CPS drops case against Rebecca Leighton, who was accused of tampering with drips at a Stockport hospital Prosecutors have dropped charges against the 27-year-old nurse accused of poisoning patients at a hospital. It is “no longer appropriate” to continue the case against Rebecca Leighton, who was charged with contaminating saline drips at Stepping Hill hospital, Stockport, the Crown Prosecution Service said. CPS prosecutor Nazir Afzal said: “The inquiries, which are still ongoing, have not so far provided us with a stronger case which would meet the test that there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction.” Leighton, who was arrested in July by detectives investigating the deaths of patients, was being freed from jail this afternoon. The CPS said Greater Manchester police’s investigation into the deaths continues and “if further evidence is presented”, then the prosecution could be restarted. Afzal added: “Rebecca Leighton was charged on the basis that there was a reasonable suspicion she had committed the offences and there were reasonable grounds for believing the continuing investigation would provide further evidence within a reasonable amount of time. “When we make a decision on this basis, it would be wrong of us to keep a suspect in custody indefinitely without keeping a very close eye on what evidence is emerging and whether objections to bail can be justified.” Leighton was held in Styal prison while a trial date was being set for next year amid accusations that she tampered with saline ampoules, saline bags and medical products. Afzal said: “We have conducted a review of the case with senior police officers and sought the advice of leading counsel on whether it would be right to keep Rebecca Leighton in custody while investigations are continuing. “The advice we have received is that on the evidence currently available there is not a case in law which could proceed and that the charges should be discontinued. “We have therefore this afternoon informed the prison where Rebecca Leighton is being held on remand that the case against her has been discontinued and she can be released immediately. It is right and proper for us to do this.” Afzal said there was “sufficient evidence” for a conviction against Leighton over one charge of theft of medication but “we have decided it is not in the public interest to proceed” considering the time she had already spent in custody. Police continue to investigate the suspicious deaths of Tracey Arden, 44, Arnold Lancaster, 71, Derek Weaver, 83, and Vera Pearson, 84. The alarm was raised when a higher than normal number of patients were reported to have “unexplained” low blood sugar levels. Crime guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A trio of deaths has put the spotlight on the role of tough guys in hockey like never before. Recently retired player Wade Belak was found hanged in a hotel room this week. His death follows that of Rick Rypien, who died in apparent suicide last month, and New York…
Continue reading …Followers told jungle drink ayahuasca cured serious illnesses including cancer A British “shaman” caught administering a potion containing a class A hallucinogenic drug to 17 followers at a candlelit “healing” ceremony has been jailed for 15 months. Peter Aziz, from Devon, who claims to have spent years in the jungles of Peru learning the art of making the drink ayahuasca, provided the brew which contained N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) during a week-long retreat in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset. He told the followers at the Dorville hotel in December 2007 that it would cure serious illnesses including cancer. Aziz, 51, of Buckfastleigh, was found guilty producing and supplying a class A drug by a jury at Bristol crown court. Judge Michael Roach accepted Aziz had tried to help others but told him: “You knew it was wrong to produce this drug and you knew it was wrong to supply it but produce and supply it you did. “I have to treat this matter as serious, which means a prison sentence.” Kate Brunner, prosecuting, told the jury: “The participants sat around in a circle, candles were lit and he poured out his brew into plastic or paper cups. “They drank it and when people drink this brew they vomit frequently. Some participants had hallucinogenic experiences. They felt that they were going on a journey. “Whilst some found the experience restorative, others felt terrified.” Nick Lewin, representing Aziz, said he was a “fundamentally good man” who was determined to help other people. Aziz made only £10,000 a year and lived in a two-bedroom former council house with his family. “This isn’t a case where a man is selling cocaine to make a good living of Maseratis and villas on the Riviera,” he told the court. “The money he was making from these events was little more than a subsistence income. “It has caused him a considerable amount of worry as far as his personal beliefs are concerned. He has learned what can be learned from this and will not be before the court again.” According to his website, Aziz has spent 35 years training as a shaman. He claims to have helped a disabled boy walk again and healed broken bones within a few hours. Outside court, Detective Chief Inspector Phil Jones, of Avon and Somerset police, said DMT was a dangerous drug. Crime Drugs Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Regulator forced to accept overseas nurses without up-to-date training while similar UK applicants are turned away Nurses and midwives from other EU countries are being registered to work in the UK despite not having worked with patients for 20 years, regulators have told a House of Lords inquiry. The Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) is being forced to