A boy and a man have been taken to hospital with serious injuries after a major incident in Beckwithshaw this morning.
Armed officers and a police helicopter were deployed at about 8.20am to a house on Church Row in the village.
North Yorkshire Police released a statement minutes ago saying an 11-year-old boy and 40-year-old man had suffered “serious injuries believed to be sustained by a bladed article”.
Both males have been taken to hospital and police remain on the scene.
The statement said:
“Officers were called to a property in Church Row, Otley Road, at 8.20am today and on arrival found an 11-year-old boy and 40-year-old man with serious injuries believed to be sustained by a bladed article.
“Both males have been taken to hospital.
“The incident is not connected to the nearby school.”
This morning, the Stray Ferret received reports of numerous emergency services vehicles and an air ambulance attending the scene.
A police cordon is in place and the road from the roundabout near the cricket club to the junction with Shaw Lane was closed.
One villager told the Stray Ferret the road had reopened.
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Officer who downloaded indecent images ‘betrayed the trust of North Yorkshire Police’
A senior North Yorkshire Police officer has said former officer Christopher Groom ‘betrayed public trust and betrayed North Yorkshire Police’ after he was given a community order for downloading indecent images of children.
Leeds Magistrates Court heard yesterday how Groom, 41, searched the internet for images of youngsters using search terms such as ‘naked young teens’ and ‘youngest naked models’.
Analysis of Groom’s computer tower revealed that he had downloaded 8,707 Category C images of children over what is thought to be a seven-year period.
District Judge Richard Kitson told Groom, of Main Street, Claxton, he would not be sending him to jail because the probation service said he was at low risk of reoffending and could be rehabilitated in the community.

Mabs Hussain
Following the end of the court case, North Yorkshire Police deputy chief constable Mabs Hussain said the force “demands the highest level of integrity from our officers and staff.”
He added:
“This is essential to ensure the communities we are proud to serve have complete trust in their police service.
“The abhorrent and criminal actions of Groom have betrayed that public trust and he has betrayed North Yorkshire Police.”
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Groom resigned from North Yorkshire Police ahead of his first court appearance on May 18.
An accelerated misconduct hearing will now be considered by the Chief Constable and the professional standards department.
Groom was investigated by NYP’s online abuse and exploitation team.
Detective Sergeant Steve Alderson said:
Police officer avoids jail after downloading 8,000 indecent images of children“The fact that Groom was a serving North Yorkshire Police officer made no difference to how we conducted the investigation.
“He was treated the same as any other member of the public who become subject to a criminal inquiry and court proceedings.
“This case shows the determination of North Yorkshire Police to secure justice against those involved in indecent images of children offences, no matter who they are.”
A North Yorkshire Police officer who downloaded more than 8,000 indecent images of children has avoided a prison sentence.
Christopher Groom, 41, of Main Street, Claxton, trawled the internet for images of youngsters using search terms such as ‘naked young teens’ and ‘youngest naked models’, Leeds Magistrates Court heard today.
Among the photos downloaded by Groom were sexual images of children between eight and 14-years-old, said prosecutor Charles Macrae.
Groom, who has since resigned from the force, was arrested after police from North Yorkshire’s online abuse team searched his home on December 16, 2021. They seized a computer tower and a mobile phone and took the devices away for analysis.
Groom was brought in for questioning and gave a prepared statement but denied he had been searching for indecent images of children and said he was “shocked” images were found on his device.
Forensic analysis of Groom’s computer tower revealed that he had downloaded 8,707 Category C images of children over what is thought to be a seven-year period.
Mr Macrae said that “file names and internet searches associated with child sexual abuse” were found on the tower.
He was interviewed again in January after the forensic report and provided a further prepared statement in which he claimed he had “not deliberately sought out” indecent images.
Groom, of Main Street, Claxton, was charged with one count of making indecent images of minors between December 2014 and November 2021. He admitted the offence and appeared for sentence today.
Following his arrest, Groom claimed he had initially downloaded what he thought was legal pornography only to find it contained indecent images.
However, the forensic report debunked his claims that the downloads were accidental because “the searches had been made where such (indecent) images were likely to be”.
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Matthew Savage, mitigating, said Groom was now a changed man having voluntarily enrolled on an offenders’ prevention course. He added Groom had resigned from the force because he “felt that his position was untenable”. Mr Savage said:
“He remains deeply embarrassed and ashamed about his behaviour.”
He said Groom “understands fully the impact that this type of offending has” and that his arrest and subsequent conviction had been a “very salutary lesson”.
‘Not a victimless crime’
District judge Richard Kitson said the huge number of images was an “aggravating factor” in Groom’s despicable offences:
“You understand that this is not a victimless crime. At some point, these photographs had been taken of very real children who have suffered that abuse.
“You were a police officer for a number of years and you have now lost that. Not only have you lost that employment, the public have lost what under other circumstances was a very good and brave police officer. You were a man not only of good character, but positive character.”
Mr Kitson told Groom he would not be sending him to jail because the probation service said he was at low risk of reoffending and could be rehabilitated in the community.
He said he had also taken account of the steps that Groom had taken to address his offending and his early guilty plea.
Instead, Groom was given an 18-month community order which includes 30 rehabilitation-activity days and 150 hours’ unpaid work.
He was also ordered to sign on the sex-offenders’ register for five years and made subject to a five-year sexual-harm prevention order to allow police to monitor his internet activities.
As part of his notification requirements, Groom will have to periodically report to Scarborough Police Station.
Man, 67, pleads not guilty to sexual act in Harrogate’s Valley GardensA 67-year-old man pleaded not guilty in court today to performing a sexual act in Valley Gardens.
Kevin Payne, from Ling Park Avenue, Bingley, was charged with outraging public decency and breaching a sexual harm prevention order.
A member of the public reported seeing a man carrying out a sexual act on Sunday afternoon at the popular family venue.
North Yorkshire Police subsequently arrested Mr Payne and charged him with the two offences.
Appearing at York Magistrates Court this morning, he pleaded not guilty to both charges and was sent for trial at York Crown Court on July 11.
He will remain in custody until the hearing.
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Man arrested on suspicion of indecent exposure in Valley Gardens
Police have arrested a man on suspicion of indecent exposure in Harrogate’s Valley Gardens.
Officers were alerted to the incident, which happened in the gardens on Sunday (June 12).
A 67-year-old man from Bradford was arrested on suspicion of outraging public decency and breaching a sexual harm prevention order.
North Yorkshire Police added in a statement:
“Officers would like to thank the quick-thinking members of the public who alerted us to the man and helped detain him.
“He remains in police custody whilst enquiries continue.”
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Harrogate police officer pleads not guilty to sexual assault
A Harrogate police officer pleaded not guilty in court today after being charged with sexually assaulting a woman.
Joseph McCabe, 27, of Starbeck, is currently suspended from duty as a North Yorkshire Police officer based in Harrogate.
The officer appeared before York Magistrates Court this morning charged with sexual assault by touching. The case concerns an alleged incident at a North Yorkshire property last summer.
Prosecutor Charlotte Dangerfield said Mr McCabe, was allegedly “trying to stroke” the woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons.
It was also alleged that he was pulling at her hair, added Ms Dangerfield. She alleged that Mr McCabe was trying to have sex with the woman who was unwilling.
The defendant’s solicitor, Mr Hague, claimed the incident was “not sexual in nature” and added:
“He [Mr McCabe] thought there was going to be sexual interaction (but) she rejected it and he respected that”.
The magistrate questioned Mr Hague about the relationship between the defendant and the woman. Mr Hague responded and said:
“It had been a friendship for sometime with regular friendly communication, just a typical workplace relationship.”
Mr McCabe is set to appear before York Magistrates Court again on October 11 and has been released on unconditional bail.
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Harrogate police officer charged with sexual assault
A Harrogate police officer is to appear in court this week charged with sexual assault.
Joseph McCabe, of Kingsley Park Road, Starbeck, will appear at York Magistrates Court on Thursday.
He is accused of touching without consent at Scotch Corner Services, near Richmond, in August last year.
The 27-year-old officer is a serving North Yorkshire Police officer based at Harrogate police station.
He is currently suspended from duty.
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Harrogate guest house owner plans to appeal cannabis racket conviction
A Harrogate guest house owner who played the role of “facilitator” in a half-a-million-pound cannabis racket has sacked her legal team as she pursues plans to appeal her conviction.
Yoko Banks, 74, rented out her properties to an Albanian drug gang for “industrial” cannabis production “in the expectation of significant profit”, Leeds Crown Court heard.
The pensioner, of Scargill Road, was jailed for three-and-a-half years in August last year after she admitted three counts of being concerned in the production of cannabis.
Her six co-conspirators, Visar Sellaj, 33, Kujtim Brahaj, 50, Indrit Brahaj, 27, Bledar Elezaj, 36, Andi Kokaj, 23, and 31-year-old Erblin Elezaj, an illegal immigrant, were jailed for a combined 22 years for various offences including drug supply and production of skunk cannabis.
Banks, who owns properties across Harrogate, was back in court today to face financial confiscation proceedings under the Proceeds of Crime Act.
But they were postponed once again after the court heard she was still intent on appealing her conviction and wanted to leave her legal team in favour of another firm of solicitors.
Prosecutor Michael Bosomworth said there was also an issue with a statement provided by one of Banks’s co-defendants, the gang’s ringleader Sellaj, who claimed that some of the money in his bank account had been transferred to him by relatives in Albania.
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He added, however, that the major sticking point involved Banks and her “complicated accounts and property empire”.
Mr Bosomworth said Banks was now claiming “she only understands Japanese” – although she spoke in English in the dock and appeared to understand everything that was put to her.
Matters have been further complicated by Banks initially telling her legal team she didn’t wish to appeal, but then changing her mind.
She had pursued the appeal “notwithstanding she told (her solicitors) she wasn’t pursuing it” and was now in the process of transferring legal aid to a new team of solicitors.
If her legal aid application is granted, it would mean her costs being covered at least partly by public money.
