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Suffolk: Two boys, aged 14 and 15, arrested on suspicion of murder after 82-year-old woman died in a robbery | UK News

Two boys, aged 14 and 15, have been arrested on suspicion of murder after an 82-year-old woman died after a robbery at her home in Suffolk.

Joy Middleditch died in hospital after being found on the floor of her home following the incident on Saturday 25 March.

She was found conscious and breathing but in a serious condition, and was taken to the James Paget University Hospital, Norfolk, where she died in the early hours of Monday 27 March.

The two teenagers are both from the Lowestoft area, east Suffolk, and are being questioned by Martlesham Police.

Ms Middleditch told her relatives and police that she had heard a noise at the door before two masked men forced their way in and knocked her to the ground.

Police outside the home of Joy Middleditch
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Police outside the home of Joy Middleditch

Police said it is thought the attack occurred between the evening of Friday 24 March and the early hours of Saturday.

Ms Middleditch’s handbag had been taken but was recovered in another road a short distance away.

Floral tributes were laid outside the home

A Home Office post-mortem examination was carried out on Monday but the cause of death is yet to be confirmed.

The pensioner’s family said in an earlier statement that she was “a strong, determined character who loved life and her dog.

“She was a loving person who was sadly taken from us too soon.”

Witnesses or anyone with information is being encouraged to contact police.

Northampton stabbing: Two teenage boys charged with murder of 16-year-old Rohan Shand | UK News

Two teenage boys have been charged with the murder of a 16-year-old who was stabbed to death earlier this week.

Rohan Shand, known to his family and friends as Fred, died following the incident near the Cock Hotel in Harborough Road, Kingsthorpe, at around 3.35pm on Wednesday 22 March.

Specialist officers are supporting Rohan’s family who have been left “devastated” by the tragedy.

Two boys, aged 16 and 14, both from Northampton, will appear before Northampton Magistrates’ Court this morning charged with murder.

They cannot be named for legal reasons.

Police said a 49-year-old man and a 21-year-old man from Northampton who were arrested in connection with Fred’s death have both been released with no further action.

Officers would still like to speak to witnesses, anyone with information, or anyone with CCTV, doorbell, or dash-cam footage of the area at the time.

Two teenagers charged with murder of two boys killed a mile apart in London | UK News

Two teenagers have been charged with the murders of two boys who were stabbed to death a mile apart in London.

Kearne Solanke and Charlie Bartolo, both 16, were killed on Saturday.

Kearne was found fatally wounded in Titmuss Avenue, Thamesmead, and Charlie was discovered in Sewell Road, Abbey Wood.

A boy aged 16 and another aged 15 were arrested on Tuesday, the Metropolitan Police said.

They are both due to appear at Bromley Magistrates’ Court later today.

Officers were called at about 5.10pm on Saturday to reports of people with injuries. Both boys were pronounced dead at the scene.

Detectives from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command are investigating and have appealed for anyone with information to come forward, specifically those who saw a black Nissan Qashqai with silver roof bars in either area in the days or hours before the deaths.

“We have the vehicle in our possession, but are still interested in witnesses who may have seen it being driven locally,” Detective Chief Inspector Kate Blackburn, investigating officer from Met Specialist Crime Command, said.

Detective Superintendent Richard McDonagh, from the South East Command Unit, assured the local community that officers will “work tirelessly” to discover what happened and urged people to continue working together to “prevent such tragedies” in the future.

Two boys, both 16, stabbed to death around a mile apart in southeast London | UK News

Two 16-year-old boys have been stabbed to death in two locations around a mile apart in southeast London, police have said.

Detectives are investigating whether there is a link between the two killings which are believed to have happened at around the same time.

Officers were called at around 5.10pm on Saturday to reports of people injured in Sewell Road, Abbey Wood, and Titmuss Avenue, Thamesmead.

Murder scene in southeast London. The forensic tent in Titmuss Avenue, Thamesmead.
Credit Pic: UK News In Pictures
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A forensics officer in Titmuss Avenue. Pic: UK News In Pictures
GVs of separate murder scenes in southeast London. This one is in Titmuss Avenue, Thamesmead. Credit: UK News In Pictures
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Pic: UK News In Pictures

At each scene they found a 16-year-old who had been stabbed.

Both youths were later pronounced dead.

GVs of separate murder scenes in southeast London. This shot is in Titmuss Avenue, Thamesmead. Credit: UK News In Pictures
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Police are seeking to establish whether the two killings are linked. Pic: UK News In Pictures

A murder investigation into the deaths is under way.

Given the proximity in time and distance of the incidents, officers are trying to establish any link between the two deaths, the Metropolitan Police said.

Crime scenes are in place at both locations and a Section 60 order, providing officers with additional search powers, is in place until 8am on Sunday.

Murder scene in Sewell Road in Abbey Wood southeast London. Pic: UK News In Pictures
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Flowers and candles left at the murder scene in Sewell Road, Abbey Wood. Pic: UK News In Pictures

The two boys’ next of kin will be provided with support by specialist officers, police said.

Queen approved RAF repatriation jet for her coffin, saying: ‘If it’s good enough for my boys, it’s good enough for me’ – according to Mike Tindall | UK News

The Queen personally approved a plane to transport her coffin that had previously repatriated British soldiers’ bodies, reportedly saying: “If it’s good enough for my boys, it’s good enough for me.”

