2011 NBA Draft Grades LA Lakers Get an A. 2011 NBA Draft: Rockets Select Marcus Morris 2011 NBA Draft: Suns Select Markieff Morris northcarolinadu says: 2011 NBA Draft : Where they were ranked (scout.com) http://feedzil.la/lLe32x
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As Rachel Maddow noted, these so-called anti-regulation Republican hypocrites sure seem to love regulations if it means shutting something down they don’t like. New state regulations could shutdown last three abortion clinics in Kansas : Due to new regulations drafted by Kansas officials, the state’s last three operating abortion clinics could be closed down — making Kansas the first state to have absolutely no abortion access. According to the Associated Press , “the top executive for Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid Missouri said he’s concerned imposing the new regulations so quickly will force all three clinics to shut down.” The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has until July to decide whether or not they will give the clinics, which include a Planned Parenthood clinic, the licenses they need to operate. The AP reports: [The state agency] is imposing the rules under Republican-backed legislation that was signed into law last month by GOP Gov. Sam Brownback, a strong abortion opponent. The department sent Planned Parenthood a letter earlier this month saying its clinic would be inspected and notified by July 1 whether it would have a license. The other clinics received similar letters. The new law requires annual inspections of abortion clinics and gives the department the power to issue fines or go to court to shut clinics down for violating the new standards. The plan was approved by the Republican-controlled Kansas Legislature earlier this year. However, Planned Parenthood is considering entering a legal battle with the state over the new regulations and the “process used to impose them.” Read on…
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As Rachel Maddow noted, these so-called anti-regulation Republican hypocrites sure seem to love regulations if it means shutting something down they don’t like. New state regulations could shutdown last three abortion clinics in Kansas : Due to new regulations drafted by Kansas officials, the state’s last three operating abortion clinics could be closed down — making Kansas the first state to have absolutely no abortion access. According to the Associated Press , “the top executive for Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid Missouri said he’s concerned imposing the new regulations so quickly will force all three clinics to shut down.” The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has until July to decide whether or not they will give the clinics, which include a Planned Parenthood clinic, the licenses they need to operate. The AP reports: [The state agency] is imposing the rules under Republican-backed legislation that was signed into law last month by GOP Gov. Sam Brownback, a strong abortion opponent. The department sent Planned Parenthood a letter earlier this month saying its clinic would be inspected and notified by July 1 whether it would have a license. The other clinics received similar letters. The new law requires annual inspections of abortion clinics and gives the department the power to issue fines or go to court to shut clinics down for violating the new standards. The plan was approved by the Republican-controlled Kansas Legislature earlier this year. However, Planned Parenthood is considering entering a legal battle with the state over the new regulations and the “process used to impose them.” Read on…
Continue reading …Cameron legal crackdown ‘not protecting families’ says Crisis as charities challenge image that squatting is a lifestyle choice Leading charities are warning that proposals to make squatting a criminal offence risk dragging some of the country’s most vulnerable people through the justice system. A letter from the charity Crisis and endorsed by the Big Issue Foundation challenges the media image that squatting is largely a lifestyle choice popular with middle class dropouts. It points out that almost 40% of homeless people resort to squatting at some point, and that of these more than half have been to prison, 20% are alcohol-dependent and more than a third have mental health problems. The letter, which is backed by other organisations working with homeless people and ex-offenders, will be sent to the government next week. The proposal to criminalise squatting in England and Wales – as is already the case in Scotland – was announced by David Cameron on Tuesday as part of his wider toughening of criminal justice measures. “A lot of the debate is coloured by media headlines about people squatting from a lifestyle choice in these large mansions,” said Katharine Sacks-Jones, head of policy at Crisis. “What we really want to make sure ministers are aware of is that there’s a large proportion of squatters who are very vulnerable people who are squatting because they simply don’t have another choice. This law would be criminalising very, very vulnerable people, and I don’t think anyone wants to see that. It’s counter-productive. It’s not going to address the underlying problems that these people face: that there’s a lack of housing.” Groups representing squatters say that while precise numbers are hard to establish, the government’s estimate of 20,000 squatters throughout the UK is likely to