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UK Metropolitan Police Officer, David Carrick Admits To Being Serial Rapist

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A Metropolitan Police armed officer who used his role to put fear into his victims has admitted dozens of rape and sexual offenses against 12 women.

According to BBC, 48-Yr-Old David Carrick, who met some victims through dating websites, pleaded guilty to 49 offenses across two decades.

The Met has apologized after it emerged he had come to the attention of police over nine incidents, including rape allegations, between 2000 and 2021.

A senior officer said his offending was “unprecedented in policing”.

Assistant Commissioner Barbara Gray, the Met’s lead for professionalism, said: “We should have spotted his pattern of abusive behavior and because we didn’t, we missed opportunities to remove him from the organization.

“We are truly sorry that being able to continue to use his role as a police officer may have prolonged the suffering of his victims.

“We know they felt unable to come forward sooner because he told them they would not be believed.”

Carrick, who admitted 24 counts of rape, was suspended from duty when he was arrested in October 2021.

His offenses spanned from 2003 to 2020 and most took place in Hertfordshire, where he lived.

Carrick, from Stevenage, would control what the women wore, what they ate, where they slept, and even stopped some of the women from speaking to their own children.

He was finally stopped when one woman did decide to report him. In October 2021, following publicity about disgraced Metropolitan Police officer PC Wayne Couzens, she contacted the police.

Jaswant Narwal, the chief crown prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service, said: “Carrick held a role where he was trusted with the responsibility of protecting the public, but yet over 17 years, in his private life, he did the exact opposite.

“This is a man who relentlessly degraded, belittled, and sexually assaulted and raped women.

“As time went on, the severity of his offending intensified as he became emboldened, thinking he would get away with it.”

She said the “scale of the degradation Carrick subjected his victims to is unlike anything I’ve encountered in my 34 years with the Crown Prosecution Service”.

Carrick, who served with the Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command, met some victims through online dating sites such as Tinder and Badoo and used his role as a police officer to gain their trust.

He admitted four counts of rape, false imprisonment, and indecent assault relating to a 40-year-old woman in 2003, at Southwark Crown Court on Monday.

It can now be reported that Carrick had already pleaded guilty to 43 charges, including 20 counts of rape, in December.

Carrick admitted raping nine women, some on multiple occasions over months or years, with many of those attacks involving violence that would have left them physically injured.

Speaking outside court, Det Ch Insp Iain Moor, from Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire Major Crime Unit, said: “The details of David Carrick’s crimes are truly shocking.

“I suspect many will be appalled and sickened by his actions, but I hope the victims and the public more widely are reassured that no one is above the law and the police service will relentlessly pursue those offenders who target women in this way.”

He said he expected even more victims to come forward.

Carrick admitted to false imprisonment offenses, having on a number of occasions forced one of his victims into a small cupboard under the stairs at his home.

Det Ch Insp Moor, the senior investigating officer, said: “I have seen bigger dog crates.”

After Carrick’s first guilty pleas, the Met stopped his pay and began an accelerated misconduct process, with a hearing due to take place on Tuesday.

Harriet Wistrich, director of campaign group the Centre for Women’s Justice, said: “We have known for some time that there has been a culture of impunity for such offending by police officers.

“Recent reports show a woefully deficient vetting and misconduct system and a largely unchallenged culture of misogyny in some sections of the Met.

“That Carrick could have not only become a police officer but remain a serving officer for so long whilst he perpetrated these horrific crimes against women, is terrifying.”

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said he was “absolutely sickened and appalled” by Carrick’s crimes.

He said “serious questions must be answered about how he was able to abuse his position as an officer in this horrendous manner”.

In the wake of the murder of Sarah Everard by a serving Met officer, the force publicly proclaimed its commitment to protecting women and launched an “action plan” to try to regain trust.

But it has now admitted its professional standards department made no attempt to check the full record of another officer accused of rape.

The prime minister’s official spokesman said it was “an appalling case” and that Rishi Sunak’s “thoughts are with all of [Carrick’s] victims”.

“There is no place in our police forces for officers who fall so seriously short of the acceptable standards of behaviour and are not fit to wear the uniform.”

Sal Naseem, from the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), said no opportunities to stop Carrick earlier had been identified by police so far.

Two retired Met officers who dealt with a 2002 allegation of assault and harassment against Carrick may have committed misconduct, but as they cannot face misconduct proceedings, the IOPC decided it was not in the public interest to take further action.

