not allowed to be voted on. This surely is in contravention of the democratic process.”
She also said incorrect information was given to the committee about the site, which an officer said was only partially in a special landscape area (SLA). The whole site was in fact part of the SLA, Ms Wilson said, but there was no opportunity for this to be corrected during the planning meeting.
She said:
“I would ask this committee to consider if the current planning committee is being given the powers to truly consider and question planning applications or are they redundant? And are planning applications being decided by just the planning officers and the solicitors?”
Read more:
- Controversial Knox Lane 53-homes plan deferred for third time
- Plans approved for Kingsley Road and Tesco — but Knox Lane decision deferred
Resident Alison Hayward said she was addressing Thursday’s area constituency committee on behalf of residents in Knox and Bilton, who were “extremely disappointed and outraged” by the situation.
Ms Hayward said:
“We believe that it was unconstitutional and contrary to the principles of fair representation of the community.
“Although we are disappointed in the result [of the vote to defer the application again], this statement is relating to the process of the meeting rather than that result.
“We ask this constituency meeting to reflect on the failures and the conduct of the planning meeting and consider how to correct the injustice to the local community and democracy.”
She said the meeting had been held during the half-term holidays, when fewer local people were available to attend.
Ms Hayward also raised concerns about the fact the planning meeting had not been streamed live, as it would usually be, because of “technical problems” on the day. She said this meant there was no “proper record” of the meeting, as the minutes did not record everything discussed.
In a statement read by clerk Mark Codman, NYC’s legal, planning and democratic services departments responded:
“The council does apologise for the lack of a live stream. The issue was only discovered on the morning of the meeting and it couldn’t be resolved.”
The statement said there was no legal requirement for a meeting to be recorded and minutes were never verbatim. Live streaming was only introduced in Harrogate during the covid pandemic, and was not used for all meetings across North Yorkshire.
The statement also said:
“It was made clear to members of the committee that they were free to vote in whichever way they wanted, but were advised of the implications of their choosing to do so on the basis of inadequate material planning reasons.”
Keen sportsman seeks amputee padel players in Harrogate
A sports enthusiast is looking for the perfect partner to play padel with in Harrogate – with one particular requirement.
Andrew Simister has only recently tried the sport, but was immediately a fan after his first session at Surge in Harrogate.
However, because he lost his leg last year following an accident and now uses a prosthesis, he needs to find another amputee to join him on the court.
Mr Simister said:
“I tried padel a few weeks ago and I loved it, but I can’t play it unless there is someone to play against. My friends play it, my son plays it, but I can’t at the moment.
“It’s doubles, so I need at least one other amputee on the other team to make it fair.”
Mr Simister’s right leg was amputated above the knee after he was involved in a collision last February.
Read more:
- Harrogate Spa Tennis Club unveils new pavilion and padel courts
- Harrogate’s Olympic hopeful from a famous sporting family
The company director said he still has “good days and bad days” after the operation to remove his leg in March 2022, adding “on the whole, it’s good”.
He was previously a keen sportsman and has got back to doing as much as he can.
While he is no longer able to run – though is hoping he may be able to use a blade in future – he has a good level of fitness and hopes he can find someone of a similar level to play against.
He added:
“I would like some sort of competition – someone that’s going to be of a similar standard.
“I don’t suppose they have to be amputees, but some sort of disability that means they would be a good match for me.”
Anyone interested in playing padel with Mr Simister can find him on Instagram, or contact the Stray Ferret.
Selby and Ainsty MP resigns with immediate effectSelby and Ainsty Conservative MP, Nigel Adams, a key ally of Boris Johnson, has announced his resignation with immediate affect.
Mr Adams resignation will trigger a third by-election in a Conservative held seat in the past 24 hours- following the shock resignation yesterday of former Prime Minster, Boris Johnson, and former culture secretary, Nadine Dorries as MPs. Mr Adams was minister without portfolio in Boris Johnson’s cabinet.
On Friday Mr Adams was not nominated for an honour on Mr Johnson’s peerage list.
Mr Adams said he wanted to “thank my constituents for their wonderful support since 2010”.
Last year Mr Adams had said he would not be standing again as an MP at the next general election- today’s announcement means his departure forces an earlier by-election.
Mr Adams was first elected in 2010 and has defended the seat in three subsequent elections. He currently holds the seat with a majority of 20,137.
Posting on Twitter, Mr Adams announced he was leaving politics immediately.
Yesterday, Selby Conservatives selected an excellent new parliamentary candidate.