be a significant underestimate. The recession means squatters now include families who cannot meet mortgage payments, they say. “This is essentially criminalising homelessness in the middle of a housing crisis, which is completely crazy,” said Paul Reynolds, from Squatters Action for Secure Homes . “People who are at the raw end of a lot of other social policy end up squatting as it’s the one form of self help open to them. They can make use of an unused resource – an empty building which they look after. When the owner wants to get rid of them it’s a very cheap and simple procedure.” The notion that a law change is needed to protect families from having their homes taken over, for example when they are on holiday, is nonsense, he said. Such actions are already crimes under a 1977 law protecting “displaced residential occupiers” or intended occupiers. “If someone squats your home, you’re legally entitled to break back in and remove them using reasonable force,” he said. “This new law is designed, as far as we can tell, to protect property speculators, people who own long-term empty commercial properties which they’re often quite happy to let fall into disrepair.” Squatters invariably improve the properties in which they live, he added: “Pretty much every squat I’ve been to has had lots of work done. If someone’s living there they make it a home. A lot of landlords realise this and they don’t mind.” A Ministry of Justice spokeswoman said: “We are determined that those who enter and occupy people’s property should be punished, which is why we will shortly be consulting on criminalising squatting. Our housing strategy, which will be published later this year, will tackle the issue of persistent homelessness by setting out our approach to creating more affordable housing, while reducing the numbers of vacant properties.” Homelessness Communities Housing Crime Peter Walker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Messages from Venezuelan president who has been unusually quiet since having an operation did not refer to his health Venezuela’s president, Hugo Chávez, who has not been seen in public for two weeks, has ended his unusual silence with several Twitter messages, but said nothing about his health after an operation in Cuba. The re-emergence of the loquacious leader on the social networking site will do little to quash speculation that his prolonged absence means he may be seriously ill . Marking a public holiday celebrating a battle won against Spanish colonial forces in 1821, the president congratulated the armed forces and saluted all Venezuelans. “Today is my army’s day and the sun rose brilliantly! A huge hug to my soldiers and to my beloved people,” he wrote from Cuba on his Twitter account. “From here, I am with you in the hard work every day. Towards victory always! We are winning! We will win!” Venezuela’s defence minister said on Thursday that the president was stronger than ever but would not rush home until he was ready. At the end of a regional tour on 10 June, Chávez had an operation in Havana for a swelling in his pelvis and he has been out of public sight since, except for one set of photos. His absence has highlighted the socialist leader’s total dominance of local politics and the lack of a clear successor. The government originally said he would return “in a few day,” but as time has gone by and Chávez has stayed in Cuba, rumours have swirled in Venezuela that the 56-year-old former soldier may have something worse like cancer. Hugo Chávez Venezuela guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Return of press for first time since being expelled in March suggests Syrian regime willing to engage in propaganda war A trickle of western journalists is being allowed back in to Damascus – under close supervision by government minders – suggesting Syrian president Bashar al-Assad’s regime is sufficiently concerned about its hold on power to be willing to engage in a foreign propaganda war. Sky News anchor Jeremy Thompson was reporting from Damascus on Friday , and CNN’s Arwan Damon, who is of Syrian and American descent, broadcast from the capital on Thursday. The Sunday Times has a reporter in the country, but declined to confirm their identity on Friday. Foreign journalists were expelled from the country shortly after unrest began in March, and have been concentrating their efforts on the Turkish border, where Syrians have been gathering in refugee camps to escape military crackdowns. Speaking during a government-arranged tour of the apparently quiet streets of Damascus today, Thompson said: “The very fact that we are here, the first foreign journalists to be allowed visas in three or four months … suggests that the government is concerned that its message isn’t getting out, that the rest of the world misunderstands what they’re doing … and if anything that the propaganda machine of the opposition… is winning the hearts and minds at the moment.” Thompson is hoping to speak to members of the Assad government in the next few days and claimed that the feeling within Damascus was that if he were to lose his grip on power “it could bring terrible instability and most people don’t want that despite the protest movement in this country”. Thompson secured his 15-day visa shortly after an interview with Assad adviser Bouthaina Shaaban on Monday. Sky News executives spent the following days requesting permission to return to Syria from Shaaban, fellow Syrian spokesperson Reema Haddad