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Man sentenced to 12 months for transphobic hate crime

A man has been sentenced after being convicted of committing a transphobic hate crime.

Darren McClean, aged 38, of Highdown Lane, Sutton pleaded guilty to using abusive behaviour to cause harassment at Guildford Crown Court and was sentenced to two months behind bars on Friday 21 April.

On March 15 2017, McClean verbally abused Philippa Baker, a transgender female, whilst shopping at a local supermarket in Caterham.

Philippa was buying groceries at the self-serve checkout when McClean started shouting offensive and transphobic comments at her. She approached McClean and asked him to stop however he continued and began taking pictures of her on his mobile phone.

McClean was eventually removed from the supermarket by security staff leaving Philippa shaken by the attack.

Following the incident, McClean posted images taken on his mobile phone onto Facebook where he continued to make transphobic and hateful comments.

Philippa said: “The comments that were made to me were completely vile. He spoke with such hatred which I have not been subjected to previously. I was just minding my own business paying for my items when I was caught off guard by the abuse I received. I would like to thank PC Kara Lyford and Surrey Police for their support and reassurance throughout the case. ”

PC Kara Lyford, added: “Philippa was subjected to an awful ordeal whilst simply going about her day to day life. McLean not only verbally abused her but then proceeded to threaten her and take pictures of her without her consent. When she asked him to stop, he refused and continued to hurl abuse and made extremely offensive and completely unacceptable comments.”

“As a result Philippa has suffered a great deal and has feared for her personal safety. I would like to reassure the residents of Caterham and particularly our LGBT+ communities that we do not tolerate hate crime in any way. We take all reports of hate seriously and will take action. This sentencing result will hopefully give Philippa a sense of justice that she deserves.”

McClean was also sentenced to 10 months for breaching his suspended sentence after he was found guilty of a burglary in Redhill on February 5, 2016. 

If you have been a victim of hate crime, dial 999 or to report online, click here:

Alternatively the independent charity Crimestoppers can be contacted anonymously on 0800 555 111.

MET adopt strip search guidance following IPCC investigation

An Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) investigation into the actions of a Metropolitan Police officer during a strip search conducted at a London custody suite has led to improved training for officers being adopted nationally.

The investigation highlighted existing ambiguity within the police guidance relating to strip searches and intimate searches.

A recommendation was made to the College of Policing that clearer guidance be published on what parts of the anatomy can be physically touched during a strip search and during an intimate search.

This recommendation was adopted.

The Metropolitan Police also adopted a recommendation made following the investigation to include specific training to all recruits on the different types of search that can be undertaken by officers.

PC Lesley Wade, serving with the Metropolitan Police in Lambeth was yesterday, April 24, found to have failed to follow correct procedures when she led a strip search of a women being held in custody in Brixton on 11 May 2015.

She was found to have touched the woman’s genitals during the search, which she was not authorised to do as part of a strip search.

The IPCC investigation into the incident was completed in September 2015 and the IPCC directed the Metropolitan Police to hold a misconduct hearing.

The misconduct hearing found PC Wade committed gross misconduct in recklessly failing to adhere to accepted police procedure. She was issued a final written warning

Tom Milsom
Tom Milsom

IPCC Associate Commissioner Tom Milsom, said: “The capacity to strip search and conduct intimate searches of those in police custody is one of the most intrusive and sensitive powers the police hold. It is vital officers are correctly trained to utilise those powers.   Both the Metropolitan Police and the College of Policing have responded positively to the recommendations made by the IPCC following this investigation.

“The changes that have been incorporated at national level and within the Metropolitan Police will help to ensure officers are fully aware of how to appropriately conduct searches of detainees in custody.”

David Hill Experience to raise funds for Sussex Beacon

The David Hill Experience are staging a spectacular evening of entertainment to raise funds for the Sussex Beacon on Wednesday, April 26.

He’s Back! After a two-year break from the stage, David Hill returns to Proud Cabaret with his trademark show The David Hill Experience.

This show will be a Diva’s Special featuring the stunning vocals of Jenna Hall, the legendary Dolly Rocket, a special solo spot from the wonderful Keris Lea and topping the bill The Sensational Sundaes with a brand new line-up.


Event: The David Hill Experience raising funds for the Sussex Beacon

Where: Proud Cabaret, 83 St George’s Rd, Brighton BN2 1EF

When: Wednesday, April 28

Time: 7pm for 8pm start

Cost: £15

To book tickets online, click here:

Or telephone: 01273 719 759

Golden Quiz kicks off Golden Handbag season at Charles Street tonight

Get your handbags at the ready for the annual Golden Quiz Challenge at Charles Street tonight, Tuesday, April 25.

The Golden Handbags Quiz kick starts the voting for this year’s Golden Handbag Awards which are celebrating their 21st anniversary and will take place at the Brighton Metropole Hilton Hotel on Sunday, June 11 starting at 7.30pm for an 8pm start.

Lola Lasagne
Lola Lasagne

Will last years winners, The Marine Tavern retain their crown?

The quiz has been complied once again by James Brooks and the lovely Lola Lasagne will be your Quiz Mistress for the evening for what she says is her “Favourite gig of the year”.

To ensure everyone has a seat at Charles Street, this year the number of teams playing has been restricted to 17 with a maximum six players per team.

 

The winners will receive the first Golden Handbag of the season, the award for Best Quiz Team of 2017.

Voting for the Golden Handbags will commence at midnight.


Event: The Golden Quiz

Where: Charles Street Bar, 8-9 Marine Parade, Brighton

When: Tuesday, April 25

Time: 7.30pm for an 8pm start

Cost: £20 for table of 6 players. Pay the money to Lola Lasagne

 

Olé Blackpool

The Marine Tavern took their annual pre-Easter trip to Blackpool from April 7-9 last month.

On the hottest weekend of the year, nineteen customers from The Marine Tavern and friends enjoyed the trip to Blackpool by mini bus, staying at Chaps Hotel on Cocker Street.

They visited all the local LGBT+ Bars, including ‘new boys on the block’ Klubland which caters for a younger dance crowd and went to see the show at Funny Girls which Lee Cockshott, the owner of the Marine Tavern described as “amazing”.

Lee is already planning a pre-Christmas trip back to Blackpool which will take place on Friday, October 13-15, returning to Brighton on October 16.

Cost of the weekend away including half board and travel will be £149 per person.

To book your place telephone: 01273 905578 or pop into the Marine Tavern in Broad Street for more details.

What is National Stalking Awareness Week?

National Stalking Awareness Week run from Monday, April 24 until Friday April 28, with partner organisations across the UK holding events to raise awareness of stalking and the effect it can have on people.

National Stalking Awareness Week is spearheaded by the Suzy Lamplugh Trust, a national organisation which forms part of the National Stalking Consortium. This year the focus is on helping police and support workers recognise the signs of stalking at an early stage, and focusing on the motives of the stalker, not just on specific incidents or behaviour.

What is Stalking?
Stalking is unwanted, persistent or obsessive attention by an individual or group towards another person causing fear, harassment, anxiety, emotional or psychological distress to the victim. Stalking behaviours are related to harassment and intimidation and may include nuisance telephone calls, sending excessive emails, regularly sending gifts, following the person or spying on them and death threats. A perpetrator of stalking may be a partner or ex-partner, a work colleague or someone unknown to the victim.

The effect of such behaviour is to curtail a victim’s freedom, leaving them feeling that they constantly have to be careful. In many cases, the conduct might appear innocent (if it were to be taken in isolation), but when carried out repeatedly so as to amount to a course of conduct, it may then cause significant alarm, harassment or distress to the victim.

 

 

For more information about the Suzy Lamplugh Trust, click here:

For information about help available locally, click here:   

 

LGBTQ mental health charity shortlisted for major national award

Brighton based charity MindOut, LGBTQ Mental Health Service has been shortlisted for the UK-wide Charity Governance Awards 2017.

The charity is in the running for the Board Diversity and Inclusivity award with a prize of a £5,000 unrestricted grant.

MindOut is one of 21 charities from across the UK who complete the full shortlist and join a shortlist of charities representing a diverse range of subject areas including LGBTQ, prisoners, homelessness, medical care and support, disability services, and the arts.

A 20-strong judging panel shortlisted the entries and they will select a winner in each of the seven categories. The winners will be announced at the official awards reception in London on May 24 2017, with former cabinet minister Sir Vince Cable delivering a keynote speech.

Helen Jones
Helen Jones

Helen Jones, MindOut CEO, said: “We are delighted to have been shortlisted for such a prestigious award! We have worked hard to develop our governance and having a diverse and inclusive board is really important to the whole organisation. Our Trustees are very proud!”

Michael Howell, Chair of the Trusteeship Committee at the award organisers The Clothworkers’ Company, added: “Congratulations to all of the shortlisted candidates – they provide the third sector with sterling examples of what can be achieved with excellent governance.

The recent report by the House of Lords Select Committee on Charities recommended that charities focus on trustee skills, board diversity and the use of digital technology on their trustee boards; so we are delighted to select and showcase some brilliant examples of charities tackling these very issues. Entries to our brand new category ‘Embracing Digital’ have been particularly forward-thinking and we hope they will provide inspiration for organisations now seeking ‘digital trustees’, as recommended in the Select Committee’s report.”


