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A 53-year-old man has been charged with the murder of a university lecturer, Devon and Cornwall Police have said.

Claire Chick, 48, was found injured on West Hoe Road, Plymouth, at 8.55pm on Wednesday.

Ms Chick, who taught at the University of Plymouth’s nursing school after a career in nursing, was taken to hospital but died on Thursday.

Paul Butler, of Stangray Avenue, Plymouth, has been charged with her murder and is due to appear before Plymouth Magistrates’ Court on Monday.

He was arrested in the Liskeard area of Cornwall, which is about 20 miles from Plymouth, police said.

A police cordon near West Hoe Road in Plymouth, Devon, where a manhunt is under way.
Pic: PA
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Police at the scene on West Hoe Road.
Pic: PA


Ms Chick, previously known as Claire Butler, had five grandchildren who call her “favourite grandma”, according to her family.

Her family added: “We are absolutely devastated and broken at the loss of our beautiful caring mother Claire Chick.

“She was the most beautiful, lively soul and was there for everyone.”

A police officer on West Hoe Road in Plymouth, Devon, where a manhunt is under way.
Pic: PA
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Pic: PA

Describing Ms Chick as the “glue” and their “go-to” they said: “We will never get over this as a family.

“We won’t ever get the justice our mum deserves for this because no amount of justice will bring her back.

“She may be gone but her spirit will always remain alive. We love you mum, and we promise to make you proud.”

Read more:
Tributes paid to university lecturer

Detective Inspector Rob Smith added: “We continue to support Claire’s family at what is an extremely awful time for them. I would ask for their privacy to be respected and to allow them the space to grieve.”

He urged the public to share any relevant information with police.

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Leicester City owner’s death in helicopter crash was accidental, inquest finds

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Leicester City owner's death in helicopter crash was accidental, inquest finds

The deaths of five people, including Leicester City’s owner, in a helicopter crash were accidental, an inquest jury has ruled.

Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, referred to in court as Khun Vichai, died in the crash along with two of his staff, Nursara Suknamai and Kaveporn Punpare, pilot Eric Swaffer, and Mr Swaffer’s girlfriend Izabela Roza Lechowicz, a fellow pilot.

The jury delivered its verdict on Tuesday after being previously instructed to conclude that the crash was accidental.

Philip Shepherd KC, representing the relatives of Khun Vichai, said those who died were the “innocent victims of a tragic accident that never needed to happen”.

His son Khun Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha, described his father as “one-of-a-kind, an investor in dreams” and said: “We miss him and feel his loss every day.”

“My father trusted in the design of this helicopter,” he said in a statement. It wasn’t safe. It was a death trap.”

As the helicopter was leaving the King Power Stadium in Leicester on 27 October 2018, a fault caused it to spin “rapidly” out of control before it crashed outside the stadium and burst into flames, the inquest heard.

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File photo dated 07/08/2016 of Leicester City's chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha on the pitch before the Community Shield match at Wembley Stadium, London. Adam Davy/PA Wire
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Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha and four others died when their helicopter crashed in 2018. Pic: PA

Jon Rudkin, Leicester City’s director of football, who had known Mr Srivaddhanaprabha for eight years, described the moment the Leonardo AW169 helicopter started to “nosedive” after taking off at 8.37pm.

“It held its position as it sometimes did,” he said. “As it turned it continued to turn and then go into a spin.

“As soon as it went on that first full circle, I thought this was strange.

“It then started to nosedive away from the stadium still rotating in the air.”

FILE - Tributes from supporters rest at a memorial under a portrait of team owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha outside Leicester City Football Club, Monday Oct. 29 2018, in Leicester, England. . (AP Photo/Rui Vieira, File)
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Tributes at a memorial outside Leicester City’s ground after the crash. Pic: AP

Mr Rudkin told the inquest he saw the chairman wave and give him a thumbs up before the helicopter took off.

The inquest was shown an animation of the helicopter’s mechanical failure and told a duplex bearing on the tail rotor became “seized and locked”, which caused the actuator control shaft to spin “very fast”.

Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) principal inspector Mark Jarvis said the pilot had done everything he could to try to avoid the crash.

The inquest also heard how police officers tried to smash the aircraft’s windscreen after it crashed, but would never have been able to break the “very strong structure” designed to withstand a bird strike at a speed of 180mph (290kph).

Nusara Suknamai was killed in the Leicester City helicopter crash
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Nusara Suknamai was among those who died in the crash

Sergeant Michael Hooper said he could hear the helicopter’s trapped pilot, Mr Swaffer, shouting: “Get me out of here, help me.”

The crashed helicopter was resting on its left-hand side, meaning neither side door could be opened. A fuel leak then caused the aircraft to catch fire.

PC Stephen Quartermain became emotional as he remembered realising “the people were going to die”.

