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No Writer
Apr 24
Man charged with murder of headteacher who was knocked off bike

Simon Richardson, 34, faces charges of murder, manslaughter, dangerous driving, failing to stop and driving without insurance after a collision in Altrincham, Cheshire, at around 6.10pm on Monday. Headteacher Michael Mullins, 56, from nearby Northwich, was treated at the scene but died shortly after. Richardson, of no fixed abode, was remanded in custody and is due to appear at Manchester and Salford Magistrates Court later today. Officers have since made an appeal for CCTV, dashcam or doorbell footage from around the area at the time of the incident. Mr Mullins, headteacher of Stretford Grammar School, was described as a "loving dad, husband, brother-in-law, 'Diddy', uncle, son-in-law" by his family. Read more from Sky News:Ex-policeman stripped of UK citizenship speaks to Sky NewsWorld Cup final tickets go on sale for $2.3m They said he "passed away after being knocked off his bike." The tribute went on: "He was devoted to his family, and our lives will never be the same. "Our dad gave us fantastic memories growing up including a trip getting lost at night around Washington DC but it was in his role as a grandad where he truly excelled. "Our love and memories of Michael will know no limits. "We will love him forever, to Saturn and beyond."

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Sarah Taaffe-Maguire, business and economics reporter
Apr 23
Shareholders 'overwhelmingly' approve Paramount takeover of Warner Bros

The shareholders, who own Warner Bros Discovery (WBD), voted "overwhelmingly" to approve the adoption of the merger agreement with Paramount, WBD said. A merger of WBD and Paramount Skydance is one of the biggest media deals in history, with significant impacts on TV, filmmaking and the possible future of the cinema. Money blog: McDonald's to increase prices A Paramount-Warner combination encompasses two of Hollywood's five legacy studios. In total, the deal has been valued at $110bn (£81.4bn) - $31 per WBD share and additional fees. Thursday's vote was described as "another key milestone toward completing this historic transaction" by WBD. The deal, it said, "will deliver exceptional value to our stockholders" and will be completed between July and September this year, subject to regulatory approval. "We will continue to work with Paramount to complete the remaining steps in this process that will create a leading, next-generation media and entertainment company," the statement continued. While both Democrats and Republicans have raised concerns the merger could result in higher prices and fewer choices for customers, WBD on Thursday said the combined company will "expand consumer choice and benefit the global creative talent community". Why does it matter? A combined Warner Bros and Paramount has huge potential to reshape Hollywood and change film and TV production. Paramount Skydance will now own CNN, as well as CBS News, sparking concern about concentrating news services within a small number of companies. The company is also headed by David Ellison, the son of Trump ally Larry Ellison, who put up tens of billions of dollars to satisfy funding guarantees for the WBD bid. Cinema operators have also expressed concern that combining ​the large Hollywood studios could cost jobs and reduce the ​number ⁠of films released in theatres. Harry Potter, Superman and Barbie movies - as well as hit TV series like Succession - will join Paramount's content library. Paramount's line-up of titles include Top Gun and The Godfather as well as the Paramount+ streaming service.

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Beth Rigby, political editor
Apr 24
Green ambitions, leaving NATO and apologising over breast hypnosis claim - Polanski's success brings more scrutiny