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BREAKING: Nnamdi Kanu Refuses To Open Defence, Says There’s No Charge Against Him

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Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), has refused to open his defence in the terrorism case filed against him by the federal government.

At the resumed proceedings on Monday, Kanu — who recently dismissed his legal team and opted to represent himself — told the court that after reviewing his case file, he found no valid charge against him.

“Join me in praising God. I have gone through my case file, and there is no charge against me,” Kanu said in court.

The separatist leader, dressed in white, told the presiding judge that the charges were baseless and could not be supported by any existing Nigerian law.

“There is no extant law in this country upon which the prosecution can predicate the charges against me. If there’s any, let my Lord read it out to me,” he said.

Kanu insisted that he should not be compelled to defend a charge that, according to him, does not exist under Nigerian law.

“So, I should not enter any defence in a charge that does not exist under any law in Nigeria. I urge you to release me today or grant me bail,” he told the court.

The matter was adjourned after his statement, as the court is expected to decide on the next line of action regarding his refusal to proceed with defence.

 

More to come…

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“It’s The Will Of The American People” — Former White House Strategist Stephen Bannon Says Trump Will Get Third Term

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Stephen Bannon, a former White House chief strategist, says US President Donald Trump will get a third term in office.

Bannon, who served briefly under Trump’s first administration, made the claim in an interview with The Economist on Thursday.

“Trump is going to be president in ’28, and people ought to just get accommodated with that,” Bannon said.

The statement has stirred controversy across political circles in the US, as the country’s 22nd Amendment forbids a president from seeking office for more than two four-year terms — whether consecutive or not.

When asked if he meant the law would be disregarded, Bannon responded:

“There’s many different alternatives. At the appropriate time, we’ll lay out what the plan is — but there is a plan.”

He insisted that Trump’s re-election is a necessity, arguing that the US needs him “to finish what we started”.

“He is a vehicle of divine providence — an instrument of divine will,” Bannon said. “We need him for at least one more term, and he’ll get that in ’28. The only way President Trump wins in 2028 and continues to stay in office is by the will of the American people — and the will of the American people is what the Constitution embodies.”

Barely a week into his second term, Republican lawmakers began floating the idea of keeping Trump in office beyond the constitutional limit.

Trump himself appeared to encourage the idea earlier this year. In March, he said he was considering the possibility because “a lot of people” wanted him to.

He later walked back the statement in May.

But last week, Trump reignited speculation when he posted an AI-generated video on his Truth Social account depicting a Time magazine cover featuring imaginary campaign signs for 2024, 2028, 2032, and beyond.

The post was accompanied by other digitally edited clips portraying him as a king and dumping brown liquid on protesters carrying “No Kings” placards.

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FG To Introduce Law Mandating Public Officials To Fly Nigerian Airlines On International Routes

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Festus Keyamo, minister of aviation and aerospace development, says the federal government is working on a bill that will mandate public officials to patronise Nigerian airlines on international routes.

Speaking on Sunday during the ceremonial send-off of Air Peace’s inaugural direct flight from Abuja to London Heathrow Airport, Keyamo said the proposed bill, titled “Fly Nigerian Act”, will be presented to the national assembly soon.

Benjamin Kalu, deputy speaker of the house of representatives, and Allen Onyema, chairman of Air Peace, were at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport to witness the event.

“We are going to bring the bill on the Fly Nigerian Air to him (Benjamin Kalu). He will pass it,” Keyamo said.

The minister explained that the proposed legislation would require every government official travelling abroad to first patronise local airlines operating on the same route, except where no Nigerian carrier flies that route.

Keyamo noted that such a move aligns with international best practices, citing examples of countries like the United States and India which have similar laws protecting their national carriers.

“We have the Fly American Act. I think we have the Fly India Act. We have these laws all over the world, but we have not implemented them,” he said.

“If a government official, member of the house of representatives, member of the senate, minister, DG, or government official is flying to any part of the world, the first question you ask them is: is there a Nigerian airline flying that route? You must buy that airline ticket first, except that they are not flying that route. That is the Fly Nigerian Act that we want to do.”

He assured that his ministry is committed to ensuring the passage of the legislation, adding that it will strengthen Nigeria’s aviation industry and boost confidence in domestic carriers.

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