I’ve today informed the chief whip that I will be standing down as a Member of Parliament with immediate effect.
It has been an honour to represent the area where I was raised, educated &
1/2
— Nigel Adams (@nadams) June 10, 2023
Police alerted after travellers set up camp at Ashville College
A group of traveller families has set up camp on Ashville College’s sports field off Yew Tree Lane in Harrogate.
The independent fee-paying school said is was alerted at 9.00pm last night to their arrival and that police have attended the scene.
In a statement the school said it was working closely with the police to remove the travellers and their vehicles as soon as possible.
This not the first time travellers have pitched up on Ashville’s sports fields. In August 2021 travellers parked on the school’s land and demanded money to leave. They left only to return weeks later. The school then started legal proceedings against them before they eventually departed.
Today Ashville College said:
“Naturally, our priority is to ensure the safety of our pupils and to minimise disruption to normal School life. We have taken a number of precautionary measures today including postponing home sports fixtures and ensuring close supervision of our boarders as they move around the campus.
“All parents were contacted on Friday evening and we will continue to update them as we monitor the situation.
“We are grateful to our families for their understanding, and praise our staff for making every reasonable effort to prevent the break-in. The continued vigilance of our staff and supervision of pupils on-site is of paramount importance”.
Read More:
- Travellers set up camp at Harrogate’s Ashville College – and demand £5,000 to leave
- Harrogate school takes legal action after travellers return
No date set for Swinsty and Fewston parking charges, says Yorkshire Water
Yorkshire Water has said no date has been set for the introduction of parking charges at Harrogate district reservoirs.
The company is to introduce payment machines and automatic number plate recognition at Swinsty, Fewston and Thruscross car parks.
It said previously that the revenue generated will help to pay for an in-house rangers team, which would undertake maintenance jobs and tackle anti-social behaviour at its sites.
Proposals for parking machines at both Fewston and Swinsty reservoirs were approved by Harrogate Borough Council in September last year.
The Stray Ferret asked Yorkshire Water this week if it had confirmed an implementation date for the machines.
A spokesperson said a date had yet to be confirmed and that the plans were “still in progress”.
While no date has been set for when charges will come in, Yorkshire Water said they will include season tickets for one or multiple sites.
A spokesperson told the Stray Ferret previously:
“There will be an option for visitors to purchase a ‘season ticket’ for the year which can cover just one car park or all car parks in the Washburn Valley, obviously this will work out cheaper than ‘pay as you go’ option, depending on how frequently people visit.
“The prices for the season tickets will be £30 per annum for a single site and £45 per annum for multiple sites. Blue badge holders, as previously stated, will be able to park free of charge.”
Read more:
- Reservoir parking costs could cause ‘tremendous problems’ on nearby roads
- Swinsty and Fewston parking charges to include ‘season ticket’
Car park users will be able to pay via card payment on site, by using the RingGo app or telephone.
The proposed tariffs will be one hour at £1, two hours at £2, six hours at £3 and an all day pass for £5.
Bransby Wilson Parking Solutions, based in York, has been appointed to operate the parking meters.
Hot Seat: The man bringing international artists to a village near HarrogateIn June every year, something close to a miracle occurs in a small village 11 miles from Harrogate.
Major names in the international arts world converge for 10 days on Aldborough — a beautiful and historic place but hardly known for capturing the zeitgeist.
For arts lovers, however, an annual pilgrimage to the Northern Aldborough Festival has become part of the summer arts scene. They park in fields, drink Pimm’s in a churchyard marquee and get to see the kind of names who usually appear in less soulful venues in Leeds or York.
The festival, which grew out of a fundraising initiative to restore the church organ in 1994, consistently attracts major international talent.
This year’s line-up, from June 15 to 24, includes the likes of South Korean pianist Sunwook Kim, TV historian Lucy Worsley, trumpeter Matilda Lloyd and a singing competition judged by a panel that includes Dame Felicity Lott.
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Lucy Worsley is among those appearing this year. Credit Hay Festival / Paul Musso
Festival director Robert Ogden, who overseas the programme, is best known locally for running Ogden of Harrogate, the fifth generation family jewellery business on James Street.
But Mr Ogden has strong credentials in the arts world: a former chorister at Westminster Cathedral Choir School in London, he completed a choral scholarship at King’s College, Cambridge before forging a successful career as a countertenor, singing around the world in major productions alongside the likes of Jose Carreras.
Since he became festival director in 2010, the festival line-up has broadened and this year includes spoken word events and jazz as well as classical music and culminates with an outdoor pop music party and fireworks in the grounds of Aldborough Manor.
