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‘Haven’t played a note yet’: British band Sports Team robbed at gunpoint on first day of US tour | Ents & Arts News

A British band were robbed at gunpoint on the first day of their US tour.

Frontman of the band Sports Team, Alex Rice, told Sky News they had stopped in their tour bus at a Starbucks in Vallejo, California, on Tuesday – the morning after landing in San Francisco.

While he and his bandmates were ordering breakfast, they heard someone say “has anyone got a white sprinter van outside? It’s being robbed”.

“Natural reaction, you sprint towards it and try to stop it, and immediately [one of the robbers] pulls a gun,” he said.

“He pulls a gun, he sort of points it at our tour manager Lauren, there’s another guy loading stuff out and a third guy in a getaway car.

“We all sprint back into the Starbucks. They’ve taken a huge amount of personal stuff and musical equipment from the middle of our van.

“So, haven’t played a note yet, one minute in, we’ve got our stuff taken.”

Pic: Sports Team
Image:
The band had laptops, in-ear monitors, cameras and other personal items taken. Pic: Sports Team

Rice added that the “really shocking bit… is we called the police straight away” but found “their reaction to an ‘as it’s happening live gunpoint event’ was ‘okay, if you could just file the report online’.”

He added: “People say ‘get down’ as if the rain’s just started coming down outside, as if the weather’s changed so people should go inside.

“That’s been the saddest bit to see, the level of resignation, the fact that people take this in their stride now.”

Laptops, in-ear monitors, cameras, and other personal items were taken in the robbery, but the band’s instruments were safe “because the back of the van is fortified”.

Pic: Sports Team
Image:
Alex Rice told Sky News the band’s instruments were safe – meaning they can keep touring. Pic: Sports Team

“The most immediate concern for us is passports, to be honest,” Rice told Sky News. “Three of us had our passports taken.

“It’s a ‘try to get to the consulate and get that sorted for Christmas’ sort of situation.”

The band are promoting their forthcoming third album, Boys These Days, and will continue their US tour despite the incident.

“We’re really lucky in that we’re able to do that,” Rice said. “We’ve got a lot of friends in San Francisco. People have been incredibly supportive.

“It’s a terrible thing to have happened but we’re lucky not to have had our actual instruments taken – which has happened to us in the past.”

Read more from Sky News:
Inside the UK’s ‘wild west’ court system
Woman murdered boyfriend by zipping him in suitcase

Sports Team were nominated for a Mercury Prize in 2020 for their debut album Deep Down Happy, which went to number two on the UK Albums Chart.

Their 2022 follow-up Gulp! marked their second top 10 record, reaching number three in the charts.

Sir Ben Ainslie has Rolex robbed at knifepoint in Barcelona | World News

British former Olympic yachtsman Sir Ben Ainslie has been robbed of his Rolex watch at knifepoint in Barcelona.

The 47-year-old, who is leading the UK’s Ineos Britannia team in the America’s Cup, was mugged by a gang while leaving a restaurant on Saturday night, local media reported.

The watch was said to be valued at around €20,000 (£16,858).

Sir Ben reported the theft to police in Barcelona on Monday.

He told The Daily Telegraph: “Barcelona is a fantastic host city for the America’s Cup, and the team has felt welcomed and is enjoying our stay in this vibrant city.

“Like in all big cities, you can be affected by opportunistic crime and my situation is no different. This matter is now with the local authorities.”

Sir Ben's watch was said to be valued around €20,000 (£16,858). PIc: PA
Image:
Sir Ben’s watch was said to be valued around €20,000 (£16,858). PIc: PA

Sir Ben has been taking part in preliminary stages of Ineos Britannia's bid to win the America's Cup. Pic: AP
Image:
Sir Ben has been taking part in preliminary stages of Ineos Britannia’s bid to win the America’s Cup. Pic: AP

Read more from Sky News:
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Starmer says government wants reset with EU

‘Lonely’ dolphin behind multiple attacks on humans, experts say

Barcelona has seen a spate of luxury watch thefts and the city has a police team specialising in the theft of high-value watches.

Sir Ben is the most successful sailor in Olympic history.

He has won medals at five consecutive Olympics from 1996 onwards, including gold at four consecutive games held between 2000 and 2012.

MP says current law on assisted dying robbed him of time with his father | UK News

A Labour MP whose father took his own life says the current rules on assisted dying robbed them of time together and the law needs to change.

In a moving interview, Paul Blomfield told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme that he wants to see a “change in the law which gives people choice”.

Under current legislation, people with terminal illnesses cannot have help in taking their own lives, and family and friends who help them do so – or even are aware of their plans – can be prosecuted.

Mr Blomfield said banning assisted dying made life “miserable” both for those who are suffering terminal illness but also their loved ones.

The Sheffield Central MP shared the story of his elderly father Harry, who died by suicide aged 87 after being diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer.

He explained how he received a phone call more than eight years ago informing him that Harry had taken his own life.

Mr Blomfield, 69, said that had the law been different they could have discussed what was going on with Harry together.

Tearfully, he said: “He could have talked to us. We could have planned together. He would probably have lived longer.

“I think he took the decision to go prematurely because he wanted to act while he still could.”

Labour MP Paul Blomfield
Image:
Labour MP Paul Blomfield

‘He had a good life’

Mr Blomfield spoke about his father’s life, growing up in poverty and becoming an RAF pilot.

“He had a good life and he enjoyed it,” he said.

“He was a great father. He was a very private person but even so I think he would want me to talk about his death because I know he always believed in giving people choice.

“In a sense, that should have given me an indication of what he might do after he had a terminal diagnosis but I didn’t really factor it in.”

Read more:
Terminally ill ex-MP reveals he ‘changed his mind’ on assisted dying

Mr Blomfield says Harry remained “positive” after his diagnosis of terminal lung cancer, and so the news of his death was a “shock”.

The MP says the diagnosis itself was a “shock for him, and it was for us”.

Currently, under the Suicide Act 1961, anyone convicted of assisting a person to take their own life can be punished with up to 14 years in prison.

‘The law drives people to take very desperate measures’

Mr Blomfield said: “The law prevents people having choice at the end of their life and it drives people to take very desperate measures, like my father.”

He added that a lot of the discussion on assisted dying should move to what the law “already does” to people – and the “misery that it causes”.

He hopes for a change in the law one day, and said that a “sensible and balanced approach” would be to allow assisted dying in cases where someone has six months to live with a terminal diagnosis, confirmed by doctors.

A study by YouGov last year found that almost three quarters of Britons (73%) think the law should be changed to allow doctors to assist in the suicide of someone suffering from a terminal illness.

However support for such a move in parliament has lagged behind public attitudes.

A Ministry of Justice spokeswoman said: “Our sympathies remain with the families and loved ones affected by these deeply upsetting cases.

“Any change to the law in an area of such sensitivity and importance is for individual MPs to consider rather than a decision for government.”

:: Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK.