A car salesman from Harrogate has been jailed for running over and seriously injuring a 58-year-old man in his BMW.
Alexander Melville, 42 – an award-winning salesman of prestige cars who was banned from driving at the time – was said to be lighting a cigarette just before the BMW veered onto the pavement and struck pedestrian Richard Selby.
As Mr Selby lay on the footpath beside Knaresborough Road, Harrogate, Melville “casually” collected his belongings from the car and walked off, York Crown Court heard.
Witnesses called 999 and Mr Selby was taken to hospital where he underwent a series of operations, including surgery to have pins inserted into his broken leg.
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Melville – formerly Audi’s leading UK car salesman for the JCT600 model – later handed himself in at Harrogate Police Station after seeing police social media appeals for information.
The collision occurred at about 8.45am on January 26, just after Melville had been to a garage to inflate the tyres on the “training” vehicle, which was unregistered and uninsured.
“A witness said he heard a loud noise of an engine revving,” said prosecutor Mohammed Khan.
“A car then accelerated up the hill…and swerved slightly left. Seconds later, he heard a loud bang and…saw debris and dust and the vehicle go backwards. He noticed (someone) laid on the pavement.”
The witness saw a man reaching into the BMW to “get some items out and then walk towards Knaresborough Road and off onto Rydal Road”.
Still needs crutches
Mr Selby’s injuries included a double fracture of the leg, a dislocated shoulder and a fracture of the shinbone at the knee joint. Eight months on from the accident, he still can’t walk unaided or without the help of crutches, and now relies on home carers.
Melville, of Roseville Drive, Harrogate, told police he had had the BMW for about a year but that it wasn’t insured and “wasn’t registered to anyone as it was used as a training vehicle”.
The salesman had been disqualified from driving last year by magistrates in Lincolnshire.
He appeared for sentence on Tuesday after pleading guilty to causing serious injury by careless driving, driving while disqualified, having no insurance, failing to stop after a road crash and failing to report an accident.
“Lit a cigarette”
Richard Reed, acting for Melville, said his client had lost his job at Audi following his disqualification. He had previously been the “best-performing salesman” for the Sytner motor group, the UK’s leading retailer of prestige cars.
After losing his licence, Melville fell on hard times financially because his work required being able to drive.
As a result, “he lost his fiancée, the marriage was cancelled, he had no income and (was) left with a house with a (big) mortgage,” added Mr Reed.
He fell further into debt after taking out a loan and credit cards and ended up on benefits.
Just before the accident, he had “lit a cigarette in the car (and) noticed he had slightly veered over the other lane”.
“He corrected it and then the car went into a spin,” said Mr Reed.
Judge Sean Morris told Melville: “Richard Selby was (simply) walking along the Harrogate road.
“You are very lucky he survived – that man could have been dead or could have been paraplegic.”
Jailing Melville for five months, the judge told him: “When people are mangled by disqualified drivers, (the drivers) must expect to go to prison immediately, although you are ordinarily a decent man.”
Melville was also given a two-year driving ban.
Ripon businessman jailed for 80mph police chase in Knaresborough
A Ripon businessman led police on a cat-and-mouse road chase in which he shot through red lights and bombed through built-up areas at more than twice the speed limit on an uninsured Kawasaki motorbike.
Craig Hindson, 34, rode like a “lunatic” as he clocked up speeds of more than 80mph through Knaresborough and put at least one cyclist’s life in danger, York Crown Court heard.
He was jailed for six months and given a 15-month driving ban.
During the death-defying chase, the father-of-two taunted the pursuing officer by slowing down and “waving with his hand, indicating to pull over” – only to drop down the gears and speed off again, said prosecutor Dan Cordey.
At one stage, Hindson appeared to give himself up after pulling into a layby and stopping the bike. Police pulled in and an officer got out – only for Hindson to speed off again.
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The chase began on the A59 at the junction of York Road and Wetherby Road on 20 March.