Mr Ogden says the change reflects his own wide tastes but also acknowledges “we can’t rely on our core audience”.

Robert Ogden
Festival planning is year-round but he takes a two-week break from the jewellery business to focus fully on the festival in the immediate run-up.
He says things are shaping up well this year ahead of Thursday’s opening night. Asked for his personal highlights, he cites Matilda Lloyd, the opening night Haydn opera double bill, Monteverdi’s Vespers and the new £7,000 singing competition. He says:
“Of all the things we have done in the last 15 years this competition is perhaps the most exciting. I’m certain at least one or two of the semi-finalists will be household names in the next few years.
“There’s nothing a festival wants to do more than to unveil and support new talent.”
How does he persuade occasionally temperamental artists to head to the eastern side of Boroughbridge? He says it’s a combination of the festival’s reputation, the St Andrew’s Church acoustics, the setting and the welcome. Aldborough, he says, is the “perfect chamber music space” and there is something undoubtedly magical about it.
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St Andrew’s Church in Aldborough
Mr Ogden says he never feels the festival is in competition with the year-round Harrogate International Festivals and thinks there is scope for another local summer arts festival “if it’s marketed well”. Besides Ryedale Festival and Swaledale Festival, competition isn’t fierce.
But it isn’t an easy time in the arts world. Brexit, he says, has denied many emerging artists the opportunities he enjoyed to develop his craft in Europe. The cost of living crisis had had an impact on ticket prices, but Mr Ogden says Aldborough hasn’t made “any major price rises”.
Future festival ideas include live streaming, although digital connectivity in the village isn’t great, and recording music under the Northern Aldborough label.
Read more:
He plans to stay at the heart of things, reporting to festival chairman Sir Andrew Lawson-Tancred:
“As long as I feel I still have that creative urge and impetus I will aim to do it as long as they allow me to.”
What is his message for anyone thinking of attending, perhaps for the first time?
“Aldborough is not far to drive from Harrogate. It’s an oasis of calm, the acoustics are wonderful and the welcome is wonderful. Try something new.”
Further information on the Northern Aldborough Festival is available here.
FoI reveals Harrogate council spent nearly £3,000 on booze for staff partyHarrogate Borough Council spent almost £3,000 of taxpayers’ money on booze for a staff party, a Freedom of Information request has revealed.
The party was held to mark the abolition of the council at the end of March — even though nearly all staff transferred to the new North Yorkshire Council the following day on the same terms.
The Stray Ferret reported last month the party cost £14,910. But a full breakdown of the costs, including the amount spent on alcohol, was not known.
The FoI has now revealed the costs included £1,438 on beer, cider and lager, £630 on wine and £587 on spirits. Just £376 was spent on soft drinks.
The council also spent £4,745 on food, £450 on a DJ, £765 on event staff and £302 on decorations. A further £5,556 went on technical equipment for the event, which was held at the council-owned Harrogate Convention Centre on February 23.
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The party was held at Harrogate Convention Centre.
The Stray Ferret was alerted to the party by an unnamed source who said they were “appalled, disgusted and downright annoyed that this amount was spent without the prior knowledge and consent of the people paying for it”.
Conor Holohan, media campaign manager of the pressure group the TaxPayers’ Alliance, added:
“Taxpayers will be shocked to find they were funding parties for council staff.
“While residents were struggling with the cost of living crisis, town hall officials were charging them for dinner and drinks.”
Final day parties
Seven district councils and North Yorkshire County Council were abolished on March 31 to make way for the new North Yorkshire Council.
Harrogate Borough Council’s final day staff party cost the most.
Scarborough was the next highest, spending £9,004, followed by Hambleton at £3,783. Ryedale awarded staff a £148 bonus and spent £3,001 on a party. North Yorkshire County Council did not spend anything.
Staff from the district councils, except the chief executives and a handful of others, transferred to North Yorkshire Council on April 1. It said in a statement:
“The new council for North Yorkshire did not play any part in sanctioning or organising any parties.
“For any further comment you will need to ask the district and borough council decision-makers who were in place at those councils at the time.”
Former Harrogate Borough Council leader Richard Cooper has declined to comment on council business since the authority was abolished.
Read more:
- Harrogate Borough Council spent £15,000 on staff leaving party
- Brew Bar owner opens new Harrogate coffee shop
Woman jailed for 22 years for attempting to murder ex-lover’s partner in Bilton
A woman turned up at her ex-lover’s home, forced her way in and stabbed his wife repeatedly with a large carving knife as she lay helpless in the hallway.
