Police have issued CCTV images of two men they would like to speak to following a shop theft in Harrogate.
A North Yorkshire Police statement yesterday said two men entered TK Maxx in the Victoria Shopping Centre and picked up a brown men’s gilet, removed the security tag then left the store.
They took the gilet with them and headed towards the railway station.

CCTV images of the wanted men.
The incident happened at 10.05am on November 22.
The statement added:
“Officers are asking members of the public to get in touch if they recognise the men in the images as they believe they will have information that will help the investigation.”
Anyone with any information can email jamie.kennerley@northyorkshire.police.uk or dial 101, select option 2 and ask for PC Kennerley.
If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
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Jail for Harrogate man who supplied drugs on electric scooter
A Harrogate man who was caught with Class A drugs while riding an electric scooter was jailed for two years and three months today.
James Latham was caught by officers from North Yorkshire Police’s drugs team Operation Expedite on King’s Road on the afternoon of September 25 this year.
A police media release today said officers saw two known drug users being approached by Latham. The three people walked behind a shop and out of view. Within seconds one of them returned and was seen placing an item in their mouth.
Officers suspected a drug deal had just taken place, with Latham supplying the drugs.
Latham, who was riding on an electric scooter, was stopped a short distance away. He was searched and found to be in possession of a large amount of cash and suspected illegal drugs.
Heroin and cocaine
Following his arrest, officers found drugs paraphernalia at Latham’s Harrogate home, along with heroin and cocaine with a street value of over £700, and a significant amount of cash.
Latham, 44, was remanded in custody and brought to court where he pleaded guilty to being concerned in the supply of class A drugs.
Through mobile phone analysis, investigators were able to show Latham was involved in the supply of class A drugs, and had a customer base within the Harrogate area.
At York Crown Court today, Latham was given a custodial sentence of two years and three months.
After the sentencing hearing, PC Christopher Thompson, of Operation Expedite, said:
“The sale of illegal drugs will not be tolerated on the streets of Harrogate. It causes untold misery and suffering, and forces people who are addicted to them to commit other serious crimes to feed their habit.
“Latham was willing to exploit other people’s addictions for his own cruel and selfish gain.”
Read more:
- Harrogate woman jailed for chasing supermarket staff with drug needle
- Harrogate paedophile jailed for 13 years for historic sex offences
- Harrogate heroin and cocaine dealer jailed for over three years
Stray Ferret Business Awards: Be recognised for your digital growth
The Stray Ferret Business Awards 2024 are for businesses across all sectors in the Harrogate district.
Over the next few weeks we will reveal what our judging panel is looking for when it comes to each of the 10 categories.
Next up is the Best Use of Digital Award, which is sponsored by ASE Computer Services.
This award is designed to showcase businesses which have embraced the digital world to drive success.
Those looking to enter or nominate need to provide details of the digital initiative/s and the business objectives behind them. As well as statistical information on why the initiative was a success.
Does your business deserve to win the Best Use of Digital Award at the Stray Ferret Business Awards? Entries close on January 19. It’s simple and quick, so enter today!
Click here or the banner below to enter for the Stray Ferret Business Awards, sponsored by Prosperis.
Met Office issues Christmas Eve wind warning for Harrogate districtThe Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning across the Harrogate district for Christmas Eve.
The forecast shows Masham and Pateley Bridge will see the worst of it, with gusts up to 53mph, while Harrogate will see 51mph winds in the early hours of the morning.
Knaresborough, Ripon and Boroughbridge could see up to 50mph.
The warning, which is active from 8am to 10pm, covers the Midlands, the north of England and Scotland.
It comes just days after Storm Pia brought 60mph winds to the district.
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Harrogate woman jailed for chasing supermarket staff with drug needle
A Harrogate woman who chased supermarket staff with a drug needle after they tried to stop her stealing alcohol has been jailed for 19 months.
Prolific shoplifter Julie Ruth Rutherford, 54, became aggressive after staff tried to stop her stealing two bottles of alcohol at the Asda store on Bower Road, York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Eleanor Guildford said that when staff members confronted Rutherford and asked her what was inside her bag, she hurled abuse at them and poured the contents of the bag onto the floor, which included needles.
Rutherford, who had bedevilled local supermarkets for years, picked up one of the needles and “began to sprint” after the store manager, shouting:
“I’ll give you a needle! I’ll stab you with it.”
Ms Guildford said the store manager, who was named in court, was caused a great deal of distress and anxiety. When he tried to block her path outside the store, Rutherford punched and threatened to stab him.
