A 40-year-old man will appear at Leeds Crown Court next month accused of attempting to murder two children in Beckwithshaw.
The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is also charged with assaulting an emergency worker.
It follows an incident in the village on the morning of Monday last week.
He appeared before York Magistrates Court on Saturday after being arrested by police on Friday and subsequently charged.
The case was sent to Leeds Crown Court on Friday, July 22.
Read more:
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
- Man denies murder at flat on Harrogate’s Mayfield Grove
Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
A man on trial for murder claimed his friend violently killed Gracijus Balciauskas after a drunken game of chess turned ugly — and then threatened to do the same to him if he dialled 999 for help.
Jaroslaw Rutowicz, 39, and Vitalijus Koreiva, 36, are accused of murdering Mr Balciauskas at a flat on Mayfield Grove in Harrogate on December 20 last year.
The trial at Leeds Crown Court began last week with the prosecution giving evidence. The court heard how Mr Balciauskas’s body was found wrapped in a rug and CCTV footage was shown of the three men buying alcohol in the hours leading up to his death.
Mr Rutowicz took the stand today to begin his defence.
Speaking through a translator, the Polish national said he came to the UK in 2004 and worked as a bricklayer.
After moving to Harrogate in 2019, he developed a friendship with Mr Koreiva and Mr Balciauskas through work.
The three men ended up living together at 6 Mayfield Grove. Mr Rutowicz described Mr Balciauskas as a “brother” and said they would meet in the evenings after work to drink and talk about their future plans.
‘Brutal’ assault
The drinking session that ultimately led to Mr Balciauskas’ death began on December 19. Mr Rutowicz said tensions flared after Mr Koreiva shaved off some of Mr Balciauskas’s hair as a practical joke whilst he was sleeping.
Mr Rutowicz said in the early hours of the next morning the three men ran out of alcohol so Mr Koreiva and Mr Rutowicz took a taxi to Pannal’s BP petrol station to buy more.
They returned to Mayfield Grove at around 5am when Mr Balciauskas challenged the two men to a game of chess, which they often enjoyed playing together while drinking.
Mr Rutowicz said Mr Koreiva erupted in anger during his game with Mr Balciauskas and described the ensuing beating of Mr Balciauskas by Mr Koreiva as “brutal”.
He said:
“Vitalijus was shouting more than Gracijus. At one point Vitalijus got up and threw Gracijus onto the floor from the stool. He started to beat him with his fist and with the heel of his foot.”
Mr Rutowicz then filmed a bloodied and bruised Mr Balciauskas with his mobile phone. He claimed this was to stop the fight and provide evidence that he was not involved in case it was later needed by police.
He said:
“I then decided to start filming. It was brutal. I wanted to use that in order to stop the fight. I approached and started to pull Gracijus away. Vitalijus was beating him and kicking him.”
Read more:
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
- Man denies murder at flat on Harrogate’s Mayfield Grove
‘If you call the police, I will kill you’
After the assault, Mr Rutowicz said Mr Balciauskas was still alive but fading out of consciousness.
He said he wanted to call 999 but was stopped by Mr Koreiva who said he would kill him if he did.
Mr Rutowicz said:
“He started to threaten me. Gracijus was lying on the floor. I could hear him saying something. I was afraid to approach because Vitalijus told me to stay away or he would kill me.
“At a certain point, Gracijus’s head was drooping. I approached to film him and recorded what he was saying to me.
“I had my phone in my hand and turned towards Vitalijus. I said I was going to call the police. He raised his fist to me and said if you call the police or ambulance, I will kill you.
“That terrified me. I felt fear as if my body was paralysed by it.”
Mr Rutowicz said he and Mr Balciauskas “loved each other like brothers” and maintained that he did not strike or kick him during the assault.
He then went to check his pulse, which was faint. He said:
“Gracijus whispered to me, ‘it hurts’
“I said to him, “brother, everything will be fine, hang in there.”
“He knew I wanted to help him, he said ‘thank you’.”
Mr Rutowicz, who was tearful in court, described the moments after Mr Balciauskas died.
“It was a shock to me. I had lost my brother. I turned my head towards Vitalijus and said, ‘You’ve killed Gracijus. Gracijus is dead.’
“I said, ‘If I had called the ambulance when I wanted to, he would still be alive’.
“But I was threatened. It was a complete nervous breakdown for me. Vitalijus sat and looked at what I was doing. I simply got up feeling broken and sat down on the bed.”
‘Total shock’
With Mr Balciauskas now dead in the flat, Mr Rutowisz claimed Mr Koreiva wanted to cover up the crime and suggested wrapping his body up in a rug before burying him. Mr Rutowisz told the court:
“He said, ‘Shut your trap. I was in prison for four years. I will not go back’.”