Hindson began revving his engine aggressively in a line of traffic at temporary traffic lights at roadworks, drawing stares from people waiting at a bus stop.
Suddenly, Hindson “accelerated sharply, straight through a red light at high speed towards the Goldsborough roundabout”, added Mr Cordey.
80mph in 30mph zone
Among the queue of traffic was a marked police car, which gave chase but despite the wailing of sirens and flashing blue lights, Hindson sped up to “at least” 80mph on a 30mph stretch of road.
He shot through another set of lights, hotly pursued by police, just as two cyclists – a man and a woman – were crossing the junction.
The female cyclist had to stop in her tracks to avoid a potential collision. The scenes were witnessed by startled pedestrians walking along the pavement.
Hindson, wearing shorts, kept looking over his shoulder at the police car as he tore through Goldsborough.
“At times, he would slow down (and) wave with his hand, indicating to pull over, (then) drop gear before accelerating quickly away,” said Mr Cordey.
Ignored police
A short time later, Hindson appeared to give himself up when he pulled into a layby and came to a stop. The police car pulled up beside him, an officer got out and walked up to Hindson.
“He shouted at (Hindson) to remove his helmet and switch the machine off,” added Mr Cordey.
“The defendant nodded, but then very quickly accelerated away…onto the A59, towards the A1.”
The police vehicle managed to prevent Hindson pulling onto the A1 and instead the Kawasaki was forced into a dead-end, where it came to a halt. Hindson was duly arrested.
The officer found false registration plates on the Kawasaki, which Hindson said he had obtained from a “local lad”. The exact provenance of the motorbike remains unclear.
Hindson, of Princess Close, Ripon, was charged with dangerous driving, handling a stolen Kawasaki ZX and using a vehicle without insurance or a licence.
The tweed-jacketed businessman appeared in court on Tuesday when he admitted all three driving matters but denied handling stolen goods. His pleas were accepted by the prosecution and the handling charge was allowed to lie on file.
‘Foolish and out of character’
Defence barrister Holly Clegg said Hindson’s actions were “foolish”, albeit out of character.
He had been going through a “difficult time” after being kicked out of the family home and separating from his partner.
She said Hindson had been offered a go on the bike by a “lad he had seen around the local area” and “foolishly” the businessman took up the offer because he thought the motorbike was “cool”.
Hindson, who wore a crisp blue shirt and gold-coloured tie, ran a successful groundworks and Tarmacking company, which employed eight people.
References from business contacts described him as a hard-working, “reputable businessman” who was a devoted father and “very honourable individual”.
Judge Sean Morris told him he had ridden “like a lunatic” and could easily have killed someone, particularly the female cyclist who was in danger of being struck by the police car due to Hindson’s actions. This was no fault of the pursuing officer.
Man avoids jail for threatening ex-girlfriend and breaking policeman’s noseA man who broke a policeman’s nose and cheekbone in a “disgraceful” attack at his home in Harrogate has narrowly avoided jail.
Joel Adam Rushton, 37, was resisting arrest when he struck one of the officers repeatedly, York Crown Court heard.
The officer received specialist hospital treatment for facial fractures and made a full physical recovery, but still suffered from the physical and mental effects of the incident on January 3, said prosecutor James Howard.
The policeman, who was named in court, had gone to Rushton’s address to arrest him for his behaviour towards his ex-partner, added Mr Howard. Six months after they broke up, she received a barrage of threatening phone calls from Rushton, who told her:
“I’m going to smash your head in; I’m going to kill you. I’m going to find you. I’m going to your mum’s to put my foot through the door. I want you dead.”
She hung up but he called back repeatedly, whereupon she called the police. Mr Howard added:
“She received a call from her mother who said that (Rushton) had been to (her) property and had been kicking the door and asking where (the victim) was.”
Turned violent
The victim – whose fraught relationship with Rushton ended in June last year – was so frightened of what he might do to her that she sought refuge at Harrogate Police Station.
