A serial driving offender has been jailed for putting lives at risk during a high-speed police chase through Knaresborough.
Liam Edmondson, 26, a white-collar boxer, sped off when a traffic officer spotted him driving his VW Golf while using a hand-held mobile phone and tried to pull him over at traffic lights.
But Edmonson ignored the flashing blue lights and sped off, prosecutor Rachael Landin told York Crown Court.
Edmondson drove at speeds of up to 90mph in restricted zones as he overtook vehicles, shot straight over junctions and at one stage drove on the wrong side of the road in midday traffic.
Eventually, following the chase along High Street and York Road, he abandoned the vehicle in a street of Kingfisher Road, ran off and jumped over a boundary fence in a residential garden into a neighbouring property.
However, a neighbour’s ring doorbell provided video footage of Edmondson’s escape and he was identified by one of the pursuing officers.
Edmondson, of Pasture Crescent, Knaresborough, was charged with dangerous driving, using a hand-held mobile phone, driving while disqualified and without insurance.
He ultimately admitted all the offences – albeit claiming he was driving at lesser speeds than alleged – and appeared for sentence yesterday.
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Ms Landin said that Edmondson, a fighter in Ultra White-Collar Boxing, had sped through 30mph and 40mph zones during the chase involving two police vehicles on March 3.
Edmonson had failed to slow down even at junctions as he sped and failed to give way to other vehicles as he drove on the wrong side of the road. He was driving so fast that a pursuing police car, travelling at over 90mph, lost sight of the Volkswagen as they approached a roundabout.
Ms Landin said:
“The defendant’s vehicle was found abandoned outside a property (near Kingfisher Road).”
Edmondson’s eight previous convictions comprised 16 offences including many driving matters and serious violence. They included failing to stop after an accident, driving without a licence and insurance, and careless driving.
In April he received a two-year community order for assault occasioning actual bodily harm after knocking a rugby player unconscious inside a bar in Harrogate.
The victim in that case was out drinking with his rugby mates when he was involved in a “heated discussion” with Edmondson in the men’s toilets.
Edmondson, a self-employed labourer, struck him in the face and the victim was knocked out. The next thing the victim remembered was being woken by police officers while laid out on the floor. He suffered “severe” facial injuries.
Defence barrister Eleanor Durdy said that Edmondson, a father-of-one, had raised a lot of money for charity through his involvement with Ultra White-Collar Boxing.
A representative for the charity boxing organisation provided a character reference attesting to the fact that Edmondson had trained very hard for his fights and raised money for cancer research.
Judge Sean Morris blasted Edmondson for his reckless driving which had put the lives of police officers and the general public at risk.
Mr Morris added:
“This was midday and there would have been children about.
“You were undertaking ridiculous driving manoeuvres. You could have killed a police officer and that is why dangerous-driving police chases are so very dangerous.”
Edmondson was jailed for 11 months and given a 17-month driving ban.
Polish prisoner jailed after absconding to UK to work in Harrogate hospitalA Polish prisoner who absconded from his homeland and used his criminal brother’s identity documents to land a job at Harrogate District Hospital has been jailed for nearly two years.
Przemyslaw Poltorak, 39, used his brother Lucas Poltorak’s Polish identity cards and driving licence to find work as a cleaner at the hospital, earning over £40,000 during his employment there, York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Charlotte Noddings said Poltorak, from Harrogate, had a criminal record in Poland but the UK immigration authorities had not yet managed to ascertain the details.
According to Poltorak, his previous convictions were for fraud, theft, drug offences and robbery. He was sentenced to 11 years in jail in 2004 for a “range of offences” and had served seven years when he fled to the UK under a false identity while on day release in 2011.
Ms Noddings said if Poltorak were jailed by a UK court, the normal procedure would be deportation to his homeland “to answer whatever matters he has to answer for”.
Ms Noddings said:
“He was serving a prison sentence there, was on day release, and never returned to prison.
“He has no legal basis to be here.”
She added, however, that despite his record, if Poltorak had entered the UK under his own identity at the time in question, when the UK was still part of the European Union, he would have been able to get into the country without a hitch.
In fact, Poltorak, trying to disguise his criminal convictions in his own country, chose instead to use his brother’s identity documents to firstly get into the UK and then land a job at Harrogate District Hospital, where he worked without anyone suspecting a thing.