Ms Lechowicz died from injuries sustained when the helicopter hit the ground – but the other four victims initially survived the crash, and were killed by smoke inhalation from the fire, a pathologist told the inquest.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge during a visit to pay tribute to those who were tragically killed in an helicopter crash at Leicester City Football Club...s stadium, King Power Stadium, Leicester, England, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2018. Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, the Thai billionaire owner of Premier League team Leicester City was among five people who died after his helicopter crashed and burst into flames shortly after taking off from the soccer field on Saturday Oct. 27, 2018. (AP Photo/Rui Vieira)
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Prince William and Kate visited the stadium to pay their respects in the wake of the crash. Pic: AP

‘Caring and devoted’

As the inquest opened at Leicester City Hall, the jury heard pen portraits of the victims, with Mr Srivaddhanaprabha described as a “caring and devoted husband, father, uncle and grandfather”.

In a tribute read by family barrister Philip Shepherd KC, relatives called him “a great inspiration to us all” and said: “We all loved him very much.”

They added: “He was adored by everyone for his kind spirit, generosity, charm, sense of humour and intellect.”

A statue of former Leicester City owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha at the King Power Stadium in Leicester. Joe Giddens/PA Wire
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A statue of Mr Srivaddhanaprabha now stands outside the King Power Stadium. Pic: PA

Kate Lechowicz, Ms Lechowicz’s sister, described her in a statement as an “extraordinary individual” who “exuded a passion for life” and who “accomplished her task with grace and efficiency”.

Kate Lechowicz also read a tribute to the helicopter’s pilot, Mr Swaffer, and said: “He was great company. He had profound love for aviation, technology, travel, his motorbike and life in general.”

Tributes were also paid to passenger Kaveporn Punpare, who had a young daughter and was one of several butlers employed by the late Leicester City chairman.

A statement prepared for the inquest by his wife said he had initially worked for Mr Srivaddhanaprabha as an assistant butler who accompanied family members on trips.

Meanwhile, Nusara Suknamai, an employee of Khun Vichai’s, was described as a “pillar” of her family.

Speaking to Sky News, her father, Viroj Suknamai, said: “She was a lively person, she was the breadwinner of the family.

“She was the one who looked after the family and after she passed away we have had difficulties financially.”

Ms Suknamai was a former Miss Thailand contestant.

Her father said: “I remember all the good memories that we had together, I remember when she was in the beauty pageants, I was the one who would drive her there.

“If she was still here today she would’ve had a very bright future ahead of her, she could have done many more things in her life.”

Before the start of the inquest, Mr Srivaddhanaprabha’s family launched a £2.15bn lawsuit against the helicopter’s manufacturer, Italian company Leonardo SpA.

It is the largest fatal accident claim in English history, according to the family’s lawyers. The sum is for loss of earnings and other damages as a result of the billionaire’s death.

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Prime Minister warns UK has ‘cohort of loners who are extreme and need to be factored in’ to security plans

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Prime Minister warns UK has 'cohort of loners who are extreme and need to be factored in' to security plans

Sir Keir Starmer has warned the UK has a “cohort of loners who are extreme and need to be factored in” as a leaked Home Office review said the UK should deal with extremism by focusing on concerning behaviours and activity rather than ideologies.

The prime minister said his government is “looking carefully where the key challenges” on extremism are, adding it is “very important” to focus on threats “so we can deploy our resource properly”.

“Obviously, that’s now informed with what I said last week in the aftermath of the Southport murders, where we’ve got the additional challenge, I think, of a cohort of loners who are extreme and they need to be factored in,” he said.

“So that’s the focus. In the end, what this comes down to is the safety and security of people across the United Kingdom, that’s my number one focus.”

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Sir Keir was speaking after a leaked Home Office extremism review suggested the UK should be focusing on behaviours and activities such as spreading conspiracy theories, misogyny, influencing racism and involvement in “an online subculture called the manosphere”.

The Home Office said Islamism and extreme right-wing ideologies are the “most prominent” issues they are tackling today.

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In August, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the Home Office was conducting a “rapid analytical spring on extremism” to map and monitor trends and inform the government’s approach to extremism.

Last week, Sir Keir Starmer said he would change the law if needed to recognise the new threat posed by extremists without specific ideologies ahead of the jailing of Axel Rudakubana for the stabbing to death of three young girls in Southport last summer.

The 18-year-old had been referred to the anti-terror Prevent programme three times but was not deemed as an extremist under the scheme’s criteria. And, although he pleaded guilty to murder, police were unable to identify Rudakubana’s motive, so his crimes fell outside the definition of terrorism.

Alice da Silva Aguiar, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Bebe King were murdered in an attack at a Taylor Swift-themed class.
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Alice da Silva Aguiar, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Bebe King were murdered by Axel Rudakubana

Recommendations could be breach of freedom of speech

The leaked review, obtained ahead of its publication by the Policy Exchange thinktank, recommends reversing the guidance, introduced by then Home Secretary Suella Braverman, for police to reduce dealing with non-hate crime incidents.

It says a new crime, making “harmful communications” online illegal, should be introduced instead. The Conservative government rejected this on freedom of speech grounds.

Policy Exchange’s Paul Stott and Andrew Gilligan said recommendations to class claims of two-tier policing as a “right-wing extremist narrative” will also raise concerns over freedom of speech.