Mr Rutowisz claimed he was in fear for his life after Mr Koreiva ordered him to go to Asda on Bower Road to buy more whiskey and cigarettes. He said he would “find him and kill him” if he did not return to Mayfield Grove.
He said the reason he returned to the flat and didn’t call 999 was due to fear.
“Never before had I the feeling that someone could kill me. There was a second feeling of realising that my brother was dead. Those two feelings caused total shock in me and a breakdown.”
After Mr Koreiva fell asleep later that evening, Mr Rutowisz went back to Asda at around 11pm.
He called family members in Poland to tell them what had happened before calling 999 to say there was a dead body at the flat.
He strongly denied telling an Asda employee that he confessed to murdering Mr Balciauskas.
The trial is expected to last until the end of this week.
Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rugA court heard today how a suspected murder victim in Harrogate was found wrapped up in a rug in a flat on Mayfield Grove after one of his alleged killers told somebody nearby, “I killed a man”.
Vitalijus Koreiva, 36, and Jaroslaw Rutowicz, 38, are accused of murdering Gracijus Balciauskas on December 20 last year.
The trial at Leeds Crown Court, which began today and is due to last for 10 days, tracked the movements of the three men on CCTV.
The court heard a witness statement from an employee at Asda on Bower Road, who found an agitated Mr Rutowicz sitting on a wall by the supermarket on the evening when Mr Balciauskas died.
The employee said Mr Rutowicz appeared to have been drinking and told her “I think I’ve killed a man.”
The court was also played a recording of a 999 call from Mr Rutowicz that took place when he was outside Asda that evening. He told a call handler: “The guy, he’s dead. No, it was an accident. We drink something.”
Two police officers then met Mr Rutowicz at Asda who then walked with him to Mayfield Grove.
Inside, they found Mr Balciauskas wrapped in a rug dead. Mr Rutowicz, of no fixed address, and Mr Koreiva, of Mayfield Grove, were then arrested on suspicion of murder.
Timeline of events
Detective Constable Christopher Williams, from North Yorkshire Police, was cross-examined by prosecuting solicitor Katherine Robinson who went through a timeline of events that led to the arrest.
CCTV captured the last time Mr Balciauskas was seen alive when he went to the Polish shop next door to the flat at 1pm on December 19.
Mr Rutowicz was seen later that evening collecting a pizza takeaway and returning to the property.
In the early hours of the following morning, Mr Koreiva was seen on CCTV pacing around the property before going back inside. At around 3am the pair were seen buying bottles of alcohol and returning.
The next day, Mr Koreiva was filmed visiting the Polish shop next door in his dressing gown and Mr Rutowicz was seen buying more alcohol using the bank card of the suspected victim.
Videos on phone
This morning the court were shown films retrieved from Mr Rutowicz’s phone, timestamped at 5am and 7am on December 20.
They showed Mr Balciauskas still alive but beaten with bruises all over his hands and face whilst inside the Mayfield Grove flat.
The videos showed the two men attempting to give Mr Balciauskas cigarettes and something to drink.
Police later retrieved a photo of the victim taken at 12.04pm that day where he was apparently dead and wrapped in a rug.
More alcohol
An hour before the videos of Mr Balciauskas beaten but still alive were filmed, Mr Rutowicz and Mr Koreiva were seen on CCTV ordering a taxi to Pannal’s BP petrol station to buy more alcohol before returning to the property.
Mr Rutowicz was seen leaving Mayfield Grove at around 10am the next day to buy more alcohol. He was again seen using Mr Balciauskas’s bank card to buy more alcohol at 2pm.
At around 11pm, Mr Rutowicz was captured on CCTV leaving the flat to go to Asda on Bower Street when the 999 call took place.
Arresting officer PC Joseph Horne gave a statement to the court that said Mr Rutowicz was crying and talking on the way to the police station.
PC Horne said:
“I couldn’t understand what he was saying because of his thick accent. When in custody he said ‘It was an accident, my brother is dead I will show you how he did it’.”
The trial continues tomorrow.
Harrogate guest house owner plans to appeal cannabis racket convictionA 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.
Man denies murder at flat on Harrogate’s Mayfield GroveA man has denied murder following the death of a 41-year-old man in Harrogate.
Vitalijus Koreiva, 36, is accused of murdering Gracijus Balciauskas on December 20 last year. Mr Balciauskas’s body was found at a flat in Mayfield Grove at about 11.30pm.