and the Syrian embassy in London. Head of international news Sarah Whitehead attributed the breakthrough to “good old-fashioned news gathering persistence”. It is understood there are no formal reporting restrictions, but Thompson will need to tread carefully. Whitehead said: “We are there because the Syrians have given us a visa and we hope to report as freely as we can but we’ll have to see how it develops over the coming days.” Thompson currently anchors Live at Five with Jeremy Thompson. A seasoned foreign correspondent, he has reported on dozens of wars and conflicts for the BBC and ITN. In 1999, he was the first TV newsman to broadcast live as British peacekeeping forces rolled into Kosovo. CNN’s Damon filmed in Damascus on Thursday, accompanied by minders, and was shown street vendors selling pro-government paraphernalia and a restaurant speaker blaring music in praise of Bashar. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook Sky News War reporting The news on TV Television Television industry TV news BSkyB Syria Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Juliette Garside guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …At least 29 dead in El Rodeo violence as hundreds of inmates remain barricaded inside One week after thousands of troops stormed a riot-torn prison in Venezuela , hundreds of rebelling inmates remained barricaded inside on Friday as a bitter political blame game continued to escalate. Security officials, whose forces stormed the El Rodeo prison complex on Friday last week after clashes killed at least 22 people, predicted an imminent surrender. But instead of capitulating prisoners, all that was brought out of the prison’s charred cellblocks in the early hours of Thursday was four dead bodies, reportedly in an advanced state of decomposition. So far the official death toll is 29, with the government blaming the violence on heavily armed “mafia” leaders, known in Venezuela’s crumbling prison system as pranes . José Argenis Sánchez, an evangelical preacher who has been attempting to negotiate a truce, said prisoners feared being killed if they surrendered. “In the past the national guard [has] killed men in prisons,” he said. Sánchez conceded, however, that gang leaders in El Rodeo were also reluctant to lose their grip on the lucrative business they controlled: selling drugs and guns and charging protection money, known as la causa . “There are too many interests involved. They make a lot of money inside prisons. They charge inmates and they buy and sell weapons. I think the national guard has cleared out a lot of spider’s webs, but they need to get to the spider.” All week tearful female relatives of inmates have flocked to El Rodeo, clutching improvised banners. “Mr President: Stop this massacre. We don’t want any more dead,” read one appeal to Venezuela’s leader, Hugo Chávez, who remains in Cuba after undergoing emergency surgery earlier this month. Another implored: “National guard: Stop firing weapons of war at the prisoners!” The crisis has sparked a war of words between government supporters and opposition politicians. Chávez supporters accused the opposition of inciting violence and vowed to investigate the role of “hasty” media outlets that had “manipulated” the situation. One high-ranking government official, who refused to be named, told the Guardian: “We have strong evidence that suggests articulation between the pranes and some opposition leaders. There is an effort on behalf of the opposition to build up destabilising actions following the current jail crisis and extend it to other jails across the country.” Opposition leaders scoffed at the allegations, claiming the government was attempting to divert attention from its own failures. Ismael Garcia, leader of the opposition Podemos party, said: “This is all a clear excuse to go after the opposition media, and an excuse not to talk about the real problems of corruption we face. Why is no one talking about how the inmates got all the weapons the national guard has seized? It wasn’t just makeshift knives, it was war armament that only the national guard has access to.” Garcia, who travelled to the besieged jail on the first night of violence, said he believed El Rodeo’s true death toll might never be known. There were “close to 40 to 60 family members who have not seen the names of their relatives in the published lists [of transferred prisoners] and have had no other news,” he said. Writing in the opposition El Universal newspaper, Jorge Sayegh criticised both sides for squabbling over blame instead of addressing deeper issues. “What a nerve, for the government and the opposition to attempt to wear the mask of innocence, accusing each other of [being responsible for] the murderous anarchy, which we all know predominates in the prisons. What good does it do to call for the resignation of a minister, when it is clear that the entire prison system, the police and the judiciary are rotten?” Venezuelan jails had become “cathedrals of delinquency”, he added. On Thursday there were reports that four prisoners had been killed and three injured during shooting at Uribana prison, in Lara state. According to one local NGO, the Observatorio Venezolano de Prisiones, 466 Venezuelan inmates were killed last year compared with a total of around 100 in Brazil, Argentina, Mexico and Colombia. Venezuela Hugo Chávez Tom Phillips guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Father of Milly Dowler says family have