That’s the claim made by former England rugby union star Mike Tindall, who is married to the late monarch‘s eldest granddaughter Zara Tindall.

Before her state funeral on 19 August, Elizabeth II’s coffin was flown from Edinburgh Airport to RAF Northolt in west London on a RAF Globemaster C-17 aircraft, accompanied by the Princess Royal.

Mr Tindall described how the Queen’s original plane selection was substituted for the larger RAF aircraft to enable a more “dignified” ceremony.

Queen's coffin at Edinburgh airport. Pic: AP
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Pic: AP

He said: “It wasn’t the original plane picked and they had to change it and they went for this big old plane to make it more dignified.”

Mr Tindall said he could not verify the story, sent to him by an “ex-army friend”.

And it appears the claims have been shared on social media after apparently being written by Pete Bond who says he was tasked, when a staff officer in 2009, with reviewing plans for the movement of the Queen’s coffin if she died overseas.

Mr Bond reportedly wrote that a BAE 146 business jet was due to transport the Queen, but access to its freight bay was difficult and it was substituted for the bigger C-17.

The Queen's coffin is carried aboard a RAF aircraft at Edinburgh airport

Mr Tindall claimed the Queen signed off the change of aircraft, used to repatriate the bodies of military personnel from Afghanistan, with the words: “If it’s good enough for my boys, it’s good enough for me.”

He added: “And that in itself just sort of sums it up.”

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Queen’s coffin departs Scotland

A senior RAF source said: “Extensive and comprehensive planning was conducted by the military for the demise of Her Majesty the Queen. The most appropriate assets were used throughout the operation.”

Mr Tindall told the story during The Good, The Bad & The Rugby podcast which he co-hosts.

When asked about the experience of the last few weeks, he replied: “It’s been sad, emotional but happy.”

Read more:
The Queen through the years – a life of service in pictures
Six moments that defined the Queen’s reign
The Queen’s most memorable quotes

Mike and Zara Tindall at the Queen's funeral in Westminster Abbey on 19 September
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Mike and Zara Tindall at the Queen’s funeral in Westminster Abbey on 19 September

Asked to comment on the Queen’s death and her funeral, he replied: “In some ways amazing, in other ways to see the family come so close together – overnight.

“You never predict it, obviously (with) a 96-year-old lady, you know at some point it’s going to happen but you’re never ready for when it does.”

He added: “I’m not a direct family member in terms of blood but watching what my wife Zara had to go through, obviously she loved the Queen beyond everything else.”

The Rugby World Cup winner also spoke about his regrets, saying he wished he had quizzed the Queen about the history she had witnessed.

He said he had “loads of regrets about not asking her so many more things. Having nervousness when you have that lucky seat of being sat next to her”.

650 children – mostly black boys – strip-searched by Met Police in just two years, with some as young as 10 | UK News

Children are being strip-searched by the Metropolitan Police without an appropriate adult present in almost a quarter of cases, with black boys disproportionately targeted, new data shows.

The research, published by the children’s commissioner for England, revealed that officers from the force conducted intrusive searches on 650 young people aged 10 to 17 between 2018 and 2020.

It was commissioned following the case of Child Q – a 15-year-old black girl who was strip-searched at her school in east London without an appropriate adult present. She was wrongly suspected of carrying cannabis.

Children’s Commissioner Dame Rachel de Souza said that the case had been wrongly described as “a one-off”.

She explained: “In a strip search, your most intimate parts are searched. For any child, that’s going to be traumatic and concerning.”

It is a legal requirement for an appropriate adult to be present, except in urgent situations.

Of the 650 who were searched over the three years, 19 in every 20 were boys and 58% were described by the officer as being black.

More on Metropolitan Police

Katrina Ffrench, the founder director of Unjust UK, said she was “incredibly horrified” by the figures.

She added: “The numbers are so high because they demonstrate that there’s an issue within the Metropolitan Police and its treatment of black communities across London.

“Unfortunately, young black children are not afforded innocence and the same rights as their white peers.”

In 2018, more than two-thirds of those strip-searched without anyone else present were black boys.

Solicitor Kevin Donoghue has represented children elsewhere in the country who have been through the experience.

“The fallout for these children is very significant,” he said. “The common features and expressions given to me in handling these cases are one of personal intrusion.

“There is a violation by police officers which is very severely felt and one of personal integrity and their bodily autonomy which has been invaded and it is an event which cannot be undone.

“An apology is not enough. Compensation is not enough.”

In the Child Q case, four officers are being investigated for gross misconduct and a serious case review has been carried out.

The Metropolitan Police said in a statement that it is “progressing at pace” to ensure children subject to intrusive searches are dealt with respectfully.

And new measures have been introduced requiring an inspector to give authority before a search takes place.

It added: “We have ensured our officers and staff have a refreshed understanding of the policy for conducting a ‘further search’, particularly around the requirement for an appropriate adult to be present.

“We have also given officers advice around dealing with schools, ensuring that children are treated as children and considering safeguarding for those under 18.”

In more than half of all child strip searches, no further action was taken.

It’s left the Children’s Commissioner questioning why so many are carried out in the first place.

She’s also concerned about “holes in the data” recorded by the Met Police.

“For about one in five of the strip-searched, they can’t even tell me where they took place, so the data collection needs to be better.”