There's a bank of cameras, cars honking as they drive past and plenty of handshakes following the leader of the Greens as he walks up the high street in Levenshulme. Politics Hub: Follow the latest He's here to talk about rejuvenating the high street in this pocket of Manchester that turned from red to green in the Gorton and Denton by-election in February. It caused a not-so-minor political earthquake on the left and Polanski is hoping to shake up a lot more in May's elections. He tells me, as we walk down the high street in the sunshine, that Labour are going to have a "disastrous" set of local elections and that he thinks Keir Starmer will be out of Number 10 in the next couple of months. "I don't see how he survives this set of elections. "I just feel like there's been a sense it hasn't happened for a long time because there was no obvious successor, but you can't keep going like that. "At some point you have to say it can't get any worse, and actually I think there's a general consensus that his poll ratings have bottomed out as low as they can go, to the point that may be the Mandelson stuff doesn't affect him as it should." 'Greens will replace Labour' In London, Polanski could potentially win four boroughs that have long been Labour - Hackney, where Polanski lives, Lambeth, Lewisham and Waltham Forest, according to a YouGov MRP poll. Across England, Polanski's Greens are expected to gain hundreds of council seats. He tells me the Greens are going to replace Labour. When I ask him who, should Starmer be forced out of office, he'd find the most difficult Labour character to face as his successor, that it would be Andy Burnham. "We'd be in a similar political space, but as a member of this country, I'd much rather have someone more progressive leading the government than Keir Starmer." Got a question for Beth Rigby about this or any other story? Ask here But for all the talk of a green wave, Polanski's Greens seem a very long way from replacing Labour. Rather like Corbyn's Labour, Polanski's eco-populism brand has energised younger, urban and ethnic minority voters. Party membership has grown from 50,000 when he was running for party leader to over 225,000 in the eight months since he's had the job. It's impressive on any measure. The question for Polanski, as it was for Farage's Reform as it began the transition from being a party of protest to one seriously vying for power, is how to put together policies and people to appeal to a wider group of voters: when I sat down with him in the local park in Levenshulme, I wanted to know how the Green Party bridges that gap. For now, the Greens seem to be following a 50-seat strategy in a general election, pitching themselves as an alternative left party, rather than building a broader coalition by picking off voters in more traditionally Conservative areas - Herefordshire, Rossendale, Amber Valley - concerned about the environment - the type of coalition of different voters a party needs to win marginal seats. When I ask Polanski what he's going to do to appeal to more voters, he tells me that part of it is the way the party communicates with voters. "They all know we want to protect the environment and tackle the climate crisis, that's never going to change. But I think people are less aware about our policies to tax multimillionaires and billionaires. To really tackle the fact that people have low wages and high bills." 👉 Click here to listen to Electoral Dysfunction on your podcast app 👈 Where he is less comfortable is talking about defence. Polling shows that over one in two voters don't trust the Greens on defence - and when I ask Polanski about his approach to NATO, he veers away from the party policy to remain a member of NATO, he gives me a much more nuanced answer when I ask him if he wants to leave the security alliance. "I want us to create an alternative alliance to have that discussion." When I press him again about wanting to leave, he tells me: "Not immediately, once we get an alternative alliance with our European neighbours, so we can ensure our military, our security, then to start working towards that alternative alliance." His argument is that NATO is not working because Donald Trump is being "deliberately antagonistic" and that European allies should build an alternative alliance. But on what those timeframes of exiting NATO and building this new alliance with European countries (already in NATO) are, he's less clear. It doesn't seem to me to be very thought-through policy on a matter of such importance, as Western allies face wars on two fronts - in Ukraine and the Middle East. The Polanski factor There's also Polanski himself. The leader undoubtedly has huge appeal, knows how to work social media in the attention economy and is a fluent communicator. But here are questions around his leadership and judgement. This week, he provoked alarm among the Jewish community when he said of the horrific wave of anti-semitic attacks: "There's a conversation to be had about whether it's a perception of unsafety or whether it's actual unsafety, but neither are acceptable." That phrase - the "perception of unsafety" - was seized upon by many in the Jewish community as somehow downplaying the rise of antisemitism Jewish people are experiencing and the way the community is feeling. When I put that to Polanski, he told me: "Neither are acceptable, and that's why I said that. And look, this context is I'm one of five Jewish people who have ever led a political party in British history." Read more from Sky News:World Cup final tickets go on sale for $2.3m eachBabies held aloft at funeral of father shot in Israeli settler attack When I also put it to Polanski that for some talking of a "perception of unsafety" was somehow downplaying these attacks, he said: "Those people would be taking me out of context and doing it for their own particular political reasons. What I think I'm saying is very clear, that both arsons and dressing up an artificial image of a Jewish leader dressed as a Nazi is also unacceptable. One is actually making Jewish people unsafe, and one is a perception of unsafety. "Of course, as a Jewish man, I care about antisemitism." Keir Starmer said Polanski's comments were "disgraceful" as antisemitism was "very real" and "felt throughout the whole community". On his judgement, one other thing I could not shake was why he did an interview with the Sun newspaper in 2013, claiming he could hypnotise a woman into having bigger breasts. It was a long time ago, when he was 30 years old and before he was in politics - but when I dug out the article and read it, I found it such an odd thing to do and I wanted to understand why he did it. First, he told me the article was nonsense, but when I pushed back and pointed out that there were direct quotes from him in the article and he endorsed it a few days after it was published on a BBC radio show, he then admits "it was the Sun journalist's idea and I should have said no". "I wasn't a politician; I went along with the idea. I shouldn't have done it and that's what I've apologised for," he added. When I ask him what he says to those voters looking at this and women who might find it uncomfortable, he tells me: "I do appreciate you asking me the question because ultimately I do want to speak to those women, but that article doesn't represent me. It was a wrong thing to do to go along with a Sun journalist, that's why I apologised, that is why I'll continue to apologise. But I think when people look at my record as a politician, not just as leader of the Green Party, but the last few years as an elected member of the London Assembly, I've got a strong record of working with women on women's rights. "I understand how people can look at the history and go 'that was strange'. I often think about what Tony Benn said, which is 'I don't care where you came from, I care where you're going' and I stand by that apology, but I think most people are interested right now in what I and the Green Party are doing." Polanski tells me, for the record, he now doesn't believe that you can enlarge women's breasts through hypnotherapy. But what he does believe is that the Green Party is going to grow rapidly in the coming weeks and months. But with more success, more seats, more power, comes more scrutiny. Is Polanski and his party really ready for that? This interview is part of a series that Sky News will be conducting with party leaders ahead of the May elections.

