A man who was arrested in connection with an incident in Bilton has been released with no further action taken.
Police were called to a property on Byland Road on Thursday, June 23, where a woman was found with serious injuries.
A man in his 40s was arrested following the incident. Clare Bailey, 44, was also arrested.
The man was initially arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder and bailed pending investigation.
Read more:
- Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
- Woman charged with Harrogate attempted murder enters no plea
However, North Yorkshire Police has confirmed over the weekend he has been released from bail and no further action is being taken against him.
Ms Bailey, 44, was charged with attempted murder.
She appeared before York Magistrates Court on June 27, but entered no plea.
Ms Bailey, who is from Dudley, will now appear before Leeds Crown Court on July 25.
Bilton man says government is failing young people with mental health issuesA man from Bilton who battled undiagnosed Post-traumatic stress disorder for six years says the government is failing young people with mental health issues due to a lack of funding.
Ben Rothery, 22, said his mental health first began to suffer as a teenager when he struggled to come to terms with his sexuality and was bullied by other children.
He also developed a problematic relationship with food and his weight increased to 18 stone.
The bullying led to a suicide attempt aged 16 and further traumatic events at university increased his suffering. Despite seeking help through the NHS several times, they were unable to diagnose what was wrong with him.
He said in one year, he told at least 10 people within the NHS about the same traumatic experiences.
He said:
“I shut everything positive out of my life. I didn’t know what was going on.”
Huge waiting lists
After his suicide attempt six years ago, he was first referred by his GP to CAMHS, an NHS service for young people with mental health problems.
Mr Rothery said the waiting list was “huge” but he was offered regular sessions for a year.
He was one of the lucky ones, with reports of some young people waiting up to two years for sessions.
Whilst helpful, he said CAMHS was unable to diagnose him with any mental health condition, which left him confused.
Things began to improve at school, and after coming out as gay during his school’s 6th form prom, his confidence improved. He went to university in York to train to be a teacher and his future looked bright.
He said:
“It was the happiest I’d ever been. I finally looked in mirror and that was who I wanted to be.”
But whilst at university, his mental health began to suffer again. He starved himself and lost six stone in just two months.
He then suffered a painful fallout with people he thought were friends and faced more bullying.
He bought a pride flag that he hoped to take to his first Harrogate Pride event. However, somebody went into his bedroom, urinated on it and posted a video all over social media. He said he then “isolated himself completely”.
Retreating into own world
When the first covid lockdown happened in March 2020, Mr Rothery said “the world stopped when I needed it to stop”.
He dropped out of university with thousands of pounds worth of debt, moved back home to Harrogate with his family, and retreated into his own world.
He said the experience at university was traumatic and he didn’t feel like he could talk about it.
“People said, ‘it’s just drama’ but it really affected me. It was like being so high up, feeling like you made it in life, then plummeting straight back down. I was lower than when I tried to commit suicide at 16″.
Read more:
- Calls for action over ‘overwhelmed’ North Yorkshire children’s mental health services
- Majority of young people in North Yorkshire have suffered from poor mental health
Seeking help
In early 2021, Mr Rothery decided to seek help again. His GP referred him to IAPT, an NHS talking therapy service.
But he was offered just three hours of CBT treatment and it didn’t address his problems. He was still desperately seeking a diagnosis and an answer to why he was feeling so bad.
He said:
“I thought I had anxiety that had spiralled out of control. I had looked into PTSD, but I thought only people who had suffered really extreme things, like soldiers or victims of sexual assault had that.
“I felt like I hadn’t been listened to. Everybody I spoke to didn’t understand my problems.”
He said he carried on struggling until late last year when he had a “complete meltdown” and contemplated suicide again.
“I sat sobbing in my bedroom. I thought, I don’t want to leave my mum and dad. I saw how my previous suicide attempt made them feel. But I just thought, I don’t want to wake up.”
Next therapist
With his mental health problems now at an all-time low, he visited his GP again.
The doctor presented him with two options: go back to IAPT again or take medication. But he didn’t want to rely on chemicals to feel better.
Fortunately, his dad, who is a painter and decorator, had a customer in Harrogate who is a trained therapist. A deal was agreed where he would do work for her in return for offering sessions for Ben.
Private therapy sessions usually start at least £50 an hour, out of reach for most young people in Harrogate on lower salaries, so the offer changed his life.
He said it was the first time somebody had listened and told him what was wrong with him: PTSD brought on by the traumatic events of his teenage years and at university.
“That was the first time somebody told me what was wrong with me.
“It’s like a filing cabinet that has been thrown over and reorganising. It was the first time I’d felt listened to. I felt like I’d achieved something. For six years since 16 I’d been trying to get support but nobody seemed to know what to do.”
Doing better now
Mr Rothery says since the private therapy sessions finished he is doing much better. He has a fulfilling job and a good support network including his mum and dad.
But he fears that there are countless other people in Harrogate who are suffering with poor mental health in silence —and they are unable to afford expensive private therapy sessions that could make all the difference.
A report published in May by Harrogate-based Healthwatch North Yorkshire found that 72% of young people said they had experienced mental health or well-being issues in the past year.
Mr Rothery said:
“The biggest frustration for me is that anybody who didn’t have a support system at home like me would not have survived as long as I did. It crossed my mind that i could stop it all with one solution, but I’d be giving up. If i was to commit suicide, I’d give up all this fight.”
He added:
Education secretary Nadhim Zahawi visits Harrogate school“If everybody tried to get help and came forward to their GPs, maybe more would be done.”
Education secretary Nadhim Zahawi visited New Park Primary Academy on a trip to Harrogate yesterday.
Mr Zahawi, who was a speaker at the Local Government Association conference at Harrogate Convention Centre, made a surprise visit to meet staff and children.
New Park Primary Academy is part of the Northern Star Academies Trust, a group of nine schools across Harrogate, Skipton and Keighley.
Academy headteacher Robert Mold said:
“At first I thought it was a hoax when the secretary of state’s office called to say he would like to visit New Park. It’s not a call you get every day.
“The secretary of state spent time with many of our children and even joined in a class making mosaics as part of an art project.”
Read more:
- Opposition councillors call for Woodfield school to be saved
- ‘Go for it!’ says Harrogate district apprentice on Women in Engineering Day
During his visit, Mr Zahawi joined year five and six pupils for an art lesson in mosaic making.
Jenn Plews, chief executive of Northern Star Academies Trust said:
“It was great for children to meet a cabinet minister in their own school and to be able to ask him questions.
“Our pupils care deeply about protecting the environment, which is a strong part of our curriculum.
“They told the secretary of state what they are doing in school to be more sustainable and he encouraged them to keep up their work to protect our environment. It was a great experience for our children.”
Call for Zahawi to intervene in Woodfield
Mr Zahawi’s visit came at a time when a consultation is being held over the future of Woodfield Community Primary School in Bilton is being held.
The school, which is just a mile away from New Park Primary Academy, is at risk of closure after an academy sponsor for the school was unable to be found.
North Yorkshire Unison called on Mr Zahawi to “intervene to save Woodfield school” while he was in Harrogate.
Harrogate rallies in search of missing dog MollyOn the day the Education Secretary @nadhimzahawi was about a mile away from Woodfield School we call upon him to intervene to #SaveWoodfieldSchool #SaveOurSchool https://t.co/wJxdEn6onw
— North Yorkshire UNISON (@NYUnison) June 30, 2022
A dog who who ran away in the Nidd Gorge has now been missing a week despite a major search operation.
Emily Watson’s white bichon frise, Molly, was spooked by another dog at 9am last Thursday.
Her last sighting was near the viaduct on the Bilton/Ripley cycle path.
Pippa Kemp, who has been helping Ms Watson with the search, told the Stray Ferret:
“We are desperate now. It’s not just the length of time, it’s how hot it has been and that no one has seen her.”
Ms Watson has put out regular appeals on Facebook to help find the missing dog and a group called Missing Molly has also been set up.
Posters and flyers have also been displayed and given out in the area.