Poltorak admitted fraud in that between June 2013 and June 2023 he used another person’s ID documents to gain employment and thereby make a gain of £150,000 – his earnings at the hospital and a car-manufacturing company in Knaresborough.
He also admitted using identity documents in March 2023 to obtain a driving licence – which meant he was also driving on the UK’s roads illegally – and using those same documents to obtain employment.
Using brother’s identity
Poltorak, of Malham Drive, Harrogate, appeared for sentence yesterday (Thursday, August 3) after being remanded in custody.
Ms Noddings said Poltorak, who was using his brother’s name and identity, was arrested at Harrogate District Hospital.
Ms Noddings said:
“His brother Lucas Poltorak – the real Lucas Poltorak – is a sex offender in Poland who was arrested at Leeds/Bradford Airport and refused entry to the UK.”
On that same day in November 2022, immigration officials converged on Przemyslaw Poltorak’s home and arrested him. They seized a “driving document related to Lucas Poltorak”.
Ms Noddings said that a driving record in the name of Lucas Poltorak was created on March 9, 2020. Przemyslaw Poltorak had used his brother’s details on his application for a driving licence.
She added:
“Enquiries were made about how he obtained a job at Harrogate hospital.
“He made an application (for a job) in the name of Lucas Poltorak (and) provided a Polish identity card, a provisional driving licence and a utility bill in the name of Lucas Poltorak.”
Poltorak was paid £42,337 during his employment at the hospital.
However, further enquiries revealed that between 2013 and 2020, he had also been employed by a car-manufacturing firm in Knaresborough which he had secured by using the same false identity cards.
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During his seven-year stint at the car company, he earned £111,631, said Ms Noddings.
Home Office officials reviewed his records and downloaded text messages from his phone which had been seized at the hospital. They showed that Poltorak had been passing himself off as his brother Lucas.
When the real Lucas Poltorak was identified, it transpired that Border Force officials had refused him entry to the UK when he landed at Leeds/Bradford Airport in November 2022.
Further scrutiny by immigration officials revealed that Lucas Poltorak had been granted the right to settle in the UK in June 2021 but was then refused re-entry a year later when his previous convictions were discovered.
‘Hard working man’
Kevin Blount, Przemyslaw Poltorak’s solicitor advocate, said his client had left prison in Poland on day release and used his brother’s identity cards to travel to the UK with his wife and children, but that in fact he could have done so legally when the country was part of the EU and borderless travel.
He said that Poltorak had since lived a “law-abiding life” in the UK, “save for the fact that it was in the wrong name”.
Mr Blount added:
“He used his brother’s (name) not to avoid British passport control, but to avoid Polish emigration authorities because he was due to return to serve the end of his sentence.”
He said that a European arrest warrant for Poltorak had still not been issued despite his detention and during the transition period when the UK was in the process of leaving the EU, he still had a right to work in this country “under his own name”.
Mr Blount said that Poltorak was a “hard working man” and even though he had lost his legal status in the UK, his family still had a right to live here.
Judge Simon Hickey said it appeared that Poltorak had fled Poland not just for a “better life for your family”, but also because he would have served a whole jail term for his previous offences in his homeland, whereas in the UK he would have been released at the halfway point.
He said that the “real seriousness of (Poltorak’s offences in the UK) was “working for that vast amount of time and concealing who you were”.
Poltorak received a 20-month jail sentence but will only serve half of that sentence behind bars before being released on prison licence, although his deportation is still in the offing.
Police appeal after sexual assault in HarrogatePolice have appealed for witnesses after a sexual assault in Harrogate.
Officers said the incident happened at a pizza takeaway on lower Station Parade in Harrogate at 2.30am on Saturday, July 29.
A women was approached by a man who offered money for sex, tried to kiss her and then sexually assaulted her.
Police arrested a man in his 40s in relation to the allegation of sexual assault and he has been released on bail pending further enquiries.
In a statement, North Yorkshire Police said:
“We are requesting the public’s assistance to help establish the full circumstances surrounding the incident.
“Officers would particularly like to speak with two men who were not involved but were in the pizza shop at the time the assault took place.