Charity Governance Awards 2017 – Full Shortlist

Board Diversity and Inclusivity

 Embracing Digital

 Embracing Opportunity and Harnessing Risk

Improving Impact – charities with 3 staff or fewer

Improving Impact – charities with 4-25 paid staff

Improving Impact – charities with 26+ paid staff

Managing Turnaround

 

REVIEW: The Crucible@Theatre Royal

This is a truly magnificent production of a twentieth-century classic; its three hours seem to pass in a blink of an eye as director Douglas Rintoul expertly paces the play so that, in places, it has the heart-pounding intensity of a thriller. It’s also an exploration of moral corruption and decency and how the former often tries to pass itself off as the latter. The Crucible is the kind of play which leaves you both drained and strangely elated.

In seventeenth-century Salem a girl is taken ill after she is found, with some friends, dancing in a forest. From the simple fact of a ‘mysterious’ sickness dark rumours circulate about witchcraft. The girl’s father Reverend Parris (Cornelius Clarke) is the town minister and although being linked with sorcery could harm his already tarnished reputation – his focus on hell and damnation even seems to have alienated some members of this Puritan community – he insists on a full investigation. Soon Reverend Hale (Charlie Condou) arrives to find that Parris’s niece Abigail (Lucy Keirl) confesses to consorting with Satan. It’s a situation she exploits as she accuses Elizabeth Proctor (Victoria Yeates) of being a witch as a way of dispatching her so that she can be with her husband John (Eoin Slattery), a man with whom she had an adulterous affair. Before long there are scores of women locked up in jail and neighbour turns on neighbour and old scores are settled as one party points an accusing finger at another.

The play’s central plot mechanism is as finely calibrated as any instrument of torture. Slowly absurd insinuations of serving Lucifer seem to gradually gain traction until they harden into fact and the innocent villagers are unable to stop the inevitable progress of church-sanctioned mass murder. The scene where Proctor presents evidence that one of the children was lying genuinely had the blood pounding in my veins: it seems almost possible that actual justice – as opposed to justice of the inquisitorial court – will prevail. The tension between what should happen and what we know actually will happen makes for something discomforting yet absolutely riveting.

The success of any great production relies on its performances and every one is excellent. Clarke’s Parris is a hectoring bully who will drop his pious godliness – however genuine it might be – when he realises that the situation could turn against him. Condou, who at first is just another willing executioner, evokes strong sympathy as a man forced to come to terms with the part he has played in unleashing genuine evil forces on a small rural community. Yeates is a supremely dignified Elizabeth, and her final scene with her husband is incredibly moving. Jonathan Tafler has a commanding malevolence as Judge Tafler, a self-righteous fanatic who would sooner see innocent people hung that admit to having made a mistake. Slattery, as John Proctor, is the man at the very heart of the play and it’s as devastating performance as I’ve seen in some time. His Proctor is truly heroic; not in some trite comic-book sense – his flaws are too manifest for this. When we get to his final, reckless act of heroism we understand his actions even as we despair at them.

Continues at the Theatre Royal until Saturday 29.

Sussex Police to fly rainbow flag during Brighton Bear Weekend

The rainbow flag will fly over Brighton Police Station from June 15-18 to mark the annual Brighton Bear Weekend (BBW) festival.

Graham Munday
Graham Munday

Chair of BBW, Graham Munday, says: “We are honoured to have the support of Sussex Police and everyone at Brighton police station and thank PC Alison Tate and Superintendent Jane Derrick for organising this for us. It shows true spirit and commitment to LGBT+ people as a whole but especially to the bear community”.

BBW held three fundraisers in April including a Bear-a-oke evening at Bar Broadway on April 2 which raised £143.46; an Easter Quiz at the Camelford Arms which raised £416 and an Underbears party at Subline on Easter Sunday which raised £135.99. All monies raised were for the Rainbow Fund.

Mark Barbeary
Mark Barbeary

BBW treasurer, Mark Barbeary, said: “The Easter quiz has always been a popular event for us, but this year was an exception with Dale having to bring in extra tables. The whole team wish to thank the Camelford Arms for hosting us plus Choccywoccydoodah and Coop Funeral Care for donating star quality raffle prizes. We also want to say thank you all those that came along and supported us at the start of a busy Easter weekend helping us to raise £416 for the Rainbow Fund.”

BBW’s main summer event this year opens on Thursday, June 15 with a quiz night at Camelford Arms followed by three days of exciting bear events.

For a full rundown of events planned during the weekend and to purchase a wristband giving you exclusive discounts during the festival, click here: 

The Rainbow Fund give grants to local LGBT/HIV organisations who deliver effective front line services to LGBT+ people in the city.

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