Dangerous individuals could be missed

They said including “behaviours” such as violence against women and girls, spreading misinformation and an interest in gore or extreme violence in the definition of extremism could “swamp already stretched counter-extremism staff and counter-terror police with thousands of new cases”.

This could increase the risk “that genuinely dangerous individuals are missed – it risks addressing symptoms, not causes”, Policy Exchange said.

The review itself admits many who display such behaviours are not extremists.

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Could the Southport killings have been prevented?

Review ‘downplays Islamism’

Following Rudakubana’s guilty plea last week, Sir Keir said the UK “faces a new threat” and the teenager represented a new kind of threat with “acts of extreme violence perpetrated by loners, misfits, young men in their bedroom, accessing all manner of material online, desperate for notoriety”.

He said he would change the law, if needed, “to recognise this new and dangerous threat” and said a review of “our entire counter-extremism system” would take place “to make sure we have what we need to defeat it”.

The review also “de-centres and downplays Islamism, by far the greatest threat to national security”, Policy Exchange said.

It said environmental extremism and Hindu extremism should be tackled, as well as “left-wing, anarchist and single issue extremism”.

And Policy Exchange said it has “ignored, even repudiated” recommendations by previous Prevent reviewer William Shawcross that the programme is the wrong place for dealing with the psychologically unstable.

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‘Southport must be a line in the sand,’ the PM says

Government focused on Islamism and right-wing ideologies

A Home Office spokesperson said: “The counter-extremism sprint sought to comprehensively assess the challenge facing our country and lay the foundations for a new approach to tackling extremism – so we can stop people being drawn towards hateful ideologies.

“This includes tackling Islamism and extreme right-wing ideologies, which are the most prominent today.

“The findings from the sprint have not been formally agreed by ministers and we are considering a wide range of potential next steps arising from that work.”

Conservative shadow home secretary Chris Philp said: “By extending the definition of extremism so widely, the government risks losing focus on ideologically motivated terrorists who pose the most risk to life.

“In fact, the Shawcross Review of Prevent made clear that counter-extremism and the counterterrorism strategy should be more focused on terrorist ideology, not less.

“Prevent must be equipped to deal with the terrorist threats in our society, and we should not be dialling back efforts to confront this.

“What the government seems to be planning is a backwards step in the interests of the political correctness we know Keir Starmer loves.

“Starmer wants the thought police to stop anyone telling uncomfortable truths that he and his left-wing lawyer friends don’t like.”

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Police end river search for sisters missing in Aberdeen for three weeks

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Police end river search for sisters missing in Aberdeen for three weeks

Police searches in the River Dee to trace two sisters who disappeared in Aberdeen three weeks ago have come to an end.

Eliza and Henrietta Huszti, both 32, were last spotted on CCTV in the city’s Market Street at Victoria Bridge at about 2.12am on Tuesday 7 January.

The women were seen crossing the bridge and turning right on to a footpath next to the River Dee in the direction of Aberdeen Boat Club.

The siblings’ disappearance sparked a major Police Scotland operation, including specialist advisers and the force’s air support, dog branch and marine unit.

A Police dive boat on the River Dee at Aberdeen harbour during the ongoing search for missing sisters, Eliza and Henrietta Huszti. The pair were last seen on CCTV on Market Street at Victoria Bridge, Aberdeen, at about 2.12am on Tuesday January 7. Picture date: Tuesday January 14, 2025.
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A police dive boat pictured on the River Dee at Aberdeen Harbour earlier this month. Pic: PA

A Police dive boat on the River Dee at Aberdeen harbour during the ongoing search for missing sisters, Eliza and Henrietta Huszti. The pair were last seen on CCTV on Market Street at Victoria Bridge, Aberdeen, at about 2.12am on Tuesday January 7. Picture date: Tuesday January 14, 2025.
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Pic: PA

In an update on Monday, the force announced that “extensive and detailed searches” of the river and harbour had concluded.

But wider inquiries to find the sisters continue, including searches of coastal areas in the north and south of Aberdeen.

Superintendent David Howieson said any further information received by police will be “acted upon”.

He added: “Our thoughts are very much with their family at what is a very difficult time.”

Police have been searching the River Dee
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Pic: PA

Investigating officers previously said there had been “no evidence” of the women leaving the immediate area and there had been nothing to suggest “suspicious circumstances or criminality”.

The police revealed that the sisters – who are part of a set of triplets and originally from Hungary – visited the bridge where they were last seen about 12 hours before they disappeared.

Read more: Mystery over missing sisters

Henrietta Huszti. Pic: Police Scotland
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Henrietta Huszti. Pic: Police Scotland

Eliza Huszti. Pic: Police Scotland
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Eliza Huszti. Pic: Police Scotland

They also sent a text message to their landlady on the morning they vanished, indicating they would not be returning to the flat.

In a statement released via Police Scotland earlier this month, the women’s family said: “This has been a very worrying and upsetting time for our family.

“We are really worried about Eliza and Henrietta and all we want is for them to be found.”

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