Koreiva, of Mayfield Grove, appeared at Leeds Crown Court via video link today when he pleaded not guilty to the allegation.
A second murder suspect, 38-year-old Jaroslaw Rutowicz, of no fixed address, has yet to enter a plea to the charge.
Judge Geoffrey Marson QC adjourned the case for a trial on June 20. It is expected to last 10 days. Koreiva and Rutowicz were remanded in custody.
Read more:
- Inquest opens into death of Harrogate suspected murder victim
- Two men charged with murder at Mayfield Grove flat
Harrogate guest house owner was ‘facilitator’ in £500k cannabis racket
A Harrogate woman who played the role of “facilitator” in a half-a-million-pound cannabis racket will have her accounts scrutinised before a financial-confiscation hearing to determine how much she pays back.
Yoko Banks, 73, a former guest-house owner, rented out her properties to an Albanian drug gang for “industrial” cannabis production “in the expectation of significant profit”, Leeds Crown Court heard.
The disgraced pensioner 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 the highly potent skunk cannabis.
‘Complicated property empire’
Banks, who owns a string of “highly marketable” properties in some of Harrogate’s most desirable areas, now faces financial punishment under the Proceeds of Crime Act (POCA), which will determine how much she has to pay back for her part in the drug plot worth at least half a million.
She was back in court today via video link from New Hall women’s prison in Wakefield.
Prosecutor Michael Bosomworth said the Crown was not yet in a position to make a financial confiscation ruling because Banks’ defence team needed more time to delve into her “complicated” accounts and extensive “property empire”.
He added:
“It’s a somewhat complicated property empire and there’s going to be some time (needed) to prepare it.”
He said that Banks’ solicitors were hiring a forensic accountant to pore over her properties and assets.

Yoko Banks was jailed at Leeds Crown Court last year. Picture: the Stray Ferret.
Banks’ defence counsel confirmed that a forensic accountant had been instructed to scrutinise her accounts and the “considerable amount” of properties and other assets” she owned.
Judge Neil Clark granted the defence an extra eight weeks to carry out an intensive audit of Banks’ assets.
She and her co-defendants will be back in court on Monday via video link when new dates will be set for the POCA hearings.
London gang invested in Banks’ properties
At the sentence hearing in August, 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.
Their plot finally unravelled when police were called to the five-bedroom villa on September 26 last year after reports of a “disturbance” in the street involving what appeared to be two rival gangs vying for the lucrative cannabis farm.
Officers found 283 plants in four growing rooms inside the mock-Tudor house, which was fitted with CCTV cameras. Chillingly, they also found a “large” crossbow and arrows next to the front door. The plants had a potential yield of up to 21 kilos.
Mr Bosomworth said the “organised” gang had operated the lighting, electrical and “security” systems remotely through broadband technology and were even able to watch a “live feed” of the drugs bust over the internet.
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There were other large grows at two of Banks’s other properties, which had the “capability of producing industrial amounts” of skunk.
She had rented the 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.
Before the drug raid, the gang had fled in a Transit van and an Audi which were “trapped” on the M1 by police in Hertfordshire and finally stopped on the M25 just after midnight.
Police found 30kg of “saleable”, harvested cannabis plants inside the van worth about £300,000.
Inside the £26,000 Audi SQ5, which belonged to Sellaj, police found £3,675 in cash and an 18-carat-gold Rolex watch worth £28,000.
As well as the 283 plants at the Alexandra Road factory, there were also 143 “root balls” from previous harvests and 6kg of cannabis flower buds. The “industrial” operation would have yielded between 11kg and 33 kilos worth up to £330,000.
Fifty-nine cannabis plants, worth up to £83,000, were found at Banks’s Somerset Road property and 86 plants, with a “bulk value” of up to £62,000, were discovered at the house on Woodlands Road.
The total potential yield of the 395 plants was 45 kilos, with a combined value of up to £456,000. This was in addition to the 30 kilos found in the van and did not include previous harvests.
Banks played ‘facilitating role’
Although Banks was not involved in the cultivation, she had played a “facilitating” or advisory role in the plot. She was in “regular communication” with ‘Francesco’ and Sellaj through Whatsapp messages and was constantly “pressing to 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.
Her defence team claimed she had let out the properties to “supplement” her weekly pension due to financial pressures.
It’s understood that Banks had been planning to appeal her conviction but had since abandoned the idea.
Harrogate police officer pleads not guilty to alleged sexual assaultA Harrogate police officer has pleaded not guilty after being charged with sexually assaulting a woman while on duty.
Christopher Ryan Hudson, 31, appeared before Leeds Crown Court for a preliminary hearing today where he entered his plea.