“Anyone with information that could assist the investigation should email Michael.crawshaw@northyorkshire.police.uk
“You can also call North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and ask for Michael Crawshaw.
“If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
“Please quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number 12230141013.”
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Knaresborough man jailed for strangling former partner
A man who strangled and terrorised his former partner has been jailed for nearly two years.
Craig Moorey, 31, from Knaresborough, strangled the victim to the point where she was struggling to breathe, York Crown Court heard.
He handed himself in following the drunken attack – albeit only because he knew the named victim had called police – but after being quizzed about the assault he went back to her home and started banging on her windows, threatening to smash them in.
Prosecutor Andrew Finlay said the assault occurred during an argument at the victim’s home in Harrogate on October 16 last year.
The victim said he only stopped when she pushed him away. Moorey claimed he pushed her away and said he “briefly” strangled her after she threatened to stab him.
The prosecution accepted that the victim had threatened to stab him but did so while being subjected to vile verbal abuse from Moorey. It was also set against a background of violence and domestic abuse she had suffered at his hands.
Mr Finlay said that in the moments before the attack, the victim had asked Moorey to leave after returning home to find empty beer cans strewn around the room.
Moorey refused and aimed abuse at her. The argument spilled into the kitchen where he strangled her.
Mr Finlay added:
“The defendant grabbed her by the neck with both hands and grabbed her clothing.
“She pushed him away before phoning police.”
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Moorey left the house and handed himself in a few days later but refused to answer police questions.
He was released under investigation but on November 9, while on a bail condition to stay away from the victim, he returned to her home and asked to be let in.
The victim, realising he was drunk, refused, but Moorey returned later that night and flew into a rage after looking inside the house to find she was with her former partner.
Mr Finlay said:
“The defendant was angered by this and banged and punched the windows while threatening to smash them and shouting at her former partner.”
The victim said she was afraid that Moorey would smash the windows because “he had done so before”.
She called police again, told Moorey she had done so, and he left. He was brought in for questioning and again refused to answer police questions.
Drink problem
Moorey, of Main Street, Scotton, was charged with offences including intentional strangulation, assault and threatening to damage property. He denied the allegations but ultimately admitted strangulation and threatening to damage property on the day of trial.
The allegations he denied were either dropped by the prosecution or allowed to lie on court file.
He appeared for sentence via video link on Friday (July 28) after being remanded in custody.
Mr Finlay said the former couple’s relationship ended a few years ago after the victim had suffered a catalogue of domestic abuse.
Moorey, a father-of-two, had nine previous offences on his record including damaging the victim’s property, sending offensive communications and breaching a restraining order. There had been previous violence against the victim.
Moorey’s defence counsel said that his client, a ground worker, had already spent about six months on custodial remand.
Judge Simon Hickey noted previous violence against the victim and that Moorey appeared to have a drink problem.
He added:
“This lady has spoken a number of times (in the past) of finding you in drink and cans of alcohol littered around the premises. That is your problem, I’m afraid, Mr Moorey. Drink is your downfall.”
Moorey was given a 22-month jail sentence and handed a 10-year restraining order to keep him away from the victim.
Knaresborough takeaway owner ordered to repay £55,000 after tax fraud convictionA Knaresborough takeaway owner has been ordered to repay £55,000 after being convicted of tax fraud.
Razaul Karim, 50, appeared for a financial-confiscation hearing at York Crown Court yesterday (Thursday, July 27) when judge Simon Hickey ordered him to pay back all the money to the public purse.
Karim, of Lunan Terrace, Leeds, was given three months to pay £55,003 or face a nine-month prison sentence if he defaulted.
In September last year, the takeaway boss was given a two-year suspended prison sentence after he admitted four counts of fraudulent evasion of VAT. The offences spanned more than three years, between March 2017 and April 2020.
He was caught following an investigation into his tax affairs relating to his business, the Paragon Indian takeaway on High Street.
Prosecutor Timothy Jacobs said the business had operated for many years and that between 2013 and 2015 it was VAT-registered.
However, at some point in 2015, Karim deregistered the business from VAT after claiming that the business was under the income threshold for paying the value-added tax.
An investigation into the business was launched, which was aided by records from two well-known delivery firms which provided services for the takeaway. The records, from August 2019, suggested that the takeaway’s turnover was way over the threshold at which companies should pay VAT.
