An 18-year-old man from Harrogate has been fined for stealing four Canada Goose coats, worth £2,040.
William Davey, who appeared at Harrogate Magistrates Court, denied the theft.
But at Monday’s hearing he was found guilty of stealing the coats from a flat on Swan Road in Harrogate on September 4 last year.
Davey, of Malden Road was sentenced to 125 hours of community service.
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He will also ordered to pay £680 compensation, a surcharge of £95 to fund victim services and costs of £620 to the Crown Prosecution Service.
Davey was also charged with driving an uninsured vehicle that he was not authorised to drive on Leyland Road, Harrogate, on February 1 last year.
He pleaded not guilty to these charges, and the cases were adjourned until September 5.
Man fined for headbutting police officer in HarrogateA man has been given a £324 fine for headbutting a police officer as he tried to arrest him.
Paul Stephen Turner, 47, of Albany Road, Harrogate, had pleaded guilty in February to the charge.
Acting for him in court today, Sonia Bhalla, of Watson Woodhouse solicitors, said Mr Turner had suffered a head injury when he was assaulted by three men with a baseball bat several years before, which still affected his actions and judgement.
Turner had been watching a documentary about fake police officers on August 18 last year when police officers knocked at his door and attempted to arrest him in relation to a separate allegation against him.
During the arrest, Turner headbutted one of the officers, PC Ryan Rudd, causing pain to one of his teeth. Turner later said he had not done so deliberately, but the process of the arrest had caused severe pain in his feet, where he had a pre-existing injury.
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A carer for his disabled father, the court heard Turner had 26 previous convictions for 52 offences, but none of a similar nature to the charge of assaulting a police officer. Ms Bhalla added:
“At 47 years of age, he has not been in trouble with the courts for a very, very long time. His last conviction was in 2011.”
Magistrates said they did not impose the maximum sentence for assaulting a police officer because the injuries appeared to be minimal, with no follow-up treatment required.
As well as the fine, magistrates ordered Turner to pay a victim surcharge of £34 and costs of £200.
Unfair to move Skipton Magistrate cases to Harrogate, says solicitorHarrogate Magistrates Court has been left as “piggy in the middle” as more cases are being transferred from Skipton, says a solicitor.
Keith Blackwell, of Blackwell Solicitors in Keighley, said that the magistrates in Skipton is being “bled dry” due to fewer hearings being held.
The Skipton court used to sit three times a week, but now cases, such as youth hearings, are being sent to Harrogate or York.
Mr Blackwell, who often travels to Harrogate for cases twice a week, said important hearing such as pre-sentence reports and trials were also being held in Harrogate over Skipton.
He said the frequency of cases being moved is unfair on those defendants and their families who are poor and have to travel long distances.
Mr Blackwell, who has been practising as solicitor since 1975, said:
“It is just not fair.
“The people who make these decisions are all driving in limousines. We are supposed to be levelling up.
“Harrogate has been left as piggy in the middle in all this.”
After being threatened with closure in 2001 and 2010, Skipton Magistrates’ Court has not had any scheduled trial time since a review earlier in the pandemic – with not guilty cases reportedly being sent to Harrogate, York and as far as Scarborough.
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Back in 2010, the axe fell on nine of Yorkshire’s courthouses, but Skipton Magistrates’ Court was spared after a campaign backed by Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith and the local branch of the Magistrates Association.
The closures were part of national plans to shut 103 magistrates and 54 county courts across the country in a move which was estimated to save almost £37 million in maintenance and running costs.
In a statement, the HM Courts & Tribunals Service said the recent changes at Skipton Magistrates’ Court were introduced to ensure cases could be heard “safely and with minimum delay” during the pandemic.
It said no decision has been taken to permanently remove criminal trials from Skipton and that “special arrangements” can be made to hear trials locally.
A spokesperson for the HM Courts & Tribunals Service said:
Property developer Adam Thorpe pleads not guilty to drink-driving“While listing is a judicial function, the pandemic forced some cases to be moved to ensure cases could be heard safely and with minimum delay.
“Skipton Law Courts continue to hear civil and family cases and special arrangements can be made to hear cases locally.
“Although there is presently no scheduled trial time in Skipton, in individual cases travel distance can be considered when the case is listed and special arrangements can be made to hear cases locally.”
Harrogate property developer Adam Thorpe has pleaded not guilty to driving at almost twice the legal limit for alcohol.
Mr Thorpe, of Ingerthorpe Hall, Markington, was stopped by police in November 2021 on the B6265 near Risplith Hill.
He was charged with having 66 micrograms of alcohol per 100 ml of breath. The legal limit is 35 micrograms.
Mr Thorpe attended Harrogate Magistrates Court today and pleaded not guilty.
Charlotte Dangerfield, prosecuting, said if the case were adjourned the prosecution would call two witnesses, including a forensic toxicologist.
The chair of the magistrates agreed to adjourn the trial until September 26. It will be heard at Harrogate Magistrates Court.
Mr Thorpe received unconditional bail.
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Harrogate Borough Council announced in 2017 that Mr Thorpe had bought its former offices at Crescent Gardens for £6.31 million.
But the deal never went through and the site was eventually sold to Impala Estates.
Men charged with theft from Harrogate and Ripon tipsThree men have appeared in court charged with stealing items from household waste recycling centres in Harrogate and Ripon.
