Crime
Keeston driver to face trial over A40 driving allegation
Twenty-year-old admits tyre offences but denies driving without due care and attention
A TWENTY-year-old man from Keeston is due to stand trial in Haverfordwest after appearing before Llanelli Magistrates’ Court charged in connection with alleged driving offences on the A40 near Haverfordwest.
Thomas Hayes, of Keeston, appeared before magistrates on Wednesday (Apr 22) in relation to three offences said to have taken place between late on December 26 and the early hours of December 27, 2025.
The court heard Hayes is accused of driving a Volkswagen Scirocco on the A40 between Haverfordwest and Johnston without due care and attention.
According to the prosecution summary, police officers first saw the car at around 10:00pm and believed it was travelling above the speed limit. Officers later reported seeing the same vehicle again and said they were unable to catch up because of its speed.
It is further alleged that at around 1:00am officers saw the vehicle on Freemens Way, Haverfordwest, negotiating a sharp bend at speed and crossing solid white lines onto the opposite side of the road. Police later traced the car after checks through the operations room and located it at a filling station in Johnston at around 1:35am.
Hayes denied the allegation of driving without due care and attention.
He did, however, plead guilty to two separate vehicle defect offences. These were using a vehicle with an incorrectly inflated rear nearside tyre, and using a vehicle with a front nearside tyre said to have had a lump, bulge or tear caused by structural failure.
The case was adjourned for trial at Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Monday, August 10 at 10:00am. The hearing is expected to last two hours.
Crime
Police search cemetery after suspect flees Milford Haven domestic incident
Heavy police presence, including dogs and drones, followed search for 23-year-old man
POLICE were seen in large numbers at a Pembrokeshire cemetery on Monday (April 20) as officers searched for a man who had fled following a domestic incident in Milford Haven the previous day.
Dyfed-Powys Police said they received a report of a domestic incident in Waterloo Square, Milford Haven, at around 10:00am on Sunday (April 19).
Officers attended, but during efforts to arrest a 23-year-old man, he fled the scene.
The Herald understands the search then moved to the Milford Haven Cemetery area on Monday, where a significant police presence was reported, including dog units, drones and several police vans.
The man was later arrested on suspicion of a domestic-related offence and escaping lawful custody.
He has since been released on bail while enquiries continue.
Crime
Pembrokeshire broadband service severely disrupted by cable-cutting vandal
A PEMBROKESHIRE man has been sentenced for disrupting an entire town’s broadband connection by causing over £26,000 worth of damage to Ogi’s underground cabling and fibre-optic network.
Between September 2023 and January 2024, Mickey Probert, 37, gained access to five of Ogi’s protected underground chambers extending from Wavell Crescent to Hamilton Court, Pembroke Dock. Using wire snippers, Probert caused a total of £26,237.73 worth of damage to the Ogi network.
On January 23, 2024, Probert was caught red-handed after once again gaining entry to one of Ogi’s chambers armed with wire snippers, a screwdriver and a metal crowbar.
This week Swansea Crown Court heard that suspicions were raised when Ogi’s alarm system confirmed that numerous cables had been affected in the Pembroke Dock area between September, 2023 and January 2024. When fault engineers began assessing the damage, they discovered that someone had gained access to the Ogi protected chambers and had cut numerous cables. Five different locations were flagged with six separate findings of damage.
Mickey Probert was subsequently discovered by police officers in the Wavell Crescent site as they carried out a search following reports of what the Crown described as ‘suspicious activities’ near one of the Ogi junction boxes.
Judge Huw Rees was told that when officers arrived at the scene at 3.55 am, they located the defendant hunched over a metal manhole cover. He had in his possession a pair of wire snippers and a screwdriver, and was wearing a head torch and latex gloves. A metal crowbar was also found nearby.
“His actions severely impacted the network services of the Pembroke Dock area, but also OGI’s reputation,” the Crown counsel told Judge Rees. “As a result, they suffered a cascade of negative effects and the 999 services were also affected. Many people rely on these services for their lives.”
Probert, of Laugharne Close, Pembroke, pleaded guilty to causing criminal damage to the Ogi network and Judge Huw Rees described the defendant’s actions as ‘very serious offending’.
“I take a serious view of this as a result of the damage that was caused, and this is a serious example of a crime to an independent public network provider in Wales,” he said.
“People who use that network and people who wanted to make emergency calls in dire circumstances, were prevented from doing so by your actions. Your actions disrupted essential services.”
But Judge Rees went on to say that as a result of Probert’s ‘realistic prospect’ of rehabilitation, his custodial sentence will be suspended.
“There’s been a period of non-offending when you’ve shown your ability to live a normal life,” he said. “ You’ve got it in you to keep out of trouble and there’s a realistic prospect of rehabilitation.”
Probert was sentenced to 16 months in custody suspended for two years. During this time he must carry out 20 rehabilitation activity requirement days and a 120-day alcohol abstinence monitoring programme.

Crime
Two women shared passenger seat in van driven by drink-driver
A court has heard how a man drove his unlit van through Pembroke Dock at midnight while two women shared the front seat.
When David Janssens was arrested by officers on April 6, he was found to be over twice the legal drink-drive limit.
“The officers were concerned about the manner of his driving,” Crown Prosecutor Linda Baker told Haverfordwest magistrates court this week.
“The Fiat Doblo was swerving in the middle of the road and the officers saw the lights being turned off while it was moving.”
After stopping the vehicle, the driver was identified as 38-year-old David Janssens.
“The officers also discovered two females in the passenger seat, one sitting on the other’s lap,” added Linda Baker.
Janssens, of Water Street, Pembroke Dock was arrested and breathalysed with the lowest reading showing he had 77 mcg of alcohol in his system, the legal limit being 35.
This week he pleaded guilty to drink-driving, using a vehicle without third party insurance and driving otherwise than in accordance with a licence. He was represented in court by solicitor Michael Kelleher.
“He was driving a two-seater van, which was why the two female friends were sitting the way they were,” Mr Kelleher told the court. “He was giving them a lift home.”
The solicitor went on to say that Janssens had previously lost his licence under the totting-up procedure.
“He’s very remorseful of what he did, and realises that he shouldn’t have been driving that night,” concluded Mr Kelleher.
Janssens was fined £320 and ordered to pay a £128 court surcharge and £85 costs. He was disqualified from driving for 20 months.
-
Business6 days agoMilford Haven dry dock pitched as home for giant £480m superyacht yard
-
Community7 days agoFamily safe after major house fire in Letterston, community told
-
Sport6 days agoLockwood handed first Six Nations start as Joyce returns for Arms Park test
-
Business7 days agoTenby harbour RNLI building takeaway allowed after appeal
-
News6 days agoFirst Minister faces the Herald: Withybush, schools, and farming under the spotlight
-
News1 day agoPaul Dowson defends controversial record in Herald election interview
-
Crime5 days agoMan found staggering in street after brutal caravan attack
-
News7 days agoSenedd election 2026: Poll points to historic Welsh Labour slump