Investigators looked into the business’s takings for the years from March 2017 and found that the turnover exceeded the VAT threshold in delivered food alone, let alone purchases made in the shop.
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They found that the business’s turnover was just under £130,000, well over the £85,000 threshold. The total amount of unpaid tax was over £51,700.
Police brought Karim in for questioning in May 2021 when he ashamedly tried to blame his accountant for the tax irregularities, but later owned up to the fraud.
However, sentencing judge Mr Hickey said that because of Karim’s hitherto clean record and otherwise “exemplary” character, he would not be sending him to jail.
He said Karim’s fraud was “out of character” and committed possibly because he was going through financially hard times.
He said that Karim was a hard-working man who had responsibilities as a father and that at the time of the offences he was “probably” struggling to pay his bills and employees.
Mr Karim’s wife Kalpana Begum Karim, 46, with whom he ran the business, had been charged with the same offences but denied the allegations. The prosecution dropped all charges against her.
Harrogate dominatrix ordered to pay £1 in £100,000 sex-trafficking racketA Portuguese dominatrix who ran an international sex-trafficking and prostitution racket, earning over £100,000 in the process, has been made to repay just £1 to the public purse.
Fabiana De Souza, 43, and her English husband Gareth Derby, 55, were jailed for a combined 10 years in February last year after they were caught trafficking sex workers from Brazil and Portugal and running a brothel in Harrogate, where many of the sex workers were based after being flown in from abroad.
Jessica Strange, prosecuting at today’s financial confiscation hearing at Leeds Crown Court, said that De Souza, who was excused attendance at court, had made £136,484 from the human-trafficking plot but had just £1 available in her accounts.
She said the prosecution’s financial investigator found that she had no hidden assets.
Derby, who appeared via video link from Moorland prison, had made profits of £28,288 and had £1,045 in cash or assets available.
Mr Recorder R Ward ordered him to pay £1,045 into the public purse but De Souza was ordered to pay a solitary pound.
The former dominatrix was given one month to pay or face a further four weeks in prison. The former sex worker is due to be deported from the UK when she’s released from jail.
De Souza’s barrister Michael Fullerton said she was due to be deported on August 21.
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He claimed that some of her financial gains during the trafficking racket were from her work as a beautician and in the fitness industry.
He said this money was “not…earned by her as a dominatrix with her own website during that period”.
Women treated like ‘commodities’
During the trial at the same court in December 2021, the jury heard that De Souza and Derby, from Norfolk, had been “flying in” sex workers from Europe and South America.
Prosecutor Nicholas Lumley KC said the couple treated the women like “commodities” as they made massive sums from their illicit trade.
De Souza, who provided dominatrix services to people in Harrogate, was said to be the ringleader of the “large-scale commercial operation” in which she and Derby, a high-earning engineer and machine specialist, flew in sex workers from Brazil and Portugal, paid for their flights and met them at airports, before sending them to sex dens where men paid for “massages” and “full (sex) services”.
They had exploited the “vulnerable” women for “significant” financial gain by “controlling (their) finances (and) choice of clients”, said Mr Lumley.
The prostitutes were put at a “significant financial disadvantage” and forced to lie to police to avoid detection.
De Souza and Derby, who ran the lucrative business from their home in East Anglia, were arrested in August 2018 and charged with controlling prostitution for financial gain and human trafficking.
They each denied the charges, but the jury found them guilty on both counts following a 10-day trial.
The charges related to six named women who worked at the Harrogate brothel and two properties in Norfolk between April 2017 and August 2018.
Mr Lumley said De Souza rented a two-bed flat in Harrogate town centre through a letting agency “so it could be used for sex…which would be advertised on the internet by these two defendants”.
De Souza and Derby would pay for sex adverts within hours of picking the women up from airports around the country and would “set them up” at the flat on Bower Road.
The adverts were placed on escort websites and included descriptions of the women.
They took the bookings and “made the arrangements (with the clients)” who would pay various amounts – from £80 for half an hour to over £1,000 for an overnight stay.
Thousands in bank transfers
Between May 2017 and August 2018, some £38,000 cash was deposited into De Souza’s bank accounts at branches in Harrogate and Norfolk. About £9,000 of bank transfers were then made to accounts in Brazil and Portugal using a money-services bureau.