Clare Bailey, 44, a secondary-school maths teacher and mother-of-two, was wearing a red wig, blue covid mask and sunglasses when she rang the doorbell at her former lover Christopher Russell’s home on Byland Road in Harrogate intent on murder on June 23 last year.
When Mr Russell’s wife Emma, a senior hospital technician, answered the door, Bailey — holding a bunch of flowers in front of her face to disguise herself — told her the bouquet was “for her”, then barged into the hallway brandishing a large carving knife and began “stabbing, hacking and slashing” her all over her body, Leeds Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Rupert Dodsworth said Ms Russell was stabbed repeatedly in the neck, chest, stomach and arms.
Mr Dodsworth said:
“Emma Russell could be heard screaming for help and was in considerable distress.
She tried desperately to fend off Bailey, who remained silent during the ferocious attack, but this only caused more deep wounds to her hands.
“It was a sustained attack (with) repeated stabbing of the victim while she was lying helpless on the ground.”
Within seconds of the attack, Mrs Russell’s teenage daughter came downstairs and witnessed the horror unfolding in the doorway.
She tried to get Bailey off her mother, only for the deranged attacker to turn to her still brandishing the carving knife, forcing her to flee upstairs, calling for help.
Video footage of the attack captured Bailey continuing to stab and slash Ms Russell while bending over the stricken victim.

Police at the scene of the attempted murder on Byland Road in Bilton on June 23, 2022.
Neighbours and passers-by saw Bailey walking calmly down the street. One neighbour described her as looking “super casual and smartly dressed”.
It was only when he noticed the front door to Ms Russell’s house was slightly ajar that he realised the full horror of what had occurred, but when he ran back up the street to look for Bailey, she had disappeared.
Another witness said he saw Bailey walking off serenely with what appeared to be a 30cm-long carving knife.
As she lay bleeding on the floor surrounded by paramedics, Mrs Russell, whose face was ashen, said to one of her neighbours: “Please don’t let me die.”
She had suffered multiple stab and slash wounds all over her body, including to her neck, chest and arms, and a puncture wound to her stomach. She also suffered a liver laceration, a colon injury, bleeding to the bowel and multiple tendon injuries.
She was taken to Leeds General Infirmary by ambulance and rushed into intensive care. She underwent emergency surgery to her stomach and had a stoma inserted for bowel leakage.
She remained in intensive care for four days and was kept in hospital for a month for further exploratory surgery. An MRI scan revealed she had suffered a seizure and a brain syndrome which required anti-epilepsy medication.
She discharged herself on July 27 against doctors’ advice because of her “life-changing” injuries.
An LGI doctor said the stab wounds to Ms Russell’s neck and stomach were “within millimetres of being a threat to life”.
Arrested in Birmingham
Bailey was arrested the following morning at her home in Dudley, near Birmingham.
She claimed she was not at the scene and when presented with video footage of her being on the Russells’ doorstep at the time in question, she claimed to have amnesia and claimed it wasn’t her.
Police searched her home and found her blood-stained clothes in the washing machine, a bloodied tissue, the covid mask, and the red wig, the bunch of flowers and gloves in a bin bag.
Footage from a Sainsbury’s supermarket near the Russells’ home showed she had bought the accoutrements, including Dettol hand wipes and a box of gloves, at the store just before launching her savage attack at about 4.50pm. She went into the supermarket’s toilets to change her leggings and footwear before the attack.
Examination of her mobile phone showed that she had sent seven text messages to Mr Russell on the morning of the attack.
Mr Dodsworth said:
“She told him she didn’t understand why he wasn’t speaking to her.
“She asked why he had blocked her on Facebook and repeatedly told him how much she loved him.”
At about 10.20am that day, she sent a message to her school saying she couldn’t make it into work that day because of a medical mishap and was “having problems” with her poorly son.
But police ANPR cameras showed that she was driving up the motorway northwards, bound for the Russells’ home in Harrogate. When the school called her in the afternoon, she said she was in her kitchen “getting a doctor’s appointment and would be back in the following day”.
An hour later, she was at Sainsbury’s in Harrogate getting prepared to carry out the act.
When distraught Mr Russell sent her a text message following the attack asking her where she had been at time of the stabbing, Bailey told him: “Is everything okay? Why would you think I’d be up there?”
When she told him his wife had been stabbed, Bailey “feigned a lack of knowledge and offered sympathy”.