When police turned up at Rushton’s home, he refused to be put in handcuffs and turned so violent that officers had to use pepper spray in an attempt to subdue him, amid screams from Rushton’s “highly agitated” new girlfriend, who was also sprayed accidentally.
Rushton “made a beeline” for one of the officers, whom he punched repeatedly in the face. The scuffle spilled out onto the street where Rushton grabbed one of the officer’s batons.
The injured officer had an X-ray six days later which showed he had fractures to his nose and cheekbone. He also suffered nasal bleeding.
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Rushton, of Grove Park Lane, Harrogate, appeared for sentence on Friday after pleading guilty to assaulting the officer occasioning actual bodily harm and making threatening phone calls to his ex-partner – an offence under the Malicious Communications Act.
In a victim impact statement, Rushton’s ex-girlfriend said she had been left feeling “anxious and distressed” which had resulted in her leaving the job she loved.
The officer who was seriously injured at Rushton’s home said he had suffered from depression, sleep problems and physical pain since the attack in January. He was put on restricted duties for weeks following the attack and was afraid to leave his house. Mr Howard said:
“He says the entire ordeal has left him (and his family) distressed and upset.”
Previous convictions
The court heard that Rushton, a father of four, had two previous convictions for three offences including public disorder.
Defence barrister Keith Allen said that Rushton, who worked as a fireplace installer, “lost emotional control” on the day in question while in a “primal state” born of “extreme anger”. He had behaved “completely out of character” when the officers came to arrest him and had since received cognitive therapy from a mental health nurse.
Recorder Margia Mostafa branded Rushton’s behaviour towards his ex-partner “disgraceful”, particularly his threats to kill her. She added:
“She must have believed what you were saying because she had to go to Harrogate Police Station as a place of safety.”
She noted, however, the “glowing” character references including one from Rushton’s employer, which “could not be further from the man that assaulted police and behaved in a dreadful fashion towards his former partner”, and others which described him as a “completely different man: a dedicated, loving father”.
Rushton’s 22-month jail sentence was suspended for two years but Ms Mostafa said he had “come close” to going straight to prison “because assaults against police officers are not acceptable”.
Rushton was also given a 12-month restraining order banning him from contacting or approaching his ex-partner. He was also placed on a nine-month, nightly curfew and ordered to carry out 150 hours’ unpaid work.
In addition, Rushton was ordered to complete a 25-day rehabilitation programme and pay £1,500 compensation to the injured police officer.
Boroughbridge man jailed for taking indecent photographs of three-year-old girlA Boroughbridge man has been jailed for taking indecent photographs of a three-year-old girl and three other offences involving indecent images of children.
Geoffrey Crowther, 72, a self-employed heavy goods driver, was sentenced to 12 months in jail at York Crown Court today (August 26) and was placed on the sex offenders’ register.
Mr Crowther previously pleaded guilty to four charges of:
- making four indecent images of children in the most serious Category A, between 14 June 2017 and 14 November 2018
- making three indecent images of children in Category B during the same period
- making 10 indecent images of children in Category C during the same period
- taking indecent images of a child in Category C between 30 April 2017 and 14 November 2018 – these relate to first generation images which Crowther took secretly of a three-year-old girl on two different smart phones
North Yorkshire Police’s Online Abuse and Exploitation Team arrested Mr Crowther on November 12, 2018, and carried out a search warrant of his home following intelligence of suspicious website activity linked to him.
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Numerous telephones and other devices were seized for examination by the force’s Digital Forensics Unit.
Mr Crowther was then charged on April 1, 2020, and later pleaded guilty at York Crown Court on July 9.
Safeguarding measures have been put in place regarding the youngster whose photograph was taken by Crowther. Police are satisfied there have been no contact offences against the girl.