Mr Lumley said one woman was flown in on an EasyJet flight from Amsterdam and was picked up by the couple who had driven from Norfolk in a 4×4 pick-up. Derby also drove a Mercedes.
They would arrange for a train ticket to be available at the airport as they moved the women around the country “or put them on a bus and sent them up to Harrogate or somewhere else”.
Following her arrest, De Souza, who is serving her sentence at a women’s prison in Peterborough, told police she had left her husband in September 2017 with the intention of divorcing him and moved to Harrogate “where no-one knew me”.
She had rented the Bower Road flat for over £700 a month and let rooms out to “others”, some of whom were “friends from Portugal”.
Derby said only that he had an “inkling that Fabia worked at the Harrogate flat as a dominatrix”.
In a text sent to a friend in January 2018, he boasted of being a “smuggler of women”.
Police trawled through the accounts of De Souza and her husband and found they had spent “thousands on air fares” and over £2,000 on adverts alone.
An undercover officer posed as a client to make appointments for the brothel on Bower Road. De Souza would answer the calls in “broken English” and arrange the appointment.
The officer was offered a “range of services”. On his first visit, dressed in civilian clothes, he was met by a sex worker named ‘Lisa’ who buzzed him into the flats above shops.
De Souza and Derby, of Town Street, Upwell, south-west Norfolk, were each jailed for five years in February 2022.
Police launch investigation after PCSO assaulted in KnaresboroughPolice have launched an investigation after a police community support officer was assaulted in Knaresborough.
The incident happened around 3pm on Tuesday (July 25) in Knaresborough Market Place.
Officers from North Yorkshire Police said they have arrested a young man in connection with the assault.
He has since been released on bail while enquiries are conducted.
A police statement added:
“Officers are appealing for witnesses or footage which could help with this investigation.
“Anyone with information that could assist the investigation should email holly.nicholls@northyorkshire.police.uk.
“You can also call North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and ask for PC Holly Nicholls.
If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
“Please quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number 12230138428.”
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Police appeal after car window smashed in Harrogate
Police have appealed for information after a car was damaged in Hollins Road in Harrogate.
Officers said the incident happened at 2am on Tuesday (July 25) when a driver’s side rear window of a Peugeot 207 was smashed.
In a statement, North Yorkshire Police said two men dressed in dark clothing were seen running away from the scene towards Hampsthwaite Road.
Police added:
“Anyone with information that could assist officers with their investigation should email Sam.Clarke2@northyorkshire.police.uk.
“You can also call North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and ask for PC Sam Clarke.
If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
“Please quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number 12230138046 when passing on information.”
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Man jailed after causing death of woman in car crash near Ripon
A man has been jailed for two years for causing the death of his friend by dangerous driving near Ripon.
Harry Elliott, 25, was driving his high-performance Audi RS3 at “excessive speeds” in the run-up to the fatal crash on the B6265 at Risplith near the city.
The Audi, which was carrying four passengers including 20-year-old Naomi Buckle from Catterick Garrison, crashed into a tree after Elliott lost control on a blind, sharp bend, York Crown Court heard.
The mother-of-one from, whose seat belt was under her arm and around her stomach, was shunted forward by the impact and suffered a haemorrhage.
An ambulance was called but Naomi, described as a “beautiful, perfect” daughter, was pronounced dead at the scene.
Prosecutor Eleanor Fry said that Elliott had been driving his friends, including Naomi and three young men, from the Richmond area to Brimham Rocks in Summerbridge when the horror crash occurred in the early hours of December 19, 2019.
She said the atmosphere inside the car had been “somewhat hyper” and loud music was blaring. Elliott had been warned by his friends “on at least one occasion” to slow down.
Naomi and her boyfriend, who was also a passenger, had been picked up by Elliott after they finished their work shifts.
She was sat in the back seat with her seat belt on, but evidence suggested she had moved the upper part of her seat belt under her arm.

Naomi Buckle, who died in the crash near Grantley Hall on December 6, 2019. Picture: North Yorkshire Police.
Ms Fry said that Elliott’s mobile phone was on the dashboard, blaring loud music, and video footage from another phone showed that the passengers were “shouting and cheering”.