Molly, the bichon frise.
In an outpouring of support, the community has been out in force searching for Molly, who was wearing a purple harness when she went missing.
Read more:
- Harrogate firefighters rescue dogs from hot car
- Rags to riches: stray dog from Harrogate stars in Legally Blonde musical
Volunteers have also come forward with thermal drones, a dog tracking team and thermal cameras.
Many have continued the search into nightfall.
Residents have also checked their smart doorbells and CCTV cameras for sightings.
And yesterday a search party was given permission to access the sewerage works, near to where she went missing.
Ms Kemp said:
“The experts who have been looking for her said it was unbelievable that she hasn’t been seen, but it does happen.
“We are holding out hope that she is out there somewhere.”
Ms Kemp praised the Harrogate community for their ongoing support.
She said:
“They have been amazing. We have had so many messages from people offering to help.
“Harrogate is unbelievable for pulling together when something like this happens. We are such a dog-loving community.”
The search is continuing today, with another tracker dog going out this afternoon.
Ms Kemp said:
“We just want to get some kind of evidence that she is still in the area. If she has moved about, or if she has been down to the river for a drink. If a scent is picked up today, it will be a recent one.”
Anyone who has seen Molly or who has any information is asked to call her owner Emily Watson on 07852 636641.
People are being asked not to approach her, while avoiding eye contact and sudden movements.
Opposition councillors call for Woodfield school to be savedOpposition councillors on Harrogate Borough Council are set to call for Woodfield Community Primary School to be saved from closure.
A four-week consultation on a proposal to close the school on December 31 ends on July 4.
Some parents and unions have called for the school to remain open. But North Yorkshire County Council, which is the local education authority, has said it has exhausted all options to keep the school open.
At a borough council meeting next week, Liberal Democrat councillors Pat Marsh and Philip Broadbank are due to submit a motion requesting that the authority supports keeping the school open.
Cllr Broadbank said there was concern over the future of the school and what could potentially happen to the site on Woodfield Road in Bilton.
He said:
“I just worry what will happen to the site.
“It is a big building. I think they have to look at going through the options.”
School closure is ‘immoral’
The school was rated inadequate by Ofsted in 2020 and placed into special measures.
The rating meant the school had to become a sponsored academy, but it failed to find a backer.
A proposed merger with Grove Road Community Primary School fell through this year, prompting the county council to open a consultation on closing the school in the next academic year.
Read more:
- Woodfield school closure ‘an absolute disgrace’, says union
- Bilton has ‘sufficient primary places’ if Woodfield school closes
- Last-ditch campaign to save Woodfield school in Bilton
Gary McVeigh-Kaye, secretary of the North Yorkshire branch of the National Education Union, is also campaigning to save the school and has called for the consultation to be extended.
He said:
“Woodfield school has been through some traumatic times over the past decade and the school needs support, not criticism from Ofsted.
“Woodfield is a genuine community school, at the heart of the community and serving generations of families whose children have attended the school. To force the closure of this valuable community asset is immoral.”