The alleged offence is said to have taken place at Stonefall Cemetery on Wetherby Road, Harrogate, on February 8.
He is accused of sexually touching the woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, while he was on duty.
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Mr Hudson, of Hollin Terrace, Huddersfield, spoke to confirm his name and that he understood his bail conditions, which include no contact with the alleged victim.
Judge Simon Batiste imposed the new conditions before adjourning the case for a trial on February 20, 2023. He blamed the delay on a “considerable backlog in the courts”.
North Yorkshire Police said in a statement that Mr Hudson was based in Harrogate at the time of the allegation and was currently suspended.
Guilty verdict for couple who flew in sex workers to HarrogateA Portuguese dominatrix and her English husband have been found guilty of running a sex-trafficking and prostitution racket in Harrogate after “flying in” women from Europe and South America.
Fabiana De Souza, 41, and Gareth Derby, 53, from Norfolk, flew sex workers in from Brazil and Portugal, paid for their flights and met them at airports, before whisking them off to flats where men paid women for “massages” and “full (sex) services”, Leeds Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Nicholas Lumley QC 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”. Mr Lumley added:
“It was run as a business by these two, controlled invariably from their home in Norfolk and the pair of them were in it together.
“The provision of sexual services provided by them was not confined to Harrogate (which) was an extension of an existing business.
“There was another flat in Norfolk put to similar use and when that became unavailable, even the home of these defendants was converted for use by sex workers. The labour force came from overseas, from countries such as Brazil, and they got here by air and their travel in and out of the country was invariably organised and paid for by these two defendants.
“As soon as the (sex workers) arrived here, they would be installed in the flat in Harrogate or elsewhere, always with the purpose of being available for sex.”
The couple, of Town Street in the village of Upwell, Norfolk, each denied one count of people-trafficking and another of controlling prostitution for financial gain. The charges related to six named women who worked at the Harrogate sex den between April and the end of August 2017.
They were found guilty on both counts on Monday following a 10-day trial.
Bower Road flat
Mr Lumley said that at least one other woman was prostituted in other parts of the country, including King’s Lynn in Norfolk and Birmingham, but they were not part of the charges.
De Souza and Derby would pay for sex adverts within hours of picking the women up from the airport and “setting them up” at the flat on Bower Road. The adverts were placed on the classified escorts websites Viva Street and Adult Work and included raunchy 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. Mr Lumley said:
“The defendants would receive their cut.”
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The money, described as “significant cash deposits”, usually ended up in De Souza’s Halifax bank account, but on occasions “cash simply changed hands, handed by the sex workers to one of these two”.
Mr Lumley said one woman was flown in 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.
Police were tracking the couple’s movements, including their journeys between Harrogate and Norfolk using number-plate recognition cameras.
An undercover officer searched the escort sites and called the phone number provided on the women’s sex profiles, pretending to be a client. The call went through to De Souza’s mobile phone in King’s Lynn.
She answered in “broken English”, claiming to be ‘Lisa’, and an “appointment” was made for the Harrogate flat.
Mr Lumley said the couple “often met the flights at the airport or arranged for a train ticket to be available at the airport as they moved these women around the country or put them on a bus and sent them up to Harrogate or somewhere else”.
Harrogate flat rented for £700 a month
Following her arrest, De Souza 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 said she rented the Bower Road flat for over £700 a month and let rooms out to “others”, some of whom were “friends from Portugal”.
She said it was “none of my business what (the women) were doing, as long as they paid (their) rent”.
She claimed that in May 2018, she reconciled with her husband and moved back to Norfolk, to a property in Walpole St Andrew.
Derby said he only had an “inkling that Fabia worked at the Harrogate flat as a dominatrix”.
Mr Lumley said that photos of the women – which were often false and whose profiles made out they were much younger than their true ages – were posted with the ads.
The women arrived at various airports including Manchester, Gatwick and Stansted. Mr Lumley said:
“They are flown in, spend two or three weeks in the country and then flown out again.”
In a text sent to an associate in January 2018, Derby boasted of being a “smuggler of women”.
One advert showed a “Latina” woman who said her services included “tantric massage, role play and fantasy”.
The undercover officer made an “appointment” and went to the Harrogate flat as a ‘client’, dressed in civilian clothes and with female back-up officers waiting outside.
Once inside the flat, he showed the woman his warrant card. She showed him a Brazilian ID card, but her responses were “not entirely honest”.
£40,000 in five months
Police trawled through the bank accounts of De Souza and her husband and found they had spent “thousands on air fares” and over £2,000 on Viva Street adverts alone. Mr Lumley said:
“Who knows how much cash simply changed hands?”
