Boxing heavyweight champion Tyson Fury and two of his brothers have been ordered to pay nearly £100,000 in unpaid business rates.
It comes after Cheshire East Council took the fighter and his siblings, Shane and John, to court for not paying the taxes since April 2021 on land they owned in Styal, Cheshire.
None of the brothers attended the hearing to settle the dispute at Chester Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday.
But their father, John Fury, did give evidence – and confirmed he had previously transferred his ownership of the Moss Lane site to them.
The court heard he rented a storage yard, said to be “a stone’s throw away” from Manchester Airport, for £600 per month to businessman Babakir Elmosbah – who said he was the director of a valet parking service firm which used the site for airport customers.
However, District Judge John McGarva said the Fury brothers had “not got anywhere near establishing a prima facie case” that the company, Holiday Car Parks Manchester Ltd, actually occupied the premises.
He ordered the siblings to pay the business rates bill of £82,166.85, plus the council’s court costs of £17,206.
‘I try to keep away from paperwork’
Mr Fury Snr earlier told the court he placed ownership of the land into a trust fund for his sons to take over when they turned 21, although he admitted it was his signature on the paperwork for the commercial lease agreement with Mr Elmosbah’s firm.
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He told the court he was dyslexic, as well as being unable to read or write, and said a trusted adviser who was “a lot more educated than me” had helped him with his business dealings.
Mr Fury Snr said: “All I have done is rent a piece of land out to this gentleman [Mr Elmosbah]. I don’t have any understanding of what business they do.
“I’m an old-fashioned man and I’m semi-literate. That’s how it is.”
Asked why he had signed the form when his sons were the registered landowners, Mr Fury Snr said he was from a “different culture” and that “I’m still the man of that land”.
He added: “They have nothing to do with it. I’m a boxing coach, I’m a boxing trainer. I have no understanding at all.
“The only trouble I have been in is criminal, not the technical stuff. It’s not my field. I try to keep away from paperwork.”
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From August: John Fury flips table in outburst
Case ‘ridiculous’ – ‘especially’ for Tyson
Mr Fury Snr said his sons had “nothing to do with any of this” and described the case as “ridiculous”.
He added: “Especially Tyson, when you are paying millions in tax every year. He has not lived here for 18 years.”
The boxer’s father left the court after giving evidence and was not present for the judge’s ruling.
Martin Budworth, representing the brothers, had argued the council had no positive case against his clients, other than that their names were recorded on the Land Register.
He said the suggestion that the car parking firm’s operation could be “discounted or disregarded as some sort of sham is a really bold proposition”.
Judge McGarva said the local authority did not dispute that Holiday Car Parks Manchester Ltd existed, but said Mr Elmosbah could not explain why it was listed as dormant in its accounts for the year ending August 2022.
It also had no employees during the period.
The judge described Mr Elmosbah as a “far from an impressive witness” and “not credible”.
He also said it was “wholly unsatisfactory” he had not heard from any of the brothers in person, or from Mr Fury Snr’s adviser.
The judge added the lease agreement “left more questions than answers,” including why Mr Fury Snr had agreed to lease a property he had “already disposed of”.
A man was later seen wielding a sword and attacking members of the public on a road near Hainault tube station.
The suspect was arrested 22 minutes later. Doorbell footage showed the moment officers cornered the hooded man, who was still holding his weapon, in a driveway.
Police confirmed on Tuesday that one person – a teenage boy – had died and four others were injured during the incident.
Among those injured were two police officers who suffered wounds that required surgery, but were not life-threatening, and two members of the public.
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Video of part of the incident showed how officers shouted at the suspect, saying “Don’t move, don’t f****** move” after he was brought to the ground by three separate Taser discharges before being arrested.
Other footage showed the suspect being chased by police as an officer is heard shouting “Lock your doors” as the sword-wielding man entered residential gardens.
In another clip, a police car arrives before the man verbally confronts the police and shouts “Is there anybody here who believes in God?” while standing next to a body.
Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Louisa Rolfe said there had been speculation about whether police had been aware of the suspect before the incident.
She said that, despite urgent and extensive checks, police had “found no trace of a prior incident involving him so far, but we will of course continue to make those inquiries”.
A neighbour from a nearby road, who witnessed the incident, told PA news agency the suspect pulled a “samurai sword from the back of his trousers”.
James Fernando, 39, said the suspect had asked one of his neighbours to “take the telephone from him to tell whoever was on the phone his location”.
