Jurors have been shown the “kidnap kit” a security guard allegedly planned to use to abduct, rape and murder television presenter Holly Willoughby.
Gavin Plumb, 37, bought the items, including hand and ankle shackles, a ball gag, rope, metal cable ties and handcuffs online, Chelmsford Crown Court has heard.
Prosecutors say he had an “obsession” with former This Morning host Willoughby, 43, and planned to use the kit, shown to jurors on Tuesday, to carry out an attack on her.
Plumb, from Harlow, in Essex, was arrested on 4 October last year after he outlined his alleged plans to kidnap, repeatedly rape and murder the presenter to an undercover US police officer, based in Minnesota, who alerted authorities in the UK, the jury has been told.
On the third day of his trial, the jury today continued to be shown material from a “sequence of events”, including hundreds of communications he had with others online as he tried to assemble a “crew” to help him.
Image: Pics: CPS/BBC
In May 2022, Plumb discussed booking a tour of the ITV studios, telling a man known as Marc, who is believed to have been based in Ireland: “I’m calling the studio tours tomorrow to see if they’re still available and if you meet presenters.”
But Essex Police Detective Constable Will Belsham told the jury there was no evidence to show he ever followed through with the plan.
Plumb later suggested he would use his security training to get a job with Willoughby, saying: “I have passed my SIA (Security Industry Authority) licence so might try to use it to become her security guard.”
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In other messages, Plumb talked about buying realistic-looking air weapons “from pistols to sniper rifles” to carry out a “home raid” to attack her, as well as targeting other celebrities.
His discussions included using chloroform to stupefy Willoughby and her husband, the television producer Dan Baldwin, before tying them up, abducting her and slitting her throat, the court has heard.
He also described an abandoned stud farm in the country where he could “keep” Willoughby.
Plumb denies charges of soliciting murder, incitement to kidnap and incitement to rape between December 2021 and October last year. The court has heard he is expected to claim it was all a fantasy.
Image: Gavin Plumb is on trial at Chelmsford Crown Court. Pic: PA/Elizabeth Cook
Earlier in the trial, the jury was told Plumb has previous convictions for trying to abduct two women on trains and for using a knife to falsely imprison two 16-year-old girls – including one whose hands he tied behind her back.
Willoughby, who is not attending the trial, has waived her automatic right to anonymity, to which all alleged victims of sexual offences or related charges are entitled.
She announced in October last year that she was stepping down from This Morning after 14 years on the ITV show, but has since hosted Dancing On Ice 2024, and is also due to present a Netflix show.
Now is the moment of “maximum danger” for Sir Keir Starmer, Harriet Harman has warned.
The Labour peer told Beth Rigby on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast “everyone really wants Keir Starmer to succeed” after Greater Manchester’s Labour mayor, Andy Burnham, said Labour MPs have been urging him to challenge Sir Keir’s premiership.
Baroness Harman, who was a Labour MP for 42 years, said this was always “going to be the most difficult time” because people are “fed up” with hearing it is the Tories’ fault, “yet they’re not feeling better off”.
“So this was always going to be the moment of maximum danger,” she said.
“But I think that what people want is for Keir Starmer to succeed. And they don’t want, I think at this point, the turbulence of a leadership challenge.”
She said Mr Burnham, who was in Gordon Brown’s cabinet with her, is “not hiding his light under a bushel in any way, shape or form”.
But added: “I do not want the drama and chaos of a leadership election.
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“It’s like ‘this guy hasn’t done it, so we’re going to try somebody else’. You know, everybody really wants Keir Starmer to succeed.”
Fans will see a series of changes to Ticketmaster sales practices after an investigation into Oasis concert prices.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has secured a number of commitments from Ticketmaster after its investigation found it did not offer fans enough clarity on pricing.
It identified that Ticketmaster did not tell Oasis fans waiting in lengthy queues that standing tickets were being sold at two different prices – and that prices would jump as soon as the cheap tickets sold out.
It also said Ticketmaster sold some “platinum” tickets at almost 2.5 times the price of ‘standard’ tickets – without sufficiently explaining that they offered no additional benefits over some ‘standard’ tickets in the same areas of the venue.
Ticketmaster will now be required to:
Tell fans 24 hours in advance if a tiered pricing system is being used. This means fans will know beforehand if there are multiple prices for the same type of ticket, and that more expensive ones will be released once the cheapest sell out;
Provide more information about ticket prices during online queues, helping fans anticipate how much they might have to pay;
Give additional information to help fans make the best decisions, and give more information about the prices of tickets sold using tiered pricing;
Not use any misleading ticket labels, giving the impression that one ticket is better than another when that is not the case;
Provide regular reports to the CMA on how it has implemented the changes over the next two years to ensure robust compliance.