The Audi was initially travelling down the A1(M) at an average speed of 94mph but at some points “significantly faster”.
It then moved onto the A6005 where it continued to drive at over the speed limit in wet conditions.
The Audi then turned onto the B6265 which had no street lighting and along which were warning signs about bends in the road and the need for careful driving.
Ms Fry said:
“It was about 2am and dark.
“It was raining. The ground was wet and the car was laden with five people.”
The Audi was travelling at “high speeds”, thought to be 69mph, as it approached a sharp, blind bend and veered out of control. Elliott slammed on the brakes, but the car struck a tree.
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Naomi, who had a three-year-old daughter, was shunted forward and suffered a haemorrhage. A road-accident expert later concluded that if the seat belt had been fitted properly, it might have saved her life.
An ambulance was called and Elliott and his friend tried to resuscitate Naomi, but her condition deteriorated by the time the emergency services arrived and she was pronounced dead at the scene.
The three other passengers, who were named in court, all suffered serious injuries. One suffered broken ribs and a fractured hand, breastbone and coccyx. Another passenger suffered a fractured wrist and breastbone and broken ribs.
Naomi’s boyfriend, with whom she had been living, suffered two spinal fractures, suspected broken ribs and whiplash.
Elliott, who suffered minor injuries, was charged with causing death by dangerous driving. He was also initially charged with three counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving.
He ultimately admitted causing Naomi’s death by dangerous driving on the first day of his trial in June after initially denying the offence. The three remaining charges relating to the three male passengers were allowed to lie on court file.
Elliott, from Richmond, appeared for sentence today – two-and-a-half years after the fatal crash which the prosecution described as “truly tragic”.
Ms Fry said that Elliott – who had drunk “two pints” some time before getting behind the wheel but was not over the limit – had driven “over-confidently, at speed”, on roads he knew very well, “no doubt encouraged (by the atmosphere in the car) and the music”.
‘Beautiful, perfect daughter’
In a statement read out in court, Naomi’s father Gary Buckle said that Naomi was a “beautiful, perfect” daughter.
He said that when Naomi’s late mother Elaine received the call on December 19 “it was the start of what can only be described as hell for our family for over three years”.
He said his wife’s heart was “broken” after they got the “dreadful knock on the door” to be told their beloved daughter had died.
He added:
“It completely broke me. She had so much to live for.”
He said his wife’s already-fragile health deteriorated after Naomi’s death and she too passed away in 2021.
Mr Buckle added:
“She never saw justice for Naomi and died with so many unanswered questions.”
Defence barrister Dan Cordey said that Elliott was “genuinely remorseful” for causing the death of his close friend.
Judge Sean Morris told Elliott he had caused the death of a “much-loved and dear young woman”.
He added:
“This has devastated the lives of Naomi’s family and nothing I can do in this case will help heal or…fill the chasm of loss that they must feel and will continue to feel for the rest of their lives.
“Young men in fast cars must understand that they drive lethal weapons.”
Elliott, of Anteforth View, Gilling West, received a two-year jail sentence but will only serve half of that behind bars before being released on prison licence. He was banned from driving for three years.
Investigation continues into Pateley Bridge petrol station attempted arsonInvestigations are ongoing into an attempted arson at a petrol station in Pateley Bridge, police have said.
The incident happened between 1.45am and 2.45am on Sunday, May 14, at the Dales Market Corner petrol station in the town.
According to North Yorkshire Police, two men walked onto the forecourt, placed a backpack in the area and set it alight. The backpack then self-extinguished.
Two men were arrested in connection with the attempted arson following the incident.
A 45-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of arson, while a 36-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of arson and criminal damage.
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Both have since been released on conditional bail and no charges have been issued.
A police spokesperson said today that an investigation into the attempted arson is ongoing.
Jill Cowling, detective inspector from Harrogate CID, said previously:
“We’re treating this incident as deliberate, and enquiries are continuing. Thankfully no one was injured, but we will be increasing police activity in the area to provide additional reassurance to the public.
“As part of the ongoing police investigation I’m now appealing for people to come forward about any suspicious activity at the location on the night of Saturday 13 and in the early hours of Sunday 14 May 2023.”