A public meeting over the future of the school was held earlier this month.
Mr McVeigh-Kaye said he had secured meetings with local politicians, including Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative MP Andrew Jones about extending the consultation.
A poorly attended public meeting this month saw people express anger at how a school with good facilities, in a densely populated area of Harrogate, could end up in this position.
But, Adam Dixon, the county council’s strategic planning manager for children and young people, pointed to how Woodfield pupil numbers had fallen from 154 in 2018 to 37 this year.
Woodfield, he added, faced a cumulative deficit of £229,000 in 2023/34, due to low pupil numbers.
The consultation over the future of the school closes on July 4. You can have your say here.
Video shows lorry crashing into Harrogate traffic lightA video has emerged of a lorry knocking over a traffic light on Skipton Road in Harrogate.
The footage appears to show a bus being towed at the junction with King’s Road, outside Bilton Working Men’s Club on Monday morning.
The trailer hits the barrier and the traffic light, which is knocked over.
The incident was one of many to cause disruption on Harrogate’s roads on Monday.
You can watch the clip below.
Barry Robertson, from Middlesbrough, uploaded the footage, which was recorded as he was driving through Harrogate.
He said drivers beeped their horns to alert the lorry driver when his vehicle got close to the barrier and traffic light.
He added that an elderly man in a car in the opposite lane where the traffic light crashed was left bemused by the incident.
“It was quite bad.
“There was an old man in the car. I don’t think he realised what happened.”
Read more:
- Decision looms on future of Beech Grove low traffic neighbourhood
- Four-mile queues as traffic chaos descends on Harrogate
Police later attended the scene and the light was moved, but traffic was left queueing for miles in both directions.
The situation was made worse when resurfacing work outside the Leon drive-thru on Wetherby Road caused traffic to queue back onto Skipton Road.
Woman charged with Harrogate attempted murder enters no pleaA 44-year-old woman will appear at crown court next month charged with attempted murder in Harrogate.
Clare Bailey, of Dudley, was arrested following an incident on Byland Road in Bilton on Thursday evening last week.
She was later charged with attempted murder and appeared before York Magistrates Court yesterday, where she entered no plea to the charge.
Read more:
- Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
- Harrogate girl, 13, admits drunken attack on police officers
The case was referred to Leeds Crown Court on July 25.
A man in his 40s has been bailed after being arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder following the same incident.
North Yorkshire Police said yesterday that the man was bailed while its investigation continues.
Woman charged with attempted murder in HarrogateA woman in her 40s has been charged with attempted murder in Harrogate.
Clare Bailey was due to appear at York Magistrates Court today.
A man, also in his 40s, has been bailed after being arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder.
The two people were arrested on Friday after an incident on Byland Road in Bilton on Thursday.
A woman was taken to hospital with what police described as ‘substantial injuries’.
Forensic officers were called to the scene after the incident.
Today’s update by North Yorkshire Police said the man has been bailed while the investigation continues.
Read more:
- Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
- Harrogate girl, 13, admits drunken attack on police officers
Four-mile queues as traffic chaos descends on Harrogate
Motorists are enduring misery on the roads in Harrogate today, with long delays on three of the main routes around town.
Wetherby Road, Skipton Road and Ripon Road have all been affected by incidents, bringing traffic to a standstill on the northern side of Harrogate.
Resurfacing outside the yet-to-open Leon drive-through close to the Woodlands junction is causing long delays in both directions on Wetherby Road and Hookstone Drive.