DC Fiona Saunderson, of the Online Abuse & Exploitation Team, said:
“Geoffrey Crowther did something unthinkable by taking indecent images of a young child. His despicable actions were a grotesque breach of trust which has devastated lives.”
DC Saunderson added:
Teen jailed for stabbing nurse in Harrogate“Crowther claimed he did not have a sexual interest in children. But when presented with the evidence he admitted to taking indecent photographs of a three-year-old girl.
“Again, he stated he got no sexual gratification from them and that he had deleted the photos immediately.
“Despite his continued denials that he has a sexual interest in children, all the evidence, including his very specific online search history, suggests otherwise.
“Crowther still hasn’t properly explained why he has been taking and making and indecent images of children.”
A teenager from Harrogate who stabbed a nurse so viciously he had his spleen removed was on bail at the time for torching two seaside chalets and causing almost £150,000 of damage.
The youth – who was just 15 at the time and cannot be named for legal reasons – left a man within an inch of his life after being beaten and stabbed repeatedly, York Crown Court heard.
On January 3 this year, the teen was part of a gang of three youths who robbed a man at knifepoint after he had been to a cashpoint.
The victim – a Romanian national who worked as a nurse – was “stabbed, kicked and robbed” in an alleyway in Harrogate town centre in the early hours of the morning when the gang stole £100 from him.
The 15-year-old – who was already on a youth rehabilitation order after accumulating a “shocking” criminal record of 41 previous offences – was the one who delivered the blows with the 10-inch blade. The victim suffered horrific internal injuries and had to have his spleen removed.
Prosecutor Mark McKone said:
“His bowel was damaged (and) he had to have a colostomy (operation). (The victim) had a one-inch stab wound in his left side.
“There were two penetrating wounds to the diaphragm, two penetrating wounds to the colon, leading to removal of part of the bowel and a colostomy. The spleen was removed. That has left (the victim) susceptible to infection for life.”
The victim, said to be a family man, also suffered wounds above his eye and to his upper arm, a punctured lung and cuts to his knees. Surgeons managed to repair the damage but had to fit a colostomy bag.
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Mr McKone said that the 15-year-old – who has roots in both Harrogate and Scarborough – was the “lead” player in the attack. He said:
“CCTV showed (the victim) laid on his back, with his arms and legs splayed out in an attempt to fend (the teen) off. (The teenager) kicked him to the legs and body. All three (youths) were surrounding (the victim).
“(The teenager) leant forward with the knife. He brought the knife down in a wide, sweeping, slashing motion, using so much force that the knife ricocheted off the left eyebrow bone and fell on the pavement.”
The victim went back to Romania temporarily to convalesce, but he could no longer exercise or play with his young son. He was also unable to use his skills as a nurse to help during the pandemic.
The teenager fled to Leeds following the attack, where the knife was thrown into a stream. He told police he had taken cocaine about an hour before the attack and didn’t know what he was doing.
£149,400 repair bill
The court also heard details of the arson offence for which he was on bail. The teen, high on cocaine and booze, was in Scarborough’s North Bay in the early hours of August 22 last year with another youth carrying a box of matches.
They broke into Peasholm Park Cafe and stole £60 from the till. The teens also burgled two seafront chalets in North Bay, stealing hundreds of pounds’ worth of goods, wrecking the holiday homes and damaging 14 others.
Six chalets were severely fire-damaged and strewn with smashed glass from broken windows, said Mr McKone. The repair bill came to £149,400.
The 15-year-old defendant was brought in for questioning but said he was “just watching the fire service putting the fire out”.
‘Challenging’ behaviour
Defence barrister Tom Storey, for the youth, said he had a drink and drug problem and had downed about eight cans of beer before the arson attack.
The teen – now 16 – had already admitted the Harrogate robbery, causing grievous bodily harm with intent and possessing an offensive weapon when he appeared at the Crown Court in February, when his young accomplices were given custodial sentences of at least 18 months.