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No Writer
Apr 23
Premier League Darts: Luke Littler beats Jonny Clayton and silences Liverpool crowd to close gap at top of table

Clayton is still in top spot in the Premier League with four regular weeks remaining on 32 points, but Littler is now just three points behind on 29. Gerwyn Price sits in third spot on 19 points, with Michael van Gerwen in fourth on 18 points. Premier League darts: Latest schedule and results ✅Darts in 2026: Key dates, calendar, results 📅Got Sky? Watch on the Sky Sports app 📱Not got Sky? Get instant access with NOW 📺 Gian van Veen is then next in line on 14 points, while defending champion Luke Humphries is in sixth on 13 points, with the race for Finals Night really hitting crunch time. The win marks Littler's fourth nightly win of his campaign and the Manchester native spent his night defying the jeers of the partisan Liverpool audience who were on his opponent's side throughout the evening. However, Littler stayed strong throughout, especially on the doubles, and sealed a big win in his quest to go into Finals Night in top spot. "It was a good night. I'm very happy with myself," Littler told Sky Sports. "Usually the doubling is not there, but I'm very thankful it was tonight. A lot of crucial doubles at crucial times. "I'm very close to Jonny now, three points off. I'm going to go chasing - I want to finish top once again - and if it's not to be, it's not to be. But there's still four weeks to go." In the final against Clayton, Littler raced into a 5-0 lead as he denied the Welshman any opportunity to get into the contest. In the first three legs Clayton's only checkout chances came on bullseye. Clayton managed to stop the rot to ensure he did not suffer a whitewash defeat but that only delayed Littler's victory by one leg. Littler imperious to overcome MVG, Humphries Littler defied an imperious display from Michael van Gerwen as he took the deciding leg in a 6-5 semi-final. The match was a display of vintage Van Gerwen with nine maximums, 71 per cent on the doubles, and a 107.54 average for the Dutchman but somehow Littler managed to hang on, change his darts, and go from 3-1 down to showing off imperious finishing. Even after Littler's fight back, it looked like the match was Van Gerwen's to take when he broke Littler's throw with an 11-darter to move 5-4 in front and give himself the opportunity to throw for the match. However, Littler made sure to break straight back, let out a celebration, and take the game all the way. The world No 1 then found a 180 at the most pivotal moment of the final leg to set himself up on 46, which he took out on tops before giving it large to the crowd. Luke Humphries was dealt a devastating blow to his Premier League finals night hopes following a 6-2 loss to Littler in the quarter-finals, seeing him walk away from Liverpool with no more points. While Humphries was scoring higher, his doubling was looser and down at just 18 per cent, allowing Littler to rattle off four legs as he raced into a 4-0 lead. Although Humphries managed to hold his throw twice, it was nowhere near enough as he fell to a seventh loss to the world No 1 in their last eight meetings. Clayton shows class in wins vs Van Veen, Bunting Clayton booked his spot in a sixth nightly final with a captivating last-leg 6-5 win over Gian van Veen. Van Veen looked in control as he went 2-0 up but the Welshman showed again that he is battle hardened as he lasted through a flurry of breaks of throw before eventually holding, during which he found a massive 121 checkout, to level the game at 3-3. After holding once again, 'The Ferret' clinched a sensational 156 checkout to move one leg from victory. That was not the end of the tale because Van Veen found a break of his own to level the scores at 5-5. However, after Van Veen missed a match dart at the bull, Clayton fired in a maximum and got down to D16, which he took under pressure for a shot at glory in Liverpool. Clayton also came through a nail-biting 6-5 quarter-final against hometown hero Stephen Bunting. The game went entirely with throw and, as he has done throughout the entire Premier League, Clayton grew into the game, stayed calm, and clinched the match on D8 in a nervy decider much to the disappointment of the partisan Liverpudlian crowd. Such is Clayton's consistency across this Premier League that the win marked his ninth quarter-final win across 12 weeks. Elsewhere, Van Veen started his night by winning a touch 6-4 battle against Gerwyn Price as he debuted new darts. Meanwhile, Van Gerwen started his night with a comprehensive 6-3 win over Josh Rock. Who will win this year's Premier League Darts? Luke Humphries will be defending his title and you can watch the action every single Thursday until May on Sky Sports. Stream darts and more top sport with NOW.

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Jenness Mitchell, Scotland reporter
Apr 24
Transgender prisoner charged with sexually assaulting inmate at Scottish jail

Alexandra Stewart, previously known as Alan Baker, is alleged to have carried out the attack at the mixed-sex HMP Greenock in Inverclyde. A Police Scotland spokesperson said: "A 38-year-old prisoner has been arrested and charged in connection with a sexual assault within HMP Greenock. "A report will be submitted to the Procurator Fiscal." The Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS) told Sky News it is yet to receive a report. A Scottish Prison Service (SPS) spokesperson said: "As this matter is subject to proceedings it would be inappropriate to comment further." The alleged incident comes amid an ongoing legal battle between For Women Scotland (FWS) and the Scottish government over the management of transgender prisoners. FWS is challenging the SPS guidance, arguing that only those born biologically female should be held in the women's estate. It follows the campaign group's landmark win at the UK Supreme Court last year, which ruled the definition of a "woman" and "sex" in the Equality Act 2010 refers to "a biological woman and biological sex". Current SPS guidance allows for a transgender woman to be admitted into the female estate if the inmate does not meet the violence against women and girls criteria, and there is no basis "to suppose" they could pose an "unacceptable risk of harm" to those also housed there. FWS is arguing the policy is "inconsistent" with the Supreme Court judgment. Read more from Sky News:Ex-policeman stripped of UK citizenship speaks to Sky News'African tribe' leader deported after eviction from Scottish woods During three days of hearings earlier this year, lawyers acting on behalf of the Scottish government argued it is right for ministers to take a "case-by-case" approach to transgender prisoners. Gerry Moynihan KC cited case law and article eight of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) in relation to the rights of trans people to live in their acquired gender. Both parties are now awaiting Lady Ross' ruling on the judicial review at the Court of Session in Edinburgh.