“Within two seconds she realised something wasn’t right, started running, and he pulled a samurai sword from the back of his trousers,” he said.
“She shouted to the other neighbour – a boy who was on his way to school. As he’s turned around, he’s struck him on the face.”
Mr Fernando said the suspect then started “running around with the sword in his hand looking for victims”.
Another witness, who asked not to be named, said: “He was wielding his sword trying to attack the police but then they sprayed him and he ran away.
“We were very scared and trying to hide and not show ourselves through the window, because he was standing right next to our house and he could have seen us if he looked up.
The UK has sent the first failed asylum seeker to Rwanda under a voluntary scheme.
The scheme is for those who have gone through the asylum process and had permission rejected, rather than for migrants who have illegally entered Britain by crossing the Channel on small boats.
The migrant was sent on a commercial flight and handed a fee from the British taxpayer to help relocate under the terms of a deal with Rwanda.
According to The Sun, the man of African origin claimed asylum in the UK but was rejected at the end of last year. He then accepted the offer to go to Rwanda.
He left the UK on Monday.
This was not done using the powers set out in the Safety of Rwanda Act, but rather a parallel scheme that allows someone to choose to make the trip if their attempts to claim asylum in the UK fails.
And upon arrival in Kigali, the person is able to claim around £3,000 in UK taxpayer money as help.
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Migrants ‘will be found and removed’
The development was criticised by both the Labour Party and Reform UK director Nigel Farage.
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Yvette Cooper, Labour’s shadow home secretary, said: “The Tories are so desperate to get any flight off to Rwanda before the local elections that they have now just paid someone to go.
“British taxpayers aren’t just forking out £3,000 for a volunteer to board a plane, they are also paying Rwanda to provide him with free board and lodgings for the next five years. This extortionate pre-election gimmick is likely to be costing on average £2m per person.
“Former Tory Home Office ministers warned that the government’s plan was just to get token flights off before a General Election. Now we know what they mean.”
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Rwanda plan: ‘What does success mean?’
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Less than a week after she survived a migrant boat disaster in which five people died, Heivin is standing in a car park next to a shabby hotel near London, smiling and joyous.
After a string of failed attempts to reach England, her dream has finally been fulfilled.
“It was really hard and dangerous for me, but I finally made it here, thanks to God,” she said.
“I am very happy to be here because I think it is a safe country and it is very suitable for me. But part of me is still in shock that the journey is finally over.”
She is a slight young woman, just 18 years old but blessed with a confidence that allowed her to persevere when others might have given up.
She left Kurdistan around a year ago, crossing Europe to France, and living in camps, woodland and in underpasses along the way.
“It was very hard,” she says.
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“Especially when you’re on your own, and a young woman. It can be very dangerous.”
Kurdistan is a region that straddles Turkey, Syria, Iran and Iraq, and whose people have historically faced ethnic and political persecution from the governments of those countries.
Heivin tried 30 times to reach England from the coast of northern France, with her penultimate attempt seeing her take a place on a boat that was wildly overcrowded after it was violently hijacked by a rival group of migrants.
In the ensuing melee, five people died, including a young child.
It was shortly after that trauma that we met Heivin for the first time, as she was recovering from the ordeal of that boat. The memories still haunted her of seeing people crushed.
Even then, Heivin said she would be trying again and, in the early hours of Saturday morning, she made it. Her boat left a French beach in the early hours and chugged towards Britain.
The people smugglers who arranged the crossing, she says, were “good with us”.
“We only had to wait for three to four hours, then we went down the beach and boarded the dinghy.”
But the boat, as so often with these crossings, was ill-equipped and struggled in the water before being intercepted by a French coastguard vessel, which offered assistance.
Of nearly 60 people on board, 33 were taken off, but the others, including Heivin, remained at sea, determined to get to Britain.
“This time I went, but I always had the feeling that I would not make it and have to return like the other times.
“It was also extremely cold that night and my clothes were soaking wet. I kept saying to myself “I won’t make it”, but thank God, I did make it.”
The decisive point came when the dinghy entered British waters and, before long, the passengers on board were collected by a Border Force vessel and taken to the mainland.
“How did you feel when you saw the British boat,” I asked.
Heivin’s face breaks into a broad smile and she says “so happy” with a shake of her head that is loaded with emotion.
“I felt overjoyed. I didn’t expect that we would make it to Britain. I thought we would just end up back in France again, like the other times. When I saw the British boat, I was extremely happy – I just can’t explain it. I’m so happy.”