He added that £40,000 appeared in the couple’s bank accounts during the five-month prostitution racket in Harrogate alone.
The undercover cop said that on his first visit to the building on Bower Road, the sex worker named ‘Lisa’ buzzed him into the flats which were above shops. He was met by a woman in a “revealing” short-length dressing gown who said she had also worked as a stripper.
He made “numerous” such visits to other women after responding to adverts including one for a “Hot Brazilian, full service”. She was about 57 years’ old but was advertised as 33.
He said there was another woman in her 50s inside the flat who was also a sex worker. She said she was from the “Republic of Portugal” but was born in Brazil. She had been earning about £280 per day.
Michael Fullerton, for De Souza, said there was no dispute that she was working as a dominatrix before and during the prostitution enterprise. She had previously worked as a stripper.
Richard Mohabir, for Derby, said his client was adamant that he “controlled nobody” and “didn’t know sex work or prostitution was going on”.
However, the jury returned unanimous guilty verdicts on both defendants.
Judge Guy Kearle QC adjourned sentence until January 18. He granted both defendants bail until then.
Harrogate man jailed for ‘using car as weapon’ to cause serious injuryA Harrogate man has been sentenced to prison for causing serious injury by dangerous driving.
George McGeogh, 24, admitted using his car to injure his ex-girlfriend’s new partner on Knox Lane in May 2020.
Leeds Crown Court was told this morning that McGeogh “used his car as a weapon” to injure the man before driving off and leaving the scene of the incident.
McGeogh, of Harlow Park Road, was sentenced to 16 months in prison and disqualified from driving.
On May 1, 2020, McGeogh pulled up in his Volkswagen Golf on Knox Lane beside his ex-girlfriend and the victim, who were both named in court.
The pair were walking their dog, which the court heard the female had got while with McGeogh.
The court was told that McGeogh then got out of the car and shouted “you think you can walk my dog?”
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He started to throw punches at the man before returning to his car to try the boot. He then returned to throw more punches.
McGeogh got into his car and the victim started to run. McGeogh mounted the grass verge and broke before the man turned and slipped.
McGeogh then hit him with the car and then drove off.
‘Highly remorseful’
The prosecution told the court that it was “miraculous” that the victim’s only serious injury was a broken cheekbone.
The court heard that McGeogh had told a friend he needed to hand himself into police. He had also referred himself to mental health services following the incident.

Knox Lane in Harrogate.
In defence, Graeme Wilson QC, said that McGeogh “saw red mist” and it was “out of a character” for him.
He said:
“His actions were impulsive and reckless, which he accepts. He is highly remorseful.”
Mr Wilson added that McGeogh had since found a stable relationship and was employing four people as a self-employed electrician.
Using car ‘as a weapon’
Sentencing McGeogh, Judge Geoffrey Marson QC said the only “appropriate punishment” was a custodial sentence.
He said:
“It is perfectly clear to me that you were using your car as a weapon to frighten your victim.”
Judge Marson described the attack as “wholly unprovoked” and added:
“It is a miracle he (the victim) was not more seriously injured. But the coward that you were, you simply drove off.”
Judge Marson said he accepted that McGeogh did not intend to run over the man and that the defendant had shown “genuine level of remorse”.
McGeogh is expected to serve half of his 16 months sentence before being released from prison on licence.
Harrogate police officer denies sexual assault while on dutyA Harrogate police officer appeared in court today charged with sexually assaulting a woman.
Christopher Ryan Hudson, 30, who was suspended by North Yorkshire Police after the allegation was made, appeared at York Magistrates’ Court on Thursday when he denied one count of sexual assault.
The alleged offence is said to have occurred at Stonefall Cemetery on Wetherby Road, Harrogate, on February 8.
Hudson, who was based in the Harrogate police division at the time of the alleged offence, was dressed in a smart black suit, white shirt and tie when he appeared before district judge Adrian Lower.
He is accused of sexually touching the woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, during working hours and in a “relatively remote location”.
Prosecutor Charles Macrae said it was alleged that Mr Hudson sexually touched the woman while she “repeatedly told him she didn’t want him to”. Mr Macrae added:
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“There was a suggestion that there was a degree of planning (to the alleged offence).”
Matthew Savage, for Hudson, said he had no submissions to make at this stage.
Judge Mr Lower sent the case to Leeds Crown Court where Mr Hudson, of Hollin Terrace, Huddersfield, will appear on January 6 for a preliminary hearing. He was released on unconditional bail.
North Yorkshire Police said in a statement that Hudson was based in Harrogate at the time of the allegation and was currently suspended.