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No Writer
Apr 24
'Significant amount' of child abuse images recovered from iCloud account of US singer D4vd, say prosecutors

More details of the alleged offences emerged at a court hearing in California on Thursday, just days after the 21-year-old, whose real name is David Burke, pleaded not guilty to all the charges against him. The body of Celeste Rivas Hernandez, 14, from Lake Elsinore in California, was found in two bags in his Tesla that had been towed from the Hollywood Hills while he was on tour. On Thursday, prosecutors outlined how the investigation was progressing, stating that a "significant amount" of child sex abuse images were found on his iCloud storage account. "Today it's been exactly one year since the death of Celeste... We're eager to set this case for trial," deputy district attorney Beth Silverman told the court. She said the evidence includes the contents of his phone and iCloud accounts, items seized from many search warrants and a huge amount of forensic material. The prosecution has claimed Burke had been sexually abusing Celeste Rivas Hernandez for at least a year, starting when she was 13. It is alleged that he killed her on or around 23 April 2025, after she threatened to report the relationship, and dismembered her body about two weeks later. Burke arrived in a Los Angeles courtroom handcuffed and wearing orange jail clothes. The judge set out a four-to-five-day preliminary evidentiary hearing for 1 May. He pleaded not guilty on Monday to first-degree murder, lewd and lascivious acts with a person under 14 and mutilating a dead body. On Wednesday, the LA County medical examiner determined that the girl died from two penetrating wounds to her upper body, but investigators did not determine how she was injured. Read more from Sky News:Who is in control of the strait?Trump threatens 'big tariff'Trump hits out at Harry Her parents, Jesus Rivas and Mercedes Martinez, made their first public statement in the case on Tuesday, calling their daughter "a beautiful, strong girl who loved to sing and dance". "All we want is justice for Celeste," they added. In a rare move, the singer is exercising his right in California to have the preliminary evidence hearing within 10 court days of his initial court appearance, when the charges were disclosed. The prosecution accepted it was working on an incredibly tight timeline for the hearing, which usually comes many months after defendants are arrested and charged. Sky News' US partner NBC News reported that prosecutors are seeking three enhancements to the singer's murder charge: lying in wait, financial gain and murdering a witness to an investigation. D4vd, pronounced "David" is known for his blend of indie rock, R&B and lo-fi pop and gained success with his 2022 hit "Romantic Homicide".

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No Writer
Apr 24
Starmer 'put a nuclear bomb' under Mandelson row by sacking Olly Robbins

The prime minister fired the former Foreign Office chief last week over his decision not to tell him Peter Mandelson had failed security vetting. 👉 Click here to listen to Electoral Dysfunction on your podcast app 👈 Speaking on Electoral Dysfunction, Baroness Harman said the move "has made the whole thing blow up". "People in the party out in the country are thinking we wish he hadn't fired him, however much justification he had because he's put a nuclear bomb under the whole thing," she said. "He wouldn't have had to do the statement in the House of Commons. We wouldn't have had all this evidence to the select committee if he hadn't had fired Olly Robbins." "He could have done all the investigations and then possibly done due process of disciplining and firing Olly Robbins, but not actually a summary dismissal, which has made the whole thing blow up." Baroness Harman added Mandelson was "clearly the wrong appointment and a dangerous appointment for the UK to be making". Read more from Sky News:World Cup final tickets go on sale for $2.3m eachBabies held aloft at funeral of father shot in Israeli settler attack The row over Mandelson's vetting has consumed the government for the past week. The prime minister has claimed Sir Olly should have told him that UK Security Vetting (UKSV) had recommended against appointing Mandelson as UK ambassador to the US. But Sir Olly says it was down to him, as head of the Foreign Office, to decide whether to give Mandelson security clearance - and that UKSV considered it a borderline case. Sir Keir is once again facing a leadership crisis. All major political party leaders have called for him to resign, as have two backbench Labour MPs.

