Police are appealing for information following a burglary at Moonglu cycle shop in Blossomgate, Ripon.
It took place at 3am on Sunday, September 25 when thieves smashed a window and took seven pedal cycles and electric bikes.
A small white van was seen in the area at the time, speeding off with bikes hanging out of the back.
North Yorkshire Police has asked anybody who saw the van, or has information about the burglary, to call 101 and ask to speak to Joshua Harrison. His email is joshua.harrison@northyorkshire.police.uk.
There is a reference number 12220171220.
Moonglu has posted the names of some of the stolen bikes on its Facebook page. They are:
- Giant Fathom E+2 29 Medium
- Giant Talon E+ Large
- Liv Rove E+ Medium
- Giant Fathom 1 27.5
- Talon 4 Large
The post added:
“My stomach is still churning, I’m absolutely devastated. Thanks to everyone that has reached out with support, I’m overwhelmed by the kindness. It means the world.”
Read more:
Police have arrested a wanted Harrogate man.
Officers issued an appeal for the whereabouts of a 30-year-old man, who was believed to be in either the Harrogate or Knaresborough area.
The force has since confirmed that he has been arrested in the Blackpool area on suspicion of offences connected to a serious assault.
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Man sentenced to life in prison for Harrogate Mayfield Grove murder
A man has been sentenced to life in prison after brutally murdering Gracijus Balciauskas at a flat on Mayfield Grove in Harrogate last year.
Vitalijus Koreiva, 37, was jailed at Leeds Crown Court this morning after being found guilty of murder by a jury in July.
Polish national Jaroslaw Rutowicz, 39, was sentenced to 12 years in prison for manslaughter for his part in the crime.
Mr Balciauskas, from Lithuania, was just 41 years old when he was killed.
Wrapped in a rug
The sentencing comes as a trial in July heard that Mr Balciauskas’s body was found wrapped in a rug after a lengthy drinking binge involving the three friends turned violent on December 20, 2021.
CCTV footage was shown of the men leaving the flat to buy more alcohol on several occasions in the hours leading to the murder.
Rutowicz told the court how Koreiva, who is Lithuanian, erupted during a drunken game of chess with Mr Balciauskas at 5am, which led to Koreiva punching and then kicking him.
Read more on the trial:
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
- Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
- Doubt cast on Harrogate murder suspect’s claim
- Harrogate man ‘out of his mind’ on alcohol admits attacking friend
Harrowing video footage taken on Rutowicz’s phone of a bloodied and bruised Mr Balciauskas was shown in court. The clips showed him being kicked by Koreiva whilst he was laying defenceless on the floor pleading for help.
In one of the videos, Rutowicz was heard shouting at Mr Balciauskas in Polish:
“Why the f*** did you send us there? Now you look like this.”
During the trial, Rutowicz said he had been threatened by Koreiva with his life if he called 999 after Mr Balciauskas died. He said Koreiva’s nickname in Harrogate was the “crazy Russian” and he had an unpredictable character.

Murder victim Gracijus Balciauskas pictured in Knaresborough.
However, prosecuting barrister Peter Moulson QC poured scorn on his claim and accused Rutowicz of lying.
Mr Balciauskas died of internal bleeding after being kicked in the spleen and suffering multiple injuries to the torso.
‘Drunken cover up’
Judge Rodney Jameson KC told Koreiva this morning that Mr Balciauskas’ injuries would not have been fatal “had you not tried to drunkly cover up what you had done”.
Addressing Rutowicz, Judge Jameson described his actions as “calculating” and that he wanted to “avoid responsibility”.
He said:
“You could have prevented this from happening, but instead you chose to encourage it.
“You spent many hours considering how to avoid responsibility.”
Koreiva will serve a minimum of 13 years in prison before he is considered for parole. Should he be released, he will spend the rest of his life on licence.
Decision due on cuts to Harrogate’s night-time fire crews this monthA controversial plan to cut the number of night-time fire engines in Harrogate to just one is set to be decided by the county’s police, fire and crime commissioner this month.
Commissioner Zoë Metcalfe is assessing feedback from a consultation and is expected to meet with her executive board for a decision in September.
She has continually insisted that the North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue service would “continue to provide an immediate emergency response” under the plan as emergencies are less likely to occur during the night.
Yet union officials and councillors remain concerned about the proposal which has been described as “putting money before lives”.
The plan is part of the fire service’s new risk and resource model, and a three-month public consultation ended in August.
According to the commissioner’s website, a consultation summary report will be presented to the executive board for a decision before the final risk and resource model is published.