Ms Guildford said he had recognised Rutherford as she had stolen from the supermarket on “multiple” previous occasions.
As Rutherford tried to escape, she damaged two plant pots, added the prosecuting barrister.
She was arrested five days after the incident which occurred on the afternoon of November 24 and was captured on CCTV.
Rutherford initially denied the offences, claiming she had “no knowledge” of the incident because of her chronic alcohol addiction.
The store manager said the terrifying episode had had a profound impact on his mental health and his sleep, and he often had nightmares about the incident.
41 previous convictions
Rutherford, of Strawberry Dale, was charged with affray, criminal damage and theft. She admitted the offences which were in breach of a 12-month suspended prison sentence imposed in late October for shoplifting.
She had 41 previous convictions for 85 offences, more than half of which were thefts.
Ms Guildford said the shoplifting incident which occasioned the suspended sentence in October occurred in “very similar circumstances” to the incident at Asda four weeks later.
She said Rutherford had a “propensity to commit offences of the same nature” and use the same sort of “tools”, namely needles, to cause people fear of violence.
Read more:
- Harrogate paedophile jailed for 13 years for historic sex offences
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Defence barrister Gabrielle Wilkes said Rutherford was “highly embarrassed” about her behaviour and had wanted to be remanded in custody for her own good.
She said Rutherford had endured a traumatic adulthood exacerbated by the death of her sister four years ago and becoming homeless.
She said that Rutherford was a drug addict and alcoholic who was now seeking help for her problems.
Time she ‘learnt a lesson’
Judge Sean Morris told Rutherford:
“I accept you had a tough life, but lots of people have tough lives and they don’t behave like you. It doesn’t give you the right to terrorise people with needles.”
Mr Morris, the Recorder of York, said Rutherford had cost the courts and authorities thousands and thousands of pounds over the years by her inveterate thievery.
He said it was time she “learnt a lesson” and gave her an 18-month jail sentence for the affray, with one month consecutive for breaching the suspended sentence.
Rutherford will serve half of the total 19-month sentence behind bars before being released on prison licence.
Call for North Yorkshire Council to ‘step up’ fossil fuel divestmentsCampaigners have called on North Yorkshire Council to “step up” its divestment from fossil fuel companies.
Fossil Free North Yorkshire, which was set up in 2020, has called on the authority to reinvest its pension fund into sustainable projects.
The fund receives contributions from staff at 160 firms, plus past and present public sector workers.
Campaigners said they had met the council’s pension fund committee on a number of occasions and welcomed a reduction in investments to about 1.8% of the total fund, but argued it still represented nearly £76m.
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Dr Margaret Jackson, from Fossil Free North Yorkshire, said the recent COP 28 meeting in Dubai had signalled a transition away from oil, gas and coal.
Local campaigners wrote to all North Yorkshire councillors calling on them to support the case for divestment by the council pension fund committee from fossil fuels and their reinvestment into sustainable projects.
Dr Jackson said:
“Although the outcome of the recent COP in UAE was felt to be disappointing by many, it did signal, with the ‘transition away from fossil fuels’, the beginning of the end of coal, oil and gas.
“Pension funds and other investors should take note and move away from these investments before they become stranded.”
In response, Gary Fielding, treasurer of the North Yorkshire pension fund, said the fund had already committed investment in renewable projects.
He said:
Business Breakfast: Harrogate district care firm wins £28m domiciliary care contract“The North Yorkshire Pension Fund has its own responsible investment policy which sets out an approach to managing assets that take environmental, social and governance factors into account in investment decision-making and the role an investor plays as an active asset owner.
“We are also working with our principal investment manager, Border to Coast Pensions Partnership, on developing targets and policies. As a shareholder of Border to Coast, we are aligned with their net zero target of 2050 or sooner.
“Our pension fund has also committed further investment to the Borders to Coast Infrastructure Fund, which holds an ever-increasing range of renewable energy investments in the UK and abroad, which includes wind farm and solar power farms, geothermal energy plants and energy from waste facilities.”
Excellence deserves to be recognised and celebrated. The 2024 Stray Ferret Business Awards is the event to put your business, people or great initiative in the spotlight!
Make the most of your efforts by reading our top 10 tips for writing your submission for success.
Entries close on January 19, 2024.
A care firm that operates across the Harrogate district has won a seven-year contract worth £28 million to provide domiciliary care on behalf of Sheffield City Council
Springfield Homecare provides care to people who want to keep living in their own homes.
It is part of Springfield Healthcare Group, which operates across Yorkshire and the rest of northern England.
Besides its domiciliary care business, it operates seven care homes including Harcourt Gardens in Harrogate.