Appearing in court via video link on Tuesday wearing a white designer T-shirt, he admitted three counts of burglary, criminal damage and arson in relation to the offences in Scarborough. He was to be sentenced for the “planned” robbery, GBH and knife possession in Harrogate at the same time.
Mr Storey said the teenager’s family had lived a “transient” life and he ultimately ended up in care where his behaviour was described as “challenging”. His offending began at the age of 14, when he was placed in a children’s home in Scarborough.
‘Dangerous young man’
Judge Sean Morris said despite the teen’s tender years, he had to lock him up “because I consider you to be a dangerous young man”.
Mr Morris said the stab victim had suffered “life-changing” injuries and told the youth he had shown a distinct lack of remorse. He added:
“That man was lucky to get away with his life. And while he lie wounded and bleeding on the ground, you robbed him. You could have left him for dead.”
The youth was jailed for four years and eight months, of which he will serve at least two-thirds behind bars, possibly even the whole tariff if he is still judged to be dangerous.
The judge ordered that upon his release, he must serve an extended three years on prison licence due to his “exceptionally serious record…which beggared belief”.
The other youth involved in the arson and burglary incidents has also admitted the offences and will be sentenced on September 25. He was 14 at the time and lives in Scarborough.
Trainee accountant jailed for Harrogate drug dealsA trainee accountant has been jailed for dealing cocaine and an ecstasy-type drug in Harrogate.
Armaan Ahmad, 24, was arrested after his Audi A3 was stopped by police in April last year, York Crown Court heard.
Officers found 26 wraps of cocaine inside the car, along with six bags of MDMA in powder form, said prosecutor Rob Galley. They also seized £340 from his wallet and a mobile phone with incriminating text messages. Mr Galley added:
“(The messages) clearly show that this defendant was being directed to go to various post codes and addresses or directed to deal (drugs) to certain people.”
They showed that Ahmad’s drugs boss had ordered him to “count what was left” of the drugs and relay the amounts back to him using abbreviations and codes such as ‘P’ for ‘premium’ cocaine, “rather than standard cocaine”, said the prosecutor.
During the phone conversations, they also discussed his “wage” which on the day in question – April 18 – was £100 to deal “party drugs” in Harrogate and Leeds.
Ahmad – whose father runs a highly successful accountancy firm – sold £780 worth of drugs on that day, although he claimed he had only been dealing for two days. Mr Galley said:
“He had to hand matters over to somebody at a mosque in Leeds at the end of the day.”
‘Significant’ role
Ahmad had played a “significant” role as a drug runner or courier, added Mr Galley. The value of the cocaine seized from his car was about £380 but could have been worth a lot more if dealt on the street.
Ahmad, from Leeds, was said to have been very open with police and owned up straight away. He was charged with two counts of possessing Class A drugs with intent to supply and admitted both charges.
He appeared for sentence on Thursday in an immaculate dark-blue suit and tie, but knowing that jail was all but certain.
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Defence barrister Andrew Dallas described his well-spoken client as a “naïve” young man who had come under the spell of others higher up the supply chain. He said:
“He was misled, not realising what he was getting into.
“He’s from an excellent background and his father… is a successful accountant.”
Ahmad had passed his exams at school and found work straight away, but then lost his job after a contract expired and “couldn’t get other work”, said Mr Dallas.
He said this led Ahmad into debt after he took out a pay-day loan. A friend told him he could make “easy money” by drug-dealing and he fell into “temptation”.
‘Working under direction’
Ahmad, of Church Lane, Adel, began driving around the streets at night in “very risky and serious situations, working absolutely under direction and he had to provide a prices account and face (pay) deductions if anything went wrong”, added Mr Dallas.
“He realised he’d got himself into something bad.”
Since his arrest, Ahmad had had a rapprochement with his father, moved back into the family home and started working full-time for his father’s business as a trainee accountant. Mr Dallas said:
“He’s looking to enrol in exams so that he can follow his father into the profession. He’s quite clearly intelligent in some ways and astonishingly naïve in others.”
