Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has said new laws will strengthen police powers to tackle crime associated with Travellers in Knaresborough this summer.
Appleby Horse Fair starts on Thursday next week in Cumbria and lasts until June 14.
The event has attracted illegal encampments in Knaresborough and Copgrove in previous years as people make their way to and from the event.
The encampments have also led to widespread concerns about crime and anti-social behaviour.
Mr Jones recently discussed the issue with fellow Conservative Zoe Metcalfe, the North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner.
He told the Stray Ferret the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 enabled police to “take quicker and more effective enforcement action where significant harm is happening” and criticised opposition parties for not supporting it.

Hay-a-Park in Knaresborough after an encampment two years ago.
Mr Jones added the broadening of existing powers under the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 would also enable police to “ban trespassers from returning to land previously occupied and preventing them from occupying land that forms part of the highway”.
He said:
“These are all matters I have raised with the local police and the police, fire and crime commissioner to ensure that they are fully aware of the tools at their disposal for dealing with anti-social behaviour connected with traveller encampments.
“I am also keen that the council and the police share intelligence on traveller movements, particularly during the summer season of traveller fairs, so that private landowners can be given advice on how to secure their land if they are on the route to these fairs.
“I hope these new powers and continued coordination between the relevant authorities, landowners and residents can prevent anti-social behaviour that is associated with some of the encampments.”
But Mr Jones admitted it was “difficult to address all eventualities and I am sure incidents will still occur”, adding:
“The court process exists for those occasions and our local council has a good track record of using those processes to re-possess public land and can provide guidance to private landowners in that respect too.
“There are sites travellers can use in the district – in fact there are nine council-owned sites across North Yorkshire. The council needs to constantly review whether the number of sites is adequate. It may be that the capacity is enough and the travellers are simply not using them. That is information the council will need to assess in its deliberations over whether the number of sites is adequate.”
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‘No specific actions’
Ms Metcalfe said she took “no specific actions” from her meeting with Mr Jones but said she expected all reports to be “investigated thoroughly”. She said:
Arrest warrant issued for couple charged with fraud in Harrogate district“I am aware of community concerns surrounding traveller encampments in the run up to and during Appleby Fair, and I know the force are learning from previous years when incidents involving gypsies and travellers have taken place.
“When meeting with MP Andrew Jones last month he raised no particular issues in relation to traveller encampments, and we spoke about this year’s Appleby Fair and the positive community messaging that had already been circulated by North Yorkshire Police regarding things such as road safety, for example drivers being aware of people travelling to the event and being careful when over taking horse and carts.
“I took no specific actions from the meeting, only to encourage anyone who witnesses or experiences a crime to report it to the police via 999 in an emergency or 101 in a non-emergency. I will continue to scrutinise the force for their handling of calls and expect that all reports made over the duration of the event will be investigated thoroughly.”
An arrest warrant has been issued for a couple charged with fraud in the Harrogate district.
John Carnell, 70, and Jacqueline Carnell, 73, were due to appear before York Crown Court yesterday for a pre-trail hearing.
The couple have been charged with a string of fraud and theft charges which are alleged to have happened between July 2014 and December 2018.
They included dishonestly claiming to have wealth of £24 million to gain a tenancy on a house in the Harrogate district.
Both initially denied the charges when they appeared via video link at Harrogate Magistrates Court from their home in Loule, Portugal, on April 28.
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However, the couple failed to appear at York Crown Court in person to enter formal pleas.
As a result, Judge Simon Hickey issued a warrant for their arrest.
A further pre-trial hearing has been listed for July 21, 2023.
A third of callers give up on police 101 calls in North YorkshireNorth Yorkshire’s police commissioner has criticised the force after new figures today revealed more than a third of 101 calls were abandoned.
Statistics for April showed 16,939 non-emergency calls were made to North Yorkshire Police.
Of that number, the average answer time was five minutes and 27 seconds.
The force has a target to answer 90% of calls within 120 seconds. Last month, 60% were picked up in time and 34% were abandoned.