accept foreign applicants without any recent experience to its register while British nurses without up-to-date training have had to leave the profession. The council’s chief executive, Dickon Weir-Hughes, said it had to operate a two-tier system because of EU rules on the free movement of workers. The revelation came in evidence to a Lords sub-committee investigating the mobility of healthcare professionals between member states. In evidence to the same inquiry the doctors’ regulatory body, the General Medical Council (GMC) revealed that a foreign doctor’s husband contacted them on her behalf to register her for work because she could not speak English. The European commission is reviewing the rules governing mutual recognition of professional qualifications. The government and healthcare bodies have been pressing for changes for two years after the Guardian revealed how a German doctor, Daniel Ubani, who was subsequently ruled incompetent by a coroner and the GMC, accidentally killed a patient on his first UK locum shift by administering a massive overdose of painkillers. The sub-committee has published written and oral evidence as it prepares what is expected to be an extremely critical report on the current arrangements. The NMC has a register of 670,000 professionals, with about 7,000 nurses and midwives from elsewhere in the EU applying each year. Weir-Hughes told peers he was concerned about the “integrity” of the register. The council required British nurses and midwives to undergo a specific number of hours of continuing professional development (CPD) and training every three years, he said. Nurses who did not complete this further training could no longer be registered. However, some EU applicants had not worked as nurses in two decades. “They make no secret of that; they simply have not practised as they have been doing other things,” he told the sub-committee. “Until fairly recently I was refusing those people entry to the register but under EU law that was not acceptable, so our council very reluctantly decided that I had to admit them. “We now have a situation whereby we are admitting people who literally have not been near a patient for 20 years, have done no CPD and have to be admitted to the register because they have freedom of movement and rights. Yet if they were a UK-registered nurse or midwife, they would not be allowed to continue. Indeed, they would have to do a return-to-practice course at a school of nursing or midwifery.” At another hearing, the GMC’s chief executive, Niall Dickson, told how a member of his staff was contacted over an EU doctor’s potential application to join the UK’s medical register. They realised “they were speaking to the doctor’s husband because the doctor could not speak English well enough to have a conversation with someone in a contact centre”, said Dickson. “Our member of staff kept on saying ‘I need to speak to the doctor.’ The husband helpfully said, ‘No, you can’t speak to her because I am busy translating for her.’” Ubani, though struck off in Britain, is still allowed to practise in Germany. In July an administrative medical court in Westfalen-Lippe, Germany, fined him €7,000 (around £6,000) for breaking the country’s code of conduct for doctors. However, a ruling said his performance in the UK “cannot be seen as an expression of his indifference towards his patients”. It added: “It serves rather more to cast doubt on the professional competence of the accused than his personal integrity and his professional ethics.” Nursing Midwifery Doctors Health NHS European Union Europe James Meikle guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The Federal Housing Finance Agency—the agency behind Fanny Mae and Freddy Mac—is poised to sue more than a dozen big banks for their role in the mortgage meltdown mess for billions of dollars. The feds are accusing the banks of misrepresenting the quality of mortgage securities, reports the…
Continue reading …West fears heatseeking surface-to-air missiles will fall into terrorists’ hands Libya must urgently secure weapons hoarded by the Gaddafi regime amid growing fears that smugglers are exploiting the chaos there to loot hundreds of portable missiles and other small arms, western officials have warned. The US and Nato are pressing the National Transitional Council to make the issue a priority because of concerns that the trade has already begun, with reports that some African mercenaries who fought for Colonel Muammar Gaddafi are returning home laden with weapons. One anxiety is that Gaddafi’s remaining stockpile of shoulder-launched missiles could end up in the hands of terrorists. The UK’s National Security Council raised the issue with Libyan rebels in March and the Guardian understands that US officials based in Benghazi are now taking a lead in helping to identify where the caches may be, and how best to protect them. The UK and France have special forces in Libya, but officials would not be drawn on whether the soldiers are now involved in anti-smuggling operations. In a private meeting with NTC leaders at the Friends of Libya summit in Paris, the US secretary of state Hillary Clinton said the safety of the Gaddafi’s weapons was “an urgent security priority facing Libya and the broader region”. A Nato official added: “The risk of seeing weapons reaching members of terrorist organisations is always a concern. We know from experience that extremists and terrorists can take advantage of instability and lawlessness. We should do our utmost to avoid that situation. We expect all sides to maintain accountability of weapons.” A spokesman for the British government said: “The issue of proliferation in Libya has been a priority for the National Security Council since this crisis began.”We have raised it with the