North Yorkshire County Council operates the sites at Penny Pot Lane in Harrogate and Dallamires Lane in Ripon.
Lewis Boocock, 23, of Pioneer House, Dewsbury, is alleged to have stolen six laptops from Dallamires Lane and two TVs and two laptops from Penny Pot Lane on March 20 last year.
Mitchell Boocock, 22, of Common Road, Batley is charged with the theft of numerous electrical items from Penny Pot Lane on March 29 last year.
Luke Boocock, 21, of Leeds Road, Ossett, is alleged to have stolen electrical items from the sites at Penny Pot Lane and Dallamires Lane on March 21 and March 29 last year.
The cases, which were heard at Harrogate Magistrates Court yesterday, have been remitted to Lancashire Magistrates Court on April 22.
The three men were granted unconditional bail.
Ex-chairman of Starbeck Bowling Club admits stealing £3,334The former chairman of Starbeck Bowling Club has pleaded guilty to stealing more than £3,000 from the organisation.
Donald Palmer, 70, of Eleanor Drive, Harrogate, volunteered to carry out work on footpaths at the club in 2019.
He was given multiple signed, blank cheques to buy materials but used them for his own benefit.
At Harrogate Magistrates Court yesterday, Palmer admitted stealing £3,334 between November 15 and December 13, 2019.
He was ordered to pay back the sum at a rate of £140 a month and escaped further punishment.
Solicitor David Dedman, representing Palmer, said his client had taken “advantage” of the club’s trust and was sorry for his actions. He said:
“This is a tricky case for a number of reasons. Mr Palmer voluntarily did the works at the club. He agrees he took the money, he was given blank, signed cheques and took advantage of this. The club benefitted and lost as a result of his actions.
“He is 70, has never been in trouble and lives off his state pension. I would ask we deal with this here rather than going to crown court.”
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Magistrate Christopher Harrison agreed it was difficult to reach a verdict. He told Pamler:
“We’ve taken into account your guilty plea, good character and that you have no criminal history and the probability of you troubling a court again is unlikely. We are going to give you a compensation order to pay the £3,334.51 back to the club.”
‘A shame it came to this’
Club secretary Steve Day told the Stray Ferret after the hearing he noticed funds had “dwindled” when he received a bank statement.
He said when the money wasn’t reimbursed, the club decided to take action.
Mr Day added:
“We are pleased it has been resolved, it was just a shame it had to come to this. Mr Palmer was chairman and first team captain and was always very supportive of the club.”
The club, situated next to Starbeck Baths, dates back to 1920 and has eight league teams.
Ex-Leeds United player fined by Harrogate magistrates for speedingFormer Leeds United midfielder Ronaldo Vieira has been fined by magistrates in Harrogate for speeding.
Vieira, 23, who was sold by Leeds to Sampdoria in 2018, was caught speeding on the A1237 near Rufforth on July 13 last year.
He was fined £250 by Harrogate Magistrates Court and ordered to pay a £34 surcharge and £90 court costs.
The case was dealt with in his absence.
Vieira currently plays for Sampdoria in the Italian Serie A league and has made 26 appearances for the club.
He was sold to the Italian side for £7.7 million in August 2018.
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Two men face charges after fight outside Harrogate McDonald’s
Two men have appeared in court to face charges after a fight outside McDonald’s in Harrogate town centre.
Joshua Archer, 18, of Kingsley Close, Harrogate, and Tyler Rushton, 19, of Century Walk, Harrogate, are charged with affray and inflicting grievous bodily harm without intent against a man.
The alleged offences occurred outside the McDonald’s on Cambridge Road, on September 18 last year.
The two men appeared before Harrogate Magistrates Court yesterday to confirm their names and ages.
Neither man indicated a plea before the magistrates.
Mr Archer and Mr Rushton will appear before York Crown Court on April 19 where the case will continue.
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Knaresborough man denies sexual assault and child exploitation charges
A Knaresborough man has denied a string of sexual assault charges and inciting the exploitation of children.
Anthony Medri, 63, of Forest Moor Road, is charged with intentionally causing a child to look at an image of a person engaging in sexual activity for the purpose of obtaining sexual gratification.
He is also charged with three counts of sexual assault on a female and three counts of causing or inciting the sexual exploitation of a child he did not reasonably believe was aged 18 or over to become a prostitute to be involved in pornography.
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Mr Medri, who stood unsuccessfully for the Liberal Democrats in the 2015 local elections when he contested the Stray ward. appeared at Harrogate Magistrates Court this morning to confirm his name and age.
He entered a plea of not guilty to all seven charges.
He was granted bail and will appear at York Crown Court for trial on April 19, 2022.
Harrogate man accused of causing cyclist’s death by dangerous driving
A Harrogate man has appeared in court charged with causing the death of a cyclist by dangerous driving.
James Bryan, 36, of St Mary’s Avenue, was driving a Porsche Carrera when the incident occurred on the A168 northbound between Allerton Park and Boroughbridge on May 10, 2020. The A168 runs alongside the A1.
He is accused of causing the death of Andrew Jackson, 36, a husband and father-of-two from Hunsingore, near Wetherby.
Mr Jackson died at the scene.
Mr Bryan appeared at Harrogate Magistrates Court yesterday, where the case was sent for trial at York Crown Court.
It is due to be heard on April 4.
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