At a North Yorkshire Police online public meeting today, Zoe Metcalfe, the Conservative police, fire and crime commissioner, said:
“It’s just not good enough for the public at all that we are having a 34% drop-off rate here in 101.
“I really would like to know when are we going to see an improvement.”
The meeting can be viewed here.
The criticism comes after the commissioner awarded the force control room £1.8 million a year to improve response times.

Figures for 101 calls in April. Data: NYP.
The money was earmarked to fund the appointment of 36 additional communications officers, 12 additional dispatchers, six established trainers and two additional police inspectors.
Elliot Foskett, assistant chief constable at the force, said he was optimistic the performance would start to improve.
“We would agree, we think 34% is high. You will start to see an improvement, commissioner, with those resources landing in the control room.
“I can’t stress highly enough that we monitor this every single day. Not only within the chief officer team, but at the force daily management meeting and in the local meetings in the force control room.
“I am optimistic that by the summer time as we start to get more people in and towards the end of the summer, we will should see that come down. I absolutely understand the frustration when people are hanging on the phone and trying to get through to us as well.”
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Meanwhile, Mr Foskett pointed to “massive improvements” in the force’s 999 response times.
The force control room answered 76% of calls over the last three months on time.
The figure is in stark contrast to November 2022, when just 44% of 999 calls were answered within that time frame.
However, it is still short of the police national target to answer 90% of calls in under 10 seconds.
Teenagers sentenced for damaging Boroughbridge school roofTwo teenagers have been sentenced after causing £660 worth of damage to a Boroughbridge school.
The boys, aged 15 and another 14, who cannot be named for legal reasons, were referred to a youth offenders panel for 12 months after damaging tiles and window seals at Alborough and Boroughbridge County Primary School last year.
The teenagers were charged with intending to destroy or damage such property or being reckless as to whether such property would be destroyed or damaged.
The incident happened on October 13 last year at the school on York Road.
The pair were also charged with trespassing in the maintenance building at the school on October 10, 2022, and stealing £94 worth of beer and wine. Another boy, aged 16, was also charged with the same offence.
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The three were sentenced to a youth offender panel after pleading guilty.
All three boys were sentenced at Harrogate Magistrates Court on Friday (May 19).
Harrogate man jailed for perverting course of justiceA Harrogate man has been jailed for six months after he tried to get his ex-partner to drop assault charges against him.
Daniel Berisha, 33, contacted the victim through a third party demanding she withdrew the complaint she had made to police, York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Michael Cahill said Berisha and the named victim started a relationship when she came to live in the UK in 2019.
She moved into his then home in Pendragon Way, Harrogate, but by the summer of 2020 the relationship began to break down due to Berisha’s cocaine use.
On November 4 last year, an argument broke out as Berisha pestered her for money to buy drugs.
The victim refused to give him the £80 but Berisha “followed her around the house, saying: “Give me the money’”.
Berisha told her that if she didn’t give him the money, he would personally transfer the cash from her account into his.
Mr Cahill said:
“He pushed her a few times (and) she fell to the floor.”
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She managed to push Berisha away, but he grabbed her phone and began using it. Knowing that he knew the passcode for her account, she transferred the money into his account and locked the door. Berisha by this stage had moved out of the house.
The following day, in the early hours of the morning, Berisha bombarded her with text messages telling her he had “nowhere to go”.
She blocked him on WhatsApp and blocked his calls, but then received over 20 calls from an unknown number.
Shortly after the phone calls, Berisha, who was high on cocaine, got into the house. The victim “screamed for help” and warned him she would call police.
Furious, Berisha shoved her and put his hand over her mouth to stop her screaming. He then took her phone and told her not to call police.
The victim, who worked in the care industry, eventually managed to call police when Berisha went downstairs. When officers arrived, they found the victim with scratches to her hand and grazes on the bridge of her nose.
Berisha was arrested and bailed pending further enquiries. In the meantime, police requested a domestic-violence protection order from magistrates to stop Berisha pestering the victim. The order was granted.
However, on November 12, a week after the second assault, Berisha sent messages to a named third party asking her to tell the victim to drop the charges.