If approved, it will pave the way for a new strategy on how the fire service will deploy its staff and equipment over the next three years.
Read more:
- Knaresborough man sentenced to 13 years in prison for manslaughter
- North Yorkshire Police to send officers to Queen’s funeral
There are similar proposals for fire stations in Scarborough and Huntington which commissioner Metcalfe said along with the Harrogate plans would save over £1.5 million a year to allow for investment in fire prevention
She also insisted the proposals are not cost-cutting measures and have been based on “extensive risk assessment”.
However, concerns remain over public safety and the amount of government funding that the fire service receives.
The North Yorkshire Fire Brigades Union previously said the fire service’s finances have left it “struggling to buy the basics” and that around £25 million is needed to replace out-of-date buildings, vehicles and equipment.
Union secretary Steve Howley also said the risk and resource model plans would leave the county with a “second-rate emergency response service that will put lives at risk”.
He said:
Harrogate man stole £24,000 watch from Rudding Park Hotel“A decade of under investment in the fire and rescue service has dovetailed with an increase in response times both locally and nationally,
“The police, fire and crime commissioner needs to fight for the correct funding from government, not simply mask underfunding by slashing services.”
A Harrogate man has been given a community order after stealing a £24,000 Rolex watch from Rudding Park Hotel.
Jake Perks, 32, of Jennyfield Drive, pleaded guilty to theft when he appeared before Harrogate Magistrates Court yesterday.
The court heard how Perks had visited the hotel on a spa day with his girlfriend on April 22 this year.
The named victim, who owned the Rolex GMT Master II watch, had left it in the changing rooms to go in the shower.
On his way out of the hotel sometime later, he realised he did not have his watch on and could not find it in the hotel.
The Rolex was reported stolen to police and Perks later made a full admission to taking it after noticing it in the changing rooms.
Read more:
- Boroughbridge man faces jail after man dies
- Harrogate woman gets suspended prison sentence for ‘appalling assault’
The prosecution said he handed the watch into police after it was in his possession “for a number of weeks”.
His defence lawyer said it was “an offence committed on impulse” and that he had no previous criminal history.
“He accepts that he has taken the watch and it was out of character.”
The defence added that Perks had been going through a long divorce with his ex-wife and had personal issues.
The magistrates said they accepted that the matter was “an unfortunate lapse in judgement”.
However, the court issued Perks with a community order and ordered him to carry out 60 hours unpaid work.
He was also ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £95 and £85 court costs.
Knaresborough man sentenced to 13 years in prison for manslaughterKnaresborough man Dean Kilkenny has been sentenced to 13 years in prison after pleading guilty to manslaughter following the death of a man at a pub.
Kilkenny, 47, and Moverley, 44, were involved in an altercation with 43-year-old Darron Bower at the Pier Hotel in Withernsea, East Yorkshire, on March 11.
Emergency services attended but Mr Bower died at the scene.
The two men pleaded not guilty to his murder at Sheffield Crown Court last month.
However, Kilkenny, of Whiteley Yard in Knaresborough, admitted manslaughter, whilst Moverley pleaded guilty to inflicting grievous bodily harm and affray on another man during the altercation.
Read more:
- North Yorkshire Police to send officers to Queen’s funeral
- Harrogate solicitor who rammed car into wife’s home spared jail
After accepting their guilty pleas, Kilkenny was sentenced at Hull Crown Court today to 13 years in prison, with an additional four years on licence. Moverley received a 20-month custodial sentence.
Humberside Police DC Fay Woodhouse said:
“I would like to thank Darron’s family for their patience and courage during the judicial process. Nothing can bring Darron back, but I hope they feel a sense of justice after today’s sentencing.
“This was a violent attack fuelled by alcohol that occurred in a public place and resulted in a man losing his life. I hope this tragic incident causes people to reflect on the devastating impact that such actions can have.”
Mr Bower’s partner said:
Harrogate solicitor who rammed car into wife’s home spared jail“The men responsible for this left myself and Darron’s two youngest children living in a nightmare, with the biggest hole in our family’s heart. I have to explain nearly every day to my two little girls why their daddy isn’t coming home.”
A drink-driving solicitor rammed his car into his wife’s home following months of marital discord in which he falsely accused her of being unfaithful and forced her to flee the house.
Richard Wade-Smith, 66, a former “high-powered” solicitor from Harrogate, waged an unrelenting harassment campaign against his now-former partner.
It culminated in the early hours of Boxing Day last year when she was awoken by a terrible “smashing” noise, prosecutor Brooke Morrison told York Crown Court.