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No Writer
Apr 24
Elliot Anderson transfer news: Man City in pole position to sign Nottingham Forest midfielder amid interest from Man Utd and Arsenal

City are among a number of big clubs that want to sign him - including Manchester United and Arsenal - and well-placed sources increasingly believe he is destined for the Etihad. The England international, 23, has been interesting a number of Premier League rivals since joining Forest from Newcastle United in July 2024 for a fee of £35m. Burnley 0-1 Man City: Match report and reactionLive Premier League table | Watch FREE PL highlightsGot Sky? Watch Premier League games LIVE on your phone📱Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW 📺 It remains to be seen whether a deal can be agreed before or after the World Cup, where Anderson is expected to play a prominent role for Thomas Tuchel and England. Anderson's contract at the City Ground runs until June 2029, and his value is expected to be considerable as he is part of a group of elite central midfielders set to be on the market in the next window, which includes Sandro Tonali, Adam Wharton, Carlos Baleba and potentially Aurelian Tchouameni. City admire how Anderson has developed since joining Forest from Newcastle and relations between the two clubs are thought to be excellent. There may be changes in City's midfield this summer, with uncertainty around the futures of Mateo Kovacic and Nico Gonzalez, while it's already been confirmed Bernardo Silva will leave when his contract expires in June. Real Madrid are also interested in Rodri - but City want him to stay and sign a new contract, with his existing deal expiring in 2027. City eyeing attacking additions this summer The club are also looking at other positions, including forwards, and Sky Sports News can reveal two more names on their list of potential new recruits - RB Leipzig winger Yan Diomande and Bournemouth striker Eli Junior Kroupi. Diomande is one of the hottest prodigies on the market this summer, and is high on the lists at Liverpool and Bayern Munich among others. Kroupi is an excellent young prospect who has impressed since moving to Bournemouth last summer, scoring 11 goals in 29 Premier League appearances. City are currently well-stocked across the forward line however, with Savinho supporting Jeremy Doku on the left-wing and Omar Marmoush the backup centre-forward to Erling Haaland. Right-back is also an area City are looking at and Sky Sports News has already reported they are tracking the progress of young Feyenoord defender Givairo Read among others. Analysis: Anderson or Rodri? Why not both Sky Sports' Laura Hunter: There will be a natural compulsion to compare Elliot Anderson directly to Rodri as Man City try to fend off competition from across the Premier League to sign the Nottingham Forest midfielder this summer. But admiring their compatibility is equally interesting. Of course there are similarities to like. Both are the profile of midfielder you anchor a side around; they run hard and are formidable at breaking up play. But their functions quite obviously differ because of the teams they play for. Anderson is needed as a tough tackler, the third-most prolific in this category in the division, while Rodri is much more passive in this area given Man City spend the majority of time in possession of the ball. Anderson has also won 270 duels, a league high, more than double that of the Spaniard (106). But Rodri is elite at distributing under pressure, boasting an incredibly high retention rate, with few in Europe matching his ability to recycle possession and punch through the thirds. Since his ACL injury last season, though, he is much less inclined to carry the ball - something Anderson is superb at. Availability is also a strength of the 23-year-old, six years Rodri's junior. There is certainly a world, then, where a Rodri-Anderson partnership would serve City well, used together or in rotation. Anderson would of course need to guard against the fate of other high profile midfielders that have travelled to the Etihad with high promise and flopped. Kalvin Phillips is the best example of that. But take Matheus Nunes as another instance of a midfielder whose function had to change to full-back in order to avoid being cut adrift of Pep Guardiola's plans. He is a demanding man to work for, and this is not a role he likes to mess with.

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