Furthermore, he told the victim through the intermediary that he had a “video of the (victim) at work” and would send it to her employer if she didn’t withdraw her complaint, warning her that she would “never get a job in the UK again”.
Berisha told her through the third party that the video was of “(the victim) with a male she cared for”.
However, the victim, whose work record was impeccable and knowing she had “nothing to hide”, knew that Berisha was bluffing and refused to drop the charges.
‘I’ve lost everything’
Berisha, lately of Redfern Mews, Harrogate, was charged with attempting to pervert the course of justice and two counts of assault. He ultimately admitted the offences and appeared for sentence today.
In a statement read out in court, the victim, who had since moved out of the area, said she had moved to the UK for a fresh start after a previous abusive relationship.
The mother-of-two said she had “endured a nightmare” at the hands of Berisha who had initially helped her settle into her adoptive country.
She added:
“I later found out this was too good to be true.
“I’ve lost everything, all my belongings, so he could get money for his drug use.”
Defence barrister Ismael Uddin said that despite the “unsavoury” episode, Berisha was a hard-working man whose employers thought highly of him.
Judge Sean Morris told Berisha:
“Trying to get (victims) not to turn up in court strikes at the very heart of the criminal justice system and civilised society.
“If these kinds of offences don’t (attract) custodial sentences, then they will become rife. As a matter of policy and as a matter of making sure others are deterred (from trying to pervert the course of justice), only an immediate prison sentence is appropriate.”
Berisha received a six-month jail sentence and was given a five-year restraining order banning him from contacting the victim and going to her home or workplace.
Police appeal after Transit van stolen in HarrogatePolice have issued an appeal after a Ford Transit T350 was stolen from Woodfield Road in Harrogate.
The van was taken between 10.30pm on Thursday, May 18, and 8am on Friday, May 19.
Officers said the vehicle has blacked out rear side panels on each side as well as red sun stickers on each rear side panel.
It also has an amber light fitted to the front of the roof on the driver’s side and the registration is BN63 WCJ.
A North Yorkshire Police statement added:
“If you see the stolen vehicle, or know where it is, please email ben.robinson-brockhill@northyorkshire.police.uk. You can also call North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and ask for Ben Robinson-Brockhill
“If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Please quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number 12230089644.”
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Witnesses come forward in Harrogate rape investigation
Two potential witnesses have come forward after police issued an appeal last night.
North Yorkshire Police said it had arrested a 35-year-old man in connection with a rape at a Harrogate bar and restaurant.
The incident occurred in the downstairs female toilets at Revolucion de Cuba on Parliament Street during the early hours of Saturday, April 8, 2023.
The victim is receiving specialist support.
Officers issued CCTV images of two women who entered the female toilets at around the time of the incident and asked anyone who knew them to get in touch.
A police update said:
“Following an earlier appeal on Friday evening to trace two potential witnesses in support of an investigation into the rape of a woman in Harrogate, we can confirm that both women have now come forward.”
The Stray Ferret has consequently removed the images from its website and social media accounts.
Read more:
- Police warning amid increase in reports of empty laughing gas canisters
- Ex-teacher jailed for raping girl at Harrogate district school
Cyclist seriously injured in Harrogate after collision with a car
A cyclist has been seriously injured after a collision with a car in Harrogate.
North Yorkshire Police has appealed for witnesses to the incident, which involved a silver Vauxhall Insignia and a woman cyclist.
It happened on Wetherby Road, at the junction of St Nicholas Road, at around 6pm on Monday (May 15).
The cyclist, a woman in her 60s, was taken to hospital by ambulance for serious injuries, including a fractured arm. She has since been discharged.
A police statement said:
“We are appealing for witnesses to the collision or anyone who recalls seeing the car or the cyclist prior to the collision, to get in touch as soon as possible to assist the investigation.
“In particular, we are appealing for any dash-cam footage of the collision.
“If you can help, please email gary.dukes@northyorkshire.police.uk , or contact North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and ask for Tc 1266 Dukes.
“Please quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number 12230088421.”
Read more:
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- Ex-teacher jailed for raping girl at Harrogate district school
Police warning amid increase in reports of empty laughing gas canisters
Police have issued a warning after an increase in reports of empty canisters of nitrous oxide being found.