The ex-partner initially thought it was an “explosion” but then heard an engine revving and locked herself inside a bedroom as she was too scared to go out and see what it was.
She called police and it was only when officers arrived that she dared venture outside her home in Slingsby Walk, near the Stray.
To her horror, she realised it was Wade-Smith, who had rammed his Nissan Qashqai into her front door.
Police helped Wade-Smith out of the car, which was damaged along with the front of his ex-partner’s semi-detached home. He was taken into custody where a breath test showed he was nearly twice the drink-drive limit.
Wade-Smith, a Cambridge law graduate whose legal specialisms included planning and environmental matters, was arrested and charged with harassment causing fear of violence, damaging property and drink-driving.
He ultimately admitted the offences and appeared for sentence today when the court was told about the couple’s toxic relationship and Wade-Smith’s unrelenting harassment of the victim.
Read more:
- Boroughbridge man faces jail after man dies
- Harrogate woman gets suspended prison sentence for ‘appalling assault’
At a previous hearing, Wade-Smith had contested the parameters of a proposed restraining order to keep him away from his former partner because he was worried that the exclusion zone would prevent him going to Waitrose, the upmarket superstore.
Ms Morrison said the former couple had been in a relationship for about 22 years, but in 2021 Wade-Smith’s behaviour changed after he started drinking following seven years of abstinence.
He would “disturb (his wife’s) sleep”, waking her in the middle of the night and demanding she “answer questions” about her so-called “secret lives” and their sex life.
Wade-Smith also demanded on “multiple occasions, in the middle of the night”, that she leave the house.
He would shout at her on “multiple occasions” in the street. She became so frightened she began “spending large amounts of time overnight sitting on her doorstep or wandering the streets”.
Fearing for her safety
In November last year, she started receiving nasty messages on a “daily basis” from Wade-Smith, who made further groundless accusations about her.
On one occasion inside the house, he told her: “If you don’t go now, I’ll kick you down the stairs.”
Fearing for her safety and worried she would be physically attacked, the former partner called police.
Wade-Smith was arrested and bailed on the proviso that he didn’t contact her or go to her address.
But the ex-lawyer, who had worked for a number of legal firms in Yorkshire before latterly being self-employed, allegedly sent her more messages while on bail, culminating in the car-ramming incident on December 26.
Following his arrest for that incident, Wade-Smith gave police a prepared statement in which he admitted that the relationship was “not good” but initially denied that the messages and his behaviour were threatening.
In a victim statement read out in court, the former partner said Wade-Smith’s behaviour had left her with health problems and had affected her “financially and psychologically”.
She said she was trying to sell the house of which Wade-Smith had joint ownership and there had been contact between their respective solicitors.
She said that at this stage in her life she he hadn’t expected to be in “this insecure position” and been put under pressure to sell the high-market-value house which needed considerable repair.
Defence barrister Alasdair Campbell said that Wade-Smith had severe mental health problems at the time of the offences and became bipolar in middle age.
A doctor’s report confirmed he had been suffering from psychosis and “hypermania”, which had been exacerbated by alcohol and “led to a very unpredictable life for both of them”.
Mr Campbell added:
“Because of his previous life (as a solicitor) he clearly has intelligence (and) he has remorse.”
‘A tragic case’
Wade-Smith, a keen cyclist, was currently homeless after spending nine months on custodial remand awaiting sentence.
Judge Sean Morris, the Recorder of York, told Wade-Smith:
“This is as tragic case – tragic for you, but especially tragic for your wife.
“You (were) a man of good character and you were a successful solicitor who worked extremely hard in a high-powered position, but unbeknown to you, you became bipolar.
“Your wife recognised that there was obviously something wrong with you and you acted as a completely different person to the man she used to know and love.
“At the time of these awful experiences for your wife, you were suffering with episodes of mania and psychosis, not helped by the fact that you tried to self-medicate with alcohol.
“You became delusional and acted in a way you would not have acted had you not been affected with this problem.”
Mr Morris said that due to this “strong” personal mitigation, he would not be sending Wade-Smith to jail, nor imposing a suspended prison sentence because the former lawyer would be released immediately without accommodation due to the nine months he had spent on remand.
Instead, Wade-Smith received a three-year community order with 40 rehabilitation-activity days “to help “rebuild your life”.
Mr Morris said a community order with support rather than a suspended prison sentence was more “appropriate”, otherwise Wade-Smith would be released from prison “unaided” and with nowhere to live and “on the streets”.