Charged with attempted murder
Bailey, of The Riddings, Pedmore, was charged with attempted murder but initially denied the offence. A trial was scheduled but she ultimately changed her plea to guilty. She appeared for sentence today after being remanded in custody.
Mr Dodsworth said that Bailey and Mr Russell had known each other since childhood in the area where they grew up and he was the best friend of her brother.
A sexual relationship began in 2019 when they were reunited after 20 years at her brother’s wedding and continued over the course of a few years during which Bailey and Mr Russell met up on a “handful” of occasions, mainly at hotels.
Mr Dodsworth said:
“It was clear to Mr Russell that (Bailey) wanted him to leave his wife.
“He accepted he may have given her the (wrong) impression he might (leave his wife).”

Leeds Crown Court. Picture: the Stray Ferret.
At Christmas 2019, Mr Russell answered a knock on the door at about midnight to find a bunch of flowers and cardboard love notes on the doorstep. No-one was at the door, but a woman was seen running up the street.
The handwritten notes were intended to suggest that Ms Russell was having an affair and the flowers had been left by a lover to try to cause a rift in the marriage.
One of the notes read: ‘I’ll keep on waiting until I can spend (time) with you.’
Ms Russell, who worked as a sterile-services hospital technician, also received a call at her workplace from someone telling her: “I know what he’s up to.”
Despite Bailey’s wicked machinations, the marriage remained intact and in March last year, Mr Russell told her the affair was over.
Mr Dodsworth said:
“He said (his children) were (his) priority (but) she seemed unwilling to accept the decision.”
Mr Russell blocked Bailey on Facebook but in May 2022 he went out for a walk for a lunchtime break from work and felt a “tap on the shoulder”.
Mr Dodsworth said:
“He turned around to see the defendant.
“When he asked her why she was there, she said she was there to see him. He told her the relationship was over and that this couldn’t keep happening. That was the last time that Christopher Russell had contact with her.”
Needs wheelchair
In a statement read out in court, Ms Russell said she had since lost her job at the hospital due to the severity of her injuries which had severely restricted her mobility to the extent that she now relied on a wheelchair to go out, had to sleep downstairs and was unable to carry out even the most basic household chores.
She had to use crutches in her home, couldn’t cook, relied on the care of her husband and daughter, couldn’t sleep and suffered flashbacks, panic attacks and nightmares about the gruesome attack. She had no feeling in her right leg or hands, had suffered nerve damage and had been told by doctors that the feeling in her limbs may never return.
She was still in severe pain, still having monthly hospital appointments and physiotherapy and receiving counselling to help her deal with the huge trauma and “mental scars”.
Worse still, her husband had had to give up work to look after her and they were both now on benefits. She was now on “constant edge” whenever someone rang the doorbell or walked past the house, she had lost all her independence and she feared she would never be able to work again.
Defence barrister Curtis Myrie said Bailey had a clear understanding of the misery and trauma she had caused the Russell family and was “genuinely remorseful”.
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He said that her problems started in 2019 following the breakdown of her “very difficult” marriage which left her looking after her children on her own and led to a drink problem and mental-health issues.
He added:
“Nevertheless, she managed to maintain a very respectable job as a teacher at a secondary school, teaching maths.
“She struggled to deal with life, struggled to cope with life…and she turned to alcohol and the extramarital affair with Mr Russell was something which represented…a haven from these very difficult circumstances in her life.
“The end of that relationship with Mr Russell was something she took very badly and (it was) difficult for her to come to terms with.”
He said that Bailey suffered from an emotional and personality disorder, although a doctor’s report noted that there were no underlying serious mental-health problems that could explain such behaviour.
Judge Robin Mairs said it was clear that Bailey had seen Ms Russell as a “stumbling block” to her relationship with Mr Russell and “to your future happiness”.
He said that Bailey had tried to “poison one side against the other” by trying to insinuate that they were both having affairs.
He told Bailey:
“Emma Russell had done you no harm (and) it would appear that she was largely unaware of your existence. You slashed and stabbed repeatedly at all parts of Emma Russell’s body.
“You remained silent while she frantically called out for help and called out in pain. For a period of about 90 seconds…you hack, slash and stab repeatedly at the prostrate body of Emma Russell.
“Your intention you admit, by your guilty plea, was to murder her.”
He said the effect on Ms Russell and her family had been “extreme” and life-altering.
Bailey was jailed for 22 years and four months and given a lifetime restraining order banning her from contacting Mrs Russell and her family.