NTC at regular intervals to ensure that weapons are secured and monitored the situation closely.” The Guardian has spoken to a number of NGOs and independent observers who believe that scores of weapons from the Gaddafi arsenal have already disappeared and that the trade presents a potential threat to the region. Fred Abrahams of Human Rights Watch, who is in Tripoli, said anti-tank missiles were among weapons looted by Libyans before anti-Gaddafi militias overran western towns. “There are reports of Libyans picking up anti-tank missiles like ants. Every second Libyan has arms. The UN should be thinking of a decommissioning programme, a buy-back programme.” Abrahams said concern was not only about the number of missiles, including Grad truck-mounted rockets, but what he called “standard bullets and bombs” – equipment that could be used to make improvised explosive devices, widely deployed by insurgents in Afghanistan. Early in the six-month conflict, thousands of 122mm Grad rockets were reportedly found in abandoned bunkers in eastern Libya. British officials say they are concerned in particular about heatseeking man-portable air defence systems (Manpads), such as SA7 shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles, getting into the wrong hands. Though most military aircraft are now equipped with countermeasures, civilian planes are not. Helicopters remain vulnerable to rocket-propelled grenades, officials said. Referring to reports that anti-Gaddafi rebels have been selling arms, Matt Schroeder, director of the arms sales monitoring group at the Federation of American Scientists in Washington, said this was “feasible and plausible … weapons may have been trafficked”. The US has promised $4.5m to collect and destroy Libya’s missiles and other light weapons, according to the congressional research service and state department. Officials in Mali confirmed last week that a leader of the country’s last Tuareg rebellion had been killed on his way back from fighting for Gaddafi. Though the circumstances were confused, Reuters quoted a military official in Mali saying that Ibrahim Ag Bahanga was killed as he smuggled weapons across the border from Libya. “He had got his hands on lots of weapons in Libya … and he hid them on the border with Algeria and Niger,” the official said. US officials were reported as saying that a small number of Soviet-made SA 7 missiles from Libya had reached the black market in Mali, where al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb has been active. Other regional governments fear that the region could become even more lawless due to an influx of weapons and fighters from Libya’s conflict. Earlier this week, Algeria’s foreign minister said his government was certain that al-Qaida’s north African affiliate had obtained weapons on the black market that flourished during the Libyan civil war. Mourad Medelci said countries across North Africa had seen proof “on the ground” that al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb had taken advantage of instability in Libya to procure weapons with which to expand its campaign of terrorism. “It’s not just a worry or a feeling, it’s a certainty,” Medelci told French radio. Libya was vulnerable to terrorists taking refuge within its borders and using the country as a springboard for terrorism throughout the region, AFP, the French news agency, reported. Pieter Wezeman of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Sipri, which monitors the arms trade, said Gaddafi imported hunderds of French-made Milan guided missiles and Russian SA 24 missile launchers adding to an arsenal which included some 20,000 older short-range surface-to-air missiles. “Many of those, we know, are now not accounted for, and that’s going to be a concern for some period of time,” General Carter Ham, head of the US military’s Africa Command, told the Senate armed services committee in April. The British government approved the sale to Libya of equipment including guns and small-arms ammunition valued at more than £200m over the first nine months of last year, according to the latest figures compiled for the Foreign Office. In 2007–2008 Ukraine supplied more than 100,000 rifles to Libya. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Middle East Africa Global terrorism Nato Arms trade al-Qaida Military Richard Norton-Taylor Nick Hopkins guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …When President Obama stands before Congress on Thursday to lay out his new ideas for the improving the economy, he will face a daunting task. Job growth ground to a halt in August, unemployment remains above 9 percent, and the president’s approval ratings have fallen to around 40 percent. How much blame does Obama deserve
Continue reading …Politics and a concert did not make beautiful music yesterday in London. A noisy pro-Palestinian protest against the Israeli Philharmonic at Albert Hall prevented a BBC radio broadcast of the music, part of Britain’s celebrated Proms music festival. The persistent protesters were organized by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, whose representatives…
Continue reading …Glenn Beck thinks it’s time to ditch “African-American” and go back to using “black” or even “colored,” or so he said on his radio program earlier this week, reports the Cleveland Leader . “Didn’t you feel ridiculously stupid everywhere in Africa, in Europe, in South America, in Jerusalem, when you would…
Continue reading …It’s a vacation package you couldn’t find on Travelocity: Sun, sand —and firing heavy weapons in a revolution. But that’s the summer trip that UCLA math major Chris Jeon, 21 , is enjoying, reports the Christian Science Monitor . “At spring break I told my friends a ‘sick’ vacation would be to…
Continue reading …