Restraining order
Wade-Smith was also made subject to a restraining order, for an indefinite period, which prohibits him contacting his wife or going near her home in Slingsby Walk.
The initial map proposed by the prosecution asked for Wade-Smith to be banned from going within 500 metres of his former partner’s house in Slingsby Walk, but Wade-Smith asked for the radius to be halved so he could go to Waitrose.
The judge said that the definitive map would be redrawn if the victim wished to alter it.
Wade-Smith also received a 17-month motoring ban for drink-driving.
The Probation Service said that Wade-Smith would be treated as a “priority” case for emergency housing and that the local authority would find him homeless accommodation in Harrogate.
Harrogate woman fined for stealing miniature DachshundA woman has been given a conditional discharge for six months and fined £111 for stealing a miniature Dachshund from a home on Swan Road.
Maggie went missing from Laurie and Paul Smith’s home on Swan Road in August. A neighbour’s CCTV had captured images of a woman the Smiths believed snatched her from the front garden.
The couple began a frantic hunt for their missing pet and posted the CCTV images on social media.
A huge response led the couple to a house on Oakdale Avenue, half a mile from their home, where they believed Maggie was.
The Smiths called the police who recovered their dog which had been taken by 62-year-old Jonkal Messenger. An emotional reunion followed between Maggie and her owners.
Guilty plea
This morning, Messenger, who lives at Oakdale Rise in Harrogate, pleaded guilty to theft at Harrogate Magistrates Court.
She received a conditional discharge of 6 months and was ordered to pay court costs of £85 plus a victim’s surcharge of £26.
Read more:
- Owners of missing dachshund Maggie joyful she’s back home
- Harrogate couple’s desperate hunt for dog-napped Dachshund
Mr Smith told the Stray Ferret afterwards that he was pleased Ms Messenger has been held accountable.
He said:
“At first police said they wouldn’t prosecute. She always said she would return the dog but it didn’t hold up. Stealing a family dog is a heinous offence.”
A month on from the ordeal, Mr Smith said he was glad the police took it seriously. He added:
Harrogate district remains the county’s cannabis farm hotspot“It was an awful 48 hours after what she put us through.”
The Harrogate district is still the place in North Yorkshire with the highest number of cannabis farms, data from North Yorkshire Police has revealed.
A Freedom of Information (FOI) request showed that between 2016 and 2021, nine major farms with more than 25 plants were discovered in the Harrogate district.
That was almost double the amount found in the Selby district, which was the next highest with five.
This marked a continuation of a trend highlighted two years when an FOI request from the Stray Ferret found that the Harrogate district also had the highest number of cannabis farms then.
Between 2017 and 2020, officers made 22 arrests of people involved with cannabis farms in North Yorkshire.
Read more
- Ex-Harrogate guest house owner Yoko Banks given court ultimatum
- Drug pushers jailed after £140,000 cannabis seizure in Boroughbridge
Countywide issue
In total over the five-year period between 2016 and 2021, Police recorded 25 crimes relating to cannabis farms across North Yorkshire.
Only two crimes were recorded in 2016/17 and there were three each in 2018/19 and 2019/20.
However, there were nine in 2017/18 and eight in 2020/21.
On average, 323 plants were seized from farms. The largest number recorded was 2,797.
Since the available data ended in 2021, North Yorkshire Police has continued to deal with the issue of large-scale cannabis production in the Harrogate area.
Earlier this year, seven people were jailed for a combined 22 years after Police discovered £450,000-worth of cannabis spread across farms at three properties.
In February, two men were stopped on the A1(M) with 14 kilos of cannabis in their car. They were jailed for two years.
North Yorkshire Police was approached for comment about the latest statistics and why the Harrogate district is so popular with cannabis growers but did not respond.
Boy, 13, arrested for affray and carrying weapon in HarrogateNorth Yorkshire Police has arrested a 13-year-old boy on suspicion of carrying an offensive weapon and affray following an incident on Monday evening.
It took place at around 8.15pm in Thruscross Close, off Skipton Road.
A number of young people were involved after they were seen entering the garden of a property in the street.
As of yesterday evening, the boy was in police custody.
Officers are working to establish what took place and are appealing to anyone who witnessed the incident, saw a group of young people, or saw any suspicious activity in the area at the time, to come forward.
If you have any information call 101, press 2 and ask to speak to PS Colin Steele or PC Phil Dawes. Alternatively, you can email colin.steele@northyorkshire.police.uk or phil.dawes@northyorkshire.police.uk
The reference number is 12220159336
Read more:
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- Police use drone in search for missing Harrogate woman Judith