Graeme Lee, the group founder and chief executive, said he was delighted with the award of such a major contract. Mr Lee, who lives in Harrogate, said:
“We want Springfield to be the best regional provider of care in Yorkshire and the north-east.”
North Yorkshire Council this month approved Springfield Healthcare’s planning application to convert the grade two listed Grove House into a luxury care home.
Harrogate business support groups to resume in January
New support groups for businesses in the Harrogate district are set to start in January.
The York and North Yorkshire Growth Hub will be hosting peer-to-peer support groups aimed at helping firms grow.
The programme, which is facilitated by Next Step, runs weekly for six weeks and comprises three cohorts, based in either Harrogate or Ripon.
In addition, there is one hour of one to one discussion in advance of the course to assess the business’s needs and two hours of one to one bespoke support.
For more information on the support groups and to apply, visit the York and North Yorkshire Growth Hub website here.
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Harrogate restaurant and hotel under new ownership
A Harrogate hotel and restaurant is under new ownership.
The Studley Hotel and The Orchid Restaurant, on Swan Road, have been acquired by local restauranteurs — but their names have not been revealed.
A spokesperson for the Orchid said the new owners, who wished to remain anonymous, have “extensive refurbishment” plans for both venues and want “to make the interiors of the restaurant as good as the food”.
Both sites will remain open during the refurbishments, the spokesperson added.
They also said the restaurant, which serves Asian food, will remain “unchanged” to ensure it keeps its loyal customer base.
Neil Mendoza, the general manager of the Orchid who has been involved with the restaurant since he was 13, said:
“This is a very exciting time for the Orchid.
“I am thrilled that it has been purchased by a family with over four decades of experience as restauranteurs, who share a passion and deep respect for Far-Eastern cuisine.
“Having been a part of the Orchid since my early teenage years, I have built lasting relationships with our valued guests. In the new year, we will commence our refurbishment, redesigning the interiors to celebrate the essence of Far-Eastern and Pan-Asian cuisine, complementing the standard of our exceptional dishes.”
The four-star Studley Hotel will also undergo a makeover, with work expected to finish in spring 2024.
The family behind the acquisition added:
“We feel incredibly fortunate to have acquired this fabulous restaurant and hotel.
“While there are countless Chinese, Thai, and Asian restaurants, the Orchid stands out due to our brigade of chefs, lead by Head Chef, Jim, who has been with the Orchid for 10 years.
“Each of our chefs specialise in different cuisines from diverse regions of the Far East. This is a genuine Pan-Asian culinary adventure prepared by true specialists.”
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Police appeal after second cyclist knocked off bike in Harrogate
A female cyclist has sustained minor injuries following a collision near Asda in Harrogate.
The incident, which took place between 5.15pm and 5.30pm on Friday, December 15, happened at the junction of Bower Road and Haywra Street.
North Yorkshire Police said it is now appealing for the driver of a grey Ford Focus to come forward.
It is the second police appeal involving am injured cyclist issued today.
It comes after another cyclist was knocked off their bike in Knaresborough on Monday.
Regarding the Harrogate appeal, the force said in a statement:
“A pedal cyclist entered Bower Road and was hit by the Ford Focus that had just exited Asda supermarket.
“The driver of the Ford stopped at the scene and spoke with the cyclist, however, they had left prior to police involvement.
“Officers are appealing for them to come forward along with any witnesses and anyone who may have dashcam footage.
“The driver and anyone with any information should call North Yorkshire Police on 101 and pass information for incident number 12230240822.”
Read more:
- Cyclist injured after Knaresborough collision
- Harrogate paedophile jailed for 13 years for historic sex offences
Cyclist injured after Knaresborough collision
A cyclist has been left with “minor injuries” following a collision with a car in Knaresborough.
North Yorkshire Police said the incident, which happened on Harrogate Road near Mother Shipton’s, took place on Monday, December 18 at 4:45pm.
The force is now appealing for witnesses and dashcam footage.
It said in a statement today:
“A car collided with a pedal bike which resulted in minor injuries for the cyclist. The driver of the car did not stop at the scene of the collision.
“Officers are now appealing to the driver or anyone with information to come forward. In particular, officers are keen to hear from anyone who has any relevant dashcam footage.
“If you have information, please email 001282@northyorkshire.police.uk or call 101 and speak to the Force Control Room.”
Quote reference number 12230241416 when passing on information.
Read more:
- Harrogate paedophile jailed for 13 years for historic sex offences
- Harrogate heroin and cocaine dealer jailed for over three years