News about Derek Jones

After discovering she had a new lover, a vengeful woman, 49, who was armed with'martial arts sticks,' bursts her way into the bedroom of a terrified ex-lover

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 8, 2024
Buathip Kendray, 49, burstled on her former partner's doorstep in rage after she learned she was with another woman who had moved into the house they once shared in Speke, Liverpool. Kendray tore a wing mirror off his vehicle, screamed at a wheelie bin, and screamed over a wheelie bin before smashing her way into the house through the living room window on August 6, 2023.

What happened to Britain's notorious ASBO kids?From baby-faced 'Ratboy' to the infamous 'Asbros'

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 16, 2023
The ASBO, or anti-social behavioural order, was introduced in 1998 by then Home Secretary David Blunkett, and the four-letter abbreviation quickly enthroiled the nation. It became shorthand for anything connected to disruptive behaviour, and there was even a mini-industry selling t-shirts, hoodies, and even baby clothes emblazoned with ASBO-inspired slogans. After terrorizing their families, mummies of children as young as ten were strewled across newspapers in the hopes of teaching them a lesson. However, the ASBO became a badge of honor for those who were not chosen (55%), and more than half of those who were given one (55%) would breach its terms. They were eventually canceled and replaced in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland by civil injunctions and criminal behaviour orders (CBOs). But what ever happened to the baby-faced troublemakers?

Since admitting to posting indecent photos of children, a mother of two, 57, was released in prison

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 23, 2023
When Julie Barnes' house in Cheshire was raided by police, they confiscated her cellphone and discovered sickening child abuse pictures. The images were sent by supporters to her fetish page, Rosie Cheek, solely due to the account's name,' she told investigators.' A judge confirmed today that Barnes had not requested the photos and that they were discovered in a cache folder that she could not access. But she told her, 'This was disgraceful and shameful conduct.'

After being stabbed 27 times, a boy, 18, was 'one of the youngest ever to be banned from an ASBO'

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 6, 2022
Following a revenge attack in which a ten-year-old boy who was "one of the youngest people ever to receive an ASBO" before becoming a teenage gang boss, he was jailed for 27 times with a machete. On Wednesday, Alfie Hodgin (pictured left and right), 18, was sentenced to more than £2,000 of heroin and crack cocaine after being found with more than £2,000 worth of heroin and crack cocaine while'slumped on the floor covered in blood'. The adolescent from Liscard, Merseyside, was working with a corporation in an attempt to pay down debt, but he ended up stealing the gang's phone and drugs as he attempted to operate his own business. On July 14, a gang of four machete-wielding men left Hodgin dead on a street in Ellesmere Port town centre, with 27 stab wounds, according to a Liverpool Crown Court.

What if you can't hear after a cold?DR MARTIN SCURR answers your health questions

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 20, 2022
DR MARTIN SCURR: Following a cold or respiratory infection, including Covid, is a common occurrence. Virulence in the mucus membrane that lines the nose and sinuses becomes inflammatory as a result of viruses that invade the respiratory tract, triggering inflammation in the nose and sinuses, which encourages immune cells to accumulate there. This inflammation takes time to resolve, and there may also be some blockage in the eustachian tubes, which ventilate the middle ear. These are usually at the back of the nose and help alleviate tensions with the outside world. Mucus can also grow into these tubes, clogging them and resulting in a sense of deafness. Despite the fact that this usually resolves within days (the mucus will fly out of the back of the nose's own accord), it is not always the case. The simplest alternative is to use a decongestant nasal spray, which reduces the inflammation in the nasal passages by shrinking the blood vessels.