Judge Sean Morris told Ahmad:
“People are mugging people in the streets for drugs, robbing their own grannies for drugs, and they have to get them from somebody, and (in this case) they were getting them from you.
“This was proper drug-dealing – fortunately nipped in the bud. You did it calmly and coolly and you took part in this filthy trade.”
Jailing Ahmad for 20 months, the judge said he was “ordinarily a decent young man”. He added:
“It beggars belief that you got into this (sort of crime) and I know that the shame you have brought upon your family you will feel acutely.”
Ahmad will serve half of the sentence behind bars before being released on prison licence.
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Ripon man jailed for city centre attackA young robber has been jailed for nearly four years after a vicious attack in Ripon in which the victim was punched repeatedly and forced to hand over money.
Ethan Anderson, 20, who has a track record of serious violence, pounced on the victim as he walked through Ripon city centre, York Crown Court heard.
Anderson, a drug addict, was with a group of youths sitting on a park bench, who hurled abuse at the man as he tried to walk away, said prosecutor Caroline Abraham.
Anderson confronted the victim, an Asian man who was named in court, and said: “You think you’re hard, do you?”
He punched the victim in the face and struck him in the eye, said Ms Abraham.
The victim tried to run away but fell over and Anderson punched him in the head while he was laid on the ground.
He finally managed to get away, but a short time later Anderson and three other males confronted him again in a car park near Ripon Cathedral. Ms Abraham said:
“(Anderson) walked towards him and demanded money. The defendant put his right hand into his pocket and gestured (as if) he had a weapon.”
Anderson told the victim: “Do you know what I’ve got in my pocket? Give me your money.”
“The victim handed over £20 to (Anderson), who did not have a weapon,” added Ms Abraham.
The victim suffered injuries including a swollen eye, bruising to his cheek and a grazed hand.
Anderson, who was addicted to cocaine, was arrested after the victim identified him about a month after the attack at around 9pm on June 27 last year.
Lock knife
On October 15, Anderson was arrested again after police were called out to a “domestic” incident in Ripon. Officers searched him and found a lock knife in his pocket.
On December 8, police were called out to North Street in Ripon, where Anderson was seen waving a tyre iron in the air during an altercation with another man outside the Wonderland bar.
Just before the incident, Anderson could be heard “shouting for an individual inside the bar, saying he was going to smash his head in”, said Ms Abraham.
“Another male approached the defendant and an altercation ensued. The defendant was brandishing a metal tyre iron and waving it at the male, shouting ‘Come on then!’”
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Anderson was arrested but denied affray and possessing an offensive weapon. He was found guilty of the charges following a trial at Harrogate Magistrates’ Court in June.
He ultimately admitted the robbery in the Ripon car park and also pleaded guilty to possessing the lock knife in a separate incident.
Anderson – from Ripon but of no fixed address – appeared for sentence on all charges via video link on Monday. The court heard he had 14 previous convictions for 26 offences, mainly violence and public disorder.
His rap sheet included two previous convictions for robbery, as well as possessing weapons.
‘Drugs were my escape’
Defence barrister John Batchelor said Anderson was now apologetic for his behaviour following a period of “forced abstinence” from drugs while remanded in custody.
Anderson, a father-of-one, had written a letter to the court saying, “I did unforgiveable things” and “drugs were my avenue of escape”.
“The cause of these offences was drugs,” added Mr Batchelor.
Judge Sean Morris said it was “time for a shot across (Anderson’s) bows” following his third robbery conviction. He told Anderson:
“You have an appalling record for somebody of your age. The robbery was a nasty robbery and it was on a man who was just walking through town.
“You pursued him and you fleeced him, threatening that you had a weapon.”
Jailing Anderson for three years and nine months, the judge told him he had been given “chance after chance and some lenient sentences (in the past) and they haven’t worked”.