North Yorkshire Police said empty canisters had been found in areas where young people congregate.
Nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, is the second most-used drug among UK 16- to 24-year-olds. It can induce euphoria and relaxation, as well as hallucinations.
Amid the increase in reports, the force has urged parents to “be viligant” for signs that their children are purchasing it.
In a statement, police said:
“People may believe that because the gas is widely available and easily purchased, that it’s harmless. However, inhaling it can lead to unconsciousness and ultimately suffocation, as the body is essentially starved of oxygen.
“There is also evidence to show that people with heart conditions can be at higher risk of harm and that inhalation can lead to anaemia or long-term nerve damage.”
Read more:
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The warning comes after residents in Huby raised concern over canisters of laughing gas being dumped by the side of the road.
In March, John Chadwick, a resident in the village, found 10 canisters left at the side of rural Gravelly Hill Lane.
Mr Chadwick said this was the first time he’d seen the canisters and it “highlights what I believe is becoming an increasing health and behavioural issue predominately amongst younger people”.
Ex-teacher jailed for raping girl at Harrogate district schoolA former maths teacher has been jailed for 18 years for raping and sexually assaulting a young girl at a boarding school in the 1990s.
John William Renel, 68, pinned the girl down and raped and indecently assaulted her in a locker room at Cundall Manor School near Boroughbridge, prosecutor Rupert Doswell told a jury at York Crown Court.
The victim, who can’t be named for legal reasons, didn’t report the matter to police until 2021, more than 20 years after the alleged sexual abuse.
She said that before the alleged rape at the fee-paying independent school, she and Renel were “joking about something” in the school kitchen when he picked her up and joked that he was going to “throw her in the bin”.
He then carried her out into the corridor and touched her on the thigh near an intimate part of her body, said Mr Doswell.
Mr Doswell added:
“He then took her into a side room – a changing room or locker room – where (pupils) hang their clothing.
“He put her down on the ground on her back. He was on top of her and she remembers him wearing a tweed jacket.”
She said she turned her head “to stare at the wall” as Renel allegedly raped her.
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A family member later noticed that the victim, who was very young at the time of the offences, had become withdrawn and in adult life she had developed post-traumatic stress disorder which led to counselling and therapy.
Mr Doswell said that about five months after the victim’s first police interview, she contacted them again about the incident in the school locker room.
She said she could remember that during the rape, she felt as if Renel’s “body (was) crushing her” and that she was struggling to breathe.
According to the victim, Renel “simply walked away” after the incident, “leaving her on the ground”.
Mr Doswell said:
“She (told police) she had one further memory of another incident (at the school) when she was older.”
She said that before this incident, Renel again picked her up and dropped her on a bed in a dormitory.
He then laid down next to the victim, sexually assaulted her and then forced her hand onto an intimate part of his body.
Mr Doswell said:
“Her next memory is of the defendant’s face close up to her.
“She remembers feeling terrified. He was staring at her and scowling. He told her not to tell anyone, before leaving the room.”
Guilty on all counts
Renel, of Main Street, Sessay, near Thirsk, was brought in for questioning in 2021 but denied even knowing the girl.
He told police he had always taught in a tweed jacket but denied raping or sexually assaulting the girl.
He was charged with one count of rape and four counts of sexual assault against the girl. He denied all offences but was today found guilty on all counts.
Recorder Anthony Hawks moved straight to sentence and jailed Renel for 18 years.
The former teacher was also placed on the sex-offenders’ register for life and made subject to a sexual-harm prevention order for the protection of children. That order will also run indefinitely.
Following his sentence, Detective Constable Alison Morris, of North Yorkshire Police’s non-recent abuse investigation team, said:
“John William Renel is a predatory child abuser who has caused unimaginable trauma to the courageous victim in this case.
“I truly hope the outcome at court along with the significant custodial sentence handed to her perpetrator, provides comfort, strength and hope for the future.”
In 1997, a few years after Renel left Cundall Manor, he was convicted of three counts of indecently assaulting a girl at another school in Keighley.