paid ‘too high a price for justice’ during trial of her killer Levi Bellfield Milly Dowler’s family today spoke of the “mental torture” they endured as witnesses in the trial of her killer, Levi Bellfield, as the jury were discharged before it reached a verdict on allegations that he attempted to abduct another girl, Rachel Cowles, 11. On the steps of the Old Bailey, Milly’s father, Robert, said: “My family have had to pay too high a price for justice for Milly” and described it as a “truly mentally scarring experience on an unimaginable scale”. During the trial, Bellfield’s defence harshly scrutinised details of the Dowler family’s personal life . The family said they had been made to feel like they were the criminals. Roger Coe Salazar, chief crown prosecutor of the Crown Prosecution Service in the South East said he recognised that the family feel the “jury trial process has let them down” but hoped the pain and anguish they are presently feeling will be somewhat diluted as a result of the convictions secured”. He said the “adversarial nature of our criminal trial system in this country is designed to test the evidence given by witnesses; be they for the prosecution or defence so as to ensure safe conviction and acquittal of the innocent”. Former home secretary David Blunkett said the case gave “pause for thought” and questioned defence barristers’ actions. Earlier Mr Justice Wilkie said that publicity in the case had left him no option but to discharge the jury which had been due this morning to continue deliberations on allegations Bellfield had attempted to abduct Cowles a day before Milly was snatched three miles away in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey. Judge Wilkie said he must refer the matter to the attorney-general, Dominic Grieve, over possible contempt. The judge said that there would be no retrial over Cowles and that an attempted abduction charge would lie on file. Cowles, now 21, whom the serial killer allegedly tried to abduct her the day before he snatched Milly, said she was “extremely hurt and angry that some of the media reporting has robbed me of justice”. As Bellfield refused to come to the court from his prison cell, judge Mr Justice Wilkie described him as a “cruel and pitiless killer” who had “not had the courage to come into court to face his victims and receive his sentence”. The judge on Friday sentenced the former doorman and wheelclamper to life in jail with a whole life tariff for Milly’s abduction and murder and told him he would never be released. He is thought to be the first person to have received a second whole-life sentence. Outside the court, Milly’s family welcomed the conviction, but said the trial had been a “horrifying ordeal” in which they were treated like criminals. Milly’s sister, Gemma, described the day her parents were cross-examined, during which her mother collapsed, as worse than when she was told her sister’s remains were found. Bellfield was already in prison for murdering 19-year-old Marsha McDonnell and Amelie Delagrange, 22, and the attempted murder of Kate Sheedy, 18, in 2004. Bellfield, 43, was given three life sentences for those crimes in February 2008 and told then that he would never be released. The judge said today: “He robbed her [Milly] of a promising life, he robbed her family and friends of the joy of seeing her grow up into a self-confident, articulate and admirable young woman. “He treated her in death with total disrespect, depositing her naked body, without even a semblance of a burial, in a wood far away from her home, vulnerable to all the forces of nature.” He added: “He is marked out as a cruel and pitiless killer.” But the cruellest thing he did, added the judge, was in an attempt to divert responsibility from himself: “He instructed his lawyers in this trial to expose to the world her most private, adolescent thoughts, secrets and worries”. As Milly’s sister Gemma, sobbed, and her mother Sally and father sat quietly comforting her, the judge said Bellfield had “sought to hint she was a dark, unhappy, troubled person”, which “flew in the face ” of her family’s evidence. She was a “funny, sparky, enthusiastic teenager, fully exploring her developing emotional life,” he said. Turning to the Dowler family’s ordeal: he added Bellfield must have known that that process “could do nothing other than hugely increase the anguish of her family, particularly her mother Sally Dowler, in ways which were made dramatically clear in court”. “No one who has been on court can have been in any doubt that the Dowler family had suffered indescribable agonies during almost a decade over the loss of their beloved daughter, for which all our hearts go out to them. “In an important sense this agony may be thought to have culminated in this trial.” He added: “I appreciate that the trial process has been excruciating for them by reason of the issues the defendant instructed his lawyers to raise in his defence.” “I understand that they feel let down by the trial process in that respect. Unfortunately given the nature of the defence it was unavoidable,” he added. “All I can do is hope that they may in time come to terms with that and that the outcome of the trial in some small way contribute to their grieving process and assist them in coming to a semblance of closure.” The only sentence he could pass was one of life. The fact it was a killing of a child was an aggravating factor, as was his “macabre attempt to conceal her body”, and his “substantial record of serious violence”. He made a whole life order so Bellfield will “never be released from custody”. In addition he was sentenced to 12 years for the kidnap to run concurrently. It can now be reported that Surrey police force has apologised for missing opportunities in the hunt for Milly’s killer that could have led to Bellfield’s arrest before he went on to murder two more victims. Bellfield, who lived 50 yards from where Milly was last seen, also escaped the net when police, conducting extensive house-to-house inquiries, knocked 10 times at his rented flat without response but made no inquiries of the landlord as to who lived there. By the time they did, the flat had seen several tenants come and go, with any potential forensic evidence obliterated by redecorating and steam cleaning. Surrey’s chief constable, Mark Rowley, has privately apologised to Milly’s parents and to Cowles. He is set to meet relatives of the other victims. “Mistakes were made,” said assistant chief constable Jerry Kirkby. Outside the court, Detective Chief Inspector Maria Woodall, leading the inquiry, said she was “extremely disappointed” that the jury were discharged before they could reach a verdict on Cowles. Milly Dowler Crime Caroline Davies Karen McVeigh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Father of Milly Dowler says family have paid ‘too high a price for justice’ during trial of her killer Levi Bellfield Milly Dowler’s family today spoke of the “mental torture” they endured as witnesses in the trial of her killer, Levi Bellfield, as the jury were discharged before it reached a verdict on allegations that he attempted to abduct another girl, Rachel Cowles, 11. On the steps of the Old Bailey, Milly’s father, Robert, said: “My family have had to pay too high a price for justice for Milly” and described it as a “truly mentally scarring experience on an unimaginable scale”. During the trial, Bellfield’s defence harshly scrutinised details of the Dowler family’s personal life . The family said they had been made to feel like they were the criminals. Roger Coe Salazar, chief crown prosecutor of the Crown Prosecution Service in the South East said he recognised that the family feel the “jury trial process has let them down” but hoped the pain and anguish they are presently feeling will be somewhat diluted as a result of the convictions secured”. He said the “adversarial nature of our criminal trial system in this country is designed to test the evidence given by witnesses; be they for the prosecution or defence so as to ensure safe conviction and acquittal of the innocent”. Former home secretary David Blunkett said the case gave “pause for thought” and questioned defence barristers’ actions. Earlier Mr Justice Wilkie said that publicity in the case had left him no option but to discharge the jury which had been due this morning to continue deliberations on allegations Bellfield had attempted to abduct Cowles a day before Milly was snatched three miles away in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey. Judge Wilkie said he must refer the matter to the attorney-general, Dominic Grieve, over possible contempt. The judge said that there would be no retrial over Cowles and that an attempted abduction charge would lie on file. Cowles, now 21, whom the serial killer allegedly tried to abduct her the day before he snatched Milly, said she was “extremely hurt and angry that some of the media reporting has robbed me of justice”. As Bellfield refused to come to the court from his prison cell, judge Mr Justice Wilkie described him as a “cruel and pitiless killer” who had “not had the courage to come into court to face his victims and receive his sentence”. The judge on Friday sentenced the former doorman and wheelclamper to life in jail with a whole life tariff for Milly’s abduction and murder and told him he would never be released. He is thought to be the first person to have received a second whole-life sentence. Outside the court, Milly’s family welcomed the conviction, but said the trial had been a “horrifying ordeal” in which they were treated like criminals. Milly’s sister, Gemma, described the day her parents were cross-examined, during which her mother collapsed, as worse than when she was told her sister’s remains were found. Bellfield was already in prison for murdering 19-year-old Marsha McDonnell and Amelie Delagrange, 22, and the attempted murder of Kate Sheedy, 18, in 2004. Bellfield, 43, was given three life sentences for those crimes in February 2008 and told then that he would never be released. The judge said today: “He robbed her [Milly] of a promising life, he robbed her family and friends of the joy of seeing her grow up into a self-confident, articulate and admirable young woman. “He treated her in death with total disrespect, depositing her naked body, without even a semblance of a burial, in a wood far away from her home, vulnerable to all the forces of nature.” He added: “He is marked out as a cruel and pitiless killer.” But the cruellest thing he did, added the judge, was in an attempt to divert responsibility from himself: “He instructed his lawyers in this trial to expose to the world her most private, adolescent thoughts, secrets and worries”. As Milly’s sister Gemma, sobbed, and her mother Sally and father sat quietly comforting her, the judge said Bellfield had “sought to hint she was a dark, unhappy, troubled person”, which “flew in the face ” of her family’s evidence. She