Banks has “messed everyone around” for 18 months
Mr Bosomworth said there had been an issue between Banks and her present solicitors and she was “awaiting legal aid to be transferred”.
He said it was the Crown’s case that Banks had “messed everyone around for the last 18 months” and that the prosecution would “invite the court to consider the matter on the basis she is just not co-operating”.
He added that any order made today in terms of benefit and confiscation amount would “inevitably” be challenged by Banks who, as things stood, did not have any legal representation.
Mr Bosomworth said it was incumbent on Banks to submit a statement to the court showing her assets and “what the issues are”, but she had not yet served one.
When Recorder Mr Baird asked Banks if she understood what had been said and that she must submit a statement, she said she did and that she had “messed up quite a lot” during the legal case.
At the previous hearing in January, the Crown said it was not yet in a position to make a financial confiscation ruling because Banks’s defence team needed more time to delve into her “complicated” accounts and extensive “property empire”.

Leeds Crown Court. Picture: the Stray Ferret.
Banks’s then defence counsel said that a forensic accountant had been instructed to scrutinise her accounts and the “considerable amount” of properties and other assets she owned.
Mr Recorder Baird adjourned the confiscation proceedings until July 29.
He said:
“These are important matters for Mrs Banks. There’s a lot of money at stake here and I take the view that she should be legally represented.”
Banks was ‘facilitator’ in cannabis racket
At the sentence hearing in August 2021, the court heard that the “professional”, London-based gang had invested tens of thousands of pounds into three cannabis factories at Banks’s properties on Alexandra Road, Woodlands Road and Somerset Road near Harrogate town centre.
The criminals had even dug a trench outside the three-storey Edwardian villa on Alexandra Road through which they fed electricity cables to the house to power the “highly sophisticated” cultivation system and bypass the electricity grid.
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Their plot finally unravelled when police were called to the five-bedroom villa on September 26, 2020, after reports of a “disturbance” in the street involving what appeared to be two rival gangs vying for the cannabis farm.
Banks had rented her properties to the Albanians through an “unidentified individual who goes by the name of Francesco”, who sub-let the houses to the gang’s ringleader Sellaj.
The total potential yield of the cannabis factories was valued at up to £456,000, not including previous harvests.
Although Banks was not involved in the cultivation, she had played a “facilitating” or advisory role in the plot and was constantly “pressing (the gang) be paid by them”.
Banks – who had previous convictions for health-and-safety offences through her work – was due to be paid at least £12,000 a month in rent for the three properties and was also receiving “high” deposits.
Rough sleepers and drugs found in Harrogate’s PinewoodsPinewoods Conservation Group has urged people to report anti-social behaviour after rough sleepers and drugs were found in the woodland.
Pictures seen by the Stray Ferret show Harrogate Borough Council staff moving a tent, which had been set up in the woods.
Inside the tents were drug paraphernalia and rubbish left in the woodland, including food and sleeping bags.
Other pictures showed graffiti defacing the Pinewoods map.

The graffiti on the Pinewoods map.
The borough council and North Yorkshire Police were both alerted to the rough sleepers this month.
The tents were later moved, however the Stray Ferret understands the process took longer than expected due to the availability of council street cleansing teams.
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A man in the 96-acre woodland was detained by police last week after residents reported gunshots being fired. But he was later released without charge.
A spokesperson for the Pinewoods Conservation Group said it had reported a number of anti-social behaviour incidents in recent months.
They said:
“Whilst the recent reported incident fortunately didn’t materialise into anything serious we are still asking our members and visitors to report anything suspicious and any anti-social behaviour to the police via 101, or 999 if an emergency, and Harrogate council customer services.
“We have reported a number of incidents in recent months from graffiti, illegal campers, groups congregating and setting fires plus clear evidence of drug use. It is only with the help of others we can continue to keep the Pinewoods a safe and enjoyable area for the community.”
A council spokesperson said:
Police release CCTV images after Harrogate burglary“We have accommodation and support available for all rough sleepers.
“Once we are made aware of someone sleeping rough in the Harrogate district, our housing options team work in partnership with the police and partner agencies in an attempt to persuade them to accept support.
“We have hostels in Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough and have most recently opened Fern House in Starbeck, our purpose-built temporary accommodation with 19 self-contained bedrooms. Additional to this, we can offer a complete support package for individuals who are homeless which includes health and wellbeing, support for any mental health issues, financial guidance as well as any further advice or information they may require.
“As a result of this holistic approach it means that we can try to identify the cause of each individual’s circumstances in a bid to help them find permanent secure accommodation.”
North Yorkshire Police has released CCTV images of a man thought to have information about a burglary at a home in Harrogate.
The burglary took place on Fawcett Drive in Harrogate at about 2am on Friday, May 6.
A man is reported to have entered a property and removed a wallet and cash. No further details have been released.
Police are asking members of the public to get in touch if they recognise the man in the images as they believe he could have information that will help the investigation.

Further CCTV images released by police of the man they want to talk to.
You can call North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2 and ask for PC 950 Fitzsimons or email leah.fitzsimons@northyorkshire.police.uk.
If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
The crime reference number 12220076667.
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