Failure to implement these measures could result in enforcement action.
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Separate to the CMA report, Ticketmaster have now also stopped using “platinum” labels in the UK.
The CMA said it hopes the measures will send a “clear message” to other ticketing websites, adding: “If Ticketmaster fails to deliver on these changes, we won’t hesitate to take further action.”
“Fans who spend their hard-earned money to see artists they love deserve to see clear, accurate information, upfront,” said CMA chief executive Sarah Cardell.
“We can’t ensure every fan gets a ticket for events as popular as the Oasis tour, but we can help ensure that next time an event like this comes along, fans have the information they need, when they need it.”
Responding to the findings, Ticketmaster said: “We welcome the CMA’s confirmation there was no dynamic pricing, no unfair practices and that we did not breach consumer law.
“To further improve the customer experience, we’ve voluntarily committed to clearer communication about ticket prices in queues. This builds on our capped resale, strong bot protection, and clear pricing displays, and we encourage the CMA to hold the entire industry to these same standards.”
The watchdog launched its investigation following widespread complaints about the sale that saw over 900,000 tickets purchased through the site.
The CMA had made it clear, in an update in March, that it was seeking a series of remedies that were yet to be agreed.
It explained then that Ticketmaster labelled certain seated tickets as “platinum” and sold them for nearly two-and-a-half times the price of equivalent standard tickets, without explaining why they were more expensive.
It found that it “risked giving consumers the misleading impression that platinum tickets were better”.
The regulator also concluded that Ticketmaster did not inform fans that there were two categories of standing tickets at different prices, but it said there was no evidence that dynamic pricing – a form of surge pricing where costs can rise depending on levels of demand – was used.
The UK leg of the Oasis tour will end at Wembley Stadium this coming weekend.
A major test of the CMA’s agreement with Ticketmaster could come soon, however, as it is widely believed that Oasis plan to return to Knebworth House in Hertfordshire next year for a gig to mark the 30th anniversary of their celebrated 1996 concert.
A US vaccine firm has opened the first mRNA manufacturing plant in the UK, against a backdrop of increasing anti-jab rhetoric back home.
The new facility outside Oxford is part of a £1bn investment in the UK by Moderna, which specialises in mRNA.
The novel vaccine technology delivered some of the most effective and fastest-to-develop jabs during the COVID pandemic.
Several pharma companies, including Germany’s leading mRNA pioneer BioNTech, are now racing to develop new therapies.
Moderna says the plant will produce up to 100 million doses of its existing vaccine products each year. It has also been designed to scale-up production to 250 million doses a year in the event of a new disease outbreak.
“God-forbid, if there is another pandemic, we can switch the facility any day,” said Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel.
The UK investment deal was agreed by the previous government, but the plant’s opening is welcome relief for the current one.
It also promises to restore domestic vaccine manufacturing capability in the UK, the lack of which was exposed when dangerous supply interruptions threatened the early COVID response.
“It’s a really fast way of getting new vaccines discovered,” said Lord Patrick Vallance, former chief scientist and now science minister.
“It’s also a great statement of confidence in the UK that [Moderna has] chosen to base themselves here.”
Image: Health Secretary Wes Streeting attended the opening
Moderna: UK ‘still believes’ in vaccines
The mRNA molecule is the same used by our cells to order the production of new proteins, and allows vaccines to be produced using just the genetic code of a virus or other biological target.
Moderna’s investment decision pre-dated Donald Trump’s return to the White House, but the Moderna CEO said its operation in the UK – a country that “still believes in vaccination” – may pay dividends if anti-vaccine rhetoric translates into a lack of demand for its products in the US.
“If there is less appetite by governments around the world, including in the US, to use vaccines, we might invest less in vaccines,” said Mr Bancel.
“We have to invest where there’s a demand for our products.”
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The UK presents other attractions for the company which has suffered substantial losses as demand for its COVID vaccine has fallen.
It’s betting that leading UK universities and a large patient population will make for successful clinical trials.
The company has ongoing NHS trials of new jabs against seasonal flu, a combination COVID and flu vaccine, cancer vaccines and mRNA therapies for two inherited childhood diseases.
Moderna says it is now the largest private commercial sponsor of clinical trials in the UK.