Resurfacing outside Leon
Traffic heading towards the Kestrel roundabout is backing up all the way from Leon to the Empress roundabout and all along Skipton Road to New Park roundabout – a distance of almost four miles.
The four-way traffic lights at the Woodlands junction, near the Leon site, brought tailbacks to Hornbeam Park.
Many vehicles were turning around in attempts to avoid the queues.

The fallen traffic lights.

The central reservation damaged by the traffic lights.
The situation was made worse this morning when a traffic light at the junction of Skipton Road and King’s Road, near Bilton Working Men’s Club, came crashing down.
That has now been removed but traffic was still queueing for miles in all directions when the Stray Ferret cycled around town at about midday today.

Queueing on Skipton Road
Motorists trying to avoid the delays on Skipton Road by heading into town on Ripon Road were hit by further roadworks outside Cygnet Hospital.

Roadworks on Ripon Road is adding to delays.
Read more:
- Decision looms on future of Beech Grove low traffic neighbourhood
- Review finds Harrogate 2019 UCI cycling championships ‘effectively closed’ town centre
Stray Views: When will this housebuilding madness end?
Stray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
When will this housebuilding madness end?
Every day in The Stray Ferret I find Harrogate Borough Council has passed more planning permissions for housing.
In the last few years, the number of new houses, including the 4,000 to be built near Beckwithshaw, is approaching 10,000. When will this lunacy stop? I know the government said it wanted 300,000 a year but it did not say they all had to be built in Harrogate.
We have lost an unbelievable amount of green field sites and healthy mature trees and all of this can NEVER be replaced. The effect on wild life is devastating.
Where is the infrastructure to cope with all this building? Every new house or flat brings onto the roads approximately 1.5 extra cars.
Where is the water going to come from? Where are the extra school places needed for the children?
What about sewage? Yorkshire Water are already putting raw sewage into the rivers on a regular basis.
Have you tried to get a doctor’s appointment recently? It is near impossible so who is going to look after all the new residents.
Electricity has to be generated, which creates pollution and contradicts the campaign to reduce the carbon footprint.
Access to these developments is a major concern, Knox Lane and Crab Lane are single width most of the way and probably the worst is Kingsley Road where pedestrians are at risk due to no footpaths on Bogs Lan.
Harrogate Borough Council has already exceeded its housing requirement by a huge amount but just carry on passing permission so the question is: why?
The council say they have been overruled by Westminster on some occasions and have had to pay compensation so they are reluctant to refuse permission.. If that is the case why do we not have strong councillors with proper negotiating skills, a strong will and a good knowledge of what they are fighting for?
The village of Killinghall is now a town. Knaresborough is slowly growing closer to the A1 motorway. Bishop Monkton has nearly doubled in size and so it goes on.
My final example of lunacy is the drive-through development on the Woodlands traffic lights. One of the busiest junctions in Harrogate. What on earth could make the council pass permission for this development ,which will make this junction much more dangerous than it already is.
Malcolm Hodgekinson, Bilton resident for over 60 years
Read more:
- Under-fire infrastructure plans for west Harrogate will cost taxpayers £25,000
- Decision on Harrogate town council could take two years
- Aaron Bertenshaw’s family to fundraise at Knaresborough Bed Race
Let’s have a Harrogate town council referendum
Town councils have a proud tradition of supporting their communities and this has been evident throughout the country during covid and the cost of living crisis.
Local people know what is best for their community and they should be able to make decisions that concern them.
I am not the only person who is worried that Harrogate will lose its voice at key decisions made by the new North Yorkshire Council. It is wrong for Harrogate’s matters to be decided and voted on by councillors from outside of our town.
A referendum needs to be held as soon as possible to allow for the transition of authority and responsibility to the new town council.
I’m a big believer in giving decision-making power back to our community and establishing a town council will do just that.
Tyler Reeton, Harrogate
Aaron Bertenshaw’s legacy is helping people with diabetes
The Stray Ferret has written several stories about our campaign to plug the gap between mental health and diabetes following the death of my son Aaron Bertenshaw.
We had a stall at Knaresborough Bed Race and the final amount raised was £4,490, which Morrisons has agreed to match fund.
The custom painted guitar (pictured below) was gifted back to us by the winner and will be put up for auction in August to raise further funds. If anyone is interested in receiving the auction details, contact the Stray Ferret and it will pass your messages on.
Diabetes UK’s Diabetes is Serious campaign has now held its virtual launch.
Several mothers came to speak with me at the event about their concerns and I have been able to direct them to the relevant member of the Diabetes UK team so they can receive the support they need.
Sammy Oates, Harrogate
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.