was a “funny, sparky, enthusiastic teenager, fully exploring her developing emotional life,” he said. Turning to the Dowler family’s ordeal: he added Bellfield must have known that that process “could do nothing other than hugely increase the anguish of her family, particularly her mother Sally Dowler, in ways which were made dramatically clear in court”. “No one who has been on court can have been in any doubt that the Dowler family had suffered indescribable agonies during almost a decade over the loss of their beloved daughter, for which all our hearts go out to them. “In an important sense this agony may be thought to have culminated in this trial.” He added: “I appreciate that the trial process has been excruciating for them by reason of the issues the defendant instructed his lawyers to raise in his defence.” “I understand that they feel let down by the trial process in that respect. Unfortunately given the nature of the defence it was unavoidable,” he added. “All I can do is hope that they may in time come to terms with that and that the outcome of the trial in some small way contribute to their grieving process and assist them in coming to a semblance of closure.” The only sentence he could pass was one of life. The fact it was a killing of a child was an aggravating factor, as was his “macabre attempt to conceal her body”, and his “substantial record of serious violence”. He made a whole life order so Bellfield will “never be released from custody”. In addition he was sentenced to 12 years for the kidnap to run concurrently. It can now be reported that Surrey police force has apologised for missing opportunities in the hunt for Milly’s killer that could have led to Bellfield’s arrest before he went on to murder two more victims. Bellfield, who lived 50 yards from where Milly was last seen, also escaped the net when police, conducting extensive house-to-house inquiries, knocked 10 times at his rented flat without response but made no inquiries of the landlord as to who lived there. By the time they did, the flat had seen several tenants come and go, with any potential forensic evidence obliterated by redecorating and steam cleaning. Surrey’s chief constable, Mark Rowley, has privately apologised to Milly’s parents and to Cowles. He is set to meet relatives of the other victims. “Mistakes were made,” said assistant chief constable Jerry Kirkby. Outside the court, Detective Chief Inspector Maria Woodall, leading the inquiry, said she was “extremely disappointed” that the jury were discharged before they could reach a verdict on Cowles. Milly Dowler Crime Caroline Davies Karen McVeigh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Department for Education contests ruling that former Haringey children’s boss was unfairly sacked over death of Baby P The Department for Education has confirmed that it is seeking an appeal at the supreme court against the court of appeal ruling that Sharon Shoesmith was unfairly sacked following the death of Baby P. The court of appeal ruled in May that Shoesmith was unfairly sacked . A leading employment lawyer said she could receive as much as £1m if the decision was not overturned. A DfE spokesman said: “The government thinks that it was right in principle for Sharon Shoesmith to be removed from her post as director of children’s services. “Our initial application to appeal has been turned down by the court of appeal. We have now filed an application for permission to appeal to the supreme court.” The DfE’s statement said: “There are questions of constitutional importance involved in this case, beyond the specific question about whether Ed Balls should have had a further meeting with Sharon Shoesmith before removing her. “Our initial application to appeal has been turned down by the court of appeal. We have now filed an application for permission to appeal to the supreme court.” Shoesmith was removed from her post in December 2008 by Ed Balls, who was education secretary. She was then sacked by Haringey, which said it had lost trust in her. The axe fell after regulator Ofsted published a damning report after the death of 17-month-old Peter Connelly exposing failings in her department. Lawyers argued that Shoesmith, 58, had been the victim of “a flagrant breach of natural justice” and that she had been driven from her £133,000-a-year post by a media witch-hunt and political pressure. They asked Lord Neuberger, master of the rolls, sitting in London with Lord Justice Maurice Kay and Lord Justice Stanley Burnton to rule that her sacking without compensation was so legally flawed as to be null and void, and that she still remained entitled to her full salary and pension from Haringey up to the present day. Allowing her challenge, the judges ruled that Balls and Haringey had acted too hastily and in a way that was procedurally unfair because Shoesmith had not been given a proper chance to put her case. Peter Connelly died in August 2007 at the hands of his mother Tracey Connelly, her lover Steven Barker and their lodger, Barker’s brother Jason Owen. The little boy had suffered 50 injuries despite receiving 60 visits from social workers, doctors and police over the final eight months of his life. A series of reviews identified missed opportunities when officials could have saved his life if they had acted properly on the warning signs. Baby P Child protection Ofsted Employment tribunals Local government guardian.co.uk
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